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Xylose, an abundant sugar fraction of lignocellulosic biomass, is a five-carbon skeleton molecule. Since decades, utilization of this sugar has gained much attention and has been in particular focus as a substrate for production of biofuels like ethanol by microbial hosts, including Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In this yeast, xylose is naturally not used as a carbon source, but its utilization could be achieved by metabolic engineering either via the oxidoreductive route or through the isomerase pathway. Both pathways share xylulose as a common intermediate that must be phosphorylated before entering the endogenous metabolism via the non-oxidative pentose phosphate pathway (noxPPP). Besides this, in some bacteria a non-phosphorylating oxidative pathway for xylose degradation exists, known as Weimberg pathway, where a molecule of xylose is converted by a series of enzymes - xylose dehydrogenase (XylB), xylonate dehydratase (XylD), 3-keto-2-deoxy-xylonate dehydratase (XylX) and α-ketoglutarate semialdehyde dehydrogenase (KsaD) - to form α-ketoglutarate (AKG). Besides having several useful properties as a product, AKG could also be used for cell growth as an intermediate of the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. One target of the present study is to establish a functional Weimberg pathway in S. cerevisiae. Previous studies have shown that this task is not trivial, for instance due to the toxicity of xylonate (the first metabolite of the pathway) and the involvement of an iron-sulfur cluster dependent enzyme, the D-xylonate dehydratase. The assembly of iron-sulfur clusters on a heterologous protein in yeast is known to be challenging.
To establish the Weimberg pathway in yeast, the genes xylB, xylD, and xylX were obtained from Caulobacter cresentus and ksaD was from Corynebacterium glutamicum. In a variant, the dehydratase xylD was replaced with orf41 from Arthrobacter nicotinovorans, which is believed to be independent of iron-sulfur clusters. Growth of yeast cells on xylose as a sole carbon source was expected as an indicator of a functional Weimberg pathway. However, the heterologous expression of the codon optimized genes was not sufficient to reach this goal. Due to the complexity of the interactions of the heterologous pathway with the endogenous cellular processes, it was assumed that potential limitations could be overcome by adaptive laboratory evolution, using xylose as a sole source of carbon. Increasing selection pressure was applied on a strain with Weimberg pathway genes integrated into the genome over several generations. As a variant of the evolutionary engineering approach, mutator strains were generated. For this, RAD27 and MSH2 genes were deleted, which are involved in nucleotide excision and mismatch repair mechanisms, respectively. Some of the resulting strains PRY24, PRY25, PRY27 and PRY28 were able grow in xylose as a sole carbon source after evolutionary engineering. As a control, a non-mutator strain PRY19 was also included. Strikingly, only the mutator strains were able to consume xylose as a sole carbon source, which shows the feasibility of the approach.
In addition to the mutator strain strategy, a further approach employed in the present study was the simultaneous expression of the Weimberg pathway in the cytosol and mitochondria. This was based on the reasoning that the iron-sulfur cluster biogenesis on XylD may be improved in the organelle and that the AKG is an intermediate of the TCA cycle. In the strain AHY02, all enzymes of the pathway were tagged with mitochondrial targeting signals in addition to a full cytosolically localized pathway. The localization of the mitochondrial variants was confirmed by fluorescence microscopy. Together with AHY02, CEN.PK2-1C wild type strain was also included as a control for evolution. When a selection pressure on xylose was applied, both strains - AHY02 and CEN.PK2-1C - were able to grow in the course of evolution. Deletion of the xylulokinase (XKS1) gene was found to be detrimental for both evolved strains in xylose-containing media. This suggests that the evolution of the endogenous oxidoreductive and noxPPP genes is responsible for growth of the evolved cells. For the evolved strain AHY02, it could also be possible that the Weimberg pathway genes supported to growth in addition to the oxidoreductive route. To elucidate the underlying molecular mechanisms, genome sequencing and reverse engineering approaches would be necessary in future.
In addition to screening for growth on xylose as a sole carbon source, a less stringent screening system was created to examine even a minor flux of xylose towards AKG. For this, all genes necessary for conversion of isocitrate to AKG where deleted, yielding a glutamate auxotrophic strain. In this system, the cells can grow on other carbon sources, whereas xylose is only provided as a source of AKG for the synthesis of glutamate...
Identification of new natural products from nematode-associated bacteria using mass spectrometry
(2023)
This work aims to find unknown natural products produced by bacteria, that live in close association with nematodes and to elucidate their structure by using mass spectrometry.
The first chapter of this work is dedicated to the detection of hitherto unknown natural products by using a metabolomics approach and subsequent structure elucidation of said compounds. This chapter includes metabolomics analysis of Xenorhabdus szentirmaii wild type and knockout mutants, overproduction of the target compound, identification of derivatives from other strains and MS based structure elucidation.
The second and third chapters are about natural products that protect C. elegans from B. thuringiensis infections.
The second chapter deals with natural products that protect the nematode host without killing the pathogen. I deployed molecular biology methods to generate deletion and overproduction strains of a target compound, identified it via LC-MS/MS analysis and used LC-MS/MS and lipidomics to analyse the chemical properties of the active compound.
The third chapter aims at finding natural products, which are produced by Pseudomonas strains MYb11 and MYb12, respectively. These natural products display the ability to protect C. elegans by killing B. thuringiensis. I identified said compounds via fractionation and subsequent bioactivity testing. After identification, I generated production strains of the target compounds and elucidated the structure of the bioactive derivative.
The last chapter deals with the structure elucidation of peptides produced by an unusual GameXPeptide synthetase in Xenorhabdus miraniensis. I analysed producer strains of GameXPeptides using LC-MS and elucidated the structural differences between the known GameXPeptides, produced by P. luminescens TT01, and the unusual ones produced by X. miraniensis.
Bacterial biosynthetic assembly lines, such as non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPS) and polyketide synthases, are often subject of synthetic biology – because they produce a variety of natural products invaluable for modern pharmacotherapy. Acquiring the ability to engineer these biosynthetic assembly lines allows the production of artificial non-ribosomal peptides (NRP), polyketides, and hybrids thereof with new or improved properties. However, traditional bioengineering approaches have suffered for decades from their very limited applicability and, unlike combinatorial chemistry, are stigmatized as inefficient because they cannot be linked to the high-throughput screening platforms of the pharmaceutical industry. Although combinatorial chemistry can generate new molecules cheaper, faster, and in greater numbers than traditional natural product discovery and bioengineering approaches, it does not meet current medical needs because it covers only a limited biologically relevant chemical space. Hence, methods for high-throughput generation of new natural product-like compound libraries could provide a new avenue towards the identification of new lead compounds. To this end, prior to this work, we introduced an artificial synthetic NRPS type, referred to as type S NRPS, to provide a first-of-its-kind bicombinatorial approach to parallelized high-throughput NRP library generation. However, a bottleneck of these first two generations of type S NRPS was a significant drop in production yields. To address this issue, we applied an iterative optimization process that enabled titer increases of up to 55-fold compared to the non-optimized equivalents, restoring them to wild-type levels and beyond.
Non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) are the origin of a wide range of natural products, including many clinically used drugs. Engineering of these often giant biosynthetic machineries to produce novel non-ribosomal peptides (NRPs) at high titre is an ongoing challenge. Here we describe a strategy to functionally combine NRPS fragments of Gram-negative and -positive origin, synthesising novel peptides at titres up to 290 mg l-1. Extending from the recently introduced definition of eXchange Units (XUs), we inserted synthetic zippers (SZs) to split single protein NRPSs into up to three independently expressed and translated polypeptide chains. These synthetic type of NRPS (type S) enables easier access to engineering, overcomes cloning limitations, and provides a simple and rapid approach to building peptide libraries via the combination of different NRPS subunits.
Adhesion to host cells is the first and most crucial step in infections with pathogenic Gram negative bacteria and is often mediated by trimeric autotransporter adhesins (TAAs). TAA-producing bacteria are the causative agent of many human diseases and TAA targeted anti-adhesive compounds might counteract such bacterial infections. The modularly structured Bartonella adhesin A (BadA) is one of the best characterised TAAs and serves as an attractive adhesin to study the domain-function relationship of TAAs during infection. BadA is a major virulence factor of B. henselae and is essential for the initial attachment to host cells via adhesion to extracellular matrix proteins. B. henselae is the causative agent of cat scratch disease and adheres to fibronectin using its long BadA fibres. The life cycle of this pathogen, with alternating host conditions, drives evolutionary and host-specific adaptations.
Human, feline, and laboratory adapted B. henselae isolates display genomic and phenotypic differences. By analysing the genomes of eight B. henselae strains using long-read sequencing, a variable genomic badA island with a diversified and highly repetitive badA gene flanked by badA pseudogenes was identified. Moreover, numerous conserved flanking genes were characterised, however, their influence on the regulation of badA expression and modification remains to be explored. It seems that B. henselae G 5436 is the evolutionary ancestor of the other B. henselae strains analysed in this work. The diversity of the badA island among the B. henselae strains indicates that the downstream badA-like domain region might be used as a ‘toolbox’ for rearrangements in the badA gene. Overall, it is suggested that badA-domain duplications, insertions, and/or deletions are the result of active phase variation via site-specific recombination and contribute to rapid host adaptation in the scope of pathogenicity, immune evasion, and/or enhanced long-term colonisation.
The model strain B. henselae Marseille expresses a badA gene that includes 30 repetitive neck/stalk domains, each consisting of several predicted structural motifs. To further elucidate the motif sequences that mediate fibronectin binding, various modified badA constructs were generated. Their ability to bind fibronectin was assessed via whole-cell ELISA and fluorescence microscopy. In conclusion, it is suggested that BadA adheres to fibronectin in a cumulative fashion with quick saturation via unpaired β-strands appearing in structural motifs present in BadA neck/stalk domains 19, 27, and other homologous domains. Furthermore, antibodies targeting a 15-mer amino acid sequence in the DALL motif of BadA neck/stalk domain 27 were able to reduce fibronectin binding of the B. henselae mutant strain S27. Moreover, this DALL motif sequence is conserved in the genome of all analysed B. henselae strains. The identification of common binding motifs between BadA and fibronectin supports the development of new anti-adhesive compounds that might inhibit the initial adherence of B. henselae and other TAA-producing pathogens during infection.
mRNA localization to subcellular compartments has been reported across all kingdoms of life and it is generally believed to promote asymmetric protein synthesis and localization. In striking contrast to previous observations, we show that in S. cerevisiae the B-type cyclin CLB2 mRNA is localized and translated in the yeast bud, while the Clb2 protein, a key regulator of mitosis progression, is concentrated in the mother nucleus. Using single-molecule RNA imaging in fixed (smFISH) and living cells (MS2 system), we show that the CLB2 mRNA is transported to the yeast bud by the She2-She3 complex, via an mRNA ZIP-code situated in the coding sequence. In CLB2 mRNA localization mutants, Clb2 protein synthesis in the bud is decreased resulting in changes in cell cycle distribution and genetic instability. Altogether, we propose that CLB2 mRNA localization acts as a sensor for bud development to couple cell growth and cell cycle progression, revealing a novel function for mRNA localization.
Deviance detection describes an increase of neural response strength caused by a stimulus with a low probability of occurrence. This ubiquitous phenomenon has been reported for multiple species, from subthalamic areas to auditory cortex. While cortical deviance detection has been well characterised by a range of studies covering neural activity at population level (mismatch negativity, MMN) as well as at cellular level (stimulus-specific adaptation, SSA), subcortical deviance detection has been studied mainly on cellular level in the form of SSA. Here, we aim to bridge this gap by using noninvasively recorded auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) to investigate deviance detection at population level in the lower stations of the auditory system of a hearing specialist: the bat Carollia perspicillata. Our present approach uses behaviourally relevant vocalisation stimuli that are closer to the animals' natural soundscape than artificial stimuli used in previous studies that focussed on subcortical areas. We show that deviance detection in ABRs is significantly stronger for echolocation pulses than for social communication calls or artificial sounds, indicating that subthalamic deviance detection depends on the behavioural meaning of a stimulus. Additionally, complex physical sound features like frequency- and amplitude-modulation affected the strength of deviance detection in the ABR. In summary, our results suggest that at population level, the bat brain can detect different types of deviants already in the brainstem. This shows that subthalamic brain structures exhibit more advanced forms of deviance detection than previously known.
As abundant carbohydrates in renewable feedstocks, such as pectin-rich and lignocellulosic hydrolysates, the pentoses arabinose and xylose are regarded as important substrates for production of biofuels and chemicals by engineered microbial hosts. Their efficient transport across the cellular membrane is a prerequisite for economically viable fermentation processes. Thus, there is a need for transporter variants exhibiting a high transport rate of pentoses, especially in the presence of glucose, another major constituent of biomass-based feedstocks. Here, we describe a variant of the galactose permease Gal2 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Gal2N376Y/M435I), which is fully insensitive to competitive inhibition by glucose, but, at the same time, exhibits an improved transport capacity for xylose compared to the wildtype protein. Due to this unique property, it significantly reduces the fermentation time of a diploid industrial yeast strain engineered for efficient xylose consumption in mixed glucose/xylose media. When the N376Y/M435I mutations are introduced into a Gal2 variant resistant to glucose-induced degradation, the time necessary for the complete consumption of xylose is reduced by approximately 40%. Moreover, Gal2N376Y/M435I confers improved growth of engineered yeast on arabinose. Therefore, it is a valuable addition to the toolbox necessary for valorization of complex carbohydrate mixtures.
Cyclophilins, or immunophilins, are proteins found in many organisms including bacteria, plants and humans. Most of them display peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase activity, and play roles as chaperones or in signal transduction. Here, we show that cyclophilin anaCyp40 from the cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 is enzymatically active, and seems to be involved in general stress responses and in assembly of photosynthetic complexes. The protein is associated with the thylakoid membrane and interacts with phycobilisome and photosystem components. Knockdown of anacyp40 leads to growth defects under high-salt and high-light conditions, and reduced energy transfer from phycobilisomes to photosystems. Elucidation of the anaCyp40 crystal structure at 1.2-Å resolution reveals an N-terminal helical domain with similarity to PsbQ components of plant photosystem II, and a C-terminal cyclophilin domain with a substrate-binding site. The anaCyp40 structure is distinct from that of other multi-domain cyclophilins (such as Arabidopsis thaliana Cyp38), and presents features that are absent in single-domain cyclophilins.
The interaction of microplastics with freshwater biota and their interaction with other stressors is still not very well understood. Therefore, we investigated the ingestion, excretion and toxicity of microplastics in the freshwater gastropod Lymnaea stagnalis.
MP ingestion was analyzed as tissues levels in L. stagnalis after 6–96 h of exposure to 5–90 μm spherical polystyrene (PS) microplastics. To understand the excretion, tissue levels were determined after 24 h of exposure followed by a 12 h–7 d depuration period. To assess the toxicity, snails were exposed for 28 d to irregular PS microplastics (<63 μm, 6.4–100,000 particles mL−1), both alone and in combination with copper as additional stressor. To compare the toxicity of natural and synthetic particles, we also included diatomite particles. Microplastics ingestion and excretion significantly depended on the particle size and the exposure/depuration duration. An exposure to irregular PS had no effect on survival, reproduction, energy reserves and oxidative stress. However, we observed slight effects on immune cell phagocytosis. Exposure to microplastics did not exacerbate the reproductive toxicity of copper. In addition, there was no pronounced difference between the effects of microplastics and diatomite. The tolerance towards microplastics may originate from an adaptation of L. stagnalis to particle-rich environments or a general stress resilience. In conclusion, despite high uptake rates, PS fragments do not appear to be a relevant stressor for stress tolerant freshwater gastropods considering current environmental levels of microplastics.
Functional genomics studies in model organisms and human cell lines provided important insights into gene functions and their context-dependent role in genetic circuits. However, our functional understanding of many of these genes and how they combinatorically regulate key biological processes, remains limited. To enable the SpCas9-dependent mapping of gene-gene interactions in human cells, we established 3Cs multiplexing for the generation of combinatorial gRNA libraries in a distribution-unbiased manner and demonstrate its robust performance. The optimal number for combinatorial hit calling was 16 gRNA pairs and the skew of a library’s distribution was identified as a critical parameter dictating experimental scale and data quality. Our approach enabled us to investigate 247,032 gRNA-pairs targeting 12,736 gene-interactions in human autophagy. We identified novel genes essential for autophagy and provide experimental evidence that gene-associated categories of phenotypic strengths exist in autophagy. Furthermore, circuits of autophagy gene interactions reveal redundant nodes driven by paralog genes. Our combinatorial 3Cs approach is broadly suitable to investigate unexpected gene-interaction phenotypes in unperturbed and diseased cell contexts.
