Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (2056) (remove)
Language
- English (2056) (remove)
Has Fulltext
- yes (2056)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (2056) (remove)
Keywords
- ALICE (8)
- Quark-Gluon-Plasma (8)
- Membranproteine (7)
- Geldpolitik (6)
- Proteine (6)
- Apoptosis (5)
- Biochemie (5)
- Heavy Ion Collisions (5)
- Immunologie (5)
- LHC (5)
Institute
- Biowissenschaften (424)
- Physik (378)
- Biochemie und Chemie (282)
- Biochemie, Chemie und Pharmazie (208)
- Medizin (126)
- Pharmazie (92)
- Geowissenschaften (87)
- Informatik und Mathematik (85)
- Informatik (54)
- Mathematik (46)
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.
This thesis presents a model for the dynamical description of deconfined quark matter created in ultra-relativistic heavy ion collisions, treating quarks and antiquarks as classical point particles subject to a colour-dependent, Cornell-type potential interaction. The model provides a dynamical handle for hadronization via the recombination of quarks and antiquarks in colour neutral clusters. Gluons are not included explicitly in the model,but are described in an effective manner by the means of the potential interaction. The model includes four different quark flavours (up, down, strange and charm) and uses current masses for the quarks. The dynamical evolution of a system of colour charges subject to the Hamiltonian equations of motion of the model yields the formation of colour neutral clusters of quarks and antiquarks, which are subject only to a small remaining interaction, the strong interquark potential notwithstanding. These clusters can be mapped onto hadrons and hadronic resonances. Thus, the model allows a dynamical description of quarks degrees of freedom in heavy ion collisions, including a recombination scheme for hadronization. The thermal properties of the model turn pout to be very satisfying. The model shows a transition from a confining phase to a deconfined phase with rising temperature, going hand in hand with a softest point in the equation of state and a rise of energy density and pressure to the Stefan-Boltzmann limit of a gas of quarks and antiquarks. Moreover, the potential interaction is screened in the deconfined phase. For the dynamical description of ultra-relativistic heavy ion collision, the qMD model is coupled to UrQMD as a generator for its initial conditions. In this way, a fully dynamical description of the expansion and hadronization of the fireball created in such collisions can be achieved. Non-equilibrium aspects of the expansion dynamics and hadronization by recombination of quarks and antiquarks are discussed in detail, and a comparison with experimental data of collisions at the CERN-SPS is presented. The big advantage of the qMD model is the possibility to study cluster formation, including exotic clusters, and fluctuations in a dynamical manner. As an example, event-by-event fluctuations in electric charge are studied. Such fluctuations have been proposed as a clear criterion to distinguish a deconfined system from a hadrons gas. However, experimental data show hadron gas fluctuation measures even at RHIC, where deconfinement is taken for granted. We will see how the dynamics of quark recombination washes out the quark-gluon plasma signal in the fluctuation criterion. Moreover, we will discuss briefly the problem of entropy at recombination. In a second application, the formation of exotic hadronic clusters, larger than usual mesons and baryons, is studied. Such clusters could provide new measures for the thermalization and homogenization of a deconfined gas of colour charges. Moreover, number estimates for exotic clusters from recombination are considerably lower than corresponding predictions from thermal models, providing a clear difference between statistical hadronization and hadronization via quark recombination. A detailed analysis is provided for pentaquark candidates such as the Theta-Plus. It turns out that the distribution of exotic states over strangeness, isospin, and spin could provide a sensitive measure for thermalization and decorrelation in the deconfined quark phase, if it could be measured.
Nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs), roughly 27 kDa in size, are conservative components of the large family of ABC (ATP-binding cassette) transporters, which includes importers, exporters, and receptors. NBDs or ABC-ATPases supply energy for the translocation of a vast variety of substrates across biological membranes. Despite their hydrophilic sequence, many NBDs tend to aggregate and precipitate in solution upon isolation from the complete transporter. The conditions stabilizing an extremely labile NBD component of the E.coli HlyA transporter, HlyB-NBD, were developed. As a result, the pure highly concentrated enzyme was protected from precipitation for months that allowed screening of the unlimited crystallization conditions in the presence of different substrates and performance of the reproducible functional assays. HlyB-NBD was characterized in regard to its uncoupled ATPase activity, oligomeric state, and stability in solution. Comparative analysis of protein stability and ATPase activity in various buffers suggested an inverse relationship between the two. Kinetic analysis of ATPase activity revealed ATP-induced protein dimerization. Gel-filtration experiments with the wild type protein and H662A-mutant of HlyB-NBD provided further evidence of protein dimerization in the presence of ATP. The crystal structures in post- and pre-hydrolysis nucleotide-bound states of HlyB-NBD were determined at 1.6Å and 2.5Å resolution, respectively. While the hydrolytically deficient H662A mutant of HlyB-NBD was crystallized as a stable dimer in the presence of ATP or ATP-Mg2+, with two nucleotide molecules sandwiched between the two monomers, the same protein was shown to be a monomer in the ADP-loaded state. The wild type protein failed to develop crystals with bound ATP, yet formed ADP-bound crystals identical to those of the H662A-mutant. The X-ray structures of HlyB-NBD in various states of the hydrolytic cycle and the functional studies of the enzyme have provided an opportunity to characterize enzyme-substrate complexes and protein-protein interactions between the NBD subunits in great detail. Comparison of the nucleotide-free, the ADP-, and the ATP-loaded states revealed oligomeric and conformational changes of the protein upon substrate binding and resulted in a molecular picture of the catalytic cycle. The correlated results of the structural and functional investigations of HlyB-NBD are discussed with relation to the mechanism of action of ABC transporters.
The analysis of doxorubicin-loaded poly(butyl cyanoacrylate) nanoparticles in in vitro glioma models
(2005)
The use of doxorubicin for the treatment of glioma tumours would be an important approach in the chemotherapy treatment since doxorubicin is a very effective neoplastic agent. However, one problem faced by the use of doxorubicin for the treatment of brain tumours is the fact that doxorubicin is a substrate of an efflux pump protein, P-glycoprotein (P-gp), which is located on the luminal side of the brain capillary endothelium and in many tumour cells, which acts pumping out of the cell such substrate, and blocking its transport into the cell. A strategy to enhance the doxorubicin delivery into the brain would be the use of nanoparticles. This work showed, that the treatment of doxorubicin bound to poly(butyl cyanoacrylate) nanoparticles decreased the viability of the three glioma cell lines, the GS-9L, the RG-2, and the F-98 cell lines significantly in comparison to doxorubicin in solution, indicating an improvement of the nanoparticles-bound doxorubicin transport into the cells. The modification of the nanoparticles surface with different surfactants may even enhance the delivery of the drug into the cells. Searching for an improvement of the doxorubicin internalization, the nanoparticles surface was modified using polysorbate 80, poloxamer 188 and poloxamine 908 surfactants. The poloxamer 188 and polaxamine 908 surfactant modified nanoparticles did not show a significant enhancement of the doxorubicin internalization. Contrary, the treatment of polysorbate 80 surfactant modified nanoparticles led in some cases to a significant decrease of cancer cell viability. The use of doxorubicin in the three glioma cell lines allowed the measurement of different responses towards doxorubicin treatment. The different responses were due to the entry of various amounts of doxorubicin into the glioma cells, which express the P-glycoprotein in their cellular membrane. A higher level of the P-gp expression correlated with a weaker response towards the doxorubicin treatment. The GS-9L cell line showed a significant higher level of P-gp expression than the F-98, and RG-2 cell lines, and consequently, the GS-9L cell line presented the highest resistance to doxorubicin with the highest viability values after doxorubicin treatment. Due to the fact that the transport of doxorubicin is governed by the activity of the P-gp in the studied glioma cells, the use of poloxamer 185 as a P-gp inhibitor resulted in an enhancement of the uptake as well as of the accumulation of doxorubicin into the cells. The effect of poloxamer 185 on the doxorubicin uptake was significant marked in the case of doxorubicin-resistance cells, as the GS-9L cell line. In some cases, the presence of the nanoparticles formulation showed also an influence on such uptake improvement. The use of a P-gp inhibitor in combination with chemotherapeutic agents leads to encouraging results. Because of the wide spectrum of substances acting as P-gp inhibitors, the exact inhibitory mechanisms remain still unclear. For instance in our results the evaluation of a described P-gp inhibitor, polysorbate 80 did not show an important improvement in the doxorubicin uptake in the P-gp-expressing cell line, GS-9L. On the other hand, the Polysorbate 80-Dox-PBCA nanoparticles formulation decreased in greater extend the viability of the glioma cells than the poloxamer185-Dox-PBCA nanoparticles. Although, the P-gp inhibition was undoubtedly higher in the presence of poloxamer 185, polysorbate 80 showed a main effect on the disruption of the cellular membrane, resulting in an important cellular viability decrease. It seems that poloxamer 185 presents a direct effect on the functionality of the P-gp protein, which would be of great importance in the sensitization of resistant cancer cells. The range of concentration of poloxamer 185 is very important to yield an inhibitory effect on the P-gp-mediated transport mechanism. The accumulation of Rhodamine-123 (Rho-123), a known P-gp substrate, increased in a range of concentration from 0.001 % to 0.01, whereas at 0.1 % poloxamer 185 the accumulation significantly decreased. A maximal Rho-123 accumulation was reached at 0.01 % poloxamer 185.
Stem cells capable of self-renewal and differentiation into multiple tissues are important in medicine to reconstitute the hematopoietic system after myelo-ablative chemo- or radiotherapy. In the present situation, adult stem cells such as Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) and Hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) are used for therapeutic purposes. For tissue regeneration and tissue constitution, engraftment of transplanted stem cells is a necessary feature. However, in many instances, the transplanted stem cells reach the tissues with low efficiency. Considering the three-step model of leukocyte extravasation by Springer et al, the rolling, adhesion and transmigration form the three major steps for the transplanted stem cells to enter the desired tissues. One of the molecular switches reported to be involved in these mechanisms are the Rho family GTPases. The present study investigates the role of Rho GTPases in adhesion and migration of stem and progenitor cells. Chemotactic and chemokinetic migration assays, transendothelial migration assays, migration of cells under shear stress, microinjection, retroviral and lentiviral gene transfer methods, oligonucleotide microarray analysis and pull down assays were employed in this study for the elucidation of Rho GTPase involvement in migration and adhesion of stem and progenitor cells. The transmigration assay used for the migration determination of the adherent cell type, MSC, was optimized for the efficient and effective assessment of the migrating cells. The involvement of Rho was found to be critical for stem and progenitor cell migration where inactivation of Rho by C2I-C3 transferase toxin and/or overexpression of C3 transferase cDNA increased the migration rate of Hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPC) and MSC. Moreover, modulation of Rho caused predictable cytoskeletal and morphological changes in MSC. Assessment of Rho GTPase involvement in the interacting partner, the endothelial cells during stem cell migration, revealed that active Rho expression induced E-selectin expression. The increased levels of E-selectin were functionally confirmed by the increased adhesion of progenitor cells (HPC) to the Human umbilical vein endothelial cell (HUVEC) layer. Moreover, inhibition of Rac in the migrating endothelial progenitor cells (eEPC) increased their adhesion to HUVEC correlating with the increased percentage expression of cell surface receptor, CD44 in Rac inactivated eEPC. In conclusion, this study shows that Rho GTPases control the adhesion and migration of stem and progenitor cells, HPC and MSC. Rho inhibition drives the cells to migrate in the blood vessels. The substantial increase in the level of active Rho in endothelial layer, manifested by the E-selectin surface expression assists the better adhesion of stem and progenitor cells to the endothelial layer. Serum factors and growth factors in the physiological system influence the Rho GTPase expression in both migrating stem cells and the barrier endothelial cells. Thus, specific modulation of Rho GTPases in the transplanted stem and progenitor cells could be an interesting tool to improve the migration and homing processes of stem cells for cellular therapy in future.
This work is dedicated to the investigation of nuclear matter at non-zero temperatures within an effective hadronic model based on the Walecka model. It includes fermions as well as a vector omega meson and a scalar sigma meson where for the latter a quartic self-interaction has been considered. The coupling constants have been adapted to the saturation properties of infinite nuclear matter. A set of self-consistent Schwinger-Dyson equations has been set up for all included particles within the Cornwall-Jackiw-Tomboulis formalism. This has been expanded to non-zero temperatures via the imaginary time formalism. Beside tree-level two different stages of approximations have been considered: the Hartree approximation which takes into account the double-bubble diagram for the scalar meson, and an improved approximation where in addition two-particle irreducible sunset diagrams for all fields were included. In the Hartree-approximation the Schwinger-Dyson equations can be solved by quasi-particle ansaetze, while in the improved approximation spectral functions with non-zero widths have to be introduced. The Schwinger-Dyson equations are solved by the fully dressed propagators. Comparing the two levels of approximation shows the influence of finite widths on the temperature dependence of the particle properties. The consideration of finite widths in fact has a significant influence on the transition from a phase of heavy nucleons to a transition of light nucleons, observed in the Walecka-model. The temperature dependence is weakend when finte widths are taken into account.
The present work was devised to address the systematic analysis of samples from a range of Roman non-ferrous metal artefacts from different archaeological contexts and sites in the Roman provinces of Germania Superior. One of the focal points of this study is the provenancing of different lead objects from five important Roman settlements between 15 BC and the beginning of fourth century AD. For this purpose, measurements were made on lead and copper ore samples from the Siegerland, Eifel, Hunsrück and Lahn-Dill area in Germany and supplemented with data from the literature to create a data bank of lead isotope ratios of European deposits. Compositional analysis of lead objects by Electron Microprobe analysis showed that Romans were able to purify lead from ore up to 99%. Multi-Collector Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass-Spectrometry was used to determine the source of lead, which played an important role in nearly all aspects of Roman life. Lead isotope ratios were measured for ore samples from German deposits from the eastern side of the Rhine (Siegerland, Lahn-Dill, Ems) and the western side of the Rhine (Eifel, Hunsrück), which contained enough ore reserves to answer the increasing local demand and are believed to have been mined during the Roman period. This data together with those from Mediterranean ore deposits from the literature was used to establish a data bank. The Mediterranean ore deposits range from Cambrian (high 207Pb/206Pb) to tertiary (lower 207Pb/206Pb) values. In particular, the Cypriot deposits are younger, while the Spanish deposits fall either with the younger Sardic ores or close to the older Cypriot ores. The lead isotope ratios of most German ore deposits fall in between the 208Pb/206Pb vs. 207Pb/206Pb ratios of Sardinia and Cyprus, where the lead isotope signature of ore deposits from France and Britain are also found. Over 240 lead objects were measured from Wallendorf (second century BC to first century AD) Dangstetten (15-8 BC), Waldgirmes (AD 1-10), Mainz (AD 1-300), Martberg (first to fourth centuries AD) & Trier (third to fourth centuries AD). Comparing the lead isotope ratios of lead objects and those from German ores shows that the source of over 85 percent of objects are Eifel ore deposits, but the Roman’s had also imported lead from the Southern Massif Central and from Great Britain. A further topic of this work was the systematic study of the variation of copper isotope ratios in different copper minerals and the mechanisms, which controls copper isotope fractionation in ores deposits. For this purpose, copper isotope analyses were made by Multi-Collector Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass-Spectrometry from a series of hydrothermal copper sulphides and their alteration products. Copper and lead isotope ratios were measured in coexisting phases of chalcopyrite and malachite and also coexisting malachite and azurite. No significant fractionation was observed in malachite-azurite phases, but in chalcopyrite-malachite coexisting phases, malachite always shows a positive fractionation to heavier isotope values. Zhu et al. and Larson et al. showed that isotopic variations in copper principally reflect mass fractionation in response to low temperature processes rather than source heterogeneity. The low temperature ore formation processes are mostly represented by weathering of primary sulphide ores to produce secondary carbonate phases and therefore are usually observed on the surface of ore deposits, which were probably removed during the early Bronze Age. Using this concept, copper isotope ratios were measured in some Early Bronze Age copper alloys and Roman copper alloys. However, no large copper isotope fractionation has been observed. Lead and copper isotope ratios were measured on samples from the Kupferschiefer. Two profiles were investigated; 1) Sangerhausen, which was not directly influenced by the oxidizing brines of Rote Fäule and 2) Oberkatz, where both Rote Fäule-controlled and structure-controlled mineralization were observed. Results from maturation studies of organic matter suggest the maximum temperature affecting the Kupferschiefer did not exceed 130°C. delta-65-Cu ranges between -0.78-+0.58‰, shows a positive correlation with copper concentration. Maximum temperature in the Kupferschiefer profile from Oberkatz is supposed to be around 150°C. delta-65Cu in this profile ranges between -0.71-+0.68‰. The pattern of copper isotope fractionation and copper concentration is same as the for profile of Sangerhausen. Origina lead isotope ratios are strongly overprinted by high concentrations of uranium in bottom of both profiles causing more radiogenic lead.
In order to investigate the role of neuronal synchronization in perceptual grouping, a new method was developed to record selectively from multiple cortical sites of known functional specificity as determined by optical imaging of intrinsic signals. To this end, a matrix of closely spaced guide tubes was developed in cooperation with a company providing the essential manufacturing technique RMPD® (Rapid Micro Product Development). The matrix was embedded into a framework of hard and software that allowed for the mapping of each guide tube onto the cortical site an electrode would be led to if inserted into that guide tube. With these developments, it was possible to determine the functional layout of the cortex by optical imaging and subsequently perform targeted recordings with multiple electrodes in parallel. The method was tested for its accuracy and found to target the electrodes with a precision of 100 µm to the desired cortical locations. Using the developed technique, neuronal activity was recorded from area 18 of anesthetized cats. For stimulation, Gabor-patches in different geometrical configurations were placed over the recorded receptive fields merging into visual objects appropriate for testing the hypothesis of feature binding by synchrony. Synchronization strength was measured by the height of the cross-correlation centre peaks. All pairwise synchronizations were summarized in a correlation index which determined the mean difference of the correlation strengths between conditions in which recording sites should or should not fire in synchrony according to the binding hypothesis. The correlation index deviated significantly from zero for several of these configurations, further supporting the hypothesis that synchronization plays an important role in the process of perceptual grouping. Furthermore, direct evidence was found for the independence of the synchronization strength from the neuronal firing rate and for neurons that change dynamically the ensemble they participate in. In parallel to the experimental approach, mechanisms of oscillatory long range synchronization were studied by network simulations. To this end, a biologically plausible model was implemented using pyramidal and basket cells with Hodgkin-Huxley like conductances. Several columns were built from these cells and intra- and inter-columnar connections were mimicked from physiological data. When activated by independent Poisson spike trains, the columns showed oscillatory activity in the gamma frequency range. Correlation analysis revealed the tendency to locally synchronize the oscillations among the columns, but a rapid phase transition occurred with increasing cortical distance. This finding suggests that the present view of the inter-columnar connectivity does not fully explain oscillatory long range synchronization and predicts that other processes such as top-down influences are necessary for long range synchronization phenomena.
Systematisch verabreichte Chemotherapeutika sind oft uneffektiv bei der Behandlung von Krankheiten des zentralen Nervensystems (ZNS). Eine der Ursachen hierfür ist der unzureichende Arzneistoff-Transport ins Gehirn aufgrund der Blut-Hirn-Schranke. Eine der Strategien für den nicht-invasiven Wirkstoff-Transport ins Gehirn ist die Verwendung von Nanopartikeln. Polybutylcyanoacrylat-Nanopartikel, die mit Polysorbat 80 (Tween® 80) überzogen wurden, können die Blut-Hirn-Schranke passieren und somit Wirkstoffe ins Gehirn transportieren. Wird die Blut-Hirn-Schranke durch einen Hirntumor partiell beschädigt und hierdurch ihre Permeabilität am Ort des Tumors erhöht, können Nanopartikel den Tumor zusätzlich durch den sogenannten EPR-Effekt erreichen. Im ersten Teil der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde die Beladung der Nanopartikel durch Variation der Formulierungparameter mit dem Ziel optimiert, eine Formulierung mit höherer Wirksamkeit für die Therapie von Glioblastom-tragenden Ratten zu entwickeln. Außerdem wurde das Potential von Doxorubicin, das an mit „Stealth Agents“ überzogenen Polybutylcyanoacrylat-Nanopartikel gebunden war, für die Chemotherapie von Hirntumoren untersucht. Im zweiten Teil dieser Studie wurden die Gehirn- und Körperverteilung in gesunden und in Glioblastom-101/8-tragenden Ratten nach i.v.-Gabe von Poly(butyl-2-cyano[3- 14C]acrylat)-Nanopartikeln, die mit Polysorbat 80 beschichtet wurden, und solchen, die noch zusätzlich mit Doxorubicin geladen waren (DOX-14C-PBCA + PS), untersucht. Die Standardformulierung von Doxubicin-Polybutylcyanoacrylat-Nanopartikeln (DOX-NP) wurde durch anionische Polymerisierung von Butylcyanoacrylat in Anwesenheit von DOX hergestellt. Zusätzlich wurden unterschiedliche DOX-NP Formulierungen durch Veränderung der Herstellung produziert. Das therapeutische Potential der Formulierungen wurde in Ratten mit ins Gehirn transplantieren Glioblastom 101/8 untersucht. Neben Polysorbat 80 wurden Poloxamer 188 und Poloxamin 908 als Überzugsmaterial verwendet. Die Resultate ergaben, dass die mit Polysorbat 80 überzogene Standardformulierung am effektivsten war. Die höhere Wirksamkeit von DOX-NP+PS 80 könnte durch die Fähigkeit dieser Träger erklärt werden, den Wirkstoff während eines frühen Stadiums der Tumorentwicklung durch einen Rezeptor-vermittelten Mechanismus, der durch den PS 80-Überzug aktiviert wurde über die intakte Blut-Hirn-Schranke, zu transportieren. Unsere Ergebnisse zeigen auch, dass Poloxamer 188 und Poloxamin 908 den antitumoralen Effekt von DOX-PBCA beträchtlich verbessern. Der anti-tumorale Effekt dieser Formulierungen könnte möglicherweise dem EPR-Effekt zugeschrieben werden. Es ist bekannt, dass die tumorale Arzneistoff-Aufnahme durch den EPR-Effektes für lang-zirkulierende Wirkstoffträger ausgeprägter ist und so mehr Wirkstoff durch die Tumor-geschädigte Blut-Hirn-Schranke gelangt. Unbeschichtete Nanopartikel, Polysorbat 80-beschichtete Nanopartikel oder mit Doxorubicin beladene und mit Polysorbat 80 beschichtete Nanopartikel wurden in gesunden und Tumor-tragenden Ratten injiziert. Diese Nanopartikel-Präparationen zeigten einer unterschiedliche Korpenverteilung in den Ratten. Unbeschichtete Nanopartikel sammelten sich in den RES-Organen an. Mit PS 80 beschichtete NP reduzierten die Aufnahme der NP in Leber und Milz, während sich die Konzentration der NP in der Lunge erhöhte. Diese Beobachtungen deuten darauf hin, dass die Änderung der Oberflächeneigenschaften der NP durch das Tensid, zu einer Interaktion mit unterschiedlichen Opsoninen führt, welches die Aufnahme der NP von verschiedenen phagozitierenden Zellen erleichtert. Hingegen war die Aufnahme der mit DOX beladenen, PS 80-beschichteten Nanopartikel den unbeschichteten Partikel ähnlich. Im Vergleich mit gesunden Ratten und mit Tumor-tragenden Ratten hingegen war die Konzentration der NP im Gehirn von Tumor tragenden Ratten 10 Tage nach der Tumor-implantation signifikant höher. In Anwesenheit des Glioblastoms ist der Transport von NP in das Gehirn das Resultat verschiedener Faktoren: zusätzlich zur Fähigkeit von PS 80-Nanopartikeln, die Blut-Hirn-Schranke zu passieren, extravasieren diese Träger wegen des EPR Effekts über das durch den Tumor undichte Endothelium. Die Konzentration von PS 80 [14C]-PBCA NP war im Glioblastom signifikant höher als mit DOX [14C]-PBCA NP. Dieses Phänomen kann durch die unterschiedliche Mikroumgebung von zerebralem intra-tumoralen und intaktem Gehirngewebe erklärt werde. Insbesondere können sich die positive Ladung der tumoralen Regionen und die positive Ladung der DOX [14C]-PBCA NP negativ beeinflussen. Dennoch waren die Doxorubicin-Konzentration in Glioblastom ausreichend, einen therapeutischen Effekt zu ermöglichen.
Group III presynaptic metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) play a central role in regulating presynaptic activity through G-protein effects on ion channels and signal transducing enzymes. Like all Class C G-protein coupled receptors, mGluR8 has an extended intracellular C-terminal domain (CTD) presumed to allow for modulation of downstream signaling. To elucidate the function and modulation of mGluR8, yeast two-hybrid screens of an adult rat brain cDNA library were performed with the CTDs of mGluR8a and 8b (mGluR8-C) as baits. Different components of the sumoylation cascade (ube2a, sumo-1, Pias1, Pias gamma and Pias xbeta) and some other proteins were identified as mGluR8 interacting proteins. Binding assays using recombinant GST-fusion proteins confirmed that Pias1 interacts not only with mGluR8-C, but all group III mGluR CTDs. Pias1 binding to mGluR8-C required a region N-terminally to a consensus sumoylation motif and was not affected by arginine substitution of the conserved lysine K882 within this motif. Co-transfection of fluorescently tagged mGluR8a-C, sumo-1 and enzymes of the sumoylation cascade into HEK 293 cells showed that mGluR8a-C can be sumoylated in cells. Arginine substitution of lysine K882 within the consensus sumoylation motif, but not of other conserved lysines within the CTD, abolished in vivo sumoylation. The results are consistent with post-translational sumoylation providing a novel mechanism of group III mGluR regulation.
