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Fluorescence microscopy has significantly impacted our understanding of cell biology. The extension of diffraction-unlimited super-resolution microscopy opened an observation window that allows for the scrutiny of cellular organization at a molecular level. The non-invasive nature of visible light in super-resolution microscopy methods renders them suitable for observations in living cells and organisms. Building upon these advancements, a promising synergy between super-resolution fluorescence microscopy and deep learning becomes evident, extending the capabilities of the imaging methods. Tasks such as image modality translation, restoration, single-molecule fitting, virtual labeling, spectral demixing, and molecular counting, are enabled with high precision. The techniques explored in this thesis address three critical facets in advanced microscopy, namely the reduction in image acquisition time, saving photon budget during measurement, and increasing the multiplexing capability. Furthermore, descriptors of protein distributions and their motion on cell membranes were developed.
Autophagy is an important degradation pathway mediating the engulfment of cellular material (cargo) into autophagosomes followed by degradation in autophagosomes.
Different stress stimuli, e.g. nutrient deprivation, oxidative stress or organelle damage, engage autophagy to maintain cellular homeostasis, recycle nutrients or remove damaged cell organelles. Autophagy not only degrades bulk cytoplasmic material but also selective autophagic cargo, for example lysosomes (lysophagy), mitochondria (mitophagy), ER (ER-phagy), lipid droplets (lipophagy), protein aggregates (aggrephagy) or pathogens (xenophagy). Selective autophagy pathways are regulated by selective autophagy receptors which bind to ubiquitinated cargo proteins and link them to LC3 on the autophagosomal membrane.
Ubiquitination is an essential post-translational modification controlling different cellular processes such as proteasomal and lysosomal degradation or innate immune signaling.
M1-linked (linear) poly-Ubiquitin (poly-Ub) chains are exclusively assembled by the E3 ligase linear ubiquitin chain assembly complex (LUBAC) and removed by the M1 poly-Ub-specific OTU domain-containing deubiquitinase with linear linkage specificity (OTULIN). In addition to key functions in innate immune signaling and nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) activation, M1 ubiquitination is also implicated in the regulation of autophagy.
LUBAC and OTULIN control autophagy initiation and maturation and the autophagic clearance of invading bacteria via xenophagy. However, additional functions of LUBAC- and OTULIN-regulated M1 ubiquitination in autophagy are largely unknown and it also remains unexplored if LUBAC and OTULIN control other selective autophagy pathways in addition to xenophagy. This study aimed to unravel the role of LUBAC- and OTULIN-controlled M1 ubiquitination in bulk and selective autophagy in more detail.
In this study, characterization of OTULIN-depleted MZ-54 glioblastoma (GBM) cells revealed that OTULIN deficiency results in enhanced LC3 lipidation in response to autophagy induction and upon blockade of late stage autophagy with Bafilomycin A1 (BafA1). Furthermore, electron microscopy analysis showed that OTULIN-deficient cells have an increased number of degradative compartments (DGCs), confirming enhanced autophagy activity upon loss of OTULIN. APEX2-based autophagosome content profiling identified various OTULIN-dependent autophagy cargo proteins. Among these were the autophagy receptor TAX1BP1 which regulates different forms of selective autophagy (e.g. lysophagy, aggrephagy) and the glycan-binding protein galectin-3 which serves key functions in lysophagy, suggesting a role of OTULIN and M1 poly-Ub in the regulation of aggrephagy and lysophagy.
Abstract 2
To study aggrephagy, protein aggregation was induced with puromycin which causes premature termination of translation and accumulation of defective ribosomal products (DRiPs). Loss of OTULIN increased the number of M1 poly-Ub-positive foci and insoluble proteins and reduced the levels of soluble TAX1BP1 and p62 in response to puromycin-induced proteotoxic stress.
