@phdthesis{Pillai2011, author = {Pillai, Deepu}, title = {Differential effects of Pigment epithelium derived factor and epidermal growth factor on Ischemia-reperfusion injury in rats - a magnetic resonance imaging study at 3 tesla}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-57341}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Stroke, after myocardial infarction and cancer is the third most common cause of death worldwide and 1/6th of all human beings will suffer at least one stroke in their lives. Furthermore, it is the leading cause for adult disability with approximately one third of patients who survive for the next 6 months are dependent on others. Because of its huge socioeconomic burden absorbing 6\% of all health care budgets and with the fact that life expectancy increases globally, one can assume that stroke is already, and will continue to be, the most challenging disease. Ischemic stroke accounts for approximately 80\% of all strokes and results from a thrombotic or embolic occlusion of a major cerebral artery (most often the middle cerebral artery, MCA) or its branches Following acute ischemic stroke, the most worrisome outcome is the rapidly increasing intra-cranial pressure due to the formation of space-occupying vasogenic oedema which can have lethal consequences. Permeability changes at the Blood-Brain Barrier (BBB) usually accompanies the oedematous development and their time course can provide invaluable insight into the nature of the insult, activation of compensatory mechanisms followed by long term repair. Rodent models of focal cerebral ischemia have been developed and optimized to mimic human stroke conditions and serve as indispensable tools in the field of stroke research. The presented work constituting of three separate but complete works by themselves are sequential, where, the first part was dedicated to the establishment of non-invasive small animal imaging strategies on a 3 tesla clinical magnetic resonance scanner. This facilitated the longitudinal monitoring of pathological outcomes following stroke where identical animals can serve as its own control. Tissue relaxometric estimations were carried out initially to derive the transverse (T2), longitudinal (T1) and the transverse relaxation time due to magnetic susceptibility effects (T2*) at the cortical and striatal regions of the rodent brain. Statistically significant differences in T2*-values could be found between the cortex and striatal regions of the rodent brain. The derived tissue relaxation values were considered to modify the existing imaging protocols to facilitate the study of the rodent model of ischemic stroke. The modified sequence protocols adequately characterized all the clinically relevant sequels following acute ischemic stroke, like, the altered perfusion and diffusion characteristics. Subsequent to this, serial magnetic resonance imaging was performed to investigate the temporal and spatial relationship between the biphasic nature of BBB opening and, in parallel, the oedema formation after I/R injury in rats. T2-relaxometry for oedema assessment was performed at 1 h after ischemia, immediately following reperfusion, and at 4, 24 and 48 hours post reperfusion. Post-contrast T1-weighted imaging was performed at the last three time points to assess BBB integrity. The biphasic course of BBB opening with significant reduction in BBB permeability at 24 hours after reperfusion was associated with a progressive expansion of leaky BBB volume, accompanied by a peak ipsilateral oedema formation. At 48 hours, the reduction in T2-value indicated oedema resorption accompanied by a second phase of BBB opening. In addition, at 4 hours after reperfusion, oedema formation could also be detected at the contralateral striatum which persisted to varying degrees throughout the study, indicative of widespread effects of I/R injury. The observations of this study may indicate a dynamic temporal shift in the mechanisms responsible for biphasic BBB permeability changes, with non-linear relations to oedema formation. Two growth factor peptides namely pigment epithelium derived factor (PEDF) and epidermal growth factor (EGF) with widely different trophic properties were considered for their beneficial effects, if any, in the established rodent model of I/R injury and studied up to one week employing magnetic resonance imaging. Both the selected, trophic factors demonstrated significant neuroprotection as demonstrated by a reduction in infarct volume, even though PEDF was found to be the most potent one. PEDF also demonstrated significant attenuation of oedema formation in comparison to both the control and EGF groups, even though EGF could also demonstrate oedema suppression. In the present work, we noticed that interventions with macromolecule protein/peptides by itself could mediate remote oedema at distant sites even though the significance of such an observation is not clear at present. Susceptibility (T2*) weighted tissue relaxometric estimations were considered at the infarct region to detect any metabolic changes arising out of any neuroprotection and/or cellular proliferation / neurogenesis. PEDF group demonstrated a striking reduction of the T2*-values, which is indicative of an increased metabolic activity. Moreover, all the groups (Control, EGF and PEDF) demonstrated significantly elevated T2*-values at the contralateral striatum, which is indicative of widespread metabolic suppression usually associated with a variety of traumatic brain conditions. Moreover, as expected from the properties of PEDF, it demonstrated an extended BBB permeability suppression throughout the duration of the study. This study underlines the merits of considering non-invasive imaging strategies without which it was not possible to study the required parameters in a longitudinal fashion. All the observations are adequately supported by reasonably well defined mechanisms and needs to be further verified and confirmed by an immunohistochemical study. These results also need to be complemented by a functional study to evaluate the behavioural outcome of animals following these treatments. These studies are progressing at our laboratory and the results will be duly published afterwards.}, subject = {Schlaganfall}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Goetz2010, author = {G{\"o}tz, Andreas}, title = {Replikation von enteroinvasiven Escherichia coli und Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhimurium St{\"a}mmen in Epithelzellen unter besonderer Betrachtung des Kohlenstoffmetabolismus}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-57292}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Schlagw{\"o}rter: Salmonella , Salmonella enterica , Salmonella typhimurium , Salmonellose , Escherichia coli , Shigella , Infektion , Bakterielle Infektion , Zellkultur , HeLa-Zelle , Apoptosis , Metabolismus , Stoffwechsel , Glucose , Glucosetransport , Glucosestoffwechsel , Katabolismus , Kohlenstoff , Kohlenstoffbedarf , Kohlenstoffhaushalt , Kohlenstoffstoffwechsel , Kohlenstoff-13 , Kohlenstoffisotop Salmonella Typhimurium und enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC) sind fakultativ intrazellul{\"a}re Bakterien aus der Familie der Enterobacteriaceae. W{\"a}hrend erstere sich nach der Internalisierung durch eukaryotische Zellen normalerweise in einem spezialisierten Phagosom, der Salmonella-enthaltenden Vakuole (SCV), vermehren, replizieren EIEC im Zytoplasma der Wirtszellen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde zun{\"a}chst durch Mikroinjektion die F{\"a}higkeit von S. Typhimurium 14028s untersucht, ebenfalls im Zytoplasma von Caco-2-Zellen replizieren zu k{\"o}nnen. Dabei wurde festgestellt, daß ein fr{\"u}her als S. Typhimurium 14028s WT bezeichneter Stamm eine Insertion eines Desoxythymidins an Position 76 des offenen Leserasters von rfbP tr{\"a}gt, einem Gen, dessen Protein an der LPS-Synthese beteiligt ist. Weiterhin synthetisierte dieser Stamm ein rauhes LPS. Aufgrund von Agglutination konnte der Rauh-Stamm nur mit geringem Erfolg mikroinjiziert werden. Hingegen lag 5 h nach der Mikroinjektion einer nicht invasiven Mutante von Salmonella mit vollst{\"a}ndigem LPS der Anteil an Caco-2-Zellen, die mehr als 32 Bakterien enthielten, bei etwa 30 \%. Der Anteil war 2-3 mal h{\"o}her als bei fr{\"u}heren Mikroinjektionen in HeLa-Zellen. Daher wurde das Verhalten von HeLa-Zellen nach einer Infektion durch S. Typhimurium ΔsifA - einer Mutante, die aus der SCV ins Zytoplasma entkommt - untersucht. Dabei wurde festgestellt, daß die sifA-Mutante 10 h nach der Infektion die Aktivit{\"a}t der Caspasen 9 und 3 in HeLa-Zellen, aber nicht in Caco-2-Zellen induziert. In weiteren Versuchen wurde die Bedeutung von Glukose, Glukose-6-phosphat und Mannose als Kohlenstoffquellen f{\"u}r die extra- und intrazellul{\"a}re Replikation zweier Isolate enteroinvasiver E. coli und eines S. Typhimurium Stammes analysiert. Zu diesem Zweck wurden zun{\"a}chst definierte Mutanten in den beiden wichtigsten Phosphoenolpyruvat-abh{\"a}ngigen Phosphotransferasesystemen (PTS) f{\"u}r die Aufnahme von Glukose und Mannose, ptsG und manXYZ, sowie im Antiporter f{\"u}r die Aufnahme von Glukose-6-phosphat, uhpT, konstruiert. Bei Wachstum im Minimalmedium mit Glukose als einziger C-Quelle waren die Generationszeiten aller ΔptsG- und ΔptsG, manXYZ-Mutanten im Vergleich zu den Wildst{\"a}mmen deutlich verl{\"a}ngert. Ebenso wuchsen ΔmanXYZ-Mutanten bzw. ΔuhpT-Mutanten deutlich langsamer auf Mannose bzw. Glukose-6-phosphat. Jedoch ergaben sich hierbei Stamm-spezifische Unterschiede. So erreichte EIEC 4608-58 ΔuhpT in der station{\"a}ren Phase eine {\"a}hnliche Zelldichte wie der Wildstamm in Gegenwart von Glukose-6-phosphat und eine ΔptsG, manXYZ-Mutante von S. Typhimurium 14028s konnte immer noch effizient mit Glukose wachsen. Infektionsversuche mit Caco-2-Zellen zeigten weiterhin, daß die Deletion von ptsG zu einer signifikanten Erh{\"o}hung der Adh{\"a}renz und Invasivit{\"a}t von EIEC 4608-58 f{\"u}hrt, w{\"a}hrend sich die intrazellul{\"a}ren Generationszeiten aller hier untersuchten Mutanten kaum ver{\"a}nderten. Selbst die ΔptsG, manXYZ, uhpT-Dreifachmutanten der drei hier verwendeten Enterobakterien und die ΔptsG, manXYZ, glk-Mutante von S. Typhimurium 14028s konnten immer noch in Caco-2-Zellen replizieren, wenn auch mit Stamm-spezifisch verringerten Geschwindigkeiten. 13C-Markierungsexperimente mit [U-13C6]-Glukose als Substrat ergaben jedoch, daß in der Tat alle hier untersuchten enterobakteriellen Wildst{\"a}mme Glukose w{\"a}hrend der Replikation in Caco-2-Zellen unter Zellkulturbedingungen verwerten. Glukose-6-phosphat, Glukonat oder Fetts{\"a}uren konnten dagegen als wichtigste Kohlenstoffquellen f{\"u}r das intrazellul{\"a}re Wachstum ausgeschlossen werden. EIEC 4608-58 metabolisierte Glukose jedoch weniger effizient als EIEC HN280 und schien zudem noch zus{\"a}tzlich C3-Substrate aus der Wirtszelle aufzunehmen. Das Markierungsmuster zeigte einen Stamm-spezifischen Kohlenstofffluß durch Glykolyse und/oder Entner-Doudoroff-Weg, Pentosephosphatzyklus, Citratzyklus und den anaplerotischen Reaktionen zwischen PEP und Oxalacetat. Mutanten mit Deletionen in ptsG und manXYZ konnten auf alternative C3-Substrate wechseln und glichen dies durch eine erh{\"o}hte Aufnahme von Aminos{\"a}uren aus den Wirtszellen aus.}, subject = {Escherichia coli}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Drescher2011, author = {Drescher, Jochen}, title = {The Ecology and Population structure of the invasive Yelllow Crazy Ant Anoplolepis gracilipes}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-57332}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2011}, abstract = {The invasive Yellow Crazy Ant Anoplolepis gracilipes is a widespread tropical ant species which is particularly common in anthropogenically disturbed habitats in South-East Asia and the Indopacific region. Its native range is unknown, and there is little information concerning its social structure as a potential mechanism facilitating invasion as well as its ecology in one of the putative native ranges, South-East Asia. Using mitochondrial DNA sequences, I demonstrated that the majority of the current Indopacific colonies were likely introduced from South-East Asian populations, which in turn may have been introduced much earlier from a yet unidentified native range. By conducting behavioral, genetic and chemical analyses, I found that A. gracilipes supercolonies contain closely related individuals, thus resembling enlarged versions of monogynous, polydomous colonies of other ant species. Furthermore, mutually aggressive A. gracilipes supercolonies were highly differentiated both genetically and chemically, suggesting limited or even absent gene flow between supercolonies. Intranidal mating and colony-budding are most likely the predominant, if not the exclusive mode of reproduction and dispersal strategy of A. gracilipes. Consequently, a positive feedback between genetic, chemical and behavioral traits may further enhance supercolony differentiation though genetic drift and neutral evolution. This potential scenario led to the hypothesis that absent gene flow between different A. gracilipes supercolonies may drive them towards different evolutionary pathways, possibly including speciation. Thus, I examined one potential way by which gene flow between supercolonies of an ant species without nuptial flights may be maintained, i.e. the immigration of sexuals into foreign supercolonies. The results suggest that this option of maintaining gene flow between different supercolonies is likely impaired by severe aggression of workers towards allocolonial sexuals. Moreover, breeding experiments involving males and queens from different supercolonies suggest that A. gracilipes supercolonies may already be on the verge of reproductive isolation, which might lead to the diversification of A. gracilipes into different species. Regarding the ecological consequences of its potential introduction to NE-Borneo, I could show that A. gracilipes supercolonies may affect the local ant fauna. The ant community within supercolonies was less diverse and differed in species composition from areas outside supercolonies. My data suggest that the ecological dominance of A. gracilipes within local ant communities was facilitated by monopolization of food sources within its supercolony territory, achieved by a combination of rapid recruitment, numerical dominance and pronounced interspecific aggression. A. gracilipes' distribution is almost exclusively limited to anthropogenically altered habitat, such as residential and agricultural areas. The rate at which habitat conversion takes place in NE-Borneo will provide A. gracilipes with a rapidly increasing abundance of suitable habitats, thus potentially entailing significant population growth. An potentially increasing population size and ecological dominance, however, are not features that are limited to invasive alien species, but may also occur in native species that become 'pests' in an increasing abundance of anthropogenically altered habitat. Lastly, I detected several ant guests in supercolonies of A. gracilipes. I subsequently describe the relationship between one of them (the cricket Myrmecophilus pallidithorax) and its ant host. By conducting behavioral bioassays and analyses of cuticular hydrocarbon (CHC) profiles, I revealed that although M. pallidithorax is attacked and consumed by A. gracilipes whenever possible, it may evade aggression from its host by a combination of supreme agility and, possibly, chemical deception. This thesis adds to our general understanding of biological invasions by contributing species-specific data on a previously understudied invasive organism, the Yellow Crazy Ant Anoplolepis gracilipes. Introductions which may have occurred a long time ago may make it difficult to determine whether a given species is an introduced invader or a native pest species, as both may have pronounced ecological effects in native species communities. Furthermore, this thesis suggests that supercolonialism in invasive ants may not be an evolutionary dead end, but that it may possibly give rise to new species due to reproductive boundaries between supercolonies evoked by peculiar mating and dispersal strategies.}, subject = {Dem{\"o}kologie}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Shityakov2011, author = {Shityakov, Sergey}, title = {Molecular modelling and simulation of retroviral proteins and nanobiocomposites}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-56960}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Molecular modelling and simulation are powerful methods in providing important in-formation on different biological systems to elucidate their structural and functional proper-ties, which cannot be determined in experiment. These methods are applied to analyse versa-tile biological systems: lipid membrane bilayers stabilized by an intercalated single wall carbon nanotube and retroviral proteins such as HIV protease and integrase. HIV-1 integrase has nuclear localization signals (NLS) which play a crucial role in nuclear import of viral preintegration complex (PIC). However, the detailed mechanisms of PIC formation and its nuclear transport are not known. Previously it was shown that NLSs bind to the cell transport machinery e.g. proteins of nuclear pore complex such as transportins. I investigated the interaction of this viral protein HIV-1 integrase with proteins of the nuclear pore complex such as transportin-SR2 (Shityakov et al., 2010). I showed that the transportin-SR2 in nuclear import is required due to its interaction with the HIV-1 integrase. I analyzed key domain interaction, and hydrogen bond formation in transportin-SR2. These results were discussed in comparison to other retroviral species such as foamy viruses to better understand this specific and efficient retroviral trafficking route. The retroviral nuclear import was next analyzed in experiments regarding the retroviral ability to infect nondividing cells. To accomplish the gene transfer task successfully, ret-roviruses must efficiently transduce different cell cultures at different phases of cell cycle. However, promising and safe foamy viral vectors used for gene transfer are unable to effi-ciently infect quiescent cells. This drawback was due to their inability to create a preintegra-tion complex (PIC) for nuclear import of retroviral DNA. On the contrary, the lentiviral vec-tors are not dependant on cell cycle. In the course of reverse transcription the polypurine tract (PPT) is believed to be crucial for PIC formation. In this thesis, I compared the transduction frequencies of PPT modified FV vectors with lentiviral vectors in nondividing and dividing alveolar basal epithelial cells from human adenocarcinoma (A549) by using molecular cloning, transfection and transduction techniques and several other methods. In contrast to lentiviral vectors, FV vectors were not able to effi-ciently transduce nondividing cell (Shityakov and Rethwilm, unpublished data). Despite the findings, which support the use of FV vectors as a safe and efficient alternative to lentiviral vectors, major limitation in terms of foamy-based retroviral vector gene transfer in quiescent cells still remains. Many attempts have been made recently to search for the potential molecules as pos-sible drug candidates to treat HIV infection for over decades now. These molecules can be retrieved from chemical libraries or can be designed on a computer screen and then synthe-sized in a laboratory. Most notably, one could use the computerized structure as a reference to determine the types of molecules that might block the enzyme. Such structure-based drug design strategies have the potential to save off years and millions of dollars compared to a more traditional trial-and-error drug development process. After the crystal structure of the HIV-encoded protease enzyme had been elucidated, computer-aided drug design played a pivotal role in the development of new compounds that inhibit this enzyme which is responsible for HIV maturation and infectivity. Promising repre-sentatives of these compounds have recently found their way to patients. Protease inhibitors show a powerful sustained suppression of HIV-1 replication, especially when used in combi-nation therapy regimens. However, these drugs are becoming less effective to more resistant HIV strains due to multiple mutations in the retroviral proteases. In computational drug design I used molecular modelling methods such as lead ex-pansion algorithm (Tripos®) to create a virtual library of compounds with different binding affinities to protease binding site. In addition, I heavily applied computer assisted combinato-rial chemistry approaches to design and optimize virtual libraries of protease inhibitors and performed in silico screening and pharmacophore-similarity scoring of these drug candidates. Further computational analyses revealed one unique compound with different protease bind-ing ability from the initial hit and its role for possible new class of protease inhibitors is dis-cussed (Shityakov and Dandekar, 2009). A number of atomistic models were developed to elucidate the nanotube behaviour in lipid bilayers. However, none of them provided useful information for CNT effect upon the lipid membrane bilayer for implementing all-atom models that will allow us to calculate the deviations of lipid molecules from CNT with atomistic precision. Unfortunately, the direct experimental investigation of nanotube behaviour in lipid bilayer remains quite a tricky prob-lem opening the door before the molecular simulation techniques. In this regard, more de-tailed multi-scale simulations are needed to clearly understand the stabilization characteristics of CNTs in hydrophobic environment. The phenomenon of an intercalated single-wall carbon nanotube in the center of lipid membrane was extensively studied and analyzed. The root mean square deviation and root mean square fluctuation functions were calculated in order to measure stability of lipid mem-branes. The results indicated that an intercalated carbon nanotube restrains the conformational freedom of adjacent lipids and hence has an impact on the membrane stabilization dynamics (Shityakov and Dandekar, 2011). On the other hand, different lipid membranes may have dissimilarities due to the differing abilities to create a bridge formation between the adherent lipid molecules. The results derived from this thesis will help to develop stable nanobiocom-posites for construction of novel biomaterials and delivery of various biomolecules for medi-cine and biology.}, subject = {Kohlenstoff}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Goeb2011, author = {G{\"o}b, Eva}, title = {Die Kernh{\"u}lle in Keimzellen: Strukturelle Besonderheiten, dynamische Prozesse und die Umgestaltung des Zellkerns w{\"a}hrend der Spermatogenese der Maus}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-56839}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Die Kernh{\"u}lle umgibt als geschlossenes Membransystem einen jeden Zellkern und ist damit ein gemeinsames Merkmal aller eukaryotischen Zellen. Sie besteht aus einer inneren und einer {\"a}ußeren Kernmembran sowie der nukleoplasmatischen Kernlamina, die aufgrund zahlreicher assoziierter Proteine in enger Wechselbeziehung mit der inneren Kernmembran steht. Neben der rein r{\"a}umlichen Trennung nukle{\"a}rer und zytoplasmatischer Strukturen hat die Kernh{\"u}lle bedeutenden regulatorischen Einfluss auf die gesamte Zelle. So ist sie unter anderem an der Steuerung der genomischen Aktivit{\"a}t, an der nukleo- und zytoplasmatischen Signal{\"u}bertragung und in hohem Maße an der Positionierung und Formerhaltung des Zellkerns beteiligt. Es mehren sich die Hinweise, dass die Kernh{\"u}lle auch w{\"a}hrend der Gametogenese, der Differenzierung befruchtungsf{\"a}higer Keimzellen, eine zentrale Rolle einnimmt und folglich auch mit bislang ungekl{\"a}rten Ursachen humaner Infertilit{\"a}t in Kontext stehen k{\"o}nnte. Um die Bedeutung der Kernh{\"u}lle f{\"u}r die Keimbahn der S{\"a}uger generell besser verstehen zu k{\"o}nnen, wurden in dieser Arbeit ausgew{\"a}hlte Bestandteile der Keimzellkernh{\"u}lle untersucht. Dadurch sollte der Kenntnisstand erweitert werden, in welcher Weise die Kernh{\"u}lle dynamische, morphologische und vor allem f{\"u}r die Keimbahn essentielle Prozesse beeinflusst; insbesondere w{\"a}hrend der meiotischen und der postmeiotischen Differenzierungsphase bei m{\"a}nnlichen M{\"a}usen. Im Mittelpunkt stand dabei einerseits Lamin C2, ein meiosespezifisches A-Typ Lamin, dessen Verlust zu einer schwer gesch{\"a}digten Meiose und infolgedessen zu vollst{\"a}ndiger m{\"a}nnlicher Infertilit{\"a}t f{\"u}hrt. Es zeigte sich, dass Lamin C2-defiziente m{\"a}nnliche M{\"a}use schwerwiegende Defekte bei der Paarung und Synapsis der homologen Chromosomen in der meiotischen Prophase I aufweisen und aufgrund apoptotischer Spermatocyten keine reifen Spermien bilden k{\"o}nnen. Es wird angenommen, dass die Assoziation homologer Chromosomen bzw. die Abstoßung nicht-homologer durch gerichtete Telomerbewegungen entlang der Kernh{\"u}llenperipherie vorangetrieben bzw. verhindert wird. Da Lamin C2 seinerseits diese Wanderung der Telomere durch eine Flexibilisierung der Spermatocytenkernh{\"u}lle vereinfachen soll, ist es durchaus vorstellbar, dass sein Verlust verlangsamte Telomerbewegungen, eine gest{\"o}rte Homologenfindung und folglich Fehlpaarungen zur Folge hat. Ein weiteres zentrales Thema war die Erforschung potentieller LINC-Komplexe w{\"a}hrend der Differenzierungs- und morphologischen Umgestaltungsphase postmeiotischer Keimzellen. LINC-Komplexe sind kernh{\"u}llendurchspannende Proteingebilde aus SUN-Proteinen in der inneren und Nesprinen in der {\"a}ußeren Kernmembran, die nukle{\"a}re Strukturen an das Zytoskelett binden. Da sie aufgrund dieser strukturellen Eigenschaft die Kernmorphologie beeinflussen k{\"o}nnen, erscheinen sie als {\"a}ußerst geeignet, an der Formierung des Spermienkopfes beteiligt zu sein. Die detaillierte Untersuchung spermiogeneserelevanter LINC-Komplex-Bestandteile ergab, dass w{\"a}hrend der Spermiogenese tats{\"a}chlich zwei neue, strukturell einzigartige LINC-Komplexe gebildet werden, die dar{\"u}ber hinaus auf den entgegengesetzten Seiten differenzierender Spermatiden polarisieren. Da sie den Kern dort an jeweils spezielle Zytoskelettelemente binden k{\"o}nnten, wurde in dieser Arbeit das Modell der LINC-Komplex vermittelten Umformung des Spermienkopfes aufgestellt. Insgesamt tr{\"a}gt diese Arbeit durch die funktionelle Analyse von Lamin C2 und die Identifizierung neuer LINC-Komplexe dazu bei, die Wichtigkeit der Kernh{\"u}lle f{\"u}r die Spermatogenese zu vertiefen und auszuweiten.}, subject = {Spermatogenese}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Geissinger2010, author = {Geissinger, Ulrike}, title = {Vaccinia Virus-mediated MR Imaging of Tumors in Mice: Overexpression of Iron-binding Proteins in Colonized Xenografts}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48099}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Vaccinia virus plays an important role in human medicine and molecular biology ever since the 18th century after E. Jenner discovered its value as a vaccination virus against smallpox. After the successful eradication of smallpox, vaccinia virus, apart from its use as a vaccine carrier, is today mainly used as a viral vector in molecular biology and increasingly in cancer therapy. The capability to specifically target and destroy cancer cells makes it a perfect agent for oncolytic virotherapy. Furthermore, the virus can easily be modified by inserting genes encoding therapeutic or diagnostic proteins to be expressed within the tumor. The emphasis in this study was the diagnosis of tumors using different vaccinia virus strains. Viruses with metal-accumulating capabilities for tumor detection via MRI technology were generated and tested for their usefulness in cell culture and in vivo. The virus strains GLV-1h131, GLV-1h132, and GLV-1h133 carry the gene encoding the two subunits of the iron storage protein ferritin under the control of three different promoters. GLV-1h110, GLV-1h111, and GLV-1h112 encode the bacterial iron storage protein bacterioferritin, whereas GLV-1h113 encodes the codon-optimized version of bacterioferritin for more efficient expression in human cells. GLV-1h22 contains the transferrin receptor gene, which plays an important role in iron uptake, and GLV-1h114 and GLV-1h115 contain the murine transferrin receptor gene. For possibly better iron uptake the virus strains GLV-1h154, GLV-1h155, GLV-1h156, and GLV-1h157 were generated, each with a version of a ferritin gene and a transferrin receptor gene. GLV-1h154 carries the genes that encode bacterioferritin and human transferrin receptor, GLV-1h155 the human ferritin H-chain gene and the human transferrin receptor gene. GLV-1h156 and GLV-1h157 infected cells both express the mouse transferrin receptor and bacterioferritin or human ferritin H-chain, respectively. The virus strains GLV-1h186 and GLV-1h187 were generated to contain a mutated form of the ferritin light chain, which was shown to result in iron overload and the wildtype light chain gene, respectively. The gene encoding the Divalent Metal Transporter 1, which is a major protein in the uptake of iron, was inserted in the virus strain GLV-1h102. The virus strain GLV-1h184 contains the magA gene of the magnetotactic bacterium Magnetospirillum magnetotacticum, which produces magnetic nanoparticles for orientation in the earth's magnetic field. Initially the infection and replication capability of all the virus strains were analyzed and compared to that of the parental virus strain GLV-1h68, revealing that all the viruses were able to infect cells of the human cancer cell lines A549 and GI-101A. All constructs exhibited a course of infection comparable to that of GLV-1h68. Next, to investigate the expression of the foreign proteins in GI-101A and A549 cells with protein analytical methods, SDS-gelelectrophoresis, Western blots and ELISAs were performed. The proteins, which were expressed under the control of the strong promoters, could be detected using these methods. To be able to successfully detect the protein expression of MagA and DMT1, which were expressed under the control of the weak promoter, the more sensitive method RT-PCR was used to at least confirm the transcription of the inserted genes. The determination of the iron content in infected GI-101A and A549 cells showed that infection with all used virus strains led to iron accumulation in comparison to uninfected cells, even infection with the parental virus strain GLV-1h68. The synthetic phytochelatin EC20 was also shown to enhance the accumulation of different heavy metals in bacterial cultures. In vivo experiments with A549 tumor-bearing athymic nude mice revealed that 24 days post infection virus particles were found mainly in the tumor. The virus-mediated expression of recombinant proteins in the tumors was detected successfully by Western blot. Iron accumulation in tumor lysates was investigated by using the ferrozine assay and led to the result that GLV-1h68-infected tumors had the highest iron content. Histological stainings confirmed the finding that iron accumulation was not a direct result of the insertion of genes encoding iron-accumulating proteins in the virus genome. Furthermore virus-injected tumorous mice were analyzed using MRI technology. Two different measurements were performed, the first scan being done with a seven Tesla small animal scanner seven days post infection whereas the second scan was performed using a three Tesla human scanner 21 days after virus injection. Tumors of mice injected with the virus strains GLV-1h113 and GLV-1h184 were shown to exhibit shortened T2 and T2* relaxation times, which indicates enhanced iron accumulation. In conclusion, the experiments in this study suggest that the bacterioferritin-encoding virus strain GLV-1h113 and the magA-encoding virus strain GLV-1h184 are promising candidates to be used for cancer imaging after further analyzation and optimization.}, subject = {Vaccinia-Virus}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Heisig2010, author = {Heisig, Martin}, title = {Development of novel Listeria monocytogenes strains as therapeutic agents for targeted tumor therapy}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48628}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Despite marked progress in development and improvement of cancer therapies the rate of cancer related death remained stable over the last years. Especially in treating metastases alternative approaches supporting current therapies are required. Bacterial and viral vectors have been advanced from crude tools into highly sophisticated therapeutic agents detecting and treating neoplastic leasions. They might be potent enough to fill in this therapeutic demand. In this thesis Listeria monocytogenes was investigated as carrier for targeted bacterial cancer therapy. One part of the study focussed on modification of a functional bacterial mRNA delivery system. Genomic integration of T7 RNA polymerase driving mRNA production allowed reduction to an one-plasmid-system and thereby partially relieved the growth retardation exerted by mRNA delivery. Importantly the integration allowed metabolic attenuation of the mRNA delivery mutant potentially enabling in vivo applications. Further expansion of the bacterial RNA delivery system for transfer of shRNAs was examined. Bacterial mutants producing high amounts of RNA containing shRNA sequences were constructed, however a functional proof of gene silencing on delivery in eukaryotic cell lines was not achieved. The second part of this thesis focussed on increasing tumor colonization by Listeria monocytogenes in vivo. Coating bacteria with antibodies against receptors overexpressed on distinct tumor cell lines enabled specific bacterial internalization into these cells in vitro. Optimization of the bacterial antibody coating process resulted in an up to 104-fold increase of intracellular bacteria. Combination of this antibody-mediated targeting with the delivery of prodrug-converting enzymes showed a cytotoxic effect in cell lines treated with the corresponding prodrug. Since incubation in murine serum completely abrogated antibodymediated bacterial internalization the antibodies were covalently linked to the bacteria for application in xenografted tumor mice. Bacteria coated and crosslinked in this manner showed enhanced tumor targeting in a murine tumor model demonstrating antibodymediated bacterial tumor targeting in vivo. Independent of antibody-mediated tumor targeting the intrinsic tumor colonization of different Listeria monocytogenes mutants was examined. Listeria monocytogenes \&\#916;aroA \&\#916;inlGHE colonized murine melanoma xenografts highly efficient, reaching up to 108 CFU per gram of tumor mass 7 days post infection. Taken together the presented data shows highly promising aspects for potential bacterial application in future tumor therapies. Combination of the delivery systems with antibodymediated- and intrinsic bacterial tumor targeting might open novel dimensions utilizing Listeria monocytogenes as therapeutic vector in targeted tumor therapy.}, subject = {Krebs }, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Seubert2010, author = {Seubert, Carolin}, title = {Onkolytische Virotherapie : Virus-vermittelte Expression von MCP-1 oder ß-Galaktosidase in Vaccinia-Virus-kolonisierten Tumoren f{\"u}hrt zu einer erh{\"o}hten Tumorregression}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48083}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Ungeachtet der enormen Entwicklung in Krebsdiagnostik und -Therapie in den letzten Jahren, sind vollst{\"a}ndige Heilungsaussichten weiterhin gering und die aktuellen Behandlungsmethoden oftmals mit schwerwiegenden Nebeneffekten verbunden. Aufgrund dessen sind alternative Behandlungsmethoden unbedingt erforderlich und f{\"u}hrten zu einer zunehmenden Bedeutung des Vaccinia-Virus als onkolytisches Virus in der Krebstherapie. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden zwei m{\"o}gliche Therapieans{\"a}tze zur Verst{\"a}rkung der onkolytischen Effekte in humanen Tumormodellen untersucht. Die Kombination einer gene-directed enzyme prodrug Therapie (GDEPT) mit dem onkolytischen Vaccinia-Virus GLV 1h68 sollte zur Selektivit{\"a}tssteigerung eines ß-Galaktosidase-aktivierbaren, cytotoxisch-aktiven Drugs f{\"u}hren. Dar{\"u}ber hinaus diente das f{\"u}r MCP-1 codierende Vaccinia-Virus GLV-1h80, zielend auf eine Cytokin-vermittelten Immuntherapie, als Vektor zur spezifischen Beeinflussung des intratumoralen Chemokin-Netzwerks. Im Zuge der GDEPT wurde in dieser Arbeit ein, durch enzymatische Deglykosylierug aktivierbares Prodrug, basierend auf dem cytotoxischem Antibiotikum Duocarmycin SA verwendet. Durch eine Infektion mit GLV-1h68 und einer resultierenden Expression des aktivierenden Enzyms ß-Galaktosidase, sollte eine Umwandlung des Prodrugs in ein cytotoxisches Drug erfolgen. In vitro Infektionsstudien zeigten ein nahezu identisches Replikationsverhalten des Vaccinia-Virus GLV-1h68 und des als Kontrollvirus dienenden rVACV GLV-1h43 in humanen GI-101A-Brustkrebszellen. Die Expression der beiden Reporter-Gene Ruc-GFP sowie ß-Galaktosidase konnten auf Protein-Ebene und mittels RT-PCR nach Infektion mit GLV-1h68 nachgewiesen werden. GLV-1h43-Infektion von GI-101A-Zellen f{\"u}hrte zu GFP-Expression, jedoch nicht zur Expression des Enzyms ß Galaktosidase. Untersuchung der Enzym-Aktivit{\"a}t in Zelllysaten und Zellkultur-{\"U}berst{\"a}nden zeigten nach Infektion mit GLV 1h68 steigende Menge zellul{\"a}r assoziierter und freier ß-Galaktosidase. Des Weiteren wurde durch Koinkubation von GI-101A-Zellen mit Virus-freien, ß Galaktosidase-haltigen Zelllysaten bzw. -{\"u}berst{\"a}nden und Prodrug eine Aktivierung des Prodrugs durch das Virus codierte Enzym nachgewiesen. Diese Koinkubation f{\"u}hrte zur Abt{\"o}tung der Zellen. Nach Inkubation mit Proben mock- oder GLV 1h43-infizierter Zellen konnte keiner Ver{\"a}nderung der Proliferationsrate von GI-101A-Zellen gefunden werden. Kombinierte Behandlung von GI 101A-Zellen mit Viren des Stammes GLV 1h68 und Prodrug f{\"u}hrte zu starken Synergieeffekten bei der Abt{\"o}tung der Zellen und wies einen Bystander Effekt der Kombinationstherapie nach. Dieser konnte in 4 weiteren humanen und 2 Hunde-Brustkrebszellen best{\"a}tigt werden. Der erzielte Bystander-Effekt zeigt, dass es nach Virus-induzierter ß-Galaktosidase-Expression in GLV 1h68-infizierten Zellen zu einer enzymatischen Spaltung des Prodrugs in das cytotoxische seco-Analogon des Antibiotikums Duocarmycin SA kommt. Durch die Membrang{\"a}ngigkeit des Drugs konnte auch in angrenzenden uninfizierten Zellen eine Wirkung erzielt werden. Anhand von Expressionsanalysen an Apoptose-assoziierten Proteinen, wie PARP und Caspasen, wurde eine Wirkung des Prodrugs {\"u}ber den intrinsischen Apoptose-Signalweg nachgewiesen. In athymischen Nude-M{\"a}usen durchgef{\"u}hrte Replikationsanalysen und X-Gal-F{\"a}rbungen GLV 1h68 infizierter Tumore nach Prodrug-Behandlung zeigten, dass GLV-1h68 ungeachtet der simultanen Behandlung mit Prodrug im Tumorgewebe repliziert und es nicht zur Anreicherung lacZ-negativer Virusmutanten kommt. Es konnten, durch Prodrug-Behandlung und einer simultanen Expression aktiver ß Galaktosidase, starke synergistische Effekte und eine signifikante Steigerung der Tumorregression erzielt werden. Da die Kombinationstherapie zu keinerlei Unterschieden in Gewicht und Gesundheitszustand behandelter Versuchstiere f{\"u}hrte, konnte eine systemische Toxizit{\"a}t außerhalb des Tumorgewebes ausgeschlossen werden. Verschiedene Zelllinien weisen Unterschiede in ihrer Sensitivit{\"a}t gegen{\"u}ber der onkolytischen Aktivit{\"a}t von Vaccinia-Virus GLV-1h68 auf. W{\"a}hrend einige Zelllinien trotz Virus-Behandlung unver{\"a}ndertes Proliferationsverhalten zeigen (non- oder poor-responder), f{\"u}hrt diese Behandlung in anderen Zelllinien zu einer vollst{\"a}ndigen Tumorregression (responder). In Anbetracht dieser Unterschiede wurden in dieser Arbeit die Effekte einer induzierten Expression des murinen Chemokins MCP-1 in GI-101A-Tumoren (responder) und HT29-CBG-Tumoren (poor-responder) untersucht. MCP-1 zeichnet sich durch seine chemotaktischen Eigenschaften gegen{\"u}ber mononukle{\"a}rer Zellen aus und f{\"u}hrt zu pleiotropen Tumor-Effekten. Replikationsstudien am Virus GLV-1h80 und des als Kontrollvirus dienenden rVACV GLV-1h68 zeigten, dass aus der Expression des Fremd-Gens mcp-1 sowohl in vitro als auch in vivo keinerlei negativen Effekte auf das Replikationsverhalten in humanen GI-101A- und HT29-CBG-Zellen resultieren. Durch Real-time Monitoring der GFP-Expression im Tumorgewebe lebender Tiere konnte zun{\"a}chst eine mit dem Infektionsverlauf zunehmende Signalst{\"a}rke beobachtet werden, welche dann 42 dpi an Intensit{\"a}t verlor. Toxizit{\"a}t und sch{\"a}dliche Nebeneffekte durch Infektion mit den beiden rVACV konnten anhand der viralen Titer in den Organen der Maus ausgeschlossen werden. Die Titer wiesen auf eine ausschließlich auf das Tumorgewebe begrenzte Replikation der Viren nach Injektion in Tumor-tragende Tiere hin. Die Expression des Chemokins MCP-1 wurde sowohl auf transkriptioneller als auch auf translationeller Ebene in GLV-1h80-inifzierten Zellen und im Tumorgewebe GLV 1h80-injizierter M{\"a}use nachgewiesen. Nach Infektion mit GLV-1h80 konnte eine mit dem Infektionsverlauf zunehmende MCP-1-Expression gezeigt werden. Dabei wurde zudem deutlich, dass nicht nur eine GLV-1h80-Infektion in vivo zu einer Zunahme der intratumoralen MCP-1-Expression f{\"u}hrte, sondern eine Vaccinia-Virus-Infektion allein einen Anstieg des Chemokins zu bewirken vermag. Eine Quantifizierung durch ELISA machte Konzentrationsunterschiede von MCP-1 zwischen den Tumormodellen GI-101A und HT29-CBG deutlich. Sowohl in vitro als auch in vivo f{\"u}hrte ein GLV-1h80-Infektion zu deutlich niedrigeren Konzentrationen im HT29-CBG-Kolon-Adenokarzinommodell. Ein Nachweis murinen MCP-1 in Blutseren Tumor-tragender Tiere zeigte eine f{\"u}r therapeutische Effekte erw{\"u}nschte systemische Freisetzung des intratumoral durch die Infektion mit GLV-1h80 gebildeten Chemokins MCP-1. Durch immunhistologische Untersuchungen GLV-1h80-infizierter Zellen und Tumoren konnte diese, mit dem Infektionsverlauf zunehmende MCP-1-Expression best{\"a}tigt werden. Die funktionelle Aktivit{\"a}t des rekombinanten Proteins wurde anhand TNF-\&\#945;-spezifischer ELISA-Analysen {\"u}berpr{\"u}ft. Dabei zeigte sich eine erh{\"o}hte Expression dieses proinflammatorischen Cytokins in GI-101A-Tumoren nach Infektion mit GLV-1h80. Dagegen konnte keine Steigerung der Expression im HT29-CBG-Tumorgewebe nachgewiesen werden. Ein Nachweis des durch proinflammatorische Immunzellen exprimierten Oberlfl{\"a}chenproteins CD14 zeigte ebenfalls einen Anstieg nach Infektion mit GLV-1h80. Auch diese ver{\"a}nderte Expression blieb im poor-Responder-Modell HT29-CBG aus. Die steigende intratumorale Expression der beiden Proteine in GI-101A-Tumoren nach GLV 1h80-Infektion l{\"a}sst auf eine Zunahme pro-inflammatorischer Immunzellen, basierend auf einer Virus-induzierten MCP-1-Expression schließen. Ein Monitoring der Tumorprogression nach Implantation von GI 101A-Zellen und Injektion der rVACV GLV-1h80 und GLV-1h68 bzw. einer PBS-Injektion f{\"u}hrte nach einer anf{\"a}nglichen Zunahme des Tumorwachstums schließlich bei beiden Viren zu einer Tumorregression. Jedoch konnte durch die GLV-1h80-vermittelte MCP-1-Expression eine Verst{\"a}rkung der onkolytischen Effekte erzielt werden, welche sich durch eine signifikante Abnahme des Tumorvolumens zeigte. Im HT29-CBG-Modell f{\"u}hrten die therapeutischen Effekte durch rVACV GLV-1h80 zwar zu keiner Regression des Tumors, jedoch zeigte sich auch in diesem humanen Tumormodell eine Verst{\"a}rkung der onkolytischen Effekte nach GLV-1h80-Infektion im Vergleich zu einer GLV 1h68-Behandlung. Durch die GLV-1h80-induzierte Expression des Chemokins MCP-1 konnte somit eine Hemmung des Tumorwachstums auch im poor-Responder-Modell HT29-CBG erzielt werden. Sowohl die Verwendung eines ß-Galaktosidase-aktivierbaren Prodrugs im Zuge einer GDEPT, als auch die Beeinflussung des intratumoralen Chemokin-Netzwerks durch Expression des Chemokins MCP-1 f{\"u}hrten in dieser Arbeit zu positiven Synergismus-Effekten in der onkolytischen Virustherapie. Durch k{\"u}nftige Konstruktion eines rVACV, welches sowohl die Expression des Chemokins MCP-1, als auch des prodrug-aktivierenden Enzyms ß-Galaktosidase im Tumorgewebe induziert, k{\"o}nnte in Kombination mit einer Prodrug-Behandlung eine zus{\"a}tzliche Verst{\"a}rkung der Effekte erzielt und m{\"o}glicherweise eine erfolgreiche Virustherapie in bisher schwach ansprechenden poor- bzw. non-Responder-Modellen erm{\"o}glicht werden.}, subject = {Vaccinia-Virus}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Brandstaetter2010, author = {Brandstaetter, Andreas Simon}, title = {Neuronal correlates of nestmate recognition in the carpenter ant, Camponotus floridanus}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-55963}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Cooperation is beneficial for social groups and is exemplified in its most sophisticated form in social insects. In particular, eusocial Hymenoptera, like ants and honey bees, exhibit a level of cooperation only rarely matched by other animals. To assure effective defense of group members, foes need to be recognized reliably. Ants use low-volatile, colony-specific profiles of cuticular hydrocarbons (colony odor) to discriminate colony members (nestmates) from foreign workers (non-nestmates). For colony recognition, it is assumed that multi-component colony odors are compared to a neuronal template, located in a so far unidentified part of the nervous system, where a mismatch results in aggression. Alternatively, a sensory filter in the periphery of the nervous system has been suggested to act as a template, causing specific anosmia to nestmate colony odor due to sensory adaptation and effectively blocking perception of nestmates. Colony odors are not stable, but change over time due to environmental influences. To adjust for this, the recognition system has to be constantly updated (template reformation). In this thesis, I provide evidence that template reformation can be induced artificially, by modifying the sensory experience of carpenter ants (Camponotus floridanus; Chapter 1). The results of the experiments showed that template reformation is a relatively slow process taking several hours and this contradicts the adaptation-based sensory filter hypothesis. This finding is supported by first in-vivo measurements describing the neuronal processes underlying template reformation (Chapter 5). Neurophysiological measurements were impeded at the beginning of this study by the lack of adequate technical means to present colony odors. In a behavioral assay, I showed that tactile interaction is not necessary for colony recognition, although colony odors are of very low volatility (Chapter 2). I developed a novel stimulation technique (dummy-delivered stimulation) and tested its suitability for neurophysiological experiments (Chapter 3). My experiments showed that dummy-delivered stimulation is especially advantageous for presentation of low-volatile odors. Colony odor concentration in headspace was further increased by moderately heating the dummies, and this allowed me to measure neuronal correlates of colony odors in the peripheral and the central nervous system using electroantennography and calcium imaging, respectively (Chapter 4). Nestmate and non-nestmate colony odor elicited strong neuronal responses in olfactory receptor neurons of the antenna and in the functional units of the first olfactory neuropile of the ant brain, the glomeruli of the antennal lobe (AL). My results show that ants are not anosmic to nestmate colony odor and this clearly invalidates the previously suggested sensory filter hypothesis. Advanced two-photon microscopy allowed me to investigate the neuronal representation of colony odors in different neuroanatomical compartments of the AL (Chapter 5). Although neuronal activity was distributed inhomogeneously, I did not find exclusive representation restricted to a single AL compartment. This result indicates that information about colony odors is processed in parallel, using the computational power of the whole AL network. In the AL, the patterns of glomerular activity (spatial activity patterns) were variable, even in response to repeated stimulation with the same colony odor (Chapter 4\&5). This finding is surprising, as earlier studies indicated that spatial activity patterns in the AL reflect how an odor is perceived by an animal (odor quality). Under natural conditions, multi-component odors constitute varying and fluctuating stimuli, and most probably animals are generally faced with the problem that these elicit variable neuronal responses. Two-photon microscopy revealed that variability was higher in response to nestmate than to non-nestmate colony odor (Chapter 5), possibly reflecting plasticity of the AL network, which allows template reformation. Due to their high variability, spatial activity patterns in response to different colony odors were not sufficiently distinct to allow attribution of odor qualities like 'friend' or 'foe'. This finding challenges our current notion of how odor quality of complex, multi-component odors is coded. Additional neuronal parameters, e.g. precise timing of neuronal activity, are most likely necessary to allow discrimination. The lower variability of activity patterns elicited by non-nestmate compared to nestmate colony odor might facilitate recognition of non-nestmates at the next level of the olfactory pathway. My research efforts made the colony recognition system accessible for direct neurophysiological investigations. My results show that ants can perceive their own nestmates. The neuronal representation of colony odors is distributed across AL compartments, indicating parallel processing. Surprisingly, the spatial activity patterns in response to colony are highly variable, raising the question how odor quality is coded in this system. The experimental advance presented in this thesis will be useful to gain further insights into how social insects discriminate friends and foes. Furthermore, my work will be beneficial for the research field of insect olfaction as colony recognition in social insects is an excellent model system to study the coding of odor quality and long-term memory mechanisms underlying recognition of complex, multi-component odors.}, subject = {Neuroethologie}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Keller2010, author = {Keller, Alexander}, title = {Secondary (and tertiary) structure of the ITS2 and its application for phylogenetic tree reconstructions and species identification}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-56151}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Biodiversity may be investigated and explored by the means of genetic sequence information and molecular phylogenetics. Yet, with ribosomal genes, information for phylogenetic studies may not only be retained from the primary sequence, but also from the secondary structure. Software that is able to cope with two dimensional data and designed to answer taxonomic questions has been recently developed and published as a new scientific pipeline. This thesis is concerned with expanding this pipeline by a tool that facialiates the annotation of a ribosomal region, namely the ITS2. We were also able to show that this states a crucial step for secondary structure phylogenetics and for data allocation of the ITS2-database. This resulting freely available tool determines high quality annotations. In a further study, the complete phylogenetic pipeline has been evaluated on a theoretical basis in a comprehensive simulation study. We were able to show that both, the accuracy and the robustness of phylogenetic trees are largely improved by the approach. The second major part of this thesis concentrates on case studies that applied this pipeline to resolve questions in taxonomy and ecology. We were able to determine several independent phylogenies within the green algae that further corroborate the idea that secondary structures improve the obtainable phylogenetic signal, but now from a biological perspective. This approach was applicable in studies on the species and genus level, but due to the conservation of the secondary structure also for investigations on the deeper level of taxonomy. An additional case study with blue butterflies indicates that this approach is not restricted to plants, but may also be used for metazoan phylogenies. The importance of high quality phylogenetic trees is indicated by two ecological studies that have been conducted. By integrating secondary structure phylogenetics, we were able to answer questions about the evolution of ant-plant interactions and of communities of bacteria residing on different plant tissues. Finally, we speculate how phylogenetic methods with RNA may be further enhanced by integration of the third dimension. This has been a speculative idea that was supplemented with a small phylogenetic example, however it shows that the great potential of structural phylogenetics has not been fully exploited yet. Altogether, this thesis comprises aspects of several different biological disciplines, which are evolutionary biology and biodiversity research, community and invasion ecology as well as molecular and structural biology. Further, it is complemented by statistical approaches and development of informatical software. All these different research areas are combined by the means of bioinformatics as the central connective link into one comprehensive thesis.}, subject = {Phylogenie}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Arumugam2010, author = {Arumugam, Manimozhiyan}, title = {Comparative metagenomic analysis of the human intestinal microbiota}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-55903}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {The human gut is home for thousands of microbes that are important for human life. As most of these cannot be cultivated, metagenomics is an important means to understand this important community. To perform comparative metagenomic analysis of the human gut microbiome, I have developed SMASH (Simple metagenomic analysis shell), a computational pipeline. SMASH can also be used to assemble and analyze single genomes, and has been successfully applied to the bacterium Mycoplasma pneumoniae and the fungus Chaetomium thermophilum. In the context of the MetaHIT (Metagenomics of the human intestinal tract) consortium our group is participating in, I used SMASH to validate the assembly and to estimate the assembly error rate of 576.7 Gb metagenome sequence obtained using Illumina Solexa technology from fecal DNA of 124 European individuals. I also estimated the completeness of the gene catalogue containing 3.3 million open reading frames obtained from these metagenomes. Finally, I used SMASH to analyze human gut metagenomes of 39 individuals from 6 countries encompassing a wide range of host properties such as age, body mass index and disease states. We find that the variation in the gut microbiome is not continuous but stratified into enterotypes. Enterotypes are complex host-microbial symbiotic states that are not explained by host properties, nutritional habits or possible technical biases. The concept of enterotypes might have far reaching implications, for example, to explain different responses to diet or drug intake. We also find several functional markers in the human gut microbiome that correlate with a number of host properties such as body mass index, highlighting the need for functional analysis and raising hopes for the application of microbial markers as diagnostic or even prognostic tools for microbiota-associated human disorders.}, subject = {Darmflora}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Reiss2010, author = {Reiß, Cora}, title = {Einfluss von Defekten des Mismatch Reparatur Proteins MLH1 (Mut L Homolog 1) auf Fertilit{\"a}t und Tumorgenese im Mausmodell}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-53626}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Mutationen im humanen DNA Mismatch-Reparatur (MMR) Gens Mlh1 sind mit dem erblichen, nicht-polyp{\"o}sen Kolonkarzinom (Lynch Syndrom, HNPCC) und einem signifikanten Anteil sporadischer kolorektaler Tumore assoziiert. Zudem konnten MMR Defekte in sporadischen und erblichen Lymphom Erkrankungen beschrieben werden. In Zellen resultiert die Inaktivierung des Mlh1 Gens in der Akkumulation von somatischen Mutationen im Genom und einer erh{\"o}hten Resistenz gegen{\"u}ber den genotoxischen Effekten einer Vielzahl von DNA sch{\"a}digenden Agenzien. M{\"a}use, die ein Null Allel f{\"u}r das MMR Gen Mlh1 tragen zeigen einen starken Tumorpr{\"a}dispositions Ph{\"a}notyp. Sie entwickeln vorrangig B- und T-Zell Lymphome und mit geringerer Haufigkeit gastrointestinale Tumore. Zus{\"a}tzlich sind Mlh1-/- M{\"a}use durch einen meiotischen Ph{\"a}notyp charakterisiert, der zu Sterilit{\"a}ten in beiden Geschlechtern f{\"u}hrt. Um die Effekte von Mlh1 missense Mutationen auf die Tumoranf{\"a}lligkeit zu untersuchen, erzeugten wir eine Mauslinie, die die h{\"a}ufig in HNPCC Patienten beschriebene MLH1G67R Mutation tragen, die in einer der ATP Bindungs-Dom{\"a}nen von MLH1 lokalisiert ist. Auch wenn die MLH1G67R Mutation in homozygot mutanten M{\"a}usen in einer DNA Reparatur Defizienz resultierte hatte sie keinen Effekt auf die MMR vermittelte zellul{\"a}re Antwort auf DNA Sch{\"a}den. Hierzu geh{\"o}rte die apoptotische Antwort von Epithelzellen der intestinalen Mucosa auf Cisplatin, die in Mlh1-/- M{\"a}usen defektiv jedoch in Mlh1G67R/G67R M{\"a}usen normal ausfiel. Mlh1G67R/G67R mutante M{\"a}use zeigten wie Mlh1-/- Tiere einen starken Tumorpr{\"a}dispositions Ph{\"a}notyp. Sie entwickelten jedoch im Vergleich zu Mlh1-/- Tieren signifikant weniger gastrointestinale Tumore, was darauf hinweist, dass Mlh1 missense Mutationen die Tumor supprimierende MMR Funktion in einer Gewebs-spezifischen Weise beeinflussen k{\"o}nnen. Dar{\"u}ber hinaus sind Mlh1G67R/G67R M{\"a}use, aufgrund der fehlenden Bindungsf{\"a}higkeit des MLH1G67R Proteins an die meiotischen Chromosomen im Pachyt{\"a}n Stadium, steril. Dies zeigt, dass die ATPase Aktivit{\"a}t von MLH1 f{\"u}r die Fertilit{\"a}t in S{\"a}ugern essentiell ist. Diese Untersuchungen belegen, dass die Mlh1G67R Mutation die biologischen MLH1 Funktionen differentiell mit einem eindeutigen Ph{\"a}notyp beeinflusst. Um die Rolle von MLH1 f{\"u}r die Lymphomagenese detaillierter untersuchen zu k{\"o}nnen, generierten wir ein neues Mausmodell mit einem konditionellen Mlh1 Allel (Mlh1flox/flox). Das Einkreuzen von transgenen EIIa-Cre Mausen in die Mlh1flox/flox Mauslinie f{\"u}hrte zur konstitutiven Inaktivierung von MLH1. Die resultierende Mlh1Δex4/Δex4 Mauslinie zeichnete sich durch MMR Defizienz und einen zu Mlh1-/- Tieren vergleichbaren Tumorpr{\"a}dispositions Ph{\"a}notyp aus. Zur T-Zell spezifischen MMR Inaktivierung kombinierten wir das Mlh1flox/flox Allel mit dem Lck-Cre Transgen. In den resultierenden Mlh1TΔex4/TΔex4 M{\"a}usen ist die MLH1 Inaktivierung auf doppelt positive und einzel positive Thymozyten und na{\"i}ve periphere TZellen beschr{\"a}nkt. Die Entwicklung von T-Zell Lymphomen in Mlh1TΔex4/TΔex4 M{\"a}usen ist im Vergleich zu Mlh1-/- M{\"a}usen signifikant reduziert, was eine wichtige, Lymphom supprimierende MMR Funktion in fr{\"u}hen Stadien der T-Zell Entwicklung oder in lymphoiden Vorl{\"a}uferzellen impliziert.}, subject = {Colonkrebs}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Ulbrich2010, author = {Ulbrich, Jannes}, title = {Integrierung und biochemische Charakterisierung ektoper BMP Rezeptoren in Zellmembranen}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-55462}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {BMPs vermitteln ihre zellul{\"a}ren Effekte durch Rekrutierung und Aktivierung von zwei Typen spezifischer, membranst{\"a}ndiger Rezeptoren. Die genauen Mechanismen der Rezeptorakivierung und die Komposition eines funktionellen, signalvermittelnden Komplexes auf der Zelloberfl{\"a}che sind in den letzten Jahren genau untersucht worden. Die dimere Natur aller BMPs, die Promiskuitivit{\"a}t der BMPs sowie der entsprechenden Rezeptoren und die unterschiedlichen Rezeptorkonformationen (PFC, BISC) erschweren jedoch die experimentelle Zug{\"a}nglichkeit dieser Proteinfamilie. Um den Einfluss der Membranverankerung der Rezeptoren auf deren Affinit{\"a}t zu einzelnen Liganden zu untersuchen, wurden verschiedene Methoden evaluiert, die eine quantitative Kopplung an Plasmamembranen erm{\"o}glichten. Die BMP Rezeptorektodom{\"a}nen wurden u.a. mittels einer lysin-spezifischen Kopplung lipidiert, oder aber als His6-Ektodom{\"a}nen an membranintegrierte Chelatlipide gekoppelt.}, subject = {Knochen-Morphogenese-Proteine}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Mueller2010, author = {M{\"u}ller, Judith}, title = {Die Rolle der HectH9/Mcl1-Interaktion in der Myc-induzierten Apoptose und Auswirkungen der Myc V394D-Mutation auf die von c-Myc gesteuerten Tumorgenese in einem transgenen Mausmodell}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-55789}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {W{\"a}hrend der Entstehung von Tumoren k{\"o}nnen zwei Mechanismen auftreten, die beide von der Aktivit{\"a}t der Onkogene abh{\"a}ngig sind und die Tumorgenese einschr{\"a}nken. F{\"u}r das Onkogen Myc ist gezeigt, dass es sowohl Apoptose als auch unter bestimmten Umst{\"a}nden Seneszenz ausl{\"o}sen kann und damit sein eigenes onkogenes Potential limitiert. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit konnte ich mich mit diesen Tumor-suppressiven Mechanismen in zwei unabh{\"a}ngigen Teilprojekten besch{\"a}ftigen. Eine erh{\"o}hte Expression von Myc steigert die Proliferation der Zellen, induziert aber gleichzeitig Doppelstrangbr{\"u}che an der DNA. Durch den dadurch entstandenen Schaden wird die DNA-Schadensantwort ausgel{\"o}st, die zum Beispiel zur Phosphorylierung von H2A.X durch die Kinasen Atm und Atr f{\"u}hrt. Ein weiteres putatives Zielprotein dieser Kinasen ist HectH9, das abh{\"a}ngig vom DNA-Schaden das mitochondriale Protein Mcl1 ubiquitiniert und es damit f{\"u}r den proteasomalen Abbau markiert. Im ungestressten Zustand interagiert das in der mitochondrialen Membran lokalisierte Protein Mcl1 mit proapoptotischen Proteinen und h{\"a}lt deren inerten Status aufrecht. Die Reduktion der Mcl1-Mengen ist essentiell, um die proapoptotischen Proteine zu aktivieren, dadurch die Freisetzung von Zytochrom C aus dem Mitochondrium zu veranlassen und damit den Prozess der Apoptose einleiten zu k{\"o}nnen. Anhand der in dieser Arbeit dokumentierten Daten bietet sich Mcl1 als potentielles Zielprotein f{\"u}r pharmazeutisch Strategien zur Therapie Myc-induzierter Tumore an. Im Idealfall erh{\"o}ht eine verst{\"a}rkte Reduktion seiner Proteinmengen die zellul{\"a}re Apoptose und verringert somit das Tumorwachstum. Im murinen T-Zell-Lymphom wird die Myc-abh{\"a}ngige Tumorgenese durch eine Mutation der Proteinsequenz von Myc verlangsamt. Diese Mutation unterbindet die Bindung von Myc zu Miz1 und verhindert dadurch die Repression von Zielgenen. Abh{\"a}ngig von der Interaktion von Myc zu Miz1 gelingt die Inhibition der Transkription des Zellzyklusinhibitors p15Ink4b. Die Interaktion von Myc und Miz1 ist essentiell um die TGFbeta-abh{\"a}ngige Seneszenz zu umgehen. Dar{\"u}ber hinaus ist Myc direkt an der Repression von TGFbeta beteiligt. Entgegen der bisher verwendeten Modelle konnte in dieser Arbeit gezeigt werden, dass Myc unabh{\"a}ngig von Miz1 zu den Promotoren der reprimierten Zielgene rekrutiert wird und die Bindung der beiden Proteine offensichtlich nur f{\"u}r die Transrepression essentiell ist.}, subject = {Myc}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Aso2010, author = {Aso, Yoshinori}, title = {Dissecting the neuronal circuit for olfactory learning in Drosophila}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-55483}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {This thesis consists of three major chapters, each of which has been separately published or under the process for publication. The first chapter is about anatomical characterization of the mushroom body of adult Drosophila melanogaster. The mushroom body is the center for olfactory learning and many other functions in the insect brains. The functions of the mushroom body have been studied by utilizing the GAL4/UAS gene expression system. The present study characterized the expression patterns of the commonly used GAL4 drivers for the mushroom body intrinsic neurons, Kenyon cells. Thereby, we revealed the numerical composition of the different types of Kenyon cells and found one subtype of the Kenyon cells that have not been described. The second and third chapters together demonstrate that the multiple types of dopaminergic neurons mediate the aversive reinforcement signals to the mushroom body. They induce the parallel memory traces that constitute the different temporal domains of the aversive odor memory. In prior to these chapters, "General introduction and discussion" section reviews and discuss about the current understanding of neuronal circuit for olfactory learning in Drosophila.}, subject = {Taufliege}, language = {en} } @inproceedings{FialaRabensteinMaschwitz1994, author = {Fiala, Brigitte and Rabenstein, R. and Maschwitz, Ulrich}, title = {Ant-attracting plant-structures: Food bodies of SE Asian Vitaceae}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-55177}, year = {1994}, abstract = {No abstract available}, subject = {Pflanzen}, language = {en} } @inproceedings{FialaFederleMaschwitzetal.1994, author = {Fiala, Brigitte and Federle, W. and Maschwitz, U. and Azarae, Idris}, title = {The first myrmecophytic 2-partner-system in the genus Macaranga: The association between Macaranga puncticulata and a Componotus (Colobopsis) in Malaysia}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-55144}, year = {1994}, abstract = {No abstract available}, subject = {Biologie}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Woelke2010, author = {W{\"o}lke, Stefan}, title = {Funktionelle Analyse von bakteriellen W-xxx-E Rho GTPasen GEF Mimetika mittels Typ 3 Sekretionssystems von Yersinia enterocolitica}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-55010}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Die zellul{\"a}ren Rho GTPasen kontrollieren und regulieren zentrale elementare Zellvorg{\"a}nge wie Phagozytose, Migration und epitheliale Integrit{\"a}t. Aufgrund ihrer zentralen Stellung, interagiert eine Vielzahl von bakteriellen Cytotoxinen und Modulinen mit den Rho GTPasen und wirken so als Pathogenit{\"a}tsfaktoren. Die zur W-xxx-E Familie geh{\"o}renden Effektoren IpgB1 und IpgB2 von Shigella und Map von E. coli (Pathotypen EHEC und EPEC) werden {\"u}ber ein Typ 3 Sekretionssystem (T3SS) in Wirtszellen injiziert und wirken als Rac1, RhoA bzw. Cdc42 GEF Mimetikum. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden die Effektor Funktionen von IpgB1 IpgB2 und Map mit Hilfe des Yersinia (Ysc)-T3SS untersucht, was zur Etablierung der „Yersinia-Toolbox" f{\"u}hrte. Damit k{\"o}nnen heterologe Effektoren isoliert im physiologischen Kontext der Erreger-Zell-Interaktion zellbiologisch untersucht werden unter Vermeidung von simultaner Injektion redundanter oder unbekannter Effektoren. Zur Etablierung der Yersinia-Toolbox wurden zun{\"a}chst die Gene f{\"u}r die Rho GTPasen modulierenden Shigella Effektoren IpgB1 und IpgB2 sowie der E. coli (EHEC)-Effektor Map mit unterschiedlich langen Gensequenzen der N-terminalen Bereiche des Yersinia-Effektorproteins YopE fusioniert (Hybridproteine: YopEi-X:i = 18, 53 bzw. 138 Aminos{\"a}urereste, X = IpgB1, IpgB2 bzw. Map). In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird gezeigt, dass die Hybridproteine YopE53-X und YopE138-X (X=IpgB1, IpgB2, Map) in den Kultur{\"u}berstand sezerniert bzw. in Zielzellen injiziert wurden. In einem weiteren Schritt konnte die zellbiologische Aktivit{\"a}t der heterologen Proteine fluoreszenzmikroskopisch durch Aktinzytoskelettumlagerungen gezeigt werden. So wurden „Membrane Ruffles" (Rac1-Aktivierung) durch YopE138-IpgB1, Stressfasern (RhoA-Aktivierung) durch E138-IpgB2 und „Mikrospikes" (Cdc42-Aktivierung) durch YopE138-Map nachgewiesen. Invasionstudien zeigten, dass YopEi-IpgB1 (i = 53, 138) die Yersinia-Invasion induzierte, wohingegen YopEi-IpgB2 die Invasionsrate der St{\"a}mme WA (pT3SS, pEi-IpgB2) (i=53, 138) verglichen mit dem Stamm WA (pT3SS) reduziert war. Durch Kombination verschiedener Yersinia-Toolbox-St{\"a}mme konnte im Co-Infektionsmodell mit HeLa-Zellen gezeigt werden, dass (1) die YopE138-IpgB1 vermittelte Invasion durch YopE138-IpgB2 signifikant inhibiert werden kann, was auf eine antagonistische Wirkung zwischen IpgB1 und IpgB2 schließen l{\"a}sst, dass (2) YopT ebenfalls die IpgB1 vermittelte Invasionsrate reduziert (inhibitorische Wirkung auf Rac1), und dass (3) YopE als GAP f{\"u}r RhoG/Rac1 (bevorzugt RhoG) praktisch nicht die IpgB1-vermittelte Invasion hemmt. Durch Klonierung der YopE138-IpgB1 und YopE138-IpgB2 kodierenden Fusionsgene in zwei kompatible Plasmidvektoren konnten die Hybridproteine simultan transloziert werden und die Co-Infektionsergebnisse best{\"a}tigt werden. In der Literatur ist beschrieben, dass die Ysc-Translokationspore YopB/YopD Rho-abh{\"a}ngig Membranporen-bedingte Zellsch{\"a}digungen verursacht (LDH-Freisetzung, PI-Kernf{\"a}rbung). Mit der Yersinia-Toolbox konnte mit dem Stamm WA (pT3SS) Zytoplasmamembransch{\"a}digung / Zytotoxizit{\"a}t nachgewiesen werden, nicht aber mit den St{\"a}mmen WA (pE138-X) X = IpgB1, IpgB2 oder Map. Co-Infektionen jedoch zeigen, dass vermehrt LDH bei der Infektion mit WA (pT3SS) + WA (pT3SS, pE138-IpgB1) detektiert wurde, wohingegen dieser Effekt von YopE138-IpgB2 in einer Co-Infektion von WA (pT3SS) + WA (pT3SS, pE138-IpgB2) inhibiert wurde. Auch hier wurde der Antagonismus zwischen IpgB1 und IpgB2 erneut sichtbar. Diese Befunde widersprechen publizierten Daten, die eine RhoA-Aktivierung/Aktinpolymerisierung mit verst{\"a}rkter Porenbildung in einen Zusammenhang bringen. Rho GTPasen sind beteiligt an der Erhaltung der polarisierten Eipthelzellschichtintegrit{\"a}t {\"u}ber Adh{\"a}sionskomplexbildung. Mittels Infektion von polarisierten MDCK-Zellschichten mit verschiedenen Yersinia-St{\"a}mmen und Messung des transepithelialen elektrischen Widerstandes/Resistenz (TER) konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Ysc-T3SS vermittelte Injektion von YopE138-IpgB1 (Rac1-Aktivierung) oder YopE138-Map (Cdc42-Aktivierung) zur Abnahme der TER und damit Sch{\"a}digung der Zellschichtintegrit{\"a}t f{\"u}hrt, wogegen bei YopE138-IpgB2-Injektion der TER-Wert unver{\"a}ndert blieb. Um bakterielle Rho GTPasen-modulierende Effektorproteine detailliert untersuchen zu k{\"o}nnen und um die Rolle von Rho GTPasen im Mausinfektionsmodell mit Yersinia enterocolitica und Salmonellen zu bestimmen, wurden M{\"a}use mit deletierten Genen f{\"u}r RhoA, Rac1 bzw. Cdc42 in Makrophagen hergestellt.