Biologische Hochschulschriften (Goethe-Universität)
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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.
This work deals with the characterization of three different type II polyketide synthase systems (PKS II) from the Gram-negative bacteria Xenorhabdus and Photorhabdus.
Particular attention was paid to a biochemically underexplored class of aryl polyene (APE) pigments. Bioinformatic analysis of enzymes involved in the biosynthesis and the in vitro reconstruction proved that the synthesis of APEs involves an unusual fatty acid-like elongation mechanism. Furthermore, the discovery of unexpected protein-protein interactions provided new insights into the multienzyme complex formation of this unusual PKS II system. Through collaboration with the groups from Prof. Michael Groll and junior Prof. Nina Morgner, two protein complexes were structurally solved and several native protein multimerization events were identified and allowed us to suggest a possible protein-interaction network. The results are summarized in publication ‘An Uncommon Type II PKS Catalyzes Biosynthesis of Aryl Polyene Pigments’ (first author; J. Am. Chem. Soc.).
In addition to in vitro-analysis, in vivo-studies were used to investigate the APE compound produced by X. doucetiae in more detail. The activation of the silent biosynthetic gene cluster (BGC) led to the detection of the APE compound in the homologous host. Further combination of homologous expression and targeted deletions of the APE BGC revealed an APE-lipid-like structure. MS-based analyses and purification of intermediates allowed us to deduce structural building blocks of the APE-lipid, which is composed of an APE structural core, a glucosamine residue and an unusual long-chain fatty acid with unusual conjugated double bonds and a phosphoethanolamine head group. In combination with the above stated in vitro-data, we assumed a plausible biosynthetic mechanism of the APE-lipid. The results are summarized in the section ‘Additional Results: Tracing the Full-length APE’.
The biosynthesis of isopropylstilbene (IPS) has already been well-studied by the Bode laboratory and the group of Prof. Ikuro Abe. Studies with Photorhabdus laumondii TT01 by the Bode group revealed the distributed locations and functions of the genes involved in biosynthesis, which originate from two pathways. Particularly, the Bode group first demonstrated that an unusual ketosynthase/cyclase (StlD) catalyzes the condensation of 5-phenyl-2,4-pentadienoyl-ACP and isovaleryl-beta-ketoacyl-ACP via a Michael addition. Such a pathway for stilbene formation is distinct from those widespread in plants. The Abe group solved the structure and biochemical mechanism of StlD and further investigated the aromatization reaction of the aromatase StlC. However, the generation of the required cinnamoyl-precursor 5-phenyl-2,4-pentadienoyl-ACP as a Michael acceptor for this cyclization reaction remained elusive. In this work, we were able to reconstitute the synthesis of the Michael acceptor in vitro, by the action of enzymes from the fatty acid biosynthesis. With the knowledge about the crucial cross-talk from primary and specialized metabolism, we further determined the minimal endowment for stilbene production in a heterologous host. Here, the discovered AasS enzyme StlB is responsible for the generation of cinnamoyl-ACP and among others, plFabH plays a key role as gatekeeper enzyme for further processing. With this information in hand, we were able to obtain IPS production in E. coli. These results are presented in the manuscript ‘Biosynthesis of the Multifunctional Isopropylstilbene in Photorhabdus laumondii Involves Cross-talk Between Specialized and Primary Metabolism’ (co-first author, manuscript).
The biosynthesis of the orange-to-red-pigmented anthraquinones (AQs) is the best-studied type II PKS system according to preliminary results. While several investigations by Brachmann et al. discovered the BGC and the overall product spectrum of the main AQ-256 and its methylated derivatives, data of Quiqin Zhou (Bode group) performed biochemical in vitro analysis paired with in vivo heterologous expression of the ant-genes antA-I. This led to the identification of shunt products that indicated an AQ-scaffold derived from an octaketide intermediate that gets shortened to a heptaketide by the hydrolase AntI, resulting in the main anthraquinone AQ-256. This PKS-shortening mechanism was further confirmed by the protein crystal structure of AntI by the Groll group (publication, minor contributions, co-author, Chem Sci. ‘Molecular Mechanism of Polyketide Shortening in Anthraquinone Biosynthesis of Photorhabdus luminescens’). Further substrate analysis of the P. luminescens AQ-producer and mutants revealed an inhibitory effect of cinnamic acid against the hydrolase AntI. Cinnamic acid might therefore be involved in regulation of AQ biosynthesis (‘Anthraquinone Production is Influenced by Cinnamic Acid’, first author, manuscript).
Biochemical analysis from Quiqin Zhou with the minimal PKS of the AQ-synthase further revealed the exclusive activation of the AQ-ACP by the PPTase AntB. The PPTase is insoluble alone but gets stabilized by the CoA-ligase, most likely inactive, working as a chaperone. Thus, the minimal PKS endowment to produce the octaketide scaffold compromises, besides the ACP, the KS:CLF heterodimer and the MCAT, the co-occurrence of the PPTase AntB and the CoA-ligase AntG. For the first time, X-ray crystallography depicted a minimal PKS in action, by obtaining the structural data of native complexes from an ACP:KS:CLF, the KS:CLF alone and an ACP:MCAT in their non-active and active forms. It was possible to confirm a KS-bound hexaketide, which was built upon heterologous expression of the KS:CLF. Mutagenesis with amino-acids proposed to be involved in protein-protein interactions in the ACP:KS:CLF complex revealed some interesting protein-interaction sites. Additionally, an induced-fit mechanism of the MCAT with the ACP during the malonylation reaction confirmed a monodirectional transfer reaction (‘Structural Snapshots of the Minimal PKS System Responsible for Octaketide Biosynthesis’ co-author, manuscript under review).
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.
Die klimatische Nische beschreibt die klimatischen Bedingungen, unter denen eine Art eine stabile Population aufrechterhalten kann. Die Quantifizierung von Klimanischen ist ein wichtiges Werkzeug, um tiefergehende Einsichten in individuelle Art-Umwelt Beziehungen zu erlangen, um den Effekt des Klimawandels effektiv zu bewerten, und um Arten- und Naturschutz zu unterstützen. Ein makroökologischer Ansatz ist von Vorteil um Ökosysteme über ein breites taxonomisches, geographisches und zeitliches Spektrum zu untersuchen, und damit die klimatischen Nischen vieler Arten auf eine konsistente Art und Weise zu quantifizieren und vergleichen.
Im Kontext des aktuellen Klimawandels ist es wichtig zu verstehen, ob Arten in der Lage sind ihre Klima-nische anzupassen. Viele bisherige Vorhersagen über klimawandelbedingte Veränderungen von Artverbreitungen beruhen auf der Annahme, dass die klimatische Nische einer Art konstant ist. Allerdings ist bekannt, dass Arten ihre klimatischen Präferenzen auf unterschiedlichen Zeitskalen verändern - sowohl über kurze (ökologische) als auch evolutionäre Zeiträume. Dies ist ein wichtiger, aber oft missachteter Faktor für die Nischenquantifizierung. Ein gutes Beispiel für solche ökologische Dynamiken sind Zugvögel, die etwa 20% aller Vogelarten ausmachen. Sie stellen eine interessante, aber auch herausfordernde Artengruppe für die Untersuchung klimatischer Nischen dar. Des Weiteren ist es wichtig klimatische Nischen über evolutionäre Zeiträume zu untersuchen, um die Prozesse zu verstehen, die Evolution, Diversifikation und Extinktion unterliegen, da sich Klimanischen mit der Anpassung einzelner Arten an neue klimatische Gegebenheiten ebenfalls wandeln. Bislang hat ein Mangel an geographisch expliziten Daten über terrestrische Umwelt-bedingungen durch evolutionäre Zeiträume eine explizite Überprüfung dieser Zusammenhänge verhindert.
Das übergeordnete Ziel dieser Dissertation war es, die ökologische (d.h. saisonale) und evolutionäre Dynamik klimatischer Nischen von Vögeln zu untersuchen. Dazu wurde ein Ansatz gewählt der makroökologische, und evolutionsbiologische Methoden vereint, um ein breites taxonomisches und zeitliches Spektrum abzudecken. Das erste Kapitel bearbeitet die Frage wie klimatische Nischen am besten zu quantifizieren sind, wenn man die Dynamik des Vogelzuges in Betracht zieht. Dazu wurde eine Datenbank erstellt, die das Zugverhalten aller 10.443 lebenden Vogelarten katalogisiert. Des Weiteren wurde eine Übersicht über die Methoden zur Quantifizierung klimatischer Nischen in der makroökologischen Literatur erstellt. Das Ergebnis derselben ist, dass die überwiegende Mehrzahl der Veröffentlichungen saisonalen Zugbewegungen nicht ausreichend berücksichtigt. Zuletzt habe ich anhand der Avifauna Australiens die Vor- und Nachteile der Verwendung von Verbreitungskarten gegenüber Punktverbreitungsdaten zur Erfassung saisonaler geographischer Muster der Artenvielfalt bewertet. Damit bietet dieses Kapitel Rahmenempfehlungen für die Datenanforderungen und Methoden, die je nach Zugverhalten einer Art, und dem geographischen, bzw. zeitlichen Fokus einer Studie für eine optimale Nischenquantifizierung notwendig sind.
Im zweiten Kapitel untersuchte ich die saisonale Dynamik klimatischer Nischen von Zugvögeln. Dabei überprüfte ich die Hypothese, dass Zugvögel in ihrem Jahreszyklus durch die Zugbewegung eine gewisse Klimanische verfolgen. Zu diesem Zweck habe ich mit Brut- und Überwinterungsarealkarten saisonale Klima-nischen für 437 Zug- und Standvogelarten aus acht Kladen der Sperlingsvögel (Passeriformes) charakterisiert. Mit Ordinationsmethoden wurde dann der innerartliche saisonale Nischenüberlapp quantifiziert. Der Beweis für die Verfolgung einer klimatischen Nische in einer Art war von mehreren Faktoren, z.B. der geographischen Verortung des Brutareals und der Zugrichtung, abhängig. Dies lässt darauf schließen, dass sich die Ursachen für den Vogelzug sowohl geographisch als auch saisonal (d.h. abhängig von der Zugrichtung) unterscheiden.
Im dritten Kapitel untersuchte ich die evolutionäre Dynamik klimatischer Nischen in Steinschmätzern (Gattung Oenanthe), um explizit zu untersuchen ob es einen Zusammenhang zwischen den Raten klimatischer Nischen-evolution und den Veränderungen paläoklimatischer Bedingungen gibt. Methoden der Klimanischen-quantifizierung wurden mit datierten molekularen Phylogenien verknüpft, um die Raten klimatischer Nischen-evolution mit einem variablen Ratenmodell abzuschätzen. Paläoklimatische Umweltbedingungen wurden mit paläobiologischen Methoden aus dem Fossilbericht altweltlicher Säugetiere der vergangenen 20 Millionen Jahre erschlossen. Die Fallstudie konnte keinen Zusammenhang zwischen Nischenevolution und Umwelt-bedingungen feststellen. Dies legt nahe, dass Vögel als überaus mobile Organismen, auf Klimaveränderungen eher durch Arealverschiebungen reagieren, als durch eine Anpassung ihrer klimatischen Nische. Die Klimanischen der Steinschmätzer waren allerdings an sich nicht statisch, so dass andere Faktoren wie z.B. biologische Wechselbeziehungen für die Nischenevolution dieser Gattung verantwortlich sein müssen.
Meine Dissertation beleuchtet die zentrale Bedeutung zeitlicher Dynamiken für den Nischenraum, den Arten über ökologische (d.h. saisonale) und evolutionäre Zeiträume einnehmen. Aus ihr ergeben sich methodische Konsequenzen für zukünftige Studien klimatischer Nischen. Der Befund, dass die klimatischen Nischen von Zugvögeln nicht saisonal konstant sind, zeigt dass es für mobile Kladen wie Vögel notwendig ist die klimatischen Bedingungen über den gesamten Jahreszyklus und das gesamte Verbreitungsgebiet in Betracht zu nehmen, um die jeweiligen klimatischen Nischen voll charakterisieren zu können.
Über diese methodischen Innovationen hinaus, hat meine Arbeit auch wichtige theoretische und praktische Schlussfolgerungen produziert. Zum einen zeigt die Betrachtung saisonaler Klimanischen, dass Zugvögel entgegen gängiger Annahmen nicht denselben Umweltbedingungen in ihren Brut- und Überwinterungsarealen ausgesetzt sind. Zum anderen zeigt meine Betrachtung von Klimanischen über evolutionäre Zeiträume, dass die Nischenevolution nicht von klimatischen Bedingungen angetrieben wird. Zusammengenommen zeigen diese Ergebnisse auf unterschiedlichen Zeitskalen, dass das Klima nicht der alleinige Faktor ist, der die Artverbreitung von Vögeln bestimmt. Während dieser Befund Raum für Optimismus schafft, was die Auswirkungen des aktuellen Klimawandels auf Vögel angeht, zeigt er auch auf, dass Faktoren wie wechselseitige Artbeziehungen und das Mobilitätspotential von Arten einen wichtigen Einfluss auf Artverbreitungen ausüben. Diese Faktoren könnten jedoch an sich vom Klimawandel beeinflusst sein, und Untersuchungen dieses Zusammenspiels zwischen Klima und anderen Faktoren und die daraus resultierenden Einflüsse auf Artareale bieten ein vielversprechendes Arbeitsfeld für zukünftige Studien.
The endosteal bone marrow niche and vascular endothelial cells provide sanctuaries to leukemic cells. In murine chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) CD44 on leukemia cells and E-selectin on bone marrow endothelium are essential mediators for the engraftment of leukemic stem cells (LSC). We hypothesized that non-adhesion of CML-initiating cells to E-selectin on the bone marrow endothelium may lead to superior eradication of LSC in CML after treatment with imatinib than imatinib alone. Indeed, here we show that treatment with the E-selectin inhibitor GMI-1271 in combination with imatinib prolongs survival of mice with CML via decreased contact time of leukemia cells with bone marrow endothelium. Non-adhesion of BCR-ABL1+ cells leads to an increase of cell cycle progression and an increase of expression of the hematopoietic transcription factor and protooncogene Scl/Tal1 in leukemia-initiating cells (LIC). We implicate SCL/TAL1 as indirect phosphorylation target of BCR-ABL1 and as a negative transcriptional regulator of CD44 expression. We show that increased SCL/TAL1 expression is associated with improved outcome in human CML. These data demonstrate the BCR-ABL1-specific, cell-intrinsic pathways leading to altered interactions with the vascular niche via the modulation of adhesion molecules - a strategy therapeutically exploitable in future.
Die Physiologie des Schmerzes umfasst komplexe immunologische, sensorische und inflammatorische Prozesse im Rückenmark, im Gehirn und in der Peripherie. Wiederholte nozizeptive Stimulation induziert pathophysiologische Veränderungen bei der Schmerzweiterleitung, aus denen eine periphere oder zentrale Sensibilisierung resultiert. Diese kann bei dafür anfälligen Patienten zu der Ausbildung von chronischen Schmerzzuständen führen. Obwohl das Wissen über die genauen molekularen Vorgänge der Schmerz-Chronifizierung noch immer unvollständig ist, sind die Identifizierung von Risikofaktoren vernünftige Schritte, um die individuelle Anfälligkeit für die Entwicklung chronischer Schmerzen zu bestimmen. Das Hauptziel dieser Doktorarbeit bestand daher in der Identifikation humaner genetischer Biomarker für chronische Schmerzzustände.
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.
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.
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.
In welchen Situationen steht ein Tier unter Stress und wie beeinflusst Stress dessen Wohlbefinden? Dies sind die Kernfragen, mit denen Zoos konfrontiert sind, wenn es darum geht, den Bedürfnissen ihrer Tiere gerecht zu werden. Die Beantwortung dieser Fragen ist jedoch angesichts der großen individuellen Variabilität des Inputs, der Stress hervorrufen kann,und des Outputs, der das Wohlbefinden bestimmt, eine Herausforderung. Um diese Herausforderung zu meistern, brauchen Zoos Kenntnisse darüber, welche Haltungsbedingungen und Managementsituationen Verhaltens-, physiologische oder emotionale Veränderungen hervorrufen, sowohl positive als auch negative. Dies trifft insbesondere auf Arten zu, die aufgrund ihrer Biologie und des großen öffentlichen Interesses große Anforderungen an das Management in Menschenobhut stellen, wie den Afrikanischen Elefanten. Die vorliegende Arbeit hatte daher das Ziel, unter Berücksichtigung der individuellen Variation die Auswirkungen bestimmter Managementsituationen auf physiologischen Stress und das Wohlbefinden der Tiere zu evaluieren.
Für diese Arbeit wurden zehn Afrikanische Elefanten aus drei Zoos im Rahmen eines Experiments in 2016 und 2017 mehrmals untersucht. Dieses Experiment umfasste zum einen die Messung von physiologischem Stress auf der Basis der Konzentration des „Stresshormons“ Cortisol im Speichel der Elefanten. Zu diesem Zweck wurden an bestimmten Tagen und zu folgenden Zeitpunkten Speichelproben entnommen: morgens, nachmittags vor und mehrmals nach einer von zwei Managementsituationen (positives Verstärkungstraining [PRT] und neuartiges Enrichmentobjekt [NOV]). Zum anderen diente die Exposition gegenüber dem neuartigen Enrichmentobjekt als sogenannter Novel Object Test. Dieser Standardtest der Persönlichkeitsforschung bei Tieren deckte bei anderen Arten konsistente Verhaltensunterschiede zwischen Individuen auf. Um zu untersuchen, ob dies auch auf Afrikanische Elefanten zutrifft, wurden die individuellen Verhaltensreaktionen auf das neuartige Objekt aufgezeichnet. Darüber hinaus wurden unabhängig von dem Experiment vor und nach einem Transport jeweils morgens und nachmittags Speichelproben von dem transferierten Tier und von zwei Tieren im Bestimmungszoo gesammelt, um den Effekt dieses potenziellen Stressors auf die individuellen Cortisolspiegel zu untersuchen.
Publikation A zeigt, dass die Elefanten unter den Bedingungen des Routinemanagements (das heißt dem routinemäßigen Tagesablauf der Tierpflege) am Morgen signifikant höhere Cortisolwerte im Speichel aufwiesen als am Nachmittag. Diese diurnale Variation der Cortisolsekretion ist typisch für tagaktive Arten und wurde daher auch für die untersuchten Elefanten erwartet. Unter Stressbedingungen wurde weder ein signifikanter Unterschied zwischen den Cortisolspiegeln vor und nach dem Transport noch zwischen den Cortisolwerten am Morgen und am Nachmittag festgestellt. Der prozentuale Unterschied zwischen dem morgendlichen und nachmittäglichen Cortisolspiegel war jedoch beim transferierten Tier nach dem Transport wesentlich geringer als vor dem Transport, was möglicherweise auf eine Stressreaktion auf den Transport und die Eingewöhnung im neuen Zoo hindeutet. Darüber hinaus zeigten sich deutliche Cortisolanstiege unmittelbar nach der ersten Zusammenführung des transferierten Tiers mit dem Bullen im neuen Zoo. Dieses Ergebnis demonstriert zum einen, dass Cortisol physiologischen Stress widerspiegelt. Zum anderen zeigt es die Notwendigkeit, zeitnah nach einem Stressor Speichelproben zu entnehmen, was nach dem Transport nicht möglich war.
Die Studie in Manuskript B zeigt unterschiedliche durchschnittliche Zeitverläufe der Cortisolantworten im Speichel auf die Managementsituationen PRT und NOV. PRT könnte aufgrund des beobachteten cortisolsenkenden und damit potenziell stresspuffernden Effekts förderlich für das Wohlbefinden sein. NOV induzierte im Mittel eine moderate, kurzfristige Cortisolantwort. Dies deutet darauf hin, dass die Tiere geringem physiologischem Stress ausgesetzt waren, mit dem sie jedoch erfolgreich umgehen konnten. Außerdem bestand eine bemerkenswerte individuelle Variation in den Cortisolverläufen in derselben Situation. Die Unterschiede im Cortisolspiegel zwischen den Tieren hingen mit dem Alter (bei NOV) und dem Zoo (bei PRT) zusammen. Der Effekt des Geschlechts und des Haltungssystems auf den Cortisolspiegel war hingegen variabel. Die Ergebnisse der Studie zeigen, dass die individuelle Variation der Cortisolsekretion unbedingt berücksichtigt werden muss, um physiologischen Stress zuverlässig zu erkennen.
Die Studie in Manuskript C ergab, dass sich die untersuchten Tiere im Novel Object Test konsistent in ihrem Verhalten gegenüber einem neuartigen Objekt unterschieden. Dieses Ergebnis zeigt, dass der Novel Object Test auch bei Elefanten genutzt werden kann, um die Persönlichkeit der Tiere zu untersuchen...
