Biologische Hochschulschriften (Goethe-Universität)
Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (847)
- Article (12)
- Part of Periodical (2)
- Bachelor Thesis (1)
- Diploma Thesis (1)
Has Fulltext
- yes (863)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (863)
Keywords
- Gentherapie (7)
- NMR-Spektroskopie (6)
- gene therapy (6)
- Elektrophysiologie (5)
- Molekularbiologie (5)
- RNA (5)
- Schmerz (5)
- Apoptosis (4)
- Arzneimitteldesign (4)
- Carotinoide (4)
Institute
- Biowissenschaften (547)
- Biochemie und Chemie (169)
- Biochemie, Chemie und Pharmazie (78)
- Pharmazie (32)
- Institut für Ökologie, Evolution und Diversität (20)
- Georg-Speyer-Haus (6)
- Medizin (5)
- Geowissenschaften (4)
- Biodiversität und Klima Forschungszentrum (BiK-F) (3)
- Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies (FIAS) (3)
Humans and other primates are highly visual animals. Our daily visual activities such as recognizing familiar faces, interacting with objects, or reading, are supported by an extensive system of interacting brain areas. The interactions between the many individual nerve cells both within and between brain areas need to be coordinated. One possible solution to achieve flexible coordination between cells in the network is rhythmic activity, or oscillations. The focus of the thesis will be activity in the largest visual area, V1, in non-human primates. In V1, high-frequency activity, so-called gamma-band activity (“gamma”, ca. 30-90 Hz) can be frequently observed and has been suggested to play a role in coordinating activity in the visual system. In Chapter 1, the coordination problem, the primate visual system and gamma-band oscillations are introduced in detail. The following chapters explore the dependence of gamma on contextual influences. Does V1 use contextual information to optimize co-ordination? In the first part, the short-term consequences of repeated encounters with visual stimuli on V1 responses are explored (Chapters 2 and 3). Inspired by results from colored, naturalistic images in the first part, the second part tests the dependence of gamma on spatial and chromatic stimulus aspects (Chapters 4 and 5).
Stimulus repetition is a simple yet powerful way to tap into our brains’ ability to learn and adapt to our environment. Repeated presentation of a visual stimulus tends to decrease responses to this stimulus. Is this accompanied by changes in the coordination of brain activity? In Chapter 2, the stimulus-specificity of repetition effects on gamma was tested using naturalistic stimuli. V1 is most typically studied using black-and-white, artificial stimuli that are very familiar to the animals. Here, colored natural images were repeatedly presented that were initially novel to the animals, to provide a wider and more naturalistic range of stimulation. Both multi-unit spiking activity (MUA) and gamma showed stimulus-specific repetition effects. MUA responses de-creased most strongly for initial repetitions and less for later repetitions. In contrast, gamma could increase or decrease for initial repetitions, but tended to increase for later repetitions. This points to the operation of multiple plasticity mechanisms. One process may rapidly decrease MUA and gamma and be related to initial novelty or adaptation. The other increases gamma, is active for more repetitions, and could constitute a form of refinement of coordination over time. Moreover, based on the spacing of stimulus repetitions, stimulus memory in V1 persisted for tens of seconds.
In the following Chapter 3, the stimulus location specificity and persistence of the repetition effects for longer timescales were tested. To this end, the observation that the increase in gamma with repetition was strongest for the first tens of repetitions was used to test for location specificity and memory. Using simple artificial stimuli that were repeated many times at two alternating locations, both location specificity and memory on the order of minutes was observed. Due to the structure of the primate visual system, location specificity suggests that the repetition effects involve early to mid-level visual areas such as V1. Memory for previous stimulus presentations on the order of minutes has not been previously reported for V1 gamma. Taken together, these experiments demonstrate short-term plasticity of gamma that is stimulus- and location specific and persists on the timescale of minutes.
In Chapter 2, the average gamma-band response to the large, naturalistic stimuli was highly stimulus dependent. Relative increases in gamma-band activity scaled between tens and thousands of percent change depending on the stimulus. Particularly the color of the stimuli appeared to play a strong role, although the stimulus set was too limited and uncontrolled to draw strong conclusions. In Chapters 4 and 5, underlying mechanisms for the stimulus specificity of gamma were explored using more well-controlled, artificial stimuli that varied in color and spatial structure.
Much of vision relies on the analysis of spatial structure. Each nerve cell in V1 only responds to visual stimuli in a particular, small part of the visual field, its so-called “receptive field” (RF). Compared to isolated RF stimulation, nearby cells that are stimulated by a similar structure from different parts of visual space can show response decreases, commonly known as “surround suppression”, and may show coordinated activity in the gamma band. In Chapter 3, responses to large, uniformly colored disks are contrasted with responses to black or white (achromatic) disks. A first experiment showed that gamma-band responses were stronger for colored than achromatic stimuli, whereas MUA responses could decrease below baseline for colored stimuli. To test whether these phenomena were related to surround suppression, stimulus size was manipulated in a second experiment. When stimuli were of sufficient size to induce surround suppression, clear gamma-band responses emerged. Surround suppression and gamma were stronger for chromatic stimuli. However, the change of stimulus size could have changed not only surround suppression but also stimulus saliency. Therefore, in a third experiment, the overall size of the stimulus was kept constant, and the spatial structure of the stimulus was manipulated. In comparison to uniform, predictable stimulus structure, mismatches between the center of the stimulus and the surrounding visual space led to strong increases in MUA responses and strong de-creases in gamma-band activity. These effects were restricted to the recording sites with RFs at the mismatch location. These experiments underpin the strong role of both spatial structure and color for gamma in V1.
In Chapter 4, responses to different color hues are studied in more detail. Gamma response strength depended on hue, being strongest for red compared to blue and green stimuli when measured with a gray background. To better understand the underlying mechanisms of the differential responses, the spatio-temporal context in the form of the background color was manipulated. Background color had a strong influence on gamma strength. Using differently colored backgrounds, different parts of the color signaling pathways could be adapted. Response differences to different color hues could be explained well with a model that incorporates differences in adaptation between pathways involving long- compared to medium-wavelength cone signals.
Taken together, these experiments indicate a strong role of both spatial context (stimulus size and structure) and temporal context and drive (repetition, adaptation) for the generation of gamma-band activity in V1. Functional implications of these dependencies are considered in the final Chapter 6, and a role for gamma-band syn-chronization in a coding regime for visual inputs that generate strong drive and high predictability is suggested.
Antagonistic and mutualistic species interactions provide important ecosystem functions affecting plant population dynamics and distribution. Many of these functions are important for the regeneration of plants, either by limiting or facilitating successful transition between life stages. Interactions can occur across the whole geographical range of a species and thereby encompass different environmental gradients, such as changes in temperature or water availability. Understanding the joint effects of species interactions and environmental factors on the regeneration of plants is key for understanding plant population dynamics under global change and could provide important recommendations for managing and conservation efforts.
My thesis aimed at advancing the knowledge of how species interactions depend on environmental conditions and jointly affect plant recruitment along the elevational distribution of plants. This thesis includes three chapters in which I studied the effects of animal seed deposition, seed predation, mycorrhizal and pathogenic fungi occurrences as well as abiotic and biotic environmental factors on the recruitment of Swiss stone pine (Pinus cembra). I conducted fieldwork in the Swiss Alps across the entire elevational distribution of the pine (1850 – 2250 m a.s.l). Over a period of three years, I recorded animal seed deposition by spotted nutcrackers (Nucifraga caryocatactes) and conducted seed translocation experiments. Further, I assessed fungal communities using DNA metabarcoding. I measured abiotic environmental factors such as temperature, water and light availability, pH, as well as biotic environmental factors such as distance to conspecific adults and ground vegetation cover. In my thesis, I used a broad range of community ecology approaches, from seed dispersal ecology to experimental plant ecology and microbial ecology.
First, I investigated the effects of environmental factors on four recruitment processes (i.e. seed deposition, seed predation, seed germination, seedling survival) of Swiss stone pine. Further, I aimed at identifying the most important recruitment processes potentially limiting pine regeneration across its elevational range. To investigate pine recruitment, I firstly tested how seed deposition, seed predation, seed germination and seedling survival were affected by the microhabitat characteristics ultimately determining where a seed arrives in the environment (i.e. canopy cover & ground vegetation cover). Secondly, I applied a sensitivity analysis to investigate which of the four recruitment processes poses limitation to the pines’ regeneration across its range. My results reveal that the importance of particular recruitment processes varies along the pines’ elevational range. I found that at the lower range margin and the distribution centre seed germination and seedling survival were the main limiting factors, whereas animal-mediated seed dispersal became especially important at the upper range margin. My study contributes to the field with a new approach for disentangling the relative importance of recruitment processes across environmental gradients and thereby could help to project how plant recruitment might respond to future changes in environmental conditions.
The second aim of my study was to investigate how abiotic and biotic environmental factors affect the occurrence of Swiss stone pine-associated pathogenic and mutualistic fungi by combining field measurements of environmental factors with a DNA metabarcoding approach. I identified potentially important fungal interaction partners of the pine and determined drivers shaping their occurrences. My results reveal that generalist fungi were not affected by abiotic and biotic environmental factors. However, specialist pathogens showed patterns according to the Janzen-Connell framework (i.e. accumulation of pathogen close to adult plants). Interestingly, I found evidence for an “inverse” Janzen-Connell effect, i.e. high abundance of a specialist mutualist close to adult plants, potentially mitigating effects of soil pathogens close to parent trees. Further, I found that pine-associated fungi are distributed widely within and beyond the range of their host plant, adding knowledge on how mutualisms and antagonisms might be affected when plants move their distributional range upwards.
Finally, I investigated how known and unknown plant-associated fungi affect the regeneration of Swiss stone pine in an environmental context. My results suggest that seedling establishment was most strongly affected by abiotic environmental factors, such as light availability and maximum summer temperature. Further, the results indicate that seedling survival was affected by biotic environmental factors, i.e. fungal agents, with high abundances of a known fungal pathogen co-occurring with low seedling survival rates. My results also reveal that known mycorrhizal partners as well as a large number of unknown fungal operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were associated with the survival of seedlings. My findings highlight the importance of plant-fungal interactions for plant recruitment and offer a feasible approach for the identification of hidden plant-fungal associations in highly complex DNA metabarcoding datasets. This approach offers a valuable tool for investigating plant-microbe interactions, ultimately helping to understand plant population dynamics.
My dissertation adds to a deeper understanding on the linkage between plant regeneration and species interactions, especially on how plant-animal and plant-fungal interactions in concert with environmental factors shape plant recruitment. My study reveals the importance of animal-mediated seed dispersal and fungal pathogens in plant recruitment with consequences for potential range shifts of plant species. My thesis has important implications for conservation and management efforts by informing on key species interactions under environmental change.
Ubiquitin and the ubiquitin-like protein ATG8 are covalently attached to their respective targets via a coordinated cascade involving E1 activating, E2 conjugating and E3 ligating enzymes. Whereas ubiquitin is conferred to proteins as mono- and/or polymer(s) to alter their stability, localization and/or activity, the ubiquitin-like modifier (UBL) ATG8 is conjugated to the phospholipid phosphatidylethanolamine (PE). The best understood function of ATG8 is during autophagy where ATG8-PE conjugates are incorporated into both layers of incipient autophagosomes and serve as multipurpose docking sites for autophagosomal cargo receptors as well as regulatory factors (termed adaptors) that drive formation and maturation of autophagosomes. Mammalian cells harbor six ATG8 family members that can be subclassified into the LC3- and GABARAP-family and that can all be lipidated. However, it is currently unclear to what extent these proteins are functionally redundant or fulfil unique roles.
Cullin-RING ligase complexes (CRLs) are modular E3 ubiquitin ligases that comprise a RING-finger protein that associates with the ubiquitin-charged E2 enzyme, a substrate recruiting module as well as a cullin scaffold as a linker between RING protein and substrate adaptor. Whereas SCF (SKP1-CUL1-F-box protein) complexes, the most studied CRLs, harbor cullin-1 (CUL1) as scaffold and F-box proteins as substrate binding modules, CUL3-containing CRL complexes employ cullin-3 (CUL3), RING-box protein 1 (RBX1) and BTB proteins as substrate adaptors. Here, the BTB domain serves as binding interface for CUL3 and is usually complemented by an additional protein-protein interaction domain such as MATH or Kelch that mediates binding to the substrate of the E3 ligase complex.
Besides ubiquitylation, guanine nucleotide binding is another common way to regulate protein activity and signaling in cells. Here, small Rho GTPases cycle between active and inactive states by binding of the guanine nucleotides GTP or GDP with the help of regulatory proteins. Whereas GTPase-activating proteins (GAP) render RAC1 inactive by facilitating GTP hydrolysis, guanine exchange factors (GEF) such as T-lymphoma invasion and metastasis-inducing protein 1 (TIAM1) activate RAC1 by stimulating the exchange of GDP to GTP. Local control of RAC1 activity is essential to allow a specific cellular response to stimuli such as growth factors or migratory impulses.
This study reports an unexpected link between the GABARAP subfamily of mammalian ATG8 proteins, the ubiquitin proteasome system and RAC1 through the ubiquitylation of the RAC1 GEF TIAM1. The Kelch repeat and BTB domain-containing proteins 6 (KBTBD6) and 7 (KBTBD7) were established as heterodimeric substrate adaptors for CUL3. Interestingly, a thorough proteomic analysis revealed a number of putative substrates but, out of 11 substrate candidates tested, only the RAC1 GEF TIAM1 appeared to be influenced by depletion of CUL3KBTBD6/KBTBD7. Binding studies showed that KBTBD7 binds TIAM1 via the Kelch repeats and that this binding was markedly enhanced when CUL3 activation was abolished upon treatment with the neddylation inhibitor MLN4924. Also, total TIAM1 abundance was increased upon CUL3KBTBD6/KBTBD7 depletion and accumulation of TIAM1 upon proteasome inhibition suggested that TIAM1 is degraded via the proteasome. In vivo ubiquitylation assays and denaturing immunoprecipitations as well as mass spectrometrical analysis confirmed that CUL3KBTBD6/KBTBD7 ubiquitylates TIAM1 at two distinct lysines (K1404 and K1420) close to its C-terminus.
Previously, KBTBD6 and KBTBD7 were found as interactors of several members of the human ATG8 family of proteins in a proteomic study analyzing the human autophagy network. This association was confirmed in the present work. Furthermore, peptide array technology and mutational analysis revealed that KBTBD6 and KBTBD7 employ a classical ATG8-family interacting motif (AIM; also referred to as LC3-interacting region or LIR) as binding interface. The AIMs of KBTBD6 (W-V-R-V) and KBTBD7 (W-V-Q-V) fulfil the consensus AIM sequence motif (F/W/Y1-X2-X3-I/L/V4) and are preceded by several acidic residues and serines. A series of structural and cell biological experiments revealed a binding preference for the GABARAP subfamily of human ATG8 proteins and most importantly, a requirement of the GABARAP-KBTBD6 and -KBTBD7 interaction for TIAM1 ubiquitylation. The finding that TIAM1 binding to KBTBD6 and KBTBD7 AIM mutants was diminished raised the possibility that GABARAP binding mediates the recruitment of CUL3KBTBD6/KBTBD7 to membranes where TIAM1 is localized. Interestingly, colocalization of KBTBD6, GABARAPL1 and TIAM1 in punctuate structures could be observed. Since only a very small fraction of GABARAPL1 colocalized with LC3B, and colocalization between KBTBD6 and LC3B was not observed, these vesicular structures are most likely distinct from autophagosomes. Furthermore, TIAM1 ubiquitylation was reduced when GABARAP, but not LC3B, was depleted or when lipidation of GABARAP was prevented.
Stabilization of TIAM1 upon KBTBD6 and/or KBTBD7 depletion led to elevated TIAM1-dependent RAC1 activity, altered actin morphology with increased cortical actin and loss of vinculin foci. Re-introduction of wild-type KBTBD6 or KBTBD7 but not AIM mutants reverted all these phenotypes. Moreover, depletion of KBTBD6 or KBTBD7 in human breast cancer cells massively increased their invasiveness, whereas TIAM1 knockdown had the opposite outcome. All physiological effects of KBTBD6 and KBTBD7 depletion were inhibited by additional depletion of TIAM1 or RAC1 confirming that the phenotypes observed are indeed mediated by the CUL3KBTBD6/KBTBD7-TIAM1-RAC1 signaling pathway. Intriguingly, KBTBD6 and KBTBD7 were not subject to autophagosomal degradation, thereby establishing a new function for GABARAP proteins beyond autophagosomal degradation in providing a signaling platform for recruitment of the E3 ligase CUL3KBTBD6/KBTBD7 in close proximity to its substrate TIAM1, enabling localized ubiquitylation.
Local restricted control of RAC1 activity by ubiquitylation has been described for TIAM1-RAC1 signaling previously. Examples are HECT, UBA and WWE domain-containing protein 1 (HUWE1)-mediated TIAM1 ubiquitylation that occurs predominantly at cell-cell-junctions in response to hepatocyte growth factor stimulation in MDCKII cells or inhibition of RAC1 activity by the RAC1 GAP protein BCR (breakpoint cluster region) at the leading edge of astrocytes through binding to the TIAM1-Par (polarity) complex. SCFBTRC mediates ubiquitylation of TIAM1 in response to mitogens or DNA damage, though it has not been explored whether this regulation is spatially restricted. Thus, this study adds a novel layer of complexity to the spatial regulation of RAC1 signaling by implicating membrane-bound human ATG8 proteins in this process.
Also, this study is the first report specifically implicating the GABARAP proteins in cellular signaling events. It will be interesting to explore whether the concept of localized signaling mediated by GABARAPs applies to other substrates of CUL3KBTBD6/KBTBD7 and membranerelated signaling processes in which GABARAP proteins are involved. Controlling RAC1 activity at GABARAP-decorated membranes might also be important for trafficking events or autophagy since it was described that RAC1 has an inhibitory function on autophagy. Therefore, spatial restricted ubiquitylation of TIAM1 resulting in specific deactivation of RAC1 could promote the autophagic process when locally needed. Although the catalytic mTOR inhibitor Torin1 and the lysosomal H+ ATPase inhibitor BafilomycinA1 promoted TIAM1 ubiquitylation by increasing the pool of membrane-conjugated GABARAP, but other signals that stimulate GABARAP-KBTBD6/KBTBD7 association and subsequent TIAM1 ubiquitylation are to be identified. Besides, determining the KBTBD6/KBTBD7 binding site in TIAM1 or uncovering a deubiquitylating enzyme (DUB) that locally counteracts the ubiquitylation of TIAM1 will enable a better comprehension of the complete localized signaling cascade.
Eine qualitative und quantitative Studie zum Einsatz der virtuellen Mikroskopie in der Schule
(2019)
Das Mikroskop stellt in der Alltagswelt ein Sinnbild für naturwissenschaftliches Arbeiten dar (Coleman 2009, Paulsen 2010). Im Bereich der Lehre eröffnet dieses Laborgerät das Eintauchen in die mikroskopische Dimension und besitzt eine wesentliche Rolle bei der damit verbundenen Erkenntnisgewinnung, insbesondere von funktionsmorphologischen Konzepten (Gropengießer & Kattmann 2008, Kremer 2002). Jedoch wird die Durchführung der klassischen Mikroskopie und damit die aktive Auseinandersetzung mit mikroskopischen Präparaten im schulischen (Biologie-)Unterricht durch verschiedene Faktoren erschwert. Zu den Limitierungen gehören beispielsweise die Verfügbarkeit geeigneter Mikroskope und Dauerpräparate, die aufwendige Vor- und Nachbereitungszeit sowie der zeitliche Aufwand bei der Herstellung hochwertiger mikroskopischer Frischpräparate. Die virtuelle Mikroskopie könnte diese Schwierigkeiten umgehen. Das virtuelle Mikroskop kann als eine Simulation verstanden werden, bei der die bildanalytischen Vorgehensweisen bei mikroskopischen Präparaten analog zur klassischen Mikroskopie nachvollzogen werden können (Gu & Oglivie 2005, Hentschel 2009). Hierbei umfasst das virtuelle Mikroskop ein Akquisitionssystem zum Einscannen und Digitalisieren mikroskopischer Präparate, einen Server zum Speichern und Bereitstellen der entstandenen virtuellen hochauflösenden Aufnahmen (WSI) sowie eine Bildbetrachtungssoftware auf einem Anwendungsrechner (Kalinski et al. 2006). Basierend auf einer Nutzerbefragung wurde eine Betrachtungssoftware programmiert, die hinsicht¬lich ihrer Benutzerfreundlichkeit und ihren Eigenschaften auf den schulischen Einsatz angepasst wurde. Um die Relevanz in diesem Anwendungsfeld zu testen, wurden die Untersuchungen der vorliegenden Arbeit sowohl im Schülerlabor Goethe BioLab als auch in der universitären Lehre der Abteilung für Didaktik der Biowissen¬schaften der Goethe–Universität Frankfurt am Main durchgeführt. Der Schülerlabortag „Blut und das virtuelle Mikroskop“ wurde entwickelt, um die computerbasierte virtuelle Mikroskopie mit Schülern ergänzend zur klassischen Mikroskopie in einem fachlichen Kontext anzuwenden und zu erforschen.
Beruhend auf der Vergleichbarkeit beider Mikroskopiemethoden (Paulsen et al. 2010) lagen die Forschungsschwerpunkte neben der Nutzung der Software durch Schülerinnen und Schülern auf einer gegenüberstellenden Beurteilung beider mikroskopischer Verfahren von Schülern und Lehramtsstudierenden. Es wurden in diesem Zusammenhang drei zentrale Forschungsfragen formuliert.
Die erste Forschungsfrage untersucht das Nutzerverhalten der Schüler (n = 123) bei der virtuellen Mikroskopie mittels automatisch generierter Datensätze während der Anwendung der Bildbetrachtungssoftware. Die Analyse der Anwendungsdaten zeigt, dass das mikroskopische Sehen, insbesondere das Fokussieren auf relevante Bildbereiche, im virtuellen Humanblutausstrich angewandt wurde.
Die zweite Forschungsfrage untersuchte das aktuelle Interesses bei Schülern (n = 293) im direkten Vergleich zwischen virtueller und klassischer Mikroskopie. Dabei wurde das aktuelle Interesse aufgrund des engen Zusammenhangs zum Lernen (vgl. Krapp 1992a) als Indikator der Lernwirksamkeit gewählt. Die Erhebung erfolgte mittels eines Fragebogens. Die Ergebnisse dieser Untersuchung zeigen, dass der Einsatz beider mikroskopischer Verfahren das aktuelle Interesse fördert, das emotionale und das wertbezogene Merkmal sich jedoch zugunsten der klassischen Mikroskopie signifikant unterscheiden.
Im Rahmen der dritten Forschungsfrage erfolgte eine Beurteilung der Vorteile virtueller Mikroskopie gegenüber der klassischen Mikroskopie von Schülern (n = 504) sowie Lehramtsstudierenden (n = 247). Hierbei diente ebenfalls ein Fragebogen als Grundlage der Erhebung. Die Auswertung zeigt, dass sowohl die Schüler als auch die Studierenden die Vorteile der virtuellen Mikroskopie klar erkennen. Es liegen jedoch signifikante Unterschiede zwischen den Versuchsgruppen vor. Die Schüler bewerten die Vorteile betreffend der Förderung von Lernprozessen, des Erkennens von Strukturen und des mikroskopischen Zeichnens höher.
Zusammenfassend bestärken die Ergebnisse dieser Studie die Ansicht, dass das virtuelle Mikroskop nicht als Ersatz, sondern als sinnvolle Ergänzung zu der klassischen Lichtmikroskopie angesehen werden sollte (Bloodgood et al. 2006, Berg et al. 2016, Braun & Kearns 2008, Hufnagl et al. 2012, Mione et al. 2013, Santiago 2018, Scoville & Buskirk 2007). Dabei sollte die vorliegende Arbeit als Einstieg verstanden werden, um bestehende Forschungslücken zu verkleinern, damit ein Transfer der virtuellen Mikroskopie in den schulischen Kontext möglichst lernwirksam erfolgen kann.
