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Institute
- Biowissenschaften (199) (remove)
Terpenes are one of the largest and most diverse class of natural products, produced by organisms from all kingdoms of life and with important applications in the pharma, flavor and fragrance industries. Well-known examples of terpenes are the pharmaceuticals artemisinin and taxol, the flavor and fragrance compounds menthol, santalol and sclareol, the structural material polyisoprene and the biofuel precursor farnesene. The methods and results presented in this work offer a variety of ways to modify terpene precursors for the creation of new terpene molecules. The application of these methodologies in well-established production systems could lead to the production of new substances, with applications in the industrial fields of pharmaceuticals, flavors and fragrances, and biofuels.
An exploration of the relationship between recruitment communication and foraging in stingless bees
(2021)
Social information is widely used in the animal kingdom and can be highly adaptive. In social insects, foragers can use social information to find food, avoid danger, or choose a new nest site. Copying others allows individuals to obtain information without having to sample the environment. When foragers communicate information they will often only advertise high-quality food sources, thereby filtering out less adaptive information. Stingless bees, a large pantropical group of highly eusocial bees, face intense inter- and intra-specific competition for limited resources, yet display disparate foraging strategies. Within the same environment there are species that communicate the location of food resources to nest-mates and species that do not. Our current understanding of why some species communicate foraging sites while others do not is limited. Studying freely foraging colonies of several co-existing stingless bee species in Brazil, we investigated if recruitment to specific food locations is linked to 1) the sugar content of forage, 2) the duration of foraging trips, and 3) the variation in activity of a colony from 1 day to another and the variation in activity in a species over a day. We found that, contrary to our expectations, species with recruitment communication did not return with higher quality forage than species that do not recruit nestmates. Furthermore, foragers from recruiting species did not have shorter foraging trip durations than those from weakly recruiting species. Given the intense inter- and intraspecific competition for resources in these environments, it may be that recruiting species favor food resources that can be monopolized by the colony rather than food sources that offer high-quality rewards.
Die Bildung von Blutgefäßen ist essentiell für die Entwicklung und Homöostase von Wirbeltieren und die Endothelzellspezifikation ist ein wichtiger erster Schritt in diesem Prozess. Das früheste bekannte Ereignis bei der Endothelzellspezifikation im Zebrafisch ist die Expression des bHLH-PAS-Transkriptionsfaktor-Gens npas4l. Ich habe eine transgene V5-Linie zum Nachweis des markierten Npas4l auf Proteinebene und eine Gal4-VP16-Reporterlinie zur Visualisierung und Verfolgung von npas4l exprimierenden Zellen in vivo generiert. Beide Linien können bereits in frühen Entwicklungsstadien nachgewiesen werden und komplementieren auch starke npas4l-Mutanten Allele. Um npas4l Reporter exprimierende Zellen in npas4l Mutanten zu verfolgen, habe ich anschließend eine mutierte Variante der Gal4-Reporterlinie erzeugt. Diese Mutante trägt eine Insertion in der Region, die die DNA-Bindedomäne kodiert. Dadurch stört sie die Npas4l-Funktion, aber nicht die Reporterexpression. Dieses mutierte Reporterallel komplementiert nicht die npas4l-Mutanten und zeigt einen starken Phänotyp, was darauf hindeutet, dass es sich um ein funktionelles Nullallel handelt. Phänotypische Analysen zeigten, dass npas4l-Reporter positive Zellen in npas4l-Mutanten nicht spezifizieren oder zur Mittelachse wandern. Stattdessen tragen sie zu den vom intermediären Mesoderm abgeleiteten pronephrischen Tubuli und dem vom paraxialen Mesoderm abgeleiteten Skelettmuskel bei. Ich habe diese Phänotypen durch Einzelzell-RNAseq an den npas4l-Reporter positiven Zellen in npas4l+/- und npas4l-/- Embryonen bestätigt. Zusammen erklären diese beiden alternativen Zellschicksale den Großteil der beobachteten Veränderungen zwischen den Genotypen. Npas4l ist dafür bekannt die Expression der drei Transkriptionsfaktorgene etsrp, tal1 und lmo2 zu fördern. Ich stellte die Hypothese auf, dass das Fehlen jedes dieser Transkriptionsfaktoren in npas4l-Mutanten verschiedene Aspekte des npas4l-Phänotyps verursacht. Daher habe ich Mutantenlinien für alle drei Gene generiert und sie sowohl in vaskulären Reporterlinien als auch im npas4l-Reporterhintergrund analysiert. Die Daten legen nahe, dass verschiedene Gene unterschiedliche Prozesse während der frühen Endothelentwicklung regulieren. In npas4l-/- und etsrp-/- Embryonen differenzieren npas4l-Reporter exprimierende Zellen nicht zu Endothelzellen und tragen stattdessen zur Skelettmuskelzellpopulation bei. In npas4l-/- und tal1-/- Embryonen können npas4l-Reporter exprimierende Zellen nicht migrieren und tragen stattdessen zu der Bildung der pronephrischen Tubuli bei. Um die Beziehung zwischen diesen Faktoren besser zu verstehen, habe ich getestet, ob die Injektion von etsrp-, tal1- oder lmo2-mRNA verschiedene Aspekte des npas4l-Phänotyps retten würde. npas4l-, etsrp- und tal1-Mutanten zeigen alle schwere vaskuläre Phänotypen. Einige Endothelzellen und vaskuläre Strukturen bleiben jedoch in jeder Mutante erhalten. Der Phänotyp ist am stärksten in npas4l-/- Embryonen, aber selbst in diesen Embryonen können einige fli1a-positive Endothelzellen in der Schwanzregion beobachtet werden. Es war unklar, ob sich diese Population von Endothelzellen unabhängig von der Npas4l-, Tal1- und Etsrp-Funktion entwickelt oder als Folge einer restlichen tal1- oder etsrp-Expression unabhängig von Npas4l. Um diese Frage zu untersuchen, habe ich Doppelmutanten generiert und nach dem Vorhandensein von fli1a-positiven Endothelzellen in diesen Mutanten gesucht. Während fli1a-positive Endothelzellen in npas4l-/- und npas4l-/-;tal1-/- Embryonen deutlich vorhanden sind, können keine solchen Zellen in npas4l-/-;etsrp-/- oder etsrp-/-;tal1-/- Embryonen beobachtet werden. Diese Daten deuten darauf hin, dass sich im Zebrafisch keine Endothelzellen entwickeln können, wenn zugleich npas4l und etsrp oder etsrp und tal1 gestört sind. Während der Verlust von etsrp zu stärkeren Defekten in npas4l-Mutanten führt, gibt es keinen zusätzlichen Phänotyp, der durch den Verlust von tal1verursacht wird, was darauf hindeutet, dass die Expression von etsrp, aber nicht die von tal1, unabhängig von Npas4l auftreten kann. Diese Idee wird durch die Beobachtung unterstützt, dass etsrp, aber nicht tal1-Expression in den meisten fli1a-exprimierenden Zellen in npas4l-/- Embryonen beobachtet wird. Dennoch wird der Großteil -Expression durch Npas4l reguliert. tal1-mRNA-Injektionen reichten aus, um eine Wildtyp-ähnliche vaskuläre Musterbildung im Bauchbereich der npas4l-/- Embryonen wiederherzustellen, einschließlich der Rettung sowohl der Zellmigration als auch der Differenzierung. Da Npas4l mehrere unterschiedliche transkriptionelle Effektoren hat, war eine so starke Rettung durch nur einen dieser Effektoren unerwartet. In den geretteten Mutanten wurde die bilaterale Population von npas4l-Reporter-positiven pronephrischen Tubuluszellen nicht entdeckt, aber die Anzahl der ektopischen npas4l-Reporter exprimierenden Muskelzellen war im Vergleich zu nicht injizierten npas4l-Mutanten gleichbleibend.
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Tissue translocation, multigenerational and population effects of microplastics in Daphnia magna
(2021)
The last century saw the widespread adoption of plastic materials throughout nearly every aspect of our lives. Plastics are synthetic polymers that are made up of monomer chains. The properties of the monomer in conjunction with chemical additives allow plastics to have a sheer endless variety of features and use cases. They are cheap, lightweight, and extremely durable. Plastic materials are often engineered for single-use and in conjunction with high production volumes and insufficient waste management and recycling across the globe, this leads to a large number of plastics entering the environment. Marine ecosystems are considered sinks. However, freshwater ecosystems as entry pathways are highly affected by plastic waste as well. Throughout the past decade, the impact of plastic waste on human and environmental health has received a lot of attention from the ecotoxicological community as well as the public. Small plastic fragments (< 1 mm called microplastics) are a large part of this emerging field of research. Within this, the water flea Daphnia magna is probably the most common organism that is used to assess microplastics toxicity. As a filter-feeding organism, it indiscriminately ingests particles from the water column and is thus highly susceptible to microplastics. For this thesis, we identified some gaps in the available data on the ecotoxicity of microplastics to daphnids. To illuminate some of those gaps the present thesis was aimed at five main aspects:
(1) Tissue translocation of spherical microplastics in Daphnia magna
(2) Investigation of the toxicity of irregularly shaped microplastics
(3) Multigenerational and population effects of microplastics
(4) Comparison of the toxicity of microplastics and natural particles
(5) Effects of particle-aging on microplastics toxicity
The thesis is comprised of three peer-reviewed articles and one so-far unpublished study as “additional results”. The first study was aimed at understanding tissue translocation of spherical microplastics to lipid storage droplets of daphnids. The crossing of biological membranes is discussed as a prerequisite to eliciting tissue damage and an inflammatory response. Previously, researchers reported the translocation of fluorescently labeled spherical microplastics to lipid storage droplets of daphnids, even though no plausible biological mechanism to explain this occurrence. Therefore, in order to learn more about this process and potentially illuminate the mechanism we replicated the study. We were able to observe a fluorescence signal inside the lipid droplets only after increasing the exposure concentrations. Nonetheless, it appeared to be independent of particles. This led to the hypothesis, that the lipophilic fluorescent dye uncoupled from the particles and subsequently accumulated in lipid storage droplets. The hypothesis was further confirmed through an additional experiment with a silicone-based passive sampling device showing that the fluorescence occurred both independent of particles and digestive processes. Accordingly, we concluded that the reported findings were a microscopic artifact caused by the uncoupling of the dye from the particles. Therefore, a fluorescence signal alone is not a sufficient proxy to assume that particles have translocated. It needs to be coupled with additional methods to ensure that the observation is indeed caused by the translocation of particles.
It is still unclear whether the toxicity profile of microplastics is different from that of naturally occurring particles or if they are “just another particle”, as there are innumerable amounts in the natural environment surrounding an organism. The goal of the second study was to compare the toxicity of irregularly shaped polystyrene microplastics to that of the natural particle kaolin. The environment is full of natural non-food particles that daphnids ingest more or less indiscriminately and therefore are well adapted to deal with. Daphnids have a short generation time and usually experience food limitation in nature. Therefore, short-term studies only looking at acute toxicity with ad libitum food availability are not representative of the exposure scenario in nature. For a more realistic scenario, we, therefore, used a four-generation multigenerational design under food limitation to investigate how effects translate from one generation to the next. We observed concentration-dependent effects of microplastics but not of natural particles on mortality, reproduction, and growth. Some of the effects increased from generation to generation, leading to the extinction of two treatment groups. Here, microplastics were more toxic than natural particles. At least part of this difference can be explained by physical properties leading to the quick sedimentation of the kaolin, while microplastics remained in the water column. Nonetheless, buoyancy and sedimentation would also affect exposure in the environment and are likely different for most microplastics than for most naturally occurring particle types.