Zur Evolution der Hirnmorphologie und Anpassungen an Extremhabitate im Taxon Poecilia (Teleostei)
(2020)
Diese Dissertation befasst sich mit den Auswirkungen kontrastierender Umweltbedingungen auf die Gehirnmorphologie von neotropischen Fischen der Gattung Poecilia, welche unterschiedlichen abiotischen sowie biotischen Stressoren ausgesetzt sind. Da das Gehirn der Teleostei ein energetisch kostspieliges Organ und viel plastischer ist als z. B. bei Säugetieren, stellt sich die Frage, wie die Gehirnanatomie durch divergierende ökologische Faktoren in verschiedenen Umgebungen geformt wird, die ´extreme´, ´ressourcenbeschränkte und günstige´ Umgebungen repräsentieren. Zur Beantwortung dieser Frage wurden intraspezifische Studien an freilebenden und Laborindividuen von Poecilia-Arten durchgeführt, um die evolutionäre und ökologische Formgebung des Gehirns besser verstehen zu lernen. Im ersten Teil der Arbeit wurden Gehirnvolumina verglichen zwischen reproduktiv isolierten Populationen des neotropischen Fisches Poecilia mexicana (Ntotal = 95), die in Dunkelheit leben (Cueva Luna Azufre), in einem nahegelegenen Oberflächenhabitat (El Azufre), welcher giftigen Schwefelwasserstoff enthält und einer Kombination aus beiden Stressoren Dunkelheit und H2S (Cueva del Azufre). In einer zweiten Studie wurde auf anatomische („konvergente“) Veränderungen im Teleost-Gehirn entlang eines natürlichen Gradienten von Sulfidkonzentrationen getestet. Hierfür wurden Gehirne (Ntotal = 100) von P. mexicana verglichen, die in drei Flusssystemen im Süden Mexikos unabhängig voneinander eine erhöhte Toleranz gegenüber Schwefelwasserstoff (H2S) entwickelt haben. Dazu gehörten eine phylogenetisch alte H2S-adaptierte Form (P. sulphuraria) und zwei P. mexicana Formen, welche frühere Stufen der Anpassung an H2S darstellen. Zur Überprüfung des Einflusses anderer abiotischer und biotischer Faktoren auf die Morphologie der Gehirnregionen wurde eine weitere Studie durchgeführt. Hierbei wurden die phänotypischen Variationen der Gehirnregionen und der Körpermorphologie von Poecilia vivipara-Populationen (Ntotal = 211) aus Lagunen des Restinga de Jurubatiba Nationalpark untersucht, die sich in abiotischen Umgebungsbedingungen, insbesondere in Salzgehalt, Wassertransparenz, Phosphat und Nitrat sowie biotischen Faktoren wie Prädatorendichte unterschieden. Die erste Studie zeigte lebensraumabhängige Unterschiede bei freilebenden Fischen. Bei Fischen, die in Dunkelheit ohne H2S (LA) oder in Oberflächenhabitaten mit H2S lebten, wurden vergrößerte telenzephale Lappen, kleinere Augen und optische Tekta gefunden. Fische aus der sulfidischen Höhle (CA) zeigten zusätzlich vergrößerte Corpus cerebelli. Der Vergleich mit den Gehirnen von Labor aufgezogenen weiblichen Fischen (Ntotal = 25) zeigt eine allgemeine Verringerung der Gehirngröße sowie eine geringe Abweichung der Gehirngröße zwischen Labor aufgezogenen und freilebenden Fischen. Auch in der zweiten Studie zeigten alle in H2S-haltigen Lebensräumen lebenden Fische kleinere Augen, ein kleineres optisches Tektum und ein kleineres Gehirnvolumen, jedoch größere Corpus cerebelli und Hypothalamusvolumen als Fische aus nicht-sulfidischen Lebensräumen. Flusssystem-spezifische Effekte wurden für die telenzephalen Lappen, das gesamte Gehirn und die Augengröße festgestellt, da die Geschlechter je nach Quelle des Flusssystems unterschiedlich auf das Vorhandensein von H2S reagierten. Die dritte Studie zeigt auch, dass andere Umwelteinflüsse bemerkenswerte Verschiebungen im Gehirn und in den Gehirnregionen verursachen können. Fische, die im Süßwasser leben, zeigten eine verringerte Gesamthirngröße, telenzephale Lappen, Corpus cerebelli und Hypothalamusvolumen. Darüber hinaus zeigten Fische aus Salzwasserlagunen (hypersalin), ein verringertes Volumen des optischen Tektum, während telenzephale Lappen, Corpus cerebelli und Hypothalamusvolumen im Vergleich zu Süßwasserfischen vergrößert waren. Im Brackwasser lebende Fische wiesen im Vergleich zu Süß- und Salzwasserfischen die größten Gehirnregion-Volumen auf. Darüber hinaus zeigten die Ergebnisse über die Lagunen hinweg auch Unterschiede in der Morphologie der Kopf- und Augendurchmesser. Bei Augengröße, Kopfgröße, optischem Tektum Volumen, Hypothalamusvolumen und dem Gesamthirnvolumen wurde ein sexueller Dimorphismus beobachtet. Die dargestellten Ergebnisse verdeutlichen, dass die gefundenen Muster nahezu mit denen von H2S-Fischen identisch sind. Die ausgeprägten Unterschiede in den Hirnregionen zwischen freilebenden Fischen können als Teil der Mosaikentwicklung interpretiert werden. Die Ergebnisse der Laborpopulation zeigen jedoch eine hohe phänotypische Plastizität. Diese Studie unterstreicht damit die Bedeutung der Kombination der Untersuchung von freilebenden mit im Labor lebenden Individuen zur Beantwortung von Fragen der Gehirnentwicklung. Kleinere Augen und ein kleineres optisches Tektum, aber größere telenzephale Lappen wurden auch bei Fischen aus einem sulfidischen Oberflächenhabitat in der Nähe einer der Höhlen gefunden und sind den Ergebnissen zufolge das Resultat begrenzter Sehkraft in trüben sulfidischen Lebensräumen.
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Den photoaktivierbaren Schutzgruppen PPGs wurde als wichtige Werkzeuge, um z. B. biologische Prozesse zu untersuchen, in den letzten Jahren eine beachtliche Aufmerksamkeit zuteil. Der Einsatz von PPGs weist gegenüber chemischen Schutzgruppen wertvolle Vorteile auf, was deren Einsatz für biologische Konzepte attraktiv macht. Insbesondere, da keine weiteren Reagenzien außer Licht als Mittel für die Photolyse benötigt werden. Darüber hinaus ist es möglich, durch Einsatz moderner Lasertechnik, eine homogene Bestrahlung des Reaktionsvolumens mit einer hohen Lichtdosis auf einer, im Vergleich zu klassischen Lichtquellen, kürzeren Zeitskala zu gewährleisten.
Die Diversität der einsetzbaren photosensitiven Schutzgruppen, kommt einerseits der Vielfalt der anwachsenden biochemischen Fragestellungen insofern zugute, als dass die ausgewählten PPGs auf verschiedenste Anforderungen der zu untersuchenden Systeme zugeschnitten werden können. Anderseits kann die, durch einige Problemstellungen, erforderte chromatische Orthogonalität der eingesetzten Schutzgruppen, gewährleistet
werden, deren Umsetzung sich in den letzten Jahren in zahlreichen Studien als erfolgsversprechend erwies. Beide Aspekte sind unter anderem Gegenstand der vorliegenden Arbeit.
Zum einen sollte das Photocaged Puromycin als photolabiles Antibiotikum Derivat, mithilfe der Cumarinylmethyl-Schutzgruppe (DEACM-Puromycin) optimiert werden und mit dem vorherigen Nitrobenzyl-geschützten NVOC-Puromycin mittels spektroskopischer und biochemischer Methoden verglichen werden. Zum anderen sollte eine neue Strategie etabliert werden, mit deren Hilfe das photolytisch entschützte Puromycin erneut deaktiviert werden kann.
DEACM-Puromycin konnte mithilfe eines fünfstufigen Syntheseweges hergestellt werden. Ausgehend von 7-Amino-4-methylcumarin, dessen allylische Methylgruppe durch die Riley-Reaktion mit Selendioxid Se2O zum entsprechenden DEACM-Aldehyd oxidiert wurde und anschließende Reduzierung in Anwesenheit von NaBH4 zum Cumarinalkohol DEACM-OH. Eine nicht toxische Variante, bei welcher Selendioxid umgangen wurde, zeichnete sich ebenso als zielführend aus. DEACM-OH und Puromycin konnten im Anschluss über ein Carbonat-Intermediat miteinander als Carbamat verknüpft und mithilfe von HPLC aufgetrennt werden.
Die Vorrangigkeit des neuen photolabilen Puromycin Derivates (DEACM-Puromycin), wurde zuerst mithilfe der Laser-NMR-Spektroskopie sowie HPLC Verfahren erfasst. Spektroskopische Analysen im Rahmen einer Kollaboration mit dem AK von Professor Wachtveitl bestätigten, dass DEACM-Puromycin für biologische Anwendungen geeignetere photolytische Eigenschaften, wie z. B. einen höheren Extinktionskoeffizienten, eine bathochrome Verschiebung des Absorptionsmaximums, sowie eine höhere Quantenausbeute und Uncaging Effizienz der Photolyse, aufwies. Basierend auf einer vergleichbaren HOMO-LUMO Differenz beider Verbindungen (DEACM-OH und DEACM-Puromycin), konnte die Spaltung der Schutzgruppe mithilfe der Differenz der Fluoreszenzslebensdauern mit einer Rate von 0,71*108 s-1 charakterisiert werden. Dies war im Vergleich zum vorherigen NVOC-Puromycin um eine Größenordnung höher. Weitere durchgeführte spektroskopische Methoden wurden mittels quantenchemischer Rechnungen unterstützt, um wichtige Erkenntnisse der kinetischen und dynamischen Abläufe der Photolyse des geschützten Puromycins anzueignen, z. B.:
• Der zur Photolyse von DEACM-Puromycin konkurrierende Fluoreszenzprozess, kann durch protische Medien unterdrückt werden. Dies und die somit ermöglichten Wasserstoffbrückenbindungen, welche die entstehenden ionischen Intermediate während der Photolyse stabilisieren, könnten sich für die Erhöhung der Quantenausbeute der photolytischen Abspaltung von DEACM-Puromycin zu Nutze gemacht werden.
• Anhand von Experimenten auf der ultrakurzen Zeitskala wurde die Population eines angeregten S1-ICT-Zustandes detektiert. Bei diesem findet, in Anwesenheit von polarem Lösungsmittel, einen Ladungstransfer der Diethylaminoreste auf den Cumarinring statt.
• Polare Lösungsmittel bewirken ebenfalls den Übergang zu einem TICT Zustand, welcher als nichtstrahlende Relaxation die Fluoreszenz des DEACM-Puromycins reduziert. Die Auswahl von Substituenten sowie polaren und protischen Lösungsmitteln zur Begünstigung der ICT- sowie TICT- Zustände, könnte zukünftig zur Optimierung der Photolyse Effizienz herangezogen werden.
Die gelungene Optimierung des geschützten Puromycins als ein photosensitives Antibiotikum, durch die DEACM-Schutzgruppe, konnte mittels eines XTT-Zellviabilität-Experimentes mit sf9-Insektenzellen nachgewiesen werden. Zusätzlich konnte die lichtkontrollierte Puromycylierung zur Visualisierung neu synthetisierter Proteine als weitere Funktion des optimierten photoaktivierbaren Puromycins in Zusammenarbeit mit dem AK. Schumann (MPI für
Hirnforschung, Frankfurt am Main) nachgeprüft werden. Obwohl beide photocaged Verbindungen, DEACM- sowie das vorherige NVOC-Puromycin, eine vergleichbare Zellpermeabilität zu den präparierten Neurozellen aufwiesen, zeigte DEACM-Puromycin unter gleichen Bedingungen nach der Belichtung ein signifikant intensiveres Puromycylierungsignal als NVOC-Puromycin. Unter der Annahme, dass sich mehr NVOC- als DEACM-Puromycin in
den Zellen befand, bestätigt diese Beobachtung die Vorrangigkeit des DEACM-Derivates, aufgrund seiner bereits optimierten photochemischen Eigenschaften. Durch den Einsatz eines Zwei-Photonen-Lasers, konnte die Eignung von DEACM-Puromycin für die raumselektive Steuerung der Detektion von neu exprimierten Proteinen, mit größerer Auflösung auf subzellularem Level, nachgewiesen werden.
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Even one century after Santiago Ramón y Cajal’s groundbreaking contribu- tions to neuroscience, one of the most fundamental questions in the field is still largely open, namely understanding how the shape of a dendrite is adapted to its specific biological function. A systematic investigation of this problem is challenging both technically and conceptually because neurons have diverse genetic, molecular, morphological, connectional and functional properties.
In the light of the preceding, dendritic arborisation (da) neurons of the Drosophila melanogaster larva PNS have proven to be an excellent model system for the study of such growth and patterning processes. Structure and function in these cell classes are intimately intertwined, as class type-specific dendritic arbour differentiation processes are required to satisfy a given phys- iological need. Also, there is a remarkable genetic toolkit that enables one to selectively and reproducibly label, image and manipulate each one of these sensory neuron classes. In this thesis, I address the aforementioned open problem by linking single-cell patterning, information processing and wiring optimisation in sensory da neurons to behaviour in Drosophila larva.
In particular, I study Class I ventral peripherical dendritic arborisation (c1vpda) neurons. These are a class of proprioceptive neurons that relay information on the position of the larva’s body back to the CNS during crawling behaviour to assure proper locomotion. Their stereotypical comb- like shaped dendritic branches spread along the body-wall, and they get noticeably deformed during crawling behaviour. The bending of the den- dritic branches is hypothesised to be a possible mechanism to transduce the mechanosensory inputs arising from cuticle folding. Interestingly, c1vpda neurons do not necessarily satisfy optimal wiring constraints since they are required to pattern into a specific shape to fulfil their function. Therefore, I considered the da system to study how the specific functional requirements may be combined with optimal wiring constraints during development.
Although the molecular machinery of dendrite patterning in c1vpda neurons is well studied, the precise elaboration of the comb-like shaped dendrites of these cells remains elusive. Moreover, even though a lot of work has been put into the description and quantification of growth processes of the nervous system, there are still few solid and standardised models of arbour staging and patterning. Importantly, the defining parameters that determine the dendrite elaboration program that in turn is responsible for creating the final arbour morphology are still unknown. As a result, unraveling possible universal stages of dendrite elaboration shared between different model systems and cell types is challenging.
Thus, in order to understand the development of the fine regulation of branch outgrowth that leads to the observed terminal arbour morphology in the mature cell, I collected in vivo, long-term, non-invasive high temporal res- olution time-lapse recordings of dendritic trees during the differentiation process in the embryo and its maturation phase in the larva. For further analysis, I developed new algorithms that quantified the structural changes in dendrite morphology in the time-lapse videos. My approach provides a framework to analyse such developmental data, or any dataset comprising continuous morphological dynamical processes in an unbiased way. Using these newly developed methods, I examined the development of a sample of c1vpda cells and identified five stages of differentiation in these data: initial stem polarization, extension, pruning, stabilization, and isometric stretching during larval stages.
The beginning of the growth process is marked by the polarisation of the main stem. Subsequently, during the extension phase, branches emerge interstitially from the existing main stem. Later, higher-order branches sprout from pre-existing lateral branches, increasing arbour complexity. This is followed by a pruning stage where developmental intermediate dendritic branches are removed. This step leads to a spatial rearrangement of the dendritic tree. The end of the pruning step is followed by a stabilisation period where arbour morphology remains virtually unaltered in the embryo. After hatching, c1vpda dendrites experience an isometric scaling, with their branching complexity and pattern being invariant across all larval stages.
After dissecting the c1vpda dendrites spatiotemporal differentiation process, I established a link between dendritic shape and behaviour. I measured intra- cellular Ca++ activity in the dendrite branches of l1 larvae during forward locomotion, while simultaneously recording branch deformation using a dual genetic line. I reported that post-embryonic c1vpda dendrites Ca++ responses increased in freely crawling larvae. Furthermore, I showed strong correlations between Ca++ signal and deformation of the comb-like dendritic ranches during body-wall contractions.
Then, using a geometrical model, I provided evidence that the pruning stage could reorganise the dendrite morphology to maximise mechanosensory re- sponses during body wall contraction. I showed that the angle orientation of each side branch correlates with the bending curvature and thus with the me- chanical displacement of the cell membrane during locomotion. During the pruning phase, I observed a preferential reduction of less efficient branches with low bending curvature, influencing the mechanisms of dendritic sig- nal integration of c1vpda sensory neurons. I proceeded to quantify branch dynamics at single tip resolution during pruning, providing evidence that a simple random pruning mechanism is sufficient to remodel the tree structure compatible with the observed way.
I used these time-lapse data to constrain a new computational noisy growth model with random pruning based on optimal wiring principles. This model is able to generate highly realistic synthetic c1vpda morphologies. The model furthermore requires few parameters to generate highly accurate temporal development trajectories and morphologies at single-cell level. Utilising this data and model enabled me to investigate upon the hypothesis that a noisy dendrite growth and random pruning mechanism synergise to achieve den- dritic trees efficient in terms of both wiring and function. My findings show how single neurons can create functionally specialised dendrites while min- imising wiring costs, elucidating how general principles of self-organisation may be involved in the generation of these structures.
Spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative movement disorder caused by expansion of CAG repeats in the ATXN2 gene beyond 33 units, while healthy individuals carry 22-23 repeats. First symptoms of SCA2 include uncoordinated movement, ataxic gait and slowing of the saccadic eye movements in line with the early pronounced atrophy of cerebellum, spinal cord and brainstem. Cerebellar Purkinje cells and spinal cord motor neurons are the most affected cells from ATXN2 expansions. Later on, patients manifest distal amyotrophy, problems in breathing and swallowing, depression and cognitive decline caused by widespread degeneration throughout the brain. The striking loss of mass in the brain, due to severe myelin fat atrophy, is accompanied by a similar reduction in the peripheral fat stores. After the devastating progression of disease, the severity and duration of which depends on the CAG repeat size, genetic background and environmental factors, patients succumb to SCA2 mostly because of respiratory failure at the terminal stage. Larger repeat sizes lead to an earlier manifestation of the disease and a more rapid progression. Aside from SCA2, intermediate-length and short pathogenic CAG expansions in ATXN2 between 26-39 repeats significantly increase the risk of developing other neurodegenerative disorders, such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), fronto-temporal lobar dementia (FTLD) or Parkinson plus tauopathies like progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) in various cohorts across the world.
Ataxin-2 (ATXN2) is a ubiquitously expressed cytosolic protein most famous for its involvement in neurodegenerative disease caused by the expanded poly-glutamine (polyQ) domain corresponding to a genomic (CAG)n tract. This N-terminal polyQ domain has no known function, other than increasing the aggregation propensity of mutant ATXN2 and facilitating interaction with other polyQ containing proteins, leading to their sequestration. The progressive accumulation of ATXN2 into cytosolic foci, and also that of its interaction partners over time, underlies the molecular pathomechanism. Next to polyQ domain, ATXN2 also contains a Like-Sm domain (Lsm), an Lsm-associated domain (LsmAD), multiple proline-rich domains (PRD) and a Poly(A)-Binding-Protein (PABP)-interacting motif (PAM2).
Through its Lsm/LsmAD domains, ATXN2 directly binds to a large number of transcripts, regulating their quality and translation rate. In a similar fashion, through its direct interaction with PABP via PAM2 motif, ATXN2 indirectly modifies the fate of even larger number of transcripts and global translation. Several PRDs scattered across the protein help ATXN2 associate with growth factor receptors and other endocytosis factors, modulating nutrient uptake and downstream signaling.
ATXN2 is a stress response factor. Therefore, its involvement in nutrient uptake plays a crucial part in cell’s capability to overcome non-permissive conditions. Upon nutrient deprivation, oxidative stress, proteotoxicity, heat stress or Ca2+ imbalance, ATXN2 relocalizes into cytosolic ribonucleoprotein particles known as stress granules (SGs), together with PABP, several eukaryotic translation initiation factors, many other RNA-binding proteins (RBP) with their target transcripts and the small ribosomal subunit. Collectively, they modulate the stability of the trapped transcripts, favoring the maturation and translation of IRES-dependent stress response proteins instead, according to the specific need. Many RBPs interact either directly or in an RNA-dependent manner in the SGs, and due to the large number of ALS-causing mutations identified in them (such as TDP-43, FUS, TIA-1, hnRNPA2/B1), SGs became a hot topic in neuropathology. Acute SGs serve to halt translation and growth, and to spend energy only for survival until stress disappears. However, chronic SG assembly eventually activates apoptotis leading to cell death. While the polyQ expansions in ATXN2 enhance SG stability, reduce their dissociation rate after stress, and lead to aberrant post-translational modifications of other SG components like TDP-43, complete loss of ATXN2 delays SG formation and results in easily dissolvable foci.
