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In der folgenden Arbeit werden Eigenschaften von Verzweigungsprozessen in zufälliger Umgebung (engl. branching processes in random environment, kurz BPREs) untersucht. Das Modell geht auf Smith (1969) und Athreya (1971) zurück. Ein BPRE ist ein einfaches mathematisches Modell für die Entwicklung einer Population von apomiktischen (d.h. sich ungeschlechtlich fortpflanzenden) Individuen in diskreter Zeit, wobei die Umgebungsbedingungen einen Einfluß auf den Fortpflanzungserfolg der Individuen haben. Dabei wird angenommen, dass die Umgebungsbedingungen in den einzelnen Generationen zufällig sind, und zwar unabhängig und identisch verteilt von Generation zu Generation. Man denke z.B. an eine Population von Pflanzen mit einem einjährigen Zyklus, die in jedem Jahr anderen Witterungsbedingungen ausgesetzt sind, wobei angenommen wird, dass diese sich unabhängig und identisch verteilt ändern. In Kapitel 1 wird eines der wichtigsten Hilfsmittel zur Beschreibung von BPREs, die sogenannte zugehörige Irrfahrt, eingeführt und die Klassifizierung von BPREs beschrieben. In Kapitel 2 werden bekannte Resultate, insbesondere zu kritischen, schwach subkritischen und stark subkritischen Verzweigungsprozessen, wiederholt. In Kapitel 3 wird der sogenannte intermediär subkritische Fall behandelt. Mithilfe von funktionalen Grenzwertsätzen für bedingte Irrfahrten wird die genaue Asymptotik der Überlebenswahrscheinlichkeit des Prozesses, die bereits in Vatutin (2004) bewiesen wurde, unter etwas allgemeineren Voraussetzungen gezeigt. Anschließend wird untersucht, wie häufig der Prozess, bedingt auf Überleben, nur noch aus einem Individuum besteht. Im letzten Teil des Kapitels wird ein funktionaler Grenzwertsatz für die zugehörige Irrfahrt, bedingt aufs Überleben des Prozesses, gezeigt. Diese konvergiert, richtig skaliert, gegen einen Levy-Prozess, der darauf bedingt ist, sein Minimum am Ende anzunehmen. In Kapitel 4 werden große Abweichungen von BPREs untersucht. Die Ratenfunktion des BPRE wird sowohl für den Fall mindestens geometrisch schnell abfallender Tails, als auch für den Fall von Nachkommenverteilungen mit schweren Tails bestimmt. Wie sich herausstellt, hängt die Ratenfunktion von der Ratenfunktion der zugehörigen Irrfahrt, der exponentiellen Abfallrate der Überlebenswahrscheinlichkeit sowie, bei Nachkommenverteilungen mit schweren Tails, auch von den Tails derselben ab. In der Ratenfunktion spiegeln sich die wahrscheinlichsten Wege, um Ereignisse der großen Abweichungen zu realisieren, wider, was in Kapitel 4.3 beschrieben wird. In Kapitel 4.4 wird im speziellen Fall von Nachkommenverteilungen mit gebrochen-linearer Erzeugendenfunktion die Ratenfunktion für Ereignisse bestimmt, bei denen ein superkritischer BPRE überlebt, aber klein im Vergleich zum Erwartungswert bleibt. In Kapitel 4.5 werden die großen Abweichungen, bedingt auf die Umgebung untersucht (engl. quenched). In diesem Fall können unwahrscheinliche Ereignisse nur über den Verzweigungsmechanismus und nicht mehr über eine außergewöhnliche Umgebung realisiert werden. Zum Abschluss der Dissertation werden Verzweigungsprozesse in zufälliger Umgebung, bedingt auf Überle-ben, simuliert. Dazu wird eine Konstruktion nach Geiger (1999) angewendet. Diese erlaubt es, Galton-Watson Bäume in variierender Umgebung, bedingt auf Überleben, entlang einer Ahnenlinie zu konstruieren. Der Fall geometrischer Nachkommenverteilungen, auf den wir uns in Kapitel 5 beschränken, erlaubt die explizite Berechnung der benötigten Verteilungen. Als Anwendung des Grenzwertsatzes aus Kapitel 3.1 können nun intermediär subkritische Verzweigungsprozesse, bedingt auf Überleben, wie folgt simuliert werden: Zunächst wird die Umgebung zufällig bestimmt, und zwar als Irrfahrt, bedingt darauf ihr Minimum am Ende anzunehmen. Anschließend wird, der Geiger-Konstruktion folgend, ein Verzweigungsprozess in dieser Umgebung, bedingt auf Überleben, simuliert. Zum Abschluss wird in einem kurzen Ausblick auf aktuelle Forschung verwiesen. Im Anhang befinden sich einige technische Resultate.
Proliferation and apoptosis are fundamental cellular processes that are important for the development and homeostasis of multi-cellular organisms. Deregulation of these processes plays an important role in tumor formation. Often, genes that control homeostasis by regulating proliferation and apoptosis are mutated or improperly expressed in tumors. In this project, the physiological and pathological functions of FUSE Binding Protein 1 (FBP1) were studied to elucidate the involvement of this gene in the context of embryonic development and tumorigenesis. Two reasons led to the hypothesis that FBP1 might be relevant in this context. FBP1 was isolated in the group of PD Dr. Martin Zörnig using a functional yeast survival screen for the identification of anti-apoptotic genes involved in tumorigenesis, and the anti-apoptotic function of FBP1 was confirmed in the human colon carcinoma cell line RKO. In addition, FBP1 had been published to function as a transcriptional regulator that activates expression of the proto-oncogene c-myc. This gene stimulates cell proliferation and is overexpressed in many tumors. Analysis of FBP1 expression by immunhistochemistry in normal and tumor tissue samples revealed frequent and significant overexpression of FBP1 in Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC). To study the functional relevance of FBP1 activity for this tumor type, apoptosis and proliferation of the HCC cell line Hep3B were studied in dependence of FBP1 expression. Downregulation of FBP1 by lentiviral expression of FBP1-specific short hairpin RNA (shRNA) reduced proliferation and increased sensitivity to apoptosis. Subcutaneous injection of FBP1-deficient Hep3B cells into immunodeficient NOD/SCID mice demonstrated that tumor growth was strongly decreased in comparison to control cells. mRNA expression studies by quantitative real time PCR showed reduced mRNA levels of the pro-apoptotic genes Bik, Noxa, TRAIL and TNF-􀀁 in the absence of FBP1. In addition, the cell cycle inhibitors p21 and p15 were repressed by FBP1 while Cyclin D2 expression was decreased in the absence of FBP1. Surprisingly, expression of c-myc was not altered by FBP1 downregulation, indicating a different mechanism of c-myc regulation in HCC cells. These results demonstrate that overexpression of FBP1 inhibits apoptosis and stimulates proliferation in HCC cells by regulating the transcription of relevant target genes. Therefore, FBP1 might represent a promising therapeutic target for the treatment of HCC. For analysis of the physiological function of FBP1, a gene trap mouse model was established. In these mice, the gene trap vector pT1􀀂geo is inserted in intron 19 of the FBP1 locus, leading to the expression of a fusion protein consisting of a truncated FBP1 (lacking the last 62 amino acids), 􀀁-Galactosidase and Neomycin Phosphotransferase. Luciferase reporter assays demonstrated that the fusion protein was not capable of activating the c-myc promoter and even showed a dominant negative effect. Thus, this gene trap mouse serves as a functional FBP1 knockout model. Phenotyping of the FBP1 gene trap mice showed that homozygous mutation of FBP1 resulted in embryonic lethality at late stages of embryonic development (E15.5-E16.5). Heterozygous mice were viable, but born at lower frequencies, indicating a gene dosage- or a dominant negative effect of the FBP1 fusion protein. The cellular effects of FBP1 inactivation were tested in mouse embryonic fibroblasts isolated from FBP1 gene trap mice. While proliferation was reduced in the absence of wildtype FBP1, apoptosis was not affected. Expression analysis showed that in homozygous MEFs p15 and p21 transcripts were upregulated, while decreased cmyc mRNA levels were measured. Closer inspection of homozygous gene trap embryos revealed an anemic phenotype that appeared most pronounced around embryonic day 15.5. Analysis of fetal livers, the main site of hematopoiesis at this stage of development, showed a strongly reduced total cell number in homozygous embryos. Evaluation of the different hematopoietic cell lineages did not reveal significant changes in particular differentiated cell types. Instead, all cell lineages seemed to be affected equally by FBP1 inactivation. In contrast, analysis of hematopoietic progenitor cell populations showed an increased percentage of multipotent progenitor cells (MPPs) and a strongly reduced number of long-term hematopoietic stem cells (LT-HSCs). Functional analysis of MPPs by in vitro colony formation assays demonstrated that the FBP1-mutant cells possess a normal colony formation potential while their expansion capacity was reduced. Competitive transplantation of lineage negative fetal liver cells into irradiated recipient mice resulted in reduced engraftment of liverderived progenitor cells from homozygous FBP1 gene trap mice. However, stable engraftment was observed over a period of 12 weeks, demonstrating that the FBP1-deficient LT-HSCs are in principle capable of long-term repopulation. These results demonstrate that FBP1 exerts an essential function during definitive hematopoiesis. It can be speculated that FBP1 influences proliferation, apoptosis and possibly also stem cell self-renewal through the regulation of specific target genes within the hematopoietic progenitor cells. Alternatively, extrinsic effects caused by the absence of FBP1 activity could impair the function of the progenitor cells.
Tumor hypoxia and nutrient starvation are common phenomena in cancerous tissue. Cells that resist this hostile environment are selected for a more aggressive phenotype, usually accompanied by therapy resistance. The hypoxia inducible factors HIF-1a and HIF-2a play a key role in the adaptive homeostatic responses to these challenging conditions inducing a number of target genes that are involved in the regulation of a variety of cellular processes such as angiogenesis, proliferation, metabolism, self-renewal and cell death/cycle arrest. Thus, the HIF pathway encompasses opposing adaptive responses on tumor growthgrowth promoting abilities on the one hand and growth inhibiting on the other. A recent study in our lab uncovered that this switch between cell death and cell survival critically depends on HIF-2a protein levels. Since PHDs (HIF prolyl hydroxylases) are the main regulators of HIF protein abundance and hypoxia drives the malignant phenotype of tumors, we wanted to characterize HIF regulatory functions of PHDs under hypoxic conditions. Our intention was to reveal the importance of PHD contribution to the opposing functions of HIFs under hypoxia. Characterization of PHD1-4 mRNA and protein expression levels under normoxic and hypoxic conditions in glioblastoma cell lines led to the identification of PHD2 and PHD3 as hypoxia inducible PHD isoforms and highlighted their predominant function under hypoxia. Mechanistically, we demonstrated that HIF mediates the hypoxic induction of PHD2 and 3 within a negative feedback loop, promoting its own degradation during prolonged hypoxia. The functional impact of PHD2 and 3 abundance on cell viability under hypoxic conditions was analyzed by disrupting PHD2 and PHD3 function either through a siRNA mediated approach or by application of the PHD inhibitor DMOG. These experiments uncovered that PHD2 and 3 are protective under hypoxic conditions and that PHD inhibition expedites cell death. Combined HIF and PHD suppression under hypoxic conditions abrogated this increased susceptibility to cell death, clearly showing that PHD2 and 3 act in a negative feedback regulatory loop to limit the HIF response under prolonged hypoxia. With respect to possible future therapeutical applications we co-treated cells with a PHD inhibitor and pro-apoptotic agents staurosporine or TRAIL. Co-challenging tumor cells even potentiated the cell death response, indicating a more widespread protective function of PHD. Taken together PHD2 and 3 protect tumor cells from cell death induction, functioning in a negative feedback regulatory loop to constrain the HIF dependent cell death responses under hypoxia. Interestingly, however, when assessing the role of PHD2 and PHD3 in in vivo tumor growth using an intracranial tumor model, we identified an exclusive tumor suppressor function for PHD3. Loss of PHD3 function enhanced tumor growth whereas increased PHD3 expression diminished the tumor burden. The accelerated tumor growth following PHD3 loss could be attributed to a decrease in the induction of apoptosis and an increase in proliferation. Tumor cells are frequently exposed to temporary and spatial depletion of nutrients. Interestingly, PHD3 loss conferred a growth advantage under growth factor deprivation. The growth regulatory function of PHD3 was isoform specific, HIF independent and importantly, did not require the hydroxylase function of PHD3. Previous reports have uncovered a regulatory function of the PHD system in NF-kB signaling. However, our results demonstrated that NF- kB signaling remained unaffected by alteration in the PHD3 status of the cell. Additionally, the PHD3 tumor suppressor function proved to be independent of two putative PHD3 downstream effectors, ATF4 and KIF1Bb. Mechanistically, PHD3 suppression reduced EGFR internalization, enhancing the amount of EGFR expressed on the cell surface. We further showed that the impaired EGFR internalization during PHD3 loss resulted in receptor hyperactivation under stimulated and growth factor deprived conditions. Importantly, PHD3 physcially associated with the EGFR complex as evidenced by co-immunoprecpitation. Consequently, this extended EGFR activation in PHD3 deficient cells resulted in enhanced downstream activation of EGFR signaling and increased proliferation. Consistent with the interpretation that PHD3 loss is beneficial for tumor growth, we found PHD3 promoter methylation in glioblastoma cell lines, hinting at a epigenetic mechanism to finetune PHD3 expression on top of the hypoxic driven gene regulation. Finally, we demonstrated that PHD3 tumor suppressor function is not restricted to glioblastomas since PHD3 suppression in lung adenocarcinoma accelerated subcutaneous tumor growth. With these findings, we expand the knowledge of PHD3 action from its oxygen sensing role to a regulatory function in growth factor signaling. This clearly discriminates PHD3 from the other isoforms and supports the exclusive tumor suppressor function in glioblastoma. Taken together our results identify a complex role of PHD signaling in cancer and delineate HIF dependent and HIF independent functions of the PHD system. We think that the HIF dependent protective effect of PHD2 and 3 and the HIF independent PHD3 tumor suppressor function are not mutually exclusive, but might be activated according to the heterogeneous intra-tumoral conditions. However, PHD3 hydroxylase activity is dispensable for its HIFindependent tumor suppressor function in glioma. This uncouples PHD3 function from co-factor and co-substrate requirements and allows it to act over a broader physiological range, since its influence on cellular processes is not constrained by the availability of rate limiting factors. It might explain, why the enzymatic independent functions of PHD3 predominate in vivo. Thus, therapeutic modulation of the PHD system to inhibit tumor growth has to be based on these contrasting functions of the PHD system. However, their differential dependence on the hydroxylase activity may facilitate a therapeutic strategy to specifically inhibit or promote the protective versus suppressive functions of the PHD system.
Biodegradation and elimination of industrial wastewater in the context of whole effluent assessment
(2010)
The focus of this thesis is on the assessment of the degradability of indirectly discharged wastewater in municipal treatment plants and on assessing indirectly discharged effluents by coupling the Zahn-Wellens test with effect-based bioassays. With this approach persistent toxicity of an indirectly discharged effluent can be detected and attributed to the respective emission source. In the first study 8 wastewater samples from different industrial sectors were analysed according to the “Whole-Effluent Assessment“ (WEA) approach developed by OSPAR. In another study this concept has been applied with 20 wastewater samples each from paper manufacturing and metal surface treating industry. In the first study generally low to moderate ecotoxic effects of wastewater samples have been determined. One textile wastewater sample was mutagenic in the Ames test and genotoxic in the umu test. The source of these effects could not be identified. After treatment in the Zahn-Wellens test the mutagenicity in the Ames test was eliminated completely while in the umu test genotoxicity could still be observed. Another wastewater sample from chemical industry was mutagenic in the Ames test. The mutagenicity with this wastewater sample was investigated by additional chemical analysis and backtracking. A nitro-aromatic compound (2-methoxy-4-nitroaniline) used for batchwise azo dye synthesis and its transformation products are the probable cause for the mutagenic effects analysed. Testing the mother liquor from dye production confirmed that this partial wastewater stream was mutagenic in the Ames test. The wasteweater samples from paper manufacturing industry of the second study were not toxic or genotoxic in the acute Daphnia test, fish egg test and umu test. In the luminescent bacteria test, moderate toxicity was observed. Wastewater of four paper mills demonstrated elevated or high algae toxicity, which was in line with the results of the Lemna test, which mostly was less sensitive than the algae test. The colouration of the wastewater samples in the visible band did not correlate with algae toxicity and thus is not considered as its primary origin. The algae toxicity in wastewater of the respective paper factory could also not be explained with the thermomechanically produced groundwood pulp (TMP) partial stream. Presumably other raw materials such as biocides might be the source of algae toxicity. In the algae test, often flat dose–response relationships and growth promotion at higher dilution factors have been observed, indicating that several effects are overlapping. The wastewater samples from the printed circuit board and electroplating industries (all indirectly discharged) were biologically pre-treated for 7 days in the Zahn–Wellens test before ecotoxicity testing. Thus, persistent toxicity could be discriminated from non-persistent toxicity caused, e.g. by ammonium or readily biodegradable compounds. With respect to the metal concentrations, all samples were not heavily polluted. The maximum conductivity of the samples was 43,700 micro S cm -1 and indicates that salts might contribute to the overall toxicity. Half of the wastewater samples proved to be biologically well treatable in the Zahn–Wellens test with COD elimination above 80%, whilst the others were insufficiently biodegraded (COD elimination 28–74%). After the pre-treatment in the Zahn–Wellens test, wastewater samples from four companies were extremely ecotoxic especially to algae. Three wastewater samples were genotoxic in the umu test. Applying the rules for salt correction to the test results following the German Wastewater Ordinance, only a small part of toxicity could be attributed to salts. In one factory, the origin of ecotoxicity has been attributed to the organosulphide dimethyldithiocarbamate (DMDTC) used as a water treatment chemical for metal precipitation. The assumption, based on rough calculation of input of the organosulphide into the wastewater, was confirmed in practice by testing its ecotoxicity at the corresponding dilution ratio after pre-treatment in the Zahn–Wellens test. The results show that bioassays are a suitable tool for assessing the ecotoxicological relevance of these complex organic mixtures. The combination of the Zahn–Wellens test followed by the performance of ecotoxicity tests turned out to be a cost-efficient suitable instrument for the evaluation of indirect dischargers and considers the requirements of the IPPC Directive.
