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Characterization of mouse NOA1 : subcellular localizaion, G-Quadruplex binding and proteolysis
(2013)
Mitochondria contain their own protein synthesis machinery with mitoribosomes that are similar to prokaryotic ribosomes. The thirteen proteins encoded in the mitochondrial genome are members of the respiratory chain complexes that generate a proton gradient, which is the electromotoric force for ATP synthesis.
NOA1 (Nitric Oxide Associated Protein-1) is a nuclear encoded GTPase that positively influences mitochondrial respiration and ATP production. Although a role in mitoribosome assembly was assigned to NOA1 the underlying molecular mechanism is poorly understood. This work shows that the multi-domain protein NOA1 serves multiple purposes for the function of mitochondria. NOA1 is a dual localized protein that makes a detour through the nucleus before mitochondrial import. The nuclear shuttling is mediated by a nuclear localization signal and the now identified nuclear export signal. SELEX (Systemic Evolution of Ligands by Exponential Enrichment) analysis revealed a G-quadruplex binding motif that characterizes NOA1 as ribonucleoprotein (RNP). G-quadruplex binding was coupled to the GTPase activity and increased the GTP hydrolysis rate. The sequence of localization events and the identification of NOA1 being a RNP lead to the discussion of an alternative import pathway for RNPs into mitochondria. The short-lived NOA1 contains ClpX recognition motifs and is specifically degraded by the mitochondrial matrix protease ClpXP. NOA1 is the first reported substrate of ClpXP in higher eukaryotes and augments the contribution of the ClpXP protease for mitochondrial metabolism. To assess the direct action of NOA1 on the mitoribosome co-sedimentation assays were performed. They showed that the interaction of NOA1 and the mitoribosome is dependent on the GTPase function and the nascent peptide chain. In vitro, NOA1 facilitated the membrane insertion of newly translated and isotope labeled mitochondrial translation products into inverted mitochondrial inner membrane vesicles. In conclusion, NOA1 is a G-quadruplex-RNP that acts as mitochondrial membrane insertion factor for mtDNA-encoded proteins.
This thesis provides a comprehensive model of the molecular function of NOA1 and is the basis for future research. The identification of NOA1 as ClpXP substrate is a major contribution to the field of mitochondrial research.
This thesis aims to analyse in a first step the physical and chemical properties of soil profiles along pedomorphological transects in different land used conditions (protected, partly protected as well as cultivated and pastured areas) in North West Benin and in South East Burkina Faso. The information about soils, which are carried out in consideration of the pedogenesis processes like weathering types, saprolitisation, formation of laterite crusts and denudation within the planation surfaces are therefore correlated in a second step with the structure and dynamic of woody plant around individual soil profiles. The relationship soil properties and woody plant is investigated in order to assess the reciprocal influence between the diversity of woody plants and soil characteristics within a small scale study and under different land use conditions.
A common vertical and lateral differentiation of physical and chemical properties regardless of the partly protected, protected and cultivated status of the sites can be noticed. Thus, in the cultivated site of Kikideni and in the partly protected zone of Natiabouani (South East Burkina Faso) sandy loam and sandy clay loam soil surfaces are widespread because of the occurrence of similar erosion processes like sheet wash, rill and gully erosion while in the central part of the Pendjari National Park loamy soil textures are prevailing. In fact, the steepness of the relief and the length of the slopes in the Pendjari Park seem to limit the development of some erosion forms as gully. Furthermore, the classification of soils reflects the variation of pedological processes along the transects and thus the occurrence of different soil types. The status of the sites may play an insignificant role in the differentiation of soil properties within the scale of small pedomorphological transects. A direct comparison of the vegetation type in the land use respectively partly protected and in the total protected sites (National Park of Pendjari) reveals a transition from the shrub savanna to the tree savanna. In conclusion it is important to insist on the fact that the variations of soil parameters within small slopes and the different sites are more conditioned by varying erosion processes and drainage conditions than the status protected or land use sites while the composition and diversity of plants is influenced by the status of the sites, the prevailing management tools, the pedogenetic conditions as well as the presence of wild animals like elephants. The ordination diagram shows that the organic matter is better correlated to the subgroup representing principally the sites of the hunting zone of the Pendjari Park and might be an explaining factor to the distribution of these sample sites groups. CEC ratios in the partly protected site of Natiabouani represent the highest measured in all sites. Nevertheless, statistical analysis of the CCA (canonical correspondence analysis) indicates generally a low correlation. This tendency is consolidated by the Monte Carlo test (p=0.14) which is a good indicator of species and environmental conditions. The detailed analysis of soil properties and the vegetation dynamic as well as their relationship within small pedomorphological transects represent an important pedological and botanical data collection involving different compartments. This thesis contributes to the better understanding of the savanna landscapes of West Africa and may provide essential scientific background for each development project directed towards interdisciplinary and integrative researches.
In the past century, scientists have realized that venoms are a source of a number of natural substances presenting a wide range of pharmacological properties and often displaying a high specificity for their targets. Thus, the field of toxinology came into being, which is defined as the study of toxic substances of biological origin. Toxins are found in a wide variety of animals, including fish, cone snails, scorpions, snakes, and even some mammals. To be classified as venom, these must contain substances, i.e. toxins, which disturb physiological processes and must be deliberately delivered to the target animal. Snakes have evolved one of the most sophisticated mechanisms for venom delivery. Envenomation by snakebite can induce and inhibit aggregation/agglutination of platelets as well as inhibit/activate hemostasis, but also disrupt other physiological functions via neurotoxins and angioneurin growth factors. Snake venoms contain a substantial amount of C-type lectin-related proteins (CLRPs) which are known to function, notably, as integrin inhibitors. CLRPs are heterodimers composed of homologous α and β subunits which can assemble either covalently or noncovalently to oligomers, resulting in αβ, (αβ)2 and (αβ)4 structures. Some of the main targets of CLRPs are membrane receptors, coagulation factors, and proteins essential to hemostasis. The platelet collagen receptors GPVI and α2β1 integrin as well as the von Willebrand factor receptor GPIb play important roles in platelet activation and aggregation and are considered main targets of antithrombotic drugs. In this thesis, the integrin α2β1 is particularly considered as it is the sole collagen-binding integrin on platelets. Reduced expression of this platelet receptor results in dysfunction of platelet responses. Equivalently, overexpression of α2β1 integrin results in an increased risk of thrombosis. As a result, selective inhibitors of the collagen-α2β1 interaction could give rise to effective antithrombotic drugs. Integrins are large receptors which mediate cell-cell contacts and the binding of cells to the extracellular matrix (ECM). Therefore, they play a role in physiological processes, e.g. hemostasis and immunity, as well as in pathological processes, e.g. tumor angiogenesis and atherosclerosis. 18 α and 8 β integrin subunits, with nine α subunits containing an additional A domain, associate non-covalently to form 24 heterodimers with distinct binding specificities. Integrin collagen receptors are a subclass of four receptors which all utilize the β1 subunit. The α2β1 integrin is a collagen-binding receptor expressed not only on platelets, but also on endothelial and epithelial cells. Consequently, this integrin is also essential for cell adhesion and migration playing a role in angiogenesis as well as tumor metastasis. To date, there are five known antagonists of α2β1 integrin: EMS16, rhodocetin, vixapatin, and most recently rhinocetin and flavocetin-A. The first four have been shown to be specific for the integrin α2A domain, the major collagen-binding domain. All these antagonists are CLRPs and present new leads for drug design. In the past few years, many insights into the structure and function of rhodocetin were obtained. Monoclonal antibodies proved to be advantageous in disclosing this information, making them not only useful as therapeutic agents, but also as tools for protein characterization. The venom of the Vipera palaestinae snake was recently shown to contain an α2β1 integrin inhibitor, which prevented the integrin from binding collagen. This inhibitor, called vixapatin, was the initial focus of this dissertation. Vixapatin’s interaction with the α2β1 integrin needed further characterization on a molecular and cellular level to assess its medical potential and monoclonal antibodies were to be used as a tool. Originally, vixapatin had been isolated by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. To avoid the stringency of this method, for this study, it was replaced with gentler chromatographic methods. First, the α2β1 integrin inhibitor was isolated from the crude snake venom with affinity chromatography using the α2A domain as bait, establishing a method to quickly screen venoms for α2β1-binding proteins which affect the collagenintegrin interaction. The applicability of this method to other snake venoms was shown by isolating an α2A domain-specific toxin from the venom of Trimeresurus flavoviridis. To allow further characterization of both these toxins, gel filtration and ion exchange chromatography were employed to purify the protein without the α2A domain. These classical protein purification methods resulted in similar separation patterns of both the V. palaestinae and T. flavoviridis venom proteins. Purified proteins exhibiting the potential of inhibiting integrinbinding to collagen were analyzed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Both VP-i and flavocetin-A, the integrin inhibitors from V. palaestinae and T. flavoviridis, respectively, were shown to have more complex structures than was evident from the purification. Each consisted of four low-molecular-weight proteins which assembled into two bands (for VP-i) or one single band (for flavocetin-A) under non-reducing conditions. Mass spectrometry analyses revealed VP-i to belong to the family of CLRPs, just like vixapatin does. However, these two proteins differed in their primary sequences and only showed homology to one another. The toxin purified from T. flavoviridis revealed this toxin to be flavocetin-A, a heterodimeric CLRP which had so far only been shown to have GPIb-binding activity. At the time of flavocetin-A’s purification, flavocetin-B was co-purified; flavocetin-B consists of the same two α and β subunits, plus an additional γ subunit. As no sequence information is known to date for the γ subunit, it may be one of the additional proteins purified here, along with an additional δ subunit. Therefore, the toxin isolated here may actually consist of four different subunits forming a tetramer of two different heterodimers, generating an (αβ)2(γδ)2 structure. This proposed (αβ)2(γδ)2 flavocetin-A structure has binding sites for both α2β1 integrin and GPIb, with no sterical overlap, as shown by affinity chromatography using the α2A domain and the extracellular domain of the GPIb receptor. The potential of VP-i and flavocetin-A to inhibit integrin-binding to type I collagen was shown during purification: Both toxins efficiently bind to the integrin α2A domain; also, VP-i and vixapatin bind to the A domain with the same affinity. Surface plasmon resonance showed the interaction of flavocetin-A with the α2β1 integrin to be extremely strong and association to be very fast. Furthermore, both toxins were shown to inhibit binding of the wildtype integrin to collagen: VP-i and flavocetin-A acted antagonistically on cell adhesion and cell migration. Initially, the interaction between VP-i and α2β1 integrin was to be further characterized with the help of monoclonal antibodies. However, this proved problematic, the procedure requiring various optimizations. Although, after expert consultation, some monoclonal antibodies could be obtained, the cells were extremely sensitive and gave unsatisfactory results when tested as detection tools in Western blot and immunoassays. Concluding, two novel α2β1 integrin inhibitors were discovered: VP-i and flavocetin-A, which were purified using the same procedure and which have similar functions. Both are Ctype lectin-related proteins which effectively inhibit cell adhesion and migration. This underlines that nature has instrumentalized CLRPs to specifically inhibit α2β1 integrin. Further characterization of VP-i and flavocetin-A will be able to provide leads for future drug development.