Chemokines play a key role in the cellular infiltration of inflamed tissue. They are released by a wide variety of cell types during the initial phase of host response to injury, allergens, antigens, or invading microorganisms, and selectively attract leukocytes to inflammatory foci, inducing both migration and activation. Monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), a member of the CC chemokine superfamily, functions in attracting monocytes, T lymphocytes, and basophils to sites of inflammation. MCP-1 is produced by monocytes, fibroblasts, vascular endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells in response to various stimuli such as tumour necrosis factor-a (TNF-a), interferon-g (IFN-g), and interleukin-1b (IL-1b). It also plays an important role in the pathogenesis of chronic inflammation, and overexpression of MCP-1 has been implicated in diseases including glomerulonephritis and rheumatoid arthritis. Oligonucleotide-directed triple helix formation offers a means to target specific sequences in DNA and interfere with gene expression at the transcriptional level. Triple helix-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) bind to homopurine/homopyrimidine sequences, forming a stable, sequence-specific complex with the duplex DNA. Purine-rich sequences are frequent in gene regulatory regions and TFOs directed to promoter sequences have been shown to prevent binding of transcription factors and inhibit transcription initiation and elongation. Exogenous TFOs that bind homopurine/ homopyrimidine DNA sequences and form triple-helices can be rationally designed, while the intracellular delivery of single-stranded RNA TFOs has not been studied in detail before. In this study, expression vectors were constructed which directed transcription of either a 19 nt triplex-forming pyrimidine CU-TFO sequence targeting the human MCP-1 or two different 19 nt GU- or CA-control sequences, respectively, together with the vector encoded hygromycin resistance mRNA as one fusion transcript. HEK 293 cells were stable transfected with these vectors and several TFO and control cell lines were generated. Functional relevant triplex formation of a TFO with a corresponding 19 bp GC-rich AP-1/SP-1 site of the human MCP-1 promoter was shown. Binding of synthetic 19 nt CUTFO to the MCP-1 promoter duplex was verified by triplex blotting at pH 6.7. Underlining binding specificity, control sequences, including the GU- and CA-sequence, a TFO containing one single mismatch and a MCP-1 promoter duplex containing two mismatches, did not participate in triplex formation. Establishing a magnetic capture technique with streptavidin microbeads it was verified that at pH 7.0 the 19 nt TFO embedded in a 1.1 kb fusion transcript binds to a plasmid encoded MCP-1 promoter target duplex three times stronger than the controls. Finally, cell culture experiments revealed 76 ± 10.2% inhibition of MCP-1 protein secretion in TNF-a stimulated CU-TFO harboring cell lines and up to 88% after TNF-a and IFN-g costimulation in comparison to controls. Expression of interleukin-8 (IL-8) as one TNF-a inducible control gene was not affected by CU-TFO, demonstrating both highly specific and effective chemokine gene repression. Furthermore, another chemokine target, regulated upon activation normal T cell expressed and secreted (RANTES), which plays an essential role in inflammation by recruiting T lymphocytes, macrophages and eosinophils to inflammatory sites, was analysed using the triplex approach. A 28 nt TFO was designed targeting the murine RANTES gene promoter, and gel mobility shift assays demonstrated that the phosphodiester TFO formed a sequencespecific triplex with the double-stranded target DNA with a Kd of 2.5 x 10-7 M. It was analysed whether RANTES expression could be inhibited at the transcriptional level testing the TFO in two different cell lines, T helper-1 lymphocytes and brain microvascular endothelial cells (bend3 cells). Although there was a sequence-specific binding of the TFO detectable in the gel shift assays, there was no inhibitory effect of the exogenously added and phosphorothioate stabilised TFO on endogenous RANTES gene expression visible. Additionally, the small interfering RNA (siRNA) approach was tested as another strategy to inhibit expression of the pro-inflammatory chemokines MCP-1 and RANTES. Two different methods were pursuit, describing transient transfection with vector derived and synthetic siRNA. The vector pSUPER containing the siRNA coding sequence was used to suppress endogenous MCP-1 in HEK 293 cells. An empty vector without RNA sequence served as a control. Inhibition due to the siRNA was measured in stimulated and unstimulated cells. In TNF-a stimulated cells MCP-1 protein synthesis was decreased by 35 ± 11% after siRNA transfection. Using a synthetic double-stranded siRNA, the TNF-a induced MCP-1 protein secretion could be successfully inhibited about 62.3 ± 10.3% in HEK 293 cells, indicating that the siRNA is functional in these cells to suppress chemokine expression. The siRNA approach targeting murine RANTES in Th1 cells and b-end3 cells revealed no inhibition of endogenous gene expression. Gene therapy approaches rely on efficient transfer of genes to the desired target cells. A wide variety of viral and nonviral vectors have been developed and evaluated for their efficiency of transduction, sustained expression of the transgene, and safety. Among them, lentiviruses have been widely used for gene therapy applications. In order to improve the delivery of TFOs or siRNAs into the target cells, cloning of the lentiviral transfer vector SEW, the production of lentiviral particles by transient transfection were performed with the aim to generate lentiviral vector-derived TFOs in further experiments. Here, Th1 cells were transduced with infectious lentiviral particles and transduction efficacy was measured. Transduction efficacy higher than 82% could be achieved using the lentiviral vector SEW, opening optimal possibilities for the TFO or siRNA approach.
Lesion of the rat entorhinal cortex denervates the outer molecular layer of the fascia dentata followed by layer-specific axonal sprouting of uninjured fibers in the denervated zone. One of the candidate molecules regulating the laminar-specific sprouting response in the outer molecular layer is the transmembrane chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan NG2. NG2 is found in glial scars and has been suggested to impede axonal regeneration following injury of the spinal cord. The present study adressed the question whether NG2 could also regulate axonal growth in denervated areas of the brain. Therefore, (1) changes in NG2 mRNA and NG2 protein levels, (2) the cellular and the extracellular localisation of the molecule, (3) the identity of NG2 expressing cells, and (4) the generation of NG2-positive cells were studied in the rat fascia dentata before and following entorhinal deafferentation. Laser microdissection was employed to selectively harvest the denervated molecular layer and combined with quantitative reverse transcription-PCR to measure changes in NG2 mRNA amount (6h, 12h, 2d, 4d, 7d post lesion). The study revealed increases of NG2 mRNA at day 2 (2.5-fold) and day 4 (2-fold) post lesion. Immunocytochemistry was used to detect changes in NG2 protein distribution (1d, 4d, 7d, 10d, 14d, 30d, 6 months post lesion). NG2 staining was increased in the denervated outer molecular layer at 1 day post lesion, reached a maximum at 10 days post lesion, and returned to control levels within 6 month. Interestingly, the accumulation of NG2 protein was strongly restricted to the denervated outer molecular layer forming a border to the unaffected inner molecular layer. Using electron microscopy, NG2-immunoprecipitate was localized not only on glial surfaces and in the extracellular matrix but also in the vicinity of neuronal profiles indicating that NG2 is secreted following denervation. Double-labelings of NG2-immunopositive cells with markers for astrocytes, microglia/macrophages, and oligodendrocytes suggested that NG2-cells are a distinct glial subpopulation before and after entorhinal deafferentation. Bromodeoxyuridine-labeling revealed that some of the NG2-positive cells are postlesional generated. Taken together, the data revealed a layer-specific upregulation of NG2 in the denervated outer molecular layer of the fascia dentata that coincides with the sprouting response of uninjured fibers. This suggests that NG2 could regulate lesion-induced axonal growth in denervated areas of the brain.
In this dissertation a non-deterministic lambda-calculus with call-by-need evaluation is treated. Call-by-need means that subexpressions are evaluated at most once and only if their value must be known to compute the overall result. Also called "sharing", this technique is inevitable for an efficient implementation. In the lambda-ND calculus of chapter 3 sharing is represented explicitely by a let-construct. Above, the calculus has function application, lambda abstractions, sequential evaluation and pick for non-deterministic choice. Non-deterministic lambda calculi play a major role as a theoretical foundation for concurrent processes or side-effected input/output. In this work, non-determinism additionally makes visible when sharing is broken. Based on the bisimulation method this work develops a notion of equality which respects sharing. Using bisimulation to establish contextual equivalence requires substitutivity within contexts, i.e., the ability to "replace equals by equals" within every program or term. This property is called congruence or precongruence if it applies to a preorder. The open similarity of chapter 4 represents a new concept, insofar that the usual definition of a bisimulation is impossible in the lambda-ND calculus. So in section 3.2 a further calculus lambda-Approx has to be defined. Section 3.3 contains the proof of the so-called Approximation Theorem which states that the evaluation in lambda-ND and lambda-Approx agrees. The foundation for the non-trivial precongruence proof is set out in chapter 2 where the trailblazing method of Howe is extended to be capable with sharing. By the use of this (extended) method, the Precongruence Theorem proves open similarity to be a precongruence, involving the so-called precongruence candidate relation. Joining with the Approximation Theorem we obtain the Main Theorem which says that open similarity of the lambda-Approx calculus is contained within the contextual preorder of the lambda-ND calculus. However, this inclusion is strict, a property whose non-trivial proof involves the notion of syntactic continuity. Finally, chapter 6 discusses possible extensions of the base calculus such as recursive bindings or case and constructors. As a fundamental study the calculus lambda-ND provides neither of these concepts, since it was intentionally designed to keep the proofs as simple as possible. Section 6.1 illustrates that the addition case and constructors could be accomplished without big hurdles. However, recursive bindings cannot be represented simply by a fixed point combinator like Y, thus further investigations are necessary.
Jet physics in ALICE
(2005)
This work aims at the performance of the ALICE detector for the measurement of high-energy jets at mid-pseudo-rapidity in ultra-relativistic nucleus-nucleus collisions at LHC and their potential for the characterization of the partonic matter created in these collisions. In our approach, jets at high energy with E_{T}>50 GeV are reconstructed with a cone jet finder, as typically done for jet measurements in hadronic collisions. Within the ALICE framework we study its capabilities of measuring high-energy jets and quantify obtainable rates and the quality of reconstruction, both, in proton-proton and in lead-lead collisions at LHC conditions. In particular, we address whether modification of the jet fragmentation in the charged-particle sector can be detected within the high particle-multiplicity environment of the central lead-lead collisions. We comparatively treat these topics in view of an EMCAL proposed to complete the central ALICE tracking detectors. The main activities concerning the thesis are the following: a) Determination of the potential for exclusive jet measurements in ALICE. b) Determination of jet rates that can be acquired with the ALICE setup. c) Development of a parton-energy loss model. d) Simulation and study of the energy-loss effect on jet properties.
This thesis has explored how structural techniques can be applied to the problem of formal verification for sequential circuits. Algorithms for formal verification which operate on non-canonical gate netlist representations of digital circuits have certain advantages over the traditional techniques based on canonical representations as BDDs. They allow to exploit problem-specific knowledge because they can take into account structural properties of the designs being analyzed. This allows us to break the problem down into sub-problems which are (hopefully) easier to be solved. However, in the past, the main application of such structural techniques was in the field of combinational equivalence checking. One reason for this is that the behaviour of a sequential system does not only depend on its inputs but also on its internal states, and no concepts had been developed to-date allowing structural methods to deal with large sets of states. An important goal of this research was therefore to develop structural, non-canonical forms of representing the reachable states of a finite state machine and to develop methods for reachability analysis based on such representations. In order to reach this goal, two steps were taken. Firstly, a framework for manipulating Boolean functions represented as gate netlists has been established. Secondly, using this framework, a structural method for FSM traversal was developed serving as the basis for an equivalence checking algorithm for sequential circuits. The framework for manipulating Boolean functions represented as multi-level combinational networks is based on a new concept of an implicant in a multi-level network and on an AND/ORtype enumeration technique which allows us to derive such implicants. This concept extends the classical notion of an implicant in two-level circuits to the multi-level case. Using this notion, arbitrary transformations in multi-level combinational networks can be performed. The multi-level network implicants can be determined from AND/OR reasoning graphs, which are associated with an AND/OR reasoning technique operating directly on the gate netlist description of a multi-level circuit. This reasoning technique has the important property that it is complete, i.e. the associated AND/OR trees contain all prime implicants of a Boolean function at an arbitrary node in a combinational circuit. In other words, AND/OR graphs constructed for a network function serve as a representation of this function. A great advantage over BDDs is that AND/OR graphs, besides representing the logic function, also represent some structural properties of the analyzed circuitry. This permits to develop heuristics that are specially tailored for certain applications such as logic optimization or verification. Another advantage which is especially useful for logic optimization is the fact that the proposed AND/OR enumeration scheme is not restricted to the use of a specific logic alphabet such as B3 = {0, 1, X}. By using Roth’s D-calculus based on B5 = {0, 1, D, D-Komplement} permissible implicants can be determined. Transformations based on permissible implicants exploit observability don’t-care conditions in logic synthesis by creating permissible functions at internal network nodes. In order to evaluate the new structural framework for manipulating Boolean functions represented as gate netlists, several experiments with implicant-based optimization of multi-level circuits were performed. The results show that implicant-based circuit transformations lead to significantly better optimization results than traditional synthesis techniques. Next, based on the proposed structural methods for Boolean function manipulation, techniques for representing and manipulating the set of states of a sequential circuit have been developed. The concept of a “stub circuit” was introduced which implicitly represents a set of state vectors as the range of a multi-output function given as a gate netlist. The stub circuit is the result of an existential quantification operation which is obtained by functional decomposition using implicant-based netlist transformations and a network cutting procedure. Using this existential quantification operation, a new structural FSM traversal algorithm was formulated which performs a fixed point iteration on the set of reachable states represented by the stub circuit. The proposed approach performs a reachability analysis of the states of a sequential circuit. It operates on gate netlists and naturally allows to incorporate structural properties of a design under consideration into the reasoning. Therefore, structural FSM traversal is an interesting alternative to traditional symbolic FSM traversal, especially in those applications of formal verification, where structural properties can be exploited. Structural FSM traversal was applied to the problem of sequential equivalence checking. Here, structural similarities between the designs to be compared can effectively reduce the complexity of the verification task. The FSM to be traversed is a special product machine called sequential miter. The special structural properties of this product machine have made it possible to formulate an approximate algorithm for structural FSM traversal, called record and play(). This algorithm uses an approximation on the reachable state set represented by the stub circuit which is very beneficial for performance. Instead of calculating the stub circuit using the exact algorithm, implicant-based transformations directly using structural design similarities are performed. These transformations, together with existential quantification implemented by the cutting procedure, lead to an over-approximation of the reachable state set. By this overapproximation, only such unreachable product states are added to the set of states represented by the stub circuit which are unreachable at the current point in time but which are nevertheless equivalent. Therefore, more product states are added to the set of reachable states sometimes leading to drastic acceleration of the traversal, i.e. the fixed point is reached in much fewer steps. The algorithm record and play() was applied to the problem of checking the equivalence of a circuit with its optimized and retimed version. Retiming is a form of sequential circuit optimization which can radically alter the state encoding of a circuit. Traditional FSM traversal techniques often fail because the BDDs needed to represent the reachable state set and the transition relation of the product machine become too large. Experiments were conducted to evaluate the performance of record and play() on a standard set of sequential benchmark circuits. The algorithm was capable of proving the equivalence of optimized and retimed circuits with their original versions, some of which (to our knowledge) have never before been verified using traditional techniques like symbolic FSM traversal. The experimental results are very promising. Future research will therefore explore how structural FSM traversal can be applied to model checking.
The results presented here strongly indicate that ubiquitination of the recombinant human alpha1 GlyR at the plasma membrane of Xenopus oocytes is involved in receptor internalisation and degradation. Ubiquitination of the human alpha1 GlyR has been demonstrated by radio-iodination of plasma membrane-boundalpha1 GlyRs, whose subunits differed in molecular weight by additional 7, 14 or 21 kDa, corresponding to the molecular weights of one, two and three conjugated ubiquitin molecules, respectively, and by co-isolation of the non-tagged human alpha1 GlyR through hexahistidyl-tagged ubiquitin. Ubiquitin conjugated GlyRs where prominent at the plasma membrane, but could be hardly detected in total cell homogenates, indicating that ubiquitination takes place exclusively at the plasma membrane. Ubiquitination of the alpha1 GlyR at the plasma membrane was no longer detectable when the ten lysine residues of the cytoplasmic loop between transmembrane segments M3 and M4 were replaced by arginines. Despite this proteolytic cleavage continued to take place at the same extent as with the wild type alpha1 GlyR, suggesting that removal of GlyRs from the plasma membrane and routing to lysosomes for degradation were not dependent on ubiquitination. Also replacing a tyrosine in position 339, which was speculated to be part of an additional endocytosis motif, did not lead to a significant reduction of cleavage of the GlyR alpha1 subunits. However, a mutant lacking both, ubiquitination sites and 339Y, was significantly less processed. These results may suggest that the GlyR alpha1 subunit harbors at least two endocytosis motifs, which may act independently to regulate the density of alpha1 GlyR. Apparently, each of the two signals may be capable of compensating entirely the loss of the other. Part two of this Dissertation demonstrates that the correct topology of the glycine receptor alpha1 subunit depends critically on six positively charged residues within a basic cluster, RFRRKRR, located in the large cytoplasmic loop following the C-terminal end of M3. Neutralization of one or more charges of this cluster, but not of other charged residues in the M3-M4 loop, led to an aberrant translocation into the endoplasmic reticulum lumen of the M3-M4 loop. However, when two of the three basic charges located in the ectodomain linking M2 and M3 were neutralized, in addition to two charges of the basic cluster, endoplasmic reticulum disposition of the M3-M4 loop was prevented. We conclude that a high density of basic residues C-terminal to M3 is required to compensate for the presence of positively charged residues in the M2-M3 ectodomain, which otherwise impair correct membrane integration of the M3 segment. Part three of this Dissertation describes my contribution (blue native PAGE analysis of metabolically labeled alpha7 and 5HT3A receptors and the examination of the glycosylation state of metabolically labeled alpha7 subunits) to a work on the limited assembly capacity of Xenopus oocytes for nicotinic alpha7 subunits. While 5HT3A subunits combined efficiently to pentamers, alpha7 subunits existed in various assembly states including trimers, tetramers, pentamers, and aggregates. Only alpha7 subunits that completed the assembly process to homopentamers acquired complex-type carbohydrates and appeared at the cell surface. We conclude that Xenopus oocytes have a limited capacity to guide the assembly of alpha7 subunits, but not 5HT3A subunits to homopentamers. Accordingly, ER retention of imperfectly assembled alpha7 subunits rather than inefficient routing of fully assembled alpha7 receptors to the cell surface limits surface expression levels of alpha7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. Part four of this Dissertation describes my contribution (the biochemical analysis of the human P2X2 and P2X6 subtypes) to studies on the quaternary structure of P2X receptors. Armaz Aschrafi, the main author of the paper showed that subsequent to isolation under non-denaturing conditions from Xenopus oocytes the His-rP2X2 protein migrated on blue native PAGE predominantly in an aggregated form. The only discrete protein band detectable could be assigned to homotrimers of the His-rP2X2 subunit. Because of the exceptional assembly-behaviour of the rP2X2 protein compared to the rP2X1, rP2X3, rP2X4 and rP2X5 proteins, its human orthologue was investigated in the same manner. In contrast to rP2X2 subunits, hP2X2 subunits migrated under virtually identical conditions in a single defined assembly state, which could be clearly assigned to a trimer. P2X6 subunits represent the sole P2X subtype that is unable to form functional homomeric receptors in Xenopus oocytes. The blue native PAGE analysis of metabolically labeled hP2X6 receptors and the examination of the glycosylation state revealed that hP2X6 subunits form tetramers and aggregates that are not exported to the plasma membrane of Xenopus oocytes.
In the present work, the Heidelberg electron beam ion trap (EBIT) at the Max-Planck-Institute für Kernphysik (MPIK) has been used to produce, trap highly charged argon ions and study their magnetic dipole (M1) forbidden transitions. These transitions are of relativistic origin and, hence, provide unique possibilities to perform precise studies of relativistic effects in many electron systems. In this way, the transitions energies of the 1s22s22p for the 2P3/2 - 2P1/2 transition in Ar13+ and the 1s22s2p for the 3P1 - 3P2 transition in Ar14+, for 36Ar and 40Ar isotopes were compared. The observed isotopic effect has confirmed the relativistic nuclear recoil effect corrections due to the finite nuclear mass in a recent calculation made by Tupitsyn [TSC03], in which major inconsistencies of earlier theoretical methods have been corrected for the first time. The finite mass, or recoil effect, composed of the normal mass shift (NMS), and the specific mass shift (SMS) were corrected for relativistic contributions, RNMS and RSMS. The present experimental results have shown that the recoil effects on the Breit level are indeed very important, as well as the effects of the correlated relativistic dynamics in a many electron ion.
This thesis examines the spread and promotion of English on a global level, from a historical perspective in particular ‘Third World’ contexts. The globalization of English as an exclusive language of power is considered to be a trap, when accompanied by an ideology aiming to universalize monolingual and monocultural norms and standards. World-wide English diffusion is related - not to any mystical effects of some psycho-social mechanisms or transmuting alchemy - but to a global rise of military, political, economic, communicational and cultural Euro-American hegemony. The fact that the English language has become perhaps the primary medium of social control and power has not been given a prominent place in the analyses of established social scientists or political planners. On the contrary, the positively idealized dominance of English as a universal medium has become part of a collection of myths seeking to deny the global reality of multilingualism. Not allowing for the existence of any power besides itself, the perpetuation of this hegemony of English within a multilingual scenario has become a contradiction in terms. Centuries of colonialism, followed by neo-colonialism, are seen to have resulted in a world-wide consensus favouring centralization and homogenization of state and world economies, administrations, language, education and mass media systems, as prerequisites to local and global unity. The particular case of India as encountered by a colonizing Britain is used to illustrate the historical clash between differing language and educational traditions and cultures. It was on the strength of their own predominantly positive attitudes towards diversity - encoded in their promotion of complex social and religious philosophies, as well as varied economic and educational practices of pluralism and hierarchy-without-imposition, unity in diversity, etc. - that the people and their leaders finally achieved Indian independence from British colonialism. Contemporary Indian society, however, is still grappling with the legacy of a Eurocentric civilizational model - encoded in the neo-colonial system of English education - and in conflict with its own positively idealized and actively promoted traditions of pluralism. On national and international levels, the destabilization and destruction of diversity continues to threaten more than the linguistic and cultural uniqueness of numerous communities and individuals. For those majorities and minorities who refuse to give up their ‘differences’, political, economic and physical survival is at stake. A paradoxical reality, seldom acknowledged, is that while for the politically and economically already powerful language groups, the enormous resources spent on formal (language) education have become a means to maintain their material and political capital, whereas for the majority of modern societies' marginalized members, powerful linguistic barriers to full economic or political participation remain firmly in place. The justifications for perpetuating exclusionary policies and sustaining structural inequality have come from monocultural ideological assumptions in education and language policies as one of the key mechanisms for state control of labour. This thesis concludes that the trap of an ideologically exclusive status for English can be avoided by theoretically positivizing and institutionally promoting existing multilingual and multicultural peoples’ realities as an integral part of their human rights, in order to resist global Englishization.
Different numerical approaches and algorithms arising in the context of modelling of cellular tissue evolution are discussed in this thesis. Being suited in particular to off-lattice agent-based models, the numerical tool of three-dimensional weighted kinetic and dynamic Delaunay triangulations is introduced and discussed for its applicability to adjacency detection. As there exists no implementation of a code that incorporates all necessary features for tissue modelling, algorithms for incremental insertion or deletion of points in Delaunay triangulations and the restoration of the Delaunay property for triangulations of moving point sets are introduced. In addition, the numerical solution of reaction-diffusion equations and their connection to agent-based cell tissue simulations is discussed. In order to demonstrate the applicability of the numerical algorithms, biological problems are studied for different model systems: For multicellular tumour spheroids, the weighted Delaunay triangulation provides a great advantage for adjacency detection, but due to the large cell numbers the model used for the cell-cell interaction has to be simplified to allow for a numerical solution. The agent-based model reproduces macroscopic experimental signatures, but some parameters cannot be fixed with the data available. A much simpler, but in key properties analogous, continuum model based on reaction-diffusion equations is likewise capable of reproducing the experimental data. Both modelling approaches make differing predictions on non-quantified experimental signatures. In the case of the epidermis, a smaller system is considered which enables a more complete treatment of the equations of motion. In particular, a control mechanism of cell proliferation is analysed. Simple assumptions suffice to explain the flow equilibrium observed in the epidermis. In addition, the effect of adhesion on the survival chances of cancerous cells is studied. For some regions in parameter space, stochastic effects may completely alter the outcome. The findings stress the need of establishing a defined experimental model to fix the unknown model parameters and to rule out further models.
