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In recent years, several neuronal differentiation protocols were published that circumvent the requirement of embryoid body (EB) formation under serum-deprivation and simplified medium conditions. But a neuronal default model to establish an approach that works efficiently for all pluripotent cells and neuronal precursors is still lacking. Whether such a default neural mechanism exist and how this is implemented across a broad spectrum of cell source, is addressed in several studies and still controversially discussed. It was proposed that the default neuronal fate is initiated in the absence of extrinsic signals and is achieved by eliminating extracellular inhibitors of neuroectodermal fate and suppressing cell-cell signalling through limited cell density. Previous studies reported that ESC and ECC grown at low density and in absence of exogenous factors or feeder layers die within 24 h but acquire a neural identity as indicated by expression of the neural marker Nestin. Thus, this application is not suitable for generating neural cultures. Furthermore, it was reported that P19 cells survive and express neuroectodermal marker genes in serum-free DMEM/F12 medium containing transferrin, insulin, and selenite, although no neurites were identified.
Based on this background, in this study, a novel approach to induce neuronal differentiation in vitro was developed that implements a nutrient-poor environment, which, in contrast to previous studies, ensures the survival of neuronally differentiated cells over a long period of time and allows normal formation of neurites. Neither the formation of free-floating aggregates nor supplementation of growth factors or known inducers was required to establish a reliable neuronal differentiation protocol. A simple medium, consisting of DMEM/F12+N2 that was highly diluted in salt solution, was sufficient to drive a fast neuronal differentiation in monolayer cultures. Serum deprivation and strong dilution of DMEM/F12+N2 medium cause a nutrient-poor environment in which the influence of growth factors and inducers is minimized. This medium creates a metabolically defined environment that is presumably free of extrinsic signals that prevent the decision of neuronal fate. Analysis of the medium components discovered no actual inducer. Hence, it was suggested that the metabolic composition of the medium exclusively covers specific cell requirements of neurons, therefore ensures their survival, and drives the switch from pluripotent cells to neurons. The self-developed method was established by usage of the murine embryonal carcinoma cell line P19 and could be transferred to murine ESC. Consequently, the method could provide a feasible protocol for a generally valid neuronal default model.
The established protocol provides several advantages such as the possibility to generate stable pure neuronal cultures by a fast, simple, and highly reproducible one-step induction under defined medium conditions with a minimum of exogen effectors. The method is characterised by clear and steady medium conditions that makes the investigation of specific cell requirements during differentiation accessible. It is therefore expected to be a useful tool to investigate the molecular basis of neuronal differentiation as well as for high throughput screenings. The phenotype of mature postmitotic neurons was arising within one week and cultures were shown to stay stable at least for three weeks. The neuronal identity was confirmed by expression of neuronal markers through immunofluorescence staining and mass spectrometry analysis. Furthermore, increased levels of axon markers were detected in early neuronal differentiation and functionality of the synapses of the P19-derived neurons was ascertained by detection of calcium activity. Axonal laser ablation, immediately followed by fast regrowth of connections in the neuronal network, revealed a strong regeneration potential under the given conditions. Furthermore, the generated neurons showed a morphologically distinct phenotype and the formation of neural rosettes. Immunofluorescence staining demonstrated the generation of pure and homogeneous neuronal cultures, free of glial cells.
Retinoic acid (RA) plays an essential role in cell signalling during embryogenesis and efficiently induces neuronal differentiation in vitro in a concentration dependent manner. Neither retinol nor retinoic acid was included in any of the components of the self-prepared medium in this work. However, I observed, dependence on RARβ- and/or RARγ-regulated RA signalling in serum-free monolayer cultures. Nevertheless, neuronal differentiation in serum-free monolayer cultures was assumed to be RARα-independent because (i) RARα was slightly downregulated after neuronal induction, (ii) the truncated RARα of the RAC65 mutant had no effect on induction efficiency, and (iii) a pan-RAR inhibitor suppressed neuronal differentiation. In contrast to serum-free monolayer cultures, the truncated RARα prevented neuronal differentiation by application of the conventional protocol where cells are grown in free floating cell aggregates in serum-containing medium. Proteome analysis of P19 cells, treated by the self-developed differentiation protocol over five days showed increased levels of cellular RA binding proteins that mediate the cellular RA transport and are involved in canonical as well as non-canonical RA signalling.