This dissertation provides an analysis of Finnish prosody, with a focus on the sentence or phrase level. The thesis analyses Finnish as a phrase language. Thus, it accounts for prosodic variation through prosodic phrasing and explains intonational differences in terms of phrase tones.
Finnish intonation has traditionally been described in terms of accents associated with stressed syllables, i.e. similarly as prototypical intonation languages like English or German. However, accents are usually described as uniform instead of forming an inventory of contrasting accent types. The present thesis confirms the uniformity of Finnish tonal contours and explains it as based on realisations of tones associated with prosodic phrases instead of accents. Two levels of phrasing are discussed: Prosodic phrases (p-phrases) and intonational phrases (i-phrases). Most prominently, the p-phrase is marked by a high tone associated with its beginning and a low tone associated with its end; realisations of these tones form the rise-fall contours traditionally analysed as accents. The i-phrase is associated with a final tone that is either low or high and additionally marked by voice quality and final lengthening. While the tonal specifications of these phrases are thus predominantly invariant, variation arises from different distributions of phrases.
This analysis is based on three studies, two production experiments and one perception study. The first production study investigated systematic variation in information structure, first syllable vowel quantity and the target word's position in the sentence, while the second production experiment induced variation in information structure, first and second syllable type and number of syllables. In addition to fundamental frequency, the materials were analysed regarding duration, the occurrence of pauses and voice quality. The perception study investigated the interpretation of compound/noun phrase minimal pairs with manipulated fundamental frequency contours using a two-alternative forced-choice picture selection task. Additionally, a pilot perception study on variation in peak height and timing supported the assumption of uniform tonal contours.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird untersucht, wie das Gehirn Bewusstsein erzeugt. Diese Frage wird als eines der größten Rätsel der heutigen Wissenschaft angesehen: Wie kann es sein, dass aus der Aktivität der Nervenzellen unsere subjektive Welt entsteht? Es ist offensichtlich nicht einfach, diese Frage wissenschaftlich zu untersuchen. Eine der vorgeschlagenen Strategien für die Untersuchung von Bewusstsein behauptet, dass man zunächst die neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins finden sollte (Koch, 2004). Einer Definition zufolge sind die neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins die kleinste Menge neuronaler Prozesse, die hinreichend für eine bestimmte bewusste Erfahrung sind (zum Beispiel für die bewusste Erfahrung des Blaubeergeschmacks). Manche behaupteten, die Entdeckung der neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins würde es erlauben, dem Rätsel des Bewusstseins näher zu kommen (Crick & Koch, 1990). Nur wie soll man die neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins finden? Eine relativ einfache Strategie dafür wurde schon vor mehr als 20 Jahren beschrieben. Es sollten einfach experimentelle Bedingungen erschaffen werden, in welchen ein Reiz manchmal bewusst wahrgenommen wird und manchmal nicht (Baars, 1989). Solche Analysen, die Bedingungen mit und ohne bewusste Wahrnehmung vergleichen, werden als „Kontrastierungsanalyse“ bezeichnet (da zwei Bedingungen miteinander kontrastiert werden). Es existieren viele verschiedene experimentelle Paradigmen, bei welchen man den Reiz unter denselben Bedingungen präsentieren kann, so dass er bei manchen Versuchsdurchgängen bewusst wahrgenommen wird, bei anderen nicht (Kim & Blake, 2005). Mit solchen experimentellen Paradigmen kann man angeblich die neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins finden, wenn man a) bei jedem Durchgang die Versuchsperson fragt, ob oder was die Versuchsperson bei dem Durchgang wahrgenommen hat und b) gleichzeitig die neuronalen Prozesse misst (zum Beispiel mit EEG, MEG oder fMRT). Anschließend kann man die erhobenen neuronalen Daten unter den Bedingungen mit und ohne bewusste Wahrnehmung vergleichen.
Mittlerweile gibt es viele Studien, in denen solche experimentelle Paradigmen – und damit die Kontrastierungsanalyse – angewendet wurden. Insofern könnte man glauben, die neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins seien schon gefunden worden. Allerdings ist dies nicht der Fall. Es existiert in der Literatur weiterhin Uneinigkeit darüber, ob die Korrelate des Bewusstseins früh oder spät in der Zeit liegen, und ob die Korrelate in sensorischen Arealen oder eher im hierarchisch höheren fronto-parietalen Kortex zu finden sind.
Nach unserer Meinung sind die experimentellen Paradigmen, die üblicherweise zum Auffinden der neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins verwendet werden, nicht spezifisch genug, um diese eindeutig zu lokalisieren. Eher glauben wir, dass die klassische Kontrastierungsanalyse auch andere Prozesse als Ergebnisse hervorbringt und uns deshalb prinzipiell nicht zu den neuronalen Korrelaten des Bewusstseins führen kann.
Im Kapitel 2 wird erklärt, wieso die typischen experimentellen Paradigmen nicht die neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins ausfindig machen können. Wir behaupten, dass der Vergleich neuronaler Daten aus experimentellen Bedingungen mit und ohne bewusste Wahrnehmung auch die neuronalen Prozesse widerspiegeln könnte, die bewussten Wahrnehmungen entweder vorausgehen oder folgen. Es ist beispielsweise bekannt, dass neuronale Prozesse vor Auftreten des Reizes darüber bestimmen können, ob der Reiz bewusst wahrgenommen wird oder nicht (Busch, Dubois, & VanRullen, 2009; Mathewson, Gratton, Fabiani, Beck, & Ro, 2009). Wenn man experimentelle Bedingungen mit und ohne bewusster Wahrnehmung miteinander vergleicht, werden auch solche Prozesse als Ergebnis auftauchen, obwohl diese zeitlich klar vor dem Reiz stattfinden und deshalb keine neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins sein können. Es ist natürlich einfach zu entscheiden, dass diese Prozesse, die schon vor dem Reiz stattfinden, der bewussten Wahrnehmung vorausgehen müssen, aber es ist unmöglich zu sagen, ob ein neuronaler Prozess 100 oder 200 Millisekunden nach der Präsentation des Reizes immer noch ein Vorläuferprozess ist schon ein neuronales Korrelat des Bewusstseins darstellt. Deshalb ist die typische Kontrastierungsanalyse nicht spezifisch genug und wir wissen nicht, ob neuronale Prozesse, die durch die Kontrastierungsanalyse aufgedeckt werden, direkt die neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins oder eher Prozesse vor der bewussten Wahrnehmung widerspiegeln.
Nicht nur die Vorläuferprozesse der bewussten Warnehmung stellen ein Problem dar. Auch Konsequenzen der bewussten Verarbeitung werden durch die Kontrastierungsanalyse gefunden. Beispielsweise wurden im medialen Temporallappen Neurone gefunden, die nur dann feuern, wenn ein Patient eine Person auf einem Bild bewusst erkennt, aber nicht feuern, wenn der Patient die Person auf dem Bild nicht bewusst wahrnimmt (Quiroga, Mukamel, Isham, Malach, & Fried, 2008). So könnte man vorerst meinen, dass das Feuern dieser Neurone das neuronale Korrelat des Bewusstseins sein könnte. Nach einer Läsion, sprich neuronalen Schädigung des medialen Temporallappens kann man die Welt jedoch weiterhin bewusst wahrnehmen (man hat jedoch Probleme mit dem Gedächtnis und Wiedererkennen). Insofern kann das Feuern dieser Neurone nicht das neuronale Korrelat des Bewusstseins sein und ist eher ein Beispiel für die Konsequenz der bewussten Verarbeitung. Wir behaupten, dass es noch viele andere solcher Vorläuferprozesse und Konsequenzen gibt, die notwendigerweise als Ergebnis bei der Kontrastierungsanalyse auftauchen, und also ist die typische Kontrastierungsanalyse extrem unspezifisch bezüglich der neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins. In anderen Worten: Die typische Kontrastierungsanalyse, bei welcher man experimentelle Bedingungen mit und ohne bewusste Wahrnehmung miteinander vergleicht, wird uns nicht helfen die neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins zu finden.
Wir glauben, dass neue experimentelle Paradigmen entwickelt werden sollten, um die neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins ausfindig zu machen. Wahrscheinlich gibt es kein einfaches Experiment, mit dem man die Vorläuferprozesse und Konsequenzen vollständig vermeiden kann, um damit direkt die neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins zu bestimmen. Eher braucht man viele verschiedene Experimente, die Schritt für Schritt unser Wissen über die neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins erweitern.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit (in Kapiteln 3, 4 und 5) wird ein neues experimentelles Paradigma angewandt. Dieses Paradigma wird nicht alle oben erwähnten Probleme lösen, wird aber hoffentlich erlauben, einige Vorläuferprozesse der bewussten Wahrnehmung von den neuronalen Korrelaten des Bewusstseins auseinanderzuhalten. Der Vorteil unseres experimentellen Paradigmas besteht darin, dass die bewusste Wahrnehmung durch zwei verschiedene Vorläuferprozesse beeinflusst wird. Die Versuchspersonen müssen auf schnell präsentierten und mittels Rauschens undeutlich gemachten Bildern eine Person detektieren. Die experimentellen Bedingungen sind derart gestaltet, dass die Versuchspersonen nicht bei jedem Durchgang die Person auf dem Bild wahrnehmen können. Damit können wir den Wahrnehmungsprozess manipulieren. Bei einer Manipulation variieren wir den Anteil des Rauschens auf dem Bild und damit die sensorische Evidenz. Je weniger Rauschen, desto besser können die Versuchspersonen die Bilder wahrnehmen und desto öfter sehen sie auch bewusst die Person auf dem Bild. Bei der anderen experimentellen Manipulation der Wahrnehmung werden einige Bilder den Versuchspersonen vorher klar und ohne Rauschen gezeigt. Damit erschafft man Wissen über bestimmte Bilder, die später mit Rauschen präsentiert werden. Man kann zeigen, dass solch bestehendes Wissen tatsächlich die Wahrnehmung beeinflusst. Wenn die Versuchspersonen bestehendes Wissen über ein Bild haben, ist es wahrscheinlicher, dass sie die Person auf dem Bild bewusst wahrnehmen. Damit haben wir zwei verschiedene Vorläuferprozesse – sensorische Evidenz und bestehendes Wissen, die beide die bewusste Wahrnehmung beeinflussen. Beide Vorläuferprozesse erhöhen den Anteil der Durchgänge, in welchen die Versuchspersonen die Person auf dem Bild bewusst wahrnehmen.
Mit diesem experimentellen Paradigma möchten wir einige Aussagen über die neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins testen. Wenn über einen neuronalen Prozess behauptet wird, dass er einem neuronalen Korrelat des Bewusstseins entspricht, müsste dieser Prozess von den beiden manipulierten Vorläuferprozessen in ähnlicher Weise beeinflusst werden, da bewusste Wahrnehmung durch beide manipulierten Vorläuferprozessen in ähnlicher Weise erleichtert wird. Wenn aber der Prozess, über den behauptet wird, er sei ein neuronales Korrelat des Bewusstseins, nicht durch beide Manipulationen geändert wird, kann dieser Prozess kein neuronales Korrelat des Bewusstseins sein, da er nicht beeinflusst wird, obwohl die bewusste Wahrnehmung geändert wurde.