Most of the stressors that induce SG formation eventually converge on energetic deficit. Therefore, it is logical that the ultimate task of SGs is to stop further growth when it cannot be afforded. In yeast, the molecular mechanism underlying this growth arrest was explained as sequestration of the master growth regulator complex, Target-of-Rapamycin Complex 1 (TORC1), into SGs in an ATXN2-dependent manner. The repressor effect of ATXN2 on mammalian TORC1 (mTORC1) and global protein translation had already been documented in earlier studies; complete loss of ATXN2 function in knock-out mouse (Atxn2-KO) resulted in mTORC1 hyperactivity and transcriptional upregulation of multiple ribosomal subunits indicating an increased need for these machines. ...
Derzeit breiten sich gebietsfremde Stechmücken (Diptera: Culicidae) aufgrund von Globalisierung und Klimawandel auf der ganzen Welt aus und bilden neue, stabile Populationen. Wegen ihrer hämatophagen Ernährungsweise sind sie Überträger von Pathogenen, die teilweise schwere bis tödliche Krankheiten beim Menschen, seinen Haustieren oder auch Wildtieren auslösen können. Mit den Stechmücken treten daher auch Infektionskrankheiten vermehrt in Gebieten auf, in denen sie vorher nicht vorkamen oder als bereits ausgerottet galten. Da die meisten im Menschen wirksamen Pathogene nicht durch Impfungen kontrolliert werden können, bleibt als eine der wenigen Möglichkeit der Krankheitsprävention die Dezimierung der Stechmückenpopulation. Daher sind Stechmücken momentan im Fokus von biologischer und epidemiologischer Forschung. Diese hat zum Ziel epidemische Krankheitsausbrüche vektorübertragener Krankheiten in der menschlichen Population zu verhindern. Eine Verringerung der lokalen Stechmückenpopulation bis hin zum Aussterben kann durch die Verwendung von Insektiziden, die Vernichtung von Bruthabitaten oder anderen Kontrollmaßnahmen erreicht werden. Jedoch sind diese Maßnahmen unterschiedlich effektiv, haben zum Teil unerwünsch-te ökologische und gesundheitsschädigende Folgen und sind unterschiedlich aufwendig und kostenintensiv in der Anwendung. Für die Entwicklung eines integrierten, effektiven, zielgerichteten und kostengünstigen Vektormanagements fehlen bislang jedoch die populationsbiologischen Grundlagen.
Ziel dieser Arbeit ist daher die Schaffung der Datengrundlage eines Integrierten Stechmückenmanagements für die Asiatische Buschmücke (Aedes japonicus japonicus THEOBALD 1901), die am weitesten verbreitete exotische Stechmücke in Deutschland. Schwerpunkte dafür wurden auf das zeitliche und räumliche Vorkommen, die Temperaturabhängigkeit des Lebenszyklus, sowie die Wirksamkeit von Kontrollmethoden gelegt.
Die Kenntnis der räumlichen Verbreitung und saisonalen Häufigkeit der Stechmücken ist notwendig, um befallene Standorte und Zeitpunkte des größten Populationszuwachses definieren zu können. Die Verbreitung und die Häufigkeit der endothermen Stechmücken sind stark von der Umgebungstemperatur abhängig, die beispielsweise deren Entwicklungsdauer und Sterblichkeit beeinflusst. Dabei entwickeln sich die verschiedenen Stadien (Ei, Larven, Puppe, Imago), die eine Stechmücke während ihres Lebens durchläuft, in Abhängigkeit von der Umgebungstemperatur unterschiedlich und haben jeweils andere Temperaturpräferenzen. Lebenszyklustabellen geben die Entwicklungsdauer und Mortalität pro Stadium in Abhängigkeit von der Temperatur an. Mit ihrer Hilfe können somit die räumlichen und zeitlichen Vorkommen und Häufigkeiten einer Stechmückenart berechnet werden. Dies ist insbesondere für Stechmücken in Gebieten mit jahreszeitlichen Temperaturveränderungen wichtig. Um Daten für eine solche Lebenszyklustabelle aufnehmen zu können, ist es notwendig Laborexperimente bei festgelegten Temperaturen durchzuführen. Die Voraussetzung dafür ist, dass die Stechmückenart im Labor optimale Bedingungen erhält, um ihren Lebenszyklus abschließen zu können. In dieser Arbeit wurde daher ein Laborprotokoll entwickelt, mithilfe dessen der Lebenszyklus der Asiatischen Buschmücke im Labor untersucht werden kann. Dazu wurden systematisch die Fütterung, die innerartliche Konkurrenz und das Wasservolumen des Brutge-fäßes für die aquatischen Stadien erprobt. Auf Basis dieses Protokolls wurden anschließend die Temperatureinflüsse auf die Entwicklung aller Stadien aufgenommen. Diese Daten dienten der Parametrisierung eines populationsdynamischen Modells. Dieses wurde verwendet, um Standorte mehrjähriger Populationen zu definieren, saisonale Häufigkeiten für Deutschland zu berechnen, durch Temperaturveränderungen hervorgerufene zukünftige Verbreitungsgebiete vorherzusagen, sowie Effekte von Kontrollmaßnahmen auf die Häufigkeit der Asiatischen Buschmücke zu modellieren.
Um eine dauerhafte Kontrolle der Stechmückenvektoren zu gewährleisten, ist weiterhin die permanente Neuentwicklung von wirksamen Kontrollmethoden notwendig. Dazu gehört die präventive Vermeidung von Bruthabitaten der aquatischen Stadien von Stechmücken. Die exotischen Stechmücken, die in Deutschland etabliert sind, gehören mehrheitlich der Gattung Aedes an und sind sogenannte Gefäßbrüter. Ihre bevorzugten Bruthabitate sind kleine Was-seransammlungen wie sie in Baumhöhlen, Gesteinsauswaschungen, Gießkannen, Regentonnen und Blumenuntersetzern vorkommen. In dieser Arbeit wurde untersucht, welche Farben und Volumina von Plastikbechern die Asiatische Buschmücke zur Eiablage bevorzugt, um präferierte Bruthabitate gezielt zu identifizieren und verringern zu können. Auch die Bereitstellung von Insektiziden wird durch in Stechmücken auftretende Insektizidresistenzen erschwert. Insektizide sollen dabei umweltfreundlich, spezifisch für den Zielorganismus und nicht gesundheitsschädlich für den Menschen sein. Weiterhin sind eine gute Anwendbarkeit, geringe Kosten und eine hohe Effizienz wünschenswert. Eine Quelle für potentielle Insektizide sind pflanzliche Stoffe, zum Beispiel ätherische Öle. Diese sind leicht erhältlich, natürlichen Ursprungs und wirksame Vergrämungsmittel gegen stechbereite Stechmückenweibchen. In dieser Arbeit wurde nach einer Literaturrecherche Nelkenöl ausgewählt und als Insektizid gegen Larven der Asiatischen Buschmücke getestet. Dafür wurden die akute toxische Wirkung von Nelkenöl bei drei Temperaturen untersucht und zusätzlich die Wirkung von Nelkenöl auf die Eiablage im Freiland. Nelkenöl zeigte dabei sowohl eine larvizide als auch eine eiablagehemmende Wirkung. Weiterhin wurde Kupfer in Form von kupferhaltigen Euromünzen als Larvizid untersucht. Kupfer ist ein wirksamer Stoff gegen die aquatischen Stadien von Stechmücken. Allerdings wurde der Stoff noch nicht in Form der einfach zu handhabenden, leicht erhältlichen Kupfermünzen getestet. Dazu wurden Vorexperimente durchgeführt, um herauszufinden, wieviel Kupferionen sich aus den Münzen lösen lassen. Anschließend wurde der akut toxische Effekt auf Larven der Asiatischen Buschmücke untersucht.
Ein Integriertes Stechmückenmanagement hat zum Ziel, die lokale Stechmückenpopulation zu kontrollieren, um so Stichen und daraus resultierender Krankheitsübertragung vorzubeugen. Dies erfolgt über die Aufklärung von Betroffenen, der Überwachung der Stechmückenpopulation, dem Testen auf Pathogenbefall und der direkten Kontrolle von Stechmücken. Diese Arbeit leistet einen Beitrag zu den Kenntnissen über die Laborhaltung einer exotischen Stechmückenart, zur Identifizierung von Bruthabitaten, zur zeitlichen und räumlichen Festlegung von Kontrollmaßnahmen und zur Anwendung von Larviziden und eines Vergrämungsmittels. Mit dieser Arbeit wurde die Grundlage eines faktenbasierten Integrativen Stechmückenmanagements für die Asiatische Buschmücke entwickelt, das eventuell auch auf weitere Aedes-Arten übertragbar ist, und als Handlungsempfehlung für politische Entscheidungstragende dienen kann.
Xenorhabdus and Photorhabdus are bacterial genera that live in symbiosis with entomopathogenic nematodes of the genera Steinernema and Heterorhabditis, respectively. These nematodes infect insect larvae through the trachea and then enter the hemocoel. Once inside the hemocoel, the nematodes release the bacteria through their intestine. Thereafter, the bacteria become active and kill the larvae within 48 h. During this process, the immune system of the insect host is compromised by molecules produced and secreted by the bacteria. This illustrates that the bacteria possess not only a large arsenal of biological weaponry such as antibiotics and fungicides but also lipases, proteases, etc. Therefore, they are not only able to kill the insect but also protect the cadaver from other food competitors.
During the past decades, a large number of natural products have been identified from Xenorhabdus and Photorhabdus. However, the targets and functions for many of these biological molecules are still unknown. Therefore, the goal of the doctoral thesis is to elucidate the modes of action of these natural products from Xenorhabdus and Photorhabdus with the main focus on non-ribosomal peptides (NRPs). The work can be divided into two parts. Initially, it starts with the synthesis of natural compounds and various chemically modified derivatives. Besides that, a number of peptides were synthesized for other projects to either verify their structures or quantify the amount produced by the bacteria. Then, secondary analysis methods are applied and provide additional insight into the modes of action of these compounds.
During the thesis, I carried out peptide synthesis either manually or with an automatic synthesizer system from Biotage. Here, the Fmoc-protecting group strategy was preferred in most cases. Natural products, such as silathride, xenoautoxin, phenylethylamide, tryptamide, rhabdopeptide, 3-hydroxyoctanoic acid, and PAX, were produced during this process. Furthermore, new peptide derivatives derived from synthetic NRPS approaches using the XU concept or SYNZIP were generated as standards.
Most of these natural compounds were experimentally verified by MIC tests (broth microdilution, plate diffusion) to be biologically active. For example, silathride, phenylethylamide, and tryptamide showed quorum quenching effects when tested against Chromobacterium violaceum. Initial results from collaborators (PD Dr. Nadja Hellmann/Mainz) showed that tryptamide and phenylethylamide interact with membrane or membrane proteins.
(R)-3-hydroxyoctanoic acid was synthesized to verify the molecule structure of phototemtide A, a cyclic lipopeptide with antiprotozoal activity. The rhabdopeptides are another class, which showed remarkable antiprotozoal effects. However, their mode of action was unknown. These compounds are relatively short peptide sequences, which contain hydrophobic residues, such as valine, leucine, or phenylalanine. Moreover, they possess N methylation, resulting in a rod-shaped highly hydrophobic structure. In this work, I synthesized eight new derivatives of rhabdopeptides for photo-affinity labeling (PAL). These molecules should react covalently under UV-light irradiation with the biological target of the peptides. In addition, these derivatives can be enriched in a pull-down assay using click chemistry. Afterward, analytic methods such as mass detection (proteome analysis) can be applied to elucidate the protein targets.
The PAX peptides derivatives are well-known to have anti-microbial activities and believed to be secreted into the environment by the producing bacteria. However, I found that the majority of these peptides are located in the cell pellet fraction and not in the supernatant. This has been shown through quantification using HPLC MS. New PAX derivatives were synthesized, which carry a moiety suitable for covalent modification using click-chemistry, therefore being functionalizable with a fluorescence dye. In collaboration with Dr. Christoph Spahn (Prof. Dr. Mike Heilemann group), we used confocal, as well as super-resolution microscopy, in particular, single-molecule localization microscopy (SMLM) to investigate the spatial distribution of clickable PAX molecules and revealed that they localize at the bacterial membrane. Furthermore, bioactivity assays revealed that the promotor exchanged X. doucetiae PAX mutants, which do not produce PAX molecules without chemical induction (hereby termed as pax-), were more susceptible to several insect AMPs tested. Based on these findings, a new dual mechanism of action for PAX was proposed. Besides the previously shown antimicrobial activity, these molecules with a positive net charge of +5 (pH = 7) would bind to the negatively charged bacterial surface. Hereby, the surface charge (typically negative) would be inversed resulting in a protective effect for Xenorhabdus against other positively charged AMPs. Furthermore, PAX was investigated as AMP against E. coli to study its antimicrobial mechanism of action. Here, the results show that PAX can disrupt the E. coli membrane at higher concentrations (> 30 µg/ml), enter the cytosol, and lead to reorganization of subcellular structures, such as the nucleoid during this process.
Another aspect of secondary analysis is the application of proteomic analysis. Therefore, I induced X. nematophila, X. szentirmaii, and P. luminescens with insect lysate. These samples were analyzed using HPLC-MS/MS (Q Exactive) together with a database approach (Maxquant/Andromeda). The results showed that in all strains the lipid degradation and the glyoxylate pathway were induced. This is in line with the given insect lysate diet, which mostly contained lipids. Moreover, several interesting unknown peptides and proteins were also upregulated and might get into the focus of future research.
Die CXCR4/CXCL12-Achse ist von entscheidender Bedeutung für die Entstehung und Aufrechterhaltung einer gesunden, reifen Hämatopoese. Erstmals beschrieben wurde der später als CXCR4 bezeichnete Rezeptor 1996 allerdings als Co-Rezeptor für den Eintritt humaner HI-Viren in Lymphozyten. Ein großes Interesse bestand daraufhin darin, sowohl natürliche Inhibitoren des G-Protein gekoppelten Rezeptors zu identifizieren, als auch synthetische herzustellen, um einen Eintritt des Virus in den menschlichen Organismus zu verhindern bzw. seine Ausbreitung zu unterbinden. Ein natürlich vorkommender CXCR4-Ligand, der 2015 von Zirafi und Kollegen erstmals beschrieben wurde, fand sich im Hämofiltrat von Dialysepatienten. Der im weiteren Verlauf als EPI-X4 bezeichnete CXCR4-Antagonist wurde als Spaltprodukt von Albumin identifiziert, welches über viele Spezies hochkonserviert ist. Diese Eigenschaft interpretieren wir als Hinweis auf eine relevante physiologische Funktion des Peptids. Da die Halbwertszeit von natürlich vorkommendem EPI-X4 beim Menschen vermutlich sehr kurz ist, sind in vivo- und darauffolgende in vitro-Analysen schwierig durchzuführen. In-vitro-Spike-Analysen von synthetischem EPI-X4 in humanem Plasma ergaben eine Halbwertszeit von nur 17 Minuten. Die geringen auftretenden Konzentrationen erschweren die Problematik zusätzlich. In dieser Arbeit sollen deshalb im Mausmodell in vivo-Analysen durchgeführt werden, um die Effekte von potentiell entstehendem EPI-X4 in verschiedenen experimentellen Ansätzen aufzudecken. Ein probates, hier verwendetes Mittel, ist die Analyse einer Knock-out (KO)-Maus. Die für die Bindung an CXCR4 entscheidende Aminosäure von EPI-X4, das am N-Terminus gelegene Leucin, wurde durch Alanin ersetzt, welches die Entstehung von EPI-X4 unterbindet und zusätzlich dessen Bindung an CXCR4 verhindert. Mit Hilfe zweier Mausmodelle können nun Analysen im EPI-X4-defizienten Modell durchgeführt werden, die im Umkehrschluss Informationen über die organismische Wirkung von EPI-X4 beinhalten. Zunächst wurde in beiden Modellen die physiologisch normale reife und unreife Hämatopoese charakterisiert. Hierbei zeigte sich kein signifikanter systematischer Einfluss von EPI-X4 auf reife Leukozyten (WBC), lediglich eine leichte Lymphozytose in der HR-Ala-Variante. Im weiteren Verlauf der homöostatischen Analyse der Hämatopoese der Ala-EPI-X4-Mäuse zeigten sich keine signifikanten Unterschiede zu wildtypischen Mäusen. Sowohl reife als auch unreife Zellen zeigten, außer in der T- und B-Zelllinie, keine zahlenmäßigen oder funktionalen Auffälligkeiten, weder im Blut, noch in der Milz oder im Knochenmark. Analysen der Zellzyklusaktivität unterschiedlicher Unreifestufen wiesen ebenfalls keine Auffälligkeiten auf. Diese Daten einer normalen, von einer C57Bl/6-Maus zu erwartenden Ergebnisse dienten als Grundlage zur Bewertung und Analyse von durchgeführten hämatopoetischen Stressmodellen. Hierfür wurden
zunächst hämatopoetische Stamm- und Vorläuferzellen (HSPC) mobilisiert. In den angewandten Mobilisierungsmodellen fanden sich lediglich unter G-CSF-Behandlung im Knochenmark eine größere Anzahl Granulozyten, was auf einen Einfluss von EPI-X4 auf HSPC schließen lässt. Um potentielle Auswirkungen von EPI-X4 im Knochenmark weiter zu untersuchen, wurde ein weiteres Stressmodell gewählt, welches ebenfalls mutmaßlich die Bedingungen zur EPI-X4-Generierung schafft: Subletale Bestrahlung der Mäuse sorgt für Schäden an allen Zellarten im Knochenmark, es wird ein steriles entzündliches Milieu kreiert. Unter diesen Umständen wurde die Regeneration von Blutzellen analysiert. Es zeigten sich keine nennenswerten Unterschiede sowohl in der akuten Phase des Schadens als auch in regelmäßigen Blutentnahmen während der Regenerierung.
Die Beschreibung von natürlich vorkommendem EPI-X4 in Vaginal- und Rektalschleimhaut zeigt seine Entstehung an Schleimhautbarrieren auf. Ala-EPI-X4-Muse werden deshalb auf deren Durchlässigkeit untersucht: LPS-Konzentrationen als Marker für eindringende pathogene Bakterien wurden im Plasma untersucht. Hierbei zeigten sich keine Unterschiede zwischen den Gruppen, eine Störung scheint hier nicht vorzuliegen. Zusätzlich wurde die Zusammensetzung des Mikrobioms im Darm untersucht, da beschrieben wurde, dass sich Mikrobiom und die Integrität der Darmschleimhaut gegenseitig beeinflussen. Im Falle der EPI-X4-defizienten Mäuse liegt zwar keine offensichtliche pathologische Veränderung vor, dennoch konnte in männlichen HR-Ala-Mäusen die Abwesenheit des Proteobakteriums Parasutterella nachgewiesen werden. Um eine mögliche Defizienz der Barrierefunktion weiter zu testen, wurden zwei Stressmodelle gewählt: Zunächst wurde den Mäusen eine akute, sterile Peritonitis zugefügt, woraufhin die Anzahl und Zusammensetzung der ins Peritoneum einströmenden Leukozyten analysiert wird. Die Reaktion auf diesen Entzündungsprozess war nicht verändert. Ähnliche Ergebnisse zeigten sich auch in einem akuten Colitis-Stressmodell.
Insgesamt konnte in dieser Arbeit mithilfe zweier KO-Mausmodelle die Rolle von EPI-X4 in der Hämatopoese und der Immunologie von Mäusen beginnend charakterisiert werden. Die homöostatische Hämatopoese scheint kaum von EPI-X4 abhängig zu sein, lediglich die Zahl der B- und T-Zellen, insbesondere der regulatorischen T-Zellen, scheint beeinflusst. Damit einhergehend konnten Veränderungen in Zytokinlevels bei inflammatorischen Ereignissen gezeigt werden. Experimente zur beeinflussten, eventuell gestörten Barrierefunktion von Ala-EPI-X4-Mäusen zeigten vielversprechende Ansätze und sollten in Zukunft weiter analysiert werden.