Intriguingly, upon induction of lysosomal membrane permeabilization (LMP) with the lysosomotropic drug L-Leucyl-L-Leucine methyl ester (LLOMe), M1 poly-Ub strongly accumulated at damaged lysosomes and colocalized with TAX1BP1- and galectin-3-positive puncta. M1 poly-Ub-modified lysosomes formed a platform for NF-κB essential modulator (NEMO) and inhibitor of κB (IκB) kinase (IKK) complex recruitment and local NF-κB activation in a K63 poly-Ub- and OTULIN-dependent manner. Furthermore, inhibition of lysosomal degradation enhanced LLOMe-induced cell death, suggesting pro-survival functions of lysophagy following LMP. Enrichment of M1 poly-Ub at damaged lysosomes was also observed in human dopaminergic neurons and in primary mouse embryonic cortical neurons, confirming the importance of M1 poly-Ub in the response to lysosomal damage.
Together, these results identify OTULIN as a negative regulator of autophagy induction and the autophagic flux and reveal OTULIN-dependent autophagy cargo proteins.
Furthermore, this study uncovers novel and important roles of M1 poly-Ub in the response to lysosomal damage and local NF-κB activation at damaged lysosomes.
Der Natrium-abhängige Kaliumkanal Slack (KNa1.1, Slo2.2, KCNT1) nimmt eine Schlüsselrolle in der Regulation neuronaler Erregbarkeit ein, indem er die Ausbildung und Feuerungsfrequenz von Aktionspotentialen kontrolliert. Sowohl in Mäusen als auch in Menschen wird Slack besonders hoch in nicht-peptidergen C-Faser-Neuronen exprimiert. Wissenschaftliche Erkenntnisse der letzten Jahre konnten die Beteiligung von Slack-Kanälen in der Signalverarbeitung neuropathischer Schmerzen, aber auch in verschiedenen Arten von Pruritus, feststellen. Dabei zeigen Slack-defiziente Mäuse ein verstärktes mechanisches Schmerzverhalten nach einer peripheren Nervenverletzung und ein erhöhtes Kratzverhalten in akuten Juckreiz-Modellen. Das als Slack-Aktivator identifizierte trizyklische Neuroleptikum Loxapin zeigt sowohl analgetische als auch antipruritische Effekte in Mäusen, jedoch ist sein klinischer Einsatz auf Grund schwerwiegender antipsychotischer Nebenwirkungen limitiert. Basierend auf Loxapins Leitstruktur wurden daher in dieser Arbeit neue Slack-Aktivatoren mit einem verbesserten pharmakologischen Profil designed und ihr Potential für die Therapie von Schmerzen sowie akutem und chronischem Pruritus in vivo untersucht.
Mast cells are long-lived tissue-resident leukocytes, located most abundantly in the skin and mucosal surfaces. They belong to the first line of defence of the body, protecting against invading pathogens, toxins and allergens. Their secretory granules are densely packed with a plethora of mediators, which can be released immediately upon activation of the cell. Next to their role in IgE-mediated allergic diseases and in promoting inflammation, potential anti-inflammatory functions have been assigned to mast cells, depending on the biological setting. The aim of this thesis was to contribute to a better understanding of the role of mast cells during the resolution of a local inflammation. Therefore, in a first of step a suitable model of a local inflammation had to be identified. Since comparison of the two Toll-like receptor (TLR)-agonists zymosan and lipopolysaccharide (LPS), which are most commonly used to locally induce inflammation, revealed a systemic response after LPS-injection and a local inflammation after zymosan-injection, the TLR2 agonist zymosan was chosen for the subsequent experiments. Multi epitope ligand cartography (MELC) combined with statistical neighbourhood analysis showed that mast cells are located in an anti-inflammatory microenvironment next to M2 macrophages during resolution of inflammation, while neutrophils and M1 macrophages are located in the zymosan-filled core of the inflammation. Furthermore, infiltrating neutrophils during peak inflammation and an increasing population of macrophages phagocytosing neutrophils during resolution of inflammation could be observed. MELC as well as flow cytometry analysis of mast cell-deficient mice revealed a decreased phagocytosing activity of macrophages in the absence of mast cells. As an untargeted approach to identify mast cell-derived mediators induced by zymosan, mRNA sequencing of bone marrow-derived mast cells (BMMCs) was performed. Gene ontology term analysis of the sequencing data revealed the induction of the type I interferon (IFN) pathway as the dominant response. Contradicting previous studies, I could validate the production of IFN-β by mast cells in response to zymosan and LPS in vitro. Furthermore IFN-β expression by mast cells was also detected in vivo. In accordance with previous studies regarding other cell types the release of IFN-β by mast cells depends on endosomal signaling. The potential of IFN-β to enhance the phagocytosing activity of macrophages has been demonstrated recently. Besides IFN-β, various other mediators with reported enhancing effects on macrophage phagocytosis were also induced by zymosan in BMMCs, including Interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-4, IL-13, and Prostaglandin (PG) E2. Thus, either one of these mediators alone or a combination of them could promote macrophage phagocytosis.