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Human GLUTs represent a family of specialized transporters that facilitate the diffusion of hexoses through membranes along a concentration gradient. The 14 isoforms share high sequence identity but differ in substrate specificity and affinity, and tissue distribution. According to their structure similarity, GLUTs are divided into three classes, with class 1 comprising the most intensively studied isoforms GLUTs1 4. An abnormal function of different GLUT members has been related to the pathogenesis of various diseases, including cancer and diabetes. Hence, GLUTs are the subject of intensive research, and efforts concentrate on identifying GLUT-selective ligands for putative medical purposes and their application in studies aiming to further unravel the metabolic roles of these transporters.
The hexose transporter deficient (hxt0) yeast strain EBY.VW4000 is devoid of all its endogenous hexose transporters and unable to grow on glucose or related hexoses. This strain has proven to be a valuable platform to investigate heterologous transporters due to its easy handling, increased robustness, and versatile applications. However, the functional expression of GLUTs in yeast requires certain modifications. Single point mutations of GLUT1 and GLUT5 led to their functional expression in EBY.VW4000, whereas the native GLUT1 was actively expressed in EBY.S7, a hxt0 strain carrying the fgy1 mutation that putatively reduces the phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate (PI4P) content in the plasma membrane. GLUT4 was only actively expressed in the hxt0 strain SDY.022, which also contains the fgy1 mutation and in which ERG4 is additionally deleted. Erg4 is one of the late enzymes in the ergosterol pathway, and therefore SDY.022 probably has an altered sterol composition in its membrane.
The goal of this thesis was to actively express GLUT2 and GLUT3 in a hxt0 yeast strain, providing a convenient system for their ligand screening. A PCR-derived amino acid exchange in the sequence of GLUT3 enabled its functional expression in EBY.VW4000 and the unmodified GLUT3 protein was active in EBY.S7. Functional expression of GLUT2 was achieved by rational design. The extracellular loop between the transmembrane regions 1 and 2 is significantly larger in GLUT2 than in other class 1 GLUTs. By truncating this loop by 34 amino acids and exchanging an alanine for a serine, a GLUT3-like loop was implemented. The resulting construct GLUT2∆loopS was functional in EBY.S7. With an additional point mutation in the transmembrane region 11, GLUT2∆loopS_Q455R was also actively expressed in EBY.VW4000. Inhibition studies with the known GLUT inhibitors phloretin and quercetin showed a reduced transporter activity for GLUT2 and GLUT3 in uptake assays and growth tests when inhibitors were present, demonstrating that both systems are amenable for ligand screening experiments.
The newly established GLUT2 yeast system was then used to screen a library of compounds pre-selected by in silico screening. Thereby, eleven identified GLUT2 inhibitors exhibited strong potencies with IC50 values ranging from 0.61 to 19.3 µM. By employing the other yeast systems, these compounds were tested for their effects on GLUT1, and GLUTs3-5, revealing that nine of the identified ligands were GLUT2-selective. In contrast, one was a pan-class 1 inhibitor (inhibiting GLUTs1-4), and one affected GLUT2 and GLUT5, the two fructose transporting isoforms. These compounds will serve as useful tools for investigations on the role of GLUT2 in metabolic diseases and might even evolve into pharmaceutical agents targeting GLUT2-associated diseases.
Due to the beneficial effect of the putatively changed sterol composition in SDY.022 (by ERG4 deletion) on the functional expression of GLUT4, it was hypothesized that the presence of the human sterol cholesterol, or cholesterol-like sterols, might have a beneficial effect on GLUT expression, too. Thus, it was attempted to generate hxt0 strains that synthesize these sterols by genetic modifications targeting the ergosterol pathway. In the scope of these experiments, several strains with different sterol compositions were generated. Drop tests on glucose medium with the different strains expressing GLUT1 or GLUT4 revealed that the deletion of ERG6 is clearly advantageous for a functional expression of GLUT1 (but not GLUT4). This indicates that the methyl group at the ergosterol side chain (introduced by Erg6 and reduced by Erg4) negatively influences GLUT1 activity. However, this effect on GLUT1 activity was less pronounced than the putative altered PI4P content in EBY.S7.
Additionally, in this thesis, a new tool to measure glucose transport rates of transporters expressed in the hxt0 yeast system was developed to facilitate their kinetic characterization. For this, the pH-sensitive GFP variant pHluorin was employed as a biosensor for the cytosolic pH (pHcyt) by measuring the ratio (R390/470) of emission intensities at 512 nm from two different excitation wavelengths (390 and 470 nm). Sugar-starved cells exhibit a slightly acidic pHcyt because ATP production is depleted, reducing the activity of ATP-dependent proton pumps.
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Recently, the potent antiandrogen 4-methyl-7-diethylaminocoumarin (C47) and its potential transformation products 4-methyl-7-ethylaminocoumarin (C47T1) and 4-methyl-7-aminocoumarin (C47T2) were identified as novel environmental contaminants. We assessed for the first time the sources, distribution, and fate of these compounds in aquatic systems using the Holtemme River (Saxony-Anhalt, Germany), which is a hotspot for these contaminants. To this end, wastewater-treatment plant (WWTP) influent and effluent samples, surface water samples over 3 years, and the longitudinal profiles in water, sediment, and gammarids were analyzed. From the longitudinal profile of the river stretch, the WWTP of Silstedt was identified as the sole point source for these compounds in the River Holtemme, and exposure concentrations in the low micrograms per liter range could be recorded continuously over 3 years. Analysis of WWTP influent and effluent showed a transformation of approximately half of the C47 into C47T1 and C47T2 but no complete removal. A further attenuation of the three coumarins after discharge into the river could be largely attributed to dilution, while transformation was only approximately 20%, thus suggesting a significant persistence in aquatic systems. Experimentally derived partitioning coefficients between water and sediment organic carbon exceeded those predicted using the OPERA quantitative structure–activity relationship tools and polyparameter linear free-energy relationships by up to 93-fold, suggesting cation binding as a significant factor for their sorption behavior. Near-equilibrium conditions between water and sediment were not observed close to the emitting WWTP but farther downstream in the river. Experimental and predicted bioaccumulation factors for gammarids were closely matching, and the concentrations in field-sampled gammarids were close to steady state with exposure concentrations in the water phase of the river. Environ Toxicol Chem 2021;40:3078–3091. © 2021 The Authors. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of SETAC.
Background: The industrial production of various alcohols from organic carbon compounds may be performed at high rates and with a low risk of contamination using thermophilic microorganisms as whole-cell catalysts. Thermoanaerobacter species that thrive around 50–75 °C not only perform fermentation of sugars to alcohols, but some also utilize different organic acids as electron acceptors, reducing them to their corresponding alcohols. Results: We purified AdhE as the major NADH- and AdhB as the major NADPH-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) from the cell extract of the organic acid-reducing Thermoanaerobacter sp. strain X514. Both enzymes were present in high amounts during growth on glucose with and without isobutyrate, had broad substrate spectra including different aldehydes, with high affinities (< 1 mM) for acetaldehyde and for NADH (AdhE) or NADPH (AdhB). Both enzymes were highly thermostable at the physiological temperature of alcohol production. In addition to AdhE and AdhB, we identified two abundant AdhA-type ADHs based on their genes, which were recombinantly produced and biochemically characterized. The other five ADHs encoded in the genome were only expressed at low levels. Conclusions: According to their biochemical and kinetic properties, AdhE and AdhB are most important for ethanol formation from sugar and reduction of organic acids to alcohols, while the role of the two AdhA-type enzymes is less clear. AdhE is the only abundant aldehyde dehydrogenase for the acetyl-CoA reduction to aldehydes, however, acid reduction may also proceed directly by aldehyde:ferredoxin oxidoreductase. The role of the latter in bio-alcohol formation from sugar and in organic acid reduction needs to be elucidated in future studies.
The Global South is facing severe challenges in ensuring livelihood security due to climate change impacts, environmental degradation and population growth as well as changing lifestyles. These complex problems cannot be solely solved by single scientific disciplines – they require transdisciplinary research (TDR). Stakeholders from civil society, the corporate sector, government and science need to pool their knowledge to find solutions for sustainable transformations. In Namibia, we have been involved in TDR projects on water supply, and sanitation services as well as livestock management in rangeland systems. In this paper, we review two TDR projects that differ in multiple ways and hence allow us to carve out structural differences and critically discuss research outcomes, lessons learned and the challenge of North–South collaborations. Our review builds upon published and unpublished project documents as well as expert interviews with Namibian and German researchers who were involved in the projects. Our results show that TDR can be put into practice in different ways, depending on the research focus and the period available. The TDR phases of problem framing, inter- and transdisciplinary integration were implemented with different tools and foci points. We discuss the role of project length and funding conditions for project success and outcome generation. In addition, we critically consider the role of Namibian and German researchers in these international collaborations. The conclusions we draw touch upon the points of preparatory research funding, the equal acknowledgement of Global South contributions to joint research projects and the explicit handling of TDR components in project work. Significance: • The current social-ecological challenges are complex and require TDR as a mode of knowledge coproduction, particularly in a development context. • Inter- and transdisciplinary integration are critical processes for a project to be successful and require the allocation of adequate time and monetary resources. • Longer-term projects with a funded preparatory research phase constitute a structural model for TDR as project outcomes can evolve over time. • Global South researchers carry a hidden burden in international collaborations that has to be adequately acknowledged upfront in project planning and final products.
Highlights
• Protocol for extracting and analyzing pollen grains from fossil insects
• Individual fossil grains can be analyzed using a combined approach
• Simple and fast TEM embedding and sectioning protocol
• Protocol enables a taxonomic assignment of pollen
Summary
This protocol explains how to extract pollen from fossil insects with subsequent descriptions of pollen treatment. We also describe how to document morphological and ultrastructural features with light-microscopy and electron microscopy. It enables a taxonomic assignment of pollen that can be used to interpret flower-insect interactions, foraging and feeding behavior of insects, and the paleoenvironment. The protocol is limited by the state of the fossil, the presence/absence of pollen on fossil specimens, and the availability of extant pollen for comparison.
Mitochondria are ubiquitous organelles of eukaryotic organisms with a number of essential functions, including synthesis of iron-sulfur clusters, amino acids, lipids, and adenosine triphosphate (ATP). During aging of the fungal aging model Podospora anserina, the inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM) undergoes prominent morphological alterations, ultimately resulting in functional impairments. Since phospholipids (PLs) are key components of biological membranes, maintenance of membrane plasticity and integrity via regulation of PL biosynthesis is indispensable. Here, we report results from a lipidomic analysis of isolated mitochondria from P. anserina that revealed an age-related reorganization of the mitochondrial PL profile and the involvement of the i-AAA protease PaIAP in proteolytic regulation of PL metabolism. The absence of PaIAP enhances biosynthesis of characteristic mitochondrial PLs, leads to significant alterations in the acyl composition of the mitochondrial signature PL cardiolipin (CL), and induces mitophagy. These alterations presumably cause the lifespan increase of the PaIap deletion mutant under standard growth conditions. However, PaIAP is required at elevated temperatures and for degradation of superfluous CL synthase PaCRD1 during glycolytic growth. Overall, our study uncovers a prominent role of PaIAP in the regulation of PL homeostasis in order to adapt membrane plasticity to fluctuating environmental conditions as they occur in nature.
