@phdthesis{Zdziarski2008, author = {Zdziarski, Jaroslaw Maciej}, title = {Bacterial Genome Plasticity and its Role for Adaptation and Evolution of Asymptomatic Bacteriuria (ABU) Escherichia coli Strains}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-32879}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2008}, abstract = {Asymptomatic bacteriuria (ABU) represents the long term bacterial colonization of the urinary tract, frequently caused by Escherichia coli (E. coli), without typical symptoms of a urinary tract infection (UTI). To investigate characteristics of ABU E. coli isolates in more detail, the geno- and phenotypes of eleven ABU isolates have been compared. Moreover, consecutive in vivo re-isolates of the model ABU strain 83972 were characterized with regard to transcriptomic, proteomic and genomic alterations upon long term in vivo persistence in the human bladder. Finally, the effect of the human host on bacterial adaptation/evolution was assessed by comparison of in vitro and in vivo-propagated strain 83972. ABU isolates represent a heterologous group of organisms. The comparative analysis of different ABU isolates elucidated the remarkable genetic and phenotypic flexibility of E. coli isolates. These isolates could be allocated to all four major E. coli phylogenetic lineages as well as to different clonal groups. Accordingly, they differed markedly in genome content, i.e., the genome size as well as the presence of typical UPEC virulence-associated genes. Multi locus sequence typing suggested that certain ABU strains evolved from UPEC variants that are able to cause symptomatic UTI by genome reduction. Consequently, the high E. coli genome plasticity does not allow a generalized view on geno- and phenotypes of individual isolates within a clone. Reductive evolution by point mutations, DNA rearrangements and deletions resulted in inactivation of genes coding for several UPEC virulence factors, thus supporting the idea that a reduced bacterial activation of host mucosal inflammation promotes the ABU lifestyle of these E. coli isolates. Gene regulation and genetic diversity are strategies which enable bacteria to live and survive under continuously changing environmental conditions. To study adaptational changes upon long term growth in the bladder, consecutive re-isolates of model ABU strain 83972 derived from a human colonisation study and from an in vitro long term cultivation experiment were analysed with regard to transcriptional changes and genome rearrangements. In this context, it could be demonstrated that E. coli, when exposed to different host backgrounds, is able to adapt its metabolic networks resulting in an individual bacterial colonisation strategy. Transcriptome and proteome analyses demonstrated distinct metabolic strategies of nutrients acquisition and energy production of tested in vivo re-isolates of strain 83972 that enabled them to colonise their host. Utilisation of D-serine, deoxy- and ribonucleosides, pentose and glucuronate interconversions were main up-regulated pathways providing in vivo re-isolates with extra energy for efficient growth in the urinary bladder. Moreover, this study explored bacterial response networks to host defence mechanisms: The class III alcohol dehydrogenase AdhC, already proven to be involved in nitric oxide detoxification in pathogens like Haemophilus influenzae, was shown for the first time to be employed in defending E. coli against the host response during asymptomatic bacteriuria. Consecutive in vivo and in vitro re-isolates of strain 83972 were also analysed regarding their genome structure. Several changes in the genome structure of consecutive re-isolates derived from the human colonisation study implied the importance of bacterial interactions with the host during bacterial microevolution. In contrast, the genome structure of re-isolates from the in vitro long term cultivation experiment, where strain 83972 has been propagated without host contact, was not affected. This suggests that exposure to the immune response promotes genome plasticity thus being a driving force for the development of the ABU lifestyle and evolution within the urinary tract.}, subject = {Escherichia coli}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Weissflog2011, author = {Weißflog, Lena}, title = {Molecular Genetics of Emotional Dysregulation in Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-69345}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a genetically complex childhood onset neurodevelopmental disorder which is highly persistent into adulthood. Several chromo-somal regions associated with this disorder were identified previously in genome-wide linkage scans, association (GWA) and copy number variation (CNV) studies. In this work the results of case-control and family-based association studies using a can-didate gene approach are presented. For this purpose, possible candidate genes for ADHD have been finemapped using mass array-based SNP genotyping. The genes KCNIP4, CDH13 and DIRAS2 have been found to be associated with ADHD and, in addition, with