Acute myeloid/lymphoid leukemia is a fatal hematological malignancy characterized by accumulation of nonfunctional, immature blasts, which interferes with the production of normal blood cells. Activating mutations of receptor tyrosine kinases are common genetic lesions in leukemia. FLT3-ITD is a frequent activating mutation found in AML patients, leading to uncontrolled proliferation of leukemic blasts. FLT3-ITD directly activates STAT5, leading to the induction of STAT5 target gene expression like PIM kinases and SOCS genes. STAT5 and PIM kinases have been shown to play a crucial role in the FLT3-ITD mediated transformation. On the other hand, the role of SOCS proteins in FLT3-ITD mediated transformation has not been studied to date. SOCS proteins are part of a negative feedback mechanism that controls Jak kinases downstream of cytokine receptors. One of the SOCS family members, SOCS1 has been reported to suppress oncogenecity of several activating kinases implicated in hematologic malignancies. In this thesis the role of these SOCS proteins in FLT3-ITD mediated transformation (in vitro) and leukemogenesis (in vivo) is systematically explored. Expression of FLT3-ITD in cell lines of myeloid (32D) and lymphoid (Ba/F3) origin, led to CIS, SOCS1 and SOCS2 expression. FLT3-ITD expression in primary murine bone marrow stem/progenitor cells led to a 59 fold induction of SOCS1 expression. Furthermore, FLT3-ITD positive AML cell lines (MV4-11, MOLM-13) show kinase dependent CIS, SOCS1, and SOCS3 expression. Importantly SOCS1 is highly expressed in AML patients with FLT3-ITD compared to healthy individuals. SOCS1 protein was expressed in FLT3-ITD transduced murine bone marrow stem cells and SOCS1 expression was abolished with kinase inhibition in MOLM-13 cell line. In conclusion, SOCS1 was highly regulated by FLT3-ITD in myeloid, lymphoid cell lines, in bone marrow stem/progenitors and in AML patient samples. SOCS1 co-expression did not affect FLT3-ITD mediated signaling and proliferation, but abolished IL-3 mediated proliferation and protected 32D cells from interferon-α and interferon-γ mediated growth inhibition. FLT3-ITD expressing 32D cells showed diminished STAT1 activation in response to interferons (α and γ). Alone, SOCS1 strongly inhibited cytokine induced colony formation of bone marrow stem and progenitors, but not FLT3-ITD induced colony formation. Most importantly, in the presence of growth inhibitory interferon-γ, SOCS1 co-expression with FLT3-ITD led to increased colony formation compared to FLT3-ITD alone. Taken together, FLT3-ITD induced and exogenously expressed SOCS1, shielded cells from external cytokines, signals, while not affecting FLT3-ITD induced proliferation/signaling. In further experiments the in vivo effects of SOCS1 were studied in a bone marrow transplantation model. SOCS1 bone marrow transplants were unable to engraft/proliferate in mice. FLT3-ITD was shown to induce a myeloproliferative disease. Both control (empty vector), SOCS1 transplanted mice were normal and did not show any disease phenotype. FLT3-ITD alone and SOCS1 co-expressing FLT3-ITD developed either myeloproliferative disease or acute lymphoblastic leukemia with equal distribution. SOCS1 co-expression with FLT3-ITD led to a decreased latency. Mice transplanted with FLT3-ITD alone and SOCS1 co-expressing FLT3-ITD displayed enlarged spleens, liver and hypercellular bone marrow indicating infiltration of leukemic cells. Mice were also anemic and showed decreased platelet counts. Importantly SOCS1 co-expression particularly shortened the latency of myeloproliferative disease but not of acute lymphoblastic leukemia. In summary, in the context of FLT3-ITD, SOCS1 acts as a ‘conditional oncogene’ and cooperates with FLT3-ITD in the development of myeloproliferative disease. With these data we propose the following model: FLT3-ITD induces SOCS gene expression, which shields cells against proliferation and differentiation signals from cytokines, while not affecting FLT3-ITD mediated proliferative signals. This leaves cells under the dictate of FLT3-ITD thereby contributing to leukemogenesis. Similar to FLT3-ITD, BCR/ABL (P190) (an oncogenic fusion kinase often found in acute lymphoblastic leukemia) induces SOCS gene expression in K562 and long-term cultured cells from patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. SOCS1 co-expression does not affect BCR/ABL mediated proliferation while abrogating IL-3 mediated proliferation. These findings suggest that SOCS proteins may play a general co-operative role in the context of oncogenes which aberrantly activate STAT3/5 independently of JAK kinases. This study reveals a novel molecular mechanism of FLT3-ITD mediated leukemogenesis and suggests SOCS genes as potential therapeutic targets.
The comparison of persons is pervasive in social judgement and human decision making and yet its neural substrate is poorly explored. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging we investigated the brain activities of participants comparing other persons with each other (other vs. other comparison - OOC) and with themselves (self vs. other comparison - SOC) as regards psychological (intelligence) and physical (height) characteristics. We found that the comparison of these two person characteristics differ in their neural activation patterns in the OOC as well as in the SOC with higher activity increases for intelligence than height comparison in several areas in medial frontal and orbitofrontal cortex and posterior cingulate cortex suggesting that their activation scales with the demand on person comparison. The person comparison network strikingly overlaps the one commonly described for the classic theory of mind tasks. We interpret this overlap as indicating perspective taking common to person comparison and theory of mind. Furthermore, we suggest that the neural differences between the SOC and the OOC especially in the dorsal part of the medial frontal cortex rely on the different degree of the self involved in the two types of comparisons. The results additionally suggest that the decision directions of self-relevant comparisons, especially in the intelligence comparison of the SOC, resulted in differences in the activation of the medial frontal cortex, which also relies on differences in the reward anticipation and self-relatedness of these decisions.
Wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) do not eliminate micropollutants completely and are thus important point sources for these substances. In particular, concerns about en-docrine disrupting compounds in WWTP effluents give rise to the implementation of advanced treatment steps for the elimination of trace organic contaminants. The present study investigated ozonation (O3) and activated carbon treatment (AC) at two WWTPs. For an ecotoxicological assessment at WWTP Regensdorf, conventionally treated wastewater, wastewater after ozonation, and ozonated wastewater after sand filtration were evaluated in parallel via the fish early life stage toxicity test (FELST) using rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). Additionally, a comparative toxicity evalu-ation of ozonated and activated carbon treated effluents was performed at the pilot scale treatment plant in Neuss (WWTP Neuss). For this purpose, four invertebrate tests and one higher plant toxicity test were selected to assess potential biological effects on or-ganisms [Lemna minor growth inhibition test, chironomid toxicity test with Chironomus riparius, Lumbriculus variegatus toxicity test, comet assay with haemolymph of the zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha), reproduction test with Potamopyrgus antipo-darum]. All in vivo assays were performed on site at the treatment plants in flow-through test systems. Furthermore, the present study investigated the effects of ozona-tion and activated carbon treatment on endocrine activities [estrogenicity, anti-estrogenicity, androgenicity, anti-androgenicity, aryl-hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) agonistic activity] with yeast based bioassays using solid phase extracted water samples. To evaluate the removal of in vitro non-specific toxicity, a cytotoxicity assay using a rat cell line was applied. The FELST at WWTP Regensdorf revealed a considerable developmental retardation of test organisms exposed to ozonated WW. This was accompanied by a significant decrease in body weight and length compared to reference water, to the conventionally treated WW, and to the ozonated water after sand filtration. Hence sand filtration obvi-ously prevents from adverse ecotoxicological effects of ozonation. An additional test – starting with yolk-sac larvae – resulted in a significant reduction of vitellogenin levels in fish exposed to ozonated wastewater compared to fish reared in conventionally treat-ed wastewater. This demonstrates the effective removal of estrogenic activity by ozonation. At WWTP Neuss, the reproduction test with the mudsnail P. antipodarum exhibited a decreased reproductive output after advanced treatment compared to conventional treatment. This indicates an effective estrogenicity removal by ozonation and activated carbon treatment and is confirmed by results of the yeast estrogen screen with a reduc-tion of in vitro estrogenic activity by > 75%. The L. variegatus test revealed a signifi-cantly enhanced toxicity after ozonation compared to conventional treatment, whereas this effect was reduced following subsequent sand filtration. When ozonation was applied, a significantly increased genotoxicity was observed, detected with the comet assay using haemolymph of the zebra mussel. Again, this effect was removed by subsequent sand filtration to the level of conventional treatment. Activated carbon treatment even resulted in a significant reduction of genotoxicity. At both treatment plants, adverse effects after ozonation may have been a result of the formation of toxic oxidation by-products. However, sand filtration reduced toxication effects, indicating that these oxidation by-products are readily degradable or adsorbable. The results point out that, in any case, ozonation should not be applied without subsequent biologically active post treatment appropriate for oxidation by-products removal (e.g. sand filtration). However, only activated carbon achieved a toxicity reduction compared to the conventional treated wastewater. Thus, it cannot be excluded that po-tential beneficial effects due to ozonation might be masked by residual toxic oxidation by-products passing the sand filter or ozonation is not as effective in toxicity removal as PAC treatment. The yeast based assays with solid phase extracted samples revealed an effective endo-crine activity removal during ozonation and activated carbon filtration (estrogenicity: 77 – 99%, anti-androgenicity: 63 – 96%, AhR agonistic activity: 79 – 82%). The cyto-toxicity assay exhibited a 32% removal of non-specific toxicity after ozonation com-pared to conventional treatment. Ozonation in combination with sand filtration reduced cytotoxic effects by 49%, indicating that sand filtration contributes to the removal of toxicants. Activated carbon treatment was the most effective technology for cytotoxici-ty removal (61%). Sample evaporation reduced cytotoxic effects by 52% (after activated carbon treatment) to 73% (after ozonation), demonstrating that volatile substances contribute considerably to toxic effects, particularly after ozone treatment. These results confirm an effective removal or transformation of toxicants with receptor mediated mode of action and non-specific toxicants during both investigated treatment steps. However, due to the limited extractability, polar ozonation by-products were neglected for toxicity analysis, and hence non-specific toxicity after O3 is underestimated. In the long run, only on-site comparisons at WW receiving water bodies (e.g. communi-ty analysis of fish, macroinvertebrates, plants, microorganisms) – before and after up-grading WWTPs – allow drawing environmentally relevant conclusions regarding bene-fits and risks of advanced WW treatment methods. Conclusively, the benefits and possible negative impacts have to be carefully evaluated to prove that not more environmental impact will be induced than removed by advanced treatment technologies as each additional treatment requires considerable amounts of energy, resources, and infrastructure facilities. Accordingly, comprehensive sustainable approaches for pollution prevention and wastewater treatment (e.g. source control and source separation) are preferable compared to end-of-pipe treatment systems.
The TTL is the transition layer between the tropical troposphere and stratosphere, and is the main region where tropospheric air enters the stratosphere. In this thesis different transport processes are studied by using in situ measurements of tracers. Long-lived tracers were measured with the High Altitude Gas Analyzer (HAGAR) on board the M55 Geophysica aircraft. The instrument was developed by the University of Frankfurt and measures the long-lived tracers CO2, N2O, CFC-12, CFC-11, H-1211, SF6, CH4 and H2 with two gas chromatographic channels and a CO2 sensor (LICOR). The measurements are supported by CO and O3 measurements of other instruments. Two campaigns were conducted to obtain measurements in the TTL: SCOUT-O3 (November/December 2005 in Darwin, Australia) and AMMA-SCOUT-O3 (August 2006 in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso). After a general introduction of the thesis in chapters one and two, the third chapter describes the findings during this last campaign. Five local flights are analyzed to study the different transport processes that occur in the tropical tropopause layer above West-Africa: deep convection up to the level of main convective outflow, vertical mixing after overshooting of air in deep convection, horizontal inmixing from the extratropical lower stratosphere, and horizontal transport across the subtropical barrier. Main findings are that the TTL over West-Africa is mostly influenced by remote convection. The subtropical barrier is not a strong barrier but more a region of transition between the extratropical and the tropical stratosphere. Chapter 4 presents the results obtained during the SCOUT-O3 campaign. From the eight local flights the last four flights (051129, 051130a, 051130b, 051205) show enhanced values of ozone, CO and CO2 between 355 and 380 K potential temperature in comparison with the first four flights (051116, 051119, 051123, 051125). Horizontal inmixing from the extra-tropical stratosphere and influence of the local convective system Hector cannot explain the enhanced values of the two flights on 30 November Therefore, other possible explanations for these enhanced CO, CO2 and ozone levels are proposed. The first explanation is vertical mixing in the vicinity of the jet stream. However, the jet cannot explain the differences between the flights on 30 November and the flights on 29 November and 5 December. Another possible explanation is influence of polluted boundary layer air masses from the Indonesian region. Especially air sampled during the flights on November 30 crossed large parts of northern Indonesia between 8 and 10 days before the measurements. Convective uplift of biomass burning and other pollution plumes can transport CO and ozone precursors into the upper troposphere, where they can significantly enhance the ozone production. The last chapter deals with the vertical ascent rate in the TTL and uses measurements of both the SCOUT-O3 and AMMA-SCOUT-O3 campaign as well as data from previous aircraft campaigns (TROCCINOX and APE-THESEO). Time scales and residence times for mean vertical transport in the background TTL are estimated for different seasons and over different geographic regions using in situ observations of CO2 and long-lived tracers. The vertical transport time scales are constrained using the seasonal variation of CO2 in the tropical troposphere as a “tracer clock” for vertical ascent. Two methods are applied to calculate the residence time in the layer between 360 and 390 K potential temperature. The first method uses the slope of the CO2 index, the second method fits the CO2 index directly to the measurements assuming a constant ascent rate. The first method yields residence times for Australia,West Africa, and Brazil of the same order, 35-45 days to 380 K and 50 days to 390 K (where no value can be derived for Australia as the slope is changing approximately one month before the campaign). For APE-THESEO, the method does not yield reasonable results. The best estimates using the second method show moderate residence times between 360 and 390 K of 60±25 days SCOUT-O3 (NH autumn) and 43±8 days for AMMA/SCOUT-O3 (NH summer). These results agree well with the results calculated using the first method. For APE-THESEO and TROCCINOX the best fits yield shorter residence times of 23±7 and 40±10 days, respectively, both during winter. These results correspond well to the expectations based on the seasonal variation of the Brewer-Dobson circulation.
Feral cats (Felis catus), introduced into Australia with European settlers in the 19th century, colonized the entire Australian continent in less than 100 years, including the Australian arid zone which covers more than 70% of the continent. Feral cats are responsible for the decline and extinction of a number of native species and the failure of a number of reintroduction attempts, especially in the arid zone. Many ecological studies on feral cats have been conducted on home range size and movement patterns in different environments, abundance and diet, with the aim of gaining a better understanding about their successful invasion of the Australian continent. There are no physiological studies on the feral cat to date. However, there is evidence that there is a strong interrelation between physiology and abiotic factors such as climate. Thus, distribution, habitat, and dispersal of species can not fully be understood without background knowledge of physiology. This PhD aims to contribute to a better understanding of three physiological parameters: metabolism, body mass and body temperature patterns. These parameters may possibly identify physiological adaptation to different climate zones, seasonal conditions and island isolation.
To date it is not clear at which stage of differentiation mature T cell leukaemia/lymphoma is initiated. Previous studies in our group showed that mature T cells are relatively resistant to transformation. We wanted to further investigate the transformation potential of NPM-ALK, p21SNFT and the viral oncoprotein Tax on mature T cells. First, we analyzed the effects on T cell growth in vitro after transducing human T cell lines with gammaretroviral vectors encoding these genes. No growth or proliferation promoting effect of all three genes was observed. In the second part of the project, we transduced murine, mature T cells and/or haematopoietic stem cells (HPCs/HSCs) and transplanted these cells into Rag-1 deficient recipients. All mice transplanted with NPM-ALK transduced monoclonal mature T cells (OT-1) developed leukaemia/lymphoma. In contrast, only few NPM-ALK transduced polyclonal T cell and HPC/HSC transplanted mice developed leukaemia/lymphoma. From the p21SNFT group, only two mice transplanted with transduced OT-1 T cells developed leukaemia/lymphoma, which showed high eGFP and interestingly CD19 expression. No malignancies were observed in Tax transplanted animals so far. Furthermore, the recipients do not show any eGFP marking in the periphery. In conclusion, our results show that compared to polyclonal T cells, monoclonal T cells are transformable after gammaretroviral transfer of NPM-ALK and p21SNFT.
This thesis is dedicated to the study of fluctuation and correlation observables of hadronic equilibrium systems. The statistical hadronization model of high energy physics, in its ideal, i.e. non-interacting, gas approximation will be investigated in different ensemble formulations. The hypothesis of thermal and chemical equilibrium in high energy interaction will be tested against qualitative and quantitative predictions.