In conclusion, I herein present mast cells as a novel source for IFN-β induced by non-viral TLR ligands and demonstrate their enhancing effect on macrophage phagocytosis, thereby contributing to the resolution of inflammation.
Die vorliegende Arbeit mit dem Titel Multiphoton Processes and Photocontrol of Biochemical Reaction Pathways befasst sich mit verschiedenen Strategien zur Implementierung von optischer Kontrolle in biochemisch relevanten Systemen. Auf systemischer Ebene wurde einerseits die Licht-getriebene Natriumpumpe Krokinobacter Eikastus Rhodopsin 2 (KR2) vor dem Hintergrund optogenetischer Anwendungen untersucht, und andererseits die Optimierung der wichtigsten photochemischen Parameter von photolabilen Schutzgruppen (PPG, engl. photolabile protecting group) angestrebt. Von der technisch-photophysikalischen Seite wurde ein weiterer Fokus auf den Aktivierungs- und Deaktivierungsschritt gelegt. Hierbei wurden vor allem Mehrphotonen-Prozesse betrachtet, die entweder durch simultane Absorption zweier Photonen zu einer spezifischen hoch-energetischen Anregung führen, oder durch sequentielle Absorption eine sukzessive Aktivierung und Deaktivierung eines Systems bewerkstelligen können. Auch wenn der Schwerpunkt dieser schriftlichen Arbeit auf den spektroskopischen Ergebnissen liegt, waren alle hier diskutierten Projekte stark kollaborativ und umfassten eine große Bandbreite verschiedener Techniken. Dies spiegelt den interdisziplinären Charakter vieler aktueller Fragestellungen in der photochemischen Forschung wider, die - in vielen Fällen - letztlich auf medizinische oder pharmazeutische Fortschritte abzielen.
Zunächst wurde die lichtgetriebene Natriumpumpe KR2 untersucht, die durch ihre mögliche Anwendung als optogenetisches Werkzeug bekannt wurde. In einer vergleichenden Studie der Natrium- und Protonenpumpmodi von KR2 konnten wichtige mechanistische Prinzipien für die Funktionalität des Proteins identifiziert werden. Dazu gehört die direkte Beteiligung spezifischer Strukturmerkmale wie die Aminosäure N112 und/oder der ECL1-Domäne am Ionen-Translokationsweg, sowie das enge Zusammenspiel zwischen dem Retinal und seinem Gegenion D116. Gleichzeitig bot diese IR-Studie einen der ersten mechanistischen Einblicke in den Protonenpump-Photozyklus in KR2, der deutlich weniger erforscht war. In Zusammenarbeit mit dem Arbeitskreis Glaubitz wurden die strukturellen Veränderungen des Chromophors und seiner Umgebung während der verschiedenen Photointermediate mittels DNP-verstärkter Festkörper-NMR und optischer Spektroskopie näher untersucht. Hier trugen zeitaufgelöste IR-Messungen in der HOOP (engl. hydrogen out of plane)-Moden-Region dazu bei, die dynamischen Veränderungen der Chromophorkonfiguration und -Verdrillung zu verfolgen. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass Retinal im O-Intermediat tatsächlich zu seiner all-trans-Konfiguration reisomerisiert wird, aber im Vergleich zu seiner Dunkelzustandskonfiguration deutlich stärker verdreht vorliegt.
