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The glycine receptor (GlyR) is the major inhibitory neurotransmitter receptor in spinal cord and brainstem. Heteropentameric GlyRs are clustered and anchored at inhibitory postsynaptic sites by the binding of the large intracellular loop between transmembrane domains 3 and 4 of the GlyRbeta subunit (GlyRbeta-loop) to the cytoplasmic scaffolding protein gephyrin. GlyRs are also cotransported with gephyrin along microtubules in the anterograde and retrograde direction due to the binding of gephyrin to microtubule-associated motor proteins. Additionally, GlyRs undergo lateral diffusion in the plasma membrane from extrasynaptic to synaptic sites and vice versa. Since its discovery, gephyrin has remained for many years the only binding partner interacting directly with the GlyRbeta subunit. In an attempt to elucidate further mechanisms involved in GlyR function and regulation at inhibitory postsynaptic sites, a proteomic screen for putative binding partners to the GlyRbeta loop was performed. Three proteins were identified as putative interactors. In this thesis, the interaction between these putative binding proteins and the GlyRbeta subunit was analyzed and characterized. Binding studies with glutathione-S-transferase fusion proteins revealed that all putative binding proteins, Syndapin (Sdp), Vacuolar Protein Sorting 35 (Vps35) and Neurobeachin (Nbea), interact specifically with the GlyRbeta loop. The Sdp family of proteins are F-BAR and SH3 domain containing proteins. Inmmunocytochemical experiments showed that SdpI as well as the isoforms SdpII-S and SdpIIL colocalize with the full-length GlyRbeta subunit in a mammalian cell expression system. In cultured spinal cord neurons, a partial colocalization of endogenous SdpI with several excitatory and inhibitory synaptic markers was demonstrated. Mapping experiments using deletion mutants narrowed the SdpI binding site down to 22 amino acids. Peptide competition experiments confirmed the specificity of the interaction between SdpI and this sequence of the GlyRbeta subunit. Point mutation analysis revealed a SH3-proline rich domain dependent interaction between SdpI and the GlyRbeta subunit, respectively. In addition, binding studies in mammalian cells showed that both splice variants of SdpII as well as SdpI interact with the GlyR scaffolding protein gephyrin. Although the SdpI and gephyrin binding sites do not overlap, protein competition studies revealed that interaction of the E-domain of gephyrin with the GlyRbeta loop interferes with SdpI binding. Since SdpI is a dynamin binding protein involved in vesicle endocytosis and recycling pathways, a possible function of SdpI in the regulation of GlyR synaptic distribution was investigated. Co-immunoprecipitation experiments confirmed a SdpI-GlyR association in the vesicle-enriched fraction of rat spinal cord tissue. Immunocytochemical studies of SdpI knock out mice showed that the clustering and distribution of GlyRs in the brain stem is unchanged. However, acute down-regulation of SdpI in rat spinal cord neurons by viral shRNA expression led to a reduction in the number and size of GlyR clusters, an effect that could be rescued upon shRNA-resistant SdpI overexpression. Further immunocytochemical analysis of the localization of gephyrin, the gamma2 subunit of the type A gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor (GABAARgamma2 subunit) and the vesicular inhibitory amino acid transporter (VIAAT) under SdpI knock-down conditions showed that both the number and average size of the gamma2-subunit containing GABAA receptor clusters were significantly reduced in spinal cord neurons. In contrast to GlyR and GABAARgamma2 immunoreactivity, the number and average size of gephyrin and VIAAT clusters were barely reduced upon SdpI downregulation. These results suggest that SdpI has a role in GlyR trafficking that can be compensated by other syndapin isoforms or other trafficking pathways. Furthermore, SdpI might be required for the clusters of GlyRs and gamma2-subunit containing GABAARs in spinal cord and brainstem. Vps35 is the core protein of the retromer complex, which mediates the endosome to Golgi apparatus retrieval of different types of receptors in mammals and yeast. Here, protein-protein interaction assays revealed for the first time that Vps35 interacts directly with the GlyRbeta loop as well as with gephyrin. The generation of specific Vps35 antibodies allowed to determine the distribution of this protein in the central nervous system. Immunocytochemical analyses revealed the presence of Vps35 in the somata and neurites of spinal cord neurons, suggesting a possible interaction of Vps35 with the GlyR under physiological conditions. Nbea is a BEACH domain containing, neuron-specific protein. Binding studies revealed a direct interaction between two regions of Nbea and the GlyRbeta loop. Immunocytochemical experiments confirmed a somatic and synaptic distribution of Nbea in primary cultures. In spinal cord neurons, a partial colocalization of Nbea with excitatory and inhibitory synaptic markers suggests a possible interaction of Nbea with the GlyR at inhibitory synaptic sites.