Neuro-vascular communication is essential to synchronize central nervous system development. Here, we identify angiopoietin/Tie2 as a neuro-vascular signaling axis involved in regulating dendritic morphogenesis of Purkinje cells (PCs). We show that in the developing cerebellum Tie2 expression is not restricted to blood vessels, but it is also present in PCs. Its ligands angiopoietin-1 (Ang1) and angiopoietin-2 (Ang2) are expressed in neural cells and endothelial cells (ECs), respectively. PC-specific deletion of Tie2 results in reduced dendritic arborization, which is recapitulated in neural-specific Ang1-knockout and Ang2 full-knockout mice. Mechanistically, RNA sequencing reveals that Tie2-deficient PCs present alterations in gene expression of multiple genes involved in cytoskeleton organization, dendritic formation, growth, and branching. Functionally, mice with deletion of Tie2 in PCs present alterations in PC network functionality. Altogether, our data propose Ang/Tie2 signaling as a mediator of intercellular communication between neural cells, ECs, and PCs, required for proper PC dendritic morphogenesis and function.
Eukaryotic ribosome assembly starts in the nucleolus, where the ribosomal DNA (rDNA) is transcribed into the 35S pre-ribosomal RNA (pre-rRNA). More than two-hundred ribosome biogenesis factors (RBFs) and more than two-hundred small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNA) catalyze the processing, folding and modification of the rRNA in Arabidopsis thaliana. The initial pre-ribosomal 90S complex is formed already during transcription by association of ribosomal proteins (RPs) and RBFs. In addition, small nucleolar ribonucleoprotein particles (snoRNPs) composed of snoRNAs and RBFs catalyze the two major rRNA modification types, 2′-O-ribose-methylation and pseudouridylation. Besides these two modifications, rRNAs can also undergo base methylations and acetylation. However, the latter two modifications have not yet been systematically explored in plants. The snoRNAs of these snoRNPs serve as targeting factors to direct modifications to specific rRNA regions by antisense elements. Today, hundreds of different sites of modifications in the rRNA have been described for eukaryotic ribosomes in general. While our understanding of the general process of ribosome biogenesis has advanced rapidly, the diversities appearing during plant ribosome biogenesis is beginning to emerge. Today, more than two-hundred RBFs were identified by bioinformatics or biochemical approaches, including several plant specific factors. Similarly, more than two hundred snoRNA were predicted based on RNA sequencing experiments. Here, we discuss the predicted and verified rRNA modification sites and the corresponding identified snoRNAs on the example of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Our summary uncovers the plant modification sites in comparison to the human and yeast modification sites.
Climate change imposes severe stress on European forests, with forest degradation already visible in several parts of Europe. Thus adaptation of forestry applications in Mediterranean areas and central Europe is necessary. Proactive forestry management may include the planting of Mediter- ranean oak species in oak-bearing Central European regions. Five replicate common gardens of Greek and Italian provenances of Quercus ilex, Q. pubescens and Q. frainetto seedlings (210 each per plantation) were established in Central Italy, NE Greece (two) and Southern Germany (two, including Q. robur) to assess their performance under different climate conditions. Climate and soil data of the plantation sites are given and seedling establishment was monitored for survival and morphological parameters. After 3 years (2019) survival rates were satisfactory in the German and Italian sites, whereas the Greek sites exerted extremely harsh conditions for the seedlings, including extreme frost and drought events. In Germany, seedlings suffered extreme heat and drought periods in 2018 and 2019 but responded well. Provenances were ranked for each country for their performance after plan- tation. In Greece and Italy, Q. pubescens was the best performing species. In Germany, Q. pubescens and Q. robur performed best. We suggest that Greek or Italian provenances of Q. pubescens may be effectively used for future forestation purposes in Central Europe. For the establishment of Quercus plantations in Northern Greece, irrigation appears to be a crucial factor in seedling establishment.
Most cellular processes are regulated by RNA-binding proteins (RBPs). These RBPs usually use defined binding sites to recognize and directly interact with their target RNA molecule. Individual-nucleotide resolution UV crosslinking and immunoprecipitation (iCLIP) experiments are an important tool to de- scribe such interactions in cell cultures in-vivo. This experimental protocol yields millions of individual sequencing reads from which the binding spec- trum of the RBP under study can be deduced. In this PhD thesis I studied how RNA processing is driven from RBP binding by analyzing iCLIP-derived sequencing datasets.
First, I described a complete data analysis pipeline to detect RBP binding sites from iCLIP sequencing reads. This workflow covers all essential process- ing steps, from the first quality control to the final annotation of binding sites. I described the accurate integration of biological iCLIP replicates to boost the initial peak calling step while ensuring high specificity through replicate re- producibility analysis. Further I proposed a routine to level binding site width to streamline downstream analysis processes. This was exemplified in the re- analysis of the binding spectrum of the U2 small nuclear RNA auxiliary factor 2 (U2AF2, U2AF65). I recaptured the known dominance of U2AF65 to bind to intronic sequences of protein-coding genes, where it likely recognizes the polypyrimidine tract as part of the core spliceosome machinery.
In the second part of my thesis, I analyzed the binding spectrum of the serine and arginine rich splicing factor 6 (SRSF6) in the context of diabetes. In pancreatic beta-cells, the expression of SRSF6 is regulated by the transcription factor GLIS3, which encodes for a diabetes susceptibility gene. It is known that SRSF6 promotes beta-cell death through the splicing dysregulation of genes essential to beta-cell function and survival. However, the exact mechanism of how these RNAs are targeted by SRSF6 remains poorly understood. Here, I applied the defined iCLIP processing pipeline to describe the binding landscape of the splicing factor SRSF6 in the human pancreatic beta-cell line EndoC-H1. The initial binding sites definition revealed a predominant binding to coding sequences (CDS) of protein-coding genes. This was followed up by extensive motif analysis which revealed a so far, in human, unknown purine-rich binding motif. SRSF6 seemed to specifically recognize repetitions of the triplet GAA. I also showed that the number of contiguous triplets correlated with increasing binding site strength. I further integrated RNA-sequencing data from the same cell type, with SRSF6 in KD and in basal conditions, to analyze SRSF6- related splicing changes. I showed that the exact positioning of SRSF6 on alternatively spliced exons regulates the produced transcript isoforms. This mechanism seemed to control exons in several known susceptibility genes for diabetes.
In summary, in my PhD thesis, I presented a comprehensive workflow for the processing of iCLIP-derived sequencing data. I applied this pipeline on a dataset from pancreatic beta-cells to unveil the impact of SRSF6-mediated splicing changes. Thus, my analysis provides novel insights into the regulation of diabetes susceptibility genes.
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.
As abundant carbohydrates in renewable feedstocks, such as pectin-rich and lignocellulosic hydrolysates, the pentoses arabinose and xylose are regarded as important substrates for production of biofuels and chemicals by engineered microbial hosts. Their efficient transport across the cellular membrane is a prerequisite for economically viable fermentation processes. Thus, there is a need for transporter variants exhibiting a high transport rate of pentoses, especially in the presence of glucose, another major constituent of biomass-based feedstocks. Here, we describe a variant of the galactose permease Gal2 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Gal2N376Y/M435I), which is fully insensitive to competitive inhibition by glucose, but, at the same time, exhibits an improved transport capacity for xylose compared to the wildtype protein. Due to this unique property, it significantly reduces the fermentation time of a diploid industrial yeast strain engineered for efficient xylose consumption in mixed glucose/xylose media. When the N376Y/M435I mutations are introduced into a Gal2 variant resistant to glucose-induced degradation, the time necessary for the complete consumption of xylose is reduced by approximately 40%. Moreover, Gal2N376Y/M435I confers improved growth of engineered yeast on arabinose. Therefore, it is a valuable addition to the toolbox necessary for valorization of complex carbohydrate mixtures.
Natural products can contribute to abiotic stress tolerance in plants and fungi. We hypothesize that biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs), the genomic elements that underlie natural product biosynthesis, display structured differences along elevation gradients. We analysed biosynthetic gene variation in natural populations of the lichen-forming fungus Umbilicaria pustulata. We collected a total of 600 individuals from the Mediterranean and cold-temperate climates. Population genomic analyses indicate that U. pustulata contains three clusters that are highly differentiated between the Mediterranean and cold-temperate populations. One entire cluster is exclusively present in cold-temperate populations, and a second cluster is putatively dysfunctional in all cold-temperate populations. In the third cluster variation is fixed in all cold-temperate populations due to hitchhiking. In these two clusters the presence of consistent allele frequency differences among replicate populations/gradients suggests that selection rather than drift is driving the pattern. We advocate that the landscape of fungal biosynthetic genes is shaped by both positive and hitchhiking selection. We demonstrate, for the first time, the presence of climate-associated BGCs and BGC variations in lichen-forming fungi. While the associated secondary metabolites of the candidate clusters are presently unknown, our study paves the way for targeted discovery of natural products with ecological significance.
White stork (Ciconia ciconia) nestlings can provide quantitative information on the quality of the surrounding environment by indicating the presence of pollutants, as they depend on locally foraged food. This study represents the first comparison of biomarkers in two fractions of white stork nestling blood: plasma and S9 (the post-mitochondrial fraction). The aim of this study was to evaluate acetylcholinesterase (AChE), carboxylesterase (CES), glutathione S-transferase (GST), and glutathione reductase (GR), as well as to establish a novel fluorescence-based method for glutathione (GSH) and reactive oxygen species (ROS) detection in plasma and S9. Considering the enzymatic biomarkers, lower variability in plasma was detected only for AChE, as CES, GST, and GR had lower variability in S9. Enzyme activity was higher in plasma for AChE, CES, and GST, while GR had higher activity in S9. Regarding the fluorescence-based method, lower variability was detected in plasma for GSH and ROS, although higher GSH detection was reported in S9, and higher ROS was detected in plasma. The present study indicated valuable differences by successfully establishing protocols for biomarker measurement in plasma and S9 based on variability, enzyme activity, and fluorescence. For a better understanding of the environmental effects on nestlings’ physiological condition, biomarkers can be measured in plasma and S9.
The geomagnetic field provides directional information for birds. The avian magnetic compass is an inclination compass that uses not the polarity of the magnetic field but the axial course of the field lines and their inclination in space. It works in a flexible functional window, and it requires short-wavelength light. These characteristics result from the underlying sensory mechanism based on radical pair processes in the eyes, with cryptochrome suggested as the receptor molecule. The chromophore of cryptochrome, flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD), undergoes a photocycle, where radical pairs are formed during photo-reduction as well as during re-oxidation; behavioral data indicate that the latter is crucial for detecting magnetic directions. Five types of cryptochromes are found in the retina of birds: cryptochrome 1a (Cry1a), cryptochrome 1b, cryptochrome 2, cryptochrome 4a, and cryptochrome 4b. Because of its location in the outer segments of the ultraviolet cones with their clear oil droplets, Cry1a appears to be the most likely receptor molecule for magnetic compass information.
Although macroecology is a well-established field, much remains to be learned about the large-scale variation of fungal traits. We conducted a global analysis of mean fruit body size of 59 geographical regions worldwide, comprising 5340 fungal species exploring the response of fruit body size to latitude, resource availability and temperature. The results showed a hump-shaped relationship between mean fruit body size and distance to the equator. Areas with large fruit bodies were characterised by a high seasonality and an intermediate mean temperature. The responses of mutualistic species and saprotrophs were similar. These findings support the resource availability hypothesis, predicting large fruit bodies due to a seasonal resource surplus, and the thermoregulation hypothesis, according to which small fruit bodies offer a strategy to avoid heat and cold stress and therefore occur at temperature extremes. Fruit body size may thus be an adaptive trait driving the large-scale distribution of fungal species.