Mit diesem experimentellen Paradigma und dieser Logik haben wir zwei unterschiedliche neuronale Prozesse getestet, von denen behauptet wird, dass sie den neuronalen Korrelaten des Bewusstseins entsprechen könnten. In Kapitel 3 wurde untersucht, ob lokale kategorienspezifische Gammabandaktivität die neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins reflektieren könnte. In Kapitel 4 wurde mit diesem experimentellen Paradigma untersucht, ob die neuronale Synchronisierung dem neuronalen Korrelat des Bewusstseins entsprechen könnte.
Unsere Arbeit im Kapitel 3 baut auf der von Fisch und Kollegen (2009) auf. Fisch und Kollegen (2009) zogen aus ihrer experimentellen Arbeit den Schluss, dass lokale kategorienspezifische Gammabandaktivität die neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins reflektieren könnte. Sie hatten Elektroden auf dem visuellen Kortex von Epilepsiepatienten implantiert und von diesen Elektroden die Gammabandaktivität abgeleitet. Im ersten Schritt suchten sie nach Elektroden, die kategorienspezifische Antworten zeigen. Bei den kategorienspezifischen Elektroden ist die Gammabandaktivität abhängig vom präsentierten Stimulusmaterial. Zum Beispiel kann man bei einer Elektrode auf dem Fusiform Face Area starke Gammabandaktivität nur dann messen, wenn ein Gesicht auf dem Bild zu sehen ist. Die Autoren benutzten solche kategorienspezifischen Elektroden, um nach den neuronalen Korrelaten des Bewusstseins zu suchen. Sie zeigten den Patienten Bilder von Gesichtern, Häusern und Objekten, die direkt nach der kurzen Präsentation maskiert wurden, so dass die Patienten nur bei manchen Durchgängen erkannten, was auf dem Bild war, bei anderen Durchgängen nicht. Dies entspricht der typischen Kontrastierungsanalyse. Die Ergebnisse haben klar gezeigt, dass bei diesen kategorienspezifischen Elektroden die Gammabandaktivität erhöht wurde, als die Patienten bewusst wahrnahmen, was auf dem Bild zu sehen war. Aus diesen Ergebnissen zogen die Autoren den Schluss, dass lokale kategorienspezifische Gammabandaktivität dem neuronalen Korrelat des Bewusstseins entspricht. Diese Aussage wollten wir mit unserem experimentellen Paradigma testen.
Um diese Behauptung zu untersuchen, erhoben wir sehr ähnliche Daten wie Fisch et al. (2009) und analysierten die Daten auf ähnliche Weise. Unsere experimentelle Frage war, ob die lokale kategorienspezifische Gammabandaktivität durch unsere beiden Manipulationen – sensorische Evidenz und bestehendes Wissen – in ähnlicher Weise erhöht wird. Dies sollte der Fall sein, wenn die lokale kategorienspezifische Gammabandaktivität dem neuronalen Korrelat des Bewusstseins entspricht, da sensorische Evidenz und bestehendes Wissen beide den Anteil der Durchgänge, in welchen die Versuchsperson die Person auf dem Bild bewusst wahrnimmt, erhöhen. Dieses Ergebnis wurde nicht gefunden. Stattdessen fanden wir, dass die lokale kategorien-spezifische Gammabandaktivität nur durch sensorische Evidenz erhöht wurde, bestehendes Wissen aber keinen Effekt auf diese Aktivierung hatte. Da bestehendes Wissen auch den Anteil der Durchgänge mit bewusster Wahrnehmung erhöht, die kategorienspezifische Gammabandaktivität aber nicht durch bestehendes Wissen erhöht wurde, kann man schlussfolgern, dass die kategorienspezifische Gammabandaktivität nicht die neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins reflektieren kann.
Als nächstes (Kapitel 4) haben wir die Hypothese getestet, dass Synchronizität dem neuronalen Korrelat des Bewusstseins entspricht. Um diese Idee zu testen, maßen wir mittels Magnetoenzephalographie die magnetischen Felder des Gehirns, schätzten aus diesen Daten mittels Beamforming die neuronalen Aktivitätsquellen und quantifizierten die Synchronizität zwischen diesen Quellen. Wenn die interareale Synchronizität dem neuronalen Korrelat des Bewusstseins entspräche, sollte die Synchronizität für Bedingungen mit mehr sensorischer Evidenz und mit bestehendem Wissen erhöht sein. Dies wurde nicht beobachtet. Wir fanden, dass Synchronizität (gemittelt über die Quellen) nur bei den Bildern erhöht war, für die bestehendes Wissen vorlag. Ein ähnlicher Effekt für sensorische Evidenz wurde nicht gefunden. Insofern können wir sagen, dass unsere Befunde dagegen sprechen, dass neuronale Synchronizität den Mechanismus für Bewusstsein darstellt. Allerdings können wir das in diesem Fall auch nicht völlig ausschließen, denn Synchronizität könnte die Informationsverarbeitung auf einem kleineren Maßstab koordinieren als wir es mit dem MEG messen können (Singer, in press).
Im Kapitel 5 untersuchten wir, wie schnell bestehendes Wissen bewusste Verarbeitung beeinflussen kann. Um dies herauszufinden machten wir uns die intraindividuellen Unterschiede der perzeptuellen Leistung zu Nutze. Wir fanden, dass bestehendes Wissen bewusste Verarbeitung schon innerhalb der ersten 100 Millisekunden nach der Präsentation des Reizes beeinflusst. Wir beobachteten auch, dass ein größerer perzeptueller Effekt des bestehenden Wissens in geringerer neuronaler Aktivität in Durchgängen mit bestehendem Wissen hervorruft. Diese Ergebnisse sind im Einklang mit Theorien, die besagen, dass unsere Wahrnehmung bestehendes Wissen nutzt, um vorherzusagen, wie die visuelle Welt sich ändert und um die neuronalen Antworten zu verringern (Friston, 2010).
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde diskutiert, warum die typische Kontrastierungsanalyse uns nicht zu den neuronalen Korrelaten des Bewusstseins führen kann. Wir schlugen vor, dass neue experimentelle Paradigmen nötig sind, um näher an die neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins heranzukommen. Es wurde ein neues Paradigma benutzt, um zwischen Vorläuferprozessen und neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins zu unterscheiden. Mit diesem Paradigma wurden zwei sehr unterschiedliche Hypothesen getestet und gefunden, dass die kategorienspezifische Gammabandaktivität nicht die neuronalen Korrelate des Bewusstseins widerspiegeln kann. Wir hoffen, dass unsere Experimente eine Entwicklung von vielen weiteren und besseren experimentellen Paradigmen stimuliert, die zwischen den Vorläuferprozessen, den Konsequenzen und den eigentlichen Korrelaten des Bewusstseins unterscheiden können. Wenn man über die Kontrastierungsanalyse hinausgeht, kann man die gegenwärtigen Theorien des Bewusstseins testen und damit Schritt für Schritt näher an die neuronalen Grundlagen des Bewusstseins kommen.
This research was conducted in the Rwenzori Region of the Western Branch, East African Rift System (EARS). The EARS is a tectonic structure extending over a length of more than 3000 km from the Afar Triple Junction, in Ethiopia, to Lake Malawi in the south. The Western Rift System is a roughly NE to ENE trending sector of the EARS, which runs along the western boundary of Uganda and the neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo (D.R.C). It stretches 2100 km from Nimule, NW on Uganda-Sudan border, extending to Lake Malawi in the SE of Africa. The unusual uplift of the Rwenzori Mountains within an extensional regime and the mechanisms associated with the high frequency of seismic activity in the region was hardly understood and therefore, had remained a subject of contention that needed to be critically addressed in detail. To my knowledge, this was probably the first study to be performed and documented in great depth within the domains of seismic noise variation, seismic anisotropy and b value analyses beneath the Rwenzori Region. After about six years of operation (2006-2012), the seismology group of the RIFTLINK Research Project (www.riftlink.org) acquired a vast amount of high-quality, digital data that were collected using a seismic network of well calibrated seismic equipment. The project was divided into two phases. Phase I, that operated between February 2006 - September 2007, consisted of thirty-two temporary seismic stations, which were selectively spread out in the Rwenzori Region on the Ugandan side, to detect and record extremely weak as well as strong naturally occurring earthquakes. The seismic equipment used included EDL and REFTEK digitizers, which were coupled with Güralp and MARK sensors respectively (REFTEKS: only short-period MARK sensors, EDLs: short-period MARK plus few broadband Güralp Sensors). Exactly 22375 earthquakes were recorded. The data were processed using the SEISAN software package. About 14413 earthquakes were carefully localized using the velocity model of Bram (1975) that implements a Vp=Vs ratio fixed at 1.74. Phase II, that extended between 2009-2012 consisted of thirty-two seismic stations, which were spread out around the Rwenzori Mountains, both on the Ugandan side and the neighboring D.R.C. Only Taurus digitizers that were coupled with Trillium sensors were used in the D.R.C. On the Ugandan side however, both EDL and Taurus digitizers, which were coupled with Trillium and Güralp sensors were used. ...
A stochastic model for the joint evaluation of burstiness and regularity in oscillatory spike trains
(2013)
The thesis provides a stochastic model to quantify and classify neuronal firing patterns of oscillatory spike trains. A spike train is a finite sequence of time points at which a neuron has an electric discharge (spike) which is recorded over a finite time interval. In this work, these spike times are analyzed regarding special firing patterns like the presence or absence of oscillatory activity and clusters (so called bursts). These bursts do not have a clear and unique definition in the literature. They are often fired in response to behaviorally relevant stimuli, e.g., an unexpected reward or a novel stimulus, but may also appear spontaneously. Oscillatory activity has been found to be related to complex information processing such as feature binding or figure ground segregation in the visual cortex. Thus, in the context of neurophysiology, it is important to quantify and classify these firing patterns and their change under certain experimental conditions like pharmacological treatment or genetical manipulation. In neuroscientific practice, the classification is often done by visual inspection criteria without giving reproducible results. Furthermore, descriptive methods are used for the quantification of spike trains without relating the extracted measures to properties of the underlying processes.
For that reason, a doubly stochastic point process model is proposed and termed 'Gaussian Locking to a free Oscillator' - GLO. The model has been developed on the basis of empirical observations in dopaminergic neurons and in cooperation with neurophysiologists. The GLO model uses as a first stage an unobservable oscillatory background rhythm which is represented by a stationary random walk whose increments are normally distributed. Two different model types are used to describe single spike firing or clusters of spikes. For both model types, the distribution of the random number of spikes per beat has different probability distributions (Bernoulli in the single spike case or Poisson in the cluster case). In the second stage, the random spike times are placed around their birth beat according to a normal distribution. These spike times represent the observed point process which has five easily interpretable parameters to describe the regularity and the burstiness of the firing patterns.
