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Many metabolic pathways of eukaryotes are carried out in form of interconnected pathways, which take place in organelles. The organelle membrane separates the reaction compartments from each other, making it a key feature of organelle existence in the cell. To maintain cellular homeostasis, organelle positioning in and transport through the cell as well as organelle interaction are important for the organisms. In plants, organellar movement of peroxisomes, Golgi stacks and mitochondria was shown to be mediated by the actin-myosin machinery. The molecular mechanisms are not elucidated, but working models comprise classical movement mechanisms of motor proteins pulling their cargo on cytoskeletal filaments. In contrast, many mechanisms of chloroplasts movement, which are regulated by blue and red light, are deciphered but follow a different molecular mechanism. Plastidal relatives of the chloroplast have long been disregarded by scientific research but carry out important metabolic reactions to maintain cellular homeostasis. The cellular transport and movement mechanisms of root plastids have not been described in detail until now. Additionally, all plastid subspecies can form tubular structures, called stromules. Those are thought to be involved in the organelle communication and metabolite exchange. Since they are very mobile structures, they influence the organellar dynamic of plastids. This work aimed for an in-detail description of the cellular movements of root plastids in the plant Arabidopsis thaliana to elucidate underlying mechanisms of their movement. Additionally, the dynamics of root plastid stromules were investigated, led by the questions, if and how stromules are involved in the mediation of plastidal movement and their overall dynamics. Plastidal movement in Arabidopsis thaliana was captured using light sheet-based fluorescence microscopy. 4D image data was automatically analyzed using the program Arivis Vision 4D with subsequent manual correction. Additionally to the 4D approach, a manual 3D analysis of plastid and stromule dynamics was performed. The results of the semiautomated analysis displayed heterologous distribution of the plastidal movement. Using a combination of the vector length of each motion event and the angle in relation to previous motion vectors, the proportions of different movement patterns were determined. Main fractions of the data showed undirected motion of plastids, whereas small proportions displayed directed movement with speed up to 8.5 µm/sec. Directed motion was shown to be carried out on defined routes in the cell. Salt stress did not affect plastidal motion, whereas drought stress lead to its reduction. Sucrose depletion led to a drastic decrease of plastidal movement. Additionally, stromule dynamics were investigated using the acquired image data. Stromules were observed in high frequency mainly at stationary plastids giving them the opportunity of dynamic interaction in their cellular surrounding. Stromules reached lengths of up to 60 µm. Additionally, they displayed a variety of movement patterns that contributed greatly to the overall plastid dynamics. Stromule related motion events were captured reaching up to 3.2 µm/sec. Similar to determined plastid dynamics, stromule motions were reduced during drought stress and sucrose depletion, but also were negatively influenced by salt stress. Those results strongly favor an actin-myosin mediated movement machinery mediating the plastidal and stromule movement. This stands in contrast to previous results describing the movement mechanisms of light induced chloroplast movement.
In an additional approach, the molecular mechanisms underlying stromule formation were analyzed. Previous results describe that stromule formation can be induced at isolated chloroplasts of the plant Nicotiana benthamiana by mixing it with concentrated cell extract. During this work, a variation of the described assay was established using the plant Pisum sativum. It was shown that an unknown protein factor presumably undergoing protein-lipid interaction is responsible for in vitro stromule formation. Using a combination of sucrose gradient centrifugation and anion exchange chromatography, the desired factor could be enriched, while the majority of unwanted proteins could be reduced drastically. A following LC-MS analysis revealed a selection of proteins with membrane interaction- and unknown functions that might be involved in in vitro stromule formation.
The production of ribosomes is a complicated multistep, that is susceptible to changes occurring within the cell and its environment. The process itself requires many proteins, known as ribosome biogenesis factors (RBFs) and many non-coding RNAs like the small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs). While RBFs are required for the accurate processing of the pre-rRNA into mature rRNAs, the snoRNAs act to coordinate and guide enzymes for post-transcriptional modifications, chiefly 2´-O-ribose methylation and pseudouridylation. While ribosome biogenesis is mostly described in human and yeast model eucaryotes, similar detailed studies in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana are far less explored and understood. Furthermore, for many experimentally confirmed modification sites the according snoRNAs and for many pre-rRNA processing steps the responsible RBFs are missing. Therefore, it is expected that a high number of snoRNAs and RBFs are not identified till yet. For this reason, RNA-deep sequencing was performed in order to identify novel snoRNAs and MS analysis data of nucleoli and nuclei of A. thaliana from a former PhD student were used in order to find new proteins involved in pre-rRNA processing.
In here, it is shown that with RNA deep-sequencing still new snoRNAs and snRNAs can be identified and that detection of predicted snoRNAs can be fulfilled with a) antisense oligonucleotides tagged with fluorescence dyes and b) with radioactive labeled antisense probes. Furthermore, a secondary structure map of the 60S and 40S subunit highlighting the predicted and moreover verified modification sites in 5.8S, 25S and 18S rRNA was created. Especially, the correlation between the modification sites and the guiding snoRNA is highlighted further shedding light on overview about current pre-rRNA modification sites and corresponding guiding snoRNAs. The next chapter reveals the complex and multi-layered existence of the 5.8S rRNA and its numerous precursors. The mutant prp24 (also known as seap1) encoding AtPRP24, is recognized as factor being important for splicing as it is promoting the recruitment of the U4 and U6 snRNAs to the spliceosome. In here, it was found that AtPRP24 is involved in processing of 5.8S rRNA precursors, recognizable by precursors that are over accumulating in the mutant. Moreover, it could be shown for the first time that the plant-specific precursor 5´-5.8S is exported to the cytoplasm, where final cleavage steps of 5.8S rRNA takes place. In the prp24.2 mutant, this precursor is exported at an increased rate to the cytoplasm, where it can be detected in the actively translating ribosomes (polysomes). A lower sensitivity of the mutant seeds to cycloheximide (CHX) suggests that due to the extension at the 5´-end of 5.8S, the structure of the 60S subunit has altered CHX binding. In conclusion, this work highlights the importance and complexity of 5.8S rRNA and its precursors for ribosome biogenesis and displays new insights into pre-rRNA processing in A. thaliana.
Adhesion to host cells is the first and most crucial step in infections with pathogenic Gram negative bacteria and is often mediated by trimeric autotransporter adhesins (TAAs). TAA-producing bacteria are the causative agent of many human diseases and TAA targeted anti-adhesive compounds might counteract such bacterial infections. The modularly structured Bartonella adhesin A (BadA) is one of the best characterised TAAs and serves as an attractive adhesin to study the domain-function relationship of TAAs during infection. BadA is a major virulence factor of B. henselae and is essential for the initial attachment to host cells via adhesion to extracellular matrix proteins. B. henselae is the causative agent of cat scratch disease and adheres to fibronectin using its long BadA fibres. The life cycle of this pathogen, with alternating host conditions, drives evolutionary and host-specific adaptations.
Human, feline, and laboratory adapted B. henselae isolates display genomic and phenotypic differences. By analysing the genomes of eight B. henselae strains using long-read sequencing, a variable genomic badA island with a diversified and highly repetitive badA gene flanked by badA pseudogenes was identified. Moreover, numerous conserved flanking genes were characterised, however, their influence on the regulation of badA expression and modification remains to be explored. It seems that B. henselae G 5436 is the evolutionary ancestor of the other B. henselae strains analysed in this work. The diversity of the badA island among the B. henselae strains indicates that the downstream badA-like domain region might be used as a ‘toolbox’ for rearrangements in the badA gene. Overall, it is suggested that badA-domain duplications, insertions, and/or deletions are the result of active phase variation via site-specific recombination and contribute to rapid host adaptation in the scope of pathogenicity, immune evasion, and/or enhanced long-term colonisation.
The model strain B. henselae Marseille expresses a badA gene that includes 30 repetitive neck/stalk domains, each consisting of several predicted structural motifs. To further elucidate the motif sequences that mediate fibronectin binding, various modified badA constructs were generated. Their ability to bind fibronectin was assessed via whole-cell ELISA and fluorescence microscopy. In conclusion, it is suggested that BadA adheres to fibronectin in a cumulative fashion with quick saturation via unpaired β-strands appearing in structural motifs present in BadA neck/stalk domains 19, 27, and other homologous domains. Furthermore, antibodies targeting a 15-mer amino acid sequence in the DALL motif of BadA neck/stalk domain 27 were able to reduce fibronectin binding of the B. henselae mutant strain S27. Moreover, this DALL motif sequence is conserved in the genome of all analysed B. henselae strains. The identification of common binding motifs between BadA and fibronectin supports the development of new anti-adhesive compounds that might inhibit the initial adherence of B. henselae and other TAA-producing pathogens during infection.