Die kontinuierliche Messung des CO2-Gaswechsels homogener Sedimente einzelliger Grünalgen hat ergeben, daß das Kohlendioxyd während der ersten Belichtungsphase zunächst an einen primären, in den verdunkelten Zellen bereits vorhandenen CO2-Acceptor (AI) angelagert wird. AI ist nur im Licht zur Aufnahme und lockeren Bindung von Kohlendioxyd befähigt und gibt die während kurzer Lichtperioden (4-30 sec) aufgenommene CO2-Menge in der anschließenden Dunkelperiode sehr schnell wieder ab. Im Verlauf längerer Belichtungszeiten (> 30 sec) übergibt AI das locker gebundene Kohlendioxyd an den inzwischen in zunehmender Konzentration gebildeten CO2-Acceptor des Calvin - Zyklus (Ribulosediphosphat = AII). Die mit der Aufnahme und lockeren Bindung von Kohlendioxyd an den aktivierten Acceptor AI und der CO2-Weitergabe an AII zusammenhängenden Übergangserscheinungen werden eingehend diskutiert.
The change in allele frequencies within a population over time represents a fundamental process of evolution. By monitoring allele frequencies, we can analyze the effects of natural selection and genetic drift on populations. To efficiently track time-resolved genetic change, large experimental or wild populations can be sequenced as pools of individuals sampled over time using high-throughput genome sequencing (called the Evolve & Resequence approach, E&R). Here, we present a set of experiments using hundreds of natural genotypes of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana to showcase the power of this approach to study rapid evolution at large scale. First, we validate that sequencing DNA directly extracted from pools of flowers from multiple plants -- organs that are relatively consistent in size and easy to sample -- produces comparable results to other, more expensive state-of-the-art approaches such as sampling and sequencing of individual leaves. Sequencing pools of flowers from 25-50 individuals at ∼40X coverage recovers genome-wide frequencies in diverse populations with accuracy r > 0.95. Secondly, to enable analyses of evolutionary adaptation using E&R approaches of plants in highly replicated environments, we provide open source tools that streamline sequencing data curation and calculate various population genetic statistics two orders of magnitude faster than current software. To directly demonstrate the usefulness of our method, we conducted a two-year outdoor evolution experiment with A. thaliana to show signals of rapid evolution in multiple genomic regions. We demonstrate how these laboratory and computational Pool-seq-based methods can be scaled to study hundreds of populations across many climates.
The entire chemical modification repertoire of yeast ribosomal RNAs and the enzymes responsible for it have recently been identified. Nonetheless, in most cases the precise roles played by these chemical modifications in ribosome structure, function and regulation remain totally unclear. Previously, we demonstrated that yeast Rrp8 methylates m1A645 of 25S rRNA in yeast. Here, using mung bean nuclease protection assays in combination with quantitative RP-HPLC and primer extension, we report that 25S/28S rRNA of S. pombe, C. albicans and humans also contain a single m1A methylation in the helix 25.1. We characterized nucleomethylin (NML) as a human homolog of yeast Rrp8 and demonstrate that NML catalyzes the m1A1322 methylation of 28S rRNA in humans. Our in vivo structural probing of 25S rRNA, using both DMS and SHAPE, revealed that the loss of the Rrp8-catalyzed m1A modification alters the conformation of domain I of yeast 25S rRNA causing translation initiation defects detectable as halfmers formation, likely because of incompetent loading of 60S on the 43S-preinitiation complex. Quantitative proteomic analysis of the yeast Δrrp8 mutant strain using 2D-DIGE, revealed that loss of m1A645 impacts production of specific set of proteins involved in carbohydrate metabolism, translation and ribosome synthesis. In mouse, NML has been characterized as a metabolic disease-associated gene linked to obesity. Our findings in yeast also point to a role of Rrp8 in primary metabolism. In conclusion, the m1A modification is crucial for maintaining an optimal 60S conformation, which in turn is important for regulating the production of key metabolic enzymes.
The entire chemical modification repertoire of yeast ribosomal RNAs and the enzymes responsible for it have recently been identified. Nonetheless, in most cases the precise roles played by these chemical modifications in ribosome structure, function and regulation remain totally unclear. Previously, we demonstrated that yeast Rrp8 methylates m1A645 of 25S rRNA in yeast. Here, using mung bean nuclease protection assays in combination with quantitative RP-HPLC and primer extension, we report that 25S/28S rRNA of S. pombe, C. albicans and humans also contain a single m1A methylation in the helix 25.1. We characterized nucleomethylin (NML) as a human homolog of yeast Rrp8 and demonstrate that NML catalyzes the m1A1322 methylation of 28S rRNA in humans. Our in vivo structural probing of 25S rRNA, using both DMS and SHAPE, revealed that the loss of the Rrp8-catalyzed m1A modification alters the conformation of domain I of yeast 25S rRNA causing translation initiation defects detectable as halfmers formation, likely because of incompetent loading of 60S on the 43S-preinitiation complex. Quantitative proteomic analysis of the yeast Δrrp8 mutant strain using 2D-DIGE, revealed that loss of m1A645 impacts production of specific set of proteins involved in carbohydrate metabolism, translation and ribosome synthesis. In mouse, NML has been characterized as a metabolic disease-associated gene linked to obesity. Our findings in yeast also point to a role of Rrp8 in primary metabolism. In conclusion, the m1A modification is crucial for maintaining an optimal 60S conformation, which in turn is important for regulating the production of key metabolic enzymes.
UV inactivated KAPPA can be reactivated like other temperate phages by plating on uvirradiated host cells (indicator). The capacity of the indicator Serratia HY for multiplication of unirradiated KAPPA was about 0.1% survivors (colony formers). The induction of clear plaque (c·) mutants by irradiating extracellular KAPPA and plating on untreated indicator can be increased further about 2 to 4 times by using UV irradiated indicator. The increase of the number of c mutants under the latter conditions, with increasing UV dose given to the phage, was never a firstorder reaction. The highest frequency of c mutants obtained was about 4.5 per cent. Plating of unirradiated KAPPA on irradiated indicator (lowest survival fraction was 0.01%) never increased the spontaneous mutation rate to c. Two c mutants studied in detail belong to two different cistrons as shown in a complementation test (map distance about 5.3%). Only one of both was revertible to the phenotype c+ spontaneously and with a higher rate by UV. However, as shown in crossing experiments with the wild type, the backmutants do not have the original genotype but originated from mutations in at least two different intragenic suppressor loci; the map distances between them and the original c mutation were 0.64% and 0.13 per cent. Host range (h) and virulent (v) mutants could not be induced by irradiation of the free phage and plating on untreated indicator. This indicates that the UV induced high mutability of the c loci in KAPPA represents an exceptional case of behavior (UV-hot spot). Some unstable h mutants could be isolated by plating irradiated phage on irradiated indicator.
Vampire bats are the only mammals that feed exclusively on blood. To uncover genomic changes associated with this dietary adaptation, we generated a haplotype-resolved genome of the common vampire bat and screened 27 bat species for genes that were specifically lost in the vampire bat lineage. We found previously unknown gene losses that relate to reduced insulin secretion (FFAR1 and SLC30A8), limited glycogen stores (PPP1R3E), and a unique gastric physiology (CTSE). Other gene losses likely reflect the biased nutrient composition (ERN2 and CTRL) and distinct pathogen diversity of blood (RNASE7) and predict the complete lack of cone-based vision in these strictly nocturnal bats (PDE6H and PDE6C). Notably, REP15 loss likely helped vampire bats adapt to high dietary iron levels by enhancing iron excretion, and the loss of CYP39A1 could have contributed to their exceptional cognitive abilities. These findings enhance our understanding of vampire bat biology and the genomic underpinnings of adaptations to blood feeding.
In natural environments, background noise can degrade the integrity of acoustic signals, posing a problem for animals that rely on their vocalizations for communication and navigation. A simple behavioral strategy to combat acoustic interference would be to restrict call emissions to periods of low-amplitude or no noise. Using audio playback and computational tools for the automated detection of over 2.5 million vocalizations from groups of freely vocalizing bats, we show that bats (Carollia perspicillata) can dynamically adapt the timing of their calls to avoid acoustic jamming in both predictably and unpredictably patterned noise. This study demonstrates that bats spontaneously seek out temporal windows of opportunity for vocalizing in acoustically crowded environments, providing a mechanism for efficient echolocation and communication in cluttered acoustic landscapes.
One Sentence Summary: Bats avoid acoustic interference by rapidly adjusting the timing of vocalizations to the temporal pattern of varying noise.
Die Einwirkung von UV-Strahlen (254 mµ) auf Bakterien und auf DNS führt zur Bildung einer Reihe von Photoprodukten. Thymin bildet ein Thymin-Dimeres und mindestens zwei weitere Photoprodukte. Aus Cytosin entstehen Uracil und ebenfalls mindestens zwei weitere Photoprodukte. Das Thymin-Dimere läßt sich durch Bestrahlung mit UV-Licht in wäßriger Lösung zu 87% wieder in Thymin zurückverwandeln. Bei den übrigen Photoprodukten gelingt diese Reaktion nicht.
Die durch UV-Strahlen verursachten biologischen Schäden in der Bakterienzelle dürften weitgehend auf die Bildung von dimerem Thymin zurückzuführen sein. Demgegenüber sind die übrigen Photoprodukte, die erst bei höherer UV-Dosis auftreten, nur von untergeordneter biologischer Bedeutung.
Die von der Strahlendosis abhängige Bildung der Thymin-Photoprodukte in Zellen von E. coli wurde quantitativ untersucht.
Eine Denaturierung der nativen DNS durch Erhitzen oder durch Abspalten der Purine zur Apurinsäure hat zur Folge, daß die Bildung des Thymin-Dimeren und eines der übrigen Thymin-Photoprodukte besonders stark begünstigt wird.
Auf der Oberfläche von Erythrozyten, Thrombozyten und Neutrophilen befinden sich mehrere hundert verschiedene polymorphe, ungekoppelt vererbte Blutgruppenantigene. Dementsprechend birgt jede Bluttransfusion das Risiko einer Immunisierung gegen fremde Blutgruppenmerkmale. Auch während der Schwangerschaft können aufgrund väterlich vererbter Antigene Alloantikörper induziert werden. Deshalb muss das Blut vor jeder Transfusion oder während einer Schwangerschaft auf das Vorhandensein irregulärer erythrozytärer Antikörper untersucht werden. Dabei greifen die aktuellen diagnostischen Verfahren auf primäre, stabilisierte Testerythrozyten von Blutspendern zurück, deren relevante Blutgruppenantigene bekannt sind. Antikörperspezifitäten können anhand von Agglutinationsreaktionen der Testzellen mit dem zu untersuchenden Patientenplasma auf ein oder mehrere Antigene zurückgeführt werden. Ist jedoch ein Antikörper gegen ein häufiges, ein hochfrequentes oder ein nicht-polymorphes, ubiquitäres Antigen gerichtet, kann in Ermangelung Antigen-negativer Testzellen keine adäquate Diagnostik gewährleistet, die Verträglichkeit der Transfusion also nicht definitiv sichergestellt werden. Auch der medizinische Einsatz therapeutischer Antikörper, welche Antigene adressieren, die auch auf Erythrozyten exprimiert werden, führt zunehmend zu Problemen. Tests auf granulozytäre Antikörper sind mangelhaft bezüglich ihrer Robustheit, besitzen eine unzureichende Auflösung und sind zudem meist zeitaufwändig und daher teuer. Antikörper gegen humane Plättchenantigene spielen insbesondere in der Schwangerschaft eine Rolle; sie vermögen bei Neugeborenen thrombozytopenische Blutungen bis hin zu massiven Hirnblutungen zu verursachen, die zu schweren Entwicklungsstörungen führen können. Bisher erfolgt jedoch mangels geeigneter Reagenzien keine standardisierte pränatale Untersuchung auf thrombozytäre Antikörper. In dieser Arbeit wurde ein neuartiges Verfahren für die Identifikation und Differenzierung irregulärer Blutgruppenantikörper etabliert, welches auf gentechnisch hergestellten, xenogenen Testzellen basiert, die einzelne definierte humane Blutgruppenantigene auf ihrer Oberfläche präsentieren. Die nicht humanen Zellen co exprimieren Fluorochrome, anhand derer Antikörper-markierte Testzellen durchflusszytometrisch voneinander unterscheidbar sind. Weiterhin können die generierten Testzellen zur Depletion von Antikörpern aus polyagglutinierenden Plasmen unter Erhalt der anderen Antikörperspezifitäten verwendet werden. Diese Technologie könnte die konventionelle Diagnostik erheblich erleichtern und bietet zudem die Möglichkeit, therapeutische Antikörper (wie z. B. anti-CD38, anti CD47, etc.), die häufig zu Interferenzen mit der Routinediagnostik führen, spezifisch prädiagnostisch aus Patientenproben zu entfernen.
Hyperparasitic fungi on black mildews (Meliolales, Ascomycota) : hidden diversity in the tropics
(2022)
Hyperparasitism on plant-parasitic fungi is a widespread but rarely studied phenomenon. Here, for the first time, we compile in a checklist information provided by peer-reviewed literature for fungi growing on colonies of black mildews (Meliolales, Ascomycota), a species-rich group of tropical and subtropical plant-parasitic microfungi. The checklist contains information on 189 species of contact-biotrophic microfungi in 82 genera. They belong to seven morphological groups: dematiaceous hyphomycetes, moniliaceous hyphomycetes, pycnidioid, perithecioid, catathecioid, and apothecioid fungi. By the fact that species accumulation curves do not reach saturation for any tropical country, it is evident that the knowledge of the diversity of hyperparasitic fungi on Meliolales is incomplete. A network analysis of records of hyperparasitic fungi, their host fungi and host plants shows that genera of hyperparasitic fungi are generalists concerning genera of Meliolales. However, most species of hyperparasitic fungi are restricted to meliolalean hosts. In addition to hyperparasitic fungi, diverse further microorganisms use meliolalean colonies as ecological niche. Systematic positions of most species are unknown because DNA sequence data are lacking for species of fungi hyperparasitic on Meliolales. We discuss the specific challenges of obtaining DNA sequence data from hyperparasitic fungi. In order to better understand the diversity, evolution and biology of hyperparasitic fungi, it is necessary to increase sampling efforts and to undertake further morphological, molecular, and ecological studies.
The European Beech is the dominant climax tree in most regions of Central Europe and valued for its ecological versatility and hardwood timber. Even though a draft genome has been published recently, higher resolution is required for studying aspects of genome architecture and recombination. Here, we present a chromosome-level assembly of the more than 300 year-old reference individual, Bhaga, from the Kellerwald-Edersee National Park (Germany). Its nuclear genome of 541 Mb was resolved into 12 chromosomes varying in length between 28 and 73 Mb. Multiple nuclear insertions of parts of the chloroplast genome were observed, with one region on chromosome 11 spanning more than 2 Mb which fragments up to 54,784 bp long and covering the whole chloroplast genome were inserted randomly. Unlike in Arabidopsis thaliana, ribosomal cistrons are present in Fagus sylvatica only in four major regions, in line with FISH studies. On most assembled chromosomes, telomeric repeats were found at both ends, while centromeric repeats were found to be scattered throughout the genome apart from their main occurrence per chromosome. The genome-wide distribution of SNPs was evaluated using a second individual from Jamy Nature Reserve (Poland). SNPs, repeat elements and duplicated genes were unevenly distributed in the genomes, with one major anomaly on chromosome 4. The genome presented here adds to the available highly resolved plant genomes and we hope it will serve as a valuable basis for future research on genome architecture and for understanding the past and future of European Beech populations in a changing climate.
A method which serves to isolate the gonads from the sea cucumber (Holothuria polii) is outlined. Criteria that will secure a well determined status of maturity of the sperm are given. From this preparation a deoxyribonucleic acid is made, purified and analysed. It is concluded that the analytical data are in compliance with the theory of Crick and Watson. The ratio of Moles for this DNA while its nitrogen to phosphorus ratio on weight basis is 1,67.
