Biologische Hochschulschriften (Goethe-Universität)
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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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My PhD work employed genetic and pharmacological manipulations, coupled with highresolution live imaging, to understand intercellular communications during zebrafish cardiovascular development. The heart is the first organ to form, and it is composed of several tissues, among which interactions are crucial. I identified two important interactions between muscular and non-muscular tissues in poorly characterized contexts, and the molecules required for the signalling. First, I discovered an important cellular and molecular crosstalk orchestrating the development of the cardiac outflow tract (i.e., the aortic root in mammals).
Endothelial-derived TGF-beta signalling controls the generation of the local extracellular matrix (ECM). The ECM in turn affects endothelial proliferation as well as smooth muscle cell organization (Boezio et al, 2020; Bensimon-Brito*, Boezio* et al, 2020). In my second project, I investigated the crosstalk between the epicardial layer and the myocardial wall. By generating epicardial-impairment models, I identified a novel role for the epicardium in regulating cardiomyocyte volume during heart development (Boezio et al, 2021). Ultimately, this research contributed to our understanding of how paracrine signalling controls the multicellular interactions integral to organogenesis.
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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In order to form an organ, cells need to take up specialized functions and tasks. Cellular specialization is guided by an interplay of chemical signals and physical forces, where one influences the other. One aspect in cellular identity is its shape, which e.g. defines how susceptible the cell may be to intercellular signaling or in which section of the cell cycle it is and therefore can tell us about its current state. Shape changes are introduced by motor proteins that are controlled and activated in a locally confined manner. For my thesis, I was interested to understand better how cellular shape and geometry impacts downstream cell and organ development. What happens if a cell cant transition to a specific shape? How does it affect tissue structure? How does it affect further development?
One regulator of motor proteins like non-muscle myosin is Shroom3, which recently has been been shown to be expressed and involved in the development of the zebrafish lateral line organ (1 ). Development of the lateral line occurs through a migrating cluster of initially about 150 cells, the posterior lateral line primordium (pLLP), which migrates from the anterior (head) to the posterior (tail) while depositing cell clusters in a regular pattern. Literature on development of the lateral line suggests that in order for a cell cluster to be deposited from the pLLP, rosette formation is a key requirement. Therefore our expectation from the shroom3 mutant was that the number of clusters deposited was significantly reduced. To our surprise, when we first inspected the end of migration lateral line phenotype we found many individuals with a significant increase in cell clusters deposited.
This made us re-think the role of Shroom3 during rosette assembly and the processes its involved in.
To study the effects of Shroom3 on lateral line development, a mutant line was generated and crossed with various transgenic lines which express fluorescently labeled proteins that locate to organelles such as the plasmamembrane or the nucleus. Following, the mutant with its fluorescent labels was microscopically imaged under different conditions to quantify and analyze various cell-morphometric features. Even though the zebrafish is a popular model organism and its perfectly suited for developmental biology and advanced microscopy, there were no methods that would allow for a standardized and more automated pipeline of data acquisition and processing.
Therefore, in order to accurately quantify the morphogenic processes Shroom3 is involved in, I developed a new toolset that significantly improved and facilitated my research. The toolset consists of (1) a new sample mounting method that is based on a 3D agarose gel that increases the number of embryos that can be mounted and imaged at once and speeds up the imaging process significantly (2) for subseqent image analysis I developed four programs that automate the process and therefore make the results much more reproducible and the analysis much more efficient. The first program is used for end of migration analyses, to deduce the pattern, count and size of Lateral Line cell clusters. The second is used not for end of migration, but for migration analyses (on timelapse recordings). Besides this it also prepares the images for more advanced downstream migration analyses and allows to analyse fluorescence signal on a second channel. The third program is used to analyse the pLLP only at high spatial resolution and to deduce the cell count, 3D cell morphometrics (like the volume) and cell orientation. The fourth program finally is used downstream of the second and third program and is capable of detecting and comparing them with the look of wildtype rosettes.