The early-diverging oomycetes contain a large number of holocarpic obligate parasites of diatoms, algae, aquatic phycomycetes, and invertebrate animals. These organisms are diverse and widespread. However, taxonomic placement most of the early-diverging oomycetes remains provisional and unresolved, since many have not been sequenced and studied for molecular phylogeny. Here, we report the taxonomy and phylogeny of several holocarpic oomycetes that we have rediscovered and newly classified, including several new species combinations. Phylogenetic reconstructions revealed that the type species of genus Ectrogella (E. bacillariacearum) is a member of the early-diverging Saprolegniales, while the type species of Olpidiopsis (O. saprolegniae) and Pontisma (P. lagenidioides) grouped within the early-diverging lineage of oomycetes forming distinct clades. Since the monophyletic red-algae parasitoids are unrelated to the Olpidiopsis, these were reclassified to the genus Pontisma, while genus Diatomophthora was introduced to accommodate all the diatom parasitoids that were previously assigned to Olpidiopsis. In addition, four new oomycete parasitoids, Miracula helgolandica, Miracula moenusica, Diatomophthora drebesii and Olpidiopsis parthenogenetica and a single rediscovered species, Diatomophthora gillii, are also classified here, including eight new species combinations of red-algae parasites (Pontisma bostrychiae, P. heterosiphoniae, P. muelleri, P. palmariae, P. porphyrae, P. pyropiae) and diatom parasitoids (Diatomophthora drebesii, D. gillii). The results obtained in this study have further improved the resolution and expanded the knowledge on the phylogeny of the earlydiverging oomycetes, leading to the establishment of three new orders (Miraculales, Diatomophthorales, Pontismatales) and one order (Anisolpidiales) being reintroduced.
Das Gehirn weist in mehreren Bereichen anatomische Asymmetrien zwischen beiden Hemisphären auf, so auch in Bereichen der Hörrinde. Zudem ist bereits langjährig bekannt, dass menschliche Sprache vorrangig in der linken Gehirnhälfte, d.h. linksseitig lateralisiert, verarbeitet wird. Daraus folgend stellt sich die Frage, ob dies eine besondere Spezialisierung ist, oder ob es noch weitere lateralisierte Hirnfunktionen gibt. Viele akustische Signale haben dabei frequenzmodulierte (FM) Komponenten, die im Hörsystem für die Erkennung nach Parametern wie Richtung und Dauer der Modulation analysiert werden müssen. Ob die Analyse von FM-Komponenten oder einzelner Reizparameter im Gehirn lateralisiert stattfindet, wurde in der Literatur meist mit bildgebenden Verfahren untersucht.
Für das Erkennen und Unterscheiden der Modulationsrichtung weist eine Vielzahl von Studien auf eine erhöhte Aktivität in der rechten Hörrinde hin. Für die Analyse von Stimulusdauern ist es bisher allerdings noch unklar bzw. umstritten, ob diese lateralisiert erfolgt. Für die Untersuchung der Lateralisierung einfacher Sprachkomponenten werden häufig Konsonant-Vokal-Silben (CV-Silben) verwendet. In einer Vielzahl von Studien konnte eine linkslastige Lateralisierung, wie bei der Spracherkennung, gezeigt werden.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde nun untersucht, ob ein eindeutigeres Muster von Lateralisierung zu finden ist, wenn diese in Wahrnehmungsexperimenten, untersucht wird. Dabei wurde ein zu untersuchender Teststimulus (FM-/CV-Stimulus) auf einem Ohr mit einem kontralateralen breitbandigen Rauschen auf dem anderen Ohr gleichzeitig präsentiert. Durch die Struktur der Hörbahn kann dabei davon ausgegangen werden, dass in einer Hemisphäre des Vorderhirns vorrangig Informationen aus dem kontralateralen Ohr verarbeitet und Informationen aus dem ipsilateralen Ohr unterdrückt werden und sich somit Rückschlüsse auf die Funktion/Beteiligung einer Hemishpäre ziehen lassen. Das Rauschen diente dabei zur unspezifischen Aktivierung der gegenüberliegenden Hemisphäre.
Die Lateralisierung wurde systematisch für unterschiedlich komplexe Reize untersucht. Dazu wurden in zwei Versuchsreihen Unterscheidungsexperimente durchgeführt, die sich in mehrere Messungen (mit mehreren Durchläufen) mit unterschiedlichen Parametereinstellungen gliederten. Pro Durchlauf musste sich die Versuchsperson immer zwischen zwei Antwortmöglichkeiten entscheiden (2-AFC-Verfahren). Der Schalldruckpegel des Rauschens war dabei für alle Messungen konstant. Der Schalldruckpegel der Teststimuli blieb zwar während einer Messung konstant, wurde jedoch innerhalb eines Experimentes von Messung zu Messung reduziert.
In einer gemeinsamen Analyse wurden jeweils die Fehlerraten und Reaktionszeiten beider Ohren, getrennt nach Seite und FM-/ CV-Stimulus, miteinander verglichen, um so auf eine mögliche Lateralisierung schließen zu können. Damit die Daten der Versuchspersonen bei vergleichbarer Schwierigkeit analysiert werden konnten, wurde als Vergleichswert zwischen allen Versuchspersonen der Schalldruckpegel der ersten Messung mit einer Fehlerrate von mindestens 15,0 % gewählt (15 %-Kriterium). Um auszuschließen, dass das Hörvermögen der Versuchspersonen Unterschiede zwischen beiden Ohren aufweist, wurde vor jeder Messung der „Punkt subjektiver Gleichheit“ für die Lautstärke-wahrnehmung zwischen linkem und rechten Ohr bestimmt.
In der ersten Versuchsreihe wurde dabei die Verarbeitung der Modulationsrichtung und der Stimulusdauer von FM-Stimuli untersucht. Es zeigte sich für beide Experimente, dass ein sinkender Schalldruckpegel des FM-Stimulus zu einer steigenden Fehlerrate führte. Unter Anwendung des 15 %-Kriteriums waren die Fehlerraten für die Unterscheidung der Modulationsrichtung signifikant geringer, wenn der FM-Stimulus auf dem linken Ohr präsentiert wurde. Dies ist ein deutlicher Hinweis für eine rechtslastige Lateralisierung.
Für die Unterscheidung der Stimulusdauer gab es dagegen keinen signifikanten Unterschied zwischen den Fehlerraten beider Ohren. Somit muss davon ausgegangen werden, dass beide Hemisphären für diese Aufgabe benötigt werden und eine bilaterale Verarbeitung stattfindet. In den Reaktionszeiten konnten in beiden Experimente keine signifikanten Unterschiede gezeigt werden. Die Unterscheidung der Modulationsrichtung wurde dabei von allen Versuchspersonen als einfacher eingestuft als die Unterscheidung der Stimulusdauer, was sich auch in niedrigeren Antwortschnelligkeit und Fehlerraten bei vergleichbaren Schalldruckpegeln zeigte.
In der zweiten Versuchsreihe wurde als Referenzmessung nochmals die Unterscheidung der Modulationsrichtungen von FM-Stimuli durchgeführt. Anschließend wurde die Unterscheidung von „da“ und „ga“ untersucht. Diese CV-Silben differieren ausschließlich in der FM-Komponente. Die Untercheidung von CV-Silben ohne Unterschied in der FM-Komponente wurde mittels „ta“ und „ka“ getestet. Für alle drei Experimente zeigte sich, dass ein geringerer Schalldruckpegel des FM- oder CV-Stimulus zu einer steigenden Fehlerrate führte. Unter Anwendung des 15 %-Kriteriums zeigte sich für die Unterscheidung der Modulationsrichtung ein Trend zu niedrigeren Fehlerraten bei der Präsentation des FM-Stimulus auf dem linken im Vergleich mit dem rechten Ohr. In den Reaktionszeiten konnten keine signifikanten Unterschiede gezeigt werden.
Für die Unterscheidung von „da“ und „ga“ ließ sich unter Anwendung des 15 %-Kriteriums in den Fehlerraten und Reaktionszeiten kein Vorteil eines Ohres nachweisen. Dagegen zeigten sich klare Unterschiede bei einzelnen Versuchspersonen. So waren die Fehlerraten für Versuchspersonen, die vorwiegend „da“ erkannt bzw. gehört hatten signifikant höher, wenn der CV-Stimulus auf dem rechten Ohr präsentiert wurde, für „ga“-Hörer war das Gegenteil der Fall. In den Reaktionszeiten konnte kein signifikanter Zusammenhang nachgewiesen werden. Somit ließ sich zeigen, dass je nach Strategie der Versuchsperson bzw. deren individueller Wahrnehmung der CV-Silben, Unterschiede in der Lateralisierung erreicht werden können.
Für die Unterscheidung von „ta“ und „ka“ zeigten sich unter Anwendung des 15 %-Kriteriums signifikant niedrigere Fehlerraten und Reaktionszeiten, wenn der CV-Stimulus auf dem linken Ohr präsentiert wurde. Dies weist deutlich auf eine rechtslastige Lateralisierung hin. Vergleicht man alle drei Experimente ließ sich zudem zeigen, dass die Unterscheidung der Modulationsrichtung einfacher war als die Unterscheidung verschiedener CV-Stimuli. Dabei war die Unterscheidung von „da“ und „ga“ für die Versuchspersonen schwieriger als die Unterscheidung von „ta“ und „ka“. Allerdings konnte in den Lateralisierungsdaten kein direkter Zusammenhang zwischen den FM- und „da“-/„ga“-Stimuli gezeigt werden.
Zusammenfassend konnte in allen fünf Experimenten eine verschieden stark lateralisierte Verarbeitung von akustischen Stimuli bei gleichzeitigem kontralateralen Rauschen gezeigt werden. Der Vorteil eines Ohres (bzw. einer Hemisphäre) war sowohl von der Aufgabe als auch vom Stimulustyp abhängig. Dabei gab es zum Teil starke Unterschiede in der Effektstärke und dem Grad der Lateralisierung zwischen den einzelnen Versuchspersonen. Insgesamt konnte gezeigt werden, dass sich die hier angewendete psychophysische Methode gut eignet, um Ergebnisse zur Lateralisierung von akustischen Stimuli zu gewinnen und somit die Verhaltensrelevanz von Ergebnissen aus Studien mit bildgebenden Verfahren zu überprüfen.
This manuscript-based thesis is divided into four chapters. Chapter one is an introduction to lichens and the Antarctic. It introduces the goal of the thesis and the problems related with lichen systematics and the lack of knowledge about Antarctic lichens. The Antarctic is one of the last wildernesses, isolated from the other continents by the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, the Subantarctic Front, the Antarctic Polar Front, and the Drake Passage. Terrestrial life in Antarctica is restricted to widely separated and small ice-free areas that cover only 0.3% of the continent. Colonization of the Antarctic is a challenge for many taxa and is related to their ability for long-range dispersal and their adaptation to the harsh climate. Antarctic terrestrial ecosystems are significantly threatened by climate change, invasive species, and their interactions. Glacial retreat caused by higher than average temperatures exposes new habitats that can be easily colonized from local biota, but non-native species can also be favored by the new climatic conditions. In addition, propagule movement mediated by humans can introduce new species or change the population structure of many taxa. The terrestrial biota is comprised almost exclusively by “lower organisms” (invertebrates, bryophytes, algae, lichenized fungi, and microorganisms). Lichens are the dominant component, and the most important primary producers. Lichens are symbiotic associations consisting of a fungus (mycobiont) and one or more photosynthetic (photobiont) partners. They can disperse sexually or vegetatively. There are several problems related to the symbiotic nature of lichens that do not facilitate easy identification; although molecular data offers additional evidence, species delimitation in lichens is still not straightforward. The true number of species is underestimated due to the presence of cryptic species and species pairs. Recommended universal fungal barcode sequences (e. g. ITS) sometimes fail to delimit species pairs. Thus, it is necessary to identify fast-evolving markers that allow for the delimitation of closely related species before proceeding with the analysis of lichen populations. The goal of this thesis is to elucidate the so far unknown genetic structure among Antarctic lichen populations because of the immediate consequences for conservation strategies. The thesis focuses not only on patterns of differentiation and gene flow, but also investigates the question of human-mediated propagule transfer into Antarctica and among Antarctic sites. This project provides data on the genetic structure of Antarctic lichens that is urgently needed to develop conservation strategies in the face of global warming and increased human activities in the region. Due to the fact that it is not possible to apply all of the unspecific fingerprinting methods to lichens, microsatellites or simple sequence repeats (SSRs) are one of the best tools to investigate the genetic structure of lichen populations. SSRs offer the possibility to discriminate the lichen partners, but species-specific microsatellites have been developed for only a few species. Regarding the Antarctic, only one species has been studied with SSRs.
The second chapter describes new methods and tools to delimit closely related species of lichens and provides fast evolving markers to characterize their genetic structure. The chapter introduces the lichen species analysed in this thesis and the problems related to their correct identification by morphological methods and molecular data. Chapter two explains the sampling methods for lichen populations and the localities from small areas in which the species pairs occur together. Then the methods used to generate and validate fungal specific microsatellites that cross-amplify species pairs are described. This chapter focuses on the species pair Usnea antarctica and U. aurantiacoatra because they are the most common lichens in the Maritime Antarctic. An internal transcribed spacer (ITS) marker do not discriminate between these species, and some authors have suggested to synonymize them. Unpublished results from another Antarctic species pair, Placopsis antarctica and P. contortuplicata, are included to confirm the capability of SSRs to discriminate closely related lichen species. This thesis is the first study to generate SSRs that cross amplify species pairs, using BLAST to compare one genome against the other to obtain markers with the same length in flanking regions. The de novo developed SSRs are able to discriminate the two closely related species, and can detect variability at the population level. In the end of the chapter, ITS sequences, microsatellites, and SNPs are used to delimit the species of Usnea antarctica and U. aurantiacoatra. The chapter exposes the importance of a correct species delimitation and the ability of SSRs and SNPs to delimit the Antarctic Usnea species pair compared with the recommended universal fungal barcode sequence ITS. ...
As fossil resources are diminishing, environmental concerns arise and chemical synthesis often involves expensive catalysts or extensive extraction procedures, the demand for production of industrially relevant compounds from renewable resources increases. In this context, engineering microorganisms for production of specialty chemicals, such as 3-alkylphenols, presents an attractive, environmental-friendly approach. 3-alkylphenols have various applications: due to their antiseptic and stabilizing properties many 3-alkylphenols, including 3-methylphenol (3-MP), are utilized as additives in disinfectant reagents and biological products, while they can be also implemented as platform chemicals for production of lubricating oil additives or flavors. Some 3-akylphenols have potential for transmission control of the disease sleeping sickness that is transmitted by tsetse flies in sub-saharan Africa, since 3-ethylphenol (3-EP) and 3-propylphenol (3-PP) and to a lesser degree 3-MP were found to attract tsetse flies and improved catch rates in impregnated tsetse fly traps. Microbial fermentation of 3-alkylphenols would provide a simple and inexpensive way for local communities in Africa to produce these compounds and prepare their own tsetse fly traps.
Some molds synthesize 3-MP as an intermediate during biosynthesis of the mycotoxin patulin. However, the heterologous host Saccharomyces cerevisiae has advantageous traits for industrial application, since it is well characterized, robust, simple to handle and easily genetically accessible. In this thesis, genetical engineering approaches were utilized to establish the yeast S. cerevisiae for biotechnological production of 3-alkylphenols. As a proof of concept, the iterative polyketide synthase from Penicillium patulum, 6-methylsalicylic acid synthase (MSAS), and 6-methylsalicylic acid (6-MSA) decarboxylase PatG from Aspergillus clavatus were heterologously expressed in S. cerevisiae resulting in the first reported de novo biosynthesis of 3-MP via 6-MSA in yeast from sugars (Hitschler & Boles, 2019). It was shown that codon-optimization and genomic integration of heterologous genes, high initial cell densities and a balanced expression of PatG were beneficial for heterologous production of up to 589 mg/L 3-MP in S. cerevisiae. However, toxicity of 3-MP limited higher product accumulation.
Different in vivo detoxification strategies were implemented to face this bottleneck. Growth tests revealed that 3-methylanisole (3-MA) is less toxic to the yeast cells than 3-MP. Expression of an orcinol-O-methyltransferase from chinese rose hybrids (OOMT2) was combined with in situ extraction converting the toxic 3-MP product into the volatile 3-MA and accumulating up to 211 mg/L 3-MA in the dodecane phase. Alternatively, up to 533 mg/L 3-MP glucoside were synthesized by expression of a UDP-glycosyltransferase (UGT72B27) from Vitis vinifera in the 3-MP producing strain, revealing saccharose as beneficial carbon source and ethanol growth phase as essential for high 3-MP production, although 3-MP conversions were not yet complete. Both detoxification strategies allowed circumvention of the toxicity imposed limited product accumulation. This was demonstrated when both detoxification strategies were combined with redirection of the carbon flux through deletion of phosphoglucose isomerase gene PGI1 and feeding a mixture of fructose and glucose leading to majorly improved product formation, with up to 899 mg/L 3-MA/3-MP and 873 mg/L 3-MP/3-MP glucoside, compared to less than 313 mg/L product titers in the wild type controls (Hitschler & Boles, 2020).
For provision of the tsetse fly attractants 3-EP from propionyl-CoA and 3-PP from butyryl-CoA, the substrate promiscuities of MSAS and PatG were exploited. However, slower formation rates with the alternative substrates propionyl-CoA and butyryl-CoA suggested that competing formation of 6-MSA from the preferred priming unit acetyl-CoA was dominating in vivo. Indeed, 3-EP or 3-PP formation was not observed in 3-MP producing yeast strains. Assuming that intracellular levels of propionyl-CoA and butyryl-CoA were limiting 3-EP and 3-PP formation, different strategies were implemented to raise the supply of these alternative priming units and successfully compete with acetyl-CoA for MSAS priming.
Supplementation of propionate increased propionyl-CoA levels by endogenous pathways sufficiently to enable 3-EP formation in yeast mediated by MSAS and PatG. Deletion of the 2-methylcitrate synthases CIT2 and CIT3 revealed that degradation of propionyl-CoA was not limiting 3-EP formation at this stage. In order to raise propionyl-CoA levels further, a heterologous propionyl-CoA synthase (PrpE) was expressed in the 3-MP producing yeast strain leading to up to 12.5 mg/L 3-EP with propionate feeding and blockage of degradation. Moreover, PrpE enabled also 3-EP formation without propionate supplementation suggesting that an endogenous supply of propionate existed that was reactivated by PrpE. As threonine or 2-ketobutyrate feeding increased 3-EP titers in combination with PrpE, this indicated that threonine degradation via 2-ketobutyrate was responsible for the endogenous propionate supply. Moreover, expression of branched-chain ketoacid dehydrogenase complex from Pseudomonas putida combined with PrpE provided propionyl-CoA from endogenous 2-ketobutyrate and raised 3-EP titers up to 5.9 mg/L compared to 2.8 mg/L with only PrpE indicating a potential route for optimization of 3-EP titers independent of propionate or threonine feeding.
For 3-PP production from butyryl-CoA, a heterologous ‘reverse ß-oxidation’ pathway was introduced in the 3-MP producing yeast strain providing sufficient butyryl-CoA for biosynthesis of up to 2 mg/L 3-PP. Degradation of the precursor via ß-oxidation was slightly limiting, since deletion of fatty acyl-CoA oxidase POX1 increased 3-PP titers slightly to 2.6 mg/L.
As the concentrations of 3-alkylphenols are close to the concentrations implemented in tsetse fly traps, the engineered yeast strains have the potential for simple and inexpensive on-site production of 3-alkylphenols as tsetse fly attractants by local rural communities in Africa. In spite of this success, 3-MP remained the main product in the developed yeast strains. Since 3-EP and 3-PP are more efficient tsetse fly attractants, a shift in substrate specificities of MSAS and PatG is desirable for a more favorable 3-EP/3-MP and 3-PP/3-MP product ratio regarding tsetse fly attraction. During rational engineering of MSAS, the MSASQ625A/I752V mutant showed a beneficial shift of product ratios with up to 11 mg/L 3-EP/63 mg/L 3-MP and 4.5 mg/L 3-PP/116 mg/L 3-MP, compared to a higher proportion of 3-MP with up to 343 mg/L, 11 mg/L 3-EP and 1.5 mg/L 3-PP in the wild type controls. Further engineering of MSAS and PatG might majorly improve production of 3-EP and 3-PP.
In summary, this thesis successfully established the yeast S. cerevisiae as cell factory for production of different 3-alkylphenols optimizing expression of the heterologous production pathway, elucidating means to detoxify products and establishing different approaches to increase intracellular levels of acyl-CoA precursors. The engineered yeast strains can be potentially implemented for simple and inexpensive fermentation of tsetse fly attractants in Africa.
Downy mildew of common sage (Salvia officinalis), caused by Peronospora salviae-officinalis, has become a serious problem in sage production worldwide. The causal agent of the disease belongs to the Pe. belbahrii species complex and was described as a species of its own in 2009. Nevertheless, very little is known about its infection biology and epidemiology. The aims of the current study were therefore to unravel the life cycle of this downy mildew and gain deeper insights into the epidemiology of the disease, as well as to clarify the species boundaries in the Pe. belbahrii species complex.
