Biologische Hochschulschriften (Goethe-Universität)
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The objectives of this thesis were to understand how distinct classes of cell types interact to shape oscillatory activity in cortical circuits of the turtle. We chose the turtle cortex as a model system for cortical computations for two reasons. One is that the phylogenetic position of turtles makes their cortex functionally and anatomically particularly interesting. The second is that reptilian brains present several unique experimental advantages. Turtles have a three-layered cortex that forms the dorsalmost part of their pallium and receives direct input from visual thalamus. Thus turtle cortex, while sharing several features with mammalian cortices, constitutes a simpler system for studying cortical computations and dynamics. Freshwater turtles are semiaquatic species, that dive for hours and hibernate for months without breathing. Their brains are adapted to these behaviors so that they can operate under severe anoxia. This property allows for ex vivo wholebrain and whole-cortex (”cortical slab”) preparations in vitro, enabling the use of many sophisticated techniques for monitoring activity in parallel.
I thus set out to utilize the advantages of our model system, by using optogenetic methods to reliably evoke oscillations in an ex vivo whole-cortex preparation while observing activity in parallel with planar multi-electrode arrays (MEA), linear silicon depth-electrodes and patch-clamp recording techniques. This required several technical aspects to be solved. Prior work in turtle cortex (Prechtl, 1994; Prechtl et al., 1997; Senseman and Robbins, 2002) indicated that visual stimuli evoke complex activity patterns (e. g. wave patterns) in dorsal cortex. The goal was to examine these dynamics in detail and to provide mechanistic explanations for them whenever possible. The recent advent of optogenetics, the development of microelectrode arrays, and the possibility to combine these techniques with classical electrophysiological approaches on a resistant, accessible and stable preparation led me to explore a number of technical avenues.
First I had to establish gene delivery methods in reptiles. I settled on recombinant viruses, and show results from several serotypes of adeno-associated virus (AAV), i lentivirus and rabies virus. I report successful gene expression of genes of interest with several subtypes of AAV, including the commonly used AAV2/1 and AAV2/5 serotypes. Second I had to find promoters enabling global and cell-type specific gene expression in reptiles. Ubiquitous high-yield promoters such as CAG/CB7 or CMV drive high levels of expression in turtles; cell-type specific promoters such as hSyn (expression limited to neurons) and CaMKIIa (expression limited exclusively o mostly to excitatory neurons) appear similarly biased in turtles. Other cell-type specific promoters reported in the literature (fNPY, fPV, fSST) failed to express in turtles.
A second major aspect of my work focused on electrophysiological recordings using microelectrode arrays and the interpretation of extracellular signals recorded from cortex in ex vivo preparations. We observed that spike signals produced by pyramidal and inhibitory neurons were very often followed by a slower potential. We identified these slower potentials as reflections of synaptic currents, and thus of the axonal projections of the neurons, at least within the deep layers of cortex. This also resulted in a means to classify neurons as excitatory or inhibitory with much higher reliability than classical methods (e. g. spike width). The final aspect of my work concerns the use of optogenetics to dissect the mechanisms of cortical oscillations and wave propagation. I show that oscillations can be induced by light in turtle cortex after transfection with AAV2/1 carrying the gene for channelrhodopsin 2 (ChR2). By using the CaMKIIa promoter, ChR2 induced currents are limited to LII/III excitatory cells; we can therefore control excitatory drive to cortical networks. If this drive is strong enough, layer III inhibitory interneurons are recruited and fire in a concerted fashion, silencing the excitatory population. The visually evoked 20 Hz oscillations observed in chronically recorded animals (Schneider, 2015) or in anaesthetized animals (Fournier et al., in press) thus appear to result from a feedback loop between E and I cells within layers II & III. Details of these interactions are being investigated but - layer I interneurons, by contrast, do not seem to be involved. By pulsing light I could control the frequency of the oscillations within a range of several Hz around the natural oscillation frequency. Above this range, cortex could only follow the stimulus at a fraction (1/2, 1/3,...) of the light pulse frequency. Using a digital micromirror device, I limited activation of the cortical networks spatially, enabling the study of wave propagation in this system.
Reptilian cortex offers a relatively simple model system for a reductionist and comparative strategy on understanding cortical computations and dynamics. Turtle dorsal cortex could thus give fundamental insights to the primordial organization tional, computational and functional principles of cortical networks. These insights are relevant to our understanding of mammalian brains and may prove valuable to decipher fundamental questions of modern neuroscience.
Rhabdomyosarcoma is the most common paediatric soft-tissue sarcoma, and for tumour recurrence, the prognosis is still unfavourable. The current standard therapy consisting of surgery, radiation and combined chemotherapy does not consider the specific biology of this tumour.
