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Im Rahmen dieser Dissertation wurden unterschiedliche Aspekte der Verbreitung der Vertreter des Pseudoterranova decipiens Komplexes betrachtet und Fragestellungen zur Ökologie und Humanpathogenität der Parasiten bearbeitet. Sie basiert auf drei (ISI-) Fachartikeln, in denen die Nutzung von Fischparasitengemeinschaften als ökologische Indikatoren für entlegene Ökosysteme des Südpolarmeeres (I), die Modellierung geeigneter Verbreitungsgebiete für Arten mit geringen Vorkommensdaten am Beispiel des P. decipiens Komplexes (II) und das Vorkommen potentiell humanpathogener P. bulbosa in unterschiedlichen Mikrohabitaten in Atlantischem Kabeljau (III) thematisiert wurde.
Die Parasitengemeinschaften der in Studie I untersuchten, nahverwandten Antarktisdorsche (Nototheniinae) Nototheniops larseni (n=40), N. nudifrons (n=40) und Lepidonotothen squamifrons (n=49) unterschieden sich hauptsächlich hinsichtlich seltener Parasitenarten. Pseudoterranova decipiens E zählte zu den häufigsten Parasiten der drei betrachteten Wirtsarten. Die Analyse der Wirtsspektren der auf Artebene bestimmten Parasiten zeigte eine geringe Spezifität antarktischer Fischparasiten im Larven- (z.B. Pseudoterranova decipiens E) und Adultstadium (z.B. Elytrophalloides oatesi). Für eine Nutzung als Bioindikatoren ergibt sich die Empfehlung, nicht auf einzelne Parasitenarten, sondern die Zusammensetzung von Parasitenfaunen zurückzugreifen und Parameter wie Abundanz oder Intensität zu berücksichtigen. Vergleiche mit Literaturdaten legten nahe, dass ein Studiendesign, das den periodischen Vergleich der Parasitierungsmuster von Nototheniinae ermöglichen soll, Standorteffekte berücksichtigen sollte. Da es sich bei der Probennahme demersaler Fische um ein aufwändiges und einschneidendes Verfahren handelt, sollten alternative Samplingmethoden vorangetrieben und eine Datenbasis dafür geschaffen werden.
Um die Belastung von Speisefischen mit potentiell humanpathogenen Parasiten in bestimmten Fanggebieten abzuschätzen, kann anhand von Vorkommens- und Umweltdaten mittels statistischer Modelle die Habitateignung für den Parasiten bestimmt werden. Eine Voraussetzung für eine verlässliche Modellierung bilden die Wahl eines geeigneten Algorithmus und die Qualität der Eingangsdaten. Für die Modellierung geeigneter Verbreitungsgebiete für die sechs Arten des P. decipiens Komplexes wurde im Rahmen von Studie II erstmalig ein biotischer Deskriptor herangezogen. Dem Ansatz lag die Annahme zugrunde, dass das Vorkommen geeigneter Endwirte der entscheidende, limitierende Faktor für die Verbreitung eines Parasiten ist, da nur so der Lebenszyklus geschlossen werden kann. Als Hypothesentest dienten Vergleiche der ökologischen Nischen von Parasiten und ihren spezifischen Endwirten im Nischenraum. Anhand der Endwirtdistanz wurde eine Verbesserung der Modellierungsergebnisse mit MaxEnt, gegenüber der ausschließlich auf abiotischen Prädiktoren basierenden Modellierung, für alle Pseudoterranova Arten, insbesondere jene mit einer geringen Anzahl Fundpunkte, erzielt. Grundsätzlich ist der Ansatz auf marine Parasitenarten, deren spezifische Endwirte verlässliche Vorkommensdaten aufweisen, übertragbar. Die Methode stellt jedoch keinen Ersatz für die Erhebung von Vorkommensdaten dar, weshalb die genetische Bestimmung schwer zu identifizierender Taxa sowie die Angabe von Metadaten in jeder parasitologischen Studie obligatorisch sein sollten.
Die Verteilung potentiell humanpathogener Parasitenstadien in für den menschlichen Verzehr vorgesehenen Fischen kann ein entscheidender Faktor für die Übertragung sein. Im Rahmen von Studie III wurde mit dem Referenztranskriptom von P. bulbosa das erste Transkriptom für eine Art den P. decipiens Komplexes erstellt. Anhand einer differentiellen Genexpressionsanalyse wurde untersucht, was die Verteilung der Parasiten auf unterschiedliche Mikrohabitate beeinflusst haben könnte. Dabei wurden siebzig differentiell exprimierte Gene identifiziert, die in aus Leber (32 Gene) und Viscera (38 Gene) von Atlantischem Kabeljau (Gadus morhua) isolierten Proben von P. bulbosa hochreguliert waren. Eine Erklärung für diesen subtilen Unterschied könnte ein Dauerstadium der P. bulbosa Larven zum Zeitpunkt der Probennahmen sein. Ob sich bestimmte Mikrohabitate innerhalb des Wirtes begünstigend auf den Parasiten auswirken, muss mit Hilfe experimenteller Studien gezeigt werden. Erste in Studie III erhobene Daten zum allergenen Potential von P. bulbosa sollten in serologischen Studien getestet werden. Als Grundlage für die Bewertung des pathogenen Potentials von P. bulbosa, sowie der weiteren Arten des P. decipiens Komplexes, sollten in experimentellen Studien NGS-Daten erhoben werden.
Im Rahmen dieser Dissertation wurde in drei methodisch unterschiedlichen Studien ein Bedarf besserer Referenzdaten aufgezeigt. Bestreben diese Datenlücken zu schließen, um das Potential der Methoden besser ausschöpfen zu können, müssen zukünftig noch weiter verstärkt werden.
