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This dissertation constitutes a series of successive research papers, starting with the characterization of various optogenetic tools up to the establishment of purely optical electrophysiology in living animals.
Optogenetics has revolutionized neurobiology as it allows stimulation of excitable cells with exceptionally high spatiotemporal resolution. To cope with the increasing complexity of research issues and accompanying demands on experimental design, the broadening of the optogenetic toolbox is indispensable. Therefore, one goal was to establish a wide variety of novel rhodopsin-based actuators and characterize them, among others, with respect to their spectral properties, kinetics, and efficacy using behavioral experiments in Caenorhabditis elegans. During these studies, the applicability of highly potent de- and hyperpolarizers with adapted spectral properties, altered ion specificity, strongly slowed off-kinetics, and inverted functionality was successfully demonstrated. Inhibitory anion channelrhodopsins (ACRs) stood out, filling the gap of long-sought equivalent hyperpolarizing tools, and could be convincingly applied in a tandem configuration combined with the red-shifted depolarizer Chrimson for bidirectional stimulation (Bidirectional Pair of Opsins for Light-induced Excitation and Silencing, BiPOLES). A parallel study aimed to compare various rhodopsin-based genetically encoded voltage indicators (GEVIs) in the worm: In addition to electrochromic FRET-based GEVIs that use lower excitation intensity, QuasAr2 was particularly convincing in terms of voltage sensitivity and photostability in C. elegans. However, classical optogenetic approaches are quite static and only allow perturbation of neural activity. Therefore, QuasAr2 and BiPOLES were combined in a closed-loop feedback control system to implement the first proof-of-concept all-optical voltage clamp to date, termed the optogenetic voltage clamp (OVC). Here, an I-controller generates feedback of light wavelengths to bidirectionally stimulate BiPOLES and keep QuasAr’s fluorescence at a desired level. The OVC was established in body wall muscles and various types of neurons in C. elegans and transferred to rat hippocampal slice culture. In the worm, it allowed to assess altered cellular physiology of mutants and Ca2+-channel characteristics as well as dynamical clamping of distinct action potentials and associated behavior.
Ultimately, the optogenetic actuators and sensors implemented in the course of this cumulative work enabled to synergistically combine the advantages of imaging- and electrode-based techniques, thus providing the basis for noninvasive, optical electrophysiology in behaving animals.
Bioactive small molecules are used in many research areas as important tools to uncover biological pathways, interpret phenotypic changes, deconvolute protein functions and explore new therapeutic strategies in disease relevant cellular model systems. To unlock the full potential of these small molecules and to ensure reliability of results obtained in cellular assays, it is crucial to understand the properties of these small molecules. These properties encompass their activity and potency on their designated target(s), their selectivity towards unintended off-targets and their phenotypic effects in a cellular system. Approved drugs often engage with multiple targets, which can be beneficial for some applications such as treatment of cancer where several pathways need to be inhibited for treatment efficacy. However, targeting multiple key proteins in diverse pathways also increases the possibility for unspecific or unwanted side effects. For many drugs the entire target space that they modulate is not known. This makes it difficult to use these drugs for target deconvolution or functional assays with the aim to understand the underlying biological processes. In contrast to drugs, for mechanistic studies, a good alternative are chemical tool compounds so called chemical probes that are usually exclusively selective as well as chemogenomic compounds, that inhibit several targets but have narrow selectivity profiles. Because they are mechanistic tools, chemical tool compounds must meet stringent quality criteria and they are therefore well characterized in terms of their potency, selectivity and cellular on-target activity. To ensure that an observed phenotypic effect caused by a compound can be attributed to the described target(s), it is essential to study also properties of chemical tools leading to unspecific cellular effects. There are a variety of unspecific effects that can be caused by physiochemical compound properties that can interfere with phenotypic assays as well as functional compound evaluations. One of these effects is low solubility causing toxicity or intrinsic fluorescence potentially interfering with assay readouts. But unanticipated cellular responses can also arise from unspecific binding, accumulation in cellular compartments or damage caused to organelles such as mitochondria or the cytoskeleton that can result in the induction of diverse forms of cell death.