Summary: Information and communication is critical to the successful management of infectious diseases because an effective communication strategy prevents the surge of anxious patients who have not been genuinely exposed to the pathogen ('low risk patients') affecting medical infrastructures (1) and the future transmission of the infectious agent (2). Surge of low risk patients: The arrival of large numbers of low risk patients at hospitals following an infectious diseases emergency would be problematic for three main reasons. First, it would complicate the situation at hospitals receiving exposed patients, delaying the treatment of the acutely ill, creating difficulties of crowd control and tying up medical resources. Second, for the low risk patients themselves, attending hospital following an infectious disease emergency might increase their risk of exposure to the agent in question. Third, the needs of low risk patients may be poorly attended to at hospitals which are already overstretched dealing with medical casualties. Future transmission: Obtaining early information about symptoms and isolating infected patients is the most effective strategy to interrupt the chain of infection in the public in the absence of specific prophylaxis or treatment. Particularly at the beginning of an outbreak, these nonpharmaceutical interventions play an important role in enabling the early detection of signs or symptoms and in encouraging passengers to adopt appropriate preventive behaviour in order to limit the spread of the disease. This thesis includes two papers dealing with this problem: The first part is a systemic literature review of information needs following an infectious disease emergency (Anthrax, SARS, Pneumonic Plague). The key question was: what are the information needs of the public during an infectious disease emergency? The second part is an empirical investigation of information needs and communication strategies at the airport during the early stage of the Influenza Pandemic. The key question here was: what communication strategies help to meet the information needs and to enable the public to behave appropriately and responsibly? Conclusions: Evidence from the anthrax attacks in the United States suggested that a surge of low risk patients is by no means inevitable. Data from the SARS outbreak illustrated that if hospitals are seen as sources of contagion, many patients with non-bioterrorism related health care needs may delay seeking help. Finally, the events surrounding the Pneumonic Plague outbreak of 1994 in Surat, India, highlighted the need for the public to be kept adequately informed about an incident to avoid creating rumours. Clear, consistent and credible information is key to the successful management of infectious disease outbreaks. The results of the empirical investigation suggested that the desire for information is a reflection of current anxiety and does not mirror the objective scientific assessment of exposure. The airport study showed that perceived information needs were directly related to anxiety – the least anxious did not require any further information, the most anxious reported significant information needs concerning medical treatment, public health management and the assessment of the ongoing situation – irrespective of their actual exposure. A communication strategy only focussing on the 'real' exposed individuals neglects the information needs of those worrying about having contracted the virus and seeking medical attendance. Effective communication strategies should enable the general public to detect early signs or symptoms and provide them with behaviour advice to prevent the further transmission of the infectious agent. These include the provision of clear information about the incident, the symptoms and what to do to prevent the further transmission, detailed and regularly updated information in various media formats (telephone, internet, etc.) and rapid triage at hospital entrances to guide patients to the appropriate medical infrastructures. Relevance: These research findings could contribute to a shift in the organisational and communicative approach responding to infectious diseases outbreaks and could be considered relevant for future risk communication and policy decision making.
Interview with Dario Azzellini, author of The Business of War and the new documentary film, Comuna Under Construction. What is it about Venezuela that is so interesting? Since 2003 I have practically lived in Venezuela. What motivates me is that I am interested in the social transformation process happening here. It’s a different type of revolution, a new left that draws from all the experiences of the 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s. ...
This thesis investigates the development of early cognition in infancy using neural network models. Fundamental events in visual perception such as caused motion, occlusion, object permanence, tracking of moving objects behind occluders, object unity perception and sequence learning are modeled in a unifying computational framework while staying close to experimental data in developmental psychology of infancy. In the first project, the development of causality and occlusion perception in infancy is modeled using a simple, three-layered, recurrent network trained with error backpropagation to predict future inputs (Elman network). The model unifies two infant studies on causality and occlusion perception. Subsequently, in the second project, the established framework is extended to a larger prediction network that models the development of object unity, object permanence and occlusion perception in infancy. It is shown that these different phenomena can be unified into a single theoretical framework thereby explaining experimental data from 14 infant studies. The framework shows that these developmental phenomena can be explained by accurately representing and predicting statistical regularities in the visual environment. The models assume (1) different neuronal populations processing different motion directions of visual stimuli in the visual cortex of the newborn infant which are supported by neuroscientific evidence and (2) available learning algorithms that are guided by the goal of predicting future events. Specifically, the models demonstrate that no innate force notions, motion analysis modules, common motion detectors, specific perceptual rules or abilities to "reason" about entities which have been widely postulated in the developmental literature are necessary for the explanation of the discussed phenomena. Since the prediction of future events turned out to be fruitful for theoretical explanation of various developmental phenomena and a guideline for learning in infancy, the third model addresses the development of visual expectations themselves. A self-organising, fully recurrent neural network model that forms internal representations of input sequences and maps them onto eye movements is proposed. The reinforcement learning architecture (RLA) of the model learns to perform anticipatory eye movements as observed in a range of infant studies. The model suggests that the goal of maximizing the looking time at interesting stimuli guides infants' looking behavior thereby explaining the occurrence and development of anticipatory eye movements and reaction times. In contrast to classical neural network modelling approaches in the developmental literature, the model uses local learning rules and contains several biologically plausible elements like excitatory and inhibitory spiking neurons, spike-timing dependent plasticity (STDP), intrinsic plasticity (IP) and synaptic scaling. It is also novel from the technical point of view as it uses a dynamic recurrent reservoir shaped by various plasticity mechanisms and combines it with reinforcement learning. The model accounts for twelve experimental studies and predicts among others anticipatory behavior for arbitrary sequences and facilitated reacquisition of already learned sequences. All models emphasize the development of the perception of the discussed phenomena thereby addressing the questions of how and why this developmental change takes place - questions that are difficult to be assessed experimentally. Despite the diversity of the discussed phenomena all three projects rely on the same principle: the prediction of future events. This principle suggests that cognitive development in infancy may largely be guided by building internal models and representations of the visual environment and using those models to predict its future development.
