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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
On tradition
(1992)
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.
HDL, through sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P), exerts direct cardioprotective effects on ischemic myocardium. It remains unclear whether other HDL-associated sphingophospholipids have similar effects. We therefore examined if HDL-associated sphingosylphosphorylcholine (SPC) reduces infarct size in a mouse model of transient myocardial ischemia/reperfusion. Intravenously administered SPC dose-dependently reduced infarct size after 30 minutes of myocardial ischemia and 24 hours reperfusion compared to controls. Infarct size was also reduced by postischemic, therapeutical administration of SPC. Immunohistochemistry revealed reduced polymorphonuclear neutrophil recruitment to the infarcted area after SPC treatment, and apoptosis was attenuated as measured by TUNEL. In vitro, SPC inhibited leukocyte adhesion to TNFα-activated endothelial cells and protected rat neonatal cardiomyocytes from apoptosis. S1P3 was identified as the lysophospholipid receptor mediating the cardioprotection by SPC, since its effect was completely absent in S1P3-deficient mice. We conclude that HDL-associated SPC directly protects against myocardial reperfusion injury in vivo via the S1P3 receptor.
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.
Piracetam, the prototype of the so-called nootropic drugs’ is used since many years in different countries to treat cognitive impairment in aging and dementia. Findings that piracetam enhances fluidity of brain mitochondrial membranes led to the hypothesis that piracetam might improve mitochondrial function, e.g., might enhance ATP synthesis. This assumption has recently been supported by a number of observations showing enhanced mitochondrial membrane potential, enhanced ATP production, and reduced sensitivity for apoptosis in a variety of cell and animal models for aging and Alzheimer disease. As a specific consequence, substantial evidence for elevated neuronal plasticity as a specific effect of piracetam has emerged. Taken together, this new findings can explain many of the therapeutic effects of piracetam on cognition in aging and dementia as well as different situations of brain dysfunctions. Keywords: mitochondrial dysfunction, alzheimer’s disease, aging, oxidative stress, piracetam
Leukotrienes constitute a group of bioactive lipids generated by the 5-lipoxygenase (5-LO) pathway. An increasing body of evidence supports an acute role for 5-LO products already during the earliest stages of pancreatic, prostate, and colorectal carcinogenesis. Several pieces of experimental data form the basis for this hypothesis and suggest a correlation between 5-LO expression and tumor cell viability. First, several independent studies documented an overexpression of 5-LO in primary tumor cells as well as in established cancer cell lines. Second, addition of 5-LO products to cultured tumor cells also led to increased cell proliferation and activation of anti-apoptotic signaling pathways. 5-LO antisense technology approaches demonstrated impaired tumor cell growth due to reduction of 5-LO expression. Lastly, pharmacological inhibition of 5-LO potently suppressed tumor cell growth by inducing cell cycle arrest and triggering cell death via the intrinsic apoptotic pathway. However, the documented strong cytotoxic off-target effects of 5-LO inhibitors, in combination with the relatively high concentrations of 5-LO products needed to achieve mitogenic effects in cell culture assays, raise concern over the assignment of the cause, and question the relationship between 5-LO products and tumorigenesis. Keywords: leukotriene, apoptosis, cell proliferation, mitogenic effects, cytotoxicity
Introduction: The Vbeta12-transgenic mouse was previously generated to investigate the role of antigen-specific T cells in collagen-induced arthritis (CIA), an animal model for rheumatoid arthritis. This mouse expresses a transgenic collagen type II (CII)-specific T-cell receptor (TCR) beta-chain and consequently displays an increased immunity to CII and increased susceptibility to CIA. However, while the transgenic Vbeta12 chain recombines with endogenous alpha-chains, the frequency and distribution of CII-specific T cells in the Vbeta12-transgenic mouse has not been determined. The aim of the present report was to establish a system enabling identification of CII-specific T cells in the Vbeta12-transgenic mouse in order to determine to what extent the transgenic expression of the CII-specific beta-chain would skew the response towards the immunodominant galactosylated T-cell epitope and to use this system to monitor these cells throughout development of CIA. Methods: We have generated and thoroughly characterized a clonotypic antibody, which recognizes a TCR specific for the galactosylated CII(260-270) peptide in the Vbeta12-transgenic mouse. Hereby, CII-specific T cells could be quantified and followed throughout development of CIA, and their phenotype was determined by combinatorial analysis with the early activation marker CD154 (CD40L) and production of cytokines. Results: The Vbeta12-transgenic mouse expresses several related but distinct T-cell clones specific for the galactosylated CII peptide. The clonotypic antibody could specifically recognize the majority (80%) of these. Clonotypic T cells occurred at low levels in the naïve mouse, but rapidly expanded to around 4% of the CD4+ T cells, whereupon the frequency declined with developing disease. Analysis of the cytokine profile revealed an early Th1-biased response in the draining lymph nodes that would shift to also include Th17 around the onset of arthritis. Data showed that Th1 and Th17 constitute a minority among the CII-specific population, however, indicating that additional subpopulations of antigen-specific T cells regulate the development of CIA. Conclusions: The established system enables the detection and detailed phenotyping of T cells specific for the galactosylated CII peptide and constitutes a powerful tool for analysis of the importance of these cells and their effector functions throughout the different phases of arthritis.
House of Finance
(2010)
Theses against occultism
(1974)
Background: The immune system is a complex adaptive system of cells and molecules that are interwoven in a highly organized communication network. Primary immune deficiencies are disorders in which essential parts of the immune system are absent or do not function according to plan. X-linked agammaglobulinemia is a B-lymphocyte maturation disorder in which the production of immunoglobulin is prohibited by a genetic defect. Patients have to be put on life-long immunoglobulin substitution therapy in order to prevent recurrent and persistent opportunistic infections. Methodology: We formulate an immune response model in terms of stochastic differential equations and perform a systematic analysis of empirical therapy protocols that differ in the treatment frequency. The model accounts for the immunoglobulin reduction by natural degradation and by antigenic consumption, as well as for the periodic immunoglobulin replenishment that gives rise to an inhomogeneous distribution of immunoglobulin specificities in the shape space. Results are obtained from computer simulations and from analytical calculations within the framework of the Fokker-Planck formalism, which enables us to derive closed expressions for undetermined model parameters such as the infection clearance rate. Conclusions: We find that the critical value of the clearance rate, below which a chronic infection develops, is strongly dependent on the strength of fluctuations in the administered immunoglobulin dose per treatment and is an increasing function of the treatment frequency. The comparative analysis of therapy protocols with regard to the treatment frequency yields quantitative predictions of therapeutic relevance, where the choice of the optimal treatment frequency reveals a conflict of competing interests: In order to diminish immunomodulatory effects and to make good economic sense, therapeutic immunoglobulin levels should be kept close to physiological levels, implying high treatment frequencies. However, clearing infections without additional medication is more reliably achieved by substitution therapies with low treatment frequencies. Our immune response model predicts that the compromise solution of immunoglobulin substitution therapy has a treatment frequency in the range from one infusion per week to one infusion per two weeks.
In total, this dissertation comprises three research papers. Objective of all of these papers are to detect mistakes of private investors when conducting mutual funds investments and to analyze the implications. Moreover, the question is addressed whether financial advisors help private investors to avoid these investment mistakes. All three research papers use the same data base which has been provided by a German online brokerage house. The detailed data set allows contributing to existing literature on mutual fund investments, smart decision making, household finance as well as financial advice on an investor- and transaction-specific level. The first paper addresses the question which particular decision criteria private investors use when purchasing mutual funds. It can be shown that funds volume is the dominating decision criterion, whereas historical performance is only of minor importance. As performance persistence exists in the underlying data set, it can be concluded that the majority of investors make investment mistakes. In the second paper it is shown that smart investors, i.e. investors who purchase mutual funds by chasing historical performance, are older, wealthier, more experienced and less likely to be overconfident. In addition, it can be verified that there exists a positive impact of the ability to select mutual funds by chasing historical performance on the overall investment success. Hence, the quality of mutual fund selection ability is an ex-ante measure for investment success. Finally, the third paper analyzes the influence of financial advice on mutual fund decision making of private investments. Evidence can be provided that financial advisors do not help their customers to purchase mutual funds by chasing historical performance. In fact, advisors recommend high-volume mutual funds from well-known fund families. Apparently, financial advisors are much more salesmen than real advisors. These results hold when controlling for potential endogeneity issues.
At present, there is a huge lag between the artificial and the biological information processing systems in terms of their capability to learn. This lag could be certainly reduced by gaining more insight into the higher functions of the brain like learning and memory. For instance, primate visual cortex is thought to provide the long-term memory for the visual objects acquired by experience. The visual cortex handles effortlessly arbitrary complex objects by decomposing them rapidly into constituent components of much lower complexity along hierarchically organized visual pathways. How this processing architecture self-organizes into a memory domain that employs such compositional object representation by learning from experience remains to a large extent a riddle. The study presented here approaches this question by proposing a functional model of a self-organizing hierarchical memory network. The model is based on hypothetical neuronal mechanisms involved in cortical processing and adaptation. The network architecture comprises two consecutive layers of distributed, recurrently interconnected modules. Each module is identified with a localized cortical cluster of fine-scale excitatory subnetworks. A single module performs competitive unsupervised learning on the incoming afferent signals to form a suitable representation of the locally accessible input space. The network employs an operating scheme where ongoing processing is made of discrete successive fragments termed decision cycles, presumably identifiable with the fast gamma rhythms observed in the cortex. The cycles are synchronized across the distributed modules that produce highly sparse activity within each cycle by instantiating a local winner-take-all-like operation. Equipped with adaptive mechanisms of bidirectional synaptic plasticity and homeostatic activity regulation, the network is exposed to natural face images of different persons. The images are presented incrementally one per cycle to the lower network layer as a set of Gabor filter responses extracted from local facial landmarks. The images are presented without any person identity labels. In the course of unsupervised learning, the network creates simultaneously vocabularies of reusable local face appearance elements, captures relations between the elements by linking associatively those parts that encode the same face identity, develops the higher-order identity symbols for the memorized compositions and projects this information back onto the vocabularies in generative manner. This learning corresponds to the simultaneous formation of bottom-up, lateral and top-down synaptic connectivity within and between the network layers. In the mature connectivity state, the network holds thus full compositional description of the experienced faces in form of sparse memory traces that reside in the feed-forward and recurrent connectivity. Due to the generative nature of the established representation, the network is able to recreate the full compositional description of a memorized face in terms of all its constituent parts given only its higher-order identity symbol or a subset of its parts. In the test phase, the network successfully proves its ability to recognize identity and gender of the persons from alternative face views not shown before. An intriguing feature of the emerging memory network is its ability to self-generate activity spontaneously in absence of the external stimuli. In this sleep-like off-line mode, the network shows a self-sustaining replay of the memory content formed during the previous learning. Remarkably, the recognition performance is tremendously boosted after this off-line memory reprocessing. The performance boost is articulated stronger on those face views that deviate more from the original view shown during the learning. This indicates that the off-line memory reprocessing during the sleep-like state specifically improves the generalization capability of the memory network. The positive effect turns out to be surprisingly independent of synapse-specific plasticity, relying completely on the synapse-unspecific, homeostatic activity regulation across the memory network. The developed network demonstrates thus functionality not shown by any previous neuronal modeling approach. It forms and maintains a memory domain for compositional, generative object representation in unsupervised manner through experience with natural visual images, using both on- ("wake") and off-line ("sleep") learning regimes. This functionality offers a promising departure point for further studies, aiming for deeper insight into the learning mechanisms employed by the brain and their consequent implementation in the artificial adaptive systems for solving complex tasks not tractable so far.