Specialized surveillance mechanisms are essential to maintain the genetic integrity of germ cells, which are not only the source of all somatic cells but also of the germ cells of the next generation. DNA damage and chromosomal aberrations are, therefore, not only detrimental for the individual but affect the entire species. In oocytes, the surveillance of the structural integrity of the DNA is maintained by the p53 family member TAp63α. The TAp63α protein is highly expressed in a closed and inactive state and gets activated to the open conformation upon the detection of DNA damage, in particular DNA double-strand breaks. To understand the cellular response to DNA damage that leads to the TAp63α triggered oocyte death we have investigated the RNA transcriptome of oocytes following irradiation at different time points. The analysis shows enhanced expression of pro-apoptotic and typical p53 target genes such as CDKn1a or Mdm2, concomitant with the activation of TAp63α. While DNA repair genes are not upregulated, inflammation-related genes become transcribed when apoptosis is initiated by activation of STAT transcription factors. Furthermore, comparison with the transcriptional profile of the ΔNp63α isoform from other studies shows only a minimal overlap, suggesting distinct regulatory programs of different p63 isoforms.
Die akute myeloische Leukämie (AML) ist eine aggressive Erkrankung des Knochenmarks, welche die Hämatopoese beeinträchtigt und zu Knochenmarksversagen führt. Trotz des Fortschritts in der AML-Therapie bleibt die Prognose für die meisten Patienten schlecht, sodass neue Therapieansätze für die Behandlung dringend benötigt werden. Autophagie, ein kataboler Abbauprozess von zellulären Komponenten, ist nachweislich an der Entstehung von AML beteiligt. Als zentraler Regulator von Zellüberleben, Homöostase und Stoffwechsel, dient die Autophagie als Nährstoffquelle durch die Wiederverwertung von Makromolekülen während begrenzter Energieversorgung. AML-Zellen benötigen ein konstantes Nährstoff- und Energieniveau, um ihre Vermehrung aufrechtzuerhalten. Dies wird durch eine Umstellung von Stoffwechselwegen, insbesondere des mitochondrialen Stoffwechsels einschließlich der oxidativen Phosphorylierung (OXPHOS) und des Tricarbonsäurezyklus (TCA), erreicht.
Mehrere Studien haben die Hemmung der Autophagie für die Behandlung von Krebs als vielversprechenden Ansatz vorgestellt. Doch eine Monotherapie mit Autophagie-Inhibitoren erzielte nur eine geringfügige Wirksamkeit. Eine mögliche Erklärung hierfür ist die Entstehung von Kompensationsmechanismen, die zum Ausgleich der Autophagie-Hemmung in Krebszellen entstehen. Bis heute sind diese Kompensationsmechanismen kaum untersucht. Ziel dieser Arbeit ist es, ein geeignetes Autophagie-Gen zu identifizieren, mit dem sich die Rolle der Autophagie-Hemmung für das Überleben von AML-Zellen untersuchen lässt. Zusätzlich sollen die kompensatorischen Mechanismen, die durch die Autophagie-Hemmung in AML-Zellen entstehen können, untersucht werden, um neue metabolische Angriffspunkte zu identifizieren, die für Kombinationstherapien genutzt werden können.
Zu Beginn der Arbeit wurde ein gezielter CRISPR/Cas9 Screen in zwei humanen AML-Zelllinien durchgeführt, um Autophagie-Gene zu identifizieren, deren Verlust eine Proliferationsstörung in AML-Zellen verursacht, welche überwunden werden kann. Validierungsexperimente zeigten, dass der Verlust von ATG3 das Zellwachstum signifikant verminderte. Außerdem zeigte die Messung des Autophagie-Fluxes, dass der Verlust von ATG3 die Autophagie stark beeinträchtigte. Dies wurde durch eine Western-Blot-Analyse, die eine beeinträchtigte LC3-Lipidierung zeigte, und durch eine Immunfluoreszenzanalyse der Autophagosomen-Bildung mittels konfokaler Mikroskopie, die eine geringere Anzahl von Autophagosomen in ATG3-defizienten Zellen ergab, bestätigt. Deshalb wurde der Knockdown von ATG3 in AML Zellen verwendet, um die Mechanismen, die zum Ausgleichen der Autophagie-Hemmung entstehen, zu untersuchen. Zuerst wurde die Zellproliferation in fünf verschiedenen AML Zelllinien über sieben Tage betrachtet. In allen Zellenlinien führte der Verlust von ATG3 mittels small hairpin RNA zu verminderter Zellproliferation. Diese Ergebnisse zeigen die wichtige Rolle von ATG3 in der Autophagie und dass Autophagie-Hemmung durch ATG3-Verlust das Wachstum von AML-Zellen beeinträchtigt.
Da der Verlust von ATG3 die Proliferation von AML-Zellen beeinträchtigte, wurde eine Zellzyklusanalyse durchgeführt. Eine reduzierte S-Phase bestätigte die verminderte Proliferation in ATG3-depletierten AML-Zellen, doch der Zellzyklus war grundsätzlich nicht gestoppt. Darüber hinaus ergab die Analyse der Apoptose, dass diese unter dem Verlust von ATG3 erhöht war, aber etwa 50% der Zellen blieben vital. Diese Beobachtungen deuten darauf hin, dass AML-Zellen trotz des Verlusts der ATG3-abhängigen Autophagie weiter proliferieren können.
Um die Mechanismen zur Kompensation der Autophagie-Hemmung zu untersuchen, wurden die Auswirkungen des ATG3-Verlusts auf die mitochondriale Homöostase untersucht. Die Mitophagie sowie das mitochondriale Membranpotenzial und die Masse unterschieden sich zwischen Kontroll- und ATG3-depletierten AML-Zellen nicht, was darauf hindeutet, dass die mitochondriale Homöostase durch den Verlust von ATG3 nicht beeinträchtigt ist. Als nächstes wurde die mitochondriale Funktion durch Messung des ATP-Spiegels und der OXPHOS untersucht. Die ATP-Level und die OXPHOS waren nach dem Verlust von ATG3 in AML-Zellen erhöht, was auf eine gesteigerte mitochondriale Aktivität bei Autophagie-Defizienz hinweist.
High-temperature tolerant enzymes offer multiple advantages over enzymes from mesophilic organisms for the industrial production of sustainable chemicals due to high specific activities and stabilities towards fluctuations in pH, heat, and organic solvents. The production of molecular hydrogen (H2) is of particular interest because of the multiple uses of hydrogen in energy and chemicals applications, and the ability of hydrogenase enzymes to reduce protons to H2 at a cathode. We examined the activity of Hydrogen-Dependent CO2 Reductase (HDCR) from the thermophilic bacterium Thermoanaerobacter kivui when immobilized in a redox polymer, cobaltocene-functionalized polyallylamine (Cc-PAA), on a cathode for enzyme-mediated H2 formation from electricity. The presence of Cc-PAA increased reductive current density 340-fold when used on an electrode with HDCR at 40 °C, reaching unprecedented current densities of up to 3 mA·cm−2 with minimal overpotential and high faradaic efficiency. In contrast to other hydrogenases, T. kivui HDCR showed substantial reversibility of CO-dependent inactivation, revealing an opportunity for usage in gas mixtures containing CO, such as syngas. This study highlights the important potential of combining redox polymers with novel enzymes from thermophiles for enhanced electrosynthesis.
Untersuchungen über die Redox-Eigenschaften der Haut nach Bestrahlung mit ultraviolettem Licht
(1959)
Eingehendere Untersuchungen über die mit Hilfe der Nadi - Reaktion nachweisbaren erhöhten Oxydationswirkungen an uv-bestrahlten Hautstellen führten zur Feststellung, daß eine Erhöhung der Peroxydase-Wirkung in Verbindung mit Vermehrung der peroxydischen Eigenschaften als Ursache anzusprechen ist. Aktivierung der Tyrosinase im bestrahlten Gebiet wurde sowohl an der albinotischen Mäusehaut als auch bei Froschschwimmhäuten nachgewiesen. Wellenlängen-Abhängigkeit und Bedeutung als Primäreffekt der UV-Strahlen werden diskutiert.
Nach Bestrahlung eines kleinen Bezirkes der Froschschwimmhaut mit verschiedenen ultravioletten Wellenlängen (λ=254 mµ, 280 mµ, 297 mµ, 313 mµ, 366 mµ) wurde Stase in den Kapillaren beobachtet. Die Wirksamkeit der verschiedenen Wellenlängen ist dabei unterschiedlich. Messungen der Durchlässigkeit der Schwimmhaut wurden durchgeführt und erlaubten Schlüsse auf die in das Kapillargebiet hingelangende Strahlung. Während der Bestrahlungen konnten Durchlässigkeits-Veränderungen der Schwimmhaut beobachtet und gemessen werden. Die Ergebnisse werden diskutiert. Histologische Untersuchungen erweiterten das Bild über die Veränderungen im Gewebe durch Strahleneinwirkung.
1. Die Lebensdauer und Entwicklungsfähigkeit unbesamter Seeigeleier in Coffeinlösungen (1 : 250 bis 1 : 2000) ist gegenüber der in normalem Seewasser deutlich verlängert.
2. Das Optimum der Lebensverlängerung liegt etwa bei einer Konzentration von 1 : 1000 bis 1 : 1250.
3. Der Zellkern kann sich unter Coffeineinfluß „aufblähen“. und zwar bis zum 3-fachen seines normalen Umfanges.
4. Das Coffein ruft bei gleichbleibender Zellgröße eine Herabsetzung der Viskosität der Zelloberfläche hervor und ermöglicht bei gallertlosen Eiern, die sich berühren, ein Aneinanderlegen und Abplatten der Eier bis zu Reihen-Eiern und Pflasterbildungen. Derartige Eier können sich nach Zurückbringen in Seewasser und Besamung noch am 4. und 5. Tage zu Plutei aller Normalitäts-Stufen entwickeln.
5. Aus den Reiheneiern können durch Verschmelzen braun gefärbte Riesen-Eier hervorgehen, die nicht mehr entwicklungsfähig, aber gegen Zerfall sehr widerstandsfähig sind.
Epithelial cells enable essential physiological functions, including absorption, morphogenesis, secretion, and transport. To execute these functions, epithelial cells often form three-dimensional shapes that include curved sheets of cells surrounding a pressurized fluid-filled lumen. These three-dimensional tissues (called domes) are essential for organ function, but when they are not working properly, developmental defects, inflammation, and cancer can ensue. Recently, it has been shown that the cells that form domes show active superelasticity on micropatterned plates.
We show here that the immortalized renal proximal tubule epithelial cell line, LLC-PK1, stereotypically forms tubules in 10 days. Tubule formation takes place in 4 stages. When cells are plated on a culture dish, they form a monolayer on the 1st day; on the 3rd day, three-dimensional structures are formed, called domes; and after the 4.5th day, these domes start fusing to begin the transition stage and transit to the tubule stage. At the end of the 10th day, differentiated, elongated, and matured tubes form (Figure 3.1). Therefore, tubule formation is a self-organized, stereotypic morphogenetic program under long-term, unperturbed tissue culture conditions.
We propose that tubulogenesis is a two-step process in proximal tubules by doming and wrapping. The process begins with dome formation, and as the cell layers come together in the transition stage at the edge of the dome, this leads to the formation of the lumen of the eventual tubule. We also found that F-actin provides the mechanical strength during the formation of these three-dimensional structures during tubule formation. To better understand this 4-step process on a molecular level, we performed proteomics of tubule formation to identify the different proteins that play a significant role in proximal tubule development. Importantly, we identified proximal tubule markers like synaptopondin, angiotensin 1-10, collectrin, polycystin 1, and polycystin 2. These proteins play an important role in renal tube formation and differentiation.
Cell division is carried out by highly conserved cyclin-CDK complexes, which phosphorylate various cellular components. Cyclin-CDKs act differently depending on the cell cycle phase and work cooperatively to create DNA replication and cytokinesis. Therefore, we identified that cyclin-B1, marker of proliferation Ki-67, the RAD51 recombinase, and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PNCA) are upregulated in the monolayer stage, and the expression decreases as tubule formation takes place. The proximal tubule reabsorbs 60-65% of the glomerulus filtrate. Therefore, it requires a lot of energy generated by using the fatty acid oxidation (FAO) pathway. In our model, we found FAO expression is higher than that of the other metabolic pathways.
We found expression of an intricate protein network in mitochondria, which we interpret as a sign of mitochondrial homeostasis being vital for the FAO pathway to work. Furthermore, we also identified different types of transporters at each stage of proximal tubule formation, and we could recognize different cytoskeletal components playing a significant role in each stage of proximal tubule formation, for instance, at the monolayer stage, vimentin expression is high, and its expression is reduced as tubules form. Hence, this 2D system, at this step of characterization, seems suitable to use to study differential transport protein expression and how this might relate to physiological functions and syndromes.
Next, we inhibited different transporters using specific inhibitors and analyzed the effect on dome and tubule formation. We identified that Na+/K+ ATPase and vacuolar H+ ATPase play a significant role in the process of epithelial dynamics. Digoxin (a Na+/K+ ATPase inhibitor) treatment inhibits dome and tubule formation. Bafilomycin (a v-ATPase inhibitor) treatment demonstrated a delay in dome and tube formation. Therefore, this study shows that this 2D proximal tubule novel system can be used for screening of pharmacological leads in the context of specific aspects of kidney physiology.
Despite the recent success in growing kidney organoids, they are not well suited to investigate various pathophysiological conditions in vitro for several reasons: They grow in 3D and form a tissue that later needs to be dissected/cleared and stained to investigate pathophysiological changes. Moreover, organoids require complex and expensive protocols for generation and are challenging to use in screening approaches. Therefore, we set out to demonstrate feasibility for our 2D system using normal renal epithelial cells, which are the origin of various pathological conditions, to study pathophysiological conditions.
Due to their sessile nature, plants are constantly exposed to an everchanging environment. When these changes exceed certain limits, they can significantly impact plant growth and development, which, in case of crop plants, has consequences on food security. Exposure to high temperatures causes heat stress (HS), one of the most devastating stresses that plants can face. The survival and recovery from HS are dependent on the activation of the HS response (HSR), a collection of molecular mechanisms conferring HS tolerance by maintaining the cellular homeostasis. Stress responses follow a strictly orchestrated network of signal perception and -transduction, ultimately resulting in an adaptive cellular output. Thereby, the massive reshaping of the transcriptome plays a major part, in which heat stress transcription factors (HSFs) play the key role by inducing the expression of HS-responsive genes, including heat shock proteins and other transcription factors. Additionally, alternative splicing (AS), the selective usage of splice sites, contributes to the rapid adjustment of the transcriptome landscape by producing different mRNA variants from a single gene. Consequently, this results in the reduction of translatable transcripts by nonsense-mediated mRNA-decay or nuclear retention, but also enhances the proteome diversity by allowing the synthesis of protein isoforms with distinct functions. AS thereby modulates the activity of important regulatory factors like HSFA2 in Solanum lycopersicum (tomato). HSFA2 is the key factor of acquired thermotolerance (ATT), which enables the ability to survive a potentially lethal HS through pre-exposure to a preceding mild HS. Temperature-dependent AS leads to the synthesis of two HSFA2 protein variants, whereby inhibition of splicing ensures the synthesis of the stable isoform HSFA2-I that is required for ATT.