This thesis consists of four chapters. Each chapter covers a topic in international macroeconomics and monetary policy. The first chapter investigates the impact of unexpected monetary policy shocks on exchange rates in a multi-country econometric model. The second chapter examines the linkage between macroeconomic fundamentals and exchange rates through the monetary policy expectation channel. The third chapter focuses on the international transmission of bank and corporate distress. The last chapter unfolds the interest rate channel of monetary policy transmission in-an emerging economy-China, where regulations and market forces co-exist in this transmission.
The pathophysiology of schizophrenia is still poorly understood. Investigating the neurophysiological correlates of cognitive dysfunction with functional neuroimaging techniques such as electroencephalography (EEG) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is widely considered to be a possible solution for this problem. Working memory impairment is one of the most prominent cognitive impairments found in schizophrenia. Working memory can be divided into a number of component processes, encoding, maintenance and retrieval. They appear to be differentially affected in schizophrenia, but little is known about the neurophysiological disturbances which contribute to deficits in these component processes. The aim of this dissertation was to elucidate the neurophysiological underpinnings of the component processes of working memory and their disturbance in schizophrenia. In the first study the the neurophysiological substrates of visual working memory capacity limitations were investigated during encoding, maintenance and retrieval in 12 healthy subjects using event-related fMRI. Subjects had to encode up to four abstract visual shapes and maintain them in working memory for 12 seconds. Afterwards a test stimulus was presented, which matched one of the previously shown shapes in fifty percent of the trials. A bilateral inverted U-shape pattern of BOLD activity with increasing memory load in areas closely linked with selective attention, i.e. the frontal eye fields and areas around the intraparietal sulcus, was observed already during encoding. The increase of the number of stored items from memory load three to memory load four in these regions was negatively correlated with the increase of BOLD activity from memory load three to memory load four. These results point to a crucial role of attentional processes for the limited capacity of working memory. In the second study, the contribution of early perceptual processing deficits during encoding and retrieval to working memory dysfunction was investigated in 17 patients with schizophrenia and 17 healthy control subjects using EEG and event-related fMRI. A slightly modified version of the working memory task used in the fist study was employed. Participants only had to encode and maintain up to three items. In patients the amplitude of the P1 event-related potential was significantly reduced already during encoding in all memory load conditions. Similarly, BOLD activity in early visual areas known to generate the P1 was significantly reduced in patients. In controls, a stronger P1 amplitude increase with increasing memory load predicted better performance. These findings indicate that in addition to later memory related processing stages early visual processing is disturbed in schizophrenia and contributes to working memory dysfunction by impairing the encoding of information. In the third study, which was based on the same data set as the second study, cortical activity and functional connectivity in 17 patients with schizophrenia and 17 to healthy control subjects during the working memory encoding, maintenance and retrieval was investigated using event-related fMRI. Patients had reduced working memory capacity. During encoding activation in the left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex and extrastriate visual cortex was reduced in patients but positively correlated with working memory capacity in controls. During early maintenance patients switched from hyper- to hypoactivation with increasing memory load in a fronto-parietal network which included left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. During retrieval right ventrolateral prefrontal hyperactivation was correlated with encoding-related hypoactivation of left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex in patients. Cortical dysfunction in patients during encoding and retrieval was accompanied by abnormal functional connectivity between fronto-parietal and visual areas. These findings indicate a primary encoding deficit in patients caused by a dysfunction of prefrontal and visual areas. The findings of these studies suggest that isolating the component processes of working memory leads to more specific markers of cortical dysfunction in schizophrenia, which had been obscured in previous studies. This approach may help to identify more reliable biomarkers and endophenotypes of schizophrenia.
Atherosclerosis is accompanied by infiltration of macrophages to the intima of blood vessels. There they engulf oxLDL (oxidized low-density lipoproteins) and differentiate to foam cells. These cells are known as major promoters of atherosclerosis progression. In initial experiments I could demonstrate that foam cell formation caused a severe loss in the ability to produce IFNA (interferon A) in response to stimulation with the bacterial cell wall component LPS (lipopolysaccharide). Since IFNA is discussed to have anti-atherosclerotic potential and has the capability to induce immune tolerance, its inhibition in foam cells might promote the atherosclerotic process. For this reason the aim of my PhD project was to clarify the underlying molecular mechanisms that attenuate LPS-induced IFNA expression in foam cells. LPS activates TLR4 (Toll-like receptor 4) in macrophages. Downstream this receptor two distinct signaling pathways are activated, namely a MyD88 (myeloid differentiation primary response gene 88)-dependent and a TRIF (TIR-domain-containing adapter-inducing IFNA)-dependent one. Foam cell formation targeted the TRIF-dependent TLR4 signaling pathway, as seen by loss of IRF3 activation and IFNA expression inhibition, whereas MyD88-initiated NFBB (nuclear factor 'B-light-chain-enhancer' of activated B-cells) activation and subsequent TNF@ (tumor necrosis factor @) expression remained unaltered. The TRIF signaling cascade results in transactivation of the transcription factor IRF3 (interferon regulatory factor 3), the main activator of IFNA expression. This event demands IRF3 phosphorylation by TBK1 (TANK-binding kinase 1), whereas TBK1 needs to be recruited to TRAF3 (TNF receptor associated factor 3) by the scaffold protein TANK (TRAF family member-associated NFBB activator) for its activation. This work allowed to propose the following scheme: OxLDL utilizes SR-A1 (scavenger receptor A1) to activate IRAK4 (interleukin-1 receptor-associated kinase 4), IRAK1 and Pellino3. Active IRAK1 and Pellino3 associate with TRAF3 and Pellino3 promotes mono-ubiquitination of the adaptor molecule TANK. Mono-ubiquitination of TANK interrupts TBK1 recruitment to TRAF3 and thereby abrogates phosphorylation and transactivation of IRF3 as well as subsequent expression of IFNA. In this study I provide evidence for a negative regulatory role of Pellino3 for TRIF-dependent TLR4 signaling. This expands the current knowledge of the interplay between pathways downstream scavenger and Toll-like receptors. Due to the multifaceted roles of TLR4 signaling in pathology, the new TRIF-signaling inhibitor Pellino3 might be of importance as therapeutical target for disease intervention.