Die Maillard-Reaktion findet während der Lagerung und thermischen Verarbeitung von Lebensmitteln zwischen den darin enthaltenen Proteinen und reduzierenden Kohlehydraten statt. Als Ergebnis der Reaktion entstehen sogenannte advanced glycation end products (AGEs), Protein-Derivate mit Glykierungs-Strukturen. Da Lebensmittel vor dem Verzehr häufig erhitzt werden, ist der Einfluss von AGEs auf die Pathogenese von Nahrungsmittelallergien von großem Interesse. Die Maillard-Reaktion könnte zur Bildung von neuen, für die Pathogenese der Nahrungsmittelallergie relevanten, Immunepitopen beitragen. Das Ziel dieser Arbeit war es, den Einfluss der Maillard-Reaktion auf die T-Zell-Immunogenität, die Antigenität und die von beiden Eigenschaften abhängige Allergenität von Nahrungsmittelallergenen zu untersuchen. Zunächst wurde der Einfluss der Maillard-Reaktion auf die T-Zell-Immunogenität von Ovalbumin (OVA), einem Allergen des Hühnereiweißes, untersucht. Dafür wurde glykiertes OVA (AGE-OVA) hergestellt indem das Protein zusammen mit Glukose erhitzt wurde. In dieser Arbeit konnte zum ersten Mal gezeigt werden, dass ein AGE-Derivat eines Lebensmittelallergens eine höhere T-Zellen-Immunogenität besitzt, als sein natives Gegenstück. Die Aktivierung und Proliferation von CD4+ T-Zellen durch AGE-OVA wurde in vitro durch Co-Kultivierung der T-Zellen mit dendritischen Zellen (DZ) untersucht. DZ sind professionelle Antigen- präsentierende Zellen, welche im Pathomechanismus der Allergie eine wichtige Rolle spielen. Im Vergleich zu nativen OVA und OVA welches ohne Glukose erhitzt wurde, führte die Stimulierung mit AGE-OVA zu einer deutlich erhöhten Aktivierung von OVA-spezifischen CD4+ T-Zellen. Damit DZ T-Zellen aktivieren können, muss das Allergen zunächst durch die DZ aufgenommen werden. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde gezeigt, dass die Aufnahme von AGE-OVA wesentlich höher war als die der Kontrollen. Außerdem konnte der scavenger receptor class A type I and II (SR-AI/II) als einer der hauptverantwortlichen Rezeptoren für die Aufnahme von AGE-OVA identifiziert werden. Zusammenfassend lässt sich aus den Ergebnissen dieser Arbeit die Hypothese aufstellen, dass die Glykierung von OVA eine erhöhte Assoziation des Allergens mit SR-AI/II ermöglicht, welche zu einer verstärkten Aufnahme des Allergens durch die DZ führt. Dadurch können mehr Peptide des Allergens an MHC II gebunden und auf der Zelloberfläche präsentiert werden. Das wiederum führt zur beobachteten stärkeren OVA-spezifischen CD4+ T-Zell-Aktivierung durch AGE-OVA. Als nächstes wurde die T-Zell-Immunogenität und Antigenität von AGE-OVA in vivo in einem Mausmodel untersucht. Es zeigte sich, dass AGE-OVA auch in vivo im Vergleich zu den nicht glykierten OVA-Formen eine erhöhte T-Zell-Immunogenität besitzt. Des weiteren führte die Immunisierung mit AGE-OVA zu einer erhöhten Produktion von IgE-Antikörpern. Somit wurde in dieser Arbeit gezeigt, dass AGE-OVA in vivo nicht nur eine erhöhte CD4+ T-Zell-Immunogenität besitzt, sondern auch eine höhere Antigenität hat als natives und ohne Glukose erhitztes OVA. Diese Ergebnisse harmonieren gut miteinander da CD4+ T-Zellen eine zentrale Rolle in der Aktivierung von B-Zellen und der IgE-Produktion durch selbige Zellen spielen. IgE-Antikörper besitzen eine essentielle Funktion beim Auslösen der klinischen Symptomatik der Allergie. Zusammenfassend lässt deshalb sagen, dass die Maillard-Reaktion die Allergenität von OVA erhöhen könnte. Zum Schluss wurden noch die immunstimulatorischen Eigenschaften des Erdnussallergens (AGE)-Ara h 2 untersucht. Da Erdnüsse häufig ernsthafte allergische Reaktionen hervorrufen und selten roh verzehrt werden, war es vom großen Interesse den Einfluss der Maillard-Reaktion auf Immunogenität und Antigenität von rekombinanten Ara h 2 (rAra h 2) zu untersuchen. Es zeigte sich, dass die Glykierung von rAra h 2 durch die Maillard-Reaktion die T-Zellen-Immunogenität, als auch die Antigenität des Allergens reduziert. Abschließend lässt sich sagen, dass die Maillard-Reaktion die allergenen Eigenschaften von Lebensmittelallergenen erheblich beeinflusst indem es die T-Zell-Immunogenität des Allergens verändert. Die Mechanismen welche die T-Zell-Immunogenität beeinflussen wurden hier näher untersucht. Wenn die Glykierung nicht die Bindung der T-Zellen- und/oder B-Zellen-Rezeptoren inhibiert, wird die Allergen-spezifische CD4+ T-Zell-Aktivierung und die davon abhängige IgE-Produktion dadurch erhöht, dass das glykierte Allergen durch DZ verstärkt über SR-AI/II aufgenommen wird. Die vorliegende Arbeit liefert wertvolle Information über die Allergenität von Proteinen die durch die Maillard-Reaktion modifiziert wurden and trägt dazu bei die Mechanismen von Nahrungsmittelallergien besser zu verstehen.
This work reports on the study of the projectile x-ray emission in relativistic ion-atom collisions. Excitation of K-shell in He-like uranium ions, electron capture into H-like uranium ions and Simultaneous ionization and excitation of initially He-like uranium ions have been studied using the experimental storage ring at GSI. Information about the population of the excited states for the H- and He-like uranium ions, can be obtained by measuring the angular distribution of the decay radiation. Since the Ly_alpha2 transition is isotropic, the intensities of the Ly_alpha1 and K_alpha transitions were normalized to the Ly_alpha2 line. For the K_alpha1 and K_alpha2 transitions originating from the excitation of the He-like uranium ions, no alignment was observed. In contrast, the Ly_alpha1 radiation from the simultaneous ionization-excitation process of the He-like uranium ions shows a clear alignment. It is shown that the alignment of Ly_alpha1 was obtained by the Alignment parameter A_20. The experimental value leads to the inclusion of a magnetic term in the interaction potential. It is interesting to note that in the case of the Ly_alpha1 emission the small M2 contribution added coherently to the E1 transition amplitudes enhances the anisotropy. The capture process of target electrons into the highly-charged heavy ions was studied using H-like uranium ions at an incident energy of 220 MeV/u, impinging on N2 gas-target. It was shown that, the strongly aligned electrons captured in 2p3/2 level will couple with the available 1s1/2 electron which shows no initial directional preference. The magnetic sub-state population of the 2p3/2 electron will be redistributed according to the coupling rules to the magnetic sub-states of the relevant two-electron states. Consequently, the 1^P1 and 3^P2 states are corresponding to the the strongly aligned 2p3/2 state. This leads to the large anisotropy in the corresponding individual ground state transitions contributing to the K_alpha1 emission. Due to the fact that the 1^P1 --> 1^S0 and 3^P2 --> 1^S0 transitions are experimentally not resolved, a more detailed analysis of the angular dependence of the K_alpha1 radiation is required. From the K_alpha1/K_alpha2 ratio, the current results show that the incoherent addition of the E1 and M2 transition components yield to an almost isotropic emission of the total K_alpha1. In contrast to the radiative electron capture, the experimental results for the K-shell single excitation of He-like uranium ions indicate that only the 1^P1 level contributes to the K_alpha1 transition. For this case, the anisotropy parameter beta_20 was found to be -0.20 + 0.03 which is similar to that one calculated for pure E1 transition. This work also reports on the study of a two-electron process: the simultaneous ionization and excitation occurring in relativistic collisions of heavy highly-charged ions with gaseous targets. The investigation was performed on He-like uranium ions impinging upon xenon gas-target at an incident energy of 220 MeV/u. The measurements have been performed at the ESR gas-target using atomic xenon with a typical area density of 10^12 particles/cm^2. In contrast to the solid state target, the use of gas target offers the advantage of clear separation of the one step two-electron process due to the fact that the probability of two consecutive collision in such thin targets is negligible and the double step processes can be excluded. During the process of simultaneous ionization and excitation in He-like uranium ions, one of the ground-state electrons is promoted into the continuum and the other into the L-subshell states of the projectile. To select this process, the Lyman-series radiation has been measured at various observation angles in coincidence with up-charged projectiles (U^91+). From the yields of the Ly_alpha1 and Ly_alpha2 projectile radiation, the relative cross section for the process of simultaneous ionization and excitation was directly determined. The angle dependent measurement of the radiation yields provide information about the angular distributions of the emitted radiation and permits the determination of the alignment parameter A_{20}. This parameter gives information on the level population and the collision impact parameter. The present results (b^exp = 810 fm) show that the simultaneous ionization and excitation is a process which occurs at small impact parameter.
Within the present study the occurrence and fate of the organophosphorus flame retardants and plasticizers tris(2-chloroethyl) phosphate (TCEP), tris(2-chloro-1-methylethyl) phosphate (TCPP), tris(1,3-dichloro-2-propyl) phosphate (TDCP), tris(2-butoxyethyl) phosphate (TBEP), tri-iso-butyl phosphate (TiBP), and tri-n-butyl phosphate (TnBP) in precipitation, lake water, surface runoff and groundwater from urban and remote areas in Germany was investigated between June 2007 and October 2009. 255 samples of precipitation, 210 samples of lentic surface water and 72 samples of groundwater were analyzed for the six organophosphates (OPs) by solid phase extraction followed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. The research focused on aspects concerning (1) the atmospheric washout of OPs by precipitation, (2) the temporal variation of OP concentrations in precipitation and in lentic surface waters as well as (3) the pollution of groundwater by OPs. The results of the study emphasize the importance of precipitation as an all-season entry-pathway for OPs in the aquatic environment, particularly in densely populated urban environments with high traffic volume and abundant usage of flame-protected products. No seasonal trends were observed for all analytes in precipitation at the urban sampling site. TCPP dominated in all precipitation and storm water holding tank (SWHT) water samples with maximum levels exceeding 1 µg/L. An accumulation of OPs deposited in SWHTs was observed with concentrations often exceeding those observed in wet precipitation. Median concentrations of TCPP (880 ng/L), TDCP (13 ng/L), and TBEP (77 ng/L) at the urban SWHT were more than twice as high as those measured at the urban precipitation sampling site (403 ng/L, 5 ng/L, 21 ng/L) located close to the SWHT. OP levels in more remote lakes were often below or close to the limits of quantitation (LOQ). Nevertheless, TCPP was the substance with the highest median concentration in rural volcanic lakes (7–18 ng/L) indicating an atmospheric transport of the compound. At urban lakes the median OP concentrations were in the range of 23–61 ng/L (TCEP), 85–126 ng/L (TCPP), <LOQ–53 ng/L (TBEP), 8–10 ng/L (TiBP), and 17–32 ng/L (TnBP). In laboratory experiments, TBEP, TiBP, and TnBP were photochemically degraded in spiked lake water samples upon exposure to sunlight. In the SWHT a seasonal trend with decreasing concentrations in summer/autumn was evident for TiBP and TnBP but not for the chlorinated OPs. The decreasing concentrations can be explained by in-lake photodegradation. Results have also shown that the occurrence of OPs in groundwater is depending on the anthropogenic impact during groundwater recharge/natural replenishment. Infiltration of precipitation was found to be no important entry-pathway for OPs into aquifers at rural sites. Highest OP concentrations (>0.1 µg/L) were determined in groundwater polluted by percolating leachate from contaminated sites or groundwater recharged via bank filtration of OP-loaded recipients. Concentrations of TCEP, TCPP, TiBP and TnBP in groundwater decreased rapidly (89–97%) during bank filtration with increasing distance from the recipient due to adsorption processes and/or biotransformation. Although TCEP and TCPP are stable within the aquifer, they are not suitable as conservative organic tracers in groundwater.
The HADES (High Acceptance DiElectron Spectrometer) is an experimental
apparatus installed at the heavy-ion synchrotron SIS-18 at GSI, Darmstadt.
The main physics motivation of the HADES experiment is the measurement
of e+e− pairs in the invariant-mass range up to 1 GeV/c2 in heavy-ion collisions
as well as in pion and proton-induced reactions.
The HADES physics program is focused on in-medium properties of the light
vector mesons ρ(770), ω(783) and φ(1020), which decay with a small branching
ratio into dileptons. Dileptons are penetrating probes which allow to study
the in-medium properties of hadrons. However, in heavy-ion collisions, the
measurement of such lepton pairs is difficult because they are rare and have a
very large combinatorial background.
Recently, HADES has been upgraded with new detectors and new electronics
in order to handle higher intensity beams and reactions with heavy nuclei up
to Au.
HADES will continue for a few more years its rich physics program at its
current place at SIS-18 and then move to the upcoming international Facility
for Antiproton and Ion Research (FAIR) accelerator complex. In this context
the physics results presented in this work are important prerequisites for the investigation
of in-medium vector meson properties in p + A and A+A collisions.
This work consists of five chapters. The first chapter introduces the physics
motivation and a review of recent physics results. In the second chapter, the
HADES spectrometer is described and its sub-detectors are presented. Chapter
three deals with the issue of lepton identification and the reconstruction of
the dielectron spectra in p + p collisions is presented. Here, two reactions
are characterized: inclusive and exclusive dilepton production reactions. From
the spectra obtained, the corresponding cross sections are presented with the
respective statistical and systematical errors. A comparison with theoretical
models is included as well. Conclusions are given in chapter four.
The final part of this work is dedicated to the HADES upgrade, whose goal
is among others the achievement of a reliable and fast data acquisition of the
Multiwire Drift Chambers (MDCs). Chapter five presents my contribution to
this successful project during the three years of my stay at GSI.
G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) are the key players in signal perception and transduction and one of the currently most important class of drug targets. An example of high pharmacological relevance is the human endothelin (ET) system comprising two rhodopsin-like GPCRs, the endothelin A (ETA) and the endothelin B (ETB) receptor. Both receptors are major modulators in cardiovascular regulation and show striking diversities in biological responses affecting vasoconstriction and blood pressure regulation as well as many other physiological processes. Numerous disorders are associated with ET dysfunction and ET antagonism is considered an efficient treatment of diseases like heart failure, hypertension, diabetes, artherosclerosis and even cancer. This study exemplifies strategies and approaches for the preparative scale synthesis of GPCRs in individual cell-free (CF) systems based on E. coli, a newly emerging and promising technique for the production of even very difficult membrane proteins. The preparation of high quality samples in sufficient amounts is still a major bottleneck for the structural determination of the ET receptors. Heterologous overexpression has been a challenge now for decades but extensive studies with conventional cell-based systems had only limited success. A central milestone of this study was the development of efficient preparative scale expression protocols of the ETA receptor in qualities sufficient for structural analysis by using individual CF systems. Newly designed optimization strategies, the implementation of a variety of CF expression modes and the development of specific quality control assays finally resulted in the production of several milligrams of ETA receptor per one millilitre of reaction mixture. The versatility of CF expression was extensively used to modulate GPCR sample quality by modification of the solubilization environment with detergents and lipids in a variety of combinations at different stages of the production process. Downstream processing procedures of CF synthesized GPCRs were systematically optimized and sample properties were analysed with respect to homogeneity, protein stability and receptor ligand binding competence. Evaluation was accomplished by an array of complementary and specifically modified techniques. Depending on its hydrophobic environment, CF production of the ETA receptor resulted in non-aggregated, monodisperse forms with sufficient long-term stability and high degrees of secondary structure thermostability. The obtained results document the CF production of the ETA receptor in two different modes as an example of a class A GPCR in ligand-binding competent and non-aggregated form in quantities sufficient for structural approaches. The presented strategy could serve as basic guideline for the production of related receptors in similar systems.