cluster B and cluster C personality disorders (PD) which are known to be related to ADHD. Most of the associations found in this work would not withstand correction for multiple testing. However, a replication in several independent populations has been achieved and in conjunction with previous evidence from linkage, GWA and CNV studies, it is assumed that there are true associations between those genes and ADHD. Further investigation of DIRAS2 by quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) revealed expression in the hippocampus, cerebral cortex and cerebellum of the human brain and a significant increase in Diras2 expression in the mouse brain during early development. In situ hybrid-izations on murine brain slices confirmed the results gained by qPCR in the human brain. Moreover, Diras2 is expressed in the basolateral amygdala, structures of the olfactory system and several other brain regions which have been implicated in the psychopatholo-gy of ADHD. In conclusion, the results of this work provide further support to the existence of a strong genetic component in the pathophysiology of ADHD and related disorders. KCNIP4, CDH13 and DIRAS2 are promising candidates and need to be further examined to get more knowledge about the neurobiological basis of this common disease. This knowledge is essential for understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying the emergence of this disorder and for the development of new treatment strategies.}, subject = {Aufmerksamkeits-Defizit-Syndrom}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Wagh2005, author = {Wagh, Dhananjay Anil}, title = {"Bruchpilot" -molecular and functional characterization of a novel active zone protein at the Drosophila synapse}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-14989}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2005}, abstract = {Chemical neurotransmission is a complex process of central importance for nervous system function. It is thought to be mediated by the orchestration of hundreds of proteins for its successful execution. Several synaptic proteins have been shown to be relevant for neurotransmission and many of them are highly conserved during evolution- suggesting a universal mechanism for neurotransmission. This process has checkpoints at various places like, neurotransmitter uptake into the vesicles, relocation of the vesicles to the vicinity of calcium channels in order to facilitate Ca2+ induced release thereby modulating the fusion probability, formation of a fusion pore to release the neurotransmitter and finally reuptake of the vesicles by endocytosis. Each of these checkpoints has now become a special area of study and maintains its own importance for the understanding of the overall process. Ca2+ induced release occurs at specialized membrane structures at the synapse known as the active zones. These are highly ordered electron dense grids and are composed of several proteins which assist the synaptic vesicles in relocating in the vicinity of Ca2+ channels thereby increasing their fusion probability and then bringing about the vesicular fusion itself. All the protein modules needed for these processes are thought to be held in tight arrays at the active zones, and the functions of a few have been characterized so far at the vertebrate active zones. Our group is primarily interested in characterizing the molecular architecture of the Drosophila synapse. Due to its powerful genetics and well-established behavioural assays Drosophila is an excellent system to investigate neuronal functioning. Monoclonal antibodies (MABs) from a hybridoma library against Drosophila brain are routinely used to detect novel proteins in the brain in a reverse genetic approach. Upon identification of the protein its encoding genetic locus is characterized and a detailed investigation of its function is initiated. This approach has been particularly useful to detect synaptic proteins, which may go undetected in a forward genetic approach due to lack of an observable phenotype. Proteins like CSP, Synapsin and Sap47 have been identified and characterized using this approach so far. MAB nc82 has been one of the shortlisted antibodies from the same library and is widely used as a general neuropil marker due to the relative transparency of immunohistochemical whole mount staining obtained with this antibody. A careful observation of double stainings at the larval neuromuscular junctions with MAB nc82 and other pre and post-synaptic markers strongly suggested an active zone localization of the nc82 antigen. Synaptic architecture is well characterized in Drosophila at the ultrastructural level. However, molecular details for many synaptic components and especially for the active zone are almost entirely unknown. A possible localization at the active zone for the nc82 antigen served as the motivation to initiate its biochemical characterization and the identification of the encoding gene. In the present thesis it is shown by 2-D gel analysis and mass spectrometry that the nc82 antigen is a novel active zone protein