In recent years, the popularity of rock-climbing has grown tremendously, setting an increasing pressure on cliff habitats. Climbing may be particularly harmful in the Mediterranean biome due to its appropriate environmental conditions for climbing. A few studies have identified the effect of climbing on plant diversity at a small-scale (namely locally or even just in specific climbing areas). However, no studies exist assessing the potential risk of rock-climbing on a broad-scale (e.g., regional or national). The study aims to identify the priority locations and priority cliff plant species in Spain to focus future study efforts. Spain was selected because it is a plant biodiversity hotspot, with a great diversity of endemic and endangered species, and one of the most popular destinations for climbers. We used a geographic information system-based approach to model the spatial concurrence among Spanish climbing areas (and climbing intensity), natural protected areas (NPAs), and distribution of threatened cliff plants (and their IUCN threat category). We found that 53.5% of climbing areas in Spain are located within a NPA, most of them falling into NPAs of medium protection level. We mapped 151 threatened cliff plants, identifying four medium priority Mediterranean locations and eight priority species in which future research efforts should be focused. High-priority study locations are absent in Spain according to our spatial modeling. For the first time on a national scale, this study identifies areas in which climbing represents a potential threat for cliff habitats and threatened plants. These findings contribute to designing field studies on the effects of rock-climbing on Mediterranean cliffs, laying the groundwork for a sustainable, yet challenging, balance between the protection of these unique habitats and rock-climbing.
Until quite recently, stem cell technology mainly focused on pure populations of embryonic stem cells (ES) derived from the inner cell mass of the blastocyst and induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS). Using organoids, a newly established culture technique, it is now possible to culture also organ and patient-specific adult stem (AS) and induced pluripotent stem (IPS) cells in vitro. Furthermore, it has been shown that adult stem cells, grown as organoids, are genetically stable, proliferate and maintain their multi-potency (often a bi-potency) for months. This is possible by providing conditions that recapitulate the stem cell niche of the corresponding organ. Particularly, defined growth factors and a physiological scaffold, which is provided by an extracellular matrix (ECM). Because of increasing research activities, organoids became influential in the recent years. Wide-ranging interest also led to a clearer definition: organoids must contain multiple organ-specific cell types, must be able to recapitulate some organ specific functions, and the cells must be spatially organized in a way similar to the organ they are derived from. The excitement about organoids is based on their high potential as a model to understand wound healing, cellular behaviour and differentiation processes in organogenesis. Furthermore, high potential in the drug development and in personalized stem cell therapeutic approaches has been shown. Specifically, for personalized stem cell therapy, one potential application is for chronic autoimmune diseases such as Diabetes type 1 (T1D). T1D is characterized by the immune-mediated destruction of ß-cells in the Pancreas that leads to absolute insulin deficiency. In T1D the first-line therapeutic approach is exogenous insulin replacement therapy, which always implicates the risk of high fluctuations in blood-sugar levels and therefore the risk of hypoglycaemia. Another therapeutic approach is the xenotransplantation of islets from human donors. A successful islet transplantation allows patients a years-long insulin independence. However, the therapeutic value of islet transplantation is highly limited by the availability of organ donors and by the need for chronic administration of immune suppressive medication. The use of pancreas organoids offers a promising alternative as a personalized cell therapeutic approach to treat T1D without the hypoglycaemia risks of the established therapies. In 2013 Meritxell Huch and colleagues established for the first-time organoids from the exocrine, ductal part of the pancreas. These pancreas organoids are characterized by a monolayered, spherical cell epithelium which comprises a liquid filled lumen. In addition, they showed that after transplantation of these cells into immunodeficient mice, they differentiate into ß-cells and cure T1D. However, basic knowledge of the culture growth behaviour is still lacking: to date, no growth parameters are defined and reliable and robust investigation approaches are still missing. Furthermore, basic knowledge about the organoid development and biochemical/biophysical mechanisms that generate the phenotypic structure are not identified. For a clinical approach these parameters are fundamental and therefore must be defined pre-clinically.
The aim of this study is the preclinical characterization of the hPOs...
Coupling between epidermis and amphid morphogenesis during embryonic development of C. elegans
(2021)
Sensory organs are fundamental for survival of animal populations, since the detection of environmental stimuli is crucial for localization of nourishment, predators or mating partners. In nematodes, the amphid (AM) sensilla are the largest sensory organs for detection of chemical compounds.
This study investigates how the AM sensilla acquire their special elongated shape during lima-bean to 1.5-fold embryonic stages of C. elegans head development. The dissertation also examines events facilitating the morphogenesis of other head sensilla (IL/OL/CEP) and addresses aspects of general embryonic head morphogenesis. Using high resolution live-cell imaging techniques with different combinations of markers highlighting specific tissues, this study shows that epidermal head enclosure, migration of AM socket cells (pores) and translocation of AM dendrite tips are coupled processes, facilitating the elongation of AM dendrites. Importantly, during AM dendrite elongation the AM neural cell bodies are staying stationary. Manipulation through conducting UV-Laser ablation (epidermis close to pore/pore) and RPN-6.1 dsRNA interference resulted in compromised AM pore migration and impaired dendrite elongation. This leads to the conclusion that AM pores need to be physically attached (through C. elegans apical junctions, CeAJ) to the migrating epidermal sheet and to AM dendrite tips for successful AM morphogenesis. This study infers that RPN-6.1 plays an important role for correct AM pore morphogenesis and AM pore to AM dendrite tip attachment. Our results lead to the conclusion that head enclosure drives AM pore migration and AM dendrite elongation with AM neural cell bodies staying stationary. Thereby, CeAJ are interconnecting AM dendrite tips to AM pores and CeAJ link the sensillar ending to the migrating epidermis. Thus, migration of attached target tissue (pore), with neural cell bodies staying stationary (constituting an abutment), creates a pulling force facilitating AM dendrite elongation. This passive neurite elongation procedure is coined dendrite towing in this study.
Additionally, this study discovers that translocation of IL, OL and CEP head sensilla pores is influenced by apical constriction. This conclusion was made based on the findings that IL/OL/CEP pores migrate towards the prospective mouth anterior to the epidermal leading edge, separated from AM pores and irrespective of highly impaired AM sensilla morphogenesis after strong RPN-6.1 depletion. Also, concurrent with translocation of IL/OL/CEP pores, bottle-shaped cells occur and non-muscle-myosin and apical polarity factors are getting enriched at the anterior most part of the head, indicating de-novo manifestation of apical constriction. It is furthermore assumed that apical constriction in arcade cells might contribute to early pharynx development. All in all, this study reveals two force-generating events: Head enclosure-driven AM sensilla morphogenesis via dendrite towing and, otherwise, apical constriction-facilitated translocation of IL/OL/CEP sensilla pores. These events can get separated by graded depletion of the proteasome activator RPN-6.1.
Eine große Gruppe von Aptameren sind die Guanosintriphosphat (GTP) Aptamere. Diese zeigt sehr eindrücklich, wie RNA unterschiedliche Strategien nutzt, um denselben Liganden zu erkennen. Die komplette Struktur des GTP Klasse II Aptamers wird in der ersten Publikation gezeigt. Interessanterweise zeichnet die Struktur ein stabil protoniertes Adenine unterhalb der GTP-Bindestelle aus. Dieses wurde durch eine Kombination aus weiterführenden NMR- und ITC-Experimente untersucht und charakterisiert. Es zeigte sich, dass die protonierte Base einen pKs-Wert hat, der weit von der Neutralität verschoben ist. Die Protonierung ist auch noch bei sehr basischen Puffern stabil.
Eine Art der funktionellen Protonierung wird von den zyklischen di-Nukleotiden (CDN) bindenden Riboswitches genutzt, um zwei CDN mit ähnlicher Affinität zu binden. c-di-GMP Riboswitches wurden als regulatorische Einheit beschrieben und deren Kristallstruktur aufgeklärt. Mutationsexperimente führten dazu, dass bei einer G-zu-A Mutation an der Gα-Bindestelle die Selektivität des Riboswitches verändert wurde. Die Mutante bindet sowohl c-di-GMP als auch cGAMP mit ähnlichen Bindungsaffinitäten. Riboswitche, die cGAMP binden wurden auch in der bakteriellen Genomen gefunden. Hierbei ist die Promiskuität unterschiedlich stark ausgeprägt. Die Untersuchung des Bindungsmodus und der damit verbundenen Promiskuität ist in der zweiten Publikation beschrieben. Hier wurde gezeigt, dass die Riboswitche beide Liganden nur binden können, wenn zur Bindung von c-di-GMP das Ligand bindende A protoniert vorliegt. Auch diese Protonierung konnte mit weiterführenden NMR- und ITC-Experimenten charakterisiert werden. Die Untersuchungen einer solch großen RNA sind mit NMR Spektroskopie herausfordernd. Hierbei wurde ausgenutzt, dass die Kristallstruktur bereits bekannt war, welche allerdings die Protonierung nicht zeigte. Auch diese Protonierung zeigt einen pKs-Wert, der weit von der Neutralität verschoben ist und außerdem bei unterschiedlichen pH stabil ist.
In den beiden untersuchten Beispielen wurden zwei verschiedene Arten von Protonierung gezeigt: eine strukturelle und eine funktionelle. Das GTP Klasse II Aptamer benutzt die Protonierung als strukturelle Basis für die Basis der Ligandenbindungsstelle. Hierbei werden durch die Protonierung des Adenines mehr nutzbare Wasserstoffbrücken ausgebildet und damit die Tertiärstruktur stabilisiert. Im Unterschied dazu nutzen die promiskuitiven CDN Ribsowicthes die Protonierung, um verschiedene Liganden binden zu können und es kommt damit zu einer Verschiebung der Funktionalität. Der regulatorische Nutzen dafür ist allerdings noch unbekannt.
Auch bei den SAM Riboswitches wurde ein promiskuitiver Vertreter beschrieben. SAM Riboswitches gehören zu den am längsten bekannten Klassen der Riboswitches. Bis heute sind hier die meisten unterschiedlichen Klassen bekannt. SAM wird häufig als Donor für funktionelle Gruppen benutzt, besonders häufig als Methlygruppendonor für die Methylierung einer Reihe unterschiedlicher Substrate (z.B. DNA, Proteine, Metabolite etc.). Bei dieser Reaktion entsteht SAH als Nebenprodukt. Zusätzlich ist SAH zelltoxisch, da es affin an Methyltransferasen bindet und damit diese essenzielle Reaktion inhibiert. Eine enge Kontrolle der SAH-Konzentration ist daher kritisch. SAM bindende Riboswitches haben zu SAM eine bis zu 1000-fach höhere Bindungsaffinität im Vergleich zu SAH. Die Beschreibung eines translationalen OFF-Riboswitches, der SAM und SAH mit ähnlicher Affinität bindet, ist daher überraschend. Zumal seine Genassoziation fast ausschließlich zu SAM Synthetasen ist, deren Regulation durch SAH wenig sinnvoll erscheint. Um ein besseres Verständnis für die Funktion des SAM/SAH Riboswitches zu erhalten, wurde seine 3D-Struktur mittels NMR-Spektroskopie aufgeklärt, wie in der vierten Publikation beschrieben. Dafür mussten zunächst alle Resonanzen der Sequenz und dem Liganden zugeordnet werden, wie in der dritten Publikation beschrieben. Dabei wurde als Ligand SAH gewählt, da dieser chemisch stabiler und damit für die teils tagelangen NMR-Messungen besser geeignet ist. Zusätzlich wurden Mutanten bzw. verwandte Liganden mittels ITC Experimente auf ihre Bindungseigenschaften untersucht, um die Bedeutung der Linkerlänge, einzelner Basenpaare und funktionelle Gruppen des Liganden zu untersuchen. Bei anderen bekannten SAM Riboswitches umschließt die RNA den Liganden fast komplett. Dabei wird zum einem das Sulfoniumion spezifisch durch die Carboxylgruppen verschiedener Uracil-Nukleotide erkennt und koordiniert. Außerdem bildet sich eine Bindetasche aus, die genug Platz für die stabile Bindung der Methylgruppe hat. Beim SAH Riboswitch wird die Selektivität für SAH dadurch erreicht, dass die Bindetasche sterisch keinen Platz für die Methylgruppe von SAM bereitstellt.