Until quite recently, stem cell technology mainly focused on pure populations of embryonic stem cells (ES) derived from the inner cell mass of the blastocyst and induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS). Using organoids, a newly established culture technique, it is now possible to culture also organ and patient-specific adult stem (AS) and induced pluripotent stem (IPS) cells in vitro. Furthermore, it has been shown that adult stem cells, grown as organoids, are genetically stable, proliferate and maintain their multi-potency (often a bi-potency) for months. This is possible by providing conditions that recapitulate the stem cell niche of the corresponding organ. Particularly, defined growth factors and a physiological scaffold, which is provided by an extracellular matrix (ECM). Because of increasing research activities, organoids became influential in the recent years. Wide-ranging interest also led to a clearer definition: organoids must contain multiple organ-specific cell types, must be able to recapitulate some organ specific functions, and the cells must be spatially organized in a way similar to the organ they are derived from. The excitement about organoids is based on their high potential as a model to understand wound healing, cellular behaviour and differentiation processes in organogenesis. Furthermore, high potential in the drug development and in personalized stem cell therapeutic approaches has been shown. Specifically, for personalized stem cell therapy, one potential application is for chronic autoimmune diseases such as Diabetes type 1 (T1D). T1D is characterized by the immune-mediated destruction of ß-cells in the Pancreas that leads to absolute insulin deficiency. In T1D the first-line therapeutic approach is exogenous insulin replacement therapy, which always implicates the risk of high fluctuations in blood-sugar levels and therefore the risk of hypoglycaemia. Another therapeutic approach is the xenotransplantation of islets from human donors. A successful islet transplantation allows patients a years-long insulin independence. However, the therapeutic value of islet transplantation is highly limited by the availability of organ donors and by the need for chronic administration of immune suppressive medication. The use of pancreas organoids offers a promising alternative as a personalized cell therapeutic approach to treat T1D without the hypoglycaemia risks of the established therapies. In 2013 Meritxell Huch and colleagues established for the first-time organoids from the exocrine, ductal part of the pancreas. These pancreas organoids are characterized by a monolayered, spherical cell epithelium which comprises a liquid filled lumen. In addition, they showed that after transplantation of these cells into immunodeficient mice, they differentiate into ß-cells and cure T1D. However, basic knowledge of the culture growth behaviour is still lacking: to date, no growth parameters are defined and reliable and robust investigation approaches are still missing. Furthermore, basic knowledge about the organoid development and biochemical/biophysical mechanisms that generate the phenotypic structure are not identified. For a clinical approach these parameters are fundamental and therefore must be defined pre-clinically.
The aim of this study is the preclinical characterization of the hPOs...
The European Community has set a milestone in the European water policy in 2000: all water directives and policies were united into one comprehensive document – the European Water Framework Directive (EU WFD). The EU WFD requires the monitoring of 45 priority substances, primarily in the water phase, which is not related to a substantial amount of chemicals available on the market worldwide (about 50,000). About 60% of these are human and environmentally toxic. Hence, the currently monitored 45 priority substances are not even close to being sufficient to provide a comprehensive picture of the actual chemical pollution in the aquatic environment.
Furthermore, the EU WFD in its original shape paid less attention to sediments as an important source and sink for chemical contamination. Under stable hydrological conditions, polluted old sediments are covered by less polluted younger sediments preventing erosion of deeper sediment layers and, therefore, the release of particle-bound contaminants. However, urbanization, deforestation, flooding, dredging, riverbed renaturation, and stormwater overflow basin releases can lead to an unpredictable release of particle-bound pollutants. Therefore, in 2008, sediments were added to the EU WFD as a monitoring matrix for substances that tend to accumulate there. As a result, after 18 years of the EU WFD, less than half of all European waterbodies reached a good ecological (40%) and chemical (38%) status.
One of the primary pollution sources in aquatic ecosystems are wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). Advanced wastewater treatment by ozonation is promising to remove most micropollutants. However, the knowledge about the possible improvement of the receiving waterbody is rare. The latter aspects were the main reasons for the start of the DemO3AC project in 2014. The study area was located in the federal state of North Rhine-Westphalia (Germany). The study area included the Wurm River and its tributary, the Haarbach River. Both waterbodies act as receiving waterbodies for WWTPs. One of them is the Aachen-Soers WWTP (receiving waterbody: Wurm River), upgraded by full stream ozonation as an advanced effluent treatment. Therefore, the extensive investigation program within the DemO3AC project included an investigation of the ecological and chemical status of both receiving waterbodies and the investigation of a possible improvement of the Wurm River after implementing advanced effluent treatment.
The current study was a part of the DemO3AC project and covered the sediment toxicity and a possible impact of the ozonation on aquatic organisms in the receiving waterbody. Time-resolved sampling campaigns allowed investigations under different hydrological conditions, mainly determined by the weather. The first sampling campaign took place in June 2017 during a prolonged dry period with low water flow in the receiving waterbodies. The second sampling campaign was performed exactly one year later (June 2018) after a long rainy period and corresponding high-water levels. Full-stream ozonation at the Aachen-Soers WWTP had been in operation for half a year. Furthermore, a wide range of organic micropollutants was investigated in the effluent of the studied WWTPs to assess a possible hazard emerging from contaminants released into the receiving waterbody.
The study design was developed based on the holistic approach to assessing the ecotoxicological pollution of surface waterbodies. It included the detection of chemical compounds combined with effect-based methods to identify possible drivers of toxicity. The sediment's ecotoxicological assessment included studies on endocrine-disrupting activity, genotoxic and embryotoxic potentials. These endpoints were evaluated using in vitro and in vivo bioassays. In addition, sediments’ chemical profiling was performed using modern analytical chemistry techniques.
The genotoxic potential was investigated using the Ames fluctuation assay with Salmonella typhimurium bacterial strains TA98, TA100, YG1041, and YG1042, sensitive to different classes of compounds, and the Micronucleus assay as a eukaryotic assay with mammalian cells. A unique feature of the present study was the implementation of non-standard Salmonella typhimurium bacterial strains YG1041 and YG1042 in the Ames fluctuation assay. Moreover, a comprehensive genotoxicity ranking of chemical compounds identified in sediments was used and combined with statistical analysis to identify the drivers of genotoxicity. The results of this study were published in Shuliakevich et al. (2022a) (see also Annex 1), describing the mutagenic potential of all sampling sites, which was primarily driven by polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, nitroarenes, aromatic amines, and polycyclic heteroarenes. In addition, the rainwater overflow basin was identified as a significant source for particle-bound pollutants from untreated wastewater, suggesting its role as a possible source of genotoxic potential. The present study showed high sensitivity and applicability of non-standard Salmonella typhimurium bacterial strains YG1041 and YG1042 in the Ames fluctuation assay to assess the different classes of mutagenic compounds. A combination of effect-based methods and a chemical analysis was shown as a suitable tool for a genotoxic assessment of freshwater sediments.
The sediments' endocrine-disruptive activity was investigated using the cell-based reporter gene CALUX® assay. A simultaneous launch of the full-scale effluent ozonation at the Aachen-Soers WWTP was used for investigation of the entrance of the ozonated effluent into the Wurm River and the endocrine-disrupting activity in the water phase. A particular focus of the present study was the unique investigation of PAHs as possible drivers of the endocrine-disrupting activity in sediments of the Wurm River. The results of this study were laid down in the publication by Shuliakevich et al. (2022b) (see also Annex 2), describing variations in endocrine-disrupting activity in the Wurm River under different weather conditions. Briefly, under stable hydrological conditions in June 2017, the estrogenic and the antiandrogenic activities in sediments of the Wurm River were within the range of 0.03-0.1 ng E2 equivalents (eq.)/g dry weight sediment equivalents (dw SEQ) and 3.0-13.9 µg Flu eq./g dw SEQ, respectively. After extensive rain events in June 2018, the sediments' estrogenic and antiandrogenic activities were detected within the range of 0.06-0.2 ng E2 eq./g dw SEQ and 1.7-39.2 µg Flu eq./g de SEQ, respectively. Increased endocrine-disruptive activity (up to 0.2 ng E2 eq./g dw SEQ in ERα- and 39.2 µg Flu eq./g dw SEQ in anti-AR-CALUX® assays) in sediments downstream of the rainwater overflow basin suggested it as a possible source of pollution. A unique result of the second study was finding a positive correlation between measured particle-bound antiandrogenic activity and detected polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) ...