Der L-Carnitin/gamma-Butyrobetain Antiporter CaiT ist ein Mitglied der Betain/Carnitin/Cholin Transporter (BCCT) Familie. Sekundärtransporter der BCCT Familie transportieren Substrate, die eine positiv-geladene quartäre Ammoniumgruppe besitzen. CaiT besteht aus 504 Amiosäuren und besitzt ein moleculares Gewicht von etwa 56 kDa. In Enterobakterien wie Escherichia coli, Proteus mirabilis und Salmonella typhimurium wird die Expression des caiTABCDE Operons unter anaeroben Bedingungen induziert. Unter diesen Bedinungen ist CaiT der Haupttransporter des Betain-Derivates L-Carnitin. In Enterobakterien wird L-Carnitin unter anaeroben Bedingungen aufgenommen und dehydratisiert wobei Crotonobetain ensteht. Crotonobetain wird anschließend zum Endprodukt gamma-Butyrobetain reduziert. Gamma-Butyrobetain ist das Gegensubstrat, das aus der Zelle hinaustransportiert wird, wenn L-Carnitin in die Zelle aufgenommen wird. Der Austauschmechanismus von LCarnitin gegen gamma-Butyrobetain geschieht ohne das Vorhandensein eines elektrochemischen Gradients, d.h. CaiT ist sowohl H+- als auch Na+-unabhängig. Ein Ziel dieser Arbeit war es die drei-dimensionale (3D) Struktur von CaiT mittels Röntgenstrukturanalyse zu lösen. Weiterhin sollten mit Hilfe der 3D-Struktur und funktionellen Studien detailiertere Erkenntnisse über den kationenunabhängigen Antiportmechanismus von CaiT ermittelt werden. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden die 3D-Röntgenkristallstrukturen von drei CaiT-Homologen der Enterobakterien P. mirabilis (PmCaiT), E. coli (EcCaiT) und S. typhimurium (StCaiT) mittels molekularem Ersatz (engl.: molecular replacement, MR) mit einem Alanin-Model des CaiT verwandten Na+/Glycinbetain Symporters BetP gelöst. PmCaiT konnte mit einer Auflösung von 2.3 Å gelöst werden. Das Protein kristallisierte in der Kristallraumgruppe H3, mit drei Molekülen in der asymmetrischen Einheit (engl.: asymmetric unit, AU). Die drei PmCaiT-Moleküle ordneten sich innerhalb der AU um eine kristallographische dreifach Symmetrieachse an. EcCaiT wurde mittels MR mit einem Alanin-Model von PmCaiT bei einer Auflösung von 3.5 Å gelöst. EcCaiT kristallisierte in der Kristallraumgruppe P32, ebenfalls mit drei Molekülen in der AU, jedoch ohne kristallographische Symmetry. Während der Verfeinerung des EcCaiT-Models wurde eine strenge dreifache nichtkristallographische Symmetry (engl.: non-crystallographic symmetry, NCS) angewandt. StCaiT, das ebenfalls mittels MR mit einem Alanin-Model von PmCaiT, aber bei einer Auflösung von 4.0 Å gelöst wurde, kristallisierte in der Kristallraumgruppe P65, ebenfalls mit drei StCaiT-Molekülen in der AU, ohne kristallographische Symmetry. Bei der Verfeinerung des StCaiT-Modells wurde wie bei EcCaiT eine strenge NCS angewandt. Da die Auflösung von 4.0 Å bei StCaiT zu niedrig ist um detailierte moleculare Erkenntnisse zu gewinnen, wurden Protein- sowie Substratinteraktionen nur an den Strukturen von PmCaiT und EcCaiT analysiert. Alle drei CaiT-Homologe weisen jedoch einen ähnlichen strukturellen Aufbau auf. In der Röntgenkristallstruktur bildet CaiT ein symmetrisches Trimer, das über ionische und polare Wechselwirkungen zwischen den Protomeren stabilisiert wird. Der trimere Oligomerisierungszustand von CaiT in Detergenzlösung sowie in zweidimensionalen Lipidmembrankristallen wurde bereits in früheren Arbeiten gezeigt. Jedes der drei CaiT-Protomere besteht aus zwölf Transmembranhelices (TMH), die N- und C-terminalen Domänen des Proteins befinden sich auf der cytoplasmatischen Seite. Zehn der TMH bilden zwei invertierte Wiederholungseinheiten aus jeweils fünf TMH. Die erste Einheit besteht aus den TMH 3 – 7, die invertierte zweite Einheit besteht aus den TMH 8 – 12. Beide Wiederholungseinheiten sind strukturell nahezu identisch und lassen sich fast vollständig übereinanderlegen, jedoch weisen die Aminosäuren der beiden Einheiten keine signifikante Sequenzidentität auf. Die ersten beiden Helices der Wiederholungseinheiten, die TMH 3 – 4 und die TMH 8 – 9, bilden ein antiparalleles vier-Helix-Bündel, in dem in CaiT zwei Substratbindestellen lokalisiert sind. Eine derartige Transporterarchitektur wurde erstmals in der Struktur des Na+/Alanin Symporters LeuTAa des thermophilen Bakteriums Aquifex aeolicus gezeigt. Bislang wurden, inklusive CaiT, sieben Sekundärtransporterstrukturen gelöst, die diese LeuT-Transporterarchitektur aufweisen. Ungewöhnlich dabei ist, dass diese sieben Sekundärtransporter fünf verschiedenen Transporterfamilien angehören und eine Verwandschaft auf Basis der Aminosäuren nicht zu finden ist. Da jedoch die tertiäre Struktur dieser Tansporter konserviert ist, kann davon ausgegangen werden, dass sie alle von einem Urprotein entstanden sind, welches zunächst aus fünf TMH bestanden haben muss. Im Laufe der Evolution hat sich das Urgen des Urproteins zunächst dupliziert und die weitere Evolution hat zwar die Aminosäuresequenz verändert und den Umweltbedingungen angepasst, jedoch ist die tertiäre Struktur erhalten geblieben. Da sich die tertiäre Struktur der sieben Sekundärtransporter so stark ähnelt, ist zu vermuten, dass auch der Transportmechanismus ähnlich, jedoch nicht identisch ist. Nach dem strukturellen Aufbau der Transporter, der Lage der Substratbindestellen in den jeweiligen Transportern und der Tatsache, dass es sich bei diesen Proteinen um Membranproteine handelt, wurde ein Transportmechanismus aufgestellt, in dem die Bindestelle des zu transportierende Substrats alternierend zu beiden Seiten der Membran zugänglich ist, ohne jedoch jemals den Substratweg innerhalb des Proteins vollständig zu öffnen. Dieser Mechanismus wurde als “alternating access mechanism” beschrieben. Anhand der unterschiedlichen Zustände, in denen einige der Transporter kristallisierten, kann abgeleitet werden, welche Konformationsänderungen erforderlich sind um das Substrat von einer Seiter der Membran auf die andere zu transportieren. Bisher kristallisierten einzelne der sechs Transporter in der nach außen gerichteten offenen Form, der nach außen gerichteten Form, in der die Substratbindestelle jedoch nicht mehr zugänglich ist, in einer Form, die keine Öffnungspräferenz der Substratbindestelle zu einer Seite der Membran hat und in der nach innen gerichteten Form, in der die Substratbindestelle jedoch nicht geöffnet ist. CaiT kristallisierte in der noch fehlenden Konformation, der nach innen gerichteten Form, in der die Substratbindestelle zugänglich ist. Mit dieser noch fehlenend Konformation kann der Transportzyklus des “alternating access mechanism” vollständig beschrieben werden. Alle drei CaiT-Homologe kristallisierten in der nach innen gerichteten, offenen Konformation. Im Gegensatz zur EcCaiT-Struktur kristallisierte PmCaiT in der substratungebundenen Form. In der StCaiT-Struktur konnte aufgrund der niedrigen Auflösung kein Substrat nachgewiesen werden. In der EcCaiT-Struktur sind zwei gamma-Butyrobetain-Moleküle gebunden. Das erste Molekül wurde in der zentralen Substratbindestelle, der sogenannten Tryptophan-Box bestehend aus vier Tryptophanen, im Zentrum des Protein lokalisiert. Das zweite gamma-Butyrobetain-Molekül wurde in einer Vertiefung an der extrazellulären Proteinoberfläche gefunden. Beide Substrate werden hauptsächlich über Kation-Pi-Interaktionen zwischen der positiv geladenen quatären Ammoniumgruppe des Substrats und des Pi-Elektronensystems der Tryptophane in den jeweiligen Bindestellen gebunden. Eine besondere Eigenschaft von CaiT ist der H+- bzw. Na+-unabhängige Substrattransport. Die CaiT-Struktur erklärt warum kein zusätzliches Kation benötigt wird um Substrat zu binden oder zu transportieren. In der EcCaiT-Struktur ist eine wichtige polare nicht-bindende Interaktion zwischen der Carboxylgruppe des gamma-Butyrobetains und dem Schwefelatom eines Methionins in der zentrale Bindestelle zu erkennen. Dieses Methionin ist konserviert in den prokaryotischen CaiTs und in den Na+-unabhängigen eukaryotischen L-Carnitin Transportern (OCTN), jedoch ist es nicht konserviert im Na+-abhängigen verwandten Glycinbetain Transporter BetP. In BetP ist diese Position des Methionins durch ein Valin ersetzt. Die Mutation des Methionins in CaiT zu Valin ermöglicht zwar immernoch die H+- bzw. Na+-unabhängige Bindung des Substrates durch die Tryptophan-Box, jedoch ist der Substrattransport nahezu vollständig zerstört. Eine derart wichtige Substratkoordinierende Funktion des Schwefelatoms eines Methionins wurde bisher nicht beschrieben. Eine weitere Stelle, die in H+- bzw. Na+-abhängigen Transporter mit H+ bzw. Na+ besetzt ist, ist in CaiT von einem positiv geladenen Arginin eingenommen. Eine positive Ladung an dieser Stelle stabilisiert den Bereich im Protein in der Nähe der zentralen Substratbindestelle. Die Mutation des Arginins zu Glutamat in CaiT erzielt eine vollständige Inaktivierung des Substrattansports. Durch Zugabe von Na+ im Transportansatz kann die Substrattransportaktivität der Glutamat-Mutante jedoch teilweise zurückerlangt werden. Diese eben beschriebenen Aminosäurereste in den beiden Stellen des Proteins erklären die Kationenunabhängigkeit von CaiT. Die Aktivierung des Antiportmechanismus in CaiT wurde mit Hilfe von Bindungsstudien an rekonstituiertem Protein ermittelt. Diese Messungen ergaben für das Wildtypprotein ein sigmoidales Substratbindungsverhalten, was auf ein positiv-kooperatives Bindungsverhalten hindeutet. Die beiden Substratbindestellen im Protein sowie die beiden unterschiedlichen Substrate, L-Carnitin und gamma-Butyrobetain, lassen auf einen heterotropen positiv-kooperativen Bindungs- und einen allosterisch regulierten Transportmechanismus schließen. Bei diesem Mechanismus erhöht die Bindung eines Substrats in der regulatorischen Bindestelle durch induzierte Konformationsänderungen die Affinität eines anderen Substrats in einer weiteren Substratbindestelle. Die regulatorische Bindestelle in CaiT befindet sich an der extrazellulären Proteinoberfläche. Eine Schwächung der Substrataffinität in dieser Bindestelle durch Einführung einer Mutation, verstärkt das sigmoidale Substratbindungsverhalten und hat einen negativen Einfluss auf den Substrattransport. Durch die in dieser Arbeit gelösten 3D-Röntgenkristallstrukturen der zwei CaiT-Homologen, PmCaiT und EcCaiT, sowie den durchgeführten funktionellen Studien sowohl an Wildtypprotein wie auch an Mutanten konnte ein L-Carnitin/gamma-Butyrobetain Antiport-Mechanismus für CaiT vorzuschlagen werden.
This thesis consists of four chapters. Each chapter covers a topic in international macroeconomics and monetary policy. The first chapter investigates the impact of unexpected monetary policy shocks on exchange rates in a multi-country econometric model. The second chapter examines the linkage between macroeconomic fundamentals and exchange rates through the monetary policy expectation channel. The third chapter focuses on the international transmission of bank and corporate distress. The last chapter unfolds the interest rate channel of monetary policy transmission in-an emerging economy-China, where regulations and market forces co-exist in this transmission.
This thesis investigates the development of early cognition in infancy using neural network models. Fundamental events in visual perception such as caused motion, occlusion, object permanence, tracking of moving objects behind occluders, object unity perception and sequence learning are modeled in a unifying computational framework while staying close to experimental data in developmental psychology of infancy. In the first project, the development of causality and occlusion perception in infancy is modeled using a simple, three-layered, recurrent network trained with error backpropagation to predict future inputs (Elman network). The model unifies two infant studies on causality and occlusion perception. Subsequently, in the second project, the established framework is extended to a larger prediction network that models the development of object unity, object permanence and occlusion perception in infancy. It is shown that these different phenomena can be unified into a single theoretical framework thereby explaining experimental data from 14 infant studies. The framework shows that these developmental phenomena can be explained by accurately representing and predicting statistical regularities in the visual environment. The models assume (1) different neuronal populations processing different motion directions of visual stimuli in the visual cortex of the newborn infant which are supported by neuroscientific evidence and (2) available learning algorithms that are guided by the goal of predicting future events. Specifically, the models demonstrate that no innate force notions, motion analysis modules, common motion detectors, specific perceptual rules or abilities to "reason" about entities which have been widely postulated in the developmental literature are necessary for the explanation of the discussed phenomena. Since the prediction of future events turned out to be fruitful for theoretical explanation of various developmental phenomena and a guideline for learning in infancy, the third model addresses the development of visual expectations themselves. A self-organising, fully recurrent neural network model that forms internal representations of input sequences and maps them onto eye movements is proposed. The reinforcement learning architecture (RLA) of the model learns to perform anticipatory eye movements as observed in a range of infant studies. The model suggests that the goal of maximizing the looking time at interesting stimuli guides infants' looking behavior thereby explaining the occurrence and development of anticipatory eye movements and reaction times. In contrast to classical neural network modelling approaches in the developmental literature, the model uses local learning rules and contains several biologically plausible elements like excitatory and inhibitory spiking neurons, spike-timing dependent plasticity (STDP), intrinsic plasticity (IP) and synaptic scaling. It is also novel from the technical point of view as it uses a dynamic recurrent reservoir shaped by various plasticity mechanisms and combines it with reinforcement learning. The model accounts for twelve experimental studies and predicts among others anticipatory behavior for arbitrary sequences and facilitated reacquisition of already learned sequences. All models emphasize the development of the perception of the discussed phenomena thereby addressing the questions of how and why this developmental change takes place - questions that are difficult to be assessed experimentally. Despite the diversity of the discussed phenomena all three projects rely on the same principle: the prediction of future events. This principle suggests that cognitive development in infancy may largely be guided by building internal models and representations of the visual environment and using those models to predict its future development.
This dissertation connects two independent fields of theoretical neuroscience: on the one hand, the self-organization of topographic connectivity patterns, and on the other hand, invariant object recognition, that is the recognition of objects independently of their various possible retinal representations (for example due to translations or scalings). The topographic representation is used in the presented approach, as a coordinate system, which then allows for the implementation of invariance transformations. Hence this study shows, that it is possible that the brain self-organizes before birth, so that it is able to invariantly recognize objects immediately after birth. Besides the core hypothesis that links prenatal work with object recognition, advancements in both fields themselves are also presented. In the beginning of the thesis, a novel analytically solvable probabilistic generative model for topographic maps is introduced. And at the end of the thesis, a model that integrates classical feature-based ideas with the normalization-based approach is presented. This bilinear model makes use of sparseness as well as slowness to implement "optimal" topographic representations. It is therefore a good candidate for hierarchical processing in the brain and for future research.
Clinical application of transcranial Doppler for detection of cerebral emboli during cardiac surgery
(2010)
Objective: Neurologic injury is one of the most damaging complications for cardiac surgery. How to decrease neurologic impairment by improving perioperative monitoring remains a challenge for both cardiac surgeons and anesthetists. For this reason, transcranial doppler (TCD) has been widely used in cerebral monitoring during cardiac surgery. In this study, two experiments of clinical application of TCD for detection of cerebral emboli during cardiac surgery were to be done. One was “Solid and gaseous cerebral emboli during valvular surgery are significantly reduced with axillary artery cannulation”. The other was “Do intraoperative cerebral embolic signals differ between valvular surgery (VS) and CABG”. Methods: In experiment one, 20 valve and combined procedures with aortic cannulation (AoC group) were compared to 18 procedures with axillary cannulation (AxC group) in a prospective non-randomized study. In experiment two, 18 VS patients and 18 CABG patients were matched by extracorporeal circulation (ECC) time retrospectively. Intraoperative monitoring of both middle cerebral arteries was performed with TCD discriminating between solid and gaseous embolic signals (ES). Results: In experiment one, the AxC group had less solid ES than the AoC group (38±22 vs 55±25, P<0.05), but no significant difference was found in gaseous (501±271 vs 538±333, P>0.05) and total (539 ± 279 vs 593 ± 350, P>0.05) ES. The AxC group had less solid ES during arterial cannulation (2.1±1.5 vs 6.6±3.6, P<0.05) and during aortic cross-clamp time (4.4 ±3.1 vs 10.2 ± 5.1, P<0.05) than the AoC group. During ECC, gaseous ES was not significantly different between groups (398±210 vs 448±291, P>0.05). However, AxC showed less gaseous ES (85±68 vs 187±148, P<0.05) and less gaseous ES per minute (1.8±1.5 vs 4.5±3.2, P<0.05) during weaning off extracorporeal circulation than the AoC group. No significant difference in gaseous ES (313±163 vs 261±189, P>0.05) and gaseous ES per minute (3.1±2.2 vs 2.8±2.2, P>0.05) was found between groups from bypass start to aortic declamping. No neurologic complications occurred. In experiment two, no significant difference was found in solid (38±20 vs 40±26, P>0.05) or gaseous (457±263 vs 412±157, P>0.05) ES between the VS and CABG group during the whole recording time. During ECC, solid ES (20±10 vs 24±19, P>0.05) and gaseous ES (368±230 vs 317±157, P>0.05) were comparable between groups. Specifically, during weaning off ECC, the VS group had more gaseous ES/min (5.6±3.6 vs 3.1±1.2, P<0.05) than the CABG group. But this difference in gaseous ES/min was not significant during the period from bypass start to aortic declamping (2.5±1.8 vs 3.0±1.8, P>0.05). Conclusion: Cerebral embolization does occur during cardiac surgery. Through these two experiments, we demonstrated the feasibility and importance of clinical application of transcranial doppler for detection of cerebral emboli during cardiac surgery. Due to the diversity in clinical application of TCD, it is impossible to compare the number of ES between different research centers. More unified standards should be drawn in order to make wider clinical application possible. Up till now, no robust evidence shows the correlation between intraoperative ES and postoperative neurological impairment. The research on intraoperative ES and postoperative neurological impairment should rely on a complete concept.
In this thesis, the structure of the C-terminal domain of presenilin-1, the catalytic component of the y-secretase complex, is investigated by NMR spectroscopy. The ysecretase complex has a definitive role in the pathogenic development of Alzheimer's disease, in that it mediates the cleavage of aprecursor to create the amyloid ß peptide. Aggregates of amyloid ß which form amyloid plaques are the most overt clinieal feature observed in the post-mortem brains of Alzheimer's patient. In addition, many of the mutations found in the aggressive early onset familial Alzheimer's disease have been linked to presenilin-1, highlighting its importance in disease progression and deeming it an important target for investigation. One of the greatest challenges for the structural investigation of the y-secretase components is their low expression yields in cell-based systems. We therefore applied continuous-exchange cell-free expression to obtain sufficient amounts of protein for our structural studies. An added benefit of the cell-free expression system is the freedom to incorporate any desired combination of stable-isotope labels directly into sampies. We were therefore able to develop a labeling scheme which targets the amino acid composition of transmembrane a-helices, allowing us to simplify an assignment procedure whieh tends to be cumbersome and diffieult for most a-helical transmembrane proteins. The y-secretase complex is a member of the intramembrane cleaving proteases which, as their name implies, cleave their transmembrane substrates within the bilayer. Single particle analysis of the y-secretase (1) as weil as crystal structures of rhomboid (2) and S2P (3) have revealed the presence of hydrophilie po res within the membrane where catalysis occurs. In light of evidence that certain elements of CTF reside in close proximity or even contribute to the formation of the hydrophilic pore, we chose to study the structure of CTF in mieelles, whieh may be better suited to accommodate CTF in isolation as compared with solid membranes in the absence of the other y-secretase components. The structure of CTF was solved to 1.7 A (backbone r.m.s.d) and revealed the presence of unusual features, including a partially membrane-spanning helix which situates the catalytic asparte at its N-terminus in what would be the center of the membrane where catalysis is proposed to occur, as weil as a severely kinked helix which is partially embedded beneath the surface of the membrane (P6). Interestingly, similar features have been observed in the crystal structure of the GlpG rhomboid. In addition, a soluble helix was found in the long N-terminal loop of CTF which until now has been described as unstructured. The first part of the thesis is designed to provide an introduction to Alzheimer's disease, the role of y-secretase and its presenilin-l catalytic component in disease progression, as weil as cell-free expression and liquid-state NMR techniques involved in the structural investigation of membrane proteins. In chapter 2, the reader is familiarized with the history, the clinical manifestation, and biochemical features of Alzheimer's disease. The chapter goes further to describe the role of the y-secretase complex and its individual components in disease progression and substrate processing. Chapter 3 focuses more specifically on presenilin-l in the context of the newly emerging class of intramembrane proteases. In chapter 4, attention is shifted to the cell-free expression system with special focus on the expression of membrane proteins, and chapter 5 explores the various liquid-state NMR techniques that were required for the characterization of CTF. The second part of the thesis is cumulative and contains original research, method, and review articles that were produced during the course of study. Chapter 6 explores the various techniques and innovations used to study membrane proteins using continuous exchange cell-free expression coupled with NMR spectroscopy. In chapter 7, a new technique, transmembrane segment targeted labeling, is described as a tool that facilitates the backbone assignment of transmembrane proteins which display severe overlap in NMR spectra. Chapter 8 presents the novel NMR structure of the C-terminal fragment of presenilin-l solved in SOS micelles.