Die akute myeloische Leukämie (AML) ist eine aggressive Erkrankung des Knochenmarks, welche die Hämatopoese beeinträchtigt und zu Knochenmarksversagen führt. Trotz des Fortschritts in der AML-Therapie bleibt die Prognose für die meisten Patienten schlecht, sodass neue Therapieansätze für die Behandlung dringend benötigt werden. Autophagie, ein kataboler Abbauprozess von zellulären Komponenten, ist nachweislich an der Entstehung von AML beteiligt. Als zentraler Regulator von Zellüberleben, Homöostase und Stoffwechsel, dient die Autophagie als Nährstoffquelle durch die Wiederverwertung von Makromolekülen während begrenzter Energieversorgung. AML-Zellen benötigen ein konstantes Nährstoff- und Energieniveau, um ihre Vermehrung aufrechtzuerhalten. Dies wird durch eine Umstellung von Stoffwechselwegen, insbesondere des mitochondrialen Stoffwechsels einschließlich der oxidativen Phosphorylierung (OXPHOS) und des Tricarbonsäurezyklus (TCA), erreicht.
Mehrere Studien haben die Hemmung der Autophagie für die Behandlung von Krebs als vielversprechenden Ansatz vorgestellt. Doch eine Monotherapie mit Autophagie-Inhibitoren erzielte nur eine geringfügige Wirksamkeit. Eine mögliche Erklärung hierfür ist die Entstehung von Kompensationsmechanismen, die zum Ausgleich der Autophagie-Hemmung in Krebszellen entstehen. Bis heute sind diese Kompensationsmechanismen kaum untersucht. Ziel dieser Arbeit ist es, ein geeignetes Autophagie-Gen zu identifizieren, mit dem sich die Rolle der Autophagie-Hemmung für das Überleben von AML-Zellen untersuchen lässt. Zusätzlich sollen die kompensatorischen Mechanismen, die durch die Autophagie-Hemmung in AML-Zellen entstehen können, untersucht werden, um neue metabolische Angriffspunkte zu identifizieren, die für Kombinationstherapien genutzt werden können.
Zu Beginn der Arbeit wurde ein gezielter CRISPR/Cas9 Screen in zwei humanen AML-Zelllinien durchgeführt, um Autophagie-Gene zu identifizieren, deren Verlust eine Proliferationsstörung in AML-Zellen verursacht, welche überwunden werden kann. Validierungsexperimente zeigten, dass der Verlust von ATG3 das Zellwachstum signifikant verminderte. Außerdem zeigte die Messung des Autophagie-Fluxes, dass der Verlust von ATG3 die Autophagie stark beeinträchtigte. Dies wurde durch eine Western-Blot-Analyse, die eine beeinträchtigte LC3-Lipidierung zeigte, und durch eine Immunfluoreszenzanalyse der Autophagosomen-Bildung mittels konfokaler Mikroskopie, die eine geringere Anzahl von Autophagosomen in ATG3-defizienten Zellen ergab, bestätigt. Deshalb wurde der Knockdown von ATG3 in AML Zellen verwendet, um die Mechanismen, die zum Ausgleichen der Autophagie-Hemmung entstehen, zu untersuchen. Zuerst wurde die Zellproliferation in fünf verschiedenen AML Zelllinien über sieben Tage betrachtet. In allen Zellenlinien führte der Verlust von ATG3 mittels small hairpin RNA zu verminderter Zellproliferation. Diese Ergebnisse zeigen die wichtige Rolle von ATG3 in der Autophagie und dass Autophagie-Hemmung durch ATG3-Verlust das Wachstum von AML-Zellen beeinträchtigt.
Da der Verlust von ATG3 die Proliferation von AML-Zellen beeinträchtigte, wurde eine Zellzyklusanalyse durchgeführt. Eine reduzierte S-Phase bestätigte die verminderte Proliferation in ATG3-depletierten AML-Zellen, doch der Zellzyklus war grundsätzlich nicht gestoppt. Darüber hinaus ergab die Analyse der Apoptose, dass diese unter dem Verlust von ATG3 erhöht war, aber etwa 50% der Zellen blieben vital. Diese Beobachtungen deuten darauf hin, dass AML-Zellen trotz des Verlusts der ATG3-abhängigen Autophagie weiter proliferieren können.
Um die Mechanismen zur Kompensation der Autophagie-Hemmung zu untersuchen, wurden die Auswirkungen des ATG3-Verlusts auf die mitochondriale Homöostase untersucht. Die Mitophagie sowie das mitochondriale Membranpotenzial und die Masse unterschieden sich zwischen Kontroll- und ATG3-depletierten AML-Zellen nicht, was darauf hindeutet, dass die mitochondriale Homöostase durch den Verlust von ATG3 nicht beeinträchtigt ist. Als nächstes wurde die mitochondriale Funktion durch Messung des ATP-Spiegels und der OXPHOS untersucht. Die ATP-Level und die OXPHOS waren nach dem Verlust von ATG3 in AML-Zellen erhöht, was auf eine gesteigerte mitochondriale Aktivität bei Autophagie-Defizienz hinweist.
Due to their sessile nature, plants are constantly exposed to an everchanging environment. When these changes exceed certain limits, they can significantly impact plant growth and development, which, in case of crop plants, has consequences on food security. Exposure to high temperatures causes heat stress (HS), one of the most devastating stresses that plants can face. The survival and recovery from HS are dependent on the activation of the HS response (HSR), a collection of molecular mechanisms conferring HS tolerance by maintaining the cellular homeostasis. Stress responses follow a strictly orchestrated network of signal perception and -transduction, ultimately resulting in an adaptive cellular output. Thereby, the massive reshaping of the transcriptome plays a major part, in which heat stress transcription factors (HSFs) play the key role by inducing the expression of HS-responsive genes, including heat shock proteins and other transcription factors. Additionally, alternative splicing (AS), the selective usage of splice sites, contributes to the rapid adjustment of the transcriptome landscape by producing different mRNA variants from a single gene. Consequently, this results in the reduction of translatable transcripts by nonsense-mediated mRNA-decay or nuclear retention, but also enhances the proteome diversity by allowing the synthesis of protein isoforms with distinct functions. AS thereby modulates the activity of important regulatory factors like HSFA2 in Solanum lycopersicum (tomato). HSFA2 is the key factor of acquired thermotolerance (ATT), which enables the ability to survive a potentially lethal HS through pre-exposure to a preceding mild HS. Temperature-dependent AS leads to the synthesis of two HSFA2 protein variants, whereby inhibition of splicing ensures the synthesis of the stable isoform HSFA2-I that is required for ATT.
Transcriptome analysis of several plant species exposed to HS has highlighted the strong impact of high temperatures on the regulation of pre-mRNA splicing. Despite its importance, little is known about the molecular basis of the AS regulation in plants. Particularly for an economically important crop like tomato, understanding the regulation of HS-sensitive AS will contribute to the description of such an important regulatory mechanism but also might offer new insights for increasing HS resilience. Serine/arginine-rich proteins (SR proteins) are central regulators of constitutive and AS by modulating the splice site selection by the spliceosome. This study describes two members of the RS2Z subfamily of SR proteins in tomato, namely RS2Z35 and RS2Z36, which act as core regulators of AS under HS and consequently as central factors for thermotolerance. This study investigates the interaction of the two RS2Z proteins with the HSFA2 pre-mRNA and provides evidence for their function as splicing repressors in this particular AS event. Thereby, RS2Z proteins play an important role in the HSR by modulating the AS of the key factor of the ATT. Furthermore, based on global transcriptome analysis of knockout mutants of single or both RS2Z genes, it is demonstrated that RS2Z proteins are involved in the splicing of pre-mRNAs of almost 2000 genes. Moreover, RS2Z proteins act as splicing regulators and take part in a large portion of HS-induced AS events, thus playing a broader role in AS regulation. Furthermore, the HS-induced RS2Z36 is involved in basal thermotolerance (BTT), highlighting its importance for the basic HS resilience capacity of tomato. In addition, RNA sequencing demonstrates that RS2Z proteins–especially RS2Z36–regulate the expression of proteins involved in plant immunity. The study thereby provides experimental evidence for the important and essential role of SR proteins for plant thermotolerance and suggests the existence of RS2Z-mediated crossroads of different stress responses.
This work characterizes the post-PKS modifications of AQ-256. Additionally, the second part describes the establishment of an AQ production platform for electrolyte generation that can be utilized in redox-flow-batteries. Lastly, a silent BGC that encodes the genes for terpenoid biosynthesis was described and characterized with regards to product formation and putative ecological function.