Interleukin-11 signaling is a global molecular switch between regeneration and scarring in zebrafish
(2022)
The two diametrically opposing outcomes after tissue damage are regeneration and fibrotic scarring. After injury, adult mammals predominantly induce fibrotic scarring, which most often leads to patient lethality. Fibrotic scarring is the deposition of excessive extracellular matrix that matures and hinders tissue function. The scarring response is mainly orchestrated by myofibroblasts, which arise only upon tissue damage, from various cellular origins, including tissue resident fibroblasts, endothelial cells and circulating blood cells. On the contrary, species like zebrafish, possess the remarkable capacity to regenerate their damaged tissues. After injury, instead of inducing a myofibroblast-mediated fibrogenic gene program, cells in these species undergo regenerative reprogramming at the transcriptional level to activate vital cellular processes needed for regeneration, including proliferation, dedifferentiation, and migration. Several pro-regenerative mechanisms have been identified to date. Most of them, if not all, are also important for tissue homeostasis and hence, are not injury specific. Therefore, the central aim of this study is to identify injury-specific mechanisms that not only induce regeneration, but also limit fibrotic scarring.
To test the notion that fibrotic scarring limits regeneration, I first compared the scarring response in the regenerative zebrafish heart after cryoinjury with what is known in the non-regenerative adult mouse heart. I found that zebrafish display ~10-fold less myofibroblast differentiation compared to adult mouse after cardiac injury. With these findings, I hypothesized that zebrafish employ mechanisms to actively suppress scarring response. Using a novel comparative transcriptomic approach coupled with genetic loss-of-function analyses, I identified that Interleukin-6 (Il-6) cytokine family-mediated Stat3 is one such pro-regenerative pathway in zebrafish.
Il-6 cytokine family consists of Il-6, Interleukin-11 (Il-11), Ciliary neurotrophic factor, Leukemia inhibitory factor, Oncostatin M, and Cardiotrophin-like cytokine factor 1. Il-6 family ligands signal through their specific receptors and a common receptor subunit (Il6st or Gp130). Using gene expression analyses after adult heart and adult caudal fin injuries in zebrafish, I identified that both the Il-11 cytokine encoding paralogous genes (il11a and il11b) are the highest expressed and induced among the Il-6 family cytokines. Hence, I chose Il-11 signaling as a candidate pathway for further analysis. To investigate the role of Il-11 signaling, I generated genetic loss-of-function mutants for both the ligand (il11a and il11b) and the receptor (il11ra) encoding genes. Using various tissue regeneration models across developmental stages in these mutants, I identified that Il-11/Stat3 signaling is indispensable for global tissue regeneration in zebrafish.
To investigate the cellular and molecular mechanisms by which Il-11 signaling promotes regeneration, I performed transcriptomics comparing the non-regenerative il11ra mutant hearts and fins with that of the wild types, respectively. I identified that Il-11 signaling orchestrates both global and tissue-specific aspects of regenerative reprogramming at the transcriptional level. In addition, I also found that impaired regenerative reprogramming in the il11ra mutant hearts and fins resulted in defective cardiomyocyte and osteoblast repopulation of the injured area, respectively.
On the other hand, by deep phenotyping the scarring response in il11ra mutant hearts and fins, I identified that Il-11 signaling limits myofibroblast differentiation. Furthermore, I found that cardiac endothelial cells and fibroblasts are one of the major responders to injury-induced Il-11 signaling. Using lineage tracing, I found that both the endothelial and fibroblast lineages in the non-regenerative il11ra mutants commit to a myofibroblast fate, spearheading the scarring response. In addition, using cell type specific manipulations, I showed that Il-11 signaling in cardiac endothelial cells allows cardiomyocyte repopulation of the injured area. Finally, using human endothelial cells in culture, I uncovered a novel feedback mechanism by which Il-11 signaling limits fibrogenic gene expression by inhibiting its parent activator and a master regulator of tissue fibrosis, TGF-β signaling.
Overall, I identified Interleukin-11/Stat3 signaling as the first global regulator of regeneration in zebrafish. Briefly, I showed that Interleukin-11 signaling promotes regeneration by regulating two crucial cellular aspects in response to injury – (1) it promotes regenerative reprogramming, thereby allowing cell repopulation of the injured area and (2) it limits mammalian-like fibrotic scarring by inhibiting myofibroblast differentiation and TGF-β signaling. Altogether, these zebrafish data, together with the contradicting mammalian data strongly indicate that the secrets of tissue regeneration lie downstream of IL-11 signaling, in the differences between regenerative and non-regenerative species. Furthermore, I establish the non-regenerative il11ra mutant as an invaluable zebrafish model to study mammalian tissue fibrosis.
Premise: Both universal and family-specific targeted sequencing probe kits are becoming widely used for reconstruction of phylogenetic relationships in angiosperms. Within the pantropical Ochnaceae, we show that with careful data filtering, universal kits are equally as capable in resolving intergeneric relationships as custom probe kits. Furthermore, we show the strength in combining data from both kits to mitigate bias and provide a more robust result to resolve evolutionary relationships.
Methods: We sampled 23 Ochnaceae genera and used targeted sequencing with two probe kits, the universal Angiosperms353 kit and a family-specific kit. We used maximum likelihood inference with a concatenated matrix of loci and multispecies-coalescence approaches to infer relationships in the family. We explored phylogenetic informativeness and the impact of missing data on resolution and tree support.
Results: For the Angiosperms353 data set, the concatenation approach provided results more congruent with those of the Ochnaceae-specific data set. Filtering missing data was most impactful on the Angiosperms353 data set, with a relaxed threshold being the optimum scenario. The Ochnaceae-specific data set resolved consistent topologies using both inference methods, and no major improvements were obtained after data filtering. Merging of data obtained with the two kits resulted in a well-supported phylogenetic tree.
Conclusions: The Angiosperms353 data set improved upon data filtering, and missing data played an important role in phylogenetic reconstruction. The Angiosperms353 data set resolved the phylogenetic backbone of Ochnaceae as equally well as the family specific data set. All analyses indicated that both Sauvagesia L. and Campylospermum Tiegh. as currently circumscribed are polyphyletic and require revised delimitation.