Therapy of hemorrhagic shock with following resuscitation-induced liver injury : in vivo study
(2010)
Shock resulting from life-threatening blood-loss (hemorrhagic shock) represents the most frequent injury pattern after a traumatic insult. Hemorrhagic shock induces inflammatory changes, characterized by highly complex pathophysiological pathways often resulting in death. In this study, we establish an experimental in vivo model of H/R in rats and study the mechanisms which determine the hepatic injury after H/R. Furthermore, we show that hemorrhagic shock with following resuscitation is accompanied with release of systemic and local pro-inflammatory mediators, increased infiltration of hepatic neutrophils in the liver, increased oxidative and nitrosative stress, enhanced cell death of both types, apoptosis and necrosis, conspicuous cytoskeletal rearrangements, loss of hepatic integrity and finally high general mortality rates, up to 80%. In addition, the effects of two potential therapeutic interventions to prevent the H/R induced liver injury are explored in a model of H/R in rats. First, the role of JNK and its inhibition by D-JNKI-1 in preservation of hepatic integrity following H/R was analyzed. Second, we investigated the potential of simvastatin to prevent the disturbed inflammatory response and hepatic injury after H/R. The effects of both therapeutic interventions were studied by looking at several inflammatory parameters, markers of oxidative and nitrosative stress, cytoskeleton integrity, microcirculatory parameters, underlying signaling cascades, liver damage and mortality. Highly specific blockade of JNK with the potent, inhibitory peptide D-JNKI-1 revealed the crucial role of the JNK signaling pathway in the H/R induced pathophysiology and strong protective effects of DJNKI- 1 in H/R induced liver injury, when the peptide was applied before and even after hemorrhagic shock. The other therapeutic intervention tested in this study was the use of simvastatin which also revealed protective effects after H/R and even a remarkable improvement in survival after H/R. We show that H/R induced release of pro-inflammatory cytokines, hepatic PMNL infiltration, increased oxidative and nitrosative stress, apoptosis and necrosis can be diminished by treatment with D-JNKI-1 but also with simvastatin in vivo. Furthermore, simvastatin reduces H/R induced cytoskelatal rearrangements, loss of liver integrity and the mortality rate after H/R. The key pathway which underlies these beneficial effects of simvastatin is the Rho kinase pathway. Identification of both mechanisms as well as the effectiveness of both substances provide new insights in the close interaction between hypoxia and the immune system and present a promising basis for the anti-inflammatory, hepatoprotective treatment after H/R.
The Alborz Mountains are forming a ~100 km wide, E-W trending mountain chain where individual summits are up to 5000 m in elevation. The Alborz Mountains range are part of the Alpine orogen and are straddling a 2000 km wide area S of the Caspian Sea. The rocks of the Alborz Mountains consist of Neogen sediments, which are affected by folding and faulting. In the western part of the Alborz Mountains the folds and faults are trending NW-SE, whereas in the eastern part they are trending NE-SW. GPS data confirm N-S shortening including dextral strike-slip along ESE-WNW trending faults, and sinistral strike-slip along ENE-WSW trending faults. The present thesis is focusing on the active Garmsar salt nappe, the fragmented roof of which is pierced by rock salt which extruded near the front of the Alborz Mountains Range. During the past 5 m.y. the front of the Alborz chain migrated towards SSW on top of the salt of the Garmsar basin. The salt was squeezed towards SSW and took place at the Great Kavir. The extruded salt is forming the Eyvanekey plateau between the cities of Eyvanekey and Garmsar. Both the Garmsar salt nappe and the Eyvanekey plateau are dextrally displaced for ca. 9 km along the Zirab-Garmsar fault. Structural analyses of the Garmsar salt nappe indicate three different groups of joints which are trending perpendicular and parallel to the local mechanical anisotropy. The folds of the study area are congruent (type 2 and 3 after Ramsay) resulting from viscose inhomogeneous flow. InSAR-Investigations suggest the Alborz Mountains to be lifted up by ca. 1 cm/a, while horizontal shortening is active at a rate of 8 ±2 mm/a. These values are consistent with GPS data. Based on nine „Advanced Synthetic Aperture Radar“ (ASAR) scenarios, produced by the ENVISAT satellite of the European space agency between 2003 and 2006, we used interferograms to map the displacement via 22 increments during 2 – 18 months. The results suggest that the topographic height of the surface of the salt is changing at a rate which is controlled by the season. The displacement ranges from subsidence at -40 to -50 mm/a to uplift of 20 mm/a. In order to investigate the time-dependent deformation with high spatial resolution, we used algorithms which are based on data of small base lines (SBAS). The resulting interferometric SAR time series analyses also suggest that the study area is largely subsiding at a rate that is controlled by the seasons. The map with the averaged LOS deformation velocities, on the other hand, suggests the subsidence to increase from the upper part of the salt nappe towards deeper topographic 5 levels of the agricultural lowlands. The major part of subsidence is probably caused by the annual rainfall which results in subrosion of salt. The spatial changes in the subsidence rate are probably controlled by the distribution of fountains, mining activity at the margin of the salt glacier, and faults and fractures inside the salt. Striking seasonal imprints are obvious along the agricultural areas which are surrounding the Garmsar salt nappe. These areas are rapidly subsiding in summer and spring when groundwater is used for irrigations. The maximum rate of subsidence (40-50 mm/a) is located E and W of the Eyvanekey plateau, where large areas are irrigated. The maximum displacement is 20 mm/a in the farmland and 5 mm/a in the center of the salt nappe. Depth estimates using Euler deconvolution method for gravimetric and magnetic data suggest the salt to extrude from a depth less than ca. 2000 m. The gravity field of the study area is characterized by strong anomalies in the SW and weak anomalies in the NE. A considerable negative anomaly in the N indicates that the northern part subsided, whereas the southern part was lifted up. The seismic data show three major horizons inside the Miocene sediments: the Lower Red Formation, the Qom Formation, and the Upper Red Formation. The western part of the study area seems to be free from salt domes. The layers of the upper part of the Qom Formation show thinning along the NE and NW trending faults. In some areas the seismic reflectors indicate steep faults close the saddle of the folds. NE-SW-, NW-SE and E-Wtrending faults prevail. Analogue experiments have been carried out to extend our knowledge about the evolution of the Garmsar salt dome. We used a scaled model (34 cm * 25 cm * 2.5 cm) that was shortened perpendicular to its long side. The wedge shape of the Alborz Mountains was simulated by a wedge consisting of Styrofoam. Rock salt was simulated using Polydimethylsiloxan (PDMS), a linear viscous material with a viscosity of 2.3*104 Pa s and a density of 0.96 g/cm3 at room temperature. Other sediments were modeled using dry quartz sand. The experimental results can be used to simulate the structural evolution of the study area: The Alborz deformation front was emplaced on top of the salt rocks in the Garmsar area while migrating towards SSW. A salt basin and a salt extrusion have also been produced in the model. Cross sections through the wedge shaped analogue model indicate N- and S-dipping reverse faults, which are in line with the wedge shape of the Alborz chain. Moreover, ENE-WSW trending sinistral and ESE-WNW trending dextral strike-slip faults led to N-S shortening during the Miocene. Structural marker horizons, 6 which have been turned into Z-folds on the western fold limbs and to S-folds on the eastern fold limbs, are comparable with the folds of the study area. Solving the problem of waste is one of the central tasks of environmental protection. It is becoming increasingly difficult to find suitable sites that are acceptable to the public. Salt and salt formations have relevant properties to be utilizing as a repository for each kind of waste. The favorable properties make rock salt highly suitable as a host rock, in particular for nonradioactive and radioactive wastes. The Qom and Garmsar basins are the nearest salt diapirs to the Tehran province, and there are suitable repositories for waste disposal. Based on surface and subsurface data, the Garmsar salt diapir has been investigated as a case example for its suitability as a host and repository for various types of waste. The data used are based on field studies, interferometry, and geophysical investigations. The results of this study suggest the deep bedded salt of the Garmsar Salt Basin to be an appropriate host for the deposition of industrial waste. Rock salt of surficial layers or domes, on the other hand, is not regarded as an appropriate candidate for waste disposal.
Iron uptake is an essential process in all Gram-negative bacteria including cyanobacteria and therefore different transport systems evolved during evolution. In cyanobacteria, however, the iron demand is higher than in proteobacteria due to the function of iron as cofactor in e.g. photosynthesis and nitrogen fixation. Most of the transport systems depend on outer membrane localized TonB-dependent transporters (TBDTs), a periplasma-facing TonB protein and a plasma membrane localized machinery (ExbBD). So far, iron chelators (siderophores), oligosaccharides and polypeptides have been identified as substrates of TBDTs. However, in proteobacteria TonB-dependent outer membrane transporter represent a well-explored subject whereas for cyanobacteria almost nothing is known about possible TonB-dependent uptake systems for iron or other substrates. The heterocyst-forming filamentous cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 is known to secrete the siderophore schizokinen, but its transport system has remained unidentified. For Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 22 genes were identified as putative TBDTs covering almost all known TBDT subclasses. This is a high number of TBDTs compared to other cyanobacteria. The expression of the 22 putative TBDTs individually depends on the presence of iron, copper or nitrogen. The atypical dependence of TBDT gene expression on different nutrition points to a yet unknown regulatory mechanism. In addition, the hypothesis of the absence of TonB in Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 was clarified by the identification of an according sequence, all5036. Inspection of the genome of Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 shows that only one gene encoding a putative TonB-dependent iron transporter, namely alr0397, is positioned close to genes encoding enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of a hydroxamate siderophore. The expression of alr0397 was elevated under iron-limited conditions. Inactivation of this gene caused a moderate phenotype of iron starvation in the mutant cells. The characterization of the mutant strain showed that Alr0397 is a TonB-dependent schizokinen transporter (SchT) of the outer membrane and that alr0397 expression and schizokinen production are regulated by the iron homeostasis of the cell. Additional two genes of Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 involved in this process were identified. SchE encoded by all4025 is a putative cytoplasmic membrane-localized transporter involved in TolC-dependent siderophore secretion. The mutation of schE resulted in an enhanced sensitivity to high metal concentrations and in drastically reduction of secretion of hydroxamate-type siderophores. IacT coded by all4026 is a predicted outer membrane-localized TonB-dependent iron transporter. Inactivation of iacT resulted in reduced sensitivity to elevated iron and copper levels, whereas decoupling the expression from putative regulation by exchange of the promoter resulted in sensitization against tested metals. Further analysis showed that iron and copper effects are synergistic because decrease of iron induced a significant decrease of copper levels in the iacT insertion mutant but an increase of those levels in Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 where expression of all4026 is under the trc-promoter. In consequence, the results unravel a link between iron and copper homeostasis.
Leukotrienes (LTs) are pro-inflammatory lipid mediators that belong to the group of eicosanoids, which are oxygenated metabolites of one common precursor, the aracidonic acid (AA). This polyunsaturated fatty acid is esterified at the sn-2 position of cellular membrane phospholipids and can be released by cytosolic phospholipase A2 alpha (cPLA2alpha) enzymatic deacylation. AA can be converted into LTs by the catalytic reaction of 5-lipoxygenase (5-LO). Enzymatic activation of cPLA2alpha as well as of 5-LO is regulated by similar determinants. In response to cellular stimuli that elevate the intracellular Ca2+ level and/or activate MAP kinase pathways, cPLA2alpha and 5-LO comigrate from a soluble cell compartment (mainly the cytosol) to the nuclear membrane, where AA is released und converted into LTs. LTs play a significant role in promoting inflammatory reactions and immune processes. They have been shown to be released from leukocytes in response to bacterial and viral infections and substantially contribute to an effective immune reaction for host defense. Innate immune pathogen recognition is mediated to a substantial part by the Toll-like receptor (TLR) family. So far, 10 human TLR subtypes have been identified, all of which detect distinct highly conserved microbial structures and trigger the induction of signaling pathways that lead to the expression of numerous immune and inflammatory genes. TLR signaling culminates in the activation NF-kappaB and/or MAP kinases, which as well are known to be involved in the regulation of cellular LT biosynthesis. In this regard, it seemed conceivable that the release of LTs might be regulated by TLR activation. Present studies were undertaken in order to verify and characterize a possible influence of TLR activation on the LT biosynthesis, and furthermore to identify the involved signaling pathways and underlying mechanisms. First experiments revealed that pre-incubation of differentiated Mono Mac 6 (MM6) cells with a TLR4 ligand, a TLR5 ligand, as well as with different TLR2 ligands led to an about 2-fold enhancement of Ca2+ ionophore induced LT biosynthesis. Ligands of other TLR subtypes did not show any influence. These observations could also be confirmed in primary human monocytes stimulated with ionophore or fMLP. With focus on TLR2 ligands, further studies were carried out to characterize the observed enhancement of LT biosynthesis in MM6 cells. It was demonstrated that the extent of LT formation was dependent on the ligand concentration used, but was also dependent on the duration of pre-incubation. Ligand pre-incubation of 15 minutes was optimal to maximally enhance LT formation and further prolongation of pre-incubation decreased LT formation again. Moreover, simultaneous addition of TLR2 ligands with ionophore did also not enhance LT formation. These results indicated that TLR2 ligands seemed to prime human monocytes for an enhanced response upon ionophore stimulation, but did not act as costimuli, which per se were not capable of directly stimulating the biosynthesis of LTs. To analyze the underlying mechanism, the impact of TLR2 ligands on the two key enzymes of the LT biosynthesis pathway, cPLA2alpha and 5-LO, was investigated. In this regard, 5-LO could not been shown to be positively regulated by TLR ligand priming. Neither a direct stimulation, nor an enhancement of 5-LO activity by TLR ligands was detectable in MM6 cells. Similarly, TLR2 ligands did also not enhance ionophore induced 5-LO translocation to the nuclear membrane. However, it was shown that TLR2 ligands enhanced ionophore induced release of AA in MM6 cells, which occurred with a similar time course as LT formation, displaying a maximum at 10 minutes of pre-incubation. A direct stimulation of AA release, however, could not been detected. Inhibitor studies revealed cPLA2alpha to be essential for AA release in TLR2 ligand primed, ionophore stimulated MM6 cells, but also sPLA2 was found to be involved. However, the priming effect of TLR2 ligands was mediated exclusively by cPLA2alpha. Western Blot analyses revealed that p38 MAP kinase, as well as ERK1/2, are activated in MM6 cells in response to TLR2 ligands, and also Ser-505 phosphorylation of cPLA2alpha was detected, which is known to be mediated by MAP kinases and to increase cPLA2alpha activity in vitro. Maximal cPLA2alpha phosphorylation occurred after 5-10 minutes of TLR2 ligand incubation, slightly preceding maximal AA release at 10 minutes and maximal LT formation at 15 minutes of priming. The combined use of a specific p38 MAPK inhibitor with an inhibitor of the ERK1/2 signaling pathway resulted in a complete prevention of cPLA2alpha phosphorylation and TLR2 ligand mediated enhancement of AA release. Thus, both MAPK pathways seem to play a role for TLR2 ligand mediated priming effects on the release of AA. An impact of other kinases such as Mnk-1 and CamKII, which can also regulate cPLA2alpha by phosphorylation, was excluded. Finally, an anti-hTLR2 antibody significantly reduced enhanced AA release, confirming the priming effects to be dependent on TLR2 activation. In summary, it was concluded that the increase of LT biosynthesis by TLR2 ligand priming is considerably due to an enhanced cellular AA supply, which arises from a MAPK mediated phosphorylation and up-regulation of cPLA2alpha. TLR dependent enhancement of LT biosynthesis represents an interesting link between activation of innate immune receptors and the rapid formation of pro-inflammatory lipid mediators. On the one hand, this support the role of LTs in host defence and infectious diseases, but may also be relevant in pathophysiological processes, which involve TLRs as well as LTs, as it has been shown for the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis or allergic diseases.
Within this thesis, an experimental study of the photo double ionization (PDI) and the simultaneous ionization-excitation is performed for lithium in different initial states Li (1s22l) (l = s, p). The excess energy of the linearly polarized VUV-light is between 4 and 12 eV above the PDI-threshold. Three forefront technologies are combined: a magneto-optical trap (MOT) for lithium generating an ultra-cold and, by means of optical pumping, a state-prepared target; a reaction microscope (ReMi), enabling the momentum resolved detection of all reaction fragments with high-resolution and the free-electron laser in Hamburg (FLASH), providing an unprecedented brilliant photon beam at favourable time structure to access small cross sections. Close to threshold the total as well as differential PDI cross sections are observed to critically depend on the excitation level and the symmetry of the initial state. For the excited state Li (1s22p) the PDI dynamics strongly depends on the alignment of the 2p-orbital with respect to the VUV-light polarization and, thus, from the population of the magnetic substates (mp = 0, ±1). This alignment sensitivity decreases for increasing excess energy and is completely absent for ionization-excitation. Time-dependent close-coupling calculations are able to reproduce the experimental total cross sections with deviations of at most 30%. All the experimental observations can be consistently understood in terms of the long range electron correlation among the continuum electrons which gives rise to their preferential back-to-back emission. This alignment effect, which is observed here for the first time, allows controlling the PDI dynamics through a purely geometrical modification of the target initial state without changing its internal energy.
Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) are rare but fatal neurodegenerative diseases affecting human and animals. The prion protein which is the causative agent, according to “protein-only” hypothesis misfold in to rogue amyloid conformer. Despite several years of studies, the atomic structural details of the rogue conformers have not been clearly understood. This study focused on developing an in-vitro conversion method, which allows us to monitor the transition from unfolded state of prion protein to fibril state. In order to reach maximal unfolded state, we have used 8 M urea as chemical denaturant, pH 2 and prion fragment 90-230 as the model. It has been demonstrated earlier that acidic pH and mild denaturant induce the fibril formation. The mechanism underlying the structural transition from monomeric state to polymeric form is largely unknown. We have confirmed by EM and AFM that fibrils are formed in our conditions, which resemble to naturally occurring fibrils in morphologies observed. The agitation accelerates the rate of fibril formation and, which allow us to do time-resolved NMR on these preparations. The conformational flexibility is inherent to amyloid fibrils and has been observed in our preparations. We aimed to map the important segment of prion protein, which forms the rigid core in its fibrillar structured form. Our time-resolved NMR studies allowed us to monitor the changes happening from unfolded state to fibrillar state. Analysis of data identified the segment between residues 145 to 223 forming the rigid core in these fibrils, which correspond to β strand 2, helix 2 and major part of helix 3 of native prion monomeric structure. Most of the point mutations which are associated with hereditary prion disease are part of rigid core, which undergo a refolding on fibril formation. The C-terminal residues from 224 to 230 displayed peak shifting and therefore, indicate the adaptation to a fibril specific conformation. The major part of N-terminal 90-144 segment, remains dynamic, which can be understood by their accessibility to amyloid specific antibodies. This provides novel structural insight to the amyloid formation from unfolded state of prion protein fragment 90-230, which represents the proteinase-K resistant part naturally occurring prions. Earlier studies have established the core to 160-220 where hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry or site-directed spin labeling EPR spectroscopy was used for analysis. Those studies have been initiated from either native-like or partially unfolded state of recombinant prion protein, and therefore, it is quite striking to find out that fibrils initiated from unfolded monomeric state share the same “amyloid core”. This structural insight has important implications for understanding the molecular basis of prion propagation.
