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Circular RNAs (circRNAs), an important class of regulatory RNAs, have been shown to be the most prevalent in the brain compared with other tissues. However the processes governing their biogenesis in neurons are still elusive. Moreover, little is known about whether and how different biogenesis factors work in synchrony to generate neuronal circRNAs. To address this question, we pharmacologically inhibited the spliceosome and profiled rat neuronal circRNAs using RNA sequencing. We identified over 100 circRNAs that were up-regulated and a few circRNAs that were down-regulated upon spliceosome inhibition. Bioinformatic analysis revealed that up-regulated circRNAs possess significantly longer flanking introns compared with the un-changed circRNA population. Moreover, the flanking introns of up-regulated circRNAs harbor a higher number of distinct repeat sequences and more reverse complementary motifs compared with the unchanged circRNAs. Taken together, our data demonstrate that the biogenesis of circRNAs containing distinct intronic features becomes favored under conditions of limited spliceosome activity.
Cardiac trabeculation is one of the essential processes required for the formation of a competent ventricular wall, whereby clusters of ventricular cardiomyocytes (CMs) from a single layer delaminate and expand into the cardiac jelly to form sheet-like projections in the developing heart (Samsa et al., 2013). Several congenital heart diseases are associated with defects in the formation of these trabeculae and lead to embryonic lethality (Jenni et al., 1999; Zhang et al., 2013, Jenni et al., 2001; Towbin 2010). It has been experimentally shown that lack of Nrg1/ErbB2/ErbB4, Angipoetin1/Tie2, EphrinB2/B4, BMP10, or any component of the Notch signaling pathway can cause defective trabeculation. Moreover, changes in blood flow and/or contractility can also affect trabeculation (Samsa et al., 2013). Together, these observations demonstrate that cardiac trabeculation is a highly dynamic and regulated process.
Trabeculation is a morphogenetic process that requires control over cell shape changes and rearrangements, similar to those observed during EMT. Epithelial cells within an epithelium are polarized and establish cell-cell junctions with the neighboring cells (Ikenouchi et al., 2003; Ferrer-vaquer et al., 2010), thus epithelial cell polarity is an important feature to maintain cell shape and tissue structure. During developmental processes such as cell migration and cell division or in disease states epithelial polarity might be disrupted. As a consequence of this alteration, cells lose their tight cell-cell adhesions, undergo cytoskeletal rearrangements, change their shape and gain migratory properties becoming mesenchymal cells (Micalizzi et al., 2010). In epithelial cells, apicobasal polarity is regulated by a conserved set of core complexes, including the PAR, Scribble and Crumbs complexes (Kemphues et al., 1988; Bilder and Perrimon, 2000; Teppas et al., 1984). The polarity proteins composing these complexes interact in a well organized and coordinated-manner creating molecular asymmetry along the apicobasal axis of the cell. In turn, this crosstalk regulates the maturation and stabilization of the junctions between cells and cytoskeleton in order to strengthen cell polarization (Roignot et al., 2013). Amongst the different polarity complex, Crumbs has been shown to be a key regulator of apicobasal polarity during development in both vertebrates and invertebrates (Tepass et al., 1990; Fan et al., 2004).
Here, taking advantage of zebrafish as a model organism, I study in vivo at single cell resolution changes in CM apicobasal polarity during cardiac trabeculation. Moreover, I show which factors regulate CM apicobasal polarity during this process. In addition, I dissect the role of the polarity complex Crumbs in regulating CM junctional rearrangements and the formation of the trabecular network.
In the 'Golden Age of Antibiotics', between 1940 and 1970, the global pharmaceutical companies discovered many antibiotics, such as cephalosporins, tetracyclines, aminoglycosides, glycopeptides, etc., as well as antifungal and antiparisitic agents. Due to several reasons, e.g. the steady re-discovery of already known NPs and the associated high costs, many pharmaceutical companies have significantly scaled back or totally abandoned their NP discovery programs since the late 20th century. Instead those companies started to focus on drug discovery based on combinatorial synthesis and thereby on the creation of enormous synthetic libraries containing small molecules. Unfortunately, this synthetic approach dealing with the optimization of existing NP or antibiotic has its limitations. As a result, leading pharmaceutical companies are re-conducting NPs research to discover new antimicrobials for the upcoming antimicrobial resistance threat. The Natural Product Center of Excellence, a collaboration between Sanofi-Aventis and Fraunhofer IME, is advancing in this context the discovery and development of novel antimicrobial agents for the treatment of infectious diseases through the testing of Sanofi's microbial extract library and strain collection. The aim of the present PhD thesis was the discovery and isolation of novel antimicrobial compounds with improved activities and/or novel MOAs as potential lead compound for a further drug discovery.