Nature benefits human health. To date, however, little is known whether biodiversity relates to human health. While some local and city level studies show that species diversity, as a measure of biodiversity, can have positive effects, there is a lack of studies about the relationship between different species diversity measures and human health, especially at larger spatial scales. Here, we conduct cross-sectional analyses of the association between species diversity and human health across Germany, while controlling for socio-economic factors and other nature characteristics. As indicators for human health, we use the mental (MCS) and physical health (PCS) component scales of the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP, Short Form Health Questionnaire – SF12). For species diversity, we use species richness and abundance estimates of two species groups: plants and birds. We phrase the following hypotheses: plant and bird species are positively associated with mental and physical health (H1 & H3); bird abundance is positively related to mental health (H2). Our results demonstrate a significant positive relationship between plant and bird species richness and mental health across all model variations controlling for a multitude of other factors. These results highlight the importance for species diversity for people’s mental health and well-being. Therefore, policy makers, landscape planners and greenspace managers on the local and national level should consider supporting biodiverse environments to promote mental health and wellbeing. For this purpose, we propose to use species diversity measures as indicators for salutogenic (health promoting) characteristics of nature, landscape and urban green space.
Acinetobacter baumannii is an opportunistic human pathogen that has become a global threat to healthcare institutions worldwide. The success of A. baumannii is based on the rise of multiple antibiotic resistances and its outstanding potential to persist in the human host and under conditions of low water activity in hospital environments. Combating low water activities involves osmoprotective measures such as uptake of compatible solutes and K+. To address the role of K+ uptake in the physiology of A. baumannii we have identified K+ transporter encoding genes in the genome of A. baumannii ATCC 19606. The corresponding genes (kup, trk, kdp) were deleted and the phenotype of the mutants was studied. The triple mutant was defective in K+ uptake which resulted in a pronounced growth defect at high osmolarities (300 mM NaCl). Additionally, mannitol and glutamate synthesis were strongly reduced in the mutant. To mimic host conditions and to study its role as an uropathogen, we performed growth studies with the K+ transporter deletion mutants in human urine. Both, the double (ΔkupΔtrk) and the triple mutant were significantly impaired in growth. This could be explained by the inability of ΔkupΔtrkΔkdp to metabolize various amino acids properly. Moreover, the reactive oxygen species resistance of the triple mutant was significantly reduced in comparison to the wild type, making it susceptible to one essential part of the innate immune response. Finally, the triple and the double mutant were strongly impaired in Galleria mellonella killing giving first insights in the importance of K+ uptake in virulence.
The heart is the first functional organ that develops in the embryo. To become a functional organ, it undergoes several morphogenetic processes. These morphogenetic events involve different cell types, that interact with each other and respond to the surrounding extracellular matrix, as well as intrinsic and extrinsic mechanical forces, assuming different behaviors. Additionally, transcription factor networks, conserved among vertebrates, control the development.
To have a better understanding of cell behavior during development, it is necessary to find a model system that allows the investigation in vivo and at single-cell resolution. Thanks to the common evolutionary origin of the different cardiac structures, together with the conserved molecular pathways, the two-chambered zebrafish heart offers many advantages to study cell behavior during cardiac morphogenesis. Here, using the zebrafish heart as a model system, I uncovered the cell behavior behind two of the main cardiac morphogenetic events: cardiac wall maturation and cardiac valve formation.
In the first part of this study, I investigated how the cardiac wall is maintained at the molecular level. Using genetic, transcriptomic, and chimeric analyses in zebrafish, we find that Snai1b is required for myocardial wall integrity. Global loss of snai1b leads to the extrusion of CMs away from the cardiac lumen, a process we show is dependent on cardiac contractility. Examining CM junctions in snai1b mutants, we observed that N-cadherin localization was compromised, thereby likely weakening cell-cell adhesion. In addition, extruding CMs exhibit increased actomyosin contractility basally, as revealed by the specific enrichment of canonical markers of actomyosin tension - phosphorylated myosin light chain (active myosin) and the α-catenin epitope α-18. By comparing the transcriptome of wild-type and snai1b mutant hearts at the early stages of CM extrusion, we found the dysregulation of intermediate filament genes in mutants including the upregulation of desmin b. We tested the role of desmin b in myocardial wall integrity and found that CM-specific desmin b overexpression led to CM extrusion, recapitulating the snai1b mutant phenotype. Altogether, these results indicate that Snai1 is a critical regulator of intermediate filament gene expression in CMs and that it maintains the integrity of the myocardial epithelium during embryogenesis, at least in part by repressing desmin b expression.
In the second part of this study, I focused on the behavior of valve cells during cardiac development. Using the zebrafish atrioventricular valve, I focus on the valve interstitial cells which confer biomechanical strength to the cardiac valve leaflets. We find that initially AV endocardial cells migrate collectively into the cardiac jelly to form a bilayered structure; subsequently, the cells that led this migration invade the extracellular matrix (ECM) between the two EC monolayers, undergo an endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition as marked by loss of intercellular adhesion, and differentiate into VICs. These cells proliferate and are joined by a few neural crest-derived cells. VIC expansion and a switch from a pro-migratory to an elastic ECM drive valve leaflet elongation. Functional analysis of Nfatc1 reveals its requirement during VIC development. Zebrafish nfatc1 mutants form significantly fewer VICs due to reduced proliferation and impaired recruitment of endocardial and neural crest cells during the early stages of VIC development. Analysis of downstream effectors reveals that Nfatc1 promotes the expression of twist1b, a well-known regulator of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. This study shows for the first time that Nfatc1 regulates zebrafish VICs formation regulating valve EMT in part by regulating twist1b expression. Moreover, it proposes the zebrafish valve as an excellent model to study the cellular and molecular process that regulate VIC development and dysfunction.
In conclusion, my work: 1) identified an unsuspected role of Snai1 in maintaining the integrity of the myocardial epithelium, opening new avenues in its role in regulating cellular contractility; 2) uncovered the function of Nfatc1 in the establishment of the VIC, establishing a new model to study valve development and function.