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Acetogenic bacteria are a polyphyletic group of organisms that fix carbon dioxide under anaerobic, non-phototrophic conditions by reduction of two mol of CO2 to acetyl-CoA via the Wood–Ljungdahl pathway. This pathway also allows for lithotrophic growth with H2 as electron donor and this pathway is considered to be one of the oldest, if not the oldest metabolic pathway on Earth for CO2 reduction, since it is coupled to the synthesis of ATP. How ATP is synthesized has been an enigma for decades, but in the last decade two ferredoxin-dependent respiratory chains were discovered. Those respiratory chains comprise of a cytochrome-free, ferredoxin-dependent respiratory enzyme complex, which is either the Rnf or Ech complex. However, it was discovered already 50 years ago that some acetogens contain cytochromes and quinones, but their role had only a shadowy existence. Here, we review the literature on the characterization of cytochromes and quinones in acetogens and present a hypothesis that they may function in electron transport chains in addition to Rnf and Ech.
Plastic products leach chemicals that induce in vitro toxicity under realistic use conditions
(2021)
Plastic products contain complex mixtures of extractable chemicals that can be toxic. However, humans and wildlife will only be exposed to plastic chemicals that are released under realistic conditions. Thus, we investigated the toxicological and chemical profiles leaching into water from 24 everyday plastic products covering eight polymer types. We performed migration experiments over 10 days at 40 °C and analyzed the migrates using four in vitro bioassays and nontarget high-resolution mass spectrometry (UPLC-QTOF-MSE). All migrates induced baseline toxicity, 22 an oxidative stress response, 13 antiandrogenicity, and one estrogenicity. Overall, between 17 and 8681 relevant chemical features were present in the migrates. In other words, between 1 and 88% of the plastic chemicals associated with one product were migrating. Further, we tentatively identified ∼8% of all detected features implying that most plastic chemicals remain unknown. While low-density polyethylene, polyvinyl chloride, and polyurethane induced most toxicological endpoints, a generalization for other materials is not possible. Our results demonstrate that plastic products readily leach many more chemicals than previously known, some of which are toxic in vitro. This highlights that humans are exposed to many more plastic chemicals than currently considered in public health science and policies.
1. Das Wachstum und die Fähigkeit zur Butyratproduktion von E. callanderi KIST612 wurde in geschlossenen Batch-Kulturen mit den Substraten Glukose, Methanol, Formiat, H2 + CO2 und CO untersucht. E. callanderi KIST612 zeigte sich nur bei Wachstum auf 20 mM Glukose oder 20 mM Methanol in der Lage, Butyrat in größeren Mengen (3,7 – 4,3 mM) zu produzieren. Das Hauptprodukt bei allen untersuchten Wachstumssubstraten war jedoch Acetat.
2. In bioinformatischen Analysen des Genoms von E. callanderi KIST612 konnte nur eine A1AO-ATP-Synthase gefunden werden, welche eine V-typ c-Untereinheit bestehend aus 4 TMH‘s mit nur einer Na+-Bindestelle aufweist. Diese konnte aus gewaschenen Membranen von E. callanderi durch Saccharose-Dichtegradientenzentrifugation, Anionenaustausch-Chromatographie (DEAE) sowie einer Größenausschluss-Chromatographie (Superose 6) bis zur apparenten Homogenität gereinigt werden. Nach Produktion einzelner Untereinheiten (A, B, C, D, E, F und H) in E. coli und Generierung von Antikörpern, konnten alle Untereinheiten (A, B, C, D, E, F, H, a sowie c) in der gereinigten Enzympräparation immunologisch oder mittels „Peptide-Mass-Fingerprinting“ nachgewiesen werden. Es konnte somit erstmals eine A1AO-ATP-Synthase aus einem mesophilen Organismus ohne Verlust von Untereinheiten gereinigt werden.