The identification of heat stress (HS)-resilient germplasm is important to ensure food security under less favorable environmental conditions. For that, germplasm with an altered activity of factors regulating the HS response is an important genetic tool for crop improvement. Heat shock binding protein (HSBP) is one of the main negative regulators of HS response, acting as a repressor of the activity of HS transcription factors. We identified a TILLING allele of Solanum lycopersicum (tomato) HSBP1. We examined the effects of the mutation on the functionality of the protein in tomato protoplasts, and compared the thermotolerance capacity of lines carrying the wild-type and mutant alleles of HSBP1. The methionine-to-isoleucine mutation in the central heptad repeats of HSBP1 leads to a partial loss of protein function, thereby reducing the inhibitory effect on Hsf activity. Mutant seedlings show enhanced basal thermotolerance, while mature plants exhibit increased resilience in repeated HS treatments, as shown by several physiological parameters. Importantly, plants that are homozygous for the wild-type or mutant HSBP1 alleles showed no significant differences under non-stressed conditions. Altogether, these results indicate that the identified mutant HSBP1 allele can be used as a genetic tool in breeding, aiming to improve the thermotolerance of tomato varieties.
Truffle fungi are well known for their enticing aromas partially emitted by microbes colonizing truffle fruiting bodies. The identity and diversity of these microbes remain poorly investigated, because few studies have determined truffle-associated bacterial communities while considering only a small number of fruiting bodies. Hence, the factors driving the assembly of truffle microbiomes are yet to be elucidated. Here we investigated the bacterial community structure of more than 50 fruiting bodies of the black truffle Tuber aestivum in one French and one Swiss orchard using 16S rRNA gene amplicon high-throughput sequencing. Bacterial communities from truffles collected in both orchards shared their main dominant taxa: while 60% of fruiting bodies were dominated by α-Proteobacteria, in some cases the β-Proteobacteria or the Sphingobacteriia classes were the most abundant, suggesting that specific factors (i.e., truffle maturation and soil properties) shape differently truffle-associated microbiomes. We further attempted to assess the influence in truffle microbiome variation of factors related to collection season, truffle mating type, degree of maturation, and location within the truffle orchards. These factors had differential effects between the two truffle orchards, with season being the strongest predictor of community variation in the French orchard, and spatial location in the Swiss one. Surprisingly, genotype and fruiting body maturation did not have a significant effect on microbial community composition. In summary, our results show, regardless of the geographical location considered, the existence of heterogeneous bacterial communities within T. aestivum fruiting bodies that are dominated by three bacterial classes. They also indicate that factors shaping microbial communities within truffle fruiting bodies differ across local conditions.
This review summarizes studies of protection against singlet oxygen and radical damage by carotenoids. The main focus is on how substitutions of the carotenoid molecules determine high antioxidant activities such as singlet oxygen quenching and radical scavenging. Applied assays were carried out either in vitro in solvents or with liposomes, and in a few cases with living organisms. In the latter, protection by carotenoids especially of photosynthesis against light- and UV-stress is of major importance, but also heterotrophic organisms suffer from high light and UV exposure which can be alleviated by carotenoids. Carotenoids to be compared include C30, C40 and C50 molecules either acyclic, monocyclic or bicyclic with different substitutions including sugar and fatty acid moieties. Although some studies are difficult to compare, there is a tendency towards mono and bicyclic carotenoids with keto groups at C-4/C-4’ and the longest possible polyene structure functions to act best in singlet oxygen quenching and radical scavenging. Size of the carotenoid and lipophilic substituents such as fatty acids seem to be of minor importance for their activity but hydroxyl groups at an acyclic end and especially glycosylation of these hydroxyl groups enhance carotenoid activity.