In this study, we investigated the influence of a variety of small molecules on distinct cell states, by establishing and validating high-content imaging assays, which we called Multiplex assay. This assay portfolio enabled us to detect different cellular responses using diverse fluorescent reporters, such as the influence of a compound on cell viability, induction of cell death programs and modulation of the cell cycle. Additionally, general compound properties such as precipitation and intrinsic fluorescence were simultaneously detected. The assay is adaptable to assess other cellular properties of interest, such as mitochondrial health, changes in cytoskeletal morphology or phospholipidosis. A significant advantage of the assay is that we are using live cells, so we can capture dynamic cellular changes and fluctuations that can be crucial for the understanding of cellular responses.
Der Hirntumor Glioblastom (GBM) ist aufgrund seines infiltrativen Wachstums, der hohen intra- und intertumoralen Heterogenität, der hohen Therapieresistenz als auch aufgrund der sogenannten gliomartigen Stammzellen sehr schwer zu behandeln und führt fast immer zu Rezidiven. Da es in den letzten Jahrzehnten kaum Fortschritte in der Behandlung des GBMs gab, bis auf die Therapie mit Tumortherapiefeldern, wird weiterhin nach alternativen Zelltodtherapien geforscht, wie zum Beispiel dem Autophagie-abhängigen Zelltod. Der Autophagie-abhängige Zelltod ist durch einen erhöhten autophagischen Flux gekennzeichnet und obwohl die Autophagie, als auch selektive Formen wie die Lysophagie und Mitophagie, normalerweise als überlebensfördernde Mechanismen gelten, konnten viele Studien eine duale Rolle in der Tumorentstehung, -progression und -behandlung aufzeigen, die vor allem vom Tumortyp und stadium abhängt. Um die zugrunde liegenden Mechanismen des durch Medikamente induzierten Autophagie-abhängigen Zelltods im GBM weiter zu entschlüsseln, habe ich in meiner Dissertation verschiedene Substanzen untersucht, die einen Autophagie-abhängigen Zelltod induzieren.
In einer zuvor in unserem Labor durchgeführten Studie konnte gezeigt werden, dass das Antipsychotikum Pimozid (PIMO) und der Opioidrezeptor-Antagonist Loperamid (LOP) einen Autophagie-abhängigen Zelltod in GBM Zellen induzieren können. Darauf aufbauend habe ich die Fähigkeit zur Induktion des Autophagie-abhängigen Zelltods in weiteren Zellmodellen validiert. Dies bestätigte einen erhöhten autophagischen Flux nach PIMO und LOP Behandlung, während der Zelltod als auch der autophagische Flux in Autophagie-defizienten Zellen reduziert war. In weiteren Versuchen konnte ich die Involvierung der LC3-assoziierten Phagozytose (LAP), ein Signalweg der auf die Funktion einiger autophagischer Proteine angewiesen ist, ausschließen. Weiterhin konnte ich eine massive Störung des Cholesterin- und Lipidstoffwechsels beobachten. Unter anderem akkumulierte Cholesterin in den Lysosomen gefolgt von massiven Schäden des lysosomalen Kompartiments und der Permeabiliserung der lysosomalen Membran. Dies trug einerseits zur Aktivierung überlebensfördernder Lysophagie als auch der Zell-schädigenden „Bulk“-Autophagie bei. Letztendlich konnte aber die erhöhte Lysophagie die Zellen nicht vor dem Zelltod retten und die Zellen starben einen Autophagie-abhängigen lysosomalen Zelltod. Da die Eignung von LOP als Therapie für das GBM aufgrund der fehlenden Blut-Hirn-Schranken Permeabilität und von dem Antipsychotikum PIMO aufgrund teils schwerer Nebenwirkungen eingeschränkt ist, habe ich mich im weiteren Verlauf meiner Dissertation mit einer Substanz mit einem anderen Wirkmechanismus beschäftigt.