}, subject = {Actin}, language = {de} } @inproceedings{FialaMaschwitzTho1991, author = {Fiala, Brigitte and Maschwitz, Ulrich and Tho, Yow Pong}, title = {The association between Macaranga trees and ants in South-east Asia}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-54752}, year = {1991}, abstract = {No abstract available}, subject = {Macaranga}, language = {de} } @article{Fiala1990, author = {Fiala, Brigitte}, title = {B{\"a}ume \& Ameisen : Partnerschaften im s{\"u}dostasiatischen Regenwald}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-54741}, year = {1990}, abstract = {No abstract available}, subject = {Baum}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Grohmann2010, author = {Grohmann, Constanze}, title = {Termite mediated heterogeneity of soil and vegetation patternsin a semi-arid savanna ecosystem in Namibia}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-54318}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Termites are the most important soil ecosystem engineers of semi-arid and arid habitats. They enhance decomposition processes as well as the subsequent mineralisation of nutrients by bacteria and fungi. Through their construction of galleries, nests and mounds, they promote soil turnover and influence the distribution of nutrients and also alter texture and hydrological properties of soils, thereby affecting the heterogeneity of their ecosystem. The main aim of the present thesis was to define the impact of termites on ecosys-tem functioning in a semi-arid ecosystem. In a baseline study, I assessed the diversity of termite taxa in relation to the amount of precipitation, the vegetation patterns and the land use systems at several sites in Namibia. Subsequently, I focussed on a species that is highly abundant in many African savannas, the fungus growing and mound building species Macro-termes michaelseni (Sj{\"o}stedt, 1914). I asked how this species influences the spatial hetero-geneity of soil and vegetation patterns. From repeated samplings at 13 sites in Namibia, I obtained 17 termite taxa of 15 genera. While the type of land use seems to have a minor effect on the termite fauna, the mean annual precipitation explained 96\% and the Simpson index of vascular plant diversity 81\% of the variation in taxa diversity. The number of termite taxa increased with both of these explanation variables. In contrast to former studies on Macrotermes mounds in several regions of Africa that I reviewed, soil analyses from M. michaelseni mounds in the central Namibian savanna revealed that they contain much higher nitrogen contents when compared to their parent material. Further analyses revealed that nitrate forms a major component of the nitrogen content in termite mounds. As nitrate solves easily in water, evaporation processes are most probably responsible for the transport of solved nitrates to the mound surface and their accumulation there. The analysed mounds in central Namibia contained higher sand propor-tions compared to the mounds of the former studies. Through the higher percentage of coarse and middle sized pores, water moves more easily in sandy soils compared to more clayey soils. In consequence, evaporation-driven nitrate accumulation can occur in the studied mounds at high rates. Hochgerechnet auf den Gesamtumfang der H{\"u}gel bedeckte das pro Jahr von einem bewohnten H{\"u}gel erodierte Material theoretisch einen 1 m breiten Kreisring um den Schwemmkegel des H{\"u}gels 2,4 mm hoch. Der entsprechende Wert f{\"u}r unbewohnte H{\"u}gel betrug 1,0 mm. To assess the amount of soil that erodes from termite mounds, I fastened four strong, 65 cm wide plastic bags at 14 mounds each and collected the soil that eroded during five rainfall events. Projected to the total mound circumference, the amount of soil eroded covers theoretically a 1 m wide circular ring around the pediment of an inhabited mound up to a height of 2.4 mm per year. For uninhabited mounds, the height of this soil layer would be 1.0 mm. Per hectare, roughly 245 kg eroded per year from the mounds. However, as the erosion rate depends on several factors such as rainfall intensity, soil texture and point of time within the rainy season, this is only a vague estimate. In order to determine up to which distance the soil erosion from the mounds still influences the chemical characteristics of the adjacent topsoil, I took samples from depth of 0-10 cm at 1, 5 and 25 m distances, respectively, from four different mounds and from the mounds themselves. The non-metric multidimensional scaling of the soil properties showed strong differences between mound and off-mound samples. Soil characteristics within the samples from the mounds did not differ largely. Similarly, I found no strong differences between the samples taken from the different distances from the mound. From these results I conclude that through the construction of foraging galleries and sheetings (soil constructions with which some termite species cover their food items), the soil eroding from termite mounds is quickly mixed with deeper soil layers. In consequence, mound material does not accumulate in the mound's vicinity. In order to reveal how plant growth is influenced by termite mound material, we assessed the number of grass and herb individuals as well as the biomass of plants growing in situ on the base of mounds compared to adjacent sites. While the numbers of both grass and herb individuals were significantly lower compared to adjacent sites, the total biomass of plants growing on the base of mounds was significantly higher. Reverse results were obtained by pot experiments with radish (Raphanus sativus subsp. sativus) and sorghum (Sorghum sp.) growth. Both species grew significantly weaker on mound soil compared to adjacent soil. The contradictory results concerning the biomass of in situ and pot experi-ments are most probably caused by the disturbance of the original soil structure during the potting process. The material was subsequently compacted through watering the plants. In contrast, Macrotermes mounds are pervaded by many macropores which seem to be essential for the plant roots to penetrate the soil. In the last part of this thesis, I posed the question how mounds of M. michaelseni are distributed and what factors might be responsible for this pattern. Former studies showed that mound size is correlated with the size of its inhabiting colony. With several multi-scale analyses, I revealed that larger inhabited mounds were regularly distributed. Additionally, mounds which were closer together tended to be smaller than on average. This indicates that intraspecific competition controls the distribution and size of colonies and their mounds. Former studies concerning Odontotermes mounds substantiated that they are local hotspots of primary productivity and animal abundance. Based on these findings, simulations revealed that a regular distribution of these mounds leads to a greater ecosystem-wide productivity compared to a random arrangement. As in the present study, plant biomass was higher at the mounds compared to off-mound sites, this might hold true for M. michaelseni mounds. From the results of this thesis, I draw the conclusion that through their mound building activities, M. michaelseni strongly influences the distribution patterns of soil nutrients within the central Namibian savanna. These termites create sharp contrasts in nutrient levels and vegetation patterns between mound soils and off-mound soils and enhance the heterogeneity of their habitats. Former studies revealed that habitat hetero-geneity is important in generating species diversity and species richness in turn is correlated positively with biomass production and positively affects ecosystem services. In conclusion, the present thesis underlines the importance of M. michaelseni for ecosystem functioning of the central Namibian savanna.}, subject = {Termiten}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Jauch2010, author = {Jauch, Mandy}, title = {Die Serin/Arginin Proteinkinase 79D (SRPK79D) von Drosophila melanogaster und ihre Rolle bei der Bildung Aktiver Zonen von Synapsen}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-53974}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Synapsen als Stellen der Kommunikation zwischen Neuronen besitzen spezialisierte Bereiche - Aktive Zonen (AZs) genannt -, die aus einem hoch komplexen Netzwerk von Proteinen aufgebaut sind und die Maschinerie f{\"u}r den Prozess der Neurotransmitter-Aussch{\"u}ttung und das Vesikel-Recycling beinhalten. In Drosophila ist das Protein Bruchpilot (BRP) ein wichtiger Baustein f{\"u}r die T-f{\"o}rmigen B{\"a}nder („T-Bars") der pr{\"a}synaptischen Aktiven Zonen. BRP ist notwendig f{\"u}r eine intakte Struktur der Aktiven Zone und eine normale Exocytose von Neurotransmitter-Vesikeln. Auf der Suche nach Mutationen, welche die Verteilung von Bruchpilot im Gewebe beeintr{\"a}chtigen, wurde eine P-Element-Insertion im Gen CG11489 an der Position 79D identifiziert, welches eine Kinase kodiert, die einen hohen Grad an Homologie zur Familie der SR Proteinkinasen (SRPKs) von S{\"a}ugern aufweist. Die Mitglieder dieser Familie zeichnen sich durch eine evolution{\"a}r hoch konservierte zweigeteilte Kinasedom{\"a}ne aus, die durch eine nicht konservierte Spacer-Sequenz unterbrochen ist. SRPKs phosphorylieren SR-Proteine, die zu einer evolution{\"a}r hoch konservierten Familie Serin/Arginin-reicher Spleißfaktoren geh{\"o}ren und konstitutive sowie alternative Spleißprozesse steuern und damit auf post-transkriptioneller Ebene die Genexpression regulieren. Mutation des Srpk79D-Gens durch die P-Element-Insertion (Srpk79DP1) oder eine Deletion im Gen (Srpk79DVN Nullmutante) f{\"u}hrt zu auff{\"a}lligen BRP-Akkumulationen in larvalen und adulten Nerven. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird gezeigt, dass diese BRP-Akkumulationen auf Ultrastruktur-Ebene ausgedehnten axonalen Agglomeraten elektronendichter B{\"a}nder entsprechen und von klaren Vesikeln umgeben sind. Charakterisierung durch Immuno-Elektronenmikroskopie ergab, dass diese Strukturen BRP-immunoreaktiv sind. Um die Bildung BRP-enthaltender Agglomerate in Axonen zu verhindern und damit eine intakte Gehirnfunktion zu gew{\"a}hrleisten, scheint die SRPK79D nur auf niedrigem Niveau exprimiert zu werden, da die endogene Kinase mit verschiedenen Antik{\"o}rpern nicht nachweisbar war. Wie in anderen Arbeiten gezeigt werden konnte, ist die Expression der PB-, PC- oder PF-Isoform der vier m{\"o}glichen SRPK79D-Varianten, die durch alternativen Transkriptionsstart in Exon eins beziehungsweise drei und alternatives Spleißen von Exon sieben zustande kommen, zur Rettung des Ph{\"a}notyps der BRP-Akkumulation im Srpk79DVN Nullmutanten-Hintergrund ausreichend. Zur Charakterisierung der Rescue-Eigenschaften der SRPK79D-PE-Isoform wurde mit der Klonierung der cDNA in einen UAS-Vektor begonnen. Offenbar beruht die Bildung der axonalen BRP-Agglomerate nicht auf einer {\"U}berexpression von BRP in den betroffenen Neuronen, denn auch bei reduzierter Expression des BRP-Proteins im Srpk79DVN Nullmutanten-Hintergrund entstehen die BRP-Agglomerate. In K{\"o}pfen der Srpk79DVN Nullmutante ist die Gesamtmenge an Bruchpilot-Protein im Vergleich zum Wildtyp nicht deutlich ver{\"a}ndert. Auch die auf Protein-Ebene untersuchte Expression der verschiedenen Isoformen der pr{\"a}synaptischen Proteine Synapsin, Sap47 und CSP weicht in der Srpk79DVN Nullmutante nicht wesentlich von der Wildtyp-Situation ab, sodass sich keine Hinweise auf ver{\"a}ndertes Spleißen der entsprechenden pr{\"a}-mRNAs ergeben. Jedes der sieben bekannten SR-Proteine von Drosophila ist ein potentielles Zielprotein der SRPK79D. Knock-down-Experimente f{\"u}r die drei hier untersuchten SR-Proteine SC35, X16/9G8 und B52/SRp55 im gesamten Nervensystem durch RNA-Interferenz zeigten allerdings keinen Effekt auf die Verteilung von BRP im Gewebe. Hinsichtlich der Flugf{\"a}higkeit der Tiere hat die Srpk79DVN Nullmutation keinen additiven Effekt zum Knock-down des BRP-Proteins, denn die Doppelmutanten zeigten bei der Bestimmung des Anteils an flugunf{\"a}higen Tieren vergleichbare Werte wie die Einzelmutanten, die entweder die Nullmutation im Srpk79D-Gen trugen, oder BRP reduziert exprimierten. Vermutlich sind Bruchpilot und die SR Proteinkinase 79D somit Teil desselben Signalwegs. Durch Doppelf{\"a}rbungen mit Antik{\"o}rpern gegen BRP und CAPA-Peptide wurde abschließend entdeckt, dass Bruchpilot auch im Median- und Transvers-Nervensystem (MeN/TVN) von Drosophila zu finden ist, welche die Neuroh{\"a}mal-Organe beherbergen. Aufgabe dieser Organe ist die Speicherung und Aussch{\"u}ttung von Neuropeptid-Hormonen. Daher ist zu vermuten, dass das BRP-Protein neben Funktionen bei der Neurotransmitter-Exocytose m{\"o}glicherweise eine Rolle bei der Aussch{\"u}ttung von Neuropeptiden spielt. Anders als in den Axonen der larvalen Segmental- und Intersegmentalnerven der Srpk79DVN Nullmutante, die charakteristische BRP-Agglomerate aufweisen, hat die Mutation des Srpk79D-Gens in den Axonen der Va-Neurone, die das MeN/TVN-System bilden, keinen sichtbaren Effekt auf die Verteilung von Brp, denn das Muster bei F{\"a}rbung gegen BRP weist keine deutlichen Ver{\"a}nderungen zum Wildtyp auf.}, subject = {Taufliege}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{NoellieAhouRUETH2010, author = {Noellie Ahou RUETH, geb. YAO}, title = {Mapping Bushfire Distribution and Burn Severity in West Africa Using Remote Sensing Observations}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-54244}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Fire has long been considered to be the main ecological factor explaining the origin and maintenance of West African savannas. It has a very high occurrence in these savannas due to high human pressure caused by strong demographic growth and, concomitantly, is used to transform natural savannas into farmland and is also used as a provider of energy. This study was carried out with the support of the BIOTA project funded by the German ministry for Research and Education. The objective of this study is to establish the spatial and temporal distribution of bushfires during a long observation period from 2000 to 2009 as well as to assess fire impact on vegetation through mapping of the burn severity; based on remote sensing and field data collections. Remote sensing was used for this study because of the advantages that it offers in collecting data for long time periods and on different scales. In this case, the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) satellite instrument at 1km resolution is used to assess active fires, and understand the seasonality of fire, its occurrence and its frequency within the vegetation types on a regional scale. Landsat ETM+ imagery at 30 m and field data collections were used to define the characteristics of burn severity related to the biomass loss on a local scale. At a regional scale, the occurrence of fires and rainfall per month correlated very well (R2 = 0.951, r = -0.878, P < 0.01), which shows that the lower the amount of rainfall, the higher the fire occurrence and vice versa. In the dry season, four fire seasons were determined on a regional scale, namely very early fires, which announce the beginning of the fires, early and late fires making up the peak of fire in December/January and very late fires showing the end of the fire season and the beginning of the rainy season. Considerable fire activity was shown to take place in the vegetation zones between the Forest and the Sahel areas. Within these zones, parts of the Sudano-Guinean and the Guinean zones showed a high pixel frequency, i.e. fires occurred in the same place in many years. This high pixel frequency was also found in most protected areas in these zones. As to the kinds of land cover affected by fire, the highest fire occurrence is observed within the Deciduous woodlands and Deciduous shrublands. Concerning the burn severity, which was observed at a local scale, field data correlated closely with the ΔNBR derived from Landsat scenes of Pendjari National Park (R2 = 0.76). The correlation coefficient according to Pearson is r = 0.84 and according to Spearman-Rho, the correlation coefficient is r = 0.86. Very low and low burn severity (with ΔNBR value from 0 to 0.40) affected the vegetation weakly (0-35 percent of biomass loss) whereas moderate and high burn severity greatly affected the vegetation, leading to up to 100 percent of biomass loss, with the ΔNBR value ranging from 0.41 to 0.99. It can be seen from these results that remotely sensed images offer a tool to determine the fire distribution over large regions in savannas and that the Normalised Burn Ratio index can be applied to West Africa savannas. The outcomes of this thesis will hopefully contribute to understanding and, eventually, improving fire regimes in West Africa and their response to climate change and changes in vegetation diversity.}, subject = {Westafrika}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Schubert2010, author = {Schubert, Alice}, title = {Immunhistochemische und funktionelle Charakterisierung der Serin/Arginin-Proteinkinase SRPK79D mit Identifizierung von Interaktionspartnern in Drosophila melanogaster}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-53841}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Auf der Suche nach Mutanten mit einer vom Wildtyp abweichenden Verteilung des Aktive Zone-Proteins Bruchpilot wurde die Serin/Arginin-Proteinkinase SRPK79D identifiziert. Hier zeigte sich, dass die Mutation im Srpk79D-Gen zu einer Agglomeration von Bruchpilot in den larvalen segmentalen und intersegmentalen Nerven f{\"u}hrt. In der vorliegenden Arbeit sollte die SRPK79D genauer charakterisiert werden. Nach Pr{\"a}adsorptionen und Affinit{\"a}tsreinigungen von in einer fr{\"u}heren Arbeit erzeugten Antiseren, gelang es die Lokalisation der {\"u}berexprimierten SRPK79D-GFP-Isoformen zu bestimmen. Dabei zeigte sich, dass keines der Antiseren die endogene Kinase im Western Blot oder immunhistocheimisch detektieren konnte. Dies legt den Schluss nahe, dass die Expression der SRPK79D in einer geringen Konzentration erfolgt. Es war jedoch m{\"o}glich die endogene SRPK79D-PC-Isoform mittels einer Immunpr{\"a}zipitation soweit anzureichern, dass sie im Western Blot nachweisbar war. F{\"u}r die SRPK79D-PB-Isoform gelang dies allerdings nicht. Anhand von larvalen Nerv-Muskel-Pr{\"a}paraten konnte gezeigt werden, dass die panneural {\"u}berexprimierte SRPK79D-PC-GFP-Isoform an die Aktiven Zone transportiert wird und dort mit Bruchpilot, sowie den Interaktionspartnern von Bruchpilot Liprin-α und Rab3 kolokalisiert. Außerdem liegt sie diffus im Zytoplasma von neuronalen Zellk{\"o}rpern vor. In adulten Gehirnen lokalisiert die transgen {\"u}berexprimierte SRPK79D-PC-GFP im Fanshaped body, Ringkomplex und in neuronalen Zellk{\"o}rpern. Die panneural {\"u}berexprimierte SRPK79D-PB-GFP-Isoform liegt im larvalen und adulten Gehirn lokal im Zytoplasma der Perikaryen akkumuliert vor und wird nicht an die Aktive Zone transportiert. Das PB-Antiserum erkennt im adulten Gehirn neuronale Zellk{\"o}rper und das Neuropil in der Calyxregion der Pilzk{\"o}rper. Immunhistochemische F{\"a}rbungen von larvalen Nerv-Muskel-Pr{\"a}paraten mit verschiedenen Antik{\"o}rpern gegen neuronale Proteine belegen, dass die Agglomerate in der Srpk79D-Mutante f{\"u}r Bruchpilot spezifisch sind. Es konnten bisher keine weiteren Komponenten der Agglomerate detektiert werden. Auch ein genereller axonaler Defekt konnte durch F{\"a}rbungen gegen CSP, Synaptotagmin und Experimenten mit dem Mitochondrienfarbstoff MitoTracker® FM Green ausgeschlossen werden. Die quantitative Auswertung der Pr{\"a}parate zeigte, dass die Morphologie der synaptischen Boutons und die Zahl der Aktiven Zonen durch die Mutation im Srpk79D-Gen nicht beeinflusst werden. Um gesicherte Kenntnis dar{\"u}ber zu erlangen, ob die Mutation im Srpk79D-Gen die beobachteten Ph{\"a}notypen verursacht, wurden Rettungsexperimente durchgef{\"u}hrt. Es konnte sowohl f{\"u}r das hypomorphe Srpk79DP1-Allel, als auch f{\"u}r die Nullmutante Srpk79DVN eine nahezu vollst{\"a}ndige Rettung des Agglomerat-Ph{\"a}notyps mit der panneural exprimierten SRPK79D-PF- oder der SRPK79D-PB-Isoform erreicht werden. Aus diesen Ergebnissen folgt, dass beide Isoformen der SRPK79D in der Lage sind den Bruchpilot-Agglomerat-Ph{\"a}notyp zu retten, die Rettung der Verhaltensdefizite jedoch alle Isoformgruppen ben{\"o}tigen. Um zu untersuchen, ob der Agglomerations-Ph{\"a}notyp der Srpk79D-Mutanten auf einer {\"U}berexpression des Bruchpilotgens oder auf Fehlspleißen seiner pr{\"a}-mRNA beruht, wurden Immunpr{\"a}zipitationen, semiquantitative RT-PCRs und Real Time-PCRs durchgef{\"u}hrt. Ausgehend von den Ergebnissen kann eine m{\"o}gliche {\"U}berexpression bzw. Spleißdefekte von Bruchpilot weitgehend ausgeschlossen werden. Die simultane {\"U}berexpression von SRPK79D und Bruchpilot konnte den Ph{\"a}notyp der Bruchpilot-{\"U}berexpression nicht retten. Anhand der stimulated emission depletion-Mikroskopie konnte gezeigt werden, dass die gebildeten Agglomerate das charakteristische Donut-f{\"o}rmige Muster der T-bars zeigen und wahrscheinlich als fusionierte Ketten von T-bars in den larvalen Nerven vorliegen. Beim in vivo Imaging Versuch konnte demonstriert werden, dass das verk{\"u}rzte Bruchpilot-D3-Strawberry in die Bruchpilot-Agglomerate der Srpk79D-Nullmutante eingebaut wird und dass gr{\"o}ßere Agglomerate unbewegt im Nerv verharren. Der anterograde und retrograde Transport kleinerer Agglomerate konnte verzeichnet werden. Bei CytoTrap-Yeast-two-hybrid-Experimenten konnten f{\"u}r die SRPK79D-PB Isoform vier potentielle Interaktionspartner identifiziert werden: das Hitzeschockprotein Hsp70Bbb, die mitochondriale NADH-Dehydrogenase mt:ND5, das large ribosomal RNA Gen in Mitochondrien und das am Spleißen beteiligte Protein 1.3CC/Caper. Die Sequenzierung zeigte, dass nur das letzte Exon von Caper im pMyr-Vektor vorliegt. Der f{\"u}r die PC-Isoform durchgef{\"u}hrte CytoTrap-Versuch ergab nur Temperatur-Revertanten. SR-Proteinkinasen phosphorylieren die RS-Dom{\"a}ne von SR-Proteinen und sind dadurch an der Regulation des konstitutiven und alternativen Spleißens beteiligt. Somit stellen die acht identifizierten SR-Proteine in Drosophila potentielle Interaktionspartner der SRPK79D dar. Die durch RNAi-vermittelte Reduktion von sieben SR-Proteinen f{\"u}hrte zu keiner Agglomeration von Bruchpilot. Jedoch f{\"u}hrte die RNAi-vermittelte Reduktion des SR-Proteins Spleißfaktor 2 (SF2) zu kleineren Bruchpilot-Agglomeraten in den axonalen Nerven. SF2 ist selbst kein Bestandteil der Agglomerate der Srpk79D-Nullmutante. Die {\"U}berexpression von SF2 f{\"u}hrt wahrscheinlich zu einem axonalen Transportdefekt, wie die F{\"a}rbung gegen das Cysteine string protein zeigte. Weiterhin f{\"u}hrt die {\"U}berexpression zu einer Akkumulation von SF2 in larvalen Axonen und im adulten Gehirn der Fliegen. SF2 ist nicht nur in Zellkernen s{\"a}mtlicher Zellen nachweisbar, sondern es konnte auch ein spezifisches Signal im subsynaptischen Retikulum der Postsynapse detektiert werden, wie die F{\"a}rbungen gegen Disc large best{\"a}tigten.}, subject = {Taufliege}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Schmitt2010, author = {Schmitt, Karin}, title = {Charakterisierung des BvgAS1,2-Regulons von Bordetella petrii}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-53603}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Die Gattung Bordetella, die phylogenetisch in die Gruppe der β-Proteobakterien eingeordnet und zur Familie der Alcaligenaceae gez{\"a}hlt wird, umfasst nach heutigem Wissenstand neun Gram-negative Arten. Die klassischen Bordetella-Arten B. pertussis, B. parapertussis und B. bronchiseptica werden im sogenannten B. bronchiseptica-Cluster zusammengefasst. Der strikt humanpathogene Erreger B. pertussis stellt als Verursacher des Keuchhustens das wohl bedeutendste Mitglied der Gattung dar. B. parapertussis ist der Verursacher von respiratorischen Erkrankungen in Menschen und Schafen, w{\"a}hrend B. bronchiseptica f{\"u}r Atemwegserkrankungen in verschiedenen S{\"a}ugetieren verantwortlich gemacht wird. Zudem kann B. bronchiseptica f{\"u}r einen l{\"a}ngeren Zeitraum in der Umwelt {\"u}berleben. Die in den letzte Jahren identifizierten „neuen" Bordetella-Arten, B. avium, B. hinzii, B. holmesii, B. trematum und B. ansorpii, wurden alle human- oder tierassoziiert isoliert und besitzen unterschiedliches pathogenes Potential, das zum Teil noch n{\"a}her untersucht werden muss. Eine Ausnahme stellt der aus einer anaeroben dechlorinierten Flusssediment-Anreicherungskultur isolierte Keim B. petrii dar. Dieser ist bis zum heutigen Zeitpunkt der einzige Umweltkeim der Gattung Bordetella (von Wintzingerode, Schattke et al. 2001). In evolution{\"a}rer Hinsicht ist B. petrii besonders interessant, da er sowohl f{\"u}r orthologe Gene einiger Virulenzfaktoren der pathogenen Bordetellen kodiert, als auch die typischen Eigenschaften eines Umweltkeims aufweist und somit als Bindeglied zu fungieren scheint. Ein solcher Virulenzfaktor ist das BvgAS-System, das in den pathogenen Bordetellen den Hauptregulator der Virulenzgenexpression darstellt, aber in B. petrii strukturell komplexer aufgebaut ist. Neben dem auf Aminos{\"a}ureebene hoch konservierten Response Regulator bvgA, finden sich in B. petrii Gene f{\"u}r zwei Histidinkinasen, bvgS1 und bvgS2, sowie eine unabh{\"a}ngige hpt-Dom{\"a}ne. Eine periplasmatische Sensordom{\"a}ne fehlt in beiden Kinasen, und nur in BvgS1 konnte eine PAS-Dom{\"a}ne identifiziert werden. In den letzten Jahren wurden zunehmend B. petrii-Isolate aus den verschiedensten Habitaten isoliert, wie z.B. das Schwammisolate R521 (Sfanos, Harmody et al. 2005) und das klinisches Isolat aus einem Patienten mit mandibul{\"a}rer Osteomyelitis (Fry, Duncan et al. 2005). Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde {\"u}ber einen PCR-Ansatz versucht, mit aus der Wildtypsequenz abgeleiteten Oligonukleotiden das BvgAS1,2-System der Isolate zu sequenzieren, aber nur im klinischen Isolat konnte ein orthologes Genfragment zum Response Regulator bvgA identifiziert werden. Ein Nachweis der Histidinkinasen sowie der hpt-Dom{\"a}ne schlug in allen untersuchten Isolaten fehl. Die vergleichenden Genomanalysen mittels DNA-Microarrays konnten aufgrund fehlender Hybridisierungen keine weiteren Gemeinsamkeiten und Unterschiede auf DNA-Ebene zwischen den Isolaten und B. petrii DSM 12804 aufzeigen. B. petrii ist ein hoch variabler Umweltkeim, der sich an verschiedene Lebensbedingungen anpassen kann. Dies konnte auch durch die Isolation dreier ph{\"a}notypisch unterscheidbare Varianten w{\"a}hrend eines Langzeitwachstumsversuches gezeigt werden (Lechner 2008). Durch die Genomsequenzierung von B. petrii DSM 12804 konnten wenigsten sieben genomischen Inseln beschrieben werden (Gross, Guzman et al. 2008), die durch unterschiedliche Exzision f{\"u}r die Entstehung der Varianten und daraus resultierend f{\"u}r die Variabilit{\"a}t in B. petrii verantwortlich sind. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit konnte die Gr{\"o}ße der einzelnen genomischen Inseln im Genom von B. petrii durch vergleichende Genomanalysen mittels DNA-Microarrays, mit Ausnahme von GI1, GI5 und GI6, im Vergleich zu den bioinformatischen Vorhersagen best{\"a}tigt werden. Diese Inseln zeigten in den Microarray-Analysen eine Vergr{\"o}ßerung bzw. Verkleinerung im Vergleich zu den zuvor beschrieben putativen Grenzen. Die große Instabilit{\"a}t des Genoms von B. petrii DSM 12804 konnte in dieser Arbeit auch durch Microarray-Analysen einzelner Klone aufgezeigt werden, die unterschiedliche Variationen im Bereich der genomischen Inseln aufwiesen. In den Analysen von B. petrii 12804 ΔbvgA bzw. ΔbvgAS konnten zus{\"a}tzlich zu den gezielten Manipulation im BvgAS1,2-Lokus weitere Deletionen im Bereich von bpet0196-0200, bpet4219-4235 und bpet4176 detektiert werden. Die Re-Integration dieser Genbereiche nach Klonierung einer BvgA-Komplementationsmutante deutet auf eine extrachromosomale plasmid-{\"a}hnliche Struktur dieser Bereiche hin. Dies konnte im Rahmen dieser Arbeit nicht abschließend best{\"a}tigt werden und bleibt weiter zu untersuchen. Im Verlauf der evolution{\"a}ren Entwicklung der Bordetellen wurde das BvgAS-System, das urspr{\"u}nglich f{\"u}r die Adaption an Umweltbedingungen mit verschiedenen Sauerstoff-konzentrationen und/oder Temperaturen zust{\"a}ndig war, mit der Regulation der Expression der Virulenzgene verkn{\"u}pft (von Wintzingerode, Gerlach et al. 2002). In den Transkriptomanalysen zur Untersuchung der Funktionalit{\"a}t des BvgAS1,2-Systems in B. petrii konnte aufgezeigt werden, dass die Temperatur ein wichtiger Signalgeber f{\"u}r die Expression des Flagellen- und Chemotaxisoperons ist. In B. bronchiseptica wird die Motilit{\"a}t, bei Temperaturen unter 25°C, negativ durch das BvgAS-System reguliert. Auch in B. petrii konnte in den Untersuchungen eine negative Regulation der Flagellen- und Chemotaxisgene durch das BvgAS1,2-System unter diesen Bedingungen detektiert werden. Ob aber in B. petrii die gleiche hierarchische Struktur zur Regulation der Motilit{\"a}t besteht wie in B. bronchiseptica, bleibt zu untersuchen. Im Verlauf der Untersuchungen konnte dem BvgAS-Zwei-Komponentensystem in B. petrii auch eine Funktion im Energiestoffwechsel einger{\"a}umt werden, um auf wechselnde Sauerstoffbedingungen reagieren zu k{\"o}nnen. Die Messung des Sauerstoffgehaltes der Umgebung und damit eine Regulation der aeroben bzw. anaeroben Atmung erfolgt in B. petrii wahrscheinlich ebenfalls {\"u}ber das BvgAS1,2-System. Die in der Histidinkinase BvgS1 vorhergesagte PAS-Dom{\"a}ne scheint laut den Analysen f{\"u}r diesen Vorgang von großer Bedeutung zu sein. Desweiteren scheint das System auch die Zusammensetzung der Cytochromoxidase zur optimalen Anpassung an aerobe, mikroaerophile und anaerobe Bedingungen zu regulieren.}, subject = {Bordetella}, language = {de} } @article{TzagoloffMacinoSebald1979, author = {Tzagoloff, A. and Macino, G. and Sebald, Walter}, title = {Mitochondrial genes and translation products}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47408}, year = {1979}, abstract = {No abstract available}, subject = {Biochemie}, language = {en} } @article{SebaldMachleidtWachter1980, author = {Sebald, Walter and Machleidt, Werner and Wachter, Elmar}, title = {N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide binds specifically to a single glutamyl residue of the proteolipid subunit of the mitochondrial adenosinetriphosphatases from Neurospora crassa and Saccharomyces cerevisiae}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47394}, year = {1980}, abstract = {T~e N,N'-dicrclohexylcarbodiimide-binding proteolipid subumt of the mitochondrial adenosinetriphosphatases (ATP phosphohydrolase, EC 3.6.1.3) of Neurosporacrassa and Saccharomyces cerevisiae were purified from mitochondria incubated with the radioactively labeled inhibitor. The specifically labeled subunit was cleaved with cyanogen bromide and N-bromosuccinimide, and the resultant fragments were separated by gel chromatography in the presence of 80\% (vol/vol) formic acid. The N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide label was recovered in each organism exclusively in a 17-residue fragment. Further analysis by automated solid-phase Edman degrada.ti.on revealed tha~ the bound label was present at only one positIOn, correspondmg to a glutamyl residue. The NN'~ icyc~ohexyl~a~bodiiJ?1~de-'!l0dified glutamyl residue is the ~nly Id~ntIcal aCidic posItIon m both proteins and occurs in the middle of a hydrophobic sequence of about 25 residues.}, subject = {Dicyclohexylcarbodiimid}, language = {en} } @article{vonJagowSebald1980, author = {von Jagow, Gerhard and Sebald, Walter}, title = {b-Type cytochromes}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47383}, year = {1980}, abstract = {No abstract available}, subject = {Biochemie}, language = {en} } @article{HoppeSchairerSebald1980, author = {Hoppe, J. and Schairer, HU and Sebald, Walter}, title = {Identification of amino-acid substitutions in the proteolipid subunit of the ATP synthase from dicyclohexylcarbodiimide-resistant mutants of Escherichia coli}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47374}, year = {1980}, abstract = {The amino acid sequence of the proteolipid subunit of the A TP synthase was analyzed in six mutant strains from Escherichia coli K 12, selected for their increased resistance towards the inhibitor N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. All six inhibitor-resistant mutants were found to be altered at the same position of the proteolipid, namely at the isoleucine at residue 28. Two substitutions could be identified. In type I this residue was substituted by a valine resulting in a moderate decrease in sensitivity to dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. Type II contained a threonine residue at this position. Here a strong resistance was observed. These two amino acid substitutions did not influence functional properties of the ATPase complex. ATPase as well as A TP-dependent proton-translocating activities of mutant membranes were indistinguishable from the wild type. At elevated concentrations, dicyclohexylcarbodiimide still bound specifically to the aspartic acid at residue 61 of the mutant proteolipid as in the wild type, and thereby inhibited the activity of the ATPase complex. It is suggested that the residue 28 substituted in the resistant mutants interacts with dicyclohexylcarbodiimide during the reactions leading to the covalent attachment of the inhibitor to the aspartic acid at residue 61. This could indicate that these two residues are in close vicinity and would thus provide a first hint on the functional conformation of the proteolipid. Its polypeptide chain would have to fold back to bring together these two residues separated by a segment of 32 residues.}, subject = {Biochemie}, language = {en} } @article{Sebald1977, author = {Sebald, Walter}, title = {Biogenesis of mitochondrial ATPase}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47362}, year = {1977}, abstract = {No abstract available}, subject = {Biochemie}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Harth2010, author = {Harth, Stefan}, title = {Molecular Recognition in BMP Ligand-Receptor Interactions}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-52797}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Bone Morphogenetic Proteins (BMPs) are secreted multifunctional signaling proteins that play an important role during development, maintenance and regeneration of tissues and organs in almost all vertebrates and invertebrates. BMPs transmit their signals by binding to two types of serine-/threonine-kinase receptors. BMPs bind first to their high affinity receptor, thereby recruiting their low affinity receptor into the complex. This receptor assembly starts a Smad (Small mothers against decapentaplegic) protein signaling cascade which regulates the transcription of responsive genes. Up to date, only seven type I and five type II receptors are known for more than 30 ligands. Therefore, many BMP ligands can recruit more than one receptor subtype. Vice versa, receptors can bind to several ligands, indicating a highly promiscuous ligand-receptor interaction. This raises the following questions: (i) How are BMPs able to induce ligand-specific signals, despite forming complexes with identical receptor composition and (ii) how are they able to recognize and bind various binding partners in a highly specific manner. From the ligand's point of view, heterodimeric BMPs are valuable tools for studying the interplay between different sets of receptors, thereby providing new insights into how the various BMP signals can be generated. This study describes the expression and purification of the heterodimers BMP-2/6 and -2/7 from E.coli cells. BIAcore interaction studies and various in vitro cell activity assays revealed that the generated heterodimers are biologically active. Furthermore, BMP-2/6 and -2/7 exhibit a higher biological activity in most of the cell assays compared to their homodimeric counterparts. In addition, the BMP type I receptor BMPR-IA is involved in heterodimeric BMP signaling. However, the usage of other type I receptor subtypes (e.g. ActR-I) building a heteromeric ligand-receptor type I complex as indicated in previous works could not be determined conclusively. Furthermore, BMP heterodimers seem to require only one type I receptor for signaling. From the receptors' point of view, the BMP type I receptor BMPR-IA is a prime example for its promiscuous binding to different BMP ligands. The extracellular binding interface of BMPR-IA is mainly unfolded in its unbound form, requiring a large induced fit to adopt the conformation when bound to its ligand BMP-2. In order to unravel whether the binding promiscuity of BMPR-IA is linked to structural plasticity of its binding interface, the interaction of BMPR-IA bound to an antibody Fab fragment was investigated. The Fab fragment was selected because of its ability to recognize the BMP-2 binding epitope on BMPR-IA, thus neutralizing the BMP-2 mediated receptor activation. This study describes the crystal structure of the complex of the extracellular domain of BMPR-IA bound to the antibody Fab fragment AbyD1556. The crystal structure revealed that the contact surface of BMPR-IA overlaps extensively with the contact surface of BMPR-IA for BMP-2 interaction. Although the contact epitopes of BMPR-IA to both binding partners coincide, the three-dimensional structures of BMPR-IA in both complexes differ significantly. In contrast to the structural differences, alanine-scanning mutagenesis of BMPR-IA showed that the functional determinants for binding to both the antibody and BMP-2 are almost identical. Comparing the structures of BMPR-IA bound to BMP-2 or to the Fab AbyD1556 with the structure of unbound BMPR-IA revealed that binding of BMPR-IA to its interaction partners follows a selection fit mechanism, possibly indicating that the ligand promiscuity of BMPR-IA is inherently encoded by structural adaptability.}, subject = {Knochen-Morphogenese-Proteine}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Torlopp2010, author = {Torlopp, Angela}, title = {Die Rolle von FGF in der fr{\"u}hen Kardiogenese und Proepikardiogenese im H{\"u}hnerembryo}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47695}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {In dieser Arbeit sollte die Funktion von FGF-Signalen im Herzfeld und in der Entwicklung des Proepikards im H{\"u}hnerembryo untersucht werden. Fibroblasten-Wachstumsfaktoren (FGF) sind eine große Gruppe von Signalmolek{\"u}len und in eine Vielzahl von Entwicklungsprozessen involviert. Das Proepikard (PE), welches sich asymmetrisch auf dem rechten Sinushorn des Sinus venosus entwickelt, bildet die Grundlage des Koronargef{\"a}ßsystems des Herzens. FGF-Liganden (FGF2, FGF10, FGF12) werden insbesondere in den epithelialen Zellen des Proepikards exprimiert, sowie an der sinomyokardialen Basis dieser embryonalen Progenitorpopulation. Die FGF-Rezeptoren (FGFR1, FGFR2, FGFR4) weisen ein {\"a}hnliches Expressionsmuster auf und deren Inhibition, durch spezifische Antagonisten, war der Ausgangspunkt f{\"u}r die funktionelle Analyse der proepikardialen FGF-Signalaktivit{\"a}t. Die Inhibition von FGF-Signalen in vitro f{\"u}hrt zu einem verringerten Wachstum sowie einer erh{\"o}hten Apoptoserate in proepikardialen Explantaten, die unter serumfreien Bedingungen kultiviert wurden. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass sowohl der Ras/MAPK- als auch der PI3-Kinase-Signalweg, beides Bestandteile der FGF-Signaltransduktion, f{\"u}r das Wachstum und {\"U}berleben proepikardialer Zellen verantwortlich sind. Dagegen sind FGF-Signale nicht in die Etablierung proepikardialer Identit{\"a}t involviert, wie die Analyse der Expression etablierter proepikardialer Markergene wie TBX18, WT1 und TBX5 nach FGF-Inhibition zeigte. Dies konnte gleichfalls durch in vivo-Experimente gezeigt werden, in denen die rechtsseitige Inhibition von FGF zu einem retardierten Proepikardwachstum f{\"u}hrte. Weiterhin konnte gezeigt werden, dass die asymmetrische Apoptose in der sich transient entwickelnden linksseitigen Proepikardanlage auf eine fr{\"u}he differentielle Expression von Apoptosegenen wie Caspase 2 zur{\"u}ckgeht. Diese asymmetrische Expression wird von FGF8 reguliert, wahrscheinlich als Teil eines fr{\"u}hen rechtsseitigen Signalweges, der Apoptose im rechten Sinushorn des kardialen Einflusstraktes verhindert. Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit wurde die Expression der Hyaluronansynthase 2 (HAS2) in Abh{\"a}ngigkeit von FGF in der Herzfeldregion analysiert. Hyaluronansynthasen produzieren Hyalurons{\"a}ure, welches eine essentielle Komponente der extrazellul{\"a}ren Matrix ist. Es wurde in vivo gezeigt, dass die Expression von HAS2 im prim{\"a}ren Herzfeld in gleicher Weise von FGF reguliert wird wie die des kardialen Transkriptionsfaktors NKX2.5. Die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit verdeutlichen, dass FGF w{\"a}hrend der fr{\"u}hen Entwicklung des Herzens und der Entstehung des Proepikards diverse Funktionen besitzt.