Hereditary Parkinson’s disease (PD) can be triggered by an autosomal dominant overdose of alpha-Synuclein (SNCA) as stressor or the autosomal recessive deficiency of PINK1 Serine/Threonine-phosphorylation activity as stress-response. We demonstrated the combination of PINK1-knockout with overexpression of SNCAA53T in double mutant (DM) mice to exacerbate locomotor deficits and to reduce lifespan. To survey posttranslational modifications of proteins underlying the pathology, brain hemispheres of old DM mice underwent quantitative label-free global proteomic mass spectrometry, focused on Ser/Thr-phosphorylations. As an exceptionally strong effect, we detected >300-fold reductions of phosphoThr1928 in MAP1B, a microtubule-associated protein, and a similar reduction of phosphoSer3781 in ANK2, an interactor of microtubules. MAP1B depletion is known to trigger perturbations of microtubular mitochondria trafficking, neurite extension, and synaptic function, so it was noteworthy that relevantly decreased phosphorylation was also detected for other microtubule and microfilament factors, namely MAP2S1801, MARK1S394, MAP1AT1794, KIF1AS1537, 4.1NS541, 4.1GS86, and ADD2S528. While the MAP1B heavy chain supports regeneration and growth cones, its light chain assists DAPK1-mediated autophagy. Interestingly, relevant phosphorylation decreases of DAPK2S299, VPS13DS2429, and VPS13CS2480 in the DM brain affected regulators of autophagy, which are implicated in PD. Overall, significant downregulations were enriched for PFAM C2 domains, other kinases, and synaptic transmission factors upon automated bioinformatics, while upregulations were not enriched for selective motifs or pathways. Validation experiments confirmed the change of LC3 processing as reflection of excessive autophagy in DM brain, and dependence of ANK2/MAP1B expression on PINK1 levels. Our new data provide independent confirmation in a mouse model with combined PARK1/PARK4/PARK6 pathology that MAP1B/ANK2 phosphorylation events are implicated in Parkinsonian neurodegeneration. These findings expand on previous observations in Drosophila melanogaster that the MAP1B ortholog futsch in the presynapse is a primary target of the PARK8 protein LRRK2, and on a report that MAP1B is a component of the pathological Lewy body aggregates in PD patient brains. Similarly, ANK2 gene locus variants are associated with the risk of PD, ANK2 interacts with PINK1/Parkin-target proteins such as MIRO1 or ATP1A2, and ANK2-derived peptides are potent inhibitors of autophagy.
Transposable elements (TEs) are replicating genetic elementst hat comprise up to 50% of mammalian genomes. A specific class of TEs are retrotransposons that proliferate by transcription into a RNA intermediate, followed by genomic reintegration into another locus (so called “copy & paste” mechanism). Due to the lack of removal mechanisms and very rare parallel insertions, the presence of TE insertions at ortholgous genomic loci in multiple taxa provides a virtually homoplasy free phylogenetic marker. So far, developing phylogenetically informative markers from TE insertions has been a tedious work of testing hundreds of putative candidate loci in a trial-and error approach with low success rate. Hence, phylogenetic studies using TE insertions were often limited to a few dozen markers.
Recently, genome sequencing of multiple species using reference-mapping allowed the identification of genome-scale datasets of TE insertions. and made the ad-hoc development of phylogenetic informative markers possible. However, genome scale TE detection methods have rarely been applied to non model organisms in which data availability and quality is comparably limited. In this thesis, I developed the TeddyPi pipeline (TE detection and discovery for phylogenetic inference), a software tool that made it possible to obtain reliable genome-scale TE insertion data from low-coverage genomes. This was achieved by integrating the data from multiple TE and structural variation callers as well as applying a stringent filtering pipeline to exclude low-quality insertion calls. Whole-genome sequencing datasets of bears (Ursidae) and baleen whales (Mysticeti) were used to apply TE based phylogenetic inference and evaluate the method in comparison to sequence-based phylogenomic analyses.
In the bear genomes, TeddyPi identified 150,513 high-quality transposable element (TE) insertions, which allowed me to reconstruct the evolutionary history of bears despite extensive phylogenetic conflict (Lammers et al., 2017). The large number of detected TE insertions made also detailed network analyses possible that visualize the phylogenetic conflict. Experimental polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays validated up to 93 % of the computationally identified TE loci and demonstrated the high accuracy of the dataset underlying the phylogenetic analyses.