Der Eisenchelator und oxidative Phosphorylierungs (OXPHOS) Inhibitor VLX600 wurde zuvor berichtet mitochondriale Dysfunktion und Zelltod in Kolonkarzinomzellen zu induzieren. Allerdings hat meines Wissens nach bisher noch keine Studie die therapeutische Eignung von VLX600 für das GBM untersucht. Hier zeige ich eine neuartige Autophagie-abhängige Zelltod-induzierende Fähigkeit von VLX600 für GBM Zellen, da der Zelltod signifikant in Autophagie-defizienten Zellen aber nicht durch Caspase-Inhibitoren gehemmt wurde und der autophagische Flux erhöht war. Darüber hinaus konnte ich die Hemmung der OXPHOS und die Induktion von mitochondrialem Stress in GBM Zellen bestätigen und weiterhin aufzeigen, dass VLX600 nicht nur die mitochondriale Homöostase stört, sondern auch zu einer BNIP3-BNIP3L-abhängigen Mitophagie führt, die wahrscheinlich durch HIF1A reguliert wird aber keinen erkennbaren Nettoeffekt auf den von VLX600 induzierten Zelltod hat. Demnach induziert VLX600 letale „Bulk“-Autophagie in den hier verwendeten Zellmodellen. Darüber hinaus konnte ich zeigen, dass die Eisenchelatierung durch VLX600 eine große Rolle für den von VLX600-induzierten Zelltod spielt aber auch für die Mitophagie Induktion, Histon Lysin Methylierung und den ribosomalen Stress. Letztendlich ist es wahrscheinlich ein Zusammenspiel all dieser Faktoren, die zur Zelltodinduktion durch VLX600 führen und interessanterweise werden Eisenchelatoren bereits in präklinischen und klinischen Studien für Krebstherapien untersucht. Dabei könnten gewisse metabolische Eigenschaften verschiedener Tumorzellen die Sensitivität von Wirkstoffen, die auf den Metabolismus wirken wie VLX600, beeinflussen was in zukünftigen Studien beachtet werden sollte um den bestmöglichsten Therapieerfolg zu erzielen. Zusammenfassend unterstützt meine Dissertation die duale Rolle der Autophagie, die stark vom jeweiligen Kontext abhängt und befürwortet die weitere Forschung von Substanzen, die einen Autophagie-abhängigen Zelltod induzieren, für das GBM.
Anthropogenic activities have a major impact on our planet and rapidly drive biodiversity loss in ecosystems at a global scale. Particularly over the last century, rising CO2 emissions significantly raised global temperatures and increased the intensity and frequency of droughts and heatwaves. Additionally, agricultural land use and fossil fuel combustion contribute to the continuous release of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) into ecosystems worldwide through extensive fertilization and deposition from the atmosphere. It is important to understand how these rapid changes affect the evolution of plant populations and their adaptive potential. Adaptation by natural selection (i.e., adaptive evolution) within a few generations is an essential process as a response to rapid environmental changes. Rapid evolution of plant populations can be detected by using the so-called resurrection approach. Here, diaspores (i.e., seeds) from a population are collected before (ancestors) and after (descendants) a potential selection pressure (e.g., consecutive years of drought or changes in nutrient supply). Comparing phenotypes of ancestors and descendants in a common environment such as an outside garden, greenhouse, or climate chamber, may then reveal evolutionary changes. Ideally, plants are first grown in a common environment for an intermediate refresher generation to reduce parental and storage effects.
The aim of this thesis was to investigate the occurrence of adaptive evolution in natural plant populations in response to rapidly changing environments over the past three decades. I conducted three experiments using the resurrection approach to generate comprehensive data on the adaptive processes that acted on three plant populations from three different species over the last three decades. Furthermore, I filled knowledge gaps in plant evolutionary ecology and conceptually developed the resurrection approach further.
In Chapter I, I performed a novel approach by testing for adaptive evolution in natural plant populations using the resurrection approach in combination with in-situ transplantations. I cultivated seedlings from ancestors (23 – 26 years old) and contemporary descendants of three perennial species (Melica ciliata, Leontodon hispidus and Clinopodium vulgare) from calcareous grasslands in the greenhouse and In Chapter III, I assessed the reproducibility of phenotypic differences between genotypes among three different growth facilities (climate chamber, greenhouse, and outdoor garden). I also evaluated differences in phenotypic expression between plants grown after one vs. two intermediate generations (i.e., refresher generations). I performed this experiment within the framework of the resurrection approach and compared ancestors and descendants of the same population of Leontodon hispidus.