Zusammenfassend wurden in dieser Arbeit drei verschiedene Ligand bindende RNA-Strukturen untersucht, die alle sehr unterschiedliche Strategien zur Bindung der Liganden nutzen. Obwohl Portionierungen bei Aptameren und Riboswitches selten beschrieben wurden, haben sie eine maßgebliche Funktion in den beiden zuerst untersuchten Strukturen. Obwohl bisher im Hinblick auf alle bekannten RNA Strukturen eher selten beschrieben, gibt es doch neben den genannten zwei, einige Beispiele für strukturelle oder funktionelle Protonierungen. Auch in Hinblick auf zukünftige bzw. Verbesserung bestehender RNA-Strukturvorhersage-Programme ähnlich wie sie für Proteine schon lange nutzt werden, müssen protonierte Nukleobasen ernsthaft in Betracht gezogen werden. Außerdem konnte gezeigt werden, dass zwei der untersuchten Riboswitches zwei Liganden mit ähnlicher Affinität binden. Die genutzte Strategie ist hierbei unterschiedlich. Während bei den promiskuitiven CDN Riboswitches der regulatorische Nutzen noch unbekannt ist, konnte für den SAM/SAH Ribsowitch gezeigt werden, dass SAH nur zufällig aufgrund der wahrscheinlich sehr niedrigen intrazellulären Konzentration gebunden wird und dieser daher wahrscheinlich später in der evolutionären Entwicklung entstanden ist. Riboswitches halten es weiterhin spannend.
Despite all advancements in cancer research and clinical practice, cancer remains a life- threatening disease with an increasing incidence. According to a 2018 WHO forecast, cancer incidence will double to approximately 37 million new cancer cases by 2040. Today, clinical management of cancer is based on a "one-fits-all" strategy. Most cancers are still treated by surgical therapy followed by adjuvant or neoadjuvant chemotherapy based on rather strict guidelines (S3 guidelines in Europe) which are based on studies of large cohorts of patients with the same tumor entity. While this approach has led to substantial increases in progression-free survival and overall patient survival, most patients do not benefit from the administered treatment regimen. One reason for this is intra-tumor heterogeneity, which results from clonal evolution between cancer cells and their environment. This means that cancer patients may respond differently to a particular drug due to the different mutation patterns of their tumor cells. Therefore, patients should be screened in advance for reliable cancer biomarkers that definitively predict whether they will respond to a particular therapy. This would increase the probability of a successful treatment.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most diagnosed cancer and the second leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide. The main cause of death in CRC is a metastatic disease, which is presented in 20 % of patients and eventually develops in more than 30 % of early-stage patients. Despite the significant increase (to more than 30 months) in median survival with the development of cytotoxic agents and the introduction of targeted therapy, the progression-free survival in the first-line setting has remained largely unchanged over the past decade.
The heterogeneity in CRC is characterized by alterations in multiple signaling pathways that affect cellular functions such as cell proliferation or apoptosis. Commonly affected signaling pathways include the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)- and the transforming growth factor-β/bone morphogenetic protein (TGF-β/BMP)-pathway. Alterations in the TGF-β/BMP pathway, due to mutations in the SMAD4 gene (mothers against decapentaplegic homolog 4), are associated with different drug response and promote resistance to chemotherapy. In addition, they are associated with a higher recurrence rate.
SMAD4 is one of the most common cancer driver genes, and mutations occur in up to 15 % of CRC cases. Therefore, there is an urgent need for therapeutic agents that can specifically target SMAD4-mutated tumors.
The aim of the present study was the identification of the clinical relevance of the SMAD4 gene and the investigation of its suitability as a potential biomarker in CRC.
For this purpose, I investigated sibling patient-derived organoids (PDOs) derived from different regions of a chemo-naïve CRC tumor. PDOs are 3D cell cultures that reliably recapitulate the architecture of the tissue of origin, as well as preserve the genomic background and intra-tumor heterogeneity. The sibling PDOs (R1R361H and R4wt) shared the most common CRC mutations, such as KRASG12D (kirsten rat sarcoma), PIK3CAH1047R (phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase, catalytic subunit alpha), and TP53C242F (tumor protein 53), but differed in a SMAD4R361H mutation and showed a different drug response. The single nucleotide variant R361H of the SMAD4 gene is among the most common pathogenic alterations in various cancers, including CRC.
The sibling PDOs showed significant differences in response to the MEK-inhibitors cobimetinib, trametinib, and selumetinib. MEK-inhibitors are antineoplastic agents that inhibit the function of MEK1 and MEK2, preventing phosphorylation of transcription factors, which leads to inhibition of tumor cell proliferation. MEK-inhibitors are approved for the treatment of malignant melanoma. Currently, they are in phase-III clinical trials for the treatment of patients with metastatic CRC.
To investigate whether SMAD4R361H is responsible for sensitivity to MEK-inhibitors, Iestablished three syngeneic PDOs harboring a SMAD4R361H mutation using the CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing system. All CRISPR-PDOs were significantly more sensitive to the MEK-inhibitors, compared to R4wt. I have shown that the SMAD4R361H mutation is responsible for sensitivity to MEK inhibition in CRC models and may be a predictive biomarker.
To test this hypothesis, I examined 62 CRC PDO models and treated them with the MEK-inhibitors cobimetinib, trametinib, and selumetinib. All models that had a pathogenic mutation or deletion in the SMAD4 gene (15 %) were sensitive to cobimetinib, 10 % of models were sensitive to trametinib, and 8 % were sensitive to selumetinib.
I performed transcriptome (RNA sequencing) and proteome analyses using the DigiWest® method to investigate the mechanism underlying MEK-inhibitor sensitivity.
DigiWest® is a Luminex® bead-based analysis that allows the simultaneous analysis of over 100 (phospho-)proteins. The transcriptome and proteome data support the observation that MEK inhibition primarily affects SMAD4R361H PDOs. Furthermore, I have shown that activation of the BMP signaling pathway in organoids with wild-type SMAD4 appears to be responsible for resistance to MEK-inhibitors. Thus, a genetic alteration in the BMP signaling pathway, beyond SMAD4, could lead to sensitivity to MEK-inhibitors.
I identified four genes involved in the TGF-β/BMP signaling pathway that are frequently mutated in CRC and grouped them into the so-called SFAB-signature (SMAD4, FBXW7 (F-box/WD repeat-containing protein 7), ARID1A (AT-rich interactive domain-containing protein 1A), or BMPR2 (Bone morphogenetic protein receptor type II). Clinical data show that approximately 36 % of CRC patients have at least one pathogenic mutation in these genes.
I tested all 62 CRC PDO models and found a significant positive prediction for sensitivity to cobimetinib (95 %) and selumetinib (70 %) for the SFAB-signature. Trametinib and the newly approved MEK-inhibitor binimetinib showed a similar trend. Therefore, the SFAB-signature has high predictive power for response to MEK-inhibitors and could be used as a predictive biomarker panel.
The current clinically used biomarkers for CRC are based on the mutation status of driver genes KRAS and BRAF, which are present in up to 50 % and 10 % of CRC, respectively. Investigation of molecular alterations in CRC revealed that mutations in the KRAS gene, which is downstream of EGFR (epidermal growth factor receptor) in the MAPK-pathway, interfere with an anti-EGFR-antibody therapy (e.g., cetuximab). Therefore, cetuximab is only relevant for RAS wild-type tumors. However, approximately 40 % of patients with RAS wild-type status do not respond to this treatment.
About 53 % of CRC PDO models carry a pathogenic RAS mutation, about 10 % harbor a pathogenic BRAF mutation. Both, the RAS and RAF status alone as well as the combination of RAS and RAF status with SFAB-signature did not provide a better prediction of sensitivity to MEK inhibition.
Climatic niches describe the climatic conditions in which species can persist. Shifts in climatic niches have been observed to coincide with major climatic change, suggesting that species adapt to new conditions. We test the relationship between rates of climatic niche evolution and paleoclimatic conditions through time for 65 Old-World flycatcher species (Aves: Muscicapidae). We combine niche quantification for all species with dated phylogenies to infer past changes in the rates of niche evolution for temperature and precipitation niches. Paleoclimatic conditions were inferred independently using two datasets: a paleoelevation reconstruction and the mammal fossil record. We find changes in climatic niches through time, but no or weak support for a relationship between niche evolution rates and rates of paleoclimatic change for both temperature and precipitation niche and for both reconstruction methods. In contrast, the inferred relationship between climatic conditions and niche evolution rates depends on paleoclimatic reconstruction method: rates of temperature niche evolution are significantly negatively related to absolute temperatures inferred using the paleoelevation model but not those reconstructed from the fossil record. We suggest that paleoclimatic change might be a weak driver of climatic niche evolution in birds and highlight the need for greater integration of different paleoclimate reconstructions.
Thermoanaerobacter kivui ist ein thermophiles acetogenes Bakterium, das chemolithoautotroph auf CO2 unter Verwendung von molekularem H2 als Elektronendonor wächst und Acetat als Produkt über den Wood-Ljungdahl-Weg (WLP) bildet. Im WLP werden 2 Mol CO2 reduziert, um ein Mol Acetyl-CoA zu bilden. Erste Studien wurden durchgeführt, um die Physiologie von T. kivui zu verstehen. T. kivui wächst autotroph auf H2 + CO2 und nach Adaptation auch auf CO oder Syngas. T. kivui wächst ebenfalls auch in Minimalmedium ohne weitere Zugabe von Vitaminen, was es zu einem Biokatalysator mit hohem Potenzial für die Produktion von Chemikalien mit hohem Mehrwert macht. Heterotroph wächst T. kivui auf Glucose, Fructose, Mannose, Pyruvat oder Formiat. Kürzlich wurde beschrieben, dass T. kivui in der Lage ist, auf dem Zuckeralkohol Mannitol in Gegenwart und Abwesenheit von HCO3- (oder externem CO2) zu wachsen. Allerdings war das Wachstum in Abwesenheit von externem CO2 deutlich verlangsamt. Daher wurde in dieser Studie getestet, ob eine Zugabe von externem Formiat das "fehlende" CO2 kompensieren kann. In Kombination mit Formiat wurde das Wachstum auf Mannitol in CO2 und HCO3- freien definierten Medien bis zu einer maximalen OD600 von 2,34 und mit einer Verdopplungszeit von 2,0 ± 0,0 stimuliert, was dem Wachstumsverhalten auf Mannitol in Anwesenheit von CO2/HCO3- entsprach. In Abwesenheit von Formiat (oder CO2) erreichte T. kivui nur eine endgültige optische Dichte von bis zu 0,7 mit einer verlängerten Verdoppelungszeit von 5,2 ± 0,2 Stunden. Dieses Experiment zeigte die höhe metabolische Flexibilität von T. kivui durch die Nutzung von Formiat als Elektronenakzeptor, wenn kein oder nur wenig CO2 vorhanden ist.