Here I show that in absence of Shroom3 rosette formation in the migrating pLLP is destabilized leading to facilitated cell cluster deposition and I show how this might be related to traction forces due to a possible interdependence of pLLP acceleration and speed of migration. Furthermore I show that apical constriction and rosette formation is not blocked in Shroom3 deficient embryos, but that larger rosettes are fragmented into many smaller ones. Finally, I give an outlook on how the absense of Shroom3 and hence the absense of morphological changes may deregulate gene transcription by elevating the levels Atoh1a, a transcription factor necessary for hair cell development.
My results and methodology demonstrate the importance of morphology in guiding developmental processes and how rather small morphological changes on the cellular level can impact further development significantly. My work also shows how powerful modern genetics, imaging and image analysis are and how diverse they are in terms of range of questions they are capable of answering. The methods and tools I developed prepare the ground for at least three quarters of the analyses I carried out and together with the documentation and data I provide, they are highly reproducible. In that regard I am especially happy that one of my developments, an improved sample preparation method, is already used by many different labs all over the world helping them to make their results more reproducible.
Across the entire animal kingdom, sociality, i.e. the tendency of individual animals to form a group with conspecifics, is a common trait. Environmental changes have to be met with corresponding, quick adaptations. For social species, the presence of conspecifics is important for survival and if social animals are deprived of access to conspecifics, this can lead to strong and lasting changes on a physiological level as well as behaviour. Gene expression changes responsible for these adaptations have so far not been understood in detail. As social isolation leads to changes on a neuronal level, it is important to investigate the gene expression changes that are induced in the brain. In this thesis, next-generation RNA-sequencing was applied to zebrafish, a well-established model organism characterized by its high degree of companionship. Within the entire brain, gene expression was analysed in zebrafish that were raised either with conspecifis or in isolation, ranging from 5 to 21 days post fertilization. Using this approach, several genes were identified that were downregulated by social isolation. In this thesis, I focused on one of these consistently downregulated genes, parathyroid hormone 2 (pth2). The expression of pth2 was demonstrated to be bidirectionally regulated by the number of conspecifics present and to be responsive to changes in the social environment within 30 minutes. Regulation of pth2 does not occur by visual or chemosensory access to conspecifcs, but is mediated by mechanosensory perception of other fish via the lateral line. In an experiment using an artificial mechanical stimulation paradigm, it was shown that the features necessary to elicit pth2 transcription closely mimick the locomotion of actual zebrafish. Other, similar stimulation paradigms are not capable to induce this transcriptional response.
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.
Global biodiversity is changing rapidly and contemporary climate change is an important driver of this change. As climate change continues, the challenge is to understand how it may affect the future of biodiversity. This is relevant to informing policy and conservation, but it requires reliable future projections of biodiversity. Biodiversity is the variety of life on Earth which includes the diversity of species. The species on Earth are linked in diverse networks of biotic interactions. Interacting species can respond differently to climate change. This can cause spatial or temporal mismatches between interacting species and result in secondary extinctions of species that lose obligate interaction partners. Yet, accounting for biotic interactions in biodiversity projections remains challenging. One way to address this challenge is the use of trait-based approaches because the impact of climate change on interacting species is influenced by species’ functional traits, i.e., measurable characteristics of the species that influence their abiotic and biotic interactions. First, species’ functional traits influence how species respond to climate change. Second, they influence whether the species find compatible interaction partners in reshuffled species assemblages under climate change. Thus, the overarching aim of this dissertation was to explore how trait-based approaches can increase our understanding of how climate change might affect interacting species. For this, I focussed on interactions between fleshy-fruited plants and avian frugivores along a tropical elevational gradient.
I investigated three principal research questions. First, I investigated how traits related to the sensitivity of avian frugivores to climate change and their adaptive capacity vary along elevation and covary across species. I combined estimates of species’ climatic niche breadth (approximating species’ sensitivity) with traits influencing species’ dispersal ability, dietary niche breadth and habitat niche breadth (aspects of species’ adaptive capacity). Species’ climatic niche breadth increased with increasing elevation, while their dispersal ability and dietary niche breadth decreased with increasing elevation. Across species, there was no significant relationship of the sensitivity of the avian frugivores to climate change and their adaptive capacity. The opposing patterns of species’ sensitivity to climate change and their adaptive capacity along elevation imply that species from assemblages at different elevations may respond differently to climate change. The independence between species’ sensitivity and adaptive capacity suggests that it is important to account for both sensitivity and adaptive capacity to fully understand how climate change might affect biodiversity.