Heart development is a dynamic process modulated by various extracellular and intracellular cues. Cardiac progenitors in vertebrates such as the zebrafish, migrate over to the midline after differentiation from the epiblast (Bakkers, 2011; Rosenthal & Harvey, 2010; Stainier et al., 1996; Trinh & Stainier, 2004). These progenitors form a cardiac disc at the midline which elongates into the linear heart tube. The differentiation and migration of cardiac precursors is modulated by signaling interactions between cardiac precursor cells and their extracellular environment known as the Extracellular Matrix (ECM). Studies have shown that Cell-ECM interactions play a crucial role in sculpting the heart during early morphogenic events (Davis CL, 1924; Männer & Yelbuz, 2019; Rosenthal & Harvey, 2010). One key factor to these processes is the presence of a specialized ECM known as the Basement Membrane (BM). Extracellular basement membrane proteins such as Fibronectin have been shown to modulate these very early migration processes of the cardiomyocyte progenitors (Trinh & Stainier, 2004). As the heart develops further, the linear heart tube is composed of myocardial cells with an inner endothelial cell lining separated by a layer of thick jelly like substance called the cardiac jelly (Barry A, 1948; Davis CL, 1924; Little et al., 1989). The cardiac jelly also called the cardiac basement membrane, has been shown to regulate distinct developmental events during cardiogenesis. This early CJ contains components of the basal lamina such as laminins, fibronectin, hyaluronan as well as non-fibrillar collagens such as Collagen IV (Little et al., 1989). In this study, I aimed to identify ECM molecules of the Basement Membrane in the heart and identify their role in the modulation of cardiac development and regeneration using the zebrafish as my model organism.
I identified genes belonging to the Zebrafish Matrisome expressed during cardiac developmental and regeneration and performed CRISPR/Cas9 sgRNA mediated mutagenesis. I also developed overexpression tools for these genes.
Agrinp168 mutants exhibited no obvious gross morphology defects during cardiac development and were adult viable. Adult mutants exhibited reduced cardiomyocyte proliferation, but no significant difference in cardiomyocyte dedifferentiation post cardiac cryoinjury.
Decorin overexpression through mRNA injections led to increased myocardial wall thickness and DN dcn overexpression through mRNA injections led to loss of cardiac looping during early development.
Mutants for Small Leucine Rich Proteoglycan (SLRP) prelp generated using CRISPR/Cas9 mutagenesis exhibited cardiovascular defects. Close observation of prelp mutant hearts revealed a reduced heart rate and impaired fractional shortening of the ventricle. prelp mutants exhibited an enlarged atrium at 48 hpf and 72 hpf as well as a reduced ventricle size at 72 hpf. Chamber size in the mutant hearts were enlarged irrespective of contractility of the heart. Mutants showed an increased number of Atrial cardiomyocytes, but no change in cell size. On the molecular level, extracellular Laminin localization was disrupted in prelp mutants along with an increase in thickness and volume of the cardiac HA in the CJ suggesting a potential compensatory role, or retention of immaturity of the cardiac jelly in the prelp mutants. Transcriptomics analysis on the prelp mutant hearts revealed downregulation of ECM organization and ECM-Receptor interaction processes in the mutants. Gene Ontology analysis on prelp mutants hearts transcriptome revealed increased MAPK signaling. Interestingly, genes related to degradation of cardiac HA and maturation of cardiac jelly were downregulated, and genes related to epithelial identity of cardiomyocytes were upregulated. Analysis of the mutant hearts at single cell resolution revealed increased number of mutants exhibiting rounded up cardiomyocytes and loss of apical Podocalyxin. Truncated forms of prelp were generated to identify domain specific roles for Prelp, and reintroduction of N-terminal truncated Prelp into the mutants rescued the basal lamina localization and cardiac jelly volume phenotypes. Myocardium specific re-establishment of prelp expression revealed a marked rescue of the mutant cardiovascular phenotype suggesting that tissue specific expression of prelp is not required so long as Prelp is secreted into the CJ. With these data, I’ve elucidated the role of ECM SLRPs in modulation of cardiac chamber morphogenesis process and regeneration of the heart.
Untersuchungen zur Bedeutung selektiver Autophagie für Alterungsprozesse von Podospora anserina
(2022)
Das Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit war, die Funktion und die Rolle von Autophagie-assoziierten Proteinen im Alternsmodell Podospora anserina zu untersuchen und einen Einblick in die nicht-selektive Autophagie, die Mitophagie und die Bildung und den Abbau von Autophagosomen im Zusammenhang zur Alterung von P. anserina zu analysieren. Dabei wurden folgende Erkenntnisse erhalten:
1. Die Untersuchungen zu ΔPaAtg8 bestätigen, dass die PaATG8-abhängige Autophagosomenbildung zur Aufrechterhaltung der Lebensspanne benötigt wird. In ΔPaAtg8 kommt es zu einem Verlust der nicht-selektiven Autophagie. Die Mitophagie hingegen ist auch ohne PaATG8 partiell möglich und es liegt ein PaATG8-unabhängiger Abbau von mitochondrialen Proteinen in P. anserina vor.
2. In P. anserina ist PaATG11 an der nicht-selektiven Autophagie beteiligt und auch die Mitophagie erfolgt in Abhängigkeit dieses Gerüstproteins. Während der PaAtg11-Deletionsstamm unter Normalbedingungen keinen zum Wildtyp veränderten Phänotyp zeigt, führt eine Kultivierung auf M2-Medium mit Glycerin als einziger Kohlenstoffquelle zu einer starken Verkürzung der Lebensspanne. Eine mikroskopische Untersuchung der Mitochondrien zeigte, dass im juvenilen Altersstadium von ΔPaAtg11 stark fragmentierte Mitochondrien vorliegen. Während der Alterung normalisiert sich die Mitochondrienmorphologie wieder. Der mitochondriale Funktionsverlust wird möglicherweise von den fragmentierten Mitochondrien ausgelöst, denn eine Kultivierung von älteren ΔPaAtg11-Stämmen auf M2-Medium mit Glycerin führt zu einer Normalisierung der Lebensspanne.
3. Die initialen Untersuchungen zur ΔPaAtg11/ΔPaAtg24-Doppelmutante zeigen, dass es bei der Kultivierung unter Normalbedingungen zu einem additiven Effekt der beiden Genverluste kommt. Bei der Anzucht auf M2-Medium mit Glycerin hingegen kann eine im Vergleich zum ΔPaAtg11-Stamm längere Lebensspanne festgestellt werden. Die Mikroskopie der Mitochondrien in ΔPaAtg11/ΔPaAtg24 zeigt, dass im juvenilen Alter zum Wildtyp vergleichbare filamentöse Mitochondrien vorhanden sind.
4. In P. anserina ist PaATG24 kein Mitophagierezeptorprotein, da im PaAtg24-Deletionsstamm eine Beeinträchtigung der nicht-selektiven Autophagie vorliegt. Auch die Mitophagie ist in diesem Stamm geschädigt. Die mikroskopische Betrachtung der Mitochondrien zeigt keinen Unterschied zum Wildtyp. Bei der Untersuchung zur Mitochondrienfunktion durch M2-Medium mit Glycerin ist wie unter Normalbedingungen eine verkürzte Lebensspanne feststellbar.
5. Der Abbau von GFP::PaATG8 ist in der PaAtg24-Deletionsmutante signifikant verringert und es kommt zu einer Akkumulation von Autophagosomen, somit liegt in diesem Stamm eine Beeinträchtigung des autophagosomalen Flusses vor. Bei der mikroskopischen Untersuchung von PaATG24 zeigt sich, dass dieses Protein in P. anserina im Bereich der Vakuolen lokalisiert ist. Die Analyse der Vakuole-Autophagosomen-Fusion zeigt jedoch, dass dieser Mechanismus unabhängig von PaATG24 ist. Die Vakuolenmorphologie und Vakuolengröße ist in ΔPaAtg24 beeinträchtigt und dadurch kommt es zu dem beobachteten Defekt der nicht-selektiven und selektiven Autophagie.
Mutational analysis of ribosomal DNA and maturation-scheme analysis of ribosomal RNA in A. thaliana
(2022)
Ribosome biogenesis is a fundamental cellular process beginning with long precursor rRNA transcription from multi-copies of repetitive 45S ribosomal DNAs. At the subunit level, the primary pre-rRNA transcript encapsuled in 90S protein-RNA complex undergoes decisive splitting in two chief ways for further maturation into large (LSU) and small (SSU) ribosomal subunit. The usage of specific rDNA copies from defined chromosomes and their selective role during growth and development have been a topic of interest owing to its contribution to specialized ribosome theory which proposes non-monolithic functions for ribosomes and thereby their mRNA translation potential. Dual-guide CRISPR/Cas9 mediated disruption of rDNA regions resulted in stable disruption of up to 2.5% and 5% of all rDNA copies in hetero- and homozygous (ploop KD) conditions, respectively. At the RNA level, the mutation excised a critical structural element, P-loop on the LSU 25S rRNA. Mutation caused a dosage dependent defect with homozygosity leading to severe developmental defects through vegetative and reproductive growth phases which is manifested in their proteome by means of disregulation through both increase and decrease of several gene ontological categories of proteins in mutants. Interestingly, the mutation on chromosome 4 triggered dosage compensation through rRNA expression from chromosome 2 further compounded by ectopic rRNA biogenesis defects. The mutated copies however are not incorporated in the translating ribosomes and as a direct or indirect consequence led to elevated basal autophagic levels in the mutants.
The primary 35S transcript is known to undergo two modes of initial cleavages at the pre-rRNA level that aid in their subsequent maturation. Root cell culture (RCC) studies shows that these cells contain a novel ITS2-first cleaved precursor even under control growth conditions, P-C2 adding a third maturation means for the 35S pre-rRNA. This maturation path is further known to be triggered under elevated growth temperature forming a novel adaptive response in Arabidopsis and two other crop plants, tomato, and rice. Taken together, the pulse-chase labeling analysis of control and stressed tissues uncovers the fine-tuned pre-rRNA schematics with crossovers between multiple maturation paths.