Aim: To study the changes in leiomyoma volume following uterine artery embolization (UAE) and to correlate these changes with the initial leiomyoma volume and location within the uterus and to evaluate the impact of preprocedural prediction of the best tube angle obliquity for visualization of the uterine artery origin using 3D-reconstructed contrast-enhanced MR angiography (CE-MRA) on the radiation dose, fluoroscopy time and contrast medium volume used during UAE. Materials and Methods: The study was performed in two parts. The first part was retrospectively done on 28 patients (age range: 37-57 years, mean: 48 years, SD: 4.81) in whom UAE was performed. All leiomyomas in all patients were evaluated. In total, 84 leiomyomas were evaluated. MRI studies were performed before, 3 months and 1 year after UAE. The volumes and location of each leiomyoma in each patient were evaluated in consensus by two radiologists. The second part included 40 consecutive patients (age range: 37-56 years, mean: 46 years, SD: 4.49) and was done in a controlled prospective/retrospective manner. In 20 sample patients (prospective part) pre-procedural prediction of the best tube angle obliquity was predicted using 3D-reconstructed CE-MRA and provided to the interventionalist. 3D-reconstruction was done using Inspace application. The radiation dose, fluoroscopy time and contrast medium volume for those patients were compared with the data of the last 20 procedures (control) performed by the same interventionalist (retrospective part). Results: For the first part the mean pre-embolization volume was 51.6 cm3 range:0.72-371.1cm3, SD=79.3). At 3-month follow-up 83 (98.8%) leiomyomas showed a mean volume reduction of 52.62% (range: 12.79–96.67%, SD=21.85) and 1 leiomyoma (1.2%) increased in volume. At 1-year follow-up 5 (6%) leiomyomas were not detectable, 72 (85.7%) showed a further mean of 20.5% (range: 2.52–58.72%, SD=11.92) volume reduction compared to the 3-month follow-up volume and 7 (8.3%) leiomyomas increased in volume. A statistically significant (p=0.026 at 3-month, p=0.0046 at 1-year) difference in percentage of volume change was observed based on leiomyoma location; submucous leiomyomas showed the largest volume reduction. The initial leiomyoma volume showed a weak negative correlation (Spearman's correlation-coefficient =-0.35 at 3m and -0.36 at 1y) with the leiomyoma volume change. For the second part the tube angle prediction resulted in a significant reduction of the radiation dose utilized (p<0.001), fluoroscopy time (p=0.002) and contrast medium volume (p<0.001) for the sample patients when compared with the control patients. The overall radiation dose was reduced from a mean of 11044 μGym2 to a mean of 4172.5 μGym2, fluoroscopy time was reduced from a mean of 15.45 minutes to 8.81 minutes and contrast medium volume was reduced from a mean of 135 ml to 75 ml. Conclusion: UAE results in significant leiomyoma volume reduction at 3-month and 1- year follow-up. The leiomyoma location plays an important role in volume changes while the initial leiomyoma volume plays a minor role. Pre-procedural prediction of the best tube angle obliquity for visualization of the origin of the uterine artery using 3D-reconstructed CE-MRA results in a significant reduction of the radiation dose, fluoroscopy time and contrast medium volume used during UAE.
Clinical application of transcranial Doppler for detection of cerebral emboli during cardiac surgery
(2010)
Objective: Neurologic injury is one of the most damaging complications for cardiac surgery. How to decrease neurologic impairment by improving perioperative monitoring remains a challenge for both cardiac surgeons and anesthetists. For this reason, transcranial doppler (TCD) has been widely used in cerebral monitoring during cardiac surgery. In this study, two experiments of clinical application of TCD for detection of cerebral emboli during cardiac surgery were to be done. One was “Solid and gaseous cerebral emboli during valvular surgery are significantly reduced with axillary artery cannulation”. The other was “Do intraoperative cerebral embolic signals differ between valvular surgery (VS) and CABG”. Methods: In experiment one, 20 valve and combined procedures with aortic cannulation (AoC group) were compared to 18 procedures with axillary cannulation (AxC group) in a prospective non-randomized study. In experiment two, 18 VS patients and 18 CABG patients were matched by extracorporeal circulation (ECC) time retrospectively. Intraoperative monitoring of both middle cerebral arteries was performed with TCD discriminating between solid and gaseous embolic signals (ES). Results: In experiment one, the AxC group had less solid ES than the AoC group (38±22 vs 55±25, P<0.05), but no significant difference was found in gaseous (501±271 vs 538±333, P>0.05) and total (539 ± 279 vs 593 ± 350, P>0.05) ES. The AxC group had less solid ES during arterial cannulation (2.1±1.5 vs 6.6±3.6, P<0.05) and during aortic cross-clamp time (4.4 ±3.1 vs 10.2 ± 5.1, P<0.05) than the AoC group. During ECC, gaseous ES was not significantly different between groups (398±210 vs 448±291, P>0.05). However, AxC showed less gaseous ES (85±68 vs 187±148, P<0.05) and less gaseous ES per minute (1.8±1.5 vs 4.5±3.2, P<0.05) during weaning off extracorporeal circulation than the AoC group. No significant difference in gaseous ES (313±163 vs 261±189, P>0.05) and gaseous ES per minute (3.1±2.2 vs 2.8±2.2, P>0.05) was found between groups from bypass start to aortic declamping. No neurologic complications occurred. In experiment two, no significant difference was found in solid (38±20 vs 40±26, P>0.05) or gaseous (457±263 vs 412±157, P>0.05) ES between the VS and CABG group during the whole recording time. During ECC, solid ES (20±10 vs 24±19, P>0.05) and gaseous ES (368±230 vs 317±157, P>0.05) were comparable between groups. Specifically, during weaning off ECC, the VS group had more gaseous ES/min (5.6±3.6 vs 3.1±1.2, P<0.05) than the CABG group. But this difference in gaseous ES/min was not significant during the period from bypass start to aortic declamping (2.5±1.8 vs 3.0±1.8, P>0.05). Conclusion: Cerebral embolization does occur during cardiac surgery. Through these two experiments, we demonstrated the feasibility and importance of clinical application of transcranial doppler for detection of cerebral emboli during cardiac surgery. Due to the diversity in clinical application of TCD, it is impossible to compare the number of ES between different research centers. More unified standards should be drawn in order to make wider clinical application possible. Up till now, no robust evidence shows the correlation between intraoperative ES and postoperative neurological impairment. The research on intraoperative ES and postoperative neurological impairment should rely on a complete concept.