It turns out that the point process is stationary, simple and ergodic. It can be characterized as a cluster process and for the bursty firing mode as a Cox process. Furthermore, the distribution of the waiting times between spikes can be derived for some parameter combination. The conditional intensity function of the point process is derived which is also called autocorrelation function (ACF) in the neuroscience literature. This function arises by conditioning on a spike at time zero and measures the intensity of spikes x time units later. The autocorrelation histogram (ACH) is an estimate for the ACF. The parameters of the GLO are estimated by fitting the ACF to the ACH with a nonlinear least squares algorithm. This is a common procedure in neuroscientific practice and has the advantage that the GLO ACF can be computed for all parameter combinations and that its properties are closely related to the burstiness and regularity of the process. The precision of estimation is investigated for different scenarios using Monte-Carlo simulations and bootstrap methods.
The GLO provides the neuroscientist with objective and reproducible classification rules for the firing patterns on the basis of the model ACF. These rules are inspired by visual inspection criteria often used in neuroscientific practice and thus support and complement usual analysis of empirical spike trains. When applied to a sample data set, the model is able to detect significant changes in the regularity and burst behavior of the cells and provides confidence intervals for the parameter estimates.
The human brain is an unparalleled system: Through millions of years of evolution and during a lifespan of learning, our brains have developed remarkable abilities for dealing with incoming sensory data, extracting structure and useful information, and finally drawing the conclusions that result in the actions we take. Understanding the principles behind this machinery and building artificial systems that mimic at least some of these capabilities is a long standing goal in both the scientific and the engineering communities. While this goal still seems unreachable, we have seen tremendous progress when it comes to training data-driven algorithms on vast amounts of training data, e.g. to learn an optimal data model and its parameters in order to accomplish some task. Such algorithms are now omnipresent: they are part of recommender systems, they perform speech recognition and generally build the foundation for many semi-autonomous systems. They start to be integral part of many technical systems modern technical societies rely on for their everyday functioning. Many of these algorithms were originally inspired by biological systems or act as models for sensory data processing in mammalian brains. The response properties of a certain population of neurons in the first stages of the mammalian visual pathway, for example, can be modeled by algorithms such as Sparse Coding (SC), Independent Component Analysis (ICA) or Factor Analysis (FA). These well established learning algorithms typically assume linear interactions between the variables of the model. Most often these relationships are expressed in the form of a matrix-vector products between a matrix with learned dictionary-elements (basis vectors as column vectors) and the latent variables of these models. While on the one hand this linear interaction can sometimes be justified by the physical process for which the machine learning model is proposed, it is on the other hand often chosen just because of its mathematical and practical convenience. From an optimal coding point of view though, one would generally expect that the ideal model closely reflect the core interactions of the system it is modeling. In vision for example, one of the dominant processes giving rise to our sensory percepts are occlusions. Occluding objects are omnipresent in visual scenes and it would not be surprising if the mammalian visual system would be optimized to process occluding structures in the visual data stream. Yet, the established mathematical models of the first stages of the visual processing path (like, e.g., SC, ICA or FA) all assume linear interactions between the active image components. In this thesis we will discuss new models that aim to approximate the effects of occluding components by assuming nonlinear interactions between their activated dictionary elements. We will present learning algorithms that infer optimal parameters for these models given data. In the experiments, we will validate the algorithms on artificial ground truth data and demonstrate their ability to recover the correct model parameters. We will show that the predictions made by these nonlinear models correspond better to the experimental data measured in-vivo than the predictions made by the established linear models. Furthermore, we systematically explore and compare a large space of plausible combinations of hyperparameters and preprocessing schemes in order to eliminate any effects of artefacts on the observed results. Training nonlinear sparse coding models is computationally more demanding than training linear models. In order to perform the numerical experiments described in this thesis we developed a software framework that facilitates the implementation of massive parallel expectation maximization (EM) based learning algorithms. This infrastructure was used for all experiments described in here, as well as by collaborators in projects we will not discuss. Some of the experiments required more than 1017 floating point operations and were run on a computer cluster running on up to 5000 CPU Cores in parallel. Our parallel framework enabled these experiments to be performed.
In this work the main emphasis is put on the investigation of relativistic shock waves and Mach cones in hot and dense matter using the microscopic transport model BAMPS, based on the relativistic Boltzmann equation. Using this kinetic approach we study the complete transition from ideal-fluid behavior to free streaming. This includes shock-wave formation in a simplified (1+1)-dimensional setup as well as the investigation of Mach-cone formation induced by supersonic projectiles and/or jets in (2+1)- and (3+1)-dimensional static and expanding systems. We further address the question whether jet-medium interactions inducing Mach cones can contribute to a double-peak structure observed in two-particle correlations in heavy-ion collision experiments. Furthermore, BAMPS is used as a benchmark to compare kinetic theory to several relativistic hydrodynamic theories in order to verify their accuracy and to find their limitations.
Die Dissertation stellt das Machtgeflecht in der Islamischen Stadt Marawi City (Mindanao, Philippinen) dar, in die die dortigen Gender-Debatten involviert sind. In einer Umgebung, die als Konsequenz des Mindanao Konfliktes als “no war, no peace”-Umgebung definiert werden kann, gibt es drei Hauptdarsteller: die nationale Regierung des mehrheitlich christlichen Staates der Philippinen (GRP), die Autonome Regierung im Muslimischen Mindanao (ARMM), zu der auch Marawi City zählt, und die islamische Rebellengruppe Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), die einen islamischen (unter-)Staat fordert. Die GRP unterstützt Re-Islamisierungs- und Re-Traditionalisierungsbewegungen in der ARMM, um die Opposition zur MILF zu stärken. Die Konsequenz ist jedoch keine Kollaboration zwischen der GRP und der ARMM. Stattdessen nutzen Politiker ihre Privilegien aus, um ihren eigenen Absichten zu folgen. Sei dies, um politische Gegner auszuspielen oder das traditionelle Sultanatssystem zu fördern. Für Gender-Debatten gibt es in diesem Kontext der ungelösten nationalen Frage kaum Spielraum außerhalb einer Islamischen Narrative; dies bedeutet jedoch nicht, dass Gender nicht debattiert wird, sondern, dass die Debatten inner-Islamisch sind, hauptsächlich zwischen Repräsentanten des traditionell synkretistischen Islam und Vertretern Islamischer Revitalisierungsbewegungen. Speziell erstere erscheinen sehr einflussreich bezüglich Gender Strategien in der Region. Dies ist nur teilweise auf die Unterstützung der nationalen Regierung zurückzuführen, sondern ist vor allem eine Frage von Identität. Diese wiederum wird nicht vorranging über Religion, sondern nach ethnischen Maßstäben und im Speziellen im Rahmen von Clanstrukturen definiert.
The prevalence of food allergies has increased in the westernized countries during the past decades. Clinical manifestations of food allergies involve the skin (e.g. atopic dermatitis), the respiratory tract (e.g. rhinitis, and asthma), the ocular area (e.g. conjunctivitis), the gastrointestinal tract (e.g. food-protein-induced enterocolitis syndrome, food-induced proctocolitis, and eosinophilic gastroenteropathies), and the cardiovascular system (e.g. anaphylaxis). A curative treatment of these diseases has not been established yet. Oral immunotherapy (OIT) has gained attention as a potential therapy for food allergies. Continuous feeding of allergenic diet applied in the model described here mirrors to a certain extent an OIT treatment. It might be therefore useful to investigate efficacy and safety of OIT pre-clinically.
Mouse models have been widely used to analyse novel treatment approaches. Unfortunately, most of them have focussed on IgE-mediated hyperreactivity. Only a limited number of mouse models presenting mixed IgE- and non-IgE-mediated gastrointestinal symptoms and inflammation upon allergen-challenge are available. To study the mechanisms underlying the induction of food-induced gastrointestinal inflammation and subsequent oral tolerance induction, a mouse model of food-induced gastrointestinal allergy was established. BALB/c mice were sensitised with Ovalbumin (OVA) plus ALUM and subsequently challenged by feeding a diet containing egg white (EW diet). During the first seven days on EW diet, OVA-sensitised mice (OVA/ALUM EW mice) developed gastrointestinal symptoms (e.g. weight loss, ruffed fur, soft stool and less mobility) and inflammation in the small intestines accompanied by a strong induction of OVA-specific IgE antibodies and mouse mast cell protease-1 (mMCP-1). Proliferation of CD4+ T cells from spleen of OVA/ALUM EW mice was reduced compared controls. The result indicated that feeding EW diet induced T cell tolerance systemically. In contrast, CD4+ T cells isolated from MLN of OVA/ALUM EW mice showed stronger proliferation upon OVA stimulation in vitro than mice OVA-sensitised but fed a conventional diet, indicating that tolerance was not induced by short-term EW diet. Histological analysis of the small intestinal tissue of OVA/ALUM EW mice revealed strong inflammation present in the duodenum, jejunum and ileum at this time point.
Interestingly, the observed symptoms in OVA/ALUM EW mice resolved spontaneously after 7 days on EW diet, if the feeding was continued. In the next steps the CD4+ T cell-mediated immune response after 28 days continuous EW diet was assessed and revealed that tolerance was induced systemically as well as locally. This was shown by reduced proliferation and cytokine secretion of CD4+ T cells from MLN of OVA/ALUM EW mice after long-term EW diet. However, the inflammation in the jejunum was aggravated instead of resolved at this time point of allergenic diet. Our results suggest that application of OIT in food-allergic patients with gastrointestinal inflammation may need to be reconsidered, since continuous administration of allergenic food may aggravate inflammation in the local tissue. Interestingly, only the jejunum was affected by a worsened condition, whereas duodenum and ileum resolved inflammation. In accordance to the observed jejunal inflammation mMCP-1 levels in the sera were not changed. Allergen-specific IgE levels did not reach baseline level after long-term EW diet, although they were reduced compared to levels in mice after 7 days on EW diet. This result suggests that residual OVA-specific IgE antibodies would promote the jejunal inflammation by sustained activation of mast cells. Furthermore, our results suggest that IL-4 produced by activated Th2 cells could be an effector molecule to induce intestinal inflammation.
The second part of this thesis was aimed at verifying the hypothesis that IgE-mediated mast cell activation is a major effector mechanism in induction of chronic inflammation induced by long-term EW diet. For that mice deficient for FcεRI, a high affinity IgE receptor, were used. These mice were sensitised with OVA and fed EW diet as described for WT mice. Although FcεRI-deficient mice showed an intact Th2 immunity with IgE production, weight loss in the receptor-deficient mice was moderately induced by EW diet compared to WT mice, suggesting that this clinical symptom during the acute phase of allergic response is associated with IgE-mediated mechanisms. Surprisingly, the deficient mice presented comparable intestinal inflammation on day seven of EW diet as WT mice did. However, if EW diet was continued, recovery of intestinal inflammation was observed in FcεRI-deficient mice in contrast to WT mice. These results suggest that the induction of intestinal inflammation is not IgE-dependent. Nevertheless, this does not rule out a potential role of mast cells in the inflammation, because of their IgE-independent activation pathways. It also suggests the involvement of T cell-mediated mechanisms during induction of jejunal inflammation. Interestingly, the aggravated inflammation seen after long-term EW diet in WT mice seems to be IgE-dependent, considering that it was not observed in FcεRI-deficient mice. The elevated number of mast cells in the intestine of WT mice further led to a hypothesis that their continuous activation might be responsible for the chronification of allergic inflammation observed after long-term EW diet. In the context of OIT it further implies that IgE might be a poor prognostic factor for recovery of intestinal inflammation during and after an OIT treatment. In the third part of this thesis regulatory mechanisms employed by the immune system were analysed. Initial results from CD4+ T cells isolated from MLN from OVA/ALUM EW mice showed elevated IL-10 levels in their supernatants after short-term EW diet. IL-10-deficient mice were used to analyse the effect of this immunosuppressive cytokine in the mouse model presented here. However, IL-10-deficient mice tend to develop a strong Th1-dominated immune response. Nevertheless, an accelerated weight loss and slight inflammation of the jejunum was observed after short-term EW diet. Analysis of OVA-specific proliferation and cytokine production CD4+ T cells from Spleen and MLN of IL-10-deficient mice on EW diet suggested that systemic as well as local tolerance was induced after short-term and long-term EW diet feeding, respectively. The result suggests that IL-10 is dispensable for induction of T cell tolerance in our mouse model.