3. Der Gesamtkomplex wies unter nativen Bedingungen eine molekulare Masse von ca. 670 kDa auf. In elektronenmikroskopischen Aufnahmen zeigte sich anhand der hantelförmigen Strukturen, dass die A1AO-ATP-Synthase als intakter Gesamtkomplex gereinigt werden konnte.
4. Die gereinigte A1AO-ATP-Synthase wurde zunächst anhand ihrer ATP-Hydrolyse-Aktivität biochemisch charakterisiert. Die ATP-Hydrolyse-Aktivität hatte ein pH-Optimum von 7 – 7,5 und ein Temperaturoptimum bei 37 °C. Durch Messung der ATPase-Aktivität in Abhängigkeit von verschiedenen Mengen an Na+ konnte die vorhergesagte Na+-Abhängigkeit des Enzyms nachgewiesen werden. Zudem zeigten Hemmstoffexperimente mit DCCD, dass dieser Inhibitor mit Na+ um die gemeinsame Bindestelle in der c-Untereinheit konkurriert. Dies bestätigte nochmals, dass das Enzym funktionell gekoppelt gereinigt werden konnte.
5. Zur weiteren Untersuchung der Ionenspezifität wurde der an die ATP-Hydrolyse gekoppelte Ionentransport durch Rekonstitution des Enzyms in Liposomen und anschließender Messung des Na+- oder H+-Transports gemessen. In den Proteoliposomen konnte mit Hilfe von 22Na+ gezeigt werden, dass das Enzym Natriumionen translozieren kann. Während in Anwesenheit des Natriumionophors ETH 2120 kein 22Na+-Transport beobachtet werden konnte, führte die Anwesenheit des Protonophors TCS zu einer geringfügigen Stimulation der 22Na+-Translokation. Insgesamt konnte ein primärer Na+-Transport nachgewiesen werden, welcher von der A1AO-ATP-Synthase aus E. callanderi katalysiert wird.
6. Durch Rekonstitution der A1AO-ATP-Synthase aus E. callanderi in Liposomen konnte erstmals biochemisch nachgewiesen werden, dass ein solches Enzym trotz seiner V-Typ c-Untereinheit in der Lage ist, ATP zu synthetisieren. Durch die Zugabe von Ionophoren (ETH 2120 und TCS) konnte der elektrochemische Ionengradient aufgehoben werden, wodurch keine ATP-Synthese beobachtet werden konnte. Der erstmalige Nachweis der ATP-Synthese wurde bei einem ΔµNa+ von 270 mV erbracht.
7. Die ATP-Synthese zeigte sich ebenfalls abhängig von der Na+-Konzentration. Der KM-Wert lag bei 1,1 ± 0,4 mM und war vergleichbar mit dem für die ATP-Hydrolyse ermittelten Wert. Ebenso konnte für die ATP-Synthese-Richtung gezeigt werden, dass DCCD mit Na+ um die gemeinsame Bindestelle in der c-Untereinheit konkurriert.
8. Um den biochemischen Nachweis zu erbringen, dass die A1AO-ATP-Synthase auch unter physiologisch relevanten Potentialen zur ATP-Synthese befähigt ist, wurde der energetische Schwellenwert der ATP-Synthese bestimmt. Dieser betrug 87 mV als Triebkraft für ΔpNa, 94 mV als Triebkraft für Δψ und 90 mV als Triebkraft für ΔµNa+. Erstaunlicherweise konnte die ATP-Synthese der A1AO-ATP-Synthase aus E. callanderi KIST612 sowohl durch Δψ als auch ΔpNa angetrieben werden. Unterschiedliche Kombinationen von Δψ und ΔpNa führten zu dem gleichen energetischen Schwellenwert; Δψ und ΔpNa waren im Enzym aus E. callanderi KIST612 äquivalente Triebkräfte.