Second, I assessed how climate change might influence the co-occurrence of interaction partners with compatible traits, i.e., the functional correspondence of interacting species. I integrated future projections of species’ elevational ranges considering different vertical dispersal scenarios with analyses of the functional diversity of interacting species assemblages. The functional correspondence of fleshy-fruited plants and avian frugivores was lowest if plant and bird species were projected to contract their ranges towards higher elevations in response to increasing temperatures. Contrastingly, if species were projected to expand their ranges upslope, the functional correspondence remained close. The low functional correspondence under a scenario of range contraction indicates that plant species with specific traits might miss compatible interaction partners in future assemblages. This could negatively affect their seed dispersal ability. These results suggest that ensuring the integrity of biotic interactions under climate change requires that species can shift their ranges upslope unlimitedly.
Third, I examined whether avian seed dispersal is sufficient for plants to track future temperature change along the elevational gradient. With a trait-based modelling approach, I simulated seed-dispersal distances avian frugivores can provide to fleshy-fruited woody plant species and quantified the number of long-distance dispersal events the plant species would require to fully track projected temperature shifts along elevation. Most plant species were projected to require several long-distance dispersal events to fully track the projected temperature shifts in time. However, the number of required long-distance dispersal events varied with the degree of trait matching and plant species’ traits. These findings suggest that avian seed dispersal is insufficient for plants to track future temperature change along the elevational gradient as woody plant species might not be able to undergo several consecutive long-distance dispersal events within a short time window, due to their long maturation times. These results also imply that the ability of bird-dispersed plant species to track climate change is associated with the specialization of the seed dispersal system and with plant species’ traits.
Trait-based approaches are promising tools to study impacts of climate change on interacting species. The trait-based approaches that I have developed in this thesis are applicable more widely, e.g., to other types of biotic interactions, or to assess the effects of other drivers of global change. Moreover, these approaches may be further developed to model changes in biotic interactions under global change more dynamically. Taken together, I have shown how a trait-based perspective could help to account for biotic interactions in biodiversity projections. The development of such approaches and the gained knowledge are urgently needed to facilitate the conservation of biodiversity in a rapidly changing world.
Genetic and genomic tools have provided researchers with the opportunity to address fundamental questions regarding the reintroduction of species into their historical range with greater precision than ever before. Reintroduction has been employed as a conservation method to return locally extinct species to their native range for decades. However, it remains unknown how genetic factors may impact population establishment and persistence at the population and metapopulation level in the short- and long-term. Genetic methods are capable of producing datasets from many individuals, even when only low quality DNA can be collected. These methods offer an avenue to investigate unanswered questions in reintroduction biology, which is vital to provide evidence based management strategies for future projects. The Eurasian lynx (Lynx lynx) and European wildcat (Felis silvestris) are elusive carnivores native to Eurasia and have been the subject of multiple reintroduction attempts into their native range. During the 19th and 20th century, the Eurasian lynx was extirpated from West and Central Europe due to increasing habitat fragmentation and persecution. Similarly, the European wildcat was the subject of human persecution, residing in a few refugia in West and Central Europe. After legal protection in the 1950s, subsequent reintroduction projects of both species began in the 1970s and 1980s and continue to the present. Despite this large focus on species conservation, little attention has been given to the consequences these reintroductions have on the genetic composition of the reintroduced populations and if the populations have a chance of persisting in the long term. These species have not yet benefited from the large range of genetic and genomic techniques currently available to non-model organisms, leaving many fundamental aspects of their reintroduction poorly understood. In my dissertation, I investigate demography, population structure, genetic diversity and inbreeding at the population and metapopulation level in both species. In the introduction, which lays the foundation for the subsequent chapters of this PHD, I provide background on reintroduction, its role in conservation and the genetic consequences on