Non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) are large multienzyme machineries. They synthesize numerous important natural products starting from amino acids. For peptide synthesis functionally specialized NRPS modules interact in a defined manner. Individual modules are either located on a single or on multiple different polypeptide chains. The “peptide-antimicrobial-Xenorhabdus” (PAX) peptide producing NRPS PaxS from Xenorhabdus bacteria consists of the three proteins PaxA, PaxB and PaxC. Different docking domains (DDs) located at the N-termini of PaxB and PaxC and at the C-termini of PaxA and BaxB mediate specific non-covalent interactions between them. The N-terminal docking domains precede condensation domains while the C-terminal docking domains follow thiolation domains. The binding specificity of individual DDs is important for the correct assembly of multi-protein NRPS systems. In many multi-protein NRPS systems the docking domains are sufficient to mediate the necessary interactions between individual protein chains. However, it remains unclear if this is a general feature for all types of structurally different docking domains or if the neighboring domains in some cases support the function of the docking domains. Here, we report the 1H, 13C and 15 N NMR resonance assignments for a C-terminal di-domain construct containing a thiolation (T) domain followed by a C-terminal docking domain (CDD) from PaxA and for its binding partner – the N-terminal docking domain (NDD) from PaxB from the Gram-negative entomopathogenic bacterium Xenorhabdus cabanillasii JM26 in their free states and for a 1:1 complex formed by the two proteins. These NMR resonance assignments will facilitate further structural and dynamic studies of this protein complex.
The current pandemic situation caused by the Betacoronavirus SARS-CoV-2 (SCoV2) highlights the need for coordinated research to combat COVID-19. A particularly important aspect is the development of medication. In addition to viral proteins, structured RNA elements represent a potent alternative as drug targets. The search for drugs that target RNA requires their high-resolution structural characterization. Using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, a worldwide consortium of NMR researchers aims to characterize potential RNA drug targets of SCoV2. Here, we report the characterization of 15 conserved RNA elements located at the 5′ end, the ribosomal frameshift segment and the 3′-untranslated region (3′-UTR) of the SCoV2 genome, their large-scale production and NMR-based secondary structure determination. The NMR data are corroborated with secondary structure probing by DMS footprinting experiments. The close agreement of NMR secondary structure determination of isolated RNA elements with DMS footprinting and NMR performed on larger RNA regions shows that the secondary structure elements fold independently. The NMR data reported here provide the basis for NMR investigations of RNA function, RNA interactions with viral and host proteins and screening campaigns to identify potential RNA binders for pharmaceutical intervention.
Despite all advancements in cancer research and clinical practice, cancer remains a life- threatening disease with an increasing incidence. According to a 2018 WHO forecast, cancer incidence will double to approximately 37 million new cancer cases by 2040. Today, clinical management of cancer is based on a "one-fits-all" strategy. Most cancers are still treated by surgical therapy followed by adjuvant or neoadjuvant chemotherapy based on rather strict guidelines (S3 guidelines in Europe) which are based on studies of large cohorts of patients with the same tumor entity. While this approach has led to substantial increases in progression-free survival and overall patient survival, most patients do not benefit from the administered treatment regimen. One reason for this is intra-tumor heterogeneity, which results from clonal evolution between cancer cells and their environment. This means that cancer patients may respond differently to a particular drug due to the different mutation patterns of their tumor cells. Therefore, patients should be screened in advance for reliable cancer biomarkers that definitively predict whether they will respond to a particular therapy. This would increase the probability of a successful treatment.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most diagnosed cancer and the second leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide. The main cause of death in CRC is a metastatic disease, which is presented in 20 % of patients and eventually develops in more than 30 % of early-stage patients. Despite the significant increase (to more than 30 months) in median survival with the development of cytotoxic agents and the introduction of targeted therapy, the progression-free survival in the first-line setting has remained largely unchanged over the past decade.
The heterogeneity in CRC is characterized by alterations in multiple signaling pathways that affect cellular functions such as cell proliferation or apoptosis. Commonly affected signaling pathways include the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)- and the transforming growth factor-β/bone morphogenetic protein (TGF-β/BMP)-pathway. Alterations in the TGF-β/BMP pathway, due to mutations in the SMAD4 gene (mothers against decapentaplegic homolog 4), are associated with different drug response and promote resistance to chemotherapy. In addition, they are associated with a higher recurrence rate.
SMAD4 is one of the most common cancer driver genes, and mutations occur in up to 15 % of CRC cases. Therefore, there is an urgent need for therapeutic agents that can specifically target SMAD4-mutated tumors.
The aim of the present study was the identification of the clinical relevance of the SMAD4 gene and the investigation of its suitability as a potential biomarker in CRC.
For this purpose, I investigated sibling patient-derived organoids (PDOs) derived from different regions of a chemo-naïve CRC tumor. PDOs are 3D cell cultures that reliably recapitulate the architecture of the tissue of origin, as well as preserve the genomic background and intra-tumor heterogeneity. The sibling PDOs (R1R361H and R4wt) shared the most common CRC mutations, such as KRASG12D (kirsten rat sarcoma), PIK3CAH1047R (phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase, catalytic subunit alpha), and TP53C242F (tumor protein 53), but differed in a SMAD4R361H mutation and showed a different drug response. The single nucleotide variant R361H of the SMAD4 gene is among the most common pathogenic alterations in various cancers, including CRC.
The sibling PDOs showed significant differences in response to the MEK-inhibitors cobimetinib, trametinib, and selumetinib. MEK-inhibitors are antineoplastic agents that inhibit the function of MEK1 and MEK2, preventing phosphorylation of transcription factors, which leads to inhibition of tumor cell proliferation. MEK-inhibitors are approved for the treatment of malignant melanoma. Currently, they are in phase-III clinical trials for the treatment of patients with metastatic CRC.
To investigate whether SMAD4R361H is responsible for sensitivity to MEK-inhibitors, Iestablished three syngeneic PDOs harboring a SMAD4R361H mutation using the CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing system. All CRISPR-PDOs were significantly more sensitive to the MEK-inhibitors, compared to R4wt. I have shown that the SMAD4R361H mutation is responsible for sensitivity to MEK inhibition in CRC models and may be a predictive biomarker.
To test this hypothesis, I examined 62 CRC PDO models and treated them with the MEK-inhibitors cobimetinib, trametinib, and selumetinib. All models that had a pathogenic mutation or deletion in the SMAD4 gene (15 %) were sensitive to cobimetinib, 10 % of models were sensitive to trametinib, and 8 % were sensitive to selumetinib.
I performed transcriptome (RNA sequencing) and proteome analyses using the DigiWest® method to investigate the mechanism underlying MEK-inhibitor sensitivity.
DigiWest® is a Luminex® bead-based analysis that allows the simultaneous analysis of over 100 (phospho-)proteins. The transcriptome and proteome data support the observation that MEK inhibition primarily affects SMAD4R361H PDOs. Furthermore, I have shown that activation of the BMP signaling pathway in organoids with wild-type SMAD4 appears to be responsible for resistance to MEK-inhibitors. Thus, a genetic alteration in the BMP signaling pathway, beyond SMAD4, could lead to sensitivity to MEK-inhibitors.