Second, I present the initial genome sequencing of six baleen whales and a detailed investigation of their evolutionary history using TE insertions and established sequence-based phylogenomic methods. The taxon sampling of baleen whales included iconic species like the blue whale (Balaneoptera musculus) or the humpback whale (Megaptera novaengliae) (Árnason et al., 2018). A sequence-based reconstruction of the baleen whale species tree solved the long-debated phylogenetic position of the gray whale (Echrichtius robustus) within rorquals (Balaneopteridae) for the first time with high statistical support. Furthermore, the genome data made it possible to identify large extent of phylogenetic conflict for divergences during the radiation of rorquals that occurred 7-10 million years ago (Ma).
The phylogenomic analyses of 91,589 TE insertions in the whale genomes confirmed the sequence-based topology (Lammers et al., 2019). The quantification of phylogenetic signals obtained from the TE insertions revealed a high degree of discordance for the divergence of the gray whale and rorquals. Despite the large genome-scale dataset, statistical tests showed only marginal support for a bifurcating divergence of gray whales and the rorqual species. The limited statistical support for a strictly bifurcating tree obtained from genome-scale datasets of thousands of markers demonstrates the importance for including phylogenetic networks for displaying evolutionary divergences.
In conclusion, this thesis shows that identification of TE insertions from whole-genome resequencing provides plentiful and accurate phylogenomic markers. For the application in non model organisms, I provide a easy-to-use software to integrate multiple datasets from TE and structural variation callers in order to obtain reliable and ascertainment-bias free datasets. Detecting genome-scale datasets of TE insertions in two case studies demonstrates the applicability of this marker system for phylogenetic reconstruction and inferring phylogenetic conflict.
The haloarchaeon Haloferax volcanii contains nearly 2800 small non-coding RNAs (sRNAs). One intergenic sRNA, sRNA132, was chosen for a detailed characterization. A deletion mutant had a growth defect and thus underscored the importance of sRNA132. A microarray analysis identified the transcript of an operon for a phosphate-specific ABC transporter as a putative target of sRNA132. Both the sRNA132 and the operon transcript accumulated under low phosphate concentrations, indicating a positive regulatory role of sRNA132. A kinetic analysis revealed that sRNA132 is essential shortly after the onset of phosphate starvation, while other regulatory processes take over after several hours. Comparison of the transcriptomes of wild-type and the sRNA132 gene deletion mutant 30 min after the onset of phosphate starvation revealed that sRNA132 controls a regulon of about 40 genes. Remarkably, the regulon included a second operon for a phosphate-specific ABC transporter, which also depended on sRNA132 for rapid induction in the absence of phosphate. Competitive growth experiments of the wild-type and ABC transporter operon deletion mutants underscored the importance of both transporters for growth at low phosphate concentrations. Northern blot analyses of four additional members of the sRNA132 regulon verified that all four transcripts depended on sRNA132 for rapid regulation after the onset of phosphate starvation. Importantly, this is the first example for the transient importance of a sRNA for any archaeal and bacterial species. In addition, this study unraveled the first sRNA regulon for haloarchaea.
As a flavor and platform chemical, m-cresol (3-methylphenol) is a valuable industrial compound that currently is mainly synthesized by chemical methods from fossil resources. In this study, we present the first biotechnological de novo production of m-cresol from sugar in complex yeast extract-peptone medium with the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A heterologous pathway based on the decarboxylation of the polyketide 6-methylsalicylic acid (6-MSA) was introduced into a CEN.PK yeast strain. For synthesis of 6-MSA, expression of different variants of 6-MSA synthases (MSASs) were compared. Overexpression of codon-optimized MSAS from Penicillium patulum together with activating phosphopantetheinyl transferase npgA from Aspergillus nidulans resulted in up to 367 mg/L 6-MSA production. Additional genomic integration of the genes had a strongly promoting effect and 6-MSA titers reached more than 2 g/L. Simultaneous expression of 6-MSA decarboxylase patG from A. clavatus led to the complete conversion of 6-MSA and production of up to 589 mg/L m-cresol. As addition of 450–750 mg/L m-cresol to yeast cultures nearly completely inhibited growth our data suggest that the toxicity of m-cresol might be the limiting factor for higher production titers.