encoded by a complex genetic locus on chromosome 2R. By RT-PCR exons from three open reading frames previously annotated as separate genes are demonstrated to give rise to a transcript of at least 5.5 kb. Northern blots produce a prominent signal of 11 kb and a weak signal of 2 kb. The protein encoded by the 5.5 kb transcript is highly conserved amongst insects and has at its N-terminus significant homology to the previously described vertebrate active zone protein ELKS/ERC/CAST. Bioinformatic analysis predicts coiled-coil domains spread all over the sequence and strongly suggest a function involved in organizing or maintaining the structure of the active zone. The large C-terminal region is highly conserved amongst the insects but has no clear homologues in veretebrates. For a functional analysis of this protein transgenic flies expressing RNAi constructs under the control of the Gal4 regulated enhancer UAS were kindly provided by the collaborating group of S.Sigrist (G\&\#1616;ttingen). A strong pan-neuronal knockdown of the nc82 antigen by transgenic RNAi expression leads to embryonic lethality. A relatively weaker RNAi expression results in behavioural deficits in adult flies including unstable flight and impaired walking behavior. Due to this peculiar phenotype as observed in the first knockdown studies the gene was named "bruchpilot" (brp) encoding the protein "Bruchpilot (BRP)" (German for crash pilot). A pan-neuronal as well as retina specific downregulation of this protein results in loss of ON and OFF transients in ERG recordings indicating dysfunctional synapses. Retina specific downregulation also shows severely impaired optomotor behaviour. Finally, at an ultrastructural level BRP downregulation seems to impair the formation of the characteristic T-shaped synaptic ribbons at the active zones without significantly altering the overall synaptic architecture (in collaboration with E.Asan). Vertebrate active zone protein Bassoon is known to be involved in attaching the synaptic ribbons to the active zones as an adapter between active zone proteins RIBEYE and ERC/CAST. A mutation in Bassoon results in a floating synaptic ribbon phenotype. No protein homologous to Bassoon has been observed in Drosophila. BRP downregulation also results in absence of attached synaptic ribbons at the active zones. This invites the speculation of an adapter like function for BRP in Drosophila. However, while Bassoon mutant mice are viable, BRP deficit in addition to the structural phenotype also results in severe behavioural and physiological anomalies and even stronger downregulation causes embryonic lethality. This therefore suggests an additional and even more important role for BRP in development and normal functioning of synapses in Drosophila and also in other insects. However, how BRP regulates synaptic transmission and which other proteins are involved in this BRP dependant pathway remains to be investigated. Such studies certainly will attract prominent attention in the future.}, subject = {Taufliege}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Schulz2010, author = {Schulz, Sandra}, title = {The Contribution of Common and Rare Variants to the Complex Genetics of Psychiatric Disorders}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-50677}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), one of the most frequent childhood-onset, chronic and lifelong neurodevelopmental diseases, affects 5 - 10\% of school - aged children and adolescents, and 4\% of adults. The classified basic symptoms are - according to the diagnostic system DSM-VI - inattentiveness, impulsivity and hyperactivity. Also daily life of patients is impaired by learning problems, relationship crises, conflicts with authority and unemployment, but also comorbidities like sleep - and eating problems, mood - and anxiety disorders, depression and substance abuse disorders are frequently observed. Although several twin and family studies have suggested heritability of ADHD, the likely involvement of multiple genes and environmental factors has hampered the elucidation of its etiology and pathogenesis. Due to the successful medication of ADHD with dopaminergic drugs like methylphenidate, up to now, the search for candidate genes has mainly focused on the dopaminergic and - because of strong interactions - the serotonergic system, including the already analyzed candidate genes DAT1, DRD4 and 5, DBH or 5-HTTLPR. Recently, DNA copy number changes have been implicated in the development of a number of neurodevelopmental diseases and the analysis of chromosomal gains and losses by Array Comparative Genomic Hybridization (Array CGH) has turned out a successful strategy to identify disease associated genes. Here we present the first systematic screen for chromosomal imbalances in ADHD using sub-megabase resolution Array CGH. To detect micro-deletions and -duplications which may play a role in the pathogenesis of ADHD, we carried out a genome-wide screen for copy number variations (CNVs) in a cohort of 99 children and adolescents with severe ADHD. Using high-resolution