Die Neurowissenschaften sind in Forschungsarbeiten für Schüler und Studierende immer wieder als eines der schwierigsten Teilgebiete der Biologie angeführt. Die Inhalte werden überwiegend nicht verstanden. Als mögliche Ursache gelten die seltenen praktischen Zugänge für die Lernenden aufgrund limitierter Ressourcen. Diese Ursache konnte in der vorliegenden Arbeit durch eine Befragung der Lehrkräfte zu ihren Praxisumsetzungen bestätigt werden. 70 % der Lehrkräfte gaben an, dass sie keine Experimente in der Schule zum Thema Nervenzellen anbieten. Experimente zur Verhaltensbiologie führen 65 % der Lehrkräfte nicht durch.
Um Schülern die Möglichkeit zu geben, sich experimentell mit den Themenfeldern der Neuro- und Verhaltensbiologie auseinanderzusetzen, wurden im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit Schülerlabortage auf dem Feld der Neurowissenschaften konzipiert. Die Konzepte wurden schülerorientiert umgesetzt und neurowissenschaftliche Forschung durch den eigenen Umgang mit modernen Forschungsapparaturen erfahrbar gemacht. Die drei Labortage für die Sekundarstufe II wurden wissenschaftlich begleitet: 1) Verhaltensbiologie, 2) systemische Ebene der Elektrophysiologie, 3) elektrophysiologische Forschungsmethoden. Um die Qualität und Wirksamkeit der Labortage beurteilen zu können, wurden sie mit Feedbackerhebungen begleitet. Die drei Labortage wurden sowohl von den Lehrkräften als auch von den Schülern bezüglich ihrer Qualität positiv bewertet. Für die Schüler konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Beurteilung weitgehend unabhängig von einem zugrunde liegenden Interesse an Biologie und Forschung ausfällt. Anhand einer retrospektiven Erhebung wird außerdem gezeigt, dass alle drei Labortage eine höchst signifikante, selbsteingeschätzte Steigerung des „Wissens“, der „Anwendungszuversicht“ und des „Interesses“ bewirken. Schüler mit niedrigen Ausgangswerten zeigen einen besonders hohen Anstieg. Für das Interesse kann weiter gezeigt werden, dass auch Schüler mit hohem Ausgangswert eine große Interessenssteigerung durch den Labortag aufweisen. Das Interesse für den verhaltensbiologischen Labortag liegt etwas niedriger – die Labortage mit elektrophysiologischen Inhalten zeigen dagegen für die Anwendungszuversicht etwas niedrigere Werte.
Der Fokus der fachdidaktischen Forschung lag auf der Betrachtung des experimentellen Zugangs zur Elektrophysiologie über ein entwickeltes „EPhys-Setup“. Dabei handelt es sich um einen quasi-realen Messaufbau. Die Umsetzung kombiniert dazu Komponenten eines realen Elektrophysiologie-Setups (Hands-on Komponenten) mit einer speziell entwickelten schülerfreundlichen Software (Neurosimulation) und einem virtuellen Nervensystem in Form einer Platine. Als Modellnervensystem werden für diese Umsetzung Ganglien von Hirudo medicinalis verwendet – der Neurosimulation liegen originale elektrophysiologische Messspuren des Ganglions zugrunde. Experimentelle Vermittlungsansätze für die Elektrophysiologie finden sich kaum für den Schulbereich. Dem Bedarf einer entsprechenden Beforschung wurde mit verschiedenen Testinstrumenten nachgegangen, um den Vermittlungsansatz mit dem EPhys-Setup bewerten zu können. Dafür fand eine Wirksamkeitsanalyse über die Erhebung der Motivation der Schüler statt (Lab Motivation Scale; Dohn et al. 2016). Von Bedeutung war auch, inwiefern gegenüber der Umsetzung eine Technologieakzeptanz vorliegt (Technology Acceptance Model; Davis 1989), die im Schulkontext ausgehend von der steigenden Einbindung von Technologien einen entsprechenden Forschungsbedarf aufweist. Weiter wurde untersucht, ob sich die Bewertung des EPhys-Setups von der Bewertung einer Kontrollgruppe unterscheidet. Für die Kontrollgruppe wurde die Neurosimulation von den Hands-on Komponenten gelöst und die Schüler arbeiteten ausschließlich PC-basiert. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass beide Umsetzungen die Motivation förderten und eine Technologieakzeptanz bei den Schülern aufwiesen. Der Unterschied der Untersuchungsgruppen fällt gering aus. Die Abhängigkeiten, die für die verwendete Simulationsumsetzung gefunden wurden, beziehen sich ausschließlich auf Komponenten der „Freude“. Somit wird der intrinsische Bereich von den Schülern die am EPhys-Setup gearbeitet haben höher bewertet. Zur weiteren Analyse der Testinstrumente wurde auch eine Abhängigkeit der Bewertung vom zugrunde liegenden Biologieinteresse sowie von den Computerfähigkeiten vergleichend betrachtet. Der Einfluss auf die Bewertungen der drei Testskalen ist in vielen Fällen höher als der Einfluss der verwendeten Simulation. Vom individuellen Biologieinteresse der Schüler zeigen alle untersuchten Komponenten eine Abhängigkeit. Die größeren Effekte beziehen sich auf die Komponenten der „Lernwirksamkeit“ oder der „Freude“. Von den individuellen Computerfähigkeiten der Schüler zeigen Komponenten zur „Zuversicht bezüglich der Methoden und der Inhalte“ eine Abhängigkeit.
Die Differenzierung zwischen Teilpopulationen hin zu unterschiedlichen Arten kann nur erfolgen, wenn zwischen diesen Teilpopulationen reproduktive Isolation besteht. Wie die unterschiedlichen Arten von reproduktiver Isolation zusammenwirken und welche Voraussetzungen bestehen müssen, um neue Arten zu bilden, muss in jedem Studiensystem untersucht werden. Ein idealer Ansatzpunkt sind Arten, die sich mehrfach an anspruchsvolle Habitate angepasst haben, deren Artbildung also von ökologischen Habitatparametern bestimmt wird. Dieser Vorgang wird als Ökologische Artbildung bezeichnet. Im Artkomplex Poecilia spec., der im Süden Mexikos mehrere schwefelangepasste Ökotypen ausgebildet hat, wurden erste Hinweise auf eine Korrelation zwischen der Selektionsstärke von natürlicher und sexueller Selektion gefunden, deren Einfluss zusammen die bestehenden reproduktiven Barrieren zwischen Klarwasser- und Schwefelökotyp formen. Wie diese Reproduktionsbarrieren beschaffen sind und wie die Umweltvariable Schwefel auf die Morphologie und das Verhalten der Poeciliiden Einfluss nimmt, wurde in der vorliegenden Arbeit anhand von fünf Fragestellungen untersucht. (1) Die Körperfärbung kann ein aussagekräftiges Signal für die Qualität des potentiellen Partners bei der Fortpflanzung sein. Wie beeinflusst die extreme Umweltvariable Schwefel die Ausbildung von Färbung? (2) Sind die gefundenen Anpassungen der Färbung erblich oder werden sie plastisch entsprechend des Nahrungsangebots ausgebildet? (3) In einem der untersuchten Flusssysteme konnte unvollständige reproduktive Isolation zwischen der Klarwasser- und Schwefelpopulation nachgewiesen werden. Sind in den Mischzonen zwischen diesen beiden Habitaten Hybriden genetisch nachweisbar und bilden diese die Färbungsanpassungen der Klarwasser-, der Schwefelpopulation oder eine intermediäre Form aus? (4) Die Gelbfärbung der Flossen bei Männchen scheint ein geeignetes Merkmal für die Anzeige der Qualität zu sein, da es möglicherweise unabhängig vom Nahrungsangebot ausgebildet wird. Besteht eine weibliche Präferenz für dieses Merkmal? (5) Auch die weibliche Partnerwahlpräferenz wird vom Habitat und dem eigenen Zustand beeinflusst. Wie verändert sich die Präferenz für Männchen mit gutem Ernährungszustand bei Weibchen, die hungrig sind?
Um diese Fragen zu beantworten, wurden in mehreren Jahren Männchen und Weibchen der Arten Poecilia mexicana und Poecilia sulphuraria aus sieben Populationen im Studiengebiet in Südmexiko gefangen und auf ihre Färbung untersucht sowie Laborpopulationen getestet. Es konnten generelle Anpassungen der Färbung an die Umweltvariable Schwefel nachgewiesen werden. Dazu gehören die Aufhellung der Körperregionen, die durch Tarnung (konkret: countershading und background matching) vor Entdeckung durch Prädatoren schützen, und die Reduktion von Gelb- und Rottönen. Diese Anpassung ist vermutlich auf das geringe Angebot an Karotinoiden in den schwefelbelasteten Extremhabitaten zurückzuführen. Außerdem konnten zahlreiche flusssystem¬spezifische Anpassungen beschrieben werden, deren Ursachen in den Unterschieden zwischen den Schwefelhabitaten untereinander begründet sind. Das Flusssystem des Río Tacotalpa stellt hier eine Besonderheit dar, da Männchen eine besonders starke Gelbfärbung der Flossen aufweisen. Wildgefangene und laborgeborene Männchen dieses Flusssystems wurden verglichen, um einen Hinweis auf den Einfluss des Nahrungsangebots auf dieses Merkmal zu untersuchen. Tatsächlich ist die Ausprägung dieses Merkmals, die Gelbfärbung der Flossen, unabhängig vom Angebot an Karotinoiden. Während die hier verwendeten genetischen Analysen nicht geeignet waren, Hybriden aus den Mischzonen zwischen Schwefel- und Klarwasserhabitat nachzuweisen, ergaben die Untersuchungen von Individuen aus den Mischzonen keine eindeutigen Ergebnisse über eine etwaige intermediäre Ausbildung der Färbung. Die Präsentation von Männchen, deren Gelbintensität an den Flossenspitzen künstlich verändert wurde, konnte bei Weibchen keine eindeutige Präferenz für stärker gefärbte Männchen aufzeigen. Vielmehr weist dieses Ergebnis auf eine starke Korrelation zwischen mehreren Merkmalen (z. B. weitere morphologische Merkmale, Verhalten) hin, die für die Beurteilung der männlichen Qualität herangezogen werden. Die weibliche Präferenz für konditionsabhängige Merkmale wird bei schwefelangepassten Weibchen leicht verstärkt, wenn diese hungrig sind. Eine solche flexible Präferenz sollte gerade in Habitaten mit starken Fluktuationen im Nährstoffangebot existieren. Dabei waren Weibchen, denen Videoaufnahmen präsentiert wurden, eher in der Lage, das qualitativ hochwertigere Männchen zu identifizieren, als Weibchen, denen animierte Bilder präsentiert wurden. Auch hier wird davon ausgegangen, dass die Reduktion auf eines oder wenige Merkmale, die für die Partnerwahl zur Verfügung stehen, keine ausreichend starke Reaktion auslösen können. Vielmehr ist der Zugriff auf alle Aspekte der männlichen Erscheinung wichtig, um die Qualität des potentiellen Partners zu beurteilen.
Färbung ist also generell geeignet, den Ökotyp eines Individuums zu bestimmen und ein solches Merkmal kann der Artbestimmung im ersten Schritt der Partnerwahl dienen. Dasjenige männliche Färbungsmerkmal, das über mehrere Generationen gleichbleibend ausgeprägt wurde – die Gelbfärbung der Flossen – reicht jedoch nicht aus, um bei der weiblichen Partnerwahl eine Reaktion auszulösen. Vielmehr deuten die Ergebnisse auf eine enge Korrelation der Färbung mit weiteren Merkmalen in Morphologie und Verhalten eines Individuums hin, die vom wählenden Weibchen stets gemeinsam entsprechend der Multiple-message-Theorie betrachtet werden. Auch der Vergleich zwischen Videoaufnahmen und animierten Fotografien als Stimuli bei der Partnerwahl ergab, dass der Aspekt Verhalten (nur verfügbar mit Videoaufnahmen) für eine Partnerwahlentscheidung von Bedeutung ist.
Meine Arbeit konnte den bestehenden Wissensschatz um die bestehenden reproduktiven Barrieren im Studiensystem um den Aspekt der Färbung erweitern. Meine Ergebnisse zeigen weitere spannende Fragestellungen auf. Je größer das Verständnis der vorliegenden Selektionskräfte und Mechanismen reproduktiver Isolation ist, desto besser kann die Wissenschaft verstehen, welche Umgebungsvariablen welchen Einfluss auf den Prozess der Artbildung haben.
Cardiovascular diseases are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Aging inflicts structural and molecular changes on the heart that oftentimes involve ischemic events, cardiomyocyte apoptosis and cardiac stiffening, which makes it a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease. After being disregarded as transcriptional noise for a long time, long non-coding RNAs have lately emerged as key regulators of many cellular processes in physiology and disease of virtually all tissues and organs, with some of them being differentially regulated during aging.
This study identified a long non-coding transcript antisense to the OXCT1 gene locus, Sarrah, to be downregulated in the heart during aging, after acute myocardial infarction and upon heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. Sarrah is expressed in several cardiac cell types with highest levels in cardiomyocytes, where it is predominantly localized in the nucleus. In mouse and human cardiomyocytes, Sarrah levels are reduced upon exposure to hypoxia or treatment with hypoxiamimetic agents in vitro.
Sarrah exerts an anti-apoptotic function in mouse and human cardiomyocytes as assessed from caspase activity and annexin V staining. Histological stainings of Sarrah-depleted human engineered heart tissue organoids and Sarrah overexpressing infarcted mouse hearts confirmed its anti-apoptotic function. Sarrah also plays a role in cardiomyocyte contractility, which is substantially impaired upon Sarrah silencing in human engineered heart tissue and neonatal rat cardiomyocytes. Additionally, cardiomyocytal Sarrah stimulates endothelial cell proliferation via paracrine effects as observed after Sarrah overexpression in mouse hearts as well as in co-culture settings with human endothelial cells and Sarrah-depleted or Sarrah overexpressing human cardiomyocytes. A microarray analysis revealed that silencing Sarrah in human cardiomyocytes induced apoptosisrelated gene expression. Mechanistically, Sarrah was predicted to form triplexes in human and mouse with promoters of genes downregulated, but not upregulated after Sarrah knockdown, suggesting that Sarrah interacts with target genes to activate their transcription. This interaction was confirmed in vitro using nucleic acid oligonucleotides containing the sequences of the Sarrah triplex motif and the Sarrah binding site of the exemplary target gene GPC6 of both human and mouse. RNA immunoprecipitation experiments in human cells demonstrated that Sarrah is associated with open chromatin, transcription factor CRIP2, transcriptional co-activator p300 and DNA-RNA hybrid structures that also occur in Sarrah target gene promoters, which indicated that Sarrah activates gene expression by triplex formation and recruitment of protein interaction partners. Deleting the triplex motif of endogenous Sarrah in mouse cardiomyocytes augmented apoptosis, showing that triplex formation is of functional relevance for Sarrah action.
Finally, overexpressing Sarrah in an acute myocardial infarction mouse model improved recovery of cardiac contractile function as assessed from ejection fraction, stroke volume, wall motion and wall thickness measured by echocardiography and magnetic resonance imaging. Infarct size was substantially reduced in Sarrah overexpressing mice compared with controls. This in vivo study implies that restoring Sarrah levels in the aged or infarcted heart bears significant therapeutic potential, which can be attributed to the combination of three Sarrah effects: increased cardiomyocytes survival, enhanced contractility of individual cardiomyocytes and paracrine stimulation of endothelial cell proliferation likely contributing to increased angiogenesis and tissue perfusion.
In summary, cardiac lncRNA Sarrah is evolutionary conserved with regard to its genomic locus, function and molecular mechanism. Via triplex formation with gene promoters, it is capable to activate a set of target genes that together mediate the anti-apoptotic and pro-contractile function of Sarrah in cardiomyocytes and that confer angiogenic effects to endothelial cells. A therapeutic utilization of Sarrah in the context of myocardial ischemia is conceivable in the future if Sarrah upregulation proves to be beneficial in further studies.
The overarching aim of this doctoral research was to examine and quantify the spatiotemporal variability in the movements of nomadic ungulates to better understand the possible drivers and characteristics of such movements as well as to examine the particular conservation challenges associated with nomadic movements.
Cerebellar ataxias are a group of neurodegenerative disorders primarily affecting the cerebellum. Although causative mutations in several genes have been identified there is currently no cure for ataxias.
The first part of this dissertation is focused on Spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2). SCA2 is a dominant ataxia caused by repeat expansion mutations in the ATXN2 gene, which encodes the protein Ataxin2 (ATXN2). A polyglutamine (polyQ) tract consisting of CAG repeats interrupted by CAA was identified at exon 1 of ATXN2. Healthy individuals have between 22 and 23 glutamines, while expansions longer than 33 CAG repeats cause SCA2. The most noticeable symptom that SCA2 patients show is ataxic gait; however, they also show cerebellar dysarthria, dysdiadochokinesia, and ocular dysmetria caused by the progressive cerebellar degeneration.
To model the SCA2 disease, we generated a new mouse model where 100 CAG repeats were introduced in the mouse Atxn2 gene via homologous recombination. The characterization of this mouse model, Atxn2-CAG100-KIN, demonstrated that it reproduces the symptomatology observed in SCA2 patients. These animals showed significant loss of weight over time, brain atrophy, and motor deficits.
In addition, ATXN2 intermediate expansions have been linked to the pathology of Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) as a risk factor. ALS is a fatal neurodegenerative disease where the motor neurons in the brain and spinal cord degenerate. A hallmark of ALS is the presence of TDP43-positive inclusions in neurons and glia. Further studies of post mortem spinal cord samples from SCA2 patients showed severe and widespread neurodegeneration of the central somatosensory system. Therefore, it was of interest to further investigate the pathology affection of this tissue in the Atxn2-CAG100-KIN line and the relationship between ATXN2 and TDP43. The characterization of the spinal cord pathology via protein quantification, transcript quantification, and immunohistochemistry showed a preferential affection of RNA binding proteins (RBP) in the spinal cord rather than the cerebellum. The ALS-linked factors TDP43 and TIA1 showed time-dependent co-aggregation with ATXN2 in spinal cord sections together with an increase of CASP3 levels. Therefore, this mouse model can help develop new therapies and evaluate their effect in differently affected areas.
A transcriptome data set from Atxn2-CAG100-KIN spinal cord samples at the final disease stage of this mouse model showed a strong up-regulation of RNA toxicity-, immune- and lysosome-implicated factors. These data pointed to a pathological reactivation of the synaptic pruning and phagocytosis in microglia. ATXN2-positive aggregates were found in microglia from spinal cord sections of 14-month-old Atxn2-CAG100-KIN via immunohistochemistry. The characterization of microglial response and the potentially deleterious effects of the expanded ATXN2 in this cell type could lead to therapies to improve patients’ living standards or delay the symptoms’ onset.
The second part of this thesis was focused on an autosomal recessive form of cerebellar ataxia, Ataxia Telangiectasia (A-T), with childhood onset. A-T patients show severe cerebellar atrophy manifesting as ataxia when the child starts to walk. The genetic cause of A-T is loss-of-function-mutations in the Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated gene (ATM). ATM is a kinase involved in DNA damage response, oxidative stress, insulin resistance, autophagy via mTOR signaling, and synaptic function.
Working with proteome data from cerebrospinal fluid of 12 A-T patients and 12 healthy controls, we aimed to define novel biomarkers that would allow following the neurodegeneration in extracellular fluid. Additional validation efforts with ~2-month-old Atm-knock-out (Atm-/-) cerebellar samples helped us to define a scenario were the deficit of vesicle-associated ATM alters the secretion of ApoB, reelin, and glutamate. As extracellular factors, apolipoproteins and their cargo such as vitamin E may be useful for neuroprotective interventions.
ADAM15, which belongs to the family of the disintegrin and metalloproteinases, is a multi-domain transmembrane protein. A strongly upregulated expression of ADAM15 is found in inflamed synovial membranes from articular joints affected by osteoarthritis and especially rheumatoid arthritis (RA). During the chronic inflammatory process in RA the synovial membrane gets hyperplastic, resulting eventually in the formation of a pannus tissue, which can invade into the adjacent cartilage and bone thereby destroying their integrity. Previously, the expression of ADAM15 in fibroblasts of the RA synovial membrane was found to confer a significant anti-apoptotic response upon triggering of the Fas receptor, which resulted in the activation of two survival kinases, focal adhesion kinase (FAK) and Src. The Fas receptor, also named CD95, belongs to the death receptor family of the tumor necrosis factor receptors and stimulation of Fas/CD95 by its ligand FasL results in the execution of apoptotic cell death in synovial membranes of RA patients. However, the occurrence of apoptotic cell death in vivo in RA synovial tissues is considerably low despite the presence of FasL at high concentrations in the chronically inflamed joint. Accordingly, a general apoptosis resistance is a characteristic of RA-synovial fibroblasts that contributes considerably to the formation the hyperplastic aggressive pannus tissue. The objective of this study was to investigate the mechanisms underlying the capability of ADAM15 to transform FasL-mediated death- inducing signals into pro-survival activation of Src and FAK in rheumatoid arthritis fibroblasts (RASFs).
In the present study, the down-regulation of ADAM15 by RNA interference resulted in a significant increase of caspase 3/7 activity upon stimulation of the Fas receptor in RASFs. Likewise, chondrocytes expressing a deletion mutant of ADAM15 (ΔC), lacking the cytoplasmic domain, revealed increased caspase activities upon Fas ligation in comparison to cells transfected with full-length ADAM15, clearly demonstrating the importance of the cytoplasmic domain for an increased apoptosis resistance. Furthermore, activation of the Fas receptor triggered the phosphorylation of Src at Y416, which results in the active conformation of Src, as well as the phosphorylation of FAK at Y576/577 and Y861 – the target tyrosines phosphorylated by Src - in full-length ADAM15-transfected chondrocytes. However, cells transfected with ADAM15 mutant (ΔC) or with vector control did not exhibit any activation of Src and FAK upon Fas ligation. This suggested the presence of an as yet unknown protein interaction mediating the Fas triggered activation of the two kinases.
In order to identify this mechanism, the application of signal transduction inhibitors interfering with Calcium signaling either by inhibiting calmodulin with trifluoperazine (TFP) or the Calcium release-activated channel (CRAC/Orai1) with BTP-2 efficiently inhibited the phosphorylation of FAK and Src, revealing a role of calmodulin, the major Ca2+ sensor in cells, in ADAM15-dependent and Fas-elicited activation of the two survival kinases. Also, a direct Ca2+ -dependent binding of calmodulin to ADAM15 could be demonstrated by pull-down assays using calmodulin-conjugated sepharose and by protein binding assays using the recombinant cytoplasmic domain of ADAM15 and calmodulin.
Furthermore, it could be demonstrated in living synovial fibroblasts by double immunofluorescence stainings that triggering the Fas receptor by its ligand FasL or a Fas-activating antibody resulted in the recruitment of calmodulin to ADAM15 as well as to the Fas receptor in patch-like structures at the cell membrane. Simultaneously, Src associated with calmodulin was shown to become engaged in an ADAM15 complex, also containing cytoplasmic-bound FAK, by co-immunoprecipitations.
Additional studies were performed to analyze the efficacy of TFP and BTP-2 on apoptosis induction in synovial fibroblasts from 10 RA patients. Using caspase 3/7 and annexin V stainings for determining apoptosis, it could be shown that both inhibitors did not possess any apoptosis inducing capacity. However, when co-incubated with FasL both compounds synergistically enhanced apoptosis rates in the RASFs. Moreover, an additional silencing of ADAM15 revealed a further significant rise in apoptosis rates upon incubation with FasL/TFP or FasL/BTP-2, providing unequivocal evidence for an involvement of ADAM15 in facilitating apoptosis resistance in RASFs.
Taken together, these results demonstrate that ADAM15 provides a scaffold for the formation of calmodulin-dependent pro-survival signaling complexes upon CRAC/Orai1 coactivation by Fas ligation, which provides a new potential therapeutic target to break the apoptosis resistance in RASFs that critically contributes to joint destruction in RA.
Understanding global biodiversity patterns is one of the main objectives of ecology. Spatial variation in species richness can be explained by several environmental factors. The relationships between species richness and environmental factors have been associated with latitudinal, longitudinal and elevational gradients. The number of species is determined by birth, death and migration rates of species in a given area. These rates are affected by abiotic and biotic factors acting at local and regional scales. Climatic seasonal variation may also influence biodiversity, directly through physiological limitations and indirectly through biotic interactions, vegetation structure and food availability. Climate and land use change are the main factors for landscape simplification and biotic homogenization. Thus, the study of community patterns across environmental gradients may help to predict the effect of projected environmental change.