9. Der energetische Schwellenwert der A1AO-ATP-Synthase aus E. callanderi KIST612 wurde mit dem der F1FO-ATP-Synthasen aus A. woodii, E. coli und P. modestum verglichen. Dazu wurden die Enzyme im ATP-Synthase-defizienten E. coli-Stamm DK8 produziert und anschließend durch Ni2+-NTA-Affinitätschromatographie gereinigt. Nach Einbau der Enzyme in Liposomen waren alle Enzyme in der Lage, ATP als Reaktion auf ΔµNa+ (A. woodii und P. modestum) oder ΔµH+ (E. coli) zu synthetisieren. Im Vergleich zum Enzym aus E. callanderi zeigten sich zwei auffällige Unterschiede. Erstens war keine der F1FO-ATP-Synthasen in der Lage, ΔpNa/ΔpH als alleinige Triebkraft zu nutzen. Während die ATP-Synthese in den Enzymen aus E. coli und P. modestum nur durch ΔµH+ bzw. ΔµNa+ angetrieben werden konnte, konnte das Enzym aus A. woodii zusätzlich auch durch Δψ als einzige Triebkraft angetrieben werden.
...
Nature's non-material contributions to people are difficult to quantify and one aspect in particular, nature's contributions to communication (NCC), has so far been neglected. Recent advances in automated language processing tools enable us to quantify diversity patterns underlying the distribution of plant and animal taxon labels in creative literature, which we term BiL (biodiversity in literature). We assume BiL to provide a proxy for people's openness to nature's non-material contributions enhancing our understanding of NCC. We assembled a comprehensive list of 240,000 English biological taxon labels. We pre-processed and searched a subcorpus of digitised literature on Project Gutenberg for these labels. We quantified changes in biodiversity indices commonly used in ecological studies for 16,000 books, encompassing 4,000 authors, as proxies for BiL between 1705 and 1969. We observed hump-shape patterns for taxon label richness, abundance and Shannon diversity indicating a peak of BiL in the middle of the 19th century. This is also true for the ratio of biological to general lexical richness. The variation in label use between different sections within books, quantified as β-diversity, declined until the 1830s and recovered little, indicating a less specialised use of taxon labels over time. This pattern corroborates our hypothesis that before the onset of industrialisation BiL may have increased, reflecting several concomitant influences such as the general broadening of literary content, improved education and possibly an intensified awareness of the starting loss of biodiversity during the period of romanticism. Given that these positive trends continued and that we do not find support for alternative processes reducing BiL, such as language streamlining, we suggest that this pronounced trend reversal and subsequent decline of BiL over more than 100 years may be the consequence of humans’ increasing alienation from nature owing to major societal changes in the wake of industrialisation. We conclude that our computational approach of analysing literary communication using biodiversity indices has a high potential for understanding aspects of non-material contributions of biodiversity to people. Our approach can be applied to other corpora and would benefit from additional metadata on taxa, works and authors.
This work comprises the investigation of four different biosynthesis gene clusters from Xenorhabdus. Xenorhabdus is an entomopathogenic bacterium that lives in mutualistic symbiosis with its Steinernema nematode host and together they infect and kill insect larvae. Xenorhabdus is well known for the production of so-called specialised metabolites and many of these compounds are synthesised by non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) or NRPS-polyketide synthase (PKS)-hybrids. These enzymes are organised in a modular manner and produce structurally very diverse molecules, often with the help of modifying domains and tailoring enzymes. In general, the genes involved in the biosynthesis are organised in so-called biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) in the genome of the producing strain. Exchanging the native promoter with an inducible promoter, e.g. PBAD, allows the targeted activation of the BGC and in turn the analysis of the biosynthesis product via LC-MS analysis.