Mapping biodiversity is the marathon of the 21st Century as an answer to the present extinction crisis. A century in which science is also characterised by large scientific datasets collected through new technologies aiming to fill gaps in our knowledge of species distributions. However, most species records rely on observations that are not linked to specimens, which does not allow verification of species hypotheses by other scientists. Natural history museums form a verifiable source of biodiversity records which were made by taxonomists. Nonetheless, these museums seem to be forgotten by biologists in scientific fields other than taxonomy or systematics. Naturalis Biodiversity Center (NBC) in Leiden is care keeper of large collections of marine organisms, which were sampled in the Northeast Atlantic during the CANCAP and Tyro Mauritania II expeditions (1976–1988). Many octocorals were sampled and deposited in the NBC collection, where they became available for study and were partially identified by the senior author (M.G.) in the 1980s. Nonetheless, no checklist or taxonomic revision was published so far with the complete results. In 2016 the first author visited NBC to examine NE Atlantic Plexauridae octocorals. Plexauridae octocoral-vouchered records were listed and mapped to reveal high standard primary biodiversity records unreported so far for the NE Atlantic Ocean. Twenty-four Plexauridae species with ~ six putative new species to science were discovered and eleven new biogeographical records were made from distinct Macaronesian archipelagos. Finally, new depth range records were found for three species at sea basin level and for eight species at a regional scale.
In homeostatic scaling at central synapses, the depth and breadth of cellular mechanisms that detect the offset from the set-point, detect the duration of the offset and implement a cellular response are not well understood. To understand the time-dependent scaling dynamics we treated cultured rat hippocampal cells with either TTX or bicucculline for 2 hr to induce the process of up- or down-scaling, respectively. During the activity manipulation we metabolically labeled newly synthesized proteins using BONCAT. We identified 168 newly synthesized proteins that exhibited significant changes in expression. To obtain a temporal trajectory of the response, we compared the proteins synthesized within 2 hr or 24 hr of the activity manipulation. Surprisingly, there was little overlap in the significantly regulated newly synthesized proteins identified in the early- and integrated late response datasets. There was, however, overlap in the functional categories that are modulated early and late. These data indicate that within protein function groups, different proteomic choices can be made to effect early and late homeostatic responses that detect the duration and polarity of the activity manipulation.
The nuclear exosome and its essential co-factor, the RNA helicase MTR4, play crucial roles in several RNA degradation pathways. Besides unwinding RNA substrates for exosome-mediated degradation, MTR4 associates with RNA-binding proteins that function as adaptors in different RNA processing and decay pathways. Here, we identify and characterize the interactions of human MTR4 with a ribosome processing adaptor, NVL, and with ZCCHC8, an adaptor involved in the decay of small nuclear RNAs. We show that the unstructured regions of NVL and ZCCHC8 contain short linear motifs that bind the MTR4 arch domain in a mutually exclusive manner. These short sequences diverged from the arch-interacting motif (AIM) of yeast rRNA processing factors. Our results suggest that nuclear exosome adaptors have evolved canonical and non-canonical AIM sequences to target human MTR4 and demonstrate the versatility and specificity with which the MTR4 arch domain can recruit a repertoire of different RNA-binding proteins.
Nanoplastics (NP) and microplastics (MP) accumulate in our environment as a consequence of the massive consumption of plastics. Huge knowledge-gaps exist regarding uptake and fate of plastic particles in micro- and nano-dimensions in humans as well as on their impact on human health.
This study investigated the transport and effects of 50 nm and 0.5 μm COOH-modified polystyrene (PS) particles, as representatives for NP and MP, in different biological models in vitro. Acute toxicity and potential translocation of the particles were studied at the human intestinal and placental barrier using advanced in vitro co-culture models. Furthermore, embryotoxicity and genotoxicity were investigated as highly sensitive endpoints.
Polystyrene was not acutely toxic in both sizes (nano- and microparticles). No transport across the intestinal and placental barrier but a cellular uptake and intracellular accumulation of PS nano- and microparticles were determined. The particles were identified as weak embryotoxic and non-genotoxic.
In contrast to single-organ studies, this multi-endpoint study is providing a data-set with the exact same type of particles to compare organ-specific outcomes. Our study clearly shows the need to investigate other types of plastics as well as towards long-term or chronic effects of plastic particles in different biological models in vitro.