populations, especially populations of apex and mesocarnivores. In Publication I, I investigated the reemergence of the European wildcat in a low mountain region in Germany using fine-scale spatial analysis. I found that the reintroduced population has persisted and merged with an expanding natural population. The reintroduced population showed no genetic differentiation from the natural population suggesting there is a good chance this population has retained sufficient genetic diversity despite reintroduction. In Publication II, I tracked population development and genetic diversity over 15 years in a reintroduced lynx population to determine the genetic ramifications on a temporal scale. I found slow genetic erosion after a period of outbreeding, which fits in line with other reintroduced taxa sharing similar demographic histories. I also found the number of genetic founders to be a fraction of the total released individuals, indicating that reintroduced populations of elusive carnivores may have fewer founder individuals than previously thought. In Publication III, I sampled all surviving lynx reintroductions in West and Central Europe as well as 11 natural populations to compare levels of genetic diversity and inbreeding across the species distribution. I found that all reintroduced populations have lower genetic variability and higher inbreeding than natural populations, which urgently requires further translocations to mitigate possible negative consequences. These translocations could stem from other reintroduced populations or from surrounding natural populations. The results contribute to a growing body of evidence indicating that inbreeding is likely to be more prevalent in wild populations than previously understood. Finally, in the discussion I explore how genetic methods can be applied to post-reintroduction monitoring of felid species to illuminate questions relating to genetic composition after release. The methods employed in these studies and in future work will be highly dependent on the research questions posed. Additionally, I investigate the drivers of the observed genetic patterns including founder size, source population, environmental factors, and population growth. I found that genetic diversity loss patterns across these two felid species are not clearly defined, however, management actions can be taken to mitigate the negative effects of reintroductions. These management actions include further translocation, introducing a sufficient number of released individuals and situating reintroductions adjacent to natural populations. All of these actions can minimize genetic drift and inbreeding, two factors which negatively impact small populations. This thesis further supports mounting evidence that genetic considerations should be assessed before releasing individuals, which allows for incorporation of scientific evidence into the planning process thereby increasing the overall success of reintroduction projects. Ultimately, the resources developed during this dissertation provide a solid baseline and foundation for future work regarding the consequences of reintroductions. This is especially important as an increasing number of species are at risk of extinction and reintroductions of both the European wildcat and Eurasian lynx, as well as many others, are planned in the coming years.
Morbus Parkinson (abgekürzt als PD vom Englischen Parkinson’s disease) ist nach Alzheimer die zweithäufigste neurodegenerative Erkrankung. Die Hauptmerkmale sind Rigidität und Bradykinesie, sowie Tremor und posturale Instabilität. Im Gehirn lässt sich bei Parkinsonpatienten post mortem ein Verlust an Neuronen in der Substantia nigra feststellen, was zu den ersten beiden Anzeichen führt. Zudem gibt es intrazelluläre Einschlüsse in den betroffenen Nervenzellen – Lewy-Körperchen genannt – die aus Alpha-Synuklein und anderen Proteinen wie Ubiquitin zusammengesetzt sind. Außerdem ist der Eisenmetabolismus in Gehirnen von Parkinsonpatienten gestört und man findet Eisen-Ablagerungen, vor allem im Mittelhirn. Die Ursachen für PD sind bislang nicht abschließend geklärt. Der Großteil der Fälle ist sporadischer Natur mit unbekannter Ursache und nur bei einem geringen Anteil liegt eine Mutation in einem einzelnen Gen zugrunde. Die häufigsten Mutationen tritt in den Genen für Alpha-Synuklein (SNCA), PINK1 und PARKIN auf.
Die Serin-Threonin-Kinase PINK1 und die E3-Ubiquitin-Protein-Ligase PARKIN sind zwei Proteine, die in Stresssituationen an der Mitochondrien-Außenmembran am Abbau von alten oder nicht richtig funktionierenden Mitochondrien beteiligt sind. Dieser Vorgang nennt sich Mitophagie.
Die dieser Arbeit zugrunde liegenden Publikationen gehen den Zusammenhängen zwischen mitochondrialen Fehlfunktionen und der Pathogenese von PD nach. Da die Krankheit meist erst im hohen Alter auftritt, davon größtenteils ohne direkte Ursache, liegt der Schluss nahe, dass neben genetischen Ursachen auch Umweltfaktoren eine größere Rolle spielen könnten. Um dies näher zu analysieren, wurden experimentell verschiedene Stressoren eingesetzt.
Insgesamt wurden folgende Aspekte untersucht:
I. Welche Auswirkungen hat das Fehlen von PINK1 auf die Zelle? Gibt es einen Biomarker, der mit höherem Alter immer stärker verändert ist?