aCGH, a total of 17 potentially syndrome-associated CNVs were identified. The aberrations comprise four deletions and 13 duplications with approximate sizes ranging from 110 kb to 3 Mb. Two CNVs occurred de novo and nine were inherited from a parent with ADHD, whereas five are transmitted by an unaffected parent. Candidates include genes expressing acetylcholine-metabolising butyrylcholinesterase (BCHE), contained in a de novo chromosome 3q26.1 deletion, and a brain-specific pleckstrin homology domain-containing protein (PLEKHB1), with an established function in primary sensory neurons, in two siblings carrying a 11q13.4 duplication inherited from their affected mother. Other genes potentially influencing ADHD-related psychopathology and involved in aberrations inherited from affected parents are the genes for the mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase 1 alpha subcomplex assembly factor 2 (NDUFAF2), the brain-specific phosphodiesterase 4D isoform 6 (PDE4D6), and the neuronal glucose transporter 3 (SLC2A3). The gene encoding neuropeptide Y (NPY) was included in a ~3 Mb duplication on chromosome 7p15.2-15.3, and investigation of additional family members showed a nominally significant association of this 7p15 duplication with increased NPY plasma concentrations (empirical FBAT, p = 0.023). Lower activation of the left ventral striatum and left posterior insula during anticipation of large rewards or losses elicited by fMRI links gene dose-dependent increases in NPY to reward and emotion processing in duplication carriers. Additionally, further candidate genes were examined via Matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS). This method enables the analysis of SNPs directly from human genomic DNA without the need for initial target amplification by PCR. All these findings implicate CNVs of behavior-related genes in the pathogenesis of ADHD and are consistent with the notion that both frequent and rare variants influence the development of this common multifactorial syndrome. The second part of this work concentrates on MLC1, a gene associated with Megalencephalic leukoencephalopathy with subcortical cysts, located on chromosome 22q13.33. To get more insight in the disease itself, a targeting vector for a conditional knockout mouse was constructed using homologous recombination. Furthermore, MLC1 has been suggested as a risk gene for schizophrenia, especially the periodic catatonia subtype. An initially identified missense mutation was found to be extremely rare in other patient cohorts; however, a recent report again argued for an association of two intronic MLC1 SNPs with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. A case-control study of these polymorphisms as well as SNPs in the transcriptional control region of MLC1 was conducted in 212 chronic schizophrenic patients, 56 of which suffered from periodic catatonia, 106 bipolar patients, and 284 controls. Both intronic and promoter polymorphisms were specifically and significantly associated with periodic catatonia but not schizophrenia or bipolar disorder in general. A haplotype constructed from all polymorphisms was also associated with periodic catatonia. The MLC1 variation is associated with periodic catatonia; whether it constitutes a susceptibility or a modifier gene has to be determined.}, subject = {Aufmerksamkeits-Defizit-Syndrom}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Raffelsbauer2001, author = {Raffelsbauer, Diana}, title = {Identification and characterization of the inlGHE gene cluster of Listeria monocytogenes}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-1180595}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2001}, abstract = {In the present study, a new gene cluster of Listeria monocytogenes EGD containing three internalin genes was identified and characterized. These genes, termed inlG, inlH and inlE, encode proteins of 490, 548 and 499 amino acids, respectively, which belong to the class of large, surface-bound internalins. Each of these proteins contains a signal peptide, two regions of repeats (Leucine-rich repeats and B repeats), an inter-repeat region and a putative cell wall anchor sequence containing the sorting motiv LPXTG. PCR analysis revealed the presence of the inlGHE gene cluster in most L. monocytogenes serotypes. A similar gene cluster termed inlC2DE localised to the same position on the chromosome was described in a different L. monocytogenes EGD isolate. Sequence comparison of the two clusters indicates that inlG is a new internalin gene, while inlH was generated by a site-specific recombination leading to an in-frame deletion which removed the 3'-terminal end of inlC2 and a 5'-portion of inlD. The genes inlG, inlH and inlE seem to be transcribed extracellularly and independent of PrfA. To study the function of the inlGHE gene cluster several in-frame deletion mutants were constructed which lack the genes of the inlGHE cluster individually or in combination with other inl genes. When tested in the mouse model, the inlGHE mutant showed a significant reduction of bacterial