Genomanalysen ergaben, dass T. kivui ein Trehalose- und Maltose-Transportsystem-Permeaseprotein (MalF) besitzt. Darüber hinaus verfügt T. kivui über Trehalose- und Maltosehydrolase-Gene, die als Kojibiose-Phosphorylase annotiert sind. Obwohl in der Originalveröffentlichung beschrieben wurde, dass der Organismus nicht auf Maltose oder Trehalose wachsen kann, konnte T. kivui im Laufe dieser Arbeit an das Wachstum auf Maltose und Trehalose adaptiert werden. Nach dem Transfer von einer Glukose-Vorkultur auf ein Medium mit 25 mM Maltose oder 25 mM Trehalose als alleinige C-Quelle wurde kein Wachstum erzielt. Bei Verwendung der gleichen Vorkultur in einem Medium mit höherer Konzentration (50 mM) Maltose oder Trehalose, begannen die Zellen zu wachsen. Bei Verwendung dieser adaptierten kulturen als Vorkultur wuchsen die Zellen in Gegenwart von in 25 mM Maltose oder Trehalose bis zu einer maximalen OD600 von 1,12 bzw. 0,73. Die Adaptation hing mit der Tatsache zusammen, dass der Organismus eine höhere Konzentration benötigt, um sich an diese Kohlenstoffquellen zu gewöhnen. Durch diese Daten wird das heterotrophe Potenzial von T. kivui erhöht.
Um die Bedeutung der wasserstoffabhängigen Kohlendioxidreduktase (HDCR) während des Wachstums auf Formiat oder auf H2 + CO2 im Stoffwechsel von T. kivui zu verstehen, wurden Studien auf molekularer Ebene durchgeführt. Die HDCR nutzt H2 direkt für die Reduktion von CO2 zu Formiat im ersten Schritt des Wood-Ljungdahl-Wegs (WLP). Um die Rolle der HDCR in dieser Reaktion zu untersuchen, wurde das hdcr-Gencluster mit Hilfe des kürzlich entwickelten Mutagenesytems für T. kivui deletiert. In Wachstumstudien konnte anschliessend gezeigt werden, dass die ߡhdcr-Deletionsmutante nicht mehr auf Formiat oder H2 + CO2 als alleiniger Kohlenstoffquelle wachsen konnte. Nach Komplementation der Mutante mit dem hdcr-Gene in cis wuchsen die Kulture wieder auf Formiat oder H2 + CO2. Diese Experimente zeigten, dass die HDCR für das Wachstum auf H2 + CO2 oder Formiat essentiell ist. Interessanterweise konnte in der ߡhdcr-Mutante ebenfalls ein verändertes Wachstum auf Glukose als alleiniger C-Quelle festgestellt werden. Die T. kivui ߡhdcr-Mutante wuchs nur bis zu einer OD600 von 0,2, während der Wildtyp und der hdcr-komplementierte Stamm bis zu einer OD600 von 2,64 bzw. 2,4 wuchsen. Damit wurde bewiesen, dass die HDCR auch für die vollständige Glukoseoxidation in T. kivui erforderlich ist. Durch die Zugabe von Formiat wurde das Wachstum vollständig wiederhergestellt, ähnlich wie beim Wildtyp. Dies belegt wieder die Nutzung Formiat als terminalen Elektronenakzeptor. Auch auf Mannitol oder Pyruvat konnte die Mutanten nur in Gegenwart von Formiat wachsen. Der Substratverbrauch und die Produktbildung der T. kivui ߡhdcr-Mutante wurden in einem Zellsuspensionsexperiment untersucht. Die Zellen verbrauchten Formiat nur in Gegenwart von Glukose und produzierten Acetat mit einem Acetat/Substrat-Verhältnis von etwas mehr als 3,0, während die Acetatproduktion nur 12 mM betrug, wenn Glukose als alleiniges Substrat verwendet wurde. Diese Ergebnisse zeigen eine enge Kopplung der Oxidation von Multikohlenstoffsubstraten an den WLP.
T. kivui ist eines der wenigen Acetogenen, die CO als einzige Kohlenstoff- und Energiequelle nutzen können. ...
In times of global warming caused by the extensive use of fossil fuels, the need to capture gaseous carbon compounds is growing bigger. Several groups of microorganisms can fix the greenhouse gas CO2. Out of these, acetogenic bacteria are role models in their ability to reduce CO2 with hydrogen to acetate, which makes acetogens prime candidates for genetic modification towards biotechnological production of value-added compounds from CO2, such as biofuels. However, growth of acetogens on gaseous substrates is strongly energy-limited, and successful metabolic engineering requires a detailed knowledge of the bioenergetics. In 1939, Clostridium aceticum was the first acetogen to be described. A recent genomic study revealed that this organism contains cytochromes and therefore may use a proton gradient in its respiratory chain. We have followed up these studies and will present data that C. aceticum does not use a H+ but a Na+ gradient for ATP synthesis, established by a Na+-Rnf. Experimental data and in silico analyses enabled us to propose the biochemistry and bioenergetics of acetogenesis from H2 + CO2 in C. aceticum.
Vocal communication is essential to coordinate social interactions in mammals and it requires a fine discrimination of communication sounds. Auditory neurons can exhibit selectivity for specific calls, but how it is affected by preceding sounds is still debated. We tackled this using ethologically relevant vocalizations in a highly vocal mammalian species: Seba’s short-tailed bat. We show that cortical neurons present several degrees of selectivity for echolocation and distress calls. Embedding vocalizations within natural acoustic streams leads to stimulus-specific suppression of neuronal responses that changes sound selectivity in disparate manners: increases in neurons with poor discriminability in silence and decreases in neurons selective in silent settings. A computational model indicates that the observed effects arise from two forms of adaptation: presynaptic frequency specific adaptation acting in cortical inputs and stimulus unspecific postsynaptic adaptation. These results shed light into how acoustic context modulates natural sound discriminability in the mammalian cortex.
Pectin-rich residues are considered as promising feedstocks for sustainable production of platform chemicals. Enzymatic hydrolysis of extracted sugar beet press pulp (SBPP) releases the main constituent of pectin, d-galacturonic acid (d-GalA). Using engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae, d-GalA is then reduced to l-galactonate (l-GalOA) with sorbitol as co-substrate. The current work addresses the combination of enzymatic hydrolysis of pectin in SBPP with a consecutive optimized biotransformation of the released d-GalA to l-GalOA in simple batch processes in stirred-tank bioreactors. Process conditions were first identified with synthetic media, where a product concentration of 9.9 g L-1 L-GalOA was obtained with a product selectivity of 99% (L-GalOA D-GalA-1) at pH 5 with 4% (w/v) sorbitol within 48 h. A very similar batch process performance with a product selectivity of 97% was achieved with potassium citrate buffered SBPP hydrolysate, demonstrating for the first time direct production of L-GalOA from hydrolyzed biomass using engineered S. cerevisiae. Combining the hydrolysis process of extracted SBPP and the biotransformation process with engineered S. cerevisiae paves the way towards repurposing pectin-rich residues as substrates for value-added chemicals.
High-temperature tolerant enzymes offer multiple advantages over enzymes from mesophilic organisms for the industrial production of sustainable chemicals due to high specific activities and stabilities towards fluctuations in pH, heat, and organic solvents. The production of molecular hydrogen (H2) is of particular interest because of the multiple uses of hydrogen in energy and chemicals applications, and the ability of hydrogenase enzymes to reduce protons to H2 at a cathode. We examined the activity of Hydrogen-Dependent CO2 Reductase (HDCR) from the thermophilic bacterium Thermoanaerobacter kivui when immobilized in a redox polymer, cobaltocene-functionalized polyallylamine (Cc-PAA), on a cathode for enzyme-mediated H2 formation from electricity. The presence of Cc-PAA increased reductive current density 340-fold when used on an electrode with HDCR at 40 °C, reaching unprecedented current densities of up to 3 mA·cm−2 with minimal overpotential and high faradaic efficiency. In contrast to other hydrogenases, T. kivui HDCR showed substantial reversibility of CO-dependent inactivation, revealing an opportunity for usage in gas mixtures containing CO, such as syngas. This study highlights the important potential of combining redox polymers with novel enzymes from thermophiles for enhanced electrosynthesis.
Biological and environmental factors as sources of variation in nocturnal behavior of giraffe
(2021)
Upon a drastic decline of the giraffe population in the wild, conservation efforts and therefore the role of zoos have become more important than ever. With their unique opportunities, zoos provide excellent conditions to study animal behavior, expanding the knowledge about the giraffe's behavior repertoire and their ability to adapt. This study therefore examined the nocturnal behavior of 63 giraffe living in 13 different EAZA zoos across Germany and the Netherlands. Giraffe were observed and videos recorded via infrared sensitive cameras during the winter seasons 2015–2018. The observation period spanned nightly from 17:00 to 7:00. Thus, 198 nights, with a total of 2772 h were recorded and analyzed. Linear mixed models were then used to assess potential biological and environmental factors influencing behavior during the dark phase. Results show that individual variables such as age, subspecies and motherhood determined nocturnal activity and sleep behavior most. Among the variables studied, husbandry conditions and environmental factors complying with EAZA standards had no influence on the giraffe's nocturnal behavior. By combining nocturnal activity analyses and an assessment of potential influencing factors, our findings present a holistic approach to a better understanding of captive giraffe behavior and allow for management implications.
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.
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Objectives: The four-dimensional ultrasound (4D-US) enables imaging of the aortic segment and simultaneous determination of the wall expansion. The method shows a high spatial and temporal resolution, but its in vivo reliability is so far unknown for low-measure values. The present study determines the intraobserver repeatability and interobserver reproducibility of 4D-US in the atherosclerotic and non-atherosclerotic infrarenal aorta. Methods: In all, 22 patients with non-aneurysmal aorta were examined by an experienced examiner and a medical student. After registration of 4D images, both the examiners marked the aortic wall manually before the commercially implemented speckle tracking algorithm was applied. The cyclic changes of the aortic diameter and circumferential strain were determined with the help of custom-made software. The reliability of 4D-US was tested by the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). Results: The 4D-US measurements showed very good reliability for the maximum aortic diameter and the circumferential strain for all patients and for the non-atherosclerotic aortae (ICC >0.7), but low reliability for circumferential strain in calcified aortae (ICC = 0.29). The observer- and masking-related variances for both maximum diameter and circumferential strain were close to zero. Conclusions: Despite the low-measured values, the high spatial and temporal resolution of the 4D-US enables a reliable evaluation of cyclic diameter changes and circumferential strain in non-aneurysmal aortae independent from the observer experience but with some limitations for calcified aortae. The 4D-US opens up a new perspective with regard to noninvasive, in vivo assessment of kinematic properties of the vessel wall in the abdominal aorta.
The accumulation of functionally impaired mitochondria is a key event in aging. Previous works with the fungal aging model Podospora anserina demonstrated pronounced age-dependent changes of mitochondrial morphology and ultrastructure, as well as alterations of transcript and protein levels, including individual proteins of the oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS). The identified protein changes do not reflect the level of the whole protein complexes as they function in-vivo. In the present study, we investigated in detail the age-dependent changes of assembled mitochondrial protein complexes, using complexome profiling. We observed pronounced age-depen-dent alterations of the OXPHOS complexes, including the loss of mitochondrial respiratory supercomplexes (mtRSCs) and a reduction in the abundance of complex I and complex IV. Additionally, we identified a switch from the standard complex IV-dependent respiration to an alternative respiration during the aging of the P. anserina wild type. Interestingly, we identified proteasome components, as well as endoplasmic reticulum (ER) proteins, for which the recruitment to mitochondria appeared to be increased in the mitochondria of older cultures. Overall, our data demonstrate pronounced age-dependent alterations of the protein complexes involved in energy transduction and suggest the induction of different non-mitochondrial salvage pathways, to counteract the age-dependent mitochondrial impairments which occur during aging.