I identified four genes involved in the TGF-β/BMP signaling pathway that are frequently mutated in CRC and grouped them into the so-called SFAB-signature (SMAD4, FBXW7 (F-box/WD repeat-containing protein 7), ARID1A (AT-rich interactive domain-containing protein 1A), or BMPR2 (Bone morphogenetic protein receptor type II). Clinical data show that approximately 36 % of CRC patients have at least one pathogenic mutation in these genes.
I tested all 62 CRC PDO models and found a significant positive prediction for sensitivity to cobimetinib (95 %) and selumetinib (70 %) for the SFAB-signature. Trametinib and the newly approved MEK-inhibitor binimetinib showed a similar trend. Therefore, the SFAB-signature has high predictive power for response to MEK-inhibitors and could be used as a predictive biomarker panel.
The current clinically used biomarkers for CRC are based on the mutation status of driver genes KRAS and BRAF, which are present in up to 50 % and 10 % of CRC, respectively. Investigation of molecular alterations in CRC revealed that mutations in the KRAS gene, which is downstream of EGFR (epidermal growth factor receptor) in the MAPK-pathway, interfere with an anti-EGFR-antibody therapy (e.g., cetuximab). Therefore, cetuximab is only relevant for RAS wild-type tumors. However, approximately 40 % of patients with RAS wild-type status do not respond to this treatment.
About 53 % of CRC PDO models carry a pathogenic RAS mutation, about 10 % harbor a pathogenic BRAF mutation. Both, the RAS and RAF status alone as well as the combination of RAS and RAF status with SFAB-signature did not provide a better prediction of sensitivity to MEK inhibition.
Eine große Gruppe von Aptameren sind die Guanosintriphosphat (GTP) Aptamere. Diese zeigt sehr eindrücklich, wie RNA unterschiedliche Strategien nutzt, um denselben Liganden zu erkennen. Die komplette Struktur des GTP Klasse II Aptamers wird in der ersten Publikation gezeigt. Interessanterweise zeichnet die Struktur ein stabil protoniertes Adenine unterhalb der GTP-Bindestelle aus. Dieses wurde durch eine Kombination aus weiterführenden NMR- und ITC-Experimente untersucht und charakterisiert. Es zeigte sich, dass die protonierte Base einen pKs-Wert hat, der weit von der Neutralität verschoben ist. Die Protonierung ist auch noch bei sehr basischen Puffern stabil.
Eine Art der funktionellen Protonierung wird von den zyklischen di-Nukleotiden (CDN) bindenden Riboswitches genutzt, um zwei CDN mit ähnlicher Affinität zu binden. c-di-GMP Riboswitches wurden als regulatorische Einheit beschrieben und deren Kristallstruktur aufgeklärt. Mutationsexperimente führten dazu, dass bei einer G-zu-A Mutation an der Gα-Bindestelle die Selektivität des Riboswitches verändert wurde. Die Mutante bindet sowohl c-di-GMP als auch cGAMP mit ähnlichen Bindungsaffinitäten. Riboswitche, die cGAMP binden wurden auch in der bakteriellen Genomen gefunden. Hierbei ist die Promiskuität unterschiedlich stark ausgeprägt. Die Untersuchung des Bindungsmodus und der damit verbundenen Promiskuität ist in der zweiten Publikation beschrieben. Hier wurde gezeigt, dass die Riboswitche beide Liganden nur binden können, wenn zur Bindung von c-di-GMP das Ligand bindende A protoniert vorliegt. Auch diese Protonierung konnte mit weiterführenden NMR- und ITC-Experimenten charakterisiert werden. Die Untersuchungen einer solch großen RNA sind mit NMR Spektroskopie herausfordernd. Hierbei wurde ausgenutzt, dass die Kristallstruktur bereits bekannt war, welche allerdings die Protonierung nicht zeigte. Auch diese Protonierung zeigt einen pKs-Wert, der weit von der Neutralität verschoben ist und außerdem bei unterschiedlichen pH stabil ist.
In den beiden untersuchten Beispielen wurden zwei verschiedene Arten von Protonierung gezeigt: eine strukturelle und eine funktionelle. Das GTP Klasse II Aptamer benutzt die Protonierung als strukturelle Basis für die Basis der Ligandenbindungsstelle. Hierbei werden durch die Protonierung des Adenines mehr nutzbare Wasserstoffbrücken ausgebildet und damit die Tertiärstruktur stabilisiert. Im Unterschied dazu nutzen die promiskuitiven CDN Ribsowicthes die Protonierung, um verschiedene Liganden binden zu können und es kommt damit zu einer Verschiebung der Funktionalität. Der regulatorische Nutzen dafür ist allerdings noch unbekannt.
Auch bei den SAM Riboswitches wurde ein promiskuitiver Vertreter beschrieben. SAM Riboswitches gehören zu den am längsten bekannten Klassen der Riboswitches. Bis heute sind hier die meisten unterschiedlichen Klassen bekannt. SAM wird häufig als Donor für funktionelle Gruppen benutzt, besonders häufig als Methlygruppendonor für die Methylierung einer Reihe unterschiedlicher Substrate (z.B. DNA, Proteine, Metabolite etc.). Bei dieser Reaktion entsteht SAH als Nebenprodukt. Zusätzlich ist SAH zelltoxisch, da es affin an Methyltransferasen bindet und damit diese essenzielle Reaktion inhibiert. Eine enge Kontrolle der SAH-Konzentration ist daher kritisch. SAM bindende Riboswitches haben zu SAM eine bis zu 1000-fach höhere Bindungsaffinität im Vergleich zu SAH. Die Beschreibung eines translationalen OFF-Riboswitches, der SAM und SAH mit ähnlicher Affinität bindet, ist daher überraschend. Zumal seine Genassoziation fast ausschließlich zu SAM Synthetasen ist, deren Regulation durch SAH wenig sinnvoll erscheint. Um ein besseres Verständnis für die Funktion des SAM/SAH Riboswitches zu erhalten, wurde seine 3D-Struktur mittels NMR-Spektroskopie aufgeklärt, wie in der vierten Publikation beschrieben. Dafür mussten zunächst alle Resonanzen der Sequenz und dem Liganden zugeordnet werden, wie in der dritten Publikation beschrieben. Dabei wurde als Ligand SAH gewählt, da dieser chemisch stabiler und damit für die teils tagelangen NMR-Messungen besser geeignet ist. Zusätzlich wurden Mutanten bzw. verwandte Liganden mittels ITC Experimente auf ihre Bindungseigenschaften untersucht, um die Bedeutung der Linkerlänge, einzelner Basenpaare und funktionelle Gruppen des Liganden zu untersuchen. Bei anderen bekannten SAM Riboswitches umschließt die RNA den Liganden fast komplett. Dabei wird zum einem das Sulfoniumion spezifisch durch die Carboxylgruppen verschiedener Uracil-Nukleotide erkennt und koordiniert. Außerdem bildet sich eine Bindetasche aus, die genug Platz für die stabile Bindung der Methylgruppe hat. Beim SAH Riboswitch wird die Selektivität für SAH dadurch erreicht, dass die Bindetasche sterisch keinen Platz für die Methylgruppe von SAM bereitstellt.