Histone deacetylases (HDACs) and the Lysine-specific demethylase-1 (LSD1) are two epigenetic modifiers which are both part of repressor complexes leading to transcriptional silencing of target genes. Whereas HDACs lead to deacetylation of several lysine-residues within the histone tail, LSD1 is specific for demethylation of H3K4me2 and H3K4me1, as well as in a different context for H3K9me2. Rhabdomyosarcoma is reported to harbour high levels of LSD1, but the functional relevance is yet unclear. HDAC inhibition proved to be effective as single agent treatment, however, the proximity of HDAC1/2 and LSD1 in repressor complexes at the DNA implies a suitable rationale for a combination therapy potentially leading to cooperative effects on target gene transcription. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the potential of a combined LSD1 and HDAC inhibition for cell death induction in rhabdomyosarcoma cell lines. Whereas LSD1 inhibitors failed to induce cell death on their own, the combined inhibition of HDACs and LSD1 resulted in highly synergistic cell death induction. This effect extended to several combinations of LSD1 and HDAC inhibitors as well as to four different rhabdomyosarcoma cell lines, two of embryonal and two of alveolar histology.
With the use of the HDAC inhibitor JNJ-26481585 and the reversible LSD1 inhibitor GSK690, we demonstrated that the cell death induced by the combination matches with the details of intrinsic mitochondrial apoptosis. JNJ-26481585/GSK690-induced cell death is partially caspase-dependent and leads to caspase cleavage, followed by substrate cleavage as shown for PARP, as well as loss of the mitochondrial membrane potential.
Furthermore, JNJ-26481585 and GSK690 acted together to transcriptionally upregulate the proapoptotic proteins NOXA, BIM and BMF, which resulted in respective changes on protein level for both cell lines. However, the antiapoptotic BCL-2 family proteins BCL-2, MCL-1 and BCL-xL displayed only minor changes in protein levels upon treatment with GSK690 and JNJ-26481585, which did not rely on transcriptional activity. Therefore, the increase in proapoptotic proteins induces a shift towards proapoptotic signalling at the mitochondrial membrane. This shift is functionally relevant since knockdown of a proapoptotic protein or overexpression of one of the antiapoptotic proteins BCL-2 and MCL-1, as well as a stabilized mutant MCL-1, can significantly protect from GSK690/JNJ-26481585-induced cell death.
Knockdown of the mitochondrial membrane protein BAK, which is directly guarding the mitochondrial membrane integrity, potently protected from GSK690/JNJ-26481585- induced cell death, directly linking the shift in the BCL-2 family proteins to the observed loss of mitochondrial membrane potential and the further downstream activation of caspases. Furthermore, treatment with JNJ-26481585 and GSK690 resulted in a cell cycle arrest in G2/M phase, indicating additional effects on the tumour cells beside apoptosis induction. Taken together, the combined inhibition of LSD1 and HDACs is a promising strategy for rhabdomyosarcoma treatment.
The human brain is one of the most complex biological systems. More than 100 billion neurons build networks that control basic body functions and highly coordinated movements, enable us to express emotions, feelings and thoughts and to store memories over years and even throughout life time. Ultimately, “We are who we are because of what we learn and what we remember” (Kandel 2006). Under pathological conditions, the brain function is challenged. Most if not all neurological diseases have in common that they are either triggered and/or accompanied by inflammatory processes of brain tissue, referred to as neuroinflammation. Such inflammatory processes directly affect an elementary neural mechanism relevant for learning and memory: synaptic plasticity. Indeed, neurons are highly dynamic structures and able to respond to specific stimuli with morphological, functional and molecular adaptations that modify the strength and number of neuronal contact sides (synapses). Hence, the main motivation of this thesis was to identify the neural targets through which inflammation affects brain function and synaptic plasticity in particular. The principles of synaptic plasticity have been studied intensively in the hippocampus, an anatomical structure localized within the temporal lobes that is essential for the consolidation of memories and spatial navigation. Synaptic plasticity is coordinated by complex interactions of thousands of molecules and proteins. Among those proteins, synaptopodin (SP) is localized at a strategic position within excitatory synapses and has been shown to be fundamentally involved in the regulation of synaptic plasticity.
To induce neuroinflammation and to study its effects on SP as well as synaptic plasticity, the classic model of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) was applied. This thesis discloses that inflammatory processes impair the ability of neurons to express hippocampal synaptic plasticity in vivo, which is accompanied by a downregulation of SP-mRNA and protein level in the mouse hippocampus, indicating that SP is one of the cellular targets through which inflammatory signaling pathways affect synaptic plasticity and hence neural function. To learn more about the cellular and molecular mechanisms, an in vitro LPS model was established using entorhino-hippocampal organotypic slice cultures (OTCs).