Biallelic pathogenic variants in CLPP, encoding mitochondrial matrix peptidase ClpP, cause a rare autosomal recessive condition, Perrault syndrome type 3 (PRLTS3). It is characterized by primary ovarian insufficiency and early sensorineural hearing loss, often associated with progressive neurological deficits. Mouse models showed that accumulations of (i) its main protein interactor, the substrate-selecting AAA+ ATPase ClpX, (ii) mitoribosomes, and (iii) mtDNA nucleoids are the main cellular consequences of ClpP absence. However, the sequence of these events and their validity in human remain unclear. Here, we studied global proteome profiles to define ClpP substrates among mitochondrial ClpX interactors, which accumulated consistently in ClpP-null mouse embryonal fibroblasts and brains. Validation work included novel ClpP-mutant patient fibroblast proteomics. ClpX co-accumulated in mitochondria with the nucleoid component POLDIP2, the mitochondrial poly(A) mRNA granule element LRPPRC, and tRNA processing factor GFM1 (in mouse, also GRSF1). Only in mouse did accumulated ClpX, GFM1, and GRSF1 appear in nuclear fractions. Mitoribosomal accumulation was minor. Consistent accumulations in murine and human fibroblasts also affected multimerizing factors not known as ClpX interactors, namely, OAT, ASS1, ACADVL, STOM, PRDX3, PC, MUT, ALDH2, PMPCB, UQCRC2, and ACADSB, but the impact on downstream metabolites was marginal. Our data demonstrate the primary impact of ClpXP on the assembly of proteins with nucleic acids and show nucleoid enlargement in human as a key consequence.
In allen drei Domänen des Lebens ist in der Translation die Initiation der geschwindigkeits-bestimmende Schritt. Die Effizienz der Translationsinitiation und ihre unterschiedliche Regula-tion ist von Translationsinitiationsfaktoren (IFs) abhängig. Bakterien enthalten nur drei IFs, während die Anzahl bei Archaeen (aIFs) und Eukaryoten (eIFs) deutlich höher ist.
Das Archaeon Haloferax volcanii beispielsweise besitzt 14 Gene, die für aIFs bzw. deren Untereinheiten kodieren. Eine Deletionsanalyse ergab, dass fünf aIFs essenziell und neun aIFs nicht essenziell sind. Um einen Einblick in die Funktions- und Interaktionsbereiche der aIFs in H. volcanii zu erhalten, wurden die aIFs mit einem His-Tag versehen und überexpri-miert. Die Überexpression erfolgte in der jeweiligen Deletionsmutante. Für essenzielle aIFs fand sie im Wildtyp statt. Durch Affinitätsaufreinigungen wurden die aIFs und ihre Bindungs-partner isoliert und mittels Massenspektrometrie (MS) identifiziert. Für den Ausschluss unspe-zifischer Proteine dienten zwei stringente Kontrollen als Referenz, das Reportergen Dihydro-folatreduktase (HVO_1279) mit His-Tag und das Expressionsplasmid ohne Gen.
Die ersten Arbeiten konzentrierten sich auf den heterotrimeren Faktor aIF2. Er bindet die Ini-tiator-tRNA und ist damit für die Bildung des Präinitiationskomplexes von zentraler Bedeu-tung. Der Faktor aIF2 besteht aus jeweils einer α-, β- und γ-Untereinheit. In H. volcanii existie-ren zwei Orthologe für aIF2β. Die Überexpressionen der α-, β1-, β2- und γ-Untereinheiten führten zur Co-Isolation der jeweils anderen Untereinheiten des aIF2 (α, β1/ β2, γ).
Die Strategie der Co-Affinitätsaufreinigung und MS wurde auf alle weiteren annotierten aIFs ausgedehnt, um mögliche Funktionen zu identifizieren und ein potenzielles Interaktionsnetz-werk der aIFs zu erstellen. Für alle aIFs konnte ein unterschiedliches Muster an co-gereinigten Proteinen festgestellt werden. Mitgereinigte Proteine waren aIFs, Proteine der Translation, Transkription, Replikation und ribosomale Proteine. Auch RNA-Polymerase-Untereinheiten (RNAPUs) konnten co-isoliert werden. Mit 13 der 14 aIFs konnten andere Ini-tiationsfaktoren co-gereinigt werden. Sechs aIFs konnten zu Beginn bei keinem weiteren Initi-ationsfaktor mitgereinigt werden. Einer dieser Faktoren war aIF2β-1, der jedoch in den Affini-tätsaufreinigungen mit nachfolgender FPLC von aIF2β-2 identifiziert werden konnte. Der Fak-tor aIF1 konnte nur in der stationären Phase von aIF2α mitgereinigt werden.
Die am häufigsten co-gereinigten Proteine waren aIF2Bδ-1 und aIF5B. Für aIF2Bδ-1 kam dies überraschend, da er bereits als Translationsinitiationsfaktor ausgeschlossen wurde. Mit dem Faktor aIF2Bδ-1 selbst konnten fünf aIFs co-gereinigt werden.
Da mit den aIFs auch RNAPUs co-gereinigt werden konnten, wurden sieben RNAPUs ebenfalls mit einem His-Tag versehen und überexprimiert. Auch mit den RNAPUs konnten aIFs, sowie weitere Proteine der Translation mitgereinigt werden.
Diese Umstände legen nahe, dass es möglicherweise eine engere Verbindung der Tran-skription und Translation in H. volcanii geben könnte, als bisher angenommen.
Translation is an important step in gene expression. Initiation of translation is rate-limiting, and it is phylogenetically more diverse than elongation or termination. Bacteria contain only three initiation factors. In stark contrast, eukaryotes contain more than 10 (subunits of) initiation factors (eIFs). The genomes of archaea contain many genes that are annotated to encode archaeal homologs of eukaryotic initiation factors (aIFs). However, experimental characterization of aIFs is scarce and mostly restricted to very few species. To broaden the view, the protein–protein interaction network of aIFs in the halophilic archaeon Haloferax volcanii has been characterized. To this end, tagged versions of 14 aIFs were overproduced, affinity isolated, and the co-isolated binding partners were identified by peptide mass fingerprinting and MS/MS analyses. The aIF–aIF interaction network was resolved, and it was found to contain two interaction hubs, (1) the universally conserved factor aIF5B, and (2) a protein that has been annotated as the enzyme ribose-1,5-bisphosphate isomerase, which we propose to rename to aIF2Bα. Affinity isolation of aIFs also led to the co-isolation of many ribosomal proteins, but also transcription factors and subunits of the RNA polymerase (Rpo). To analyze a possible coupling of transcription and translation, seven tagged Rpo subunits were overproduced, affinity isolated, and co-isolated proteins were identified. The Rpo interaction network contained many transcription factors, but also many ribosomal proteins as well as the initiation factors aIF5B and aIF2Bα. These results showed that transcription and translation are coupled in haloarchaea, like in Escherichia coli. It seems that aIF5B and aIF2Bα are not only interaction hubs in the translation initiation network, but also key players in the transcription-translation coupling.
Interest is an important factor for successful learning that has been the subject of intensive research for decades. Although interest in nature is of great importance for environmental education, to date there is no valid and reliable measurement tool. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to develop and test a scale for interest in nature, the Nature Interest Scale (NIS). In study 1, nine items were selected based on the three dimensions of the psychological interest construct to represent interest in nature. The factor structure of this new measurement instrument, was tested using confirmatory factor analyses. The results show that the instrument represents the three dimensions of the interest construct well. In study 2 the validity (discriminant and convergent validity) as well as the reliability (internal consistency, composite reliability, test-retest reliability) of the NIS were demonstrated. In study 3, the applicability of the NIS was tested with a different target group, students with learning disabilities. The results of this factor analysis also confirm the factor structure of the scale. Thus, this study provides a valid and reliable measurement tool for individual interest in nature that can be used for future research.
Animals living in human care for several generations face the risk of losing natural behaviors, which can lead to reduced animal welfare. The goal of this study is to demonstrate that meerkats (Suricata suricatta) living in zoos can assess potential danger and respond naturally based on acoustic signals only. This includes that the graded information of urgency in alarm calls as well as a response to those alarm calls is retained in captivity. To test the response to acoustic signals with different threat potential, meerkats were played calls of various animals differing in size and threat (e.g., robin, raven, buzzard, jackal) while their behavior was observed. The emitted alarm calls were recorded and examined for their graded structure on the one hand and played back to them on the other hand by means of a playback experiment to see whether the animals react to their own alarm calls even in the absence of danger. A fuzzy clustering algorithm was used to analyze and classify the alarm calls. Subsequently, the features that best described the graded structure were isolated using the LASSO algorithm and compared to features already known from wild meerkats. The results show that the graded structure is maintained in captivity and can be described by features such as noise and duration. The animals respond to new threats and can distinguish animal calls that are dangerous to them from those that are not, indicating the preservation of natural cooperative behavior. In addition, the playback experiments show that the meerkats respond to their own alarm calls with vigilance and escape behavior. The findings can be used to draw conclusions about the intensity of alertness in captive meerkats and to adapt husbandry conditions to appropriate welfare.
Endogenous clocks enable organisms to adapt cellular processes, physiology, and behavior to daily variation in environmental conditions. Metabolic processes in cyanobacteria to humans are under the influence of the circadian clock, and dysregulation of the circadian clock causes metabolic disorders. In mouse and Drosophila, the circadian clock influences translation of factors involved in ribosome biogenesis and synchronizes protein synthesis. Notably, nutrition signals are mediated by the insulin receptor/target of rapamycin (InR/TOR) pathways to regulate cellular metabolism and growth. However, the role of the circadian clock in Drosophila brain development and the potential impact of clock impairment on neural circuit formation and function is less understood. Here we demonstrate that changes in light stimuli or disruption of the molecular circadian clock cause a defect in neural stem cell growth and proliferation. Moreover, we show that disturbed cell growth and proliferation are accompanied by reduced nucleolar size indicative of impaired ribosomal biogenesis. Further, we define that light and clock independently affect the InR/TOR growth regulatory pathway due to the effect on regulators of protein biosynthesis. Altogether, these data suggest that alterations in InR/TOR signaling induced by changes in light conditions or disruption of the molecular clock have an impact on growth and proliferation properties of neural stem cells in the developing Drosophila brain.
Background: In the face of ongoing climate warming, vector-borne diseases are expected to increase in Europe, including tick-borne diseases (TBD). The most abundant tick-borne diseases in Germany are Tick-Borne Encephalitis (TBE) and Lyme Borreliosis (LB), with Ixodes ricinus as the main vector.
Methods: In this study, we display and compare the spatial and temporal patterns of reported cases of human TBE and LB in relation to some associated factors. The comparison may help with the interpretation of observed spatial and temporal patterns.
Results: The spatial patterns of reported TBE cases show a clear and consistent pattern over the years, with many cases in the south and only few and isolated cases in the north of Germany. The identification of spatial patterns of LB disease cases is more difficult due to the different reporting practices in the individual federal states. Temporal patterns strongly fluctuate between years, and are relatively synchronized between both diseases, suggesting common driving factors. Based on our results we found no evidence that weather conditions affect the prevalence of both diseases. Both diseases show a gender bias with LB bing more commonly diagnosed in females, contrary to TBE being more commonly diagnosed in males.
Conclusion: For a further investigation of of the underlying driving factors and their interrelations, longer time series as well as standardised reporting and surveillance system would be required.