My graduate thesis is on the "Structural studies of membrane transport proteins". Transporters are membrane proteins that have multiple membrane-spanning a-helices. They are dynamic and diverse proteins, undergoing a large conformational change and transporting wide range of susbtrates. Based on their energy source they can be classified into primary and secondary transport systems. Primary transport systems are driven by the use of chemical (ATP) or light energy, while secondary transporters utilize ion gradients to transport substrates. I began my PhD dissertation on secondary transporters by two-dimensional crystallization and electron crystallographic analysis and recently my focus also has shifted towards 3D crystallization. The following projects constitute my PhD thesis: 1) 2D crystallization of MjNhaP1 and pH induced structural change: MjNhaP1, a Na+/H+ antiporter that is regulated by pH has been implicated in homeostasis of H+ and Na+ in Methanococcus jannaschii, a hyperthermophilic archaeon that grows optimally at 85°C. MjNhaP1 was cloned and expressed in E. coli. Two-dimensional crystals were obtained from purified protein at pH4. Electron cryo-microscopy yielded an 8Å projection map. The map of MjNhaP1 shows elongated densities in the centre of the dimer and a cluster of density peaks on either side of the dimer core, indicative of a bundle of 4-6 membrane-spanning helices. The effect of pH on the structure of MjNhaP1was studied in situ in 2D crystals revealing a major change in density within the helix bundle relative to the dimer interface. This change occurred at pH6 and above. The two conformations at low and high pH most likely represent the closed and open states of the antiporter, respectively. This is the first instance where a conformational change associated with the regulation of a secondary transporter appears to map structurally. Reconstruction of 3D map and high-resolution structure by x-ray crystallography would be necessary to understand the mechanism of ion transport and regulation by pH. 2) 2D crystallization of Proline transporter: Proline transporter (PutP) from E.coli belongs the sodium-solute symporter family that includes disease related sodium dependent glucose and iodide transporter in humans. Sodium and proline are co-transported with a stoichiometry of 1:1. Purified PutP was reconstituted to yield 2D crystals that were hexagonal in nature. The 2D crystals had tendency to stack indicating their willingness to form 3D crystals. A projection map of PutP from negatively stained crystals showed trimeric arrangement of protein. Other members of the SSF family have been shown to be monomers. My analysis of oligomeric state of PutP in detergent by blue native gel indicates a monomer in detergent solution. It is likely that PutP can function as a monomer but at higher concentration and in lipid bilayer it tends to form trimer. 3) Oligomeric state and crystallization of carnitine transporter from E.coli: E.coli carnitine transporter (CaiT) belongs to the BCCT (Betaine, Carnitine and Choline) superfamily that transports molecules with quaternary amine groups. CaiT is predicted to span the membrane 12 times and acts as a L-carnitine/g-butyrobetaine exchanger. Unlike other members in this transporter family, it does not require an ion gradient and does not respond to osmotic stress. Over-expression of the protein yielded ~2mg of protein/L of culture. The structure and oligomeric state of the protein were analyzed in detergent and lipid bilayers. Blue native gel electrophoresis indicated that CaiT was a trimer in detergent solution. Gel filtration and cross-linking studies further support this. Reconstitution of CaiT into lipid bilayers resulted in 2D crystals. Analysis of negatively stained 2D crystals confirmed that CaiT is a trimer in the membrane. Initial 3D crystallization trials have been successful and currently, the crystals diffract to 6Å and are being improved. 4) Monomeric porin OmpG: OmpG is a bacterial outer membrane b-barrel protein. It is monomeric and its size (33kDa) places it as a prime candidate for a structural solution, using the recently developed method of solid state NMR (work in collaboration with Prof.Hartmut Oskinat, FMP, Berlin). A long-term aim would be to study porins as templates for designing nanopores, for DNA sequencing and identification. I have expressed OmpG in inclusion bodies and refolded at an efficiency of >90% into a functional form using detergent. OmpG was then crystallized by 2D crystallization yielding an 8Å projection map whose structure was similar to native protein. In addition, these crystals were used for structure determination by solid state NMR. An initial spectrum of heavy isotopically labeled OmpG has allowed identification of specific amino acid residues including threonine and proline. Additionally, I obtained 3D crystals in detergent that diffract to 5.5Å and are being improved.
Protein-protein interactions within the plane of cellular membranes play a key role for many biological processes and in particular for transmembrane signaling. A prominent example is the ligand-induced crosslinking of cytokine receptors, where 3- dimensional cytokine binding followed by 2-dimensional interaction between the receptor subunits have been recognized to be important for regulating signaling specificity. The fundamental importance of such coupled interactions for cell-surface receptor activation has stimulated numerous theoretical studies, which have hardly been confirmed experimentally. An experimental approach to measure interactions and real time kinetics of type I interferon (IFN) induced assembly between interferon receptor subunits ifnar2 and ifnar1 on membrane was developed and determinants of the 2-dimensional interactions, such as dimensionality, size, valency, orientation, membrane fluidity and receptor density were quantitatively addressed The C-terminal decahistidine tagged extracellular domains (EC) of ifnar1 and ifnar2 were site- specifically tethered onto solid-supported fluid lipid membrane, which carried covalently attached chelator bis-nitrilotriacetic acid (bis-NTA) groups. Interactions on the lipid bilayer were detected with a novel solid phase detection technique, which allows simultaneous detection of ligand binding to a membrane anchored receptors and lateral interaction between them in the real time. This was achieved by combining two optical techniques: label-free reflectance interferometry (RIf) and total internal reflection fluorescence spectroscopy (TIRFS). Fluorescence signals, in the order of 10 fluorophores/µm2, were detected without substantial photobleaching. The sensitivity of the label-free interferometric detection was in the range of 10 pg/mm2. The crosstalk between the two signals was eliminated by means of spectral separation. Fluorescence was detected in the visible region and RIf was performed at 800 nm in the near infrared. Flow through conditions allowed to automate experiments and measure binding events as fast as ~ 5 s-1. Using this technique we have dissected the interactions involved in IFN-induced ifnar crosslinking. 2-dimensional association and dissociation rate constants were independently determined by tethering high stoichiometric excess of one of the receptor subunits and comparing dissociation of the labelled ligand away from the membrane in the absence and presence of the non-labelled high affinity competitor. Dissociation traces were fitted with the two-step dissociation model: the first step being the 2-dimensional separation of the ternary complex followed by the 3- dimensional ligand dissociation into solution. Label-free RIf detection allowed absolute parameterization of the 2-dimensional concentrations of the ifnar subunits on the membrane. The TIRFS signal provided high sensitivity of the ligand dissociation and was correlated against the RIf signal before fitting. These features of the detection system allowed us to parameterize the model, and the 2-dimensional association or dissociation rate constants were the only variables during the fitting. Another FRET based binding assay was developed to determine the 2- dimensional dissociation rate constant using a pulse-chase approach. The donor fluorescence from ifnar2-EC was quenched upon the ternary complex formation with the acceptor-labelled IFN and the nonlabelled ifnar1-EC. The equilibrium was perturbed by rapid tethering of substantial excess of the nonlabelled ifnar2-EC onto the membrane. The exchange of the labelled ifnar2-EC with the nonlabelled one was monitored as the decrease in the FRET signal with the 2-dimensional dissociation of ifnar2-EC from the ternary complex being the rate limiting step. Based on the several mutants and variants of the interacting proteins, the effect of different rate constants and receptor orientation on the 2-dimensional crosslinking dynamics was studied. We have identified several critical features of the 2- dimensional interactions on membranes, which cannot be readily concluded from the solution binding assays. The restricted rotation and the increased lifetime of the encounter complex due to high membrane viscosity are the main determinants of the 2-dimensional association. Tethering ifnar1-EC to the membrane via N-terminal decahistidine tag decreased the 2-dimensional association rate constant 4-5 fold. Electrostatic attraction and steering, the important mechanism to enhance association rate constant between the soluble proteins, are not pronounced for interactions on the membrane. Protein orientation due to membrane anchoring dominates over electrostatic effects and together with the increased lifetime of the encounter complex consequence that 2-dimensional association rate constants are quite similar and do not correlate with association rate constants in solution. The 2- dimensional dissociation rate constants were generally 2-5-fold lower compared to the corresponding 3-dimensional dissociation rate constants in solution. Possible explanations for this are that long lifetime of the encounter complex stabilizes the ternary complex or that membrane tethering affects the interaction diagram. In conclusion, combined TIRFS-RIf detection turn to be powerful and versatile technique to characterize protein-protein interactions on membranes.
Virtual screening of potential bioactive substances using the support vector machine approach
(2005)
Die vorliegende Dissertation stellt eine kumulative Arbeit dar, die in insgesamt acht wissenschaftlichen Publikationen (fünf publiziert, zwei eingerichtet und eine in Vorbereitung) dargelegt ist. In diesem Forschungsprojekt wurden Anwendungen von maschinellem Lernen für das virtuelle Screening von Moleküldatenbanken durchgeführt. Das Ziel war primär die Einführung und Überprüfung des Support-Vector-Machine (SVM) Ansatzes für das virtuelle Screening nach potentiellen Wirkstoffkandidaten. In der Einleitung der Arbeit ist die Rolle des virtuellen Screenings im Wirkstoffdesign beschrieben. Methoden des virtuellen Screenings können fast in jedem Bereich der gesamten pharmazeutischen Forschung angewendet werden. Maschinelles Lernen kann einen Einsatz finden von der Auswahl der ersten Moleküle, der Optimierung der Leitstrukturen bis hin zur Vorhersage von ADMET (Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism, Toxicity) Eigenschaften. In Abschnitt 4.2 werden möglichen Verfahren dargestellt, die zur Beschreibung von chemischen Strukturen eingesetzt werden können, um diese Strukturen in ein Format zu bringen (Deskriptoren), das man als Eingabe für maschinelle Lernverfahren wie Neuronale Netze oder SVM nutzen kann. Der Fokus ist dabei auf diejenigen Verfahren gerichtet, die in der vorliegenden Arbeit verwendet wurden. Die meisten Methoden berechnen Deskriptoren, die nur auf der zweidimensionalen (2D) Struktur basieren. Standard-Beispiele hierfür sind physikochemische Eigenschaften, Atom- und Bindungsanzahl etc. (Abschnitt 4.2.1). CATS Deskriptoren, ein topologisches Pharmakophorkonzept, sind ebenfalls 2D-basiert (Abschnitt 4.2.2). Ein anderer Typ von Deskriptoren beschreibt Eigenschaften, die aus einem dreidimensionalen (3D) Molekülmodell abgeleitet werden. Der Erfolg dieser Beschreibung hangt sehr stark davon ab, wie repräsentativ die 3D-Konformation ist, die für die Berechnung des Deskriptors angewendet wurde. Eine weitere Beschreibung, die wir in unserer Arbeit eingesetzt haben, waren Fingerprints. In unserem Fall waren die verwendeten Fingerprints ungeeignet zum Trainieren von Neuronale Netzen, da der Fingerprintvektor zu viele Dimensionen (~ 10 hoch 5) hatte. Im Gegensatz dazu hat das Training von SVM mit Fingerprints funktioniert. SVM hat den Vorteil im Vergleich zu anderen Methoden, dass sie in sehr hochdimensionalen Räumen gut klassifizieren kann. Dieser Zusammenhang zwischen SVM und Fingerprints war eine Neuheit, und wurde von uns erstmalig in die Chemieinformatik eingeführt. In Abschnitt 4.3 fokussiere ich mich auf die SVM-Methode. Für fast alle Klassifikationsaufgaben in dieser Arbeit wurde der SVM-Ansatz verwendet. Ein Schwerpunkt der Dissertation lag auf der SVM-Methode. Wegen Platzbeschränkungen wurde in den beigefügten Veröffentlichungen auf eine detaillierte Beschreibung der SVM verzichtet. Aus diesem Grund wird in Abschnitt 4.3 eine vollständige Einführung in SVM gegeben. Darin enthalten ist eine vollständige Diskussion der SVM Theorie: optimale Hyperfläche, Soft-Margin-Hyperfläche, quadratische Programmierung als Technik, um diese optimale Hyperfläche zu finden. Abschnitt 4.3 enthält auch eine Diskussion von Kernel-Funktionen, welche die genaue Form der optimalen Hyperfläche bestimmen. In Abschnitt 4.4 ist eine Einleitung in verschiede Methoden gegeben, die wir für die Auswahl von Deskriptoren genutzt haben. In diesem Abschnitt wird der Unterschied zwischen einer „Filter“- und der „Wrapper“-basierten Auswahl von Deskriptoren herausgearbeitet. In Veröffentlichung 3 (Abschnitt 7.3) haben wir die Vorteile und Nachteile von Filter- und Wrapper-basierten Methoden im virtuellen Screening vergleichend dargestellt. Abschnitt 7 besteht aus den Publikationen, die unsere Forschungsergebnisse enthalten. Unsere erste Publikation (Veröffentlichung 1) war ein Übersichtsartikel (Abschnitt 7.1). In diesem Artikel haben wir einen Gesamtüberblick der Anwendungen von SVM in der Bio- und Chemieinformatik gegeben. Wir diskutieren Anwendungen von SVM für die Gen-Chip-Analyse, die DNASequenzanalyse und die Vorhersage von Proteinstrukturen und Proteininteraktionen. Wir haben auch Beispiele beschrieben, wo SVM für die Vorhersage der Lokalisation von Proteinen in der Zelle genutzt wurden. Es wird dabei deutlich, dass SVM im Bereich des virtuellen Screenings noch nicht verbreitet war. Um den Einsatz von SVM als Hauptmethode unserer Forschung zu begründen, haben wir in unserer nächsten Publikation (Veröffentlichung 2) (Abschnitt 7.2) einen detaillierten Vergleich zwischen SVM und verschiedenen neuronalen Netzen, die sich als eine Standardmethode im virtuellen Screening etabliert haben, durchgeführt. Verglichen wurde die Trennung von wirstoffartigen und nicht-wirkstoffartigen Molekülen („Druglikeness“-Vorhersage). Die SVM konnte 82% aller Moleküle richtig klassifizieren. Die Klassifizierung war zudem robuster als mit dreilagigen feedforward-ANN bei der Verwendung verschiedener Anzahlen an Hidden-Neuronen. In diesem Projekt haben wir verschiedene Deskriptoren zur Beschreibung der Moleküle berechnet: Ghose-Crippen Fragmentdeskriptoren [86], physikochemische Eigenschaften [9] und topologische Pharmacophore (CATS) [10]. Die Entwicklung von weiteren Verfahren, die auf dem SVM-Konzept aufbauen, haben wir in den Publikationen in den Abschnitten 7.3 und 7.8 beschrieben. Veröffentlichung 3 stellt die Entwicklung einer neuen SVM-basierten Methode zur Auswahl von relevanten Deskriptoren für eine bestimmte Aktivität dar. Eingesetzt wurden die gleichen Deskriptoren wie in dem oben beschriebenen Projekt. Als charakteristische Molekülgruppen haben wir verschiedene Untermengen der COBRA Datenbank ausgewählt: 195 Thrombin Inhibitoren, 226 Kinase Inhibitoren und 227 Faktor Xa Inhibitoren. Es ist uns gelungen, die Anzahl der Deskriptoren von ursprünglich 407 auf ungefähr 50 zu verringern ohne signifikant an Klassifizierungsgenauigkeit zu verlieren. Unsere Methode haben wir mit einer Standardmethode für diese Anwendung verglichen, der Kolmogorov-Smirnov Statistik. Die SVM-basierte Methode erwies sich hierbei in jedem betrachteten Fall als besser als die Vergleichsmethoden hinsichtlich der Vorhersagegenauigkeit bei der gleichen Anzahl an Deskriptoren. Eine ausführliche Beschreibung ist in Abschnitt 4.4 gegeben. Dort sind auch verschiedene „Wrapper“ für die Deskriptoren-Auswahl beschrieben. Veröffentlichung 8 beschreibt die Anwendung von aktivem Lernen mit SVM. Die Idee des aktiven Lernens liegt in der Auswahl von Molekülen für das Lernverfahren aus dem Bereich an der Grenze der verschiedenen zu unterscheidenden Molekülklassen. Auf diese Weise kann die lokale Klassifikation verbessert werden. Die folgenden Gruppen von Moleküle wurden genutzt: ACE (Angiotensin converting enzyme), COX2 (Cyclooxygenase 2), CRF (Corticotropin releasing factor) Antagonisten, DPP (Dipeptidylpeptidase) IV, HIV (Human immunodeficiency virus) protease, Nuclear Receptors, NK (Neurokinin receptors), PPAR (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor), Thrombin, GPCR und Matrix Metalloproteinasen. Aktives Lernen konnte die Leistungsfähigkeit des virtuellen Screenings verbessern, wie sich in dieser retrospektiven Studie zeigte. Es bleibt abzuwarten, ob sich das Verfahren durchsetzen wird, denn trotzt des Gewinns an Vorhersagegenauigkeit ist es aufgrund des mehrfachen SVMTrainings aufwändig. Die Publikationen aus den Abschnitten 7.5, 7.6 und 7.7 (Veröffentlichungen 5-7) zeigen praktische Anwendungen unserer SVM-Methoden im Wirkstoffdesign in Kombination mit anderen Verfahren, wie der Ähnlichkeitssuche und neuronalen Netzen zur Eigenschaftsvorhersage. In zwei Fällen haben wir mit dem Verfahren neuartige Liganden für COX-2 (cyclooxygenase 2) und dopamine D3/D2 Rezeptoren gefunden. Wir konnten somit klar zeigen, dass SVM-Methoden für das virtuelle Screening von Substanzdatensammlungen sinnvoll eingesetzt werden können. Es wurde im Rahmen der Arbeit auch ein schnelles Verfahren zur Erzeugung großer kombinatorischer Molekülbibliotheken entwickelt, welches auf der SMILES Notation aufbaut. Im frühen Stadium des Wirstoffdesigns ist es wichtig, eine möglichst „diverse“ Gruppe von Molekülen zu testen. Es gibt verschiedene etablierte Methoden, die eine solche Untermenge auswählen können. Wir haben eine neue Methode entwickelt, die genauer als die bekannte MaxMin-Methode sein sollte. Als erster Schritt wurde die „Probability Density Estimation“ (PDE) für die verfügbaren Moleküle berechnet. [78] Dafür haben wir jedes Molekül mit Deskriptoren beschrieben und die PDE im N-dimensionalen Deskriptorraum berechnet. Die Moleküle wurde mit dem Metropolis Algorithmus ausgewählt. [87] Die Idee liegt darin, wenige Moleküle aus den Bereichen mit hoher Dichte auszuwählen und mehr Moleküle aus den Bereichen mit niedriger Dichte. Die erhaltenen Ergebnisse wiesen jedoch auf zwei Nachteile hin. Erstens wurden Moleküle mit unrealistischen Deskriptorwerten ausgewählt und zweitens war unser Algorithmus zu langsam. Dieser Aspekt der Arbeit wurde daher nicht weiter verfolgt. In Veröffentlichung 6 (Abschnitt 7.6) haben wir in Zusammenarbeit mit der Molecular-Modeling Gruppe von Aventis-Pharma Deutschland (Frankfurt) einen SVM-basierten ADME Filter zur Früherkennung von CYP 2C9 Liganden entwickelt. Dieser nichtlineare SVM-Filter erreichte eine signifikant höhere Vorhersagegenauigkeit (q2 = 0.48) als ein auf den gleichen Daten entwickelten PLS-Modell (q2 = 0.34). Es wurden hierbei Dreipunkt-Pharmakophordeskriptoren eingesetzt, die auf einem dreidimensionalen Molekülmodell aufbauen. Eines der wichtigen Probleme im computerbasierten Wirkstoffdesign ist die Auswahl einer geeigneten Konformation für ein Molekül. Wir haben versucht, SVM auf dieses Problem anzuwenden. Der Trainingdatensatz wurde dazu mit jeweils mehreren Konformationen pro Molekül angereichert und ein SVM Modell gerechnet. Es wurden anschließend die Konformationen mit den am schlechtesten vorhergesagten IC50 Wert aussortiert. Die verbliebenen gemäß dem SVM-Modell bevorzugten Konformationen waren jedoch unrealistisch. Dieses Ergebnis zeigt Grenzen des SVM-Ansatzes auf. Wir glauben jedoch, dass weitere Forschung auf diesem Gebiet zu besseren Ergebnissen führen kann.
After a brief introduction on QCD and effective models in the first chapter, I analyze the dependence of the QCD transition temperature on the quark (or pion) mass in the second chapter. I found that a linear sigma model, which links the transition to chiral symmetry restoration, predicts a much stronger dependence of T_c on m_pi than seen in present lattice data for m_pi >~ 0.4 GeV. On the other hand, an effective Lagrangian for the Polyakov loop requires only small explicit symmetry breaking to describe T_c(m_pi) in the above mass range. In the third and fourth chapter, I study the linear sigma model with O(N) symmetry at nonzero temperature in the framework of the Cornwall-Jackiw-Tomboulis formalism. Extending the set of two-particle irreducible diagrams by adding sunset diagrams to the usual Hartree-Fock (or Hartree) contributions, I derive a new approximation scheme which extends the standard Hartree-Fock (or Hartree) approximation by the inclusion of nonzero decay widths.
In the present study possible sources and pathways of the gasoline additive methyl tertiary-butyl ether (MTBE) in the aquatic environment in Germany were investigated. The objective of the present study was to clarify some of the questions raised by a previous study on the MTBE situation in Germany. In the USA and Europe 12 million t and 3 million t of MTBE, respectively, are used as gasoline additive. The detection of MTBE in the aquatic environment and the potential risk for drinking water resources led to a phase-out of MTBE as gasoline additive in single states of the USA. Meanwhile there is also an ongoing discussion about the substitution of MTBE in Europe and Germany. The annual usage of MTBE in Germany is about 600,000 t. However, compared to the USA, significant less data exists on the occurrence of MTBE in the aquatic environment in Europe. Because of its physico-chemical properties, MTBE readily vaporizes from gasoline, is water soluble, adsorbs only weakly to the underground matrix and is largely persistent to biological degradation. The toxicity of MTBE remains to be completely investigated, but MTBE in drinking water has low taste- and odor thresholds of 20-40 microgram/L. The present study was conducted by collecting water samples and analyzing them for their MTBE concentrations through a combination of headspace-solid phase microextraction (HS-SPME) and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). The detection limit was 10 ng/L. The method was successfully tested in the framework of an interlaboratory study and showed recoveries of reference values of 89% (74 ng/L) and 104% (256 ng/L). The relative standard deviations were 12% and 6%. The investigation of 83 water samples from 50 community water systems (CWSs) in Germany revealed a detection frequency of 40% and a concentration range of 17-712 ng/L. The detection of MTBE in the drinking water samples could be explained by a groundwater pollution and the pathway river - riverbank filtration - waterworks. Rivers are important drinking water sources. MTBE is emitted into rivers through a variety of sources. In the present study, potential point sources were investigated, i.e. MTBE production sites/refineries/tank farms and groundwater pollutions. For this purpose, the spatial distribution of MTBE in three German rivers with the named potential emission sources located close to the rivers was investigated by analyzing 49 corresponding river water samples. The influence of the potential emission sources groundwater pollution and refinery/tank farm was successfully demonstrated in certain parts of the River Saale and the River Rhine. Increasing MTBE concentrations from 24 ng/L to 379 ng/L and from 73 ng/L to 5 microgram/L, respectively, could be observed in the parts investigated in these two rivers. The identification of such emission sources is important for future modeling. Further sources of MTBE emission into surface water are industrial (non-petrochemical) and municipal sewage plant effluents. In the present study long-term monitoring of water from the River Main (n=67 samples), precipitation (n=89) and industrial (n=34) and municipal sewage plant effluents (n=66) was conducted. The comparison of the data sets revealed that maximum MTBE concentrations in the River Main of up to 1 microgram/L were most possibly due to single industrial effluents with MTBE concentrations of up to 28 microgram/L (measured in this study). The average MTBE content of 66 ng/L in the River Main most probably originated from municipal sewage plant effluents and further industrial effluents. Background concentrations of <30 ng/L could be related to the direct atmospheric input via precipitation. A certain aspect of the atmospheric MTBE input is represented by the input of MTBE into river water or groundwater through snow. In the present study 43 snow samples from 13 different locations were analyzed for their MTBE content. MTBE could be detected in 65% of the urban and rural samples. The concentrations ranged from 11-613 ng/L and were higher than the concentrations in rainwater samples formerly analyzed. Furthermore, a temperature dependency and wash-out effects could be observed. The atmospheric input of MTBE was in part also visible in the analyzed groundwater samples (n=170). The detection frequencies in non-urban and urban wells were 24% and 63%, respectively. The median concentrations were 177 ng/L and 57 ng/L. In wells located in the vicinity of sites with gasoline contaminated groundwater, MTBE concentrations of up to 42 mg/L could be observed. The MTBE emission sources and the different pathways of MTBE in the aquatic environment demonstrated in the present study and other works raise the question whether the use of MTBE in a bulk product like gasoline should be continued in the future. Currently, possible substitutes like ethyl tertiary-butyl ether (ETBE) or ethanol are being discussed.