counts in liver and spleen in comparison to the wild type strain, indicating that the inlGHE gene cluster plays an important role in virulence of L. monocytogenes. The ability of this mutant to invade non-phagocytic cells in vitro was however two- to three-fold higher than that of the parental strain. To examine whether deletion of the single genes from the cluster has the same stimulatory effect on invasiveness as deletion of the complete gene cluster, the single in-frame deletion mutants inlG, inlH and inlE were constructed. These mutants were subsequently reverted to the wild type by introducing a copy of the corresponding intact gene into the chromosome by homologous recombination using knock-in plasmids. To determine a putative contribution of InlG, InlH and InlE in combination with other internalins to the entry of L. monocytogenes into mammalian cells, the combination mutants inlA/GHE, inlB/GHE, inlC/GHE, inlA/B/GHE, inlB/C/GHE, inlA/C and inlA/C/GHE were constructed. Transcription of the genes inlA, inlB and inlC in these mutants was studied by RT-PCR. Deletion of inlGHE enhances transcription of inlA and inlB, but not of inlC. This enhancement is not transient but can be observed at different time-points of the bacterial growth curve. Deletion of inlA also increases transcription of inlB and vice-versa. In contrast, the amounts of inlA and inlB transcripts in the single deletion mutants inlG, inlH and inlE were similar to those from the wild type.}, subject = {Listeria monocytogenes}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Prusko2006, author = {Prusko, Carsten Dietmar}, title = {Evolutionary Diversification of Protein Functions : From Translation in Prokaryotes to Innate Immunity in Invertebrates}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-18517}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2006}, abstract = {With the progress in sequencing of the honey bee genome new data become available which allows the search and identification of genes coding for homologous proteins found in other organism. Two genes coding for c-type lysozymes were identified in the genome of A. mellifera through an online-based BLAST search. Expression of both intron-less genes seems not to be under the regulatory control of either of the two pathways involved in humoral insect immunity, i.e. Toll and Imd, since no NF-\&\#954;B transcription factor binding sites are found upstream of the genes. The encoded Lys-1 and Lys-2 are 157 and 143 amino acid long, respectively, and share a sequence similarity of 90\%. Further in silico analysis revealed a signal peptidase cleavage site at the N-terminus of each amino acid sequence, strongly suggesting a secretion of the enzymes into the surrounding environment of the producing cells. Sequence alignments of both amino acid sequences with other c-type lysozymes identified the highly conserved active site glutamic acid (Glu32) as well as eight highly conserved cysteine residues. However, an important aspartic acid (Asp50) in the active site that helps to stabilize a substrate intermediate during catalysis is replaced by a serine residue in the lysozymes of A. mellifera. The replacement of the active site aspartic acid in the honey bee lysozymes suggests a different catalytic mechanism and/or a different substrate-specificity in respect to other c-type lysozymes. Furthermore, 3D-models of Lys-1 and Lys-2 were generated based on the sequence similarity of A. mellifera lysozymes with other c-type lysozymes. The published 3D structure of the lysozyme from the silkmoth Bombyx mori, which shares the highest sequence similarity of all available structures with A. mellifera lysozymes, was used as template for the construction of the 3D-models. The models of Lys-1 and Lys-2 suggest that both enzymes resemble, in large part, the structure of B. mori lysozyme. In order to identify the set of AMPs in the hemolymph of A. mellifera, hemolymph of immunized bees was analyzed. Applying SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry on hemolymph from immunized bees, three out of the four peptides were identified, i.e. abaecin, defensin 1 and hymenoptaecin. Furthermore, Lys-2 was identified in the hemolymph by mass spectrometry, conclusively demonstrating the presence of a lysozyme in the hemolymph of A. mellifera for the first time. However, the protein levels of Lys-2 were not affected by bacterial injection, suggesting that the gene expression of the putative antibacterial protein is not under the regulatory control of the Imd and/or Toll pathway. Besides the abovementioned antimicrobial peptides, the 76 kDa large transferrin was also identified. Transferrin is an iron-binding protein that has been implicated in innate immunity in the honey bee. Furthermore, the effect of pathogenic dose, the timeline of peptide induction and the age-related accumulation of the aforementioned AMPs were studied. The intensity of expression of the antimicrobial peptides, abaecin, defensin 1, and hymenoptaecin as well as transferrin increased proportionally with the amount of bacteria injected into the