A promising strategy to reduce the dependency from fossil fuels is to use the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae to bioconvert renewable non-food feedstocks or waste streams, like lignocellulosic biomass, into bioethanol and other valuable molecule blocks. Lignocellulosic feedstocks contain glucose and significant fractions of the pentoses xylose and arabinose in varying proportions depending on the biomass type. S. cerevisiae is an efficient glucose consumer, but it cannot metabolize xylose and arabinose naturally. Therefore, extensive research using recombinant DNA techniques has been conducted to introduce and improve the biochemical pathways necessary to utilize these non-physiological substrates. However, any functional pathway capable of metabolizing D xylose and L arabinose in S. cerevisiae requires the transport of these sugars across the plasma membrane. The endogenous sugar transport system of S. cerevisiae can conduct a limited uptake of D-xylose and L-arabinose; this uptake enables only basal growth when the enzymatic pathways are provided. For this reason, the uptake of D xylose and L-arabinose has been recognized as a limiting step for the efficient utilization of these non-physiological substrates.
Gal2, a member of the major facilitator superfamily, is one of the most studied hexose transporters in S. cerevisiae. Although its expression is repressed in the presence of glucose, it also transports this sugar with high affinity when constitutively expressed. Recent efforts to engineer yeast strains for the utilization of plant biomass have unraveled the ability of Gal2 to transport non-physiological substrates like xylose and arabinose, among others. Improving Gal2 kinetic and substrate specificity, particularly for pentoses, has become a crucial target in strain engineering. The main goal of this study is to improve the utilization of xylose and arabinose by increasing the cell permeability of these non physiological substrates through the engineering of the galactose permease Gal2.
GAL2 gene expression depends on galactose, which acts as an inducer; nevertheless, even in the presence of galactose, glucose act as a strict repressor; consequently, GAL2 gene is usually placed under the control of a constitutive promoter. However, the presence of glucose additionally triggers the Gal2 degradation, which is mediated by the covalent attachment of the small 76 amino acid protein ubiquitin (Ub) to the targeted transporter; in a multi-step process called ubiquitination.
Ubiquitination of hexose permeases involves the activation of the Ub molecule by the E1 Ub-activating enzyme using ATP; then, the activated Ub is transferred to a specific Ub-conjugating enzyme E2, which donates the Ub indirectly through a specific HECT E3 enzyme (Rsp5) to a lysine residue of the substrate, with the aid of an adaptor protein which recognizes the target (Rsp5-adaptor). Ubiquitinated permeases are sent by membrane invagination to early endosomes, where they encounter ESCRTs (endosomal sorting complex required for transport). The targeted permeases are sorted in intralumenal vesicles (ILV) inside of the endosome, which after several cycles, turns into a multivesicular body (MVB) that subsequently fuses with the vacuole to expose the protein content of the ILVs to lumenal hydrolases for degradation.
Gal2 contains 30 lysine residues that may accept the ubiquitin molecule, which targets its degradation. It is known that mono-ubiquitination by Rsp5 on multiple lysine residues is necessary to internalize Gal2 (Horak & Wolf, 2001). However, the authors did not identify the specific lysine residues involved in the ubiquitination processes. This study screened several Gal2 variants where lysine residues were mutated or removed from the protein sequence to discover which lysine residues are likely involved in ubiquitination and consequent turnover of the transporter. The results of the screening showed that mutation of the N terminal lysine residues 27, 37, and 44 to arginine (Gal23KR) produced a functional transporter that, when fused with GFP (Gal23KR_GFP), showed an exclusive localization at the plasma membrane in cells growing in galactose or glucose as a sole carbon source (Tamayo Rojas et al., 2021b).
This study furthermore evaluated upstream signals caused by phosphorylation which triggers ubiquitination and consequent turnover of the targeted protein; using similar screening approaches to assess the stabilization of Gal2 by lysine residue modifications, it was possible to identify that N terminal serine residues 32, 35, 39, 48, 53, and 55 are likely involved in the internalization of Gal2, since a Gal2 construct where all these serines were mutated to alanine residues and tagged with GFP (Gal26SA_GFP) exhibited practically complete localization at the plasma membrane in cells growing in galactose or glucose as a sole carbon source (Tamayo Rojas et al., 2021b)...
Die oxygene Photosynthese bildet den Grundpfeiler des heutigen Ökosystems unseres Planeten. Neben den gut untersuchten Landpflanzen bilden Mikroalgen eine äußerst bedeutende Organismengruppe der phototrophen Lebewesen. Zu den Mikroalgen zählen die Diatomeen, welche sich beispielsweise durch eine Silikatschale und spezielle Lichtsammelkomplexe auszeichnen und für einen Großteil der marinen Primärproduktion verantwortlich sind. Die stoffwechselphysiologischen Grundlagen des ökologischen Erfolgs der Kieselalgen sind bislang noch unzureichend erforscht. Ein Vertreter der zentrischen Diatomeen, Cyclotella, wurde bereits zur Jahrtausendwende zur biochemischen Charakterisierung der Diatomeen Photosynthese verwendet (Eppard und Rhiel, 1998; Eppard und Rhiel, 2000), das Genom des Organismus aber erst vor kurzem sequenziert (Traller et al., 2016). Die Sequenzierung des Genoms konnte einige Gene für Lichtsammelproteine identifizieren, die Homologie zu den LhcSR-Proteinen aus C. reinhardtii aufweisen, welche nachweislich eine photoprotektive Funktion besitzen (Peers et al., 2009). Diese sogenannten Lhcx-Proteine der Diatomeen sind in den zwei Gruppen der Kieselalgen, den zentrischen und pennaten Diatomeen zu finden, unterscheiden sich aber in ihren jeweiligen Lhcx-Kandidaten. So können in der pennaten Diatomee P. tricornutum vier lhcx-Gene ausgemacht werden, während die zentrische Kieselalge T. pseudonana sechs lhcx-Gene besitzt und C. cryptica vier verschiedene lhcx-Kandidaten genomisch aufweist (Armbrust et al., 2004; Bowler et al., 2008; Traller et al., 2016). Die beschriebenen Diatomeen weisen alle eine Homologie im Lhcx1 auf, während sich die übrigen Lhcx-Kandidaten zwischen pennaten und zentrischen Diatomeen unterscheiden. Ein zwischen T. pseudonana und C. cryptica konserviertes Lhcx ist das Lhcx6_1, welches 2011 das erste Mal massenspektrometrisch an Photosystemen von T. pseudonana nachgewiesen wurde (Grouneva et al., 2011) und in weiteren Massenspektrometrie-gestützten Untersuchungen in beiden zentrischen Diatomeen an Photosynthese-Komplexen gefunden werden konnte (Gundermann et al., 2019; Calvaruso et al., 2020). Die Funktion des Lhcx6_1 ist bislang unklar.
Diese Arbeit konnte das Lhcx6_1 aus C. meneghiniana charakterisieren und Antikörper-gestützt genauer lokalisieren, eine nicht dynamische Phosphorylierung der Thylakoidmembran-Proteine der zentrischen Diatomee nachweisen und die molekularbiologische Zugänglichkeit des Organismus optimieren. qRT-PCR gestützte Expressions-Analysen konnten eine unerwartete Expression des lhcx6_1-Gens aufdecken. Dieses weist, im Vergleich zum Lhcx1, keine Starklicht induzierte Expression auf. Die Expression des Gens konnte nach wenigen Stunden Schwachlicht als maximal bestimmt werden, während sie im Starklicht abnimmt. Das Muster der Genexpression glich im Schwachlicht eher der des lhcf1-Gens. Die Sequenzierung des lhcx6_1 aus C. meneghiniana identifizierte eine verlängerte N-terminale Sequenz des Proteins, welche Homologie zu den minoren Antennen aus A. thaliana besitzt und Teil des reifen Proteins ist. Mittels eines C-terminalen Epitops wurde ein Antikörper gegen das Lhcx6_1 entworfen, welcher das Protein in C. meneghiniana spezifisch nachweisen kann. Die Isolation von Thylakoidmembranen der zentrischen Diatomee und weitergehende Aufreinigung mittels Saccharosedichtegradienten und lpBN-PAGE konnten die Lokalisation des Lhcx6_1 eingrenzen. Das Protein zeigt dabei keine Unterschiede in seiner Lokalisation nach Inkubation in Schwach-, Stark- und Fernrot-Licht und ist vorrangig mit Photosystem I assoziiert. In geringerer Menge konnte es zudem an Photosystem II nachgewiesen werden, während der immunologische Nachweis in Lichtsammelkomplexen (FCPs) minimale Mengen erbrachte. Ferner konnte eine Phosphorylierung des Lhcx6_1 an Threonin-Resten nachgewiesen werden, während die meisten anderen Thylakoidmembran-Proteine mittels Phospho-Serin Antikörper detektiert werden konnten. Weder die Phosphorylierung des Lhcx6_1, noch der anderen Thylakoidmembran-Proteine, zeigt eine dynamische Regulation, im Stile einer state-transition ähnlichen Kinase auf. Die Qualität des Umgebungslichts führte zu keinerlei Unterschieden in Phosphorylierungsmustern. Weiterführende Untersuchungen der Lhcx6_1-Phosphorylierung mittels Phos-tag PAGE identifizieren eine unphosphorylierte und eine einfach phosphorylierte Form des Proteins. Dabei kann an PSI ausschließlich die phosphorylierte Version des Lhcx6_1 gefunden werden. Im Zuge der Arbeit konnte zudem erstmalig die Elektroporation und Konjugation für C. meneghiniana als Transformations-Methoden etabliert werden, während das Protokoll für die biolistische Transformation optimiert wurde. Die Elektroporation erbrachte die höchste Transformationseffizienz. Molekularbiologische Unterfangen eines Lhcx6_1-Knockdowns mittels Antisense-RNA erzielten zunächst, aufgrund der starken Gegenregulation der Diatomee, keinen Erfolg...