II. Welchen Einfluss haben Umweltfaktoren wie veränderte Eisen-Exposition auf die Zelle und was verändert sich beim Fehlen von PINK1?
III. Wie können mitochondriale Fehlfunktionen präferentiell das Nervensystem betreffen, wenn es nicht um respiratorische Insuffizienz geht?
Die einzelnen Studien zeigten folgende Ergebnisse:
Torres-Odio/Key et al. 2017 widmete sich der Suche nach molekularen Biomarkern, wodurch PD präsymptomatisch erkannt und die Progression der Erkrankung eingeschätzt werden kann. Die Transkriptom-Analyse der Kleinhirne von Mäusen mit Pink1-/--Mutation in drei verschiedenen Altersstufen zeigte eindrücklich, dass nicht ein einzelner Faktor immer stärker verändert war, sondern, dass immer mehr Faktoren und daher auch eine steigende Zahl an
Signalwegen mit höherem Alter beteiligt waren. Diese Veränderungen betrafen inflammatorische Signalwege, insbesondere Faktoren, die mit der Erkennung und Verarbeitung von zellfremden Nukleinsäuren assoziiert sind. Aufgrund der evolutionären Herkunft von Mitochondrien als frühere Protobakterien haben mitochondriale Nukleinsäuren und Proteine zum Teil bakterielle Ähnlichkeiten, und könnten bei Fehlfunktionen ins Zytosol gelangen. Vor diesem Hintergrund lassen die Ergebnisse der Studie den Schluss zu, dass das angeborene Immunsystem in Neuronen durch eine PINK1-assoziierte mitochondriale Störung aktiviert wird.
In der Publikation Key et al. 2020 wurde Eisen als ein im täglichen Leben vorkommender Stressor eingesetzt und es wurden systematisch Faktoren des Eisenstoffwechsels bei hohen und niedrigen Eisenspiegeln im Zusammenhang mit Parkinson-Mutationen untersucht. Da Eisen für die Gesundheit von Mitochondrien eine große Rolle spielt und Eisen-Chelatoren als Therapie bei PD Patienten bereits diskutiert werden, haben die molekularen Befunde große Relevanz. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass unter niedrigen Eisenspiegeln Proteine reduziert waren, die am Nukleotid-Stoffwechsel beteiligt sind, sowie Faktoren, die Eisen-Schwefel-Cluster als Cofaktoren haben und wichtig für die Nukleotid-Qualitätskontrolle sind. Das Fehlen von Eisen führte zu einer Induktion von Pink1 und Prkn, was auf verstärkte Mitophagie hindeutet. Insgesamt konnte gezeigt werden, dass die mitochondriale Eisen-Schwefel-Cluster Biogenese und die post-transkriptionelle Eisenregulation entscheidend für die Pathogenese von PD, bzw. das gesunde Fortbestehen einer Zelle und letztlich auch eines Organismus sind.
In Key et al. 2019 wurde erstmalig das Gesamt-Ubiquitylom aus Gehirnen von gealterten Parkin-knockout (KO) Mäusen erhoben und analysiert, um Ubiquitylierungs-Substrate von PARKIN zu identifizieren. Hierbei zeigte sich eine veränderte Ubiquitylierung von mehreren Faktoren, die an der zellulären Calcium-Homöostase beteiligt sind. Weitere elektrophysiologische Experimente in Gehirnen von gealterten Parkin-/--KO Mäusen ergaben, dass in Nervenzellen im Locus coeruleus die Geschwindigkeit der spontanen Taktgeber erhöht, dass die langsame Nachhyperpolarisation reduziert und, dass die Dauer der Aktionspotentiale erniedrigt war, ohne Veränderung der Kaliumkanal-Ströme.
Insgesamt geht aus den drei Studien hervor, dass mitochondriale Fehlfunktionen bei dauerhaftem Bestehen weitreichende Folgen für die Gesundheit des Nervensystems haben können, denn auch kleine Veränderungen, seien es durch Mutationen oder Umweltfaktoren wie Eisen, können in einer so großen Lebensspanne wie der des Menschen über Krankheit oder Gesundheit entscheiden!