Biophysical investigation of the ligand-induced assembling of the human type I interferon receptor
(2005)
Type I interferons (IFNs) elicit antiviral, antiproliferative and immunmodulatory responses through binding to a shared receptor consisting of the transmembrane proteins ifnar1 and ifnar2. Differential signaling by different interferons – in particular IFNalpha´s and IFNbeta – suggest different modes of receptor engagement. In this work either single ligand-receptor interactions or the formation of the extracellular part of a signaling complex were investigated referring to thermodynamics, kinetics, stoichiometry and structural organization. Initially an expression and purification strategy for the extracellular domain of ifnar1 (ifnar1-EC) using Sf9 insect cells yielding in mg amounts of glycosylated protein was established. Using reflectometric interference spectroscopy (RIfS) the interactions between IFNalpha2/beta and ifnar1-EC and ifnar2-EC was studied in order to understand the individual energetic contributions within the ternary complex. For IFNalpha2 a Kd of 5 µM for the interaction with ifnar1-EC was determined. Substantially tighter binding of IFNbeta with both ifnar2-EC and ifnar1-EC compared to IFNalpha2 was observed. For neither IFNalpha2 nor IFNbeta stabilization of the complex with ifnar1-EC in presence of soluble ifnar2-EC was detectable. In addition, no direct interaction between ifnar2 and ifnar1 was could be shown. Thus, stem-stem interactions between the extracellular domains of ifnar1 and ifnar2 do not seem to play a role for ternary complex formation. Furthermore, ligand-induced cross-talk between ifnar1-EC and ifnar2-EC being tethered onto solid-supported, fluid lipid bilayers was investigated by RIfS and total internal reflection fluorescence spectroscopy. A very stable binding of IFNalpha2 at high receptor surface concentrations was observed with an apparent kd approximately 200-times lower than for ifnar2-EC alone. This apparent kd was strongly dependent on the surface concentration of the receptor components, suggesting kinetic rather than static stabilization, which was corroborated by competition experiments. These results indicate that signaling is activated by transient cross-talk between ifnar1 and ifnar2, which is by several orders of magnitude more efficiently engaged by IFNbeta than by IFNalpha2. With respect to differential recognition of different IFNs ifnar1-EC was dissected into sub-fragments containing different of the four Ig-like domains. The appropriate folding and glycosylation of these proteins, also purified in mg amounts were confirmed by SDS-PAGE, size exclusion chromatography and CD-spectroscopy. Surprisingly, only one construct containing all three N-terminal Ig-like domains was active in terms of ligand binding, indicating that these domains were required. Competitive binding of IFNalpha2 and IFNbeta to both this fragment and ifnar1-EC was demonstrated. Cellular binding assays with different fragments, however, highlight the key role of the membrane-proximal Ig-like domain for the formation of an in situ IFN-receptor complex and the ensuing signal activation. Even substitution with Ig-like domains from homologous cytokine receptors did not restore high-affinity ligand binding. Receptor assembling analysis on supported lipid bilayer revealed that appropriate orientation of the receptor is required, which is controlled by the membrane-proximal Ig-domain. All results indicate that differential signalling is encoded by the efficiency of signalling complex formation, which is controlled by the binding affinity of IFNs to the extracellular domains of ifnar1 and 2.
Here I analyse 23 populations of D. galeata, a large-lake cladoceran, distributed mainly across the Palaearctic. I detected high levels of clonal diversity and population differentiation using variation at six microsatellite loci across Europe. Most populations were characterised by deviations from H-W equilibrium and significant heterozygote deficiencies. Observed heterozygote deficiencies might be a consequence of simultaneous hatching of individuals produced during different times of the year or of the coexistence of ecologically and genetically differentiated subpopulations. A significant isolation by distance was only found over large geographic distances (> 700 km). This pattern is mainly due to the high genetic differentiation among neighbouring populations. My results suggest that historic populations of Daphnia were once interconnected by gene flow but current populations are now largely isolated. Thus local ecological conditions which determine the level of biparental sexual reproduction and local adaptation are the main factors mediating population structure of D. galeata. The population genetic structure and diversity in D. galeata was investigated at a European scale using six microsatellite loci and 12S rDNA sequence data to infer and compare historical and contemporary patterns of gene flow. D. galeata has the potential for long-distance dispersal via ephippial resting eggs by wind and other dispersing vectors (waterfowl), but shows in general strong population differentiation even among neighbouring populations. A total of 427 individuals were analysed for microsatellite and 85 individuals for mitochondrial (mtDNA) sequence data from 12 populations across Europe. I detected genetic differentiation among populations across Europe and locations within sampling regions for both genetic marker systems (average values: mtDNA FST = 0.574; microsatellite FST = 0.389), resulting in a lack of isolation by distance. Furthermore, several microsatellite alleles and one haplotype were shared across populations. Partitioning of molecular variance was inconsistant for both marker systems. Microsatellite variation was higher within than among populations, whereas mtDNA data yielded an inverse pattern. Relative high levels of nuclear DNA diversity were found across Europe. The amount of mitochondrial diversity was low in Spain, Hungary and Denmark. Gene flow analysis at a European scale did not reveal typical pattern of population recolonization in the light of postglacial colonization hypotheses. Populations, which recently experienced an expansion or population-bottleneck were observed both in middle and northern Europe. Since these populations revealed high genetic diversity in both marker systems, I suggest these areas to represent postglacial zones of secondary contact among divergent lineages of D. galeata. In order to reveal the relationship between population genetic structure of D. galeata and the relative contribution of environmental factors, I used a statistical framework based on canonical correspondence analysis. Although I detected no single ecological gradient mediating the genetic differentiation in either lake regions, it is noteworthy that the same ecological factors were significantly correlated with intra- and interspecific genetic variation of D. galeata. For example, I found a relationship between genetic variation of D. galeata and differentiation with higher and lower trophic levels (phytoplankton, submerged macrophytes and fish) and a relationship between clonal variation and species diversity within Cladocera. Variance partitioning had only a minor contribution of each environmental category (abiotic, biomass/density and diversity) to genetic diversity of D. galeata, while the largest proportion of variation was explained by shared components. My work illustrates the important role of ecological differentiation and adaptation in structuring genetic variation, and it highlights the need for approaches incorporating a landscape context for population divergence.
Die vorliegende Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit der Charakterisierung des ALTRO Chips (ALICE TPC Readout), der ein integraler und wichtiger Bestandteil der Auslesekette des TPC (Time Projection Chamber) Detektors von ALICE (A Large Ion Collider Experiment) ist. ALICE ist ein Experiment am noch im Bau befindlichen LHC (Large Hadron Collider) am CERN mit der zentralen Ausrichtung, Schwerionenkollisionen zu untersuchen. Diese sind von besonderem Interesse, da durch sie ein experimenteller Zugriff zu dem QGP (Quark Gluon Plasma) existiert, dem einzigen vom Standardmodell vorhergesagten Phasenübergang, der unter Laborbedingungen erreichbar ist. Im Jahr 2004 wurden Messungen an einem Teststrahl am CERN PS (Proton Synchrotron) durchgeführt. Der Prototyp wurde voll mit FECs bestückt, was 5400 Kanälen entspricht und einer anderen Gasmixtur (Ne/N2/CO2 90%/5%/5%) befüllt. Für das optimale Leistungsverhalten der ALICE TPC muß der Digitalprozessor im ALTRO, bestehend aus vier Berechnungseinheiten, mit den passenden Werten konfiguriert werden. Der Datenfluss beginnt mit dem BCS1 (Baseline Correction and Subtraction 1) Modul, das systematische Störungen und die Grundlinie entfernt. Da der ALTRO kontinuierlich das anliegende Signal abtastet, entfernt es automatisch langsame Grundlinienveränderungen, die Beispielsweise durch Temperaturänderungen auftreten können. Gefolgt von dem TCF (Tail Cancellation Filter), der den Schweif des langsam fallenden, vom PASA generierten Signals entfernt. Um die nichtsystematischen Störungen der Grundlinie zu entfernen, folgt die BCS2 (Baseline Correction and Subtraction 2), die auf einer gleitenden Mittelwertsberechnung mit Ausschluß von Detektorsignalen über einen doppelten Schwellenwert basiert. Die finale Einheit für die Signalverarbeitung ist die ZSU (Zero Suppression Unit), die Meßpunkte unterhalb eines definierten Schwellwertes entfernt. Hier wird der weg beschrieben die TCF und BCS1 Parameter aus vorhandenen Detektordaten zu extrahieren. Während der Analyse der Daten von kosmischen Teilchen fiel bei Signalen mit hoher Amplitude (>700 ADC) eine zusätzliche Struktur in dem Schweif auf. Der Monitor wurde deswegen mit einem gleitenden Mittelwertfilter erweitert, worauf sich diese Struktur auch in kleineren Signalen (> 200 ADC) zeigte. Dieses Signal wird von Ionen erzeugt, die zur Kathode oder zu den Pads driften, bisher ist jedoch weder die Streuung der Elektronenlawine an der Anode, noch die Variationsbreite in den erzeugten Elektronlawinen verstanden oder gemessen worden. Eine erfolgreiche Messung, sowie Charakterisierung wird in dieser Arbeit beschrieben. Im Jahr 2005 im Sommer beginnt der Einbau der Gaskammern der TPC in ALICE, die Elektronik folgt am Ende dieses Jahres. Parallel hierzu wurde der Prototyp der TPC wieder in Betrieb genommen und im Frühling wird ein kompletter Sektor mit der Detektorelektronik ausgestattet. An diesen zwei Aufbauten wird die ALTRO Charakterisierung fortgeführt, verfeinert und komplettiert.
Mitochondial NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) the largest multiprotein enzyme of the respiratory chain, catalyses the transfer of two electrons from NADH to ubiquinone, coupled to the translocation of four protons across the membrane. In addition to the 14 strictly conserved central subunits it contains a variable number of accessory subunits. At present, the best characterized enzyme is complex I from bovine heart with a molecular mass of about 980 kDa and 32 accessory proteins. In this study, the subunit composition of mitochondrial complex I from the aerobic yeast Y. lipolytica has been analysed by a combination of proteomic and genomic approaches. The sequences of 37 complex I subunits were identified. The sum of their individual molecular masses (about 930 kDa) was consistent with the native molecular weight of approximately 900 kDa for Y. lipolytica complex I obtained by BN-PAGE. A genomic analysis with Y. lipolytica and other eukaryotic databases to search for homologues of complex I subunits revealed 31 conserved proteins among the examined species. A novel protein named “X” was found in purified Y. lipolytica complex I by MALDI-MS. This protein exhibits homology to the thiosulfate sulfurtransferase enzyme referred to as rhodanese. The finding of a rhodanese-like protein in isolated complex I of Y. lipolytica allows to assume a special regulatory mechanism of complex I activity through control of the status of its iron-sulfur clusters. The second part of this study was aimed at investigating the possible role of one of these extra subunits, 39 kDa (NUEM) subunit which is related to the SDRs-enzyme family. The members of this family function in different redox and isomerization reactions and contain a conserved NAD(P)H-binding site. It was proposed that the 39 kDa subunit may be involved in a biosynthetic pathway, but the role of this subunit in complex I is unknown. In contrast to the situation in N. crassa, deletion of the 39 kDa encoding gene in Y. lipolytica led to the absence of fully assembled complex I. This result might indicate a different pathway of complex I assembly in both organisms. Several site-directed mutations were generated in the nucleotide binding motif. These had either no effect on enzyme activity and NADPH binding, or prevented complex I assembly. Mutations of arginine-65 that is located at the end of the second b-strand and responsible for selective interaction with the 2’-phosphate group of NADPH retained complex I activity in mitochondrial membranes but the affinity for the cofactor was markedly decreased. Purification of complex I from mutants resulted in decrease or loss of ubiquinone reductase activity. It is very likely that replacement of R65 not only led to a decrease in affinity for NADPH but also caused instability of the enzyme due to steric changes in the 39 kDa subunit. These data indicate that NADPH bound to the 39 kDa subunit (NUEM) is not essential for complex I activity, but probably involved in complex I assembly in Y. lipolytica.
The thesis entitled „Investigations on the significance of nucleo-cytoplasmic transport for the biological function of cellular proteins" aimed to unreveal molecular mechanisms in order to improve our understanding of the impact of nucleo-cytoplasmic transport on cellular functions. Within the scope of this work, it could be shown that regulated nucleo-cytoplasmic transport of a subfamily of homeobox transcription factors controlled their intra- and intercellular transport, and thereby influencing also their transcriptional activity. This study describes a novel regulatory mechanism, which could in general play an important role for the ordered differentiation of complex organisms. Besides cis-active transport Signals, also post-translational modifications can influence the localization and biological activity of proteins in trans. In addition to the known impact of phosphorylation on the transport and activity of STAT1, experimental evidence was provided demonstrating that acetylation affected the interaction of STAT1 with NF-kB p65, and subsequently modulated the expression of apoptosis-inducing NF-kB target genes. The impact of nucleo-cytoplasmic transport on the regulation of apoptosis was underlined by showing that the evolutionary conservation of a NES within the anti-apoptotic protein survivin plays an essential role for its dual function in the inhibition of apoptosis and ordered cell division. Since survivin is considered a bona fide cancer therapy target, these results strongly encourage future work to identify molecular decoys that specifically inhibit the nuclear export of survivin as novel therapeutics. In order to further dissect the regulation of nuclear transport and to efficiently identify transport inhibitors, cell-based assays are urgently required. Therefore, the cellular assay Systems developed in this work may not only serve to identify synthetic nuclear export and Import inhibitors but may also be applied in systematic RNAi-screening approaches to identify novel components of the transport machinery. In addition, the translocation based protease- and protein-interaction biosensors can be applied in various biological Systems, in particular to identify protein-protein interaction inhibitors of cancer relevant proteins. In summary, this work does not only underline the general significance of nucleo-cytoplasmic transport for cell biology, but also demonstrates its potential for the development of novel therapies against diseases like cancer and viral infections.
Calcium-activated potassium channels are fundamental regulators of neuron excitability. SK channels are activated by an intracellular increase of Ca++ (such as occurs during an action potential). They have a small single channel conductance (less than 20pS) and show no voltage dependence of activation. To date, there are only a few examples of high-resolution structures of eukaryotic membrane proteins. All of them were purified from natural sources. Since no abundant natural sources of eukaryotic K+ channels are available we overexpressed rSK2 in order to produce the quantities necessary for structural analysis. Unfortunately the Pichia pastoris expression system did not yield sufficient amount of pure protein, mainly because most of the protein was retained by in the ER and was only partially soluble. Subsequently, two constructs were expressed: SK2-FCYENE (containing a specific sequence that promotes surface expression), and SK2-q-CaM a concatamer of SK2 and calmodulin. Although these proved an improvement in terms of solubilisation, little improvement was found in terms of amounts of purified material obtained. For this reason we tested the Semliki Forest virus expression system, since the protein is expressed in a mammalian system where we hoped that it would be trafficked in the same way as in vivo. Using this system it was possible to express rSK2 and solubilise it with several detergents and to achieve much better purification. However, the levels were still not sufficient for high-resolution structural studies, although sufficient for single particle electron microscopy analysis.
Molecular dynamics (MD) simulation serves as an important and widely used computational tool to study molecular systems at an atomic resolution. No experimental technique is capable of generating a complete description of the dynamical structure of the biomolecules in their native solution environment. MD simulations allow us to study the dynamics and structure of the system and, moreover, helps in the interpretation of experimental observations. MD simulation was first introduced and applied by Alder and Wainwright in 1957 \cite{Alder57}. However, the first MD simulation of a macromolecule of biological interest was published 28 years ago \cite{McCammon77}. The simulation was concerned with the bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) protein, which has served as the hydrogen molecule'' of protein dynamics because of its small size, high stability, and relatively accurate X-ray structure available in 1977 \cite{Deisenhofer75}. This method is now widely used to tackle larger and more complex biological systems \cite{Groot01,Roux02} and has been facilitated by the development of fast and efficient methods for treating the long-range electrostatic interactions \cite{Essmann95}, the availability of faster parallel computers, and the continuous development of empirical molecular mechanical force fields \cite{Langley98,Cheatham99,Foloppe00}. It took several years until the first MD simulations of nucleic acid systems were performed \cite{Levitt83,Tidor83,Prabhakaran83,Nilsson86}. These investigations, which were also performed in vacuo, clearly demonstrated the importance of proper handling of electrostatics in a highly charged nucleic acid system, and different approaches, such as reduction of the phosphate charges and addition of hydrated counterions, have been applied to remedy this shortcoming and to maintain stable DNA structures. A few years later, the first MD simulation of a DNA molecule, including explicit water molecules and counterions was published \cite{Seibel85}. Various MD simulations on fully solvated RNA molecules with explicit inclusion of mobile ions indicated the importance of proper treatment of the environment of highly charged nucleic acids \cite{Lee95,Zichi95,Auffinger97,Auffinger99}. Given the central roles of RNA in the life of cells, it is important to understand the mechanism by which RNA forms three dimensional structures endowed with properties such as catalysis, ligand binding, and recognition of proteins. Furthermore, the increasing awareness of the essential role of RNA in controlling viral replication and in bacterial protein synthesis emphazises the potential of ribonucleicacids as targets for developing new antibacterial and new antiviral drugs. Driven by fruitful collaborations in the Sonderforschungsbereich RNA-Ligand interactions" the model RNA systems in this study include various RNA tetraloops and HIV-1 TAR RNA. For the latter system, the binding sites of heteroaromatic compounds have been studied employing automated docking calculations \cite{Goodsell90}. The results show that it is possible to use this tool to dock small rigid ligands to an RNA molecule, while large and flexible molecules are clearly problematic. The main part of this work is focused on MD simulations of RNA tetraloops.
The quinol:fumarate reductase (QFR) is the terminal reductase of anaerobic fumarate respiration, the most commonly occurring type of anaerobic respiration. This membrane protein complex couples the oxidation of menaquinol to menaquinone to the reduction of fumarate to succinate. The three-dimensional crystal structure of the QFR from Wolinella succinogenes has previoulsy been solved at 2.2 Å resolution. Although the diheme-containing QFR from W. succinogenes is known to catalyze an electroneutral process, structural and functional characterization of parental and variant enzymes has revealed active site locations which indicate electrogenic catalysis across the membrane. A solution to this apparent controversy was proposed with the so-called “Epathway hypothesis”. According to this, transmembrane electron transfer via the heme groups is strictly coupled to a parallel, compensatory transfer of protons via a transiently established pathway, which is inactive in the oxidized state of the enzyme. Proposed constituents of the E-pathway are the side chain of Glu C180, and the ring C propionate of the distal heme. Previous experimental evidence strongly supports such a role for the former constituent. One aim of this thesis is to investigate by a combination of specific 13C-heme propionate labeling and FTIR difference spectroscopy whether the ring C propionate of the distal heme is involved in redox-coupled proton transfer in the QFR from W. succinogenes. In addition to W. succinogenes, the primary structures of the QFR enzymes of two other e- proteobacteria are known. These are Campylobacter jejuni and Helicobacter pylori, which unlike W. succinogenes are human pathogens. The QFR from H. pylori has previously been established to be a potential drug target, and the same is likely for the QFR from C. jejuni. The two pathogenic species colonize mucosal surfaces causing several diseases. The possibility of studying these QFRs from these bacteria and creating more efficient drugs specifically active for this enzyme depends substantially on the availability of large amounts of high-quality protein. Further, biochemical and structural studies on QFR enzymes from e- proteobacteria species other than W. succinogenes can be valuable to enlighten new aspects or corroborate the current understanding of this class of membrane proteins.
A strong interest is currently going on in the physics of high intensity and high energy beams: intense proton or deuteron beams are required in various fields of science and industry, including sources of neutrons for research experiments and material processing, nuclear physics experiments, tritium production and nuclear waste transmutation. High current heavy ion beams are envisaged for power production facilities (inertial fusion). Several projects presently under study are based on rf linacs as driver, sometimes followed by accumulation and/or compressor rings [Acc98]. The critical issue for all of them is to be operated in a low loss regime, because of activation problems in the structure. For this reason careful investigations have to be performed in order to understand and control the beam behaviour, aiming at conserving the beam quality, reducing the emittance growth and filamentation and avoiding the formation of halo. The beam current to be accelerated is actually limited by the amount of beam losses, which depends upon the beam halo: in order to reduce induced radioactivity and to allow for hands-on maintenance, normally losses <1 W/m are considered as acceptable [Sto96]. One of the major facilities under study is the European Spallation Source (ESS), a project based on a H- linac accelerating a 107 mA peak current beam (360 ns pulse in the DTL) and on two compressor rings, producing 5 MW average beam power [ESS]. Also the USA are developing a proposal for a Spallation Neutron Source (SNS), providing a short pulse H- beam with average power of 1÷2 MW; a 30 mA linac is required [SNS]. The Accelerator for Production of Tritium (APT), studied at Los Alamos, requires a 100 mA proton beam current (cw) to produce a power of 130÷170 MW [APT]. A similar but smaller accelerator (40 mA, 40 MW beam power) would serve as driver for the Accelerator Driven Transmutation of Waste (ADTW) system [ATW]. The accelerator system for the International Fusion Material Irradiation Facility (IFMIF) will test the behaviour of materials to be used for magnetic fusion (e.g. ITER); it consists of two 125 mA deuteron beams in parallel, to generate a fusion-like neutron spectrum with 10 MW cw [IFM]. In the field of heavy ions, for about 20 years scientists have been working on inertial confinement fusion, as an alternative to magnetic confinement one, to find a practical and cleaner method for producing energy. Nuclear fusion occurs when the nuclei of lighter elements (in a state of matter called "plasma") merge to form heavier elements; the extremely high temperatures and densities needed to get the nuclei to collide in the proper way and release big amounts of energy are obtained in a small "pellet" of fusion fuel, which receives energy from laser or ion beams, implodes and its inertia compresses it hard enough to hold together the plasma until it reaches ignition. Both laser and accelerator facilities have been investigated as drivers, since a demonstration of ignition at low gains is more easily accessible by lasers, whereas the intrinsic properties of accelerators -efficiency and repetition rate- will be essential for a medium-gain power plant. One study for a fusion power system driven by heavy ion beams (HIBALL) was completed in Europe already in 1982 [Bad81]. When the USA declassified essential information on pellet design, "indirect drive" targets have been considered openly, where the pellet is hit by X-rays generated from laser or ion beams rather than directly from the beams. Main progress has been achieved during the latest years in the understanding of pellet dynamics after ignition, i.e. in plasma physics [Sym1][Sym2][Sym3][Bas97][Lut97], imposing also new requirements on the layout of the driver accelerator facilities. In 1994-95 Frankfurt University and several other European laboratories (leaded by GSI) started a new collaboration called HIDIF (Heavy Ion Driven Ignition Facility) in order to simplify the accelerator plant design owing to the new technique of indirectly driven targets and to some technological improvements. First studies were oriented towards the conceptual goal of a facility providing just enough beam energy for the ignition of fusion reactions at very low gain (a "proof of principle") [Hof98]. In a recent phase of the study, it was realized that the proposed concept would make this scheme a more appropriate choice for energy production rather than for ignition; the acronym HIDIF was therefore intended as Heavy Ion Driven Inertial Fusion, and the parameters are going to be modified accordingly [Hof96][Hof97][Hof98]. The scenario presently discussed by this group proposes the formation and acceleration of an intense beam (400 mA) of singly charged heavy ions of three different atomic species, with mass differences of about 10% (the reference one is 209Bi+) in a main rf linac; they are then injected into some storage rings at an energy of 50 MeV/u, bunched in induction linacs and finally transported to a target with different velocities in such a way that the three species merge on the pellet ("telescoping") at 500 TW peak power. In this thesis the main linac of the HIDIF proposal is extensively investigated as an example of a high intensity heavy ion linac. Results are presented from numerical simulations of multi-particle beam dynamics carried out for the first time in this context. After a short presentation of the HIDIF reference scenario (Ignition Facility), including a discussion of the motivations for a high current heavy ion linac, some elements of the theory of beam transport and acceleration are recalled [Con91][Hof82][Kap85] [Lap87][Law88][Mit78][Rei94][Str83]. Then the used simulation programs are described, and a particle dynamics layout of a conventional 200 MHz Alvarez DTL is discussed with respect to low emittance growth at high transmission, including large space-charge effects, taking into account the influence of different kinds of statistical errors and of input mismatch on the beam dynamics. The modifications needed for "telescoping" are investigated with simulations for the nominal mass difference (10%) and for a smaller one (5%); finally the transfer line between DTL and rings is discussed and studied both analytically and by numerical calculations. The large mass number (A= 209) helps to reduce the space-charge effects with respect to protons, therefore the behaviour of the beam is not space-charge dominated. Nevertheless the tune depression values (similar to those of the ESS linac e.g.) indicate that these effects cannot be neglected. For a linac with low duty cycle, as in the case of an ignition facility, the results from particle dynamics calculations can be considered as a reliable guideline for the DTL layout, since they indicate that such a high intensity linac can fulfill the requirements on smooth beam behaviour and low losses.
The challenging intricacies of strongly correlated electronic systems necessitate the use of a variety of complementary theoretical approaches. In this thesis, we analyze two distinct aspects of strong correlations and develop further or adapt suitable techniques. First, we discuss magnetization transport in insulating one-dimensional spin rings described by a Heisenberg model in an inhomogeneous magnetic field. Due to quantum mechanical interference of magnon wave functions, persistent magnetization currents are shown to exist in such a geometry in analogy to persistent charge currents in mesoscopic normal metal rings. The second, longer part is dedicated to a new aspect of the functional renormalization group technique for fermions. By decoupling the interaction via a Hubbard-Stratonovich transformation, we introduce collective bosonic variables from the beginning and analyze the hierarchy of flow equations for the coupled field theory. The possibility of a cutoff in the momentum transfer of the interaction leads to a new flow scheme, which we will refer to as the interaction cutoff scheme. Within this approach, Ward identities for forward scattering problems are conserved at every instant of the flow leading to an exact solution of a whole hierarchy of flow equations. This way the known exact result for the single-particle Green's function of the Tomonaga-Luttinger model is recovered.