While confirming the major effect of LPS on SP, this thesis furthermore shows that neuroinflammation crucially involves the cytokine TNFα to transduce its effects on SP, and that microglial cells are the main source of TNFα production under inflammatory conditions. In an attempt to learn more about the mechanisms that are affected under conditions of neuroinflammation effects of retinoic acid (RA), a vitamin A derivate were tested. This is mainly because SP as well as RA have been shown to modulate synaptic plasticity through the accumulation of glutamate receptors at the postsynaptic site: SP via the association with the actincytoskeleton as well as intracellular calcium stores, and RA directly via the modulation of local protein synthesis within dendrites. Indeed, in slice cultures exposed to RA, hippocampal SP cluster size is upregulated, both in vitro and in vivo. Intriguingly, a lack of SP prevents RA-induced synaptic strengthening of hippocampal dentate granule cells in OTCs. This suggests a direct contribution of SP in RA-dependent synaptic plasticity. Interestingly, co-immunoprecipitation of SP-mRNA together with the RA-receptor alpha (RARα) further implies that RA directly controls synaptic plasticity via regulation of SP-protein expression. It is therefore interesting to speculate that RA may increase SP expression or prevent its reduction and thus alterations in synaptic plasticity under conditions of neuroinflammation. Taken together, this thesis identifies SP as an important neuronal target of TNFα-mediated alterations in synaptic plasticity. Moreover, the work on RA indicates that SP affects the ability of neurons to express synaptic plasticity by modulating/mediating local protein synthesis. Since neuroinflammatory processes are an elementary concomitant feature and/or cause of neurological diseases, I am confident that future work on the effects of inflammatory processes on brain function may provide the perspective in devising new therapeutic strategies for the treatment of neuropathologies such as Alzheimer’s disease, multiple sclerosis, epilepsy or stroke, by targeting SP expression and SP-mediated synaptic plasticity.
Pulsed electron-electron double resonance (PELDOR), also called Double Electron-Electron Resonance, (DEER) is a pulsed EPR technique that can provide structural information of biomolecules, such as proteins or nucleic acids, complementary to other structure determination methods by measuring long distances (from 1.5 up to 10 nm) between two paramagnetic labels. Incorporation of the rigid Ç-label pairwise into DNA or RNA molecules enables the determination not only of the distance but also of the mutual orientation between the two Ç-labels by multi-frequency orientation-selective PELDOR data (X-, Q- and G-band frequencies). Thus, information about the orientation of secondary structure elements of nucleic acids can be revealed and used as additional angular information for structure determination. Since Ç does not have motion independent from the helix where it resides, the conformational flexibility of the nucleic acid molecule can be directly determined. This thesis demonstrates the advancement of PELDOR spectroscopy, beyond its original scope of distance measurements, to determine the mutual orientation between two rigid spin labels towards the characterization of the conformational space sampled by highly flexible nucleic acid molecules. Applications of the methodology are shown on two systems: a three-way junction, namely a cocaine aptamer in its bound-state, and a two-way junction, namely a bent DNA.
More in detail, the conformational changes of the cocaine aptamer upon cocaine binding were investigated by analysis of the distance distributions. The cocaine-bound and the unbound states could be differentiated by their conformational flexibility, which decreases in the presence of the ligand. Moreover, the obtained distance distributions revealed a small change in the mean distance between the two spin labels upon cocaine binding. This indicates a ligand-induced conformational change, which presumably originates at the junction where cocaine is known to bind. The investigation of the relative orientation between the two spin-labeled helices of the aptamer revealed further structural insights into the conformational dynamics of the cocaine-bound state. The angular information from the orientation-selective PELDOR data and the a priori knowledge about the secondary structure of the aptamer were helpful in obtaining a molecular model describing its global folding and flexibility. In spite of a large flexible aptamer, the kink angle between the Ç-labeled helices was found to be rather well-defined.
As for the bent DNA molecule, a two-step protocol was proposed to investigate the conformational flexibility. In the first step, a database with all the possible conformers was created, using available restraints from NMR and distance restraints derived from PELDOR. In a second step, a weighted ensemble of these conformers fitting the multi-frequency PELDOR data was built. The uniqueness of the obtained structural ensemble was checked by validation against an independent PELDOR data set recorded at a higher magnetic field strength. In addition, the kink and twist angle pairs were determined and the resulting structural ensemble was compared with the conformational space deduced both from FRET experiments and from the structure determined by the NMR restraints alone.
Overall, this thesis underlines the potential of using PELDOR spectroscopy combined with rigid spin labels in the context of structure determination of nucleic acids in order to determine the relative orientation between two helices, the conformational flexibility and the conformational changes of nucleic acid molecules upon ligand binding.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde ein integrativer Netzwerkmodellierungsansatz gewählt, um die Rolle des Endothels im Kontext der Arteriosklerose zu untersuchen. Hierbei wurden bioinformatische Analysen, laborexperimentelle Versuche und klinische Daten vereinigt und aus dieser Synthese neue klinisch relevante Gene identifiziert und beschrieben.
Das Endothel trägt maßgeblich zur Homöostase des vaskulären Systems bei und eine Dysfunktion des Endothels fördert die Entstehung der Arteriosklerose. Im Zuge der Atherogenese entstehen vermehrt reaktive Sauerstoffspezies, die Lipide in der Membran von Plasma-Lipoprotein-Partikeln und in der zellulären Plasmamembran oxidieren. Eine Gruppe solcher oxidierter Membranlipide ist oxPAPC, das in erhöhter Konzentration in arteriosklerotischen Plaques und lokal an Orten chronischer Entzündung im vaskulären System vorkommt. Weitherhin findet sich diese Gruppe von oxidierten Phospholipiden in oxidierten LDL-Partikeln, in denen oxPAPC die Bindung an Makrophagen vermittelt und hierdurch maßgeblich zur Bildung der Schaumzellen und damit zum arteriosklerotischen Prozess beiträgt. Die durch oxPAPC verursachte Veränderung der Endothelzelle ist bisher wenig erforscht. Es ist jedoch bekannt, dass oxPAPC die Transkriptionslandschaft in Endothelzellen tiefgreifend verändert. Um der Komplexität der Endothelzellveränderung gerecht zu werden, wurde ein bayesscher Ansatz angewendet.