Transcriptome analysis of several plant species exposed to HS has highlighted the strong impact of high temperatures on the regulation of pre-mRNA splicing. Despite its importance, little is known about the molecular basis of the AS regulation in plants. Particularly for an economically important crop like tomato, understanding the regulation of HS-sensitive AS will contribute to the description of such an important regulatory mechanism but also might offer new insights for increasing HS resilience. Serine/arginine-rich proteins (SR proteins) are central regulators of constitutive and AS by modulating the splice site selection by the spliceosome. This study describes two members of the RS2Z subfamily of SR proteins in tomato, namely RS2Z35 and RS2Z36, which act as core regulators of AS under HS and consequently as central factors for thermotolerance. This study investigates the interaction of the two RS2Z proteins with the HSFA2 pre-mRNA and provides evidence for their function as splicing repressors in this particular AS event. Thereby, RS2Z proteins play an important role in the HSR by modulating the AS of the key factor of the ATT. Furthermore, based on global transcriptome analysis of knockout mutants of single or both RS2Z genes, it is demonstrated that RS2Z proteins are involved in the splicing of pre-mRNAs of almost 2000 genes. Moreover, RS2Z proteins act as splicing regulators and take part in a large portion of HS-induced AS events, thus playing a broader role in AS regulation. Furthermore, the HS-induced RS2Z36 is involved in basal thermotolerance (BTT), highlighting its importance for the basic HS resilience capacity of tomato. In addition, RNA sequencing demonstrates that RS2Z proteins–especially RS2Z36–regulate the expression of proteins involved in plant immunity. The study thereby provides experimental evidence for the important and essential role of SR proteins for plant thermotolerance and suggests the existence of RS2Z-mediated crossroads of different stress responses.
Auf Grund vergleichender Prüfungen im Riesengebirge, im Schwarzwald und im Allgäu zwischen 1250 und 2220 m Meereshöhe wird nachgewiesen, daß die bisher allein bekannt gewordene Beziehung zwischen Lichtfeld und Chlorophyllgehalt der Art, daß der Farbstoffgehalt mit der Lichtintensität bis zur ökologisch maximalen Strahlung ansteigt, nur für die Angehörigen des photostabilen Reaktionstypus gilt.
Neben diesem ist selbst in frei-sonnigen Pflanzenvereinen alpiner Matten und Felsfluren ein photolabiler Typus weit verbreitet, dessen maximal bestrahlte Sonnenblätter im Verlauf des Sommers im Vergleich zu gleich alten Schattenblättern mäßige bis starke Depressionen des (flächenrelativen) Chlorophyllwertes aufweisen.
Der extrem photostabile ist mit dem extrem photolabilen Reaktionstypus durch alle Übergänge verbunden. Allein die Abstufungen der Resistenz können weder auf das Vorleben in bestimmtem Strahlungsklima bzw. bestimmter Höhenlage, noch auf die Zugehörigkeit zu einem bestimmten ökologischen Verbreitungstypus zurückgeführt werden. Photostabile Tieflandpflanzen wie Silene inflata und Anthyllis vulneraria erweisen sich auch in 2220 m Höhe als photostabil, während viele Alpenpflanzen auch in ihrem natürlichen Verbreitungsgebiet ausgesprochen photolabil angetroffen werden.
In synchronen Vergleichsversuchen aus 1415 m Höhe werden an photolabilen Stauden die Zeitkurven der Veränderungen des Chlorophyllwertes beim Übergang aus diffusem Licht in die Gesamtstrahlung und umgekehrt verfolgt. Während im ersten Fall im Verlauf einer Schönwetterperiode die (bisherigen) Scha-Blätter rasch photochemische Chlorophyllzerstörungen erleiden, erfahren die (bisherigen) So-Blätter im diffusen Licht zur gleichen Zeit eine Zunahme des Chlorophylls.
Es wird die Brauchbarkeit der Wärmeleitfähigkeitsmessung zur Ermittlung des Grundumsatzes geprüft.
Durch Diffusion des Meßgases zu den Hitzdrähten, eine Anordnung, die in der industriellen Meßtechnik häufig Anwendung findet, wird erreicht, daß die Messung weitgehend von der linearen Strömungsgeschwindigkeit unabhängig wird. Die Empfindlichkeit der Sauerstoffbestimmung wird gesteigert durch Erhöhung der Hitzdrahttemperatur. Eine Anordnung zur Bestimmung des Grundumsatzes am Menschen wird beschrieben, die es gestattet, im „offenen System" laufende Messungen durchzuführen. Die laufende Messung“ wird den integrierenden Methoden gegenübergestellt.
Bestrahlung mit UV und UR einschließlich sichtbaren Lichts bedingt bei weißen Mäusen und Hühnern eine Senkung im Gasstoffwechsel von durchschnittlich 25% und im Dauerversuch eine deutliche Herabsetzung des Grundstoffwechsels, während Lichtmangel bei weißen Mäusen den Stoffwechsel erhöht.
Sichtbares Licht, UV oder UR allein bewirken keinen Stoffwechselabfall.
Für die Stoffwechselerniedrigung nach Bestrahlung ist eine bestimmte Kombination von UV und UR notwendig.
Die Wirkung der Bestrahlung beruht mit großer Wahrscheinlichkeit auf einer Senkung des Tonus des Sympathicus und einer Verschiebung der vegetativen Regulationslage zur Vagotonie.
Eigenbestrahlungsversuche (G.) zeigten eine gleiche Senkung des durch Hyperthyreose erhöhten Grundstoffwechsels.
Motivation Expert curation to differentiate between functionally diverged homologs and those that may still share a similar function routinely relies on the visual interpretation of domain architecture changes. However, the size of contemporary data sets integrating homologs from hundreds to thousands of species calls for alternate solutions. Scoring schemes to evaluate domain architecture similarities can help to automatize this procedure, in principle. But existing schemes are often too simplistic in the similarity assessment, many require an a-priori resolution of overlapping domain annotations, and those that allow overlaps to extend the set of annotations sources cannot account for redundant annotations. As a consequence, the gap between the automated similarity scoring and the similarity assessment based on visual architecture comparison is still too wide to make the integration of both approaches meaningful.
Results Here, we present FAS, a scoring system for the comparison of multi-layered feature architectures integrating information from a broad spectrum of annotation sources. Feature architectures are represented as directed acyclic graphs, and redundancies are resolved in the course of comparison using a score maximization algorithm. A benchmark using more than 10,000 human-yeast ortholog pairs reveals that FAS consistently outperforms existing scoring schemes. Using three examples, we show how automated architecture similarity assessments can be routinely applied in the benchmarking of orthology assignment software, in the identification of functionally diverged orthologs, and in the identification of entries in protein collections that most likely stem from a faulty gene prediction.
Pectin-rich residues are considered as promising feedstocks for sustainable production of platform chemicals. Enzymatic hydrolysis of extracted sugar beet press pulp (SBPP) releases the main constituent of pectin, d-galacturonic acid (d-GalA). Using engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae, d-GalA is then reduced to l-galactonate (l-GalOA) with sorbitol as co-substrate. The current work addresses the combination of enzymatic hydrolysis of pectin in SBPP with a consecutive optimized biotransformation of the released d-GalA to l-GalOA in simple batch processes in stirred-tank bioreactors. Process conditions were first identified with synthetic media, where a product concentration of 9.9 g L-1 L-GalOA was obtained with a product selectivity of 99% (L-GalOA D-GalA-1) at pH 5 with 4% (w/v) sorbitol within 48 h. A very similar batch process performance with a product selectivity of 97% was achieved with potassium citrate buffered SBPP hydrolysate, demonstrating for the first time direct production of L-GalOA from hydrolyzed biomass using engineered S. cerevisiae. Combining the hydrolysis process of extracted SBPP and the biotransformation process with engineered S. cerevisiae paves the way towards repurposing pectin-rich residues as substrates for value-added chemicals.
The interaction between the Heat Shock Proteins 70 and 40 is at the core of the ATPase regulation of the chaperone machinery that maintains protein homeostasis. However, the structural details of this fundamental interaction are still elusive and contrasting models have been proposed for the transient Hsp70/Hsp40 complexes. Here we combine molecular simulations based on both coarsegrained and atomistic models with co-evolutionary sequence analysis to shed light on this problem by focusing on the bacterial DnaK/DnaJ system. The integration of these complementary approaches resulted into a novel structural model that rationalizes previous experimental observations. We identify an evolutionary-conserved interaction surface formed by helix II of the DnaJ J-domain and a groove on lobe IIA of the DnaK nucleotide binding domain, involving the inter-domain linker.
The basidiomycete smut fungi are predominantly plant parasitic, causing severe losses in some crops. Most species feature a saprotrophic haploid yeast stage, and several smut fungi are only known from this stage, with some isolated from habitats without suitable hosts, e.g. from Antarctica. Thus, these species are generally believed to be apathogenic, but recent findings that some of these might have a plant pathogenic sexual counterpart, casts doubts on the validity of this hypothesis. Here, four Pseudozyma genomes were re-annotated and compared to published smut pathogens and the well-characterised effector gene Pep1 from these species was checked for its ability to complement a Pep1 deletion strain of Ustilago maydis. It was found that 113 high-confidence putative effector proteins were conserved among smut and Pseudozyma genomes. Among these were several validated effector proteins, including Pep1. By genetic complementation we show that Pep1 homologs from the supposedly apathogenic yeasts restore virulence in Pep1-deficient mutants Ustilago maydis. Thus, it is concluded that Pseudozyma species have retained a suite of effectors. This hints at the possibility that Pseudozyma species have kept an unknown plant pathogenic stage for sexual recombination or that these effectors have positive effects when colonising plant surfaces.
The auditory midbrain (inferior colliculus, IC) plays an important role in sound processing, acting as hub for acoustic information extraction and for the implementation of fast audio-motor behaviors. IC neurons are topographically organized according to their sound frequency preference: dorsal IC regions encode low frequencies while ventral areas respond best to high frequencies, a type of sensory map defined as tonotopy. Tonotopic maps have been studied extensively using artificial stimuli (pure tones) but our knowledge of how these maps represent information about sequences of natural, spectro-temporally rich sounds is sparse. We studied this question by conducting simultaneous extracellular recordings across IC depths in awake bats (Carollia perspicillata) that listened to sequences of natural communication and echolocation sounds. The hypothesis was that information about these two types of sound streams is represented at different IC depths since they exhibit large differences in spectral composition, i.e., echolocation covers the high-frequency portion of the bat soundscape (> 45 kHz), while communication sounds are broadband and carry most power at low frequencies (20–25 kHz). Our results showed that mutual information between neuronal responses and acoustic stimuli, as well as response redundancy in pairs of neurons recorded simultaneously, increase exponentially with IC depth. The latter occurs regardless of the sound type presented to the bats (echolocation or communication). Taken together, our results indicate the existence of mutual information and redundancy maps at the midbrain level whose response cannot be predicted based on the frequency composition of natural sounds and classic neuronal tuning curves.
Vocal communication is essential to coordinate social interactions in mammals and it requires a fine discrimination of communication sounds. Auditory neurons can exhibit selectivity for specific calls, but how it is affected by preceding sounds is still debated. We tackled this using ethologically relevant vocalizations in a highly vocal mammalian species: Seba’s short-tailed bat. We show that cortical neurons present several degrees of selectivity for echolocation and distress calls. Embedding vocalizations within natural acoustic streams leads to stimulus-specific suppression of neuronal responses that changes sound selectivity in disparate manners: increases in neurons with poor discriminability in silence and decreases in neurons selective in silent settings. A computational model indicates that the observed effects arise from two forms of adaptation: presynaptic frequency specific adaptation acting in cortical inputs and stimulus unspecific postsynaptic adaptation. These results shed light into how acoustic context modulates natural sound discriminability in the mammalian cortex.
Although new advances in neuroscience allow the study of vocal communication in awake animals, substantial progress in the processing of vocalizations has been made from brains of anaesthetized preparations. Thus, understanding how anaesthetics affect neuronal responses is of paramount importance. Here, we used electrophysiological recordings and computational modelling to study how the auditory cortex of bats responds to vocalizations under anaesthesia and in wakefulness. We found that multifunctional neurons that process echolocation and communication sounds were affected by ketamine anaesthesia in a manner that could not be predicted by known anaesthetic effects. In wakefulness, acoustic contexts (preceding echolocation or communication sequences) led to stimulus-specific suppression of lagging sounds, accentuating neuronal responses to sound transitions. However, under anaesthesia, communication contexts (but not echolocation) led to a global suppression of responses to lagging sounds. Such asymmetric effect was dependent on the frequency composition of the contexts and not on their temporal patterns. We constructed a neuron model that could replicate the data obtained in vivo. In the model, anaesthesia modulates spiking activity in a channel-specific manner, decreasing responses of cortical inputs tuned to high-frequency sounds and increasing adaptation in the respective cortical synapses. Combined, our findings obtained in vivo and in silico reveal that ketamine anaesthesia does not reduce uniformly the neurons’ responsiveness to low and high frequency sounds. This effect depends on combined mechanisms that unbalance cortical inputs and ultimately affect how auditory cortex neurons respond to natural sounds in anaesthetized preparations.
Communication sounds are ubiquitous in the animal kingdom, where they play a role in advertising physiological states and/or socio-contextual scenarios. Distress sounds, for example, are typically uttered in distressful scenarios such as agonistic interactions. Here, we report on the occurrence of superfast temporal periodicities in distress calls emitted by bats (species Carollia perspicillata). Distress vocalizations uttered by this bat species are temporally modulated at frequencies close to 1.7 kHz, that is, ∼17 times faster than modulation rates observed in human screams. Fast temporal periodicities are represented in the bats’ brain by means of frequency following responses, and temporally periodic sounds are more effective in boosting the heart rate of awake bats than their demodulated versions. Altogether, our data suggest that bats, an animal group classically regarded as ultrasonic, can exploit the low frequency portion of the soundscape during distress calling to create spectro-temporally complex, arousing sounds.
Neural oscillations are at the core of important computations in the mammalian brain. Interactions between oscillatory activities in different frequency bands, such as delta (1-4 Hz), theta (4-8 Hz), or gamma (>30 Hz), are a powerful mechanism for binding fundamentally distinct spatiotemporal scales of neural processing. Phase-amplitude coupling (PAC) is one such plausible and well-described interaction, but much is yet to be uncovered regarding how PAC dynamics contribute to sensory representations. In particular, although PAC appears to have a major role in audition, the characteristics of coupling profiles in sensory and integration (i.e. frontal) cortical areas remain obscure. Here, we address this question by studying PAC dynamics in the frontal-auditory field (FAF; an auditory area in the bat frontal cortex) and the auditory cortex (AC) of the bat Carollia perspicillata. By means of simultaneous electrophysiological recordings in frontal and auditory cortices examining local-field potentials (LFPs), we show that the amplitude of gamma-band activity couples with the phase of low-frequency LFPs in both structures. Our results demonstrate that the coupling in FAF occurs most prominently in delta/high-gamma frequencies (1-4/75-100 Hz), whereas in the AC the coupling is strongest in the theta/low-gamma (2-8/25-55 Hz) range. We argue that distinct PAC profiles may represent different mechanisms for neuronal processing in frontal and auditory cortices, and might complement oscillatory interactions for sensory processing in the frontal-auditory cortex network.
In humans, screams have strong amplitude modulations (AM) at 30 to 150 Hz. These AM correspond to the acoustic correlate of perceptual roughness. In bats, distress calls can carry AMs, which elicit heart rate increases in playback experiments. Whether amplitude modulation occurs in fearful vocalisations of other animal species beyond humans and bats remains unknown. Here we analysed the AM pattern of rats’ 22-kHz ultrasonic vocalisations emitted in a fear conditioning task. We found that the number of vocalisations decreases during the presentation of conditioned stimuli. We also observed that AMs do occur in rat 22-kHz vocalisations. AMs are stronger during the presentation of conditioned stimuli, and during escape behaviour compared to freezing. Our results suggest that the presence of AMs in vocalisations emitted could reflect the animal’s internal state of fear related to avoidance behaviour.
Frontal areas of the mammalian cortex are thought to be important for cognitive control and complex behaviour. These areas have been studied mostly in humans, non-human primates and rodents. In this article, we present a quantitative characterization of response properties of a frontal auditory area responsive to sound in the bat brain, the frontal auditory field (FAF). Bats are highly vocal animals and they constitute an important experimental model for studying the auditory system. At present, little is known about neuronal sound processing in the bat FAF. We combined electrophysiology experiments and computational simulations to compare the response properties of auditory neurons found in the bat FAF and auditory cortex (AC) to simple sounds (pure tones). Anatomical studies have shown that the latter provide feedforward inputs to the former. Our results show that bat FAF neurons are responsive to sounds, however, when compared to AC neurons, they presented sparser, less precise spiking and longer-lasting responses. Based on the results of an integrate-and-fire neuronal model, we speculate that slow, low-threshold, synaptic dynamics could contribute to the changes in activity pattern that occur as information travels through cortico-cortical projections from the AC to the FAF.