Regulatory required, classical toxicity studies for environmental hazard assessment are costly, time consuming, and often lack mechanistic insights about the toxic mode of action induced through a compound. In addition, classical toxicological non-human animal tests raise serious ethical concerns and are not well suited for high throughput screening approaches. Molecular biomarker-based screenings could be a suitable alternative for identifying particular hazardous effects (e.g. endocrine disruption, developmental neurotoxicity) in non-target organisms at the molecular level. This, however, requires a better mechanistic understanding of different toxic modes of action (MoA) to describe characteristic molecular key events and respective markers.
Ecotoxicgenomics, which uses modern day omic technologies and systems biology approaches to study toxicological responses at the molecular level, are a promising new way for elucidating
the processes through which chemicals cause adverse effects in environmental organisms. In this context, this PhD study was designated to investigate and describe MoA-characteristic
ecotoxicogenomic signatures in three ecotoxicologically important aquatic model organisms of different trophic levels (Danio rerio, Daphnia magna and Lemna minor).
Applying non-target transcriptomic and proteomic methodologies post chemical exposure, the aim was to identify robust functional profiles and reliable biomarker candidates with potential
predictive properties to allow for a differentiation among different MoA in these organisms. For the sublethal exposure studies in the zebrafish embryo model (96 hpf), the acute fish embryo toxicity test guideline (OECD 236) was used as conceptual framework. As different test compounds with known MoA, the thyroid hormone 3,3′,5-triiodothyronine (T3) and the thyrostatic 6-propyl-2-thiouracil (6-PTU), as well as six nerve- and muscle-targeting insecticides (abamectin, carbaryl, chlorpyrifos, fipronil, imidacloprid and methoxychlor) were evaluated. Furthermore, a novel sublethal immune challenge assay in early zebrafish embryos (48 hpf) was evaluated for its potential to assess immuno-suppressive effects at the gene expression level. Therefore, toxicogenomic profiles after an immune response inducing stimulus with and without prior clobetasol propionate (CP) treatment were compared. For the aquatic invertebrate D. magna, the study was performed with previously determined low effect concentrations (EC5 & EC20) of fipronil and imidacloprid according to the acute immobilization test in water flea (OECD 202). The aim was to compare toxicogenomic signatures of the GABA-gated chloride channel blocker (fipronil) and the nAChR agonist (imidacloprid). With similar low effect concentrations, a shortened 3 day version of the growth inhibition test with L. minor (OECD 221) was conducted to find molecular profiles differentiating between photosynthesis and HMG-CoA reductase inhibitory effects. Here, the biological interpretation of the molecular stress response profiles in L. minor due to the lack of functional annotation of the reference genome was particularly challenging. Therefore, an annotation workflow was developed based on protein sequence homology predicted from the genomic reference sequences.
With this PhD work, it was shown how transcriptomic, proteomic and computational systems biology approaches can be coupled with aquatic toxicological tests, to gain important mechanistic insights into adverse effects at the molecular level. In general, for the different investigated adverse effects for the different organisms, biomarker candidates were identified, which describe a potential functional link between impaired gene expressions and previously reported apical effects. For the assessed chemicals in the zebrafish embryo model, biomarker candidates for thyroid disruption as well as developmental toxicity targeting the heart and central nervous system were described. The biomarkers derived from nerve- and muscletargeting insecticides were associated with three major affected processes: (1) cardiac muscle cell development and functioning, (2) oxygen transport and hypoxic stress and (3) neuronal development and plasticity. To our knowledge, this is the first study linking neurotoxic insecticide exposure and affected expression of important regulatory genes for heart muscle (tcap, actc2) and forebrain (npas4a) development in a vertebrate model. The proposed immunosuppression assay found CP to affect innate immune induction by attenuating the response of genes involved in antigen processing, TLR signalling, NF-КB signalling, and complement activation ...
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is a major glycolipid component in the outer leaflet of the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria and known as endotoxin exhibited by the lipid A moiety, which serves as a membrane anchor. The effective permeability barrier properties of the outer membrane contributed by the presence of LPS in the extracellular layer of the outer membrane confer Gram-negative bacteria a high resistance against hydrophobic compounds such as antibiotics, bile salts and detergents to survive in harsh environments. The biogenesis of LPS is well studied in Escherichia coli (herewith E. coli) and the LPS transport (Lpt) is carried out by a transenvelope complex composed of seven essential proteins (LptABCDEFG), which are located in the three compartments of the cell such as the outer membrane, the inner membrane and the periplasm. The Lpt system also exists in Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 (herewith Anabaena sp.), however, homologues of LptC and LptE are still missing. BLAST search failed to identify a homologue of LptC, in contrast, the secondary structure analysis using the Pfam database based on the existing ecLptC secondary structure identified one open reading frame All0231 as the putative Anabaena sp. homologue of LptC, which is designated anaLptC. Despite the low sequence similarity, the secondary structure alignment between anaLptC and ecLptC using the HHpred server showed that both proteins share high secondary structural similarities. The genotypic analysis of the insertion mutant anaLptC did not identify a fully segregated genome and its phenotypic analysis revealed that it was sensitive against chemicals, suggesting that the analptC gene is essential for the growth of Anabaena sp. and involved in the outer membrane biogenesis. This is further supported by the observation of the small cell phenotype in the anaLptC mutant via transmission electron microscopy. Moreover, physical interactions between the anaLptC periplasmic domain with anaLptA as well as with anaLptF were established, indicating that the anaLptC periplasmic domain is correctly folded and alone functional and that the transmembrane helix is not required for the interaction with anaLptA and anaLptF. Furthermore, the reduction of the O-antigen containing LPS was observed in the insertion mutant anaLptC and the dissociation constant Kd of the anaLptC periplasmic domain for ecLPS was determined.The three-dimensional structure of the periplasmic domain of anaLptC was solved by X-ray crystallography with a resolution of 2.8 Å. The structural superposition between the ecLptC crystal structure (PDB number 3my2) and the crystal structure of anaLptC periplasmic domain obtained by this study showed the similarity in the folding of the two proteins with a Cα r.m.s.d value of about 1 Å and confirmed that the length of anaLptC is more than two times longer than that of ecLptC. The structural comparison also revealed that both structures share the typical β-jellyroll fold and conserved amino acids, which were shown in ecLptC to bind to LPS in vivo and found in anaLptC. Overall, these data strongly suggest that anaLptC is involved in the transport of LPS and support the model whereby the bridge spanning the inner membrane and the outer membrane would be assembled via interactions of the structurally conserved β-jellyroll domains shared by five (LptACDFG) out of seven Lpt proteins.
Chemical pollution is one of the main contributors to the degradation of lotic ecosystems and their biodiversity. Among chemicals driving lotic biodiversity decline are anthropogenic organic micropollutants (AOM), which affect the survival and functioning of freshwater organisms. Continuous exposure of freshwater organisms to AOM leads to adverse effects that sometimes cannot be traced with standard toxicity methods such as standard toxicity testing or biodiversity indices. Among these effects of AOM are selective or mutagenic effects that cause impaired species genetic diversity. Thus, the correlation between different levels of AOM and genetic diversity of species is still poorly understood. However, it can be explored by applying population genetics screening.
In Chapter 1 of this thesis, background information on environmental pollution, genetic screening, and the detection of evolutionary-relevant AOM effects in freshwater organisms are described and the thesis goals are identified. The main goal of the thesis is to study whether AOM exposure occurring in European rivers causes a significant evolutionary footprint in freshwater species and leads to a selection of more tolerant geno-and phenotypes. Therefore, population genetics indices together with high-resolution chemical exposure screening of a widespread indicator invertebrate species, Gammarus pulex (Linnaeus, 1758), living in polluted and pristine European rivers were investigated.