The website Sci-Hub enables users to download PDF versions of scholarly articles, including many articles that are paywalled at their journal’s site. Sci-Hub has grown rapidly since its creation in 2011, but the extent of its coverage was unclear. Here we report that, as of March 2017, Sci-Hub’s database contains 68.9% of the 81.6 million scholarly articles registered with Crossref and 85.2% of articles published in toll access journals. We find that coverage varies by discipline and publisher and that Sci-Hub preferentially covers popular, paywalled content. For toll access articles, green open access via licit services is quite limited, while Sci-Hub provides greater coverage than a major research university. Our interactive browser at https://greenelab.github.io/scihub allows users to explore these findings in more detail. For the first time, nearly all scholarly literature is available gratis to anyone with an Internet connection, suggesting the toll access business model will become unsustainable.
The website Sci-Hub provides access to scholarly literature via full text PDF downloads. The site enables users to access articles that would otherwise be paywalled. Since its creation in 2011, Sci-Hub has grown rapidly in popularity. However, until now, the extent of Sci-Hub's coverage was unclear. As of March 2017, we find that Sci-Hub's database contains 68.9% of all 81.6 million scholarly articles, which rises to 85.2% for those published in closed access journals. Furthermore, Sci-Hub contains 77.0% of the 5.2 million articles published by inactive journals. Coverage varies by discipline, with 92.8% coverage of articles in chemistry journals compared to 76.3% for computer science. Coverage also varies by publisher, with the coverage of the largest publisher, Elsevier, at 97.3%. Our interactive browser at https://greenelab.github.io/scihub allows users to explore these findings in more detail. Finally, we estimate that over a six-month period in 2015–2016, Sci-Hub provided access for 99.3% of valid incoming requests. Hence, the scope of this resource suggests the subscription publishing model is becoming unsustainable. For the first time, the overwhelming majority of scholarly literature is available gratis to anyone with an Internet connection.
The website Sci-Hub enables users to download PDF versions of scholarly articles, including many articles that are paywalled at their journal’s site. Sci-Hub has grown rapidly since its creation in 2011, but the extent of its coverage has been unclear. Here we report that, as of March 2017, Sci-Hub’s database contains 68.9% of the 81.6 million scholarly articles registered with Crossref and 85.1% of articles published in toll access journals. We find that coverage varies by discipline and publisher, and that Sci-Hub preferentially covers popular, paywalled content. For toll access articles, we find that Sci-Hub provides greater coverage than the University of Pennsylvania, a major research university in the United States. Green open access to toll access articles via licit services, on the other hand, remains quite limited. Our interactive browser at https://greenelab.github.io/scihub allows users to explore these findings in more detail. For the first time, nearly all scholarly literature is available gratis to anyone with an Internet connection, suggesting the toll access business model may become unsustainable.
As adapter molecules to convert the nucleic acid information into the amino acid sequence, tRNAs play a central role in protein synthesis. To fulfill this function in a reliable way, tRNAs exhibit highly conserved structural features common in all organisms and in all cellular compartments active in translation. However, in mitochondria of metazoans, certain dramatic deviations from the consensus tRNA structure are described, where some tRNAs lack the D- or T-arm without losing their function. In Enoplea, this miniaturization comes to an extreme, and functional mitochondrial tRNAs can lack both arms, leading to a considerable size reduction. Here, we investigate the secondary and tertiary structure of two such armless tRNAs from Romanomermis culicivorax. Despite their high AU content, the transcripts fold into a single and surprisingly stable hairpin structure, deviating from standard tRNAs. The three-dimensional form is boomerang-like and diverges from the standard L-shape. These results indicate that such unconventional miniaturized tRNAs can still fold into a tRNA-like shape, although their length and secondary structure are very unusual. They highlight the remarkable flexibility of the protein synthesis apparatus and suggest that the translational machinery of Enoplea mitochondria may show compensatory adaptations to accommodate these armless tRNAs for efficient translation.
Der DNA-Translokator von T. thermophilus HB27, ebenso wie Typ-IV-Pili (T4P), sind Multiproteinkomplexe, die die Membranen und das Periplasma durchspannen. Sie sind ähnlich aufgebaut und enthalten identische Proteine. Der DNA-Translokator vermittelt Transport von DNA in das Zellinnere während der natürlichen Transformation. T4P sind filamentöse Zellorganellen, die an der inneren Membran assembliert werden und bis zu mehrere Mikrometer aus der Zelle hinausragen. Sie dienen der Anhaftung und Fortbewegung der Zellen auf Oberflächen.