However, the presence of functionally active Tregs was observed during this study in WT mice fed short-term EW diet, suggesting that Tregs might have an important role in regulating the systemic or local immune response. T cell deletion as an alternative immune regulatory mechanism was also observed. Additionally, the efficacy of continuous EW diet (mirroring to a certain extent an OIT treatment) in induction of permanent tolerance was assessed. In OVA-sensitised WT mice continuous allergenic diet was stopped after resolution of clinical symptoms and reintroduced after a defined period on conventional diet. Evaluating the weight development showed that reintroduction of EW diet induced weight loss again, but not as pronounced as seen after short-term EW diet. Also the CD4+ T cell-mediated response was elevated again upon allergen stimulation in vitro. The results suggested that permanent tolerance was not induced in the chosen feeding regime.
The mouse model established and analysed here was used to investigate inflammatory and regulatory mechanisms underlying food-induced gastrointestinal allergy. It presents clinical symptoms and intestinal inflammation (Burggraf et al., 2011). This model is easy to be reproduced in different laboratories, and is useful for testing novel therapy approaches (Schülke et al., 2011; Bohnen et al., 2013). It further provides an opportunity to investigate basic mechanisms underlying OIT. This therapy approach is currently extensively investigated and our mouse model would help to understand the therapeutic mechanism of OIT.
Lipid mediators have been referred as bioactive lipids, whose change in lipid levels resulted in functional or pathophysiological consequences. They are in the focus of biological research, nevertheless this is a late recognition due to the many difficulties of working with bioactive lipids due to their properties: hydrophobic, unstable and they occur in only in small quantities. Liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry have facilitated the work with them. Especially in this field, cardiovascular diseases and inflammatory mediated diseases and cancer are pathophysiological events where LMs are deregulated. Additionally, if the modulation of one LM pathway is not sufficient to overcome a disease, the combination of targeting two or more pathways could be effective. Needless to say, lipid signaling cascades are complicated pathways and possible shunting into other pathways when inhibiting or genetically deleting enzymes should be taken into consideration.
The first part of this work has focused on enzymes that metabolize eicosanoids, like mPGES-1 and 5-LO. mPGES-1 is an important enzyme metabolizing PGH2 and one of the key players of the AA cascade. Its product, PGE2 plays an important role in different inflammatory processes. Inhibition of the mPGES-1 might be a promising step to circumvent COX dependent side effects of NSAIDs. The class of quinazoline compounds around the lead structure FR20 has been investigated on isolated human and murine enzyme, in HeLa cells and in different human whole blood (HWB) settings to establish the possible effects of these compounds on eicosanoid profiling. Novel compounds with inhibitory activities in the submicromolar range (IC50: 0.13 µM - 0.37 µM on isolated enzyme) were obtained which were also effective in cells and HWB. Furthermore, pharmacological profiling of toxicity and lipid screening with LC/MS-MS revealed that compounds also reduce PGE2 levels in intact cells and whole blood; they do not impair cell viability but lack the ability to inhibit the murine mPGES-1 enzyme. This problem could be overcome by means of chemical synthesis varying the scaffold (quinoline, quinazoline) or introducing biosteric replacement in the phenyl moieties.
5-LO is a relevant enzyme that plays an important role in eicosanoid signaling in particular in leukotriene biosynthesis. Leukotrienes are involved in asthma, allergic rhinitis, glomerulonephritis, rheumatoid arthritis, sepsis, cancer and atherosclerosis. Moreover, genetic variants in the genes of the 5-LO pathway have been associated with the risk of development of acute myocardial infarction and stroke. Eicosanoids are increased in infectious exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). They are also elevated in the airways of stable COPD patients compared to healthy subjects. Therefore, 5-LO has attired the scientific community as a possible therapeutic target to treat the several disease conditions listed before. In this study an extensive evaluation of imidazo[1,2-a]pyridines as a suitable lead structure for novel 5-LO targeting compounds was presented Within the three publications, 5-LO inhibitory activity of synthesized compounds was investigated in intact PMNL, a cell-free assay, in human whole blood and rodent cells to both elucidate structure-activity relationships and compounds were in vitro pharmacological evaluated. Chemical modifications for lead optimization via straight forward synthesis were used to combine small polar groups (hydroxy, and methoxy groups) which led to a suitable candidate with desired in vitro pharmacokinetic profile in terms of solubility and intrinsic clearance without showing any cytotoxicity. More than 70 imidazo[1,2-a]pyridine derivatives have been synthesized, resulting in more than 50 active compounds. Although it was not possible to introduce a solubility group without impairing the 5-LO inhibitory activity, combination of small polar groups lead to a more favorable solubility and in vitro metabolic stability. Overall, the development of 5-LO inhibitors with high efficacy and selectivity in vivo will provide a possible treatment for patients having one of the diseases where leukotriene biosynthesis plays an important role.
Other types of 5-LO inhibitors have been synthesized during this work, NO-NSAIDs can be postulated as novel 5-LO inhibitors that could circumvent the undesired side-effects of inhibiting COX isoforms (ulcer perforation, gastrointestinal bleeding and in some cases death). It is suggested that NO group is released in situ or after compounds are metabolized. NO-NSAIDs maintain the same anti-inflammatory properties by inhibiting 5-LO in clinical relevant concentrations. NO-NSAIDs are currently under clinical trial for the treatment of diseases where inflammation plays an important role. Synthesis of NO-NSAIDs is straightforward and can be applied for most NSAIDs recently published. Among them, the most promising candidate is NO-sulindac that was able to inhibit 5-LO product formation in intact PMNL, purified 5-LO and HWB in micromolar concentration. Additional experiments regarding their mechanism are currently being performed.
The present study could show that dual inhibitors are an interesting approach that is practicable. It has been used in the recent years to overcome side-effects and diseases concerning more pathophysiological conditions. MetS is an example of a conjunction of symptoms: hyperglycemia, hypertriglyceridemia, hypertension and obesity. Due to its complex nature, the current treatment strategies of MetS require multiple pharmacological compounds regulating lipid and glucose homeostasis as well as blood pressure and coagulation. This study describes the first synthesis of dual sEH/PPAR modulators as potential agents for treatment of MetS. Following a combinatorial approach, an acidic head group known as a pharmacophore important for PPARα/γ dual agonistic activity was combined with different hydrophobic urea derivatives in order to introduce an epoxide mimetic (sEH pharmacophore). The resulting compounds yielded high inhibition of sEH and different patterns of PPAR agonistic activity. This study demonstrates that the pharmacophores of PPAR agonists and sEH inhibitors can be easily combined, resulting in a simplified blueprint of a dual sEH/PPAR modulator. Further in vivo pharmacological evaluation studies are needed in order to evaluate, which pattern of PPAR activation shows the most promising profile for treatment of metabolic syndrome.
Another example of dual pharmacology has been presented in this work. Natural products derived compounds were able to target sEH and exhibit promising antiproliferative properties. The principle of addressing multiple targets by natural products can be transferred to synthetic multi-target ligands. In conclusion, several (E)-styryl-1H-benzo[d]imidazoles were synthesized and evaluated on recombinant sEH after an initial hit (IPS) that lead to potent sEH inhibitors exhibiting antiproliferative activities. Following the natural product-inspired design, the desired biological activity from a bacterial secondary metabolite has been enhanced and transferred to a synthetic compound series. The resulting compounds were accessible via an easy synthetic route and offered a possibility to investigate the structure-activity relationships. The natural product inspired drug design extends the valuable role of natural products as drugs and drug precursors to templates for fully synthetic bioactive molecules. Simplification of natural products by means of chemical synthesis could lead to an interesting field in the treatment of cancer.
Affinity chromatography has been used to unravel unknown- and off-target effects which either contribute to the biological effect of the inhibitor or that counteract or lead to undesired side-effects. During this PhD work, two main projects related to this technique have been established. In the first one, related to an imidazo[1,2-a]pyridine inhibitor (EP6), it has been shown that epoxide-sepharose is a reliable material in order to couple compounds bearing an alcohol. Coupling of an analogue of EP6 to the sepharose has been accomplished and affinity towards 5-LO was demonstrated. The challenging step is to discern from unspecific protein binders and analysis via SDS-PAGE separation and mass spectrometry. Further experiments using other cell types or improving SDS-PAGE analysis (e.g. 2D gel analysis) should be useful to unravel EP6 off-target effect. During the second project related to off-target effects of celecoxib and DMC, the main problem was the coupling of the functional group to the sepharose. Affinity towards COX-2 could not be demonstrated pointing out the inefficient coupling method. Higher pH values during coupling reaction should be tested in further experiments. Nevertheless, affinity chromatography is a useful technique to unravel cellular mechanisms.
Sphingolipid metabolism is also a recent area that attired the attention of cancer researchers, due to their important roles in cell proliferation and apoptosis. Ceramide metabolism inhibitors were synthesized and evaluated on different assay systems in order to assess their efficacy on several cancer lines. Remarkably, 2,2-dimethyl-1,3-dioxolan-4-yl)methanamine (32) was a useful scaffold to mimic the sphingoid base. This key intermediate was used to produce ceramide analogues that could enter the cell and target apoptosis machinery. EB143 (38) increased ceramide levels in an in vitro ceramide synthase assay in a dose-response manner meaning that ceramide synthase was not inhibited but the ceramide de novo synthesis was activated. This effect was due to the fact that EB143 is a cytotoxic compound with an interesting antiproliferative profile. Further chemical modifications should be carried out to modulate this effect.
COX and LO inhibitors are cancer-preventive not only by inhibiting specific antiapoptotic AA metabolites but also by facilitating accumulation of AA which promotes neutral SMase activity and increases the proapoptotic ceramide. Several 5-LO inhibitors have been evaluated on several cancer lines and sphingolipid levels were measured in order to obtain a relationship. A549, Capan-2 and MCF-7 cells line were incubated with synthetic 5-LO inhibitors and zileuton. Compounds were cytotoxic to all cancer cell lines except from A549. Needless to say, zileuton did not exhibit a cytotoxic profile. Synthetic 5-LO inhibitors were able to modify ceramide levels but were useless when coincubating with sphingolipid metabolism inhibitors (myoricin, amitryptiline etc.) and inconsistent results were obtained. On the contrary, zileuton selectively increased Cer-C16 levels and in less extend Cer-C24:1. When using a SPT inhibitor (myoricin) alone was able to reduce C24:1 and Cer-C16:0 levels below the control, a similar effect occurred when incubation the cells with zileuton and myriocin. Interestingly, treatment of zileuton together with either amitryptiline or desipramine led to a decrease in Cer-C24:1 and levels Cer-C16:0 but the inhibition was not complete indicating that probably the de novo pathway has an important role. Further investigations on mRNA level should be carried out in order to discern which CerS is activated.