In einem ersten Schritt wurden Expressionsprofile von humanen Aortenendothelzellen (HAEC) aus 147 Herztransplantatspendern verwendet. Diese Expressionprofile enthalten Transkriptionsinformationen der 147 HAEC, die mit oxPAPC oder Kontrollmedium behandelt worden waren. Es wurden signifikant koexprimierte Gene identifiziert und hiervon Gen-Paare berechnet, die einen differentiellen Vernetzungsgrad zwischen Kontroll- and oxPAPC-Status aufweisen. Dieses Netzwerkmodell gibt darüber Aufschluss, welche Gene miteinander in Verbindung stehen. 26759 Gene-Paare, die differentiell verbunden und signifkant koexprimiert waren, wurden hierarchisch gruppiert. Es wurden neun Gen-Gruppen mit einer erhöhten und elf Gen-Gruppen mit einer verminderten Konnektivität nach oxPAPC identifiziert. Gruppe 6 der erhöhten Konnektvitäts-Gruppen wies hierbei die höchste kohärente Konnektivität von allen Gruppen auf. Eine Analyse signifikant überrepräsentierter kanonischer Gensätze ergab, dass diese Gruppe insbesondere Serin-Glycin-Aminosäuremetabolismus, tRNA- und mTOR-Aktivierung wiederspiegelte. Der hier gewählte Netzwerkmodellierungsansatz zeigte auf, dass der Aminosäuremetabolismus durch oxidizerte Phospholipide massiven Veränderungen unterworfen ist.
Um den Mechanismus der Veränderung des Aminosäuremetabolismus näher zu untersuchen, wurden bayessche Netzwerkmodelle verwendet. Dieses Netzwerkmodell enthält im Gegensatz zum differentiellen Koexpresssionsmodell gerichtete Informationen innerhalb des Netzwerkgraphes. Die Gen-Gen Verbindungen sind kausal, wodurch sich eine Hierarchie bildet und Schlüsselfaktoren innerhalb des Netzwerks bestimmt werden können. Durch die Integrierung von Expressionsprofilen und Genomprofilen derselben HAEC-Kohorte und der Inferenz von kausalen Gen-Gen-Verbindungen ergaben sich zwei bayessche Netze: Kontroll- und oxPAPC-Netzwerk. Permutationsuntersuchungen und systematische Beurteilung im Vergleich zu Gen-Gen-Verbindungen in Online-Datenbanken zeigten eine erhöhte Prognosefähigkeit der beiden HAEC bayesschen Netze. Es wurden die Schlüsselfaktoren und deren Teilnetzwerke berechnet und auf biologische Wege hin untersucht. Hierbei wurde das mitochondriale Protein MTHFD2 als ein Schlüsselfaktor für ein Teilnetzwerk des oxPAPC bayesschen Netzes identifiziert. Dieses Teilnetz zeigte eine ähnliche Gensatzanreicherung wie GOC-AA und überlappte mit diesem signifikant.
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Echolocation allows bats to orientate in darkness without using visual information. Bats emit spatially directed high frequency calls and infer spatial information from echoes coming from call reflections in objects (Simmons 2012; Moss and Surlykke 2001, 2010). The echoes provide momentary snapshots, which have to be integrated to create an acoustic image of the surroundings. The spatial resolution of the computed image increases with the quantity of received echoes. Thus, a high call rate is required for a detailed representation of the surroundings.
One important parameter that the bats extract from the echoes is an object’s distance. The distance is inferred from the echo delay, which represents the duration between call emission and echo arrival (Kössl et al. 2014). The echo delay decreases with decreasing distance and delay-tuned neurons have been characterized in the ascending auditory pathway, which runs from the inferior colliculus (Wenstrup et al. 2012; Macías et al. 2016; Wenstrup and Portfors 2011; Dear and Suga 1995) to the auditory cortex (Hagemann et al. 2010; Suga and O'Neill 1979; O'Neill and Suga 1982).
Electrophysiological studies usually characterize neuronal processing by using artificial and simplified versions of the echolocation signals as stimuli (Hagemann et al. 2010; Hagemann et al. 2011; Hechavarría and Kössl 2014; Hechavarría et al. 2013). The high controllability of artificial stimuli simplifies the inference of the neuronal mechanisms underlying distance processing. But, it remains largely unexplored how the neurons process delay information from echolocation sequences. The main purpose of the thesis is to investigate how natural echolocation sequences are processed in the brain of the bat Carollia perspicillata. Bats actively control the sensory information that it gathers during echolocation. This allows experimenters to easily identify and record the acoustic stimuli that are behaviorally relevant for orientation. For recording echolocation sequences, a bat was placed in the mass of a swinging pendulum (Kobler et al. 1985; Beetz et al. 2016b). During the swing the bat emitted echolocation calls that were reflected in surrounding objects. An ultrasound sensitive microphone traveling with the bat and positioned above the bat’s head recorded the echolocation sequence. The echolocation sequence carried delay information of an approach flight and was used as stimulus for neuronal recordings from the auditory cortex and inferior colliculus of the bats.