hemocoel. No such effect was observed for the protein levels of Lys-2. Furthermore, up-regulation of the three antibacterial peptides and transferrin was observed within the first 24 h following infection with E. coli (gram-). Infection with the gram+ bacterium Micrococcus flavus resulted in high and moderate protein levels for transferrin and abaecin, respectively, whereas hardly any accumulation of hymenoptaecin was observed, indicating that the gene expression of abaecin and transferrin is somehow positively correlated, and would suggest a shared regulatory pathway that differs from that of hymenoptaecin. Although bacterial infections didn't seem to stimulate the production of Lys-2, different concentrations in the hemolymph were observed in bees of different ages, suggesting a correlation between the expression of Lys-2 and the age-related division of labor of adult worker honey bees, also known as age polyethism. The results further allow a proposed causal connection between the age-dependent accumulation of Lys-2 and the hemolymph titer of the gonotrophic hormone juvenile hormone, which is the "behavioral pacemaker" in adult honey bees.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Pietsch2005, author = {Pietsch, Christof}, title = {The genetics of species differences within the genus Nasonia ASHMEAD 1904 (Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae)}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-14348}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2005}, abstract = {The genetics of species differences is an outstanding question in evolutionary biology. How do species evolve to become phenotypically distinct and how is the genetic architecture organized that underlie species differences? Phenotypic diverged traits are supposed to be frequently involved in prezygotic isolation, i.e. they prevent the formation of hybrids, whereas postzygotic isolation occurs when hybrids experience a fitness reduction. The parasitic wasp genus Nasonia represents an appropriate model system to investigate the genetics of species differences as well as the genetics of postzygotic isolation. The genus consists of three species N. vitripennis, N. longicornis and N. giraulti that differ particularly in male traits that are assumed to posses an adaptive significance: courtship behaviour and wing size differences. The courtship behaviour consists of cyclically repeated series of head nods that are separated by pauses. The stereotypic performance allowed to split up the display into distinct courtship components. Males of N. vitripennis bear vestigial forewings and are incapable of flight, whereas N. longicornis wear intermediate sized wings and N. giraulti is fully capable of flying. Nasonia species can produce interspecific hybrids after removing Wolbachia bacteria induced hybrid incompatibilities with antibiotics. Postzygotic isolation occurs to different extent and is asymmetric among reciprocal crosses, e.g. inviability is stronger in the N. vitripennis (\&\#9792;) x N. longicornis (\&\#9794;) cross than in the N. longicornis (\&\#9792;) x N. vitripennis (\&\#9794;) cross. The formation of hybrids allow to study the genetic of species differences in QTL (quantitative trait locus) analyses as well as the genetics of postzygotic isolation causing hybrid inviability. The aim of the study was to investigate the genetic architecture of differences in courtship behaviour and wing size between N. vitripennis and N. longicornis and to assess the genetics of postzygotic isolation to gain clues about the evolutionary processes underlying trait divergence and establishment of reproductive isolation between taxa. In a QTL analysis based on 94 F2-hybrid individuals of an LV cross only few QTL for wing size differences have been found with relatively large effects, although a large proportion of the phenotypic variance remained unexplained. The QTL on courtship behaviour analysis based on 94-F2 hybrid males revealed a complex genetic architecture of courtship behaviour with QTL of large phenotypic effects that explained more than 40 \% of the phenotypic variance in one case. Additionally, an epistatic analysis (non-additive interlocus interaction) of courtship QTL revealed frequent genetic interchromsomal relations leading in some instances to hybrid specific effects, e.g. reversion of phenotypic effects or the transgression of phenotypes. A QTL analysis based on a threefold sample size revealed, however, an overestimation of QTL effects in the analysis based on smaller sample size pointing towards a genetic architecture of many loci with small effects governing the phenotypic differences in courtship behaviour. Furthermore, the the study comprised the analysis of postzygotic isolation in the reciprocal crosses N. vitripennis (\&\#9792;) x N. longicornis (\&\#9794;) versus N. longicornis (\&\#9792;) x N. vitripennis (\&\#9794;) located several loci distributed over different chromosomes that are involved in hybrid incompatibility. The mapping of hybrid incompatibility regions reproduced for the first time the observed asymmetries in the strength of postzygotic isolation in reciprocal crosses of between the more distant related taxa within the genus Nasonia. Stronger postzygotic incompatibilities in the VL cross are supposed to result from the superposition of nuclear-nuclear incompatibilities with nuclear-cytoplasmic incompatibilities, whereas the coincidences of these to types of incompatibilities were found to be much weaker in the reciprocal LV cross.