I investigated how abiotic and biotic factors influence different facets of bird diversity across an elevational gradient. My study was conducted along an elevational gradient spanning 2000 m within and around Podocarpus National Park and San Francisco reserve on the southeastern slope of the Andes in Ecuador. The climate is humid tropical montane with a bimodal rain regime. The region is characterized by evergreen premontane forest at low elevations, evergreen lower montane forest at mid elevations and upper montane forest at high elevations. The elevational gradient has natural continuous forests within the protected reserves and fragmented forests surrounding the reserves in a matrix of cattle pastures. To monitor bird diversity, I placed nine 20-m radius point counts within 18 one-hectare plots, in continuous and fragmented forest at 1000, 2000 and 3000 m a.s.l. I recorded and identified all birds for 10 minutes within each point count. Bird communities were sampled eight times per plot, in the most humid season and in the least humid season of 2014 and 2015. To estimate flower and fruit availability, I recorded all plants with open flowers and ripe fruits within each point count. To obtain the relative invertebrate availability, I assessed understory invertebrate fresh biomass using a standardized sweep-netting design along 100-metre borders of each plot. Vertical vegetation heterogeneity was estimated at eight layers above the ground within each point count. Temperature for each plot was obtained using an air temperature regionalization tool and precipitation through remote sensing techniques and meteorological data.
In the first chapter of this thesis, I explored the effects of elevation, climate and vegetation structure on overall bird communities as well as on frugivorous and insectivorous birds. I found that elevation was mostly indirectly associated with bird diversity, jointly mediated via temperature, precipitation and vegetation structure. Additionally, elevation was directly and positively associated with both the overall bird community and with insectivores, but not with frugivores. My findings indicate a reduction of bird diversity due to climatic factors and vegetation structure with increasing elevation. However, the direct, positive effect of elevation suggests that bird diversity was higher than expected towards high elevations, probably due to spatial, biotic and evolutionary settings.
In the second chapter, I analysed the influence of climate and resource availability on temporal variation of bird communities. I found a higher bird diversity in the least humid season than in the most humid season. The seasonality of the bird communities was mainly driven by temperature and precipitation. While temperature had a significant positive effect at high elevations, precipitation had a significant negative effect at low elevations. Resource availability had no significant effect. My findings suggest that the temporal fluctuations in bird communities likely occur due to climate
constraints rather than due to resource limitations.
In the third chapter, I studied the effect of forest fragmentation on taxonomic and functional bird diversity. I found that taxonomic diversity was higher in fragmented compared to continuous forests, while functional diversity was negatively affected by fragmentation, but only at low elevations. The increase of taxonomic diversity in disturbed habitats suggests an increase of habitat generalists, which may compensate the loss of forest specialists. My findings suggest that taxonomic diversity can be uncoupled from functional diversity in diverse communities at low elevations.
My results show the effects of environmental factors on the spatio-temporal patterns of bird communities and the potentially uncoupled responses of taxonomic and functional diversity to forest fragmentation. My findings highlight that bird communities respond differently to abiotic and biotic factors across elevational gradients. Overall, my study helps to better understand the mechanisms that drive species communities in response to complex environmental conditions, which could be an essential contribution for the conservation of bird communities in the tropical Andes.
Investigating the influence of truffle´s microbiome and genotype on the aroma of truffle fungi
(2019)
Truffles (Tuber spp.) are belowground forming fungi that develop in association with roots of various host trees and shrubs. Their fruiting bodies are renowned for their enticing aromas which vary considerably, even within truffles of the same species. This aroma variability might be attributed to factors such as geographical origin, degree of fruiting body maturation, truffle genotype and microbiome (microbial communities that colonise truffle fruiting bodies) which often co-vary. Although the influence of specific factors is highlighted by several studies, discerning the contribution of each factor remains a challenge since it requires an appropriate experimental design. The primary purpose of this thesis was to gain insight into the influence of truffle’s genotype and microbiome on truffle aroma.
This doctoral thesis is comprised of four chapters. Chapter1 (Vahdatzadeh et al., 2018) aimed to exclusively elucidate the influence of truffle genotype on truffle aroma by investigating the aroma of nine mycelial strains of the white truffle Tuber borchii. We also assessed whether strain selection could be employed to improve the human- perceived truffle aroma. Quantitative differences in aroma profiles among strains could be observed upon feeding of amino acids. Considerable aroma variabilities among strains were attributed to important truffle volatiles, many of which might be derived from amino acid catabolism through the Ehrlich pathway. 13 C-labelling experiments confirmed the existence of the Ehrlich pathway in truffles for leucine, isoleucine, methionine, and phenylalanine. Sensory analyses further demonstrated that the human nose can differentiate among strains. Our results illustrated the influence of truffle genotype on truffle aroma and showed how strain selection could be used to improve the human-perceived truffle aroma.
In chapter 2 the existing knowledge on the composition of bacterial community of four truffle species was compiled using meta-analysis approach (Vahdatzadeh et al., 2015). We highlighted the endemic microbiome of truffle as well as similarities and differences in the composition of microbial community within species at various phases of their life cycle. Furthermore, the potential contribution of truffle microbiome in the formation of truffle odorants was studied. Our findings showed that truffle fruiting bodies harbour complex microbial community composed of bacteria, yeasts, filamentous fungi, and viruses with bacteria being the dominant group. Regardless of truffle species, the composition of endemic microbiome of fruiting bodies appeared very similar and was dominated by α-Proteobacteria class. However, striking differences were observed in the bacterial community composition at various stages of the life cycle of truffle.Our analyses further suggested that odorants common to many truffle species might be produced by both truffle fungi and microbes, whereas specific truffle odorants might be derived from microbes only. Nevertheless, disentangling the origin of truffle odorants is very challenging, since acquiring microbe-free fruiting bodies are currently not possible.
Chapter 3 (Splivallo et al., 2019) further characterises truffle-associated bacterial communities of fruiting bodies of the black truffle T. aestivum from two different orchards. It aimed at defining the native microbiome in this truffle species, evaluating the variability of their microbiome across orchards, and assessing factors that shape assemblages of the bacterial communities. The dominant bacterial communities in T. aestivum revealed to be similar in both orchards: although a large portion of fruiting bodies were dominated by the α-Proteobacteria class (Bradyrhizobium genus) similar to other so far-assessed truffle species, in few cases β-Proteobacteria (Polaromonas genus), or Sphingobacteria (Pedobacter genus) were found to be predominant classes. Moreover, factors shaping bacterial communities influenced the two orchards differently, with spatial location within the orchard being the main driver in Swiss orchard and collection season in the French one. Surprisingly, in contrast to other fungi, truffle genotype and the degree of fruiting body maturity seemed not to contribute in shaping the assembly of truffle microbiome. Altogether, our data highlighted the existence of heterogeneous bacterial communities in T. aestivum fruiting bodies which are dominated by either of the three bacterial classes and mainly by the α-Proteobacteria class, irrespective of geographical origin. They further illustrated that determinants driving the assembly of various bacterial communities within truffle fruiting bodies are site-specific. Truffles are highly perishable delicacies with a short shelf life (1-2 weeks), and their aroma changes profoundly upon storage. Since truffle aroma might be at least partially produced by the truffle microbiome, chapter 4 (Vahdatzadeh et al., 2019) focuses on assessing the influence of the truffle microbiome on aroma deterioration of T.aestivum during post harvest storage. Specifically, volatile profile and bacterial communities of fruiting bodies collected from four different regions (three in France and one in Switzerland) were studied over nine days of storage. Our findings demonstrated the gradual replacement of dominant bacterial classes in fresh truffles (α-Proteobacteria, β-Proteobacteria, and Sphingobacteria) by food spoilage bacteria (members of γ- Proteobacteria and Bacilli classes), regardless of the initial diversity of the bacterial classes. This shift in the bacterial community also correlated with changes in volatile profiles, and markers for truffle freshness and spoilage could be identified. Ultimately, network analysis illustrated possible links among those volatile markers and specific bacterial classes. Our data showed that storage deeply influenced the composition of bacterial community as well as aroma of truffle fruiting bodies. They also illustrated the correlation between the shift in truffle microbiome, from commensal to detrimental, and the change of aroma profile, possibly leading to the loss of fresh truffle aroma. Overall, the work undertaken in this thesis demonstrated that truffle genotype and microbiome had a stronger influence on truffle aroma than previously believed.
Role of npas4l and Hif pathway in endothelial cell specification and specialization in vertebrates
(2018)
Cardiovascular development requires two main steps, vasculogenesis and angiogenesis. During vasculogenesis, angioblasts, the precursors of endothelial cells (ECs), specify from the mesoderm and coalesce to form the axial vessels of the vertebrate embryo. Many questions regarding the transcriptional waves initiating and sustaining angioblast specification are still unanswered. The identity of cloche, a gene essential for EC differentiation in zebrafish, was only recently discovered by our group, and very little is known about its upstream regulators or its molecular mechanism of action. I described the molecular players involved in orchestrating npas4l expression, upstream of angioblast specification. By using genetic models and chemical treatments, I identified FGF-Erk axis and BMP signaling to be involved in npas4l regulation. I also showed that eomesa is a potent inducer of npas4l expression. In addition, in vitro experiments indicated that murine Eomes promotes EC specification, acting upstream of Etv2 and Tal1. Using a combination of gain-of-function and loss-of-function models for npas4l, I identified primary and secondary downstream effectors of npas4l. I showed that Npas4l binding sites are present in the promoter of genes involved in hematoendothelial specification, such as tal1, lmo2 and etv2. Importantly, I reported that npas4l is sufficient and necessary to promote the EC specification program. By performing a combined analysis of the developed datasets, I recovered putative genes with a potential role in EC specification. One of the most promising candidates was tspan18b. I generated a mutant allele for tspan18b and observed angiogenic defects in tspan18b-/- embryos, confirming a role for this gene in zebrafish cardiovascular development. I showed that Npas4l binds etv2 promoter in zebrafish. In mammalian embryonic stem cells, however, Etv2 promoter is bound by HIF-1α, a transcription factor homolog to Npas4l. Interestingly, Eomes knockdown in vitro lead to a significant reduction of Hif-1α expression. To test the function of Hif-1α in vivo, I took advantage of a murine loss-of-function model.
Hif-1α mouse mutant embryos exhibit a significant decrease in Etv2 expression, when compared with WT siblings. These data suggest a model where mammals lost npas4l during evolution and HIF-1α acquired a new function, replacing npas4l role in EC specification. I compared the phenotype of Hif-1α mouse mutant with zebrafish hif-1α loss-of- function models. Importantly, zebrafish hif-1α mutant did not show defects in vasculogenesis or EC specification, but in EC specialization, during HSC development. I showed that hypoxia is a potent inducer of HSC formation, and hif-1α as well as hif-2α act upstream of notch1, vegfaa and evi1 in hemogenic endothelial specification.
Conclusions
In this work, I explored the molecular mechanisms underlying EC specification in vertebrates, analyzing the role of bHLH-PAS transcription factors in this biological process. I identified the upstream regulators and the downstream effectors of npas4l, describing a novel role for tspan18b in zebrafish cardiovascular development. Npas4l is a transcription factor necessary and sufficient for angioblast differentiation in zebrafish, but the gene was lost in the mammalian lineage. hif-1α and hif-2α, paralogous genes of npas4l, are involved in the establishment of EC heterogeneity and specifically in the specification of hemogenic endothelium in zebrafish. Murine Hif-1α, however, is responsible for Etv2 regulation, indicating a role for hypoxia inducible factor in initiating the EC specification program in mouse, similarly to npas4l function in zebrafish.
Biodiversity is threatened worldwide because of ongoing habitat loss and fragmentation, overexploitation, pollution, biological invasions and a changing global climate. Due to the major importance of biological diversity for modern human living, efficient conservation and management strategies are required to protect endangered habitats and species. For this purpose, ambitious multilateral agreements on regional and global scale were declared to prevent biodiversity loss.
Efficient biomonitoring methods are required to adequately implement these biodiversity conventions. Species monitoring as a core activity in biodiversity research is an effective tool to assess the status of species and trends within habitats. Data collection can be obtained with visual, electronic or genetic surveys. Still, these monitoring programs can be expensive, laborious and inefficient for accurate species assessments. New techniques based on environmental DNA (eDNA) allows for the detection of DNA traces in environmental samples (soil, sediment, water and air samples) and open up new possibilities for species monitoring. The eDNA methodology enables detection of single species in a qualitative (presence/absence) or (semi-) quantitative way. eDNA metabarcoding approaches can be an effective community structure assessment method.
This thesis, located at the interface between experimental and applied research, illustrates the suitability of the eDNA methodology in applied biomonitoring using the example of the water-borne crayfish plague pathogen Aphanomyces astaci (Schikora 1906). The obtained results provide new insights into A. astaci sporulation dynamics in natural water courses. A. astaci sporulation is influenced by seasonal variation of water temperatures and life history traits (molting, activity, mating) of infected crayfish. The results also imply a high transmission risk of A. astaci spores during the complete year. This thesis compares two eDNA methods, which are successfully and consistently detecting A. astaci spores. Each approach is suitable for different biomonitoring tasks due to the method-specific requirements. The obtained results also reveal spatial variation in A. astaci occurance in the tested water bodies. A. astaci spore estimates are positively correlated with population density and pathogen loads of captured A. astaci- positive crayfish. eDNA results show a downstream zoospore transport of up to three kilometres distance from a distribution hot spot area of A. astaci-infected crayfish. The eDNA methodology is helpful in gaining reliable information on A. astaci occurrence in large water bodies. This information is urgently needed to initiate efficient management decisions for the conservation of European crayfish species.
eDNA-based methods such as for A. astaci detection are a useful complement for conventional monitoring and should have a strong impact on conservation policy. eDNA methodology will be helpful for the practical implementation of the main aims of key conservation agreements and thus will make important contributions to biodiversity protection.
Cardiac trabeculation is one of the essential processes required for the formation of a competent ventricular wall, whereby clusters of ventricular cardiomyocytes (CMs) from a single layer delaminate and expand into the cardiac jelly to form sheet-like projections in the developing heart (Samsa et al., 2013). Several congenital heart diseases are associated with defects in the formation of these trabeculae and lead to embryonic lethality (Jenni et al., 1999; Zhang et al., 2013, Jenni et al., 2001; Towbin 2010). It has been experimentally shown that lack of Nrg1/ErbB2/ErbB4, Angipoetin1/Tie2, EphrinB2/B4, BMP10, or any component of the Notch signaling pathway can cause defective trabeculation. Moreover, changes in blood flow and/or contractility can also affect trabeculation (Samsa et al., 2013). Together, these observations demonstrate that cardiac trabeculation is a highly dynamic and regulated process.
Trabeculation is a morphogenetic process that requires control over cell shape changes and rearrangements, similar to those observed during EMT. Epithelial cells within an epithelium are polarized and establish cell-cell junctions with the neighboring cells (Ikenouchi et al., 2003; Ferrer-vaquer et al., 2010), thus epithelial cell polarity is an important feature to maintain cell shape and tissue structure. During developmental processes such as cell migration and cell division or in disease states epithelial polarity might be disrupted. As a consequence of this alteration, cells lose their tight cell-cell adhesions, undergo cytoskeletal rearrangements, change their shape and gain migratory properties becoming mesenchymal cells (Micalizzi et al., 2010). In epithelial cells, apicobasal polarity is regulated by a conserved set of core complexes, including the PAR, Scribble and Crumbs complexes (Kemphues et al., 1988; Bilder and Perrimon, 2000; Teppas et al., 1984). The polarity proteins composing these complexes interact in a well organized and coordinated-manner creating molecular asymmetry along the apicobasal axis of the cell. In turn, this crosstalk regulates the maturation and stabilization of the junctions between cells and cytoskeleton in order to strengthen cell polarization (Roignot et al., 2013). Amongst the different polarity complex, Crumbs has been shown to be a key regulator of apicobasal polarity during development in both vertebrates and invertebrates (Tepass et al., 1990; Fan et al., 2004).
Here, taking advantage of zebrafish as a model organism, I study in vivo at single cell resolution changes in CM apicobasal polarity during cardiac trabeculation. Moreover, I show which factors regulate CM apicobasal polarity during this process. In addition, I dissect the role of the polarity complex Crumbs in regulating CM junctional rearrangements and the formation of the trabecular network.
In the 'Golden Age of Antibiotics', between 1940 and 1970, the global pharmaceutical companies discovered many antibiotics, such as cephalosporins, tetracyclines, aminoglycosides, glycopeptides, etc., as well as antifungal and antiparisitic agents. Due to several reasons, e.g. the steady re-discovery of already known NPs and the associated high costs, many pharmaceutical companies have significantly scaled back or totally abandoned their NP discovery programs since the late 20th century. Instead those companies started to focus on drug discovery based on combinatorial synthesis and thereby on the creation of enormous synthetic libraries containing small molecules. Unfortunately, this synthetic approach dealing with the optimization of existing NP or antibiotic has its limitations. As a result, leading pharmaceutical companies are re-conducting NPs research to discover new antimicrobials for the upcoming antimicrobial resistance threat. The Natural Product Center of Excellence, a collaboration between Sanofi-Aventis and Fraunhofer IME, is advancing in this context the discovery and development of novel antimicrobial agents for the treatment of infectious diseases through the testing of Sanofi's microbial extract library and strain collection. The aim of the present PhD thesis was the discovery and isolation of novel antimicrobial compounds with improved activities and/or novel MOAs as potential lead compound for a further drug discovery.
Transposable elements (TEs) are replicating genetic elementst hat comprise up to 50% of mammalian genomes. A specific class of TEs are retrotransposons that proliferate by transcription into a RNA intermediate, followed by genomic reintegration into another locus (so called “copy & paste” mechanism). Due to the lack of removal mechanisms and very rare parallel insertions, the presence of TE insertions at ortholgous genomic loci in multiple taxa provides a virtually homoplasy free phylogenetic marker. So far, developing phylogenetically informative markers from TE insertions has been a tedious work of testing hundreds of putative candidate loci in a trial-and error approach with low success rate. Hence, phylogenetic studies using TE insertions were often limited to a few dozen markers.
Recently, genome sequencing of multiple species using reference-mapping allowed the identification of genome-scale datasets of TE insertions. and made the ad-hoc development of phylogenetic informative markers possible. However, genome scale TE detection methods have rarely been applied to non model organisms in which data availability and quality is comparably limited. In this thesis, I developed the TeddyPi pipeline (TE detection and discovery for phylogenetic inference), a software tool that made it possible to obtain reliable genome-scale TE insertion data from low-coverage genomes. This was achieved by integrating the data from multiple TE and structural variation callers as well as applying a stringent filtering pipeline to exclude low-quality insertion calls. Whole-genome sequencing datasets of bears (Ursidae) and baleen whales (Mysticeti) were used to apply TE based phylogenetic inference and evaluate the method in comparison to sequence-based phylogenomic analyses.
In the bear genomes, TeddyPi identified 150,513 high-quality transposable element (TE) insertions, which allowed me to reconstruct the evolutionary history of bears despite extensive phylogenetic conflict (Lammers et al., 2017). The large number of detected TE insertions made also detailed network analyses possible that visualize the phylogenetic conflict. Experimental polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays validated up to 93 % of the computationally identified TE loci and demonstrated the high accuracy of the dataset underlying the phylogenetic analyses.
Second, I present the initial genome sequencing of six baleen whales and a detailed investigation of their evolutionary history using TE insertions and established sequence-based phylogenomic methods. The taxon sampling of baleen whales included iconic species like the blue whale (Balaneoptera musculus) or the humpback whale (Megaptera novaengliae) (Árnason et al., 2018). A sequence-based reconstruction of the baleen whale species tree solved the long-debated phylogenetic position of the gray whale (Echrichtius robustus) within rorquals (Balaneopteridae) for the first time with high statistical support. Furthermore, the genome data made it possible to identify large extent of phylogenetic conflict for divergences during the radiation of rorquals that occurred 7-10 million years ago (Ma).
The phylogenomic analyses of 91,589 TE insertions in the whale genomes confirmed the sequence-based topology (Lammers et al., 2019). The quantification of phylogenetic signals obtained from the TE insertions revealed a high degree of discordance for the divergence of the gray whale and rorquals. Despite the large genome-scale dataset, statistical tests showed only marginal support for a bifurcating divergence of gray whales and the rorqual species. The limited statistical support for a strictly bifurcating tree obtained from genome-scale datasets of thousands of markers demonstrates the importance for including phylogenetic networks for displaying evolutionary divergences.
In conclusion, this thesis shows that identification of TE insertions from whole-genome resequencing provides plentiful and accurate phylogenomic markers. For the application in non model organisms, I provide a easy-to-use software to integrate multiple datasets from TE and structural variation callers in order to obtain reliable and ascertainment-bias free datasets. Detecting genome-scale datasets of TE insertions in two case studies demonstrates the applicability of this marker system for phylogenetic reconstruction and inferring phylogenetic conflict.
Der DNA-Translokator von T. thermophilus HB27, ebenso wie Typ-IV-Pili (T4P), sind Multiproteinkomplexe, die die Membranen und das Periplasma durchspannen. Sie sind ähnlich aufgebaut und enthalten identische Proteine. Der DNA-Translokator vermittelt Transport von DNA in das Zellinnere während der natürlichen Transformation. T4P sind filamentöse Zellorganellen, die an der inneren Membran assembliert werden und bis zu mehrere Mikrometer aus der Zelle hinausragen. Sie dienen der Anhaftung und Fortbewegung der Zellen auf Oberflächen.
Das Ziel dieser Arbeit war es, die Funktionen einzelner Komponenten der Komplexe und ihrer Proteindomänen bei der natürlichen Transformation, der T4P-Assemblierung und den durch T4P vermittelten Funktionen Adhäsion und „twitching motility“ aufzuklären.
Es sind neun Proteine bekannt, die eine duale Rolle als Komponenten des DNA-Translokators und des T4P spielen. Eines dieser Proteine ist die Assemblierungs-ATPase PilF, die Hexamere bildet. Diese cytoplasmatischen ATPase-Komplexe stellen die Energie für die Assemblierung der T4P bereit, ebenso wie für die Aufnahme freier DNA. Es ist jedoch bisher nicht geklärt, wie die durch PilF bereitgestellte Energie auf die anderen Komponenten des DNA-Translokators/T4P übertragen wird.
In dieser Arbeit konnte gezeigt werden, dass PilF an das cytoplasmatische Protein PilM des T4P und DNA-Translokators bindet. Zudem konnten Proteinkomplexe bestehend aus den Proteinen PilM, PilN und PilO heterolog produziert und aus Zellmembranen koisoliert werden. PilF interagierte mit diesen PilMNO-Komplexen via PilM. Diese Interaktionen führt zur Stimulierung der ATPase-Aktivität von PilF. Dies deutet an, dass PilM ein Kupplungsprotein ist, welches die Assemblierungs-ATPase PilF physisch und funktionell mit dem T4P/DNA-Translokator über den PilMNO-Komplex verbindet.
Neben PilF standen Präpiline von T. thermophilus im Fokus dieser Arbeit. Präpiline sind Vorläuferproteine, die zu Pilinen prozessiert werden und als solche dann die Untereinheiten der Pilus-Strukturen bilden.
Zusammenfassend konnten die Rollen einzelner Präpilin-ähnlicher Proteine bei T4P-assoziierten Funktionen geklärt werden und es konnten erste Analysen zur Charakterisierung des weitestgehend unbekannten Proteins ComZ durchgeführt werden. Desweiteren liefert diese Arbeit Hinweise darauf, dass die membranassoziierten Proteine PilM, PilN und PilO Kupplungsproteine sind, die PilF mit den periplasmatischen Komponenten des T4P/DNA-Translokators verbinden und dadurch die ATPase-Aktivität von PilF stimulieren. Die Rollen einzelner Proteindomänen von PilF und PilM bei der Protein-Protein-Interaktion und der Bindung von Liganden wurden aufgeklärt, sowie ihre Funktionen bei den T4P-vermittelten Funktionen und der natürlichen Transformation.
Autophagy, meaning “self-eating”, is an important cellular waste disposal mechanism. Thereby, damaged proteins, lipids and organelles are enclosed by autophagosomes and subsequently transported to the lysosomes for degradation into basic, cellular building blocks. Under basal conditions autophagy prevents the accumulation of defective and harmful material and generally promotes cell survival. However, several studies reported that hyperactivated autophagy, e.g. during developmental processes in lower eukaryotes, or during chemotherapeutic treatment of cancer cells, can also trigger cell death.
