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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.