Cancer has become one of the most fatal diseases. The Heidelberg Heavy Ion Cancer Therapy (HICAT) has the potential to become an important and efficient treatment method because of its excellent “Bragg peak” characteristics and on-line irradiation control by the PET diagnostics. The dedicated Heidelberg Heavy Ion Cancer Therapy Project includes two ECR ion sources, a RF linear injector, a synchrotron and three treatment rooms. It will deliver 4*10 high 10 protons, or 1*10 high 10 He, or 1*10 high 9 Carbons, or 5*10 high 8 Oxygens per synchrotron cycle with the beam energy 50-430AMeV for the treatments. The RF linear injector consists of a 400AkeV RFQ and of a very compact 7AMeV IH-DTL accelerator operated at 216.816MHz. The development of the IH-DTL within the HICAT project is a great challenge with respect to the present state of the DTL art because of the following reasons: • The highest operating frequency (216.816MHz) of all IH-DTL cavities; • Extremely large cavity length to diameter ratio of about 11; • IH-DTL with three internal triplets; • The highest effective voltage gain per meter (5.5MV/m); • Very short MEBT design for the beam matching. The following achievements have been reached during the development of the IH-DTL injector for HICAT : The KONUS beam dynamics design with LORASR code fulfills the beam requirement of the HICAT synchrotron at the injection point. The simulations for the IH-DTL injector have been performed not only with a homogeneous input beam, but also with the actual particle distribution from the exit of the HICAT RFQ accelerator as delivered by the PARMTEQ code. The output longitudinal normalized emittance for 95% of all particles is 2.00AkeVns, the emittance growth is less than 24%, while the X-X’ and Y-Y’ normalized emittance are 0.77mmmrad and 0.62mmmrad, respectively. The emittance growth in X-X’ is less than 18%, and the emittance growth in Y-Y’ is less than 5%. Based on the transverse envelopes of the transported particles, the redesign of the buncher drift tubes at the RFQ high energy end has been made to get a higher transit time factor for this novel RFQ internal buncher. An optimized effective buncher gap voltage of 45.4KV has been calculated to deliver a minimized longitudinal beam emittance, while the influence of the effective buncher voltage on the transverse emittance can be neglected. Six different tuning concepts were investigated in detail while tuning the 1:2 scaled HICAT IH model cavity. ‘Volume Tuning’ by a variation of the cavity cross sectional area can compensate the unbalanced capacitance distribution in case of an extreme beta-lambda-variation along an IH cavity. ‘Additional Capacitance Plates’ or copper sheets clamped on drift tube stems are a fast way for checking the tuning sensitivity, but they will be replaced by massive copper blocks mounted on the drift tube girders finally. ‘Lens Coupling’ is an important tuning to stabilize the operation mode and to increase or decrease the coupling between neighboring sections. ‘Tube Tuning’ is the fine tuning concept and also the standard tuning method to reach the needed field distributions as well as the gap voltage distributions. ‘Undercut Tuning’ is a very sensitive tuning for the end sections and with respect to the voltage distribution balance along the structure. The different types of ‘plungers’ in the 3rd and 4th sections have different effects on the resonance frequency and on the field distribution. The different triplet stems and the geometry of the cavity end have been also investigated to reach the design field and voltage distributions. Finally, the needed uniform field distribution along the IH-DTL cavity and the corresponding effective voltage distribution were realized, the remaining maximum gap voltage difference was less than 5% for the model cavity. The several important higher order modes were also measured. The RF tuning of the IH-DTL model cavity delivers the final geometry parameters of the IH-DTL power cavity. A rectangular cavity cross section was adopted for the first time for this IH-DTL cavity. This eases the realization of the volume tuning concept in the 1st and 2nd sections. Lens coupling determines the final distance between the triplet and the girder. The triplets are mounted on the lower cavity half shell. The Microwave Studio simulations have been carried out not only for the HICAT model cavity, but also for the final geometry of the IH-DTL power cavity. The field distribution for the operation mode H110 fits to the model cavity measurement as well as the Higher Order Modes. The simulations prove the IH-DTL geometrical design. On the other hand, the precision of one simulation with 2.3 million mesh points for full cross section area and the CPU time more than 15hours on a DELL PC with Intel Pentium 4 of 2.4GHz and 2.096GRAM were exploited to their limit when calculating the real parameters for the two final machining iterations during production. The shunt impedance of the IH-DTL power cavity is estimated by comparison with the existing tanks to about 195.8MOmega/m, which fits to the simulation result of 200.3MOmega/m with reducing the conductivity to the 5.0*10 high 7 Omega-1m-1. The effective shunt impedance is 153 MOmega/m. The needed RF power is 755kW. The expected quality factor of the IH-DTL cavity is about 15600. The IH-DTL power cavity tuning measurements before cavity copper plating have been performed. The results are within the specifications. There is no doubt that the needed accuracy of the voltage distribution will be reached with the foreseen fine tuning concepts in the last steps.
Prion diseases, also called transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, are a group of fatal neurodegenerative conditions that affect humans and a wide variety of animals. To date there is no therapeutic or prophylactic approach against prion diseases available. The causative infectious agent is the prion, also termed PrPSc, which is a pathological conformer of a cellular protein named prion protein PrPc. Prions are thought to multiply upon conversion of PrPc to PrPSc in a self-propagating manner. Immunotherapeutic strategies directed against PrPc represent a possible approach in preventing or curing prion diseases. Accordingly, it was already shown in animal models, that passive immunization delays the onset of prion diseases. The present thesis aimed at the development of a candidate vaccine towards the active immunization against prion diseases, an immune response, which has to be accompanied by the circumvention of host tolerance to the self-antigen PrPc. The vaccine development was approached using virus-like particles (retroparticles) derived from either the murine leukemia (MLV) or the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The display of PrP on the surface of such particles was addressed for both the cellular and the pathogenic form of PrP. The display of PrPc was achieved by either fusion to the transmembrane domain of the platelet derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR) or to the N-terminal part of the viral envelope protein (Env). In both cases, the corresponding PrPD- and PrPE-retroparticles were successfully produced and analyzed via immune fluorescence, Western Blot analysis, immunogold electron microscopy as well as by ELISA methods. Both, PrPD- and PrPE-retroparticles showed effective incorporation of N-terminally truncated forms of PrPc but not for the complete protein. PrPc at this revealed the typical glycosylation pattern, which was specifically removed by a glycosidase enzyme. Upon display of PrPc on retroparticles the protein remained detectable by PrP-specific antibodies under native conditions. Electron microscopy analysis of PrPc-variants revealed no alteration of the characteristic retroviral morphology of the generated particles. MLV-derived PrPD-retroparticles were successfully used in immunization studies. Contrary to approaches using bacterially expressed PrPc, the immunization of mice resulted in a specific antibody response. The display of the pathogenic isoform was aimed by two different strategies. The first one was directed at the conversion of the proteinase K (PK) sensitive from of PrP on the surface of PrPD-retroparticles into the PK resistant form. Albeit specific adaption of the PK digestion assay detecting resistant PrP, no PrP conversion was observed for PrPD-retroparticles. The second approach utilized a replication competent variant of the ecotropic MLV displaying PrPc on the viral Env protein. This MLV variant was stable in cell culture for six passages but did not replicate on scrapie-infected, PrPSc-propagating neuroblastoma cells. Thus, besides PrPc-displaying virus-like particles a replication competent MLV variant was obtained, which stably incorporated PrPc at the N-terminus of the viral Env protein. The incorporation of the cell-surface located PrPc into particles was expected from previously obtained data on protein display in the context of retrovirus-derived particles. Thus, the lack of incorporation observed for the complete PrPc sequence was rather unexpected and was found to be inhibited at both, fusion to PDGFR and the viral Env. In contrast to N-terminally truncated PrPc, the complete PrPc was shown to exhibit increased cell surface internalization rates and half-life times eventually contributing to the observed results. The PrP-vaccination approach described in this work represents the first successful system inducing PrP-specific antibody responses against the prion protein in wt mice. Explanations at this are based on the induction of specific T cell help or effects of the innate immunity, respectively. MLV-and HIV-derived particles bearing the PrP-coding sequence or being replication competent variants generated during this thesis might help to further improve the PrP-specific immune response.
This study analyses the labour market effects of fixed-term contracts (FTCs) in West Germany by microeconometric methods using individual and establishment level data. In the first part of the study the role of FTCs in firms’ labour demand is analysed. An econometric investigation of the firms’ reasons for using FTCs focussing on the identification of the link between dismissal protection for permanent contract workers and the firms’ use of FTCs is presented. Furthermore, a descriptive analysis of the role of FTCs in worker and job flows at the firm level is provided. The second part of the study evaluates the short-run effects of being employed on an FTC on working conditions and wages using a large cross-sectional dataset of employees. The final part of the study analyses whether taking up an FTC increases the (permanent contract) employment opportunities in the long-run (stepping stone effect) and whether FTCs affect job finding behaviour of unemployed job searchers. Firstly, an econometric unemployment duration analysis distinguishing between both types of contracts as destination states is performed. Secondly, the effects of entering into FTCs from unemployment on future (permanent contract) employment opportunities are evaluated attempting to account for the sequential decision problem of job searchers.
Drug target 5-lipoxygenase : a link between cellular enzyme regulation and molecular pharmacology
(2005)
Leukotriene (LT) sind bioaktive Lipidmediatoren, die in einer Vielzahl von Entzündungskrankheiten wie z.B. Asthma, Psoriasis, Arthritis oder allergische Rhinitis involviert sind. Des Weiteren spielen LT in der Pathogenese von Erkrankungen wie Krebs, Osteoarthritis oder Atherosklerose eine Rolle. Die 5-Lipoxygenase (5-LO) ist das Enzym, das für die Bildung von LT verantwortlich ist. Aufgrund der physiologischen Eigenschaften der LT, ist die Entwicklung von potentiellen Arzneistoffen, welche die 5-LO als Zielstruktur besitzen, von erheblichem Interesse. Die Aktivität der 5-LO wird in vitro durch Ca2+, ATP, Phosphatidylcholin und Lipidhydroperoxide (LOOH) und durch die p38-abhängige MK-2/3 5-LO bestimmt. Inhibitorstudien weisen darauf hin, dass der MEK1/2-Signalweg ebenfalls in vivo an der 5-LO Aktivierung beteiligt ist. Hauptziel dieser Arbeit war es zu untersuchen, welche Rolle der MEK1/2-Signalweg bei der Aktivierung der 5-LO besitzt und welchen Einfluss der 5-LO Aktivierungsweg auf die Wirksamkeit potentieller Inhibitoren hat. „In gel kinase“ und „In vitro kinase“ Untersuchungen zeigten, dass die 5-LO ein Substrat für die Extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) und MK-2/3 darstellt. Der Zusatz von mehrfach ungesättigten Fettsäuren (UFA), wie AA oder Ölsäure, verstärkte den Phosphorylierungsgrad der 5-LO sowohl durch ERK1/2 als auch durch MK-2/3. Die genannten Kinasen sind demnach auch für die 5-LO Aktivierung durch natürliche Stimuli verantwortlich, die den zellulären Ca2+-Spiegel kaum beeinflussen. Daraus ist ersichtlich, dass die Phosphorylierung der 5-LO durch ERK1/2 und/oder MK-2/3 einen alternativen Aktivierungsmechanismus neben Ca2+ darstellt. Ursprünglich wurden Nonredox-5-LO-Inhibitoren als kompetitive Wirkstoffe entwickelt, die mit AA um die Bindung an die katalytische Domäne der 5-LO konkurrieren. Vertreter dieser Inhibitoren, wie ZM230487 und L-739,010, zeigen eine potente Hemmung der LT-Biosynthese in verschiedenen Testsystemen. Sie scheiterten jedoch in klinischen Studien. In dieser Arbeit konnten wir zeigen, dass die Wirksamkeit dieser Inhibitoren vom Aktivierungsweg der 5-LO abhängig ist. Verglichen mit 5-LO Aktivität, die durch den unphysiologischen Stimulus Ca2+-Ionophor induziert wird, erfordert die Hemmung zellstress-induzierter Aktivität eine 10- bis 100-fach höhere Konzentration der Nonredox-5-LO-Inhibitoren. Die nicht-phosphorylierbare 5-LO Mutante (Ser271Ala/Ser663Ala) war wesentlich sensitiver gegenüber Nonredox-Inhibitoren als der Wildtyp, wenn das Enzym durch 5-LO Kinasen aktiviert wurde. Somit zeigen diese Ergebnisse, dass, im Gegensatz zu Ca2+, die 5-LO Aktivierung mittels Phosphorylierung die Wirksamkeit der Nonredox-Inhibitoren deutlich verringert. Des Weiteren wurde das pharmakologische Profil des neuen 5-LO Inhibitors CJ-13,610 mittels verschiedener in vitro-Testsysteme charakterisiert. In intakten PMNL, die durch Ca2+-Ionophor stimuliert wurden, hemmte die Substanz die 5-LO Produktbildung mit einem IC50 von 70 nM. Durch Zugabe von exogener AA, wird die Wirkung vermindert und der IC50 des Inhibitors steigt an. Dies deutet auf eine kompetitive Wirkweise hin. Wie die bekannten Nonredox-Inhibitoren, verliert auch CJ-13,610 seine Wirkung bei erhöhtem zellulärem Peroxidspiegel. Der Inhibitor CJ-13,610 zeigt jedoch keine Abhängigkeit vom Aktivierungsweg der 5-LO. Grundsätzlich ist es also von fundamentaler Bedeutung bei der Entwicklung von neuen Arzneistoffen, die zellulären Zusammenhänge, insbesondere die Regulierung der Aktivität von Enzymen, zu kennen. Wie in dieser Arbeit gezeigt, hat die Phosphorylierung der 5-LO einen starken Einfluss auf die Regulation der 5-LO Aktivität und eine elementare Wirkung auf die Hemmung des Enzyms durch verschiedene Wirkstoffe.
A fundamental work on THz measurement techniques for application to steel manufacturing processes
(2004)
The terahertz (THz) waves had not been obtained except by a huge system, such as a free electron laser, until an invention of a photo-mixing technique at Bell laboratory in 1984 [1]. The first method using the Auston switch could generate up to 1 THz [2]. After then, as a result of some efforts for extending the frequency limit, a combination of antennas for the generation and the detection reached several THz [3, 4]. This technique has developed, so far, with taking a form of filling up the so-called THz gap . At the same time, a lot of researches have been trying to increase the output power as well [5-7]. In the 1990s, a big advantage in the frequency band was brought by non-linear optical methods [8-11]. The technique led to drastically expand the frequency region and recently to realize a measurement up to 41 THz [12]. On the other hand, some efforts have yielded new generation and detection methods from other approaches, a CW-THz as well as the pulse generation [13-19]. Especially, a THz luminescence and a laser, originated in a research on the Bloch oscillator, are recently generated from a quantum cascade structure, even at an only low temperature of 60 K [20-22]. This research attracts a lot of attention, because it would be a breakthrough for the THz technique to become widespread into industrial area as well as research, in a point of low costs and easier operations. It is naturally thought that a technology of short pulse lasers has helped the THz field to be developed. As a background of an appearance of a stable Ti:sapphire laser and a high power chirped pulse amplification (CPA) laser, instead of a dye laser, a lot of concentration on the techniques of a pulse compression and amplification have been done. [23] Viewed from an application side, the THz technique has come into the limelight as a promising measurement method. A discovery of absorption peaks of a protein and a DNA in the THz region is promoting to put the technique into practice in the field of medicine and pharmaceutical science from several years ago [24-27]. It is also known that some absorption of light polar-molecules exist in the region, therefore, some ideas of gas and water content monitoring in the chemical and the food industries are proposed [28-32]. Furthermore, a lot of reports, such as measurements of carrier distribution in semiconductors, refractive index of a thin film and an object shape as radar, indicate that this technique would have a wide range of application [33-37]. I believe that it is worth challenging to apply it into the steel-making industry, due to its unique advantages. The THz wavelength of 30-300 ¼m can cope with both independence of a surface roughness of steel products and a detection with a sub-millimeter precision, for a remote surface inspection. There is also a possibility that it can measure thickness or dielectric constants of relatively high conductive materials, because of a high permeability against non-polar dielectric materials, short pulse detection and with a high signal-to-noise ratio of 103-5. Furthermore, there is a possibility that it could be applicable to a measurement at high temperature, for less influence by a thermal radiation, compared with the visible and infrared light. These ideas have motivated me to start this THz work.
Das Ziel der Untersuchung von ultra-relativistischen Schwerionenkollisionen ist die Suche nach dem Quark Gluon Plasma (QGP), einem Zustand hochdichter stark wechselwirkender Materie in dem der Einschluss von Quarks und Gluonen in Hadronen aufgehoben ist. Die bisher gewonnenen experimentellen Hinweise deuten daraufhin,daß in Schwerionenkollisionen bei den derzeit höchsten zur Verfügung stehenden Energien von 158 GeV/Nukleon in Pb+Pb Reaktionen am CERN-SPS die Rahmenbedingungen für einen Phasenübergang von hadronischer Materie zu einer partonischen Phaseerfüllt sind. Die exakte Phasenstruktur stark wechselwirkender Materie hingegen ist derzeit noch nicht vollständig verstanden. Da inklusive hadronische Observablen und "penetrierende Proben" nicht direkt sensitiv auf die Existenz und Natur des Phasenübergangs sind, wurde die Analyse von Einzelereignis-"event-by-event"-Fluktuationenvorgeschlagen. Das Fluktuationsverhalten von Einzelereignis-Observablen sollte direkt sensitiv auf die Natur des zu beobachtenden Phasenübergangssein. In dieser Arbeit wurden Fluktuationen in der "chemischen" Zusammensetzung der Teilchenquelle untersucht und erste Ergebnisse werden präsentiert.
The mammalian retina contains around 30 morphological varieties of amacrine cell types. These interneurons receive excitatory glutamatergic input from bipolar cells and provide GABA- and glycinergic inhibition to other cells in the retina. Amacrine cells exhibit widely varying light evoked responses, in large part defined by their presynaptic partners. We wondered whether amacrine functional diversity is based on a differential expression of glutamate receptors among cell populations and types. In whole cell patch-clamp experiments on mouse retinal slices, we used selective agonists and antagonists to discriminate responses mediated by NMDA/ non-NMDA (NBQX) and AMPA/ KA receptors (cyclothiazide, GYKI 52466, GYKI 53655, SYM 2081). We sampled a large variety of individual cell types, which were classified by their dendritic field size into either narrow-field or wide-field cells after filling with Lucifer yellow or neurobiotin. In addition, we used transgenic GlyT2-EGFP mice, whose glycinergic neurons express EGFP. This allowed us to classify amacrines on basis of their neurotransmitter into either glycinergic or GABAergic cells. All cells (n = 300) had good responses to non-NMDA agonists. Specific AMPA receptor responses could be obtained from almost all cells recorded: 94% of the AII (n = 17), 87% of the narrow-field (n = 45), 81% of the wide-field (n = 21), 85% of the glycinergic (n = 20) and 78% of the GABAergic cells (n = 9). KA receptor selective drugs were also effective on the majority of the AII (79%, n = 14), narrow-field (93%, n = 43), wide-field (85%, n = 26), glycinergic (94%, n = 16) and GABAergic amacrine cells (100%, n = 6). Among the cells tested for the two receptors (n = 65), we encountered both exclusive expression of AMPA or KA receptors and co-expression of the two types. Most narrow-field (70%, n = 27), glycinergic (81%, n = 16) and GABAergic cells (67%, n = 6) were found to have both AMPA and KA receptors. In contrast, only less than half of the wide-field cells (43%, n = 14) were found to co-express AMPA and KA receptors, most of them expressing exclusively AMPA (36%) or KA receptors (21%). We could elicit small NMDA responses from most of the wide-field (75%, n = 13) and GABAergic cells (67%, n = 3), whereas only 47% of the narrow-field (n = 15), 14% of the AII (n = 22) and no glycinergic cell (n = 2) reacted to NMDA. Abstract 83 Our data suggest that AMPA, KA and NMDA receptors are differentially expressed among different types of amacrine cells rather than among populations with different neurotransmitters or different dendritic coverage of the retina. Selective expression of kinetically different glutamate receptors among amacrine types may be involved in generating transient and sustained inhibitory pathways in the retina. Since AMPA and KA receptors are not generally clustered at the same postsynaptic sites, a single amacrine cell expressing both AMPA and KA receptors may provide inhibition with different temporal characteristics to individual synaptic partners.
Life of Varroa destructor, Anderson and Trueman, an ectoparasitic mite of honeybees, is divided into a reproductive phase in the bee brood and a phoretic phase during which the mite is attached to the adult bee. Phoretic mites leave the colony with workers involved in foraging tasks. Little information is available on the mortality of mites outside the colony. Mites may or not return to the colony as a result of death of the infested foragers, host change by drifting of foragers, or removal of mites outside the colony. That mites do not return to the colony was indicated by substantially higher infestation of outflying workers compared to the infestation of returning workers (Kutschker, 1999). The main objective of the study was to provide information whether V. destructor influences flight behaviour of foragers and consequently returning frequency of foragers to the colony. I first repeated the experiment of Kutschker (1999) examining the infestation of outflying and returning workers. Further, I registered flight duration of foragers using a video method. In this experiment I compared also the infestation and flight duration of bees of different genetic origin, Carnica from Oberursel and bees from Primorsky region. I investigated returning time of workers, returning frequency until evening, drifting to other colonies and orientation toward the nest entrance in the experiments in which workers were released in close vicinity of the colony. At last, I measured the loss of foragers in relation to colony infestation using a Bee Scan. Results from this study, listed below, showed considerable influence of V. destructor on flight behavior of foragers translating into loss of mites. Loss of mites with foragers add substantial component to mite mortality and was underestimated in previous studies. Such loss might be viewed as a mechanism of resistance against V. destructor. a) The mean infestation of outflying workers (0.019±0.018) was twice as the mean infestation of returning workers (0.009±0.018). The difference in the infestation between outflying and returning workers was more marked in highly infested colonies. b) Investigation of individually tagged workers by use of a two camera video recording device showed significantly higher infestation of outflying workers compared to returning workers. Mites were lost by the non returning of infested foragers (22%) and by loss of mites from foragers that returned to the colony without the mite (20%). A small portion of mites (1.8%) was gained. Loss of mites significantly exceeded mite gain. c) The flight duration of infested workers determined by using the same two camera video system was significantly higher in infested compared to uninfested workers of the same age that flew closest at time. The median flight duration of infested workers was 1.7 higher (214s) than the median duration of unifested workers (128s). d) Infested workers took 2.3 times longer to return to the colony than uninfested workers of the same age when released from the same locations, closest at time. The returning time increased with the distance of release. In a group of bees released simultaneously the infestation was higher in bees returning later and in those that did not return in the observation period of 15 min. e) Released workers did not return to the colony 1.5 more frequently than uninfested workers in evening. The difference in returning was significant for locations of 20 and 50m from the colony. No difference in returning between infested and uninfested workers were observed for the most distant location of 400m. f) No significant difference was found in returning time and/or in the returning frequency until evening between workers artificially infested overnight and naturally infested workers. Artificially infested workers returned later and less frequently than a control group indicating rapid influence of V. destructor on flight behavior of foragers. g) The orientation ability of infested workers toward the nest entrance was impaired. Infested workers compared to uninfested workers twice as often approached a dummy entrance before finding the nest entrance. h) No significant differences were found in drifting between infested and uninfested workers. Drifting in the neighboring nucleus colony occurred in about 1% occasions after release of marked workers. Similarly, more infested, but not significantly more infested workers (2.6%) entered a different colored hive than the same colored hive (1.9%). However, the number of drifting bees were to low to make results conclusive. i) The comparison between Carnica and Primorsky workers revealed higher infestation in Carnica compared to Primorsky. Further, Primorsky workers lost more mites during foraging due to mite loss from foragers and non returning of infested workers. No significant differences in flight duration were observed between the two bee stocks. j) Loss of foragers, as determined by the Bee Scan counts of outflying and returning foragers, and the infestation of outflying bees increased significantly over a period of 70 days. A colony with 7.7. higher infestation of outflying foragers lost 2.2. time more bees per flight per day compared to a low infested colony. k) The estimates of mite loss with foragers from mite population per day up to 3.1% exceeds approximately mite mortality of 1% within the colony as represented by counting dead mites on bottom board inserts.
Cold target recoil ion momentum spectroscopy (COLTRIM) has been employed to image the momentum distributions of continuum electrons liberated in the impact of slow He2+ on He and H2. The distributions were measured for fully determined motion of the nuclei that is as a function of the impact parameter and in a well de ned scattering plane The single ionization (SI) of H2 leading to H2+ recoil ions in nondissociative states (He2+ + H+ -> He2+ + H+ + e-) and the transfer ionization (TI) of H2 leading to H2 dissociation into two free protons (He2+ H2 -> He+ + H+ + H+ + e-) were investigated. Similar measurements have been carried out for He target, the corresponding atomic two electron system, i.e. the single ionization (SI) (He2+ + He -> He+ + He2+ e- and the transfer ionization (TI) (He2+ + He -> He+ + He2+ + e-). These measurements have been exploited to understand the results obtained for H target. In comparing the continuum electron momentum distributions for H2 with that for He, a high degree of similarity is observed. In the case of transfer ionization of H2, the electron momentum distributions generated for parallel and perpendicular molecular orientations revealed no orientation dependence. The in scattering plane electron momentum distributions for the transfer ionization of H2 by He2+ and for the transfer ionization of He by He2e showed that the salient feature of these distributions for both collisions systems consists in the appearance of two groups of electrons with difeerent structures. In addition to the group of the saddle electrons forming two jets separated by a valley along the projectile axis we nd a new group of electrons moving with a velocity higher than the projectile velocity These new fast forward electrons result from a narrow range of impact parameters and appear as image saddle in the projectile frame. In contrast to the transfer ionization of He, the fast forward electrons group disappears in the in scattering plane electron momentum distribution generated for the single ionization of He. Instead of this group another new group of electrons appear These electrons exhibit an amount of backscattering These backward elec trons appear as image saddle in the target frame The structures that the saddle electrons show are owing to the quasi molecular nature of the collision process For the TI of H2, the TI of He and the SI of He, a pi-orbital shape of the electron momentum distribution is observed This indicates the importance of the rotational coupling 2-p-theta -> 2p-pi in the initial promotion of the ground state followed by further promotions to the continuum The backward electrons as well as the fast forward electrons are not discussed in the theoretical literature at all. However, a number of obvious indications of the existence of the backward and fast forward electrons could be seen in the experimental works of Abdallah et al. as well as in the theoretical calculations of Sidky et al One might speculate that electrons which are promoted on the saddle for some time during the collision could finally swing around the He+ ion in the way out of the collision, i.e. either around the projectile in the forward direction as in the TI case forming the fast forward electrons or around the recoil ion in the backward direction as in the SI case forming the backward electrons. This might be a result of the strong gradient, and hence the large acceleration of the screened He+ potential.