Zusammenfassend wurden in dieser Arbeit drei verschiedene Ligand bindende RNA-Strukturen untersucht, die alle sehr unterschiedliche Strategien zur Bindung der Liganden nutzen. Obwohl Portionierungen bei Aptameren und Riboswitches selten beschrieben wurden, haben sie eine maßgebliche Funktion in den beiden zuerst untersuchten Strukturen. Obwohl bisher im Hinblick auf alle bekannten RNA Strukturen eher selten beschrieben, gibt es doch neben den genannten zwei, einige Beispiele für strukturelle oder funktionelle Protonierungen. Auch in Hinblick auf zukünftige bzw. Verbesserung bestehender RNA-Strukturvorhersage-Programme ähnlich wie sie für Proteine schon lange nutzt werden, müssen protonierte Nukleobasen ernsthaft in Betracht gezogen werden. Außerdem konnte gezeigt werden, dass zwei der untersuchten Riboswitches zwei Liganden mit ähnlicher Affinität binden. Die genutzte Strategie ist hierbei unterschiedlich. Während bei den promiskuitiven CDN Riboswitches der regulatorische Nutzen noch unbekannt ist, konnte für den SAM/SAH Ribsowitch gezeigt werden, dass SAH nur zufällig aufgrund der wahrscheinlich sehr niedrigen intrazellulären Konzentration gebunden wird und dieser daher wahrscheinlich später in der evolutionären Entwicklung entstanden ist. Riboswitches halten es weiterhin spannend.
The intensive use of the North Sea area through offshore activities, sand mining, and the spreading of dredged material is leading to increasing pollution of the ecosystem by chemicals such as hydrophobic organic contaminants (HOCs). Due to their toxicological properties and their ability to accumulate in the environment, HOCs are of particular concern. The contaminants partition between aqueous (pore water, overlying water) and solid phases (sediment, suspended particulate matter, and biota) within these systems. The accumulated contaminants in the sediment are of major concern for benthic organisms, who are in close contact with sediment and interstitial water. It is thus particularly important to better understand how contaminants interact with biota, as these animals may contribute to trophic transfer through the food web. Furthermore, sediments are a crucial factor for the water quality of aquatic systems. They not only represent a sink for contaminants but also determine environmental fate, bioavailability, and toxicity. The Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD) was introduced to protect our marine environment across Europe and includes the assessment of pollutant concentrations in the total sediment, which, however, rarely reflects the actual exposure situation. The consideration of the pollutant concentrations in the pore water is not implemented, although this is needed for the evaluation of bioavailability and risk assessment. For this reason, special attention is given to further development, implementation, and validation of pollutant monitoring methods that can determine the bioavailable fraction in sediment pore water. For risk assessment purposes, it is furthermore important to use biological indicators in addition to classical analytics to determine the effect of pollutants on organisms. The main objective of this thesis was to gain insight into the pollution load and the potential risk of hydrophobic organic chemicals (HOCs) in the sediment of the North Sea and to evaluate these results with regard to possible risks for benthic organisms and the ecosystem. The following five aims are covered within these studies to gain a holistic assessment of sediment contamination:
1. Assessment of the pore water concentrations of PAHs and PCBs
2. Determination of the bioturbation potential by macrofauna analysis
3. Application of the SPME method on biological tissue
4. Assessment of recreated environmental mixtures in passive dosing bioassays
5. Development of SPME method for DDT in sediments
The thesis is comprised of three main studies supported by three additional studies ...
Coupling between epidermis and amphid morphogenesis during embryonic development of C. elegans
(2021)
Sensory organs are fundamental for survival of animal populations, since the detection of environmental stimuli is crucial for localization of nourishment, predators or mating partners. In nematodes, the amphid (AM) sensilla are the largest sensory organs for detection of chemical compounds.
This study investigates how the AM sensilla acquire their special elongated shape during lima-bean to 1.5-fold embryonic stages of C. elegans head development. The dissertation also examines events facilitating the morphogenesis of other head sensilla (IL/OL/CEP) and addresses aspects of general embryonic head morphogenesis. Using high resolution live-cell imaging techniques with different combinations of markers highlighting specific tissues, this study shows that epidermal head enclosure, migration of AM socket cells (pores) and translocation of AM dendrite tips are coupled processes, facilitating the elongation of AM dendrites. Importantly, during AM dendrite elongation the AM neural cell bodies are staying stationary. Manipulation through conducting UV-Laser ablation (epidermis close to pore/pore) and RPN-6.1 dsRNA interference resulted in compromised AM pore migration and impaired dendrite elongation. This leads to the conclusion that AM pores need to be physically attached (through C. elegans apical junctions, CeAJ) to the migrating epidermal sheet and to AM dendrite tips for successful AM morphogenesis. This study infers that RPN-6.1 plays an important role for correct AM pore morphogenesis and AM pore to AM dendrite tip attachment. Our results lead to the conclusion that head enclosure drives AM pore migration and AM dendrite elongation with AM neural cell bodies staying stationary. Thereby, CeAJ are interconnecting AM dendrite tips to AM pores and CeAJ link the sensillar ending to the migrating epidermis. Thus, migration of attached target tissue (pore), with neural cell bodies staying stationary (constituting an abutment), creates a pulling force facilitating AM dendrite elongation. This passive neurite elongation procedure is coined dendrite towing in this study.
Additionally, this study discovers that translocation of IL, OL and CEP head sensilla pores is influenced by apical constriction. This conclusion was made based on the findings that IL/OL/CEP pores migrate towards the prospective mouth anterior to the epidermal leading edge, separated from AM pores and irrespective of highly impaired AM sensilla morphogenesis after strong RPN-6.1 depletion. Also, concurrent with translocation of IL/OL/CEP pores, bottle-shaped cells occur and non-muscle-myosin and apical polarity factors are getting enriched at the anterior most part of the head, indicating de-novo manifestation of apical constriction. It is furthermore assumed that apical constriction in arcade cells might contribute to early pharynx development. All in all, this study reveals two force-generating events: Head enclosure-driven AM sensilla morphogenesis via dendrite towing and, otherwise, apical constriction-facilitated translocation of IL/OL/CEP sensilla pores. These events can get separated by graded depletion of the proteasome activator RPN-6.1.