The Benchmark Dose (BMD) approach, which was suggested firstly in 1984 by K. Crump [CRUMP (1984)], is a widely used instrument in risk assessment of substances in the environment and in food. In this context, the BMD approach determines a reference point (RfP) on the statistically estimated dose-response curve, for which the risk can be determined with adequate certainty and confidence. In the next step of risk characterization a threshold is calculated, based on this RfP and toxicological considerations. The BMD approach bases upon the fit of a dose-response model on the data. For this fit a stochastic distribution of the response endpoint is taken as a basis. Ultimately, the BMD reflects the dose for which a pre-specified increase in an adverse health effect (the benchmark response) can be expected. Until now, the BMD approach has been specified only for quantal and continuous endpoints. But in risk assessment of carcinogens especially so called time-to-event data are of high interest since they contain more information on the tumor development than quantal incidence data. The goal of this diploma thesis was to extend the BMD approach to such time-to-event data.
Paleoecology is the study of organismal interactions with the environment in the geological past. Organisms are influenced in their distribution and abundance by abiotic factors such as temperature and precipitation. A change in these factors, for example by major climatic shifts, would then affect the communities of organisms. Studying this hypothesized causal link between climatic and faunal change is especially interesting for the Plio-Pleistocene of East Africa due to the fact that our own ancestors also inhabited these regions. Both the Turkana basin in Kenya and the Lake Albert region in Uganda offer unique opportunities to investigate these paleoecological issues. Their late Miocene through Pleistocene deposits provide a very good record of climatic, vegetation and faunal change in East Africa (Pickford et al. 1993, Leakey et al. 1995, 1998, McDougall & Feibel 2003, Wynn 2004). This study focuses on the mammal family Bovidae as they are good indicator of vegetation and environment (e.g. Vrba 1980, 1995, Shipman & Harris 1988, Bobe & Eck 2001, Bobe & Behrensmeyer 2004, Bobe et al. 2007). Bovidae are quite species-rich and inhabit a wide range of habitats from tropical rain forests to deserts which predicates their array of morphological adaptations (ecovariables) to these environments. Diet is the ecovariable that is most to climate and thus habitat change. Therefore, the fossil Bovidae are especially suitable for reconstructing past environments. The objective of this thesis is to test the hypothesis that, from the late Miocene through the Holocene, Africa has experienced an overall increase in aridity and concomitant pulses of habitat change. The hypothesis predicts that increasing aridity causes a likewise growth in the abundance of taxa adapted to open arid environments. In particular, an increase in bovid grazers should be observed in combination with a decrease of bovid browsers. To test this hypothesis, I examine the fossil bovid communities from each stratigraphic member of Lake Turkana (Lothagam, Kanapoi, West Turkana and Koobi Fora) and Lake Albert (Nkondo-Kaiso region) and through a taxonomic and a functional perspective reconstruct the paleoenvironments and -climates from approximately 8 to 0.6 Ma. This study is the first to use taxonomic and ecomorphological data together to reconstruct the paleoenvironments of the Turkana basin and the Nkondo-Kaiso region of Lake Albert. In a first analysis, mesowear, as introduced by Fortelius & Solounias (2000), is used to gather information about the diet of bovids. As a result of my preliminary investigations on upper vs. lower molars of recent species, the sample of fossil bovid specimens from the Turkana basin and Lake Albert were found to be unsuitable to reveal a meaningful diet reconstruction. Therefore, the bovids are assigned to diet categories based on literature. For each member of the time period from 8.0 to 0.6 Ma, I provide a detailed characterization of the bovid fauna in terms of α- and β- diversity both on tribe and diet level based on presence-absence as well as for the Turkana basin on abundance data. Statistical comparisons between the fossil bovid communities and those in modern protected areas with known vegetation and climatic conditions have yielded modern analogues for each stratigraphic member. Following that I provide paleoclimatic conditions such as assumed mean annual temperature for