Despite sensible guidelines for the use of opioid analgesics, respiratory depression remains a significant risk with a possibility of fatal outcomes. Clinicians need to find a balance of analgesia with manageable respiratory effects. The ampakine CX717 (Cortex Pharmaceuticals, Irvine, CA, USA), an allosteric enhancer of glutamate-stimulated AMPA receptor activation, has been shown to counteract opioid-induced respiratory depression in rats while preserving opioid-induced analgesia. Adopting a translational approach, we orally administered 1500 mg of CX717 to 16 male healthy volunteers in a placebo controlled double-blind study. Starting 100 min after CX717 or placebo intake, alfentanil was administered by computerized intravenous infusion targeting a plateau of effective alfentanil plasma concentrations of 100 ng/ml. One hour after start of opioid infusion, its effects were antagonized by intravenous injection of 1.6 mg of the classical opioid antidote naloxone. Respiration was quantified prior to drug administration (baseline), during alfentanil infusion and after naloxone administration by (i) counting the spontaneous respiratory frequency at rest and (ii) by employing hypercapnic challenge with CO2 rebreathing that assessed the expiratory volume at a carbon dioxide concentration in the breathable air of 55% (VE55). Pain was quantified at the same time points, immediately after assessment of respiratory parameters, by (i) measuring the tolerance to electrical stimuli (5 Hz sine increased by 0.2 mA/s from 0 to 20 mA and applied via two gold electrodes placed on the medial and lateral side of the mid-phalanx of the right middle finger) and (ii) by measuring the tolerance to heat (increased by 0.3°C/s from 32 to 52.5°C applied to a 3 x 3 cm2 skin area of the left volar forearm, after sensitization with 0.15 g capsaicin cream 0.1%). CX717 was tolerated by all subjects without side effects that would have required medical intervention. We observed that CX717 was approximately as effective as naloxone in reversing the opioid induced reduction of the respiratory frequency. Despite the presence of high plasma alfentanil concentrations, the respiratory frequency decreased only by 8.9 ± 22.4% when CX717 was pre-administered, which was comparable to the 7.0 ± 19.3% decrease observed after administration of naloxone. In contrast, after placebo pre-administration the respiratory rate decreased by 30.0 ± 21.3% (p=0.0054 for CX717 versus placebo). In agreement with this, periods of a very low respiratory frequency of <= 4 min-1 under alfentanil alone were shortened by ampakine pre-dosing by 52.9% (p=0.0182 for CX717 versus placebo). Furthermore, VE55 was decreased during alfentanil infusion by 55.9 ± 16.7% under placebo preadministration but only by 46.0 ± 18.1% under CX717 pre-administration (p=0.017 for CX717 versus placebo). Most importantly, in contrast to naloxone, CX717 had no effect on opioid induced analgesia. Alfentanil increased the pain tolerance to electrical stimuli by 68.7 ± 59.5% with placebo pre-administration. With CX717 pre-administration, the increase of the electrical pain tolerance was similar (54.6 ± 56.7%, p=0.1 for CX717 versus placebo). Similarly, alfentanil increased the heat pain tolerance threshold by 24.6 ± 10.0% with placebo pre-administration. Ampakine co-administration had also no effect on the increase of the heat pain tolerance of the capsaicin-sensitized skin (23.1 ± 8.3%, p=0.46 for CX717 versus placebo). The results of this study allow us to draw the conclusion, that opioid induced ventilatory depression can be selectively antagonized in humans by co-administering an ampakine. This is the first successful translation of a selective antagonism of opioidinduced respiratory depression from animal research into application in humans. Ampakines, namely CX717, thus are the first selective antidote for opioid-induced respiratory depression without loss of analgesia, available for the use in humans.
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is a chronic T cell-mediated autoimmune disorder that results in the destruction of insulin-producing pancreatic ß cells leading to life-long dependence on exogenous insulin. Attraction, activation and transmigration of inflammatory cells to the site of ß-cell injury depend on two major molecular interactions. First, interactions between chemokines and their receptors expressed on leukocytes result in the recruitment of circulating inflammatory cells to the site of injury. In this context, it has been demonstrated in various studies that the interaction of the chemokine CXCL10 with its receptor CXCR3 expressed on circulating cells plays a key role in the development of T1D. Second, once arrived at the site of inflammation adhesion molecules promote the extravasation of arrested cells through the endothelial cell layer to penetrate the site of injury. Here, the junctional adhesion molecule (JAM) JAM-C expressed on endothelial cells is involved in the process of leukocyte diabedesis. It was recently demonstrated that blocking of JAM-C efficiently attenuated cerulein-induced pancreatitis in mice. In my thesis I studied the influence of the CXCL10/CXCR3 interaction on the one hand, and of the adhesion molecule JAM-C on the other hand, on trafficking and transmigration of antigen-specific, autoaggressive T cells in the RIP-LCMV mouse model. RIP-LCMV mice express the glycoprotein (GP) or the nucleoprotein (NP) of the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) as a target autoantigen specifically in the ß cells of the islets of Langerhans and turn diabetic after LCMV-infection. In my first project I found that pharmacologic blockade of CXCR3 during development of virus-induced T1D results in a significant delay but not in an abrogation of overt disease. However, neither the frequency nor the migratory properties of islet-specific T cells was significantly changed during CXCR3 blockade. In the second project I was able to demonstrate that JAM-C was upregulated around the islets in RIP-LCMV mice after LCMV infection and its expression correlated with islet infiltration and functional ß-cell impairment. Blockade with a neutralizing anti-JAM-C antibody slightly reduced T1D incidence, whereas overexpression of JAM-C on endothelial cells did not accelerate virus-induced diabetes. In summary, our data suggest that both CXCR3 as well as JAM-C are involved in trafficking and transmigration of antigen-specific autoaggressive T cells to the islets of Langerhans. However, the detection of only a moderate influence on the onset of clinical disease during CXCR3 or JAM-C blockade reflects the complex pathogenesis of T1D and indicates that several different inflammatory factors need to be neutralized in order to achieve a stable and persistent protection from disease.
In this retrospective study, case records of clinical forensic examinations and respective investigation records of the police and the public prosecutor’s (state attorney) office along with the resulting verdicts were examined in terms of type and site of injury found and extent of agreement or discrepancy between the story given by the accused party and the medical conclusions drawn from the injury pattern. Particular attention was focussed on the relevance of the expert opinion for the legal assessment through case-specific analysis of the respective verdicts. A total of 118 cases originating from the scope of the Institute of Forensic Medicine, Goethe-University Frankfurt/Main (2002 – 2005) were examined. These included bodily injury, child abuse, sexual compulsion, self-mutilation and injury patterns of individuals under suspicion of attempted or completed manslaughter/homicide. As compared to former studies, the results of this analysis were additionally correlated with the investigation records of the public prosecutor’s office (state attorney) to elucidate the importance of the forensic findings for police investigation and legal evaluation. The forensic examination involved 19 accused and 99 victims. As for the gender distribution of the victims, 51 females and 48 males were encountered. Slight female preponderance was seen in cases of sexual compulsion. The group of accused individuals consisted of 16 males and 3 females. Injuries due to blunt force impact, in particular hematomas involving skull and trunk, dominated as diagnostic findings in cases of bodily injury, sexual offenses and child abuse. In cases with suspected self-mutilation and in examinations of accused perpetrators of manslaughter/homicide scratches and lacerations prevailed. Correlating injury patterns and police inquiries, conclusions drawn from medical findings and results of police investigations were in good agreement in 46 % of the cases, but showed major discrepancies in another 25 %. In the remaining 29 % of the cases, the injury pattern did not allow for a definite expert opinion on the mode of infliction. Nevertheless, a detailed documentation of the medical findings proved to be of substantial value for police investigations. 39 % of the cases resulted in a final verdict, whilst in 59 % of the cases the charge was dismissed. Especially in the ladder forensic expert opinion was of considerable importance, since forensic assessment of injuries could either not be attributed to a certain perpetrator or contributed to the exoneration of the accused. In 2 % the judicial assessment was not available. In 82 % of the cases of child abuse the proceedings were stopped, e.g. since maltreatment could not be assigned to a particular perpetrator. In these cases, it became obvious, that forensic examination and assessment alone does not suffice, but has to be embedded in police investigations to achieve optimal results. Medical conclusions by forensic experts were – almost without any exception – considered in legal assessment and differentiatedly taken into account when weighing the sentence, thus reflecting the objectivity and neutrality of the medical assessment. In synopsis, albeit evidential value of forensic examination is assessed to be high optimal clarification of a case requires integration into the complete spectrum of investigations performed in a case.
A basic introduction to RFQs has been given in the first part of this thesis. The principle and the main ideas of the RFQ have been described and a small summary of different resonator concepts has been given. Two different strategies of designing RFQs have been introduced. The analytic description of the electric fields inside the quadrupole channel has been derived and the limitation of these approaches were shown. The main work of this thesis was the implementation and analysis of a Multigrid Poisson solver to describe the potential and electric field of RFQs which are needed to simulate the particle dynamics accurately. The main two ingredients of a Multigrid Poisson solver are the ability of a Gauß-Seidel iteration method to smooth the error of an approximation within a few iteration steps and the coarse grid principle. The smoothing corresponds to a damping of the high frequency components of the error. After the smoothing, the error term can well be approximated on a coarser grid in which the low frequency components of the error on the fine grid are converted to high frequency errors on the coarse grid which can be damped further with the same Gauß-Seidel method. After implementation, the multigrid Poisson solver was analyzed using two different type of test problems: with and without a charge density. After illustrating the results of the multigrid Poisson solver, a comparison to the field of the old multipole expansion method was made. The multipole expansion method is an accurate representation of the field within the minimum aperture, as limited by cylindrical symmetry. Within these limitations the multigrid Poisson solver and the multipole expansion method agree well. Beyond the limitation the two method give different fields. It was shown that particles leave the region in which the multipole expansion method gives correct fields and that the transmission is affected therefrom as well as the single particle dynamic. The multigridPoisson solver also gives a more realistic description of the field in the beginning of the RFQ, because it takes the tank wall into account, and this effect is shown as well. Closing the analysis of the external field, the transmission and fraction of accelerated particles of the set of 12 RFQs for the two different methods were shown. For RFQs with small apertures and big modulations the two different method give different values for the transmission due to the limitation of the multipole expansion method. The internal space charge fields without images was analyzed at the level of single particle dynamic and compared to the well known SCHEFF routine from LANL, showing major differences for the analyzed particle. For comparing influences on the transmissions of the set of 12 RFQs a third space charge routine (PICNIC) was considered as well. The basic shape of the transmission curve was the same independent of space charge routines, but the absolute values differ a little from routine to routine, with SCHEFF about 2% lower than the other routines. The multigrid Poisson solver and PICNIC agree quite well (less than 1%), but PICNIC has an extremely long running time. The major advantage of the multigrid Poisson solver in calculating space charge effects compared to the other two routines used here is that the Poisson solver can take the effect of image charges on the electrodes into account by just changing the boundaries to have the shape of the vanes whereas all other settings remain unchanged. It was demonstrated that the effect of image charges on the vanes on the space charge field is very big in the region close to the electrodes. Particles in that region will see a stronger transversely defocusing force than without images. The result is that the transmission decreases by as much as 10% which is considerably more than determined by other (inexact) routines before. This is an important result, because knowing about the big effect of image charges on the electrodes it allows it to taken into account while designing the RFQ to increase the performance of the machine. It is also an important factor in resolving the traditional difference observed between the transmission of actual RFQs and the transmission predicted by earlier simulations. In the last chapter of this thesis some experimental work on the MAFF (Munich Accelerator for Fission Fragments) IH-RFQ is described. The machine was assembled in Frankfurt and a beam test stand was built. The shunt impedance of the structure was measured using different techniques, the output energy of the structure were measured and finally its transmission was determined and compared to the beam dynamics simulations of the RFQ. Unfortunately, the transmission measurements were done without exact knowledge of the beam’s emittance. So the comparison to the simulation is somewhat rough, but with a reasonable guess of the emittance a good comparison between the measurement and simulation was obtained.
The power to dissociate : molecular function of the twin-ATPase ABCE1 in archaeal ribosome recycling
(2010)
Relational data exchange deals with translating relational data according to a given specification. This problem is one of the many tasks that arise in data integration, for example, in data restructuring, in ETL (Extract-Transform-Load) processes used for updating data warehouses, or in data exchange between different, possibly independently created, applications. Systems for relational data exchange exist for several decades now. Motivated by their experiences with one of those systems, Fagin, Kolaitis, Miller, and Popa (2003) studied fundamental and algorithmic issues arising in relational data exchange. One of these issues is how to answer queries that are posed against the target schema (i.e., against the result of the data exchange) so that the answers are consistent with the source data. For monotonic queries, the certain answers semantics proposed by Fagin, Kolaitis, Miller, and Popa (2003) is appropriate. For many non-monotonic queries, however, the certain answers semantics was shown to yield counter-intuitive results. This thesis deals with computing the certain answers for monotonic queries on the one hand, and on the other hand, it deals with the issue of which semantics are appropriate for answering non-monotonic queries, and how hard it is to evaluate non-monotonic queries under these semantics. As shown by Fagin, Kolaitis, Miller, and Popa (2003), computing the certain answers for unions of conjunctive queries - a subclass of the monotonic queries - basically reduces to computing universal solutions, provided the data transformation is specified by a set of tgds (tuple-generating dependencies) and egds (equality-generating dependencies). If M is such a specification and S is a source database, then T is called a solution for S under M if T is a possible result of translating S according to M. Intuitively, universal solutions are most general solutions. Since the above-mentioned work by Fagin, Kolaitis, Miller, and Popa it was unknown whether it is decidable if a source database has a universal solution under a given data exchange specification. In this thesis, we show that this problem is undecidable. More precisely, we construct a specification M that consists of tgds only so that it is undecidable whether a given source database has a universal solution under M. From the proof it also follows that it is undecidable whether the chase procedure - by which universal models can be obtained - terminates on a given source database and the set of tgds in M. The above results in particular strengthen results of Deutsch, Nash, and Remmel (2008). Concerning the issue of which semantics are appropriate for answering non-monotonic queries, we study several semantics for answering such queries. All of these semantics are based on the closed world assumption (CWA). First, the CWA-semantics of Libkin (2006) are extended so that they can be applied to specifications consisting of tgds and egds. The key is to extend the concept of CWA-solution, on which the CWA-semantics are based. CWA-solutions are characterized as universal solutions that are derivable from the source database using a suitably controlled version of the chase procedure. In particular, if CWA-solutions exist, then there is a minimal CWA-solution that is unique up to isomorphism: the core of the universal solutions introduced by Fagin, Kolaitis, and Popa (2003). We show that evaluation of a query under some of the CWA-semantics reduces to computing the certain answers to the query on the minimal CWA-solution. The CWA-semantics resolve some the known problems with answering non-monotonic queries. There are, however, two natural properties that are not possessed by the CWA-semantics. On the one hand, queries may be answered differently with respect to data exchange specifications that are logically equivalent. On the other hand, there are queries whose answer under the CWA-semantics intuitively contradicts the information derivable from the source database and the data exchange specification. To find an alternative semantics, we first test several CWA-based semantics from the area of deductive databases for their suitability regarding non-monotonic query answering in relational data exchange. More precisely, we focus on the CWA-semantics by Reiter (1978), the GCWA-semantics (Minker 1982), the EGCWA-semantics (Yahya, Henschen 1985) and the PWS-semantics (Chan 1993). It turns out that these semantics are either too weak or too strong, or do not possess the desired properties. Finally, based on the GCWA-semantics we develop the GCWA*-semantics which intuitively possesses the desired properties. For monotonic queries, some of the CWA-semantics as well as the GCWA*-semantics coincide with the certain answers semantics, that is, results obtained for the certain answers semantics carry over to those semantics. When studying the complexity of evaluating non-monotonic queries under the above-mentioned semantics, we focus on the data complexity, that is, the complexity when the data exchange specification and the query are fixed. We show that in many cases, evaluating non-monotonic queries is hard: co-NP- or NP-complete, or even undecidable. For example, evaluating conjunctive queries with at least one negative literal under simple specifications may be co-NP-hard. Notice, however, that this result only says that there is such a query and such a specification for which the problem is hard, but not that the problem is hard for all such queries and specifications. On the other hand, we identify a broad class of queries - the class of universal queries - which can be evaluated in polynomial time under the GCWA*-semantics, provided the data exchange specification is suitably restricted. More precisely, we show that universal queries can be evaluated on the core of the universal solutions, independent of the source database and the specification.
Summary: Information and communication is critical to the successful management of infectious diseases because an effective communication strategy prevents the surge of anxious patients who have not been genuinely exposed to the pathogen ('low risk patients') affecting medical infrastructures (1) and the future transmission of the infectious agent (2). Surge of low risk patients: The arrival of large numbers of low risk patients at hospitals following an infectious diseases emergency would be problematic for three main reasons. First, it would complicate the situation at hospitals receiving exposed patients, delaying the treatment of the acutely ill, creating difficulties of crowd control and tying up medical resources. Second, for the low risk patients themselves, attending hospital following an infectious disease emergency might increase their risk of exposure to the agent in question. Third, the needs of low risk patients may be poorly attended to at hospitals which are already overstretched dealing with medical casualties. Future transmission: Obtaining early information about symptoms and isolating infected patients is the most effective strategy to interrupt the chain of infection in the public in the absence of specific prophylaxis or treatment. Particularly at the beginning of an outbreak, these nonpharmaceutical interventions play an important role in enabling the early detection of signs or symptoms and in encouraging passengers to adopt appropriate preventive behaviour in order to limit the spread of the disease. This thesis includes two papers dealing with this problem: The first part is a systemic literature review of information needs following an infectious disease emergency (Anthrax, SARS, Pneumonic Plague). The key question was: what are the information needs of the public during an infectious disease emergency? The second part is an empirical investigation of information needs and communication strategies at the airport during the early stage of the Influenza Pandemic. The key question here was: what communication strategies help to meet the information needs and to enable the public to behave appropriately and responsibly? Conclusions: Evidence from the anthrax attacks in the United States suggested that a surge of low risk patients is by no means inevitable. Data from the SARS outbreak illustrated that if hospitals are seen as sources of contagion, many patients with non-bioterrorism related health care needs may delay seeking help. Finally, the events surrounding the Pneumonic Plague outbreak of 1994 in Surat, India, highlighted the need for the public to be kept adequately informed about an incident to avoid creating rumours. Clear, consistent and credible information is key to the successful management of infectious disease outbreaks. The results of the empirical investigation suggested that the desire for information is a reflection of current anxiety and does not mirror the objective scientific assessment of exposure. The airport study showed that perceived information needs were directly related to anxiety – the least anxious did not require any further information, the most anxious reported significant information needs concerning medical treatment, public health management and the assessment of the ongoing situation – irrespective of their actual exposure. A communication strategy only focussing on the 'real' exposed individuals neglects the information needs of those worrying about having contracted the virus and seeking medical attendance. Effective communication strategies should enable the general public to detect early signs or symptoms and provide them with behaviour advice to prevent the further transmission of the infectious agent. These include the provision of clear information about the incident, the symptoms and what to do to prevent the further transmission, detailed and regularly updated information in various media formats (telephone, internet, etc.) and rapid triage at hospital entrances to guide patients to the appropriate medical infrastructures. Relevance: These research findings could contribute to a shift in the organisational and communicative approach responding to infectious diseases outbreaks and could be considered relevant for future risk communication and policy decision making.