The main objective of the present thesis was the synthesis of lipid signaling modulators and their evaluation in vitro as therapeutic strategy to overcome pathophysiological conditions (cancer, metabolic syndrome, etc). It has been accomplished on many relevant targets like 5-LO, mPGES-1, sEH and PPAR and these lipid signaling modulators could be used in the treatment of diseases conditions where lipid mediators play an important role.
Structural determinants for substrate specificity of the promiscuous multidrug efflux pump AcrB
(2013)
Opportunistic Gram-negative pathogens such as Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Acinetobacter Baumanii and Pseudomonas aeruginosa are becoming more and more multiresistant against many commonly available antibiotics [39, 40]. An important resistance mechanism of Gram-negative bacteria is the efflux of noxious compounds by tripartite systems [39, 41-44]. The best studied and most clinically relevant tripartite system is the AcrA-AcrB-TolC system of Escherichia coli, where substrate recognition and energy transduction takes place in the inner membrane protein AcrB. AcrB has a remarkably huge substrate spectrum and can recognize structurally diverse molecules, such as hexan in contrast to erythromycin, as its substrates [45]. Therefore, overproduction of the tripartite system can render a Gram-negative pathogen resistant against multiple antibiotics at once. The mechanisms of how AcrB is able to recognize such an enormous spectrum of molecules as substrates, without compromising its specificity (e.g. by neglecting essential compounds like lipids or gluclose as its susbtates), remained puzzling. Structural insight into substrate specificity was so far limited to two co-crystal structures of AcrB, where minocycline and doxorubicin, respectively, were identified bound to an internal binding pocket of AcrB. This binding pocket is particularly deeply buried into internal parts of the T monomer of AcrB and was, therefore, denoted deep binding pocket (DBP). Analysis of several AcrB co-crystal structures with substrate molecules bound to the DBP [4, 23, 25] indicated that the substrate promiscuity involved multisite binding modes within the DBP. Multisite binding modes, where different substrate molecules can bind to slightly different positions and orientations to the same binding pocket, is a common feature of multidrug recognizing proteins such as QacR or BmrR [27-29]. Nevertheless, AcrB's substrate spectrum is much broader than substrate spectra of most other multidrug recognizing proteins. Therefore, it is likely that additional mechanisms are involved in mediating the observed high substrate promiscuity of AcrB. In our recently published high-resolution AcrB/doxorubicin co-crystal structure (pdb entry: 4DX7 [23]) we were able to identify two additional substrate binding pockets in the L monomer of AcrB: i) the access pocket (AP), with an opening towards the periplasm, and ii) a putative binding site in a groove between transmembrane helices 8 and 9 (TM8/TM9 groove), accessible from the lipid layer of the inner membrane. Both binding pockets are likely to be access sites for substrates towards AcrB. Furthermore, each of the binding pockets are possibly specialized to recognize a specific subset of the entire substrate spectrum of AcrB, i.e. highly hydrophobic substrates (e.g. n-dodecyl-ß-d-maltoside or sodium dodecylsulfate) might access AcrB towards the TM8/TM9 groove and water soluble substrates (e.g. berberine) might access AcrB towards the AP. Since substrates will accumulate in the membrane or the periplasm according to their hydrophilic or hydrophobic nature, substrates will be "pre-selected" by the medium, rather than by the protein itself, and guided to their appropriate access site. This process is proposed to be called "medium- mediated pre-selection". The AcrB/doxorubicin co-crystal structure (pdb entry: 4DX7 [23]) furthermore revealed that the AP and DBP are in next neighborhood to each other and are separated by a switch loop. This switch loop adopts distinct conformations in the L, T and O monomers. Specific switch loop conformations are strongly involved in coordinating the selective occupation of both binding pockets, the AP and the DBP. The conformation of the switch loop in the L monomer (L-switch loop) opens the AP and closes the DBP, whereas the conformation of the switch loop in the T monomer (T-switch Loop) opens the DBP and closes the AP. An analysis of all asymmetric AcrB structures indicated that the L-switch loop is able to adopt multiple distinct conformations, whereas the conformation of T-switch loop remained largely congruent in all crystal structures. Moreover, each distinct switch loop conformation, observed in co-crystal structures of AcrB with occupied AP [4, 23], was perfectly adapted to the bound substrate molecule. Therefore, the putatively flexible switch loop is likely to act as an adaptive module and mediates a high binding pocket plasticity without altering the global protein structure. This binding mode is called adaptor-mediated binding mechanism, where an flexible adaptive module (like the switch loop) is able to adapt the surface shape of an binding pocket to different substrate molecules. Furthermore, structural and biochemical analyses of an AcrB G616N variant, revealed the involvement of specific switch loop conformations in the substrate specificity of AcrB. A substitution of G616, located on the switch loop, to N616 was able to alter the conformation of the switch loop exclusively in the L monomers of AcrB, whereas the switch loop conformations in T and O monomers remained congruent to the conformations observed in crystal structures of wildtype AcrB. Moreover, cells producing the AcrB G616N and MexB, both bearing the G616N amino acid substitution, exhibited a reduced resistance against certain substrates, whereas the resistance against most other substrates remained on the level of wildtype AcrB. Correlations of the phenotypes with minimal projection areas, a novel 2-spatiodimensional parameter which approximates the size of a substrate molecule, revealed that AcrB variants with a G616N substitution have a reduced efflux activity for exclusively large substrate molecules. The rejection of large substrates is most likely connected with altered L-switch loop conformations....
Im Zentralen Nervensystem (ZNS) kommunizieren neuronale Synapsen über eine Kombination von chemischen und elektrischen Signalen, die in ihrer Umgebung eine spezifische Komposition von Ionen benötigen. Um eine strenge Kontrolle des ZNS-Milieus zu gewährleisten, hat sich in Säugetieren eine endotheliale Blut-Hirn-Schranke (BHS) entwickelt. Die BHS limitiert den parazellulären Molekül Transport und wird von den Kapillargefässen des Gehirns gebildet, wobei die physische Barrier von den Tight Junctions (TJs) des vaskulären Endothels generiert wird. Das Gehirnendothel ist Teil einer neurovaskulären Einheit (NVE), zu der auch Perizyten (PZ), Astrozyten (AZ), Mikroglia und Interneurone zählen. Fehlkommunikation oder defekte zelluläre Komponenten in der NVE führen in der Regel zu Störungen in der BHS Funktion und können schwerwiegende neuronale Erkrankungen zur Folge haben.
Vor einigen Jahren haben wir und andere Forschungsgruppen herausgefunden, dass der Wnt/β-Catenin Signalweg essentiell für die Vaskularisierung des Gehirns während der Embryonalentwicklung ist und darüber hinaus auch eine bedeutende Rolle in der Induktion der BHS spielt. Des Weiteren konnte im Zebrafischmodell eine Aktivierung des kanonischen Wnt Signalweges auch im adulten Organismus nachgewiesen werden. Allerdings ist die Quelle der Wnt Wachstumsfaktoren bis dato unbekannt. Der Wnt Signalweg ist eine hoch konservierte und komplexe zelluläre Signalkaskade, die in allen mehrzelligen Organismen vorkommt. Wnt Wachstumsfaktoren sind sekretierte, hydrophobe Signalmoleküle, die sowohl über lange als auch kurze Strecken entweder den β-Catenin-abhängingen („kanonischen“) oder β-Catenin-unabhängingen („nicht-kanonischen“) Wnt Signalweg aktivieren können.
Da die meisten ZNS Erkrankungen mit einem Zusammenbruch der BHS-Funktion assoziiert sind, ist die Forschung bestrebt die Mechanismen, die der Entstehung und Aufrechterhaltung der BHS zugrunde liegen, zu ermitteln und zu verstehen. Das Ziel meiner Doktorarbeit war es herauszufinden, ob AZ Wnts produzieren und ob deren Wirkung auf das Gehirnendothel an der Aufrechterhaltung der BHS beteiligt ist. Zu diesem Zweck, habe ich ein in vitro BHS Kokultivierungs-Modellsystem etabliert das erstmalig ausschliesslich auf der Verwendung von murinen AZ und Gehirnendothelzellen basiert. Zu Beginn der Studie wurden sowohl primäre AZ als auch eine murine Gehirnendothel-zelllinie (MBE) bezüglich ihrer zell-spezifischen Eigenschaften charakterisiert. Dabei konnte belegt werden, dass sowohl die primären AZ als auch die MBE Zelllinie, aufgrund ihrer Proteinexpressionsprofile als repräsentative Vertreter ihres Zelltyps eingestuft werden können. Die darauffolgenden Untersuchungen konnten zeigen, dass primäre AZ über mehrere Passagen hinweg fast alle 19 Wnt Liganden auf mRNA Ebene exprimierten. Ferner konnte in primären Gehirnendothelzellen und zwei Gehirnendothelzelllinien die korrespondierenden Frizzled (FZD) Rezeptoren und low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein (LRP) Korezeptoren nachgewiesen werden. Dieser Befund legte Nahe, dass AZ und Gehirnendothelzellen die basalen Eigenschaften besitzen, um über den Wnt Signalweg miteinander zu kommunizieren. Die Stimulation von pMBEs mit Astrozyten konditioniertem Medium (AKM) induzierte die Hochregulation von Claudin-3 einem bekannten kanonischen Wnt Zielgens. Interessanterweise konnte diese Regulation teilweise durch die Zugabe von dickkopf 1 (Dkk1), einem Wnt/β-Catenin Antagonisten, inhibiert werden.
Um die physiologische Rolle der Wnt Liganden zu bestimmen, habe ich mir die Eigenschaft des universellen Sekretionsmechanismus der Wachstumsfaktoren, welcher von dem Transmembranprotein evenness interrupted (Evi) abhängig ist, zu Nutze gemacht. Die Verpaarung von Evifl/fl mit hGFAP-Cre Mäusen erlaubt die AZ-spezifische Deletion des Evi Proteins (Evi KO), was zur Folge hat, dass die Astrozyten der Nachkommen keine Wnt Wachstumsfaktoren sekretieren können.
In vitro führte der Verlust von Wnts in AKM zu einer teilweisen Delokalisierung von Junction Proteinen. Während die Kokultivierung mit Evi WT AZ einen straken Anstieg im TEER und reduzierte Permeabilitätsmesswerte induzierten, konnten diese pro-BHS Eigenschaften bei Evi KO AZ nicht beobachtet werden. Diese Ergebnisse zeigten deutlich, dass Wnts sekretiert von AZ den BHS Phenotyp positive beeinflussen, indem sie die Zell-Zell-Verbindung verstärken, was wiederum zu erhöhtem Zellwiderstand und reduzierter transzellulärer Permeabilität führt. Die Analyse des in vivo Phänotyps von Evi KO Mäusen ergab, dass mit fortschreitendem, postnatalem Alter makroskopisch erkennbare zerebrale Blutungen auftraten. Ausserdem konnte ich zeigen, dass eine Subpopulation von Blutgefässen Malformationen aufwies, die mit reduzierter Astrozytenendfuss-Assoziierung einhergingen.