The first BGC investigated in this work is responsible for the biosynthesis of xenofuranones. Based on gene deletions, this work shows that the NRPS-like enzyme XfsA produces a carboxylated furanone intermediate which is subsequently decarboxylated by XfsB to yield xenofuranone B. The next step in xenofuranone biosynthesis is the O-methylation of xenofuranone B to yield xenofuranone A. A comparative proteomics approach allowed the identification of four methyltransferase candidates and subsequent gene deletions confirmed one of the candidates to be responsible for methylation of xenofuranone B. The proteome analysis was based on the comparison of X. szentirmaii WT and X. szentirmaii Δhfq because distinct levels of the methylated xenofuranone A were observed when the xfs BGC was activated in either WT or Δhfq strain. Hfq is a global transcriptional regulator whose deletion is associated with the down regulation of natural product biosynthesis in Xenorhabdus. The strong PBAD activation of the xfs BGC also allowed the detection of two novel xenofuranone derivatives which arise from incorporation of one 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvic acid as first or second building block, respectively.
PBAD based activation of the second BGC addressed in this work lead to the detection of a novel metabolite and compound purification allowed NMR-based structure elucidation. The molecule exhibits two pyrrolizidine moieties and was named pyrrolizwilline (pyrrolizidine + twin (German: “Zwilling”)). The BGC comprises seven genes and single gene deletions as well as heterologous expression in E. coli and NRPS engineering were conducted to investigate the biosynthesis. The first two genes xhpA and xhpB encode a bimodular NRPS and a monooxygenase which synthesise a pyrrolizixenamide-like structure, similar to PxaA and PxaB in pyrrolizixenamide biosynthesis. It is suggested that the acyl side chain incorporated by XhpA is removed by the α,β-hydrolase XhpG. The keto function is then reduced by two subsequent two electron reductions catalysed by XhpC and XhpD. One of these two reduced pyrrolizidine units most likely is extended with glyoxalate prior to non-enzymatic dimerisation with the second pyrrolizidine moiety. To finally yield pyrrolizwilline, L-valine is incorporated, probably by the free-standing condensation domain XhpF.
The third BGC investigated is responsible for the production of a tripeptide composed of β-D-homoserine, α-hydroxyglycine and L-valine and is referred to as glyoxpeptide. This work demonstrates that the previously observed glyoxpeptide derivative is derived from glycerol present in the culture medium. Furthermore, this work shows that the monooxygenase domain, which is found in an unusual position between motifs A8 and A9 within the adenylation domain, is responsible for the α-hydroxylation of glycine. It is suggested that the α-hydroxylation of glycine renders the tripeptide prone to hydrolysis via hemiacetal formation. Hence, the XgsC_MonoOx domain might be an interesting candidate for further NRPS engineering.
The fourth BGC addressed is responsible for the production of xildivalines and this work describes two additional derivatives which are detected only when the promoter is exchanged and activated in the X. hominickii WT strain but not in X. hominickii Δhfq. Deletion of the methyltransferase encoding gene xisE results in the production of non-methylated xildivalines. It remains to be determined when the N-methylation of L-valine takes place. It is discussed that the methyltransferase could act on the NRPS released product but also during the assembly. The peptide deformylase is not involved in the proposed biosynthesis as xildivaline production is detected in a ΔxisD strain. The PKS XisB features two adjacent, so-called tandem T domains. The inactivation of the first or the second T domain by point mutation causes decreased production titres of detected xildivalines in the respective mutant strain when compared to the wild type.
Clean water is fundamental to human health and ecosystem integrity. However, water quality deteriorates due to novel anthropogenic pollutants present at microgram per liter concentrations in urban water cycles (termed micropollutants). Wastewater treatment plants (WWTP) have been identified as major point sources for aquatic (micro-)pollutants. Chemical and ecotoxicological analyses have shown that conventional biological WWTPs do not fully remove micropollutants and associated toxicities, which is often because of mobile, polar and/or recalcitrant compounds and transformation products (TPs). To minimize possible environmental risks, advanced wastewater treatment (AWWT) technologies could be a promising mitigation measure. Multiple processes are therefore being developed and evaluated such as ozonation and ozonation followed by granulated activated carbon (GAC) or biological filtration. Assessing the performance of these combined AWWTs was the focus the TransRisk project. Within this project, this thesis accomplished four major goals.