each member. Based on abundance of diet categories in the bovid communities, the paleoclimate of the Turkana basin was in general cooler and considerably more humid during the late Miocene to the Pleistocene than today. The mean annual temperature at Lothagam is assumed as 22.2 °C, the annual precipitation as 685 mm for 8.0 – 6.54 Ma and 4.9 – 3.4 Ma. The intervening time period is characterized by a slightly lower mean annual temperature and precipitation (20.3 °C, 583 mm). From 4.17 to 4.07 Ma Kanapoi faced 21.3 °C and 592 mm rainfall. In the eastern part of the basin the climate was warmer and more humid (3.4 – 2.68 Ma: 26.2, 961 mm; 2.68 – 1.3 Ma: 27.1 °C, 935 mm) from 3.4 to 1.3 Ma than in the preceeding eras. In the western part, the climate became warmer and more humid ~500,000 years later and was more variable than that in the eastern basin. From 2.94 to 2.52 Ma the mean annual temperature was 26.2 °C and the annual precipitation 961 mm. Between 2.34 and 1.6 Ma the climate again cooled and became drier as before 2.94 Ma. A second shift to higher temperature and precipitation occurred after 1.6 Ma (27.1 °C, 935 mm) lasted until 1.34 Ma. The results of the bovid community analyses do not support the hypothesis of increasing aridity in Eastern Africa during the late Mio- to Pleistocene. Instead, the results show that the bovid communities differed much over time and on a relatively small spatial scale. Regional paleovegetation and paleoclimate exhibit fluctuations through the studied time period at western Turkana and differences between the western and eastern part of the Turkana basin. This is indicative of a patchy habitat distribution both on temporal and spatial levels. Increased climate variability predicts an increase in landscape complexity as proposed by the ‘variability selection hypothesis’ (Potts 1998a+b). Therefore, this thesis research supports the hypothesis of increased landscape complexity on the spatial level. This study has important implications for future research. First, an analysis based on ecovariable characteristics such as diet may be preferred to a taxonomic analysis. Second, abundance data should be used for an ecovariable analysis because the results then provide more precise information on the paleovegetation and –climate than just the presence of these adaptations in the faunal community. Lastly, as this study is based on one mammal family, further studies on other mammal groups should be conducted to increase the database of exploited resource by the entire faunal community. Most significantly this study provides a basis for new interpretations of faunal community distributions. It also raises the question whether small scale spatial community variability is also to be expected at other fossil sites. If so then this methodology has important implications for reconstructions of paleovegetation and paleoclimate.
Magnetic characteristics of metal organic low-dimensional quantum spin systems at low temperatures
(2010)
In dieser Arbeit wurden neue Klassen von niedrigdimensionalen metallisch-organischen Materialien untersucht, die es ermöglichen interessante quantenkritische Phänomene (quantum critical phenomena, QCP) wie die Bose-Einstein-Kondensation (Bose-Einstein condensation, BEC) der magnetischen Anregung in gekoppelten Spin-Dimer-Systemen, den Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless Übergang (Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless transition, BKT) und die Divergenz des magnetokalorischen Effekts (magnetocaloric effect, MCE) in Quanten-Spinsystemen beim Anlegen eines magnetischen Feldes zu beobachten. Die Niedrigdimensionalität der untersuchten Systeme war sowohl für die theoretische Beschreibung, als auch für die experimentelle Beobachtung der Phänomene von großer Bedeutung. Aus theoretischer Sicht eröffnet die Beschäftigung mit diesen Systemen die Möglichkeit, einfache Modelle zu entwickeln, die exakt lösbar sind und erlaubt somit ein qualitatives Verständnis der magnetischen Phänomene. Von experimenteller Seite ist es von größtem Interesse, dass durch das Zusammenspiel von Niedrigdimensionalität, konkurrierenden Wechselwirkungen und starker Quantenfluktuation exotische und aufregende magnetische Phänomene (quantenkritische Phänomene) entstehen, die mit verschiedenen experimentellen Methoden untersucht werden können. Um die intrinsischen Eigenschaften der quantenkritischen Phänomene zu verstehen ist es wichtig, die Phänomene an einfachen und gut kontrollierbaren niedrigdimensionalen Modellsystemen wie ein- oder zweidimensionalen Systemen zu untersuchen. ...