I observed very strong differences among plants growing in the different growth facilities. I found a significant interaction between the growth facility and the temporal origin (ancestors vs. descendants): descendants had significantly larger rosettes than ancestors only in the greenhouse and they flowered significantly later than ancestors exclusively in the climate chamber. I did not find significant differences between intermediate generations within the growth facilities. Overall, Chapter III shows that the use of a particular experimental system can dictate the presence and magnitude of phenotypic differences. This implies that absence of evidence is not evidence of absence when it comes to investigating genetically based trait differentiation among plant origins (in space or time). Experimental systems should be carefully designed to provide meaningful conditions, ideally mimicking the environmental conditions of the population’s origins. Finally, growing a second intermediate generation did not impact the genetic differences of ancestors and descendants within the environments, supporting the idea that only one intermediate generation may be sufficient to reduce detectable parental and storage effects.
The resurrection approach allows a better understanding of rapid plant adaptation, but some limitations deserve to be highlighted. I only studied one population per species, and Chapters II and III only focus on one population of L. hispidus, which is also hampering generalizations, as adaptive potential can vary greatly among populations of the same species. I only compared the ancestral genotypes to one descendant sample with a long time span in between (26 – 28 years), which makes it hard to pinpoint the selection agents that caused the genetic differentiation among the sampling years. Hence, closely monitoring biotic and abiotic factors of the studied populations between the ancestral and descendant sampling in future studies, would make identifying the responsible selection pressures more precise. I also recommend sampling multiple populations over consecutive years to improve the robustness of results and make generalizations more approachable.Furthermore, combining the resurrection approach with other methods such as in-situ transplantations will be valuable to offset the limitation that adaptations cannot be proven under artificial conditions (e.g., in the greenhouse).
The nucleus reuniens drives hippocampal goal‑directed trajectory sequences for route planning
(2023)
Goal-directed spatial navigation requires accurate estimates of one’s position and destination, as well as careful planning of a route between them to avoid known obstacles in the environment. Despite its general importance across species, the neural circuitry supporting the ability for route planning remains largely unclear. Previous studies described that place cells in the hippocampal CA1 encode the animal's next movement direction (Wood et al., 2000; Ito et al., 2015) and upcoming navigational routes (Pfeiffer & Foster, 2013). However, it has been shown that part of the CA1 activity representing the animal’s future behaviors is not necessarily generated in the hippocampus, but is derived from the medial prefrontal cortex (PFC) via the nucleus reuniens of the thalamus (RE) (Ito et al., 2015). Notably, the importance of the PFC in navigation has been demonstrated in several studies, including the recent finding of a goal map in the orbitofrontal cortex (Basu et al., 2021). Therefore, I hypothesized that information flow from the PFC to CA1 via the RE plays a key role in route planning.
To assess the animals' route planning ability, I designed a new navigation task in which a rat has to navigate to a fixed target location from various starting positions in an arena. Furthermore, by adding an L-shaped wall in the maze and removing all light sources in the experimental room, this task forced the animals to plan a wall-avoiding route without relying on direct sensory perceptions. I confirmed that rats could learn this task successfully, memorizing the wall location and taking a smooth wall-avoidance route. To test the role of the RE, I inactivated RE neurons by expressing the inhibitory opsin SwiChR++, which resulted in a significant deficit in the animal’s route planning ability, taking a longer non-smooth path to the destination. By contrast, this manipulation did not affect navigation performance when a straight goal-directed route was available, suggesting a specific role of the RE in route planning. I further found that DREADDs-mediated inactivation of neurons in the bilateral hippocampi resulted in a similar deficit in route planning ability, implying cooperation between the RE and the hippocampus.
I finally examined the activity of hippocampal CA1 neurons with and without RE inactivation. While neurons in the hippocampus exhibited brief trajectory sequences corresponding to the animal’s subsequent goal-directed journey, I found that this goal-directed bias of trajectory events was significantly reduced by RE inactivation, likely associated with route-planning deficits in these animals.
Altogether, this dissertation demonstrates the role of the RE from both behavioral and neural coding perspectives, identifying a pivotal circuit element supporting the animal’s route-planning ability.