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common neurodegenerative disorder world wide, causing presenile dementia and death of millions of people. During AD damage and massive loss of brain cells occur. Alzheimer’s disease is genetically heterogeneous and may therefore represent a common phenotype that results from various genetic and environmental influences and risk factors. In approximately 10% of patients, changes of the genetic information were detected (gene mutations). In these cases, Alzheimer’s disease is inherited as an autosomal dominant trait (familial Alzheimer’s disease, FAD). In rare cases of familial Alzheimer’s disease (about 1-3%), mutations have been detected in genes on chromosomes 14 and 1 (encoding for Presenilin 1 and 2, respectively), and on chromosome 21 encoding for the amyloid precursor protein (APP), which is responsible for the release of the cell-damaging protein amyloid-beta (ß-amyloid, Aß). Familial forms of early-onset Alzheimer’s disease are rare; however, their importance extends far beyond their frequency, because they allow to identify some of the critical pathogenetic pathways of the disease. All familial Alzheimer mutations share a common feature: they lead to an enhanced production of the Aß, which is the major constituent of senile plaques in brains of AD patients. New data indicates that Aß promotes neuronal degeneration. Therefore, one aim of these thesis was to elucidate the neurotoxic biochemical pathways induced by Aß, investigating the effect of the FAD Swedish APP double mutation (APPsw) on oxidative stress-induced cell death mechanisms. This mutation results in a three- to sixfold increased Aß production compared to wild-type APP (APPwt). As cell models, the neuronal PC12 (rat pheochromocytoma) and the HEK (human embryonic kidney 293) cell lines were used, which have been transfected with human wiltyp APP or human APP containing the Swedish double mutation. The used cell models offer two important advantages. First, compared to experiments using high concentrations of Aß at micromolar levels applied extracellularly to cells, PC12 APPsw cells secret low Aß levels similar to the situation in FAD brains. Thus, this cell model represents a very suitable approach to elucidate the AD-specific cell death pathways mimicking physiological conditions. Second, these two cell lines (PC12 and HEK APPwt and APPsw) with different production levels of Aß may additionally allow to study dose-dependent effects of Aß. The here obtained results provide evidence for the enhanced cell vulnerability caused by the Swedish APP mutation and elucidate the cell death mechanism probably initiated by intracellulary produced Aß. Here it seems likely that increased production of Aß at physiological levels primes APPsw PC12 cells to undergo cell death only after additional stress, while chronic high levels in HEK cells already lead to enhanced basal apoptotic levels. Crucial effects of the Swedish APP mutation include the impairments of cellular energy metabolism affecting mitochondrial membrane potential and ATP levels as well as the additional activation of caspase 2, caspase 8 and JNK in response to oxidative stress. Thereby ,the following model can be proposed: PC12 cells harboring the Swedish APP mutation have a reduced energy metabolism compared to APPwt or control cells. However, this effect does not leads to enhanced basal apoptotic levels of cultured cells. An exposure of PC12 cells to oxidative stress leads to mitochondrial dysfunction, e.g., decrease in mitochondrial membrane potential and depletion in ATP. The consequence is the activation of the intrinsic apoptotic pathway releasing cytochrome c and Smac resulting in the activation of caspase 9. This effect is amplified by the overexpression of APP, since both APPsw and APPwt PC12 cells show enhanced cytochrome c and Smac release as well as enhanced caspase 9 activity as vector transfected control. In APPsw PC12 cells a parallel pathway is additionally emphased. Due to reduced ATP levels or enhanced Aß production JNK is activated. Furthermore, the extrinsic apoptotic pathway is enhanced, since caspase 8 and caspase 2 activation was clearly enhanced by the Swedish APP mutation. Both pathways may then converge by activating the effector enzyme, caspase 3, and the execution of cell death. In addition, caspase independent effects also needs to be considered. One possibility could be the implication of AIF since AIF expression was found to be induced by the Swedish APP mutation. In APPsw HEK cells high chronic Aß levels leads to enhanced apoptotic levels, reduce mitochondrial membrane potential and ATP levels even under basal conditions. Summarizing, a hypothetical sequence of events is proposed linking FAD, Aß production, JNK-activation, mitochondrial dysfunction with caspase pathway and neuronal loss for our cell model. The brain has a high metabolic rate and is exposured to gradually rising levels of oxidative stress during life. In Swedish FAD patients the levels of oxidative stress are increased in the temporal inferior cortex. This study using a cell model mimicking the in vivo situation in AD brains indicates that probably both, increased Aß production and the gradual rise of oxidative stress throughout life converge at a final common pathway of an increased vulnerability of neurons to apoptotic cell death from FAD patients. Presenilin (PS) 1 is an aspartyl protease, involved in the gamma-secretase mediated proteolysis of Amyloid-ß-protein (Aß), the major constituent of senile plaques in brains of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patients. Recent studies have suggested an additional role for presenilin proteins in apoptotic cell death observed in AD. Since PS 1 is proteolytic cleaved by caspase 3, it has been prosposed that the resulting C-terminal fragment of PS1 (PSCas) could play a role in signal transduction during apoptosis. Moreover, it was shown that mutant presenilins causing early-onset of familial Alzheimer's disease (FAD) may render cells vulnerable to apoptosis. The mechanism by which PS1 regulates apoptotic cell death is yet not understood. Therefore one aim of our present study was to clarify the involvement of PS1 in the proteolytic cascade of apoptosis and if the cleavage of PS1 by caspase 3 has an regulatory function. Here it is demonstrated that both, PS1 and PS1Cas lead to a reduced vulnerability of PC12 and Jurkat cells to different apoptotic stimuli. However a mutation at the caspase 3 recognition site (D345A/ PSmut), which inhibits cleavage of PS1 by caspase 3, show no differences in the effect of PS1 or PSCas towards apoptotic stimuli. This suggest that proteolysis of PS1 by caspase 3 is not a determinant, but only a secondary effect during apoptosis. Since several FAD mutation distributed through the whole PS1 gene lead to enhanced apoptosis, an abolishment of the antiapoptotic effect of PS1 might contribute to the massive neurodegeneration in early age of FAD patients. Here, the regulate properties of PS1 in apoptosis may not be through an caspase 3 dependent cleavage and generation of PSCas, but rather through interaction of PS1 with other proteins involved in apoptosis.
In contrast to the class A heat stress transcription factors (Hsfs) of plants, a considerable number of Hsfs assigned to classes B and C have no evident function as transcription activators on their own. In the course of my PhD work I showed that tomato HsfB1, a heat stress induced member of class B Hsf family, is a novel type of transcriptional coactivator in plants. Together with class A Hsfs, e.g. tomato HsfA1, it plays an important role in efficient transcrition initiation during heat stress by forming a type of enhanceosome on fragments of Hsp promoter. Characterization of promoter architecture of hsp promoters led to the identification of novel, complex heat stress element (HSE) clusters, which are required for optimal synergistic interactions of HsfA1 and HsfB1. In addition, HsfB1 showed synergistic activation of the expression of a subset of viral and house keeping promoters. CaMV35S promoter, the most widely expressed constitutive promoter turned out to be the the most interesting candidate to study this effect in detail. Because, for most house-keeping promoters tested during this study, the activators responsible for constitutive expression are not known, but in case of CaMV35S promoter they are quite well known (the bZip proteins, TGA1/2). These proteins belong to the acidic activators, similar to class A Hsfs. Actually, on heat stress inducible promoters HsfA1 or other class A Hsfs are the synergistic partners of HsfB1, whereas on house-keeping or viral promoters, HsfB1 shows synergistic transcriptional activation in cooperation with the promoter specific acidic activators, e.g. with TGA proteins on 35S promoter. In agreement with this the binding sites for HsfB1 were identified in both house-keeping and 35S promoter. It has been suggested during this study that HsfB1 acts in the maintenance of transcription of a sub-set of house-keeping and viral genes during heat stress. The coactivator function of HsfB1 depends on a single lysine residue in the GRGK motif in its CTD. Since, this motif is highly conserved among histones as the acetylation motif, especially in histones H2A and H4,. It was suggested that the GRGK motif acts as a recruitment motif, and together with the other acidic activator is responsible for corecruitment of a histone acetyl transferase (HAT). So, the effect of mammalian CBP (a well known HAT) and its plant orthologs (HAC1) was tested on the stimulation of synergistic reporter gene activation obtained with HsfA1 and HsfB1. Both in plant and mammalian cells, CBP/HAC1 further stimulated the HsfA1/B1 synergistic effect. Corecruitment of HAC1 was proven by in vitro pull down assays, where the NTD of HAC1 interacted specifically both with HsfA1 and HsfB1. Formation of a ternary complex between HsfA1, HsfB1 and CBP/HAC1 was shown via coimmunoprecipitation and electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSA). In conclusion, the work presented in my thesis presents a new model for transcriptional regulation during an ongoing heat stress.
In an attempt to search for potential candidate molecules involved in the pathogenesis of endometriosis, a novel 2910 bp cDNA encoding a putative 411 amino acid protein, shrew-1 was discovered. By computational analysis it was predicted to be an integral membrane protein with an outside-in transmembrane domain but no homology with any known protein or domain could be identified. Antibodies raised against the putative open-reading frame peptide of shrew-1 labelled a protein of ca. 48 kDa in extracts of shrew-1 mRNA positive tissues and also detected ectopically expressed shrew-1. In the course of my PhD work, I confirmed the prediction that shrew-1 is indeed a transmembrane protein, by expressing epitope-tagged shrew-1 in epithelial cells and analysing the transfected cells by surface biotinylation and immunoblots. Additionally, I could show that shrew-1 is able to target to E-cadherin-mediated adherens junctions and interacts with the E-cadherin-catenin complex in polarised MCF7 and MDCK cells, but not with the N-cadherin-catenin complex in non-polarised epithelial cells. A direct interaction of shrew-1 with beta-catenin could be shown in an in vitro pull-down assay. From this data, it could be assumed that shrew-1 might play a role in the function and/or regulation of the dynamics of E-cadherin-mediated junctional complexes. In the next part of my thesis, I showed that stable overexpression of shrew-1 in normal MDCK cells. causes changes in morphology of the cells and turns them invasive. Furthermore, transcription by ²-catenin was activated in these MDCK cells stably overexpressing shrew-1. It was probably the imbalance of shrew-1 protein at the adherens junctions that led to the misregulation of adherens junctions associated proteins, i.e. E-cadherin and beta-catenin. Caveolin-1 is another integral membrane protein that forms complexes with Ecadherin- beta-catenin complexes and also plays a role in the endocytosis of E-cadherin during junctional disruption. By immunofluorescence and biochemical studies, caveolin-1 was identified as another interacting partner of shrew-1. However, the functional relevance of this interaction is still not clear. In conclusion, it can be said that shrew-1 interacts with the key players of invasion and metastasis, E-cadherin and caveolin-1, suggesting its possible role in these processes and making it an interesting candidate to unravel other unknown mechanisms involved in the complex process of invasion.
In dieser Arbeit werden Untersuchungen über die Anwendbarkeit von vier Methoden zur selektiven Einführung von Radikalen in DNA vorgestellt. Hierzu wurde die EPR-Spektroskopie (Elektronen-paramagnetische Resonanz) benutzt. Die selektive Einführung und Erzeugung von Radikalen in DNA ist nötig, um J-Kopplungen in DNA zu untersuchen. Vor dem Fernziel der Bestimmung der Austauschkopplungskonstanten J in biradikalischer DNA und deren Korrelation mit der charge-transfer-Geschwindigkeitskonstanten kCT stellen diese Untersuchungen einen wichtigen Ausgangspunkt dar. Stabile aromatische Nitroxide. Simulationen von Raumtemperatur-CW-X-Band-EPRSpektren fünf verschiedener aromatischer Nitroxide, welche potentielle DNA-Interkalatoren sind, wurden durchgeführt. Die aromatischen Nitroxide zeigen aufgelöste Hyperfeinkopplungen, welche zu dem Schluss führen, dass die Spindichte in hohem Maße delokalisiert ist, was die Verwendung dieser Verbindungen zur Messung von J-Kopplungen in biradikalischer DNA erlaubt. Transiente Guanin-Radikale. Transiente Guanin-Radikale werden in DNA selektiv durch die Flash-Quench-Technik erzeugt, bei der optisch anregbare Ruthenium-Interkalatoren verwendet werden. Transiente Thymyl-Radikale aus UV-bestrahltem 4'-Pivaloyl-Thymidin. Es werden photoinduzierte Prozesse untersucht, welche durch Bestrahlung von Thymin-Nukleosiden, die an der 4’-Position die optisch spaltbare Pivaloyl-Gruppe tragen, erzeugt werden. Dieses Nukleosid wurde speziell dafür entworfen, um Elektronenlöcher in DNA zu injizieren. In dieser Arbeit wird gezeigt, dass diese Verbindung benutzt werden kann, um selektiv eine Thymin-Base zu reduzieren. Transiente Thymyl-Radikale erzeugt durch ein neuartig modifiziertes Thymin nach UV-Bestrahlung. Photoinduzierte Prozesse, welche durch Bestrahlung eines ähnlichen Thymidin-Nukleosids erzeugt wurden, werden hier untersucht. Dieses Thymidin- Nukleosid wurde modifiziert, indem die optisch spaltbare Pivaloyl-Gruppe an eine Seitenkette angehängt wurde, welche an der C6-Position der Thymin-Base sitzt. Die Thymin-Base wurde speziell dafür entworfen, um Elektronen in DNA zu injizieren. In dieser Arbeit wurde bestätigt, dass ein Überschuss-Elektron selektiv auf eine Thymin-Base transferiert werden kann.
Die in Englisch verfasste Dissertation, die unter der Betreuung von Herrn Prof. Dr. H. F. de Groote, Fachbereich Mathematik, entstand, ist der Mathematischen Physik zuzuordnen. Sie behandelt Stonesche Spektren von Neumannscher Algebren, observable Funktionen sowie einige Anwendungen in der Physik. Das abschließende Kapitel liefert eine Verallgemeinerung des Kochen-Specker-Theorems. Stonesche Spektren und observable Funktionen wurden von de Groote eingeführt. Das Stonesche Spektrum einer von Neumann-Algebra ist eine Verallgemeinerung des Gelfand-Spektrums, die observablen Funktionen verallgemeinern die Gelfand-Transformierten. Da de Grootes Ergebnisse zum großen Teil unveröffentlicht sind, folgt nach dem Einleitungskapitel im zweiten Kapitel eine Übersichtsdarstellung dieser Ergebnisse. Das dritte Kapitel behandelt die Stoneschen Spektren endlicher von Neumann-Algebren. Für Algebren vom Typ In wird eine vollständige Charakterisierung des Stoneschen Spektrums entwickelt. Zu Typ-II1-Algebren werden einige Resultate vorgestellt. Das vierte Kapitel liefert. einige einfache Anwendungen des Formalismus auf die Physik. Das fünfte Kapitel gibt erstmals einen funktionalanalytischen Beweis des Kochen-Specker-Theorems und liefert die Verallgemeinerung dieses Satzes, wobei die Situation für alle von Neumann-Algebren geklärt wird.
Die Ermittlung von Proteinstukturen mittels NMR-Spektroskopie ist ein komplexer Prozess, wobei die Resonanzfrequenzen und die Signalintensitäten den Atomen des Proteins zugeordnet werden. Zur Bestimmung der räumlichen Proteinstruktur sind folgende Schritte erforderlich: die Präparation der Probe und 15N/13C Isotopenanreicherung, Durchführung der NMR Experimente, Prozessierung der Spektren, Bestimmung der Signalresonanzen ('Peak-picking'), Zuordnung der chemischen Verschiebungen, Zuordnung der NOESY-Spektren und das Sammeln von konformationellen Strukturparametern, Strukturrechnung und Strukturverfeinerung. Aktuelle Methoden zur automatischen Strukturrechnung nutzen eine Reihe von Computeralgorithmen, welche Zuordnungen der NOESY-Spektren und die Strukturrechnung durch einen iterativen Prozess verbinden. Obwohl neue Arten von Strukturparametern wie dipolare Kopplungen, Orientierungsinformationen aus kreuzkorrelierten Relaxationsraten oder Strukturinformationen, die sich in Gegenwart paramagnetischer Zentren in Proteinen ergeben, wichtige Neuerungen für die Proteinstrukturrechnung darstellen, sind die Abstandsinformationen aus NOESY-Spektren weiterhin die wichtigste Basis für die NMR-Strukturbestimmung. Der hohe zeitliche Aufwand des 'peak-picking' in NOESY-Spektren ist hauptsächlich bedingt durch spektrale Überlagerung, Rauschsignale und Artefakte in NOESY-Spektren. Daher werden für das effizientere automatische 'Peak-picking' zuverlässige Filter benötigt, um die relevanten Signale auszuwählen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird ein neuer Algorithmus für die automatische Proteinstrukturrechnung beschrieben, der automatisches 'Peak-picking' von NOESY-Spektren beinhaltet, die mit Hilfe von Wavelets entrauscht wurden. Der kritische Punkt dieses Algorithmus ist die Erzeugung inkrementeller Peaklisten aus NOESY-Spektren, die mit verschiedenen auf Wavelets basierenden Entrauschungsprozeduren prozessiert wurden. Mit Hilfe entrauschter NOESY-Spektren erhält man Signallisten mit verschiedenen Konfidenzbereichen, die in unterschiedlichen Schritten der kombinierten NOE-Zuordnung/Strukturrechnung eingesetzt werden. Das erste Strukturmodell beruht auf stark entrauschten Spektren, die die konservativste Signalliste mit als weitgehend sicher anzunehmenden Signalen ergeben. In späteren Stadien werden Signallisten aus weniger stark entrauschten Spektren mit einer größeren Anzahl von Signalen verwendet. Die Auswirkung der verschiedenen Entrauschungsprozeduren auf Vollständigkeit und Richtigkeit der NOESY Peaklisten wurde im Detail untersucht. Durch die Kombination von Wavelet-Entrauschung mit einem neuen Algorithmus zur Integration der Signale in Verbindung mit zusätzlichen Filtern, die die Konsistenz der Peakliste prüfen ('Network-anchoring' der Spinsysteme und Symmetrisierung der Peakliste), wird eine schnelle Konvergenz der automatischen Strukturrechnung erreicht. Der neue Algorithmus wurde in ARIA integriert, einem weit verbreiteten Computerprogramm für die automatische NOE-Zuordnung und Strukturrechnung. Der Algorithmus wurde an der Monomereinheit der Polysulfid-Schwefel-Transferase (Sud) aus Wolinella succinogenes verifiziert, deren hochaufgelöste Lösungsstruktur vorher auf konventionelle Weise bestimmt wurde. Neben der Möglichkeit zur Bestimmung von Proteinlösungsstrukturen bietet sich die NMR-Spektroskopie auch als wirkungsvolles Werkzeug zur Untersuchung von Protein-Ligand- und Protein-Protein-Wechselwirkungen an. Sowohl NMR Spektren von isotopenmarkierten Proteinen, als auch die Spektren von Liganden können für das 'Screening' nach Inhibitoren benutzt werden. Im ersten Fall wird die Sensitivität der 1H- und 15N-chemischen Verschiebungen des Proteinrückgrats auf kleine geometrische oder elektrostatische Veränderungen bei der Ligandbindung als Indikator benutzt. Als 'Screening'-Verfahren, bei denen Ligandensignale beobachtet werden, stehen verschiedene Methoden zur Verfügung: Transfer-NOEs, Sättigungstransferdifferenzexperimente (STD, 'saturation transfer difference'), ePHOGSY, diffusionseditierte und NOE-basierende Methoden. Die meisten dieser Techniken können zum rationalen Design von inhibitorischen Verbindungen verwendet werden. Für die Evaluierung von Untersuchungen mit einer großen Anzahl von Inhibitoren werden effiziente Verfahren zur Mustererkennung wie etwa die PCA ('Principal Component Analysis') verwendet. Sie eignet sich zur Visualisierung von Ähnlichkeiten bzw. Unterschieden von Spektren, die mit verschiedenen Inhibitoren aufgenommen wurden. Die experimentellen Daten werden zuvor mit einer Serie von Filtern bearbeitet, die u.a. Artefakte reduzieren, die auf nur kleinen Änderungen der chemischen Verschiebungen beruhen. Der am weitesten verbreitete Filter ist das sogenannte 'bucketing', bei welchem benachbarte Punkte zu einen 'bucket' aufsummiert werden. Um typische Nachteile der 'bucketing'-Prozedur zu vermeiden, wurde in der vorliegenden Arbeit der Effekt der Wavelet-Entrauschung zur Vorbereitung der NMR-Daten für PCA am Beispiel vorhandener Serien von HSQC-Spektren von Proteinen mit verschiedenen Liganden untersucht. Die Kombination von Wavelet-Entrauschung und PCA ist am effizientesten, wenn PCA direkt auf die Wavelet-Koeffizienten angewandt wird. Durch die Abgrenzung ('thresholding') der Wavelet-Koeffizienten in einer Multiskalenanalyse wird eine komprimierte Darstellung der Daten erreicht, welche Rauschartefakte minimiert. Die Kompression ist anders als beim 'bucketing' keine 'blinde' Kompression, sondern an die Eigenschaften der Daten angepasst. Der neue Algorithmus kombiniert die Vorteile einer Datenrepresentation im Wavelet-Raum mit einer Datenvisualisierung durch PCA. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird gezeigt, dass PCA im Wavelet- Raum ein optimiertes 'clustering' erlaubt und dabei typische Artefakte eliminiert werden. Darüberhinaus beschreibt die vorliegende Arbeit eine de novo Strukturbestimmung der periplasmatischen Polysulfid-Schwefel-Transferase (Sud) aus dem anaeroben gram-negativen Bakterium Wolinella succinogenes. Das Sud-Protein ist ein polysulfidbindendes und transferierendes Enzym, das bei niedriger Polysulfidkonzentration eine schnelle Polysulfid-Schwefel-Reduktion katalysiert. Sud ist ein 30 kDa schweres Homodimer, welches keine prosthetischen Gruppen oder schwere Metallionen enthält. Jedes Monomer enhält ein Cystein, welches kovalent bis zu zehn Polysulfid-Schwefel (Sn 2-) Ionen bindet. Es wird vermutet, dass Sud die Polysulfidkette auf ein katalytischen Molybdän-Ion transferiert, welches sich im aktiven Zentrum des membranständigen Enzyms Polysulfid-Reduktase (Psr) auf dessen dem Periplasma zugewandten Seite befindet. Dabei wird eine reduktive Spaltung der Kette katalysiert. Die Lösungsstruktur des Homodimeres Sud wurde mit Hilfe heteronuklearer, mehrdimensionaler NMR-Techniken bestimmt. Die Struktur beruht auf von NOESY-Spektren abgeleiteten Distanzbeschränkungen, Rückgratwasserstoffbindungen und Torsionswinkeln, sowie auf residuellen dipolaren Kopplungen, die für die Verfeinerung der Struktur und für die relative Orientierung der Monomereinheiten wichtig waren. In den NMR Spektren der Homodimere haben alle symmetrieverwandte Kerne äquivalente magnetische Umgebungen, weshalb ihre chemischen Verschiebungen entartet sind. Die symmetrische Entartung vereinfacht das Problem der Resonanzzuordnung, da nur die Hälfte der Kerne zugeordnet werden müssen. Die NOESY-Zuordnung und die Strukturrechnung werden dadurch erschwert, dass es nicht möglich ist, zwischen den Intra-Monomer-, Inter-Monomer- und Co-Monomer- (gemischten) NOESY-Signalen zu unterscheiden. Um das Problem der Symmetrie-Entartung der NOESY-Daten zu lösen, stehen zwei Möglichkeiten zur Verfügung: (I) asymmetrische Markierungs-Experimente, um die intra- von den intermolekularen NOESY-Signalen zu unterscheiden, (II) spezielle Methoden der Strukturrechnung, die mit mehrdeutigen Distanzbeschränkungen arbeiten können. Die in dieser Arbeit vorgestellte Struktur wurde mit Hilfe der Symmetrie-ADR- ('Ambigous Distance Restraints') Methode in Kombination mit Daten von asymetrisch isotopenmarkierten Dimeren berechnet. Die Koordinaten des Sud-Dimers zusammen mit den NMR-basierten Strukturdaten wur- den in der RCSB-Proteindatenbank unter der PDB-Nummer 1QXN abgelegt. Das Sud-Protein zeigt nur wenig Homologie zur Primärsequenz anderer Proteine mit ähnlicher Funktion und bekannter dreidimensionaler Struktur. Bekannte Proteine sind die Schwefeltransferase oder das Rhodanese-Enzym, welche beide den Transfer von einem Schwefelatom eines passenden Donors auf den nukleophilen Akzeptor (z.B von Thiosulfat auf Cyanid) katalysieren. Die dreidimensionalen Strukturen dieser Proteine zeigen eine typische a=b Topologie und haben eine ähnliche Umgebung im aktiven Zentrum bezüglich der Konformation des Proteinrückgrades. Die Schleife im aktiven Zentrum umgibt das katalytische Cystein, welches in allen Rhodanese-Enzymen vorhanden ist, und scheint im Sud-Protein flexibel zu sein (fehlende Resonanzzuordnung der Aminosäuren 89-94). Das Polysulfidende ragt aus einer positiv geladenen Bindungstasche heraus (Reste: R46, R67, K90, R94), wo Sud wahrscheinlich in Kontakt mit der Polysulfidreduktase tritt. Das strukturelle Ergebnis wurde durch Mutageneseexperimente bestätigt. In diesen Experimenten konnte gezeigt werden, dass alle Aminosäurereste im aktiven Zentrum essentiell für die Schwefeltransferase-Aktivität des Sud-Proteins sind. Die Substratbindung wurde früher durch den Vergleich von [15N,1H]-TROSY-HSQC-Spektren des Sud-Proteins in An- und Abwesenheit des Polysulfidliganden untersucht. Bei der Substratbindung scheint sich die lokale Geometrie der Polysulfidbindungsstelle und der Dimerschnittstelle zu verändern. Die konformationellen Änderungen und die langsame Dynamik, hervorgerufen durch die Ligandbindung können die weitere Polysulfid-Schwefel-Aktivität auslösen. Ein zweites Polysulfid-Schwefeltransferaseprotein (Str, 40 kDa) mit einer fünffach höheren nativen Konzentration im Vergleich zu Sud wurde im Bakterienperiplasma von Wolinella succinogenes entdeckt. Es wird angenommen, dass beide Protein einen Polysulfid-Schwefel-Komplex bilden, wobei Str wässriges Polysulfid sammelt und an Sud abgibt, welches den Schwefeltransfer zum katalytischen Molybdän-Ion auf das aktive Zentrum der dem Periplasma zugewandten Seite der Polysulfidreduktase durchführt. Änderungen chemischer Verschiebungen in [15N,1H]-TROSY-HSQC-Spektren zeigen, dass ein Polysulfid-Schwefeltransfer zwischen Str und Sud stattfindet. Eine mögliche Protein-Protein-Wechselwirkungsfläche konnte bestimmt werden. In der Abwesenheit des Polysulfidsubstrates wurden keine Wechselwirkungen zwischen Sud und Str beobachtet, was die Vermutung bestätigt, dass beide Proteine nur dann miteinander wechselwirken und den Polysulfid-Schwefeltransfer ermöglichen, wenn als treibende Kraft Polysulfid präsent ist.