The TTL is the transition layer between the tropical troposphere and stratosphere, and is the main region where tropospheric air enters the stratosphere. In this thesis different transport processes are studied by using in situ measurements of tracers. Long-lived tracers were measured with the High Altitude Gas Analyzer (HAGAR) on board the M55 Geophysica aircraft. The instrument was developed by the University of Frankfurt and measures the long-lived tracers CO2, N2O, CFC-12, CFC-11, H-1211, SF6, CH4 and H2 with two gas chromatographic channels and a CO2 sensor (LICOR). The measurements are supported by CO and O3 measurements of other instruments. Two campaigns were conducted to obtain measurements in the TTL: SCOUT-O3 (November/December 2005 in Darwin, Australia) and AMMA-SCOUT-O3 (August 2006 in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso). After a general introduction of the thesis in chapters one and two, the third chapter describes the findings during this last campaign. Five local flights are analyzed to study the different transport processes that occur in the tropical tropopause layer above West-Africa: deep convection up to the level of main convective outflow, vertical mixing after overshooting of air in deep convection, horizontal inmixing from the extratropical lower stratosphere, and horizontal transport across the subtropical barrier. Main findings are that the TTL over West-Africa is mostly influenced by remote convection. The subtropical barrier is not a strong barrier but more a region of transition between the extratropical and the tropical stratosphere. Chapter 4 presents the results obtained during the SCOUT-O3 campaign. From the eight local flights the last four flights (051129, 051130a, 051130b, 051205) show enhanced values of ozone, CO and CO2 between 355 and 380 K potential temperature in comparison with the first four flights (051116, 051119, 051123, 051125). Horizontal inmixing from the extra-tropical stratosphere and influence of the local convective system Hector cannot explain the enhanced values of the two flights on 30 November Therefore, other possible explanations for these enhanced CO, CO2 and ozone levels are proposed. The first explanation is vertical mixing in the vicinity of the jet stream. However, the jet cannot explain the differences between the flights on 30 November and the flights on 29 November and 5 December. Another possible explanation is influence of polluted boundary layer air masses from the Indonesian region. Especially air sampled during the flights on November 30 crossed large parts of northern Indonesia between 8 and 10 days before the measurements. Convective uplift of biomass burning and other pollution plumes can transport CO and ozone precursors into the upper troposphere, where they can significantly enhance the ozone production. The last chapter deals with the vertical ascent rate in the TTL and uses measurements of both the SCOUT-O3 and AMMA-SCOUT-O3 campaign as well as data from previous aircraft campaigns (TROCCINOX and APE-THESEO). Time scales and residence times for mean vertical transport in the background TTL are estimated for different seasons and over different geographic regions using in situ observations of CO2 and long-lived tracers. The vertical transport time scales are constrained using the seasonal variation of CO2 in the tropical troposphere as a “tracer clock” for vertical ascent. Two methods are applied to calculate the residence time in the layer between 360 and 390 K potential temperature. The first method uses the slope of the CO2 index, the second method fits the CO2 index directly to the measurements assuming a constant ascent rate. The first method yields residence times for Australia,West Africa, and Brazil of the same order, 35-45 days to 380 K and 50 days to 390 K (where no value can be derived for Australia as the slope is changing approximately one month before the campaign). For APE-THESEO, the method does not yield reasonable results. The best estimates using the second method show moderate residence times between 360 and 390 K of 60±25 days SCOUT-O3 (NH autumn) and 43±8 days for AMMA/SCOUT-O3 (NH summer). These results agree well with the results calculated using the first method. For APE-THESEO and TROCCINOX the best fits yield shorter residence times of 23±7 and 40±10 days, respectively, both during winter. These results correspond well to the expectations based on the seasonal variation of the Brewer-Dobson circulation.
This dissertation is devoted to the study of thermodynamics for quantum gauge theories.The poor convergence of quantum field theory at finite temperature has been the main obstacle in the practical applications of thermal QCD for decades. In this dissertation I apply hard-thermal-loop perturbation theory, which is a gauge-invariant reorganization of the conventional perturbative expansion for quantum gauge theories to the thermodynamics of QED and Yang-Mills theory to three-loop order. For the Abelian case, I present a calculation of the free energy of a hot gas of electrons and photons by expanding in a power series in mD/T, mf /T and e2, where mD and mf are the photon and electron thermal masses, respectively, and e is the coupling constant.I demonstrate that the hard-thermal-loop perturbation reorganization improves the convergence of the successive approximations to the QED free energy at large coupling, e ~ 2. For the non-Abelian case, I present a calculation of the free energy of a hot gas of gluons by expanding in a power series in mD/T and g2, where mD is the gluon thermal mass and g is the coupling constant. I show that at three-loop order hard-thermal-loop perturbation theory is compatible with lattice results for the pressure, energy density, and entropy down to temperatures T ~ 2 - 3 Tc. The results suggest that HTLpt provides a systematic framework that can be used to calculate static and dynamic quantities for temperatures relevant at LHC.
Background: To evaluate the effectivity of fractionated radiotherapy in adolescent and adult patients with pineal parenchymal tumors (PPT). Methods: Between 1982 and 2003, 14 patients with PPTs were treated with fractionated radiotherapy. 4 patients had a pineocytoma (PC), one a PPT with intermediate differentiation (PPTID) and 9 patients a pineoblastoma (PB), 2 of which were recurrences. All patients underwent radiotherapy to the primary tumor site with a median total dose of 54 Gy. In 9 patients with primary PB treatment included whole brain irradiation (3 patients) or irradiation of the craniospinal axis (6 patients) with a median total dose of 35 Gy. Results: Median follow-up was 123 months in the PC patients and 109 months in the patients with primary PB. 7 patients were free from relapse at the end of follow-up. One PC patient died from spinal seeding. Among 5 PB patients treated with radiotherapy without chemotherapy, 3 developed local or spinal tumor recurrence. Both patients treated for PB recurrences died. The patient with PPTID is free of disease 7 years after radiotherapy. Conclusion: Local radiotherapy seems to be effective in patients with PC and some PPTIDs. Diagnosis and treatment of patients with more aggressive variants of PPTIDs as well as treatment of PB need to be further improved, since local and spinal failure even despite craniospinal irradiation (CSI) is common. As PPT are very rare tumors, treatment within multi-institutional trials remains necessary.