Presentation of high stimulus rates to other species, such as rats, guinea pigs, suppresses cortical neuron activity (Wehr and Zador 2005; Creutzfeldt et al. 1980). Therefore, I tested if neurons of bats are suppressed when they are stimulated with high acoustic rates represented in echolocation sequences (sequence situation). Additionally, the bats were stimulated with randomized call echo elements of the sequence and an interstimulus time interval of 400 ms (element situation). To quantify neuronal suppression induced by the sequence, I compared the response pattern to the sequence situation with the concatenated response patterns to the element situation. Surprisingly, although the bats should be adapted for processing high acoustic rates, their cortical neurons are vastly suppressed in the sequence situation (Beetz et al. 2016b). However, instead of being completely suppressed during the sequence situation, the neurons partially recover from suppression at a unit specific call echo element. Multi-electrode recordings from the cortex allow assessment of the representation of echo delays along the cortical surface. At the cortical level, delay-tuned neurons are topographically organized. Cortical suppression improves sharpness of neuronal tuning and decreases the blurriness of the topographic map. With neuronal recordings from the inferior colliculus, I tested whether the echolocation sequence also induced neuronal suppression at subcortical level. The sequence induced suppression was weaker in the inferior colliculus than in the cortex. The collicular response makes the neurons able to track the acoustic events in the echolocation sequence. Collicular suppression mainly improves the signal-to-noise ratio. In conclusion, the results demonstrate that cortical suppression is not necessarily a shortcoming for temporal processing of rapidly occurring stimuli as it has previously been interpreted.
Natural environments are usually composed of multiple objects. Thus, each echolocation call reflects off multiple objects resulting in multiple echoes following the calls. At present, it is largely unexplored how neurons process echolocation sequences containing echo information from more than one object (multi-object sequences). Therefore, I stimulated bats with a multi-object sequence which contained echo information from three objects. The objects were different distances away from each other. I tested the influence of each object on the neuronal tuning by stimulating the bats with different sequences created from filtering object specific echoes from the multi-object sequence. The cortex most reliably processes echo information from the nearest object whereas echo information from distant objects is not processed due to neuronal suppression. Collicular neurons process less selectively echo information from certain objects and respond to each echo.
For proper echolocation, bats have to distinguish between own biosonar signals and the signals coming from conspecifics. This can be quite challenging when many bats echolocate adjacent to each other. In behavioral experiments, the echolocation performance of C. perspicillata was tested in the presence of potentially interfering sounds. In the presence of acoustic noise, the bats increase the sensory acquisition rate which may increase the update rate of sensory processing. Neuronal recordings from the auditory cortex and inferior colliculus could strengthen the hypothesis. Although there were signs of acoustic interference or jamming at neuronal level, the neurons were not completely suppressed and responded to the rest of the echolocation sequence.
Photolabile Schutzgruppen haben sich im Laufe der letzten Jahre als wertvolle Werkzeuge für die Untersuchung und Regulation biologischer Prozesse etabliert. Dabei wird die photolabile Schutzgruppe auf geeignete Weise mit Biomolekülen verknüpft, sodass deren Funktion temporär deaktiviert wird. Durch Bestrahlen mit Licht geeigneter Wellenlängen wird die photolabile Schutzgruppe entfernt und die Aktivität des Biomoleküls bzw. des zu beobachtenden Prozesses wiederhergestellt. Die Grundlagen der Verwendung photolabiler Schutzgruppen im biologischen Kontext wurden in zwei Pionierarbeiten 1977 von J.W. ENGELS und 1978 von J.F. HOFFMAN gelegt. Davon ausgehend haben sich zahlreiche Anwendungen photolabiler Schutzgruppen für biologisch interessante Molekülklassen entwickelt. Auf dem speziellen Gebiet der Nukleinsäuren wurden in den letzten Jahren einige fundamentale Mechanismen entdeckt und aufgeklärt, die nicht zuletzt auch therapeutisch interessante Anwendungsmöglichkeiten für photolabile Schutzgruppen bieten. Hierbei stellt das An-/Aus-Schaltverhalten von Nukleinsäuren jedoch ein nicht-triviales Problem dar. Selbst der gezielte Einbau einer einzelnen photolabilen Schutzgruppe in ein multifunktionales Oligonukleotid führt in der Regel nämlich nicht zu einer vollständigen Deaktivierung dessen. Ein multipler Einbau photolabiler Schutzgruppen entlang der Sequenz eines funktionellen Oligonukleotids schaltet die Hintergrundaktivität im deaktivierten Zustand zwar vollständig aus, allerdings müssen in diesem Fall hohe Bestrahlungsintensitäten bzw. –dauern für das Entfernen aller photolabilen Modifikationen angewendet werden. Dadurch geht zum einen die Zeitauflösung der lichtgeschalteten Prozesse verloren, nicht zuletzt erhöht sich dabei aber auch das Risiko von lichtinduzierten Schäden am biologischen System. Das Kernthema der vorliegenden Dissertation war es daher, neue Architekturen für den Aufbau photoaktivierbarer Oligonukleotide zu entwickeln.