Methods using environmental DNA to explore and analyze biodiversity from previously unexplored habitats and ecosystems have become increasingly popular in recent years. This is particularly due to the potential reduction in necessary taxonomic expertise, the opportunity to assess microorganismal communities, and decreased time investments required to cover large spatial extents. In forests, the surface of tree bark is an important habitat for epiphytic diversity. Because of the large surface area rich in micro-niches, the seasonal stability of the substrate, and the longevity of trees, tree bark surfaces provide an ideal habitat for many species. Yet, we lack a comprehensive understanding of their communities and the environmental drivers behind the community assembly. These missing links hinder the exploration of the forest microbiome as a whole and limits our understanding of functions of a large forest habitat and its connections to other forest microbiomes. With a holistic eDNA metabarcoding approach, encompassing samples of three major taxonomic groups (e.g. bacteria, fungi, and green algae), as well as simultaneous collections from multiple forest habitats we can contribute to closing these gaps and increase our knowledge of the forest microbiome.
My dissertation is set within the framework of the Biodiversity Exploratories and was conducted in four parts: I. the establishment of an eDNA metabarcoding workflow to reveal the local diversity of the bark surface microbiome; II. the upscaling of the method to large geographic and environmental gradients to uncover the drivers of the microbiome; III. the integration of soil and bark samples to investigate compositional differences in two important forest habitats; IV. the evaluation of eDNA metabarcoding as a tool for biodiversity assessments of lichen diversity in forests.
In the first part, I developed a simple, cost-effective and fast sampling strategy to acquire eDNA samples from the bark of trees in forest ecosystems. Using readily available medical-specimen-collection swabs I sampled bark surfaces of individual trees in Central German forests and used metabarcoding to amplify marker genes of green algae, fungi and bacteria. From the sequencing reads I calculated the first diversity estimates of the major organismal groups of bark surface microbiomes from Central European forests. Overall the methodology produced reliable results, allowing for an expanded sampling in the second part.
In the second part of the dissertation, I expanded the sampling based on the results of part one. I collected bark surface samples from the three regions of the Biodiversity Exploratories covering large spatial and environmental gradients representative for Central European forests. The collection included composite samples from 150 plots and over 750 trees. Utilizing measurements of climatic and forest structure variables provided by the Biodiversity Exploratories, as well as my own community data, I identified the biotic and abiotic drivers behind alpha and beta diversity of the bark surface microbiome.
In the third part, I studied the differences between the bark surface as an unexplored and the soil as an example of a well characterized forest microbiome. Using only the fungal part of the large sampling campaign and soil samples obtained from the same plots at the same time, I assessed the commonalities and differences of the micro-communities of these distinct forest niches. Furthermore, I included two coniferous and one deciduous tree species to examine, if the effect of tree species, previously shown for soil microbiomes, also holds true for the bark surface.
In the last part of my dissertation, I used eDNA in a more applied way as a tool in biodiversity assessments of lichenized fungi. I compared the results from eDNA metabarcoding to an expert floristic mapping conducted in the same plots in 2007/2008. I assigned functional guilds to the fungal taxa obtained in the large sampling campaign and used a subset that was assigned as lichenized fungi.
In conclusion, I showed that eDNA metabarcoding is a valuable tool to reveal the unknown diversity of microorganisms in forest ecosystems. In particular, my results advance our understanding of the bark surface microbiome, an underexplored habitat within forests. The tightly linked interactions of the three major microbial groups underline that studies need to take holistic approaches across multiple taxonomic groups to deepen our understanding of processes governing the assembly of microbiomes. Results from my dissertation may serve as a foundation to inform hypotheses addressing the functions of forest microbiomes. The massive diversity data collected may also contribute to closing the gap in our understanding of macro-organisms and micro-organisms with respect to diversity distributions and patterns of richness, and serve as a baseline for predictions of biodiversity responses under future anthropogenic change.
Biotechnological processes offer better production conditions for a wide variety of goods of industrial interest. The production of aromatic compounds, for example, involves molecules of great value for cosmetic, plastic, agrochemical and pharmaceutic industries. However, the yield of such processes frequently prevents a proper implementtation that would allow the replacement of traditional production processes.