Firstly, the preparation of (waste)water samples was optimised for in vitro bioassays. Acidification, filtration and solid phase extraction (SPE) were tested for their impact on environmentally relevant in vitro endocrine activities, mutagenicity, genotoxicity and cytotoxicity. Significantly different outcomes of these assays were detected comparing neutral and acidified samples. Sample filtration had a lesser impact, but in some cases retention of particle-bound compounds could have caused significant toxicity losses. Out of three SPE sorbents the Telos C18/ENV at sample pH 2.5 extracted highest toxicity, some undetected in aqueous samples. These results indicate that sample preparation needs to be optimised for specific sample matrices and bioassays to avoid false-positive or -negative detects in effect-based analyses.
Secondly, the above listed in vitro toxicities were monitored in a protected region for drinking water production in South-West Germany (2012-2015). Out of 30 sampling sites surface water and groundwater were the least polluted. Nonetheless, a few groundwater samples induced high anti-estrogenic activity that prompted further monitoring. The latter included a waterworks in which no toxicity was detected. Hospital wastewater also had elevated in vitro toxicities and hospitals are, thus, relevant intervention points for source control. The biological WWTPs were effective in removing most of the detected toxicity, and the selected bioassays proved to be pertinent tools for water quality assessment and prioritisation of pollution hotspots.
Thirdly, the in vivo bioassay ISO10872 based on Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans) was adapted for this thesis. Using this model, a median effect concentration (EC50) for reproductive toxicity of the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon β-naphthoflavone (β- NF) of 114 µg/L was computed which is slightly lower than reported in the scientific literature. β-NF induced cyp-35A3::GFP (a biomarker in transgenic animals) in a time and concentration dependent manner (≤ 21.3–24 fold above controls). β-NF spiked wastewater samples supported earlier hypotheses on particle-bound pollutants. Reproductive toxicity (96 h) and cyp-35A3 induction (24 h) of biologically treated and/or ozonated wastewater extracts and growth promoting effects of GAC/biologically filtered ozonated wastewater extracts were observed. This suggested the presence of residual bioactive/toxic chemicals not included in the targeted chemical analysis. It also highlighted the importance of integrating multiple (apical and molecular) endpoints in wastewater assessments.
Fourthly, five in vitro and the adapted C. elegans bioassay were integrated into a wastewater quality evaluation (developed within TransRisk). Out of the five AWWT options, ozonation (at 1 g O3,applied/g DOC, HRT ~ 18 min) combined with nonaerated GAC filtration was rated most effective for toxicity removal. All five AWWTs largely removed estrogenic and (anti-)androgenic activities, but not anti-estrogenic activity and mutagenicity, which even increased during ozonation. This has been observed in related studies and points towards toxic TPs. These results also emphasized the need for implementing an effective post-treatment for ozonation. The results from a parallel in vivo study with Lumbriculus variegatus and Potamopyrgus antipodarum conducted on site at the WWTP (using flow through systems) were in accordance with the C. elegans results. In this context, it is suggested to further implement C. elegans as sensitive, feasible and ecologically relevant model.
In conclusion, this thesis shows how optimised sample preparation, long-term (in vitro) environmental monitoring, sensitive and ecologically relevant (in vivo) bioassays as well as innovative evaluation concepts, are pivotal in improving the removal of micropollutants and their toxicities with AWWTs. Future research should further develop and evaluate measures at sewer systems, conventional biological, tertiary and other advanced treatment technologies, as well as sociopolitical strategies (e.g., source control or natural conservation) and restoration projects. The effect-based tools optimised in this thesis will support assessing their success.