Direct photon emission from heavy-ion collisions has been calculated and compared to available experimental data. Three different models have been combined to extract direct photons from different environments in a heavy-ion collision: Thermal photons from partonic and hadronic matter have been extracted from relativistic, non-viscous 3+1-dimensional hydrodynamic calculations. Thermal and non-thermal photons from hadronic interactions have been calculated from relativistic transport theory. The impact of different physics assumptions about the thermalized matter has been studied. In pure transport calculations, a viscous hadron gas is present. This is juxtaposed with ideal gases of hadrons with vacuum properties, hadrons which undergo a chiral and deconfinement phase transition and with a system that has a strong first-order phase transition to a deconfined ideal gas of quarks and gluons in the hybrid model calculations with the various Equations of State. The models used for the determination of photons from both hydrodynamic and transport calculations have been elucidated and their numerical properties tested. The origin of direct photons, itemised by emission stage, emission time, channel and baryon number density, has been investigated for various systems, as have the transverse momentum spectra and elliptic flow patterns of direct photons. The differences of photon emission rates from a thermalized transport box and the hadronic photon emission rates that are used in hydrodynamic calculations are found to be very similar, as are the spectra from calculations of heavy-ion collisions with transport model and hybrid model with hadronic Equation of State. Taking into account the full (vacuum) spectral function of the rho-meson decreases the direct photon emission by approximately 10% at low photon transverse momentum. The numerical investigations show that the parameter with the largest impact on the direct photon spectra is the time at which the hydrodynamic description is started. Its variation shows deviations of one to two orders of magnitude. In the regime that can be considered physical, however, the variation is less than a factor of 3. Other parameters change the direct photon yield by up to approximately 20%. In all systems that have been considered -- heavy-ion collisions at E_lab = 35 AGeV and 158 AGeV, (s_NN)**1/2 = 62.4 GeV, 130 GeV and 200 GeV -- thermal emission from a system with partonic degrees of freedom is greatly enhanced over that from hadronic systems, while the difference between the direct photon yields from a viscous and a non-viscous hadronic system (transport vs. hydrodynamics) is found to be very small. Predictions for direct photon emission in central U+U-collisions at 35 AGeV have been made. Since non-soft photon sources are very much suppressed at this energy, experimental results should very easily be able to distinguish between a medium that is entirely hadronic and a system that undergoes a phase transition from partonic to hadronic matter. In the case of lead-lead collisions at 158 AGeV, the situation is not so clear. In central collisions, the complete direct photon spectra including prompt photons seem to favour hadronic emission sources, while the partonic calculations only slightly overpredict the data. In peripheral collisions at the same energy, the hadronic contribution is more than one order of magnitude smaller than the prompt photon contribution, which fits the available experimental data. A similar picture presents itself at higher energies. At RHIC energies, however, the difference between transport calculations and hadronic hybrid model calculations is largest. Hybrid model calculations with partonic degrees of freedom can describe the experimental results in gold-gold collisions at 200 GeV. The elliptic flow component of direct photon emission is found to be consistently positive at small transverse momenta. This means that the initial photon emission from a non-flowing medium does not completely overshine the emission patterns from later stages. High-pt photons dominantly come from the beginning of a heavy-ion collision and therefore do not carry the directed information of an evolving medium.
The role of gamma oscillatory activity in magnetoencephalogram for auditory memory processing
(2010)
Recent studies have suggested an important role of cortical gamma oscillatory activity (30-100 Hz) as a correlate of encoding, maintaining and retrieving auditory, visual or tactile information in and from memory. It was shown that these cortical stimulus representations were modulated by attention processes. Gamma-band activity (GBA) occurred as an induced response peaking at approximately 200-300 ms after stimulus presentation. Induced cortical responses appear as non-phase-locked activity and are assumed to reflect active cortical processing rather than passive perception. Induced GBA peaking 200-300 ms after stimulus presentation has been assumed to reflect differences between experimental conditions containing various stimuli. By contrast, the relationship between specific oscillatory signals and the representation of individual stimuli has remained unclear. The present study aimed at the identification of such stimulus-specific gamma-band components. We used magnetoencephalography (MEG) to assess gamma activity during an auditory spatial delayed matching-to-sample task. 28 healthy adults were assigned to one of two groups R and L who were presented with only right- or left-lateralized sounds, respectively. Two sample stimuli S1 with lateralization angles of either 15° or 45° deviation from the midsagittal plane were used in each group. Participants had to memorize the lateralization angle of S1 and compare it to a second lateralized sound S2 presented after an 800-ms delay phase. S2 either had the same or a different lateralization angle as S1. After the presentation of S2, subjects had to indicate whether S1 and S2 matched or not. Statistical probability mapping was applied to the signals at sensor level to identify spectral amplitude differences between 15° and 45° stimuli. We found distinct gamma-band components reflecting each sample stimulus with center frequencies ranging between 59 and 72 Hz in different sensors over parieto-occipital cortex contralateral to the side of stimulation. These oscillations showed maximal spectral amplitudes during the middle 200-300 ms of the delay phase and decreased again towards its end. Additionally, we investigated correlations between the activation strength of the gamma-band components and memory task performance. The magnitude of differentiation between oscillatory components representing 'preferred' and 'nonpreferred' stimuli during the final 100 ms of the delay phase correlated positively with task performance. These findings suggest that the observed gamma-band components reflect the activity of neuronal networks tuned to specific auditory spatial stimulus features. The activation of these networks seems to contribute to the maintenance of task-relevant information in short-term memory.
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is a chronic T cell-mediated autoimmune disorder that results in the destruction of insulin-producing pancreatic ß cells leading to life-long dependence on exogenous insulin. Attraction, activation and transmigration of inflammatory cells to the site of ß-cell injury depend on two major molecular interactions. First, interactions between chemokines and their receptors expressed on leukocytes result in the recruitment of circulating inflammatory cells to the site of injury. In this context, it has been demonstrated in various studies that the interaction of the chemokine CXCL10 with its receptor CXCR3 expressed on circulating cells plays a key role in the development of T1D. Second, once arrived at the site of inflammation adhesion molecules promote the extravasation of arrested cells through the endothelial cell layer to penetrate the site of injury. Here, the junctional adhesion molecule (JAM) JAM-C expressed on endothelial cells is involved in the process of leukocyte diabedesis. It was recently demonstrated that blocking of JAM-C efficiently attenuated cerulein-induced pancreatitis in mice. In my thesis I studied the influence of the CXCL10/CXCR3 interaction on the one hand, and of the adhesion molecule JAM-C on the other hand, on trafficking and transmigration of antigen-specific, autoaggressive T cells in the RIP-LCMV mouse model. RIP-LCMV mice express the glycoprotein (GP) or the nucleoprotein (NP) of the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) as a target autoantigen specifically in the ß cells of the islets of Langerhans and turn diabetic after LCMV-infection. In my first project I found that pharmacologic blockade of CXCR3 during development of virus-induced T1D results in a significant delay but not in an abrogation of overt disease. However, neither the frequency nor the migratory properties of islet-specific T cells was significantly changed during CXCR3 blockade. In the second project I was able to demonstrate that JAM-C was upregulated around the islets in RIP-LCMV mice after LCMV infection and its expression correlated with islet infiltration and functional ß-cell impairment. Blockade with a neutralizing anti-JAM-C antibody slightly reduced T1D incidence, whereas overexpression of JAM-C on endothelial cells did not accelerate virus-induced diabetes. In summary, our data suggest that both CXCR3 as well as JAM-C are involved in trafficking and transmigration of antigen-specific autoaggressive T cells to the islets of Langerhans. However, the detection of only a moderate influence on the onset of clinical disease during CXCR3 or JAM-C blockade reflects the complex pathogenesis of T1D and indicates that several different inflammatory factors need to be neutralized in order to achieve a stable and persistent protection from disease.
In this retrospective study, case records of clinical forensic examinations and respective investigation records of the police and the public prosecutor’s (state attorney) office along with the resulting verdicts were examined in terms of type and site of injury found and extent of agreement or discrepancy between the story given by the accused party and the medical conclusions drawn from the injury pattern. Particular attention was focussed on the relevance of the expert opinion for the legal assessment through case-specific analysis of the respective verdicts. A total of 118 cases originating from the scope of the Institute of Forensic Medicine, Goethe-University Frankfurt/Main (2002 – 2005) were examined. These included bodily injury, child abuse, sexual compulsion, self-mutilation and injury patterns of individuals under suspicion of attempted or completed manslaughter/homicide. As compared to former studies, the results of this analysis were additionally correlated with the investigation records of the public prosecutor’s office (state attorney) to elucidate the importance of the forensic findings for police investigation and legal evaluation. The forensic examination involved 19 accused and 99 victims. As for the gender distribution of the victims, 51 females and 48 males were encountered. Slight female preponderance was seen in cases of sexual compulsion. The group of accused individuals consisted of 16 males and 3 females. Injuries due to blunt force impact, in particular hematomas involving skull and trunk, dominated as diagnostic findings in cases of bodily injury, sexual offenses and child abuse. In cases with suspected self-mutilation and in examinations of accused perpetrators of manslaughter/homicide scratches and lacerations prevailed. Correlating injury patterns and police inquiries, conclusions drawn from medical findings and results of police investigations were in good agreement in 46 % of the cases, but showed major discrepancies in another 25 %. In the remaining 29 % of the cases, the injury pattern did not allow for a definite expert opinion on the mode of infliction. Nevertheless, a detailed documentation of the medical findings proved to be of substantial value for police investigations. 39 % of the cases resulted in a final verdict, whilst in 59 % of the cases the charge was dismissed. Especially in the ladder forensic expert opinion was of considerable importance, since forensic assessment of injuries could either not be attributed to a certain perpetrator or contributed to the exoneration of the accused. In 2 % the judicial assessment was not available. In 82 % of the cases of child abuse the proceedings were stopped, e.g. since maltreatment could not be assigned to a particular perpetrator. In these cases, it became obvious, that forensic examination and assessment alone does not suffice, but has to be embedded in police investigations to achieve optimal results. Medical conclusions by forensic experts were – almost without any exception – considered in legal assessment and differentiatedly taken into account when weighing the sentence, thus reflecting the objectivity and neutrality of the medical assessment. In synopsis, albeit evidential value of forensic examination is assessed to be high optimal clarification of a case requires integration into the complete spectrum of investigations performed in a case.