}, subject = {Huhn}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Wegert2010, author = {Wegert, Jenny}, title = {WTX-Mutationsscreen und funktionelle Analyse des Retins{\"a}ure-Signalwegs in Wilms Tumoren}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-52822}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Der Wilms Tumor (WT), auch Nephroblastom genannt, ist einer der h{\"a}ufigsten b{\"o}sartigen Tumoren im Kindesalter. Er entsteht aus embryonalem undifferenziertem Nierengewebe und tritt meist als unilateraler und sporadischer Tumor auf. In 10-15\% der Wilms Tumoren finden sich WT1- und/oder CTNNB1-Mutationen. W{\"a}hrend diese schon l{\"a}nger als genetische Ursachen des Nephroblastoms bekannt sind, wurde erst k{\"u}rzlich WTX als drittes Gen beschrieben, welches eine Rolle in der Tumorentstehung spielt. F{\"u}r einen Großteil der WT ist die genetische Ursache jedoch unklar. Da die bisher publizierten WTX-Mutationsraten auf Untersuchungen kleiner Gruppen basieren und sich stark unterscheiden, sollten in dieser Arbeit WTX-, CTNNB1- und WT1-Mutationen in einem großen WT-Set bestimmt werden. Verluste genetischen Materials in der WTX-Region traten in 17\% der F{\"a}lle auf und waren zwischen den Geschlechtern gleich verteilt. Die Sequenzierung von WT-Proben zeigte, dass nur 2\% von WTX-Punktmutationen betroffen sind. In weiteren 11,5\% der Proben konnte keine WTX-Expression nachgewiesen werden. Die WTX-Ver{\"a}nderungen traten z. T. gemeinsam mit WT1- und/oder CTNNB1-Mutationen auf. Die unvollst{\"a}ndige WTX-Deletion in einigen WT legte die Vermutung nahe, dass innerhalb eines Tumors eine Heterogenit{\"a}t in Bezug auf den WTX-Status m{\"o}glich ist. Dieser Verdacht konnte durch die detaillierte Untersuchung verschiedener Regionen solcher Tumoren erh{\"a}rtet werden: Hierzu wurden histologisch unterschiedliche Bereiche auf den Anteil einer WTX-Mutation bzw. eines WTX-LOH hin untersucht. Obwohl alle Regionen des jeweiligen Tumors einen kompletten LOH auf Chromosom 11 aufwiesen, waren die WTX-Ver{\"a}nderungen unterschiedlich stark ausgepr{\"a}gt. Diese Ergebnisse deuten darauf hin, dass WTX-Ver{\"a}nderungen keine notwendigen und fr{\"u}hen Ereignisse in der Tumorentstehung sind, sondern erst sp{\"a}ter auftreten und nur einen Teil der Tumorzellen betreffen k{\"o}nnen. Die Vermutung, dass WTX-Mutationen keinen direkten Einfluss auf die Tumorentwicklung und prognose haben, wird durch das Fehlen eines signifikanten Zusammenhangs zwischen WTX-Deletion bzw. WTX-Expression und den klinischen Eigenschaften der WT gest{\"u}tzt. Um die Rolle von Genen, die potentiell an der Entstehung und Entwicklung des Nephroblastoms beteiligt sind, zu untersuchen oder m{\"o}gliche neue Therapiestrategien zu {\"u}berpr{\"u}fen, sind in vitro-Modelle n{\"o}tig. Da ein solches f{\"u}r Wilms Tumoren nicht etabliert ist, wurden Prim{\"a}rkulturen aus verschiedenen WT-Proben angelegt. Kulturen aus Tumorgewebe von 12 Patienten mit unterschiedlichen genetischen Ver{\"a}nderungen konnten als echte Tumorzellen validiert werden. Zwei Zelltypen ließen sich morphologisch und immunhistochemisch unterscheiden: Zum einen runde, langsam wachsende Zellen mit Epithelcharakter und zum anderen fibroblasten{\"a}hnliche Zellen, welche weniger differenziert waren und h{\"a}ufig f{\"u}r viele Passagen kultiviert werden konnten. Somit wurde ein Set verschiedener WT-Prim{\"a}rkulturen etabliert, welches nun f{\"u}r in vitro-Experimente zur Untersuchung grundlegender Mechanismen der WT-Entstehung oder zum Test neuer Therapieans{\"a}tze eingesetzt werden kann. Fr{\"u}here Microarray-Analysen deuteten auf eine Deregulation des Retins{\"a}ure (RA)-Signalwegs in fortgeschrittenen Wilms Tumoren hin. Diese Ergebnisse sollten in einem großen unabh{\"a}ngigen Proben-Set mittels Realtime-RT-PCR validiert werden. Eine Deregulation des RA-Signalwegs und die {\"U}berexpression von NMYC wurden f{\"u}r Tumoren der Hochrisikogruppe im Vergleich zu Tumoren mit geringem/mittlerem Risiko nachgewiesen. So stellte sich die Frage, ob Patienten mit fortgeschrittenem WT von einem Retins{\"a}ure-Einsatz in der Therapie profitieren k{\"o}nnten. Um dies zu beantworten, wurde der Effekt von verschiedenen Retinoiden auf WT-Prim{\"a}rkulturen untersucht. Die WT-Zellen wurden mit all-trans RA (ATRA), 9cisRA, dem synthetischen Retinoid Fenretinid (4HPR) und Kombinationen von ATRA bzw. 4HPR und einem HDAC-Inhibitor (SAHA) behandelt. Gene, welche in Hochrisiko-WT differenziell reguliert waren, wurden untersucht und zeigten nach RA-Behandlung eine entgegengesetzte Expression. In sechs der sieben verwendeten Prim{\"a}rkulturen wurde eine RA-vermittelte Proliferationsreduktion nachgewiesen. F{\"u}r die Kombinationen von Retinoiden mit SAHA wurden keine synergistischen Effekte beobachtet. W{\"a}hrend Fenretinid in den meisten Kulturen Apoptose induzierte, verursachten ATRA und 9cisRA morphologische Ver{\"a}nderungen, welche auf Differenzierungsvorg{\"a}nge hindeuteten. Eine Microarray-Analyse ATRA-behandelter WT-Zellen zeigte die differenzielle Regulation vieler Gene, welche eine Rolle in der Bildung der extrazellul{\"a}ren Matrix oder bei Differenzierungsvorg{\"a}ngen von Knochen-, Knorpel-, Nerven- oder Muskelgewebe spielen. Diese Befunde bieten einen weiteren Hinweis darauf, dass Retinoide f{\"u}r den Einsatz in der Therapie des Nephroblastoms geeignet sein k{\"o}nnten.}, subject = {Nephroblastom}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Ondrusch2010, author = {Ondrusch, Nicolai}, title = {Der Thiol:Disulfid-Redox Metabolismus und der Blaulichtrezeptor Lmo0799 von Listeria monocytogenes}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-52612}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Der Thiol-Redox-Metabolismus, der in allen lebenden Zellen zu finden ist, wirkt oxidativem Stress entgegen. Des Weiteren dient er auch der Aufrechterhaltung der intrazellul{\"a}ren Thiol:Disulfid-Balance, die wiederum f{\"u}r die Funktion vieler Proteine essentiell ist. Auch stellt er Reduktions{\"a}quivalente f{\"u}r die Produktion von Desoxyribonucleotiden f{\"u}r die DNA-Synthese bereit und hilft oxidierte Proteine zu reparieren. Der Thiol:Disulfid-Redox-Metabolismus (TDRM) unterscheidet sich von anderen metabolischen Netzwerken dadurch, dass keine Kohlenstoff- oder Stickstoffbindungen ver{\"a}ndert werden. In vielen F{\"a}llen beinhaltet er die reversible Oxidation zweier benachbarter Cysteinreste im entsprechenden Protein, was zur Ausbildung von Disulfidbr{\"u}cken f{\"u}hrt. Da ein totaler Ausfall der GSH-Synthese einen geringeren Effekt zu haben schien als ein teilweiser, wurden DNA-Microarray-Transkriptomanalysen der ΔgshF-Mutante durchgef{\"u}hrt. Es wurden rund 750 Gene als signifikant reguliert (p < 0,05, Fold-change <0,5 bzw. >2) identifiziert. Da die am st{\"a}rksten regulierten Gene von besonderem Interesse waren, wurden die Ausschlussgrenzen auf <0,2 bzw. >5 -fach reguliert heraufgesetzt. Diese Parameter trafen auf 92 Gene zu, davon 41 durch GSH-Mangel herauf-regulierte (d.h. die mRNA-Menge war in der Mutante h{\"o}her als im Wildtyp) und 51 herunter-regulierte. Auff{\"a}llig war, dass die Expression vieler Gene, welche durch den Stress-Sigmafaktor SigB reguliert werden, bei Fehlen von GSH ver{\"a}ndert war. Zu den am st{\"a}rksten (sechs- bis elffach) herauf-regulierten Genen z{\"a}hlen lmo0135-7, sie codieren f{\"u}r einen putativen Oligopeptidtransporter. Die Vermutung lag nahe, dass dieser evtl. GSH aus dem Medium in die Zellen transportieren k{\"o}nnte. Man kann also davon ausgehen, dass GSH von Listeria aktiv aus dem Medium aufgenommen wird und dass die Effekte, die im Versuch ohne zus{\"a}tzliches GSH auftreten, direkt auf das Fehlen von GSH zur{\"u}ckzuf{\"u}hren sind. Zusammengefasst zeigte sich, dass ein Ausfall der GSH-Synthese in Listeria keinen auff{\"a}lligen Ph{\"a}notyp zeigt. Es wurden jedoch sehr umfangreiche Ver{\"a}nderungen des Transkriptionsprofils beobachtet, offenbar konnten die Bakterien dadurch eine neue zellul{\"a}re Hom{\"o}ostase erreichen. Physiologische Mengen von GSH im Medium komplementierten den Ausfall der GSH-Synthese fast vollst{\"a}ndig. Im Laufe dieser Analysen fiel das Augenmerk auf ein Gen mit unbekannter Funktion, lmo0799, das in der ΔgshF-Mutante als deutlich heraufreguliert identifiziert worden war. Eine n{\"a}here in-silico-Analyse ergab deutliche Homologien des Lmo0799 Proteins zu einem Blaulicht-photorezeptor, YtvA, von Bacillus subtilis. Da ein Zusammenhang mit dem TDRM aufgrund der Microarray-Analysen mehr als wahrscheinlich schien, richtete sich das Augenmerk verst{\"a}rkt auf die Charakterisierung des putativen Blaulichtrezeptors Lmo0799. Es wurde eine In-Frame-Deletionsmutante in lmo0799 hergestellt, die mit Δlmo0799-Mutante bezeichnet wurde. Darin ist das urspr{\"u}nglich 253 Aminos{\"a}uren (AS) große Genprodukt von lmo0799 auf sieben AS verk{\"u}rzt, ohne den Promotor- oder Terminatorbereich bzw. umliegende Gene zu ver{\"a}ndern. Parallel wurde begonnen, Versuche zum Einfluss von Licht (blau, λ=455nm bzw. rot, λ=625nm) in vivo und in vitro auf L. monocytogenes durchzuf{\"u}hren. Versuche mittels qRT-PCR wurden durchgef{\"u}hrt um die genaue Wirkweise von Lmo0799 n{\"a}her aufzukl{\"a}ren. Dazu wurden Testgene aus verschiedenen Regulons ausgew{\"a}hlt und deren Transkription in Proben von Wildtyp und Δlmo0799-Mutante mit und ohne blauem bzw. rotem Licht sowie mit und ohne Salzstress gemessen. Dabei zeigte sich, dass vor allem die Transkription von Genen des SigB-Regulons, das f{\"u}r die allgemeine Stressantwort in Listerien zust{\"a}ndig ist, durch Licht moduliert wurde. Die Wirkung von Blaulicht hing in hohem Maße von der Anwesenheit von Lmo0799 ab, welches wahrscheinlich eine Komponente des „Stressosoms" von Listeria darstellt. Die Lichtregulation betraf auch die Internaline A und B, deren Transkription durch Belichtung stark erh{\"o}ht wurde. Infektionsversuche mit blau belichteten bzw. dunkel gehaltenen Wildtyp- bzw. Δlmo0799-Bakterien an humanen Caco-2 Enterozyten zeigten, dass wildtypische Listerien nach Bestrahlung mit blauem Licht ihre Invasionsrate verdoppelten, w{\"a}hrend die Δlmo0799-Listerien auf Niveau der Dunkelkontrolle blieben. In der vorliegenden Arbeit konnte erstmals gezeigt werden, dass L. monocytogenes (und wohl auch die anderen Listeria-Arten) in Lmo0799 einen funktionalen Blaulichtrezeptor besitzt, der eine wichtige Rolle in der Vermittlung von Stressreizen via SigB spielt und auch die Motilit{\"a}t und Virulenz moduliert. Weiterhin konnte gezeigt werden, dass auch rotes Licht die Transkription zahlreicher durch Blaulicht regulierter Gene beeinflusst. Der molekulare Mechanismus konnte im Rahmen dieser Arbeit nicht mehr aufgekl{\"a}rt werden.}, subject = {Listeria monocytogenes}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Salzmann2010, author = {Salzmann, Steffen}, title = {Regulation der TNF-Rezeptor Signaltransduktion durch das Zytokin TWEAK}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-52525}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Das pleiotrope Zytokin TNF (tumor necrosis factor) kann an den TNF-Rezeptor 1 (TNFR1) und den TNF-Rezeptor 2 (TNFR2) binden und mit deren Hilfe seine biologischen Funktionen {\"u}ber verschiedene Signalwege, wie z.B. NFB- und MAPK-Aktivierung bzw. Apop¬toseinduktion, vermitteln. In fr{\"u}heren Arbeiten konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Aktivierung des TNFR2 zur proteasomalen Degradation des Adaterproteins TRAF2 f{\"u}hrt und dadurch die TNFR1-induzierte Apoptose verst{\"a}rkt wird. TWEAK (tumor necrosis like weak inducer of apoptosis), das ebenfalls der TNF-Ligandenfamilie angeh{\"o}rt und die Interaktion mit dessen Rezeptor Fn14 (fibroblast growth factor-inducible 14), der wie der TNFR2 zur Untergruppe der TRAF-bindenden Rezeptoren der TNF-Rezeptorfamilie geh{\"o}rt, zeigten in verschiedenen Arbeiten auch eine TRAF2-degradierende Wirkung. In der vorliegenden Arbeit konnte nun gezeigt werden, dass dies auch im Falle des TWEAK/Fn14-Systems mit einem verst{\"a}rkenden Effekt auf die TNFR1-vermittelte Apoptose einhergeht. Dar{\"u}ber hinaus konnte gezeigt werden, dass TWEAK zus{\"a}tzlich auch die TNFR1-induzierte Nekrose verst{\"a}rkt, die den Zelltod durch andere Mechanismen als bei der Apoptose induziert. Von anderen Arbeiten unserer Gruppe war bekannt, dass l{\"o}sliches TWEAK (sTWEAK) und membranst{\"a}ndiges TWEAK (mTWEAK) bez{\"u}glich der TRAF2-Depletion wirkungs¬gleich sind. Da der apoptotische Fn14-TNFR1-„crosstalk" auf der Depletion von TRAF2-Komplexen beruht wurden auch keine signifikanten Unterschiede zwischen sTWEAK und mTWEAK in Bezug auf die Verst{\"a}rkung der TNFR1-induzierten Apoptose beobachtet. Interessanter¬weise zeigte sich in der vorliegenden Arbeit jedoch, dass sTWEAK den klassischen NFB-Signalweg gar nicht bzw. nur schwach aktiviert, wohingegen mTWEAK diesen stark induziert. Bei der Aktivierung des alternativen NFB-Signalweges hingegen ließen sich keine Unterschiede zwischen sTWEAK und mTWEAK erkennen. Die Aktivierung eines Signalweges wird also durch die Oligomerisierung des Liganden nicht moduliert, demgegen{\"u}ber aber erwies sich die Aktivierung eines anderen Signalweges als stark abh{\"a}ngig von der Liganden-Oligomerisierung. Vor dem Hintergrund, dass das Adapterprotein TRAF1 (TNF-receptor-associated factor 1) Heterotrimere mit TRAF2 bildet, wurde weiterhin untersucht, ob dieses Molek{\"u}l einen Einfluss auf die Aktivit{\"a}t der TWEAK-induzierten Signalwege hat. Tats{\"a}chlich zeigte sich in TRAF1-exprimie¬renden Zellen eine Verst{\"a}rkung der TWEAK-induzierten Aktivierung des klassischen NFB-Signalweges Zuk{\"u}nftige Studien m{\"u}ssen nun aufkl{\"a}ren, inwieweit die hier gefundenen Mecha-nismen das Zusammenspiel von TNF und TWEAK in vivo bestimmen.}, subject = {Tumor-Nekrose-Faktor}, language = {de} } @article{BlackenhornPerner1994, author = {Blackenhorn, Wolf U. and Perner, Dirk}, title = {Heritability and repeatability of behavioural attributes affecting foraging success and fitness in water striders}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-52496}, year = {1994}, abstract = {Heritabilities and repeatabilities are presented for various behavioural attributes affecting foraging performance and fitness in Aquarius (Gerris) remigis (Heteroptera: Gerridae) females. These behavioural attributes were patch choice, foraging success, capture accuracy, and measures of mobility, activity, skittishness and aggressiveness. Most heritabilities were not significantly different from zero, which may be related to the low sampIe size. Conclusions as to the potential of direct selection on behaviour in this species were consequently limited. In contrast, with a few exceptions (capture accuracy, foraging success), most repeatabilities were significant and at times high (range=O'22-O'79), indicating consistent, stereotypical individual behaviour. Tbe Iife history or reproductive state of the daughter generation individuals signifieantly affected the magnitude of the repeatabilities as weil as the mean values of many of the variables (notably mobility and aggressiveness), the latter in a manner consistent with field observations. This indicates that the state of the organism affects the general environmental variance, thus contributing to the discrepancies between the repeatabilities and the heritabilities obtained. It is suggested that common physiological proeesses (e.g. hormones) may underlie several of the behavioural attributes examined, resulting in possible pleiotropie effects and eonstraints on selection in a heterogeneous environment. It is further suggested that field studies of selection on behavioural attributes may be a more fruitful approach in this species, whose suitability for genetic analysis is limited.}, subject = {Teichl{\"a}ufer}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Saverschek2010, author = {Saverschek, Nicole}, title = {The influence of the symbiotic fungus on foraging decisions in leaf-cutting ants - Individual behavior and collective patterns}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-52087}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Foraging behavior is a particularly fascinating topic within the studies of social insects. Decisions made by individuals have effects not only on the individual level, but on the colony level as well. Social information available through foraging in a group modulates individual preferences and shapes the foraging pattern of a colony. Identifying parameters influencing foraging behavior in leaf-cutting ants is especially intriguing because they do not harvest for themselves, but for their symbiotic fungus which in turn influences their plant preferences after the incorporation of the substrate. To learn about the substrates' unsuitability for the fungus, ants need to be able to identify the incorporated substrate and associate it with detrimental effects on the fungus. Odor is an important plant characteristic known to be used as recognition key outside the nest in the context of foraging. Chapter 1 shows that foragers are able to recall information about the unsuitability of a substrate through odor alone and consequently reject the substrate, which leads to the conclusion that inside the nest, odor might be enough to indentify incorporated substrate. Identification of plant species is a key factor in the foraging success of leaf-cutting ants as they harvest a multitude of different plant species in a diverse environment and host plant availability and suitability changes throughout the year. Fixed plant preferences of individuals through innate tendencies are therefore only one factor influencing foraging decisions. On the individual as well as the colony level, foraging patterns are flexible and a result of an intricate interplay between the different members involved in the harvesting process: foragers, gardeners and the symbiotic fungus. In chapter 2 I identified several conditions necessary for na{\"i}ve foragers to learn about the unsuitability of substrate inside the nest. In order to exchange of information about the unsuitability of a substrate, the plant in question must be present in the fungus garden. Foragers can learn without own foraging experience and even without experiencing the effects of the substrate on the fungus, solely through the presence of experienced gardeners. The presence of experienced foragers alone on the other hand is not enough to lower the acceptance of substrate by na{\"i}ve foragers in the presence of na{\"i}ve gardeners, even if experienced foragers make up the majority of the workforce inside the nest. Experienced foragers are also able to reverse their previous negative experience and start accepting the substrate again. The individual behavior of foragers and gardeners with different experiential backgrounds in the presence of suitable or unsuitable substrate inside the fungus chamber was investigated in chapter 3 to shed some light on possible mechanisms involved in the flow of information about substrate suitability from the fungus to the ants. Gardeners as well as foragers are involved in the leaf processing and treatment of the applied leaf patches on the fungus. If the plant material is unsuitable, significantly more ants treat the plant patches, but foragers are less active overall. Contacts between workers initiated by either gardeners or foragers occur significantly more frequent and last longer if the substrate is unsuitable. Even though experienced gardeners increase na{\"i}ve foragers' contact rates and duration with other workers in the presence of suitable plant patches, na{\"i}ve foragers show no differences in the handling of the plant patches. This suggests that foragers gain information about plant suitability not only indirectly through the gardening workers, but might also be able to directly evaluate the effects of the substrate on the fungus themselves. Outside the nest, foragers influence each other the trail (chapter 4). Foraging in a group and the presence of social information is a decisive factor in the substrate choice of the individual and leads to a distinct and consentaneous colony response when encountering unfamiliar or unsuitable substrates. As leaf-cutting ants harvest different plant species simultaneously on several trails, foragers gain individual experiences concerning potential host plants. Preferences might vary among individuals of the same colony to the degree that foragers on the same trail perceive a certain substrate as either suitable or unsuitable. If the majority of foragers on the trail perceives one of the currently harvested substrates as unsuitable, na{\"i}ve foragers lower their acceptance within 4 hours. In the absence of a cue in the fungus, na{\"i}ve foragers harvesting by themselves still eventually (within 6 hours) reject the substrate as they encounter experienced gardeners during visits to the nest within foraging bouts. As foraging trails can be up to 100 m long and foragers spend a considerable amount of time away from the nest, learning indirectly from experienced foragers on the trail accelerates the distribution of information about substrate suitability. The level of rejection of a formerly unsuitable substrate after eight hours of foraging by na{\"i}ve foragers correlates with the average percentage of unladen experienced foragers active on the trail. This suggests that unladen experienced foragers might actively contact laden na{\"i}ve workers transmitting information about the unsuitability of the load they carry. Results from experiments were I observed individual laden foragers on their way back to the nest backed up this assumption as individuals were antennated and received bites into the leaf disk they carried. Individuals were contacted significantly more often by nestmates that perceived the carried leaf disk as unsuitable due to previous experience than by nestmates without this experience (chapter 6). Leaf-cutting ants constantly evaluate, learn and re-evaluate the suitability of harvested substrate and adjust their foraging activity accordingly. The importance of the different sources of information within the colony and their effect on the foraging pattern of the colony depend on the presence or absence of each of them as e.g. experienced foragers have a bigger influence on the plant preferences of na{\"i}ve foragers in the absence of a cue in the fungus garden.}, subject = {Blattschneiderameisen}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Vainshtein2010, author = {Vainshtein, Yevhen}, title = {Applying microarray-based techniques to study gene expression patterns: a bio-computational approach}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-51967}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {The regulation and maintenance of iron homeostasis is critical to human health. As a constituent of hemoglobin, iron is essential for oxygen transport and significant iron deficiency leads to anemia. Eukaryotic cells require iron for survival and proliferation. Iron is part of hemoproteins, iron-sulfur (Fe-S) proteins, and other proteins with functional groups that require iron as a cofactor. At the cellular level, iron uptake, utilization, storage, and export are regulated at different molecular levels (transcriptional, mRNA stability, translational, and posttranslational). Iron regulatory proteins (IRPs) 1 and 2 post-transcriptionally control mammalian iron homeostasis by binding to iron-responsive elements (IREs), conserved RNA stem-loop structures located in the 5'- or 3'- untranslated regions of genes involved in iron metabolism (e.g. FTH1, FTL, and TFRC). To identify novel IRE-containing mRNAs, we integrated biochemical, biocomputational, and microarray-based experimental approaches. Gene expression studies greatly contribute to our understanding of complex relationships in gene regulatory networks. However, the complexity of array design, production and manipulations are limiting factors, affecting data quality. The use of customized DNA microarrays improves overall data quality in many situations, however, only if for these specifically designed microarrays analysis tools are available. Methods In this project response to the iron treatment was examined under different conditions using bioinformatical methods. This would improve our understanding of an iron regulatory network. For these purposes we used microarray gene expression data. To identify novel IRE-containing mRNAs biochemical, biocomputational, and microarray-based experimental approaches were integrated. IRP/IRE messenger ribonucleoproteins were immunoselected and their mRNA composition was analysed using an IronChip microarray enriched for genes predicted computationally to contain IRE-like motifs. Analysis of IronChip microarray data requires specialized tool which can use all advantages of a customized microarray platform. Novel decision-tree based algorithm was implemented using Perl in IronChip Evaluation Package (ICEP). Results IRE-like motifs were identified from genomic nucleic acid databases by an algorithm combining primary nucleic acid sequence and RNA structural criteria. Depending on the choice of constraining criteria, such computational screens tend to generate a large number of false positives. To refine the search and reduce the number of false positive hits, additional constraints were introduced. The refined screen yielded 15 IRE-like motifs. A second approach made use of a reported list of 230 IRE-like sequences obtained from screening UTR databases. We selected 6 out of these 230 entries based on the ability of the lower IRE stem to form at least 6 out of 7 bp. Corresponding ESTs were spotted onto the human or mouse versions of the IronChip and the results were analysed using ICEP. Our data show that the immunoselection/microarray strategy is a feasible approach for screening bioinformatically predicted IRE genes and the detection of novel IRE-containing mRNAs. In addition, we identified a novel IRE-containing gene CDC14A (Sanchez M, et al. 2006). The IronChip Evaluation Package (ICEP) is a collection of Perl utilities and an easy to use data evaluation pipeline for the analysis of microarray data with a focus on data quality of custom-designed microarrays. The package has been developed for the statistical and bioinformatical analysis of the custom cDNA microarray IronChip, but can be easily adapted for other cDNA or oligonucleotide-based designed microarray platforms. ICEP uses decision tree-based algorithms to assign quality flags and performs robust analysis based on chip design properties regarding multiple repetitions, ratio cut-off, background and negative controls (Vainshtein Y, et al., 2010).}, subject = {Microarray}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Junker2010, author = {Junker, Robert R.}, title = {Scents as Floral Defence : Impact on Species and Communities, Mechanisms and Ecological Consequences}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-51827}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Floral scents are compositions of diverse volatile substances. Despite the chemical complexity, the interpretation of their ecological relevance was mostly confined to the attractive function facilitating interactions with pollinators. However, the negative impact on plants' reproduction by non-pollinating flower visitors is pronounced and demands floral adaptations that exclude antagonists. The aim of this dissertation was to explore the defensive properties of floral odours and to imbed them into ecological contexts. The thesis covered four scopes: the scents' impact on individual species and on flower-visitor communities, the mechanisms that explain the dual function of floral volatiles (attraction and defence), and the ecological consequences of missing defences for plants and pollinators. The most important floral antagonists that are known to reduce the reproductive fitness of plants were identified and their responses towards floral scents were examined. We found that representatives of non-pollinating florivores (bush crickets), predators that lure for pollinators (spiders), and microorganisms that potentially colonize petals were repelled, deterred or inhibited in their growth by floral secondary metabolites. An earlier study revealed the same effect on nectar thieving ants. These experimental studies clearly demonstrate that scents universally serve as floral defences that have the potential to reduce or even prevent the visitation and exploitation of flowers by these antagonists. Within diverse communities, we tested whether species-specific responses to odours reflect the structure of naturally occurring flower-visitor interactions in order to examine the ecological importance of defensive floral scents. On three Hawaiian Islands, ant-flower interactions involving co-occurring native and introduced plants were observed. Ants were historically absent from the geographically isolated Hawaiian archipelago. Thus, we hypothesized that native Hawaiian plants lack floral features that exclude ants and therefore would be heavily exploited by introduced, invasive ants. We quantified the residual interaction strength of each pair of ant/plant species as the deviation of the observed interaction frequency from a null-model prediction based on available nectar sugar in a local plant community and local ant activity at sugar baits. As predicted, flowers of plants that are endemic or indigenous to Hawaii were stronger exploited by ants than flowers of co- occurring introduced plants, which share an evolutionary history with ants. We showed experimentally that the absence of ants on flowers of most introduced and few native plants species was due to morphological barriers and/or repellent floral scents, examined in a mobile olfactometer. Analysis of floral volatiles, however, revealed no consistent ant- repellent "syndrome", probably due to the high chemical variability within the floral scent bouquets. On a fallow land in Germany, we linked the responses of receivers (flower visitors) towards signals (flower scent) with the structure of a highly diverse natural flower-insect network. For each interaction, we defined link temperature - a newly developed metric - as the deviation of the observed interaction strength from neutrality, assuming that animals randomly interact with flowers. Link temperature was positively correlated to the specific visitors' responses to floral scents. Thus, communication between plants and consumers via phytochemical signals reflects a significant part of the microstructure in a complex network. Negative as well as positive responses towards floral scents contributed to these results, where individual experience was important, apart from innate behaviour. The demonstration of the contrasting functions of floral scents that control the visitor spectrum of flowers represents the first evidence that floral scents act as filters allowing access to some flower visitors but simultaneously exclude others. These findings raise the central question of this thesis: what evolutionary mechanism explains the dual function of floral scents? The view of flower visitors as mutualistic and antagonistic agents considers primarily the interest of plants. A classification emphasizing the consumer's point of view, however, may be more useful when considering adaptations of animals to flower visits. Therefore, we introduced a novel classification that acknowledges the consumers' interest in the interaction: some animals evolved an obligate dependence on floral resources, others use nectar and pollen as supplement to their diet and are thus regarded as facultative flower visitors. In a meta-analysis covering 18 studies on the responses of animals to floral scents, we assigned the animals to the categories of obligate or facultative flower visitors. Their responses to floral scents were compared. On average, obligate flower visitors, often corresponding to pollinators, were attracted to floral scent compounds. In contrast, facultative and mainly antagonistic visitors were strongly repelled by flower odours. The findings confirm that floral scents have a dual function both as attractive and defensive cues. Whether an animal depends on floral resources determines its response to these signals, suggesting that obligate flower visitors evolved a tolerance against primarily defensive compounds. These findings were confirmed in an experimental study. We conclude that floral scents protect flowers against visitors that would otherwise reduce the reproductive success of plants. In Hawaii, where flowers do not have defensive means against ants, we studied the impact of ants on the pollination effectiveness of endemic and introduced bees and on the fruit set of an endemic tree Metrosideros polymorpha (Myrtaceae). Ants were dominant nectar-consumers that mostly depleted the nectar of visited inflorescences. Accordingly, the visitation frequency, duration, and consequently the pollinator effectiveness of nectar-foraging bees strongly decreased on ant-visited flowers, whereas pollen-collecting bees remained largely unaffected by ants. Overall, endemic bees (Hylaeus spp.) were much poorer pollinators than introduced honeybees (Apis mellifera). The average net effect of ants on pollination of M. polymorpha was neutral, corresponding to a similar fruit set of ant-visited and ant-free inflorescences. A second Hawaiian plant species, Vaccinium reticulatum (Ericaceae), was visited by the caterpillars of an introduced plume moth (Stenoptilodes littoralis) that destroyed buds and flowers of this species. The ants' presence on flowers strongly reduced flower parasitism by the caterpillars and consequently decreased the loss of flowers and buds. This is, to our knowledge, the first documented mutualism between invasive ants and an endemic plant species in Hawaii. Thus, ants that have been shown to be detrimental flower visitors elsewhere, had neutral (M. polymorpha) or even positive (V. reticulatum) effects on endemic Hawaiian plants. However, their overall negative effect on the Hawaiian flora and fauna should not be disregarded.}, subject = {Bl{\"u}te}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Leonhardt2010, author = {Leonhardt, Sara Diana}, title = {Resin collection and use in stingless bees}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-51588}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Harz ist ein klebriges Pflanzenprodukt mit einem oft intensiven aromatischen Geruch. Es wird von B{\"a}umen produziert, um Wunden zu verschließen und sch{\"a}dliche Besucher abzuwehren. Einige Insektenarten haben jedoch die erstaunliche F{\"a}higkeit entwickelt, mit der klebrigen Substanz umzugehen und sie sich gar zu Nutzen zu machen. So verwenden Bienen Harz beispielsweise zum Nestbau und zur Verteidigung ihrer Kolonien. W{\"a}hrend allgemein bekannt ist, dass Bienen Pollen und Nektar sammeln, wird der Tatsache, dass sie auch Harz sammlen, allerdings sehr viel weniger Beachtung geschenkt. Ziel meiner Dissertation war es daher, herauszufinden, warum, wie und wo stachellose Bienen in Borneo (sieben untersuchte Bienenarten), Australien (acht Arten) und Costa Rica (27 Arten) Pflanzenharze sammeln und verwerten. Diese Arbeit behandelt somit die enge Beziehung zwischen einer eusozialen Insektengattung und einem chemisch und physiologisch hoch komplexen Pflanzenprodukt, das Bienen nicht nur als Nestmaterial und zur Verteidigung dient, sondern auch eine wesentliche Bedeutung f{\"u}r deren chemische Diversit{\"a}t hat. Stachellose Bienen verhalten sich hochgradig opportunistisch, wenn sie Harz sammeln, d.h. verschiedene Bienenarten sammeln Harz von denselben Baumarten, wobei sie nahezu jede verf{\"u}gbare Harzquelle nutzen. Dabei finden und erkennen sie Harzquellen anhand einiger charakteristischer Mono- und Sesquiterpene, nutzen jedoch nicht das gesamte Harz-Bouquet. Die Menge an eingetragenem Harz unterscheidet sich zwischen verschiedenen Bienenarten und kolonien und varriert mit verschiedenen Umweltbedingungen. Insbesondere eine Bedrohung durch Fressfeinde (z. B. Ameisen) f{\"u}hrt zu einer massiven Steigerung des Harzeintrages; eine manuelle Zerst{\"o}rung des Nesteinganges hat dagegen relativ wenig Einfluss. Das eingetragene Harz wird zum Nestbau und zur Verteidigung gegen Fressfeinde und Mikroben genutzt. Dar{\"u}ber hinaus dient es als Quelle f{\"u}r Terpene, die von den Bienen in ihre chemischen Oberfl{\"a}chenprofile eingebaut werden (kutikul{\"a}re Terpene). Dabei {\"u}bertragen sie nur einen Bruchteil (8 \%) der gewaltigen Menge (>> 1000) an Terpenen, die man im Harz von B{\"a}umen findet, auf ihre Oberfl{\"a}che. Die {\"u}bertragenen Terpene bleiben in ihrer Struktur unver{\"a}ndert, allerdings unterscheiden sich die Bienenarten in der Zusammensetzung der Terpenprofile auf ihrer Oberfl{\"a}che, obwohl alle untersuchten Arten Harz von denselben B{\"a}umen sammeln. Die unterschiedlichen Terpenprofile sowie die Tatsache, dass nur wenige Terpene aus dem Harz aufgenommen werden, deuten auf einen artspezifischen und bisher unbekannten Filterungsmechanismus bei stachellosen Bienen hin. Auch {\"u}bersteigt durch die Aufnahme von Terpenen die chemische Diversit{\"a}t der Oberfl{\"a}chenprofile von stachellosen Bienen die zahlreicher anderer Hymenopteren. Da Bienen die Terpene aus dem Harz nur „filtern", sie dabei aber nicht ver{\"a}ndern, sind s{\"a}mtliche Bienenarten aus Borneo, Australien und Costa den charakteristischen Harzprofilen von B{\"a}umen aus ihren Ursprungsgebieten chemisch sehr {\"a}hnlich. Da in jeder tropischen Region andere Baumarten vorkommen, varriert die chemische Zusammensetzung der vorkommenden Harze und damit der kutikul{\"a}ren Terpene von dort vorkommenden Bienen. Die meisten Bienenarten mit kutikul{\"a}ren Terpenen findet man in Borneo, wo nahezu 100 \% der untersuchten Arten aus Baumharzen gewonnene Terpene in ihre chemischen Profilen einbauen. Im Gegensatz dazu sind es in Costa Rica nur 40 \% der untersuchten Arten. Auch sammeln in Borneo gelegentlich 9 von 10 Arbeiterinnen einer Tetragonilla collina Kolonie Harz, wohingegen in Australien maximal 10 \% und in Costa Rica maximal 40 \% der Arbeiterinnen einer Kolonie Harz sammeln. Das Vorherrschen von Harz und aus Harz gewonnenen Terpenen in der chemischen {\"O}kologie von Bienen auf Borneo spiegelt das Vorherrschen einer bestimmten s{\"u}dostasiatischen Baumfamilie wieder: der Dipterocarpaceen, deren Holz ungew{\"o}hnlich harzig ist. Ein solch enger Zusammenhang zwischen der Chemie von Bienen und der von Baumharzen verdeutlicht die enge Beziehung zwischen stachellosen Bienen und den B{\"a}umen in ihrem Habitat. Die kutikul{\"a}ren Terpene sch{\"u}tzen ihre Tr{\"a}ger vor Angreifern (z.B. Ameisen) und Mikrobenbefall. Dabei variiert eine bestimmte Gruppe - Sesquiterpene - am meisten zwischen den Arten. Diese Terpengruppe manipuliert die nat{\"u}rlichweise auftretende zwischen-artliche Aggression, indem sie letztere bei jenen Arten verringert, die selbst keine Sesquiterpene in ihrem Profil haben. Aggressionsminderung durch chemische Komponenten, welche aus der Umwelt aufgenommen werden, stellt somit einen bisher unbekannten Mechanismus dar, um Toleranz zwischen sonst aggressiven Arten zu erreichen. Eine derarte Herabsetzung von aggressiven Verhalten bei stachellosen Bienen kann dar{\"u}ber hinaus ein entscheidender Faktor f{\"u}r das Entstehen sogenannter Nestaggregationen sein. Dabei nisten Kolonien von Bienenarten mit und Bienenarten ohne Sesquiterpene in ihrem chemischen Profil in unmittelbarer Nachbarschaft, ohne gegeneinander aggressiv zu sein. Im Hinblick auf die zahlreichen Funktionen, die Harze und/oder aus dem Harz gewonnene Substanzen f{\"u}r stachellose Bienen haben, stellt Harz zweifelsohne eine bedeutende Ressource in der Welt der Bienen dar - eine Ressource, die einen direkten Einfluss auf deren chemische {\"O}kologie, Verteidigungsmechanismen und zwischen-artliche Kommunikation aus{\"u}bt. Wie genau die Bienen ihre artspezifischen Terpenprofile erzeugen, insbesondere, wie es ihnen gelingt, dabei ganze Terpengruppen auszuschließen, muss in zuk{\"u}nftigen Studien genauer untersucht werden. Auch stellt sich die Frage, wie wichtig eine hohe Diversit{\"a}t an Harzquellen und damit Baumarten f{\"u}r die Bienen ist! Es ist durchaus m{\"o}glich, dass neben einer Vielfalt an Bl{\"u}tenpflanzenarten auch der „Harzreichtum" f{\"u}r das Wohlergehen der Bienen eine entscheidende Rolle spielt.