Numerous rational engineering approaches have been attempted to enhance metabolic pathways associated with desired products. Unfortunately, genetic modifications and heterologous pathway expression often lead to a higher metabolic burden on the producing organisms, ultimately leading to reduced production levels and fitness.
This project utilised adaptive laboratory evolution to better understand the development of synthetic cooperative consortia, using S. cerevisiae as a model organism. Specifically, a synthetic cooperative consortium was developed around the exchange of lysine and tyrosine, which was subjected to adaptive laboratory evolution aiming to induce mutations that would improve the system’s fitness either by enhanced production or upgraded stress resistance. Consequently, the mutant strains isolated after the evolution rounds were sequenced to identify relevant variations that could be related to the growth and production phenotypes observed.
The insights derived from this project are expected to contribute to further developing synthetic cooperative consortia with utilitarian purposes.
Hyperparasitic fungi on black mildews (Meliolales, Ascomycota) : hidden diversity in the tropics
(2023)
Meliolales (Sordariomycetes, Ascomycota) is a group of obligate plant parasitic microfungi mainly distributed in the tropics and subtropics. Meliolalean fungi are commonly known as “black mildews”, as they form black, superficial hyphae on the surface of vegetative and reproductive organs of vascular plants. They are considered biotrophic parasites, and the infections caused by black mildews can lead to a decrease in the photosynthetic activity of plants, as well as to an increase in the temperature and respiration rate of their leaves.
Meliolales are frequently parasitized by hyperparasitic fungi, i.e., parasitic fungi that have parasitic hosts. These hyperparasites are all Ascomycota and belong mainly to the Dothideomycetes and Sordariomycetes. Although hyperparasites represent a megadiverse group, species were only described by morphology until 1980, and the systematic position of more than 60 % of known species is still unclear. In addition, there are no DNA reference sequences available in public databases for any of the species of hyperparasites of Meliolales, and no ecological studies have been done up to now.
Before this study, no exact number of hyperparasitic fungi growing on colonies of black mildews existed. Here, we present a checklist including 189 species of fungi known to be hyperparasitic on Meliolales, but the number of existing species is likely to be even higher. The elaboration of this species checklist laid the foundations for this investigation, as it helped to understand the present state of knowledge of hyperparasitic fungi on Meliolales worldwide.
For the present study, fresh specimens of leaves infected with colonies of Meliolales and hyperparasites were opportunistically collected at 32 collection sites in Western Panama and Benin, West Africa, in 2020 and 2022, respectively. In total, 100 samples of plant specimens infected with black mildews were collected, of which 58 samples were parasitized by hyperparasitic fungi. 31 species and morphospecies of hyperparasitic fungi were identified. In addition, 35 historical specimens, including 12 type specimens, were examined for the present work.
DNA of hyperparasitic fungi was isolated directly from conidia, synnemata, apothecia, perithecia or pseudothecia of fresh and dried specimens. The main challenges faced by scientists in doing molecular studies of hyperparasitic fungi are related to the fact that the hyperparasitic fungi are intermingled with tissues of the meliolalean hosts and other organisms present in a given sample. This makes the isolation of DNA exclusively from the hyperparasite difficult. Moreover, hyperparasitic fungi on Meliolales are biotrophs and cannot be grown axenically. The hosts themselves are also biotrophic, further complicating DNA isolation from either partner. These factors have contributed to a lack of reference sequences in public databases. After more than 100 attempts, DNA of 20 specimens of hyperparasitic fungi, representing seven species, has been isolated in the context of the present investigation. Three partial nuclear gene regions were amplified and sequenced: nrLSU, nrSSU and nrITS. The datasets were assembled for phylogenetic analyses applying Maximum Likelihood (ML) and Bayesian inference (BI) methods. DNA sequences of hyperparasitic fungi on Meliolales were generated for the first time in the context of the present investigation.