A basic introduction to RFQs has been given in the first part of this thesis. The principle and the main ideas of the RFQ have been described and a small summary of different resonator concepts has been given. Two different strategies of designing RFQs have been introduced. The analytic description of the electric fields inside the quadrupole channel has been derived and the limitation of these approaches were shown. The main work of this thesis was the implementation and analysis of a Multigrid Poisson solver to describe the potential and electric field of RFQs which are needed to simulate the particle dynamics accurately. The main two ingredients of a Multigrid Poisson solver are the ability of a Gauß-Seidel iteration method to smooth the error of an approximation within a few iteration steps and the coarse grid principle. The smoothing corresponds to a damping of the high frequency components of the error. After the smoothing, the error term can well be approximated on a coarser grid in which the low frequency components of the error on the fine grid are converted to high frequency errors on the coarse grid which can be damped further with the same Gauß-Seidel method. After implementation, the multigrid Poisson solver was analyzed using two different type of test problems: with and without a charge density. After illustrating the results of the multigrid Poisson solver, a comparison to the field of the old multipole expansion method was made. The multipole expansion method is an accurate representation of the field within the minimum aperture, as limited by cylindrical symmetry. Within these limitations the multigrid Poisson solver and the multipole expansion method agree well. Beyond the limitation the two method give different fields. It was shown that particles leave the region in which the multipole expansion method gives correct fields and that the transmission is affected therefrom as well as the single particle dynamic. The multigridPoisson solver also gives a more realistic description of the field in the beginning of the RFQ, because it takes the tank wall into account, and this effect is shown as well. Closing the analysis of the external field, the transmission and fraction of accelerated particles of the set of 12 RFQs for the two different methods were shown. For RFQs with small apertures and big modulations the two different method give different values for the transmission due to the limitation of the multipole expansion method. The internal space charge fields without images was analyzed at the level of single particle dynamic and compared to the well known SCHEFF routine from LANL, showing major differences for the analyzed particle. For comparing influences on the transmissions of the set of 12 RFQs a third space charge routine (PICNIC) was considered as well. The basic shape of the transmission curve was the same independent of space charge routines, but the absolute values differ a little from routine to routine, with SCHEFF about 2% lower than the other routines. The multigrid Poisson solver and PICNIC agree quite well (less than 1%), but PICNIC has an extremely long running time. The major advantage of the multigrid Poisson solver in calculating space charge effects compared to the other two routines used here is that the Poisson solver can take the effect of image charges on the electrodes into account by just changing the boundaries to have the shape of the vanes whereas all other settings remain unchanged. It was demonstrated that the effect of image charges on the vanes on the space charge field is very big in the region close to the electrodes. Particles in that region will see a stronger transversely defocusing force than without images. The result is that the transmission decreases by as much as 10% which is considerably more than determined by other (inexact) routines before. This is an important result, because knowing about the big effect of image charges on the electrodes it allows it to taken into account while designing the RFQ to increase the performance of the machine. It is also an important factor in resolving the traditional difference observed between the transmission of actual RFQs and the transmission predicted by earlier simulations. In the last chapter of this thesis some experimental work on the MAFF (Munich Accelerator for Fission Fragments) IH-RFQ is described. The machine was assembled in Frankfurt and a beam test stand was built. The shunt impedance of the structure was measured using different techniques, the output energy of the structure were measured and finally its transmission was determined and compared to the beam dynamics simulations of the RFQ. Unfortunately, the transmission measurements were done without exact knowledge of the beam’s emittance. So the comparison to the simulation is somewhat rough, but with a reasonable guess of the emittance a good comparison between the measurement and simulation was obtained.
In order to fully understand the new state of matter formed in heavy ion collisions, it is vital to isolate the always present final state hadronic contributions within the primary Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP) experimental signatures. Previously, the hadronic contributions were determined using the properties of the known mesons and baryons. However, according to Hagedorn, hadrons should follow an exponential mass spectrum, which the known hadrons follow only up to masses of M = 2 GeV. Beyond this point the mass spectrum is flat, which indicates that there are "missing" hadrons, that could potentially contribute significantly to experimental observables. In this thesis I investigate the influence of these "missing" Hagedorn states on various experimental signatures of QGP. Strangeness enhancement is considered a signal for QGP because hadronic interactions (even including multi-mesonic reactions) underpredict the hadronic yields (especially for strange particles) at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, RHIC. One can conclude that the time scales to produce the required amount of hadronic yields are too long to allow for the hadrons to reach chemical equilibrium within the lifetime of a cooling hadronic fireball. Because gluon fusion can quickly produce strange quarks, it has been suggested that the hadrons are born into chemical equilibrium following the Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) phase transition. However, we show here that the missing Hagedorn states provide extra degrees of freedom that can contribute to fast chemical equilibration times for a hadron gas. We develop a dynamical scheme in which possible Hagedorn states contribute to fast chemical equilibration times of X X pairs (where X = p, K, Lambda, or Omega) inside a hadron gas and just below the critical temperature. Within this scheme, we use master equations and derive various analytical estimates for the chemical equilibration times. Applying a Bjorken picture to the expanding fireball, the hadrons can, indeed, quickly chemically equilibrate for both an initial overpopulation or underpopulation of Hagedorn resonances. We compare the thermodynamic properties of our model to recent lattice results and find that for both critical temperatures, Tc = 176 MeV and Tc = 196 MeV, the hadrons can reach chemical equilibrium on very short time scales. Furthermore the ratios p/pi, K/pi , Lambda/pi, and Omega/pi match experimental values well in our dynamical scenario. The effects of the "missing" Hagedorn states are not limited to the chemical equilibration time. Many believe that the new state of matter formed at RHIC is the closet to a perfect fluid found in nature, which implies that it has a small shear viscosity to entropy density ratio close to the bound derived using the uncertainty principle. Our hadron resonance gas model, including the additional Hagedorn states, is used to obtain an upper bound on the shear viscosity to entropy density ratio, eta/s, of hadronic matter near Tc that is close to 1/(4pi). Furthermore, the large trace anomaly and the small speed of sound near Tc computed within this model agree well with recent lattice calculations. We also comment on the behavior of the bulk viscosity to entropy density ratio of hadronic matter close to the phase transition, which qualitatively has a different behavior close to Tc than a hadron gas model with only the known resonances. We show how the measured particle ratios can be used to provide non-trivial information about Tc of the QCD phase transition. This is obtained by including the effects of highly massive Hagedorn resonances on statistical models, which are generally used to describe hadronic yields. The inclusion of the "missing" Hagedorn states creates a dependence of the thermal fits on the Hagedorn temperature, TH , and leads to a slight overall improvement of thermal fits. We find that for Au+Au collisions at RHIC at sqrt{sN N} = 200 GeV the best square fit measure, chi^2 , occurs at TH = Tc = 176 MeV and produces a chemical freeze-out temperature of 172.6 MeV and a baryon chemical potential of 39.7 MeV.
The recent financial crisis has highlighted the limits of the “originate to distribute” model of banking, but its nexus with the macroeconomy and monetary policy remains unexplored. I build a DSGE model with banks (along the lines of Holmström and Tirole [28] and Parlour and Plantin [39] and examine its properties with and without active secondary markets for credit risk transfer. The possibility of transferring credit reduces the impact of liquidity shocks on bank balance sheets, but also reduces the bank incentive to monitor. As a result, secondary markets allow to release bank capital and exacerbate the effect of productivity and other macroeconomic shocks on output and inflation. By offering a possibility of capital recycling and by reducing bank monitoring, secondary credit markets in general equilibrium allow banks to take on more risk. Keywords: Credit Risk Transfer , Dual Moral Hazard , Monetary Policy , Liquidity , Welfare JEL Classification: E3, E5, G3 First Draft: December 2009, This Draft: September 2010
According to disposition effect theory, people hold losing investments too long. However, many investors eventually sell at a loss, and little is known about which psychological factors contribute to these capitulation decisions. This study integrates prospect theory, utility maximization theory, and theory on reference point adaptation to argue that the combination of a negative expectation about an investment’s future performance and a low level of adaptation to previous losses leads to a greater capitulation probability. The test of this hypothesis in a dynamic experimental setting reveals that a larger total loss and longer time spent in a losing position lead to downward adaptations of the reference point. Negative expectations about future investment performance lead to a greater capitulation probability. Consistent with the theoretical framework, empirical evidence supports the relevance of the interaction between adaptation and expectation as a determinant of capitulation decisions. Keywords: Investments , Adaptation , Reference Point , Capitulation , Selling Decisions , Disposition Effect , Financial Markets JEL Classification: D91, D03, D81
We investigate the incentives for vertical or horizontal integration in the financial security service industry, consisting of trading, clearing and settlement. We thereby focus on firms’ decisions but also look on the implications of these decisions on competition and welfare. Our analysis shows that the incentives for vertical integration crucially depend on industry as well as market characteristics. A more pronounced demand for liquidity clearly favors vertical integration whereas deeper financial integration increases the incentives to undertake vertical integration only if the efficiency gains associated with vertical integration are sufficiently large. Furthermore, we show that market forces can suffer from a coordination problem that end in vertically integrated structures that are not in the best interest of the firms. We believe this problem can be addressed by policy measures such as the TARGET2-Securities program. Furthermore, we use our framework to discuss major industry trends and policy initiatives. Keywords: Vertical Integration , Horizontal Integration , Competition , Trading , Settlement JEL Classification: G15, L13, L22
During the last decades households in the U.S. have experienced that residential house prices move in a persistent manner, i.e. that returns are positively serially correlated. Since an owner-occupied home is usually the largest investment of a household it is important to understand how households act when they base their consumption and investment decisions on this experience. We show in a setting with housing market cycles and households who can decide whether they rent or own the home, that - besides the consumption and the precautionary savings motive - serial correlation in house prices generates a new speculative motive for homeownership. In particular, we show how good and bad housing market cycles affect homeownership rates, leverage, stock investments and consumption and can explain empirically observed household behavior during housing market boom and bust periods. Keywords: Asset Allocation , Portfolio Choice , Housing Market Cycles , Real Estate JEL Classification: G11, D91
We test whether asymmetric preferences for losses versus gains as in Ang, Chen, and Xing (2006) also affect the pricing of cash flow versus discount rate news as in Campbell and Vuolteenaho (2004). We construct a new four-fold beta decomposition, distinguishing cash flow and discount rate betas in up and down markets. Using CRSP data over 1963–2008, we find that the downside cash flow beta and downside discount rate beta carry the largest premia. We subject our result to an extensive number of robustness checks. Overall, downside cash flow risk is priced most consistently across different samples, periods, and return decomposition methods, and is the only component of beta that has significant out-of-sample predictive ability. The downside cash flow risk premium is mainly attributable to small stocks. The risk premium for large stocks appears much more driven by a compensation for symmetric, cash flow related risk. Finally, we multiply our premia estimates by average betas to compute the contribution of the different risk components to realized average returns. We find that up and down discount rate components dominate the contribution to average returns of downside cash flow risk. Keywords: Asset Pricing, Beta, Downside Risk, Upside Risk, Cash Flow Risk, Discount Rate Risk JEL Classification: G11, G12, G14