Infection studies showed that temperatures between 15 and 20 °C were most favourable for infection and disease progress. At 5 °C Pe. salviae-officinalis is still able to infect sage plants, but sporulation was only observed at higher temperatures. Furthermore, Pe. salviae-officinalis needs two events of leaf wetness or high humidity, a first one of at least three hours for conidial germination and penetration of the host, and a second one for sporulation. Additionally, contamination of sage seeds by Pe. salviae-officinalis was proven by seed washing and by PCR and DNA sequence comparisons, suggesting that infested seeds might play a major role in the fast spread of sage downy mildew, which is an important finding for phytosanitary or quarantine measures.
A protocol for fluorescence staining and confocal laser scanning microscopy was established and the whole life cycle of Pe. salviae-officinalis was tracked including oospore formation. The method was also used to examine samples of Pe. lamii on Lamium purpureum and Pe. belbahrii on Ocimum basilicum demonstrating the usefulness of this method for studying the infection process of downy mildews in general.
Peronospora species parasitizing S. sclarea, S. pratensis, O. basilicum, and Plectranthus scutellarioides were studied using light microscopy and molecular phylogenetic analyses based on six loci (ITS rDNA, cox1, cox2, ef1a, hsp90 and β-tubulin). The downy mildew on S. pratensis was shown to be distinct from Pe. salviae-officinalis and closely related to Pe. glechomae, and is herein described as a new taxon, Peronospora salviae-pratensis. The downy mildew on S. sclarea was found to be caused by Peronospora salviae-officinalis. The multi-gene phylogeny revealed that the causal agent of downy mildew on coleus is distinct from Pe. belbahrii on basil, and is herein described as a new taxon, Pe. choii.
The genus Giraffa likely evolved around seven million years ago in Indo-Asia and spread over the Arabian-African land bridge into Eastern Africa. The oldest fossil of the African lineage was found in Kenya and dated to 7-5.4 Mya. Beside modern giraffe, four additional African species have likely existed (G. gracilis, G. pygmaea, G. stillei, and G. jumae). Based on their morphological similarities, G. gracilis is often considered to be the closest relative of the modern giraffe. Nevertheless, the phylogeny within the genus Giraffa is largely unresolved.
Modern giraffe (Giraffa sp.) have been neglected by the scientific community for a long time and still very little is known about their biology. Traditionally, present-day giraffe have been considered a single species (G. camelopardalis) which is divided into six to eleven subspecies, with nine subspecies being the most accepted classification. This classification was based on morphological differences and geographic ranges. However, recent genetic analyses found hidden diversity within Giraffa and proposed four genetically distinct giraffe species (G. camelopardalis, G. reticulata, G. tippelskirchi, G. giraffa) with presumably little gene flow among them.
Gene flow on a population level is the exchange of genetic information among populations facilitated by the migration of individuals between populations. Additionally, it is an important criterion to delineate species, because many species concepts, especially the Biological Species Concept, rely on the concept of reproductive isolation. Yet, new genetic methods are identifying an increasing number of species that show signs of introgressive hybridization or gene flow among them. Therefore, strict reproductive isolation cannot always be applied to delineate species, especially in young, probably still diverging, species such as giraffe.
Therefore, giraffe are ideal study organisms to investigate the level of gene flow in recently diverged species with adjacent or potentially overlapping ranges. Furthermore, their recent classification as “Vulnerable” by the IUCN and their unreliable distribution maps require the genetic evaluation of their population structure, distribution and conservation status.
In Publication 1 (Winter et al. (2018a), Ecological Genetics and Genomics, 7–8, 1–5), I studied the distribution and matrilineal population structure of Angolan giraffe (G. giraffa angolensis) using sequences from the cytochrome b gene (1,140 bp) and the mitochondrial control region for individuals from across their known range and beyond, and additionally including individuals from all known giraffe species and subspecies. The reconstruction of a phylogenetic tree and a mitochondrial haplotype network allowed to identify the most easterly known natural population of Angolan giraffe, a population that was previously assigned to their sister-subspecies South African giraffe (G. giraffa giraffa), indicating the limit of classification by morphology and geography. Furthermore, the analyses show that Namibia’s iconic desert-dwelling giraffe population is genetically distinct, even from the nearest population at Etosha National Park, suggesting very limited, if any, natural exchange of matrilines. Yet, no geographic barriers are known for this region that would prevent genetic exchange. Therefore, the two populations are likely on different evolutionary trajectories. Limited individuals with an Etosha haplotype further suggest that translocation of Etosha giraffe into the desert population had only a minor impact on the local population. Two separate haplogroups within Etosha National Park suggest an “out of Etosha” radiation of Angolan giraffe to the East followed by a later back-migration.
In Publication 2 (Winter et al. (2018b), Ecology and Evolution, 8(20), 10156–10165), I investigated the genetic population structure of giraffe across their range (n = 137) with focus on the amount of gene flow among the proposed giraffe species with a 3-fold increased set of nuclear introns (n = 21). Limited gene flow of less than one effective migrant per generation, even between the closely related northern (G. camelopardalis) and reticulated giraffe (G. reticulata) further supports the existence of four giraffe species by a different methodology, gene flow. This is significant because most species concepts build on reproductive isolation. Furthermore, this result is corroborated by four distinct major clades in a phylogenetic tree analysis, and distinct clusters in Principal Component Analysis and STRUCTURE analysis. All these analyses suggest a low level of genetic exchange among the four giraffe species and, therefore, a high degree of reproductive isolation in accordance with the Biological Species Concept (BSC). In Addition, only a single individual in 137 was identified as being potential of natural hybrid origin, which promotes the four-species concept further. ...
The growing number of infections with multi-resistant bacteria or the current COVID-19 pandemic put compounds with therapeutic properties into the public focus. Non-ribosomal peptides (NRPs) are natural products that are already marketed as antibiotics, cytotoxic agents or immunosuppressants. Their biological activities rely on the structural diversity including non-proteinogenic amino acids (AAs), heterocycles or modifications like methylation or acylation.
The biosynthesis of NRPs is carried out by non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs). These multifunctional megaenzymes show a modular architecture like in an assembly-line. Each module is thereby responsible for the incorporation and modification of one AA and therefore contains different catalytic domains. The adenylation (A) domain recognizes and activates its specific substrate in an ATP-dependent manner which is transferred to a 4’-phosphopantetheine cofactor post-translationally attached to the thiolation (T) domain. Peptide bond formation between two T domain bound substrates catalysed by the condensation (C) domain transfers the growing peptide chain to the following module. Such a C-A-T module can be extended with optional domains to integrate structural diversity and a terminal thioesterase (TE) domain usually releases the peptide via hydrolysis or intramolecular attack of nucleophiles. Inspired by the modular architecture, NRPS engineering deals with the modification of NRPs in order to increase biological activities, circumvent bacterial resistances or create de novo peptides. This can be achieved by mutasynthesis or modification of the substrate binding pocket as well as single and multiple domain substitution. However, the few successful approaches led to impaired enzymes and did not establish a general applicable guideline. In the first publication as part of this work, the development of such a guideline comprising three rules is addressed. First, the A-T-C tridomain named exchange unit (XU) is seen as a catalytic unit instead of a module. When using them as building blocks, the C domain’s specificity for the AA of the following XU has to be considered as second rule. Third, a conserved WNATE motif within the C-A linker depicts the fusion point of the XUs. Upon heterologous expression of the cloned plasmids in E. coli and high performance liquid chromatography coupled mass spectrometry-based analysis of the extracts, the ambactin-producing NRPS from Xenorhabdus was reprogrammed with one and two XUs. This only leads to a moderate loss of production titre or an even higher one when the AA configuration was changed by introducing a dual condensation/epimerization (C/E) domain. The pentamodular GameXPeptide-producing NRPS was reconstructed using up to five XUs of four different NRPSs and even completely de novo synthetases were created. The second publication describes the exchange unit condensation domain (XUC) concept and relies on a fusion point between the two subdomains (N-terminal CDsub and C-terminal CAsub) of the C domain’s V-shaped pseudodimeric structure which generates A-T didomains with flanking CAsub and CDsub. These hybrid C domain-forming building blocks depict an improvement to the XU concept by avoiding the drawback of C domain specificity. This allows a more flexible NRPS engineering that can e.g. enable peptide library design. Furthermore, beside a combination of both concepts within one NRPS and a transfer to Bacillus NRPSs, the use of XUC with relaxed A domain specificity allowed further peptide modifications by introducing non-natural AAs. The third publication deals with aldehyde and alcohol-generating reductase (R) domains which depict an alternative for peptide release in NRPSs. A promoter exchange in X. indica identified a pyrazine-producing NRPS with a minimal architecture of an A, T and R domain and was therefore termed ATRed. R domains were additionally used in engineered NRPSs to produce pyrazinones and derivatives thereof by XU substitution although most constructs failed to show production. Beyond that, an R domain has been shown to replace a TE domain in wild type synthetases leading to slightly modified NRPs and the postulated biosynthesis was incidentally revised. Furthermore, an NRPS with terminal R domain was engineered to produce a free peptide aldehyde, which are known to be potent proteasome inhibitors. For the above mentioned ATReds, the presence of up to three coding regions was further identified in 20 different Xenorhabdus strains but only six of them were verified to produce pyrazines. All ATReds share variable sequence similarities among each other and were subsequently divided into three subtypes. One subtype is supposed to perform the pyrazine biosynthesis via a non-canonical catalytic triad.
Nematophilic bacteria as a source of novel macrocyclised antimicrobial non-ribosomal peptides
(2020)
A solution to ineffective clinical antimicrobials is the discovery of new ones from under-explored sources such as macrocyclic non-ribosomal peptides (NRP) from nematophilic bacteria. In this dissertation an antimicrobial discovery process –from soil sample to inhibitory peptide– is demonstrated through investigations on six nematophilic bacteria: Xenorhabdus griffiniae XN45, X. griffiniae VH1, Xenorhabdus sp. nov. BG5, Xenorhabdus sp. nov. BMMCB, X. ishibashii and Photorhabdus temperata. To demonstrate the first step of bacterium isolation and species delineation, endosymbionts were isolated from Steinernema sp. strains BG5 and VH1 that were isolated directly from soil samples in Western Kenya. After genome sequencing and assembly of novel Xenorhabdus isolates VH1 and BG5, species delineation was done via three overall genome relatedness indices. VH1 was identified as X. griffiniae VH1, BG5 as Xenorhabdus sp. nov. BG5 and X. griffiniae BMMCB was emended to Xenorhabdus sp. nov. BMMCB. The nematode host of X. griffiniae XN45, Steinernema sp. scarpo was highlighted as a putative novel species. To demonstrate the second step of genome mining and macrocyclic non-ribosomal peptide structure elucidation, chemosynthesis and biosynthesis, the non-ribosomal peptide whose production is encoded by the ishA-B genes in X. ishibashii was investigated. Through a combination of refactoring the ishA-B operon by a promoter exchange mechanism, isotope labelling experiments, high resolution tandem mass spectrometry analysis, bioinformatic protein domain analysis and chemoinformatic comparisons of actual to hypothetical mass spectrometry spectra, the structures of Ishipeptides were elucidated and confirmed by chemical synthesis. Ishipeptide A was a branch cyclic depsidodecapeptide macrocyclised via an ester bond between serine and the terminal glutamate. It chemosynthesis route was via a late stage macrolactamation and linearised Ishipeptide B was synthesised via solid phase iterative synthesis. Ishipeptides were not N-terminally acylated despite being biosynthesised from the IshA protein that had a C-starter domain. It was highlighted that more than restoration of the histidine active site of this domain is required to restore N-terminal acylation activity.
To demonstrate the final step of determination of antimicrobial activity, minimum inhibitory concentrations of Ishipeptides and Photoditritide from Photorhabdus temperata against fungi and bacteria were determined. None were antifungal while only the macrocyclic compounds were inhibitory, with Ishipeptide A inhibitory to Gram-positive bacteria at 37 µM. The cationic Photoditritide, a cyclic hexapeptide macrocyclised via a lactam bond between homoarginine and tryptophan, was 12 times more inhibitory (3.0 µM), even more effective than a current clinical compound, Ampicillin (4.2 µM). For both, macrocyclisation was hypothesised to contribute to antimicrobial activity. Ultimately, this dissertation demonstrated not only nematophilic bacteria as a source of novel macrocyclic antimicrobial non-ribosomal peptides but also a process of antimicrobial discovery–from soil sample to inhibitory peptide– from these useful bacteria genera. This is significant for the fight against antimicrobial resistance.
Photorhabdus and Xenorhabdus bacteria live in a highly specific symbiosis with nematodes that belong to the genus of Heterorhabditis and Steinernema, respectively. These cruiser type nematodes actively search for soil-dwelling insects and infect them via natural openings. Inside of the insect, the bacteria are released into the hemocoel where they start producing an array of secondary metabolites to bypass the insect immune system and kill the prey within 48 hours. Many of those natural products possess bioactivities against other bacteria, fungi, protozoa or insects, which makes them interesting candidates for pharmaceutical applications. Even though advanced molecular biological methods in combination with bioinformatics tools can now be used to predict biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) and their products, there are still many BGCs with unknown products. Even for the plethora of natural products that were successfully identified in the last couple of years, the exact ecological function often remains elusive, as laboratory conditions can vary considerably from the natural environment of the bacteria. Knowledge about the natural conditions that stimulate, or repress production of certain natural products and their underlying regulatory mechanisms yield new approaches for natural product research and enables possibilities for selective manipulations of the regulatory cascades.
The overarching goal of this work was to examine the regulatory networks in Photorhabdus and Xenorhabdus strains. The first part of this work focused on the Hfq-dependent regulation of specialized metabolite production. In those genera, the RNA chaperone, Hfq, represses expression of hexA, which encodes for a global transcriptional regulator that acts as the master repressor for SM production. Multiple global approaches were used to identify the sRNA ArcZ, which targets a specific region in the 5’-untranslated region of the hexA mRNA and ultimately guides Hfq in order to repress its expression. It was shown that a deletion of arcZ led to a drastic reduction of SM production in Photorhabdus and Xenorhabdus, consistent with the phenotype of their respective hfq deletion mutants. Transcriptomic profiling revealed far-reaching effects on the transcriptome, with up to 735 coding sequences significantly affected in the arcZ deletion strain. Finally, it was shown that the resulting chemical background, devoid of SMs, in combination with targeted promotor exchange can be used to exclusively overproduce a desired natural product, representing an alternative route of genetic manipulation.
The second part of this work focused on the influence and identification of insect related compounds that affect SM production in P. laumondii, X. szentirmaii and X. nematophila. Insect homogenate was generated from G. mellonella larvae, a model host for these bacteria. Supplementation of the cultivation medium with homogenate induced considerable shifts in the SM profiles of those bacteria. A global effect on the transcriptional output was determined by transcriptomic profiling. The core response to the simulation of an insect environment consisted of ten CDS, eight of which are involved in the degradation of fatty acids or the import of maltose and maltodextrin into the cells. Two abundant components in the insect homogenate, trehalose and putrescin, were added to the cultivation medium of those strains and subsequent HPLC-MS analysis revealed a direct correlation of their concentration in the medium and the production titres of certain SMs. These results indicated that the bacteria sense the insect environment via different insect specific components in order to initiate a metabolic adjustment, which is probably required for adaptation to the insect host.
The last part of this work examined the influence of other, so far not directly related genes on SM production, based on the isolation of P. laumondii transposon-insertion mutants with clear phenotypic alterations. Re-sequencing and SM profiling of the mutant strains revealed that a transposon-insertion in the gene encoding for a putative DNA-adenine methyltransferase affected SM production. The phenotype was confirmed by deleting this gene. Based on Single-Molecule Real-Time sequencing, the complete methylome of the WT, deletion- and complementation mutant were analysed (experimental work performed by Sacha J. Pidot, Melbourne, Australia). No obvious alterations were detected in the methylation patterns of the strains, indicating that the dam gene product does not methylate the adenine in GATC-motifs, as it was described in literature for E. coli. This data raises the question what the function of the putative DNA-adenine methyltransferase is in P. laumondii and how it can influence the secondary metabolism. Even though there is currently no clear evidence, the potential role of epigenetic gene regulation mechanisms should be considered in further work.
Diese Arbeit behandelt die Rolle der Proteinkinasen IKKe und TBK1 in der Progression von humanen malignene Melanomen und die Rolle von alpha-Synuclein in der Schmerzwahrnehmung von Mäusen.
A novel role for mutant mRNA degradation in triggering transcriptional adaptation to mutations
(2020)
Robustness to mutations promotes organisms’ well-being and fitness. The increasing number of mutants in various model organisms, and humans, showing no obvious phenotype (Bouche and Bouchez, 2001; Chen et al., 2016b; Giaever et al., 2002; Kok et al., 2015) has renewed interest into how organisms adapt to gene loss. In the presence of deleterious mutations, genetic compensation by transcriptional upregulation of related gene(s) (also known as transcriptional adaptation) has been reported in numerous systems (El-Brolosy and Stainier, 2017; Rossi et al., 2015; Tondeleir et al., 2012); however, the molecular mechanisms underlying this response remained unclear. To investigate this phenomenon, I develop and study multiple models of transcriptional adaptation in zebrafish and mouse cell lines. I first show that transcriptional adaptation is not caused by loss of protein function, indicating that the trigger lies upstream, and find that the response involves enhanced transcription of the related gene(s). Furthermore, I observe a correlation between levels of mutant mRNA degradation and upregulation of related genes. To investigate the role of mutant mRNA degradation in triggering the response, I generate mutant alleles that do not transcribe the mutated gene and find that they fail to induce a transcriptional response and display stronger phenotypes. Transcriptome analysis of alleles displaying mutant mRNA degradation revealed upregulation of a significant proportion of genes displaying sequence similarity with the mutated gene’s mRNA, suggesting a model whereby mRNA degradation intermediates induce transcriptional adaptation via sequence similarity. Further mechanistic analyses suggested RNA-decay factors-dependent chromatin remodeling, and repression of antisense RNAs to be implicated in the response. These results identify a novel role for mutant mRNA degradation in buffering against mutations. Besides, they hold huge implications on understanding disease-causing mutations and shall help in designing mutations that lead to minimal transcriptional adaptation-induced compensation, facilitating studying gene function in model organisms.
The application of natural products (NPs) as drugs and lead compounds has greatly improved human health over the past few decades. Despite their success, we still need to find new NPs that can be used as drugs to combat increasing drug resistance via new modes of action and to develop safer treatments with less side effects.
Entomopathogenic bacteria of Xenorhabdus and Photorhabdus that live in mutualistic symbiosis with nematodes are considered as promising producers of NPs, since more than 6.5% of their genomes are assigned to biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) responsible for production of secondary metabolites. The investigation on NPs from Xenorhabdus and Photorhabdus can not only provide new compounds for drug discovery but also help to understand the biochemical basis involved in mutualistic and pathogenic symbiosis of bacteria, nematode host and insect prey.
Nonribosomal peptides (NRPs) are a large class of NPs that are mainly found in bacteria and fungi. They are biosynthesized by nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) and display diverse functions, representing more than 20 clinically used drugs. Although a large number of NRPs have been identified in Xenorhabdus and Photorhabdus, the advanced genome sequencing and bioinformatic analysis indicate that these bacteria still have many unknown NRPS-encoding gene clusters for NRP production that are worth to explore. Therefore, this thesis focuses on the discovery, biosynthesis, structure identification, and biological functions of new NRPs from Xenorhabdus and Photorhabdus.
The first publication describes the isolation and structure elucidation of seven new rhabdopeptide/xenortide-like peptides (RXPs) from X. innexi, incorporating putrescine or ammonia as the C-terminal amines. Bioactivity testing of these RXPs revealed potent antiprotozoal activity against the causative agents of sleeping sickness (Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense) and malaria (Plasmodium falciparum), making them the most active RXP derivatives known to date. Biosynthetically, the initial NRPS module InxA might act iteratively with a flexible methyltransferase activity to catalyze the incorporation of the first five or six N-methylvaline/valine to these peptides.
The second publication focuses on the structure elucidation of seven unusual methionine-containing RXPs that were found as minor products in E. coli carrying the BGC kj12ABC from Xenorhabdus KJ12.1. To confirm the proposed structures from detailed HPLC-MS analysis, a solid-phase peptide synthesis (SPPS) method was developed for the synthesis of these partially methylated RXPs. These RXPs also exhibited good effects against T. brucei rhodesiense and P. falciparum, suggesting RXPs might play a role in protecting insect cadaver from soil-living protozoa to support the symbiosis with nematodes.