In Chapter 2, the development of a genetic screening method for G. pulex (microsatellites) is described. Due to genetic differentiation and the presence of morphologically cryptic lineages, the available sets of target loci do not enable a reliable population genetic characterization of G. pulex from central Germany. Thus, a novel set of microsatellite loci for a high-precision assessment of population genetic diversity was here applied. Eleven loci were first identified and thereafter amplified in G. pulex from three rivers. The new loci reliably amplified and indicated polymorphisms in the studied amphipods. The amplification resulted in the successful identification of genetically distinct populations of G. pulex from the analyzed rivers. Moreover, the microsatellite loci were amplified in other genetic lineages of G. pulex and another Gammarus species, G. fossarum, promising a broader applicability of the loci in related amphipod species.
In Chapter 3, the effects of AOM on species genetic differentiation and sensitivity to toxic chemicals in a typical central European river with pristine and AOM-polluted sections was investigated. The river’s site-specific concentrations of AOM were assessed by chemical analysis of G. pulex tissue and water samples. To test, whether different levels of AOM in the river select for pollution-dependent genotypes, the genetic structure of G. pulex from the river was analyzed. Finally, the toxicokinetics of and sensitivity to the commonly used insecticide imidacloprid were determined for amphipods sampled at pristine and polluted sections to assess whether various levels of AOM in the river influence sensitivity of G. pulex to imidacloprid. The results indicated that different levels of AOM did not drive genetic divergence of G. pulex within the river but led to an increased sensitivity of exposed amphipods to imidacloprid. The amphipods living in polluted river sections were more sensitive to the insecticide due to chronic exposure to toxic levels of AOM.
In Chapter 4, the relationship between site-specific pollution levels of AOM and genetic diversity parameters of G. pulex was analyzed at the regional scale within six rivers in central Germany. The genetic structure of G. pulex in the studied area was tested for relatedness to the waterway distance between sites. Gammarus pulex genetic diversity parameters, including allelic richness and inbreeding rate, were tested against environmental pollution parameters using linear mixed-effect- and structural-equation models. According to the results, G. pulex genetic diversity parameters were significantly associated with the detected AOM levels. At sites with high concentrations of AOM and toxicity potential G. pulex showed reduced genetic diversity and increased rates of inbreeding. These results suggest that AOM play a major role in shaping the genetic diversity of G. pulex in rivers.
According to the findings presented here, the applied microsatellites can be used to successfully detect changes in genetic patterns in freshwater amphipods facing increased levels of AOM. The findings indicate that levels of AOM representative for European rivers do not lead to the separation of genotypes among G. pulex as the connectivity between sites majorly contributes to species’ genetic structure. However, the chronic exposure to increased levels of toxic AOM leads to a reduction of species genetic diversity and increases the sensitivity of G. pulex to the toxic chemical effects.
Mitglieder der ubiquitär verbreiteten Cryptochrom-Photolyase-Familie sind Blaulicht-absorbierende Flavoproteine mit hoher Sequenzhomologie aber diversen Funktionen. Photolyasen katalysieren die Reparatur UV-Licht-induzierter DNA-Schäden. Cryptochrome (CRYs) wirken als lichtunabhängige Transkriptionsrepressoren innerhalb des Kern-Oszillators der circadianen Uhr oder als primäre Photorezeptoren zur Synchronisation dieser mit dem äußeren Tag-Nacht-Rhythmus und steuern durch Regulation der Genexpression Wachstum und Entwicklung. Gemeinsames Strukturmerkmal aller CPF-Vertreter ist die Photolyase- homologe Region (PHR), die das Chromophor Flavinadenindinukleotid (FAD) bindet, das lichtabhängig zwischen den Redoxformen oxidiert (FADox), semireduziert (FAD●- bzw. FADH●) und vollreduziert (FADH-) wechseln kann und damit die CRY-Konformation und -Aktivität beeinflusst. Unterscheidungsmerkmale sind die spezifische C-terminale Erweiterung (CTE) sowie die Komposition der FAD-Bindetasche, die unterschiedliche FAD-Redoxformen stabilisiert. Die Mechanismen der CRY-Photosignaltransduktion sind nicht völlig erforscht.
CryP ist eines von vier CRYs in der Diatomee Phaeodactylum tricornutum und gehört zur bislang nicht charakterisierten Gruppe pflanzenähnlicher CRYs. In vorhergehenden Untersuchungen wurde für CryP eine nukleare Lokalisation und damit verbunden eine blaulicht- sowie dunkelabhängige Regulation der Transkription unterschiedlichster Gene gezeigt. Zudem reguliert CryP das Proteinlevel photosynthetischer Lichtsammelkomplexe. CryP interagiert mit bisher nicht charakterisierten Proteinen aus dem Bereich DNA und Regulation sowie Ribosomen und Translation. Heterolog exprimiertes und isoliertes CryP stabilisiert das Neutralradikal FADH● und das Antennenchromophor Methenyltetrahydrofolat (MTHF).
In vorliegender Dissertation wurde die Bedeutung des FAD-Redoxzustands und der C-terminalen Proteindomäne für Strukturänderungen hinsichtlich der Oligomerisierung und Konformation sowie für das CryP-Interaktionsverhalten untersucht. Hierzu wurden rekombinante CryP-Varianten heterolog isoliert, die Mutationen in für die FAD-Reduzierbarkeit entscheidenden Aminosäuren oder eine Deletion der CTE tragen.
Die Analyse der CryP-Oligomerisierungsstufe und Konformation erfolgte mittels Ko-Präzipitation, nativen und zweidimensionalen PAGEs sowie partieller Proteolyse. Dabei wurde heterolog isoliertes CryP in seinen drei Redoxformen oxidiert (mit FADox), semireduziert (mit FADH●) und vollreduziert (mit FADH-) sowie das um die CTE-verkürzte CryP-PHR verglichen. Für CryP wurde eine redoxunabhängige, PHR-vermittelte Di- und Tetramerisierung über elektrostatische Wechselwirkung der Monomere beobachtet. Die CTE bindet spezifisch und redoxunabhängig an die PHR in einem Bereich um die FAD-Bindetasche. Dies schließt eine großräumige Konformationsänderung zwischen PHR und CTE infolge einer FAD-Photoreduktion wie für pflanzliche und viele tierische CRYs als Aktivierungsmechanismus für CryP aus.
Interaktionsstudien mittels zweidimensionaler PAGE gaben Aufschluss über unterschiedliche Bindeverhalten der beiden betrachteten Interaktionspartner an CryP. Sowohl BolA, ein potentieller redoxregulierter Transkriptionsfaktor, als auch ID42612 mit unbekannter Funktion interagieren mit CryP unabhängig von der FAD-Redoxform. Dabei bindet BolA an die CTE des CryP-Dimers und -Monomers, während ID42612 einen Komplex mit dem CryP-Dimer bildet.
Mittels in vitro Absorptions- und Fluoreszenzspektroskopie wurde die FAD-Redoxchemie von CryP und CryP-PHR verglichen. Die beiden Varianten unterscheiden sich in der FAD-Photoreduzierbarkeit und -Oxidationskinetik. Das Volllängenprotein CryP kann ohne externes Reduktionsmittel zum semireduzierten FADH● phototreduziert werden, das im Gegensatz zu bekannten CRYs über Tage im Dunkeln stabil gegen aerobe Oxidation ist. Eine Belichtung mit Reduktionsmittel führt zur Bildung des vollreduzierten FADH-, das innerhalb von Minuten zu FADH● rückoxidiert. Das um die CTE verkürzte CryP-PHR kann nur mit externem Reduktionsmittel zu FADH● photoreduziert werden, der vollreduzierte Zustand wird nie erreicht. Die Stabilisierung von FADH● gegen aerobe Oxidation im CryP-Holoprotein ist vergleichbar zur FAD-Redoxchemie von Photolyasen. Verglichen mit sonstigen charakterisierten CRYs ist die Wichtigkeit der CTE für eine effiziente FAD-Photoreduktion und FADH●-Stabilisierung eine CryP-spezifische Charakteristik.
Neben der CTE trägt die zu FAD-N5 proximal gelegene Position zur FADH●-Stabilisierung bei, wie Absorptionsmessungen an CryP_N417C zeigten. CryP weist mit Asparagin die gleiche Konservierung an dieser Position wie Photolyasen auf und unterscheidet sich damit ebenfalls von klassischen CRYs.
Analysen zur cryp-Transkription mittels qRT-PCR zeigten eine rhythmische Expression mit maximalen Transkriptmengen in der Nacht und eine rasche photoinduzierte Herunterregulation der Transkription...
Patients harboring mutations in the gene DEPDC5 often display variations of neurological diseases including epilepsy, autism spectrum disorders (ASD) and other neuro-architectural alterations. DEPDC5 protein has been identified as an amino acid sensor responsible for negatively regulating the mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR), a central regulator in cell growth and cell homeostasis. Often, mutations of the DEPDC5 protein result in mTOR hyperactivity leading to abnormal neuronal phenotypes and the generation of excitatory/inhibitory imbalances in animal models. Complete knockout (KO) of DEPDC5 results in death shortly after birth, while inhibition of mTOR activity recovers postnatal death (Marsan et al. 2016). However, heterozygous DEPDC5-KOs in animals have been variable in their disease phenotypes during adulthood indicating developmental differences between subspecies and early development mechanisms which could be impactful on the outcome of the diseases.