Das Ziel dieser Arbeit war es, die Funktionen einzelner Komponenten der Komplexe und ihrer Proteindomänen bei der natürlichen Transformation, der T4P-Assemblierung und den durch T4P vermittelten Funktionen Adhäsion und „twitching motility“ aufzuklären.
Es sind neun Proteine bekannt, die eine duale Rolle als Komponenten des DNA-Translokators und des T4P spielen. Eines dieser Proteine ist die Assemblierungs-ATPase PilF, die Hexamere bildet. Diese cytoplasmatischen ATPase-Komplexe stellen die Energie für die Assemblierung der T4P bereit, ebenso wie für die Aufnahme freier DNA. Es ist jedoch bisher nicht geklärt, wie die durch PilF bereitgestellte Energie auf die anderen Komponenten des DNA-Translokators/T4P übertragen wird.
In dieser Arbeit konnte gezeigt werden, dass PilF an das cytoplasmatische Protein PilM des T4P und DNA-Translokators bindet. Zudem konnten Proteinkomplexe bestehend aus den Proteinen PilM, PilN und PilO heterolog produziert und aus Zellmembranen koisoliert werden. PilF interagierte mit diesen PilMNO-Komplexen via PilM. Diese Interaktionen führt zur Stimulierung der ATPase-Aktivität von PilF. Dies deutet an, dass PilM ein Kupplungsprotein ist, welches die Assemblierungs-ATPase PilF physisch und funktionell mit dem T4P/DNA-Translokator über den PilMNO-Komplex verbindet.
Neben PilF standen Präpiline von T. thermophilus im Fokus dieser Arbeit. Präpiline sind Vorläuferproteine, die zu Pilinen prozessiert werden und als solche dann die Untereinheiten der Pilus-Strukturen bilden.
Zusammenfassend konnten die Rollen einzelner Präpilin-ähnlicher Proteine bei T4P-assoziierten Funktionen geklärt werden und es konnten erste Analysen zur Charakterisierung des weitestgehend unbekannten Proteins ComZ durchgeführt werden. Desweiteren liefert diese Arbeit Hinweise darauf, dass die membranassoziierten Proteine PilM, PilN und PilO Kupplungsproteine sind, die PilF mit den periplasmatischen Komponenten des T4P/DNA-Translokators verbinden und dadurch die ATPase-Aktivität von PilF stimulieren. Die Rollen einzelner Proteindomänen von PilF und PilM bei der Protein-Protein-Interaktion und der Bindung von Liganden wurden aufgeklärt, sowie ihre Funktionen bei den T4P-vermittelten Funktionen und der natürlichen Transformation.
Microenvironmental regulation of tumor progression and therapeutic response in brain metastasis
(2019)
Cellular and non-cellular components of the tumor microenvironment (TME) are emerging as key regulators of primary tumor progression, organ-specific metastasis, and therapeutic response. In the era of TME-targeted- and immunotherapies, cancer-associated inflammation has gained increasing attention. In this regard, the brain represents a unique and highly specialized organ. It has long been regarded as an immunological sanctuary site where the presence of the blood brain barrier (BBB) and blood cerebrospinal fluid barrier (BCB) restricts the entry of immune cells from the periphery. Consequently, tumor cells that metastasize to the brain were thought to be shielded from systemic immune surveillance and destruction. However, the detailed characterization of the immune landscape within border-associated areas of the central nervous system (CNS), such as the meninges and the choroid plexus, as well as the discovery of lymphatics and channels that connect the CNS with the periphery, have recently challenged the dogma of the immune privileged status of the brain. Moreover, the presence of brain metastases (BrM) disrupts the integrity of the BBB and BCB. Indeed, BrM induce the recruitment of different immune cells from the myeloid and lymphoid lineage to the CNS. Blood-borne immune cells together with brain-resident cell-types, such as astrocytes, microglia, and neurons, form a highly complex and dynamic TME that affects tumor cell survival and modulates the mode of immune responses that are elicited by brain metastatic tumor cells. In this review, we will summarize recent findings on heterotypic interactions within the brain metastatic TME and highlight specific functions of brain-resident and recruited cells at different rate-limiting steps of the metastatic cascade. Based on the insight from recent studies, we will discuss new opportunities and challenges for TME-targeted and immunotherapies for BrM.