Das Wissen um die Beteiligung des Wnt Signalweges an der Regulation der BHS auch im adulten Organismus kann in Zukunft von wichtiger Bedeutung sein, da es potentielle therapeutische Anwendungen ermöglicht.
Cheating and Cheaters in Pfaffe Amis and Reinhart Fuchs An Alsatian poet named Heinrich, writing around 1180, composed a beast epic, based on French sources, about a trickster fox named Reinhart. Some sixty years later, a poet known to us only as Der Stricker composed a work of similar length and structure, about a trickster priest named Amis, and his diligent efforts to cheat various anonymous individuals out of their money. Other works by this poet bear out the Stricker's consistent emphasis on strategy over brute force, prudence and intelligence over unconsidered actions. These stories both illustrate that power, when not directed by intelligence, is useless or dangerous, even to the one who wields it. Tricksters and cheating also appear in a surprising range of works contemporary to the Stricker's Pfaffe Amis and Heinrich's Reinhart Fuchs. Romances have their own trickster characters, conducting their cheats using methods and structures that recall those of these two Schwank-type epics. Cheaters like Amis, and Tristan's Isolde generate twin situations. One of them is true/hidden, and can influence the characters, and one is false/apparent, to which the victim characters are forced to respond. This artificial, apparent reality persists even after the cheater has left the scene, occasionally taking on a truth of its own. Both Reinhart and Amis, whatever their motivations, work evil everywhere they go; and yet the audience is expected to treat them as sympathetic characters. Because the trickster universe functions to turn systems upside-down, it also rejects the concepts of good and evil, forming a universe in which all that matters is who wins and who loses. The place of the villain belongs now to the fool; any character who becomes deceived deserves to be, and is treated with indignation by the narrator, just as the traditional villain might be.
Biological membranes separate the cell interior from the outside and have diverse functions from signal transduction, apoptosis to transportations of ions and small molecules in and out of the cell. Most of these functions are fulfilled by proteins incorporated in the membrane. However, lipids as the main component of membrane not only serve as structural element for bilayer formation but they are also directly involved e.g. signalling processes and bilayer properties are important to mediate protein interactions. To fully understand the role of lipids, it is necessary to develop a molecular understanding of how certain membrane components modify bulk bilayer structure and dynamics. Membranes are known to have many different motions in different conditions and time scales. Temperature, pH, water content and many other conditions change membrane dynamics in a high degree. In addition to this, time scales of motions in membranes vary from ns to ms range corresponding to fast motion and slow motion, respectively. Therefore, membranes are needed to be studied systematically by varying the conditions and using methods to investigate motions in various time scales separately. The aim of this study was therefore perform a combined solid-state NMR / molecular dynamics study on model membranes. Different substrates, such as potential drugs, polarizing agents and signaling lipids were incorporated into bilayers and their location within the membrane and their effect onto the membrane was probed. NSAIDs (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs), pirinixic acid derivatives, ceramides and polarizing agents were the substrates for membranes in this study. There were several experimental methods that were applied in order to investigate effects of these substrates on membrane dynamics. Different kind of phospholipids including POPC, DMPC and DPPC were used. In addition to experimental work, with the information gathered from solid state NMR experiments molecular dynamics simulations were performed to obtain more information about the membranes at the molecular level. As a result, combination of solid-state NMR with molecular dynamics simulations provides very systematic way of investigating membrane dynamics in a large range of time scales.
Pirinixic acid derivatives were special interest of this study because of their activity on peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) as an agonist as well as on enzymes of microsomal prostaglandin E2 synthase-1 (PGE2s) -1 and 5-lipoxygenase (5-LO) as dual inhibitor. Two potent pirinixic acid derivatives, 2-(4-chloro-6-(quinolin-6-ylamino)pyrimidin-2-ylthio)octanoic acid (compound 2) and 2-(4-chloro-6-(quinolin-6-ylamino)pyrimidin-2-ylthio)octanoate (compound 3), have been worked and their insertion depts were investigated by combining of solid state NMR and molecular dynamics simulations. Both experimental and theoretical results pointed out that compound 3 was inserted the phospholipid bilayer more deeply than 2. NSAIDs – lipid mixtures have been also studied here. It is known that consumption of NSAIDs as in mixture with lipids results much fewer side effects than consumption of the drugs alone. Thus, it is crucial to understand interactions of NSAIDs with lipids and investigate the possible complex formation of drugs with lipids. In this study, interactions of three widely used NSAIDs, ibuprofen, diclofenac and piroxicam, with DPPC were investigated by solid-state NMR. 1H and 31P NMR results depicted that ibuprofen and diclofenac had interactions with lipids, which is an indication of drug-lipid complex formation whereas piroxicam didn’t show any interactions with lipids suggesting that no complex formation occurred in the case of piroxicam. Ceramides are known to play key roles in many cell processes and many studies showed that the functions of ceramides are related with the ceramide effects on biological membranes. Therefore, in this study, influences of ceramides on biophysics of lipid bilayers were investigated by using various solid state NMR techniques and molecular dynamics simulations. Results from molecular dynamics simulations clearly showed that ceramide and lipids have strong interactions. More evidences about ceramide-lipid interactions were provided from 1H and 14N NMR results. In addition, it was indicated by both simulation and experimental methods that ceramide increased the rigidity of DMPC by increasing chain order parameters. BTbk is a biradical, which is used as polarizing agent for dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) experiments and found to be more efficient than other widely used polarizing agents such as TOTAPOL. Since it is a hydrophobic compound, which prefers to stay inside lipid bilayer it is important to investigate the location and orientation of bTbk along the bilayer in order to understand its enhancement profile in DNP measurements. In this study, both NMR relaxation time measurements and molecular dynamics simulations revealed that bTbk tends to stay more close to hydrophobic chain of lipids than the interfacial part of lipids at bilayer surface.
In the first part of this work, a brief introduction on lipid membranes as well as a theoretical summary on both methods of solid-state NMR and molecular dynamics simulations is given. Then, in the second part methodology is introduced for both solid-state NMR spectrometer and theoretical calculations. Afterwards, results of different membrane systems are discussed in the following parts for both solid state NMR and MD. Finally, in the last part, a summary and the conclusion of the overall results together with some future plans are explained.
Der Begriff psychologische Akkulturation beschreibt jene Veränderungen, die infolge des dauerhaften Aufeinandertreffens verschiedener kultureller Gruppen auf individueller Ebene zu beobachten sind (Berry, 1997). Die vorliegende Arbeit umfasst drei Publikationen, die sich mit Akkulturationsprozessen von Kindern und Jugendlichen mit Migrationshintergrund in Deutschland befassen. Zunächst wird ein Überblick über den aktuellen Stand der Forschung zur Situation junger Migranten in Deutschland vorgelegt. An zentraler Stelle steht dabei die Frage, wie die Migrationsgeschichte und Immigrationspolitik Deutschlands sowie die öffentliche Einstellung gegenüber Migranten die transkulturelle Adaptation von Kindern und Jugendlichen nicht-deutscher ethno-kultureller Herkunft beeinflussen. Bereits bestehende wissenschaftliche Erkenntnisse werden verknüpft mit den Ergebnissen neuerer empirischer Studien um zu einem tieferen Verständnis der Ursachen für die vielfach berichteten problematischen Verläufe psychologischer und soziokultureller Adaptation von Migranten beizutragen. Neben anderen Risiken und protektiven Faktoren wird diskutiert, wie sich Besonderheiten Deutschlands als Aufnahmeland, wie z.B. die Eigenarten des Schulsystems, auf Adaptationsverläufe auswirken können. Unsere eigenen Studien tragen zum Verständnis der Anpassungsprozesse junger Migranten bei, indem sie aufzeigen, dass nicht die Akkulturationsstrategie der Integration, sondern speziell die Orientierung an der deutschen Kultur bei Individuen zu den günstigsten psychologischen und soziokulturellen Ergebnissen zu führen scheint. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wird weiterhin ein empirischer und methodologischer Beitrag zur Akkulturationsforschung geleistet, indem ein Messinstrument zur Erfassung psychologischer Akkulturation bei Kindern im deutschen Sprachraum – die Frankfurter Akkulturationsskala für Kinder (FRAKK-K)– entwickelt, validiert und schließlich anhand einer Fragestellung praktisch angewandt wird. Die Skalenentwicklung und –optimierung erfolgte auf der Grundlage von zwei Studien, welche Daten von 387 Grundschülern aus zwei städtischen Regionen in Deutschland umfassen (Frankenberg & Bongard, 2013). Die Ergebnisse konfirmatorischer Faktorenanalysen sprechen für zwei Faktoren, Orientierung an der Aufnahmekultur und Orientierung an der Herkunftskultur, die jeweils mittels 6 Items erfasst werden. Beide Subskalen weisen eine zufriedenstellende interne Reliabilität und Kriteriumsvalidität auf und lassen sich zwecks Erfassung der Akkulturationsstrategie kombinieren (i.e. Assimilation, Integration, Separation und Marginalisierung). In einer ersten praktischen Anwendung der Skala wird der Frage nachgegangen, inwiefern erweiterter Musikunterricht und Orchesterspiel in der Grundschule über verstärkte Gruppenkohäsion zur Förderung kultureller Integration beitragen können.
Grundschüler, die in einem Orchester gespielt haben, zeigen über einen Zeitraum von 1,5 Jahren einen stärkeren Anstieg der Orientierung an der deutschen Kultur als Schüler, die keinen erweiterten Musikunterricht erhielten. Musikschüler fühlen sich außerdem stärker in die Klassengemeinschaft integriert. Dies deutet darauf hin, dass die Erfahrung der Zusammenarbeit und des Musizierens innerhalb einer Gruppengemeinschaft zu einer stärkeren Orientierung an der deutschen Kultur geführt hat. Die Orientierung an der Herkunftskultur blieb unbeeinflusst. Somit können Programme, die jungen Migranten die Gelegenheit bieten Musik innerhalb einer größeren, kulturell heterogenen Gruppe aufzuführen, als eine effektive Intervention zur Förderung der kulturellen Anpassung an die Mehrheitskultur und der Integration innerhalb – und außerhalb – des Klassenzimmers führen.
Abschließend werden die Ergebnisse der empirischen Untersuchungen vor dem Hintergrund des aktuellen Forschungsstandes zu neueren Akkulturationsmodellen sowie zu der Terminologie und den methodischen Herausforderungen des Forschungsfeldes in Beziehung gesetzt und kritisch reflektiert. Daraus abgeleitet werden Implikationen für zukünftige Interventionen und Forschung diskutiert.
Due to recent technical developments, it became evident that the mammalian transcriptome is much more complex than originally expected. Alternative splicing(AS) and the transcription of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) are two phenomenas which have been greatly underestimated in their frequency. Nowadays it is accepted that almost every gene has at least one alternative isoform and the number of lncRNAs exceeds the one of protein-coding genes.