The third publication presents the identification of a new peptide library, named photohexapeptide library, which occurred after the biosynthetic gene phpS was activated in P. asymbiotica PB68.1 via promoter exchange. The chemical diversity of the photohexapeptides results from unusual promiscuous specificity of five out of six adenylation (A) domains being an excellent example of how to create compound libraries in nature. Furthermore, photohexapeptides enrich the family of the rare linear D-/L-peptide NPs.
The fourth publication concentrates on the structure elucidation of a new cyclohexapeptide, termed photoditritide, which was produced by P. temperata Meg1 after the biosynthetic gene pdtS was activated via promoter exchange. Photoditritide so far is the only example of a peptide from entomopathogenic bacteria that contains the uncommon amino acid homoarginine. The potent antimicrobial activity of photoditritide against Micrococcus luteus implies that photoditritide can protect the insect cadaver from food competitor bacteria in the complex life cycle of nematode and bacteria.
The last publication reports a new family of cyclic lipopeptides (CLPs), named phototemtides, which were obtained after the BGC pttABC from P. temperata Meg1 was heterologously expressed in E. coli. The gene pttA encodes an MbtH protein that was required for the biosynthesis of phototemtides in E. coli. To determine the absolute configurations of the hydroxy fatty acids, a total synthesis of the major compound phototemtide A was performed. Although the antimalarial activity of phototemtide A is only weak, it might be a starting point towards a selective P. falciparum compound, as it shows no activity against any other tested organisms.
Carotinoide sind Pigmente, die in Pflanzen, Algen, einigen Pilzen und Bakterien vorkommen. Sie spielen eine wichtige Rolle bei der Photosynthese durch Absorption von Licht und beim Lichtschutz. Sie sind verantwortlich für die braunen, roten, orangen und gelben Farben von Obst, Gemüse, Herbstblättern und die Farbe einiger Blumen und Algen. Tiere können keine Carotinoide synthetisieren, daher ist ihre Anwesenheit auf die Nahrungsaufnahme zurückzuführen. Carotinoide sind Tetraterpenoide (40C), die aus Isoprenoidmolekülen (5C) synthetisiert werden. Der Methylerythritol-phosphatweg ist der Carotinoid-Vorläuferweg, der die Isoprenoideinheiten bildet. Carotinoide haben aufgrund ihrer gesundheitlichen Vorteile das Interesse der Nutrazeutika-Industrie geweckt.
Fucoxanthin ist ein Carotinoid, das nur in Kieselalgen, Braunalgen, Haptophyten und einigen Dinoflagellaten vorkommt. Aufgrund seiner Vorteile zur Vorbeugung von Krebs, kognitiven Erkrankungen und Fettleibigkeit sowie seiner antioxidativen Eigenschaften ist Fucoxanthin ein sehr interessantes Molekül fur die Nutrazeutikabranche.
Fucoxanthin hat eine komplexe chemische Struktur mit einer Allenbindung und einer Epoxyketogruppe. Daher wäre seine chemische Synthese kompliziert, da es auch eine stereokontrollierte Synthese erfordert86. Aus diesem Grund ist die Extraktion aus Makroalgen oder Mikroalgen die Methode der Wahl für die kommerzielle Herstellung von Fucoxanthin.
In dieser Arbeit bestand das Ziel darin, die Fucoxanthin-Produktivität in Kieselalgen mit gentechnischen Methoden zu steigern, damit die Zellen mehr Fucoxanthin produzieren. Zu diesem Zweck wurde der Effekt der Insertion zusätzlicher Kopien von Genen in das Genom untersucht, die für geschwindigkeitsbestimmende oder Schlüsselenzyme im Carotinoid- und MEP-Weg kodieren.
Zu Beginn wurden diese Effekte bei einzelnen Mutanten beobachtet. Letztendlich ist es jedoch das Ziel, eine Mutante zu erzeugen, die mehrere geschwindigkeitsbestimmende Enzyme überexprimiert, um auf diese Weise Engpässe zu vermeiden. In früheren Studien erreichten Eilers et al.54 durch die einmalige Überexpression der psy- und dxs-Gene in der Kieselalge P. tricornutum einen 2.4- und 1.8-fachen Anstieg der Fucoxanthin-Spiegel.
In dieser Arbeit führte die Insertion zusätzlicher Kopien der Gene idi und pds2 nicht dazu, dass die Zellen mehr Fucoxanthin produzieren. Im Gegensatz dazu erreichten die Mutanten mit zusätzlichen Kopien der Gen ggpps und mit zusätzlichen Kopien sowohl von psy als auch von dxs seine um 28% bzw. 10% höhere Fucoxanthin-Produktivität pro Million Zellen. Bei diesen Mutanten ist die Gesamtproduktivität jedoch geringer als beim Wildtyp, da ihr Wachstum langsamer als beim Wildtyp ist.
Unter Berücksichtigung der besten Zielgene wurden Mutanten erzeugt, die gleichzeitig zusätzliche Kopien von psy, dxs und ggpps enthielten. Die Mutanten hatten unter sehr niedriegen Lichtbedingungen eine um bis zu 61% höhere Produktivität pro Million Zellen als der Wildtyp. Ausnahmsweise wurden diese Mutanten bei sehr schwachem Licht (10 µE m-2 s-1) gezüchtet, da sie sehr gestresst waren und als Zellklumpen wuchsen. Obwohl die Gesamt-Fucoxanthin-Spiegel in diesen Mutanten unter diesen Bedingungen höher sind als im Wildtyp, sind sie daher niedriger als die Fucoxanthin-Spiegel bei den in anderen Experimenten verwendeten Lichtbedingungen (50 µE m-2 s-1). Als Ergebnis dieser Experimente kann gesagt werden, dass die Belastung der Zellen nach den genetischen Veränderungen untersucht werden muss, da dies zu einer Abnahme der Biomasse und folglich zu einer Abnahme der Fucoxanthinproduktion führt. Alternativ könnte auch eine 2-Stufen-Kultur etabliert werden, in der in einem ersten Schritt eine hohe Biomasse erreicht wird und im zweiten Schritt die Expression der interessierenden Gene induziert wird.
Aufgrund der antioxidativen Eigenschaften von Carotinoiden besteht eine übliche Strategie zur Akkumulation von Carotinoiden darin, die Zellen unter oxidative Stressbedingungen zu setzen. Diese Strategie ist jedoch nicht wirksam für die Anreicherung von Fucoxanthin unter hohen Salzkonzentrationen oder hohen Lichtbedingungen. Bessere Versuchspläne könnten jedoch eine 2-Stufen-Kultur oder adaptive Laborbedingungen gewesen sein.
Eine andere mögliche Strategie zur Erhöhung des Fucoxanthinspiegels wäre die Durchführung einer zufälligen Mutagenese der Zellen. Auf diese Weise sind keine Vorkenntnisse über den Carotinoidsyntheseweg und seine Regulation erforderlich und es kann zu Veränderungen in Genen führen, die keine offensichtlichen Ziele sind.
Experimente mit zufälliger Mutagenese erfordern ein Hochdurchsatz-Screeningsystem, da Hunderte oder sogar Tausende von Mutanten erhalten werden. Eine mögliche Strategie, um die Kultivierung der hohen Anzahl von Mutanten zu vereinfachen, ist die Einkapselung dieser Mutanten in Alginatkügelchen. Auf diese Weise können alle Mutanten in demselben Gefäß kultiviert werden. Die eingekapselten Zellen können dann beispielsweise mit einem Durchflusszytometer auf große Partikel durch Fluoreszenz- oder Absorptionsmessungen gescreent werden.
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Evidence is increasingly pointing towards a significant global decline in biodiversity. The drivers of this decline are numerous, including habitat change and overexploitation, rapid deforestation, pollution, exotic species and disease, and finally climate change as an emerging driver of biodiversity change (Nakamura, et al., 2013; Hancocks, 2001; Pereira, Navarro & Martins, 2012). Raising public awareness of the need to conserve biological diversity is essential to safeguard the richness of life forms all over the world (Lindemann-Matthies, 2002). In this regard, institutions such as science museums, zoos and aquariums have the potential to play an important role (Rennie & Stocklmayer, 2003). Especially, zoos can provide a productive learning environment (Miles & Tout, 1992), facilitating the promotion of public conservation awareness and the adoption of pro-environmental behaviours that would reduce negative human impacts on biodiversity (Barongi, et al., 2015).
Based on these concepts, my study contributes to the developing field of visitor studies. Taking as reference non-zoo visitors and zoo visitors, I have focused on reviewing some aspects of conservation education, such as people's awareness of conservation, people's interest in animals and people's feelings towards animals and attitudes towards zoos. The study identified differences between non-regular and regular zoo visitors in interests in animals, as well as visitor attitudes towards conservation issues and zoos. Therefore, the present study indicated that positive emotional reactions and, in particular, a perceived sense of connection to the animal were linked and depended on the frequency of zoo visits. It was as well remarkable, that conservation awareness was influenced by the interest in animals, the interest in visiting zoos, the attitudes towards these institutions, and the age and the country of origin. All these variables had a greater effect in the conservation consciousness of the participants. Additionally interestingly, the main reason for visiting zoos in every country was to learn something about animals. This highlights the educational role of zoos and broadly supports the idea that people want to visit zoos to learn something about animals, in turn facilitating pro-conservation learning and changes in attitude. They are uniquely positioned to interact with visitors, communities, and society and to contribute by providing an informative and entertaining environment. Visiting zoos could led to contribute to promoting animal connectedness and interest in species.
Nature and its constituents are known to affect human well-being in positive and negative ways. Nature can be beneficial for humans by providing, for instance, food, recreation or inspiration. Natural disasters or transmitted diseases are, on the other hand, examples of nature’s detrimental or harmful contributions to human well-being. Such positive as well as negative effects have been termed Nature’s Contributions to People (NCP) by the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) and can be categorized into three different types of contributions: regulating, material and non-material NCP. While regulating and material NCP have been studied extensively, research on the non-material NCP is less common in comparison, especially regarding non-material NCP of biodiversity and wildlife. This dissertation therefore aims at shedding light on the non-material links between biodiversity, wildlife and human well-being. The thesis presents the results of three individual research studies in three separate chapters (CH1, 2 & 3).
In the first chapter (CH1) I conduct a systematic literature review on the non-material contributions of wildlife. Several previous reviews have published overviews on the non-material contributions of wildlife. However, only a few of these reviews examine both the positive and negative effects of wildlife in combination. These reviews usually cover few aspects of human well-being (e.g. recreation, health, psychological well-being) or just focus on a specific group of wildlife species (e.g. carnivores, scavengers). In addition, the pathways determining how wildlife affects human well-being are yet little understood. The aim of this review is therefore to create a holistic overview of the current knowledge on non-material contributions of wildlife (WCP), by summarising research on positive and negative effects and disentangling potential channels of human-wildlife experiences.
My results show that most studies in scientific literature report negative WCP. However, over the last decade the number of publications on positive WCP has increased, mainly in the Global North. This change in research focus, at the turn of the century, may be related to the newly emerging ideas and perspectives on nature during that time (e.g. Ecosystem Services and NCP). The results may also indicate different research interests across global regions and a focus on positive WCP (especially in the Global North). Surprisingly, the review identifies a lack of joint systematic assessments of positive and negative WCP across taxa, human well-being dimensions and ways (channels) of wildlife experiences. Studies show taxon-specific differences, with predominantly positive WCP reported for birds and predominantly negative WCP published for mammals and reptiles. Physical health was the most examined human well-being dimension, while many others, such as subjective well-being, social well-being, learning, identity or sense of place were rarely studied in comparison. The two channels of wildlife experiences that have been mainly studied or reported are Interaction and Knowing. While Interaction describes multisensory experiences in which people physically interact with wildlife. Knowing describes the metaphysical connection between humans and wildlife that arises through thinking or remembering experiences from wildlife encounters (including knowledge about wildlife).
To date, only few published studies examine the relationship between biodiversity and human well-being across larger spatial scales. For instance, little is known about how biodiversity is related to human well-being on the national or continental level. The second and third chapter (CH2 & 3) are thus comprised of two empirical case studies which examine the relationship between biodiversity and human well-being across Germany and Europe, respectively. As indicator for biodiversity, I use different species diversity measures including species richness and abundance. In the second chapter (CH2) I analyse the association between species richness and human health across Germany. The results demonstrate a significant positive relationship between plant and bird species richness and mental health while controlling for a multitude of socio-economic and demographic factors as well as other nature characteristics. In the third chapter (CH3) I conduct the first study on the relationship between species diversity and subjective well-being on the continental level. The results show that bird species richness (unlike mammal, megafauna and tree richness) is positively associated with life-satisfaction, a measure for subjective well-being across Europe. These results are robust while accounting for socio-economic and macro-economic factors. The results of both empirical studies are in correspondence with previous research, conducted on the local and national level.
Overall, my dissertation shows that wildlife and biodiversity greatly affect human well-being and provide substantial non-material NCP.
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Across the entire animal kingdom, sociality, i.e. the tendency of individual animals to form a group with conspecifics, is a common trait. Environmental changes have to be met with corresponding, quick adaptations. For social species, the presence of conspecifics is important for survival and if social animals are deprived of access to conspecifics, this can lead to strong and lasting changes on a physiological level as well as behaviour. Gene expression changes responsible for these adaptations have so far not been understood in detail. As social isolation leads to changes on a neuronal level, it is important to investigate the gene expression changes that are induced in the brain. In this thesis, next-generation RNA-sequencing was applied to zebrafish, a well-established model organism characterized by its high degree of companionship. Within the entire brain, gene expression was analysed in zebrafish that were raised either with conspecifis or in isolation, ranging from 5 to 21 days post fertilization. Using this approach, several genes were identified that were downregulated by social isolation. In this thesis, I focused on one of these consistently downregulated genes, parathyroid hormone 2 (pth2). The expression of pth2 was demonstrated to be bidirectionally regulated by the number of conspecifics present and to be responsive to changes in the social environment within 30 minutes. Regulation of pth2 does not occur by visual or chemosensory access to conspecifcs, but is mediated by mechanosensory perception of other fish via the lateral line. In an experiment using an artificial mechanical stimulation paradigm, it was shown that the features necessary to elicit pth2 transcription closely mimick the locomotion of actual zebrafish. Other, similar stimulation paradigms are not capable to induce this transcriptional response.
A large number of chemicals are constantly introduced to surface water from anthropogenic and natural sources. Although substantial efforts have been made to identify these chemicals (e.g potentially anthropogenic contaminants) in surface waters using liquid chromatography coupled to high resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS), a large number of LC-HRMS chemical signals often with high peak intensity are left unidentified. In addition to synthetic chemicals and transformation products, these signals may also represent plant secondary metabolites (PSMs) released from vegetation through various pathways such as leaching, surface run-off and rain sewers or input of litter from vegetation. While this may be considered as a confounding factor in screening of water contaminants, it could also contribute to the cumulative toxic risk of water contamination. However, it is hardly known to what extent these metabolites contribute to the chemical mixture of surface waters. Thus, reducing the number of unknowns in water samples by identifying also PSMs in significant concentrations in surface waters will help to improve monitoring and assessment of water quality potentially impacted by complex mixtures of natural and synthetic compounds. Therefore, the main focus of the present study was to identify the occurrence of PSMs in river waters and explore the link between the presence of vegetation along rivers and detection of their corresponding PSMs in river
water.
In order to achieve the goals of the present thesis, two chemical screening approaches, namely, non-target and target screening using LC-HRMS were implemented. (1) Non-target analysis involving a novel approach has been applied to associate unknown peaks of high intensity in LC-HRMS to PSMs from surrounding vegetation by focusing on peaks overlapping between river water and aqueous plant extracts (Annex A1). (2) LC–HRMS target screening in river waters were performed for about 160 PSMs, which were selected from a large phytotoxin database (Annex A2 and A3) considering their expected abundance in the vegetation, their potential mobility, persistence and toxicity in the water cycle and commercial availability of standards.
In non-target screening (Annex A1), a high number of overlapping peaks has been found in between aqueous plant extracts and water from adjacent location, suggesting a significant impact of vegetation on chemical mixtures detectable in river waters. The chemical structures were assigned for 12 pairs of peaks while several pairs of peaks
whose MS/MS spectra matched but no structure suggestion were made by the implemented software tools for retrieving possible chemical structure. Nevertheless, the pairs of peaks with matching spectra represented the same chemical structure. The identified compound belonged to different compound classes such as coumarins, flavonoids besides others. For the identified PSMs individual concentration up to 5 µg/L were measured. The concentration and the number of detected PSMs per sample were correlated with the rain event and vegetation coverage.
Target screening unraveled the occurrence of 33 out of 160 target compounds in river waters (Annex A2 and A3). The identified compounds belonged to different classes such as alkaloids, coumarins, flavonoids, and other compounds. Individual compound concentrations were up to several thousand ng/L with the toxic alkaloids narciclasine and
lycorine recording highest maximum concentrations. The neurotoxic alkaloid coniine from poison hemlock was detected at concentrations up to 0.4 µg/L while simple coumarins
esculetin and fraxidin occurred at concentrations above 1 µg/L. The occurrence of some PSMs in river water were correlated to the specific vegetation growing along the rivers while the others were linked to a wide range of vegetation. As an example, narciclasine and lycorine was emitted by the dominant plant species from Amaryllidaceae family (e.g. Galanthus nivalis (snow drop), Leucojum vernum and Anemone nemorosa) while intermedine and echimidine were from Symphytum officinale. The ubiquitous occurrence of simple coumarins fraxidin, scopoletin and aesculetin could be linked to their presence in a wide range of vegetation.
Due to lack of aquatic toxicity data for the identified PSMs (in both target and non-target) and extremely scarce exposure data, no reliable risk assessment was possible.
Alternatively, risk estimation was performed using the threshold for toxicological concern (TTC) concept developed for drinking water contaminants. Many of the identified PSMs
exceeded the TTC value (0.1 µg/L) thus caution should be taken when using such surface waters for drinking water abstraction or recreational use.
This thesis provides an overview of the occurrence of PSMs in river water impacted by the massive presence of vegetation. Concentration for many of the identified PSMs are well within the range of those of synthetic environmental contaminants. Thus, this study adds to a series of recent results suggesting that possibly toxic PSMs occur in relevant concentrations in European surface waters and should be considered in monitoring and risk assessment of water resources. Aquatic toxicity data for PSMs are extensively lacking but are required to include these compounds in the assessment of risks to aquatic organisms and for eliminating risks to human health during drinking water production.
Light is one of the most important abiotic factors for plant physiological processes. In addition to light intensity, the spectral quality of light can also influence the plant morphology and the content of secondary metabolites. In the horticultural industry, artificial light is used in to enable year-round production of herbs, ornamental plants and vegetables in winter terms.
Until today, discharge lamps like high-pressure sodium (HPS) lamps, emitting predominantly orange and red light and high amounts of infrared radiation, are the most common lamp systems in greenhouses. In the last decades, light-emitting diodes (LEDs) emerged as an efficient alternative light source. LEDs have the advantage of distinct adjustments to the light spectrum. For a usage in horticultural industry LEDs are often too expensive. Furthermore, reduced plant growth can occur due to incorrectly adjusted light spectra and lower leaf temperatures caused by the lack of infrared radiation.
In a research project (LOEWE, funding no. 487/15-29) funded by the Hessen State Ministry of Higher Education, Research and Arts, Microwave plasma lamps (MPL) were tested as new light sources for horticultural industry and plant research. The electrodeless lamp systems emit light in similar properties like sun light. The aim of the study was to determine the influence of artificial sunlight of the MPL on the accumulation of secondary metabolites, plant architecture and plant physiology of three different species (coleus, basil and potted roses). The MPL was compared with other light systems such as commercial HPS lamps, LEDs or ceramic metal halide lamps (CDM). In addition to morphological parameters such as plant height, internode length or fresh and dry weight, the phenolic content of leaves grown under the respective light sources were examined.
Overall an increased far-red light content in the emission spectra of the MPL showed high influence on the plant architecture which was observed in all three plant species. Artificial sunlight from MPL induced stem elongation in coleus and basil plants, compared to the other tested light sources. In potted roses a reduced branching degree was observed under MPL light compared to HPS grown plants.
In addition to the impact of far-red light also the blue light content of the emission spectra was found to be a strong influencing factor for plant physiological processes. A positive correlation between blue light content and leaf thickness was determined in coleus cultivated under MPL, LED, HPS and CDM lamps. Low blue light content in HPS emission spectra resulted in shade-adapted leaves with low photosynthetic capacity and susceptibility to high irradiances. Blue light was assumed to increase phenolic metabolites in basil and rose leaves. Furthermore, the different light treatments resulted in an alteration of the composition of essential oils of basil.