Capturing the zero: a new class of zero-augmented distributions and multiplicative error processes
(2010)
We propose a novel approach to model serially dependent positive-valued variables which realize a non-trivial proportion of zero outcomes. This is a typical phenomenon in financial time series observed on high frequencies, such as cumulated trading volumes or the time between potentially simultaneously occurring market events. We introduce a flexible pointmass mixture distribution and develop a semiparametric specification test explicitly tailored for such distributions. Moreover, we propose a new type of multiplicative error model (MEM) based on a zero-augmented distribution, which incorporates an autoregressive binary choice component and thus captures the (potentially different) dynamics of both zero occurrences and of strictly positive realizations. Applying the proposed model to high-frequency cumulated trading volumes of liquid NYSE stocks, we show that the model captures both the dynamic and distribution properties of the data very well and is able to correctly predict future distributions. Keywords: High-frequency Data , Point-mass Mixture , Multiplicative Error Model , Excess Zeros , Semiparametric Specification Test , Market Microstructure JEL Classification: C22, C25, C14, C16, C51
Despite sensible guidelines for the use of opioid analgesics, respiratory depression remains a significant risk with a possibility of fatal outcomes. Clinicians need to find a balance of analgesia with manageable respiratory effects. The ampakine CX717 (Cortex Pharmaceuticals, Irvine, CA, USA), an allosteric enhancer of glutamate-stimulated AMPA receptor activation, has been shown to counteract opioid-induced respiratory depression in rats while preserving opioid-induced analgesia. Adopting a translational approach, we orally administered 1500 mg of CX717 to 16 male healthy volunteers in a placebo controlled double-blind study. Starting 100 min after CX717 or placebo intake, alfentanil was administered by computerized intravenous infusion targeting a plateau of effective alfentanil plasma concentrations of 100 ng/ml. One hour after start of opioid infusion, its effects were antagonized by intravenous injection of 1.6 mg of the classical opioid antidote naloxone. Respiration was quantified prior to drug administration (baseline), during alfentanil infusion and after naloxone administration by (i) counting the spontaneous respiratory frequency at rest and (ii) by employing hypercapnic challenge with CO2 rebreathing that assessed the expiratory volume at a carbon dioxide concentration in the breathable air of 55% (VE55). Pain was quantified at the same time points, immediately after assessment of respiratory parameters, by (i) measuring the tolerance to electrical stimuli (5 Hz sine increased by 0.2 mA/s from 0 to 20 mA and applied via two gold electrodes placed on the medial and lateral side of the mid-phalanx of the right middle finger) and (ii) by measuring the tolerance to heat (increased by 0.3°C/s from 32 to 52.5°C applied to a 3 x 3 cm2 skin area of the left volar forearm, after sensitization with 0.15 g capsaicin cream 0.1%). CX717 was tolerated by all subjects without side effects that would have required medical intervention. We observed that CX717 was approximately as effective as naloxone in reversing the opioid induced reduction of the respiratory frequency. Despite the presence of high plasma alfentanil concentrations, the respiratory frequency decreased only by 8.9 ± 22.4% when CX717 was pre-administered, which was comparable to the 7.0 ± 19.3% decrease observed after administration of naloxone. In contrast, after placebo pre-administration the respiratory rate decreased by 30.0 ± 21.3% (p=0.0054 for CX717 versus placebo). In agreement with this, periods of a very low respiratory frequency of <= 4 min-1 under alfentanil alone were shortened by ampakine pre-dosing by 52.9% (p=0.0182 for CX717 versus placebo). Furthermore, VE55 was decreased during alfentanil infusion by 55.9 ± 16.7% under placebo preadministration but only by 46.0 ± 18.1% under CX717 pre-administration (p=0.017 for CX717 versus placebo). Most importantly, in contrast to naloxone, CX717 had no effect on opioid induced analgesia. Alfentanil increased the pain tolerance to electrical stimuli by 68.7 ± 59.5% with placebo pre-administration. With CX717 pre-administration, the increase of the electrical pain tolerance was similar (54.6 ± 56.7%, p=0.1 for CX717 versus placebo). Similarly, alfentanil increased the heat pain tolerance threshold by 24.6 ± 10.0% with placebo pre-administration. Ampakine co-administration had also no effect on the increase of the heat pain tolerance of the capsaicin-sensitized skin (23.1 ± 8.3%, p=0.46 for CX717 versus placebo). The results of this study allow us to draw the conclusion, that opioid induced ventilatory depression can be selectively antagonized in humans by co-administering an ampakine. This is the first successful translation of a selective antagonism of opioidinduced respiratory depression from animal research into application in humans. Ampakines, namely CX717, thus are the first selective antidote for opioid-induced respiratory depression without loss of analgesia, available for the use in humans.
Within this thesis, an experimental study of the photo double ionization (PDI) and the simultaneous ionization-excitation is performed for lithium in different initial states Li (1s22l) (l = s, p). The excess energy of the linearly polarized VUV-light is between 4 and 12 eV above the PDI-threshold. Three forefront technologies are combined: a magneto-optical trap (MOT) for lithium generating an ultra-cold and, by means of optical pumping, a state-prepared target; a reaction microscope (ReMi), enabling the momentum resolved detection of all reaction fragments with high-resolution and the free-electron laser in Hamburg (FLASH), providing an unprecedented brilliant photon beam at favourable time structure to access small cross sections. Close to threshold the total as well as differential PDI cross sections are observed to critically depend on the excitation level and the symmetry of the initial state. For the excited state Li (1s22p) the PDI dynamics strongly depends on the alignment of the 2p-orbital with respect to the VUV-light polarization and, thus, from the population of the magnetic substates (mp = 0, ±1). This alignment sensitivity decreases for increasing excess energy and is completely absent for ionization-excitation. Time-dependent close-coupling calculations are able to reproduce the experimental total cross sections with deviations of at most 30%. All the experimental observations can be consistently understood in terms of the long range electron correlation among the continuum electrons which gives rise to their preferential back-to-back emission. This alignment effect, which is observed here for the first time, allows controlling the PDI dynamics through a purely geometrical modification of the target initial state without changing its internal energy.
Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) are rare but fatal neurodegenerative diseases affecting human and animals. The prion protein which is the causative agent, according to “protein-only” hypothesis misfold in to rogue amyloid conformer. Despite several years of studies, the atomic structural details of the rogue conformers have not been clearly understood. This study focused on developing an in-vitro conversion method, which allows us to monitor the transition from unfolded state of prion protein to fibril state. In order to reach maximal unfolded state, we have used 8 M urea as chemical denaturant, pH 2 and prion fragment 90-230 as the model. It has been demonstrated earlier that acidic pH and mild denaturant induce the fibril formation. The mechanism underlying the structural transition from monomeric state to polymeric form is largely unknown. We have confirmed by EM and AFM that fibrils are formed in our conditions, which resemble to naturally occurring fibrils in morphologies observed. The agitation accelerates the rate of fibril formation and, which allow us to do time-resolved NMR on these preparations. The conformational flexibility is inherent to amyloid fibrils and has been observed in our preparations. We aimed to map the important segment of prion protein, which forms the rigid core in its fibrillar structured form. Our time-resolved NMR studies allowed us to monitor the changes happening from unfolded state to fibrillar state. Analysis of data identified the segment between residues 145 to 223 forming the rigid core in these fibrils, which correspond to β strand 2, helix 2 and major part of helix 3 of native prion monomeric structure. Most of the point mutations which are associated with hereditary prion disease are part of rigid core, which undergo a refolding on fibril formation. The C-terminal residues from 224 to 230 displayed peak shifting and therefore, indicate the adaptation to a fibril specific conformation. The major part of N-terminal 90-144 segment, remains dynamic, which can be understood by their accessibility to amyloid specific antibodies. This provides novel structural insight to the amyloid formation from unfolded state of prion protein fragment 90-230, which represents the proteinase-K resistant part naturally occurring prions. Earlier studies have established the core to 160-220 where hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry or site-directed spin labeling EPR spectroscopy was used for analysis. Those studies have been initiated from either native-like or partially unfolded state of recombinant prion protein, and therefore, it is quite striking to find out that fibrils initiated from unfolded monomeric state share the same “amyloid core”. This structural insight has important implications for understanding the molecular basis of prion propagation.
The first part of the following paper deals with varying points of criticism forwarded against Ordoliberalism. Here, it is not the aim to directly falsify each argument on its own; rather, the author tries to give a precise overview of the spectrum of critique. The second section picks out one argument of critical review – namely that the ordoliberal concept of the state is somewhat elitist and grounded on intellectual experts. Based on the previous sections, the final part differentiates two kinds of genesis of norms: an evolutionary and an elitist one – both (latently) present within Ordoliberalism. In combination with the two-level differentiation between individual and regulatory ethics, the essay allows for a distinction between individual-ethical norms based on an evolutionary genesis of norms and regulatory-ethical norms based on an elitist understanding of norms. A by-product of the author’s argument is a (further) demarcation within neoliberalism.
Iron uptake is an essential process in all Gram-negative bacteria including cyanobacteria and therefore different transport systems evolved during evolution. In cyanobacteria, however, the iron demand is higher than in proteobacteria due to the function of iron as cofactor in e.g. photosynthesis and nitrogen fixation. Most of the transport systems depend on outer membrane localized TonB-dependent transporters (TBDTs), a periplasma-facing TonB protein and a plasma membrane localized machinery (ExbBD). So far, iron chelators (siderophores), oligosaccharides and polypeptides have been identified as substrates of TBDTs. However, in proteobacteria TonB-dependent outer membrane transporter represent a well-explored subject whereas for cyanobacteria almost nothing is known about possible TonB-dependent uptake systems for iron or other substrates. The heterocyst-forming filamentous cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 is known to secrete the siderophore schizokinen, but its transport system has remained unidentified. For Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 22 genes were identified as putative TBDTs covering almost all known TBDT subclasses. This is a high number of TBDTs compared to other cyanobacteria. The expression of the 22 putative TBDTs individually depends on the presence of iron, copper or nitrogen. The atypical dependence of TBDT gene expression on different nutrition points to a yet unknown regulatory mechanism. In addition, the hypothesis of the absence of TonB in Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 was clarified by the identification of an according sequence, all5036. Inspection of the genome of Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 shows that only one gene encoding a putative TonB-dependent iron transporter, namely alr0397, is positioned close to genes encoding enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of a hydroxamate siderophore. The expression of alr0397 was elevated under iron-limited conditions. Inactivation of this gene caused a moderate phenotype of iron starvation in the mutant cells. The characterization of the mutant strain showed that Alr0397 is a TonB-dependent schizokinen transporter (SchT) of the outer membrane and that alr0397 expression and schizokinen production are regulated by the iron homeostasis of the cell. Additional two genes of Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 involved in this process were identified. SchE encoded by all4025 is a putative cytoplasmic membrane-localized transporter involved in TolC-dependent siderophore secretion. The mutation of schE resulted in an enhanced sensitivity to high metal concentrations and in drastically reduction of secretion of hydroxamate-type siderophores. IacT coded by all4026 is a predicted outer membrane-localized TonB-dependent iron transporter. Inactivation of iacT resulted in reduced sensitivity to elevated iron and copper levels, whereas decoupling the expression from putative regulation by exchange of the promoter resulted in sensitization against tested metals. Further analysis showed that iron and copper effects are synergistic because decrease of iron induced a significant decrease of copper levels in the iacT insertion mutant but an increase of those levels in Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 where expression of all4026 is under the trc-promoter. In consequence, the results unravel a link between iron and copper homeostasis.