}, subject = {stachellose Biene}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Schmid2010, author = {Schmid, Benjamin}, title = {Computational tools for the segmentation and registration of confocal brain images of Drosophila melanogaster}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-51490}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Neuroanatomical data in fly brain research are mostly available as spatial gene expression patterns of genetically distinct fly strains. The Drosophila standard brain, which was developed in the past to provide a reference coordinate system, can be used to integrate these data. Working with the standard brain requires advanced image processing methods, including visualisation, segmentation and registration. The previously published VIB Protocol addressed the problem of image registration. Unfortunately, its usage was severely limited by the necessity of manually labelling a predefined set of neuropils in the brain images at hand. In this work I present novel tools to facilitate the work with the Drosophila standard brain. These tools are integrated in a well-known open-source image processing framework which can potentially serve as a common platform for image analysis in the neuroanatomical research community: ImageJ. In particular, a hardware-accelerated 3D visualisation framework was developed for ImageJ which extends its limited 3D visualisation capabilities. It is used for the development of a novel semi-automatic segmentation method, which implements automatic surface growing based on user-provided seed points. Template surfaces, incorporated with a modified variant of an active surface model, complement the segmentation. An automatic nonrigid warping algorithm is applied, based on point correspondences established through the extracted surfaces. Finally, I show how the individual steps can be fully automated, and demonstrate its application for the successful registration of fly brain images. The new tools are freely available as ImageJ plugins. I compare the results obtained by the introduced methods with the output of the VIB Protocol and conclude that our methods reduce the required effort five to ten fold. Furthermore, reproducibility and accuracy are enhanced using the proposed tools.}, subject = {Taufliege}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Derrer2010, author = {Derrer, Bianca}, title = {Charakterisierung der Vitamin B6 Synthese und des Shikimatsyntheseweges im Malariaerreger Plasmodium ssp.}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-51456}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Malaria ist eine schwerwiegende Krankheit, die j{\"a}hrlich {\"u}ber eine Million Menschen t{\"o}tet. Die zunehmende Resistenzbildung gegen{\"u}ber den verwendeten Medikamenten macht die Entwicklung neuer Antimalariamittel dringend notwendig. Daher sind die Vitamin B6 Synthese und der Shikimatweg von besonderem Interesse, da diese beiden Synthesewege nur im Parasiten und nicht im Menschen vorkommen. Unter der Voraussetzung, dass diese essentiell f{\"u}r den Parasiten sind, b{\"o}ten sie ideale Ansatzpunkte zur Entwicklung neuer Antimalariamittel. Voraus gegangene Studien haben gezeigt, dass Plasmodium falciparum in der Lage ist, PLP de novo mittels eines bifunktionalen Enzymkomplex, bestehend aus den Proteinen Pdx1 und Pdx2, zu synthetisieren. Pdx1 stellt dabei die eigentliche Synthase dar, w{\"a}hrend Pdx2 als Glutaminase-Partner das ben{\"o}tigte Ammoniumion f{\"u}r den heterocyclen Ring bereitstellt. Zus{\"a}tzlich dazu verf{\"u}gt der Parasit auch {\"u}ber einen salvage pathway um PLP zu „recyclen", in dem der Pyridoxalkinase PdxK eine Schl{\"u}sselfunktion zuf{\"a}llt. Knockout Studien der pdx1 im Mausmalariasystem P. berghei haben gezeigt, dass PbPdx1 f{\"u}r eine optimale Entwicklung der Blutstadien ben{\"o}tigt wird, nicht jedoch f{\"u}r deren {\"U}berleben. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit habe ich die Effekte eines pbpdxK(-) Knockouts in demselben System untersucht. Es konnte eine monoklonale Knockoutlinie generiert werden, was zeigte, dass PbPdxK nicht essentiell f{\"u}r das {\"U}berleben des Parasiten in den Blutstadien ist. Die Entwicklung w{\"a}hrend des Blutstadiums war von dem pbpdxK(-) Knockout nicht betroffen. Allerdings zeigte sich im Moskitostadium eine drastische Reduktion der Sporozoitenzahl sowohl in den Mitteld{\"a}rmen als auch in den Speicheldr{\"u}sen. Dieses Ergebnis legt nahe, dass PbPdxK essentiell f{\"u}r das {\"U}berleben der Sporozoiten ist. Daneben wurde versucht, die Gene pfpdx1, pfpdx2 sowie pfpdxK in P. falciparum 3D7 durch Verwendung der single cross over Strategie auszuschalten. Es konnte jedoch f{\"u}r keines der genannten Konstrukte eine Integration in die jeweiligen Genloci anhand von PCR-Analysen nachgewiesen werden. Ebenso scheiterte der Versuch, durch Rekombination eines komplement{\"a}ren Genabschnitts die Funktion des Gens zu rekonstituieren. Daher bleibt es unklar, ob pfpdx1, pfpdx2 und pfpdxK durch Knockout Strategien auszuschalten sind oder nur f{\"u}r Genmanipulationen nicht zug{\"a}nglich sind. Die Kultivierung von P. falciparum 3D7 Parasiten in Vitamin B6 depletiertem Medium hatte keinen Effekt auf deren Wachstum. Eine anschließende Analyse der Proteinextrakte zeigte eine erh{\"o}hte Expression der PfPdxK, w{\"a}hrend sich das Expressionslevel der PfPdx1 nicht ver{\"a}nderte. Es scheint, dass der Parasit in der Lage ist Vitamin B6 Mangel durch vermehrte Nutzung des salvage pathways vollst{\"a}ndig zu kompensieren. Fr{\"u}here Arbeiten zeigten, dass der C-Terminus der Pdx1 in die Aktivit{\"a}t des PLP Synthasekomplexes involviert ist. Aus diesem Grund wurden verschiedene C-terminale Deletionsmutanten der PfPdx1 konstruiert und dabei bis zu 30 Aminos{\"a}uren entfernt. Diese Analysen ergaben, dass der C-Terminus vier verschiedene Funktionen besitzt: das Assembly der Pdx1 Untereinheiten zum Dodekamer, die Bindung des Pentosesubstrats Ribose 5-Phosphat, die Bildung des Intermediats I320 und schließlich die PLP Synthese. Diese unterschiedlichen Funktionen wurden durch verschiedene Deletionsvarianten identifiziert. Dar{\"u}ber hinaus waren alle Deletionsvarianten in der Lage, die Glutaminase Pdx2 zu aktivieren, was zeigt, dass das Dodekamer nicht Vorraussetzung f{\"u}r die Glutaminaseaktivit{\"a}t ist. Aufgrund der geringen PLP Syntheseaktivit{\"a}t in vitro wurde vermutet, dass der PfPdx1/PfPdx2 Komplex durch einen zus{\"a}tzlichen Faktor aktiviert wird. Daher wurde versucht, mittels Yeast 2-Hybrid, basierend auf einer PCR-amplifizierten P. falciparum 3D7 cDNA-Bibliothek als bait und PfPdx1 als prey, einen Interaktionspartner zu identifizieren. Mehrere Klone wurden gewonnen, die alle einen Bereich des Mal13P1.540, einem putativen Hsp70 Proteins, enthielten. Jedoch scheiterten alle Versuche, die Protein-Protein-Interaktion mit rekombinant exprimierten Protein zu best{\"a}tigen. Ebenso war es nicht m{\"o}glich, das vollst{\"a}ndige Mal13P1.540 rekombinant zu exprimieren sowie dessen Lokalisation in vivo zu bestimmen. Daher bleibt die Interaktion von PfPdx1 und Mal13P1.540 ungekl{\"a}rt. Neben der Vitamin B6 Biosynthese konnten auch einige Gene des Shikimatweges in Plasmodium identifiziert werden. In P. berghei konnten der C-terminale Teil der 3-Dehydroquinatsynthase (2) sowie die Shikimatkinase (5) und die 5-Enoylpyruvylshikimat 3-Phosphatsynthase (6) in einem open reading frame (ORF) identifiziert werden, der dieselbe genetische Organisation aufweisen wie der Arom-Komplex der Hefen. Mit Hilfe eines Komplementationsassay wurde die Funktionalit{\"a}t dieses ORFs {\"u}berpr{\"u}ft. Dazu wurden S. cerevisiae BY4741Δaro1, ein Hefestamm ohne funktionalen Arom-Komplex, mit dem Pb2_6_5_ABC Fragment transformiert. Die so transformierten Hefen waren nicht in der Lage, auf Mangelplatten ohne aromatische Aminos{\"a}uren zu wachsen, was zeigte, dass das Pb2_6_5_ABC Konstrukt den BY4741Δaro1 Ph{\"a}notyp nicht komplementieren konnte. Der Versuch, mit Hilfe des Baculovirussytems rekombiant exprimiertes Protein zu erhalten, verlief erfolglos. Ebenso war es nicht m{\"o}glich, Teile des Proteins f{\"u}r Immunisierungen zu exprimieren. Daher bleibt die Funktionalit{\"a}t des Pb2_6_5_ABC Konstruktes ungekl{\"a}rt.}, subject = {Plasmodium falciparum}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Nuwal2010, author = {Nuwal, Tulip}, title = {Characterization of Synapsin, Tubulin-Binding Chaperone E-like, And Their Putative Interactions With Synapse Associated Protein Of 47 kDa In Drosophila melanogaster}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-51683}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {In this thesis we have used Drosophila melanogaster as a model organism to investigate proteins and their putative interacting partners that are directly or indirectly involved in the release of neurotransmitters at the synapse. We have used molecular techniques to investigate conserved synaptic proteins, synapsin and synapse associated protein of 47 kD (SAP47), and a putative interaction partner of SAP47, tubulin binding chaperone E-like (TBCEL). SAP47 and synapsins are highly conserved synaptic vesicle associated proteins in Drosophila melanogaster. To further investigate the role and function of Sap47 and Syn genes, we had earlier generated the null mutants by P-element mutagenesis (Funk et al., 2004; Godenschwege et al., 2004). Western blots and ELISA of brain homogenates from Sap47156 null mutants showed the presence of up-regulated phospho-synapsin in comparison to wild-type (CS) and the presence of up-regulated phospho-synapsin was partially abolished when a pan-neuronal rescue of SAP47 was performed by the Gal4- UAS technique. Thus, the results suggest a qualitative and quantitative modulation of synapsin by SAP47. At the transcript level, we did not observe any difference in content of Syn transcript in Sap47156 and wild-type CS flies. The question of a direct molecular interaction between SAP47 and synapsin was investigated by co-immunoprecipitation (Co-IP) experiments and we did not find any stable interactions under the several IP conditions we tested. The possibility of Sap47 as a modifier of Syn at the genetic level was investigated by generating and testing homozygous double null mutants of Sap47 and Syn. The Syn97, Sap47156 double mutants are viable but have a reduced life span and decreased locomotion when compared to CS. In 2D-PAGE analysis of synapsins we identified trains of spots corresponding to synapsins, suggesting that synapsin has several isoforms and each one of them is posttranslationally modified. In an analysis by Blue native-SDS-PAGE (BN-SDS-2D- PAGE) and Western blot we observed synapsin and SAP47 signals to be present at 700-900 kDa and 200-250 kDa, respectively, suggesting that they are part of large but different complexes. We also report the possibility of Drosophila synapsin forming homo- and heteromultimers, which has also been reported for synapsins of vertebrates. In parallel to the above experiments, phosphorylation of synapsins in Drosophila was studied by IP techniques followed by 1D-SDS gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry (in collaboration with S. Heo and G. Lubec). We identified and verified 5 unique phosphorylation sites in Drosophila synapsin from our MS analysis. Apart from phosphorylation modifications we identified several other PTMs which have not been verified. The significance of these phosphorylations and other identified PTMs needs to be investigated further and their implications for synapsin function and Drosophila behavior has to be elucidated by further experiments. In a collaborative project with S. Kneitz and N. Nuwal, we investigated the effects of Sap156 and Syn97 mutations by performing a whole Drosophila transcriptome microarray analysis of the individual null mutants and the double mutants (V2 and V3). We obtained several candidates which were significantly altered in the mutants. These genes need to be investigated further to elucidate their interactions with Sap47 and Syn. In another project, we investigated the role and function of Drosophila tubulin- binding chaperone E-like (Tbcel, CG12214). The TBCEL protein has high homology to vertebrate TBCE-like (or E-like) which has high sequence similarity to tubulin-binding chaperone E (TBCE) (hence the name TBCE-Like). We generated an anti-TBCEL polyclonal antiserum (in collaboration with G. Krohne). According to flybase, the Tbcel gene has only one exon and codes for two different transcripts by alternative transcription start sites. The longer transcript RB is present only in males whereas the shorter transcript RA is present only in females. In order to study the gene function we performed P- element jump-out mutagenesis to generate deletion mutants. We used the NP4786 (NP) stock which has a P(GawB) insertion in the 5' UTR of the Tbcel gene. NP4786 flies are homozygous lethal due to a second-site lethality as the flies are viable over a deficiency (Df) chromosome (a deletion of genomic region spanning the Tbcel gene and other upstream and downstream genes). We performed the P-element mutagenesis twice. In the first trial we obtained only revertants and the second experiment is still in progress. In the second attempt, jump-out was performed over the deficiency chromosome to prevent homologous chromosome mediated double stranded DNA repair. During the second mutagenesis an insertion stock G18151 became available. These flies had a P-element insertion in the open reading frame (ORF) of the Tbcel gene but was homozygous viable. Western blots of fresh tissue homogenates of NP/Df and G18151 flies probed with anti-TBCEL antiserum showed no TBCEL signal, suggesting that these flies are Tbcel null mutants. We used these flies for further immunohistochemical analyses and found that TBCEL is specifically expressed in the cytoplasm of cyst cells of the testes and is associated with the tubulin of spermatid tails in wild-type CS, whereas in NP/Df and G18151 flies the TBCEL staining in the cyst cells was absent and there was a disruption of actin investment cones. We also found enrichment of TBCEL staining around the actin investment cone. These results are also supported by the observation that the enhancer trap expression of the NP4786 line is localised to the cyst cells, similar to TBCEL expression. Also, male fertility of NP/Df and G18151 flies was tested and they were found to be sterile with few escapers. Thus, these results suggest that TBCEL is involved in Drosophila spermatogenesis with a possible role in the spermatid elongation and individualisation process.}, subject = {Taufliege}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Nuwal2010, author = {Nuwal, Nidhi}, title = {Optogenetic investigation of nervous system functions using walking behavior and genome wide transcript analysis of Synapsin and Sap47 mutants of Drosophila}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-51694}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {PART I Animals need to constantly evaluate their external environment in order to survive. In some cases the internal state of the animal changes to cope with it's surrounding. In our study we wanted to investigate the role of amines in modulating internal states of Drosophila. We have designed a behavioral paradigm where the flies are fixed in space but can walk on a small styrofoam ball suspended by a gentle stream of air. The walking activity of flies was used as behavioral readout. PART I Animals need to constantly evaluate their external environment in order to survive. In some cases the internal state of the animal changes to cope with it's surrounding. In our study we wanted to investigate the role of amines in modulating internal states of Drosophila. We have designed a behavioral paradigm where the flies are fixed in space but can walk on a small styrofoam ball suspended by a gentle stream of air. The walking activity of flies was used as behavioral readout. An operant training paradigm was established by coupling one of the walking directions to incidence of heat punishment. We observed that animals quickly realized the contingency of punishment with walking direction and avoided walking in the punished direction in the presence of punishment, but did not continue walking in the unpunished direction in the absence of the punishment. This would indicate that the flies do not form a memory for the punished direction or rapidly erase it under new conditions. On having established the paradigm with heat punishment we have attempted to activate selected subsets of neuronal populations of Drosophila while they were walking on the ball. The selective activation of neurons was achieved by expressing the light-activated ion channel channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2) using the Gal4-UAS system and coupling the unidirectional walking of the animals on the ball with the incidence of blue light required to activate the channels and depolarize the neurons. The feasibility of this approach was tested by light-activating sugar sensitive gustatory receptor neurons expressing ChR2, we found that when the light was actuated the flies preferred to turn in one direction the optically "rewarded" direction. Next we similarly activated different subsets of aminergic neurons. We observed that in our setup animals avoided to turn in the direction which was coupled to activation of dopaminergic neurons indicating that release of dopamine is disliked by the animals. This is in accordance with associative learning experiments where dopamine is believed to underlie the formation of an association between a neutral conditioned stimulus with the aversive unconditioned stimulus. However, when we activated tyraminergic/octopaminergic neurons we did not observe any directional preference. The activation of dopaminergic and tyraminergic/octopaminergic neurons led to arousal of the animals indicating that we were indeed successful in activating those neurons. Also, the activation of serotonergic neurons did not have any effect on directional preference of the animals. With this newly established paradigm it will be interesting to find out if in insects like in mammals a reward mediating system exists and to test subsets of aminergic or peptidergic neurons that could possibly be involved in a reward signaling system which has not been detected in our study. Also, it would be interesting to localize neuropile regions that would be involved in mediating choice behavior in our paradigm. PART II In collaboration with S. Kneitz (IZKF Wuerzburg) and T. Nuwal we performed genome-wide expression analysis of two pre-synaptic mutants - Synapsin (Syn97) and Synapse associated protein of 47 kDa (Sap47156). The rationale behind these experiments was to identify genes that were up- or down-regulated due to these mutations. The microarray experiments provided us with several candidate genes some of which we have verified by qPCR. From our qPCR analysis we can conclude that out of the verified genes only Cirl transcripts seem to be reproducibly down regulated in Synapsin mutants. The Cirl gene codes for a calcium independent receptor for latrotoxin. Further qPCR experiments need to be performed to verify other candidate genes. The molecular interactions between CIRL and SYN or their genes should now be investigated in detail.}, subject = {Taufliege}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Laisney2010, author = {Laisney, Juliette Agn{\`e}s Genevi{\`e}ve Claire}, title = {Characterisation and regulation of the Egfr/Egfr ligand system in fish models for melanoma}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-51369}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Fish of the genus Xiphophorus belong to the oldest animal models in cancer research. The oncogene responsible for the generation of spontaneous aggressive melanoma encodes for a mutated epidermal growth factor receptor (Egfr) and is called xmrk for Xiphophorus melanoma receptor kinase. Xmrk constitutive activation mechanisms and subsequent signaling pathways have already been investigated and charaterized but it is still unknown if Egfr ligands may also play a role in Xmrk-driven melanoma formation. To investigate the potential role of Egfr ligands in Xmrk-driven melanoma, I firstly analyzed the evolution of teleost and tetrapod Egfr/Egfr ligand systems. I especially focused on the analysis on the medaka fish, a closely related species to Xiphophorus, for which the whole genome has been sequenced. I could identify all seven Egfr ligands in medaka and could show that the two teleost-specific Egfr copies of medaka display dissimilar expression patterns in adult tissues together with differential expression of Egfr ligand subsets, arguing for subfunctionalization of receptor functions in this fish. Our phylogenetic and synteny analyses supported the hypothesis that only one gene in the chordate ancestor gave rise to the diversity of Egfr ligands found in vertebrate genomes today. I also could show that the Egfr extracellular subdomains implicated in ligand binding are not evolutionary conserved between tetrapods and teleosts, making the use of heterologous ligands in experiments with fish cells debatable. Despite its well understood and straight-forward process, Xmrk-driven melanomagenesis in Xiphophorus is problematic to further investigate in vivo. Our laboratory recently established a new melanoma animal model by generating transgenic mitf::xmrk medaka fishes, a Xiphophorus closely related species offering many more advantages. These fishes express xmrk under the control of the pigment-cell specific Mitf promoter. During my PhD thesis, I participated in the molecular analysis of the stably transgenic medaka and could show that the Xmrk-induced signaling pathways are similar when comparing Xiphophorus with transgenic mitf::xmrk medaka. These data together with additional RNA expression, protein, and histology analyses showed that Xmrk expression under the control of a pigment cell-specific promoter is sufficient to induce melanoma in the transgenic medaka, which develop very stereotyped tumors, including uveal and extracutaneous melanoma, with early onset during larval stages. To further investigate the potential role of Egfr ligands in Xmrk-driven melanoma, I made use of two model systems. One of them was the above mentioned mitf::xmrk medaka, the other was an in-vitro cell culture system, where the EGF-inducible Xmrk chimera HERmrk is stably expressed in murine melanocytes. Here I could show that HERmrk activation strongly induced expression of amphiregulin (Areg) and heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor (Hbegf) in melanocytes. This regulation was dependent on the MAPK and SRC signaling pathways. Moreover, upregulation of Adam10 and Adam17, the two major sheddases of Egfr ligands, was observed. I also could demonstrate the functionality of the growth factors by invitro analyses. Using the mitf::xmrk medaka model I could also show the upregulation of a subset of ligand genes, namely egf, areg, betacellulin (btc) and epigen (epgn) as well as upregulation of medaka egfrb in tumors from fish with metastatic melanoma. All these results converge to support an Xmrk-induced autocrine Egfr ligand loop. Interestingly, my in-vitro experiments with conditioned supernatant from medaka Egf- and Hbegf-producing cells revealed that not only Xiphophorus Egfrb, but also the pre-activated Xmrk could be further stimulated by the ligands. Altogether, I could show with in-vitro and in-vivo experiments that Xmrk is capable of inducing a functional autocrine Egfr ligand loop. These data confirm the importance of autocrine loops in receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK)-dependent cancer development and show the possibility for a constitutively active RTK to strengthen its oncogenic signaling by ligand binding.}, subject = {Schwertk{\"a}rpfling}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Vershenya2010, author = {Vershenya, Stanislav}, title = {Quantitative and qualitative analyses of in-paralogs}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-51358}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {In our analysis I was interested in the gene duplications, with focus on in-paralogs. In-paralogs are gene duplicates which arose after species split. Here I analysed the in-paralogs quantitatively, as well as qualitatively. For quantitative analysis genomes of 21 species were taken. Most of them have vastly different lifestyles with maximum evolutionary distance between them 1100 million years. Species included mammals, fish, insects and worm, plus some other chordates. All the species were pairwised analysed by the Inparanoid software, and in-paralogs matrix were built representing number of in-paralogs in all vs. all manner. Based on the in-paralogs matrix I tried to reconstruct the evolutionary tree using in-paralog numbers as evolutionary distance. If all 21 species were used the resulting tree was very far from real one: a lot of species were misplaced. However if the number was reduced to 12, all of the species were placed correctly with only difference being wrong insect and fish clusters switched. Then to in-paralogs matrix the neighbour-net algorithm was applied. The resulting "net" tree showed the species with fast or slow duplications rates compared to the others. We could identify species with very high or very low duplications frequencies and it correlates with known occurrences of the whole genome duplications. As the next step I built the graphs for every single species showing the correlation between their in-paralogs number and evolutionary distance. As we have 21 species, graph for every species is built using 20 points. Coordinates of the points are set using the evolutionary distance to that particular species and in-paralogs number. In mammals with increasing the distance from speciation the in-paralogs number also increased, however not in linear fashion. In fish and insects the graph close to zero is just the same in mammals' case. However, after reaching the evolutionary distances more than 800 million years the number of inparalogs is beginning to decrease. We also made a simulation of gene duplications for all 21 species and all the splits according to the fossil and molecular clock data from literature. In our simulation duplication frequency was minimal closer to the past and maximum in the near-present time. Resulting curves had the same shape the experimental data ones. In case of fish and insect for simulation the duplication rate coefficient even had to be set negative in order to repeat experimental curve shape. To the duplication rate coefficient in our simulation contribute 2 criteria: gene duplications and gene losses. As gene duplication is stochastical process it should always be a constant. So the changing in the coefficient should be solely explained by the increasing gene loss of old genes. The processes are explained by the evolution model with high gene duplication and loss ratio. The drop in number of in-paralogs is probably due to the BLAST algorithm. It is observed in comparing highly divergent species and BLAST cannot find the orthologs so precisely anymore. In the second part of my work I concentrated more on the specific function of inparalogs. Because such analysis is time-consuming it could be done on the limited number species. Here I used three insects: Drosophila melanogaster (fruit y), Anopheles gambiae (mosquito) and Apis mellifera (honeybee). After Inparnoid analyses and I listed the cluster of orthologs. Functional analyses of all listed genes were done using GO annotations and also KEGG PATHWAY database. We found, that the gene duplication pattern is unique for each species and that this uniqueness is rejected through the differences in functional classes of duplicated genes. The preferences for some classes reject the evolutionary trends of the last 350 million years and allow assumptions on the role of those genes duplications in the lifestyle of species. Furthermore, the observed gene duplications allowed me to find connections between genomic changes and their phenotypic manifestations. For example I found duplications within carbohydrate metabolism rejecting feed pattern adaptation, within photo- and olfactory-receptors indicating sensing adaptation and within troponin indicating adaptations in the development. Despite these species specific differences, found high correlations between the independently duplicated genes between the species. This might hint for a "pool" of genes preferentially duplicated. Taken together, the observed duplication patterns reject the adaptational process and provide us another link to the field of genomic zoology.}, subject = {Duplikation}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Hacker2010, author = {Hacker, Christian}, title = {Beteiligung des Major Vault Proteins an der Kernporenkomplexbildung}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-51279}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {In die Kernmembran von Eukaryoten sind Kernporenkomplexe eingelagert. Diese stellen die einzige Verbindung zwischen dem Nukleo- und Zytoplasma dar und vermitteln den gerichteten Transport von Proteinen und Ribonukleoproteinpartikeln {\"u}ber die Kernh{\"u}lle. Durch vorangehende Versuche unserer Arbeitsgruppe konnte gezeigt werden, dass es experimentell m{\"o}glich ist, die Bildung einer kontinuierlichen Doppelmembran von der Insertion der Kernporenkomplexe zu trennen (Ewald et al., 1997). Dabei spielen verschiedene im Extrakt enthaltene Membranfraktionen eine Rolle. Erst k{\"u}rzlich wurden in unserer Arbeitsgruppe zwei unterschiedliche Membranfraktionen aus Xenopus Extrakt isoliert, die aufgrund ihrer Dichte als 40\% und 30\% Membranfraktion benannt wurden. Massenspektrometrische Untersuchungen zeigten, dass sich in der 30\% Membranfraktion, welche f{\"u}r die Kernporenkomplexbildung verantwortlich zu sein scheint, das Major Vault Protein (MVP) befindet. MVP ist Hauptbestandteil der Vault-Komplexe, großer tonnenf{\"o}rmiger Ribonukleoproteinpartikel, denen bislang eine Vielzahl von zellul{\"a}ren Funktionen zugeordnet wurden, die meisten davon jedoch noch stark debattiert. Vaults k{\"o}nnten wom{\"o}glich eine Rolle als Transporter {\"u}ber die Kernporenkomplexe spielen und wurden schon mehrfach mit dem Aufbau einer multiplen Arzneimittelresistenz in Verbindung gebracht. Die Beteiligung von MVP bei der Bildung der Kernporenkomplexe ist eine neue zellul{\"a}re Funktion und sollte deshalb in dieser Arbeit n{\"a}her untersucht werden. In dieser Arbeit wurden zun{\"a}chst die 40\% und 30\% Membranfraktionen auf ihr unterschiedliches Verhalten bei der Bildung der Kernh{\"u}lle separat und in Kombination genauer untersucht. Dabei zeigte sich, dass die 40\% Membranfraktion an Chromatin bindet und eine kontinuierliche Doppelmembran aufbaut. Die 30\% Membranfraktion konnte alleine nicht an Chromatin binden, induzierte aber in der durch die 40\% Membranfraktion gebildeten Doppelmembran den Aufbau von Kernporenkomplexen. Durch Immunfluoreszenzaufnahmen und ultrastrukturelle Untersuchungen wurde belegt, dass das an der 30\% Membranfraktion assoziierte MVP f{\"u}r die Bildung von Kernporenkomplexen verantwortlich war. Ferner konnten wir zeigen, dass sowohl MVP als auch Vault-Partikel die de novo Insertion von Kernporenkomplexen in kontinuierliche Doppelmembranen induzieren konnten. Die molekularen Mechanismen der Kernporenkomplexbildung durch MVP wurden mit Hilfe von artifiziellen Lipidmembranen analysiert. Anhand von unilamellaren Liposomen und elektronenmikroskopischen Aufnahmen konnte gezeigt werden, dass MVP die Lipidstruktur beeinflussen und perforieren kann. Zudem l{\"o}ste MVP die Bildung von Poren in schwarzen Lipidmembranen aus und f{\"u}hrte zur Messung von Str{\"o}men durch Einzelkanalmessungen {\"u}ber die entstandenen Poren. Um die bei dem Prozess der Kernporenkomplexbildung beteiligten Bindungspartner von MVP zu identifizieren, wurden mehrere Protein-Protein-Bindungsstudien durchgef{\"u}hrt. Unter den ermittelten MVP-Bindungspartnern ließen sich keine Nukleoporine mit dem Sequenzmotiv FXFG identifizieren, es ist jedoch nicht auszuschließen, dass MVP bei der Bildung der Kernporenkomplexe mit anderen Nukleoporinen interagiert. Da eine fr{\"u}here Arbeit die Bedeutung von Mikrotubuli bei der Bildung der Kernporenkomplexe aufzeigte (Ewald et al., 2001), wurden in dieser Arbeit die Interaktionen der isolierten 40\% und 30\% Membranfraktionen und von MVP mit dem Mikrotubulinetzwerk n{\"a}her analysiert. Dabei zeigte sich, dass nur die 30\% Membranfraktion mit Mikrotubuli interagierte und eine Inhibition der Mikrotubulipolymerisation durch Colchizin den Einbau von Kernporenkomplexen verhinderte. Im Gegensatz dazu interagierten die 40\% Membranvesikel nicht mit Mikrotubuli und daher hat eine Colchizin-induzierte Inhibition der Mikrotubulipolymerisation keinen Effekt auf den Aufbau einer kontinuierlichen Doppelmembran. Durch immunfluoreszenzmikroskopische Untersuchungen konnte zudem gezeigt werden, dass die Lokalisation von MVP an der Kernh{\"u}lle ebenfalls Abh{\"a}ngig von Mikrotubuli ist. Um zu demonstrieren, dass die MVP-induzierte Kernporenkomplexbildung im zellfreien System abh{\"a}ngig vom Transport von MVP zur Kernh{\"u}lle ist, wurde die Zugabe von MVP zu porenlosen Kernen nach einer Colchizin-Behandlung analysiert. Hierbei konnte belegt werden, dass MVP Mikrotubuli auch ben{\"o}tigt, um die Bildung von Kernporenkomplexen in der Kernmembran zu initiieren. Da Mikrotubulifilamente im zellfreien System mit ihren Plus-Enden gegen die Chromatinoberfl{\"a}che gerichtet sind, sollten f{\"u}r den gerichteten Transport zum Chromatin Motorproteine der Kinesin-Familie eine Rolle spielen. Durch die Inhibition von Mklp2, einem mitotischen Kinesin, konnte der Aufbau der Kernporenkomplexe durch MVP in porenlosen Kernen blockiert werden.