Das erste große Projekt basierte auf der Annahme, dass sich Duplexstrukturen, die für die Funktion vieler Nukleinsäuremechanismen fundamental sind, durch Zyklisierung von Oligonukleotiden global destabilisieren und damit effizienter photoaktivieren lassen, als durch lokalen Einbau einzelner photolabiler Schutzgruppen in Oligonukleotide. Hierzu wurden geeignete Alkin-Modifikationen an photolabile Nitrobenzyl- und Cumarin-Schutzgruppen angebracht und diese an die Nukleobasen verschiedener DNA-Bausteine geknüpft. Es ist daraufhin gelungen, Oligonukleotide mit je zwei photolabilen Alkin-Modifikationen herzustellen und diese intrasequentiell über eine Cu(I)-katalysierte Click-Reaktion mit einem Bisazid-Linker zu zyklisieren. Die so erhaltenen Oligonukleotide wiesen dramatisch erniedrigte Schmelzpunkte gegenüber den nativen Duplexen, sowie gegenüber den zweifach photolabil geschützten Oligonukleotiden auf. Dabei wurde außerdem festgestellt, dass Zyklisierungsparameter wie die Linkerlänge, -polarität und –flexibilität und die Wahl der photolabilen Schutzgruppe keinen signifikanten Einfluss auf die Duplexstabilität hat. Über einen Bereich von Ringgrößen zwischen ca. 11-21 Nukleotiden wurden die niedrigsten Duplexstabilitäten beobachtet. Sehr kleine, sowie große Ringe ab 30 Nukleotiden wiesen dagegen höhere Stabilität auf.
Da mit dem entwickelten Zyklisierungskonzept auch mehrere Ringstrukturen innerhalb einer Oligonukleotidsequenz aufgebaut werden können, wurde im nächsten Schritt eine photoaktivierbare Variante des C10-Aptamers hergestellt, welches selektiv gegen Burkitt’s Lymphomzellen bindet. Dieses 90-mer DNA-Oligonukleotid wurde an drei Stellen photolabil Alkin-modifiziert und infolge mit einem Trisazid-Linker zu einer bizyklisierten Struktur verknotet. Mit Hilfe von Fluoreszenzmikroskopie-Experimenten konnte demonstriert werden, dass das durch eine solche „Photo-Klammer“ deaktivierte C10-Aptamer keine Bindungsaffinität gegenüber Burkitt’s Lymphomzellen aufweist, die Bindungsaktivität jedoch nach Belichten wiederhergestellt werden kann. Mit Atomkraftmikroskopie-Experimenten ist es darüber hinaus gelungen, die Photoaktivierung des verknäuelten C10-Aptamers mit molekularer Auflösung abzubilden. Mit diesem Ergebnis können nun lange funktionelle Oligonukleotide auf definierte Weise photoaktivierbar gestaltet werden, insbesondere auch dann, wenn keine (Informationen über) funktionelle Sekundärstrukturen existieren.
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Gegenstand der vorliegenden Arbeit sind die Untersuchungen lichtgesteuerter Reaktionen der zwei Retinalproteine Channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR-2) und Proteorhodopsin (PR) mit Hilfe zeitaufgelöster Laserspektroskopie.
Da der Mechanismus der Kanalöffnung des ChR-2 bis heute nicht vollständig aufgeklärt werden konnte, beschäftigt sich diese Arbeit insbesondere mit den Prozessen, die direkt nach der Photoanregung des Retinals stattfinden und die Kanalöffnung vorbereiten. Es wurde dabei gezielt auf für die Funktion des Proteins wichtige Faktoren wie strukturelle Besonderheiten des Chromophors und seiner Umgebung eingegangen und deren Auswirkung auf die Dynamik der Photoreaktionen sowie die Veränderungen im Protein nach der Anregung untersucht.
Zunächst wurden die Ergebnisse der vis-pump-IR-probe-Experimente an ChR-2 im Bereich der Carbonylschwingungsbanden protonierter Glutamat- und Aspartat-Reste dargestellt. Dabei wurde insbesondere die Bildungsdynamik der Differenzbanden in diesem Spektralbereich untersucht und in Anlehnung an die vorhandene Literatur eine Bandenzuordnung der für die Funktion des Proteins wichtigen Aminosäurereste vorgenommen. Aus den Messergebnissen konnte geschlossen werden, dass die mit der Kanalöffnung einhergehenden Konformationsänderungen in ChR-2 durch eine effektive Aufnahme der Überschussenergie durch das Protein auf einer sub-Pikosekunden-Zeitskala vorbereitet werden.