Acute myeloid/lymphoid leukemia is a fatal hematological malignancy characterized by accumulation of nonfunctional, immature blasts, which interferes with the production of normal blood cells. Activating mutations of receptor tyrosine kinases are common genetic lesions in leukemia. FLT3-ITD is a frequent activating mutation found in AML patients, leading to uncontrolled proliferation of leukemic blasts. FLT3-ITD directly activates STAT5, leading to the induction of STAT5 target gene expression like PIM kinases and SOCS genes. STAT5 and PIM kinases have been shown to play a crucial role in the FLT3-ITD mediated transformation. On the other hand, the role of SOCS proteins in FLT3-ITD mediated transformation has not been studied to date. SOCS proteins are part of a negative feedback mechanism that controls Jak kinases downstream of cytokine receptors. One of the SOCS family members, SOCS1 has been reported to suppress oncogenecity of several activating kinases implicated in hematologic malignancies. In this thesis the role of these SOCS proteins in FLT3-ITD mediated transformation (in vitro) and leukemogenesis (in vivo) is systematically explored. Expression of FLT3-ITD in cell lines of myeloid (32D) and lymphoid (Ba/F3) origin, led to CIS, SOCS1 and SOCS2 expression. FLT3-ITD expression in primary murine bone marrow stem/progenitor cells led to a 59 fold induction of SOCS1 expression. Furthermore, FLT3-ITD positive AML cell lines (MV4-11, MOLM-13) show kinase dependent CIS, SOCS1, and SOCS3 expression. Importantly SOCS1 is highly expressed in AML patients with FLT3-ITD compared to healthy individuals. SOCS1 protein was expressed in FLT3-ITD transduced murine bone marrow stem cells and SOCS1 expression was abolished with kinase inhibition in MOLM-13 cell line. In conclusion, SOCS1 was highly regulated by FLT3-ITD in myeloid, lymphoid cell lines, in bone marrow stem/progenitors and in AML patient samples. SOCS1 co-expression did not affect FLT3-ITD mediated signaling and proliferation, but abolished IL-3 mediated proliferation and protected 32D cells from interferon-α and interferon-γ mediated growth inhibition. FLT3-ITD expressing 32D cells showed diminished STAT1 activation in response to interferons (α and γ). Alone, SOCS1 strongly inhibited cytokine induced colony formation of bone marrow stem and progenitors, but not FLT3-ITD induced colony formation. Most importantly, in the presence of growth inhibitory interferon-γ, SOCS1 co-expression with FLT3-ITD led to increased colony formation compared to FLT3-ITD alone. Taken together, FLT3-ITD induced and exogenously expressed SOCS1, shielded cells from external cytokines, signals, while not affecting FLT3-ITD induced proliferation/signaling. In further experiments the in vivo effects of SOCS1 were studied in a bone marrow transplantation model. SOCS1 bone marrow transplants were unable to engraft/proliferate in mice. FLT3-ITD was shown to induce a myeloproliferative disease. Both control (empty vector), SOCS1 transplanted mice were normal and did not show any disease phenotype. FLT3-ITD alone and SOCS1 co-expressing FLT3-ITD developed either myeloproliferative disease or acute lymphoblastic leukemia with equal distribution. SOCS1 co-expression with FLT3-ITD led to a decreased latency. Mice transplanted with FLT3-ITD alone and SOCS1 co-expressing FLT3-ITD displayed enlarged spleens, liver and hypercellular bone marrow indicating infiltration of leukemic cells. Mice were also anemic and showed decreased platelet counts. Importantly SOCS1 co-expression particularly shortened the latency of myeloproliferative disease but not of acute lymphoblastic leukemia. In summary, in the context of FLT3-ITD, SOCS1 acts as a ‘conditional oncogene’ and cooperates with FLT3-ITD in the development of myeloproliferative disease. With these data we propose the following model: FLT3-ITD induces SOCS gene expression, which shields cells against proliferation and differentiation signals from cytokines, while not affecting FLT3-ITD mediated proliferative signals. This leaves cells under the dictate of FLT3-ITD thereby contributing to leukemogenesis. Similar to FLT3-ITD, BCR/ABL (P190) (an oncogenic fusion kinase often found in acute lymphoblastic leukemia) induces SOCS gene expression in K562 and long-term cultured cells from patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. SOCS1 co-expression does not affect BCR/ABL mediated proliferation while abrogating IL-3 mediated proliferation. These findings suggest that SOCS proteins may play a general co-operative role in the context of oncogenes which aberrantly activate STAT3/5 independently of JAK kinases. This study reveals a novel molecular mechanism of FLT3-ITD mediated leukemogenesis and suggests SOCS genes as potential therapeutic targets.
By adopting a variety of shapes, proteins can perform a wide number of functions in the cell, from being structural elements or enabling communication with the environment to performing complex enzymatic reactions needed to sustain metabolism. The number of proteins in the cell is limited by the number of genes encoding them. However, several mechanisms exist to increase the overall number of protein functions. One of them are post-translational modifications, i.e. covalent attachment of various molecules onto proteins. Ubiquitin was the first protein to be found to modify other proteins, and, faithful to its evocative name, it is involved in nearly all the activities of a cell. Ubiquitylation of proteins was believed for a long time only to be responsible for proteasomal degradation of modified proteins. However, with the discovery of various types of ubiquitylation, such as mono-, multiple- or poly-ubiquitylation, new functions of this post-translational modification emerged. Mono-ubiquitylation has been implicated in endocytosis, chromatin remodelling and DNA repair, while poly-ubiquitylation influences the half-life of proteins or modulates signal transduction pathways. DNA damage repair and tolerance are example of pathways extensively regulated by ubiquitylation. PCNA, a protein involved in nearly all types of DNA transaction, can undergo both mono- and poly-ubiquitylation. These modifications are believed to change the spectrum of proteins that interact with PCNA. Monoubiquitylation of PCNA is induced by stalling of replication forks when replicative polymerases (pols) encounter an obstacle, such as DNA damage or tight DNA-protein complexes. It is believed that monoubiquitylation of PCNA stimulates the exchange between replicative pols to one of polymerases that can synthesize DNA across various lesions, a mechanism of damage tolerance known as translesion synthesis (TLS). Our work has helped to understand why monoubiqutylation of PCNA favours this polymerase switch. We have identified two novel domains with the ability to bind Ub non-covalently. These domains are present in all the members of Y polymerases performing TLS, and were named Ub-binding zinc finger (UBZ) (in polη and polκ) and Ub-binding motif (UBM) (in polι and Rev1). We have shown that these domains enable Y polymerases to preferentially gain access to PCNA upon stalling of replication, when the action of translesion polymerases is required. While the region of direct interaction between Y pols and PCNA had been known (BRCT domain in Rev1 and PIP box motif (PIP) in three others members), we propose that Ub-binding domains (UBDs) in translesion Y pols enhance the PIP- or BRCT-domain-mediated interaction between these polymerases and PCNA by binding to the Ub moiety attached onto PCNA. Following these initial studies, we have also discovered that Y polymerases themselves undergo monoubiquitylation and that their UBDs mediate this modification. This auto-ubiquitylation is believed to lead to an intramolecular interaction between UBD and Ub attached in cis onto the UBD-containing protein. We have mapped monoubiquitylation sites in polη in the C-terminal portion of the protein containing the nuclear localization signal (NLS) and the PIP box. Beside PIP, the NLS motif is also involved in direct interaction of polη with PCNA. Based on these findings, we propose that monoubiquitylation of either NLS or PIP masks them from potential interaction with PCNA. Lastly, using several functional assays, we have demonstrated the importance of all these three motifs in the C-terminus of polη (UBZ, NLS and PIP) for efficient TLS. We have also constructed a mimic of monoubiquitylated polη by genetically fusing polη with Ub. Interestingly, this chimera is deficient in TLS as compared to the wild-type protein. Altogether, these studies demonstrate that the C-terminus of polη constitutes a regulatory module involved in multiple-site interaction with monoubiquitylated PCNA, and that monoubiquitylation of this region inhibits the interaction between polη and PCNA. Our work has also revealed that the UBDs of Y pols as well as of other proteins implicated in DNA damage repair and tolerance, such as the Werner helicase-interacting protein 1 (Wrnip1), are required for their proper sub-nuclear localization. All these proteins localize to discrete focal structures inside the nucleus and mutation of their UBDs results in inability to accumulate in these foci. Interestingly, by exchanging UBDs between different proteins we have learned that each UBD seems to have a distinct functional role, surprisingly not limited to Ubbinding ability. In fact, swapping the UBZ of Wrnip1 with the UBM of polι abolished the localization of Wrnip1 to foci despite preserving the Ub-binding ability of the chimeric protein. In summary, this work provides an overview of how post-translation modification of proteins by Ub can regulate several DNA transactions. Firstly, key regulators (e.g. PCNA) can be differentially modified by Ub. Secondly, specialized UBDs (e.g. UBM, UBZ) embedded only in a subset of proteins act as modules able to recognize these modifications. Thirdly, by means of mediating auto-ubiquitylation, UBDs can modulate the behaviour of host proteins by allowing for either in cis or in trans Ub-UBD interactions.