}, subject = {Ribonucleoproteine}, language = {de} } @misc{Fiala1990, author = {Fiala, Brigitte}, title = {Extrafloral nectaries versus ant-Homoptera mutualisms : a comment on Becerra and Venable}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-32948}, year = {1990}, abstract = {No abstract available}, subject = {Nektarium}, language = {en} } @article{RandlkoferJordanMitesseretal.2009, author = {Randlkofer, Barbara and Jordan, Florian and Mitesser, Oliver and Meiners, Torsten and Obermaier, Elisabeth}, title = {Effect of vegetation density, height, and connectivity on the oviposition pattern of the leaf beetle Galeruca tanaceti}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-49665}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Vegetation structure can profoundly influence patterns of abundance, distribution, and reproduction of herbivorous insects and their susceptibility to natural enemies. The three main structural traits of herbaceous vegetation are density, height, and connectivity. This study determined the herbivore response to each of these three parameters by analysing oviposition patterns in the field and studying the underlying mechanisms in laboratory bioassays. The generalist leaf beetle, Galeruca tanaceti L. (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), preferentially deposits its egg clutches on non-host plants such as grasses. Earlier studies revealed that oviposition within structurally complex vegetation reduces the risk of egg parasitism. Consequently, leaf beetle females should prefer patches with dense, tall, or connected vegetation for oviposition in order to increase their reproductive success. In the present study, we tested the following three hypotheses on the effect of stem density, height, and connectivity on oviposition: (1) Within habitats, the number of egg clutches in areas with high stem densities is disproportionately higher than in low-density areas. The number of egg clutches on (2) tall stems or (3) in vegetation with high connectivity is higher than expected for a random distribution. In the field, stem density and height were positively correlated with egg clutch presence. Moreover, a disproportionately high presence of egg clutches was determined in patches with high stem densities. Stem height had a positive influence on oviposition, also in a laboratory two-choice bioassay, whereas stem density and connectivity did not affect oviposition preferences in the laboratory. Therefore, stem height and, potentially, density, but not connectivity, seem to trigger oviposition site selection of the herbivore. This study made evident that certain, but not all traits of the vegetation structure can impose a strong influence on oviposition patterns of herbivorous insects. The results were finally compared with data on the movement patterns of the specialised egg parasitoid of the herbivore in comparable types of vegetation structure.}, subject = {Blattk{\"a}fer}, language = {en} } @article{LambeetsVandegehuchteMaelfaitetal.2008, author = {Lambeets, Kevin and Vandegehuchte, Martijn L. and Maelfait, Jean-Pierre and Bonte, Dries}, title = {Understanding the impact of flooding on trait-displacements and shifts in assemblage structure of predatory arthropods on river banks}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-49580}, year = {2008}, abstract = {1. Species assemblages of naturally disturbed habitats are governed by the prevailing disturbance regime. Consequently, stochastic flood events affect river banks and the inhabiting biota. Predatory arthropods occupy predominantly river banks in relation to specific habitat conditions. Therefore, species sorting and stochastic processes as induced by flooding are supposed to play important roles in structuring riparian arthropod assemblages in relation to their habitat preference and dispersal ability. 2. To ascertain whether assemblages of spiders and carabid beetles from disturbed river banks are structured by stochastic or sorting mechanisms, diversity patterns and assemblage-wide trait-displacements were assessed based on pitfall sampling data. We tested if flooding disturbance within a lowland river reach affects diversity patterns and trait distribution in both groups. 3. Whereas the number of riparian spider species decreased considerably with increased flooding, carabid beetle diversity benefited from intermediate degrees of flooding. Moreover, regression analyses revealed trait-displacements, reflecting sorting mechanisms particularly for spiders. Increased flooding disturbance was associated with assemblage-wide increases of niche breadth, shading and hygrophilic preference and ballooning propensity for spider (sub)families. Trait patterns were comparable for Bembidiini carabids, but were less univocal for Pterostichini species. Body size decreased for lycosid spiders and Bembidiini carabids with increased flooding, but increased in linyphiid spiders and Pterostichini carabids. 4. Our results indicate that mainly riparian species are disfavoured by either too high or too low degrees of disturbance, whereas eurytopic species benefit from increased flooding. Anthropogenic alterations of flooding disturbance constrain the distribution of common hygrophilous species and/or species with high dispersal ability, inducing shifts towards less specialized arthropod assemblages. River banks with divergent degrees of flooding impact should be maintained throughout dynamic lowland river reaches in order to preserve typical riparian arthropod assemblages.}, subject = {Flussufer}, language = {en} } @article{LambeetsVandegehuchteMaelfaitetal.2009, author = {Lambeets, Kevin and Vandegehuchte, Martijn L. and Maelfait, Jean-Pierre and Bonte, Dries}, title = {Integrating environmental conditions and functional life-history traits for riparian arthropod conservation planning}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-50148}, year = {2009}, abstract = {River banks are naturally disturbed habitats, in which local flood events and the landscape structure are expected to govern riparian species assemblages. Not solely effects of flooding per se, but also related changes in vegetation structure will affect species' distribution. By elucidating the relationships between species' occurrence and multivariate habitat conditions on a restricted spatial scale, insight into conservation strategies to preserve riparian species is gained. Ordination and grouping methods revealed important environmental and functional trait constraints on species composition of predatory riparian arthropod assemblages. Mainly flooding disturbance appeared to affect spider and carabid beetle species composition. Habitat affinity and dispersal ability were retained as important traits explaining similarity between arthropod assemblages. River banks similar in species composition differed in absolute and functional group species richness. Furthermore, Poisson regressions demonstrated the importance of variation in discharge regime, sediment composition and vegetation structure for the preservation of rare riparian arthropods. Whereas hygrophilic species benefited from increased vegetation cover, xerothermophilic specialists were favoured by increased flooding disturbance. In contrast to flight-active riparian carabids occurring throughout the river system, especially cursorial spiders are expected to go extinct under increased anthropogenic alterations of discharge regimes. We show the importance of a dynamic and evidence-based approach of river management on a local scale to preserve vulnerable riparian arthropods. In general, river restoration should generate the required heterogeneity in environmental conditions (e.g. dynamic processes) at the river bank level, thereby increasing the sustainability of riverine landscapes. More-over, we argue that the understanding of functional responses towards environmental factors results in general and widely applicable guiding concepts for species conservation.}, subject = {Laufk{\"a}fer}, language = {de} } @article{HeisswolfUlmannObermaieretal.2007, author = {Heisswolf, Annette and Ulmann, Sandra and Obermaier, Elisabeth and Mitesser, Oliver and Poethke, Hans J.}, title = {Host plant finding in the specialised leaf beetle Cassida canaliculata: an analysis of small-scale movement behaviour}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-49485}, year = {2007}, abstract = {1. Host plant finding in walking herbivorous beetles is still poorly understood. Analysis of small-scale movement patterns under semi-natural conditions can be a useful tool to detect behavioural responses towards host plant cues. 2. In this study, the small-scale movement behaviour of the monophagous leaf beetle Cassida canaliculata Laich. (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) was studied in a semi-natural arena (r = 1 m). In three different settings, a host (Salvia pratensis L., Lamiales: Lamiaceae), a non-host (Rumex conglomeratus Murr., Caryophyllales: Polygonaceae), or no plant was presented in the centre of the arena. 3. The beetles showed no differences in the absolute movement variables, straightness and mean walking speed, between the three settings. However, the relative movement variables, mean distance to the centre and mean angular deviation from walking straight to the centre, were significantly smaller when a host plant was offered. Likewise, the angular deviation from walking straight to the centre tended to decline with decreasing distance from the centre. Finally, significantly more beetles were found on the host than on the non-host at the end of all the trials. 4. It is concluded that C. canaliculata is able to recognise its host plant from a distance. Whether olfactory or visual cues (or a combination of both) are used to find the host plant remains to be elucidated by further studies.}, subject = {K{\"a}fer}, language = {en} } @article{HeisswolfGablerObermaieretal.2007, author = {Heisswolf, Annette and Gabler, Dirk and Obermaier, Elisabeth and M{\"u}ller, Caroline}, title = {Olfactory versus contact cues in host plant recognition of a monophagous chrysomelid beetle}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-49475}, year = {2007}, abstract = {The importance of olfactory versus contact cues for host plant recognition was investigated in the tortoise beetle Cassida canaliculata Laich. (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), which is strictly monophagous on meadow sage. The reaction of adult beetles to olfactory and contact host cues was tested using three bioassays (locomotion compensator, six-chamber-olfactometer, stem arena') to account for different behavioral contexts. Bioassay-guided fractionation of plant extracts was elaborated to characterize the nature of contact stimuli. The beetles were only slightly attracted to odors from small amounts of leaf material. However, when contact cues were provided additionally, the beetles showed strong preferences for samples of their host plant over controls. Bioassay-guided fractionation led to isolation of at least two non-polar contact stimuli acting in concert that are sufficient for host plant identification in C. canaliculata.}, subject = {Insekt}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Ruchty2010, author = {Ruchty, Markus}, title = {Sensory basis of thermal orientation in leaf-cutting ants}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48906}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Leaf-cutting ants have a highly developed thermal sense which the insects use to regulate the own body temperature and also to optimize brood and fungus development. Apart from the already described temperature guided behaviors inside the nest it is unknown to what extent the ants may use their thermal sense outside the nest. As part of the present thesis, the question was addressed whether leaf-cutting ants (Atta vollenweideri) are able to learn the position of a warm object as landmark for orientation during foraging. Using absolute conditioning, it was shown that ten training trials are sufficient to elicit the association be-tween food reward and the temperature stimulus. In the test situation (without reward) a significantly higher amount of ants preferred the heated site compared to the unheated con-trol. Importantly, thermal radiation alone was sufficient to establish the learned association and served as orientation cue during the test situation (chapter IV). Based on the experi-mental design used in the previous chapter, the localization of thermosensitive neurons, which detect the underlying thermal stimuli, is restricted to the head or the antennae of the ants. The antennal sensillum coeloconicum is a potential candidate to detect the thermal stimuli during the orientation behavior. In chapter V the sensillum coeloconicum of Atta vollenweideri was investigated concerning its gross morphology, fine-structure and the phy-siology of the associated thermosensitive neuron. The sensillum is predominantly located on the apical antennal segment (antennal tip) where around 12 sensilla are clustered, and it has a peg-in-pit morphology with a double walled, multiporous peg. The sensory peg is deeply embedded in a cuticular pit, connected to the environment only by a tiny aperture. The sen-sillum houses three receptor neurons of which one is thermosensitive whereas the sensory modality of the other two neurons remains to be shown. Upon stimulation with a drop in temperature, the thermosensitve neuron responds with a phasic-tonic increase in neuronal activity (cold-sensitive neuron) and shows rapid adaptation to prolonged stimulation. In ad-dition, it is shown that thermal radiation is an effective stimulus for the thermosensitive neuron. This is the first evidence that sensilla coeloconica play an important role during the thermal orientation behavior described in chapter IV. During the test situation of the classic-al conditioning paradigm, the ants showed rapid antennal movements, indicating that they scan their environment in order to detect the heated object. Rapid antennal movements will result in rapid discontinuities of thermal radiation that re-quire thermosensitive neurons with outstanding sensitivity and high temporal resolution. In Chapter VI the question was addressed whether the thermosensitive neuron of the sensilla coeloconica fulfils these preconditions. Extracellular recordings revealed that the neuron is extremely sensitive to temperature transients and that, due to the response dynamics, an estimated stimulus frequency of up to 5 Hz can be resolved by the neuron. Already a tem-perature increase of only 0.005 °C leads to a pronounced response of the thermosensitive neuron. Through sensory adaptation, the sensitivity to temperature transients is maintained over a wide range of ambient temperatures. The discovered extreme sensitivity, the high temporal resolution and the pronounced adaptation abilities are further evidence support-ing the idea that sensilla coeloconica receive information of the thermal environment, which the ants may use for orientation. In order to understand how the ants use their thermal environment for orientation, it is ne-cessary to know where and how thermal information is processed in their central nervous system. In Chapter VII the question is addressed where in the brain the thermal information, specifically received by the thermosensitive neuron of sensilla coeloconica, is represented. By selectively staining single sensilla coeloconica, the axons of the receptor neurons could be tracked into the antennal lobe of Atta vollenweideri workers. Each of the three axons termi-nated in a single functional unit (glomerulus) of the antennal lobe. Two of the innervated glomeruli were adjacent to each other and are located lateral, while the third one was clear-ly separate and located medial in the antennal lobe. Using two-photon Ca2+ imaging of an-tennal lobe projection neurons, the general representation of thermal information in the antennal lobe was studied. In 11 investigated antennal lobes up to six different glomeruli responded to temperature stimulation in a single specimen. Both, warm- and cold-sensitive glomeruli could be identified. All thermosensitive glomeruli were located in the medial half of the antennal lobe. Based on the correlative evidence of the general representation of thermal information and the results from the single sensilla stainings, it is assumed that thermal information received by sensilla coeloconica is processed in the medial of the three target glomeruli. This part of the thesis shows the important role of the antennal lobe in temperature processing and links one specific thermosensitive neuron to its target region (a single glomerulus). In chapter V it was shown that the sensilla coeloconica are clustered at the antennal tip and have an extraordinary peg-in-pit morphology. In the last chapter of this thesis (Chapter VIII) the question is addressed whether the morphology of the sensilla coeloconica predicts the receptive field of the thermosensitive neuron during the detection of thermal radiation. The sensory pegs of all sensilla coeloconica in the apical cluster have a similar orientation, which was not constraint by the shape of the antennal tip where the cluster is located. This finding indicates that the sensilla coeloconica function as a single unit. Finally the hypothesis was tested whether a single sensillum could be direction sensitive to thermal radiation based on its eye-catching morphology. By stimulating the thermosensitive neuron from various angles around the sensillum this indeed could be shown. This is the last and most significant evi-dence that the sensilla coeloconica may be adapted to detect spatially distributed heated objects in the environment during the thermal landmark orientation of ants.}, subject = {Neurobiologie}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Knapek2010, author = {Knapek, Stephan}, title = {Synapsin and Bruchpilot, two synaptic proteins underlying specific phases of olfactory aversive memory in Drosophila melanogaster}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-49726}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Memory is dynamic: shortly after acquisition it is susceptible to amnesic treatments, gets gradually consolidated, and becomes resistant to retrograde amnesia (McGaugh, 2000). Associative olfactory memory of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster also shows these features. After a single associative training where an odor is paired with electric shock (Quinn et al., 1974; Tully and Quinn, 1985), flies form an aversive odor memory that lasts for several hours, consisting of qualitatively different components. These components can be dissociated by mutations, their underlying neuronal circuitry and susceptibility to amnesic treatments (Dubnau and Tully, 1998; Isabel et al., 2004; Keene and Waddell, 2007; Masek and Heisenberg, 2008; Xia and Tully, 2007). A component that is susceptible to an amnesic treatment, i.e. anesthesia-sensitive memory (ASM), dominates early memory, but decays rapidly (Margulies et al., 2005; Quinn and Dudai, 1976). A consolidated anesthesia-resistant memory component (ARM) is built gradually within the following hours and lasts significantly longer (Margulies et al., 2005; Quinn and Dudai, 1976). I showed here that the establishment of ARM requires less intensity of shock reinforcement than ASM. ARM and ASM rely on different molecular and/or neuronal processes: ARM is selectively impaired in the radish mutant, whereas for example the amnesiac and rutabaga genes are specifically required for ASM (Dudai et al., 1988; Folkers et al., 1993; Isabel et al., 2004; Quinn and Dudai, 1976; Schwaerzel et al., 2007; Tully et al., 1994). The latter comprise the cAMP signaling pathway in the fly, with the PKA being its supposed major target (Levin et al., 1992). Here I showed that a synapsin null-mutant encoding the evolutionary conserved phosphoprotein Synapsin is selectively impaired in the labile ASM. Further experiments suggested Synapsin as a potential downstream effector of the cAMP/PKA cascade. Similar to my results, Synapsin plays a role for different learning tasks in vertebrates (Gitler et al., 2004; Silva et al., 1996). Also in Aplysia, PKA-dependent phosphorylation of Synapsin has been proposed to be involved in regulation of neurotransmitter release and short-term plasticity (Angers et al., 2002; Fiumara et al., 2004). Synapsin is associated with a reserve pool of vesicles at the presynapse and is required to maintain vesicle release specifically under sustained high frequency nerve stimulation (Akbergenova and Bykhovskaia, 2007; Li et al., 1995; Pieribone et al., 1995; Sun et al., 2006). In contrast, the requirement of Bruchpilot, which is homologous to the mammalian active zone proteins ELKS/CAST (Wagh et al., 2006), is most pronounced in immediate vesicle release (Kittel et al., 2006). Under repeated stimulation of a bruchpilot mutant motor neuron, immediate vesicle release is severely impaired whereas the following steady-state release is still possible (Kittel et al., 2006). In line with that, knockdown of the Bruchpilot protein causes impairment in clustering of Ca2+ channels to the active zones and a lack of electron-dense projections at presynaptic terminals (T-bars). Thus, less synaptic vesicles of the readily-releasable pool are accumulated to the release sites and their release probability is severely impaired (Kittel et al., 2006; Wagh et al., 2006). First, I showed that Bruchpilot is required for aversive olfactory memory and localized the requirement of Bruchpilot to the Kenyon cells of the mushroom body, the second-order olfactory interneurons in Drosophila. Furthermore, I demonstrated that Bruchpilot selectively functions for the consolidated anesthesia-resistant memory. Since Synapsin is specifically required for the labile anesthesia sensitive memory, different synaptic proteins can dissociate consolidated and labile components of olfactory memory and two different modes of neurotransmission (high- vs. low frequency dependent) might differentiate ASM and ARM.}, subject = {Taufliege}, language = {en} } @article{PoethkeHovestadt2002, author = {Poethke, Hans J. and Hovestadt, Thomas}, title = {Evolution of density-and patch-size-dependent dispersal rates}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-49659}, year = {2002}, abstract = {Based on a marginal value approach, we derive a nonlinear expression for evolutionarily stable (ES) dispersal rates in a metapopulation with global dispersal. For the general case of density-dependent population growth, our analysis shows that individual dispersal rates should decrease with patch capacity and-beyond a certain threshold-increase with population density. We performed a number of spatially explicit, individual-based simulation experiments to test these predictions and to explore further the relevance of variation in the rate of population increase, density dependence, environmental fluctuations and dispersal mortality on the evolution of dispersal rates. They confirm the predictions of our analytical approach. In addition, they show that dispersal rates in metapopulations mostly depend on dispersal mortality and inter-patch variation in population density. The latter is dominantly driven by environmental fluctuations and the rate of population increase. These conclusions are not altered by the introduction of neighbourhood dispersal. With patch capacities in the order of 100 individuals, kin competition seems to be of negligible importance for ES dispersal rates except when overall dispersal rates are low.}, subject = {Metapopulation}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Breher2009, author = {Breher, Stephanie}, title = {Die kardiale Funktion von Popdc1 in der Maus: Vom Gen zum Ph{\"a}n}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-37283}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Die Popeye domain containing (Popdc)-Gene bilden eine evolution{\"a}r stark konservierte Genfamilie mit pr{\"a}ferenzieller Expression im Herzen und in der Skelettmuskulatur. In dieser Arbeit konnte gezeigt werden, dass Popdc1 in kardialen Myozyten in Glanzstreifen, lateralen Membranen und im T-Tubuli-System exprimiert wird und mit Ionenkan{\"a}len und anderen myozyt{\"a}ren Membranproteinen wie Cav1.2, Caveolin 3 und NCX1 kolokalisiert ist. Im ventrikul{\"a}ren Reizleitungssystem ist die Expression von Popdc1 gegen{\"u}ber dem ventrikul{\"a}ren Arbeitsmyokard erh{\"o}ht, w{\"a}hrend Atrium und Sinusknoten nahezu {\"a}quivalente Expressionsdom{\"a}nen aufweisen. Mithilfe von elektrophysiologischen Untersuchungen konnte bei den Popdc1-Nullmutanten eine stressinduzierte Sinusbradykardie festgestellt werden, die altersabh{\"a}ngig auftritt und auf Sinuspausen zur{\"u}ckzuf{\"u}hren ist. Histologische Untersuchungen, unter Zuhilfenahme des Sinusknotenmarkers HCN4, zeigten einen Zellverlust im inferioren Teil des Sinusknotens. Popdc1 ist ein Transmembranprotein, das eine 150 Aminos{\"a}ure umfassende, stark konservierte Popeye-Dom{\"a}ne aufweist. F{\"u}r diese Dom{\"a}ne konnte auf struktureller Ebene eine Homologie zu zyklischen Nukleotid-Bindungsdom{\"a}nen vorhergesagt und eine Bindung an cAMP und cGMP experimentell demonstriert werden. Es handelt sich bei den Popdc-Proteinen um einen neuen Zweig der Bindungsproteine f{\"u}r zyklische Nukleotidmonophosphate (cNMP). Die Bindungssequenz weist signifikante Unterschiede zu anderen bereits identifizierten cNMP-Bindungsproteinen auf. Weiterhin wurde die Interaktion von Popdc1 mit TREK1, einem Mitglied der Tandemporenkan{\"a}le untersucht. Es zeigte sich, dass Popdc1 nach Koexpression in Froschoozyten, den TREK1-Strom erh{\"o}ht und dass die \&\#946;-adrenerge Inhibition des TREK1 Kanals durch Popdc1 verst{\"a}rkt wird. Im Arbeitsmyokard, im kardialen Reizleitungssystem und in kotransfizierten Cos7-Zellen werden beide Proteine {\"u}berlappend exprimiert. Diese Daten zeigen, dass Popdc1 eine wichtige Funktion bei der Regulation der Schrittmacheraktivit{\"a}t, der Aufrechterhaltung der Sinusknotenmorphologie und der Modulation von Ionenkan{\"a}len aufweist. Interessanterweise wurden von unserer Arbeitsgruppe bereits die gleichen Ph{\"a}notypen f{\"u}r die Popdc2 Maus beschrieben, sodass die Popdc Genfamilie {\"u}berlappende und redundante Funktionen aufweist.}, subject = {Sinusknoten}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Heinecke2010, author = {Heinecke, Kai}, title = {Die Dynamik der prim{\"a}ren Erkennungsschritte von BMP-Rezeptoren}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-49257}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Bone Morphogenetic Proteins (BMPs) bilden zusammen mit den Activinen, Growth and Differentiation Factors (GDFs) und Transforming Growth Factor \&\#946; (TGF-\&\#946;) die Transforming Growth Factor \&\#946;-Superfamilie von sekretierten Signalproteinen. Sie spielen eine wichtige Rolle in der Entwicklung, Erhaltung und Regeneration von Geweben und Organen. Die Signalvermittlung dieser Proteine erfolgt durch die Bindung von zwei verschiedenen Typen von Serin-/Threonin-Kinaserezeptoren, die als Typ-I- und Typ-II-Rezeptoren bezeichnet werden. Im ersten Schritt erfolgt die Bindung an den hochaffinen Rezeptor (im Fall von BMP-2 der Typ-I-Rezeptor), im n{\"a}chsten Schritt wird der niederaffine Rezeptor in den Komplex rekrutiert. Bis heute sind lediglich sieben Typ-I- und f{\"u}nf Typ-II-Rezeptoren bekannt, was auf eine Promiskuit{\"a}t in der Liganden-Rezeptor-Interaktion schließen l{\"a}sst. Die Architektur beider Rezeptorsubtypen ist dabei relativ {\"a}hnlich. Beide bestehen aus einer ligandenbindenden extrazellul{\"a}ren Dom{\"a}ne, einer Transmembrandom{\"a}ne sowie einer intrazellul{\"a}ren Kinasedom{\"a}ne. Eine nacheinander ablaufende Transphosphorylierung der intrazellul{\"a}ren Dom{\"a}nen f{\"u}hrt zu einer Phosphorylierung von SMAD-Proteinen, die dann als nachgeschaltete Vermittler fungieren und die Transkription regulierter Gene ausl{\"o}sen. Im Hauptteil dieser Arbeit wurden die initialen Schritte der Rezeptorkomplexformierung sowie die Mobilit{\"a}t der Rezeptoren mit Hilfe von fluoreszenzmikroskopischen Methoden untersucht. Dabei konnte festgestellt werden, dass f{\"u}r die Bildung eines Signalkomplexes eine bestimmte Schwellenkonzentration des Liganden n{\"o}tig ist und dass der Mechanismus nach einem Alles-oder-Nichts-Prinzip wie ein Schalter funktioniert. Außerdem konnten Unterschiede in der Nutzung der gleichen Rezeptoren durch verschiedene Liganden festgestellt werden. Die anderen Teile der Arbeit befassen sich mit der Funktionalit{\"a}t der verschiedenen Rezeptordom{\"a}nen in der Signal{\"u}bermittlung, der Analyse von hoch- und niederaffinen Ligandenbindestellen auf ganzen Zellen sowie dem Einfluss des SMAD- und des MAPK-Signalwegs auf die Induktion der Alkalischen Phosphatase. Dabei konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Art der SMAD-Phosphorylierung allein vom Typ der Kinasedom{\"a}ne abh{\"a}ngig ist, dass auf einer Zelle verschiedene Rezeptorpopulationen existieren, welche von unterschiedlichen Ligandenkonzentrationen angesprochen werden, und dass die Induktion der Alkalischen Phosphatase stark vom zeitlichen Verlauf der SMAD- und MAPK-Aktivierung abh{\"a}ngig ist.}, subject = {Knochen-Morphogenese-Proteine}, language = {de} } @article{KreftHaasGoebel1989, author = {Kreft, J{\"u}rgen and Haas, Albert and Goebel, Werner}, title = {Isolation and characterization of genes coding for proteins involved in the cytolysis by Listeria ivanovii}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-46991}, year = {1989}, abstract = {We established a library of chromosomal DNA of Listeria ivanovii in the pTZ19R plasmid system, using Escherichia coli DH5alpha as the host. One recombinant clone reacted strongly with a polyclonal antiserum raised against the listeriolysin 0 and a second exoprotein (24kDa) of L. ivanovii, which is most probably also involved in cytolytic processes. The recombinant E. coli clone may contain part of the listeriolysin 0 gene of L. ivanovii.}, language = {en} } @article{KreftFunkeSchlesingeretal.1989, author = {Kreft, J{\"u}rgen and Funke, D. and Schlesinger, R. and Lottspeich, F. and Goebel, Werner}, title = {Purification and characterization of cytolysins from Listeria monocytogenes serovar 4b and Listeria ivanovii}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47036}, year = {1989}, abstract = {Several exoproteins from Listeria monocytogenes serovar 4b (NCTC 10527) and Listeria ivanovii (ATCC) 19119, SLCC 2379), respectively, have been purified to homogeneity by thiol-disulfide exchange chromatography and gel filtration. Both strains produce a haemolytic/cytolytic protein of Mr 58 kDa, which has all the properties of a SH-activated cytolysin, the prototype of which is streptolysin 0 (SLO), and this protein has therefore heen termed Iisteriolysin 0 (LLO). In addition a protein of Mr 24 kDa from culture supernatants of L. ivanovii co-purified withLLO. The N-terminal aminoacid sequences of both proteins from L. ivanovii have been determined. By mutagenesis with transposons of Gram-positive origin (Tn916 and TnI545), which have been introduced via conjugation into L. ivanovii, several phenotypic mutants (altered haemolysis on sheep blood agar or lecithinase-negative) were obtained. Results on the properties of these muntants will he presented.}, language = {en} } @article{KreftHughes1982, author = {Kreft, J{\"u}rgen and Hughes, Colin}, title = {Cloning vectors derived from plasmids and phage of Bacillus}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47014}, year = {1982}, abstract = {No abstract available}, language = {en} } @article{KreftBernhardGoebel1978, author = {Kreft, J{\"u}rgen and Bernhard, K. and Goebel, Werner}, title = {Recombinant plasmids capable to replication in B. subtilis and E. coli}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47000}, year = {1978}, abstract = {The plasmid pBC16 (4.25 kbases), ongtnally isolated from Bacillus cereus, determines tetracycline resistance and can be transformed into competent cells of B. subtilis. A miniplasmid of pBCl6 (pBCI6-1), 2,7 kb) which has lost an EcoRI fragment of pBCI6 retains the replication functions and the tetracycline resistance. This plasmid which carries only one EcoRI site has been joined in vitro to pBS], a cryptic plasmid previously isolated from B. subtilis and shown to carry also a single EcoRI site (Bernhard et aI., 1978). The recombinant plasmid is unstable and dissociates into the plasmid pBSl61 (8.2 kb) and the smaller plasmid pBS162 (2. I kb). Plasmid pBS161 retains the tetracycline resistance. It possesses a single EcoRI site and 6 HindlII sites. The largest HindIII fragment of pBS161 carries the tetracycline resistance gene and the replication function. After circularization in vitro of this fragment a new plasmid, pBS161-l is generated, which can be used as a HindlII and EcoRI cloning vector in Bacillus suhtilis. Hybrid plasmids consisting of the E. coli plasmids pBR322, p WL 7 or pACl84 and different HindlII fragments of pBSI61 were constructed in vitro. Hybrids containing together with the E. coli plasmid the largest HindlII fragment of pBS161 can replicate in E. coli and B. sublilis. In E. coli only the replicon of the E. coli plasmid part is functioning whereas in B. suhtilis replication of the hybrid plasmid is under the control of the Bacillus replicon. The tetracycline resistance of the B. subtilis plasmid is expressed in E. coli, but several antibiotic resistances of the E. coli plasmids (ampicillin, kanamycin and chloramphenicol) are not expressed in B. suhtilis. The hybrid plasmids seem to be more unstable in B. subtilis than in E. coli.}, language = {en} } @article{Kreft1980, author = {Kreft, J{\"u}rgen}, title = {Reovirus-specific messenger ribonucleoprotein particles from Hela cells}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47028}, year = {1980}, abstract = {When reovirus-infected Hela cells are incubated at 43°C virus-specific messenger RNA is released ~rom the polysomes. It accumulates free in the cytoplasm as messenger ribonucleoprotem partIcles (mRNPs). The:e part~cles have a sedimentati~n rate of about 50S and a buoyant densIty m CsCI of 1.42 g/cm . ReovIrus mRNPs contam, beSIdes all three size classes of reovirus messenger RNA, the same spectrum of proteins found in the polysomal mRNPs from uninfected cells, plus t~o addi~ional pr?teins with molecular masses of 7000~ d and 110000 d, respectively. Electron mIcroscoPIc exammatlOn of the reovIrus mRNP fractIOn reveals specific Y-shaped structures wIth a total mean length ofO.5Ilm.}, language = {en} } @article{KreftGoebel1974, author = {Kreft, J{\"u}rgen and Goebel, Werner}, title = {Complex Co1E1 DNA in Escherichia coli and Proteus mirabilis}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47044}, year = {1974}, abstract = {Incubation of the colicinogenic Escherichia coli strain JC 411 (ColE1) at elevated temperatures (47-49°) leads to the accumulation of catenated molecules and replicative intermediates of this plasmid. Mature supercoiled OolE1 DNA molecules synthesized under these conditions have an increased number of tertiary turns as shown by electron microscopy. The monomeric tightly supercoiled molecules possess a slightly slower sedimentation rate and a higher binding capacity for ethidium bromide than supercoiJed monomers synthesized at lower temperatures. Recombination deficient mutants of E. coli recA, recB and recC, which carry the ColE1 plasmid, form about the same amount of catenated molecules at the elevated temperature as a rec+ strain. In addition, we have observed by electron microscopy a small percentage (.--.5\% of the circular DNA molecules) of minicircular DNA molecules in all preparations of JC 411 (CoIE1). They are homogenous in size, with a molecular weight of 1.4 X 106 daltons. Addition of chloramphenicol to a culture of Proteus mirabilis (ColE1) leads to an increased amount of higher multiple circular oligomers and to a stimulated accumulation of catenated OolE1 DNA molecules of varying sizes. ColE1 DNA synthesis is more thermosensitive than chromosomal DNA replication in P. mirabili8. Plasmid replication stops completely at temperatures above 43°C.