Im Rahmen dieser Dissertation wurde die Photophysik und die elektronische Struktur einer Klasse neuartiger Donator-Akzeptor-Ladungstransfer-Komplexe untersucht. Im Wesentlichen bestehen diese Verbindungen aus einem Ferrocen-Donator (Fc) und organischen Akzeptoren, die über B-N-Bindungen verbrückt sind, welche sich bei dieser Art von makromolekularen Systemen spontan bilden. Zentraler Gegenstand dieser Arbeit war die spektroskopische Untersuchung des Metall-zu-Ligand-Ladungstransfers (engl. Abkürzung: MLCT) im elektronischen Anregungszustand dieser kationischen Komplexverbindungen, die im Weiteren als „Fc-B-bpy“-Verbindungen bezeichnet werden. Die vorliegende Arbeit analysiert eine Vielzahl miteinander verwandter Fc-B-bpy-Derivate. Die Arbeit ist gegliedert in 1.) die Analyse der Absorptionsspektren vom UV- bis zum nahen Infrarot-Spektralbereich (250-1000 nm) von Lösungen, dotierten Polymer-Dünnfilmen und Einkristallen, 2.) die zeitaufgelöste optische Spektroskopie des angeregten Zustands auf der Pikosekunden-Zeitskala, 3.) die Analyse elektrochemischer Messungen an Lösungen, und 4.) die Auswertung quantenchemischer Berechnungen. Für die zeitaufgelösten Messungen wurde ein komplexes optisches Spektroskopie-System mit breitbandigen Femtosekunden-Pulsen sowie den entsprechenden zeitaufgelösten Detektionsmethoden (spektral gefilterte Weißlicht-Detektion) aufgebaut. Die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit beweisen die Existenz eines MLCT-Übergangs mit fast vollständigem Übergang eines Fc-Donator-Elektrons zum B-bpy-Akzeptor bei optischer Anregung. Die vergleichenden Untersuchungen der spektroskopischen Eigenschaften verschiedener Derivate liefern wichtige Information für die Entwicklung neuartiger Derivate, einschließlich verwandter Polymere, mit verbesserten spektroskopischen Eigenschaften. Es wurden transiente Absorptionsmessungen bestimmter Fc-B-bpy-Derivate in Lösung nach gepulster Anregung der MLCT-Bande (bei 500 nm) über einen Zeitbereich von 0,1-1000 ps und einen Wellenlängenbereich von 460-760 nm vorgenommen. Aus den Messergebnissen geht hervor, dass die Relaxation aus dem angeregten MLCT-Zustand in den Grundzustand auf verschiedenen Zeitskalen geschehen kann, welche im Bereich zwischen ~18 und 900 ps liegen. Ein Vergleich verschiedener Derivate mit unterschiedlicher Flexibilität in der Konformation zeigt, dass die Starrheit der Bindungen zwischen Donatoren und Akzeptoren ein wesentlicher Faktor für die Lebensdauer des angeregten Zustands ist. Wenn die Akzeptorgruppen relativ frei rotieren können, ist es der Verbindung möglich, eine Geometrie einzunehmen, von der aus ein effizienter, strahlungsfreier Übergang in den Grundzustand erfolgen kann. Dieser Befund zeigt einen Weg auf, wie neuartige, verwandte Verbindungen mit größerer Lebensdauer das angeregten Zustands synthetisiert werden können, indem darauf geachtet wird, daß eine starre molekulare Architektur zwischen Donator und Akzeptor verwirklicht wird.
The hypothesis that oxidative stress plays a role in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) was tested by studying oxidative damage, acitvities of antioxidant enzymes and levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in several models. To this end, mouse models transgenic for mutant presenilin (PS1M146L) as well as mutant amyloid precursor protein (APP) and human post mortem brain tissue from sporadic AD patients and age-matched controls were studied. Aging leads to an upregulation of antioxidant enzyme activities of Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase (Cu/Zn-SOD), glutathione peroxidase (GPx) and glutathione reductase (GR) in brains from C57BL/6J mice. Simultaneously, levels of lipid peroxidation products malondialdehyde MDA and 4-hydroxynonenal HNE were reduced. Additionally, pronounced gender effects were observed, as female mice display better protection against oxidative damage due to higher activity of GPx. Hence, antioxidant enzymes provide an important contribution to the protection against oxidative damage. In PS1M146L transgenic mice oxidative damage was only detectable in 19-22 months old mice, arguing for an additive effect of aging and the PS1 mutation. Both HNE levels in brain tissue as well as mitochondrial and cytosolic levels of ROS in splenic lymphocytes were increased in PS1M146L mice. Antioxidant defences were unaltered. In PDGF-APP and PDGF-APP/PS1 trangenic mice no changes in any of the parameters studied were observed in any age group. In contrast, Thy1-APP transgenic mice display oxidative damage as assessed by increased HNE levels. Reduced activity of Cu/Zn-SOD may explain this observation. Additionally, gender modified this effect, as female APP transgenic mice display higher b-secretase cleavage of APP and simultaneously increased HNE levels and reduced Cu/Zn-SOD activity earlier than male mice, i.e. from an age of 3 months and before the formation of Ab plaques. Reduced Cu/Zn-SOD activity was also found in another APP transgenic mouse model, in APP23 mice. In post mortem brain tissue from sporadic AD patients activities of Cu/Zn-SOD and GPx were however increased, and changes were most pronounced in temporal cortex. Simultaneously, levels of HNE but not MDA were elevated. Additionally, in vitro stimulation of lipid peroxidation led to increased MDA formation in samples from AD patients, indicating that increased activity of Cu/Zn-SOD and GPx are insufficient to protect against oxidative damage. Furthermore, the observed changes were subject to a gender effect, as samples from female AD patients showed increased activities of Cu/Zn-SOD and GPx as well as increased HNE levels, indicating that brain tissue from females is more sensitive towards oxidative damage. Levels of soluble Ab1-40 were positively correlated with with MDA levels and activities of Cu/Zn-SOD and GPx. Additionally, levels of lipid peroxidation products MDA and HNE are gene-dose-dependently modulated by the Apolipoprotein E4 allele, the most important genetic risk factor for AD known so far. While MDA levels were negatively correlated with MMSE scores, a measure for cognitive function, HNE levels were highest in AD patients with moderate cognitive impairment. Hence, increased HNE levels may play an important role in neurodegenerative events at an early disease stage. In summary, oxidative damage, as assessed by increased HNE levels, could be detected in sporadic AD patients and in different transgenic mouse models. The results of this thesis therefore support the further research of pharmacological targets aiming at augmentation of antioxidant defences for therapy or prophylaxis of Alzheimer’s disease.
The cytochrome bc1 complex is a cornerstone in bioenergetic electron transfer chains, where it carries out tasks as diverse as respiration, photosynthesis, and nitrogen fixation. This homodimeric multisubunit membrane protein has been studied extensively for several decades and the enzyme mechanism is described with the modified protonmotive Q cycle. Still, the molecular and kinetic description of the catalytic cycle is not complete and questions remain regarding the bifurcation of electron transfer at the quinol oxidation (Qo) site, substrate occupancy, pathways of proton conduction, and the nature of the Rieske protein domain movement. We used competitive inhibitors to study the molecular architecture at the Qo site with X-ray crystallography. The structure of the enzyme with the substrate analog 5-n-heptyl-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole (HHDBT) bound at the Qo site was determined at 2.5 Å resolution. Spectroscopic studies showed that HHDBT is negatively charged when bound at the active site. Mechanistic interpretations from inhibitor binding are in line with single occupancy model for quinol oxidation and structural analysis supports the proposed proton transfer pathway. For functional insight into the enzyme mechanism, redox-sensitive protonation changes were studied by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The protein purification procedure was optimized for less delipidation and the isolated enzyme was more active. Furthermore, two new phospholipids were identified in the X-ray structures, including a cardiolipin. Strikingly, conserved lipid binding cavities were observed in structural comparison with homologous enzymes. The functional role of tightly bound phospholipids will be discussed. Finally, the Qo site is a target for various compounds of agricultural and pharmaceutical importance. Importantly, the X-ray structures permit detailed analysis of the molecular reasons for acquired resistance to and treatment failure of Qo site inhibitors, such as atovaquone, that is used to treat malaria and pneumonia, as discussed herein.
The cytochrome bc1 complex or ubiquinol:cytochrome c oxidoreductase (QCR) catalyses electron transfer from ubiquinol to cytochrome c in respiration and photosynthesis coupled to a vectorial proton transport across the membrane, in which the enzyme resides. In both bacteria and eukaryotic organisms, QCR participates in supramolecular assembly of membrane proteins that comprise the respiratory or photosynthetic chain. In the present work, proton transfer pathways, substrate binding and the supramolecular assembly of the respiratory chain in yeast were probed by structure-based site-directed mutagenesis and characterization of the variants. Both active sites centre P, the place of quinol oxidation, and centre N, where quinone reduction takes place, lack direct access to the bulk solvent necessary for proton release and uptake. Based on the X-ray structure, proton transfer pathways were postulated. Analysis at centre P showed, that E272 and Y132 of cytochrome b are important for QCR catalysis as indicated by increased superoxide production and lowered Cyc1p reductase activity in these variants. Pre-steady state heme reduction kinetics in combination with stigmatellin resistance indicated that charge and length of the side chain at position 272 are crucial for efficient docking of the ISP to form the enzyme substrate complex and for electron bifurcation at centre P. Variants of Y312 and F129, both residues of cytochrome b, showed an increased Km indicating participation of these residues in coordination of ubiquinol or the possible intermediate semiquinone anion radical. F129 proved to be crucial for a functional Q-cycle as indicated by respiratory negative growth phenotype and a lowered H+/e- stoichiometry of F129 variants. At centre N, the postulated CL/K and E/R proton transfer pathways are located at opposite sites of the bound ubiquinone. Variants in the surface residues R218 (cytochrome b) and E52 (Qcr7) of the E/R pathway and E82 (Qcr7) of the CL/K pathway showed instability upon purification indicating an important role of these residues for QCR integrity. The slowed down centre N reduction kinetics in H85 (CL/K), R218 and N208 (both E/R) variant was attributed to a destabilised semiquinone anion consistent with the observed decreased sensitivity towards the site-specific inhibitor antimycin and an increased Km. Variants of residues of both pathway, E82Q and R218M, exhibited a decreased H+/e- stoichiometry indicating a crucial role of both residue for maintaining a working Q-cycle and supporting the proposed protonation of the substrate via the Cl/K and the E/R pathway. Long-range interaction between centre N and centre P were observed by altered reduction kinetics of the high potential chain and increased superoxide production in the centre N variants. The role of the cation-pi-interaction between F230 of Cyt1p and R19 of cytochrome c in binding of the redox carrier to QCR was analysed. In F230L hydrophobic interaction were partially lost as was deduced from the ionic strength dependence of Cyc1p reductase activity and Cycp1 binding, as detected by ionic strength sensitive Kd and Km for Cyc1p. The decreased enzymatic rate of F230W could be explained by a disturbed binding of Cyc1p to the variant enzyme. F230 may influence the heme mid point potential and thereby the electron transfer rate to Cyc1p. Reduction of Cobp via both centre P and centre N was disturbed suggesting an interaction between high and low potential chain. Supramolecular association between QCR and cytochrome c oxidase (COX) in yeast mitochondria was probed by affinity chromatography of a his-tagged QCR in the presence of the mild detergent digitonin. In comparison to purification with laurylmaltoside, the presence of both QCR and COX subunits was detected in the elution fractions by SDS-PAGE, Cyc1p reductase and TMPD oxidase activity assays and immunoblot analysis. The CL-dependent formation of the supercomplex between QCR and COX was analysed by replacement variants in the CL-binding site of QCR in CL containing and CL free environment. With an increasing number of replacements of the three lysines the CL-binding pocket supercomplex formation was not abolished, when CL is present as shown by BN-PAGE analysis. This was supported by the synergetic decrease in enzyme activity for both enzymes upon increased number of replacements. In the CL-free environment, no supracomplex formation was observed for a wildtype CL binding site. By replacements of two lysines in the CL-binding pocket, supercomplex formation could be recovered as revealed by BN-PAGE. This indicates, that CL may serve as a charge neutralizer for the lysines near the presumed interaction domain between complex III and complex IV. The obtained results for centre P provide new information of residues critical for stabilisation of ubiquinol and controlling electron short circuit reactions. The observations for centre N variants clearly support the proposed two proton transfer pathways and the role of the bound phospholipids in centre N kinetics. Variants in the Cyc1p binding site suggest a role for F230 both in Cyc1p binding and electron transfer. Clear interaction between the high and low potential chain in both Cyt1p and centre N variants strongly support long-range interactions in the complex. Studies on the supramolecular association of complex III and complex IV indicate a new role of Cl in stabilising a supracomplex.
The enzyme quinol:fumarate reductase (QFR) from the anaerobic e-proteobacterium Wolinella succinogenes is part of the anaerobic respiratory system of this organism. It couples the reduction of fumarate to succinate to the oxidation of menaquinol to menaquinone. W. succinogenes uses fumarate as terminal electron acceptor and can use various substrates (e.g., formate or molecular hydrogen) as electron donors. The concerted catalytic substrate turnover of either a hydrogenase or a formate dehydrogenase in conjunction with QFR contributes to the generation of an electrochemical potential gradient across the bacterial plasma membrane, which is used for the phosphorylation of ADP with inorganic phosphate, Pi, to ATP. In addition to an FAD (in subunit A) and three iron-sulfur clusters (in subunit B), QFR binds a low- and a high-potential heme b group in its transmembrane subunit C, as was ultimately shown in the crystal structure at 2.2 Å resolution (Lancaster et al., 1999, Nature 402, 377– 385). Both hemes are part of the electron transport chain between the two catalytic sites of this redox enzyme. The midpoint potentials of the hemes are well established but their assignment to the distal and proximal positions in the structure had not yet been determined. Furthermore, QFR from W. succinogenes has been proposed to exhibit a novel coupling mechanism of transmembrane electron and proton transfer, which has been described in the so-called “E-pathway” hypothesis (Lancaster, 2002, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1565, 215–231). The aim of this project was to characterize the relationship between structure and function of QFR and to investigate the details of the proposed coupling mechanism (“Epathway”) with the help of computer-based electrostatic calculations on the QFR wild-type (WT) coordinates, and electrochemically induced FTIR and VIS difference spectroscopy on the QFR WT and available variant enzymes (in particular enzyme variant E180Q, in which the glutamic acid at position C180 has been replaced by a glutamine). 1.) It was demonstrated in this study that the diheme-containing QFR exhibits stable and reproducible electrochemically induced FTIR difference bands in the midinfrared range from 1800 cm-1 to 1000 cm-1 that reflect transitions from the reduced to the oxidized state of the enzyme. The spectral features that were observed in the FTIR difference spectra are fully reversible when changing from a reductive to an oxidative reference potential at the working electrode and vice versa. This indicates that the underlying redox reactions of the enzyme at the gold grid working electrode are also fully reversible under the applied experimental conditions. The same reversible spectral redox behavior in the visible range could also be ascertained for the Soret- and a-band of the two heme b groups of QFR. This behavior allowed to reliably determine the heme b midpoint potentials of QFR at various pH values. Analysis of the FTIR difference spectra in the amide I range yields evidence for structural reorganizations of the polypeptide backbone upon the electrochemically induced redox reaction. 2.) The redox titrations of the high- and low-potential heme b of QFR as simulated by multiconformation continuum electrostatics (MCCE) calculations showed a very high level of agreement with respect to the experimentally observed midpoint potentials of the heme b groups at pH 7. As determined with the help of the theoretical calculations, prominent features governing the differences in redox potential between the two hemes are the higher loss of reaction field energy for the proximal heme and the stronger destabilization of the oxidized form of the proximal heme due to several buried and ionized Arg and Lys residues. The explicit incorporation of crystallographically identified water molecules in the calculations had a noticeable effect on the absolute values of the determined midpoint potentials, although the relative difference of the two obtained midpoints did not change significantly. The results of the electrostatic calculations clearly showed that the lowpotential heme corresponds to the distal position bD in the structure, and that the high-potential heme is identical to the proximal heme bP. This assignment could previously not be achieved unequivocally with experimental methods. 3.) In addition, the currently discussed mechanism of coupled electron and proton transfer in the QFR of W. succinogenes (i.e., the “E-pathway” hypothesis) is further supported by the results of this study. The simulations of intermediate states of electron transfer via the heme b groups show that the protonation state of the key amino acid residue Glu C180 depends on the redox states of the heme groups as suggested in the “E-pathway” hypothesis. This result yields a possible mechanism for the coupling of transient transmembrane proton transfer via Glu C180 to the electron transfer via the heme b groups, since Glu C180 could be part of a “proton wire” and its redox-dependent protonation state could serve as the regulatory element of the “E-pathway”. Furthermore, the results of simulated heme reduction indicate that the side chain of Glu C180 also changes its conformation with respect to the redox state of the hemes. Both major results concerning the role of Glu C180, the change of protonation as well as the reorientation of the side chain upon reduction of the heme groups, are consistent with the results from electrochemically induced FTIR difference spectroscopy: Of particular interest was the spectral range above 1710 cm-1, where C=O stretching vibrations of protonated COOH carboxyl groups absorb, because those groups can act as proton donors, respectively acceptors, and can be involved in intra-protein proton transfer reactions. It was possible to observe signals of such protonated carboxyl groups originating from QFR enzyme, which either change their protonation state and/or experience an environmental change in the course of the induced redox reaction. This finding was supported by the fact that the relevant FTIR difference signals are sensitive to an isotopic hydrogen/deuterium (1H/2H) exchange via the buffer solution, since they were shifted towards lower wavenumbers in D2O. Furthermore, it could be shown with the help of site-directed mutagenesis that the acidic residue Glu C180, which is located in the membranespanning, diheme-containing subunit C of QFR, is contributing to the redox dependent signal of protonated carboxyl groups. The observed residual signal in the FTIR double-difference spectrum of QFR wild-type and enzyme variant E180Q (Glu C180 has been replaced with a Gln residue) could be interpreted as a protonation/deprotonation event that is superimposed by an environmental effect on the specific C=O vibration. This result strongly supports the proposed “E-pathway” of coupled transmembrane electron and proton transfer in the QFR enzyme, which states that residue Glu C180 is an essential constituent of a transient redox-controlled transmembrane proton transfer pathway. 4.) As a second possible constituent of the suggested “E-pathway”, the ring C propionate of the distal heme was found to be unusually fully protonated in all simulated redox states, indicating a possible role as a transient proton donor/acceptor in the “E-pathway”. Similarly to Glu C180, experimental evidence from FTIR difference spectroscopy on a modified QFR with 13C-labeled heme propionates was obtained, which indicates an involvement of at least one of the two propionates of heme bD in proton transfer. The observed signals can tentatively be interpreted as a redox-coupled (de)protonation of the ring C propionate of bD, which is possibly xiii superimposed by a conformational or environmental change of the specific propionate. 5.) Also the observation of a strong redox Bohr effect for both heme b groups in QFR is in line with the proposed “E-pathway” hypothesis, as this effect yields a possible and well-established mechanism for the coupling of proton transfer and redox changes of the heme groups. The comparison of the observed effect in QFR WT and E180Q together with the results from FTIR spectroscopy and MCCE calculation indicate that the ring C propionate of the distal heme is dominating the pHdependence of the midpoint potential of bD, and that the corresponding group for bP is Glu C180. The origin of the redox Bohr effect for bP in the enzyme variant E180Q (which is dramatically changed with respect to the WT) could not be identified unequivocally, but the observation of this redox Bohr effect in the variant implies the presence of other protolytic groups, which interact with heme bP and which may be necessary for a functional “E-pathway”.