Relational data exchange deals with translating relational data according to a given specification. This problem is one of the many tasks that arise in data integration, for example, in data restructuring, in ETL (Extract-Transform-Load) processes used for updating data warehouses, or in data exchange between different, possibly independently created, applications. Systems for relational data exchange exist for several decades now. Motivated by their experiences with one of those systems, Fagin, Kolaitis, Miller, and Popa (2003) studied fundamental and algorithmic issues arising in relational data exchange. One of these issues is how to answer queries that are posed against the target schema (i.e., against the result of the data exchange) so that the answers are consistent with the source data. For monotonic queries, the certain answers semantics proposed by Fagin, Kolaitis, Miller, and Popa (2003) is appropriate. For many non-monotonic queries, however, the certain answers semantics was shown to yield counter-intuitive results. This thesis deals with computing the certain answers for monotonic queries on the one hand, and on the other hand, it deals with the issue of which semantics are appropriate for answering non-monotonic queries, and how hard it is to evaluate non-monotonic queries under these semantics. As shown by Fagin, Kolaitis, Miller, and Popa (2003), computing the certain answers for unions of conjunctive queries - a subclass of the monotonic queries - basically reduces to computing universal solutions, provided the data transformation is specified by a set of tgds (tuple-generating dependencies) and egds (equality-generating dependencies). If M is such a specification and S is a source database, then T is called a solution for S under M if T is a possible result of translating S according to M. Intuitively, universal solutions are most general solutions. Since the above-mentioned work by Fagin, Kolaitis, Miller, and Popa it was unknown whether it is decidable if a source database has a universal solution under a given data exchange specification. In this thesis, we show that this problem is undecidable. More precisely, we construct a specification M that consists of tgds only so that it is undecidable whether a given source database has a universal solution under M. From the proof it also follows that it is undecidable whether the chase procedure - by which universal models can be obtained - terminates on a given source database and the set of tgds in M. The above results in particular strengthen results of Deutsch, Nash, and Remmel (2008). Concerning the issue of which semantics are appropriate for answering non-monotonic queries, we study several semantics for answering such queries. All of these semantics are based on the closed world assumption (CWA). First, the CWA-semantics of Libkin (2006) are extended so that they can be applied to specifications consisting of tgds and egds. The key is to extend the concept of CWA-solution, on which the CWA-semantics are based. CWA-solutions are characterized as universal solutions that are derivable from the source database using a suitably controlled version of the chase procedure. In particular, if CWA-solutions exist, then there is a minimal CWA-solution that is unique up to isomorphism: the core of the universal solutions introduced by Fagin, Kolaitis, and Popa (2003). We show that evaluation of a query under some of the CWA-semantics reduces to computing the certain answers to the query on the minimal CWA-solution. The CWA-semantics resolve some the known problems with answering non-monotonic queries. There are, however, two natural properties that are not possessed by the CWA-semantics. On the one hand, queries may be answered differently with respect to data exchange specifications that are logically equivalent. On the other hand, there are queries whose answer under the CWA-semantics intuitively contradicts the information derivable from the source database and the data exchange specification. To find an alternative semantics, we first test several CWA-based semantics from the area of deductive databases for their suitability regarding non-monotonic query answering in relational data exchange. More precisely, we focus on the CWA-semantics by Reiter (1978), the GCWA-semantics (Minker 1982), the EGCWA-semantics (Yahya, Henschen 1985) and the PWS-semantics (Chan 1993). It turns out that these semantics are either too weak or too strong, or do not possess the desired properties. Finally, based on the GCWA-semantics we develop the GCWA*-semantics which intuitively possesses the desired properties. For monotonic queries, some of the CWA-semantics as well as the GCWA*-semantics coincide with the certain answers semantics, that is, results obtained for the certain answers semantics carry over to those semantics. When studying the complexity of evaluating non-monotonic queries under the above-mentioned semantics, we focus on the data complexity, that is, the complexity when the data exchange specification and the query are fixed. We show that in many cases, evaluating non-monotonic queries is hard: co-NP- or NP-complete, or even undecidable. For example, evaluating conjunctive queries with at least one negative literal under simple specifications may be co-NP-hard. Notice, however, that this result only says that there is such a query and such a specification for which the problem is hard, but not that the problem is hard for all such queries and specifications. On the other hand, we identify a broad class of queries - the class of universal queries - which can be evaluated in polynomial time under the GCWA*-semantics, provided the data exchange specification is suitably restricted. More precisely, we show that universal queries can be evaluated on the core of the universal solutions, independent of the source database and the specification.
Enantioselective carbon-carbon bond-forming reactions, particularly, using organocatalysts represent one of the most important areas in modern synthetic chemistry. New concepts and methods in organocatalysis are emerging continuously, allowing more selective, economically more appealing and environmentally friendlier transformations. Chiral Brønsted-acid catalysts have recently emerged as a new class of organocatalysts for a number of enantioselective carbon-carbon bond-forming reactions. The first part of this thesis focused on the new development of new Brønsted acid-catalyzed enantioselective Nazarov cyclizations. The Nazarov reaction belongs to the group of electrocyclic reactions and is one of the most versatile methods for the synthesis of five-membered rings, which are the key structural elements of numerous natural products. In general, the Nazarov cyclization can be catalyzed by Brønsted or Lewis acids. However, only a few asymmetric variations have been described, of which most require the use of large amounts of chiral metal complexes. The reactivities of Nazarov cyclizations are also depending on the substituents of the divinyl ketone substrates as described in the first chapter. The substrates to study Brønsted acid-catalyzed enantioselective Nazarov cyclization were prepared following the known procedures. The dihydropyran was treated with tBuLi in THF at –78 oC and then the α,β-unsaturated aldehydes 1 were added to the reaction mixture to afford the corresponding alcohols 2 in moderate to good yields. The alcohols 2 were oxidized to divinyl ketones 3 employing Dess-Martin periodinane/pyridine (DMP/py) in CH2Cl2 at room temperature to obtain the divinyl ketones 3 in moderate to good yields (Scheme 1). Scheme 1. Preparation of substrates in order to study Brønsted acid-catalyzed enantioselective Nazarov cyclization and subsequent transformations. At the starting point, an evaluation of suitable Brønsted acid catalysts for the enantioselective Nazarov cyclization of divinyl ketone 3a was performed. The initial reactions conducted with various BINOL-phosphoric acids 4a-4e in toluene at 60 oC provided the mixture of cis and trans cyclopentenones 5a with enantioselectivities of up to 82% ee (Table 1, entries 1-5). Eventually, improved reactivity could be achieved by using the corresponding N-triflylphosphoramides 4f and 4g, which even at 0 oC gave complete conversion after ten minutes. Additionally, it was shown that the use of these catalysts significantly enhanced both the diastereoselectivity (cis/trans ratio up to 7:1) and the enantioselectivity (up to 96% ee; Table 1, entries 6 and 7). Table 1. Evaluation of Brønsted acids 4a-4g in the enantioselective Nazarov cyclization. The scope of the Brønsted acid-catalyzed enantioselective Nazarov cyclization of various divinyl ketones 3 was explored under an optimized reaction condition (Scheme 2). Treatment of divinyl ketones 3 in CHCl3 in the presence of 2 mol% chiral BINOL-Ntriflylphosphoramide 4g at 0 oC for 1-6 h provided the corresponding cyclopentenone 5 in good yields (45-92%) with excellent enantioselectivities (up to 93% ee) (Scheme 2). Furthermore, the isomerization of cis-cyclopentenone under basic condition led to the corresponding trans-cyclopentenone without loss of enantiomeric purity. This efficient method introduced here was not only the first example of an organocatalytic electrocyclic reaction but also represented the first enantioselective activation of a carbonyl group catalyzed by a chiral BINOL phosphoric acid. Compared to the metal-catalyzed reaction, special features of this new Brønsted acid-catalyzed electrocyclization are the lower catalyst loadings (2 mol%), higher enantioselectivities, accessibility to all possible stereoisomers, as well as the mild conditions. ....
An eclogite barometer has profound importance in the study of upper mantle processes and potential application to diamond prospecting. Studies on the partitioning of Li between clinopyroxene (cpx) and garnet (grt) in natural samples have shown that this particular element is very sensitive to changes in pressure and could be calibrated as the barometer demanded for bimineralic eclogites. Experiments were performed from 4 to 13 GPa and 1100 to 1400°C in the CMAS (CaO, MgO, Al2O3, SiO2) system with Li added as Li3PO4 to quantify this pressure dependence into a barometer expressed in the following equation: P= (0.00255*T-lnKd)/0.2351 where P is in GPa, T is in °C and Kd is defined as the partition coefficient of Li (in ppm) between clinopyroxene and garnet. The experimental pressures are reproduced to ± 0.38 GPa (1σ) by this equation. This barometer is strictly applicable only to CMAS. Experiments at 1300°C, 8-12 GPa showed that Henry’s Law is fulfilled for Li partitioning between cpx and grt in the concentration range of approximately 0.01 – 1 wt% Li. Direct application of the equation to experiments in natural systems performed at 1300°C from 4 GPa to 13 GPa consistently overestimates pressures by approximately 2 GPa. Our previous experiments in the system CaO-MgO-Al2O3-SiO2 + Li3PO4 showed that the partitioning of Li between garnet and clinopyroxene is pressure dependent in eclogitic bulk compositions. This supports experimentally the hypothesis of Seitz et al. (2003), based on the analysis of Li in eclogitic xenoliths and inclusions in diamond, that the partitioning of this particular element between clinopyroxene and garnet is very sensitive to changes in pressure and could be calibrated as a barometer for bimineralic eclogites. In order to calibrate this pressure dependence into a barometer, experiments were performed in natural systems using starting materials sourced from a well preserved eclogitic xenolith from the Roberts Victor kimberlite pipe (South Africa) to extrapolate our findings in CMAS to natural systems. Sixteen multianvil experiments were performed from 4-13 GPa and 1100-1500°C. Our findings reinforced the general trend we observed in the CMAS system, that KdLi cpx-grt for Li decreases with increasing P, and that at P ≥ 12 GPa, garnet is able to incorporate more Li than clinopyroxene. Multiple linear regression was applied to our experimental results to create the barometer: P = (0.000963*T – ln KdLi cpx-grt + 1.581) / 0.252 Where P is pressure in GPa, T is temperature in °C and KdLi cpx-grt is defined as the partitioning coefficient of Li obtained by dividing the concentration of Li in cpx by the concentration of Li in garnet. This barometer reproduces the experimental conditions to ± 0.2 GPa. It is applicable to eclogitic xenoliths, to garnet pyroxenites and to peridotitic and eclogitic inclusions in diamond. Application of the barometer to diamond bearing xenoliths results in pressures in the diamond stability field. Clinopyroxene is easily corrupted in xenoliths and also preferentially takes in Li during short lived metasomatic processes. Care must be taken therefore to analyse primary, unaltered clinopyroxene. Our preliminary application to natural samples shows that the barometer can be applied beyond the experimental range to pressures down to 3 GPa. Seventeen eclogitic xenoliths were chosen from a sample set of greater than 200 for their fresh microscopic and macroscopic appearance and were analyzed for Li content in coexisting garnet (grt) and clinopyroxene (cpx). These samples can be subdivided into two groups on the basis of Mg in cpx (cpfu: cations per formula unit, based on 6 oxygens): Group 1 with Mg > 0.75, and Group 2 with Mg < 0.75. Group 1 xenoliths show lower Li contents in both grt and cpx compared to Group 2. The Li barom ter calibrated in Hanrahan et al. (2009b)/Chapter 3 was applied to these samples as well as available literature data to obtain pressures of provenance - Group 2 xenoliths often provide pressures that appear unrealistic for eclogitic xenoliths. In light of observed crystal chemical relations in the natural samples, a new fitting procedure was applied to the experimental data presented in Chapter 3. This new fit appears to be more realistic than the previous fit, although a strong relationship with Mg# remains present, suggesting that Li-barometry is, at present, only applicable to Mg-rich eclogites. Inclusions in diamond, with the exception of eclogitic inclusions of coexisting majorite and cpx, often yield pressures that are inconsistent with the pressures required for diamond formation. Although an interesting observation when comparing all of the data is that inclusions in diamond have significantly higher average Li concentrations compared to xenoliths, which suggests that Li is highly present in the fluids from which diamonds form in the mantle, an observation which was previously made for the deep mantle as a result of high Li in ferropericlase inclusions in diamond (Seitz et al. 2003).