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Gruber2010, author = {Gruber, Franz Andreas}, title = {Untersuchung zur Regulation der Expression des zuckerkonditionierten Verhaltens bei Drosophila melanogaster}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48802}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {In dieser Doktorarbeit habe ich die Regulation der Expression des zuckerbelohnten Verhaltens durch den F{\"u}tterungszustand bei Drosophila melanogaster untersucht. Die Fliegen k{\"o}nnen w{\"a}hrend einer Trainingsphase mit Hilfe einer Zuckerbelohnung auf einen bestimmten Duft konditioniert werden. Nach dem Training k{\"o}nnen die Fliegen dann auf das olfaktorische Ged{\"a}chtnis getestet werden. Die Bereitschaft das zuckerkonditionierte Ged{\"a}chtnis im Test zu zeigen wird vom F{\"u}tterungszustand kontrolliert, wie ich in {\"U}bereinstimmung mit den Ergebnissen fr{\"u}herer Arbeiten demonstrierte (Tempel et al. 1983; Gruber 2006; Krashes et al. 2008). Nur nicht gef{\"u}tterte Fliegen exprimieren das Ged{\"a}chtnis, w{\"a}hrend F{\"u}tterungen bis kurz vor dem Test eine reversibel supprimierende Wirkung haben. Einen {\"a}hnlichen regulatorischen Einfluss {\"u}bt der Futterentzug auch auf die Expression anderer futterbezogener Verhaltensweisen, wie z.B. die naive Zuckerpr{\"a}ferenz, aus. Nachdem ich den drastischen Einfluss des F{\"u}tterungszustands auf die Auspr{\"a}gung des zuckerkonditionierten Verhaltens gezeigt bzw. best{\"a}tigt hatte, habe ich nach verhaltensregulierenden Faktoren gesucht, die bei einer F{\"u}tterung die Ged{\"a}chtnisexpression unterdr{\"u}cken. Als m{\"o}gliche Kandidaten untersuchte ich Parameter, die zum Teil bereits bei verschiedenen futterbezogenen Verhaltensweisen unterschiedlicher Tierarten als „S{\"a}ttigungssignale" identifiziert worden waren (Marty et al. 2007; Powley and Phillips 2004; Havel 2001; Bernays and Chapman 1974; Simpson and Bernays 1983; Gelperin 1971a). Dabei stellte sich heraus, dass weder die „ern{\"a}hrende" Eigenschaft des Futters, noch ein durch Futteraufnahme bedingter Anstieg der internen Glukosekonzentration f{\"u}r die Suppression des zuckerkonditionierten Ged{\"a}chtnisses notwendig sind. Die Unterdr{\"u}ckung der Ged{\"a}chtnisexpression kann auch nicht durch Unterschiede in den aufgenommenen Futtermengen, die als verhaltensinhibitorische Dehnungssignale des Verdauungstrakts wirken k{\"o}nnten, oder mit der St{\"a}rke des s{\"u}ßen Geschmacks erkl{\"a}rt werden. Die Suppression des zuckerbelohnten Verhaltens folgte den Konzentrationen der gef{\"u}tterten Substanzen und war unabh{\"a}ngig von deren chemischen Spezifit{\"a}t. Deshalb wird die Osmolarit{\"a}t des aufgenommenen Futters als ein entscheidender Faktor f{\"u}r die Unterdr{\"u}ckung der zuckerkonditionierten Ged{\"a}chtnisexpression angenommen. Weil nur inkorporierte Substanzen einen Unterdr{\"u}ckungseffekt hatten, wird ein osmolarit{\"a}tsdetektierender Mechanismus im K{\"o}rper 67 postuliert, wahrscheinlich im Verdauungstrakt und/oder der H{\"a}molymphe. Die H{\"a}molymphosmolarit{\"a}t ist als „S{\"a}ttigungssignal" bei einigen wirbellosen Tieren bereits nachgewiesen worden (Bernays and Chapman 1974; Simpson and Raubenheimer 1993; Gelperin 1971a; Phifer and Prior 1985). Deshalb habe ich mit Hilfe genetischer Methoden und ohne die Fliegen zu f{\"u}ttern, versucht {\"u}ber einen k{\"u}nstlich induzierten Anstieg der Trehaloseund Lipidkonzentrationen die Osmolarit{\"a}t der H{\"a}molymphe in Drosophila zu erh{\"o}hen. Eine solche konzentrationserh{\"o}hende Wirkung f{\"u}r Lipide und die Trehalose, dem Hauptblutzucker der Insekten, ist bereits f{\"u}r das adipokinetische Hormon (AKH), das von Zellen der Corpora cardiaca exprimiert wird, nachgewiesen worden (Kim and Rulifson 2004; Lee and Park 2004; Isabel et al. 2005). Es stellte sich heraus, dass die k{\"u}nstliche Stimulierung AKH-produzierender Neurone das zuckerkonditionierten Verhalten tempor{\"a}r, reversible und selektiv unterdr{\"u}ckt. Gleiche Behandlungen hatten keinen Effekt auf ein aversiv konditioniertes olfaktorisches Ged{\"a}chtnis oder ein naives Zuckerpr{\"a}ferenzverhalten. Wie aus dieser Arbeit hervorgeht, stellt wahrscheinlich die Osmolarit{\"a}t des Verdauungstrakts und der H{\"a}molymphe oder nur der H{\"a}molymphe ein physiologisches Korrelat zum F{\"u}tterungszustand dar und wirkt als unterdr{\"u}ckendes Signal. Dass F{\"u}tterungen das zuckerkonditionierte Verhalten und die Zuckerpr{\"a}ferenz supprimieren, die k{\"u}nstliche Stimulation AKH-produzierender Zellen aber selektiv nur die zuckerbelohnte Ged{\"a}chtnisexpression unterdr{\"u}ckt, deutet auf mindestens zwei unterschiedliche „S{\"a}ttigungssignalwege" hin. Außerdem macht es deutlich wie uneinheitlich futterbezogene Verhaltensweisen, wie das zuckerbelohnte Verhalten und die naive Zuckerpr{\"a}ferenz, reguliert werden.}, subject = {Taufliege}, language = {de} } @article{BonteTravisDeClercqetal.2008, author = {Bonte, Dries and Travis, Justin M. J. and De Clercq, Nele and Zwertvaegher, Ingrid and Lens, Luc}, title = {Thermal conditions during juvenile development affect adult dispersal in a spider}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48691}, year = {2008}, abstract = {Abstract: Understanding the causes and consequences of dispersal is a prerequisite for the effective management of natural populations. Rather than treating dispersal as a fixed trait, it should be considered a plastic process that responds to both genetic and environmental conditions. Here, we consider how the ambient temperature experienced by juvenile Erigone atra, a spider inhabiting crop habitat, influences adult dispersal. This species exhibits 2 distinct forms of dispersal, ballooning (long distance) and rappelling (short distance). Using a half-sib design we raised individuals under 4 different temperature regimes and quantified the spiders' propensity to balloon and to rappel. Additionally, as an indicator of investment in settlement, we determined the size of the webs build by the spiders following dispersal. The optimal temperature regimes for reproduction and overall dispersal investment were 20 °C and 25 °C. Propensity to perform short-distance movements was lowest at 15 °C, whereas for long-distance dispersal it was lowest at 30 °C. Plasticity in dispersal was in the direction predicted on the basis of the risks associated with seasonal changes in habitat availability; long-distance ballooning occurred more frequently under cooler, spring-like conditions and short-distance rappelling under warmer, summer-like conditions. Based on these findings, we conclude that thermal conditions during development provide juvenile spiders with information about the environmental conditions they are likely to encounter as adults and that this information influences the spider's dispersal strategy. Climate change may result in suboptimal adult dispersal behavior, with potentially deleterious population level consequences.}, language = {en} } @article{GrosHovestadtPoethke2008, author = {Gros, Andreas and Hovestadt, Thomas and Poethke, Hans Joachim}, title = {Evolution of sex-biased dispersal : the role of sex-specific dispersal costs, demographic stochasticity, and inbreeding}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48705}, year = {2008}, abstract = {Abstract: Inbreeding avoidance and asymmetric competition over resources have both been identified as factors favoring the evolution of sex-biased dispersal. It has also been recognized that sex-specific costs of dispersal would select for sex-biased dispersal, but there is little quantitative information on this aspect. In this paper we explore (i) the quantitative relationship between cost-asymmetry and a bias in dispersal, (ii) the influence of demographic stochasticity on this effect, and (iii) how inbreeding and cost-asymmetry interact in their effect on sex-specific dispersal. We adjust an existing analytical model to account for sex-specific costs of dispersal. Based on numerical calculations we predict a severe bias in dispersal already for small differences in dispersal costs. We corroborate these predictions in individual-based simulations, but show that demographic stochasticity generally leads to more balanced dispersal. In combination with inbreeding, cost asymmetries will usually determine which of the two sexes becomes the more dispersive.}, language = {en} } @article{GrosPoethkeHovestadt2009, author = {Gros, Andreas and Poethke, Hans Joachim and Hovestadt, Thomas}, title = {Sex-specific spatio-temporal variability in reproductive success promotes the evolution of sex-biased dispersal}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48711}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Abstract: Inbreeding depression, asymmetries in costs or benefits of dispersal, and the mating system have been identified as potential factors underlying the evolution of sex-biased dispersal. We use individual-based simulations to explore how the mating system and demographic stochasticity influence the evolution of sex-specific dispersal in a metapopulation with females competing over breeding sites, and males over mating opportunities. Comparison of simulation results for random mating with those for a harem system (locally, a single male sires all offspring) reveal that even extreme variance in local male reproductive success (extreme male competition) does not induce male-biased dispersal. The latter evolves if the between-parch variance in reproductive success is larger for males than females. This can emerge due to demographic stochasticity if the habitat patches are small. More generally, members of a group of individuals experiencing higher spatio-temporal variance in fitness expectations may evolve to disperse with greater probability than others.}, language = {en} } @article{BonteClercqZwertvaegheretal.2009, author = {Bonte, Dries and Clercq, Nele De and Zwertvaegher, Ingrid and Lens, Luc}, title = {Repeatability of dispersal behaviour in a common dwarf spider: evidence for different mechanisms behind short- and long-distance dispersal}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48242}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Abstract: 1. The response of dispersal towards evolution largely depends on its heritability for which upper limits are determined by the trait's repeatability. 2. In the Linyphiid spider E. atra, we were able to separate long- and short-distance dispersal behaviours (respectively ballooning and rappelling) under laboratory conditions. By performing repeated behavioural trials for females, we show that average dispersal trait values decrease with increasing testing days. By comparing mated and unmated individuals during two periods (before and after mating for the mated group, and the same two periods for the unmated group), we show that mating has no effect on the mean displayed dispersal behaviour or its within-individual variation. Repeatabilities were high and consistent for ballooning motivation, but not for rappelling. 3. Ballooning motivation can be regarded as highly individual-specific behaviour, while general pre-dispersal and rappelling behaviours showed more individual variation. Such difference in repeatability between long-and short-distance dispersal suggests that short-and long-distance dispersal events are triggered by different ecological and evolutionary mechanisms.}, language = {en} } @article{BonteMaes2008, author = {Bonte, Dries and Maes, Dirk}, title = {Trampling affects the distribution of specialised coastal dune arthropods}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48274}, year = {2008}, abstract = {Abstract: From a conservation point of view, species- tolerances towards disturbance are often generalised and lack reference to spatial scales and underlying processes. In order to investigate how average typical species react to habitat fragmentation and disturbance, we adopted a multi-species approach to address occupancy patterns of five specialised dune arthropods (butterflies Hipparchia semele, Issoria lathonia; grasshopper Oedipoda caerulescens; spiders Alopecosa fabrilis, Xysticus sabulosus) in recently fragmented coastal dune habitats which are subjected to varying levels and modes of local disturbance, i.e. trampling by cattle or people. Occupancy patterns were assessed during two successive years in 133 grey dune fragments of the Flemish coastal dunes (Belgium, France). By treating species as a random factor in our models, emphasis was placed on generalisations rather than documenting species-specific patterns. Our study demonstrates that deteriorating effects of local disturbance on arthropod incidence cannot be interpreted independent of its landscape context, and appear to be more severe when patch area and connectivity decrease. When controlled for patch area and trampling intensity, the probability of species occupancy in poorly connected patches is higher under cattle trampling than under recreation. Incidences additionally decrease with increasing intensity of cattle trampling, but increases with trampling by tourists. This study provides evidence of mode- and landscape-dependent effects of local disturbance on species occupancy patterns. Most importantly, it demonstrates that trampling of sensitive dune fragments will lead to local and metapopulation extinction in landscapes where trampling occurs in a spatially autocorrelated way, but that the outcome (spatial patterns) varies in relation to disturbance mode, indicating that effects of disturbance cannot be generalised.}, language = {en} } @article{BonteLanckackerWiersmaetal.2008, author = {Bonte, Dries and Lanckacker, Kjell and Wiersma, Elisabeth and Lens, Luc}, title = {Web building flexibility of an orb-web spider in a heterogeneous agricultural landscape}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48262}, year = {2008}, abstract = {Abstract: Intensification of land-use in agricultural landscapes is responsible for a decline of biodiversity which provide important ecosystem services like pest-control. Changes in landscape composition may also induce behavioural changes of predators in response to variation in the biotic or abiotic environment. By controlling for environmentally confounding factors, we here demonstrate that the orb web spider Araneus diadematus alters its web building behaviour in response to changes in the composition of agricultural landscapes. Thereby, the species increases its foraging efficiency (i.e. investments in silk and web asymmetry) with an increase of agricultural land-use at intermediate spatial scales. This intensification is also related to a decrease in the abundance of larger prey. A negative effect of landscape properties at similar spatial scales on spider fitness was recorded when controlling for relative investments in capture thread length. This study consequently documents the web building flexibility in response to changes in landscape composition, possibly due to changes in prey availability.}, language = {en} } @article{BonteHovestadtPoethke2008, author = {Bonte, Dries and Hovestadt, Thomas and Poethke, Hans-Joachim}, title = {Male-killing endosymbionts: influence of environmental conditions on persistance of host metapopulation}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-45344}, year = {2008}, abstract = {Background: Male killing endosymbionts manipulate their arthropod host reproduction by only allowing female embryos to develop into infected females and killing all male offspring. Because of the reproductive manipulation, we expect them to have an effect on the evolution of host dispersal rates. In addition, male killing endosymbionts are expected to approach fixation when fitness of infected individuals is larger than that of uninfected ones and when transmission from mother to offspring is nearly perfect. They then vanish as the host population crashes. High observed infection rates and among-population variation in natural systems can consequently not be explained if defense mechanisms are absent and when transmission efficiency is perfect. Results: By simulating the host-endosymbiont dynamics in an individual-based metapopulation model we show that male killing endosymbionts increase host dispersal rates. No fitness compensations were built into the model for male killing endosymbionts, but they spread as a group beneficial trait. Host and parasite populations face extinction under panmictic conditions, i.e. conditions that favor the evolution of high dispersal in hosts. On the other hand, deterministic 'curing' (only parasite goes extinct) can occur under conditions of low dispersal, e.g. under low environmental stochasticity and high dispersal mortality. However, high and stable infection rates can be maintained in metapopulations over a considerable spectrum of conditions favoring intermediate levels of dispersal in the host. Conclusion: Male killing endosymbionts without explicit fitness compensation spread as a group selected trait into a metapopulation. Emergent feedbacks through increased evolutionary stable dispersal rates provide an alternative explanation for both, the high male-killing endosymbiont infection rates and the high among-population variation in local infection rates reported for some natural systems.}, subject = {Metapopulation}, language = {en} } @article{BonteHovestadtPoethke2009, author = {Bonte, Dries and Hovestadt, Thomas and Poethke, Hans Joachim}, title = {Sex-specific dispersal and evolutionary rescue in metapopulations infected by male killing endosymbionts}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-45351}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Background: Male killing endosymbionts manipulate their arthropod host reproduction by only allowing female embryos to develop into infected females and killing all male offspring. Because the resulting change in sex ratio is expected to affect the evolution of sex-specific dispersal, we investigated under which environmental conditions strong sex-biased dispersal would emerge, and how this would affect host and endosymbiont metapopulation persistence. Results: We simulated host-endosymbiont metapopulation dynamics in an individual-based model, in which dispersal rates are allowed to evolve independently for the two sexes. Prominent male-biased dispersal emerges under conditions of low environmental stochasticity and high dispersal mortality. By applying a reshuffling algorithm, we show that kin-competition is a major driver of this evolutionary pattern because of the high within-population relatedness of males compared to those of females. Moreover, the evolution of sex-specific dispersal rescues metapopulations from extinction by (i) reducing endosymbiont fixation rates and (ii) by enhancing the extinction of endosymbionts within metapopulations that are characterized by low environmental stochasticity. Conclusion: Male killing endosymbionts induce the evolution of sex-specific dispersal, with prominent male-biased dispersal under conditions of low environmental stochasticity and high dispersal mortality. This male-biased dispersal emerges from stronger kin-competition in males compared to females and induces an evolutionary rescue mechanism.}, subject = {Metapopulation}, language = {en} } @article{GrosHovestadtPoethke2006, author = {Gros, Andreas and Hovestadt, Thomas and Poethke, Hans Joachim}, title = {Evolution of local adaptions in dispersal strategies}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-45406}, year = {2006}, abstract = {The optimal probability and distance of dispersal largely depend on the risk to end up in unsuitable habitat. This risk is highest close to the habitat's edge and consequently, optimal dispersal probability and distance should decline towards the habitat's border. This selection should lead to the emergence of spatial gradients in dispersal strategies. However, gene flow caused by dispersal itself is counteracting local adaptation. Using an individual based model we investigate the evolution of local adaptations of dispersal probability and distance within a single, circular, habitat patch. We compare evolved dispersal probabilities and distances for six different dispersal kernels (two negative exponential kernels, two skewed kernels, nearest neighbour dispersal and global dispersal) in patches of different size. For all kernels a positive correlation between patch size and dispersal probability emerges. However, a minimum patch size is necessary to allow for local adaptation of dispersal strategies within patches. Beyond this minimum patch area the difference in mean dispersal distance between center and edge increases linearly with patch radius, but the intensity of local adaptation depends on the dispersal kernel. Except for global and nearest neighbour dispersal, the evolved spatial pattern are qualitatively similar for both, mean dispersal probability and distance. We conclude, that inspite of the gene-flow originating from dispersal local adaptation of dispersal strategies is possible if a habitat is of sufficient size. This presumably holds for any realistic type of dispersal kernel.}, subject = {Ausbreitung}, language = {en} } @article{ObermaierHeisswolfRandlkoferetal.2006, author = {Obermaier, Elisabeth and Heisswolf, Annette and Randlkofer, B. and Meiners, T.}, title = {Enemies in low places - insects avoid winter mortality and egg parasitism by modulating oviposition height}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48200}, year = {2006}, abstract = {Oviposition site selection in insects is essential in terms of low egg mortality, high offspring survival and therefore a high reproductive output. Although oviposition height could be a crucial factor for the fitness of overwintering eggs, it has rarely been investigated. In this study the oviposition height of a polyphagous leaf beetle, Galeruca tanaceti Linnaeus in different habitats and at different times of the season was examined and its effect on egg clutch mortality was recorded. The leaf beetle occurs as an occasional pest on several agricultural plants. It deposits its eggs within herbaceous vegetation in autumn. Eggs are exposed to numerous biotic and abiotic mortality factors summarized as egg parasitism and winter mortality. Oviposition height of the leaf beetle was not uniform, but changed significantly with the structure of the habitat and during the season. Mean oviposition height per site (70.2±4.9 cm) was significantly higher than mean vegetation height (28.4±2.4 cm). Height of plants with egg clutches attached and oviposition height were significantly positively correlated. The results suggest that females try to oviposit as high as possible in the vegetation and on the plants selected. In accordance with this, the probability of egg parasitism and of winter egg clutch mortality significantly declined with increasing oviposition height. A preference of G. tanaceti for oviposition sites high up in the vegetation might therefore have evolved due to selection pressures by parasitoids and winter mortality.}, language = {en} } @article{HovestadtMitesserElmesetal.2007, author = {Hovestadt, Thomas and Mitesser, Oliver and Elmes, Graham and Thomas, Jeremy A. and Hochberg, Michael E.}, title = {An Evolutionarily Stable Strategy model for the evolution of dimorphic development in the butterfly Maculinea rebeli, a social parasite of Myrmica Ant Colonies}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48165}, year = {2007}, abstract = {Caterpillars of the butterfly Maculinea rebeli develop as parasites inside ant colonies. In intensively studied French populations, about 25\% of caterpillars mature within 1 year (fast-developing larvae [FDL]) and the others after 2 years (slow-developing larvae [SDL]); all available evidence indicates that this ratio is under the control of egg-laying females. We present an analytical model to predict the evolutionarily stable fraction of FDL (pESS). The model accounts for added winter mortality of SDL, general and kin competition among caterpillars, a competitive advantage of SDL over newly entering FDL (priority effect), and the avoidance of renewed infection of ant nests by butterflies in the coming season (segregation). We come to the following conclusions: (1) all factors listed above can promote the evolution of delayed development; (2) kin competition and segregation stabilize pESS near 0.5; and (3) a priority effect is the only mechanism potentially selecting for. However, given the empirical data, pESS is predicted to fall closer to 0.5 than to the 0.25 that has been observed. In this particular system, bet hedging cannot explain why more than 50\% of larvae postpone growth. Presumably, other fitness benefits for SDL, for example, higher fertility or longevity, also contribute to the evolution of delayed development. The model presented here may be of general applicability for systems where maturing individuals compete in small subgroups.}, language = {en} } @article{PoethkePfenningHovestadt2007, author = {Poethke, Hans J. and Pfenning, Brenda and Hovestadt, Thomas}, title = {The relative contribution of individual and kin selection to the evolution of density-dependent dispersal rates}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48225}, year = {2007}, abstract = {Questions: What are the relative contributions of kin selection and individual selection to the evolution of dispersal rates in fragmented landscapes? How do environmental parameters influence the relative contributions of both evolutionary forces? Features of the model: Individual-based simulation model of a metapopulation. Logistic local growth dynamics and density-dependent dispersal. An optional shuffling algorithm allows the continuous destruction of any genetic structure in the metapopulation. Ranges of key variables: Depending on dispersal mortality (0.05-0.4) and the strength of environmental fluctuations, mean dispersal probability varied between 0.05 and 0.5. Conclusions: For local population sizes of 100 individuals, kin selection alone could account for dispersal probabilities of up to 0.1. It may result in a ten-fold increase of optimal dispersal rates compared with those predicted on the basis of individual selection alone. Such a substantial contribution of kin selection to dispersal is restricted to cases where the overall dispersal probabilities are small (textless 0.1). In the latter case, as much as 30\% of the total fitness of dispersing individuals could arise from the increased reproduction of kin left in the natal patch.}, language = {en} } @article{HovestadtPoethkeMessner2000, author = {Hovestadt, Thomas and Poethke, Hans J. and Messner, Stefan}, title = {Variability in dispersal distances generates typical successional patterns: a simple simulation model}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48178}, year = {2000}, abstract = {More recently, it became clear that conclusions drawn from traditional ecological theory may be altered substantially if the spatial dimension of species interactions is considered explicitly. Regardless of the details of these models, spatially explicit simulations of ecological processes have nearly universally shown that spatial or spatio-temporal patterns in species distributions can emerge even from homogeneous starting conditions; limited dispersal is one of the key factors responsible for the development of such aggregated and patchy distributions (cf., Pacala 1986, Holmes et al. 1994, Molofsky 1994, Tilman 1994, Bascompte and Sole 1995, 1997, 1998, Jeltsch et al. 1999). In line with these ideas, we wish to draw attention to the fact that in heterogeneous landscapes differences in characteristic dispersal distances between species are a sufficient precondition for the emergence of a successional pattern. We will use a simple, spatially explicit simulation program to demonstrate the validity of this statement. We will also show that the speed of the successional progress depends on scale and heterogeneity in the distribution of suitable habitat.}, language = {en} } @article{Mahsberg1986, author = {Mahsberg, Dieter}, title = {Contact chemoreception of prey in hunting scorpions}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-45784}, year = {1986}, abstract = {Scorpions commonly are assumed to hunt on living prey. But under laboratory conditions they also respond very sensitively to dead insects lying on the substrate. In many cases the motionless prey is seized and consumed. It was investigated how this behavior can be elicited. The buthid scorpions Androctonus australis (L.) and Buthus occitanus (Am.) not only find motionless prey again which was stung but managed to escape before dying: They also respond to extracts of the cuticle of prey insects. After touching prey marks' either with the tips of the chelae fingers or the tarsi of the walking legs or the pectine organs specific responses (searching, seizing, feeding) are released at a high rate. Behavioral experiments demonstrate for the first time the chemosensitivity of the pectine organs for which only mechanosensitivity had been proofed formerly. Mechanical as well as contact chemical stimulation of these organs cause scorpions to orient towards the stimulus source which is grasped, retained and consumed or rejected depending on its quality. The probably responsible chemosensitive receptors are already described in the literature. The possible adaptive value and the biological significance of contact chemoreception in prey catching and in other aspects of the life of scorpions is discussed.}, subject = {Skorpion}, language = {en} } @inproceedings{Mahsberg1990, author = {Mahsberg, Dieter}, title = {Brood care and family cohesion in the tropical scorpion Pandinus imperator (Koch) (Scorpiones: Scorpionidae)}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-45776}, year = {1990}, abstract = {Pandinus imperator is a forest dweller of tropical West Africa. In the field, lobserved aggregations of up to 15 individuals. In the laboratory, mixed age groups of related and also unrelated animals lived jointly in terraria rarely showing within-group aggression or cannibalism. Brood-caring behavior of the mother influenced growth rate and survival probability of the young. With birth, mothers became very aggressive. To study family cohesion in Pandinus, experiments with family groups were conducted. Siblings aggregated around their mother. In choice experiments with two family groups, mothers were placed in enclosures that only the young were able to enter or to leave. Second instars significantly preferred the enclosure containing their own mother. Aggression among unrelated young of the same age was not observed. Feeding experiments studied the possible advantages of long-Iasting group living with regard to enhanced success in prey capture and its effect on growth of the young. Even groups of second instars were unable to subdue large prey on their own. Sibling groups with their mother removed suffered high mortality due to starvation and cannibalism compared to groups with mothers present. Here, young grew significantly faster: they shared the prey that only the mother was able to kill and dismember. Pandinus imperator has to be considered an intermediate subsocial scorpion.}, subject = {Skorpion}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Hauff2009, author = {Hauff, Cornelia}, title = {Aspects of the mode of action of bispecific T cell engager (BiTE) antibodies}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48369}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Bispecific T cell engager (BiTE) display a novel design among the class of bispecific antibodies and hold great promise to fight diverse cancers. BiTE molecules consist of two different binding entities derived from two human IgG antibodies connected by a short peptide linker. Their binding arms are directed against the CD3e chain of the T cell receptor on T cells and against an antigen that is specific for (e.g., CD19 for lymphoma in MT103) or over-expressed on (e.g., EpCAM for epithelial cancer in MT110) tumor cells. Without requirement for pre- or co-stimulation, BiTE molecules efficiently redirect CD3+ T cells towards tumor cells expressing the relevant target antigen. Only a BiTE molecule simultaneously bound to both tumor cell and T cell activates the T cell to exert its cytolytic function resulting in tumor cell death. In T cells stimulated with both BiTE and target cells, elevated levels of caspase activation and increased expression of cytotoxic and signaling proteins are observed. These include cytolytic proteins granzyme B and perforin, activation markers CD69 and CD25 and adhesion molecules CD2 and LFA-1. Activated T cells secrete the usual mix of cytokines, among them pro-inflammatory cytokines IFN-g and TNF-a. The membrane of tumor cells expressing the relevant target antigen is perforated during the attack of BiTE-stimulated effector cells as can be concluded from adenylate kinase release from the cytosol of tumor cells. Ca2+-chelator EGTA completely blocked BiTE-mediated activation of caspases and tumor cell lysis. As perforin is strictly Ca2+-dependent, a major role for this pore-forming protein is assumed for the elimination of tumor cells via BiTE-stimulated T cells. Granzyme B and caspases are main players in BiTE-mediated elimination of tumor cells. Inhibitors of granzyme B or caspases reduce or block, respectively the activation of caspases. However, other signals of apoptosis (cleavage of PARP and fragmentation of DNA) were only reduced by granzyme B inhibitor or caspase inhibitor. Most interestingly, the lytic capacity of BiTE molecules was not impaired by granzyme B inhibitor or caspase inhibitor. It seems that there is no requirement for granzyme B and caspases to be present simultaneously. Instead the data presented provide evidence that they can be replaced one at a time by related proteins. Pre-incubation of effector cells with the glucocorticoids dexamethasone or methylprednisolone resulted in markedly decreased secretion of cytokines by T cells yet only a small reduction in the expression of activation markers and adhesion molecules on T cells and specific lysis of tumor cells upon BiTE stimulation. Soluble factors secreted in an undirected manner by BiTE-stimulated T cells do not mediate tumor cell death by themselves. Bystander cells negative for the antigen that is recognized by the BiTE molecule will not be compromised by BiTE activity. The cytokine TGF-b reduced proliferation as well as granzyme B and perforin expression of BiTE-stimulated T cells. Redirected lysis by BiTE-activated T cells was also decreased under the influence of TGF-b, however lysis was still performed at a reasonable rate (72 \% of target cells). TGF-b does not exert a deleterious effect on lytic potential of BiTE-stimulated T cells. The minimal anticipated biological effect level for the BiTE MT110 was determined for the entry of MT110 into phase I clinical studies. Experiments analyzing redirected lysis of tumor cells, expression of activation marker CD25 and cytokine release by T cells revealed a MABEL value of 50 pg/ml for MT110.}, subject = {Antik{\"o}rper}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Blume2009, author = {Blume, Constanze}, title = {Cellular functions of VASP phosphorylations}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48321}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Members of the enabled/vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein (Ena/VASP) family are important regulators of the actin cytoskeleton dynamics. VASP functions as well as its interactions with other proteins are regulated by phosphorylation at three sites - serine157 (S157), serine239 (S239), and threonine278 (T278) in humans. cAMP- and cGMP- dependent protein kinases phosphorylate S157 and S239, respectively. In contrast, the kinase responsible for T278 was as yet unknown and identified in the first part of this thesis. In a screen for T278 phosphorylating kinases using a phospho-specific antibody against phosphorylated T278 AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) was identified in endothelial cells. Mutants of AMPK with altered kinase-activity modulate T278-phosphorylation levels in cells. AMPK-driven T278-phosphorylation impaired stress fiber formation and changed cell morphology in living cells. AMPK is a fundamental sensor of cellular and whole body energy homeostasis. Zucker Diabetic Fatty (ZDF) rats, which are an animal model for type II diabetes mellitus, were used to analyze the impact of phosphorylated T278 in vivo. AMPK-activity and T278-phosphorylation were substantially reduced in arterial vessel walls of ZDF rats in comparison to control animals. These findings demonstrate that VASP is a new AMPK substrate, that VASP phosphorylation mediates the effects of metabolic regulation on actin cytoskeleton rearrangements, and that this signaling system becomes down-regulated in diabetic vessel disorders in rats. In the second part of this thesis, a functional analysis of differential VASP phosphorylations was performed. To systematically address VASP phosphorylation patterns, a set of VASP phosphomimetic mutants was cloned. These mutants enable the mimicking of defined phosphorylation patterns and the specific analysis of single kinase-mediated phosphorylations. VASP localization to the cell periphery was increased by S157- phosphorylation and modulated by phosphorylation at S239 and T278. Latter phosphorylations synergistically reduced actin polymerization. In contrast, S157- phosphorylation had no effect on actin-dynamics. Taken together, the results of the second part show that phosphorylation of VASP serves as a fine regulator of localization and actin polymerization activity. In summary, this study revealed the functions of VASP phosphorylations and established novel links between signaling pathways and actin cytoskeleton rearrangement.