Summary The auditory midbrain (inferior colliculus, IC) plays an important role in sound processing, acting as hub for acoustic information extraction and for the implementation of fast audio-motor behaviors. IC neurons are topographically organized according to their sound frequency preference: dorsal IC regions encode low frequencies while ventral areas respond best to high frequencies, a type of sensory map defined as tonotopy. Tonotopic maps have been studied extensively using artificial stimuli (pure tones) but our knowledge of how these maps represent information about sequences of natural, spectro-temporally rich sounds is sparse. We studied this question by conducting simultaneous extracellular recordings across IC depths in awake bats (Carollia perspicillata) that listened to sequences of natural communication and echolocation sounds. The hypothesis was that information about these two types of sound streams is represented at different IC depths since they exhibit large differences in spectral composition, i.e. echolocation covers the high frequency portion of the bat soundscape (> 45 kHz), while communication sounds are broadband and carry most power at low frequencies (20-25 kHz). Our results showed that mutual information between neuronal responses and acoustic stimuli, as well as response redundancy in pairs of neurons recorded simultaneously, increase exponentially with IC depth. The latter occurs regardless of the sound type presented to the bats (echolocation or communication). Taken together, our results indicate the existence of mutual information and redundancy maps at the midbrain level whose response cannot be predicted based on the frequency composition of natural sounds and classic neuronal tuning curves.
Animals extract behaviorally relevant signals from “noisy” environments. To investigate signal extraction, echolocating provides a rich system testbed. For orientation, bats broadcast calls and assign each echo to the corresponding call. When orienting in acoustically enriched environments or when approaching targets, bats change their spectro-temporal call design. Thus, to assess call adjustments that are exclusively meant to facilitate signal extraction in “noisy” environments, it is necessary to control for distance-dependent call changes. By swinging bats in a pendulum, we tested the influence of acoustic playback on the echolocation behavior of Carollia perspicillata. This paradigm evokes reproducible orientation behavior and allows a precise definition of the influence of the acoustic context. Our results show that bats dynamically switch between different adaptations to cope with sound-based navigation in acoustically contaminated environments. These dynamics of echolocation behavior may explain the large variety of adaptations that have been reported in the bat literature.
Molluscs are the second most species-rich phylum in the animal kingdom, yet only 11 genomes of this group have been published so far. Here, we present the draft genome sequence of the pulmonate freshwater snail Radix auricularia. Six whole genome shotgun libraries with different layouts were sequenced. The resulting assembly comprises 4,823 scaffolds with a cumulative length of 910 Mb and an overall read coverage of 72×. The assembly contains 94.6% of a metazoan core gene collection, indicating an almost complete coverage of the coding fraction. The discrepancy of ∼690 Mb compared with the estimated genome size of R. auricularia (1.6 Gb) results from a high repeat content of 70% mainly comprising DNA transposons. The annotation of 17,338 protein coding genes was supported by the use of publicly available transcriptome data. This draft will serve as starting point for further genomic and population genetic research in this scientifically important phylum.
Endogenous clocks enable organisms to adapt cellular processes, physiology, and behavior to daily variation in environmental conditions. Metabolic processes in cyanobacteria to humans are under the influence of the circadian clock, and dysregulation of the circadian clock causes metabolic disorders. In mouse and Drosophila, the circadian clock influences translation of factors involved in ribosome biogenesis and synchronizes protein synthesis. Notably, nutrition signals are mediated by the insulin receptor/target of rapamycin (InR/TOR) pathways to regulate cellular metabolism and growth. However, the role of the circadian clock in Drosophila brain development and the potential impact of clock impairment on neural circuit formation and function is less understood. Here we demonstrate that changes in light stimuli or disruption of the molecular circadian clock cause a defect in neural stem cell growth and proliferation. Moreover, we show that disturbed cell growth and proliferation are accompanied by reduced nucleolar size indicative of impaired ribosomal biogenesis. Further, we define that light and clock independently affect the InR/TOR growth regulatory pathway due to the effect on regulators of protein biosynthesis. Altogether, these data suggest that alterations in InR/TOR signaling induced by changes in light conditions or disruption of the molecular clock have an impact on growth and proliferation properties of neural stem cells in the developing Drosophila brain.
Endogenous clocks enable organisms to adapt their physiology and behavior to daily variation in environmental conditions. Metabolic processes in cyanobacteria to humans are effected by the circadian clock, and its dysregulation causes metabolic disorders. In mouse and Drosophila were shown that the circadian clock directs translation of factors involved in ribosome biogenesis and synchronizes protein synthesis. However, the role of clocks in Drosophila neurogenesis and the potential impact of clock impairment on neural circuit formation and function is less understood. Here we demonstrate that light stimuli or circadian clock causes a defect in neural stem cell growth and proliferation accompanied by reduced nucleolar size. Further, we define that light and clock independently affect the InR/TOR growth regulatory pathway due to the effect on regulators of protein biosynthesis. Altogether, these data suggest that alterations in growth regulatory pathways induced by light and clock are associated with impaired neural development.
Totholzinseln für Frankfurt
(2023)
Ist das Lebensraum oder kann das weg? Aaron Kauffeldt und Tim Milz haben ihrem Biodiversitätsprojekt bewusst diesen etwas provokanten Namen verliehen. Sie wollen mehr Aufmerksamkeit für den Biodiversitätshotspot Totholz schaffen. Für ihre Idee, Totholzinseln im Frankfurter Stadtgebiet anzulegen, wurden sie kürzlich mit dem dritten Platz des Ideenwettbewerbs Biodiversität von Goethe-Universität, Palmengarten, der Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung, dem Dezernat für Klima, Umwelt und Frauen der Stadt Frankfurt und der Frankfurter Sparkasse ausgezeichnet.
Die Genetik hat die Landwirtschaft erheblich vorangebracht, weil sich mit ihrer Hilfe wesentlich ertragreichere Arten züchten lassen. Dabei werden Pflanzen mit vorteilhaften Eigenschaften ausgewählt und mit solchen gekreuzt, die andere erstrebenswerte Merkmale aufweisen. Auf diese Weise erhält man hybride Pflanzensorten, die beispielsweise widerstandsfähiger gegenüber Schädlingen und Krankheiten sind und sich besser an unterschiedliche Umweltbedingungen anpassen können. Aber das reicht nicht mehr, selbst mit den leistungsfähigsten und ertragreichsten Zuchtpflanzen steht die Landwirtschaft vor großen Herausforderungen: Klimawandel, Wasserknappheit und schlechte Bodenqualität begrenzen die Höhe landwirtschaftlicher Erträge, gleichzeitig wächst mit der Weltbevölkerung natürlich auch der Bedarf an Nahrungsmitteln. Wesentliche Fortschritte in der Nahrungsmittelerzeugung sind allerdings zu erwarten, wenn bei der Entwicklung von Nahrung nicht nur genetische, sondern auch epigenetische Verfahren angewandt werden, um Nahrungspflanzen weiterzuentwickeln – Verfahren, die darauf beruhen, einzelne Gene gezielt an- und abzuschalten. Seit einigen Jahren forscht dazu an der Goethe-Universität der Molekularbiologe Dr. Sotirios Fragkostefanakis.
This work characterizes the post-PKS modifications of AQ-256. Additionally, the second part describes the establishment of an AQ production platform for electrolyte generation that can be utilized in redox-flow-batteries. Lastly, a silent BGC that encodes the genes for terpenoid biosynthesis was described and characterized with regards to product formation and putative ecological function.
Background: Understanding the processes that lead to hybridization of wolves and dogs is of scientific and management importance, particularly over large geographical scales, as wolves can disperse great distances. However, a method to efficiently detect hybrids in routine wolf monitoring is lacking. Microsatellites offer only limited resolution due to the low number of markers showing distinctive allele frequencies between wolves and dogs. Moreover, calibration across laboratories is time-consuming and costly. In this study, we selected a panel of 96 ancestry informative markers for wolves and dogs, derived from the Illumina CanineHD Whole-Genome BeadChip (174 K). We designed very short amplicons for genotyping on a microfluidic array, thus making the method suitable also for non-invasively collected samples.
Results: Genotypes based on 93 SNPs from wolves sampled throughout Europe, purebred and non-pedigree dogs, and suspected hybrids showed that the new panel accurately identifies parental individuals, first-generation hybrids and first-generation backcrosses to wolves, while second- and third-generation backcrosses to wolves were identified as advanced hybrids in almost all cases. Our results support the hybrid identity of suspect individuals and the non-hybrid status of individuals regarded as wolves. We also show the adequacy of these markers to assess hybridization at a European-wide scale and the importance of including samples from reference populations.
Conclusions: We showed that the proposed SNP panel is an efficient tool for detecting hybrids up to the third-generation backcrosses to wolves across Europe. Notably, the proposed genotyping method is suitable for a variety of samples, including non-invasive and museum samples, making this panel useful for wolf-dog hybrid assessments and wolf monitoring at both continental and different temporal scales.
Using walls to navigate the room: egocentric representations of borders for spatial navigation
(2021)
Spatial navigation forms one of the core components of an animal’s behavioural repertoire. Good navigational skills boost survival by allowing one to avoid predators, to search successfully for food in an unpredictable world, and to be able to find a mating partner. As a consequence, the brain has dedicated many of its resources to the processing of spatial information. Decades of seminal work has revealed how the brain is able to form detailed representations of one’s current position, and use an internal cognitive map of the environment to traverse the local space. However, what is much less understood is how neural computations of position depend on distance information of salient external locations such as landmarks, and how these distal places are encoded in the brain.
The work in this thesis explores the role of one brain region in particular, the retrosplenial cortex (RSC), as a key area to implement distance computations in relation to distal landmarks. Previous research has shown that damage to the RSC results in losses of spatial memory and navigation ability, but its exact role in spatial cognition remains unclear. Initial electrophysiological recordings of single cells in the RSC during free exploration behaviour of the animal resulted in the discovery of a new population of neurons that robustly encode distance information towards nearby walls throughout the environment. Activity of these border cells was characterized by high firing rates near all boundaries of the arena that were available to the animal, and sensory manipulation experiments revealed that this activity persisted in the absence of direct visual or somatosensory detection of the wall.
It quickly became apparent that border cell activity was not only modulated by the distance to walls, but was contingent on the direction the animal was facing relative to the boundary. Approximately 40% of neurons displayed significant selectivity to the direction of walls, mostly in the hemifield contra-lateral to the recorded hemisphere, such that a neuron in left RSC is active whenever a wall occupies proximal space on the right side of the animal. Using a cue-rotation paradigm, experiments initially showed that this egocentric direction information was invariant to the physical rotation of the arena. Yet this rotation elicited a corresponding shift in the preferred direction of local head-direction cells, as well as a rotation in the firing fields of spatially-tuned cells in RSC. As a consequence, position and direction encoding in RSC must be bound together, rotating in unison during the environmental manipulations, as information about allocentric boundary locations is integrated with head-direction signals to form egocentric border representations.
It is known that the RSC forms many anatomical connections with other parts of the brain that encode spatial information, like the hippocampus and para-hippocampal areas. The next step was to establish the circuit mechanisms in place for RSC neurons to generate their activity in respect to the distance and direction of walls. A series of inactivation experiments revealed how RSC activity is inter-dependent with one of its communication partners, the medial entorhinal cortex (MEC). Together they form a wider functional network that encodes precise spatial information of borders, with information flowing from the MEC to RSC but not vice versa. While the conjunction between distance and heading direction relative to the outer walls was the main driver of neural activity in RSC, border cells displayed further behavioural correlates related to movement trajectories. Spiking activity in either hemisphere tended to precede turning behaviour on a short time-scale in a way that border cells in the right RSC anticipated right-way turns ~300 ms into the future.
The interpretation of these results is that the RSC’s primary role in spatial cognition is not necessarily on the early sensory processing stage as suggested by previous studies. Instead, it is involved in computations related to the generation of motion plans, using spatial information that is processed in other brain areas to plan and execute future actions. One potential function of the RSC’s role in this process could be to act correctly in relation to the nearby perimeter, such that border cells in one hemisphere are involved in the encoding of walls in the contralateral hemifield, after which the animal makes an ipsilateral turn to avoid collision. Together this supports the idea that the MEC→RSC pathway links the encoding of space and position in the hippocampal system with the brain’s motor action systems, allowing animals to use walls as prominent landmarks to navigate the room.
The main aim of this thesis work was to elucidate the catalytic mechanism of several enzyme complexes on the basis of their three-dimensional structure. All investigated enzyme complexes occur in the anaerobic energy metabolism and have an essential function by the challenging degradation of aromatic compounds and the flavin-based electron bifurcation (FBEB)/confurcation, an energy-coupling mechanism. More specifically, I studied the phthaloyl-CoA decarboxylase of Thauera chlorobenzoica (Pcd) involved in phthalate ester decomposition, the FBEB protein complexes lactate dehydrogenase/electron-transfer flavoprotein (Ldh/EtfAB) of Acetobacterium woodii, the heterodisulfide-related subunit HdrA of the sulfur- oxidizing bacteria Hyphomicrobium denitrificans (sHdrA). In addition, I contributed to the structure determination of the caffeyl-CoA reductase- EtfAB complex of A. woodii and the naphthoyl-CoA reductase of the sulfate-respiring enrichment culture N47 (mentioned in the Appendix E and F).
Background: In times of global warming there is an urgent need to replace fossil fuel-based energy vectors by less carbon dioxide (CO2)-emitting alternatives. One attractive option is the use of molecular hydrogen (H2) since its combustion emits water (H2O) and not CO2. Therefore, H2 is regarded as a non-polluting fuel. The ways to produce H2 can be diverse, but steam reformation of conventional fossil fuel sources is still the main producer of H2 gas up to date. Biohydrogen production via microbes could be an alternative, environmentally friendly and renewable way of future H2 production, especially when the flexible and inexpensive C1 compound formate is used as substrate.
Results: In this study, the versatile compound formate was used as substrate to drive H2 production by whole cells of the thermophilic acetogenic bacterium Thermoanaerobacter kivui which harbors a highly active hydrogen-dependent CO2 reductase (HDCR) to oxidize formate to H2 and CO2 and vice versa. Under optimized reaction conditions, T. kivui cells demonstrated the highest H2 production rates (qH2 = 685 mmol g−1 h−1) which were so far reported in the literature for wild-type organisms. Additionally, high yields (Y(H2/formate)) of 0.86 mol mol−1 and a hydrogen evolution rate (HER) of 999 mmol L−1 h−1 were observed. Finally, stirred-tank bioreactor experiments demonstrated the upscaling feasibility of the applied whole cell system and indicated the importance of pH control for the reaction of formate-driven H2 production.
Conclusions: The thermophilic acetogenic bacterium T. kivui is an efficient biocatalyst for the oxidation of formate to H2 (and CO2). The existing genetic tool box of acetogenic bacteria bears further potential to optimize biohydrogen production in future and to contribute to a future sustainable formate/H2 bio-economy.
Microbial production of chemicals is a sustainable alternative to conventional industrial processes. However, the implementation of exogenous metabolic pathways is hampered by slow diffusion rates, competing pathways, or secretion of intermediates. Pre-existing organelles have been harnessed to overcome these problems, but these approaches suffer from interference with endogenous pathways. We have developed a new concept for the compartmentalization of enzymatic pathways in ER-derived vesicles.
This work addresses the investigation of the biosynthesis mechanisms of type II polyketide synthase (PKS) and fatty acid synthase (FAS) derived specialized metabolites (SMs) from Photorhabdus laumondii.
The elucidation of the biosynthetic pathway of the bacterial 3,5-dihydroxy-4-isopropyl-trans-stilbene (IPS) was one of the major topics of this thesis. IPS exhibits several bioactive characteristics as it inhibits the phenoloxidase of insects, acts antibacterial, but also influences the soluble epoxide hydrolase which is involved in inflammatory reactions. It was recently approved as a treatment against psoriasis by the FDA and is the first Photorhabdus derived drug.