Die vorliegende Arbeit soll einen Beitrag zur Erforschung der Verarbeitungsmechanismen des Gehirns leisten. Die Erregung des komplexen Systems "Hirn" liefert Antworten, deren Analyse zu einem besseren Verständnis dieser Informationsverarbeitung führt. Zu diesem Zweck wurde das Gehirn mit unterschiedlichen visuellen Stimuli angeregt und die hirnelektrischen Signale gemessen, die von Nervenzellgruppen (Multiunits) im visuellen Kortex der Katze ausgesandt wurden.Die verwendeten Stimuli waren ein Streifenmuster sowie eine Zufallspunktverteilung, deren Kohärenz beliebig geändert werden konnte. Darüber hinaus wurden die Antworten auf eine Vielzahl von Stimuli analysiert, die nur aufgrund des Bewegungskontrastes zwischen punktdefiniertem Objekt und Hintergrund zu erkennen sind (Shape-from-Motion- (SFM-) Stimuli). Die aufgenommenen Daten wurden mit Hilfe einer umfangreichen Signalanalyse untersucht. So wurden in Abhängigkeit von der Stimulusbedingung die Anzahl der Nervenimpulse pro Zeiteinheit (Feuerraten), Synchronisation, Frequenzverteilung sowie Kopplung von Aktionspotenzialen und LFPDaten analysiert. Die Experimente im ersten Teil dieser Arbeit untersuchten den Einfluss von Kohärenz auf die Verarbeitung von Bewegungsinformation im primären visuellen Areal (A17) und im posteromedialen lateralen suprasylvischen Sulcus (Area PMLS) der Katze. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass Multiunits in A17 und PMLS sowohl auf Streifenmuster als auch auf Zufallspunktverteilungen antworten und dass die Stärke der Antwort als eine Funktion der Stimulusrichtung variiert. Die Vorzugsrichtung ist in beiden Arealen weitgehend unabhängig von der Art des verwendeten Stimulus, was darauf hindeutet, dass die Stimulusrichtung für Streifenmuster und Zufallspunktmuster in diesen Arealen durch einen einheitlichen Mechanismus bestimmt wird. Bei einer Abnahme der Stimuluskohärenz zeigen die Multiunits eine Abnahme der Feuerrate, wobei im Vergleich zu PMLS in A17 eine stärkere Abnahme der Kohärenz nötig ist, um die gleiche Abnahme der Feuerrate zu erreichen. Dieses Ergebnis konnte durch die unterschiedlichen Größen der rezeptiven Felder der beiden Areale erklärt werden und ist ein weiterer Hinweis darauf, dass eine wichtige Funktion von PMLS in der Analyse von Bewegung und räumlich verteilter Information liegt. Da beide Areale keine signifikante Änderungen der Feuerrate bei Inkohärenzniveaus von mehr als 50% zeigten, scheinen sie nicht in der Lage zu sein, die Bewegungsrichtung eines inkohärenten Zufallspunktmusters nahe der psychophysischen Detektionsschwelle von 95% auf der Basis von Feuerraten zu erkennen. Die Korrelation der Aktionspotenziale unterschiedlicher Multiunits zeigte bereits bei einer geringen Abnahme der Stimuluskohärenz eine monotone Verbreiterung des zentralen Maximums in den Korrelogrammen beider Areale. Die Stärke der Synchronisation hingegen war kaum beeinflusst. Darüberhinaus kam es zu einer Verschiebung der Leistung im lokalen Feldpotential (LFP) von hohen hin zu niedrigen Frequenzbereichen. Diese Verschiebung wurde auch für die Kopplung zwischen LFP und Akvi tionspotenzialen nachgewiesen. Diese Resultate unterstützen die Theorie, dass präzise Synchronisation und hochfrequente Oszillationen ein Mechanismus für die Bindung kohärenter Objekte sind. Sie zeigen darüber hinaus, dass Synchronisation auch nicht kohärente Stimuli binden kann und dass die Verschiebung im LFP hin zu niedrigeren Frequenzen wichtig für die Integration verteilter Information über einen größeren visuellen Raum sein kann. Da bei hohen Inkohärenzniveaus keine präzise Synchronisation mehr nachgewiesen werden konnte, kann jedoch auch die Synchronisation nicht als alleiniger Mechanismus zum Erkennen einer Bewegungsrichtung eines inkohärenten Zufallspunktmusters herangezogen werden. In den Experimenten im zweiten Teil dieser Arbeit wurde untersucht, wie das Gehirn SFM-Stimuli verarbeitet. Die Auswertungen der Feuerraten haben gezeigt, dass Multiunits in PMLS sowohl auf helligkeitsdefinierte Kontrastbalken als auch auf SFM-Balken reagieren. Die Stärke der Antwort hängt von der Kombination von Stimulus und Hintergrund und von der relativen Bewegungsrichtung zueinander ab. Während ähnliche Feuerraten für Balken mit hohem Kontrast relativ zum Hintergrund und für punktdefinierte Balken gefunden wurde, die sich über einen dunklen Hintergrund bewegten, führte ein statischer Zufallspunkthintergrund zu einer starken Abnahme der von dem SFM-Balken hervorgerufenen Antwort. Ein in die Gegenrichtung bewegter Hintergrund sowie ein reduziertes Kohärenzniveau des Zufallspunkthintergrundes führten dazu, dass die Multiunits auf den SFM- Balken nicht mehr mit einer Zunahme der Feuerraten reagierten. Um die hemmende Wirkung des Hintergrundes aufzuheben, musste der Hintergrund auf einer Fläche des visuellen Feldes, die der Größe des rezeptiven Feldes entsprach, abgedeckt werden. Dieses Ergebnis zeigt, dass die Feuerraten für diese Art Stimulus nicht wesentlich von Arealen außerhalb des rezeptiven Feldes beeinflusst werden. Zur weiteren Analyse der Fähigkeit von PMLS, SFM-Balken nur aufgrund des Bewegungskontrastes zwischen punktdefiniertem Objekt und Hintergrund zu erkennen, wurde mit Hilfe von zwei Tuningkurven-Stimuli, bei denen sich die Bewegungsrichtung der Punkte innerhalb des Balkens um 90° unterschied, die Vorzugsrichtung der Multiunits bestimmt. Die Auswertung ergab, dass sich die gemessene Vorzugsrichtung der Multiunit um 45° drehte, obwohl sich die Bewegungsrichtung des Balkens selbst nicht änderte. Darüber hinaus wurden verschiedene SFM-Stimuli untersucht, die alle dieselbe Bewegungsrichtung des Balkens, jedoch unterschiedliche Bewegungsrichtungen der Punkte innerhalb des Balkens aufwiesen. Wenn PMLS die Bewegung des SFM-Objekts statt der Bewegung der einzelnen Punkte verarbeitet, sollte die Feuerrate für alle diese Bedingungen identisch sein. Die Ergebnisse zeigen jedoch, dass sich die durch die verschiedenen SFM-Stimuli hervorgerufenen Feuerraten verringerten, je weiter sich die Punkte, die den Balken bildeten, von der Bewegungsrichtung des Balkens – und damit von der Vorzugsrichtung der Multiunit – weg bewegten. Durch dieses Ergebnis konnte gezeigt werden, dass Multiunits in PMLS nicht in der Lage sind, die Richtung von kinetisch definierten Balken zu analysieren und statt dessen nur die Bewegung der einzelnen Komponenten erfassen.
Proton-translocating NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) transports two electrons from NADH to membranal ubiquinone: in this process protons are translocated across the membrane, producing 40% of the total proton gradient between matrix side and intermembrane space. Mitochondrial complex I contains at least 46 subunits in mammals, and has a molecular weight of around 1000 kDa. Electronic microscopy analysis showed that complex I has an L-form, which consists of two domains: a peripheral “arm” (hydrophilic domain) and a membrane “arm” (hydrophobic domain). The peripheral domain, which protrudes into the matrix, contains one non-covalently bound flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and the iron-sulfur clusters N1a, N1b, N2, N3, N4 and N5 as redox active groups. They transport electrons from NADH to ubiquinone. Cluster N2 is supposed to be the immediate electron donor to ubiquinone by virtue of its highest and pH dependent redox midpoint potential (Em,7 –150 mV). The exact location of the tetra-nuclear cluster N2 is still object of discussion. The TYKY and the PSST subunits contain three binding motifs for tetranuclear clusters which are formed by twelve cysteins. In an effort to investigate the “ubiquinone reduction module” of complex I, in the first part of this work site directed mutagenesis of the TYKY and PSST subunits has been carried out. Mutant strains were characterised in terms of complex I content, catalytic activity and EPR signature of cluster N2. The second part of this work was aimed at developing a substrate inducible version of the internal alternative NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (NDH2i). A substrate inducible NDH2i is expected to offer a “switch” between complex I activity dependent (no NDH2i activity) and independent (NDH2i activity) cell growth, by changing between activating and non-activating substrates. This strategy would allow the screening for two types of complex I mutants, which is a prerequisite for realising a random PCR mutagenesis of single subunits of complex I, that allows the production of a high number of point mutations in relatively short time. Y. lipolytica complex I deficiency mutant strains could be easily identified, by virtue of their inability to survive under complex I dependent growth conditions (no NDH2i activity). By this way, amino acids that have an important role for complex I structure or function could be identified by subsequent sequence analysis. Each of the twelve cysteines that form the above mentioned three binding motifs for iron-sulfur cluster have been mutagenised. In mutant mitochondrial membranes, no assembled complex I could be detected. From these data one may conclude that the mutagenised 6 SUMMARY 92 cysteines play an important role for complex I stability, or that are a prerequisite for complex I assembly in Y. lipolytica, but there is not direct evidence indicating that any of the four mutagenised residues acts as a ligand. Two aspartates in the PSST subunit, Asp-99 and Asp-115, were found to be essential for complex I catalytic activity. EPR spectroscopic analysis indicated that the electron transfer to N2 cluster was not blocked and implied that this was not the reason for the loss of catalytic activity. From these data it can be concluded that D99 and D115 play a vital role for complex I NADH:ubiquinone reductase activity, but are not ligands for cluster N2 and that their position is not close enough to the cluster to influence directly its electromagnetic environment. Three mutations, identified in the PSST and TYKY homologous subunits of patients affected with Leigh syndrome (V119M in PSST, P78L and R101H in TYKY) were reconstructed in the obligate aerobic yeast Y. lipolytica. This approach may help to understand the aetiology of the Leigh syndrome, in terms of the ability of complex I to oxidize NADH and to transport electrons. In fact, all three mutations showed effects on electron transport, reducing the VMax by about 50%. Mutant V119M in the PSST subunit, which had a lethal effect in two patients that were homozygous for this mutation, affects a fully conserved residue. Overall, the results from site directed mutagenesis carried out so far support the theory that the “catalytic core ” (N2 cluster and quinone binding site) of complex I has been evolved from the electron transfer module of the [Ni-Fe] hydrogenases. In fact, mutagenesis of residues that are fully conserved between complex I and [Ni-Fe] hydrogenases, showed dramatic effects on complex I in terms of assembly (cysteine mutants) or catalytic activity (D99-D115). Differently, changing aspartate 174 and glutamic acid 185 (not fully conserved, Fig 4.1A) had little or no effect on the Michaelis-Menten parameters and N2 EPR signal. In recent years Y. lipolytica has been developed as a yeast genetic system to study mitochondrial complex I. The present work introduced the promoter for the isocitrate lyase (pICL1) as a useful tool for the substrate selective expression of the internal version of the alternative NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (pICL1-NDH2i). This allows to rescue complex I deficiencies “in vivo” selectively by growth on acetate (or ethanol) medium. The integration of the pICL1-NDH2i construct into the genome of Y. lipolytica and subsequent deletion of nuclear-coded subunits like PSST, TYKY and 49 kDa, would contribute to further develop this organism as a useful genetic model for studying subunits of mitochondrial complex I by site directed mutagenesis.
Stability, unfolding and refolding of the outer membrane protein porin from Paracoccus denitrificans was investigated using genetic and spectroscopic methods. Structural and functional activity studies on wild type and mutant porins: The site-directed mutants were constructed based on conserved residues and evidences on the role of certain amino acids from previous studies with OmpF. Secondary structure analysis of wild type and mutants E81Q, W74C, E81Q/D148N, E81Q/D148N/W74C by FTIR and CD spectroscopy are in line with the fact that porins are predominantly ß-sheet structure. The functional activity studies by black lipid bilayer techniques showed that the wild type and mutants W74C, E81Q/D148N, E81Q/D148N/W74C have a conductance of 3.25 nS. For mutant E81Q conductance of 1.25nS was more predominant over 3.25 nS. The activity of the mutants was observed to be far less than the wild type. This indicates that structural similarities does not implies similar functional activity. Thermal stability analysis of porin in detergent micelles and reconstituted into liposomes: Thermal stability analysis of wild type and mutants in detergent micelles showed changes in secondary and quaternary structure. It was found that wild type porin unfolds into aggregated structure with a high transition temperature of 86.2 °C. For mutants E81Q, W74C, E81Q/D148N the transition temperature was found to be 84.2 °C, 80.3 °C and 80.2 °C respectively. Functional activity assays at high temperatures revealed that the protein tends to loose its activity on heating up to 50 °C. This shows that structural stability does not imply functionality in the case of porins. Thermal stability analysis of porin reconstituted into liposomes showed that there was no change in the secondary and quaternary structure of the protein up to 100 °C, revealing that the protein becomes more thermostable when it is reconstituted into liposomes. Refolding of aggregated porin: This study shows that disaggregation of ß-sheet membrane protein porin is possible by changing its chemical and thermodynamic parameters. An increase of the solution pH to 12 or above results in opening up of the aggregated protein into unordered structure, as observed by FTIR and CD spectroscopy. This unordered structure could be refolded into native-like structure forming trimers. The secondary structure of the refolded protein deviated slightly from the native one. The thermal stability analysis of the native-like refolded proteins showed that the unfolding pattern is entirely different when compared to the native porins. pH dependent unfolding of porin: Thermal stability of porin at different pH values showed that the protein is stable in a pH range of 1-11. At pH 12 and above the protein unfolds into unordered structure instead of aggregating. The high pH unfolding of porin is a reversible process. The secondary structure of the refolded protein varied slightly from the native-one. Whereas thermal stability was entirely different. This shows that even though the unfolding of porin at high pH is reversible, it results in changes in local interaction between the amino acids resulting in a difference in stability. Unfolding in presence of urea and guanidinium hydrochloride (GuHCl): Denaturation of porin in the presence of chemical denaturants like urea and GuHCl showed that porin unfold into unordered structure. The unfolding is a reversible process. Unfolded protein was refolded into detergent micelles and liposomes. Refolding into detergent micelles was faster compared to refolding into liposomes, as seen by kinetic gel shift assays. The refolding into liposomes showed the presence of intermediates similar to those reported for OmpF. This study shows the difference in thermal stability of the outer membrane protein porin from Paracoccus denitrificans in detergent micelles and native-like liposomes. It suggests various unfolding pathways, which can be further investigated for unfolding and refolding kinetics. This report also suggests that it is possible to refold a heat-aggregated protein.
Results were presented from Brownian dynamics simulations for cyt c molecules approximated as spherical particles with diameter 2R ' 3.3 nm interacting with a charged planar membrane surface. Using the well-known Ermak-McCammon algorithm of ref. [36, 37] for solving the Langevin equations (see Chapter 2), a new computer program in C++ was developed. An overview of the way it is implemented is given in Chapter 3. The program in its current state is able to compute the trajectories (translation and rotation) of hundreds of spherical particles in systems with typical dimensions of 103 − 1003 nm3 . As explained in the introductory Chapter 1 the motivation for studying the dynamics of cyt c molecules in such systems came from the progress in the research of photosynthetic bacteria, e.g. While the internal processes of energy transduction (light harvesting, channelling to RC, charge separation) are quite well understood, the dynamics of soluble cyt c as an electron transporter in this context is not yet clear. In many textbooks one can find illustrations where a single cyt c is responsible for the electron transport between two integral membrane proteins (the reaction centre RC and the bc1 complex). But as pointed out in publications like refs. [49], [59], [60], [61] or [62] biological cells are crowded with different molecules. Consequently, one can assume that the electron transport between two integral membrane proteins is not simply taken on by one single cyt c molecule. Instead it is likely that many of these particles are located in a cyt c pool above the membrane and that they perform the electron transport in turns. Thus, it is desirable to have a simulation package that is able to compute the trajectories of many proteins. Note that the detailed processes of electron transfer and binding to membrane proteins are not modelled here. The details of these processes are quite complicated so that we refrained from including them in the coarse-grained simulations. Here, the actual binding is simply defined by a particle distance zb from the membrane which marks the beginning of the attractive potential. ...
Hinreichend kalte und dichte Quarkmaterie ist ein Farbsupraleiter. Ähnlich wie Elektronen in einem gewöhnlichen Supraleiter bilden Quarks Cooper-Paare. Während bei Elektronen der Austausch von Phononen zu einer Anziehung führt, ist im Falle von Quarks der Antitriplett-Kanal der starken Wechselwirkung attraktiv. Arbeiten in den letzten Jahren haben verschiedene Phasen von farbsupraleitender Quarkmaterie untersucht und sich dabei vor allem auf Phasen konzentriert, m denen der Gesamtspin eines Cooper-Paares verschwindet. In der vorliegenden Dissertation habe ich hauptsächlich Farbsupraleiter diskutiert, deren Cooper-Paare im Spin-Triplett-Kanal kondensieren, d.h. die Cooper-Paare haben den Gesamtspin 1. Diese Art von Supraleiter ist möglicherweise relevant für Systeme in der Natur, wie z.B. das Innere von Neutronensternen. Denn bei der Spin-0-Farbsupraleitung wird vorausgesetzt, dass die Fermi-Impulse zweier Quark-Flavor gleich ist oder zumindest hinreichend klein, was für realistische Systeme, also für nicht zu große Dichten, fragwürdig ist. Diese Einschränkung gibt es im Falle von Spin-1-Farbsupraleitern nicht, da hier Quarks des gleichen Flavors Cooper-Paare bilden. Ich habe in meiner Dissertation die verschiedenen möglichen Phasen eines Spin-1-Farbsupraleiters systematisch klassifiziert. Dies wurde mit Hilfe von gruppen-theoretischen Methoden durchgeführt, basierend auf der Tatsache, dass die Farbsupraleitung durch das theoretische Konzept der spontanen Symmetriebrechung beschrieben werden kann. Ähnlich wie bei supraflüssigem Helium-3 gibt es eine Vielzahl theoretisch möglicher Phasen. Ich habe die physikalischen Eigenschaften von vier dieser Phasen untersucht, nämlich der polaren und planaren Phasen sowie der A- und CSL-(color-spin-locked)Phasen. Mit Hilfe der QCD-Lückengleichung wurde die Energielücke sowie die kritische Temperatur bestimmt. Es stellt sich heraus, dass die Energielücke eines Spin-1-Farbsupraleiters um 2-3 Größenordnungen kleiner ist als die eines Spin-0-Farbsupraleiters, d.h. sie liegt im Bereich von 10 - 100 keV. Zwei besondere Eigenschaften der Energielücke werden diskutiert, nämlich eine 2-Lücken-Struktur, die in zwei der untersuchten Fälle auftritt, sowie mögliche Anisotropien, insbesondere Nullstellen der Lückenfunktion. Die Berechnung der kritischen Temperatur zeigt, dass es durchaus farbsupraleitende Materie in einer Spin-1-Phase im Innern von Neutronensternen geben kann, da die Temperatur von alten Neutronensternen im Bereich von einigen keV oder sogar darunter liegt. Darüber hinaus wurde die Frage untersucht, ob ein Farbsupraleiter auch ein gewöhnlicher Supraleiter ist. In diesem Zusammenhang ist die Frage von Interesse, ob ein Spin-1-Farbsupraleiter gewöhnliche Magnetfelder aus seinem Innern verdrängt, was sicherlich Auswirkungen auf die Observablen eines Neutronensterns hätte. Tatsächlich stellt sich heraus, dass ein Spin-1-Farbsupraleiter, im Gegensatz zu einem Spin-0-Farbsupraleiter, einen elektronmagnetischen Meissner-Effekt aufweist. Dieses Ergebnis wurde mit Hilfe von gruppentheoretischen Überlegungen vorausgesagt und mit Hilfe einer detaillierten Berechnung der Photon-Meissner-Massen bestätigt.
A new experimental setup, for pump-probe fs DFWM measurements, which is based on a femtosecond laser system, has been constructed. It allows for the investigation of molecular species in the gas phase at different temperatures, from ~30 K in a seeded supersonic jet up to ~500 K in a heat-pipe oven. In comparison to other RCS methods the employed fs DFWM technique is less complicated and gives much higher signal-to-noise ratio [BFZ86, FeZ95a, CKS89, CCH90, HCF91, WRM02, Rie02]. A general computer code for the simulation of fs DFWM spectra of nonrigid asymmetric top molecules has been developed. This new DFWM code in combination with a non-linear fitting routine allows one to determine rotational and centrifugal distortion constants and obtain information on the polarizability tensor components from the experimental spectra. Fs DFWM spectroscopy was successfully applied to the medium-sized molecules benzene and benzene-d6 in a gas cell and in a supersonic jet. The spectrum from a seeded expansion has been measured up to delay time of 3.9 ns (restricted by the length of the delay stage) with excellent signal-to-noise ratio (102-103). In that way 87 and 72 J-type transients have been recorded for benzene and benzene-d6, correspondingly. A relative accuracy on the order of 10-5 has been achieved for the rotational constant. From the room temperature experiments, precise values of centrifugal distortion constants DJ and DJK have been extracted. The literature data for cyclohexane have been revised and a new precise rotational constant B0 has been obtained, which is (+5.5 MHz) shifted from the one reported in the former Raman investigation by Peters et al. [PWW73]. Additionally, high-level ab initio calculations of cyclohexane have been carried out using a large number of basis sets at several levels of theory. In particular, the vibrational averaging effects have been examined in order to critically compare the experimentally determined and theoretically evaluated rotational constants. The contribution of highly symmetric vibrational modes to vibrational averaging effects was clarified. More structural information could be obtained from fs DFWM measurements of asymmetric top species, since different type of rotational recurrences can appear, and all three rotational constants (A, B, C) can be extracted. On the other hand the analysis of the asymmetric top spectra is no longer trivial. In fact the simple formula for rotational recurrence periods of symmetric top species (Tab. 2.1) can not be applied to asymmetric top molecules. Thus, in order to extract high-resolution data for asymmetric species, a complete fitting of the experimental spectra is necessary. The fs DFWM and (1+2') PPI method have been applied to the asymmetric top molecules pyridine in the ground (S0) and pDFB in the S0 and electronically excited (S1) states. By fitting the measured fs DFWM spectra the rotational and centrifugal distortion constants have been extracted with good precision and the value of the parametrized polarizability angle of pDFB was obtained. In this work, the first application of fs DFWM spectroscopy to a molecular cluster has been reported. Also, the chemical equilibrium between monomeric and dimeric species was studied. In particular formic and acetic acid have been investigated in a gas cell and in a supersonic expansion. Many spectral features have been observed and analized in the fs DFWM spectrum of formic acid vapor in a gas cell at room temperature. Most of them were attributed to rotational recurrences of the formic acid monomer, but also spectral feature originating from the formic acid dimer of O-H×××O/O×××H-O type have been detected and analyzed. From the fitted simulation, the rotational and centrifugal distortion constants, and parametrized polarizability angle were extracted for the dimeric structure of O-H×××O/O×××HO type. With the assumption of unperturbed monomers a center-of-mass distance of R = 2.990 ± 0.001 Å for the monomers within the dimer has been calculated from the spectroscopic results. This distance is 0.028 Å smaller than that reported from electron diffraction [ABM69]. Thus, the centers-of-mass distance was assigned as the main point of disagreement between results of fs DFWM and electron diffraction experiments. In contrast to formic acid, acetic acid shows strong recurrences from dimeric species even in the fs DFWM spectra at room temperature. This is explained in terms of different symmetry of the moments-of-inertia tensor, which modulates the intensity of RRs (the fs DFWM signal is in general stronger from symmetric species). Due to the symmetric nature of the acetic acid dimer, only the sum (B+C) of the rotational constants has been extracted. The changes of geometrical parameters upon dimer formation have been analyzed for, both, formic and acetic acid. A heat-pipe oven has been used in order to overcome the main drawback of fs DFWM spectroscopy – the square dependence of the signal intensity on the sample number density. Two-ring molecules (cyclohexylbenzene, para-cyclohexylaniline and nicotine) with low vapor pressure (<0.1 mbar) at room temperature have been investigated. From the analysis of the experimental and ab-initio results for CHB and pCHA a nearly perpendicular conformation of the aromatic vs. cyclohexane ring for both system is inferred. The enlargement of the benzene ring of CHB in the electronically excited state (S1) has been found to cause the smaller rotational constants in S1. This conclusion has been drawn from the comparison of the ground and electronically excited state experimental rotational constants in combination with ab-initio calculations. The extraction of precise structural information for nicotine was not possible due to it weak fs DFWM signal. However, the fact that fs DFWM technique can be applied to conformational analysis of molecular species in an equilibrium mixture opens other applications for this kind of spectroscopy. In general the results obtained in this work show that the fs DFWM technique, being an experimental implementation of RCS, provides one with an important tool for structural analysis of molecular species in the gas phase in particular for the species to which microwave spectroscopy can not be applied. It gives spectra with excellent signal-to-noise ratio even at low number density samples expanded in a seeded supersonic jet. It provides an alternative and innovative approach towards rotational Raman spectroscopy of large polyatomic molecules applicable under various experimental conditions (broad temperature and pressure range). With the introduction of femtosecond (10-15s) laser pulses (usually picosecond (10-12s) laser pulses were used in RCS) an improvement in time-resolution and therefore in precision for the rotational constants by more than one order of magnitude has been achieved. Molecular systems in the ground electronic state without permanent dipole moment and chromophore can be studied with high precision, providing thereby molecular benchmark systems for the electronic structure theory. As has been shown, the study of molecular clusters by fs DFWM spectroscopy is possible, but its potential are restricted by the square dependence of the fs DFWM signal from the sample number density, which is even more important for supersonic jet expansions. Here, the application of near-resonant and resonant FWM schemes should help in order to compensate for the low sample concentration. With the introduction of the heat pipe oven for fs DFWM experiments, the investigation of large nonvolatile molecules under equilibrium conditions is possible now. In our laboratory the first results on the structural analysis of different conformers of pyrrolidine in the gas phase have been obtained [MaR04]. This method can have even more prospects for the structural investigations of large molecular species in combination with new non-thermal gas phase sources for nonvolatile molecules, like laser desorption [CTL89], laser oblation [MHL83], electrospray [FMM90], laser induced liquid beam ion desorption [KAB96, Sob00] etc. A very recent application of the fs DFWM technique is the investigation of the influence of strong laser fields on molecular gas phase sample, which could range from active alignment [PPB03] over molecular deformation to field ionization [CSD03]. In regards to future development in fs DFWM spectroscopy for more complex molecules one has to take into account, how large amplitude motions such as the van der Waals vibrations or internal rotation (see section 6.4.2) affect the rotational coherences. In any case, femtosecond Degenerate Four-Wave Mixing as experimental implementation of Rotational Coherence Spectroscopy can be considered as an innovative, developing, and powerful method for the structural investigation of the molecular species, which are hard to study by classical frequency-resolved spectroscopy [FeZ95a, Dan01, Rie02].
Nitric oxide (NO) represents a short-lived mediator that pivotally drives keratinocyte movements during cutaneous wound healing. In this study, we have identified p68 DEAD box RNA helicase (p68) from a NO-induced differential keratinocyte cDNA library. Subsequently, we have analyzed regulation of p68 by wound-associated mediators in the human keratinocyte cell line HaCaT. NO, serum, growth factors and pro-inflammatory cytokines were potent inducers of p68 expression in the cells. p68 was constitutively expressed in murine skin, but rapidly down-regulated upon injury. The down-regulation appeared to be transient, as p68 protein expression increased again after the inflammatory phase of repair. However, p68 protein expression did not completely disappear during wound inflammation, as immunohistochemistry and cell fractiona tion analysis revealed a restricted localization of p68 in keratinocyte nuclei of the developing epithelium. In line, cultured human (HaCaT) and murine (PAM 212) keratinocyte cell lines showed a nuclear localization of the helicase. Moreover, confocal microscopy revealed a strong localization of p68 protein within the nucleoli of the keratinocytes. Functional analyses demonstrated that p68 strongly participates in keratinocyte proliferation and gene expression. Keratinocytes that constitutively overexpressed p68 protein were characterized by a marked increase in serum-induced proliferation and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression, whereas down-regulation of endogenous p68 using small interfering RNA (siRNA) markedly attenuated serum-induced proliferation and VEGF expression. Altogether, our results suggest a tightly controlled expression and nucleolar localization of p68 in keratinocytes in vitro and during skin repair in vivo that functionally contributes to keratinocyte proliferation and gene expression.