}, subject = {Vasodilatator-stimuliertes Phosphoprotein}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Fischer2010, author = {Fischer, Matthias}, title = {Der Einfluß der Ribosomale S6 Kinase 2 (RSK2) auf das Neuriten- und Synapsenwachstum in vivo und in Zellkultur}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48341}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {In dieser Arbeit sollte die Funktion der Ribosomalen S6 Kinase 2 (RSK2) auf neuronaler Ebene untersucht werden. Dahingehend gab es, z.B. auf Grund der Ph{\"a}notypen von Fliegen und M{\"a}usen mit Mutationen im entsprechenden Gen oder von Patienten mit Coffin-Lowry-Syndrom (CLS) nur Vermutungen. Es bestand letztlich die Hoffnung, einen Beitrag zur Aufkl{\"a}rung der Pathophysiologie des CLS zu leisten. Es stellte sich auf Grund von Experimenten sowohl in vivo als auch in vitro in verschiedenen Modellsystemen in dieser Arbeit heraus, daß RSK2 einen negativen Einfluß auf das Neuriten- und Synapsenwachstum hat. In kultivierten Motoneuronen f{\"u}hrte der KO von RSK2 zu l{\"a}ngeren Axonen und die {\"U}berexpression eines konstitutiv aktiven RSK2-Konstrukts zu k{\"u}rzeren Axonen. In PC12-Zellen f{\"u}hrte die Expression von konstitutiv aktiven RSK2 Konstrukten zur Verk{\"u}rzung der Neuriten und die Expression eines Kinase-inaktiven RSK2 Konstrukts zu l{\"a}ngeren Neuriten. In vivo war die neuromuskul{\"a}re Synapse bei RSK2-KO M{\"a}usen vergr{\"o}ßert und hatte bei Drosophila rsk Mutanten mehr Boutons. Das RSK2-Protein ist in Motoneuronen der Maus und in {\"u}berexprimierter Form in den Boutons der neuromuskul{\"a}ren Synapse bei Drosophila nachweisbar. Damit wurde zum ersten Mal die Funktion von RSK2 auf neuronaler Ebene beschrieben. Bez{\"u}glich des Mechanismus, wie RSK2 das Nervenwachstum beeinflußt gab es deutliche Hinweise, die daf{\"u}r sprechen, daß RSK2 dies {\"u}ber eine in der Literatur schon h{\"a}ufiger beschriebene Hemmung der MAPK ERK1/2 erreicht. F{\"u}r diese Hypothese spricht die Tatsache, daß die ERK-Phosphorylierung in murinen Motoneuronen und im R{\"u}ckenmark embryonaler M{\"a}use der RSK2-Mutante erh{\"o}ht ist und der Axonwachstumsdefekt durch eine Hemmung von MEK/ERK behoben werden kann. Auch ist die ERK-Phosphorylierung an der murinen Muskel-Endplatte in der Mutante erh{\"o}ht. Zudem zeigen genetische Epistasis-Experimente in Drosophila, daß RSK die Bouton-Zahl {\"u}ber ERK/RL hemmt. RSK scheint also in Drosophila von der Funktion her der RSK2-Isoform in Wirbeltieren sehr {\"a}hnlich zu sein. Ein weiteres wichtiges Ergebnis ist die Beobachtung, daß RSK2 bei Motoneuronen keinen wesentlichen Einfluß auf das {\"U}berleben der Zellen in Gegenwart neurotropher Faktoren hat. M{\"o}glicherweise spielen hier redundante Funktionen der RSK Familienmitglieder eine Rolle. Ein bislang unerkl{\"a}rter Befund ist die reduzierte Frequenz spontaner Depolarisationen bzw. damit einhergehender Ca2+ Einstr{\"o}me bei RSK2-KO Motoneuronen in Zellkultur. Die H{\"a}ufigkeit und Dichte von Ca2+-Kan{\"a}len und aktive Zonen Proteinen war in Motoneuronen nicht von der Anwesenheit des RSK2-Proteins abh{\"a}ngig. Im Hippocampus konnte außerdem das RSK2-Protein pr{\"a}synaptisch in den Moosfaser-Boutons der CA3 Region nachgewiesen werden. Es befindet sich auch in den Pyramidenzellen, aber nicht in den Pyramidenzell-Dendriten in CA3. Bez{\"u}glich der Bedeutung dieser Befunde f{\"u}r die Aufkl{\"a}rung der Pathologie des CLS ist zu folgern, daß der neuro-psychologische Ph{\"a}notyp bei CLS Patienten wahrscheinlich nicht durch reduziertes {\"U}berleben von Neuronen, sondern eher durch disinhibiertes Axonwachstum oder Synapsenwachstum bedingt ist. Dies kann grob sowohl f{\"u}r die peripheren als auch die zentralen Defekte gelten, denn die Synapsen im ZNS und am Muskel sind in ihrer molekularen Ausstattung z.B. im Bereich der Vesikel, der aktiven Zonen oder der Transmitteraussch{\"u}ttung sehr {\"a}hnlich. Weiterhin k{\"o}nnte eine ver{\"a}nderte synaptische Plastizit{\"a}t u.a. an der Moosfaser-Pyramidenzell-Synapse in der CA3 Region des Hippocampus eine Rolle bei den kognitiven und mnestischen Einschr{\"a}nkungen der Patienten spielen. Die Entdeckung, daß aktiviertes ERK bei den beobachteten Effekten eine Rolle spielt kann f{\"u}r die Entwicklung von Therapiestrategien eine wertvolle Erkenntnis sein.}, subject = {Ribosom}, language = {de} } @article{MitesserWeisselStrohmetal.2007, author = {Mitesser, Oliver and Weissel, Norbert and Strohm, Erhard and Poethke, Hans-Joachim}, title = {Adaptive dynamic resource allocation in annual eusocial insects: Environmental variation will not necessarily promote graded control}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-45412}, year = {2007}, abstract = {Background: According to the classical model of Macevicz and Oster, annual eusocial insects should show a clear dichotomous "bang-bang" strategy of resource allocation; colony fitness is maximised when a period of pure colony growth (exclusive production of workers) is followed by a single reproductive period characterised by the exclusive production of sexuals. However, in several species graded investment strategies with a simultaneous production of workers and sexuals have been observed. Such deviations from the "bang-bang" strategy are usually interpreted as an adaptive (bet-hedging) response to environmental fluctuations such as variation in season length or food availability. To generate predictions about the optimal investment pattern of insect colonies in fluctuating environments, we slightly modified Macevicz and Oster's classical model of annual colony dynamics and used a dynamic programming approach nested into a recurrence procedure for the solution of the stochastic optimal control problem. Results: 1) The optimal switching time between pure colony growth and the exclusive production of sexuals decreases with increasing environmental variance. 2) Yet, for reasonable levels of environmental fluctuations no deviation from the typical bang-bang strategy is predicted. 3) Model calculations for the halictid bee Lasioglossum malachurum reveal that bet-hedging is not likely to be the reason for the graded allocation into sexuals versus workers observed in this species. 4) When environmental variance reaches a critical level our model predicts an abrupt change from dichotomous behaviour to graded allocation strategies, but the transition between colony growth and production of sexuals is not necessarily monotonic. Both, the critical level of environmental variance as well as the characteristic pattern of resource allocation strongly depend on the type of function used to describe environmental fluctuations. Conclusion: Up to now bet-hedging as an evolutionary response to variation in season length has been the main argument to explain field observations of graded resource allocation in annual eusocial insect species. However, our model shows that the effect of moderate fluctuations of environmental conditions does not select for deviation from the classical bang-bang strategy and that the evolution of graded allocation strategies can be triggered only by extreme fluctuations. Detailed quantitative observations on resource allocation in eusocial insects are needed to analyse the relevance of alternative explanations, e.g. logistic colony growth or reproductive conflict between queen and workers, for the evolution of graded allocation strategies.}, subject = {Insekten}, language = {en} } @article{MitesserWeisselStrohmetal.2006, author = {Mitesser, Oliver and Weissel, Norbert and Strohm, Erhard and Poethke, Hans J.}, title = {The evolution of activity breaks in the nest cycle of annual eusocial bees: A simple model of delayed exponential growth}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48196}, year = {2006}, abstract = {Abstract: Background Social insects show considerable variability not only in social organisation but also in the temporal pattern of nest cycles. In annual eusocial sweat bees, nest cycles typically consist of a sequence of distinct phases of activity (queen or workers collect food, construct, and provision brood cells) and inactivity (nest is closed). Since the flight season is limited to the time of the year with sufficiently high temperatures and resource availability, every break reduces the potential for foraging and, thus, the productivity of a colony. This apparent waste of time has not gained much attention. Results We present a model that explains the evolution of activity breaks by assuming differential mortality during active and inactive phases and a limited rate of development of larvae, both reasonable assumptions. The model predicts a systematic temporal structure of breaks at certain times in the season which increase the fitness of a colony. The predicted pattern of these breaks is in excellent accordance with field data on the nest cycle of the halictid Lasioglossum malachurum. Conclusion Activity breaks are a counter-intuitive outcome of varying mortality rates that maximise the reproductive output of primitively eusocial nests.}, language = {en} } @article{PoethkeLiebig2008, author = {Poethke, Hans J. ; and Liebig, J{\"u}rgen}, title = {Risk-sensitive foraging and the evolution of cooperative breeding and reproductive skew}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48214}, year = {2008}, abstract = {Abstract: Background Group formation and food sharing in animals may reduce variance in resource supply to breeding individuals. For some species it has thus been interpreted as a mechanism of risk avoidance. However, in many groups reproduction is extremely skewed. In such groups resources are not shared equally among the members and inter-individual variance in resource supply may be extreme. The potential consequences of this aspect of group living have not attained much attention in the context of risk sensitive foraging. Results We develop a model of individually foraging animals that share resources for reproduction. The model allows analyzing how mean foraging success, inter-individual variance of foraging success, and the cost of reproduction and offspring raising influence the benefit of group formation and resource sharing. Our model shows that the effects are diametrically opposed in egalitarian groups versus groups with high reproductive skew. For individuals in egalitarian groups the relative benefit of group formation increases under conditions of increasing variance in foraging success and decreasing cost of reproduction. On the other hand individuals in groups with high skew will profit from group formation under conditions of decreasing variance in individual foraging success and increasing cost of reproduction. Conclusion The model clearly demonstrates that reproductive skew qualitatively changes the influence of food sharing on the reproductive output of groups. It shows that the individual benefits of variance reduction in egalitarian groups and variance enhancement in groups with reproductive skew depend critically on ecological and life-history parameters. Our model of risk-sensitive foraging thus allows comparing animal societies as different as spiders and birds in a single framework.}, language = {en} } @article{BonteHovestadtPoethke2009, author = {Bonte, Dries and Hovestadt, Thomas and Poethke, Hans-Joachim}, title = {Evolution of dispersal polymorphism and local adaptation of dispersal distance in spatially structured landscapes}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47856}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Many organisms show polymorphism in dispersal distance strategies. This variation is particularly ecological relevant if it encompasses a functional separation of short- (SDD) and long-distance dispersal (LDD). It remains, however, an open question whether both parts of the dispersal kernel are similarly affected by landscape related selection pressures. We implemented an individual-based model to analyze the evolution of dispersal traits in fractal landscapes that vary in the proportion of habitat and its spatial configuration. Individuals are parthenogenetic with dispersal distance determined by two alleles on each individual's genome: one allele coding for the probability of global dispersal and one allele coding for the variance of a Gaussian local dispersal with mean value zero. Simulations show that mean distances of local dispersal and the probability of global dispersal, increase with increasing habitat availability, but that changes in the habitat's spatial autocorrelation impose opposing selective pressure: local dispersal distances decrease and global dispersal probabilities increase with decreasing spatial autocorrelation of the available habitat. Local adaptation of local dispersal distance emerges in landscapes with less than 70\% of clumped habitat. These results demonstrate that long and short distance dispersal evolve separately according to different properties of the landscape. The landscape structure may consequently largely affect the evolution of dispersal distance strategies and the level of dispersal polymorphism.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Reichert2008, author = {Reichert, Nina}, title = {The Role of LIN9 in Mouse Development}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-30889}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2008}, abstract = {LINC, the human homologue of an evolutionary conserved complex, regulates the transcription of a set of genes essential during the G2/M transition (Osterloh et al., 2007; Schmit et al., 2007). One component of the LINC core module is LIN-9. LIN-9 is essential for the transcriptional activation of LINC target genes and also promotes differentiation in association with pRB (Gagrica et al., 2004). However, nothing is known about its function in vivo. Histological and molecular analysis revealed that Lin9 is ubiquitously expressed throughout embryonic development and in all examined adult organs. Additionally, Lin9 mRNA is expressed in ES cells and blastocysts. Moreover the analogous distribution of the other LINC components suggested that they all function in the same cells and most likely in the same pathway. To deeper investigate the role of LIN9 in cell cycle and differentiation in vivo, a Lin9 gene trap mouse model (GT) was successfully generated and examined. Heterozygouse Lin9GT/+ mice were inconspicuous and develop normally. However, homozygouse knockout embryos were never obtained. The Lin9GT/GT embryos die at peri-implantation, probably due to a defect in the development of the epiblast, which could be shown with in situ hybridization with specific lineage markers. In vitro, the ICM of Lin9-deficient blastocysts did not develop properly. These data suggest that the loss of Lin9 leads to embryonic lethality at peri-implantation, and indicates that LIN9 is required for proper formation of the epiblast. In parallel, the first conditional Lin9 mouse model based on the Cre-loxP technology was generated. The Lin9fl/fl allele can be deleted by Cre-recombinase, in vivo and in vitro. Therefore an inducible system with Lin9fl/fl mice harboring Cre-ERT2 was established. The MEFs generated from these transgenic mice carried a nearly complete knockout upon induction with tamoxifen. Deletion of LIN9 in MEFs had a major impact upon the cell cycle and growth rates. Specifically, they arrested in G2/M phase and stopped to proliferate. Taken together, I was able to generate a lin9 gene trap and a lin9 conditional knockout mouse model. All results obtained so far demonstrate, that Lin9 is an essential gene for embryonic development and cell cycle control. It will be of great interest to further investigate Lin9-deficiency to gain insights into the mechanism of cell cycle control in early embryonic development and cell differentiation.}, subject = {Zellzyklus}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Liang2009, author = {Liang, Chunguang}, title = {Tools for functional genomics applied to Staphylococci, Listeriae, Vaccinia virus and other organisms}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48051}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Genome sequence analysis A combination of genome analysis application has been established here during this project. This offers an efficient platform to interactively compare similar genome regions and reveal loci differences. The genes and operons can be rapidly analyzed and local collinear blocks (LCBs) categorized according to their function. The features of interests are parsed, recognized, and clustered into reports. Phylogenetic relationships can be readily examined such as the evolution of critical factors or a certain highly-conserved region. The resulting platform-independent software packages (GENOVA and inGeno), have been proven to be efficient and easy to handle in a number of projects. The capabilities of the software allowed the investigation of virulence factors, e.g., rsbU, strains' biological design, and in particular pathogenicity feature storage and management. We have successfully investigated the genomes of Staphylococcus aureus strains (COL, N315, 8325, RN1HG, Newman), Listeria spp. (welshimeri, innocua and monocytogenes), E.coli strains (O157:H7 and MG1655) and Vaccinia strains (WR, Copenhagen, Lister, LIVP, GLV-1h68 and parental strains). Metabolic network analysis Our YANAsquare package offers a workbench to rapidly establish the metabolic network of such as Staphylococcous aureus bacteria in genome-scale size as well as metabolic networks of interest such as the murine phagosome lipid signalling network. YANAsquare recruits reactions from online databases using an integrated KEGG browser. This reduces the efforts in building large metabolic networks. The involved calculation routines (METATOOL-derived wrapper or native Java implementation) readily obtain all possible flux modes (EM/EP) for metabolite fluxes within the network. Advanced layout algorithms visualize the topological structure of the network. In addition, the generated structure can be dynamically modified in the graphic interface. The generated network as well as the manipulated layout can be validated and stored (XML file: scheme of SBML level-2). This format can be further parsed and analyzed by other systems biology software, such as CellDesigner. Moreover, the integrated robustness-evaluation routine is able to examine the synthesis rates affected by each single mutation throughout the whole network. We have successfully applied the method to simulate single and multiple gene knockouts, and the affected fluxes are comprehensively revealed. Recently we applied the method to proteomic data and extra-cellular metabolite data of Staphylococci, the physiological changes regarding the flux distribution are studied. Calculations at different time points, including different conditions such as hypoxia or stress, show a good fit to experimental data. Moreover, using the proteomic data (enzyme amounts) calculated from 2D-Gel-EP experiments our study provides a way to compare the fluxome and the enzyme expression. Oncolytic vaccinia virus (VACV) We investigated the genetic differences between the de novo sequence of the recombinant oncolytic GLV-1h68 and other related VACVs, including function predictions for all found genome differences. Our phylogenetic analysis indicates that GLV-1h68 is closest to Lister strains but has lost several ORFs present in its parental LIVP strain, including genes encoding CrmE and a viral Golgi anti-apoptotic protein, v-GAAP. Functions of viral genes were either strain-specific, tissue-specific or host-specific comparing viral genes in the Lister, WR and COP strains. This helps to rationally design more optimized oncolytic virus strains to benefit cancer therapy in human patients. Identified differences from the comparison in open reading frames (ORFs) include genes for host-range selection, virulence and immune modulation proteins, e.g. ankyrin-like proteins, serine proteinase inhibitor SPI-2/CrmA, tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor homolog CrmC, semaphorin-like and interleukin-1 receptor homolog proteins. The contribution of foreign gene expression cassettes in the therapeutic and oncolytic virus GLV-1h68 was studied, including the F14.5L, J2R and A56R loci. The contribution of F14.5L inactivation to the reduced virulence is demonstrated by comparing the virulence data of GLV-1h68 with its F14.5L-null and revertant viruses. The comparison suggests that insertion of a foreign gene expression cassette in a nonessential locus in the viral genome is a practical way to attenuate VACVs, especially if the nonessential locus itself contains a virulence gene. This reduces the virulence of the virus without compromising too much the replication competency of the virus, the key to its oncolytic activity. The reduced pathogenicity of GLV-1h68 was confirmed by our experimental collaboration partners in male mice bearing C6 rat glioma and in immunocompetent mice bearing B16-F10 murine melanoma. In conclusion, bioinformatics and experimental data show that GLV-1h68 is a promising engineered VACV variant for anticancer therapy with tumor-specific replication, reduced pathogenicity and benign tissue tropism.}, subject = {Genanalyse}, language = {en} } @article{MaschwitzFialaLinsenmair1994, author = {Maschwitz, Ulrich and Fiala, Brigitte and Linsenmair, Karl Eduard}, title = {Clerodendrum fistulosum (Verbenanceae), an unspecific myrmecophyte from Borneo with spontaneously opening domatia}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-31013}, year = {1994}, abstract = {Clerodendrumjistulosum Becc. is a true myrmecophyte as it offers nesting space for ants in hollow intemodes. In contrast to previous reports our investigations proved that these domatia open by themselves, thus providing cavities for a variety of different ant species. In Sarawak, Malaysia, we did not find an obligate relationship between C. jistulosum and a specific ant-partner. For comparison, studies on herbarium material of other Clerodendrum species were carried out a further species, C. deflexum from the Malay Peninsula and Sumatra presumably also is myrmecophytic.}, language = {en} } @article{WeisingFialaRamlochetal.1990, author = {Weising, K. and Fiala, Brigitte and Ramloch, K. and Kahl, K. and Epplen, J. T.}, title = {Olingonucleotide fingerprinting in angiosperms}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-42884}, year = {1990}, abstract = {No abstract available}, language = {en} } @article{FialaMaschwitzPongetal.1989, author = {Fiala, Brigitte and Maschwitz, Ulrich and Pong, Tho, Yow and Helbig, Andreas J.}, title = {Studies of a South East Asian ant-plant association : protection of Macaranga trees by Crematogaster borneensis}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-42857}, year = {1989}, abstract = {In the humid tropics of SE Asia there are some 14 myrmecophytic species of the pioneer tree genus Macaranga (Euphorbiaceae). In Peninsular Malaysia a close association exists between the trees and the small, non-stinging myrmicine Crema togas ter borneensis. These ants feed mainly on food bodies provided by the plants and have their colonies inside the hollow intemodes. In a ten months field study we were able to demonstrate for four Macaranga species (M. triloba, M. hypoleuca, M. hosei, M. hulletti) that host plants also benefit considerably from ant-occupation. Ants do not contribute to the nutrient demands of their host plant, they do, however, protect it against herbivores and plant competition. Cleaning behaviour of the ants results in the removal of potential herbivores already in their earliest developmental stages. Strong aggressiveness and a mass recruiting system enable the ants to defend the host plant against many herbivorous insects. This results in a significant decrease in leaf damage due to herbivores on ant-occupied compared to ant-free myrmecophytes as well as compared to non-myrmecophytic Macaranga species. Most important is the ants' defense of the host plant against plant competitors, especially vines, which are abundant in the well-lit pioneer habitats where Macaranga grows. Ants bite off any foreign plant part coming into contact with their host plant. Both ant-free myrmecophytes and non-myrmecophytic Macaranga species had a significantly higher incidence of vine growth than specimens with active ant colonies. This may be a factor of considerable importance allowing Macaranga plants to grow at sites of strongest competition.}, language = {en} } @article{MaschwitzFialaLeeetal.1989, author = {Maschwitz, Ulich and Fiala, Brigitte and Lee, Ying Fah and Chey, Vun Khen and Tan, Fui Lian}, title = {New and little-known myrmecophytic associations from Bornean rain forests}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-42957}, year = {1989}, abstract = {The woody climber Millettia niuewenhuisii (Fabaceae) and the shrub Myrmeconauclea strigosa (Rubiaceae) in Sabah, Borneo are associated with ants. The hollow stems of Millettia nieuwenhuisii are regularly inhabited by an aggressive Cladomyrma sp., which keeps pseudococcids inside the stem. On Myrmeconauclea strigosa the ants live in hollow internodal swellings near the end of the branches. In this plant many different ant species use the nesting space in an opportunistic manner.}, language = {en} } @article{WeisingFiala1992, author = {Weising, Kurt and Fiala, Brigitte}, title = {Botanische Eindr{\"u}cke vom Bako-Nationalpark / Sarawak}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-42947}, year = {1992}, abstract = {No abstract available}, language = {de} } @article{MaschwitzFialaSawetal.1994, author = {Maschwitz, Ulich and Fiala, Brigitte and Saw, L. G. and Norma-Rashid, Yusoff and Idris, Azarae Haji}, title = {Ficus obscura var. borneensis (Moraceae), a new non-specific ant-plant from Malesia}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-42926}, year = {1994}, abstract = {Ficus obscura var. borneensis is a true myrmecophyte. It spontaneously forms cavities (domatia) in parts of its twigs which open by slits, These occur in the internodes and are usually not swollen. The domatia are inhabited by a variety of non-specific tree-living ants including Crematogaster spp., Cataulacus sp., Tetramorium sp., Cardio condyla sp. and Camponotus sp.. Additionally the plant providL a su~ar-containing secretion from extrafloral nectaries on the lower surfaces of the leaves. Examination of herbarium specimens of 37 other South-east Asian Ficus species did not reveal a single specimen with domatia.}, language = {en} } @article{HeisswolfObermaierPoethke2005, author = {Heisswolf, Annette and Obermaier, Elisabeth and Poethke, Hans-Joachim}, title = {Selection of large host plants for oviposition by a monophagous leaf beetle: nutritional quality or enemy-free space?}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47728}, year = {2005}, abstract = {1. Oviposition site selection is crucial for the reproductive success of herbivorous insects. According to the preference-performance hypothesis, females should oviposit on host plants that enhance the performance of their offspring. More specifically, the plant vigour hypothesis predicts that females should prefer large and vigorously growing host plants for oviposition and that larvae should perform best on these plants. 2. The present study examined whether females of the monophagous leaf beetle Cassida canaliculata Laich. (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) prefer to oviposit on large host plant individuals of the meadow clary and whether large host plants are of higher nutritional quality than small host plants. Subsequently, it was tested whether the female preference correlates with offspring performance and survival. 3. In the field, females preferred large host plant individuals for oviposition and host plant quality, i.e. leaf nitrogen content, was significantly higher in leaves of large than of small host plants. 4. In the laboratory, larval development time was shorter on leaves of large host plant individuals than on small host plant individuals, but this could not be shown in the field. 5. However, a predator-exclusion experiment in the field resulted in a higher survival of larvae on large host plants than on small host plants when all predators had free access to the plants. On caged host plants there was no difference in survival of larvae between plant size categories. 6. It is concluded that females of C. canaliculata select oviposition sites that enhance both performance and survival of their offspring, which meets the predictions of the plant vigour hypothesis.}, subject = {Insekten}, language = {en} } @article{HeisswolfPoethkeObermaier2006, author = {Heisswolf, Annette and Poethke, Hans-Joachim and Obermaier, Elisabeth}, title = {Multitrophic influences on oviposition site selection in a specialized leaf beetle at multiple spatial scales}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47738}, year = {2006}, abstract = {Egg distribution in herbivorous beetles can be affected by bottom-up (host plant), and by top-down factors (parasitoids and predators), as well as by other habitat parameters. The importance of bottom-up and top-down effects may change with spatial scale. In this study, we investigated the influence of host plant factors and habitat structure on egg distribution in the leaf beetle Cassida canaliculata Laich. (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), a monophagous herbivore on Salvia pratensis L. (Lamiales: Lamiaceae), on four spatial scales: individual host plant, microhabitat, macrohabitat, and landscape. At the individual host plant scale we studied the correlation between egg clutch incidence and plant size and quality. On all other scales we analyzed the relationship between the egg clutch incidence of C. canaliculata and host plant percentage cover, host plant density, and the surrounding vegetation structure. Vegetation structure was examined as herbivores might escape egg parasitism by depositing their eggs on sites with vegetation factors unfavorable for host searching parasitoids. The probability that egg clutches of C. canaliculata were present increased with an increasing size, percentage cover, and density of the host plant on three of the four spatial scales: individual host plant, microhabitat, and macrohabitat. There was no correlation between vegetation structure and egg clutch occurrence or parasitism on any spatial scale. A high percentage of egg clutches (38-56\%) was parasitized by Foersterella reptans Nees (Hymenoptera: Tetracampidae), the only egg parasitoid, but there was no relationship between egg parasitism and the spatial distribution of egg clutches of C. canaliculata on any of the spatial scales investigated. However, we also discuss results from a further study, which revealed top-down effects on the larval stage.}, subject = {Eiablage}, language = {en} } @article{HeisswolfReichmannPoethkeetal.2009, author = {Heisswolf, Annette and Reichmann, Stefanie and Poethke, Hans-Joachim and Schr{\"o}der, Boris and Obermaier, Elisabeth}, title = {Habitat quality matters for the distribution of an endangered leaf beetle and its egg parasitoid in a fragmented landscape}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47740}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Fragmentation, deterioration, and loss of habitat patches threaten the survival of many insect species. Depending on their trophic level, species may be differently affected by these factors. However, studies investigating more than one trophic level on a landscape scale are still rare. In the present study we analyzed the effects of habitat size, isolation, and quality for the occurrence and population density of the endangered leaf beetle Cassida canaliculata Laich. (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) and its egg parasitoid, the hymenopteran wasp Foersterella reptans Nees (Hymenoptera: Tetracampidae). C. canaliculata is strictly monophagous on meadow sage (Salvia pratensis), while F. reptans can also parasitize other hosts. Both size and isolation of habitat patches strongly determined the occurrence of the beetle. However, population density increased to a much greater extent with increasing host plant density ( = habitat quality) than with habitat size. The occurrence probability of the egg parasitoid increased with increasing population density of C. canaliculata. In conclusion, although maintaining large, well-connected patches with high host plant density is surely the major conservation goal for the specialized herbivore C. canaliculata, also small patches with high host plant densities can support viable populations and should thus be conserved. The less specialized parasitoid F. reptans is more likely to be found on patches with high beetle density, while patch size and isolation seem to be less important.}, subject = {Fragmentierung}, language = {en} } @article{PoethkeHovestadtMitesser2003, author = {Poethke, Hans-Joachim and Hovestadt, Thomas and Mitesser, Oliver}, title = {Local extinction and the evolution of dispersal rates: Causes and correlations}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47718}, year = {2003}, abstract = {We present the results of individual-based simulation experiments on the evolution of dispersal rates of organisms living in metapopulations. We find conflicting results regarding the relationship between local extinction rate and evolutionarily stable (ES) dispersal rate depending on which principal mechanism causes extinction: if extinction is caused by environmental catastrophes eradicating local populations, we observe a positive correlation between extinction and ES dispersal rate; if extinction is a consequence of stochastic local dynamics and environmental fluctuations, the correlation becomes ambiguous; and in cases where extinction is caused by dispersal mortality, a negative correlation between local extinction rate and ES dispersal rate emerges. We conclude that extinction rate, which both affects and is affected by dispersal rates, is not an ideal predictor for optimal dispersal rates.}, subject = {Ausbreitung}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Kelber2009, author = {Kelber, Christina}, title = {The olfactory system of leafcutting ants: neuroanatomy and the correlation to social organization}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47769}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2009}, abstract = {In leaf-cutting ants (genera Atta and Acromyrmex), the worker caste exhibits a pronounced size-polymorphism, and division of labor is largely dependent on worker size (alloethism). Behavioral studies have shown a rich diversity of olfactory-guided behaviors, and the olfactory system seems to be highly developed and very sensitive. To allow fine-tuned behavioral responses to different tasks, adaptations within the olfactory system of different sized workers are expected. In a recent study, two different phenotypes of the antennal lobe of Atta vollenweideri workers were found: MG- and RG-phenotype (with and without a macroglomerulus, MG). The existence of the macroglomerulus is correlated to the body size of workers, with small workers showing the RG-phenotype and large workers showing the MG-phenotype. In the MG, the information about the releaser component of the trail-pheromone is processed. In the first part of my PhD-project, I focus on quantifying behavioral differences between different sized workers in Atta vollenweideri. The study analyzes the trail following behavior; which can be generally performed by all workers. An artificial trail consisting of the releaser component of the trail-pheromone in decreasing concentration was used to test the trail-following performance of individual workers. The trail-following performance of the polymorphic workers is depended of the existence of the MG in the antennal lobe. Workers possessing the MG-phenotype were significantly better in following a decreasing trail then workers showing the RG-phenotype. In the second part I address the question if there are more structural differences, besides the MG, in the olfactory system of different sized workers. Therefore I analyze whether the glomerular numbers are related to worker size. The antennal lobes of small workers contain ~390 glomeruli (low-number; LN-phenotype), and in large workers I found a substantially higher number of ~440 glomeruli (high-number; HN-phenotype). All LN-phenotype workers and some of the small HN-phenotype workers do not possess an MG (LN-RG-phenotype and HN-RG-phenotype) at all, whereas the remaining majority of HN-phenotype workers do possess an MG (HN-MG-phenotype). Mass-stainings of antennal olfactory receptor neurons revealed that the sensory tracts divide the antennal lobe into six clusters of glomeruli (T1-T6). In the T4-cluster ~50 glomeruli are missing in the LN-phenotype workers. Selective staining of single sensilla and their associated receptor neurons showed that T4-glomeruli are innervated by receptor neurons from the main type of olfactory sensilla, the Sensilla trichodea curvata which are also projecting to glomeruli in all other clusters. The other type of olfactory sensilla, the Sensilla basiconica, exclusively innervates T6-glomeruli. Quantitative analyses revealed a correlation between the number of Sensilla basiconica and the volume of T6 glomeruli in different sized workers. The results of both behavioral and neuroanatomical studies in Atta vollenweideri suggest that developmental plasticity of antennal-lobe phenotypes promotes differences in olfactory-guided behavior which may underlie task specialization within ant colonies. The last part of my project focuses on the evolutionary origin of the macroglomerulus and the number of glomeruli in the antennal lobe. I compared the number, volumes and position of the glomeruli of the antennal lobe of 25 different species from all three major Attini groups (lower, higher and leaf-cutting Attini). The antennal lobes of all investigated Attini comprise a high number of glomeruli (257-630). The highest number was found in Apterostigma cf. mayri. This species is at a basal position within the Attini phylogeny, and a high number of glomeruli might have been advantageous in the evolution of the advanced olfactory systems of this Taxa. The macroglomerulus can be found in all investigated leaf-cutting Attini, but in none of the lower and higher Attini species. It is found only in large workers, and is located close to the entrance of the antennal nerve in all investigated species. The results indicate that the presence of a macroglomerulus in large workers of leaf-cutting Attini is a derived overexpression of a trait in the polymorphic leaf-cutting species. It presumably represents an olfactory adaptation to elaborate foraging and mass recruitment systems, and adds to the complexity of division of labor and social organization known for this group.}, subject = {Gehirn}, language = {en} }