Dies wurde auch durch die Ergebnisse im nahen UV-Bereich bestätigt, welcher bei der Charakterisierung von mikrobiellen Rhodopsinen oft ausgelassen wird. Die neu gefundene Signatur erwies sich als SBS (engl. second bright state) der 13-cis-Konfiguration des Retinals, die mit der Bildung des O-Intermediats in KR2 verschwindet. Neben der offensichtlichen Verwendung als spektraler Marker wurde der SBS-Übergang auch bezüglich seiner Anwendbarkeit für optische Kontrollexperimente untersucht. Ähnlich wie beim BLQ (engl. blue light quenching)-Effekt war es möglich, den KR2-Dunkelzustand durch Anwendung von fs-Pulsen im nahen UV - ausgehend von einem photostationären Zustand - zu regenerieren. Durch Variation der Probenbedingungen war es möglich, gezielt K (pH~5) oder M (pH~9) anzusteuern, was sich auch in unterschiedlichen Deaktivierungs-Dynamiken äußerte. Diese Ergebnisse können zusammen mit dem hier vorgeschlagenen experimentellen Konzept als Grundlage für komplexere Multiphotonen-Sequenzen im Zusammenhang optogenetischer Fragestellungen verwendet werden.
Im Gegensatz zu den recht großen und komplexen Photorezeptoren bieten unter anderem PPGs einen feineren Weg, um biochemische Reaktionen gezielt zu steuern und auszulesen. In diesem Zusammenhang sind zwei Eigenschaften von großer Bedeutung: Einerseits die Fähigkeit der PPG, Photonen bestimmter Wellenlängen zu absorbieren, und andererseits die Effizienz der gewünschten photochemischen Reaktion. Der letztgenannte Aspekt wurde unter der Hypothese untersucht, dass die Verringerung der konkurrierenden Deaktivierungskanäle in PPGs zu einer höheren Quantenffizienz der Freisetzung führt. Dies wurde an DEACM-basierten Modellverbindungen getestet, die systematisch modifiziert wurden, um verschiedene Deaktivierungsprozesse des angeregten Zustands zu identifizieren. Durch das Hinzufügen eines zusätzlichen sechsgliedrigen Rings wurde die Freisetzungsausbeute im Vergleich zu DEACM um das 2- bis 3-fache erhöht. Dies konnte durch eine weitere Planarisierung des Systems mit einer zusätzlichen Doppelbindung an der C6-Position sogar noch weiter verbessert werden (bis zu einem Faktor von 5-6). Die Anregung des Cumarin-Rückgrats führt zu einem lokal-angeregten Zustand, der sich im Gleichgewicht mit einem Ladungstransferzustand befindet. In Abhängigkeit der lokalen Umgebung, die vor allem durch die Protizität und Polarität des Lösungsmittels bestimmt wird, wird der Ladungstransfercharakter eher stabilisiert oder gar destabilisiert. Die Ladungsverschiebung führt auch zu einer Abschwächung der spaltbaren C-C-Bindung, die eine Voraussetzung für die Freisetzungsreaktion ist. Darüber hinaus wurde gezeigt, dass der mit der Freisetzungsreaktion verbundene zusätzliche Zerfallskanal zu einer mehr als 2-fachen Verringerung der Lebensdauer des angeregten Zustands in den funktionalisierten PPGs führt. Diese Eigenschaft ist ein vielversprechender photophysikalischer Indikator für die Freisetzung der Abgangsgruppe, der durch spektroskopische oder - mit zusätzlicher räumlicher Auflösung - auch durch mikroskopische Techniken wie in der Fluoreszenzlebensdauer-Mikroskopie ausgelesen werden könnte...