Identifying unexpected acoustic inputs, which allows to react appropriately to new situations, is of major importance for animals. Neural deviance detection describes a change of neural response strength to a stimulus solely caused by the stimulus' probability of occurrence. In the present study, we searched for correlates of deviance detection in auditory brainstem responses obtained in anaesthetised bats (Carollia perspicillata). In an oddball paradigm, we used two pure tone stimuli that represented the main frequencies used by the animal during echolocation (60 kHz) and communication (20 kHz). For both stimuli, we could demonstrate significant differences of response strength between deviant and standard response in slow and fast components of the auditory brainstem response. The data suggest the presence of correlates of deviance detection in brain stations below the inferior colliculus (IC), at the level of the cochlea nucleus and lateral lemniscus. Additionally, our results suggest that deviance detection is mainly driven by repetition suppression in the echolocation frequency band, while in the communication band, a deviant-related enhancement of the response plays a more important role. This finding suggests a contextual dependence of the mechanisms underlying subcortical deviance detection. The present study demonstrates the value of auditory brainstem responses for studying deviance detection and suggests that auditory specialists, such as bats, use different frequency-specific strategies to ensure an appropriate sensation of unexpected sounds.
Cercosporoid fungi (Mycosphaerellaceae, Mycosphaerellales, Ascomycota) are one of the largest and most diverse groups of hyphomycetes causing a wide range of diseases of economically important plants as well as of plants in the wild. Although more than 6000 species are known for this group, the documentation of this fungal group is far from complete. Especially in the tropics, the diversity of cercosporoid fungi is poorly known. The present study aims to identify and characterise cercosporoid fungi collected on host plants belonging to Fabaceae in Benin, West Africa. Information on their morphology, host species and DNA sequence data (18S rDNA, 28S rDNA, ITS and tef1) is provided. DNA sequence data were obtained by a simple and non-culture-based method for DNA isolation which has been applied for cercosporoid fungi for the first time in the context of the present study. Among the loci used for the phylogenetic analysis, tef1 provided the best resolution together with the multigene dataset. Species delimitation in many cases, however, was only possible by combining molecular sequence data with morphological characteristics. Based on forty specimens recently collected in Benin, 18 species are presented with morphological descriptions, illustrations and sequence data. Among these, six species in the genus Cercospora and two species in Pseudocercospora are proposed as species new to science. The newly described species are Cercospora (C.) beninensis on Crotalaria macrocalyx, C. parakouensis on Desmodium tortuosum, C. rhynchophora on Vigna unguiculata, C. vignae-subterraneae on Vigna subterranea, C. tentaculifera on Vigna unguiculata, C. zorniicola on Zornia glochidiata, Pseudocercospora sennicola on Senna occidentalis and Pseudocercospora tabei on Vigna unguiculata. Eight species of cercosporoid fungi are reported for Benin for the first time, three of them, namely C. cf. canscorina, C. cf. fagopyri and C. phaseoli-lunati are new for West Africa. The presence of two species of cercosporoid fungi on Fabaceae previously reported from Benin, namely Nothopassalora personata and Passalora arachidicola, is confirmed.
Responses of southern ocean seafloor habitats and communities to global and local drivers of change
(2021)
Knowledge of life on the Southern Ocean seafloor has substantially grown since the beginning of this century with increasing ship-based surveys and regular monitoring sites, new technologies and greatly enhanced data sharing. However, seafloor habitats and their communities exhibit high spatial variability and heterogeneity that challenges the way in which we assess the state of the Southern Ocean benthos on larger scales. The Antarctic shelf is rich in diversity compared with deeper water areas, important for storing carbon (“blue carbon”) and provides habitat for commercial fish species. In this paper, we focus on the seafloor habitats of the Antarctic shelf, which are vulnerable to drivers of change including increasing ocean temperatures, iceberg scour, sea ice melt, ocean acidification, fishing pressures, pollution and non-indigenous species. Some of the most vulnerable areas include the West Antarctic Peninsula, which is experiencing rapid regional warming and increased iceberg-scouring, subantarctic islands and tourist destinations where human activities and environmental conditions increase the potential for the establishment of non-indigenous species and active fishing areas around South Georgia, Heard and MacDonald Islands. Vulnerable species include those in areas of regional warming with low thermal tolerance, calcifying species susceptible to increasing ocean acidity as well as slow-growing habitat-forming species that can be damaged by fishing gears e.g., sponges, bryozoan, and coral species. Management regimes can protect seafloor habitats and key species from fishing activities; some areas will need more protection than others, accounting for specific traits that make species vulnerable, slow growing and long-lived species, restricted locations with optimum physiological conditions and available food, and restricted distributions of rare species. Ecosystem-based management practices and long-term, highly protected areas may be the most effective tools in the preservation of vulnerable seafloor habitats. Here, we focus on outlining seafloor responses to drivers of change observed to date and projections for the future. We discuss the need for action to preserve seafloor habitats under climate change, fishing pressures and other anthropogenic impacts.
Cancer is a multifactorial disease with increasing incidence. There are more than 100 different cancer types, defined by location, cell of origin, and genomic alterations that influence oncogenesis and therapeutic response. This heterogeneity between tumors of different patients and also the heterogeneity within the same patient’s tumor pose an enormous challenge to cancer treatment. In this review, we explore tumor heterogeneity on the longitudinal and the latitudinal axis, reviewing current and future approaches to study this heterogeneity and their potential to support oncologists in tailoring a patient’s treatment regimen. We highlight how the ideal of precision oncology is reaching far beyond the knowledge of genetic variants to inform clinical practice and discuss the technologies and strategies already available to improve our understanding and management of heterogeneity in cancer treatment. We will focus on integrating multi-omics technologies with suitable in vitro models and their proficiency in mimicking endogenous tumor heterogeneity.
An increasing number of voices highlight the need for science itself to transform and to engage in the co-production of knowledge and action, in order to enable the fundamental transformations needed to advance towards sustainable futures. But how can global sustainability-oriented research networks engage in co-production of knowledge and action? The present article introduces a strategic tool called the ‘network compass’ which highlights four generic, interrelated fields of action through which networks can strive to foster co-production. It is based on the networks’ particular functions and how these can be engaged for co-production processes. This tool aims to foster self-reflection and learning within and between networks in the process of (re)developing strategies and activity plans and effectively contributing to sustainability transformations.
EphrinB2 and GRIP1 stabilize mushroom spines during denervation-induced homeostatic plasticity
(2021)
Highlights
• Denervation induces mushroom spine loss and AMPAR redistribution to the surface
• GRIP1 and ephrinB2 mediate homeostatic mechanisms after lesion
• Stimulation with the ephrinB2 receptor EphB4 promotes a surface shift of AMPARs
• AMPARs surface shift restores impaired spine recovery after lesion in GRIP1 mutants
Summary
Despite decades of work, much remains elusive about molecular events at the interplay between physiological and structural changes underlying neuronal plasticity. Here, we combined repetitive live imaging and expansion microscopy in organotypic brain slice cultures to quantitatively characterize the dynamic changes of the intracellular versus surface pools of GluA2-containing α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptors (AMPARs) across the different dendritic spine types and the shaft during hippocampal homeostatic plasticity. Mechanistically, we identify ephrinB2 and glutamate receptor interacting protein (GRIP) 1 as mediating AMPAR relocation to the mushroom spine surface following lesion-induced denervation. Moreover, stimulation with the ephrinB2 specific receptor EphB4 not only prevents the lesion-induced disappearance of mushroom spines but is also sufficient to shift AMPARs to the surface and rescue spine recovery in a GRIP1 dominant-negative background. Thus, our results unravel a crucial role for ephrinB2 during homeostatic plasticity and identify a potential pharmacological target to improve dendritic spine plasticity upon injury.
Combinatorial CRISPR-Cas screens have advanced the mapping of genetic interactions, but their experimental scale limits the number of targetable gene combinations. Here, we describe 3Cs multiplexing, a rapid and scalable method to generate highly diverse and uniformly distributed combinatorial CRISPR libraries. We demonstrate that the library distribution skew is the critical determinant of its required screening coverage. By circumventing iterative cloning of PCR-amplified oligonucleotides, 3Cs multiplexing facilitates the generation of combinatorial CRISPR libraries with low distribution skews. We show that combinatorial 3Cs libraries can be screened with minimal coverages, reducing associated efforts and costs at least 10-fold. We apply a 3Cs multiplexing library targeting 12,736 autophagy gene combinations with 247,032 paired gRNAs in viability and reporter-based enrichment screens. In the viability screen, we identify, among others, the synthetic lethal WDR45B-PIK3R4 and the proliferation-enhancing ATG7-KEAP1 genetic interactions. In the reporter-based screen, we identify over 1,570 essential genetic interactions for autophagy flux, including interactions among paralogous genes, namely ATG2A-ATG2B, GABARAP-MAP1LC3B and GABARAP-GABARAPL2. However, we only observe few genetic interactions within paralogous gene families of more than two members, indicating functional compensation between them. This work establishes 3Cs multiplexing as a platform for genetic interaction screens at scale.
Exploring the in vivo subthreshold membrane activity of phasic firing in midbrain dopamine neurons
(2021)
Dopamine is a key neurotransmitter that serves several essential functions in daily behaviors such as locomotion, motivation, stimulus coding, and learning. Disrupted dopamine circuits can result in altered functions of these behaviors which can lead to motor and psychiatric symptoms and diseases. In the central nervous system, dopamine is primarily released by dopamine neurons located in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) and ventral tegmental area (VTA) within the midbrain, where they signal behaviorally-relevant information to downstream structures by altering their firing patterns. Their “pacemaker” firing maintains baseline dopamine levels at projection sites, whereas phasic “burst” firing transiently elevates dopamine concentrations. Firing activity of dopamine neurons projecting to different brain regions controls the activation of distinct dopamine pathways and circuits. Therefore, characterization of how distinct firing patterns are generated in dopamine neuron populations will be necessary to further advance our understanding of dopamine circuits that encode environmental information and facilitate a behavior.
However, there is currently a large gap in the knowledge of biophysical mechanisms of phasic firing in dopamine neurons, as spontaneous burst firing is only observed in the intact brain, where access to intrinsic neuronal activity remains a challenge. So far, a series of highly-influential studies published in the 1980s by Grace and Bunney is the only available source of information on the intrinsic activity of midbrain dopamine neurons in vivo, in which sharp electrodes were used to penetrate dopamine neurons to record their intracellular activity. A novel approach is thus needed to fill in the gap. In vivo whole-cell patch-clamp method is a tool that enables access to a neuron’s intrinsic activity and subthreshold membrane potential dynamics in the intact brain. It has been used to record from neurons in superficial brain regions such as the cortex and hippocampus, and more recently in deeper regions such as the amygdala and brainstem, but has not yet been performed on midbrain dopamine neurons. Thus, the deep brain in vivo patch-clamp recording method was established in the lab in an attempt to investigate the subthreshold membrane potential dynamics of tonic and phasic firing in dopamine neurons in vivo.
The use of this method allowed the first in-depth examination of burst firing and its subthreshold membrane potential activity of in vivo midbrain dopamine neurons, which illuminated that firing activity and subthreshold membrane activity of dopamine neurons are very closely related. Furthermore, systematic characterization of subthreshold membrane patterns revealed that tonic and phasic firing patterns of in vivo dopamine neurons can be classified based on three distinct subthreshold membrane signatures: 1) tonic firing, characterized by stable, non-fluctuating subthreshold membrane potentials; 2) rebound bursting, characterized by prominent hyperpolarizations that initiate bursting; and 3) plateau bursting, characterized by transient, depolarized plateaus on which bursting terminates. The results thus demonstrated that different types of phasic firing are driven by distinct patterns of subthreshold membrane activity, which may potentially signal distinct types of information. Taken together, the deep brain in vivo patch-clamp technique can be used for the investigation of firing mechanisms of dopamine neurons in the intact brain and will help address open questions in the dopamine field, particularly regarding the biophysical mechanisms of burst firing in dopamine neurons that control behavior.