The stilbene generation in Photorhabdus requires the formation of the two acyl-carrier-protein (ACP) bound 5-phenyl-2,4-pentadienoyl- and isovaleryl-β-ketoacyl-moieties. The ketosynthase (KS)/cyclase StlD catalyzes a ring formation via a Michael-addition between the two intermediates which is then further processed by an aromatase. The formation of 5-phenyl-2,4-pentadienoyl-ACP was shown via in vitro assays with purified proteins by proving the influence of the KS FabH, ketoreductase FabG and dehydratase FabA or FabZ of the fatty acid metabolism. While E. coli was able to complement most of these enzymes in attempts to produce IPS in the heterologous host, the Photorhabdus derived FabH was not replaceable despite 73 % sequence identity with the E. coli based isoenzyme, acting as a gatekeeper enzyme for cinnamic acid (CA) moieties. Furthermore, the ability to incorporate meta-substituted halogenated CA-derivatives was shown in order to produce 3-chloro- and 3-bromo-IPS. While studying the stilbene biosynthesis, the ability of Photorhabdus and Xenorhabdus to produce hydrazines was also discovered.
The second investigated biosynthesis was the formation of benzylideneacetone (BZA). BZA is produced by Photorhabdus and Xenorhabdus strains acting as a suppressor for the immune cascade of insects and has also antibiotic activities towards Gram-negative bacteria. Due to its structural similarity towards CA and the intermediates during the stilbene formation, a shared mechanism for Photorhabdus and Xenorhabdus budapestensis was proposed due to their ability to produce CA. The production of BZA was also dependent on the stilbene related CoA-ligase, the ACP and FabH. It was verified in vitro and in vivo in E. coli yielding a 150-fold increase of the BZA production compared to the Photorhabdus and Xenorhabdus wildtype (WT) strains.
The second part of this work deals with the optimization of P. laumondii strains regarding the production titers of IPS. Therefore, several deletions of other SM related genes as well as promoter exchanges in front of stilbene related genes were carried out. These approaches were combined with the upregulation of the phenylalanine by heterologous plasmid expression, since it is the precursor of CA. Another approach applied in parallel was the optimization of the cultivation conditions with different media and supplementation with XAD-resins. It was proved that media rich on fatty acids or peptides led to higher optical densities of the cultures and thus to higher titers of stilbenes. Since IPS is inhibiting the phenoloxidase, an enzyme important for the insect immunity, it was hypothesized that cultivation in media containing insects might enhance the output of this SM. Starting from 23 mg/l of IPS in the P. laumondii WT strain, it was possible to increase the production levels to more than 860 mg/l by utilizing the mentioned approaches.
The last topic of this thesis focuses on the production of epoxidated IPS (EPS) and its derivatives. Under laboratory conditions, only a low titer of EPS was observed for the wildtype strain. However, the optimized IPS strains and IPS-production conditions could also be applied for EPS which led to higher productions and also to the detection of many new derivatives. Most of the EPS derivatives were amino acid or peptide derived acting as nucleophiles to open the epoxide ring and yielding β-amino-alcohols. However, purification and chemical synthesis attempts to obtain EPS failed due to its poor stability. Epoxides were utilized in in vitro assays with amino acids, peptides and proteins to get insights whether epoxidations might act as posttranslational modification in Photorhabdus. The reactions were performed with styrene oxide and stilbene oxide replacing EPS based on their structural similarity. The modifications were executed successfully although proteomics approaches with in vivo data are required to confirm these findings. During the purification attempts of EPS, further derivatives were detected. The structures of dimerized stilbenes, a cis-isomer of IPS and another derivative that might incorporate an amino-group in the resveratrol ring were proposed on the basis of the HPLC-MS data.
Combinatorial CRISPR-Cas screens have advanced the mapping of genetic interactions, but their experimental scale limits the number of targetable gene combinations. Here, we describe 3Cs multiplexing, a rapid and scalable method to generate highly diverse and uniformly distributed combinatorial CRISPR libraries. We demonstrate that the library distribution skew is the critical determinant of its required screening coverage. By circumventing iterative cloning of PCR-amplified oligonucleotides, 3Cs multiplexing facilitates the generation of combinatorial CRISPR libraries with low distribution skews. We show that combinatorial 3Cs libraries can be screened with minimal coverages, reducing associated efforts and costs at least 10-fold. We apply a 3Cs multiplexing library targeting 12,736 autophagy gene combinations with 247,032 paired gRNAs in viability and reporter-based enrichment screens. In the viability screen, we identify, among others, the synthetic lethal WDR45B-PIK3R4 and the proliferation-enhancing ATG7-KEAP1 genetic interactions. In the reporter-based screen, we identify over 1,570 essential genetic interactions for autophagy flux, including interactions among paralogous genes, namely ATG2A-ATG2B, GABARAP-MAP1LC3B and GABARAP-GABARAPL2. However, we only observe few genetic interactions within paralogous gene families of more than two members, indicating functional compensation between them. This work establishes 3Cs multiplexing as a platform for genetic interaction screens at scale.
Resistance to CD19-directed immunotherapies in lymphoblastic leukemia has been attributed, among other factors, to several aberrant CD19 pre-mRNA splicing events, including recently reported excision of a cryptic intron embedded within CD19 exon 2. While “exitrons” are known to exist in hundreds of human transcripts, we discovered, using reporter assays and direct long-read RNA sequencing (dRNA-seq), that the CD19 exitron is an artifact of reverse transcription. Extending our analysis to publicly available datasets, we identified dozens of questionable exitrons, dubbed “falsitrons,” that appear only in cDNA-seq, but never in dRNA-seq. Our results highlight the importance of dRNA-seq for transcript isoform validation.
To fight the global problems of humanity, the United Nations has adopted 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). To achieve these goals, it is necessary that future decision-makers and stakeholders in society consider these goals to be important. Therefore, in this study, we examined how important students in 41 countries directly related to the environmental sector rated each of the 17 SDGs. Based on the analysis of these ratings, it was possible to categorize the SDGs into three higher-level factors that reflect the three pillars of sustainability (social, economic, environmental). These three pillars are considered to be of varying importance in different countries. We also correlated the ratings of these higher-level factors with country-specific indicators, such as the Human Development Index. The correlations between the indicators and the higher-level factors revealed that in countries with higher indices, the SDGs are rated as less important compared to in countries with lower indices. These results provide stakeholders with important guidance on how the SDGs should be promoted in their country.
The mammalian frontal and auditory cortices are important for vocal behavior. Here, using local-field potential recordings, we demonstrate that the timing and spatial patterns of oscillations in the fronto-auditory network of vocalizing bats (Carollia perspicillata) predict the purpose of vocalization: echolocation or communication. Transfer entropy analyses revealed predominant top-down (frontal-to-auditory cortex) information flow during spontaneous activity and pre-vocal periods. The dynamics of information flow depend on the behavioral role of the vocalization and on the timing relative to vocal onset. We observed the emergence of predominant bottom-up (auditory-to-frontal) information transfer during the post-vocal period specific to echolocation pulse emission, leading to self-directed acoustic feedback. Electrical stimulation of frontal areas selectively enhanced responses to sounds in auditory cortex. These results reveal unique changes in information flow across sensory and frontal cortices, potentially driven by the purpose of the vocalization in a highly vocal mammalian model.
Myocardial injury as induced by myocardial infarction results in tissue ischemia, which critically incepts cardiomyocyte death. Endothelial cells play a crucial role in restoring oxygen and nutrient supply to the heart. Latest advances in single-cell multi-omics, together with genetic lineage tracing, reveal a transcriptional and phenotypical adaptation to the injured microenvironment, which includes alterations in metabolic, mesenchymal, hematopoietic and pro-inflammatory signatures. The extent of transition in mesenchymal or hematopoietic cell lineages is still debated, but it is clear that several of the adaptive phenotypical changes are transient and endothelial cells revert back to a naïve cell state after resolution of injury responses. This resilience of endothelial cells to acute stress responses is important for preventing chronic dysfunction. Here, we summarize how endothelial cells adjust to injury and how this dynamic response contributes to repair and regeneration. We will highlight intrinsic and microenvironmental factors that contribute to endothelial cell resilience and may be targetable to maintain a functionally active, healthy microcirculation.
Heart development is a dynamic process modulated by various extracellular and intracellular cues. Cardiac progenitors in vertebrates such as the zebrafish, migrate over to the midline after differentiation from the epiblast (Bakkers, 2011; Rosenthal & Harvey, 2010; Stainier et al., 1996; Trinh & Stainier, 2004). These progenitors form a cardiac disc at the midline which elongates into the linear heart tube. The differentiation and migration of cardiac precursors is modulated by signaling interactions between cardiac precursor cells and their extracellular environment known as the Extracellular Matrix (ECM). Studies have shown that Cell-ECM interactions play a crucial role in sculpting the heart during early morphogenic events (Davis CL, 1924; Männer & Yelbuz, 2019; Rosenthal & Harvey, 2010). One key factor to these processes is the presence of a specialized ECM known as the Basement Membrane (BM). Extracellular basement membrane proteins such as Fibronectin have been shown to modulate these very early migration processes of the cardiomyocyte progenitors (Trinh & Stainier, 2004). As the heart develops further, the linear heart tube is composed of myocardial cells with an inner endothelial cell lining separated by a layer of thick jelly like substance called the cardiac jelly (Barry A, 1948; Davis CL, 1924; Little et al., 1989). The cardiac jelly also called the cardiac basement membrane, has been shown to regulate distinct developmental events during cardiogenesis. This early CJ contains components of the basal lamina such as laminins, fibronectin, hyaluronan as well as non-fibrillar collagens such as Collagen IV (Little et al., 1989). In this study, I aimed to identify ECM molecules of the Basement Membrane in the heart and identify their role in the modulation of cardiac development and regeneration using the zebrafish as my model organism.
I identified genes belonging to the Zebrafish Matrisome expressed during cardiac developmental and regeneration and performed CRISPR/Cas9 sgRNA mediated mutagenesis. I also developed overexpression tools for these genes.
Agrinp168 mutants exhibited no obvious gross morphology defects during cardiac development and were adult viable. Adult mutants exhibited reduced cardiomyocyte proliferation, but no significant difference in cardiomyocyte dedifferentiation post cardiac cryoinjury.
Decorin overexpression through mRNA injections led to increased myocardial wall thickness and DN dcn overexpression through mRNA injections led to loss of cardiac looping during early development.
Mutants for Small Leucine Rich Proteoglycan (SLRP) prelp generated using CRISPR/Cas9 mutagenesis exhibited cardiovascular defects. Close observation of prelp mutant hearts revealed a reduced heart rate and impaired fractional shortening of the ventricle. prelp mutants exhibited an enlarged atrium at 48 hpf and 72 hpf as well as a reduced ventricle size at 72 hpf. Chamber size in the mutant hearts were enlarged irrespective of contractility of the heart. Mutants showed an increased number of Atrial cardiomyocytes, but no change in cell size. On the molecular level, extracellular Laminin localization was disrupted in prelp mutants along with an increase in thickness and volume of the cardiac HA in the CJ suggesting a potential compensatory role, or retention of immaturity of the cardiac jelly in the prelp mutants. Transcriptomics analysis on the prelp mutant hearts revealed downregulation of ECM organization and ECM-Receptor interaction processes in the mutants. Gene Ontology analysis on prelp mutants hearts transcriptome revealed increased MAPK signaling. Interestingly, genes related to degradation of cardiac HA and maturation of cardiac jelly were downregulated, and genes related to epithelial identity of cardiomyocytes were upregulated. Analysis of the mutant hearts at single cell resolution revealed increased number of mutants exhibiting rounded up cardiomyocytes and loss of apical Podocalyxin. Truncated forms of prelp were generated to identify domain specific roles for Prelp, and reintroduction of N-terminal truncated Prelp into the mutants rescued the basal lamina localization and cardiac jelly volume phenotypes. Myocardium specific re-establishment of prelp expression revealed a marked rescue of the mutant cardiovascular phenotype suggesting that tissue specific expression of prelp is not required so long as Prelp is secreted into the CJ. With these data, I’ve elucidated the role of ECM SLRPs in modulation of cardiac chamber morphogenesis process and regeneration of the heart.
Natural products can contribute to abiotic stress tolerance in plants and fungi. We hypothesize that biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs), the genomic elements that underlie natural product biosynthesis, display structured differences along elevation gradients. We analysed biosynthetic gene variation in natural populations of the lichen-forming fungus Umbilicaria pustulata. We collected a total of 600 individuals from the Mediterranean and cold-temperate climates. Population genomic analyses indicate that U. pustulata contains three clusters that are highly differentiated between the Mediterranean and cold-temperate populations. One entire cluster is exclusively present in cold-temperate populations, and a second cluster is putatively dysfunctional in all cold-temperate populations. In the third cluster variation is fixed in all cold-temperate populations due to hitchhiking. In these two clusters the presence of consistent allele frequency differences among replicate populations/gradients suggests that selection rather than drift is driving the pattern. We advocate that the landscape of fungal biosynthetic genes is shaped by both positive and hitchhiking selection. We demonstrate, for the first time, the presence of climate-associated BGCs and BGC variations in lichen-forming fungi. While the associated secondary metabolites of the candidate clusters are presently unknown, our study paves the way for targeted discovery of natural products with ecological significance.
Summary statement When echolocating under demanding conditions e.g. noisy, narrow space, or cluttered environments, frugivorous bats adapt their call pattern by increasing the call rate within biosonar groups.
Abstract For orientation, echolocating bats emit biosonar calls and use echoes arising from call reflections. They often pattern their calls into groups which increases the rate of sensory feedback over time. Insectivorous bats emit call groups at a higher rate when orienting in cluttered compared to uncluttered environments. Frugivorous bats increase the rate of call group emission when they echolocate in noisy environments. Here, calls emitted by conspecifics potentially interfere with the bat’s biosonar signals and complicate the echolocation behavior. To minimize the information loss followed by signal interference, bats may profit from a temporally increased sensory acquisition rate, as it is the case for the call groups. In frugivorous bats, it remains unclear if call group emission represents an exclusive adaptation to avoid interference by signals from other bats or if it represents an adaptation that allows to orient under demanding environmental conditions. Here, we compared the emission pattern of the frugivorous bat Carollia perspicillata when the bats were flying in noisy versus silent, narrow versus wide or cluttered versus non-cluttered corridors. According to our results, the bats emitted larger call groups and they increased the call rate within the call groups when navigating in narrow, cluttered, or noisy environments. Thus, call group emission represents an adaptive behavior when the bats orient in complex environments.
Most mammals rely on the extraction of acoustic information from the environment in order to survive. However, the mechanisms that support sound representation in auditory neural networks involving sensory and association brain areas remain underexplored. In this study, we address the functional connectivity between an auditory region in frontal cortex (the frontal auditory field, FAF) and the auditory cortex (AC) in the bat Carollia perspicillata. The AC is a classic sensory area central for the processing of acoustic information. On the other hand, the FAF belongs to the frontal lobe, a brain region involved in the integration of sensory inputs, modulation of cognitive states, and in the coordination of behavioural outputs. The FAF-AC network was examined in terms of oscillatory coherence (local-field potentials, LFPs), and within an information theoretical framework linking FAF and AC spiking activity. We show that in the absence of acoustic stimulation, simultaneously recorded LFPs from FAF and AC are coherent in low frequencies (1-12 Hz). This “default” coupling was strongest in deep AC layers and was unaltered by acoustic stimulation. However, presenting auditory stimuli did trigger the emergence of coherent auditory-evoked gamma-band activity (>25 Hz) between the FAF and AC. In terms of spiking, our results suggest that FAF and AC engage in distinct coding strategies for representing artificial and natural sounds. Taken together, our findings shed light onto the neuronal coding strategies and functional coupling mechanisms that enable sound representation at the network level in the mammalian brain.
The mammalian frontal and auditory cortices are important for vocal behaviour. Here, using local field potential recordings, we demonstrate for the first time that the timing and spatial pattern of oscillations in the fronto-auditory cortical network of vocalizing bats (Carollia perspicillata) predict the purpose of vocalization: echolocation or communication. Transfer entropy analyses revealed predominantly top-down (frontal-to-auditory cortex) information flow during spontaneous activity and pre-vocal periods. The dynamics of information flow depended on the behavioural role of the vocalization and on the timing relative to vocal onset. Remarkably, we observed the emergence of predominantly bottom-up (auditory-to-frontal cortex) information transfer patterns specific echolocation production, leading to self-directed acoustic feedback. Electrical stimulation of frontal areas selectively enhanced responses to echolocation sounds in auditory cortex. These results reveal unique changes in information flow across sensory and frontal cortices, potentially driven by the purpose of the vocalization in a highly vocal mammalian model.