Experiments with coleus plants demonstrated that besides light color also the infrared radiation, had an influence on secondary metabolites by causing different leaf temperatures. Coleus plants grown with MPL showed the lowest content of phenolic compounds such as rosmarinic acid per dry weight. Infrared radiation resulted in a faster plant development indicated by increased biomass production and higher leaf formation rate as observed in coleus and basil plants.
The results obtained in this study show that the influence of leaf temperature should always be considered when comparing different lamp systems. Especially when LEDs are compared to discharge lamps an overestimation of light color can be a consequence since also infrared radiation influences the content of phenolic compounds and plant growth.
Nematophilic bacteria as a source of novel macrocyclised antimicrobial non-ribosomal peptides
(2020)
A solution to ineffective clinical antimicrobials is the discovery of new ones from under-explored sources such as macrocyclic non-ribosomal peptides (NRP) from nematophilic bacteria. In this dissertation an antimicrobial discovery process –from soil sample to inhibitory peptide– is demonstrated through investigations on six nematophilic bacteria: Xenorhabdus griffiniae XN45, X. griffiniae VH1, Xenorhabdus sp. nov. BG5, Xenorhabdus sp. nov. BMMCB, X. ishibashii and Photorhabdus temperata. To demonstrate the first step of bacterium isolation and species delineation, endosymbionts were isolated from Steinernema sp. strains BG5 and VH1 that were isolated directly from soil samples in Western Kenya. After genome sequencing and assembly of novel Xenorhabdus isolates VH1 and BG5, species delineation was done via three overall genome relatedness indices. VH1 was identified as X. griffiniae VH1, BG5 as Xenorhabdus sp. nov. BG5 and X. griffiniae BMMCB was emended to Xenorhabdus sp. nov. BMMCB. The nematode host of X. griffiniae XN45, Steinernema sp. scarpo was highlighted as a putative novel species. To demonstrate the second step of genome mining and macrocyclic non-ribosomal peptide structure elucidation, chemosynthesis and biosynthesis, the non-ribosomal peptide whose production is encoded by the ishA-B genes in X. ishibashii was investigated. Through a combination of refactoring the ishA-B operon by a promoter exchange mechanism, isotope labelling experiments, high resolution tandem mass spectrometry analysis, bioinformatic protein domain analysis and chemoinformatic comparisons of actual to hypothetical mass spectrometry spectra, the structures of Ishipeptides were elucidated and confirmed by chemical synthesis. Ishipeptide A was a branch cyclic depsidodecapeptide macrocyclised via an ester bond between serine and the terminal glutamate. It chemosynthesis route was via a late stage macrolactamation and linearised Ishipeptide B was synthesised via solid phase iterative synthesis. Ishipeptides were not N-terminally acylated despite being biosynthesised from the IshA protein that had a C-starter domain. It was highlighted that more than restoration of the histidine active site of this domain is required to restore N-terminal acylation activity.
To demonstrate the final step of determination of antimicrobial activity, minimum inhibitory concentrations of Ishipeptides and Photoditritide from Photorhabdus temperata against fungi and bacteria were determined. None were antifungal while only the macrocyclic compounds were inhibitory, with Ishipeptide A inhibitory to Gram-positive bacteria at 37 µM. The cationic Photoditritide, a cyclic hexapeptide macrocyclised via a lactam bond between homoarginine and tryptophan, was 12 times more inhibitory (3.0 µM), even more effective than a current clinical compound, Ampicillin (4.2 µM). For both, macrocyclisation was hypothesised to contribute to antimicrobial activity. Ultimately, this dissertation demonstrated not only nematophilic bacteria as a source of novel macrocyclic antimicrobial non-ribosomal peptides but also a process of antimicrobial discovery–from soil sample to inhibitory peptide– from these useful bacteria genera. This is significant for the fight against antimicrobial resistance.
Freshwater is one of the most fundamental resources for life and is the habitat for a wide diversity of species. One of the most diverse aquatic insect taxa is Trichoptera Kirby, 1813, caddisflies. These semi-aquatic insects have aquatic larvae and terrestrial adults and are found all around the globe in freshwater habitats. Water is also one of the most important natural resources for the human population, but alarmingly, freshwaters are among the most threatened natural habitats. Thus, the monitoring and preservation of the quality of freshwater habitats should have a high priority. In order to track changes in the biota a baseline reference is necessary, but freshwater biodiversity is under-studied in many parts of the Earth such as the biodiversity hotspots of the Himalaya and the Hengduan Mountains. This thesis treats the trichopteran genus Himalopsyche Banks, 1940 (Rhyacophilidae) which has its diversity center in the Himalayas and the Hengduan Mountains. Himalopsyche larvae are large and conspicuous and only occur in clean, unpolluted streams. This makes Himalopsyche potentially suited as indicator organisms for freshwater quality monitoring, but taxonomic knowledge is yet insufficient. Based on samples from a field survey in the Hengduan Mountains targeting both larvae and adults I uncovered three new Himalopsyche species which are described in this thesis (Chapter II), and with the aid of molecular data I associated larvae of Himalopsyche to adult species (Chapter I). The molecular association enabled the first comparative morphological study of Himalopsyche species in the larval stage, and the morphological study in Chapter II revealed that there are four distinct larval types of Himalopsyche. However, no diagnostic characters to identify Himalopsyche larvae to species level were found. To understand Himalopsyche larval morphology from an evolutionary perspective, I reconstructed the first molecular phylogeny of the genus (Chapter III). This demonstrated that each larval type corresponds to a deep phylogenetic split, indicating that larval types evolved early in Himalopsyche evolution and remained constant since. Based on the phylogenetic results as well as larval and adult morphology, I re-defined five species groups of Himalopsyche: H. kuldschensis Group, H. lepcha Group, H. navasi Group, H. phryganea Group, and H. tibetana Group. The species groups differ with respect to their diversity centers. The monotypic H. lepcha Group resides in the Himalayas, and the monotypic H. phryganea Group inhabits Western Nearctic. The H. kuldschensis and H. tibetana Groups are geographically overlapping with distributions in the Himalayas, but the distribution of H. kuldschensis Group stretches more to the west to include the Tian Shan, and the H. tibetana Group is more concentrated around the eastern Himalayas and the Hengduan Mountains. The H. navasi Group has a more eastern distribution than most Himalopsyche including isolated areas such as Japan and Indonesia. The earliest split in Himalopsyche divides the H. navasi Group from remaining Himalopsyche, suggesting a more eastern area of origin of Himalopsyche than its current diversity center, with subsequent radiations in the Himalayas and Hengduan Mountains. In addition to the three chapters, in this thesis I discuss further aspects of Himalopsyche biology including genital evolution, species complexes, and Himalopsyche ecology.
Connectomic analysis of apical dendrite innervation in pyramidal neurons of mouse cerebral cortex
(2020)
The central goal of this study was to generate synapse-resolution maps of local and long-range innervation on apical dendrites (AD) in mouse cerebral cortex. We used three-dimensional electron microscopy (3D-EM) to first measure the cell-type specific balance in the excitatory and inhibitory input on ADs. Further, we found two inhibitory axon populations with preference for apical dendrites originating from layer 2 and 3/5. Additionally, we used a combination of large-scale volumetric light and electron microscopy to investigate the innervation preference of long-range cortical projections onto ADs. To generate such large-scale 3D-EM datasets, we also developed a software package to automate aberration adjustment.
The balance of excitation and inhibition defines the computational properties of neurons. We, therefore, generated 6 datasets and annotated 26,548 excitatory and inhibitory synapses to map the relative inhibitory strength on the AD of pyramidal neurons in layers 1 and 2 (L1 and 2) of the cortex. We found consistent and cell-type specific patterns of inhibitory strength along the apical dendrite of L2-5 pyramidal neurons in primary somatosensory (S1), secondary visual (V2), posterior parietal (PPC) and anterior cingulate (ACC) cortices. L2 and L5 pyramidal neurons had inhibitory hot-zones at their main bifurcation and distal apical dendrite tuft, respectively. In contrast, L3 neurons had a baseline (~10%) level of inhibition along their apical dendrite. As controls, we quantified the effect of synapse strength (size), dendrite diameter, AD classification and synapse identification methods on the cell-type specific synapse densities. To classify L5 pyramidal subtypes, we performed hierarchical clustering using morphological properties that were described to differentiate slender- and thick-tufted L5 neurons.
We also investigated the distance to soma as a predictor of fractional inhibition around the main bifurcation of apical dendrites. Interestingly, we found a strong exponential relationship that was absent in density of either synapse type. This suggests a distance dependent control mechanism designed specifically for the balance (in synapse numbers) of excitation and inhibition.
Next, we focused on the inhibitory innervation preference for apical dendrite of pyramidal neuron. We, therefore, annotated 5,448 output synapses of AD-targeting inhibitory axons and found two populations specific for either L2 or L3/5 apical dendrites. Together with previous findings on preferential innervation of sub-cellular structures by inhibitory axons, this suggests two distinct inhibitory circuits for control of AD activity in L2 vs. deep-layer pyramidal neurons. This innervation preference was surprisingly consistent across S1, V2, PPC and ACC cortices.
3D-EM data acquisition is a laborious process that is made easier and more popular everyday by technical progress in the laboratory and industrial settings. To make data acquisition robust using our custom-built 3D-EM microscopes, an automatic aberration software was implemented to adjust the objective lens and the stigmators of the electron microscope. This method was used in multiple month-long experiments across 2 microscopes and 10 datasets. The aberration adjustment used the reduction in image details (high-frequency elements) to estimate the level of deviation from optimal focus and stigmator parameters. However, large objects in EM micrographs such as blood vessel and nuclei cross-sections generated anomalous results. We, therefore, added image processing routines based on edge detection combined with morphological operations to exclude such large objects.
Finally, we performed a correlative three-dimensional (3D) light (LM) and electron (EM) microscopy experiment to map the long-range primary visual (V1) and secondary motor (M2) cortical input to ADs in layer 1 of PPC using the “FluoEM” approach. This method allows for identification of the long-range source of projection axons in EM volumes without the need for EM-dense label conversion or heat-induced markings. The long-range source of an axon in EM is identified based on the fluorescent protein that is expressed in its LM counterpart. In comparison to M2 input, Long-range axons from V1 had a higher tendency to target L3 pyramidal neurons in PPC according to our preliminary analysis. In combination with the difference observed in the synapse composition of L2 and L3 apical dendrites, this suggests the need for separate functional and structural analysis of L2 and 3 pyramidal neurons.
Monoterpenes and their monoterpenoid derivatives form a subclass of terpene(oid)s. They are widely used in medicines/pharmaceuticals, as flavor and fragrance compounds, or in agriculture and are also considered as future biofuels. However, for many of these substances, the extraction from natural sources poses challenges such as occurring at low concentrations in their raw material or because the natural sources are diminishing. Furthermore, many of the structurally more complex terpenoids cannot be chemically synthesized in an economic way. Therefore, microbial production provides an attractive alternative, taking advantage of the often distinct regio- and stereoselectivity of enzymatic reactions. However, monoterpenes and monoterpenoids are challenging products for industrial biotechnology processes due to their pronounced cytotoxicity, which complicates the production in microorganisms compared to longer-chain terpenes (sesquiterpenes, diterpenes, etc.).
The aim of this thesis was to generate a biotechnological complement to fossil-resources-based chemical processes for industrial monoterpenoid production. Therefore, a starting point for the further development of a microbial cell factory based on the microbe Pseudomonas putida KT2440 was aimed to be created. This production organism should be able to conduct a whole- cell biocatalysis to selectively oxyfunctionalize monoterpene hydrocarbons using renewable industrial by-products and waste streams as raw material for monoterpenoid production (Figure 1). As a model substance, the production of (-)-menthol should be addressed due to its industrial significance. (-)-Menthol is one of the world’s most widely-used flavor and fragrance compounds by volume as well as a medical component, having an annual production volume of over 30,000 tons. An approach for (-)-menthol production from renewable resources could be a biotechnological(-chemical) two-step conversion (Figure 1), starting from (+)-limonene, a by-product of the citrus fruit processing industry.
The thesis project was divided into three parts. In the first part, enzymes (limonene-3- hydroxylases) were to be identified that can convert (+)-limonene into the precursor of (-)-menthol, (+)-trans-isopiperitenol. To counteract product toxicity, in the second part, the tolerance of the intended production organism P. putida KT2440 towards monoterpenes and their monoterpenoid derivatives should be increased. Finally, in the third part, the identified hydroxylase enzymes would be expressed in the improved P. putida KT2440 strain to create a whole-cell biocatalyst for the first reaction step of a two-step (-)-menthol production, starting from (+)-limonene.
To achieve these objectives, different genetic/molecular biology and analytical methods were applied. In this way, two cytochrome P450 monooxygenase enzymes from the fungi Aureobasidium pullulans and Hormonema carpetanum could be identified and functionally expressed in Pichia pastoris, which can catalyze the intended hydroxylation reaction on (+) limonene with high stereo- and regioselectivity. A further characterization of the enzyme from A. pullulans showed that apart from (+) limonene the protein can also hydroxylate ( ) limonene, - and -pinene, as well as 3-carene.
Furthermore, within this thesis, mechanisms of microbial monoterpenoid resistance of P. putida could be identified. It was shown that the different monoterpenes and monoterpenoids tested have very different toxicity levels and that mainly the Ttg efflux pumps of P. putida GS1 are responsible for the tolerance to many of these compounds. Based on these results, a P. putida KT2440 strain with increased resistance to various monoterpenoids, including isopiperitenol, could then be generated, which can be used as a host organism for the further development of monoterpenoid-producing cell factories.
While within the scope of this work the heterologous expression of the fungal gene in prokaryotic cells in a functional form could not be realized despite different approaches, the identified enzymes, the monoterpenoid-tolerant P. putida strain and a plasmid developed for heterologous gene expression in P. putida provide a starting point for the further design of a microbial cell factory for biotechnological monoterpenoid production.
The blood-brain barrier (BBB) protects the brain microenvironment from external damage. It is formed by endothelial cells (ECs) lining the brain vessels, expressing tight junctions and having reduced transcytosis, resulting in a very low paracellular and transcellular passage of substances, respectively (low permeability). The specific BBB phenotype is maintained by Wnt molecules secreted by astrocytes (ACs) that bind to receptors in ECs, and start a molecular cascade that leads to β-catenin translocating to the nucleus and activating the transcription of BBB genes.
An increasing number of studies report BBB dysfunction in Alzheimer’s disease (AD), although the topic is currently under debate. AD is a neurodegenerative condition characterized by brain depositions of Aβ aggregates and Tau neurofibrillary tangles. The aetiology of AD is unknown, although round 5% of all AD cases have a genetic origin. Mutations in APP or PSEN1/2 can lead to Aβ over-production and accumulation, causing familiar AD. There is no cure for AD, as all clinical trials failed during the past years. Consequently, I studied the role of the BBB in AD, aiming to investigate if a BBB dysfunction occurs in AD, and to identify by transcriptomic analysis novel gene regulations happening at the BBB in AD. The final objective was to evaluate the potential of identified BBB genes as therapeutical target.
I used transgenic mice expressing the human APP mutations Swiss, Dutch and Iowa under the control of the neuronal promoter Thy1 (Thy1-APPSwDI) as AD model. In this AD mouse model, I could detect Aβ deposits and memory loss by immunofluorescence (IF) and behavioural tests. Importantly, I identified an increase of BBB permeability to 3-4 kDa dextrans in 6 months, 9-12 months, and 18 months or older AD mice compared to age-matched control wild types (WT), indicating BBB dysfunction in AD mice.
In order to study the BBB transcriptional changes in AD, I sequenced the RNA from 6 and 18 months old AD and WT mouse brain microvessels (MBMVs), as well as of FACS-sorted ECs, mural cells (MuCs), ACs, and microglia (MG) in collaboration with GenXPro, a company specialized in 3’ RNA sequencing. Currently, no transcriptomic datasets of ECs and MuCs are publicly available, suggesting that this is the first study sequencing those cell types in the context of AD.
The analysis of sequencing data from MBMVs and ECs revealed a Wnt/β-catenin repression, and an increase of inflammatory genes like Ccl3 in ECs, that could explain the BBB dysfunction observed in AD mice. Furthermore, the sequencing data from MuCs identified a set of 11 genes strongly regulated in both 6 and 18 month AD groups. Three of those 11 genes are known to be involved in inflammatory processes, demonstrating that inflammation affects and plays an important role in MuCs and ECs during AD.
Thanks to published sequencing data, some up-regulated MG genes in AD are well known and recognized, such as Trem2 and Apoe. Those genes were found in the FACS-sorted MG data as well, validating the AD model and with it, the other novel sequenced datasets. Importantly, one of the most strongly AD-regulated genes in MBMV and MG samples was Dkk2, a member of the Dickkopf family of secreted proteins known to be involved in Wnt signalling modulation. Importantly, a dual luciferase reporter assay proved that Dkk2 is a Wnt inhibitor. A preliminary immunohistochemistry examination of DKK2 in human brain autopsy tissue from an AD patient and age-matched control revealed a stronger DKK2 immunoreactivity in the AD brain.
In order to answer the question whether a rescue of BBB function would ameliorate AD symptoms, I made use of a tamoxifen-inducible transgenic mouse line to activate the Wnt/β-catenin pathway specifically in ECs, leading to a gain of function (GOF) condition (Cdh5-CreERT2+/–/Ctnnb1(Ex3)fl/fl). This mouse line was then crossed with the AD line, creating AD/GOF and AD/control groups.
AD/GOF mice performed better in a Y-Maze memory test than AD/controls when the Wnt/β-catenin pathway was induced before AD onset, indicating a protective effect. Moreover, the finding implies that shielding BBB functioning in AD further protects the brain from AD toxic effects, suggesting an important role of brain vasculature in AD and its potential as therapeutic target.
Synaptic plasticity is the activity dependent alteration of the composition, form and strength of synapses and believed to be the underlying mechanism of learning and memory formation. While initial changes in synaptic transmission are caused by second messenger signaling pathways and rapid modifications in the cytoskeleton, to achieve stable and persistent changes at individual synapses, the expression of new mRNAs and proteins is required. The central dogma postulated that the cell body is the only source of newly synthesized proteins. For neurons, with their unique morphology, this meant that proteins would need be transported long distances, often hundreds of microns, to reach their destined locations in dendrites and at spines. To overcome this limitation, neurons have developed a strategy to regulate protein synthesis locally by distributing thousands of mRNAs into neuronal processes and use them for local protein synthesis. Ample research has demonstrated the importance of local protein synthesis to many forms of long-term synaptic plasticity. One potential regulator of mRNA localization and local translation in neurons are non-coding RNAs. Intensive work over the past decades has highlighted the importance of non-coding RNAs in many aspects of brain function. The aim of this thesis is to obtain a better understanding of the role of non-coding RNAs in synaptic function and plasticity in the murine hippocampus. For this, we focused our studies on two classes of non-coding RNAs.
In the first part of my thesis, I describe our efforts on characterizing circular RNAs, a novel and peculiar family of non-coding RNAs, in the murine hippocampus by combining high throughput RNA-Sequencing with fluorescence in situ hybridization. Furthermore, we investigated the mechanisms of circular RNA biogenesis in hippocampal neurons by temporarily inhibiting spliceosome activity and analyzing the differentially regulated circular RNAs.
The compound class of the fabclavines was described as secondary or specialized metabolites (SM) for Xenorhabdus budapestensis and X. szentirmaii. Their corresponding structure was elucidated by NMR and further derivatives could be identified in both strains. Biochemically, fabclavines are hybrid SMs derived from two non-ribosomal-peptide-synthetases (NRPS), one type I polyketide-synthase (PKS) and polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) synthases. In detail, a hexapeptide is connected via partially reduced polyketide units to an unsual polyamine. Structurally, they are related to the (pre-)zeamines, described for Serratia plymuthica and Dickeya zeae. Fabclavines exhibit a broad-spectrum bioactivity against a variety of different organisms like Grampositive and Gram-negative bacteria, fungi, protozoa but also against eukaryotic celllines.
In this work, the fabclavine biosynthesis was elucidated and assigned to two independently working assembly lines. The NRPS-PKS-pathway is initiated by the first NRPS FclI via generation of a tetrapeptide, which is elongated by the second NRPS FclJ, leading to a hexapeptide. Alternatively, FclJ can also act as direct start of the biosynthesis, resulting in the final formation of shortened fabclavine derivatives with a diinstead of a hexapeptide. In both cases, the peptide moiety is transferred to the iterative type I PKS FclK, leading to an elongation with partially reduced polyketide units. The resulting NRPS-PKS-intermediate is still enzyme-bound. The PUFA-homologues FclC, FclD and FclE in combination with FclF, FclG and FclH belong to the polyamine-forming pathway. Briefly, repeating decarboxylative Claisen thioester condensation reactions of acyl-coenzym A building blocks lead to the generation of an acyl chain in a PKS- or fatty acid biosynthesis-like manner. The corresponding β-keto-groups are either completely reduced or transaminated in a specific and repetitive way, resulting in the concatenation of so-called amine-units. The final β-keto-group is reduced to a hydroxy-group and the intermediate is reductively released by the thioester reductase FclG. A subsequent transamination step leads to the final polyamine. The NRPS-PKS- as well as the polyamine-pathway are connected by FclL. This condensation domain-like protein catalyzes the condensation of the polyamine with the NRPS-PKS-part, which results in the release of the final fabclavine. The results are described in detail in the first publication (first author).