Glucose is an essential energy source for cells. In humans, its passive diffusion through the cell membrane is facilitated by members of the glucose transporter family (GLUT, SLC2 gene family). GLUT2 transports both glucose and fructose with low affinity and plays a critical role in glucose sensing mechanisms. Alterations in the function or expression of GLUT2 are involved in the Fanconi–Bickel syndrome, diabetes, and cancer. Distinguishing GLUT2 transport in tissues where other GLUTs coexist is challenging due to the low affinity of GLUT2 for glucose and fructose and the scarcity of GLUT-specific modulators. By combining in silico ligand screening of an inward-facing conformation model of GLUT2 and glucose uptake assays in a hexose transporter-deficient yeast strain, in which the GLUT1-5 can be expressed individually, we identified eleven new GLUT2 inhibitors (IC50 ranging from 0.61 to 19.3 µM). Among them, nine were GLUT2-selective, one inhibited GLUT1-4 (pan-Class I GLUT inhibitor), and another inhibited GLUT5 only. All these inhibitors dock to the substrate cavity periphery, close to the large cytosolic loop connecting the two transporter halves, outside the substrate-binding site. The GLUT2 inhibitors described here have various applications; GLUT2-specific inhibitors can serve as tools to examine the pathophysiological role of GLUT2 relative to other GLUTs, the pan-Class I GLUT inhibitor can block glucose entry in cancer cells, and the GLUT2/GLUT5 inhibitor can reduce the intestinal absorption of fructose to combat the harmful effects of a high-fructose diet.
Echolocation behavior, a navigation strategy based on acoustic signals, allows scientists to explore neural processing of behaviorally relevant stimuli. For the purpose of orientation, bats broadcast echolocation calls and extract spatial information from the echoes. Because bats control call emission and thus the availability of spatial information, the behavioral relevance of these signals is undiscussable. While most neurophysiological studies, conducted in the past, used synthesized acoustic stimuli that mimic portions of the echolocation signals, recent progress has been made to understand how naturalistic echolocation signals are encoded in the bat brain. Here, we review how does stimulus history affect neural processing, how spatial information from multiple objects and how echolocation signals embedded in a naturalistic, noisy environment are processed in the bat brain. We end our review by discussing the huge potential that state-of-the-art recording techniques provide to gain a more complete picture on the neuroethology of echolocation behavior.
Marine oomycetes are highly diverse, globally distributed, and play key roles in marine food webs as decomposers, food source, and parasites. Despite their potential importance in global ocean ecosystems, marine oomycetes are comparatively little studied. Here, we tested if the primer pair cox2F_Hud and cox2-RC4, which is already well-established for phylogenetic investigations of terrestrial oomycetes, can also be used for high-throughput community barcoding. Community barcoding of a plankton sample from Brudenell River (Prince Edward Island, Canada), revealed six distinct oomycete OTU clusters. Two of these clusters corresponded to members of the Peronosporaceae—one could be assigned to Peronospora verna, an obligate biotrophic pathogen of the terrestrial plant Veronica serpyllifolia and related species, the other was closely related to Globisporangium rostratum. While the detection of the former in the sample is likely due to long-distance dispersal from the island, the latter might be a bona fide marine species, as several cultivable species of the Peronosporaceae are known to withstand high salt concentrations. Two OTU lineages could be assigned to the Saprolegniaceae. While these might represent marine species of the otherwise terrestrial genus, it is also conceivable that they were introduced on detritus from the island. Two additional OTU clusters were grouped with the early-diverging oomycete lineages but could not be assigned to a specific family. This reflects the current underrepresentation of cox2 sequence data which will hopefully improve with the increasing interest in marine oomycetes.
Correction to: Apidologie (2020) 51:1182–1198
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13592-020-00796-9
The article Insights into Ethiopian honey bee diversity based on wing geomorphometric and mitochondrial DNA analyses, written by Hailu, T.G., D’Alvise, P., Tofilski, A. et al., was originally published Online First without Open Access. After publication in volume 51, issue 6, page 1182-1198, the author decided to opt for Open Choice and to make the article an Open Access publication. Therefore, the copyright of the article has been changed to © The Author(s) 2020 and the article is forthwith distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution, and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article is included in the article’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL.
The acetogenic model bacterium Acetobacterium woodii is well-known to produce acetate by homoacetogenesis from sugars, but under certain conditions minor amounts of ethanol are produced in addition. Here, we have aimed to identify physiological conditions that increase electron and carbon flow towards ethanol production. Ethanol was only produced from fructose but not from H2 + CO2, formate, pyruvate, lactate or alanine. In the absence of Na+, the Wood–Ljungdahl pathway (WLP) of acetate formation is not functional. Therefore, the ethanol yield increased to 0.42 mol/mol (ethanol/fructose) with an ethanol/acetate ratio of 0.28 mol/mol. The presence of bicarbonate/CO2 stimulated electron and carbon flow through the WLP and led to less ethanol produced. Of the 11 potential alcohol dehydrogenase genes, the most upregulated during ethanologenesis was adh4. A deletion of adh4 led to an increase in ethanol production by 100% to a yield of 0.79 mol/mol (ethanol/fructose); this correlated with an increase in transcript abundance of adh6. In sum, our studies revealed low Na+ and bicarbonate/CO2 as factors that trigger ethanol formation and that a deletion of adh4 drastically increased ethanol formation in A. woodii.
Invasive alien species are a well-known and pervasive threat to global biodiversity and human well-being. Despite substantial impacts of invasive alien species, quantitative syntheses of monetary costs incurred from invasions in national economies are often missing. As a consequence, adequate resource allocation for management responses to invasions has been inhibited, because cost-benefit analysis of management actions cannot be derived. To determine the economic cost of invasions in Germany, a Central European country with the 4th largest GDP in the world, we analysed published data collected from the first global assessment of economic costs of invasive alien species. Overall, economic costs were estimated at US$ 9.8 billion between 1960 and 2020, including US$ 8.9 billion in potential costs. The potential costs were mostly linked to extrapolated costs of the American bullfrog Lithobates catesbeianus, the black cherry Prunus serotina and two mammals: the muskrat Ondatra zibethicus and the American mink Neovison vison. Observed costs were driven by a broad range of taxa and mostly associated with control-related spending and resource damages or losses. We identified a considerable increase in costs relative to previous estimates and through time. Importantly, of the 2,249 alien and 181 invasive species reported in Germany, only 28 species had recorded economic costs. Therefore, total quantifications of invasive species costs here should be seen as very conservative. Our findings highlight a distinct lack of information in the openly-accessible literature and governmental sources on invasion costs at the national level, masking the highly-probable existence of much greater costs of invasions in Germany. In addition, given that invasion rates are increasing, economic costs are expected to further increase. The evaluation and reporting of economic costs need to be improved in order to deliver a basis for effective mitigation and management of invasions on national and international economies.