To understand the mechanisms underlying DEPDC5 mutations during early development, a novel primary human neural progenitor cell line extracted from fetal tissue was characterized during proliferation and differentiation. CRISPR-Cas9 induced mutations of the DEPDC5 gene resulted in hyperphosphorylation of mTOR signaling processes and rapid expansion of the neuronal population during differentiation. Analysis of transcriptome data identified deregulation amongst p53 signaling, ribosome biogenesis, nucleotide and lipid synthesis as well as protein degradation pathways due to loss of DEPDC5. Disease gene datasets identified a correlation between Tuberous Sclerosis mutations as being more closely associated with DEPDC5 mutations while also finding overlap with some ASD and epilepsy genes. By using the mTOR inhibitor rapamycin, a substantial amount of the deregulated gene network was recovered while also reversing rapid neuronal differentiation caused by loss of DEPDC5. Though we saw increased dendritic arborization and subsequent decreases in dendrite lengths and soma sizes, rapamycin failed to recover these effects suggesting mTOR independent processes produced by DEPDC5-KO. This study provides new insights on the relationship between mutations in DEPDC5 and the functional, genomic and deregulatory networks it intertwines in humans and highlights that the DEPDC5 associated pathomechanisms are not fully related to mTOR hyperactivation, but include independent processes. This also sheds light on the question why rapamycin treatment only partially restores DEPDC5 related phenotypes and gives insight on treatments for DEPDC5 patients.
Non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) are modular biosynthetic megaenzymes producing many important natural products and refer to a specific set of peptides in bacteria’s and fungi’s secondary metabolism. With the actual purpose of providing advantages within their respective ecological niche, the bioactivity of the structurally highly diverse products ranges from, e.g., antibiotic (e.g., vancomycin) to immunosuppressive (e.g., cyclosporin A) to cytostatic (e.g., echinomycin or thiocoralin) activity.
An NRPS module consists of at least three core domains that are essential for the incorporation of specific substrates with the 'multiple carrier thiotemplate mechanism' into a growing peptide chain: an adenylation (A) domain selects and activates a cognate amino acid; a thiolation (T) domain shuffles the activated amino acid and the growing peptide chain, which are attached at its post-translationally 4ʹ-phosphopantetheine (4'-PPant) group, between the active sites; a condensation (C) domain links the upstream and downstream substrates. NRPS synthesis is finished with the transfer of the assembled peptide to the C-terminal chain-terminating domain. Accordingly, the intermediate is either released by hydrolysis as a linear peptide chain or by an intramolecular nucleophilic attack as a cyclic peptide.
The NRPS’s modular character seems to imply straightforward engineering to take advantage of their features but appears to be more challenging. Since the pioneering NRPS engineering approaches focused on the reprogramming and replacement of A domains, several working groups developed advanced methods to perform a complete replacement of subdomains or single or multiple catalytic domains.
The first part of this work focusses parts of the publication with the title 'De novo design and engineering of non-ribosomal peptide synthetases', which follows up assembly line engineering with the development of a new guideline. Thereby, the pseudodimeric V-shaped structure of the C domain is exploited to separate the N-terminal (CDSub) and C-terminal (CASub) subdomains alongside a four-AA-long linker. This results in the creation of self-contained, catalytically active CASub-A-T-CDSub (XUC) building blocks. As an advantage over the previous XU concept, the characteristics (substrate- and stereoselectivity) assigned to the C domain subunits are likewise exchanged, and thus, no longer represent a barrier. Furthermore, with the XUC concept, no important interdomain interfaces are disrupted during the catalytic cycle of NRPS, allow to expect much higher production titers. Moreover, the XUC concept shows a more flexible application within its genus origin of building blocks to create peptide libraries. Additionally, with this concept only 80 different XUC building blocks are needed to cover the entire proteinogenic amino acid spectrum.
The second part of this work addresses the influence of the C domain on activity and specificity of A domains. In a comprehensive analysis, a clear influence of different C domains on the in vitro activation rate and the in vivo substrate spectrum could be observed. Further in situ and in silico characterizations indicate that these influences are neither the result of the respective A domains promiscuity nor the C domain’s proofreading, but due to an 'extended gatekeeping' function of the C domain. This novel term of an 'extended gatekeeping' function describes the very nature of interfaces that C domains can form with an A domain of interest. Therefore, the C-A interface is assumed to have a more significant contribution to a selectivity filter function.
The third part of this work combines the NRPS engineering with phylogenetic/evolutionary perspectives. At first, the C-A interface could be precisely defined and further identified to encode equivalent information corresponding to the complete C-A didomain. Moreover, the comparison of NRPSs topology reveals hints for a co-evolutionary relatedness of the C-A didomain and could be shown to reassemble even after separation. In this regard, based on a designed CAopt.py algorithm, the reassembling-compatibility of hybrid interfaces could be determined by scoring of the co-expressed NRPS hybrids. This algorithm also enables the randomization of the interface sequences, thus, leading to the identification of more functional interface variant, which cause significantly higher peptide production and could even be applied to other native and hybrid interfaces.
Ischemic heart disease caused by occlusion of coronary vessels leads to the death of downstream tissues, resulting in a fibrotic scar that cannot be resolved. In contrast to the adult mammalian heart, the adult zebrafish heart can regenerate following injury, enabling the study of the underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms. One of the earliest responses that take place after cardiac injury in adult zebrafish is coronary revascularization. Previous transcriptomic data from our lab show that vegfc, a well-known regulator of lymphatic development, is upregulated early after injury and peaks at 96 hours post cryoinjury, coinciding with the peak of coronary endothelial cell proliferation. To test the hypothesis that vegfc is involved in coronary revascularization, I examined its expression pattern and found that it is expressed by coronary endothelial cells after cardiac damage. Using a loss-of-function approach to block Vegfc signaling, I found that it is required for coronary revascularization during cardiac regeneration. Notably, blocking Vegfc signaling resulted in a significant reduction in cardiomyocyte regeneration. Using transcriptomic analysis, I identified the extracellular matrix component gene emilin2a and the chemokine gene cxcl8a as effectors of Vegfc signaling. During cardiac regeneration, cxcl8a is expressed in epicardium-derived cells, while the gene encoding its receptor cxcr1 is expressed on coronary endothelial cells. I found that overexpressing emilin2a increases coronary revascularization, and induces cxcl8a expression. Using loss-of-function approaches, I observed that both cxcl8a and cxcr1 are required for coronary revascularization after cardiac injury.
Altogether, my findings indicate that Vegfc acts as an angiocrine factor that plays an important role in regulating cardiac regeneration in zebrafish. Mechanistically, Vegfc promotes the expression of emilin2a, which promotes coronary proliferation, at least in part by enhancing Cxcl8a-Cxcr1 signaling. This study helps in understanding the mechanisms underlying coronary revascularization during cardiac regeneration, with promising therapeutic applications for human heart regeneration.
Die Vorläuferform der eukaryotischen mRNA (prä-mRNA) durchläuft, eine Reihe von Prozessierungs-Schritte, die schließlich zu der Synthese einer „reifen“ und Exportkompetenten mRNA führt. prä-mRNA Spleißen ist ein essentieller Teilschritt dieser Reifung bei der intragene Sequenzen, sogenannte Introns, von der prä-mRNA entfernt werden, während Exons legiert werden. Das prä-mRNA Spleißen wird durch das Spleißosom katalysiert. Dieser Mega-Dalton Komplex, besteht aus fünf Sub-Komplexen, die sich wiederum aus katalytisch aktiven „kleinen nukleären Ribonukleinsäuren“ (snRNAs) und einer Vielzahl von proteinogenen Faktoren zusammensetzen. Diese Subkomplexe, bezeichnet als snRNPs (small nuclear Ribonucleoprotein Particles), binden die prä-mRNA an charakteristischen Sequenzen und richten die prä-mRNA durch eine Reihe von Konformations-Änderungen so aus, dass benachbarte Exons in Kontakt treten und über eine biochemische Ligations-Reaktion verbunden werden können.
Die Exon- bzw Intronerkennung der snRNPs wird durch zahlreiche Spleißfaktoren reguliert. Eine Proteinfamilie, die essentiell für die Regulierung des Spleißens ist, sind Serin/Arginin-reiche Proteine (SR-Proteine). Diese binden vorzugsweise an das 3‘ oder 5’ Ende von Exons, rekrutieren snRNPs und stimulieren dadurch die Exon-Inklusion. Durch diese Stimulierung können Spleiß-Events reguliert und gezielt spezifische Exons ausgeschlossen oder eingeschlossen werden. Dieser Prozess, der als alternatives Spleißen (AS) bezeichnet wird, tritt in 95% des menschlichen Transkriptoms auf und erweitert die Diversität eines Organismus, da verschiedene Transkripte von demselben Gen erzeugt werden können und folglich die Translation unterschiedlicher Proteine mit distinkten Funktionen ermöglicht wird.