Extremophilic prokaryotes live under harsh environmental conditions which require far-reaching cellular adaptations. The acquisition of novel genetic information via natural transformation plays an important role in bacterial adaptation. This mode of DNA transfer permits the transfer of genetic information between microorganisms of distant evolutionary lineages and even between members of different domains. This phenomenon, known as horizontal gene transfer (HGT), significantly contributes to genome plasticity over evolutionary history and is a driving force for the spread of fitness-enhancing functions including virulence genes and antibiotic resistances. In particular, HGT has played an important role for adaptation of bacteria to extreme environments. Here, we present a survey of the natural transformation systems in bacteria that live under extreme conditions: the thermophile Thermus thermophilus and two desiccation-resistant members of the genus Acinetobacter such as Acinetobacter baylyi and Acinetobacter baumannii. The latter is an opportunistic pathogen and has become a world-wide threat in health-care institutions. We highlight conserved and unique features of the DNA transporter in Thermus and Acinetobacter and present tentative models of both systems. The structure and function of both DNA transporter are described and the mechanism of DNA uptake is discussed.
he ubiquity of microplastics in aquatic ecosystems has raised concerns over their interaction with biota. However,microplastics research on freshwater species, especially mollusks, is still scarce. We, therefore, investigated the factorsaffecting microplastics ingestion in the freshwater musselDreissena polymorpha. Using polystyrene spheres (5, 10, 45,90μm), we determined the body burden of microplastics in the mussels in relation to 1) exposure and depuration time, 2)body size, 3) food abundance, and 4) microplastic concentrations.D. polymorpharapidly ingested microplastics and ex-creted most particles within 12 h. A few microplastics were retained for up to 1 wk. Smaller individuals had a higher relativebody burden of microplastics than larger individuals. The uptake of microplastics was concentration‐dependent, whereas anadditional food supply (algae) reduced it. We also compared the ingestion of microplastics byD. polymorphawith 2 otherfreshwater species (Anodonta anatina,Sinanodonta woodiana), highlighting that absolute and relative uptake depends onthe species and the size of the mussels. In addition, we determined toxicity of polystyrene fragments (≤63μm,6.4–100 000 p mL–1) and diatomite (natural particle, 100 000 p mL–1)inD. polymorphaafter 1, 3, 7, and 42 d of exposure,investigating clearance rate, energy reserves, and oxidative stress. Despite ingesting large quantities, exposure to poly-styrene fragments only affected the clearance rate ofD. polymorpha. Further, results of the microplastic and diatomiteexposure did not differ significantly. Therefore,D. polymorphais unaffected by or can compensate for polystyrene fragmenttoxicity even at concentrations above current environmental levels.Environ Toxicol Chem2021;40:2247–2260. © 2021 TheAuthors.Environmental Toxicology and Chemistrypublished by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of SETAC.Keywords:Microplastics; Toxic effects; Mollusk toxicity
Ziel dieser Arbeit war es, einen genaueren Einblick in die Rolle von PaCLPXP für den Energiemetabolismus von P. anserina zu erhalten und mögliche Komponenten zu identifizieren, welche wichtig für die Langlebigkeit der PaClpP-Deletionsmutante sind. Folgende neue Erkenntnisse konnten hierbei gewonnen werden:
1. Die Substrat-Analyse durch eine Cycloheximid-Behandlung und anschließender Proteom-Analyse legte erfolgreich eine Reihe potentieller bisher nicht bekannter Substrate von PaCLPP offen. Interessanterweise waren unter den identifizierten Proteinen viele ribosomale Untereinheiten und Komponenten verschiedener Stoffwechselwege des Energiemetabolismus zu finden. Am auffälligsten unter diesen Substraten war die extreme Anreicherung eines Retikulon-ähnlichen Proteins, das einen neuen Aspekt der möglichen molekularbiologischen Rolle von PaCLPP in P. anserina andeutet.
2. Durch die Zugabe von Butyrat zum Medium, konnte erfolgreich die Autophagie sowohl im P. anserina Wildtyp als auch in der PaClpP-Deletionsmutante reduziert werden. Diese Verminderung der Autophagie sorgt bei ΔPaClpP für eine Verkürzung der Lebensspanne. Dieser Effekt ist spezifisch für die PaClpP-Deletionsmutante, während die Auswirkung von Butyrat auf den Wildtyp nur marginal ist. Dieses Ergebnis untermauert frühere Analysen dieser Deletionsmutante, welche besagen, dass die Langlebigkeit von ΔPaClpP Autophagie abhängig ist (Knuppertz und Osiewacz, 2017).