In recent years, autophagic cell death (ACD) has been considered as an alternative cell death pathway for tumor therapy, especially for solid tumors with high apoptosis resistance such as glioblastoma. Glioblastoma (GBM) is a very aggressive, malignant primary brain tumor with a median survival of ~ 15 months despite surgery and chemoradiotherapy. Accordingly, there is a great interest in improving GBM therapy through alternative cell death mechanisms. Interestingly, it has been shown that various substances, e.g. AT 101, cannabinoids and the combination of imipramine and ticlopidine (IM+TIC), induce ACD in GBM cells.
The aim of this project was to identify the underlying mechanisms of stress- and drug-induced ACD and its therapeutic potential for glioblastoma treatment. For detailed investigation of ACD, a CRISPR/Cas9-based approach was used to generate ATG5 and ATG7 knockouts as genetic models of autophagy deficiency. In a previous study of our lab it was demonstrated that administration of AT 101 triggers ACD in glioblastoma cells, which was associated with early mitochondrial fragmentation but no signs of apoptosis. Since mitochondrial fragmentation often precedes mitophagy, the first part of this thesis explored the potential role of mitophagy in AT 101-induced cell death.
ATG5-depleted cells confirmed that AT 101 induces ACD. In addition, treatment with AT 101 resulted in a pronounced mitochondrial depolarization, which was at least partly caused by the opening of the mitochondrial permeability pore. Global proteome analysis of AT 101-treated GBM cells revealed a robust decrease in mitochondrial protein clusters as well as a strong increase in the enzyme heme oxygenase-1 (HMOX1). Subsequent experiments for detailed investigation of mitophagy following AT 101 treatment (western blot, flow cytometric MTG and mt-mKeima, qRT-PCR of mitochondrial vs nuclear DNA) consistently indicated strong mitophagy induction by AT 101, which could be reduced by genetic or pharmacological inhibition of autophagy. Furthermore, siRNA-mediated knockdown experiments revealed that the selective mitophagy receptors BNIP3 and BNIP3L and the HMOX1 enzyme play an essential role in AT 101-induced mitophagy and subsequent cell death. Taken together, these data demonstrate that AT 101-induced mitochondrial dysfunction and HMOX1 induction synergize to promote excessive mitophagy with a lethal outcome in glioma cells.
The second part of this thesis focused on the identification of new substances that cause ACD and the investigation of the underlying cell death pathways. Using a cell death screen of the ENZO Screen-Well™ autophagy library in MZ-54 wild-type vs ATG5 and ATG7-depleted cells, loperamide, pimozide, and STF-62247 were identified as ACD-inducing agents. The increase of the autophagic flux and the induction of ACD by these substances was confirmed by using different ATG5 and ATG7 knockout cell lines and the already established positive control IM+TIC.
In contrast to AT 101, IM+TIC, STF-62247, loperamide and pimozide produced neither mitochondrial dysfunction nor mitophagy. Interestingly, it has been described that imipramine, loperamide and pimozide inhibit the lysosomal enzyme acid sphingomyelinase, which is associated with impaired lipid transport. Global proteome analysis and cholesterol staining confirmed that all four substances, but especially loperamide and pimozide, inhibit cellular lipid transport, leading to massive lipid accumulation in the lysosomes. In the further course of the experiments, the connection between defective lipid transport and autophagy was investigated in more detail. On the one hand, the defective lipid transport contributed to the induction of autophagy, on the other hand the massive accumulation of lipids led to lysosomal membrane damage, inhibition of lysosomal degradation at later time points and finally to a lysosomal cell death. Remarkably, it has been shown that hyperactivated autophagy by IM+TIC, loperamide and pimozide massively promotes lysosomal membrane damage. This result highlights the difficulties of a clear distinction between autophagic and lysosomal cell death.
In summary, two new signaling pathways that induce autophagic cell death in GBM cells and may be relevant for glioblastoma therapy were investigated in this study.
Structured illumination microscopy (SIM) is part of the super-resolution methods developed at the beginning of this century. To produce a super-resolution image SIM requires three things: 1) illumination of the sample with a periodic pattern, 2) acquisition of multiple images per plane under different pattern’s phases and orientations and 3) the processing of these images has to be carried with a reconstruction algorithm. The result of the reconstruction is an image with a resolution gain that is proportional to the frequency of the pattern (po). The typical SIM set-up uses an epi-fluorescence configuration, thus the interference angle of the beams that create the pattern is restricted by the angular aperture of the objective. Under this restriction the maximum value of po is given by the cut-off frequency of the objective lens and sets at 2 the maximum resolution gain of SIM under linear illumination.
In the first part of this thesis we present the implementation and characterization of the 2D-SIM set-up designed by Dr. Bo-Jui Chang (B-J. Chang et al., PNAS 2017), this design exploits the concept introduced by light-sheet microscopy, i.e. separation of illumination and detection paths to obtain resolution gains larger than the usual two-fold (Chapter 3). The set-up is named coherent structured illumination light-sheet based fluorescence microscopy (csiLSFM) and it consists of a triangular array of three objectives, such that two are used for illumination and one for detection. With the independent illumination arms is possible to interfere two coherent light-sheets at angles beyond the angular aperture of the detection lens, attaining the maximum interference angle of 180° when the light-sheets counter-propagate. This condition delivers a pattern with a po 1.4 times larger than the cut-off frequency (ωo), hence our set-up provides generic resolution gains of 2.4.
The extraction of the high spatial frequencies that produce the resolution gain in the csiLSFM is a challenge due to a low pattern modulation. The low modulation inherently arises because the frequency associated to the pattern period lies beyond the cut-off frequency of the detection lens. To overcome this challenge we developed a filtering strategy that facilitates the withdrawal of information from a SIM data set, simultaneously the proposed filtering process optimizes the reconstruction algorithm by reducing the periodic artifacts that are recurrent in SIM images. In this same chapter we also performed an spectral analysis of the artifacts and determined that they originate from irregularities in the power spectrum that occur due to the partial or total lack of certain spatial frequencies (fig.4.2 and 4.3), our reconstruction reduces this information drops and diminishes the artifact occurrence. The relevance of our reconstruction pipeline is that it delivers a standardized process to enhance the SIM image in a current context in which the commonly used reconstruction algorithms employ empirical tuning to improve it (fig.4.13). Moreover, the pipeline is applicable to the csiLSFM data and also to images acquired with any other 2D-/3D-SIM set-up (fig.4.10 and 4.11).
The processing of various image data sets acquired with the csiLSFM exposed us to the question of how low the modulation of the illumination pattern can be before no super-resolution frequencies can be extracted. Answering this question is important to guarantee that the SIM data contains enough spatial frequencies to provide significant resolution gains. Thus in chapter 5 we developed a quantitative metric to indirectly determine the pattern modulation from the SIM data and find its critical value to use it as evaluation criterion. We called this metric the quality factor (Q-factor) and it represents the normalized strength (amplitude) of the extracted frequencies respect to the Gaussian noise contained in the images. Through simulations we estimated that Q=0.11 is a critical value and a SIM data set requires this as minimum value is to deliver a significant resolution gain. Q works then as an assessment tool for classifying SIM data as optimal or sub-optimal, i.e. Q≥0.11 or Q<0.11. We demonstrated such application with data acquired in various SIM commercial set-ups to prove its feasibility in the field (fig.5.6-5.11)
As mentioned at the beginning of this abstract SIM requires a specialized set-up and a processing algorithm to produce super-resolution images. This thesis contributes to these two areas in the following aspects: first, in its linear version a structured illumination microscope is highly associated to a 2-fold resolution gain. Here we demonstrated the possibility of extending this gain to 2.4 using our custom set-up the csiLSFM. Second, a reconstructed SIM image is prone to artifacts due to the mathematical process it undergoes, here we analyzed the artifact sources and identified them with drops of spatial information in the reconstructed spectrum, based on these conclusions we designed a processing pipeline to facilitate the extraction of spatial frequencies and directly reduce artifacts. A third and final outcome of this thesis is the development and practical implementation of a quantitative index to evaluate the quality of SIM data in terms of its relevant information content (Q-factor). Accordingly, the overall contributions of this work were done in the areas of SIM set-up, SIM reconstruction procedure and SIM data evaluation.
BACKGROUND: Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is one of the most common neurodevelopmental disorders worldwide. As described in the DSM-5, ADHD is clinically heterogeneous with three main subtypes; predominant hyperactive, predominant attention deficit and combined. The severity of symptoms widely differs among the patients and interferes with the person functioning, negatively impacting social and occupational activities (American Psychiatric Association, 2013). Despite the many efforts, the etiology of the disorder is still unclear. Therefore, there is an increasing demand of models that would help elucidating the causative mechanisms of the disorder and, in parallel, would be valuable tools to discover new and effective treatments. The main goal of the study is the identification of disease specific cellular phenotypes related to Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in cellular models from patients carrying rare copy number variants (CNVs) in the PARK2 locus that have been previously associated with ADHD (Elia et al., 2010; Jarick et al., 2014).
METHODS: Human dermal fibroblast (HDF) cultures were obtained from skin punches and reprogrammed into human induced pluripotent stem cells (HiPSC) and successively induced to differentiate into HiPSC-derived dopaminergic neurons. Both HiPSC and HiPSC-derived neurons, were proven to be bona fide models by morphological analysis, RT-PCR, RT-qPCR, immunofluorescence, embryoid body assay, molecular karyotyping and dopamine level quantification. A total of six donors were selected for HiPSC and dopaminergic neuron generation: 3 adult ADHD PARK2 CNV risk carriers (1 duplication and 2 deletion carriers, 1 ADHD non-risk CNV variant carrier and 2 healthy controls).
We conducted stress-response experiments (nutrient deprivation and CCCP administration) that are well known to increase PARK2 expression, on both fibroblasts and HiPSC. After assessing PARK2 gene and protein expression levels, we evaluated the gene expression of genes that are involved with different processes orchestrated by PARK2. We then performed a series of assays with a special focus on mitochondrial function and energy metabolism (ATP production, basal oxygen consumption rates, ROS abundance) and evaluated changing in the mitochondrial network morphology.
To evaluate the effect of nicotine exposure, one of the best replicated prenatal risk factors for having a child later on diagnosed with ADHD, we treated HiPSC-derived dopaminergic neurons with smoking-relevant nicotine concentrations and evaluated PARK2 protein expression after treatment and gene expression by RNA sequencing.
RESULTS: The cell models created in this study passed all the characterization tests required to assess whether the lines can be considered bona fide models without underling genotype differences. The evaluation of patho-phenotypes connected with ADHD/PARK2 CNVs in HDF and HIPSC showed that, although PARK2 gene expression was unchanged, ADHD/PARK2 CNV carriers show different PARK2 protein levels possibly implying the presence of different post-transcriptional processes. ADHD/PARK2 CNV carriers show lower levels of ATP production and basal oxygen consumption rates compared to controls, a result in line with what was already reported in ADHD cybrids cells model (Verma et al., 2016). Our experiments indicate that both the amount of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and the mitochondrial network morphology is influenced by the treatment but not by the genotype. The evaluation of nicotine effects on HiPSC-derived dopaminergic neuron from aADHD patients showed no effects on PARK2 protein levels and gene expression. ADHD/PARK2 CNVs carriers show gene ontology enrichment in modules connected with the regulation of cell growth after nicotine acute treatment. Additionally, genes connected with energy production & oxidative stress response and extracellular matrix & cell adhesion were significantly differentially expressed after nicotine treatments.
CONCLUSIONS: This study points out the presence of impairment of mitochondrial energetics in cellular models derived from adult ADHD patients carrying rare CNVs within the PARK2 locus. In the last years, several studies have linked mitochondrial impairments to the etiology of psychiatric and neurodevelopmental disorders (McCann & Ross, 2018) and reported an overall increase of oxidative stress or insufficient response to oxidative damage both in children and adults with ADHD (Joseph, Zhang-James, Perl, & Faraone, 2015; Lopresti, 2015). Additionally, different groups have underlined an abnormal brain connectivity in ADHD patients in their work (Gehricke et al., 2017). Our preliminary investigation of the effects of a well-known prenatal risk factor for ADHD, nicotine gestation exposure, point out a susceptibility of the PARK2 CNVs carriers in processes involved in regulation of cell growth and in proteins connected with extracellular matrix composition and cell-adhesion molecules, all factors necessary for neuronal maturation and formation of proper neural connections (Washbourne et al., 2004). In conclusion, this study presents novel and fully validated cellular model systems to study the etiopathogenesis of ADHD based on rare CNVs in the PARK2 locus. Moreover, the identification of disease-relevant phenotypes in the model might be helpful in the future for testing new alternative medications.
Die Analyse von DNA-Sequenzen steht spätestens seit der Feststellung ihrer tragenden Rolle in der Vererbung organismischer Eigenschaften im Fokus biologischer Fragestellungen. Seit Kurzem wird mit modernsten Methoden die Untersuchung von kompletten Genomen ermöglicht. Dies eröffnet den Zugang zu genomweiten Informationen gegenüber begrenzt aussagekräftigen markerbasierten Analysen. Eine Genomsequenz ist die ultimative Quelle an organismischer Information. Allerdings sind diese Informationen oft aufgrund technischer und biologischer Gründe komplex und werfen meist mehr Fragen auf, als sie beantworten.
Die Rekonstruktion einer bislang unbekannten Genomsequenz aus kurzen Sequenzen stellt eine technische Herausforderung dar, die mit grundlegenden, aber in der Realität nicht zwingend zutreffenden Annahmen verbunden ist. Außerdem können biologische Faktoren, wie Repeatgehalt oder Heterozygotie, die Fehlerrate einer Assemblierung stark beeinflussen. Die Beurteilung der Qualität einer de novo Assemblierung ist herausfordernd, aber zugleich äußerst notwendig. Anschließend ist eine strukturelle und funktionale Annotation von Genen, kodierenden Bereichen und repeats nötig, um umfangreiche biologische Fragestellungen beantworten zu können. Ein qualitativ hochwertiges und annotiertes assembly ermöglicht genomweite Analysen von Individuen und Populationen. Diese Arbeit beinhaltet die Assemblierung und Annotation des Genoms der Süßwasserschnecke Radix auricularia und eine Studie vergleichender Genomik von fünf Individuen aus verschiedenen molekularen Gruppen (MOTUs).
Mollusken beherbergen nach den Insekten die größte Artenvielfalt innerhalb der Tierstämme und besiedeln verschiedenste, teils extreme, Habitate. Trotz der großen Bedeutung für die Biodiversitätsforschung sind verhältnismäßig wenige genomische Daten öffentlich verfügbar. Zudem sind Arten der Gattung Radix auch aufgrund ihrer großen geografischen Verbreitung in diversen biologischen Disziplinen als Modellorganismen etabliert. Eine annotierte Genomsequenz ermöglicht über bereits untersuchte Felder hinaus die Forschung an grundlegenden biologischen Fragestellungen, wie z.B. die Funktionsweise von Hybridisierung und Artbildung. Durch Assemblierung und scaffolding von sechs whole genome shotgun Bibliotheken verschiedener insert sizes und einem transkriptbasiertem scaffolding konnte trotz des hohen Repeatgehalts ein vergleichsweise kontinuierliches assembly erhalten werden. Die erhebliche Differenz zwischen der Gesamtlänge der Assemblierung und der geschätzten Genomgröße konnte zum Großteil auf kollabierte repeats zurückgeführt werden.
Die strukturelle Annotation basierend auf Transkriptomen, Proteinen einer Datenbank und artspezifisch trainierten Genvorhersagemodellen resultierte in 17.338 proteinkodierenden Genen, die etwa 12,5% der geschätzten Genomgröße abdecken. Der Annotation wird u.a. aufgrund beinhaltender Kernrthologen, konservierter Proteindomänenarrangements und der Übereinstimmung mit de novo sequenzierten Peptiden eine hohe Qualität zugesprochen.
Das mapping der Sequenzen von fünf Radix MOTUs gegen die R. auricularia Assemblierung zeigte stark verringerte coverage außerhalb kodierender Bereiche der nicht-Referenz MOTUs aufgrund hoher Nukleotiddiversität. Für 16.039 Gene konnten Topologien berechnet werden und ein Test auf positive Selektion ausgeführt werden. Insgesamt konnte über alle MOTUs hinweg in 678 verschiedenen Genen positive Selektion detektiert werden, wobei jede MOTU ein nahezu einzigartiges Set positiv selektierter Gene beinhaltet. Von allen 16.039 untersuchten Genen konnten 56,4% funktional annotiert werden. Diese niedrige Rate wird vermutlich durch Mangel an genomischer Information in Mollusken verursacht. Anschließende Analysen auf Anreicherungen von Funktionen sind deshalb nur bedingt repräsentativ.
Neben den biologischen Ergebnissen wurden Methoden und Optimierungen genomischer Analysen von Nichtmodellorganismen entwickelt. Dazu zählen eigens angefertigte Skripte, um beispielsweise Transkriptomalignments zu filtern, Trainings eines Genvorhersagemodells automatisiert und parallelisiert auszuführen und Orthogruppen bestimmter Arten aus einer Orthologievorhersage zu extrahieren. Zusätzlich wurden Abläufe entwickelt, um möglichst viele vorhandene Daten in die Assemblierung und Annotation zu integrieren. Etwa wurde ein zusätzliches scaffolding mit eigens assemblierten Transkripten mehrerer MOTUs sequenziell und phylogenetisch begründet ausgeführt.
Insgesamt wird eine umfassende und qualitativ hochwertige Genomsequenz eines Süßwassermollusken präsentiert, welche eine Grundlage für zukünftige Forschungsprojekte z.B. im Bereich der Biodiversität, Populationsgenomik und molekularen Ökologie bietet. Die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit stellen einen Wissenszuwachs in der Genomik von Mollusken dar, welche bisher trotz ihrer Artenvielfalt deutlich unterrepräsentiert bezüglich assemblierter und annotierter Genome auffallen.
In times of a growing world population and the associated demand for high crop yield, the understanding and improvement of plant reproduction is of central importance. One key step of plant reproduction is the development of the male gametophyte, which is better known as pollen. In addition, the development of pollen was shown to be very sensitive to abiotic stresses, such as heat, which can cause crop damage and yield loss. To obtain new insights in the development and heat stress response of pollen, a combined transcriptome and proteome analysis was performed for three pollen developmental stages of non- and heat-stressed tomato plants.
The analysis of the transcriptomes of non-stressed pollen developmental stages enabled the determination of mRNAs accumulated in certain developmental stages. The functional analysis of these mRNAs led to the identification of protein families and functional processes that are important at different times of pollen development. A subsequent comparison of the transcriptomes of non- and heat-stressed pollen revealed a core set of 49 mRNAs, which are upregulated in all three developmental stages. The encoded proteins include among other things different heat stress transcription factors and heat shock proteins, which are known key players of the plant heat stress response.
Furthermore, 793 potential miRNAs could be identified in the transcriptome of non- and heat-stressed pollen. Interestingly, 38 out of the 793 miRNAs have already been identified in plants. For more than half of these miRNAs potential target mRNAs were identified and the interactions between miRNAs and mRNAs linked to the development and heat stress response of pollen. In total, 207 developmentally relevant interactions could be determined, out of which 34 have an effect on transcriptional-networks. In addition, 24 of the interactions contribute the heat stress response of pollen, whereby this mainly affects post-meiotic pollen.
An initial correlation of the proteome and transcriptome of the developmental stages revealed that transcriptome analyses are not sufficient to draw exact conclusions about the state of the proteome. A closer look on the relationship of the transcriptome and proteome during pollen development revealed two translational modes that are active during the development of pollen. One mode leads to a direct translation of mRNAs, while the second mode leads a delayed translation at a later point in time. Regarding the delayed translation, it could be shown that this is likely due to a short-term storage of mRNAs in so-called EPPs. The comparison of the proteome and transcriptome response to heat stress revealed that the proteome reacts much stronger and that the reaction is mainly independent from the transcriptome. Finally, the comparison of the proteome of non- and heat-stressed pollen provided first indications for changes in the ribosome composition in response to heat stress, as 57 ribosomal proteins are differentially regulated in at least one developmental stage.
Heat stress transcription factors (Hsfs) have an essential role in heat stress response (HSR) and thermotolerance by controlling the expression of hundreds of genes including heat shock proteins (Hsps) with molecular chaperone functions. Hsf family in plants shows a striking multiplicity, with more than 20 members in many species. In Solanum lycopersicum HsfA1a was reported to act as the master regulator of the onset of HSR and therefore is essential for basal thermotolerance. Evidence for this was provided by the analysis of HsfA1a co-suppression (A1CS) transgenic plants, which exhibited hypersensitivity upon exposure to heat stress (HS) due to the inability of the plants to induce the expression of many HS-genes including HsfA2, HsfB1 and several Hsps. Completion of tomato genome sequencing allowed the completion of the Hsf inventory, which is consisted of 27 members, including another three HsfA1 genes, namely HsfA1b, HsfA1c and HsfA1e.
Consequently, the suppression effect of the short interference RNA in A1CS lin e was re-evaluated for all HsfA1 genes. We found that expression of all HsfA1 proteins was suppressed in A1CS protoplasts. This result suggested that the model of single master regulator needs to be re-examined.
Expression analysis revealed that HsfA1a is constitutively expressed in different tissues and in response to HS, while HsfA1c and HsfA1e are minimally expressed in general, and show an induction during fruit ripening and a weak upregulation in late HSR. Instead HsfA1b shows preferential expression in specific tissues and is strongly and rapidly induced in response to HS. At the protein level HsfA1b and HsfA1e are rapidly degraded while HsfA1a and HsfA1c show a higher stability. In addition, HsfA1a and HsfA1c show a nucleocytosolic distribution, while HsfA1b and HsfA1e a strong nuclear retention.
A major property of a master regulator in HSR is thought to be its ability to cause a strong transactivation of a wide range of genes required for the initial activation of protective mechanisms. GUS reporter assays as well as analysis of transcript levels of several endogenous transcripts in protoplasts transiently expressing HsfA1 proteins revealed that HsfA1a can stimulate the transcription of many genes, while the other Hsfs have weaker activity and only on limited set of target genes. The low activity of HsfA1c and HsfA1e can be attributed to the lower DNA capacity of the two factors as judged by a GUS reporter repressor assay.
HsfA1a has been shown to have synergistic activity with the stress induced HsfA2 and HsfB1. The formation of such complexes is considered as important for stimulation of transcription and long term stress adaptation. All HsfA1 members show synergistic activity with HsfA2, while only HsfA1a act as co-activator of HsfB1 and HsfA7. Interestingly, HsfA1b shows an exceptional synergistic activity with HsfA3, suggesting that different Hsf complexes might regulate different HS-related gene networks. Altogether these results suggest that HsfA1a has unique characteristics within HsfA1 subfamily. This result is interesting considering the very high sequencing similarity among HsfA1s, and particularly among HsfA1a and HsfA1c.
To understand the molecular basis of this discrepancy, a series of domain swapping mutants between HsfA1a and HsfA1c were generated. Oligomerization domain and C-terminal swaps did not affect the basal activity or co-activity of the proteins. Remarkably, an HsfA1a mutant harbouring the N-terminus of HsfA1c shows reduced activity and co-activity, while the reciprocal HsfA1c with the N-terminus of HsfA1a cause a gain of activity and enhanced DNA binding capacity.
Sequence analysis of the DBD of HsfA1 proteins revealed a divergence in the highly conserved C-terminus of the turn of β3-β4 sheet. As the vast majority of HsfA1 proteins, HsfA1a at this position comprises an Arg residue (R107), while HsfA1c a Leu and HsfA1e a Cys. An HsfA1a-R107L mutant has reduced DNA binding capacity and consequently activity. Therefore, the results presented here point to the essential function of this amino acid residue for DNA binding function. Interestingly, the mutation did not affect the activity of the protein on Hsp70-1, suggesting that the functionality of the DBD and consequently the transcription factor on different promoters with variable heat stress element number and architecture is dependent on structural peculiarities of the DBD.