Hyperparasitic fungi on Meliolales do not represent a single systematic group, but a polyphyletic ecological guild of fungi. Because of this huge diversity, only the systematics of species of perithecioid hyperparasites, as well as of the species of the genera Atractilina and Spiropes known to be hyperparasitic on black mildews was discussed in this thesis, as they represented the most common groups of fungi found in Benin and Panama. The results indicated, for example, the systematic position of Dimerosporiella cephalosporii and Paranectriella minuta in the Sordariomycetes and Dothideomycetes, respectively. In addition, the first record of a hyperparasitic fungus of black mildews in the Lecanoromycetes, namely Calloriopsis herpotricha, is reported here. The systematics of Atractilina parasitica and of some species of Spiropes is also discussed here.
In the context of the present investigation, four species new to science were described. They are presented with detailed descriptions, photos and scientific illustrations. Taxonomic studies of this thesis also generated seven new synonyms, nine new records for Benin, seven for Panama, one for Africa and two for mainland America, as well as the confirmation of one anamorph-teleomorph connection by molecular sequence data.
The ecology of hyperparasitic fungi on Meliolales is complex and far from being completely understood. The hypothesis of host specificity between hyperparasitic fungi, their meliolalean hosts and their plant hosts was tested for the first time, through a tritrophic network analysis. Results indicate that hyperparasites of Meliolales are generalists concerning genera of Meliolales, but apparently specialists at the level of order. In addition, hyperparasitic fungi tend to be found alongside their meliolalean hosts, suggesting a pantropical distribution.
Die Zahl der gramnegativen Bakterien auf der WHO-Liste der Antibiotikaresistenzen hat in den letzten Jahrzehnten erheblich zugenommen. Schätzungen zufolge wird die Antibiotikaresistenz bis 2050 tödlicher sein als Krebs. Die äußere Membran gramnegativer Bakterien ist aufgrund ihres wichtigsten Strukturbestandteils, des Lipopolysaccharids (LPS), sehr anpassungsfähig an Umweltveränderungen. Das LPS macht gramnegative Bakterien von Natur aus resistent gegen viele Antibiotika und führt somit zu Antibiotikaresistenz. Der bakterielle ATP-bindende Kassettentransporter (ABC-Transporter) MsbA spielt eine entscheidende Rolle bei der Regulierung der bakteriellen Außenmembran, indem er das Kern-LPS durch ATP-Hydrolyse über die Innenmembran von gramnegativen Bakterien flockt. Darüber hinaus fungiert diese Floppase als Efflux-Pumpe, indem sie Medikamente durch die innere Membran transportiert, was sie zu einem interessanten Ziel für Medikamente macht. Vor kurzem wurden zwei verschiedene Klassen von MsbA-Inhibitoren entdeckt: (1) Tetrahydrobenzothiophene (TBT), die den LPS-Transport aufheben, und (2) Chinolinderivate, die sowohl die ATP-Hydrolyse als auch die LPS-Translokation blockieren. Darüber hinaus hat die Bestimmung der 3D-Struktur von MsbA durch Rontgen- und Kryo-EM mehrere interessante Zustände der Floppase ergeben. Die Kernspinresonanzspektroskopie ist eine hervorragende biophysikalische Methode zur Ergänzung der vorhandenen 3D-Strukturdaten. Insbesondere ermöglicht die Festkörper-NMR die Untersuchung von Membranproteinen in einer nativen Umgebung (z. B. in einer Lipiddoppelschicht). In der Vergangenheit hat unser Labor mithilfe der Festkörper-NMR einige detaillierte Mechanismen von MsbA aufgedeckt. Trotz der zahlreichen Fortschritte bei der Untersuchung der ABC-Transporterprotein-Superfamilie ist der spezifische Prozess der Substrattranslokation von MsbA noch immer unbekannt. Es wird angenommen, dass dieser Translokationsprozess über die Kopplungshelices (CHs) erfolgt, die sich zwischen der Transmembranregion (TMD) und der Nukleotidbindungsdomäne (NBD) befinden. Nukleotid-Bindungsdomäne (NBD). Zu diesem Zweck wird dem Zusammenspiel zwischen der TMD und der NBD über die CHs besondere Aufmerksamkeit gewidmet, mit dem Ziel, den Prozess der Substrattranslokation mithilfe von funktionellen Assays und Festkörper-NMR zu verstehen. Bei letzterem wurden spezifische Reporter in die CHs eingeführt, um Konformationsänderungen in 2D-spektroskopischen Daten zu verfolgen. Darüber hinaus wurde zeitaufgelöste NMR eingesetzt, um die Auswirkungen verschiedener Substrate in der TMD während der ATP-Hydrolyse in der NBD sichtbar zu machen. Die einzigartigen Reporter in den CHs haben Konformationsänderungen in bestimmten katalytischen Zuständen gezeigt. Darüber hinaus scheinen verschiedene Substrate die Kinetik der ATP-Hydrolyse zu beeinflussen. Die Ergebnisse zeigten, dass einige Substrate einen bevorzugten katalytischen Zustand innerhalb des ATP-Hydrolyse Zyklus aufweisen, der möglicherweise einen gekoppelten oder ungekoppelten Kinasemechanismus hat. Diese Ergebnisse könnten verschiedene Einblicke in die molekulare Struktur potenzieller neuer Antibiotika liefern.