The physiology of our most complex organ, the brain, is still not comprehensively understood. The brain basically serves the processing, storing and binding of external and internal information, and thereby generates amazing phenomena like the understanding of oneself as an individual entitiy. How exactly information is encoded and represented, how individual neurons or networks of neurons actually interact, is a gigantic puzzle, whose pieces were collected since many decades. Subject of scientific discussions are the basic spatiotemporal structures of neuronal representations. Suggestions and observations reach hereby from simple rate coding of individual neurons to synchronous activity of larger ensembles. To approach answers to these questions, our working group has used a combination of different recording techniques that allowed for the comparison of neuronal interactions on different spatial scales. We focused on prefrontal neuronal interactions during visual short-term memory. Herefore two rhesus monkeys had been trained to perform a visual short-term memory task. We measured and recorded their neuronal activity by means of a microelectrode matrix that could be inserted into the cortex via a closable chamber, which had been previously implanted above prefrontal cortex. The acquired signal was separated into two components: a high-frequency component, that represents the spiking output activity of few neurons in the vicinity of each electrode tip (multi-unit activity), and a low-frequency component, that results from dendritic input activity of larger neuronal assemblies (local field potential). From one of the experimental animals we also recorded mass signals of even larger neuronal populations by means of small silverball electrodes, that had been implated into the skull above prefrontal cortex (skull EEG) in the context of a pilot project. In the first subproject, we analyzed the selectivity of output signals with respect to the memorized stimulus and task performance. We compared selectivities of local recording sites (multi-unit activity) with the selectivities of patterns created by the combined activity of all recording sites, thus representing the activity of large and distributed ensembles. Local neuronal activity correlated with the course of the visual short-term memory task, but was not highly discriminative with respect to different visual stimuli. We could show that the population activity was significantly more specific. Concerning task performance, we obtained the same result, albeit less pronounced. Further analyses revealed that the patterns of distributed ensemble activity were only partly based on realtime coordination of neuronal activity, and in addition, did not remain stable across the time course of the short-term memory task. In the second subproject, we focused on the oscillatory behavior of the local field potential. After a time-frequency analysis, we studied different frequency bands concerning stimulus selectivity and task performance of the monkey. We hereby found significant modulations of oscillations in the beta- and gamma-frequency range, that correlated with different periods of the task. Especially for oscillations in beta- and low-gamma-range, we observed phase-locking of oscillations between different recording sites, which could play an important role as internal clock to coordinate spatially separate activity. Local high-gamma oscillations themselves seemed to be important for the maintenance of information. These results could be partly confirmed by mass signals of EEG. In sum, our results support the hypothesis that information is represented in the brain by means of concerted activity of spatially distributed neuronal ensembles. This activity again appears to be coordinated by oscillatory activity in beta- and low-gamma-frequency ranges. A deeper understanding of central nervous information processing could contribute to better treatment of diseases like Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s as well as epilepsy, and neuropsychiatric disorders like schizophrenia.
Fas Ligand (FasL; CD95L; CD178; TNSF6) is a 40 kDa glycosylated type II transmembrane protein with 279 aa in mice and 281 aa in humans that belongs to the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) family. The extracellular domain (ECD) harbors a TNF homology domain, the receptor binding site, a motif for self assembly and trimerization, and several putative N-glycosylation and a metalloprotease cleavage site/s. The cytoplasmic tail of FasL is the longest of all TNFL family members and contains several conserved signaling motifs, such as a putative tandem Casein kinase I phosphorylation site, a unique proline-rich domain (PRD) and phosphorylatable tyrosine residues (Y7 in mice; Y7, Y9, Y13 in human). The FasL/Fas system is renowned for the potent induction of apoptosis in the receptor-bearing cell and is especially important for immune system functions. It is involved in the killing of target cells by natural killer (NK) and cytotoxic T cells, in the (self) elimination of effector cells following the proliferative phase of an immune response (activation-induced cell death; AICD), in the maintenance of immuneprivileged sites and in the induction and maintenance of peripheral tolerance. Owing to its potent pro-apoptotic signaling capacity and important functions, FasL expression and activity are tightly regulated at transcriptional and posttranscriptional levels and restricted to few cell types, such as immune effector cells and cells of immune-privileged sites. In contrast, Fas is expressed in a variety of tissues including lymphoid tissues, liver, heart, kidney, pancreas, brain and ovary. In addition to its pro-apoptotic function, the FasL/Fas system can also elicit nonapoptotic signals in the receptor-expressing cell. Among others, Fas-signaling exerts co-stimulatory functions in the immune system, e.g. by promoting survival, activation and proliferation of T cells. Besides the capacity to deliver a signal into receptor-bearing cells (‘forward signal’), FasL can receive and transmit signals into the ligand-expressing cell. This phenomenon has been described for several TNF family ligands and is known as ‘reverse signaling’. The first evidence for the existence of reverse signaling into FasL-bearing cells stems from two studies that demonstrated either co-stimulation of murine CD8+ T cell lines by FasL cross-linking or inhibition of activation-induced proliferation of murine CD4+ T cells. In both cases, the observed changes of proliferative behaviour critically depended on the presence of a signaling-competent FasL. Almost certainly, the FasL ICD is functionally involved in signal-transmission: (i) The ICD is highly conserved across species and harbors several signaling motifs, most notably a unique PRD. (ii) Numerous proteins have been identified which interact with the FasL PRD via their SH3 or WW domains and regulate various aspects of FasL biology, such as FasL sorting, storage, cell surface expression and the linkage of FasL to intracellular signaling pathways. (iii) Post-translational modifications of the ICD have been implicated in the sorting of FasL to vesicles and the FasL-dependent activation of Nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT). (iv) Proteolytic processing of FasL liberates the ICD and allows its translocation into the nucleus where it might influence gene transcription. (v) It could be shown that overexpression of the FasL ICD is sufficient to initiate reverse signaling upon concomitant T cell receptor (TCR) stimulation and ICD cross-linking. Conflicting data on the consequences of FasL reverse signaling exist, and costimulatory as well as inhibitory functions have been reported. These discrepancies probably reflect the use of artificial experimental systems. Neither the precise molecular mechanism underlying FasL reverse signaling, nor its physiological relevance have been addressed at the endogenous protein level in vivo. Therefore, a ‘knockout/knockin’ mouse model in which wildtype FasL was replaced with a deletion mutant lacking the intracellular portion (FasL Delta Intra) was established in the group of PD Dr. Martin Zörnig. In the present study, FasL Delta Intra mice were phenotypically characterized and were employed to investigate the physiological consequences of FasL reverse signaling at the molecular and cellular level. To ensure that FasL Delta Intra mice represent a suitable model to study the consequences of FasL reverse signaling, we demonstrated that activated lymphocytes from homozygous FasL Delta Intra or wildtype mice express comparable amounts of (truncated) FasL at the cell surface. The truncated protein retains the capacity to induce apoptosis in Fas receptor-positive target cells, as co-culture assays with FasL-expressing activated lymphocytes and Fas-sensitive target cells showed. Additionally, systematic screening of unchallenged mice did not reveal any phenotypic abnormalities. Notably, signs of a lymphoproliferative autoimmune disease associated with FasL-deficiency could not be detected. As several reports have implicated FasL reverse signaling in the regulation of T cell expansion and activation, proliferation of lymphocytes isolated from FasL Delta Intra and wildtype mice in response to antigen receptor stimulation was investigated. Using CFSE dilution assays it could be demonstrated that the proliferative response of CD4+ T cells, CD8+ T cells and of B cells was enhanced in the absence of the FasL ICD. Interestingly, this effect was most pronounced in B cells and could only be detected in CD4+ T cells after depletion of CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells. To our Summary knowledge, this is the first time that FasL reverse signaling has been demonstrated in B cells. In a series of experiments, the activation of several pathways that are known to play important roles in signal-transmission initiated upon antigen receptor triggering was assessed. As a molecular correlate for the observed enhancement of activation-induced proliferation, Extracellular signal regulated kinase (ERK1/2) phosphorylation was significantly increased in FasL Delta Intra mice following antigen receptor crosslinking. Surprisingly, B cell stimulation lead to a comparable extent of activating phosphorylations on S38 in c-Raf and S218/S222 in MEK1/2 in cells isolated from wildtype and FasL Delta Intra mice, indicating that Mitogen activated protein kinases (MAPKs) upstream of ERK1/2 (Raf-1 and MEK1/2) apparently do not contribute to the differential regulation of ERK1/2. Experiments in which activation-induced Akt phosphorylation (S473) was quantified also did not suggest a participation of Phosphoinositol specific kinase 3 (PI3K)/Akt signals in this process. Instead, further characterization of the upstream pathway revealed an involvement of Phospholipase C gamma (PLC gamma) and Protein kinase C (PKC) signals in FasL-dependent ERK1/2- regulation. Previous studies in our group revealed a Notch-like processing of FasL, resulting in the transcriptional regulation of a reporter gene. Furthermore, an interaction of the FasL ICD with the transcription factor Lymphoid-enhancer binding factor-1 (Lef-1) that affected Lef-1-dependent reporter gene transcription could be demonstrated. Therefore, a molecular analysis of activated lymphocytes was performed to identify FasL reverse signaling target genes. The differential expression of promising candidates was verified by quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR), which showed that the transcription of genes associated with lymphocyte proliferation and activation was increased in FasL Delta Intra mice compared to wildtype mice. Interestingly, an extensive regulation of Lef-1-dependent Wnt/beta-Catenin signalingrelated genes was found. Lef-1 mRNA (RT-PCR) and protein (intracellular FACS staining) could be detected in mature B cells, suggesting the possibility of FasL ICD-mediated inhibition of Lef-1-dependent gene expression in these cells, initiated by Notch-like processing of FasL. To investigate the consequences of FasL reverse signaling in vivo, a potential participation of the FasL ICD in the regulation of immune responses upon various challenges was analyzed. In experiments in which thymocyte proliferation or the expansion of antigen-specific T cells following a challenge with the superantigen Staphylococcus enterotoxin B (SEB), with Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) or with Listeria monocytogenes were investigated, comparable results were obtained with wildtype and FasL Delta Intra mice. Likewise, the recruitment of neutrophils in a thioglycollate-induced model of peritonitis was not affected by deletion of the FasL ICD. These findings might reflect regulatory mechanisms operating in vivo, such as control exerted by regulatory T cells. Along these lines, proliferative differences in CD4+ T cells could only be detected ex vivo after depletion of CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells. Furthermore, several in vitro studies indicate that retrograde FasL signals can be observed under conditions of suboptimal lymphocyte stimulation, but not when the TCR is optimally stimulated. Therefore, the potent initiation of antigen receptor signaling by stimuli like SEB or LCMV might have masked inhibitory FasL reverse signaling in these experiments. In agreement with the observed hyperactivation of lymphocytes in the absence of the ICD ex vivo, the increase in germinal center B cells (GCs) following immunization with the hapten 3-hydroxy 4-nitrophenylacetyl (NP) and the number of antibody-secreting PCs was significantly higher in FasL Delta Intra mice. The larger quantity of PCs correlated with increased titers of NP-binding, i.e. antigen-specific, IgM and IgG1 antibodies in the serum of FasL Delta Intra mice after immunization. These data suggest that FasL reverse signaling exerts immunmodulatory functions. Supporting this notion, a model of Ovalbumin-induced allergic airway inflammation revealed an involvement of retrograde FasL-signals in the recruitment of immune effector cells into the lung and in the activation of T cells following exposure of mice to Ovalbumin. Together, our ex vivo and in vivo findings based on endogenous FasL protein levels demonstrate that FasL ICD-mediated reverse signaling is a negative modulator of certain immune responses. It is tempting to speculate that FasL reverse signaling might be a fine-tuning mechanism to prevent autoimmune diseases, a theory which will be tested in adequate mouse models in the future.