In conclusion, the unique properties including expression pattern, transcriptional activities, stability, DBD-peculiarities are likely responsible for the dominant function of HsfA1a as a master regulator of HSR in tomato. Instead, other HsfA1-members are only participating in HSR or developmental regulations by regulating a specific set of genes. Furthermore, HsfA1b and HsfA1e are likely function as stress primers in specific tissues while HsfA1c as a co-regulator in mild HSR. Thereby, tomato subclass A1 presents another example of function diversity not only within the Hsf family but also within the Hsf-subfamily of closely related members. The diversification based on DBD peculiarities is likely to occur in potato as well. Therefore this might have eliminated the functional redundancy observed in other species such as Arabidopsis thaliana but has probably allowed the more refined regulation of Hsf networks possibly under different stress regimes, tissues and cell types.
Smut fungi (Ustilaginomycotina) were previously defined as plant parasites that produced blackish or brownish masses of teliospores in or on various organs of plants. Each teliospore germinates to form a single basidium with usually four basidiospores that subsequently grow as a saprobic, yeast-like, haploid stage. The Ustilaginomycotina are a highly diverse group with about 1,700 species in 115 different genera. All of the species were united in a single order, the Ustilaginales, in late 19th century. These teliospore producing fungi are now considered the classic smut fungi. Towards the end of the 20th century, new ideas were brought into this classification system. Most notable was the comparative work regarding the ultrastructure of septal pores and the anatomy of the interaction zones between host and parasite. This work changed the whole concept of smut fungi and their evolutionary relationships. These results were subsequently supported by molecular phylogenetic studies. Both lines of investigation led to the classification of the smut fungi into four different classes, Ustilaginomycetes, Exobasidiomycetes, Malasseziomycetes and Moniliellomycetes (see chapter 1.3).
A reliable taxonomy that reflects phylogenies needed in order to estimate the diversity and the relationships between the diverse groups of smut fungi. In the last 20 years, molecular investigations based mostly on rDNA loci, e.g. ITS (internal transcribed spacer) or LSU (large subunit), have revealed the evolutionary relationships between many taxa of smut fungi. However, there are few phylogenetic studies available for smut fungi (see chapter 1.5.1), and much work is needed to develop backbone phylogenetic trees and to resolve species complexes of many smut fungi.
This thesis reports the results of six different studies that aimed to develop new and improved tools for the phylogenetic analyses of smut fungi, and then apply these methods to selected groups of smut fungi. The first study (Kruse et al. 2017a, Chapter 3) developed a method to improve the amplification of ITS sequences of some smut fungi. Due to its high discrimination value, the ITS gene region is widely used as a barcoding locus for species delimitation of fungi. For this purpose, the general ITS primers ITS1 and ITS4 or more specific modifications, e.g. ITS1F for Ascomycota, ITS4B for Basidiomycota or M-ITS1 for smut fungi, were used. As these primer combinations often yielded unsatisfactory results, due to coamplification of other (contaminant) fungi or the host plant DNA, improvement of the amplification of the ITS region was needed. In order to design new smut specific primers for the ITS region, a representative set of several sequences of the flanking regions of the ITS region (LSU and SSU) of smut fungi, plants and other fungi were downloaded from GenBank. A set of primers was designed on this dataset. These primers were tested on a representative set of about 70 different smut genera under different PCR conditions. Finally, three different primers, one forward primer, smITS-F, and two reverse primers, smITS-R1 and -R2, were selected as the best ones. The following tests with different combinations of these primers, and also under inclusion of the M-ITS1 primer, showed only slight differences in the number of different genera that successfully amplified. But there were some differences regarding the genera that amplified. A broader test on 205 samples in 39 genera showed that the PCR efficiency of the newly designed primers was much better than the primer set ITS4/M-ITS1. With the primers designed in this study almost no non-target ITS was amplified, giving new opportunities especially for amplifying ancient DNA or DNA from older herbarium samples. However, many species groups remain unresolved by only one gene region.
The second study (Kruse et al. 2017c, Chapter 4) found new loci and suitable primers that better resolved multi-locus trees. To date, the most frequently used loci for making multi-locus trees are SSU (small subunit), LSU (large subunit) and ITS (internal transcribed spacer). While the LSU is not always sufficient to distinguish between closely related species, it is highly discriminative above the species level. In an effort to increase the phylogenetic resolution of smut phylogenies, some protein-coding genes were used, including rpb1, rpb2, and atp6 with varying success (see Chapter 2.1.2). As most of these loci are seldom used or sometimes only work on pure cultures because of their low specifity, new protein-coding loci were identified that produced reliable phylogenetic trees. Based on five available genomes, potential gene loci were filtered for possible primers. Initially, 40 different primer combinations for 14 gene loci were tested on a set of twelve different genera of smut fungi. The best candidates were selected and optimized during further tests. Finally, 22 different forward primers and 17 different reverse primers for nine different gene regions were developed, with each differentiating at least one genus of smut fungi (preferably for Ustilaginomycetes). The different primers showed varying discriminative power for different smut genera. They worked best for the Ustilaginaceae, based on the primer designed from Ustilaginomycetes genomes. These new primer sets and loci have the potential to resolve different species groups within the smut fungi and furthermore to produce reliable phylogenetic trees with high resolution. To prove their applicability, three species complexes were investigated in-depth, two from the Ustilaginomycetes and one from the Exobasidiomycetes.
...
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.
To date, chemicals are used ubiquitous in everyday life and an increasing consumption of pharmaceuticals and personal care products and industrial chemicals results in an increased water pollution. Conventional wastewater treatment plants are not able to completely remove the variety of (polar) organic compounds from today’s wastewater and thus serve as constant key point sources for the unintentional release of (micro-)pollutants into the aquatic environment. Anthropogenic micropollutants are detectable in very low concentrations in almost every aquatic compartment and may cause adverse effects on aquatic organisms. Considering the current situation of water pollution and to enhance water quality with regard to environmental and human health, the implementation of advanced wastewater treatment technologies, such as ozonation and activated carbon filtration was extensively discussed and investigated in recent years. Yet, besides their advantages regarding the efficient removal of a variety of recalcitrant, organic compounds as well as pathogens from the wastewater, it is known that especially the treatment with ozone may lead to the formation of largely unknown ozonation by-products with often unknown toxicity and unknown threats to human and the environment. To address these topics the joint research project TransRisk aimed at the “characterization, communication and minimization of risks originating from emerging contaminants and pathogens in the water cycle”. Within this research project the present thesis focuses on the ecotoxicological investigation of emerging waterborne contaminants, including their potential transformation products (TPs). Additionally, focus was laid on the investigation of combined effects of anthropogenic contaminants and pathogens with effects especially on aquatic invertebrate organisms.
The potential ecotoxicological effects of the antiviral drug acyclovir and two of its structurally identified TPs, were investigated on three aquatic organisms (Raphidocelis subcapitata, Daphnia magna and embryos of Danio rerio). While the parent compound acyclovir caused no acute toxicity up to a tested concentration of 100 mg/l on any of the investigated organisms, both TPs were shown to exhibit an increased aquatic toxicity. Carboxy-acyclovir, the biodegradation product of acyclovir, significantly reduced reproduction of D. magna by 40% at 102 mg/l, and the ozonation product COFA significantly inhibited growth of green algae R. subcapitata (EC10 = 14.1 mg/l). In the present case, advanced wastewater treatment was shown to lead to the formation of TPs, that reveal a higher toxicity towards investigated organisms, than the parent compound. Results highlight the necessity of further research related to the topic of identification and characterization of TPs, formed during advanced wastewater treatment processes.
To investigate the potential reduction or enhancement of toxic effects of nine differently treated wastewater effluents, selected bioassays with Daphnia magna, Lumbriculus variegatus and Lemna minor were conducted in flow-through test systems on a pilot treatment plant. The different treatment processes included ozonation of conventional biological treatment, with subsequent filtration processes as well as membrane bioreactor treatment in combination with ozonation. While exposure to the conventionally treated wastewater did not result in significant impairing effects on D. magna and L. minor, a reduced abundance of L. variegatus (by up to 46%) was observed compared to the medium control. Subsequent ozonation and additional filtration of the wastewater enhanced water quality, visible in an improved performance of L. variegatus. In general, direct evidence for the formation of toxic TPs due to the advanced wastewater treatments was not found, at least not in concentrations high enough to cause measurable effects in the investigated test systems. Additionally, no evidence for immunotoxic effects of the investigated wastewater effluents were observed. Yet, study-site- and species-specific effects hindered the definite interpretation of results. That underline the importance of a suitable test battery consisting of representatives of different taxonomic groups and trophic levels, to ensure a comprehensive evaluation of the complex matrix of wastewater and to avoid false-negative or false-positive results.
With aim to improve knowledge regarding immunotoxicity in invertebrates, the potential immunotoxic effects of the immunosuppressive pharmaceutical cyclosporine A (CsA) were investigated by applying the host-parasite model system Daphnia magna – Pasteuria ramosa in an adapted host resistance assay. Co-exposure to CsA and Pasteuria synergistically affected long-term survival of D. magna. Additionally, the enhanced virulence of the pathogen upon chemical co-exposure was expressed in synergistically increased infection rates and an increased speed of Pasteuria-induced host sterilization. In conclusion, results provide evidence for a suppressed disease resistance in a chemically stressed invertebrate host, highlighting the importance of investigating the conjunction of environmental pollutants and pathogens in the environmental risk assessment of anthropogenic pollutants.
Die Analyse früher Entwicklungsstadien von Säugetierembryonen und daraus gewonnener Stammzelllinien kann entscheidende Erkenntnisse im Bereich der Reproduktionsbiologie und der regenerativen Medizin hervorbringen. Dabei spielt die Maus, als geeignetes Modellsystem für die Übertragbarkeit auf den Menschen eine wichtige Rolle, in erster Linie weil die Blastozysten der Maus verglichen mit menschliche Blastozysten eine morphologische Ähnlichkeit aufweisen. Humane embryonale Stammzelllinien haben großes Potential für die Anwendung in der regenerativen Medizin und vergleichend dazu wurde Gen-Targeting in embryonalen Stammzellen verwendet, um tausende neuer Mausstämme zu generieren. Die Gewinnung embryonaler Stammzellen erfolgt im Blastozystenstadium, diese können dann nach Injektion in eine andere Blastozyste zur Entwicklung aller Gewebearten, einschließlich der Keimbahngewebe, beitragen (Martin, 1981; Evans and Kaufman 1981).
Ursache einer Fehlgeburt können vor allem Defekte in der Entwicklung des Trophoblasten und des primitive Entoderms (PrE) sein, dabei sind ca. 5 % der Paare betroffen die versuchen ein Kind zu bekommen (Stephenson and Kutteh, 2007). Eine Untersuchung dieser Zelllinien im Mausmodell könnte weitere Erkenntnisse für die Gründe einer Fehlentwicklung liefern. Trophoblasten Stammzelllinien können aus den Blastozysten der Maus und dem extraembryonalen Ektoderm von bereits implantieren Embryonen gewonnen werden (Tanaka et al., 1998). Diese Zelllinien geben Aufschluss über die Entwicklung des Trophoblasten, fördern die Entwicklung der Plazenta und sind gleichzeitig ein gutes Modellsystem um die Implantation des Embryos im Uterus näher zu untersuchen. Zellen des primitive Entoderms (PrE) beeinflussen das im Dottersack vorhandene extraembryonale Entoderm, welches dort als “frühe Plazenta” fungiert und für die Versorgung des Embryos mit Nährstoffen zuständig ist (Cross et al., 1994). Des Weiteren besitzt das Entoderm einen induktiven Einfluss auf die Bildung von anterioren Strukturen und die Bildung von Endothelzellen sowie Blutinseln (Byrd et al., 2002).
Extraembryonale Endodermstammzellen (XEN Zellen) können aus Blastozysten gewonnen und in embryonale Stammzellen (ES-Zellen) umgewandelt werden (Fujikura et al., 2002; Kunath et al., 2005). Es war jedoch nicht bekannt, ob XEN-Zellen auch aus Postimplantations-Embryonen gewonnen werden können. XEN-Zellen tragen in vivo zur Entwicklung des Darmendoderms bei (Kwon et al., 2008; Viotti et al., 2014) und könnten als alternative, selbsterneuernde Quelle für extraembryonale Endoderm-abgeleitete Zellen dienen, die zur Herstellung von Geweben für die regenerative Medizin verwendet werden könnten (Niakan et al., 2013).
In der Embryogenese der Maus zeigt sich an Tag E3.0 eine kompakte Morula die sich allmählich in das Trophektoderm (TE) differenziert, welches wiederum den Embryonalknoten (“innere Zellmasse”) umschließt (Johnson and Ziomek, 1981). Ein wichtiger Schritt im Rahmen der Entwicklung findet an Tag E3.5 statt, in diesem Zeitraum gehen aus dem Embryonalknoten der pluripotente Epiblast und das primitive Entoderm hervor. Im späten Blastozystenstadium an Tag E4.5 liegt das PrE als Zellschicht entlang der Oberfläche der Blastocoel-Höhle. Aus dem Epiblast entwickeln sich im weiteren Verlauf der Embryo, das Amnion und das extraembryonale Mesoderm des Dottersacks. Die Zellen des Trophektoderm führen zur Entwicklung der Plazenta. Das PrE differenziert sich im Zuge der Weiterentwicklung in das viszerale Entoderm (VE) und das parietale Entoderm (PE) des Dottersacks (Chazaud et al., 2006; Gardner and Rossant, 1979; Plusa et al., 2008). VE umgibt den Epiblast und extraembryonisches Ektoderm (ExE). PE-Zellen wandern entlang der inneren Oberfläche von TE und sezernieren zusammen mit Trophoblasten-Riesenzellen Basalmembranproteine, um die Reichert-Membran zu bilden (Hogan et al., 1980). Die Reichert-Membran besteht aus Basalmembranproteinen, einschließlich Kollagenen und Lamininen, die zwischen den parietalen Endoderm- und Trophoblastzellen liegen. Diese Membran wirkt als ein Filter, der dem Embryo den Zugang zu Nährstoffen ermöglicht, während er eine Barriere zu den Zellen der Mutter bildet (Gardner, 1983).
...
Angesichts heutiger Umweltprobleme ist die Stärkung positiver Mensch-Natur-Beziehungen wichtiger denn je. Zeitgenössische Umweltbildung zielt darauf ab, Motivation und Einstellungen zu fördern sowie eine grundlegende Wissensbasis zu schaffen (IUCN, UNEP, & WWF, 1991; Potter, 2010), um einen selbstbestimmten, verantwortungsvollen Umgang mit der Natur zu ermöglichen. Positiver Naturbezug und Umwelteinstellungen gelten als Basis für aktiven Umweltschutz. Direkte Naturerfahrungen gelten dabei als didaktische Möglichkeit, die Motivation für Umweltschutz zu festigen (Kaiser, Roczen, & Bogner, 2008). Einstellungen verändern sich im Laufe des Lebens und so kann das Alter eine wichtige Rolle bezüglich der Effektivität von Umweltbildungsprogrammen spielen (Ernst & Theimer, 2011). Auch Umweltwissen gilt als Grundlage von Umwelthandeln. Denn sinnliche Erfahrungen allein führen nicht zum Verständnis ökologischer Zusammenhänge (Frick, Kaiser, & Wilson, 2004; Liefländer, Bogner, Kibbe, & Kaiser, 2015). Die biologiedidaktische Forschung sieht Fakten-, Handlungs- und Effektivitäts-wissen als zentral für die Genese von Umwelthandeln (Frick, Kaiser, & Wilson, 2004). Isoliertes Fachwissen wiederum führt nach aktueller Erkenntnis auch nicht zur Entwicklung von Haltungen und Wertvorstellungen, welche unser Handeln beeinflussen (Barr, 2003; Finger, 2010; Leiserowitz, Kates, & Parris, 2005).
Bis heute sind altersbasierte Unterschiede bei Schülerinnen und Schülern bezüglich ihrer Naturverbundenheit und Umwelteinstellungen nicht hinreichend untersucht. Auch ist die nötige Dauer der Naturerfahrungen noch nicht nachgewiesen. Es gibt bislang keine Studie, die Umwelteinstellungen, -wissen und –handeln von Kindern verschiedener Regionen der Erde untersucht und Daten auf internationaler Ebene erhoben und ausgewertet hat. Die gezielte Integration der drei Umweltwissensarten in ein solch globales Umweltbildungsprojekt stellt eine zusätzliche bislang nicht angegangene Aufgabe dar. Die vorliegende Arbeit schließt diese Forschungslücken, indem sie auf internationaler Ebene jene Variablen mit einbezieht, die einen nahezu vollständigen Eindruck der Effektivität von Umweltbildung in verschiedenen Regionen, Sozialisationen und Altersklassen zulässt. So wird der Einfluss eines umfassenden Umweltbildungsprogramms auf Naturverbundenheit, Umwelteinstellungen und -wissen der verschiedenen Typen untersucht und ein Bezug zur eventuellen Veränderung des Umwelthandelns hergestellt. Dabei stehen sowohl traditionelle als noch unerforschte mögliche Einflussfaktoren im Fokus. Die Studie umfasst insgesamt 1454 Schülerinnen und Schüler aus Bangladesch, Malaysia, Deutschland und Singapur, die alle an dem Umweltbildungsprojekt „Global denken, lokal handeln – wir schützen unsere Umwelt!“ bzw. “Think global, act local – we protect our environment!“ teilgenommen haben.
Zur Messung der Naturverbundenheit diente Schulz’ INS-Skala (Inclusion of Nature in Self) (2002). Umwelteinstellungen wurden mit dem 2-MEV-Modell (Two Major Environmental Values) gemessen (Johnson & Manoli, 2011). Eine Skala zur Erhebung von Umweltwissen wurde eigens erstellt und hinsichtlich der drei Wissenstypen nochmals modelliert. Eine Skala zur Ermittlung von Umwelthandeln wurde auf Grundlage von Bögeholz (1999) erstellt. Alle Skalen waren Teil eines Fragebogens, welcher in Form eines Pre-, Post- und Follow-up-Test eingesetzt wurde. Kinder aus Parallelklassen, die nicht am Projekt teilnahmen, aber Klassenunterricht zu den jeweiligen Themen erhielten, dienten als Kontrollgruppen.
Die Ergebnisse bestätigen einen positiven Effekt außerschulischer Umweltbildung bezüglich der Entwicklung der untersuchten Variablen. So wurde nach der Teilnahme am eintägigen und auch nach dem fünftägigen Umweltbildungsprogramm eine signifikante Verstärkung des Naturbezugs gemessen, wohingegen die Kontrollgruppen keine messbare Veränderung zeigten. Jedoch nur die fünftägige Intervention führte auch zu nachhaltigen Veränderungen. Hierbei am stärksten beeinflusst wurden Kinder zwischen sieben und neun Jahren.
Bei der Untersuchung demographischer Einflussfaktoren auf Umwelteinstellung, -wissen und –handeln stellten sich das Wohnsitzland sowie die städtische bzw. ländliche Prägung der Wohngegend als entscheidend heraus. So waren dies die einflussreichsten Determinanten zur Vorhersage des Grundvorhandenseins sowie Veränderungen der untersuchten Variablen in Folge der Bildungsmaßnahme. Einzig bei der Entwicklung des Umwelthandelns schien die direkte Naturerfahrung unwesentlich, zeigten die Kontrollgruppen ähnlichen Wandel in ihrem aktiven Einsatz für die Umwelt. Im internationalen Vergleich scheint die komplexe Verkettung diverser einflussnehmender Faktoren, wie der Wohlstand des jeweiligen Staates, das generelle politische System sowie spezifische bildungspolitische Begebenheiten, den Erfolg von Umweltbildungsprogrammen mit zu bestimmen.
Die Daten zeigen, dass Faktenwissen Grundlage für Handlungs- und Effektivitätswissen ist. Alle Dimensionen wurden durch die Intervention signifikant gesteigert. Effektivitätswissen wuchs am stärksten. Auch das Umweltverhalten wurde positiv verstärkt. Jedoch ließen sich nur schwache Korrelationen zwischen den einzelnen Wissenstypen und Handeln feststellen. Zusammenfassend war das durchgeführte Bildungsprojekt erfolgreich in der Förderung von Naturverbundenheit sowie Umwelteinstellungen, -wissen und- handeln. Die Ergebnisse werden im Rahmen dieser Arbeit im Hinblick auf ihre Bedeutung für die schulische Umweltbildung sowie die didaktische Forschung erörtert.
Ribonukleinsäure (ribonucleic acid, RNA) wirkt bei der Proteinbiosynthese nicht nur als Informationsüberträger, sondern kann auch beispielsweise durch sogenannten Riboschalter (auch Riboswitches) regulatorische Funktionen übernehmen. Riboschalter sind komplett aus RNA aufgebaut und man kann sie sich als molekulare Schalter vorstellen, die die Genexpression kontrollieren. Konzeptionell besteht ein Riboswitch aus zwei Untereinheiten, dem Aptamer und der Expressionsplattform. Das Aptamer bindet, üblicherweise sehr spezifisch, kleine organische Moleküle, aber auch Ionen. Diese Ligandenbindung induziert Änderungen in der Struktur des Riboswitches, welche wiederum die Expressionsplattform beeinflussen. Je nach Riboswitch ermöglicht oder verhindert dies schließlich die Genexpression. Die vorliegende Doktorarbeit beschäftigt sich mit der Entwicklung und Etablierung von Methoden der optischen Spektroskopie zur Aufklärung von RNA-Dynamiken und -Strukturen im Allgemeinen und der Erforschung von Aptamerbindungsmechanismen im Besonderen.
Eine der dazu verwendetet Methoden ist die FTIR-Spektroskopie. Hierfür wurden zunächst kritische Parameter wie verschiedenste Messeinstellungen oder die Probenpräparation ausgiebig an RNA-Modellsträngen getestet. Dabei war es möglich, eine kleine Spektrenbibliothek als internen Standard aufzubauen. Gleichzeitig konnte gezeigt werden, dass kleinere RNA-Oligonukleotide (< ca. 20 Nukleobasen) gut mittels FTIR-Methoden untersucht werden können. Anschließend wurde eine statische Bindungsstudie am adenosin- sowie am guanosinbindenden Aptamer vorgenommen.
Die zweite hier vorgestellte Methode zur Untersuchung von RNA-Molekülen ist die Fluoreszenzspektroskopie. Im Gegensatz zur FTIR-Spektroskopie ist dazu allerdings eine Modifizierung der RNA durch ein Fluoreszenzlabel nötig. Deshalb beschäftigt sich der Hauptteil dieser Doktorarbeit mit der Charakterisierung und der Anwendung des quasi bifunktionellen RNA-Markers (auch RNA-Labels) Çmf. So wurden zunächst die photophysikalischen und photochemischen Eigenschaften des Markers untersucht. Dabei konnte gezeigt werden, dass Çmf sich als lokale Sonde eignet, da es empfindlich auf Änderungen der Mikroumgebung in Lösung reagiert. Durch direkten Vergleich der optischen Eigenschaften von Çmf mit den entsprechenden Eigenschaften des Spinlabels Çm war es möglich, den starken Fluoreszenzlöschungseffekt (sog. quenching) des Çm aufzuklären. So kann davon ausgegangen werden, dass die Fluoreszenz des Çm durch eine sehr schnelle interne Konversion (IC) in einen dunklen Dublettzustand (D1) gelöscht wird.
Im nächsten Schritt wurde Çmf in RNA-Modellstränge eingebaut, um den Einfluss der RNA auf die Photochemie des Markers zu untersuchen. Dabei konnte gezeigt werden, dass sich dessen Fluoreszenzsignal abhängig von den direkten Nachbarbasen sowie abhängig vom Hybridisierungszustand signifikant ändert. Gleichzeitig konnte keine deutliche Veränderung der Stabilität der Modellstränge festgestellt werden. So konnte also nachgewiesen werden, dass sich Çmf sehr gut als lokale Sonde in RNA eignet. Im Speziellen wurde aus den Ergebnissen geschlossen, dass der Fluorophor für Ligandenbindungsstudien herangezogen werden kann.
Deshalb wurde Çmf schließlich an mehreren verschiedenen Stellen in das neomycinbindende Aptamer (N1) eingebaut, um dessen Bindungskinetik zu untersuchen. Mittels Stopped-Flow-Messungen war es möglich, die Bindungsdynamik des Aptamers zu beobachten. Anhand dieser transienten Daten konnte ein Zweischrittbindungsmodell abgeleitet werden. Dabei bindet Neomycin zunächst unspezifisch an das weitgehend vorgeformte Aptamer. Anschließend kommt es durch die Ausbildung von Wasserstoffbrücken zu einer spezifischen Bindung des Liganden am Aptamer.