The brains of black 6 mice (Mus musculus) and Seba’s short-tailed bats (Carollia perspicillata) weigh roughly the same and share the mammalian neocortical laminar architecture. Bats have highly developed sonar calls and social communication and are an excellent neuroethological animal model for auditory research. Mice are olfactory and somatosensory specialists and are used frequently in auditory neuroscience, particularly for their advantage of standardization and genetic tools. Investigating their potentially different general auditory processing principles would advance our understanding of how the ecological needs of a species shape the development and function of the mammalian nervous system. We compared two existing datasets, recorded with linear multichannel electrodes down the depth of the primary auditory cortex (A1) while awake, across both species while presenting repetitive stimulus trains with different frequencies (∼5 and ∼40 Hz). We found that while there are similarities between cortical response profiles in bats and mice, there was a better signal to noise ratio in bats under these conditions, which allowed for a clearer following response to stimuli trains. This was most evident at higher frequency trains, where bats had stronger response amplitude suppression to consecutive stimuli. Phase coherence was far stronger in bats during stimulus response, indicating less phase variability in bats across individual trials. These results show that although both species share cortical laminar organization, there are structural differences in relative depth of layers. Better signal to noise ratio in bats could represent specialization for faster temporal processing shaped by their individual ecological niches.
The ability to vocalize is ubiquitous in vertebrates, but neural networks leading to vocalization production remain poorly understood. Here we performed simultaneous, large scale, neuronal recordings in the frontal cortex and dorsal striatum (caudate nucleus) during the production of echolocation and non-echolocation calls in bats. This approach allows to assess the general aspects underlying vocalization production in mammals and the unique evolutionary adaptations of bat echolocation. Our findings show that distinct intra-areal brain rhythms in the beta (12-30 Hz) and gamma (30-80 Hz) bands of the local field potential can be used to predict the bats’ vocal output and that phase locking between spikes and field potentials occurs prior vocalization production. Moreover, the fronto-striatal network is differentially coupled in the theta-band during the production of echolocation and non-echolocation calls. Overall, our results present evidence for fronto-striatal network oscillations in motor action prediction in mammals.
Tracking influenza a virus infection in the lung from hematological data with machine learning
(2022)
The tracking of pathogen burden and host responses with minimal-invasive methods during respiratory infections is central for monitoring disease development and guiding treatment decisions. Utilizing a standardized murine model of respiratory Influenza A virus (IAV) infection, we developed and tested different supervised machine learning models to predict viral burden and immune response markers, i.e. cytokines and leukocytes in the lung, from hematological data. We performed independently in vivo infection experiments to acquire extensive data for training and testing purposes of the models. We show here that lung viral load, neutrophil counts, cytokines like IFN-γ and IL-6, and other lung infection markers can be predicted from hematological data. Furthermore, feature analysis of the models shows that blood granulocytes and platelets play a crucial role in prediction and are highly involved in the immune response against IAV. The proposed in silico tools pave the path towards improved tracking and monitoring of influenza infections and possibly other respiratory infections based on minimal-invasively obtained hematological parameters.
Orthologs document the evolution of genes and metabolic capacities encoded in extant and ancient genomes. Orthologous genes that are detected across the full diversity of contemporary life allow reconstructing the gene set of LUCA, the last universal common ancestor. These genes presumably represent the functional repertoire common to – and necessary for – all living organisms. Design of artificial life has the potential to test this. Recently, a minimal gene (MG) set for a self-replicating cell was determined experimentally, and a surprisingly high number of genes have unknown functions and are not represented in LUCA. However, as similarity between orthologs decays with time, it becomes insufficient to infer common ancestry, leaving ancient gene set reconstructions incomplete and distorted to an unknown extent. Here we introduce the evolutionary traceability, together with the software protTrace, that quantifies, for each protein, the evolutionary distance beyond which the sensitivity of the ortholog search becomes limiting. We show that the LUCA set comprises only high-traceable proteins most of which have catalytic functions. We further show that proteins in the MG set lacking orthologs outside bacteria mostly have low traceability, leaving open whether their eukaryotic orthologs have just been overlooked. On the example of REC8, a protein essential for chromosome cohesion, we demonstrate how a traceability-informed adjustment of the search sensitivity identifies hitherto missed orthologs in the fast-evolving microsporidia. Taken together, the evolutionary traceability helps to differentiate between true absence and non-detection of orthologs, and thus improves our understanding about the evolutionary conservation of functional protein networks.
Bacteria of the genera Photorhabdus and Xenorhabdus produce a plethora of natural products to support their similar symbiotic lifecycles. For many of these compounds, the specific bioactivities are unknown. One common challenge in natural product research when trying to prioritize research efforts is the rediscovery of identical (or highly similar) compounds from different strains. Linking genome sequence to metabolite production can help in overcoming this problem. However, sequences are typically not available for entire collections of organisms. Here we perform a comprehensive metabolic screening using HPLC-MS data associated with a 114-strain collection (58 Photorhabdus and 56 Xenorhabdus) from across Thailand and explore the metabolic variation among the strains, matched with several abiotic factors. We utilize machine learning in order to rank the importance of individual metabolites in determining all given metadata. With this approach, we were able to prioritize metabolites in the context of natural product investigations, leading to the identification of previously unknown compounds. The top three highest-ranking features were associated with Xenorhabdus and attributed to the same chemical entity, cyclo(tetrahydroxybutyrate). This work addresses the need for prioritization in high-throughput metabolomic studies and demonstrates the viability of such an approach in future research.
The Mediterranean fruit fly (medfly), Ceratitis capitata, is an important model organism in biology and agricultural research with high economic relevance. However, information about its embryonic development is still sparse. We share nine long-term live imaging datasets acquired with light sheet fluorescence microscopy (484.5 h total recording time, 373 995 images, 256 Gb) with the scientific community. Six datasets show the embryonic development in toto for about 60 hours at 30 minutes intervals along four directions in three spatial dimensions, covering approximately 97% of the entire embryonic development period. Three datasets focus on germ cell formation and head involution. All imaged embryos hatched morphologically intact. Based on these data, we suggest a two-level staging system that functions as a morphogenetic framework for upcoming studies on medfly. Our data supports research on wild-type or aberrant morphogenesis, quantitative analyses, comparative approaches to insect development as well as studies related to pest control. Further, they can be used to test advanced image processing approaches or to train machine learning algorithms and/or neuronal networks.
Complex peptide natural products exhibit diverse biological functions and a wide range of physico-chemical properties. As a result, many peptides have entered the clinics for various applications. Two main routes for the biosynthesis of complex peptides have evolved in nature: ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptide (RiPP) biosynthetic pathways and non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs). Insights into both bioorthogonal peptide biosynthetic strategies led to the establishment of universal principles for each of the two routes. These universal rules can be leveraged for the targeted identification of novel peptide biosynthetic blueprints in genome sequences and used for the rational engineering of biosynthetic pathways to produce non-natural peptides. In this review, we contrast the key principles of both biosynthetic routes and compare the different biochemical strategies to install the most frequently encountered peptide modifications. In addition, the influence of the fundamentally different biosynthetic principles on past, current and future engineering approaches is illustrated. Despite the different biosynthetic principles of both peptide biosynthetic routes, the arsenal of characterized peptide modifications encountered in RiPP and NRPS systems is largely overlapping. The continuous expansion of the biocatalytic toolbox of peptide modifying enzymes for both routes paves the way towards the production of complex tailor-made peptides and opens up the possibility to produce NRPS-derived peptides using the ribosomal route and vice versa.
Detailed information on species temperature preferences are needed to measure the effects of global warming on species and communities in European rivers. However, information currently available in the literature on taxon-specific temperature preferences or temperature tolerances is very heterogeneous and therefore not well suited for forecasting purposes. To close this gap, we derived so-called ’central temperature tendencies’ (CTTt values) for benthic invertebrate species. For this end, 547 species and temperature data from regional monitoring programmes in Germany collected at 4249 sites were analysed. Due to the vulnerability of species to high
temperatures, CTTt values were calculated for mean summer temperatures, following a robust approach of calculating a weighted average based on temperature classes. Derived CTTt values correspond well to species temperature preferences as reported in literature as long as the latter were homogeneous in terms of how they were derived and which temperature reference was at focus. Based on taxon-specific CTTt values, a community value, CTTCom, was calculated for each benthic invertebrate sample. CTTCom values were validated by correlation with mean summer water temperatures. As the slope a of the linear regression model between CTTCom values and measured summer temperatures was comparatively low (a = 0.49), a correction function was derived in order to optimise the relation between both. This was crucial, because it is assumed that although CTTt was derived solely from taxa abundances within summer temperature classes, CTTCom not only reflects the effect of (summer) water temperature itself, but also corresponds to a temperature equivalent value, which describes the overall quality of all respiration-relevant aquatic summer habitat conditions that determine the metabolism of respective benthic invertebrates. By comparing this equivalent value with water temperatures measured in the year previous of sampling, statements can be made about the influence of flow conditions and other factors determining oxygen availability.
Thus, CTTCom reflects the mean aerobic scope of the overall benthic invertebrate fauna: the better the respiration conditions for rheophilic species with high oxygen demand, the larger the aerobic scope and the lower CTTCom.
The approach taken in our study is promising and provides a tool to track and even project past, present, and future impacts of global warming on benthic invertebrates in rivers based on measured values of respiratory relevant environmental variables. We encourage all stakeholders in the field of freshwater ecology to test this
The filamentous ascomycete Podospora anserina is a well-established model system to study organismic aging. Its senescence syndrome has been investigated for more than fifty years and turned out to have a strong mitochondrial etiology. Several different mitochondrial pathways were demonstrated to affect aging and lifespan. Here, we present an update of the literature focusing on the cooperative interplay between different processes.
Untersuchungen zur Bedeutung selektiver Autophagie für Alterungsprozesse von Podospora anserina
(2022)
Das Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit war, die Funktion und die Rolle von Autophagie-assoziierten Proteinen im Alternsmodell Podospora anserina zu untersuchen und einen Einblick in die nicht-selektive Autophagie, die Mitophagie und die Bildung und den Abbau von Autophagosomen im Zusammenhang zur Alterung von P. anserina zu analysieren. Dabei wurden folgende Erkenntnisse erhalten:
1. Die Untersuchungen zu ΔPaAtg8 bestätigen, dass die PaATG8-abhängige Autophagosomenbildung zur Aufrechterhaltung der Lebensspanne benötigt wird. In ΔPaAtg8 kommt es zu einem Verlust der nicht-selektiven Autophagie. Die Mitophagie hingegen ist auch ohne PaATG8 partiell möglich und es liegt ein PaATG8-unabhängiger Abbau von mitochondrialen Proteinen in P. anserina vor.
2. In P. anserina ist PaATG11 an der nicht-selektiven Autophagie beteiligt und auch die Mitophagie erfolgt in Abhängigkeit dieses Gerüstproteins. Während der PaAtg11-Deletionsstamm unter Normalbedingungen keinen zum Wildtyp veränderten Phänotyp zeigt, führt eine Kultivierung auf M2-Medium mit Glycerin als einziger Kohlenstoffquelle zu einer starken Verkürzung der Lebensspanne. Eine mikroskopische Untersuchung der Mitochondrien zeigte, dass im juvenilen Altersstadium von ΔPaAtg11 stark fragmentierte Mitochondrien vorliegen. Während der Alterung normalisiert sich die Mitochondrienmorphologie wieder. Der mitochondriale Funktionsverlust wird möglicherweise von den fragmentierten Mitochondrien ausgelöst, denn eine Kultivierung von älteren ΔPaAtg11-Stämmen auf M2-Medium mit Glycerin führt zu einer Normalisierung der Lebensspanne.
3. Die initialen Untersuchungen zur ΔPaAtg11/ΔPaAtg24-Doppelmutante zeigen, dass es bei der Kultivierung unter Normalbedingungen zu einem additiven Effekt der beiden Genverluste kommt. Bei der Anzucht auf M2-Medium mit Glycerin hingegen kann eine im Vergleich zum ΔPaAtg11-Stamm längere Lebensspanne festgestellt werden. Die Mikroskopie der Mitochondrien in ΔPaAtg11/ΔPaAtg24 zeigt, dass im juvenilen Alter zum Wildtyp vergleichbare filamentöse Mitochondrien vorhanden sind.
4. In P. anserina ist PaATG24 kein Mitophagierezeptorprotein, da im PaAtg24-Deletionsstamm eine Beeinträchtigung der nicht-selektiven Autophagie vorliegt. Auch die Mitophagie ist in diesem Stamm geschädigt. Die mikroskopische Betrachtung der Mitochondrien zeigt keinen Unterschied zum Wildtyp. Bei der Untersuchung zur Mitochondrienfunktion durch M2-Medium mit Glycerin ist wie unter Normalbedingungen eine verkürzte Lebensspanne feststellbar.
5. Der Abbau von GFP::PaATG8 ist in der PaAtg24-Deletionsmutante signifikant verringert und es kommt zu einer Akkumulation von Autophagosomen, somit liegt in diesem Stamm eine Beeinträchtigung des autophagosomalen Flusses vor. Bei der mikroskopischen Untersuchung von PaATG24 zeigt sich, dass dieses Protein in P. anserina im Bereich der Vakuolen lokalisiert ist. Die Analyse der Vakuole-Autophagosomen-Fusion zeigt jedoch, dass dieser Mechanismus unabhängig von PaATG24 ist. Die Vakuolenmorphologie und Vakuolengröße ist in ΔPaAtg24 beeinträchtigt und dadurch kommt es zu dem beobachteten Defekt der nicht-selektiven und selektiven Autophagie.
Mutational analysis of ribosomal DNA and maturation-scheme analysis of ribosomal RNA in A. thaliana
(2022)
Ribosome biogenesis is a fundamental cellular process beginning with long precursor rRNA transcription from multi-copies of repetitive 45S ribosomal DNAs. At the subunit level, the primary pre-rRNA transcript encapsuled in 90S protein-RNA complex undergoes decisive splitting in two chief ways for further maturation into large (LSU) and small (SSU) ribosomal subunit. The usage of specific rDNA copies from defined chromosomes and their selective role during growth and development have been a topic of interest owing to its contribution to specialized ribosome theory which proposes non-monolithic functions for ribosomes and thereby their mRNA translation potential. Dual-guide CRISPR/Cas9 mediated disruption of rDNA regions resulted in stable disruption of up to 2.5% and 5% of all rDNA copies in hetero- and homozygous (ploop KD) conditions, respectively. At the RNA level, the mutation excised a critical structural element, P-loop on the LSU 25S rRNA. Mutation caused a dosage dependent defect with homozygosity leading to severe developmental defects through vegetative and reproductive growth phases which is manifested in their proteome by means of disregulation through both increase and decrease of several gene ontological categories of proteins in mutants. Interestingly, the mutation on chromosome 4 triggered dosage compensation through rRNA expression from chromosome 2 further compounded by ectopic rRNA biogenesis defects. The mutated copies however are not incorporated in the translating ribosomes and as a direct or indirect consequence led to elevated basal autophagic levels in the mutants.
The primary 35S transcript is known to undergo two modes of initial cleavages at the pre-rRNA level that aid in their subsequent maturation. Root cell culture (RCC) studies shows that these cells contain a novel ITS2-first cleaved precursor even under control growth conditions, P-C2 adding a third maturation means for the 35S pre-rRNA. This maturation path is further known to be triggered under elevated growth temperature forming a novel adaptive response in Arabidopsis and two other crop plants, tomato, and rice. Taken together, the pulse-chase labeling analysis of control and stressed tissues uncovers the fine-tuned pre-rRNA schematics with crossovers between multiple maturation paths.
Size and shape variation of molar crowns in primates plays an important role in understanding how species adapted to their environment. Gorillas are commonly considered to be folivorous primates because they possess sharp cusped molars which are adapted to process fibrous leafy foods. However, the proportion of fruit in their diet can vary significantly depending on their habitats. While tooth morphology can tell us what a tooth is capable of processing, tooth wear can help us to understand how teeth have been used during mastication. The objective of this study is to explore if differences in diet at the subspecies level can be detected by the analysis of molar macrowear. We analysed a large sample of second lower molars of Grauer’s, mountain and western lowland gorilla by combining the Occlusal Fingerprint Analysis method with other dental measurements. We found that Grauer’s and western lowland gorillas are characterised by a macrowear pattern indicating a larger intake of fruit in their diet, while mountain gorilla’s macrowear is associated with the consumption of more folivorous foods. We also found that the consumption of herbaceous foods is generally associated with an increase in dentine and enamel wear, confirming the results of previous studies.
The SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid (N) protein is crucial for the highly organized packaging and transcription of the genomic RNA. Studying atomic details of the role of its intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs) in RNA recognition is challenging due to the absence of structure and to the repetitive nature of their primary sequence. IDRs are known to act in concert with the folded domains of N and here we use NMR spectroscopy to identify the priming events of N interacting with a regulatory SARS-CoV-2 RNA element. 13C-detected NMR experiments, acquired simultaneously to 1H detected ones, provide information on the two IDRs flanking the N-terminal RNA binding domain (NTD) within the N-terminal region of the protein (NTR, 1–248). We identify specific tracts of the IDRs that most rapidly sense and engage with RNA, and thus provide an atom-resolved picture of the interplay between the folded and disordered regions of N during RNA interaction.
Orientation hypercolumns in the visual cortex are delimited by the repeating pinwheel patterns of orientation selective neurons. We design a generative model for visual cortex maps that reproduces such orientation hypercolumns as well as ocular dominance maps while preserving retinotopy. The model uses a neural placement method based on t–distributed stochastic neighbour embedding (t–SNE) to create maps that order common features in the connectivity matrix of the circuit. We find that, in our model, hypercolumns generally appear with fixed cell numbers independently of the overall network size. These results would suggest that existing differences in absolute pinwheel densities are a consequence of variations in neuronal density. Indeed, available measurements in the visual cortex indicate that pinwheels consist of a constant number of ∼30, 000 neurons. Our model is able to reproduce a large number of characteristic properties known for visual cortex maps. We provide the corresponding software in our MAPStoolbox for Matlab.
A promising strategy to reduce the dependency from fossil fuels is to use the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae to bioconvert renewable non-food feedstocks or waste streams, like lignocellulosic biomass, into bioethanol and other valuable molecule blocks. Lignocellulosic feedstocks contain glucose and significant fractions of the pentoses xylose and arabinose in varying proportions depending on the biomass type. S. cerevisiae is an efficient glucose consumer, but it cannot metabolize xylose and arabinose naturally. Therefore, extensive research using recombinant DNA techniques has been conducted to introduce and improve the biochemical pathways necessary to utilize these non-physiological substrates. However, any functional pathway capable of metabolizing D xylose and L arabinose in S. cerevisiae requires the transport of these sugars across the plasma membrane. The endogenous sugar transport system of S. cerevisiae can conduct a limited uptake of D-xylose and L-arabinose; this uptake enables only basal growth when the enzymatic pathways are provided. For this reason, the uptake of D xylose and L-arabinose has been recognized as a limiting step for the efficient utilization of these non-physiological substrates.
Gal2, a member of the major facilitator superfamily, is one of the most studied hexose transporters in S. cerevisiae. Although its expression is repressed in the presence of glucose, it also transports this sugar with high affinity when constitutively expressed. Recent efforts to engineer yeast strains for the utilization of plant biomass have unraveled the ability of Gal2 to transport non-physiological substrates like xylose and arabinose, among others. Improving Gal2 kinetic and substrate specificity, particularly for pentoses, has become a crucial target in strain engineering. The main goal of this study is to improve the utilization of xylose and arabinose by increasing the cell permeability of these non physiological substrates through the engineering of the galactose permease Gal2.
GAL2 gene expression depends on galactose, which acts as an inducer; nevertheless, even in the presence of galactose, glucose act as a strict repressor; consequently, GAL2 gene is usually placed under the control of a constitutive promoter. However, the presence of glucose additionally triggers the Gal2 degradation, which is mediated by the covalent attachment of the small 76 amino acid protein ubiquitin (Ub) to the targeted transporter; in a multi-step process called ubiquitination.
Ubiquitination of hexose permeases involves the activation of the Ub molecule by the E1 Ub-activating enzyme using ATP; then, the activated Ub is transferred to a specific Ub-conjugating enzyme E2, which donates the Ub indirectly through a specific HECT E3 enzyme (Rsp5) to a lysine residue of the substrate, with the aid of an adaptor protein which recognizes the target (Rsp5-adaptor). Ubiquitinated permeases are sent by membrane invagination to early endosomes, where they encounter ESCRTs (endosomal sorting complex required for transport). The targeted permeases are sorted in intralumenal vesicles (ILV) inside of the endosome, which after several cycles, turns into a multivesicular body (MVB) that subsequently fuses with the vacuole to expose the protein content of the ILVs to lumenal hydrolases for degradation.
Gal2 contains 30 lysine residues that may accept the ubiquitin molecule, which targets its degradation. It is known that mono-ubiquitination by Rsp5 on multiple lysine residues is necessary to internalize Gal2 (Horak & Wolf, 2001). However, the authors did not identify the specific lysine residues involved in the ubiquitination processes. This study screened several Gal2 variants where lysine residues were mutated or removed from the protein sequence to discover which lysine residues are likely involved in ubiquitination and consequent turnover of the transporter. The results of the screening showed that mutation of the N terminal lysine residues 27, 37, and 44 to arginine (Gal23KR) produced a functional transporter that, when fused with GFP (Gal23KR_GFP), showed an exclusive localization at the plasma membrane in cells growing in galactose or glucose as a sole carbon source (Tamayo Rojas et al., 2021b).
This study furthermore evaluated upstream signals caused by phosphorylation which triggers ubiquitination and consequent turnover of the targeted protein; using similar screening approaches to assess the stabilization of Gal2 by lysine residue modifications, it was possible to identify that N terminal serine residues 32, 35, 39, 48, 53, and 55 are likely involved in the internalization of Gal2, since a Gal2 construct where all these serines were mutated to alanine residues and tagged with GFP (Gal26SA_GFP) exhibited practically complete localization at the plasma membrane in cells growing in galactose or glucose as a sole carbon source (Tamayo Rojas et al., 2021b)...
Die oxygene Photosynthese bildet den Grundpfeiler des heutigen Ökosystems unseres Planeten. Neben den gut untersuchten Landpflanzen bilden Mikroalgen eine äußerst bedeutende Organismengruppe der phototrophen Lebewesen. Zu den Mikroalgen zählen die Diatomeen, welche sich beispielsweise durch eine Silikatschale und spezielle Lichtsammelkomplexe auszeichnen und für einen Großteil der marinen Primärproduktion verantwortlich sind. Die stoffwechselphysiologischen Grundlagen des ökologischen Erfolgs der Kieselalgen sind bislang noch unzureichend erforscht. Ein Vertreter der zentrischen Diatomeen, Cyclotella, wurde bereits zur Jahrtausendwende zur biochemischen Charakterisierung der Diatomeen Photosynthese verwendet (Eppard und Rhiel, 1998; Eppard und Rhiel, 2000), das Genom des Organismus aber erst vor kurzem sequenziert (Traller et al., 2016). Die Sequenzierung des Genoms konnte einige Gene für Lichtsammelproteine identifizieren, die Homologie zu den LhcSR-Proteinen aus C. reinhardtii aufweisen, welche nachweislich eine photoprotektive Funktion besitzen (Peers et al., 2009). Diese sogenannten Lhcx-Proteine der Diatomeen sind in den zwei Gruppen der Kieselalgen, den zentrischen und pennaten Diatomeen zu finden, unterscheiden sich aber in ihren jeweiligen Lhcx-Kandidaten. So können in der pennaten Diatomee P. tricornutum vier lhcx-Gene ausgemacht werden, während die zentrische Kieselalge T. pseudonana sechs lhcx-Gene besitzt und C. cryptica vier verschiedene lhcx-Kandidaten genomisch aufweist (Armbrust et al., 2004; Bowler et al., 2008; Traller et al., 2016). Die beschriebenen Diatomeen weisen alle eine Homologie im Lhcx1 auf, während sich die übrigen Lhcx-Kandidaten zwischen pennaten und zentrischen Diatomeen unterscheiden. Ein zwischen T. pseudonana und C. cryptica konserviertes Lhcx ist das Lhcx6_1, welches 2011 das erste Mal massenspektrometrisch an Photosystemen von T. pseudonana nachgewiesen wurde (Grouneva et al., 2011) und in weiteren Massenspektrometrie-gestützten Untersuchungen in beiden zentrischen Diatomeen an Photosynthese-Komplexen gefunden werden konnte (Gundermann et al., 2019; Calvaruso et al., 2020). Die Funktion des Lhcx6_1 ist bislang unklar.
Diese Arbeit konnte das Lhcx6_1 aus C. meneghiniana charakterisieren und Antikörper-gestützt genauer lokalisieren, eine nicht dynamische Phosphorylierung der Thylakoidmembran-Proteine der zentrischen Diatomee nachweisen und die molekularbiologische Zugänglichkeit des Organismus optimieren. qRT-PCR gestützte Expressions-Analysen konnten eine unerwartete Expression des lhcx6_1-Gens aufdecken. Dieses weist, im Vergleich zum Lhcx1, keine Starklicht induzierte Expression auf. Die Expression des Gens konnte nach wenigen Stunden Schwachlicht als maximal bestimmt werden, während sie im Starklicht abnimmt. Das Muster der Genexpression glich im Schwachlicht eher der des lhcf1-Gens. Die Sequenzierung des lhcx6_1 aus C. meneghiniana identifizierte eine verlängerte N-terminale Sequenz des Proteins, welche Homologie zu den minoren Antennen aus A. thaliana besitzt und Teil des reifen Proteins ist. Mittels eines C-terminalen Epitops wurde ein Antikörper gegen das Lhcx6_1 entworfen, welcher das Protein in C. meneghiniana spezifisch nachweisen kann. Die Isolation von Thylakoidmembranen der zentrischen Diatomee und weitergehende Aufreinigung mittels Saccharosedichtegradienten und lpBN-PAGE konnten die Lokalisation des Lhcx6_1 eingrenzen. Das Protein zeigt dabei keine Unterschiede in seiner Lokalisation nach Inkubation in Schwach-, Stark- und Fernrot-Licht und ist vorrangig mit Photosystem I assoziiert. In geringerer Menge konnte es zudem an Photosystem II nachgewiesen werden, während der immunologische Nachweis in Lichtsammelkomplexen (FCPs) minimale Mengen erbrachte. Ferner konnte eine Phosphorylierung des Lhcx6_1 an Threonin-Resten nachgewiesen werden, während die meisten anderen Thylakoidmembran-Proteine mittels Phospho-Serin Antikörper detektiert werden konnten. Weder die Phosphorylierung des Lhcx6_1, noch der anderen Thylakoidmembran-Proteine, zeigt eine dynamische Regulation, im Stile einer state-transition ähnlichen Kinase auf. Die Qualität des Umgebungslichts führte zu keinerlei Unterschieden in Phosphorylierungsmustern. Weiterführende Untersuchungen der Lhcx6_1-Phosphorylierung mittels Phos-tag PAGE identifizieren eine unphosphorylierte und eine einfach phosphorylierte Form des Proteins. Dabei kann an PSI ausschließlich die phosphorylierte Version des Lhcx6_1 gefunden werden. Im Zuge der Arbeit konnte zudem erstmalig die Elektroporation und Konjugation für C. meneghiniana als Transformations-Methoden etabliert werden, während das Protokoll für die biolistische Transformation optimiert wurde. Die Elektroporation erbrachte die höchste Transformationseffizienz. Molekularbiologische Unterfangen eines Lhcx6_1-Knockdowns mittels Antisense-RNA erzielten zunächst, aufgrund der starken Gegenregulation der Diatomee, keinen Erfolg...
The ongoing pandemic caused by the Betacoronavirus SARS-CoV-2 (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus-2) demonstrates the urgent need of coordinated and rapid research towards inhibitors of the COVID-19 lung disease. The covid19-nmr consortium seeks to support drug development by providing publicly accessible NMR data on the viral RNA elements and proteins. The SARS-CoV-2 genome encodes for approximately 30 proteins, among them are the 16 so-called non-structural proteins (Nsps) of the replication/transcription complex. The 217-kDa large Nsp3 spans one polypeptide chain, but comprises multiple independent, yet functionally related domains including the viral papain-like protease. The Nsp3e sub-moiety contains a putative nucleic acid-binding domain (NAB) with so far unknown function and consensus target sequences, which are conceived to be both viral and host RNAs and DNAs, as well as protein-protein interactions. Its NMR-suitable size renders it an attractive object to study, both for understanding the SARS-CoV-2 architecture and drugability besides the classical virus’ proteases. We here report the near-complete NMR backbone chemical shifts of the putative Nsp3e NAB that reveal the secondary structure and compactness of the domain, and provide a basis for NMR-based investigations towards understanding and interfering with RNA- and small-molecule-binding by Nsp3e.
Peronospora aquilegiicola is a destructive pathogen of columbines and has wiped out most Aquilegia cultivars in several private and public gardens throughout Britain. The pathogen, which is native to East Asia was noticed in England and Wales in 2013 and quickly spread through the country, probably by infested plants or seeds. To our knowledge, the pathogen has so far not been reported from other parts of Europe. Here, we report the emergence of the pathogen in the northwest of Germany, based on morphological and phylogenetic evidence. As the pathogen was found in a garden in which no new columbines had been planted recently, we assume that the pathogen has already spread from its original point of introduction in Germany. This calls for an increased attention to the further spread of the pathogen and the eradication of infection spots to avoid the spread to naturally occurring columbines in Germany and to prevent another downy mildew from becoming a global threat, like Peronospora belbahrii and Plasmopara destructor, the downy mildews of basil and balsamines, respectively.
Oomycetes infecting diatoms are biotrophic parasitoids and live in both marine and freshwater environments. They are ubiquitous, but the taxonomic affinity of many species remains unclear and the majority of them have not been studied for their molecular phylogeny. Only recently, the phylogenetic and taxonomic placement of some diatom-infecting, early-diverging oomycetes was resolved, including the genera Ectrogella, Miracula, Olpidiopsis, and Pontisma. A group of holocarpic diatom parasitoids with zoospores swarming within the sporangium before release were found to be unrelated to the known genera with diatom-infecting species, and were re-classified to a new genus, Diatomophthora. However, about a dozen species of holocarpic diatom parasitoids with unclear affinity remained unsequenced, which includes a commonly occurring species so far identified as Ectrogella perforans. However, this assignment to Ectrogella is doubtful, as the species was not reported to feature a clear-cut diplanetism, a hallmark of Ectrogella s. str. and the whole class Saprolegniomycetes. It was the aim of the current study to clarify the phylogenetic affinities of the species and if the rather broad host range reported is correct or a reflection of cryptic species. By targeted screening, the parasitoid was rediscovered from Helgoland Roads, North Sea and Oslo Fjord, Southern Norway and investigated for its phylogenetic placement using small ribosomal subunit (18S) sequences. Stages of its life cycle on different marine diatoms were described and its phylogenetic placement in the genus Diatomophthora revealed. A stable host-parasite axenic culture from single spore strains of the parasitoid were established on several strains of Pleurosigma intermedium and Coscinodiscus concinnus. These have been continuously cultivated along with their hosts for more than 2 years, and cultural characteristics are reported. Cross-infection trials revealed the transferability of the strains between hosts under laboratory conditions, despite some genetic distance between the pathogen strains. Thus, we hypothesise that D. perforans might be in the process of active radiation to new host species.
Geoffrey Burnstock will be remembered as the scientist who set up an entirely new field of intercellular communication, signaling via nucleotides. The signaling cascades involved in purinergic signaling include intracellular storage of nucleotides, nucleotide release, extracellular hydrolysis, and the effect of the released compounds or their hydrolysis products on target tissues via specific receptor systems. In this context ectonucleotidases play several roles. They inactivate released and physiologically active nucleotides, produce physiologically active hydrolysis products, and facilitate nucleoside recycling. This review briefly highlights the development of our knowledge of two types of enzymes involved in extracellular nucleotide hydrolysis and thus purinergic signaling, the ectonucleoside triphosphate diphosphohydrolases, and ecto-5′-nucleotidase.