Lattice Yang-Mills theories at finite temperature can be mapped onto effective 3d spin systems, thus facilitating their numerical investigation. Using strong-coupling expansions we derive effective actions for Polyakov loops in the SU(2) and SU(3) cases and investigate the effect of higher order corrections. Once a formulation is obtained which allows for Monte Carlo analysis, the nature of the phase transition in both classes of models is investigated numerically, and the results are then used to predict – with an accuracy within a few percent – the deconfinement point in the original 4d Yang-Mills pure gauge theories, for a series of values of Nt at once.
Relying on the existing estimates for the production cross sections of mini black holes in models with large extra dimensions, we review strategies for identifying those objects at collider experiments. We further consider a possible stable final state of such black holes and discuss their characteristic signatures. Keywords: Black holes
We discuss the present collective flow signals for the phase transition to the quark-gluon plasma (QGP) and the collective flow as a barometer for the equation of state (EoS). We emphasize the importance of the flow excitation function from 1 to 50A GeV: here the hydrodynamicmodel has predicted the collapse of the v1-flow at ~ 10A GeV and of the v2-flow at ~ 40A GeV. In the latter case, this has recently been observed by the NA49 collaboration. Since hadronic rescattering models predict much larger flow than observed at this energy, we interpret this observation as potential evidence for a first order phase transition at high baryon density pB.
We study various fluctuation and correlation signals of the deconfined state using a dynamical recombination approach (quark Molecular Dynamics, qMD). We analyse charge ratio fluctuations, charge transfer fluctuations and baryon-strangeness correlations as a function of the center of mass energy with a set of central Pb+Pb/Au+Au events from AGS energies on (Elab = 4 AGeV) up to the highest RHIC energy available (V sNN = 200 GeV) and as a function of time with a set of central Au+Au qMD events at V sNN = 200 GeV with and without applying our hadronization procedure. For all studied quantities, the results start from values compatible with a weakly coupled QGP in the early stage and end with values compatible with the hadronic result in the final state. We show that the loss of the signal occurs at the same time as hadronization and trace it back to the dynamical recombination process implemented in our model.
To investigate the formation and the propagation of relativistic shock waves in viscous gluon matter we solve the relativistic Riemann problem using a microscopic parton cascade. We demonstrate the transition from ideal to viscous shock waves by varying the shear viscosity to entropy density ratio n/s. Furthermore we compare our results with those obtained by solving the relativistic causal dissipative fluid equations of Israel and Stewart (IS), in order to show the validity of the IS hydrodynamics. Employing the parton cascade we also investigate the formation of Mach shocks induced by a high-energy gluon traversing viscous gluon matter. For n/s = 0.08 a Mach cone structure is observed, whereas the signal smears out for n/s >=0.32.
Starting from a classical picture of shear viscosity we construct a steady velocity gradient in the partonic cascade BAMPS. Using the Navier-Stokes-equation we calculate the shear viscosity coefficient. For elastic isotropic scatterings we find a very good agreement with the analytic values. For both elastic and inelastic scatterings with pQCD cross sections we find good agreement with previously published calculations.
This paper shows the equivalence of applicative similarity and contextual approximation, and hence also of bisimilarity and contextual equivalence, in the deterministic call-by-need lambda calculus with letrec. Bisimilarity simplifies equivalence proofs in the calculus and opens a way for more convenient correctness proofs for program transformations. Although this property may be a natural one to expect, to the best of our knowledge, this paper is the first one providing a proof. The proof technique is to transfer the contextual approximation into Abramsky’s lazy lambda calculus by a fully abstract and surjective translation. This also shows that the natural embedding of Abramsky’s lazy lambda calculus into the call-by-need lambda calculus with letrec is an isomorphism between the respective term-models. We show that the equivalence property proven in this paper transfers to a call-by-need letrec calculus developed by Ariola and Felleisen. 1998 ACM Subject Classification: F.4.2, F.3.2, F.3.3, F.4.1. Key words and phrases: semantics, contextual equivalence, bisimulation, lambda calculus, call-by-need, letrec.
Twin and family studies in autistic disorders (AD) have elucidated a high heritability of AD. In this literature review, we will present an overview on molecular genetic studies in AD and highlight the most recent findings of an increased rate of copy number variations in AD. An extensive literature search in the PubMed database was performed to obtain English published articles on genetic findings in autism. Results of linkage, (genome wide) association and cytogenetic studies are presented, and putative aetiopathological pathways are discussed. Implications of the different genetic findings for genetic counselling and genetic testing at present will be described. The article ends with a prospectus on future directions. Keywords: Autistic disorder , Linkage , Whole genome association , Copy number variation , Mutation
Introduction: In the large-scale case-control study EPILIFT, we investigated the dose-response relationship between lifestyle factors (weight, smoking amount, cumulative duration of different sports activities) and lumbar disc disease. Methods: In four German study regions (Frankfurt am Main, Freiburg, Halle/Saale, Regensburg), 564 male and female patients with lumbar disc herniation and 351 patients with lumbar disc narrowing (chondrosis) aged 25 to 70 years were prospectively recruited. From the regional population registers, 901 population control subjects were randomly selected. In a structured personal interview, we enquired as to body weight at different ages, body height, cumulative smoking amount and cumulative duration of different sports activities. Confounders were selected according to biological plausibility and to the change-in-estimate criterion. Adjusted, gender-stratified odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals were calculated using unconditional logistic regression analysis. Results: The results of this case-control study reveal a positive association between weight and lumbar disc herniation as well as lumbar disc narrowing among men and women. A medium amount of pack-years was associated with lumbar disc herniation and narrowing in men and women. A non-significantly lowered risk of lumbar disc disease was found in men with high levels of cumulative body building and strength training. Conclusions: According to our multi-center case-control study, body weight might be related to lumbar disc herniation as well as to lumbar disc narrowing. Further research should clarify the potential protective role of body building or strength training on lumbar disc disease.
Background: Descending inhibitory pain control contributes to the endogenous defense against chronic pain and involves noradrenergic and serotonergic systems. The clinical efficacy of antidepressants suggests that serotonin may be particularly relevant for neuropathic pain conditions. Serotonergic signaling is regulated by synthesis, metabolisms, reuptake and receptors. To address the complexity, we used inbred mouse strains, C57BL/6J, 129 Sv, DBA/2J and Balb/c, which differ in brain serotonin levels. Results: Serotonin analysis after nerve injury revealed inter-strain differences in the adaptation of descending serotonergic fibers. Upregulation of spinal cord and midbrain serotonin was apparent only in 129 Sv mice and was associated with attenuated nerve injury evoked hyperalgesia and allodynia in this strain. The increase of dorsal horn serotonin was blocked by hemisectioning of descending fibers but not by rhizotomy of primary afferents indicating a midbrain source. Para-chlorophenylalanine-mediated serotonin depletion in spinal cord and midbrain intensified pain hypersensitivity in the nerve injury model. In contrast, chronic inflammation of the hindpaw did not evoke equivalent changes in serotonin levels in the spinal cord and midbrain and nociceptive thresholds dropped in a parallel manner in all strains. Conclusion: The results suggest that chronic nerve injury evoked hypernociception may be contributed by genetic differences of descending serotonergic inhibitory control.
This paper discusses the implications of transnational media production and diasporic networks for the cultural politics of migrant minorities. How are fields of cultural politics transformed if Hirschmann’s famous options ‘exit’ and ‘voice’ are no longer constituting mutually exclusive responses to dissent within a nation-state, but modes of action that can combine and build upon each other in the context of migration and diasporic media activism? Two case studies are discussed in more detail, relating to Alevi amateur television production in Germany and to a Kurdish satellite television station that reaches out to a diaspora across Europe and the Middle East. Keywords: migrant media, transnationalism, Alevis, Kurds, Turkey, Germany
On the backdrop of the 2008 financial crisis this paper introduces an understanding of societal crises as a reduction in the meaning production of social entities, which can either be internally or externally provoked. The emergence of constitutions and, more generally, constitutional structures, can be understood as responses to both forms of crisis. This is the case because they are double-edged structures which are simultaneously oriented towards the maintenance of internal order and stability within a given social entity at the same time as they frame the transfer of the meaning components between the social entities and their environments. Thus, the 2008 financial crisis indicates a failure of constitutional bonding. When observed from an overall structural perspective, the reasons for this failure can be traced back to an increased discrepancy between the structural composition of world society and the constitutional structures in place. The crisis reflects a failure to respond to two simultaneous, inter-related and mutually re-inforcing structural transformations. First, there is the increased globalisation, which has led to massive dis-locations in the relative centrality of the different national configurations for the reproductive processes of functional systems. Second, there is a structural transformation of the transnational layer of world society through a reduced reliance on the centre/periphery differentiation and an increased reliance on functional differentiation. One of the many consequences of this development is the emergence of new forms of transnational law and politics. A new constitutional architecture which reflects these transformations is needed in order to ensure an adequate constitutional bonding of economic processes, as well as of other social processes.