3. Die Metabolom-Analyse von ΔPaClpP im Vergleich zum Wildtyp zeigt, dass das Fehlen der PaCLPP zu Veränderungen in der Menge der Metaboliten der Glykolyse und des Citratzyklus kommt. Außerdem sind die Mengen der meisten Aminosäuren und der Nukleotide betroffen. Diese Analyse beweist, dass das Fehlen dieser mitochondrialen Protease weitreichende Folgen für die ganze Zelle hat. Durch die signifikante Verringerung von ATP und die Anreicherung von AMP in jungen ΔPaClpP-Stämmen und durch den Umstand der gesteigerten Autophagie in dieser Mutante, fiel das Augenmerk auf die AMPK. Dieses veränderte AMP/ATP-Verhältnis ist ein Indiz für eine gesteigerte AMPK-Aktivität und könnte auch den Umstand der gesteigerten Autophagie in ΔPaClpP erklären.
4. Das Gen codierend für die katalytische α-Untereinheit der AMPK (PaSnf1) konnte erfolgreich in P. anserina deletiert werden. Das Fehlen von PaSNF1 führt zu einer reduzierten Wuchsrate, eine beeinträchtige weibliche Fertilität und eine verzögerte Sporenreifung. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Autophagie infolge einer PaSnf1-Deletion nicht gänzlich unterdrückt wird, PaSNF1 allerdings für die Stress-induzierte Autophagie notwendig ist. Überraschenderweise führt die Abwesenheit von PaSNF1 zu einer verlängerten Lebensspanne im Vergleich zum Wildtyp. Die meisten Effekte infolge einer PaSnf1-Deletion konnten durch die Einbringung eines FLAG::PaSNF1-Konstrukts komplementiert werden.
5. Eine gleichzeitige PaSnf1 und PaClpP-Deletion führt zu eine unerwarteten, extremen Lebenspannenverlängerung, die die Verlängerung der Lebensspanne bei der PaClpP-Deletionsmutante noch übertrifft. Interessanterweise geht dieser Phänotyp nicht mit einer erhöhten Autophagie einher. Des Weiteren konnte beobachtet werden, dass das Fehlen von PaSNF1 sowohl in ΔPaSnf1 als auch in ΔPaSnf1/ΔPaClpP zu einer veränderten Mitochondrien-Morphologie im Alter führt. Die Abwesenheit von PaSNF1 verursacht, dass die Stämme auch im Alter (20d) noch überwiegend filamentöse Mitochondrien aufweisen. Zudem zeigen die drei analysierten Deletionsstämme (ΔPaSnf1, ΔPaClpP und ΔPaSnf1/ΔPaClpP) massive Einschränkungen wenn sie auf die mitochondriale Funktion angewiesen sind.
6. Auffallend war, dass bei ΔPaSnf1, ΔPaClpP und bei ΔPaSnf1/ΔPaClpP die Stämme mit dem Paarungstyp „mat-“ langlebiger sind als die Stämme mit dem Paarungstyp „mat+“. Dieser Effekt ist bei der ΔPaSnf1/ΔPaClpP-Doppelmutante am stärksten ausgeprägt. Weitere Untersuchungen dazu ergaben, dass die Paarungstypen immer dann eine Rolle spielen, wenn die Stämme mitochondrialem Stress ausgesetzt, oder aber auf die mitochondriale Funktion angewiesen sind. Verantwortlich für diese Unterschiede sind zwei rmp1-Allele, die mit den unterschiedlichen Paarungstyp-Loci gekoppelt sind und mit dem jeweiligen Paarungstyp-Locus vererbt werden (rmp1-1 mit „mat-“; rmp1-2 mit „mat+“).