}, subject = {Pteromalidae}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Niewalda2010, author = {Niewalda, Thomas}, title = {Neurogenetic analyses of pain-relief learning in the fruit fly}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-65035}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {All animals learn in order to cope with challenges imposed on them by their environment. This is true also for both larval and adult fruit flies as exemplified in pavlovian conditioning. The focus of this Thesis is on various aspects of the fruit flies learning ability. My main project deals with two types of learning which we call punishment-learning and pain-relief learning. Punishment learning happens when fruit flies are exposed to an odour which is followed by electric shock. After such training, flies have learned that that odour signals pain and consequently will avoid it in the future. If the sequence of the two stimuli is reversed such that odour follows shock, flies learn the odour as a signal for relief and will later on approach it. I first report a series of experiments investigating qualitative and parametric features of relief-learning; I find that (i) relief learning does result from true associative conditioning, (ii) it requires a relatively high number of training trials, (iii) context-shock training is ineffective for subsequent shock-odour learning. A further question is whether punishment-learning and pain-relief learning share genetic determinants. In terms of genetics, I test a synapsin mutant strain, which lacks all Synapsin protein, in punishment and relief-learning. Punishment learning is significantly reduced, and relief-learning is abolished. Pan-neuronal RNAi-mediated knock-down of Synapsin results in mutant-like phenotypes, confirming the attribution of the phenotype to lack of Synapsin. Also, a rescue of Synapsin in the mushroom body of syn97 mutants restores both punishment- and relief-learning fully, suggesting the sufficiency of Synapsin in the mushroom body for both these kinds of learning. I also elucidate the relationship between perception and physiology in adult fruit flies. I use odour-shock conditioning experiments to identify degrees of similarity between odours; I find that those similarity measures are consistent across generalization and discrimination tasks of diverse difficulty. Then, as collaborator of T. V{\"o}ller and A. Fiala, I investigate how such behavioural similarity/dissimilarity is reflected at the physiological level. I combine the behaviour data with calcium imaging data obtained by measuring the activity patterns of those odours in either the sensory neurons or the projection neurons at the antennal lobe. Our interpretation of the results is that the odours perceptual similarity is organized by antennal lobe interneurons. In another project I investigate the effect of gustatory stimuli on reflexive behaviour as well as their role as reinforcer in larval learning. Drosophila larvae greatly alter their behaviour in presence of sodium chloride. Increasing salt concentration modulates choice behaviour from weakly appetitive to strongly aversive. A similar concentration-behaviour function is also found for feeding: larval feeding is slightly enhanced in presence of low salt concentrations, and strongly decreased in the presence of high salt concentrations. Regarding learning, relatively weak salt concentrations function as appetitive reinforcer, whereas high salt concentrations function as aversive reinforcer. Interestingly, the behaviour-concentration curves are shifted towards higher concentrations from reflexive behaviour (choice behaviour, feeding) as compared to associative learning. This dissociation may reflect a different sensitivity in the respective sensory-motor circuitry.}, subject = {Taufliege}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Ng2001, author = {Ng, Eva Yee Wah}, title = {How did Listeria monocytogenes become pathogenic?