Background: It has been demonstrated that cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) has a moderate effect on symptom reduction and on general well being of patients suffering from psychosis. However, questions regarding the specific efficacy of CBT, the treatment safety, the cost-effectiveness, and the moderators and mediators of treatment effects are still a major issue. The major objective of this trial is to investigate whether CBT is specifically efficacious in reducing positive symptoms when compared with non-specific supportive therapy (ST) which does not implement CBT-techniques but provides comparable therapeutic attention. Methods: The POSITIVE study is a multicenter, prospective, single-blind, parallel group, randomised clinical trial, comparing CBT and ST with respect to the efficacy in reducing positive symptoms in psychotic disorders. CBT as well as ST consist of 20 sessions altogether, 165 participants receiving CBT and 165 participants receiving ST. Major methodological aspects of the study are systematic recruitment, explicit inclusion criteria, reliability checks of assessments with control for rater shift, analysis by intention to treat, data management using remote data entry, measures of quality assurance (e.g. on-site monitoring with source data verification, regular query process), advanced statistical analysis, manualized treatment, checks of adherence and competence of therapists. Research relating the psychotherapy process with outcome, neurobiological research addressing basic questions of delusion formation using fMRI and neuropsychological assessment and treatment research investigating adaptations of CBT for adolescents is combined in this network. Problems of transfer into routine clinical care will be identified and addressed by a project focusing on cost efficiency. Discussion: This clinical trial is part of efforts to intensify psychotherapy research in the field of psychosis in Germany, to contribute to the international discussion on psychotherapy in psychotic disorders, and to help implement psychotherapy in routine care. Furthermore, the study will allow drawing conclusions about the mediators of treatment effects of CBT of psychotic disorders. Trial Registration Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN29242879
Background In October 2007, the working group CEN/TC 216 of the European Committee for standardisation suggested that the Sabin oral poliovirus vaccine type 1 strain (LSc-2ab) presently used for virucidal tests should be replaced by another attenuated vaccine poliovirus type 1 strain, CHAT. Both strains were historically used as oral vaccines, but the Sabin type 1 strain was acknowledged to be more attenuated. In Germany, vaccination against poliomyelitis was introduced in 1962 using the oral polio vaccine (OPV) containing Sabin strain LSc-2ab. The vaccination schedule was changed from OPV to an inactivated polio vaccine (IPV) containing wild polio virus type 1 strain Mahoney in 1998. In the present study, we assessed potential differences in neutralising antibody titres to Sabin and CHAT in persons with a history of either OPV, IPV, or OPV with IPV booster. Methods Neutralisation poliovirus antibodies against CHAT and Sabin 1 were measured in sera of 41 adults vaccinated with OPV. Additionally, sera from 28 children less than 10 years of age and immunised with IPV only were analysed. The neutralisation assay against poliovirus was performed according to WHO guidelines. Results The neutralisation activity against CHAT in adults with a complete OPV vaccination series was significantly lower than against Sabin poliovirus type 1 strains (Wilcoxon signed-rank test P < 0.025). In eight sera, the antibody titres measured against CHAT were less than 8, although the titre against Sabin 1 varied between 8 and 64. Following IPV booster, anti-CHAT antibodies increased rapidly in sera of CHAT-negative adults with OPV history. Sera from children with IPV history neutralised CHAT and Sabin 1 strains equally. Conclusion The lack of neutralising antibodies against the CHAT strain in persons vaccinated with OPV might be associated with an increased risk of reinfection with the CHAT polio virus type 1, and this implies a putative risk of transmission of the virus to polio-free communities. We strongly suggest that laboratory workers who were immunised with OPV receive a booster vaccination with IPV before handling CHAT in the laboratory.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) naturally infects only humans and chimpanzees. The determinants responsible for this narrow species tropism are not well defined. Virus cell entry involves human scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI), CD81, claudin-1 and occludin. Among these, at least CD81 and occludin are utilized in a highly species-specific fashion, thus contributing to the narrow host range of HCV. We adapted HCV to mouse CD81 and identified three envelope glycoprotein mutations which together enhance infection of cells with mouse or other rodent receptors approximately 100-fold. These mutations enhanced interaction with human CD81 and increased exposure of the binding site for CD81 on the surface of virus particles. These changes were accompanied by augmented susceptibility of adapted HCV to neutralization by E2-specific antibodies indicative of major conformational changes of virus-resident E1/E2-complexes. Neutralization with CD81, SR-BI- and claudin-1-specific antibodies and knock down of occludin expression by siRNAs indicate that the adapted virus remains dependent on these host factors but apparently utilizes CD81, SR-BI and occludin with increased efficiency. Importantly, adapted E1/E2 complexes mediate HCV cell entry into mouse cells in the absence of human entry factors. These results further our knowledge of HCV receptor interactions and indicate that three glycoprotein mutations are sufficient to overcome the species-specific restriction of HCV cell entry into mouse cells. Moreover, these findings should contribute to the development of an immunocompetent small animal model fully permissive to HCV.
Snake bite is one of the most neglected public health issues in poor rural communities living in the tropics. Because of serious misreporting, the true worldwide burden of snake bite is not known. South Asia is the world's most heavily affected region, due to its high population density, widespread agricultural activities, numerous venomous snake species and lack of functional snake bite control programs. Despite increasing knowledge of snake venoms' composition and mode of action, good understanding of clinical features of envenoming and sufficient production of antivenom by Indian manufacturers, snake bite management remains unsatisfactory in this region. Field diagnostic tests for snake species identification do not exist and treatment mainly relies on the administration of antivenoms that do not cover all of the important venomous snakes of the region. Care-givers need better training and supervision, and national guidelines should be fed by evidence-based data generated by well-designed research studies. Poorly informed rural populations often apply inappropriate first-aid measures and vital time is lost before the victim is transported to a treatment centre, where cost of treatment can constitute an additional hurdle. The deficiency of snake bite management in South Asia is multi-causal and requires joint collaborative efforts from researchers, antivenom manufacturers, policy makers, public health authorities and international funders.