The aim of this work is to develop an effective equation of state for QCD, having the correct asymptotic degrees of freedom, to be used as input for dynamical studies of heavy ion collisions. We present an approach for modeling an EoS that respects the symmetries underlying QCD, and includes the correct asymptotic degrees of freedom, i.e. quarks and gluons at high temperature and hadrons in the low-temperature limit. We achieve this by including quarks degrees of freedom and the thermal contribution of the Polyakov loop in a hadronic chiral sigma-omega model. The hadronic part of the model is a nonlinear realization of an sigma-omega model. As the fundamental symmetries of QCD should also be present in its hadronic states such an approach is widely used to describe hadron properties below and around Tc. The quarks are introduced as thermal quasi particles, coupling to the Polyakov loop, while the dynamics of the Polyakov loop are controlled by a potential term which is fitted to reproduce pure gauge lattice data. In this model the sigma field serves a the order parameter for chiral restoration and the Polyakov loop as order parameter for deconfinement. The hadrons are suppressed at high densities by excluded volume corrections. As a next step, we introduce our new HQ model equation of state in a microscopic+macroscopic hybrid approach to heavy ion collisions. This hybrid approach is based on the Ultra-relativistic Quantum Molecular Dynamics (UrQMD) transport approach with an intermediate hydrodynamical evolution for the hot and dense stage of the collision. The present implementation allows to compare pure microscopic transport calculations with hydrodynamic calculations using exactly the same initial conditions and freeze-out procedure. The effects of the change in the underlying dynamics - ideal fluid dynamics vs. non-equilibrium transport theory - are explored. The final pion and proton multiplicities are lower in the hybrid model calculation due to the isentropic hydrodynamic expansion while the yields for strange particles are enhanced due to the local equilibrium in the hydrodynamic evolution. The elliptic and directed flow are shown to be not sensitive to changes in the EoS while the smaller mean free path in the hydrodynamic evolution reflects directly in higher flow results which are consistent with the experimental data. This finding indicates qualitatively that physical mechanisms like viscosity and other non equilibrium effects play an essentially more important role than the EoS when bulk observables like flow are investigated. In the last chapter, results for the thermal production of MEMOs in nucleus-nucleus collisions from a combined micro+macro approach are presented. Multiplicities, rapidity and transverse momentum spectra are predicted for Pb+Pb interaction at different beam energies. The presented excitation functions for various MEMO multiplicities show a clear maximum at the upper FAIR energy regime making this facility the ideal place to study the production of these exotic forms of multistrange objects.
The Opisthobranchia comprise highly specialized marine gastropods and have therefore been subject to diverse investigations covering various biological disciplines. However, a robust phylogeny of these gastropods is still lacking and several subclades have only been rarely studied. Furthermore, crucial aspects for the evolution of Opisthobranchia have not been comparatively analysed. Therefore, the aim of the present thesis is to gain new insights into the phylogeny of the Opisthobranchia with special focus on certain critical groups (Pleurobranchomorpha, Acteonoidea) and to assess several crucial features of the evolution of the investigated clades. The combination of four different gene markers (18S rDNA, 28S rDNA, 16S rDNA and CO1) and modern molecular systematic analysis tools were used to construct phylogenetic hypotheses focussing on Opisthobranchia as a whole as well as Pleurobranchomorpha and Acteonoidea in more detail. Intriguing new aspects of phylogeny and evolution of Opisthobranchia were revealed. First of all, monophyly of Opisthobranchia is definitely rejected based on the present data, while monophyly of Euthyneura (comprising Opisthobranchia and Pulmonata) is supported. Monophyly of opisthobranch subclades is confirmed for Nudipleura (as well as its constituting groups Nudibranchia and Pleurobranchomorpha), Umbraculida, Pteropoda (as well as subclades Thecosomata and Gymnosomata) and Acochlidiacea, for Cephalaspidea (if Runcinacea is regarded as a separate clade) and for Sacoglossa (if Cylindrobulla is accepted as an Oxynoacea). Aplysiomorpha are rendered paraphyletic due to the position of Akera bullata, but this result needs further investigation and should be considered with caution. The Nudipleura are found as the first single offshoot of the Euthyneura implying an early evolutionary separation of the last common ancestor of this clade. The remaining taxa form two main clades, one comprising the opisthobranch subgroups Umbraculida, Cephalaspidea, Aplysiomorpha and Pteropoda, while the other contains the pulmonate taxa and the opisthobranch Sacoglossa and Acochlidiacea. The interrelationships within these clades remain largely unresolved due to low statistical support values. However, a possible sister group relationship of Acochlidiacea and Eupulmonata receives statistical support. Opisthobranchia display various highly specific adaptations to diverse food sources. However, evolution of these specialized traits has never been assessed at an analytical level. The current thesis reconstructs the evolution of dietary preferences with novel methodologies based on the newly proposed phylogenetic hypothesis. Reconstruction of dietary evolution revealed herbivory as the ancestral condition in Euthyneura implying that carnivory evolved at least five times independently in the diverse lineages. The first comprehensive molecular phylogenetic hypothesis of the Pleurobranchomorpha could not reveal monophyly of the two main subclades Pleurobranchaeidae and Pleurobranchidae. This is due to the position of a single taxon (Euselenops luniceps) which is assigned to the Pleurobranchaeidae based on morphology but clusters within Pleurobranchidae in the current hypothesis. Furthermore, the tribe Berthellini and the genus Berthella are rendered paraphyletic by the current analyses. The results of molecular systematic analyses were used to reconstruct historical biogeography of Pleurobranchomorpha. Four different methodological approaches were applied yielding ambiguous results for Pleurobranchomorpha. However, the Pleurobranchidae comprising about 80% of the extant Pleurobranchomorpha most probably derived from an Antarctic origin. Dating of the phylogenetic tree via molecular clock methods yielded divergence of Pleurobranchidae into the Antarctic Tomthompsonia antarctica and the remaining species in Early Oligocene. Afterwards the latter underwent rapid radiation during Oligocene and Early Miocene. This divergence event coincides with two major geological events in the Antarctic region. On the one hand, the onset of glaciation and on the other hand the opening of the Drake Passage with concurrent formation of an Antarctic circumpolar current (ACC). I suppose that these sudden and dramatic changes in climate and palaeogeography probably accounted for migration of the last common ancestor of Pleurobranchidae (besides Tomthompsonia) into warmer regions via the Drake Passage to the Western Atlantic and Eastern Pacific and via the South Tasman Rise to the Indo-West Pacific. Furthermore, the ACC may have triggered larval dispersal to the Eastern Atlantic. The phylogenetic position of Acteonoidea has been a matter of debate for decades and they have long been considered as basal opisthobranchs. Results of the present thesis rather support placement in “Lower Heterobranchia” as sister group of Rissoelloidea. The current division of Acteonoidea into three families has never been investigated by means of phylogenetic methods. Thus, this thesis provides the first comprehensive investigation of this clade challenging present division into three families. The results rather support division into two main clades with the monogeneric Bullinidae clustering within Aplustridae doubting its separate status. Additionally, Rictaxis punctocaelatus which has been assigned to Acteonidae clusters basal to Aplustridae rendering Acteonidae paraphyletic. Since information on morphology of R. punctocaelatus was lacking until now, I conducted the first detailed investigation on morphology and histology of this species in order to reassess the unexpected molecular systematic placement. Character tracing analyses revealed similarities with both acteonoidean families implying an intermediate position of this species which might be assigned to a separate family in the future. Furthermore, the common features of Acteonidae and Rictaxis (massive shell, small foot, anterior mantle cavity opening, and absence of oral gland) are possibly plesiomorphic for the whole Acteonoidea. In summary, the results of the present thesis provide valuable novel insights into the phylogeny and evolution of the Opisthobranchia by employing state-of-the-art approaches of molecular systematics and evolutionary reconstruction. Thus, diverse hypotheses on opisthobranch phylogeny and evolution were either supported or rejected as well as novel hypotheses proposed which offer the basis for further research on these extraordinary gastropods.
In order to fully understand the new state of matter formed in heavy ion collisions, it is vital to isolate the always present final state hadronic contributions within the primary Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP) experimental signatures. Previously, the hadronic contributions were determined using the properties of the known mesons and baryons. However, according to Hagedorn, hadrons should follow an exponential mass spectrum, which the known hadrons follow only up to masses of M = 2 GeV. Beyond this point the mass spectrum is flat, which indicates that there are "missing" hadrons, that could potentially contribute significantly to experimental observables. In this thesis I investigate the influence of these "missing" Hagedorn states on various experimental signatures of QGP. Strangeness enhancement is considered a signal for QGP because hadronic interactions (even including multi-mesonic reactions) underpredict the hadronic yields (especially for strange particles) at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, RHIC. One can conclude that the time scales to produce the required amount of hadronic yields are too long to allow for the hadrons to reach chemical equilibrium within the lifetime of a cooling hadronic fireball. Because gluon fusion can quickly produce strange quarks, it has been suggested that the hadrons are born into chemical equilibrium following the Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) phase transition. However, we show here that the missing Hagedorn states provide extra degrees of freedom that can contribute to fast chemical equilibration times for a hadron gas. We develop a dynamical scheme in which possible Hagedorn states contribute to fast chemical equilibration times of X X pairs (where X = p, K, Lambda, or Omega) inside a hadron gas and just below the critical temperature. Within this scheme, we use master equations and derive various analytical estimates for the chemical equilibration times. Applying a Bjorken picture to the expanding fireball, the hadrons can, indeed, quickly chemically equilibrate for both an initial overpopulation or underpopulation of Hagedorn resonances. We compare the thermodynamic properties of our model to recent lattice results and find that for both critical temperatures, Tc = 176 MeV and Tc = 196 MeV, the hadrons can reach chemical equilibrium on very short time scales. Furthermore the ratios p/pi, K/pi , Lambda/pi, and Omega/pi match experimental values well in our dynamical scenario. The effects of the "missing" Hagedorn states are not limited to the chemical equilibration time. Many believe that the new state of matter formed at RHIC is the closet to a perfect fluid found in nature, which implies that it has a small shear viscosity to entropy density ratio close to the bound derived using the uncertainty principle. Our hadron resonance gas model, including the additional Hagedorn states, is used to obtain an upper bound on the shear viscosity to entropy density ratio, eta/s, of hadronic matter near Tc that is close to 1/(4pi). Furthermore, the large trace anomaly and the small speed of sound near Tc computed within this model agree well with recent lattice calculations. We also comment on the behavior of the bulk viscosity to entropy density ratio of hadronic matter close to the phase transition, which qualitatively has a different behavior close to Tc than a hadron gas model with only the known resonances. We show how the measured particle ratios can be used to provide non-trivial information about Tc of the QCD phase transition. This is obtained by including the effects of highly massive Hagedorn resonances on statistical models, which are generally used to describe hadronic yields. The inclusion of the "missing" Hagedorn states creates a dependence of the thermal fits on the Hagedorn temperature, TH , and leads to a slight overall improvement of thermal fits. We find that for Au+Au collisions at RHIC at sqrt{sN N} = 200 GeV the best square fit measure, chi^2 , occurs at TH = Tc = 176 MeV and produces a chemical freeze-out temperature of 172.6 MeV and a baryon chemical potential of 39.7 MeV.
The single unit doctrine proposes that each one of our percepts and sensations is represented by the activity of specialized high-level cells in the brain. A common criticism applied to this proposal is the one referred to as the "combinatorial problem". We are constantly confronted with unlimited combinations of elements and features, and yet we face no problem in recognizing patterns and objects present in visual scenes. Are there enough neurons in the brain to singly code for each one of our percepts? Or is it the case that perceptions are represented by the distributed activity of different neuronal ensembles? We lack a general theory capable of explaining how distributed information can be efficiently integrated into single percepts. The working hypothesis here is that distributed neuronal ensembles signal relations present in the stimulus by selectively synchronizing their spiking responses. Synchronization is generally associated with oscillatory activity in the brain. Gamma oscillations in particular have been linked to various integrative processes in the visual system. Studies in anesthetized animals have shown a conspicuous increase in power for the gamma frequency band (30 to 60 Hz) in response to visual stimuli. Recently, these observations have been extended to behavioral studies which addressed the role of gamma activity in cognitive processes demanding selective attention. The initial motivation for carrying out this work was to test if the binding-by-synchronization (BBS) hypothesis serves as a neuronal mechanism for perceptual grouping in the visual system. To this aim we used single and superimposed grating stimuli. Superimposed gratings (plaids) are bi-stable stimuli capable of eliciting different percepts depending on their physical characteristics. In this way, plaids can be perceived either as a single moving surface (pattern plaids), or as two segregated surfaces drifting in different directions (component plaids). While testing the BBS hypothesis, we performed various experiments which addressed the role of both stimulus and cortical architecture on the properties of gamma oscillations in the primary visual cortex (V1) of monkeys. Additionally, we investigated whether gamma activity could also be modulated by allocating attention in time. Finally, we report on gamma-phase shifts in area V1, and how they depend on the level of neuronal activation. ...
Atherosclerosis is accompanied by infiltration of macrophages to the intima of blood vessels. There they engulf oxLDL (oxidized low-density lipoproteins) and differentiate to foam cells. These cells are known as major promoters of atherosclerosis progression. In initial experiments I could demonstrate that foam cell formation caused a severe loss in the ability to produce IFNA (interferon A) in response to stimulation with the bacterial cell wall component LPS (lipopolysaccharide). Since IFNA is discussed to have anti-atherosclerotic potential and has the capability to induce immune tolerance, its inhibition in foam cells might promote the atherosclerotic process. For this reason the aim of my PhD project was to clarify the underlying molecular mechanisms that attenuate LPS-induced IFNA expression in foam cells. LPS activates TLR4 (Toll-like receptor 4) in macrophages. Downstream this receptor two distinct signaling pathways are activated, namely a MyD88 (myeloid differentiation primary response gene 88)-dependent and a TRIF (TIR-domain-containing adapter-inducing IFNA)-dependent one. Foam cell formation targeted the TRIF-dependent TLR4 signaling pathway, as seen by loss of IRF3 activation and IFNA expression inhibition, whereas MyD88-initiated NFBB (nuclear factor 'B-light-chain-enhancer' of activated B-cells) activation and subsequent TNF@ (tumor necrosis factor @) expression remained unaltered. The TRIF signaling cascade results in transactivation of the transcription factor IRF3 (interferon regulatory factor 3), the main activator of IFNA expression. This event demands IRF3 phosphorylation by TBK1 (TANK-binding kinase 1), whereas TBK1 needs to be recruited to TRAF3 (TNF receptor associated factor 3) by the scaffold protein TANK (TRAF family member-associated NFBB activator) for its activation. This work allowed to propose the following scheme: OxLDL utilizes SR-A1 (scavenger receptor A1) to activate IRAK4 (interleukin-1 receptor-associated kinase 4), IRAK1 and Pellino3. Active IRAK1 and Pellino3 associate with TRAF3 and Pellino3 promotes mono-ubiquitination of the adaptor molecule TANK. Mono-ubiquitination of TANK interrupts TBK1 recruitment to TRAF3 and thereby abrogates phosphorylation and transactivation of IRF3 as well as subsequent expression of IFNA. In this study I provide evidence for a negative regulatory role of Pellino3 for TRIF-dependent TLR4 signaling. This expands the current knowledge of the interplay between pathways downstream scavenger and Toll-like receptors. Due to the multifaceted roles of TLR4 signaling in pathology, the new TRIF-signaling inhibitor Pellino3 might be of importance as therapeutical target for disease intervention.
In this work we study compact stars, i.e. neutron stars, as cosmic laboratories for the nuclear matter. With a mass of around 1 - 3 solar masses and a radius of around 10km, compact stars are very dense and, besides nucleons, can contain exotic matter such as hyperons or quark matter. The KaoS collaboration studied nuclear matter for densities up to 2-3 times saturation density by analysing kaon multiplicities from Au+Au and C+C collisions. The results show that nuclear matter in the corresponding density region is very compressible, with a compressibility of <200MeV. For such soft nuclear equations of state the maximum masses of neutron stars are ca. 1.8 - 1.9 solar masses, whereas the central densities are higher than 5 times nuclear saturation density and therefore point towards a possible phase transition to quark matter. If quark matter would be present in the interior of neutron stars, so-called hybrid stars, it could be produced already during their birth in supernova explosions. To study this we implement a quark matter phase transition in a hadronic equation of state which is used in supernova simulations. Supernova simulations of low and intermediate mass progenitors and two different bag constants show a collapse of the proto neutron star due to the softening of the equations of state in the quark-hadron mixed phase. The stiffening of the equation of state for pure quark matter halts the collapse and leads to the production of a second shock wave. The second shock wave is energetic enough to lead to an explosion of the star and produces a neutrino burst when passing the neutrinospheres. Furthermore, first studies of the longtime cooling of hybrid stars show, that colour superconductivity can significantly influence the cooling behaviour of hybrid stars, if all quarks form Cooper Pairs. For the so-called CSL phase (colour-spin locking) with pairing energies of several MeV, the cooling of the quark phase is suppressed and the hybrid star appears as a pure hadronic star.
This dissertation introduces in chapter 1 a new comparative approach to model-based research and policy analysis by constructing an archive of business cycle models. It includes many well-known models used in academia and at policy institutions. A computational platform is created that allows straightforward comparisons of models’ implications for monetary and fiscal stabilization policies. Chapter 2 applies business cycle models to forecasting. Several New Keynesian models are estimated on historical U.S. data vintages and forecasts are computed for the five most recent recessions. The extent of forecast heterogeneity for models and professional forecasts is analysed. Chapter 3 extends the forecasting analysis to a long sample and to the evaluation of density forecasts. Weighted forecasts are computed using a variety of weighting schemes. The accuracy of forecasts is evaluated and compared to professional forecasts and forecasts from nonstructural time series methods. Chapter 4 adds a new feature to existing business cycle models. Specifically, a medium-scale New Keynesian model is constructed that allows for strategic complementarities in price-setting. The role of trade integration for monetary policy transmission is explored. A new dimension of the exchange rate channel is highlighted by which monetary policy directly impacts domestic inflation. Chapter 5 tests whether simple symmetric monetary policy rules used in most business cycle models are a sufficient description of reality. I use quantile regressions to estimate policy parameters and find asymmetric reactions to inflation, the output gap and past interest rates.