Im dritten Teil dieser Arbeit geht es ebenfalls um die Entwicklung und Etablierung eines spektroskopischen Werkzeuges. Dabei stehen allerdings Rhodopsine im Mittelpunkt der Aufmerksamkeit. Hierbei handelt es sich um Membrantransportproteine, die nach optischer Anregung einen sehr schnellen Photozyklus mit mehreren Intermediaten durchlaufen. Es ist möglich, diese Intermediate dank transienter Absorptionsmessungen mit sehr guter zeitlicher und spektraler Auflösung zu beobachten. Allerdings besteht der Bedarf, diese Intermediate statisch zu präparieren, um sie näher charakterisieren und mit anderen Methoden, wie z.B. der Festkörper-NMR, vergleichen zu können.
Ein spektroskopisches Werkzeug zum Präparieren von frühen Photointermediaten ist kryogenes Einfangen (sog. Cryotrapping) dieser Intermediate. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden das Cryotrapping und die anschließende statische UV/vis-Absorptionsspektroskopie der fixierten (getrappten) Zustände optimiert und an einer Reihe von Rhodopsinen (ChR2, GPR) demonstriert.
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are involved in various signalling mechanisms. Redox homeostasis is important in cancer cells, since they are dependent on upregulated antioxidant defence pathways to cope with elevated ROS levels. Therefore, targeting the antioxidant defence system and/ or increasing ROS to a lethal level may be a feasible strategy to counteract cancer cell progression.
Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) is the most frequent malignant childhood cancer, displaying on one side resistance to cell death induction and on the other side elevated ROS levels. Therefore, inducing ferroptosis, a ROS- and iron-dependent cell death pathway might be useful to trigger cell death in ALL as a novel treatment strategy. In the first study of this thesis we observed that RSL3, a glutathione (GSH) peroxidase 4 (GPX4) inhibitor, triggered ROS accumulation and lipid peroxidation which contributed to ferroptotic cell death. These observations were based on suppression of RSL3 stimulated cell death using different ferroptosis inhibitors like Ferrostatin-1 (Fer-1), Liproxstatin-1 (Lip-1), as well as iron chelator Deferoxamine (DFO) and the vitamin E derivate α-Tocopherol (α-Toc). RSL3-triggered ROS and lipid peroxide production were also inhibited through Fer-1 and α-Toc. Furthermore, lipoxygenases (LOX) were activated upon RSL3 stimulation and contributed to ferroptotic cell death in ALL as well. Selective inhibition of LOX with the 12/15-LOX inhibitor Baicalein and the pan-LOX inhibitor nordihydroguaiaretic acid (NDGA) abolished RSL3-induced ROS production, lipid peroxidation and cell death. In addition, RSL3 induced lipid peroxide-dependent ferroptotic cell death in FAS-associated Death Domain (FADD)-deficient, death receptor-induced apoptosis resistant cells, demonstrating that ferroptosis might circumvent apoptosis resistance.
The second part of the study revealed that RSL3 and Erastin (Era), a GSH-depleting agent, inhibiting the cystine/glutamate antiporter system xc- and ferroptosis inducer, cooperated with the Smac mimetic BV6 to trigger cell death in ALL cells. RSL3/BV6 and Era/BV6 combination-induced cell death was dependent on ROS accumulation, but independent of caspases and key modulators of necroptosis. RSL3/BV6-treated ALL cells exhibited classical features of ferroptotic cell death with iron-dependency, ROS accumulation and lipid peroxidation which was diminished through either pharmacological inhibition (Fer-1, DFO, α-Toc) or genetic inhibition by overexpressing GPX4. Interestingly, Era/BV6-induced cell death in ALL cells was independent of iron but dependent on ROS accumulation, since α-Toc rescued from Era/BV6-triggered ROS production, lipid peroxidation and cell death. Moreover, inhibition of lipid peroxide formation through the addition of Fer-1 or by overexpressing GPX4 failed to rescue from Era/BV6-triggered cell death, even if Era/BV6-stimulated lipid peroxidation was diminished. Likewise, Fer-1 protected from RSL3/BV6-, but not from Era/BV6-generated ROS production, leading to the assumption that other ROS besides lipid-based ROS contributed to cell death in Era/BV6-treated cells. In summary, while RSL3/BV6 induced ferroptosis in ALL, Era/BV6 stimulated a ROS dependent cell death, which was neither dependent on iron nor caspases or receptor-interacting protein (RIP) kinase 1 nor 3. Additionally, using Erastin alone did not trigger ferroptotic cell death in ALL. Finally, with these two studies we tried to unravel the molecular pathway of ferroptosis by using RSL3 and Erastin as well described ferroptosis stimulators. Here, we demonstrate the possibility of a novel treatment strategy to reactivate programmed cell death by impeding redox homeostasis in ALL.
Since ALL failed to induce ferroptosis upon Erastin treatment, we investigated in the third part of this thesis a new model system to induce ferroptosis upon Erastin and RSL3 exposure. Previous studies revealed that rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) cells might be susceptible to oxidative stress-induced compounds. To this end, we used Erastin as a prototypic ferroptosis stimulus and GSH-depleting agent and demonstrated that GSH depletion, ROS and lipid ROS accumulation contributed to cell death. Additionally, Fer-1, Lip-1, DFO, lipophilic vitamin E derivate α-Toc and GSH, a cofactor of GPX4, protected from Erastin stimulated ROS accumulation, lipid peroxidation and cell death. Also, the use of a broad spectrum protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor Bisindolylmaleimide I (Bim1), a PKCα and ß selective inhibitor Gö6976 and siRNA-mediated knockdown of PKCα suppressed Erastin-mediated cell death in RMS. Moreover broad spectrum nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) oxidase (NOX) inhibitor Diphenyleneiodonium (DPI) and a more selective NOX1/4 isoform inhibitor GKT137831 abrogated Erastin-generated ROS formation, lipid peroxidation and cell death. With this, we demonstrate that RMS are vulnerable to ferroptotic cell death and investigated the molecular mechanism of ferroptosis by unravelling that PKC and NOX could have a pivotal role in ROS-mediated ferroptosis signalling in RMS. In this regard, ferroptosis inducers may act as a possible novel treatment strategy for RMS, especially those with poor clinical outcome.
Seit einigen Jahren ist bekannt, dass Sphingolipide nicht nur eine strukturgebende Funktion in der Plasmamembran aufweisen, sondern ebenfalls als Botenstoffe intra- und extrazellulär aktiv sind. Sphingosin-1-Phosphat (S1P) bildet dabei einen Schlüssel-Metaboliten, da es verschiedene Zellfunktionen wie Wachstum und Zelltod beeinflusst. Es wird durch zwei Isoformen der Sphingosinkinasen, SK1 und SK2, gebildet. Die SK1 wurde bereits gut untersucht und es konnte gezeigt werden, dass sie eine wichtige Rolle beim Zellwachstum einnimmt und einen entscheidender Regulator bei inflammatorischen Erkrankungen und Krebs darstellt. Über die SK2 ist soweit wenig bekannt und die Ergebnisse sind zum Teil kontrovers. Sowohl pro-proliferative als auch anti-proliferative Funktionen der SK2 wurden beschrieben. Andererseits handelt meine Arbeit von Nierenfibrose, da beschrieben wurde, dass Sphingolipide einen wichtigen Einfluss auf die Entwicklung chronischer Nierenerkrankungen nehmen. Nierenfibrose stellt das Endstadium chronischer Nierenerkrankungen dar und führt zu einer Akkumulation der Extrazellulärmatrix, Organvernarbung und zum Verlust der Nierenfunktion. Die SK1 spielt dabei eine protektive Rolle bei der Entstehung von Nierenfibrose. Deshalb sollte in dieser Arbeit die Rolle der Sk2 bei der Entstehung von Nierenfibrose untersucht werden.
Im ersten Teil meiner Arbeit wurde das Mausmodell der unilateralen Ureterobstruktion (UUO) verwendet, welches zur Entwicklung einer tubulointerstitiellen Nephritits und nachfolgender Fibrose führt. Es konnte dabei gezeigt werden, dass sowohl die Protein-Expression als auch die Aktivität der SK2 im fibrotischen Nierengewebe gesteigert wurden. Allgemein wiesen die SK2-/--Mäuse eine verminderte Fibrose in Folge des UUO auf im Vergleich zu den Wildtyp-Mäusen. Dies wurde bestätigt durch eine reduzierte Kollagenakkumulation, sowie eine verminderte Protein-Expression von Fibronektin-1, Kollagen-1, α-smooth muscle actin, connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) und Plasminogen-Aktivator-Inhibitor1 (PAI-1). Diese Effekte gingen einher mit einer gesteigerten Protein-Expression des inhibitorischen Smad7 und erhöhten Sphingosin-Spiegeln in SK2-/--UUO-Nieren. Auf mechanistischer Ebene vermindern die erhöhten Sphingosin-Spiegel die durch transforming growth factor-β (TGFβ) induzierte Kollagenakkumulation, die PAI-1- und CTGF-Expression, aber induzieren die Smad7-Expression in primären Nierenfibroblasten. In einem komplementären Versuch mit hSK2 tg-Mäusen wurde eine verstärkte Entstehung von Nierenfibrose mit erhöhter Kollagenakkumulation, sowie erhöhte Protein-Expressionen von Fibronektin-1, Kollagen-1, α-smooth muscle actin, CTGF und PAI-1 festgestellt. Die Smad7-Expression dagegen war vermindert.
Im zweiten Teil meiner Arbeit stand der glomeruläre Teil der Niere im Fokus und es wurde untersucht, ob die Überexpression der SK2 zu einer phänotypischen Veränderung der glomerulären Mesangiumzellen führt. Mesangiumzellen wurden dazu aus den hSK2 tg-Mäuse isoliert und charakterisiert. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass hSK2 und mSK2 in den transgenen Zellen hauptsächlich in der zytosolischen Fraktion lokalisiert sind, während S1P ausschließlich im Kern akkumulierte. Weiterhin konnte eine verminderte Proliferation unter normalen Wachstumsbedingungen der hSK2 tg-Zellen im Vergleich zu den Kontrollzellen beobachtet werden. Die Zellen reagierten auch sensitiver auf Stress-induzierte Apoptose. Auf molekularer Ebene konnte dies durch eine reduzierte ERK- und Akt/PKB-Aktivierung erklärt werden. Nach Staurosporin-Behandlung wurde Apoptose durch den intrinsischen, mitochondrialen Apoptosesignalweg induziert. Dabei konnte eine reduzierte anti-apoptotische Bcl-xL-Expression und vermehrte Prozessierung von Caspase-9 und Caspase-3 und PARP beobachtet werden.
Zusammenfassend konnte in dieser Arbeit gezeigt werden, dass eine verminderte tubulointerstitielle Fibrose-Entstehung durch die Deletion der SK2, sowie anti-proliferative und Apoptose-induzierende Effekte durch die SK2 in Mesangiumzellen nachgewiesen werden konnten. Somit könnten SK2-Inhibitoren die Entstehung tubulointerstitieller Fibrose und mit Proliferation assoziierte Erkrankungen wie mesangioproliferative Glomerulonephritis positiv beeinflussen.
Polyploidie in Prokaryoten
(2018)
Diese Arbeit teilt sich in drei Teile auf, die sich mit der Regulation der Polyploidie sowie mit der Genkonversion als evolutionären Vorteil von Polyploidie in Haloferax volcanii beschäftigen.
Im ersten Teil dieser Arbeit, wurde der Einfluss der DNA-Replikationsinitiatorproteine Orc1/Cdc6 auf das Ploidielevel untersucht. Hierbei konnte anhand von Deletionsmutanten zunächst gezeigt werden, dass lediglich drei der 16 Orc1/Cdc6-Proteine in H. volcanii essentiell sind. Bestimmung des Ploidielevels mittels qPCR-Analyse ergab, dass jedes der 12 untersuchten Orc1/Cdc6-Proteine das Ploidielevel mindestens eines Replikons beeinflusst und dementsprechend sowohl die mit einem Replikationsursprung assoziierten als auch die „verwaisten“ Orc1/Cdc6-Proteine eine Funktion haben. Die mit einem Replikationsursprung assoziierten Orc1/Cdc6-Proteine hatten hierbei keinen größeren Einfluss auf das Ploidielevel als die „verwaisten“. Zusätzlich konnte durch Wachstumsanalysen in Mikrotiterplatten gezeigt werden, dass die meisten Deletionsmutanten unter allen getesteten Bedingungen ein mit dem Wildtyp vergleichbares oder besseres Wachstum zeigen. Eine Deletionsmutante eines Orc1/Cdc6-Proteins hingegen zeigte nur verbessertes Wachstum bei Glukose als Kohlenstoffquelle, was ein Hinweis auf die Verwendung verschiedener Orc1/Cdc6-Proteine unter verschiedenen Bedingungen sein könnte. Zusätzlich wurden zwei mit dem Replikationsursprung assoziierte Orc1/Cdc6-Proteine überexprimiert und via ihres N-terminalen His-Tag im Western-Blot nachgewiesen, sodass diese nun für Co-Affinitätsaufreinigungen zur weiteren Charakterisierung des komplexen Zusammenspiels der Orc1/Cdc6-Proteine zur Verfügung stehen.
Im Rahme des zweiten Teils der Arbeit wurde der Einfluss der in der 5‘-Region der der Replikationsursprünge ori1 und ori2 kodierten Proteine auf Wachstum und die Kopienzahl des Hauptchromosoms bestimmt. Zunächst wurde die Expression der drei in Haloarchaea hoch-konservierten oap-Gene upstream von ori1 mittels Nothern-Blot untersucht und es konnte gezeigt werden, dass das oap-Operon tatsächlich als Operon abgelesen wird. Um alle Gene in den 5‘-Regionen von ori1 und ori2 genauer zu charakterisieren, wurden induzierbare Überexpressionsmutanten im Wildtyp-Hintergrund angefertigt. Es konnte mittels Wachstumsversuchen in Mikrotiterplatten gezeigt werden, dass bei Induktion von Beginn an die Überexpression der Hef-Helikase und des oapB-Proteins zu einem starken Wachstumsdefekt führen, die von oapC und HVO_1724 zu einem moderaten Wachstumsdefekt, wohingegen für die Überexpressionsmutante von oapA vergleichbares Wachstum zum Wildtyp und für die Überexpression der Rad25d-Helikase verbessertes Wachstum beobachtet werden konnte. Es konnte darüber hinaus gezeigt werden, dass sowohl die Deletion als auch die Überexpression der Helikasen keinen Einfluss auf das Ploidielevel hat; die Deletion von oapC führt jedoch zu einer Reduktion der Genomkopienzahl in exponentieller und stationärer Phase, was ein erster Hinweis darauf ist, dass das oap-Operon eine Rolle bei der Regulation des Ploidielevels spielen könnte.
Im dritten Teil der Arbeit wurde eine Methode entwickelt, um Genkonversion farblich sichtbar zu machen. Hierbei wurde sich H. volcaniis Carotinoidbiosynthese zu Nutze gemacht. Es wurden zwei verschiedene, auxotrophe Elternstämme mittels Protoplastenfusion verschmolzen, um eine heterozygote Tochterzelle zu erzeugen. Ein Genkonversionsereignis wurde durch einen roten Keil angezeigt, der aus einer weißen Kolonie wuchs und durch die erfolgreiche Reparatur des Carotinoidbiosynthesegens entstand. Es wurden insgesamt 8525 Klone ausgestrichen und 0,14 % der Kolonien zeigten eine entsprechende rote Färbung. Das Proof-of-Principle dieser Methode ist in damit in dieser Arbeit gelungen. Um die Genkonversion in den weißen Kolonien auf genetischer Ebene genauer zu untersuchen, wurde PCR verwendet. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass in den Zellen aller 135 untersuchten Kolonien Genkonversion stattgefunden hatte und zwar so effizient, dass nur in seltenen Fällen Heterozygotie vorlag. Unter Selektionsdruck stehende Loci hatten in beiden untersuchten Fällen eine starke Präferenz in Richtung Homozygotie und Erhalt der Prototrophie. Für nicht unter Selektionsdruck stehende Loci konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Hälfte der untersuchten Kolonien dem Elternstamm 1 glich, während die andere Hälfte dem Elternstamm 2 glich. Auch hier waren die Zellen nur in seltenen Fällen homozygot.
Der ligandaktivierte Transkriptionsfaktor Farnesoid X Rezeptor (FXR) ist neben seiner Funktion als Regulator des Gallensäurehaushaltes auch in vielen anderen metabolischen Prozessen wie Glukose- und Lipidhomöostase involviert und besitzt antiinflammatorische Eigenschaften. Gerade bei hepatischen, gastrointestinalen und systemischen Erkrankungen erscheint FXR daher als interessante Zielstruktur zur Behandlung metabolischer Erkrankungen. Basierend auf den natürlichen Liganden von FXR, den Gallensäuren, wurde Obeticholsäure (OCA) als seminsynthetisches Derivat der endogenen Chenodesoxycholsäure zu einem potenten FXR-Agonisten entwickelt. OCA wurde in mehreren Studien auf seine therapeutische Wirkung bei hepatisch-entzündlichen Krankheitsbildern wie der primären biliären Cholangitis (PBC), der nicht-alkoholischen Fettleber (engl: non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, NAFLD) und der daraus folgenden nicht-alkoholischen Steatohepatitis (NASH) getestet. Mittlerweile ist OCA als Zweitlinientherapie der PBC auf dem Arzneimittelmarkt zuge-lassen. Neben OCA gibt es noch eine große Anzahl an weiteren FXR-Liganden, deren strukturelle Diversität von Steroiden bis nicht-steroidalen kleinen Molekülen (engl: small molecules) reicht. Trotz dieser Erfolge muss das Therapiepotential von FXR noch weiter ausgebaut werden. Die meisten verfügbaren Liganden besitzen in vitro zwar eine hohe Potenz, können in ihrem pharmakokinetischen Profil oder ihrer Selektivität gegenüber anderen nukleären Rezeptoren aber nicht überzeugen.
Die hier vorliegende Arbeit hat sich mit der Entwicklung unterschiedlicher Liganden für FXR beschäftigt und diese in vitro und teilweise auch in vivo charakterisiert, um sie entsprechend ihrer Wirkungsweise einzuordnen und ein besseres Verständnis der regulatorischen Funktion von FXR zu erlangen.
Modulation von FXR bezieht sich nicht nur auf die agonistische Aktivierung, sondern setzt sich auch mit Antagonismus auseinander. Neben einigen Krankheitsbildern, die aus einer Überexpression von FXR resultieren, werden Antagonisten als Werkzeug (engl: tool compound) zur Aufklärung von konformellen Veränderungen von FXR und deren Auswirkung auf bestimmte Signalwege benötigt. Für die Erforschung solcher FXR-Antagonisten sollte das Potential nicht-steroidaler Antirheumatika (engl: non-steroidal anti-rheumatic drugs, NSAIDs) als etwaige Leitstrukturen untersucht werden, da in einer Veröffentlichung von Lu et al. ein FXR-Antagonismus durch NSAIDs postuliert wurde. Beim Versuch der Reproduktion der Ergebnisse von Lu et al. mit den drei NSAIDs Ibuprofen, Indometacin und Diclofenac wurde festgestellt, dass die Effekte auf den ersten Blick antagonistisch erscheinen, aber bei genaueren biochemischen Untersuchungen zweifelsfrei als Zytotoxizität identifiziert wurden.
FXR-Antagonisten wie Guggulsteron oder Gly-MCA sind auf ihre therapeutische Wirksamkeit unter-sucht worden, aber die genaue Wirkweise ist noch nicht aufgeklärt. Aufgrund ihrer steroidalen Grundstruktur ist ihre Selektivität gegenüber anderen nukleären Rezeptoren fraglich. Die überschaubare Anzahl an publizierten nicht-steroidalen FXR-Antagonisten besitzt zwar moderate IC50-Werte, ihre strukturelle Diversität und Selektivität ist aber limitiert. Zur Entwicklung neuer potenter FXR-Antagonisten, die aus kleinen Molekülen (engl: small molecules) aufgebaut sind, wurde eine N-Phenylbenzamid-Leitstruktur ausgewählt. Diese Leitstruktur wurde im Rahmen der SAR-Unter-suchungen zur Entwicklung von Anthranilsäurederivaten als FXR-Partialagonisten innerhalb des Arbeitskreises entdeckt. Ausgehend von dieser Leitstruktur wurde eine mehrstufige, systematische SAR-Untersuchung durchgeführt, wodurch ein sehr potenter FXR-Antagonist entwickelt werden konnte, der anschließend umfangreich biochemisch auf FXR-Modulation, Selektivität, Löslichkeit, Toxizität und metabolische Stabilität charakterisiert wurde.
Neben dem Verständnis eines Modulationsmechanismus ist die konkrete Anwendung eines FXR-Liganden zu therapeutischen Zwecken von großem Interesse. Die Beteiligung von FXR in unterschiedlichen metabolischen Prozessen macht den Rezeptor zu einem begehrten Ansatzpunkt für die Wirkstoffentwicklung. Doch die Behandlung eines multifaktoriellen Krankheitsbildes (z.B. metabolisches Syndrom, NASH) sollte sich nicht nur auf einen der gestörten Signalwege beziehen, da diese Erkrankungen durch mehrere Faktoren ausgelöst oder beeinflusst werden. Der semisynthetische FXR-Agonist OCA zeigte innerhalb der FLINT-Studie sowohl antientzündliche und antifibrotische Effekte, als auch eine Verbesserung der metabolischen Parameter mit Blick auf NAFLD und NASH. Die lösliche Epoxidhydrolase (engl: soluble epoxidhydrolase, sEH) besitzt nachweislich anti-inflammatorische und antisteatotische Effekte in der Leber. Aus diesem Grund wurde eine Leitstruktur entwickelt, die eine duale Modulation aus FXR-Aktivierung und sEH-Inhibition erzeugt. Dafür wurden die Pharmakophore eines im Arbeitskreis entwickelten FXR-Partialagonisten sowie eines potenten sEH-Inhibitors miteinander verknüpft. Zur Weiterentwicklung einer ausgewogenen hohen Potenz beider Modulationsfaktoren wurden mehrere unterschiedliche SAR-Untersuchungen als translationales Projekt in mehreren Arbeiten durchgeführt. In der hier vorliegenden Arbeit konnten dieses SAR-Untersuchungen zusammengeführt und weiterentwickelt werden. Dabei wurde ein ausgewogener und hochpotenter dualer Modulator erhalten, der umfassend in vitro und in vivo charakterisiert wurde. Die gezielte duale Aktivität, die mit dieser Substanz erreicht wurde, führt in einem Krankheitsbild zu synergistischer Ergänzung zweier Therapieoptionen. Jedoch kann eine unerwünschte Promiskuität über verwandten nukleären Faktoren zu Nebenwirkungen führen. Die Ursache dafür kann eine saure Funktion darstellen. Ein sehr potenter nicht-azider FXR-Agonist mit einem subnanomolaren EC50-Wert konnte im Arbeitskreis entwickelt werden. Diese Verbindung ist FXR-selektiv, hat keinen toxischen Effekt auf HepG2-Zellen und eine moderate metabolische Halbwertszeit. Die qRT-PCR-Untersuchung direkter und indirekter FXR-Zielgene zeigte eine verstärkte Expression nach der Inkubation mit der nicht-aziden Substanz. Dadurch lässt sich das Prinzip der Nebenwirkungsminderung durch nicht-azide Verbindungen beweisen.
Insgesamt konnte in dieser Arbeit gezeigt werden, wie vielfältig und vielversprechend eine FXR-Modulation aufgebaut sein kann. Zum einen konnte über eine ausgeprägte biochemische Evaluation eine Differenzierung zwischen FXR-Antagonismus und Zelltoxizität bewiesen werden, worauf sich aufbauend eine genaue in vitro-Charakterisierung von neuen N-phenylbenzamidbasierten FXR-Antagonisten durchführen ließ, die ausgehend von einer moderat potenten Leitstruktur zu einer sehr potenten optimierten Substanz entwickelt wurden. FXR-Antagonismus und die dazu passenden tool compounds sind nicht nur von Bedeutung zum besseren Verständnis der unterschiedlichen Bindungsmodi des FXR, sondern auch potentielle Therapieansätze zur Behandlung von Krankheiten, in denen eine FXR-Überexpression stattfindet. Die agonistische Modulation von FXR wurde genauer betrachtet in der in vitro-Untersuchung nicht-azider FXR-Agonisten, die durch das Fehlen einer sauren Funktion ein hohes Maß an Selektivität und dabei eine geringe Toxizität aufwiesen. Synergistische Effekte zur Behandlung eines multifaktoriellen Krankheitsbildes durch die Kombination von FXR-Partialagonismus und sEH-Inhibition konnte durch die Entwicklung der potenten und balancierten Substanz sowohl in vitro als auch in vivo bewiesen werden, wodurch diese Verbindung ein vielversprechender Kandidat für weitere klinische Entwicklung ist.