The introduction of a trigonal boron atom into a polyaromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) core is an extremely powerful tool to provide organic scaffolds with optoelectronic properties as well as optimal packing in the solid state. However, boron-doped PAHs (B-PAHs) often display low processability due to their poor solubility. The distortion of the molecular scaffold provides a suitable strategy to enhance the solubility properties of B-PAHs while maintaining good stacking properties and sufficient electronic conjugation.
Extreme distortion of the molecular structure can be achieved in helical-shaped PAHs, namely helicenes which are screw-shaped inherently chiral polycycles, formed by ortho-fused aromatic or heteroaromatic rings. The presence of a helical structure in B-PAHs is expected to strongly influence their physico-chemical properties leading to compounds characterized by peculiar features promising for applications in next generation functional materials. Despite the great potential of this class of compounds, only few examples of borahelicenes have been reported in the literature and those mainly consist of carbohelicene-based structures. However, the considerable structural diversity achievable by introducing different boraheterocycles (oxaborine, borole, borepin) and other heteroaromatic rings (thiophene, furan, pyrrole) into the same helical scaffold, suggests that a large variety of compounds with intriguing features could be accessible via currently unexplored synthetic routes. The design, synthesis, and properties investigation of new boraheterohelicenes (BHHs) is therefore a relevant research topic and is the object of this PhD project, aimed to obtain several BHHs with structural diversity, as well as to study their reactivity, electrochemical and photophysical features for better understanding their potential as building blocks for material science.
The thesis work was carried out in part at the University of Milan in the laboratories of Prof. Emanuela Licandro and in part at the Goethe Universität Frankfurt am Main under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Matthias Wagner, within a co-tutelle programme. Owing to the long-standing expertise of Prof. Licandro group in the synthesis of tetrathia helicenes and that of Prof. Dr. Wagner group in the synthesis of boron-doped PAHs (e.g. boron helicene 4BH; Figure 1), I conceived this PhD project designing a series of thiahelicenes containing one or more B-O bond into the helical scaffold.Tetrathia helicenes, consisting of thiophene and benzene rings fused in an alternating fashion, are configurationally stable heterohelicenes which exist as pair of enantiomers.
This class of molecules is particularly interesting since it merges the properties of oligothiophenes with those of helicenes, giving rise to systems with peculiar electronic and chiroptical properties which make them appealing building blocks for applications in manifold fields of science, including optoelectronics, catalysis and biology.
The introduction of trigonal boron atom into a thiahelicene scaffold gives rise to a novel class of unexplored boron π-conjugated molecules with potentially interesting features.
The present Ph.D. thesis was therefore intended to provide a meaningful contribution in the development of innovative and versatile syntheses of BO-doped tetrathia helicenes as well as the study of their stereochemical and optoelectronic properties to identify potential applications of these systems in material science. The first selected structures containing one or two oxaborine rings in the helical scaffold are shown in figure 2. The presence of the bulky mesityl group at the boron atom is necessary to ensure stability to the molecule.
It is noteworthy that compound 2 is the skeletal isomer of 1, as the direction of the B-O bond is opposite in the two molecules. In the course of the research work, after the evaluation of the photophysical properties of 1, helicene 2 was designed to get information on the structure-property relationship and evaluate how the position of the BO-bond into the helical scaffold can influence the electronic properties of BO-doped thiahelicenes.
This work deals with the theoretical investigation of the vibrationally promoted electronic resonance (VIPER) experiment, the intramolecular energy transfer within a rhodamine-BODIPY antenna system initiated by two-photon excitation and a computational study of the photochemical mechanism of the uncaging of the [7-(dimethylamino)coumarin-4-yl]methyl (DEACM) class of photocages . In continuation to Jan von Cosel’s work, the setup for the theoretical investigation of the VIPER experiment has been extended to two-photon absorption (TPA) also including the first-order Herzberg-Teller (HT) effects which are dependent on changes with respect to nuclear coordinates.