Direct photon emission from heavy-ion collisions has been calculated and compared to available experimental data. Three different models have been combined to extract direct photons from different environments in a heavy-ion collision: Thermal photons from partonic and hadronic matter have been extracted from relativistic, non-viscous 3+1-dimensional hydrodynamic calculations. Thermal and non-thermal photons from hadronic interactions have been calculated from relativistic transport theory. The impact of different physics assumptions about the thermalized matter has been studied. In pure transport calculations, a viscous hadron gas is present. This is juxtaposed with ideal gases of hadrons with vacuum properties, hadrons which undergo a chiral and deconfinement phase transition and with a system that has a strong first-order phase transition to a deconfined ideal gas of quarks and gluons in the hybrid model calculations with the various Equations of State. The models used for the determination of photons from both hydrodynamic and transport calculations have been elucidated and their numerical properties tested. The origin of direct photons, itemised by emission stage, emission time, channel and baryon number density, has been investigated for various systems, as have the transverse momentum spectra and elliptic flow patterns of direct photons. The differences of photon emission rates from a thermalized transport box and the hadronic photon emission rates that are used in hydrodynamic calculations are found to be very similar, as are the spectra from calculations of heavy-ion collisions with transport model and hybrid model with hadronic Equation of State. Taking into account the full (vacuum) spectral function of the rho-meson decreases the direct photon emission by approximately 10% at low photon transverse momentum. The numerical investigations show that the parameter with the largest impact on the direct photon spectra is the time at which the hydrodynamic description is started. Its variation shows deviations of one to two orders of magnitude. In the regime that can be considered physical, however, the variation is less than a factor of 3. Other parameters change the direct photon yield by up to approximately 20%. In all systems that have been considered -- heavy-ion collisions at E_lab = 35 AGeV and 158 AGeV, (s_NN)**1/2 = 62.4 GeV, 130 GeV and 200 GeV -- thermal emission from a system with partonic degrees of freedom is greatly enhanced over that from hadronic systems, while the difference between the direct photon yields from a viscous and a non-viscous hadronic system (transport vs. hydrodynamics) is found to be very small. Predictions for direct photon emission in central U+U-collisions at 35 AGeV have been made. Since non-soft photon sources are very much suppressed at this energy, experimental results should very easily be able to distinguish between a medium that is entirely hadronic and a system that undergoes a phase transition from partonic to hadronic matter. In the case of lead-lead collisions at 158 AGeV, the situation is not so clear. In central collisions, the complete direct photon spectra including prompt photons seem to favour hadronic emission sources, while the partonic calculations only slightly overpredict the data. In peripheral collisions at the same energy, the hadronic contribution is more than one order of magnitude smaller than the prompt photon contribution, which fits the available experimental data. A similar picture presents itself at higher energies. At RHIC energies, however, the difference between transport calculations and hadronic hybrid model calculations is largest. Hybrid model calculations with partonic degrees of freedom can describe the experimental results in gold-gold collisions at 200 GeV. The elliptic flow component of direct photon emission is found to be consistently positive at small transverse momenta. This means that the initial photon emission from a non-flowing medium does not completely overshine the emission patterns from later stages. High-pt photons dominantly come from the beginning of a heavy-ion collision and therefore do not carry the directed information of an evolving medium.
One of the earliest and most striking observations made about HIV is the extensive genetic variation that the virus has within individual hosts, particularly in the hypervariable regions of the env gene which is divided into 5 variable regions (V1-V5) and 5 more constant (C1-C5) regions. HIV evolves at any time over the course of an individual’s infection and infected individuals harbours a population of genetically related but non-identical viruses that are under constant change and ready to adapt to changes in their environment. These genetically heterogeneous populations of closely related genomes are called quasispecies [65]. Tuberculosis or tubercle forming disease is an acute and/or chronic bacterial infection that primarily attacks the lungs, but which may also affect the kidneys, bones, lymph nodes, and brain. The disease is caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB), a slow growing rod-shaped, acid fast bacterium. It is transmitted from person to person through inhalation of bacteria-carrying air droplets. Worldwide, one person out of three is infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis – two billion people in total. TB currently holds the seventh place in the global ranking of causes of death [73]. In 2008, there were an estimated 9.4 (range, 8.9–9.9 million) million incident cases (equivalent to 139 cases per 100 000 population) of TB globally [75]. A complex biological interplay occurs between M. tuberculosis and HIV in coinfected host that results in the worsening of both pathologies. HIV promotes progression of M. tuberculosis either by endogenous reactivation or exogenous reinfection [77, 78] and, the course of HIV-1 infection is accelerated subsequent to the development of TB [80]. Active TB is associated with an increase in intra-patient HIV-1 diversity both systemically and at the infected lung sites [64,122]. The sustainability or reversal of the HIV-1 quasispecies heterogeneity after TB treatment is not known. Tetanus toxoid vaccinated HIV-1 infected patients developed a transient increase in HIV-1 heterogeneity which was reversed after few weeks [121]. Emergence of a heterogeneous HIV-1 population within a patient may be one of the mechanisms to escape strong immune or drug pressure [65,128]. The existence of better fitting and/or immune escape HIV-variants can lead to an increase in HIV-1 replication [129,130]. It might be that TB favourably selected HIV-1 variants which are sources for consistent HIV-1 replication. Understanding the mechanisms underlying the impacts of TB on HIV-1 is essential for the development of effective measures to reduce TB related morbidity and mortality in HIV-1 infected individuals. In the present study we studied whether the increase in HIV-1 quasispecies diversity during active TB is reversed or preserved throughout the course of antituberculous chemotherapy. For this purpose Two time point HIV-1 quasispecies were evaluated by comparing HIV-1 infected patients with active tuberculosis (HIV-1/TB) and HIV-1 infected patients without tuberculosis (HIV-1/non TB). Plasma samples were obtained from the Frankfurt HIV cohort and HIV-1 RNA was isolated. C2V5 env was amplified by PCR and molecular cloning was performed. Eight to twenty five clones were sequenced from each patient. Various phylogenetic analyses were performed including tree inferences, intra-patient viral diversity and divergence, selective pressure, co-receptor usage prediction and two time point identity of quasispecies comparison using Mantel’s test. We found out from this study that: 1) Active TB sustains HIV-1 quasispecies diversity for longer period 2. Active TB increases the rate of HIV-1 divergence 3) TB might slow down evolution of X4 variants And we concluded that active TB has an impact on HIV-1 viral diversity and divergence over time. The influence of active TB on longitudinal evolution of HIV- 1 may be predominant for R5 viruses. The use of CCR5-coreceptor inhibitors for HIV-1/TB patients as therapeutic approach needs further investigation.
This dissertation is devoted to the study of thermodynamics for quantum gauge theories.The poor convergence of quantum field theory at finite temperature has been the main obstacle in the practical applications of thermal QCD for decades. In this dissertation I apply hard-thermal-loop perturbation theory, which is a gauge-invariant reorganization of the conventional perturbative expansion for quantum gauge theories to the thermodynamics of QED and Yang-Mills theory to three-loop order. For the Abelian case, I present a calculation of the free energy of a hot gas of electrons and photons by expanding in a power series in mD/T, mf /T and e2, where mD and mf are the photon and electron thermal masses, respectively, and e is the coupling constant.I demonstrate that the hard-thermal-loop perturbation reorganization improves the convergence of the successive approximations to the QED free energy at large coupling, e ~ 2. For the non-Abelian case, I present a calculation of the free energy of a hot gas of gluons by expanding in a power series in mD/T and g2, where mD is the gluon thermal mass and g is the coupling constant. I show that at three-loop order hard-thermal-loop perturbation theory is compatible with lattice results for the pressure, energy density, and entropy down to temperatures T ~ 2 - 3 Tc. The results suggest that HTLpt provides a systematic framework that can be used to calculate static and dynamic quantities for temperatures relevant at LHC.
Employing NMR spectroscopy, it is not only possible to calculate the three dimensional structures of single proteins, but also to study dynamics and conformational changes of protein-complexes. In fact that is an important aspect, since the protein function depends on dynamics and interactions with other molecules. Therefore the study of protein-protein interactions is of highest importance for a better understanding of biological processes. Based on NMR methods, in this thesis we were able to determine protein-protein interactions within the enterobacterial Rcs signalling complex which is regulated via a phosphorelay. Originally identified as regulator of capsule synthesis, the Rcs phosphorelay is now considered to be implicated in stress response caused by disturbances in the peptidoglycan layer. Beyond that the Rcs system is involved in multiplex transcriptional networks including cell division, motility, biofilm formation and virulence. Because of such global nature and its extraordinary structural organisation involving membrane integrated sensor proteins (RcsC, RcsD), coactivators (RcsF, RcsA) and a transcription factor (RcsB), the Rcs system is one of the most remarkable phosphorelays in the family of enterobacteriacaea. During the complex phosphotransfer the histidine phosphotransferase (HPt) domain of the intermediary RcsD protein mediates the phosphotransfer between RcsC and RcsB, and probably modulates the phosphorylation state of the response regulator RcsB. Therefore the present work has been focused on the interface between RcsD and RcsB in more detail. In the first part of the thesis a new domain within the RcsD protein has been identified and structurally analysed by liquid NMR spectroscopy. RcsD is an inner membrane bound hybrid sensor like-kinase composed of a periplasmic sensor domain and a cytoplasmic portion. The cytoplasmic part contains the histidine like-kinase (HK) domain and the histidine phosphotransferase (HPt) domain. By analysis of the secondary structure in more detail, it was shown here that the two domains are intermitted by an additional 13.3 kDa domain. Corresponding to the position of the ABL (α−β−loop) domain of RcsC, located C-terminal to the RcsC-HK domain, the new identified domain was named RcsD-ABL. The central structural element of RcsD-ABL is a β-sheet composed of six strands with a β1−β2−β3−β4−β6−β5 topology and surrounded by two α-helices α1 and α2. In the second part of the thesis, RcsD-ABL is identified as a binding domain for the response regulator RcsB by NMR titration experiments. Such a binding domain for a response regulator has so far only been described for the histidine kinase CheA. In reportergene assays with β-galactosidase and ONPG as substrate it was shown that overexpression of RcsD-ABL in high amounts inhibited binding of RcsB to its target promoter. The β-galactosidase activity was reduced by 80 % with respect to cells carrying no plasmid encoding RcsD-ABL. The mapping of the binding interface was successfully achieved by chemical shift perturbations, a fast mapping protocol and selective labelling. It was shown that the interaction between RcsD-ABL and RcsB takes place via a binding interface comprising mainly the two α-helices of RcsD-ABL and the α-helices α7, α8 and α10 in the effector domain of RcsB. In the third part of the thesis, the interaction of RcsB with RcsD-ABL was related to that with RcsD-HPt. Using NMR titration experiments and ITC measurements, a comparison of the binding constants (Kd) of RcsB interacting either with the isolated RcsD-ABL (2 PM) or the isolated RcsDHPt domain (40 PM) revealed a higher affinity of RcsD-ABL to RcsB. A conjugate of RcsD-ABL-HPt interacting with RcsB decreased the Kd in the one-site fitting mode to 10 PM. However, the two-site fitting mode applied for RcsD-ABL-HPt/RcsB interaction resulted in a Kd (RcsD-ABL) of 2 PM and a Kd (RcsD-HPt) of 8 PM, indicating that RcsD-ABL enhances the binding of RcsD-HPt to RcsB. In the last part of the thesis, it was partly possible together with the data obtained from NMR titration experiments, PRE measurements and a HADDOCK protocol to develop a geometrical model for the interaction of RcsD with RcsB. In this model the receiver domain of RcsB interacts with the RcsD-HPt domain and the RcsB effector domain interacts with the RcsD-ABL domain. These results lead to surprising insights on the regulation of phosphorelays, since normally the effector domain binds to DNA. Here the effector domain is recognized by the newly identified RcsD-ABL domain. Prospectively, further investigations of phosphorylation affects and mutational studies will be of great interest.
Genes coding for membrane proteins make up 25%-30% of the genome in most organisms. Membrane proteins play an important role in cell functioning and their importance is enhanced by the fact that a large number of drugs are targeted at membrane proteins. Paradoxically, experimentally determined structures of membrane protein correspond to only about 1.7% of protein structures deposited in the protein data bank (PDB). This is largely due to the fact that membrane proteins are difficult to deal with owing to their amphipathic nature. The low abundance of membrane proteins in native tissue makes heterologous overexpression of these genes a necessity. This thesis work aimed at heterologous production of several secondary active transporter proteins for structural and functional characterizations and establishing alternative strategies to overcome the obstacles associated with heterologous overproduction. Four members of the heavy metal transporting cation diffusion facilitator (CDF) family from S. typhimurium and A. aeolicus were heterologously overproduced in E. coli and functionally characterized by an in vivo complementation assay using the zinc transport deficient E. coli GG48 strain. Out of these four, Aq_2073 from A. aeolicus was produced in large scale with substantial yield and purity sufficient to carry out structural studies. After extensive stability studies with different detergents, pHs and temperatures, the protein was subjected to 3D and 2D crystallization trials. Several C- terminal truncated constructs were made and the simultaneous crystallization screenings were carried out. These resulted in initial needle like crystals in 3D crystallization trials or optimum sized vesicles with crystalline patches in 2D crystallization trials but no obvious crystal. The protein showed significant increase in melting temperature in the presence of cadmium, when tested by differential scanning calorimetry. Another transporter, STM3880 of the potassium uptake permease (KUP) family from S. typhimurium, was heterologously overproduced in E. coli, purified by affinity chromatography, reconstituted into artificial liposome and functionally characterized by solid supported membrane based electrophysiology. In order to establish alternative expression strategies, continuous exchange cell free expression (CECF) of proteins from four different families was carried out. This method found to be aptly complementing the cell-based production approach. Targets from resistance to homoserine/threonine (RhtB) family not expressing in vivo could be expressed and purified using CECF. STM1781 of the sulfate permease (SulP) family was expressed, purified and characterized for stability while the cell-based production resulted in extensive degradation. PF0780 of multidrug/oligosaccharidyllipid/polysaccharide flippase (MOP) family was also purified to homogeneity and the stability was comparable to in vivo produced protein. Moreover, the effect of maltose binding protein (MBP) fusion at N-terminus on production and membrane integration was tested with three selected targets. The analysis revealed decreased yields in the presence of MBP if the protein had both termini in the cytoplasm. This work succeed in heterologously overproducing and establishing purification protocols for several secondary active transporters aiming at structural and functional characterization in a structural genomics framework. It also showed that integration of alternative strategies, like employing both cell-based and cell-free heterologous expression systems, expands the overall expression space coverage and in turn increases the chance of success of a structural genomics styled project.
Succinate:quinone oxidoreductases (SQORs) are integral membrane protein complexes, which couple the two-electron oxidation of succinate to fumarate (succinate → fumarate + 2H+ + 2e-) to the two-electron reduction of quinone to quinol (quinone + 2H+ + 2e- → quinol) as well as catalyzing the opposite reaction, the reduction of fumarate by quinol. In mitochondria and some aerobic bacteria, succinate:ubiquinone reductase, also known as complex II of the aerobic respiratory chain or as succinate dehydrogenase from the tricarboxylic acid (TCA or Krebs) cycle, catalyzes the oxidation of succinate by ubiquinone, which is mildly exergonic under standart conditions and not directly associated with energy storage in the form of a transmembrane electrochemical proton potential (Δp). Gram-positive bacteria do not contain ubiquinone but rather menaquinone, a quinone with significantly lower oxidation-reduction (“redox”) midpoint potential. In these cases, the catalyzed oxidation of succinate by quinone is endergonic under standard conditions. Consequently, these bacteria face a thermodynamic problem in supporting the catalysis of this reaction in vivo. Based on experimental evidence obtained on whole cells and purified membranes, it had previously been proposed that the SQR from Gram-positive bacteria supports this reaction at the expense of the protonmotive force, Δp. Nonetheless, it has been argued that the observed Δp dependence is not associated specifically with the activity of SQR because the occurrence of artifacts in experiments with bacterial membranes and whole cells can not be fully excluded. Clearly, definitive insight into the mechanism of catalysis of this intriguing reaction required a corresponding functional characterization of an isolated, membranebound SQR from a Gram-positive bacterium. The first aim of the present work addresses the question if the general feasibility of the energetically uphill electron transfer from succinate to menaquinone is associated specifically to a single enzyme complex, the SQR. The prerequisite to achieve this goal was stable preparation of this enzyme.
The nicotinamide-adenine-dinucleotide (NADH):ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) from the strictly aerobic yeast Y. lipolytica contains at least 26 “accessory” subunits however the significance of most of them remains unknown. The aim of this study was to characterize the role of three accessory subunits of complex I, recently identified: two mitochondrial acyl carrier proteins, ACPM1 and ACPM2 and a sulfurtransferase (st1) subunit. ACPMs are small (approx. 10 kDa) acidic proteins that are homologous to the corresponding central components of prokaryotic fatty acid synthase complexes. Genomic deletions of the two genes ACPM1 and ACPM2 resulted in strains that were not viable or retained only trace amounts of assembled mitochondrial complex I, respectively, as assessed using two-dimensional blue native/sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (BN/SDS) PAGE. This suggested different functions for the two proteins that despite high similarity could not be complemented by the respective other homolog still expressed in the deletion strains. To test whether complex I was affected by deletion of the ACPM2 gene, its activities in mitochondrial membranes were measured. Consequently, specific inhibitor sensitive dNADH: decylubiquinone (DBQ) oxidoreductase activity was lost completely and a strong decrease in dNADH: hexa-ammine-ruthenium (HAR) oxidoreductase activity was measured. Remarkably, the same phenotypes were observed if just the conserved serine carrying the phosphopantethein moiety was exchanged with alanine. Although this suggested a functional link to the lipid metabolism of mitochondria, using HPLC chromatography no changes in the lipid composition of the organelles were found. Proteomic analysis revealed that both ACPMs were tightly bound to purified mitochondrial complex I. Western blot analysis revealed that the affinity tagged ACPM1 and ACPM2 proteins were exclusively detectable in mitochondrial membranes but not in the mitochondrial matrix as reported for other organisms. Hence it has been concluded that the ACPMs can serve all their possible functions in mitochondrial lipid metabolism and complex I assembly and stabilization as subunits bound to complex I. A protein exhibiting rhodanese (thiosulfate:cyanide sulfurtransferase) activity was found to be associated with homogenous preparation of complex I. From a rhodanese deletion strain, functional complex I that lacked the additional protein but was fully assembled and displayed no functional defects or changes in EPR signature was purified. In contrast to previous suggestions, this indicated that the sulfurtransferase associated with Y. lipolytica complex I is not required for assembly of its iron–sulfur clusters.