Discrepancies between knockdown and knockout animal model phenotypes have long stood as a perplexing phenomenon. Several mechanisms explaining such observations have been proposed, namely the toxicity or the off-target effects of the knockdown reagents, as well as, in certain cases, genetic robustness – an organism's ability to maintain its phenotype despite genetic perturbations. In addition to these explanations, transcriptional adaptation (TA), a phenomenon defined as an event whereby a mutation in one gene leads to transcriptional upregulation or downregulation of another, adapting, gene or genes expression, has been recently proposed as an alternative explanation for the conflicting knockdown and knockout phenotype paradox.
Since its discovery in 2015, TA's precise mechanism remains a subject of ongoing research. Majority of evidence suggests that mutant mRNA degradation plays a central in TA. Epigenetic remodeling is also thought to play a role, as evidenced by an increase in active histone marks at the transcription start sites of the adapting genes. Whether mRNA degradation is indeed the key player in TA remains debated. Furthermore, it is still unknown how exactly TA develops, what adapting genes it targets, and whether genomic mutations that render mutant mRNA sensitive to degradation are required for TA to occur.
Throughout the experiments described in this Dissertation, I have designed an inducible TA system where TA can be triggered on demand and its effects on the cell’s transcriptome followed through time. I have demonstrated that degradation-prone transgenes, once induced and expressed, can be efficiently degraded, resulting in the protein loss-independent upregulation of adapting genes via TA. Adapting genes with higher degree of sequence similarity become upregulated faster than genes with lower degree of sequence similarity. Further functionality of this approach to study TA is limited by the leakiness of the inducible gene expression system; however, constitutively expressed degradation-prone transgenes were used to demonstrate TA in human cells.
In addition, I have developed an approach to target wild-type cytoplasmic mRNAs without altering the cell’s genome and reported a TA-like phenomenon, which manifested as adapting gene upregulation not relying on mutations in other genes. Cytoplasmic mRNA cleavage with CRISPR-Cas13d triggered a TA-like response in three different gene models: Actg1 knockdown, Ctnna1 knockdown, and Nckap1 knockdown. After comparing two different modes of triggering TA, CRISPR-Cas9 knockout versus CRISPR-Cas13d knockdown, I reported little overlap between the dysregulated genes and suggested that diverse mRNA degradation modes led to distinct TA responses. In addition, the transcriptional increase of Actg2 caused by CRISPR-Cas13d-mediated Actg1 mRNA cleavage did not require chromatin accessibility changes.
Experiments and genetic tools described in this dissertation investigated how TA develops from its earliest onset, how it affects the global transcriptome of the cell, as well as provided compelling evidence for an mRNA degradation-central TA mechanism. I have created tools to study both direct and indirect TA gene targets and unveiled important insights into the temporal dynamics of TA. Genes with higher sequence similarity were found to be upregulated more rapidly than those with lower similarity. Furthermore, it was revealed that the epigenetic properties of TA responses vary depending on the triggering mechanism. Cas13d-mediated degradation of wild-type mRNAs led to immediate transcriptional enhancement independent of epigenetic changes, which stood in contrast to previously measured alterations in chromatin accessibility in CRISPR-Cas9 mutants. This research has thus significantly advanced our knowledge of TA and provided valuable tools and findings that contribute to the broader understanding of gene expression regulation in response to mRNA degradation.