The VIPER experiment constitutes an extended form of two-dimensional infrared (2DIR) spectroscopy with a sequence of infrared (IR) and ultraviolet (UV) or visible (vis) pulses. The molecular system under probe is excited initially by a narrow-band IR pump pulse and then electronically excited by an off-resonant UV/vis pulse. An IR probe pulse is applied afterwards to probe the system and record a 2DIR spectrum in combination with the first pulse. Since the lifetime of the vibrational excitation is very short, the electronic excitation by the UV/vis pulse is used to enlarge the lifetime of the excitation in the molecule and thus enable measurements on a longer timescale. Therefore, it becomes easier to study dynamical photochemical processes on long timescales. In the VIPER experiment with TPA, the UV/vis pulse is replaced by a near-infrared (NIR) pulse which offers an intrinsic 3D resolution, minimzed photodamage, a lower noise level and an increased penetration depth. This makes TPA highly attractive for biological systems among a wide range of other possible applications.
The computation of the vibrationally resolved electronic absorption spectra accounts for the Franck-Condon (FC) contributions which are independent of the nuclear framework as well as the HT effects which are dependent on the nuclear coordinates. The FC contributions are dominant for electronically-allowed transitions whereas HT contributions could be important for weakly-allowed or forbidden transitions. Laying emphasis on TPA, the test systems used belong to the category of two-photon active compounds. The initial candidate is dimethylaminonitrodibenzofuran (DMA-NDBF) which has been reported to be a two-photon only caging compound. The other system is a well-known laser dye, a rhodamine derivative of the commercially available rhodamine 101 (Rh101). Rhodamines are also recognized for their excellent TPA characteristics.
The findings for both the test systems show interesting contrasts. The one-photon absorption (OPA) and TPA spectrum together with vibronic couplings present the same lineshape in case of DMA- NDBF and also the HT effects have very weak contributions to the vibronic spectrum. Insignificant HT effects are quite typical for electronically allowed transitions. Overall, the NO2 bending mode exhibits the strongest change in the absorption spectrum upon vibrational pre-excitation, even stronger than in the case of different ring distortion modes that usually show a high VIPER activity. In the case of rhodamine, the vibronic OPA spectrum is pre-dominantly the FC spectrum and the HT couplings have a very weak contribution. The vibronic TPA spectrum is entirely dominated by the HT contributions and hence, the vibrationally resolved TPA spectrum of the rhodamine is a HT-only spectrum. Explanations towards this behaviour have been reported by Milojevich et al. which are holding the change in symmetry of the molecular orbital transitions from the ground to the excited state accountable. No significantly VIPER-active normal modes could be determined owing to the low magnitudes of their dimensionless displacements that are connected to the Huang-Rhys factors. Two ring distortion modes however have been probed but the intensity of their vibrational pre-excitation is observed to be very low.
The other part of this work is concerned with the estimation of the rate of the intramolecular energy transfer within rhodamine-BODIPY dyads. After the investigations on the prospective rhodamine derivatives, the Rho101 derivative shows the highest TPA activity. This linked together with the BODIPY derivative with styryl substituents through an acetylene bond has been probed theoretically as well as experimentally for the excitation energy transfer (EET).
Time-resolved spectroscopic measurements reveal an ultrafast energy transfer process on femtosecond timescales. The theoretical estimation of the EET rates through the Förster theory and the determination of the coupling between the donor and acceptor groups by the transition density cube (TDC) method falls short of the experimental results. Because of this disagreement, quantum dynamics simulations with the multi-layer multi-configuration time-dependent Hartree (ML-MCTDH) method have been performed on an adapted rhodamine-BODIPY molecular dyad which reveal that the energy transfer occurs through transient coherence whose mechanism cannot be described by Förster theory ...