Fabclavine biosynthesis gene cluster (BGC) are widely spread among the genus Xenorhabdus and Photorhabdus. In Xenorhabdus strains a high degree of conservation regarding the BGC synteny as well as the identity of single proteins can be observed. However, Photorhabdus strains harbor only the PUFA-homologues. While in Photorhabdus no product could be detected, our analysis revealed that the Xenorhabdus strains produce a large chemical diversity of different derivatives. Briefly, the general backbone of the fabclavines is conserved and only four chemical moieties are variable: The second and last amino acids of the NRPS-part, the number of incorporated polyketide units as well as the number of amine units in the polyamine. In combination with the elucidated biosynthesis, these variables could be assigned to single biosynthesis components as diversity mechanisms. Together with the 10 already described derivatives, a total of 32 derivatives could be detected. Interestingly, except for taxonomic closely related strains, all analyzed strains produce their own set of derivatives. Finally, we could confirm that the fabclavines are the major bioactive compound class in the analyzed strains under laboratory conditions. The results are described in detail in the second publication (first author).
Together with our collaboration partner Prof. Selcuk Hazir a potent bioactivity against Enterococcus faecalis, which is associated with endodontic infections, could be contributed to X. cabanillasii. Here, we could confirm that this bioactivity can be assigned to the fabclavines. The results are described in detail in the third publication(co-author).
Among the genus Xenorhabdus, X. bovienii represents an exception as its NRPS and PKS genes of the fabclavine BGC are missing or truncated, resulting in the exclusive production of polyamines. Furthermore, its PUFA-homologue FclC harbors an additional dehydratase (DH) domain. Upon extensive analysis a yet unknown deoxy-polyamine was identified and assigned to this additional domain. Finally, the DH domain was transferred into other polyamine pathways. Regardless of an in cis or in trans integration, the chimeric pathways produced deoxy-derivatives of its naturally occurring polyamines, suggesting that this represents another diversification mechanism. The results are described in detail in the attached manuscript (first author).
Clean water is fundamental to human health and ecosystem integrity. However, water quality deteriorates due to novel anthropogenic pollutants present at microgram per liter concentrations in urban water cycles (termed micropollutants). Wastewater treatment plants (WWTP) have been identified as major point sources for aquatic (micro-)pollutants. Chemical and ecotoxicological analyses have shown that conventional biological WWTPs do not fully remove micropollutants and associated toxicities, which is often because of mobile, polar and/or recalcitrant compounds and transformation products (TPs). To minimize possible environmental risks, advanced wastewater treatment (AWWT) technologies could be a promising mitigation measure. Multiple processes are therefore being developed and evaluated such as ozonation and ozonation followed by granulated activated carbon (GAC) or biological filtration. Assessing the performance of these combined AWWTs was the focus the TransRisk project. Within this project, this thesis accomplished four major goals.
Firstly, the preparation of (waste)water samples was optimised for in vitro bioassays. Acidification, filtration and solid phase extraction (SPE) were tested for their impact on environmentally relevant in vitro endocrine activities, mutagenicity, genotoxicity and cytotoxicity. Significantly different outcomes of these assays were detected comparing neutral and acidified samples. Sample filtration had a lesser impact, but in some cases retention of particle-bound compounds could have caused significant toxicity losses. Out of three SPE sorbents the Telos C18/ENV at sample pH 2.5 extracted highest toxicity, some undetected in aqueous samples. These results indicate that sample preparation needs to be optimised for specific sample matrices and bioassays to avoid false-positive or -negative detects in effect-based analyses.
Secondly, the above listed in vitro toxicities were monitored in a protected region for drinking water production in South-West Germany (2012-2015). Out of 30 sampling sites surface water and groundwater were the least polluted. Nonetheless, a few groundwater samples induced high anti-estrogenic activity that prompted further monitoring. The latter included a waterworks in which no toxicity was detected. Hospital wastewater also had elevated in vitro toxicities and hospitals are, thus, relevant intervention points for source control. The biological WWTPs were effective in removing most of the detected toxicity, and the selected bioassays proved to be pertinent tools for water quality assessment and prioritisation of pollution hotspots.
Thirdly, the in vivo bioassay ISO10872 based on Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans) was adapted for this thesis. Using this model, a median effect concentration (EC50) for reproductive toxicity of the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon β-naphthoflavone (β- NF) of 114 µg/L was computed which is slightly lower than reported in the scientific literature. β-NF induced cyp-35A3::GFP (a biomarker in transgenic animals) in a time and concentration dependent manner (≤ 21.3–24 fold above controls). β-NF spiked wastewater samples supported earlier hypotheses on particle-bound pollutants. Reproductive toxicity (96 h) and cyp-35A3 induction (24 h) of biologically treated and/or ozonated wastewater extracts and growth promoting effects of GAC/biologically filtered ozonated wastewater extracts were observed. This suggested the presence of residual bioactive/toxic chemicals not included in the targeted chemical analysis. It also highlighted the importance of integrating multiple (apical and molecular) endpoints in wastewater assessments.
Fourthly, five in vitro and the adapted C. elegans bioassay were integrated into a wastewater quality evaluation (developed within TransRisk). Out of the five AWWT options, ozonation (at 1 g O3,applied/g DOC, HRT ~ 18 min) combined with nonaerated GAC filtration was rated most effective for toxicity removal. All five AWWTs largely removed estrogenic and (anti-)androgenic activities, but not anti-estrogenic activity and mutagenicity, which even increased during ozonation. This has been observed in related studies and points towards toxic TPs. These results also emphasized the need for implementing an effective post-treatment for ozonation. The results from a parallel in vivo study with Lumbriculus variegatus and Potamopyrgus antipodarum conducted on site at the WWTP (using flow through systems) were in accordance with the C. elegans results. In this context, it is suggested to further implement C. elegans as sensitive, feasible and ecologically relevant model.
In conclusion, this thesis shows how optimised sample preparation, long-term (in vitro) environmental monitoring, sensitive and ecologically relevant (in vivo) bioassays as well as innovative evaluation concepts, are pivotal in improving the removal of micropollutants and their toxicities with AWWTs. Future research should further develop and evaluate measures at sewer systems, conventional biological, tertiary and other advanced treatment technologies, as well as sociopolitical strategies (e.g., source control or natural conservation) and restoration projects. The effect-based tools optimised in this thesis will support assessing their success.
In the past decades, the use and production of chemicals has been on the rise globally due to increasing industrialization and intensive agriculture; resulting in the occurrence and ecotoxicological risks of chemicals of emerging concern (CECs) in the aquatic compartments. Risks include changes in community structure resulting in the dominance of one species and ecosystem imbalance. When dominant disease-causing organisms are in the environment, the disease transmission is increased. For example, host snails for the schistosomiasis, a human trematode disease, are known to be tolerant to pesticide
exposure compared to the predators. This would therefore result in an increased abundance of snails which consequently increase the disease transmission in the human population.
Kenya, being a low income country faces a lot of challenges with provision of clean water, diseases and sanitation facilities, and increasing population which results in intensive agriculture coupled with pesticide use. Although a lot of research has been carried out on the environmental occurrence and risk of CECs (Chapter 1), most of these studies have been done in developed countries with limited information from Africa. Additionally, research in Africa focused on urban areas with limited number of compounds analyzed and mostly in the water phase, and inadequate information on the effects of CECs on the aquatic organisms. In order to reduce this knowledge gap, this dissertation focused on identification and quantification of CECs present in water, sediment and snails from western Kenya, and the contribution of pesticides to the transmission of schistosomiasis.
Chapter 2 gives a summary of the results and discussion of the dissertation. In Chapter 3, a comprehensive chemical analysis was carried out on 48 water samples to identify compounds, spatial patterns and associated risks for fish, crustacean and algae using toxic unit (TU) approach. A total of 78 compounds were detected with pesticides and biocides being the compounds most frequently detected. Spatial pattern analysis revealed limited compound grouping based on land use. Acute risk for crustaceans and algae were driven by one to three individual compounds. These compounds responsible for toxicity were prioritized as candidate compounds for monitoring and regulation in Kenya.
In Chapter 4, an extension of Chapter 3 was done to cover the CECs present in snails and sediment from the 48 sites. A total of 30 compounds were found in snails and 78 in sediments with 68 additional compounds being found which were not previously detected in water. Higher contaminant concentrations were found in agricultural sites than in areas without anthropogenic activities. The highest acute toxicity (TU 0.99) was determined for crustaceans based on compounds in sediment samples. The risk was driven by diazinon and pirimiphos-methyl. Acute and chronic risks to algae were driven by diuron whereas fish were found to be at low to no acute risk.
In Chapter 5, the effect of pesticide contamination on schistosomiasis transmission was evaluated by applying complimentary laboratory and field studies. In the field studies, the ecological mechanisms through which pesticides and physical chemical parameters affect host snails, predators and competitors were investigated. Pesticide data was obtained from the results in chapter 3. The overall distribution of grazers and predators was not affected by pesticide pollution. However, within the grazers, pesticide pollution increased dominance of host snails. On the contrary, the host-snail competitors were highly sensitive to pesticide exposure. For the laboratory studies, macroinvertebrates including Schistosoma-host snails, competitors and predators were exposed to 6 concentrations levels of imidacloprid and diazinon. Snails showed higher insecticide tolerance compared to competitors and predators. Finally, Chapter 6 summarizes the conclusions of this dissertation, placing it in a broader
context. In this dissertation, a comprehensive chemical characterization and risk assessment of CECs has been carried out in freshwater systems; together with the effects of pesticides on schistosomiasis transmission in rural western Kenya. Results of this dissertation showed that rural areas are contaminated posing a risk to aquatic organisms which contribute to schistosomiasis transmission. This shows the need for regular monitoring and policy formulation to reduce pollutant emissions which contributes negatively to both ecological and human health effects.
Ziel dieser Arbeit war es, einen genaueren Einblick in die Rolle von PaCLPXP für den Energiemetabolismus von P. anserina zu erhalten und mögliche Komponenten zu identifizieren, welche wichtig für die Langlebigkeit der PaClpP-Deletionsmutante sind. Folgende neue Erkenntnisse konnten hierbei gewonnen werden:
1. Die Substrat-Analyse durch eine Cycloheximid-Behandlung und anschließender Proteom-Analyse legte erfolgreich eine Reihe potentieller bisher nicht bekannter Substrate von PaCLPP offen. Interessanterweise waren unter den identifizierten Proteinen viele ribosomale Untereinheiten und Komponenten verschiedener Stoffwechselwege des Energiemetabolismus zu finden. Am auffälligsten unter diesen Substraten war die extreme Anreicherung eines Retikulon-ähnlichen Proteins, das einen neuen Aspekt der möglichen molekularbiologischen Rolle von PaCLPP in P. anserina andeutet.
2. Durch die Zugabe von Butyrat zum Medium, konnte erfolgreich die Autophagie sowohl im P. anserina Wildtyp als auch in der PaClpP-Deletionsmutante reduziert werden. Diese Verminderung der Autophagie sorgt bei ΔPaClpP für eine Verkürzung der Lebensspanne. Dieser Effekt ist spezifisch für die PaClpP-Deletionsmutante, während die Auswirkung von Butyrat auf den Wildtyp nur marginal ist. Dieses Ergebnis untermauert frühere Analysen dieser Deletionsmutante, welche besagen, dass die Langlebigkeit von ΔPaClpP Autophagie abhängig ist (Knuppertz und Osiewacz, 2017).
3. Die Metabolom-Analyse von ΔPaClpP im Vergleich zum Wildtyp zeigt, dass das Fehlen der PaCLPP zu Veränderungen in der Menge der Metaboliten der Glykolyse und des Citratzyklus kommt. Außerdem sind die Mengen der meisten Aminosäuren und der Nukleotide betroffen. Diese Analyse beweist, dass das Fehlen dieser mitochondrialen Protease weitreichende Folgen für die ganze Zelle hat. Durch die signifikante Verringerung von ATP und die Anreicherung von AMP in jungen ΔPaClpP-Stämmen und durch den Umstand der gesteigerten Autophagie in dieser Mutante, fiel das Augenmerk auf die AMPK. Dieses veränderte AMP/ATP-Verhältnis ist ein Indiz für eine gesteigerte AMPK-Aktivität und könnte auch den Umstand der gesteigerten Autophagie in ΔPaClpP erklären.
4. Das Gen codierend für die katalytische α-Untereinheit der AMPK (PaSnf1) konnte erfolgreich in P. anserina deletiert werden. Das Fehlen von PaSNF1 führt zu einer reduzierten Wuchsrate, eine beeinträchtige weibliche Fertilität und eine verzögerte Sporenreifung. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Autophagie infolge einer PaSnf1-Deletion nicht gänzlich unterdrückt wird, PaSNF1 allerdings für die Stress-induzierte Autophagie notwendig ist. Überraschenderweise führt die Abwesenheit von PaSNF1 zu einer verlängerten Lebensspanne im Vergleich zum Wildtyp. Die meisten Effekte infolge einer PaSnf1-Deletion konnten durch die Einbringung eines FLAG::PaSNF1-Konstrukts komplementiert werden.
5. Eine gleichzeitige PaSnf1 und PaClpP-Deletion führt zu eine unerwarteten, extremen Lebenspannenverlängerung, die die Verlängerung der Lebensspanne bei der PaClpP-Deletionsmutante noch übertrifft. Interessanterweise geht dieser Phänotyp nicht mit einer erhöhten Autophagie einher. Des Weiteren konnte beobachtet werden, dass das Fehlen von PaSNF1 sowohl in ΔPaSnf1 als auch in ΔPaSnf1/ΔPaClpP zu einer veränderten Mitochondrien-Morphologie im Alter führt. Die Abwesenheit von PaSNF1 verursacht, dass die Stämme auch im Alter (20d) noch überwiegend filamentöse Mitochondrien aufweisen. Zudem zeigen die drei analysierten Deletionsstämme (ΔPaSnf1, ΔPaClpP und ΔPaSnf1/ΔPaClpP) massive Einschränkungen wenn sie auf die mitochondriale Funktion angewiesen sind.
6. Auffallend war, dass bei ΔPaSnf1, ΔPaClpP und bei ΔPaSnf1/ΔPaClpP die Stämme mit dem Paarungstyp „mat-“ langlebiger sind als die Stämme mit dem Paarungstyp „mat+“. Dieser Effekt ist bei der ΔPaSnf1/ΔPaClpP-Doppelmutante am stärksten ausgeprägt. Weitere Untersuchungen dazu ergaben, dass die Paarungstypen immer dann eine Rolle spielen, wenn die Stämme mitochondrialem Stress ausgesetzt, oder aber auf die mitochondriale Funktion angewiesen sind. Verantwortlich für diese Unterschiede sind zwei rmp1-Allele, die mit den unterschiedlichen Paarungstyp-Loci gekoppelt sind und mit dem jeweiligen Paarungstyp-Locus vererbt werden (rmp1-1 mit „mat-“; rmp1-2 mit „mat+“).
Operons wurden zuerst im Jahre 1961 beschrieben. Bis heute ist bekannt, dass die prokaryotischen Domänen Bacteria und Archaea Gene sowohl in monocistronischen als auch in bi- oder polycistronischen Transkripten exprimieren können. Häufig überlappen Gene sogar in ihren Sequenzen. Diese überlappenden Genpaare stehen nicht in Korrelation mit der Kompaktheit ihres Genoms. Das führt zu der Annahme, dass eine Art der Regulation vorliegt, welche weitere Proteine oder Gene nicht benötigt. Diese könnte eine gekoppelte Translation sein. Das bedeutet die Translation des stromabwärts-liegenden Gens ist abhängig von der Translation eines stromaufwärts-liegenden Gens. Diese Abhängigkeit kann zum Beispiel durch lang reichende Sekundärstrukturen entstehen, bei welchen Ribosomenbindestellen (RBS) des stromabwärts-liegenden Gens blockiert sind. Die de novo-Initiation am stromabwärts-liegenden Gen kann nur stattfinden, wenn das erste Gen translatiert wird und dabei die Sekundärstruktur an der RBS aufgeschmolzen wird. Für Genpaare in E. coli ist dieser Mechanismus gut untersucht. Ein anderes Beispiel für die Translationskopplung ist die Termination-Reinitiation, bei welcher ein Ribosom das erste Gen translatiert bis zum Stop-Codon, dort terminiert und direkt am stromabwärts-liegenden Start-Codon reinitiiert. Der Mechanismus via Termination-Reinitiation ist bis jetzt nur für eukaryontische Viren beschrieben worden. Im Gegensatz zu einer Kopplung über Sekundärstrukturen kommt es bei der Termination-Reinitiation am stromabwärts-liegenden Gen nicht zu einer de novo-Initiation sondern eine Reinitiation des Ribosoms findet statt. Diese Arbeit analysiert jene Art der Translationskopplung an Genen polycistronischer mRNAs in jeweils einem Modellorganismus als Vertreter der Archaea (Haloferax volcanii) und Bacteria (Escherichia coli). Hierfür wurden Reportergenvektoren erstellt, welche die überlappenden Genpaare an Reportergene fusionierten. Für diese Reportergene ist es möglich die Transkriptmenge zu quantifizieren sowie für die exprimierten Proteine Enzymassays durchgeführt werden können. Aus beiden Werten können Translationseffizienzen berechnet werden indem jeweils die Enzymaktivität pro Transkriptmenge ermittelt wird. Durch ein prämatures Stop-Codon in diesen Konstrukten ist es möglich zu unterscheiden ob es für die Translation des zweiten Gens essentiell ist, dass das Ribosom den Überlapp erreicht. Hiermit konnte für neun Genpaare in H. volcanii und vier Genpaare in E. coli gezeigt werden, dass eine Art der Kopplung stattfindet bei der es sich um eine Termination-Reinitiation handelt. Des Weiteren wurde analysiert, welche Auswirkungen intragene Shine-Dalgarno Sequenzen bei dem Event der Translationskopplung besitzen. Durch die Mutation solcher Motive und dem Vergleich der Translationseffizienzen der Konstrukte, mit und ohne einer SD Sequenz, wird für alle analysierten Genpaare beider Modellorganismen gezeigt, dass die SD Sequenz einen Einfluss auf diese Art der Kopplung hat. Zwischen den Genpaaren ist dieser Einfluss jedoch stark variabel. Weiterhin wurde der maximale Abstand zwischen zwei bicistronischen Genen untersucht, für welchen Translationskopplung via Termination-Reinitiation noch stattfinden kann. Hierfür wird durch site-directed mutagenesis jeweils ein prämatures Stop-Codon im stromaufwärts-liegenden Gen eingebracht, welches den intergenen Abstand zwischen den Genen in den jeweiligen Konstrukten vergrößert. Der Vergleich aller Konstrukte eines Genpaars zeigt in beiden Modellorganismen, dass die Termination-Reinitiation vom intergenen Abstand abhängig ist und die Translationseffizienz des stromabwärts-liegenden Reporters bereits ab 15 Nukleotiden Abstand abnimmt.
Eine weitere Fragestellung dieser Arbeit war es, den genauen Mechanismus der Termination-Reinitiation zu analysieren. Für Ribosomen gibt es an der mRNA nach der Termination der Translation zwei Möglichkeiten: Entweder als 70S Ribosom bestehen zu bleiben und ein weiteres Start-Codon auf der mRNA zu suchen oder in seine beiden Untereinheiten zu dissoziieren, während die 50S Untereinheit die mRNA verlässt und die 30S Untereinheit über Wechselwirkungen an der mRNA verbleiben kann. Um diesen Mechanismus auf molekularer Ebene zu untersuchen, wird ein Versuchsablauf vorgestellt. Dieser ermöglicht das Event bei der Termination-Reinitiation in vitro zu analysieren. Eine Unterscheidung von 30S oder 70S Ribosomen bei der Reinitiation der Translation des stromabwärts-liegenden Gens wird ermöglicht. Die Idee dabei basiert auf einem ribosome display, bei welchem Translationskomplexe am Ende der Translation nicht in ihre Bestandteile zerfallen können, da die eingesetzte mRNA kein Stop-Codon enthält Der genaue Versuchsablauf, die benötigten Bestandteile sowie proof-of-principal Versuche sind in der Arbeit dargestellt und mögliche Optimierungen werden diskutiert.