Des Weiteren wurden spektroskopische Untersuchungen an der R120H-Mutante des ChR-2 vorgestellt. Da diese Mutante bei elektrophysiologischen Messungen keine Kanalaktivität zeigte, sollte zunächst geklärt werden, ob die Mutation einen Einfluss auf die Retinalisomerisierung und den nachfolgenden Photozyklus hat. Dabei stellte sich heraus, dass die Retinalisomerisierung bei der R120H-Mutante zwar im Vergleich zum Wildtyp etwas verzögert stattfindet, der Einfluss der Punktmutation auf den weiteren Photozyklus jedoch insgesamt gering ist. Mit Hilfe der Kurzzeit-IR-Spektroskopie im Bereich der Amid I-Schwingung des Proteinrückgrats konnten für die Mutante allerdings signifikante Veränderungen der Bildungsdynamik sowie eine deutliche Abnahme der Amplitude des Amid I-Signals detektiert werden. Anhand weiterer Experimente an den Mutanten E123T und D253N in diesem Spektralbereich konnte anschließend ein Zusammenhang zwischen der Intensität der Amid I-Bande und der Kanalaktivität von ChR-2 festgestellt werden. Diese Ergebnisse ließen somit die Schlussfolgerung zu, dass die Aminosäurereste R120 und D253 eine entscheidende Rolle beim schnellen Transfer der Überschussenergie an das Protein nach der Retinalanregung und der so initiierten Kanalöffnung spielen.
Zusätzlich wurde der Frage nachgegangen, inwieweit Veränderungen am Chromophor die Isomerisierungsreaktion, den nachfolgenden Photozyklus sowie die Funktion des ChR-2 als Ionenkanal beeinflussen können. Zu diesem Zweck wurden spektroskopische Untersuchungen an einem mit 9-12-Phenylretinal (PheRet) rekonstituierten ChR-2 vorgestellt. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Isomerisierung des PheRet zu seiner 13-cis-Form in ChR-2 stark verlangsamt ist und verglichen mit dem nicht modifizierten Chromophor deutlich ineffizienter abläuft. Es wurde außerdem festgestellt, dass die Veränderungen am Retinal zu deutlichen Beeinträchtigungen des Photozyklus führen. Zum einen wurde ein sehr schneller Zerfall des ersten Photoprodukts sowie die Bildung eines zusätzlichen, blauverschobenen Px-Zustands detektiert. Außerdem wurde festgestellt, dass nach der Deprotonierung des isomerisierten PheRet der Großteil der modifizierten Retinale in den Ausgangszustand zurückkehrt und der P3-Zustand nur in geringen Mengen gebildet wird. Die Messergebnisse führten somit zu der Schlussfolgerung, dass die all-trans-Konformation des PheRet in ChR-2 deutlich bevorzugt wird. Da elektrophysiologische Untersuchungen des Retinal-Analogons jodach keine signifikanten Verminderungen der Photoströme im Vergleich zum ATR in ChR-2 zeigten, ließ sich schließlich festhalten, dass die vorgenommenen Veränderungen am Chromophor, die zu einer deutlichen Hemmung der Isomerisierungsreaktion führen und einen starken Einfluss auf den nachfolgenden Photozyklus haben, nicht ausreichend sind, um die Kanalaktivität von ChR-2 komplett zu blockieren, solange noch ein kleiner Anteil der Retinale isomerisieren kann.
Der abschließende Teil der Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit der Absorption des UV-Lichts durch das Retinal mit deprotonierter Schiff-Base im grünabsorbierenden Proteorhodopsin, welches in einem alkalischen Medium im Dunkelzustand akkumuliert werden kann. Die Untersuchungen der Primärreaktion zeigten einen langsamen biexponentiellen Zerfall des angeregten Zustands der UV-absorbierenden Spezies mit anschließender Bildung des 13-cis-Photoprodukts. Aufgrund dieser Ergebnisse konnte ein Reaktionsmodell für die ersten Prozesse nach der UV-Anregung des Retinals im GPR aufgestellt werden, welches möglicherweise für weitere UV-Rezeptoren genutzt werden kann.
The fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster is one of the most important biological model organisms, but only the comparative approach with closely related species provides insights into the evolutionary diversification of insects. Of particular interest is the live imaging of fluorophores in developing embryos. It provides data for the analysis and comparison of the threedimensional morphogenesis as a function of time. However, for all species apart from Drosophila, for example the red flour beetle Tribolium castaneum, essentially no established standard operation procedures are available and the pool of data and resources is sparse. The goal of my PhD project was to address these limitations. I was able to accomplish the following milestones:
- Development of the hemisphere and cobweb mounting methods for the non-invasive imaging of Tribolium embryos in light sheet-based fluorescence microscopes and characterization of most crucial embryogenetic events.
- Comprehensive documentation of methods as protocols that describe (i) beetle rearing in the laboratory, (ii) preparation of embryos, (ii) calibration of light sheet-based fluorescence microscopes, (iv) recording over several days, (v) embryo retrieval as a quality control as well as (vi) data processing.