Application of a developed tool to visualize newly synthesized AMPA receptor components in situ
(2018)
The information flow between neurons happens at contact points, the synapses. One underlying mechanism of learning and memory is the change in the strength of information flow in selected synapses. In order to match the huge demand in membranes and proteins to build and maintain the neurites' complex architecture, neurons use decentralized protein synthesis. Many candidate proteins for local synthesis are known, and the need of de novo synthesis for memory formation is well established. The underlying mechanisms of how somatic versus dendritic synthesis is regulated are yet to be elucidated. Which proteins are newly synthesized in order to allow learning?
In this thesis protein synthesis is studied in hippocampal neurons. The fractional distribution of somatic and dendritic synthesis for candidate proteins and their subsequent transport to their destination are investigated using a newly developed technique. In the first part of this study we describe the development of this technique and use it in the second part to answer biological questions.
We focus here on AMPA receptor subunits, the key players in fast excitatory transmission. AMPA receptors contain multiple subunits with diverse functions. It remains to be understood, when and where in a neuron these subunits come together to form a protein complex and how the choice of subunits is regulated.
The investigation of the subunits' site of synthesis and redistribution kinetics in this study will help us to understand how neurons are able to change their synaptic strength in an input specific manner which eventually allows learning and memory.
Key questions which are addressed in this study:
How can specific newly synthesized endogenous proteins be visualized in situ? What are the neuron's abilities to locally synthesize and fully assemble AMPA receptor complexes?
How fast do different AMPA receptor subunits redistribute within neurons after synthesis?
The fungal interaction with plants is a 400 million years old phenomenon, which presumably assisted in the plants’ establishment on land. In a natural ecosystem, all plant-ranging from large trees to sea-grasses-are colonized by fungal endophytes, which can be detected inter- and intracellularly within the tissues of apparently healthy plants, without causing obvious negative effects on their host. These ubiquitous and diverse microorganisms are likely playing important roles in plant fitness and development. However, the knowledge on the ecological functions of fungal root endophytes is scarce. Among possible functions of endophytes, they are implicated in mutualisms with plants, which may increase plant resistance to biotic stressors like herbivores and pathogens, and/or to abiotic factors like soil salinity and drought. Also, endophytes are fascinating microorganisms in regard to their high potential to produce a great spectrum of secondary metabolites with expected ecological functions. However, evidences suggest that the interactions between host plants and endophytes are not static and endophytes express different symbiotic lifestyles ranging from mutualism to parasitism, which makes difficult to predict the ecological roles of these cryptic microorganisms. To reveal the ecological function of fungal root endophytes, this doctoral thesis aims at assessing fungal root endophytes interactions with different plants and their effects on plant fitness, based on their phylogeny, traits, and competition potential in settings encompassing different abiotic contexts. To understand the cryptic implication of nonmycorrhizal endophytes in ecosystem processes, we isolated a diverse spectrum of fungal endophytes from roots of several plant species growing in different natural contexts and tested their effects on different model plants under axenic laboratory conditions. Additionally,we aimed at investigating the effect of abiotic and biotic variables on the outcome of interactions between fungal root endophytes and plants.
In summary, the morphological and physiological traits of 128 fungal endophyte strains within ten fungal orders were studied and artificial experimental systems were used to reproduce their interactions with three plant species under laboratory conditions. Under defined axenic conditions, most endophytes behaved as weak parasites, but their performance varied across plant species and fungal taxa. The variation in the interactions was partly explained by convergent fungal traits that separate groups of endophytes with potentially different niche preferences. According to my findings, I predict that the functional complementarity of strains is essential in structuring natural root endophytic communities. Additionally, the responses of plant-endophyte interactions to different abiotic factors, namely nutrient availability, light intensity, and substrate’s pH, indicate that the outcome of plant-fungus relationships may be robust to changes in the abiotic environment. The assessment of the responses of plant endophyte interactions to biotic context, as combinations of selected dominant root fungal endophytes with different degrees of trait similarity and shared evolutionary history, indicates that frequently coexisting root-colonizing fungi may avoid competition in inter-specific interactions by occupying specific niches, and that their interactions likely define the structure of root-associated fungal communities and influence the microbiome impacts on plant fitness.
In conclusion, my findings suggest that dominant fungal lineages display different ecological preferences and complementary sets of functional traits, with different niche preferences within root tissues to avoid competition. Also, their diverse effects on plant fitness is likely host-isolate dependent and robust to changes in the abiotic environment when these encompass the tolerance range of either symbiont.
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.
Biologischen Systemen liegen Mechanismen zugrunde, die bis heute nicht vollständig aufgeklärt sind. Für die Untersuchung eignen sich externe Trigger, die eine Regulation von außen auf das System erlauben und Prozesse gezielt steuerbar machen. Eine Möglichkeit ist das System unter optische Kontrolle zu bringen, d.h. durch Licht eine externe Steuerung zu implementieren, was von einem internen Chromophor aufgenommen wird. In der vorliegenden Dissertation werden drei individuelle Projekte vorgestellt, die alle dieses Prinzip auf unterschiedliche Weise anwenden.
RNAs haben eine Vielzahl an verschiedenen Funktionen in der Zelle, die von der Proteinsynthese bis zur Genregulation variieren. Im ersten Projekt wurde der Photoschalter Spiropyran im Kontext von RNA eingesetzt. Mit dem Ziel das Derivat PyBIPS kovalent an ein Oligonukleotid zu binden und damit die Hybridisierung eines Duplexes zu steuern, wurden Strukturmotive gesucht, an die der Photoschalter postsynthetisch gebunden werden kann. Dabei soll die sterisch anspruchsvolle Spiropyran-Form die Watson-Crick-Basenpaarung stören und die planare, konjugierte Merocyanin-Form in den Duplex, zur zusätzlichen Stabilisierung, interkalieren. In Vorarbeiten von Clara Brieke wurde festgestellt, dass erstens nur PyBIPS, nach kovalenter Verknüpfung, noch vollständig photochemisch aktiv ist und zweitens eine Herstellung über Festphasensynthese nur in schlechter Ausbeute realisierbar ist. Ausgehend davon wurde PyBIPS an die drei nicht-nukleosidischen Linker, Aminoglykol, D-Threoninol und Serinol, postsynthetisch über eine Amidbindung angebracht, die zuvor über Oligonukleotidfestphasensynthese in 2´-OMe-RNA eingebaut wurden.
In der photochemischen Charakterisierung konnte gezeigt werden, dass PyBIPS, gebunden an alle drei Motive, noch photochemisch aktiv ist und im Vergleich zu ungebundenem PyBIPS stabiler ist gegenüber Photolyse. In Untersuchungen im Doppelstrang im Wedge Motiv, d.h. im Gegenstrang befindet sich kein Nukleotid gegenüber dem Photoschalter, wurde ein ähnliches Verhalten festgestellt. Zusätzlich zur charakteristischen Merocyanin-Bande bei 550 nm ist ein zweites, rotverschobenes Absorptionsmaximum entstanden, das die gleichen Eigenschaften besitzt. In Schaltzyklen wurde festgestellt, dass eine Isomerisierung bis 660 nm möglich ist, was eine Anwendung im therapeutischen Fenster zwischen ca. 600 und 1000 nm von Blut ermöglichen würde. Das Auftreten der zweiten Bande hängt stark vom Linker und dem Baustein im gegenüberliegenden Strang ab. Es wird vermutet, dass sich das, sonst nicht-bevorzugte, TTT-Isomer der Merocyanin-Form, durch Stabilisierung durch die Umgebung im Oligonukleotid ausbildet.
Zur Untersuchung, inwiefern die Isomerisierung des Photoschalters die Duplexstruktur beeinflusst, wurden Schmelzpunktstudien und Fluoreszenzmessungen zur KD-Bestimmung durchgeführt, ohne dass eine Veränderung zu erkennen war. In einer größeren NMR-Studie, in Kooperation mit Tom Landgraf (Arbeitsgruppe Prof. Dr. Harald Schwalbe) wurde der Fokus darauf-gelegt mehr Informationen über die strukturelle Integrität zu erhalten. Es findet eine Störung der benachbarten Basenpaarungen durch den Photoschalter statt, jedoch kann die Kraft der Isomerisierung des Photoschalters nicht übertragen warden. Der Einfluss war zunächst geringer als erwartet, was in anderen Anwendungen überprüft warden muss.
Im zweiten Projekt steht das Membranprotein OmpG aus E. Coli K12 im Fokus. Proteine besitzen viele verschiedene funktionelle Gruppen, die für selektive Biokonjugation genutzt werden können in einer Reihe von Anwendungen. OmpG gehört zur Gruppe der Porine, die in der äußeren Membran von Gram-negativen Bakterien sitzen und die seltene ß-Fassstruktur ausbilden. Die Pore besitzt einen großen Innendurchmesser ohne Selektivität. Das Molekül wurde bereits intensiv auf seine Struktur, insbesondere Loop 6, der pH-abhängig die Pore verschließt, untersucht. In Vorarbeiten von Grosse et al. wurde der Loop entfernt, sodass ein ruhiger Kanal entstanden ist, der ein optimales Modellsystem darstellt. Außerdem wurden in der Pore zwei Cysteine, die auf gegenüberliegenden Seiten auf halber Höhe des Kanals sitzen, eingeführt. An die Thiolgruppen wurden photolabile Schutzgruppen angebracht, die erst den Kanal blockieren und nach Abspaltung durch Licht wieder freigeben. Dazu wurde jeweils ein 7-Diethylaminocumarin (DEACM) postsynthetisch angebracht.
Der Linker am Cumarin-Alkohol stellt dabei einen Kompromiss dar, da er zum einen selektiv mit der Thiolgruppe des Cysteins reagieren soll, gleichzeitig aber noch photo-induziert wieder abspalten muss. Durch Belichtung findet eine Hydrolyse des Esters unter Abspaltung des Alkohols statt, der einen Carbonsäurerest am Thiol in der Pore zurück lässt. In spannungsabhängigen Einzelkanal-messungen, durchgeführt von Dr. Philipp Reiß (Universität Marburg), konnte gezeigt werden, dass die zwei DEACM Modifikationen eine Reduktion der Leitfähigkeit bewirkten und durch Licht abgespalten und aus dem Kanal entfernt werden konnten. Dabei war außerdem zu erkennen, dass die Leitfähigkeit aufgrund der Carboxylreste über das Niveau von unmodifiziertem OmpG steigt.
...
Massenspektrometrie-basierte Proteomuntersuchungen erfolgen auch heute überwiegend nach dem sogenannten Bottom-Up-Ansatz, d.h. die Identifizierung von Proteinen erfolgt auf der Basis von Peptiden, die chromatographisch gut voneinander getrennt werden können und massenspektrometrisch leichter zu analysieren sind als Proteine. Nach Identifikation der Peptide kann rekonstruiert werden, welche Proteine ursprünglich in der Probe vorgelegen haben. Zentraler Arbeitsschritt der Probenvorbereitung ist daher die Zerlegung des Proteins, die entweder chemisch oder - wie in den meisten Fällen – enzymatisch erfolgt. Trypsin ist das mit Abstand am häufigsten genutzte Enzym, da es eine hohe Schnittspezifität aufweist und sehr effizient ist. Der Trypsin-Verdau ist darüber hinaus sehr robust, d.h. er zeigt eine hohe Toleranz gegenüber Verunreinigungen, und zudem werden Peptide erzeugt, die sowohl gute Ionisations- als auch gute Fragmentierungseigenschafen aufweisen. Die durch Trypsin gebildeten Peptide enthalten neben dem basischen N-Terminus eine weitere basische Aminosäure am C-Terminus, so dass sie leicht zumindest doppelt-geladene Ionen bilden können und sehr häufig aussagekräftige C-terminale Fragmentioneserien liefern.
Neben den zahlreichen Vorteilen gibt es allerdings auch Nachteile. So können nach einem tryptischen Verdau in Abhängigkeit von der Verteilung der Schnittstellen Peptide entstehen, die entweder zu klein sind, um eine verlässliche Zuordnung zu einem Protein zu erlauben oder die zu groß sind für den Massenbereich des gewählten Massenanalysators. Eine vielversprechende Alternative zu Trypsin wäre ArgC, welches C-Terminal zu Argininen schneidet und somit im Durchschnitt größere Peptide mit Ionisations- und Fragmentierungseigenschaften ähnlich zu tryptischen Peptiden erzeugt. Das Enzym ArgC weist jedoch nur eine geringe Schnittspezifität auf und sein Trypsin-ähnliches Verhalten – also das Schneiden auch hinter Lysin - wurde öfters beobachtet und wird auch vom Hersteller angegeben. Ziel dieser Arbeit war die Entwicklung einer Verdaumethode, die Peptide erzeugt, die ausschließlich auf Argininen enden.
Das Resultat der zu entwickelnden Verdaumethode sollte somit dem eines idealen enzymatichen ArgC-Verdaues entsprechen. Realisiert wurde der ArgC-ähnliche-Verdau durch den Einsatz von Trypsin, dessen enzymatischer Schnitt durch die chemische Derivatizierung der Substrat-Lysine auf Arginine reduziert wurde. Neben dem weiteren Einsatz von Trypsin sollte dieser "Quasi-Arg-C-Verdau" weitere systematische Vorteile für Proteomanalysen realisieren: Zum Ersten sollte die Anzahl von Fehlschnitt-Peptiden, die sich bei Trypsin insbesondere an Lysinen mit saurer chemischer Umgebung ergeben, reduziert werden, zum Zweiten sollten die Arg-C-Peptide sowohl durch ihre gewachsende Größe, als auch durch das mit dem C-terminalen Arginin verbesserte Fragmentierungsverhalten höhere Score-Werte bei der bioninformatischen Auswertung der MS-Daten ergeben.
Im ersten Teil wurden zunächst bioinformatische Werkzeuge entwickelt, die MALDI-MS-Dateien automatisiert prozessierten. Die entwickelten Programme umfassen die Identifizierung und relative Quantifizierung von Proteinen aus diesen Dateien. Des Weiteren wurde ein Programm zur Analyse von MALDI-ISD-Dateien entwickelt. Automatisierte Auswertungen gelangen durch die Erstellung von Workflows in der Datenanalyseplattform KNIME. Diese Workflows kombinieren in Python geschriebene Skripte und Funktionalitäten frei verfügbarer Programme wie "MSConvert" und "mMass".
Nach Erstellung der bioinformatischen Werkzeuge wurde die Methodenentwicklung zur Modifizierung der Lysine für verschiedene Reagenzien durchgeführt. Die Auswahl fiel auf vier Substanzen, von denen bekannt ist, dass sie unter milden Reaktionsbedingung im quantitativen Ausmaß mit Aminogruppen reagieren. Diese waren Sulfo-NHS-Acetat, Propionsäureanhydrid, Diethylpyrocarbonat und die reduktive Methylierung mit Formaldehyd und Picolin-Boran. Die Reaktionsbedingungen mussten zunächst für Proteine optimiert werden, da die publizierten Protokolle hauptsächlich zur Derivatizierung von Peptiden verwendet worden waren. Anschließend wurden die optimierten Protokolle für eine Protein- und Proteomprobe eingesetzt und die Resultate miteinander verglichen. Die Untersuchungen führten zu dem Ergebnis, dass sowohl auf Protein- als auch auf Proteomebene die Propionylierung des Lysins die besten Resultaten zeigte. Insbesondere ist hervorzuheben, dass alle ArgC-ähnlichen Ansätze unabhängig vom eingesetzten Reagenz zu besseren Ergebnissen in jeder der Untersuchungen führte als der klassische enzymatische ArgC-Verdau.
...
Quantenchemische Untersuchungen zu Reaktionsmechanismen reaktiver Carben- und Silylenverbindungen
(2018)
In dieser Arbeit werden Reaktionsmechanismen verschiedener Carben- und Silylenverbindungen mit quantenchemischen Methoden untersucht: Die Zerfallsreaktion acylischer Diaminocarbene, die Reaktion verschiedener Diaminocarbene mit CO, die C-C Kupplung von Benzophenon mit SiCl2, die Reaktion von NHC mit Si2Br6 und die Reaktion von Dimethyltitanocen mit neo-Si5H12
Antimicrobial resistance became a serious threat to the worldwide public health in this century. A better understanding of the mechanisms, by which bacteria infect host cells and how the host counteracts against the invading pathogens, is an important subject of current research. Intracellular bacteria of the Salmonella genus have been frequently used as a model system for bacterial infections. Salmonella are ingested by contaminated food or water and cause gastroenteritis and typhoid fever in animals and humans. Once inside the gastrointestinal tract, Salmonella can invade intestinal epithelial cells. The host cell can fight against intracellular pathogens by a process called xenophagy. For complex systems, such as processes involved in the bacterial infection of cells, computational systems biology provides approaches to describe mathematically how these intertwined mechanisms in the cell function. Computational systems biology allows the analysis of biological systems at different levels of abstraction. Functional dependencies as well as dynamic behavior can be studied. In this thesis, we used the Petri net formalism to gain a better insight into bacterial infections and host defense mechanisms and to predict cellular behavior that can be tested experimentally. We also focused on the development of new computational methods.
In this work, the first realization of a mathematical model of the xenophagic capturing of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium in epithelial cells was developed. The mathematical model expressed in the Petri net formalism was constructed in an iterative way of modeling and analyses. For the model verification, we analyzed the Petri net, including a computational performance of knockout experiments named in silico knockouts, which was established in this work. The in silico knockouts of the proposed Petri net are consistent with the published experimental perturbation studies and, thus, ensures the biological credibility of the Petri net. In silico knockouts that have not been experimentally investigated yet provide hypotheses for future investigations of the pathway.
To study the dynamic behavior of an epithelial cell infected with Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, a stochastic Petri net was constructed. In experimental research, a decision like "Which incubation time is needed to infect half of the epithelial cells with Salmonella?" is based on experience or practicability. A mathematical model can help to answer these questions and improve experimental design. The stochastic Petri net models the cell at different stages of the Salmonella infection. We parameterized the model by a set of experimental data derived from different literature sources. The kinetic parameters of the stochastic Petri net determine the time evolution of the bacterial infection of a cell. The model captures the stochastic variation and heterogeneity of the intracellular Salmonella population of a single cell over time. The stochastic Petri net is a valuable tool to examine the dynamics of Salmonella infections in epithelial cells and generate valuable information for experimental design.
In the last part of this thesis, a novel theoretical method was introduced to perform knockout experiments in silico. The new concept of in silico knockouts is based on the computation of signal flows at steady state and allows the determination of knockout behavior that is comparable to experimental perturbation behavior. In this context, we established the concept of Manatee invariants and demonstrated the suitability of their application for in silico knockouts by reflecting biological dependencies from the signal initiation to the response. As a proof of principle, we applied the proposed concept of in silico knockouts to the Petri net of the xenophagic recognition of Salmonella. To enable the application of in silico knockouts for the scientific community, we implemented the novel method in the software isiKnock. isiKnock allows the automatized performance and visualization of in silico knockouts in signaling pathways expressed in the Petri net formalism. In conclusion, the knockout analysis provides a valuable method to verify computational models of signaling pathways, to detect inconsistencies in the current knowledge of a pathway, and to predict unknown pathway behavior.
In summary, the main contributions of this thesis are the Petri net of the xenophagic capturing of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium in epithelial cells to study the knockout behavior and the stochastic Petri net of an epithelial cell infected with Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium to analyze the infection dynamics. Moreover, we established a new method for in silico knockouts, including the concept of Manatee invariants and the software isiKnock. The results of these studies are useful to a better understanding of bacterial infections and provide valuable model analysis techniques for the field of computational systems biology.
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.
Die membranintegrierten, rotierenden F-Typ ATP-Synthasen zählen zu den essentiellen Komponenten der bakteriellen Energieversorgung. Ihre Rolle im zellulären Energiehaushalt bestehtin der Synthese von ATP unter Nutzung des transmembranen, elektrischen Ionengradienten (Mitchell 1961, Duncan et al. 1995, Noji et al. 1997, Kinosita et al. 1998). Die rotierenden ATP-Synthasen werden entsprechend der Kationenselektivität, die sie unter physiologischen Bedingungen zeigen, in zwei verschiedene Klassen eingeteilt, die H+-selektiven, sowiedie Na+-selektiven ATP-Synthasen. Hierbei bildet die Selektivität beider Klassen für einwertige Kationen (H+ oder Na+) eine essenzielle Grundlage für ihre Rolle im Energiehaushalt der bakteriellen Zellen. Jedoch gibt es nur eine begrenzte Anzahl von anaeroben Eubakterien und Archaeen, die noch einen auf Na+- Ionen basierenden Energiehaushalt besitzen. Gut charakterisierte Beispiele für Na+-selektive ATP-Synthasen bilden die F-Typ-Synthasen von I. tartaricus, P. modestum, sowie die V/A-Typ-Enzyme von E. hirae und A. woodii. Trotz der Unterschiede in der Kationenselektivitätder unterschiedlichen F-Typ ATP-Synthasen sind sie jedoch sowohl inihre Organisation, als auch hinsichtlich ihre Wirkungsweisen ähnlich. Das Ziel, der im Rahmen dieser Arbeit durchgeführten Forschung, bestand in der Identifizierung der Faktoren, die sowohl die hohen Selektivität, als auch die Affinität des in der Membran-eingebetteten Rotor-C-Rings der ATP-Synthasezu Protonen (H+) und Na+- Ionen beeinflussen. Die Untersuchungen wurden hierbei andem c11-Ring der F-Typ-ATP-Synthase aus dem anaeroben Bakterium Ilyobacter tartaricus durchgeführt, das hierbei als Modellsystem diente. Der untersuchte Ring zeigt unter physiologischen Bedingungen eine hohe Bindungsselektivität für Na+ Ionen, kann jedoch unter nicht-physiologischen Bedingungen auch Li+ und H+ Ionen binden und zur ATP-Synthese verwenden (Neumann et al. 1998).
Das Ziel, der im Rahmen dieser Arbeit durchgeführten Forschung, bestand in der Identifizierung der Faktoren, die sowohl die hohen Selektivität, als auch die Affinität des in der Membran-eingebetteten Rotor-C-Rings der ATP-Synthasezu Protonen (H+) und Na+- Ionen beeinflussen. Die Untersuchungen wurden hierbei andem c11-Ring der F-Typ-ATP-Synthase aus dem anaeroben Bakterium Ilyobacter tartaricus durchgeführt, das hierbei als Modellsystem diente. Der untersuchte Ring zeigt unter physiologischen Bedingungen eine hohe Bindungsselektivität für Na+ Ionen, kann jedoch unter nicht-physiologischen Bedingungen auch Li+ und H+ Ionen binden und zur ATP-Synthese verwenden (Neumann et al. 1998). Die Kd- und KM-Werte wurden verwendet, um die Na+ -Bindungsaffinität der C-Ringe bzw. ATP-Synthasen zu quantifizieren. Über die Selektivität wurdebeschrieben, welche Kationen an die C-Ringe und ATP-Synthasen binden können (z. B. H+/Na+/Li+, H+/Na+ - oder nur H+ Ionen).Das Verhältnis der absoluten Bindungsaffinitäten zwischen zwei Kationen (z. B. Kd (Na+)/Kd (H+)) wurde verwendet, um die Präferenz des Enzyms für eines der Ionen zu quantifizieren. Die Faktoren, dieder Kationenselektivität und der Affinität des I. tartaricus c-Rings zugrunde liegen, wurden mit Hilfe von Mutageneseexperimenten der Aminosäuren in der Ionenbindungsstelle untersucht. Im I. tartaricus-c-Ring erfolgt die Na+ Bindung an der Grenzfläche von zwei benachbarten c-Untereinheiten des c-Rings. An der Bindung der Na+-Ionen sind sowohl Aminosäuren aus Helix 1 (Gln32), sowie von Helix 2 (Val63, Ser66, Thr67 und Tyr70) beteiligt, die in der Nähe, des für den Mechanismusessentiellen Glu65 liegen. Insgesamt wurden 19 verschiedene, spezifische Einzel- und Doppelmutationen in die Sequenz des atpE-Gens eingeführt, die für die I. tarticus-ATP-Synthase-c-Untereinheit kodiert. Bei den Experimenten mit dem I. tartaricus c-Ring (Ser66, Thr67 und Tyr70) wurden drei polare Reste der Ionenbindungsstelle durch die polaren Reste (Ser67, Ile67 oder Leu67) oder hydrophobe Reste (Ala66, Gln67 und Phe70) ersetzt, während das geladene Glu65 durch die kürzere, aber immer noch geladene Seitenkette Asp65 ausgetauscht wurde. Zur Charakterisierung der monovalenten Kationenbindung durch die Wildtyp, sowie die mutierten C-Ringe von I.-tartaricus, wurde ein Ansatz verwendet, der biochemische (DCCD-Ionen-Kompetitionsassay) und biophysikalische (ITC) Methoden kombiniert.