We built user-friendly web interfaces which can process Affymetrix GeneChip Exon 1.0 ST Arrays (exon arrays) and GeneChip Gene 1.0 ST Arrays (gene arrays)for the analysis of alternative splicing events. Results are presented with detailed annotation information and graphics to identify splice events and to facilitate biological validations. Based on two studies using exon arrays, we show how our tools were used to profile genome-wide splicing changes under silencing of Jmjd6 and under hypoxic conditions. Since gene arrays are not intended for AS analysis originally, we demonstrated their applicability by profiling alternative splicing events during embryonic heart development.
To measure lncRNAs expressions with exon arrays, we completely re-annotation all probes and built a lncRNA specific annotation. To demonstrate the applicability of exon arrays in combination with our annotation, we profiled the expression of tens of thousands of lncRNAs. Further, our custom annotation allows for a detailed inspection of lncRNAs and to distinguish between isoforms, as we validated by RTPCR.
To allow for a general usage to the research community, we integrated the annotation in an easy-to-use web interface, which provides various helpful features for the analysis of lncRNAs.
Ultrarelativistic Quantum Molecular Dynamics is a physics model to describe the transport, collision, scattering, and decay of nuclear particles. The UrQMD framework has been in use for nearly 20 years since its first development. In this period computing aspects, the design of code, and the efficiency of computation have been minor points of interest. Nowadays an additional issue arises due to the fact that the run time of the framework does not diminish any more with new hardware generations.
The current development in computing hardware is mainly focused on parallelism. Especially in scientific applications a high order of parallelisation can be achieved due to the superposition principle. In this thesis it is shown how modern design criteria and algorithm redesign are applied to physics frameworks. The redesign with a special emphasise on many-core architectures allows for significant improvements of the execution speed.
The most time consuming part of UrQMD is a newly introduced relativistic hydrodynamic phase. The algorithm used to simulate the hydrodynamic evolution is the SHASTA. As the sequential form of SHASTA is successfully applied in various simulation frameworks for heavy ion collisions its possible parallelisation is analysed. Two different implementations of SHASTA are presented.
The first one is an improved sequential implementation. By applying a more concise design and evading unnecessary memory copies, the execution time could be reduced to the half of the FORTRAN version’s execution time. The usage of memory could be reduced by 80% compared to the memory needed in the original version.
The second implementation concentrates fully on the usage of many-core architectures and deviates significantly from the classical implementation. Contrary to the sequential implementation, it follows the recalculate instead of memory look-up paradigm. By this means the execution speed could be accelerated up to a factor of 460 on GPUs.
Additionally a stability analysis of the UrQMD model is presented. Applying metapro- gramming UrQMD is compiled and executed in a massively parallel setup. The resulting simulation data of all parallel UrQMD instances were hereafter gathered and analysed. Hence UrQMD could be proven of high stability to the uncertainty of experimental data.
As a further application of modern programming paradigms a prototypical implementa- tion of the worldline formalism is presented. This formalism allows for a direct calculation of Feynman integrals and constitutes therefore an interesting enhancement for the UrQMD model. Its massively parallel implementation on GPUs is examined.
Alzheimer’s disease (AD), which was first reported more than a century ago by Alhzeimer, is one of the commonest forms of dementia which affects >30 million people globally (>8 million in Europe). The origin and pathogenesis of AD is poorly understood and there is no cure available for the disease. AD is characterized by the accumulation of senile plaques composed of amyloid beta peptides (Ab 37-43) which is formed by the gamma secretase (GS) complex by cleaving amyloid precursor protein. Therefore GS can be an attractive drug target. Since GS processes several other substrates like Notch, CD44 and Cadherins, nonspecific inhibition of GS has many side effects. Due to the lack of crystal structure of GS, which is attributed to the extreme difficulties in purifying it, molecular modeling can be useful to understand its architecture. So far only low resolution cryoEM structures of the complex has been solved which only provides a rough structure of the complex at low 12-15 A resolution Furthermore the activity of GS in vitro can be achieved by means of cell-free (CF) expression.
GS comprises catalytic subunits namely presenilins and supporting elements containing Pen-2, Aph-1 and Nicastrin. The origin of AD is hidden in the regulated intramembrnae proteolysis (RIP) which is involved in various physiological processes and also in leukemia. So far growth factors, cytokines, receptors, viral proteins, cell adhesion proteins, signal peptides and GS has been shown to undergo RIP. During RIP, the target proteins undergo extracellular shredding and intramembrane proteolysis.
This thesis is based on molecular modeling, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, cell-free (CF) expression, mass spectrometry, NMR, crystallization, activity assay etc of the components of GS complex and G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs).
First I validated the NMR structure of PS1 CTF in detergent micelles and lipid bilayers using coarse-grained MD simulations using MARTINI forcefield implemented in Gromacs. CTF was simulated in DPC micelles, DPPC and DLPC lipid bilayer. Starting from random configuration of detergent and lipids, micelle and lipid bilyer were formed respectively in presence of CTF and it was oriented properly to the micelle and bilyer during the simulation. Around DPC molecules formed micelle around CTF in agreement of the experimental results in which 80-85 DPC molecules are required to form micelles. The structure obtained in DPC was similar to that of NMR structure but differed in bilayer simulations showed the possibility of substrate docking in the conserved PAL motif. Simulations of CTF in implicit membrane (IMM1) in CHAMM yielded similar structure to that from coarse grained MD.
I performed cell-free expression optimization, crystallization and NMR spectroscopy of Pen-2 in various detergent micelles. Additionally Pen-2 was modeled by a combination of rosetta membrane ab-initio method, HHPred distant homology modeling and incorporating NMR constraints. The models were validated by all atom and coarse grained MD simulations both in detergent micelles and POPC/DPPC lipid bilayers using MARTINI forcefield.
GS operon consisting of all four subunits was co-expressed in CF and purified. The presence of of GS subunits after pull-down with Aph-1 was determined by western blotting (Pen-2) and mass spectrometry (Presenilin-1 and Aph-1). I also studied interactions of especially PS1 CTF, APP and NTF by docking and MD.
I also made models and interfaces of Pen-2 with PS1 NTF and checked their stability by MD simulations and compared with experimental results. The goal is to model the interfaces between GS subunits using molecular modeling approaches based on available experimental data like cross-linking, mutations and NMR structure of C-terminal fragment of PS1 and transmembrane part of APP. The obtained interfaces of GS subunits may explain its catalysis mechanism which can be exploited for novel lead design. Due to lack of crystal/NMR structure of the GS subunits except the PS1 CTF, it is not possible to predict the effect of mutations in terms of APP cleavage. So I also developed a sequence based approach based on machine learning using support vector machine to predict the effect of PS1 CTF L383 mutations in terms of Aβ40/Aβ42 ratio with 88% accuracy. Mutational data derived from the Molgen database of Presenilin 1 mutations was using for training.
GPCRs (also called 7TM receptors) form a large superfamily of membrane proteins, which can be activated by small molecules, lipids, hormones, peptides, light, pain, taste and smell etc. Although 50% of the drugs in market target GPCRs , only few are targeted therapeutically. Such wide range of targets is due to involvement of GPCRs in signaling pathways related to many diseases i.e. dementia (like Alzheimer's disease), metabolic (like diabetes) including endocrinological disorders, immunological including viral infections, cardiovascular, inflammatory, senses disorders, pain and cancer.
Cannabinoid and adrenergic receptors belong to the class A (similar to rhodopsin) GPCRs. Docking of agonists and antagonists to CB1 and CB2 cannabinoid receptors revealed the importance of a centrally located rotamer toggle switch, and its possible role in the mechanism of agonist/antagonist recognition. The switch is composed of two residues, F3.36 and W6.48, located on opposite transmembrane helices TM3 and TM6 in the central part of the membranous domain of cannabinoid receptors. The CB1 and CB2 receptor models were constructed based on the adenosine A2A receptor template. The two best scored conformations of each receptor were used for the docking procedure. In all poses (ligand-receptor conformations) characterized by the lowest ligand-receptor intermolecular energy and free energy of binding the ligand type matched the state of the rotamer toggle switch: antagonists maintained an inactive state of the switch, whereas agonists changed it. In case of agonists of β2AR, the (R,R) and (S,S) stereoisomers of fenoterol, the molecular dynamics simulations provided evidence of different binding modes while preserving the same average position of ligands in the binding site. The (S,S) isomer was much more labile in the binding site and only one stable hydrogen bond was created. Such dynamical binding modes may also be valid for ligands of cannabinoid receptors because of the hydrophobic nature of their ligand-receptor interactions. However, only very long molecular dynamics simulations could verify the validity of such binding modes and how they affect the process of activation.
Human N-formyl peptide receptors (FPRs) are G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) involved in many physiological processes, including host defense against bacterial infection and resolving inflammation. The three human FPRs (FPR1, FPR2 and FPR3) share significant sequence homology and perform their action via coupling to Gi protein. Activation of FPRs induces a variety of responses, which are dependent on the agonist, cell type, receptor subtype, and also species involved. FPRs are expressed mainly by phagocytic leukocytes. Together, these receptors bind a large number of structurally diverse groups of agonistic ligands, including N-formyl and nonformyl peptides of different composition, that chemoattract and activate phagocytes. For example, N-formyl-Met-Leu-Phe (fMLF), an FPR1 agonist, activates human phagocyte inflammatory responses, such as intracellular calcium mobilization, production of cytokines, generation of reactive oxygen species, and chemotaxis. This ligand can efficiently activate the major bactericidal neutrophil functions and it was one of the first characterized bacterial chemotactic peptides. Whereas fMLF is by far the most frequently used chemotactic peptide in studies of neutrophil functions, atomistic descriptions for fMLF-FPR1 binding mode are still scarce mainly because of the absence of a crystal structure of this receptor. Elucidating the binding modes may contribute to designing novel and more efficient non-peptide FPR1 drug candidates. Molecular modeling of FPR1, on the other hand, can provide an efficient way to reveal details of ligand binding and activation of the receptor. However, recent modelings of FPRs were confined only to bovine rhodopsin as a template.
To locate specific ligand-receptor interactions based on a more appropriate template than rhodopsin we generated the homology models of FPR1 using the crystal structure of the chemokine receptor CXCR4, which shares over 30% sequence identity with FPR1 and is located in the same γ branch of phylogenetic tree of GPCRs (rhodopsin is located in α branch). Docking and model refinement procedures were pursued afterward. Finally, 40 ns full-atom MD simulations were conducted for the Apo form as well as for complexes of fMLF (agonist) and tBocMLF (antagonist) with FPR1 in the membrane. Based on locations of the N- and C-termini of the ligand the FPR1 extracellular pocket can be divided into two zones, namely, the anchor and activation regions. The formylated M1 residue of fMLF bound to the activation region led to a series of conformational changes of conserved residues. Internal water molecules participating in extended hydrogen bond networks were found to play a crucial role in transmitting the agonist-receptor interactions. A mechanism of initial steps of the activation concurrent with ligand binding is proposed.
I accurately predicted the structure and ligand binding pose of dopamine receptor 3 (RMSD to the crystal structure: 2.13 Å) and chemokine receptor 4 (CXCR4, RMSD to the crystal structure 3.21 Å) in GPCR-Dock 2010 competition. The homology model of the dopamine receptor 3 was 8 th best overall in the competition.