- Adaption of the methods to record and analyze embryonic morphogenesis of the Mediterranean fruit fly Ceratitis capitata and the two-spotted cricket Gryllus bimaculatus as well as integration of the data into an evolutionary context.
- Further development of the hemisphere method to allow the bead-based / landmark-based registration and fusion of three-dimensional images acquired along multiple directions to compensate the shadowing effect.
- Development of the BugCube, a web-based computer program that allows to share image data, which was recorded by using light sheet-based fluorescence microscopy, with colleagues.
- Invention and experimental proof-of-principle of the (i) AGameOfClones vector concept that creates homozygous transgenic insect lines systematically. Additionally, partial proof-of-principle of the (ii) AClashOfStrings vector concept that creates double homozygous transgenic insect lines systematically, as well as preliminary evaluation of the (iii) AStormOfRecords vector concept that creates triple homozygous transgenic insect lines systematically.
- Creation and performance screening of more than fifty transgenic Tribolium lines for the long-term imaging of embryogenesis in fluorescence microscopes, including the first Lifeact and histone subunit-based lines.
My primary results contribute significantly to the advanced fluorescence imaging approaches of insect species beyond Drosophila. The image data can be used to compare different strategies of embryonic morphogenesis and thus to interpret the respective phylogenetic context. My technological developments extend the methodological arsenal for insect model organisms considerably.
Within my perspective, I emphasize the importance of non-invasive long-term fluorescence live imaging to establish speciesspecific morphogenetic standards, discuss the feasibly of a morphologic ontology on the cellular level, suggest the ‘nested linearly decreasing phylogenetic relationship’ approach for evolutionary developmental biology, propose the live imaging of species hybrids to investigate speciation and finally outline how light sheet-based fluorescence microscopy contributes to the transition from on-demand to systematic data acquisition in developmental biology.
During my PhD project, I wrote a total of ten manuscripts, six of which were already published in peer-reviewed scientific journals. Additionally, I supervised four Master and two Bachelor projects whose scientific questions were inspired by the topic of my PhD work.
Inhibition of midbrain dopamine (DA) neurons codes for negative reward prediction errors, and causally affects conditioning learning. DA neurons located in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) display two-fold longer rebound delays from hyperpolarizing inhibition in comparison to those in the substantia nigra (SN). This difference has been linked to the slow inactivation of Kv4.3-mediated A-type currents (IA). One known suppressor of Kv4.3 inactivation is a splice variant of potassium channel interacting protein 4 (KChIP4), KChIP4a, which has a unique potassium channel inactivation suppressor domain (KISD) that is coded within exon 3 of the KChIP4 gene. Previous ex vivo experiments from our lab showed that the constitutive knockout of KChIP4 (KChIP4 KO) removes the slow inactivation of IA in VTA DA neurons, with marginal effects on SN DA neurons. KChIP4 KO also increased firing pauses in response to phasic hyperpolarization in these neurons. Here I show, using extracellular recordings combined with juxtacellular labeling in anesthetized mice, that KChIP4 KO also selectively changes the number and duration spontaneous firing pauses by VTA DA neurons in vivo. Pauses were quantified with two different statistical methods, including one developed in house. No other firing parameter was affected, including mean frequency and bursting, and the activity of SN DA neurons was untouched, suggesting that KChIP4 gene products have a highly specific effect on VTA DA neuron responses to inhibitory input.
Following up on this result, I developed a new mouse line (KChIP4 Ex3d) where the KISD-coding exon 3 of KChIP4 is selectively excised by cre-recombinase expressed under the dopamine transporter (DAT) promoter, therefore disrupting the expression of KChIP4a only in midbrain DA neurons. I show that these mice have a highly selective behavioral phenotype, displaying a drastic acceleration in extinction learning, but no changes in acquisition learning, in comparison to control littermates. Computational fitting of the behavioral data with a modified Rescorla-Wagner model confirmed that this phenotype is congruent with a selective increase in learning from negative prediction errors. KChIP4 Ex3d also had normal open field exploration, novel object preference, hole board exploration and spontaneous alternation in a plus maze, indicating that exploratory drive, responses to novelty, anxiety, locomotion and working memory were not affected by the genetic manipulation. Furthermore semi-quantitative IHC revealed that KChIP4 Ex3d mice have increased Kv4.3 expression in TH+ neurons, suggesting that the absence of KChIP4a increases the binding of other KChIP variants, which known to increase surface expression of Kv4 channels.
Furthermore, in the course of my experimental study I identified that the most used mouse line where cre-recombinase is expressed under the DAT promoter (DAT-cre KI) has a different behavioral phenotype during conditioning in relation to WT littermate controls. These animals displayed increased responding during the initial trials of acquisition and delayed response latency extinction, consistent with an increase in motivation, which is in line with a decrease in DAT function.
I propose a working model where the disruption of KChIP4a expression in DA neurons leads to an increase in binding of other KChIP variants to Kv4.3 subunits, promoting their increased surface expression and increasing IA current density; this then increases firing pauses in response to synaptic inhibition, which in behaving animals translates to an increase in negative prediction error-based learning.