Die Daten der in dieser Arbeit durchgeführten Experimente, zeigen, dass c-Ringe selektiv für H+ sind, solange in der Ionenbindungsstelle des c-Rings ein ionisierbarer Glu/Asp-Rest vorhanden ist. Die H+-Bindungsaffinität des c-Rings hängt von der Hydrophobizität der Reste ab, aus der die Ionenbindungsstelle aufgebaut ist.Jedoch ist die Zahl der Faktoren, die die Na+-Selektivität des C-Rings bestimmen, weitaus größer. Von den in dieser Arbeit untersuchten Faktoren war die Zahl der polaren Reste, die Wasserstoffbrücken zu Na+ bilden, die Co-Koordination von Na+ durch strukturell vorhandene Wassermoleküle und die Anwesenheit von negativ geladenen Resten besonders wichtig für die Bindung der Na+-Ionen an den Ring. Die hohe Bindungsaffinität des c-Rings für Na+-Ionen, wird sowohl durch Wechselwirkungen begünstigt die das gebundene Na+-Ion stabilisieren, als auch den gesamten atomaren Aufbau der Ionenbindestelle, der die enthalpiegetriebene Na+-Bindungan den c-Ring begünstigen. Im Rahmen dieser eingehenden Studien konnten zum ersten Mal die thermodynamischen Eigenschaften aufgeklärt werden, die der hohen Na+-Bindungsaffinität des c-Rings zugrunde liegen, sowie der Einfluss von Mutationen auf diese Parameter ermittelt werden. Durch zahlreiche Experimente mit ATP-Synthasen, die mit mutierten c-Ringen zusammengesetzt wurden, sollte eine Verbindung zwischen Veränderungen der H+- und der Na+-Bindungsaffinitäten und Unterschiede im Betrieb der ATP-Synthase aufgeklärt werden. Die wichtigste Schlussfolgerung, die sich aus dieser Arbeit ableiten lässt, ist, besteht darin, dass sich Na+/H+-selektiven ATP-Synthasen durch den Austausch von 1-2 Aminosäureresten innerhalb der rotierenden c-Ring-Ionenbindungsstelle in ausschließlich H+-selektive, vollfunktionelle ATP-Synthasen umwandeln lassen.
Natural products are valuable sources for biologically active compounds, which can be utilized as pharmaceuticals. Thereby, the synthesis is based purely on biosynthetic grounds often conducted by so-called megaenzymes. One major biosynthetic pathway is the acetate pathway including polyketide and fatty acid synthesis, which encompass one of the largest classes of chemically diverse natural products. These have medicinal relevance due to their antibacterial, antifungal, anthelmintic, immunosuppressive and antitumor properties.
Due to the high structural and functional similarity between polyketide synthases and type I animal fatty acid synthases (FASs), FAS can serve as a paradigm for the whole class of multifunctional enzymes. To fully exploit the biosynthetic potential of FASs, a good access to the enzyme is of essential importance. In this regard, Escherichia coli remains an unchallenged heterologous host due to low culturing costs, particularly fast mutagenesis cycles and relatively easy handling. Surprisingly, no sufficient expression strategy for an animal FAS in E. coli has yet been reported, as it turned out that the only approach was not reproducible.
We commenced our analysis with searching for an appropriate FAS homolog that fulfills our requirements of high protein quality, sufficient yield and ensured functionality. After extensive screening of different variants, culturing conditions and co-expression strategies, we identified the murine FAS (mFAS) as our protein of choice. The established purification strategy using tags at both termini led to a reproducible and sufficient access to the protein in excellent quality. The enzyme was further biochemically characterized including an enzyme kinetic investigation of fatty acid synthesis and an examination whether different acyl-CoA substrates can serve as priming units. This adds mFAS to our repertoire of manageable megaenzymes paving the way to exploit the catalytic efficiency in regards of microbial custom-compound synthesis.
With a strong focus on deepening our understanding of the working mode of such megaenzymes, rather than analyzing respective biosynthetic products, we have addressed the question whether mFAS itself can be engineered towards PKSs or whether properties of mFAS can be exploited to engineer PKSs. This approach was conducted on three levels of complexity from function of individual domains via organization of domains to form modules to the interplay of two modules in bimodular constructs.
Fatty acid synthesis begins with the loading of acyl moieties onto the FAS, which is conducted by a domain called malonyl-/acetyltransferase (MAT). This domain was in-depth characterized due to its important role of choosing the substrates that are built in the final compound. Our analysis comprised structural and functional aspects providing crystal structures of two different acyl-bound states and kinetic parameters for the hydrolysis and transacylation reaction using twelve exemplary CoA-esters. For this purpose, we have successfully established a continuous fluorometric assay using the α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase as a coupled enzyme, which converts the liberated coenzyme A into Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide. These data revealed an extensive substrate ambiguity of the MAT domain, which had not been reported to that extent before. Further, we could demonstrate that the fold fulfills both criteria for the evolvability of an enzyme by expressing MAT in different structural arrangements (robustness) and by altering the substrate ambiguity within a mutagenesis study (plasticity). Taken these aspects together, we are persuaded that the MAT domain can serve as a versatile tool for PKSs engineering in potential FAS/PKS hybrid systems.
On the higher level of complexity, we investigated the architectural variability of the mFAS fold, which constitutes a fundamental basis for a broader biosynthetic application. We could rebuild all four module types occurring in typical modular PKSs confirming a high degree of modularity within the fold. Not only structural, but also functional integrity of these modules was validated by using triacetic acid lactone formation and ketoreductase activity. Especially the latter analysis, made it possible to quantify effects of the engineering within the processing part by respective enzyme kinetic parameters. Expanding our focus beyond a singular module, we have utilized the mFAS fold for designing up to 380 kDa large bimodular constructs. In this approach, a loading didomain was attached N-terminally containing an additional MAT and acyl carrier protein (ACP) domain. Two constructs could be expressed and purified in excellent quality to investigate the influence of an altered overall architecture on fatty acid synthesis. By comparison with appropriate controls, a functional effect of the additional loading module could indeed be proven in the bimodular systems. Those constructs allow a comprehensive analysis of the underlying molecular mechanism in the future and serve as a potential model system to study the transition from iterative to vectorial polyketide synthesis in vitro.
Macrophages in the tumor microenvironment respond to complex cytokine signals. How these responses shape the phenotype of tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) is incompletely understood. Here we explored how cytokines of the tumor milieu, interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-4, interact to influence target gene expression in primary human monocyte-derived macrophages (hMDMs). We show that dual stimulation with IL-4 and IL-6 synergistically modified gene expression. Among the synergistically induced genes are several targets with known pro-tumorigenic properties, such as CC-chemokine ligand 18 (CCL18), transforming growth factor alpha (TGFA) or CD274 (programmed cell death 1 ligand 1 (PD-L1)). We found that transcription factors of the signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) family, STAT3 and STAT6 bind regulatory regions of synergistically induced genes in close vicinity. STAT3 and STAT6 co-binding further induces the basic leucine zipper ATF-like transcription factor (BATF), which participates in synergistic induction of target gene expression. Functional analyses revealed increased MCF-7 and MDA-MB 231 tumor cell motility in response to conditioned media from co-treated hMDMs compared to cells incubated with media from single cytokine-treated hMDMs. Flow cytometric analysis of T cell populations upon co-culture with hMDMs polarized by different cytokines indicated that dual stimulation promoted immunosuppressive properties of hMDMs in a PD-L1-dependent manner. Analysis of clinical data revealed increased expression of BATF together with TAM markers in tumor stroma of breast cancer patients as compared to normal breast tissue stroma. Collectively, our findings suggest that IL-4 and IL-6 cooperate to alter the human macrophage transcriptome, endowing hMDMs with pro-tumorigenic properties.
Bei Autismus-Spektrum-Störungen (ASS) handelt es sich um genetisch komplexe Störungen mit hoher Erblichkeit. Als zugrundeliegender Pathomechanismus von ASS werden unter anderem Veränderungen der neuronalen Entwicklung diskutiert. Der Phänotyp von ASS ist definiert durch Einschränkungen in der sozialen Interaktion und Kommunikation sowie repetitives und stereotypes Verhalten. Genkopiepolymorphismen (englisch „copy number variations“/CNVs), also Deletionen oder Duplikationen einer chromosomalen Region, wurden wiederholt in Probanden mit ASS identifiziert. Hierbei ist in ASS die Region 16p11.2 mit am häufigsten von CNVs betroffen. Einige Gene aus diesem chromosomalen Abschnitt wurden bereits funktionell charakterisiert. Dennoch können die Befunde der bisherigen Einzelgenstudien nicht alle Aspekte erklären, die durch 16p11.2 CNVs hervorgerufen werden. Ziel dieser Studie war es daher, ein weiteres neuronal assoziiertes Kandidatengen dieser Region zu identifizieren und im Anschluss funktionell im Kontext der neuronalen Differenzierung zu charakterisieren.
Das SH-SY5Y Neuroblastom-Zellmodell wurde auf Transkriptom- und morphologischer Ebene auf seine Eignung als Modell für neuronale Differenzierung untersucht und bestätigt. Eine Analyse der Expressionen aller Gene der 16p11.2-Region zeigte, dass das Gen Quinolinat-Phosphoribosyltransferase (QPRT) eine vergleichsweise hohe Expression mit der stärksten und robustesten Regulierung über die Zeit aufwies. Eine de novo Deletion der 16p11.2-Region wurde in einem Patienten im Vergleich zu seinen Eltern validiert. In Patienten-spezifischen lymphoblastoiden Zelllinien derselben Familie konnten wir eine Gendosis-abhängige Expression von QPRT auf RNA-Ebene bestätigen. In SH-SY5Y-Zellen korrelierte die Expression von QPRT signifikant mit der Entwicklung von Neuriten während der Differenzierung. Um QPRT funktionell zu charakterisieren, benutzten wir drei verschiedene Methoden zur Reduktion der QPRT-Gendosis: (i) knock down (KD) durch siRNA, (ii) chemische Inhibition durch Phthalsäure und (iii) knock out (KO) über CRISPR/Cas9-Geneditierung. Eine Reduktion von QPRT durch siRNA führte zu einer schwachen Veränderung der neuronalen Morphologie differenzierter SH-SY5Y-Zellen. Die chemische Inhibition sowie der genetische KO von QPRT waren letal für differenzierende aber nicht für proliferierende Zellen. Eine Metabolitenanalyse zeigte keine Veränderungen des QPRT-assoziierten Tryptophanstoffwechsels. Gene, welche auf Transkriptomebene im Vergleich zwischen KO- und Kontrollzellen differenziell reguliert vorlagen, waren häufig an Prozessen der neuronalen Entwicklung sowie an der Bildung, Stabilität und Funktion synaptischer Strukturen beteiligt. Die Liste differenziell regulierter Gene enthielt außerdem überdurchschnittlich viele ASS-Risikogene und ko-regulierte Gengruppen waren assoziiert mit der Entwicklung des dorsolateralen präfrontalen Cortex, des Hippocampus sowie der Amygdala.
In dieser Studie zeigten wir einen kausalen Zusammenhang zwischen QPRT und der neuronalen Differenzierung in vitro sowie einen Einfluss von QPRT auf die Regulation von ASS-assoziierten Genen und Gen-Netzwerken. Funktionell standen diese Gene im Kontext mit synaptischen Vorgängen, welche durch Veränderungen zu einem Exzitations-Inhibitions-Ungleichgewicht und letztendlich zum Zelltod von Neuronen führen können. Unsere Ergebnisse heben in Summe die wichtige Rolle von QPRT in der Krankheitsentstehung von ASS, insbesondere in Trägern einer 16p11.2 Deletion, hervor.
Pretubulysin (PT), a biosynthetic precursor of the myxobacterial compound tubulysin D, was recently identified as a novel microtubule-targeting agent (MTA) causing microtubule destabilization. MTAs are the most frequently used chemotherapeutic drugs. They are well studied regarding their direct cytotoxic effects against various tumors as well as for their anti-angiogenic and vascular-disrupting action addressing endothelial cells of the tumor vasculature. However, the impact of MTAs on endothelial cells of the non-tumor vasculature has been largely neglected, although tumor cell interactions with the healthy endothelium play a crucial role in the process of cancer metastasis. Besides their use as potent anti-cancer drugs, some MTAs such as colchicine are traditionally used or recommended for the therapy of inflammatory diseases. Here, too, the role of endothelial cells has been largely neglected, although the endothelium is crucially involved in regulating the process of inflammation.
In the present study, the impact of PT on tumor-endothelial cell interactions was therefore analyzed in vitro to gain insights into the mechanism underlying its anti-metastatic effect that was recently confirmed in vivo. In the second part of this work, the influence of PT and other MTAs, namely the microtubule-destabilizing compounds vincristine (VIN) and colchicine (COL) and the microtubule-stabilizing drug paclitaxel (PAC), on leukocyte-endothelial cell interactions was investigated in vitro and in vivo (only PT). It is important to mention that in all in vitro experiments solely endothelial cells and not tumor cells or leukocytes were treated with the MTAs to strictly focus on the role of the endothelium in the action of these compounds.
The impact of PT on tumor-endothelial cell interactions was analyzed in vitro by cell adhesion and transendothelial migration assays as well as immunocytochemistry using the breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231 and primary human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs). The treatment of HUVECs with PT increased the adhesion of MDA cells onto the endothelial monolayer, whereas their transendothelial migration was reduced by the compound. Thereafter, the influence of PT on the endothelial cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) E-selectin, N-cadherin, ICAM-1, VCAM-1 and galectin-3 and on the CXCL12/CXCR4 chemokine system was examined, since they might be involved in the PT-triggered tumor cell adhesion. Interestingly, although PT induced the upregulation of ICAM-1, VCAM-1, N-cadherin and CXCL12, cell adhesion assays using neutralizing antibodies or the CXCL12 inhibitor AMD3100 revealed that all these molecules were dispensable for the PT-evoked tumor cell adhesion. As PT induces the formation of interendothelial gaps and MDA cells might adhere onto components of the underlying extracellular matrix (ECM), the precise location of MDA cells attached to the PT-treated endothelial monolayer was investigated. Instead of a direct interaction between tumor and endothelial cells, this work showed that MDA cells preferred to adhere to the ECM component collagen that was exposed within PT-triggered endothelial gaps. Both the PT-evoked increase in tumor cell adhesion onto and the decrease in trans-endothelial migration were completely abolished when β1-integrins were blocked on MDA cells. Similar results were obtained when endothelial cells were treated with VIN and COL but not PAC, indicating that the observed effects of PT depend on its microtubule-destabilizing activity.
The impact of PT, VIN, COL and PAC on leukocyte-endothelial cell interactions was analyzed in vivo (only PT) by intravital microscopy of the mouse cremaster muscle and in vitro by cell adhesion assays using the monocyte-like cell line THP-1 and TNFα-activated human dermal microvascular endothelial cells (HMEC-1). While PT did not affect the rolling of leukocytes on the endothelium, their firm adhesion onto and transmigration through the activated endothelium was reduced by PT in vivo. In accordance, the treatment of HMEC-1 with PT, VIN and COL decreased the TNFα-induced adhesion of THP-1 cells onto the endothelial monolayer, whereas PAC had no influence on this process. Thereafter, the influence of PT, VIN, COL and PAC on endothelial ICAM-1 and VCAM-1 was examined, since these molecules are substantially involved in the firm adhesion of leukocytes onto the endothelium. The cell surface protein expression of ICAM-1 and VCAM-1 was reduced by PT, VIN and COL in activated endothelial cells, whereas PAC did only slightly affect the TNFα-induced upregulation of VCAM-1. As the pro-inflammatory transcription factor NFκB plays a crucial role in the TNFα-induced expression of these CAMs, the impact of the MTAs on the NFκB promotor activity was investigated. While PT, VIN and COL decreased the activation of NFκB in activated endothelial cells, PAC did not affect this process. However, in contrast to the strong effects regarding the cell surface protein expression of ICAM-1 and VCAM-1, the effects of PT, VIN and COL on the NFκB activity was rather low. Thus, the used MTAs might also affect other relevant signaling pathways and/or the intracellular transport of CAMs might be influenced by the impact of the MTAs on the microtubule network.
Taken together, the current study provides – at least in part – an explanation for the anti-metastatic potential of PT and gives first insights into the use of PT and VIN as anti-inflammatory drugs. Moreover, this work highlights the endothelium as an attractive target for the development of new anti-cancer and anti-inflammatory drugs.
Photolabile protecting groups (PPGs, cages, photocages) are molecules which can block the activity of a functional group and be removed by irradiation of light of an appropriate wavelength. One of the goals of this work was to design new photolabile protecting groups, based on a literature known one. The far-UV absorbing diethylamino benzyl (DEAMb) photocage, developed by Wang et al., was selected as structural basis for this work. In order to trigger the uncaging reaction with longer wavelengths (≥365 nm), thus allowing also biological applications, its structure was optimized. This was done by elongating the π-orbital conjugation using biphenyl derivatives instead of a single aromatic moiety. The photocage was loaded with glutamic acid as the leaving group.
The highest bathochromic shift was shown by compounds, which had the smallest sterical hindrance imposed on the second aromatic ring. The absorption spectrum was more redshifted if the second aromatic ring contained an electron withdrawing group. However, the stronger the substituents electron withdrawing strength was, the lower the uncaging quantum yield was. It was rationalized, that this is due to a decreased excited state electron density at the benzylic carbon of the DEAMb core which is necessary to trigger bond dissociation. This has been confirmed using TDDFT (time-dependent density functional theory) computations done by Jan von Cosel, Konstantin Falahati and Carsten Hamerla (from the group of Irene Burghardt). The best uncaging quantum yield was 42% for m-phenyl substituted DEAMb, while if a strong electron withdrawing group was present (nitro group), there was no photoactivity at all.
In order to achieve a better π-orbital conjugation of the non-coplanar biphenyl derivatives, a C-C bond was introduced between the benzylic carbon and the second aromatic ring. The resulting planar compounds belong to the fluorene class. The computational data predicted the photochemical meta effect to some extent to be preserved in these molecules. A set of fluorene derivatives was synthesized and photochemically characterized. The molar absorption coefficients of all prepared fluorene derivatives were higher than for any of the biphenyl derivatives. Quantum yields of the acetate release ranged between 3-42%, thus being as good as the best glutamic acid releasing biphenyl compounds. The highest uncaging cross section of the acetate release from the prepared fluorene derivatives was above 5000 M^-1 cm^-1. This value proves the high potential of the new fluorene based photocages developed in this work. Furthermore, release of hydroxide ion from fluorenol could be shown along with generation of, presumably, fluorenyl cation. These intriguing results paves a way for further exploration of fluorene based photocages for the release of bad leaving groups.
The second part of this work describes the custom synthesis of 13C labeled compounds for the VIPER (VIbrationally Promoted Electronic Resonance) project. In the VIPER pulse sequence, a molecule is vibrationally excited by a narrow band IR-pump pulse. The following Vis-pump pulse will promote the vibrationally pre-excited molecules to an electronically excited state. This Vis-pump pulse is offresonant for the not vibrationally pre-selected species and only resonant with the molecules, which are already pre-excited by the IR-pump pulse. Since the IR absorption bands usually are well resolved, a selective excitation of one molecule in an ensemble of similar ones is possible in the IR frequency range. Isotopologues and isotopomers are an extreme case of molecules which are near identical and differ only by isotopic composition or position. As a result in solution and at room temperature they have an identical UV-Vis absorption spectrum but different IR spectrum. This allows vibrational excitation of only one isotopologue (or isotopomer).
Isotopic labels were introduced in known photocages: 7-diethylamino coumarin (DEACM) and para-hydroxy phenacyl (pHP). The position for isotopic label incorporation in these molecules was guided by computations done by Jan von Cosel and Carsten Neumann. To allow control of the photoreactions in an ultrafast timescale, an IR active leaving group was used. The uncaging behavior of the prepared molecules in steady state was tested using chromatography (HPLC) and spectroscopy (1H NMR, FTIR and UV-Vis). The VIPER experiments were performed by Daniela Kern-Michler, Carsten Neumann, Nicole Mielke and Luuk van Wilderen (from the group of Jens Bredenbeck). A selective uncaging of only the vibrationally pre-excited molecules could be achieved.
This dissertation aimed to shed light on changes of the epigenetic landscape in heart and skeletal muscle tissue of the turquoise Killifish N. furzeri, a novel, short-lived animal model for aging research. The following results could be obtained:
1. A global trend towards closed chromatin conformation could be observed; histone markers for H3K27me3, H3K9me3 and H4K20me3 accumulated in skeletal muscle tissue from old N. furzeri. Markers for open chromatin conformation such as H3K4me3, H3K9ac and H4K16ac decreased in old skeletal muscle tissue. In old hearts from N. furzeri an accumulation of H3K27me3 could be detected while H3K9ac was found to increase with age as well. mRNA expression levels of methylating enzymes were higher in skeletal muscle tissue from old N. furzeri when compared to expression levels in skeletal muscle tissue from young N. furzeri.
2. The shift of epigenetic pattern was accompanied by a change of gene expression. Via mRNA sequencing in collaboration with the MPI, Bad Nauheim it could be shown that genes associated with cell cycle and DNA repair were lower expressed in skeletal muscle tissue from old N. furzeri than in tissue from young N. furzeri. Genes, associated with inflammatory signaling and glycolysis, displayed increased mRNA levels in skeletal muscle tissue from old N. furzeri. These results could be confirmed by Western blot and qRT-PCR analyses.
3. Markers for DNA damage and senescence increased in skeletal muscle tissue from old N. furzeri.
4. Cells derived from young and old N. furzeri skeletal muscle could be isolated and cultured for many passages. These cells were a mix of different cell types with properties and features of the native tissue. They could be used for treatment with drugs and/small compounds modulating the epigenetic landscape via specific interference with methylating enzymes.
5. DNA methylation and hydroxy-methylation were found to go in different directions in skeletal muscle and heart tissue from N. furzeri: while increasing in skeletal muscle tissue, a both DNA modifications declined in heart tissue with age.
6. In the heart of N. furzeri microRNA expression changes with age were assed with sequencing in collaboration with the FLI, Jena. It could be demonstrated that miRNA expression is age-dependent. Particular focus was on miR-29 and its target genes: miR-29 was highly upregulated in heart and skeletal muscle tissue, while target genes such as collagens and dnmts were reduced with age in the heart of N. furzeri.
7. Cardiac function remained stable with age and no accumulation of collagens could be found when comparing hearts of young and old N. furzeri despite the increase of markers for oxidative stress.
8. Cell culture experiments with human cardiac fibroblasts revealed that miR-29 is upregulated with increasing age of the donor. In addition to that, it could be shown that miR-29 is positively regulated by oxidative stress.
9. A zebrafish mutant with modified expression of miR-29 that was created in collaboration with the SNS, Pisa, presented a severe hypoxic phenotype and an altered mRNA expression profile compared to wild type control zebrafish. Cardiac dysfunction and hypertrophy were observed as well as an increase in DNA methylation and collagens.
Taken together, it could be shown that the aging process in skeletal muscle and heart tissue from N. furzeri leads to a series of changes on epigenetic levels. It remains to be elucidated whether these changes are result or cause for further changes of mRNA expression, protein levels and pathophysiology, yet the N. furzeri represents a promising research model for further aging studies.