Darüber hinaus verfügt die Zelle durch das AS über eine weitere posttranskriptionale Genregulationsebene, die insbesondere unter zellulären Stressbedingungen zur Expression von alternativen Protein-Isoformen von der Zelle genutzt wird. Eine in medizinischer Hinsicht besonders relevante Stressbedingung ist die sogenannte Hypoxie, die eine Sauerstoff-Unterversorgung von Zellen oder Gewebebereichen beschreibt. Hypoxie bzw. hypoxische Bereiche finden sich in Krebszellen und treten in 90% aller soliden Tumoren auf. Als Teil der Hypoxie Stress-Antwort, verfügt die Zelle über einen Adaptations-Mechanismus, der durch Hypoxieinduzierbare Faktoren (HIF) vermittelt wird. Diese Faktoren induzieren die Transkription zahlreicher Gene und stimulieren die Expression von Stressfaktoren, die an der zellulären Adaption der Hypoxie beteiligt sind. Einer dieser Faktoren ist der vaskuläre endotheliale Wachstumsfaktor A (VEGFA), welcher unter hypoxischen Bedingungen sekretiert wird und dadurch die Proliferation von Endothelzellen, die Neubildung von Blutgefäßen und damit die Vaskularisation des hypoxischen Bereichs stimuliert.
Die zelluläre Anpassung ist jedoch nicht nur auf die transkriptionelle Regulation des HIF-vermittelten Hypoxie Signalwegs beschränkt, sondern wird auf multiplen Genexpressions-Ebenen reguliert. Obwohl bekannt ist, dass tausende Transkripte unter hypoxischen Bedingungen alternativ gespleißt werden, sind die Faktoren, die die zelluläre Stress-Antwort durch AS regulieren, sowie deren molekularer Mechanismus jedoch weitestgehend unbekannt.
Diese Arbeit umfasst die Identifizierung und Charakterisierung von AS Events, sowie den Einfluss und die Regulation von Spleißfaktoren auf AS unter hypoxischen Bedingungen. Hierzu führten wir globale Genexpressions- und AS-Analysen in HeLaKarzinomzelllinien unter Normoxie (21% O2) und Hypoxie (0.2% O2) durch und zeigen, dass 7962 Gene nach 24h Hypoxie unterschiedlich exprimiert werden. Über AS-Analysen konnten 4434 Transkripte identifiziert werden, die bei Hypoxie über AS reguliert sind. Dabei trat „Exon-Skipping“ als das am häufigsten auftretende AS-Events auf. Über PCR basierte Validierungs-Experimente konnten 5 regulierte Transkripte nachgewiesen werden. Dabei weisen Exon 3 und 4 in BORA, Exon 6 in MDM4 und Exon 4-5 in CSSP1 Exon-Skipping Events auf, während Exon-Inklusionen in CEP192 Exon 28 und in der 3’UTR von EIF4A2 validiert werden konnten.
Darüber hinaus wurde im Rahmen der AS-Analyse die Regulation des sogenannten „backsplicings“ bei Hypoxie untersucht. Im Gegensatz zum linearen Spleißens, wird beim backsplicing das 5’Ende und das 3’Ende von Exons verbunden, was die Bildung von sogenannten zirkulären RNAs (circRNAs) zufolge hat. Obwohl nur wenige Funktionen dieser RNA-Klasse bekannt sind, wurde die Regulation von circRNAs während der Zell-Differenzierung sowie in diversen Krebszellen beschrieben. Dabei können circRNAs als microRNA- oder Protein-Schwämme fungieren oder dienen als Protein-Interaktion Plattform und regulieren dabei die Genexpression.
Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden verschiedene metabolische Anpassungsmechanismen des humanpathogenen Bakteriums Acinetobacter baumannii an seinen Wirt untersucht. Im ersten Teil wurde die Rolle von verschiedenen Trimethylammoniumverbindungen (Cholin, Glycinbetain und Carnitin) und den zugehörigen Aufnahmesystemen, sowie ihren Stoffwechselwegen während dieses Prozesses analysiert. Für die Analyse der Transportsysteme wurde eine markerlose Vierfachmutante (Δbcct) von A. baumannii generiert, sodass alle bekannten Transportsysteme für die genannten Verbindungen deletiert vorlagen. Wachstumsversuche mit dieser Mutante zeigten, dass es in A. baumannii keine weiteren Transporter für die Aufnahme von Cholin gibt, jedoch weitere primär aktive oder sekundär aktive Transporter für die Aufnahme von Glycinbetain. Weiterhin konnten innerhalb dieser Arbeit die KM-Werte der Transporter bestimmt werden. Verschiedene Virulenz- und Infektionsanalysen führten zu dem Schluss, dass die Transporter keine Rolle bei der Virulenz von A. baumannii spielen. In Genomanalysen konnten die Gene, die für die Enzyme des Oxidationsweges von Cholin zu Glycinbetain kodieren identifiziert werden (Cholin-Dehydrogenase (betA), GlycinbetainAldehyd-Dehydrogenase (betB) und ein potenzieller Regulator (betI)). Es wurden Deletionsmutanten innerhalb dieses Genclusters generiert, mit dessen Hilfe gezeigt werden konnte, dass Cholin unter Salzstress ausschließlich als Vorläufer für das kompatible Solut Glycinbetain fungiert und nicht als kompatibles Solut von A. baumannii genutzt werden kann. Virulenz- und Infektionsstudien mit den Deletionsmutanten zeigten, dass der Cholin-Oxidationsweg keine Rolle bei der Virulenz von A. baumannii spielt.
Die Cholin-Dehydrogenase BetA wurde zusätzlich in E. coli produziert und anschließend mittels NiNTA-Affinitätschromatographie aufgereinigt. Die biochemische Charakterisierung des Enzyms zeigte, dass BetA membranständig ist und die höchste Aktivität bei einem pH-Wert von 9,0 hat. Salze wie NaCl oder KCl hatten keinen Effekt auf die Aktivität des Enzyms, während Glutamat die Aktivität stimulierte.
Weiterhin konnte FAD als Cofaktor identifiziert werden und der KM-Wert ermittelt werden. Zudem konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Oxidation von Cholin zu Glycinbetain unter isoosmotischen Bedingungen zu einem Anstieg der ATP-Konzentration in A. baumannii-Zellsuspensionen führt und damit, dass Cholin als alternative Energiequelle genutzt wird. Das Phospholipid Phosphatidylcholin konnte als natürliche Cholinquelle identifiziert werden. Eine Rolle der Phospholipasen D bei der Abspaltung der Cholin-Kopfgruppe des Phosphatidylcholins konnte ausgeschlossen werden. Die Gene für die Oxidation von Cholin zu Glycinbetain werden ausschließlich in Anwesenheit von Cholin exprimiert, jedoch unabhängig von der extrazellulären Salzkonzentration. Diese Studien zeigten, dass der Cholin-Oxidationsweg eine Rolle in der metabolischen Adaptation von A. baumannii an den Wirt spielt. Phosphatidylcholin kann hier als natürliche Cholinquelle im Wirt genutzt werden, da die Wirtsmembranen aus bis zu 70 % Phosphatidylcholin bestehen. Transportstudien mit Carnitin führten zu dem Schluss, dass der Transporter Aci01347 aus A. baumannii neben Cholin ebenfalls Carnitin transportiert. Wachstumsversuche mit einer aci01347-Mutante bestätigen, dass Aci01347 essenziell für die Aufnahme und anschließende Verwertung von Carnitin als Kohlenstoffquelle ist. Es konnte weiterhin gezeigt werden, dass das Transportergen mit essenziellen Genen für den Carnitin-Abbau in einem Operon liegt. Für die Analyse des Abbauweges von Carnitin wurden markerlose Deletionsmutanten innerhalb des Operons generiert. In Wachstumsstudien mit diesen Mutanten konnte der Abbauweg aufgeklärt werden und der Regulator des Operons identifiziert werden. Carnitin wird hier über Trimethylamin und Malat-Semialdehyd zu D-Malat umgewandelt und anschließend über Pyruvat in den TCA-Zyklus eingespeist. Der Regulator wurde zusätzlich in E. coli produziert und mittels Ni-NTA-Affinitätschromatographie aufgereinigt. Mithilfe von EMSA-Studien konnte die Bindestelle des Regulators auf eine 634 Bp lange DNA-Sequenz stromaufwärts des CarnitinOperons eingegrenzt werden. Durch Transkriptomanalysen konnte gezeigt werden, dass bei Wachstum mit Acetylcarnitin, Carnitin und D-Malat die Expression des Carnitin-Operons induziert wurde. Darüber hinaus wurden die Gene konservierter Aromatenabbauwege wie z. B. des Homogentisatweges, des Phenylacetatweges und des Protocatechuat-Abbaus, verstärkt exprimiert. In G. mellonellaVirulenzstudien konnte eine Rolle des Abbaus von Carnitin bei der Virulenz von A. baumannii nachgewiesen werden. Zusätzlich konnte dieser Effekt dem entstehenden Trimethylamin zugesprochen werden...