}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-1752}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2001}, abstract = {Listeriae are Gram positive, facultative, saprophytic bacteria capable of causing opportunistic infections in humans and animals. This thesis presents three separate lines of inquiries that can lead to the eventual convergence of a global view of Listeria as pathogen in the light of evolution, genomics, and function. First, we undertook to resolve the phylogeny of the genus Listeria with the goal of ascertaining insights into the evolution of pathogenic capability of its members. The phylogeny of Listeriae had not yet been clearly resolved due to a scarcity of phylogenetically informative characters within the 16S and 23S rRNA molecules. The genus Listeria contains six species: L. monocytogenes, L. ivanovii, L. innocua, L. seeligeri, L. welshimeri, and L. grayi; of these, L. monocytogenes and L. ivanovii are pathogenic. Pathogenicity is enabled by a 10-15Kb virulence gene cluster found in L. seeligeri, L. monocytogenes and L. ivanovii. The genetic contents of the virulence gene cluster loci, as well as some virulence-associated internalin loci were compared among the six species. Phylogenetic analysis based on a data set of nucleic acid sequences from prs, ldh, vclA, vclB, iap, 16S and 23S rRNA genes identified L. grayi as the ancestral branch of the genus. This is consistent with previous 16S and 23S rRNA findings. The remainder 5 species formed two groupings. One lineage represents L. monocytogenes and L. innocua, while the other contains L. welshimeri, L. ivanovii and L. seeligeri, with L. welshimeri forming the deepest branch within this group. Deletion breakpoints of the virulence gene cluster within L. innocua and L. welshimeri support the proposed tree. This implies that the virulence gene cluster was present in the common ancestor of L. monocytogenes, L. innocua, L. ivanovii, L. seeligeri and L. welshimeri; and that pathogenic capability has been lost in two separate events represented by L. innocua and L. welshimeri. Second, we attempted to reconstitute L. innocua of its deleted virulence gene cluster, in its original chromosomal location, from the L. monocytogenes 12 Kb virulence gene cluster. This turned out particularly difficult because of the limits of genetic tools presently available for the organism. The reconstitution was partially successful. The methods and approaches are presented, and all the components necessary to complete the constructs are at hand for both L. innocua and the parallel, positive control of L. monocytogenes mutant deleted of its virulence gene cluster. Third, the sequencing of the entire genome of L. monocytogenes EGDe was undertaken as part of an EU Consortium. Our lab was responsible for 10 per cent of the labor intensive gap-closure and annotation efforts, which I helped coordinate. General information and comparisons with sister species L. innocua and a close Gram positive relative Bacillus subtilis are presented in context. The areas I personally investigated, namely, sigma factors and stationary phase functions, are also presented. L. monocytogenes and L. innocua both possess surprisingly few sigma factors: SigA, SigB, SigH, SigL, and an extra-cytoplasmic function type sigma factor (SigECF). The stationary phase genes of L. monocytogenes is compared to the well-studied, complex, stationary phase networks of B. subtilis. This showed that while genetic competence functions may be operative in unknown circumstances, non-sporulating Listeria opted for very different approaches of regulation from B. subtilis. There is virtually no overlap of known, stationary phase genes between Listeria and Gram negative model organism E. coli.}, subject = {Listeria monocytogenes}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Motsch2005, author = {Motsch, Isabell}, title = {Lamin A and lamin C are differentially dysfunctional in autosomal dominant Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-15360}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2005}, abstract = {Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy (EDMD) is a rare genetic disorder characterised by early contractures of the elbows, Achilles tendons and spine, slowly progressive muscle wasting and cardiomyopathy associated with cardiac conduction defect. The autosomal dominant form is caused by mutations in the LMNA gene which gives rise to lamin A and lamin C proteins by alternative splicing. These A-type lamins, together with B-type lamins, form the nuclear lamina, a network of intermediate filament proteins underlining the nuclear envelope. In order to ascertain the role lamin A and C separately contribute to the molecular phenotype, we analysed ten LMNA mutations and one single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in transfection studies in COS7 fibroblasts and, partially, in C2C12 myoblasts. The EGFP or DsRed2 tagged lamins were exogenously expressed either individually or both A-types together and examined by light and electron microscopy. The protein mobility of lamin A mutants was determined by FRAP analysis. Additionally, a co-immunoprecipitation binding assay of in vitro synthesised A-type lamins and emerin was performed.Eight of the LMNA mutations (R50S, R133P, E358K, E358K+C}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{AlcantarinoMenescal2012, author = {Alcantarino Menescal, Luciana}, title = {In vivo characterization of genetic factors involved in Xmrk driven melanoma formation in Medaka (Oryzias latipes): a closer look at braf, Stat5 and c-myc}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-70762}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Melanoma arises from the malignant transformation of melanocytes and is one of the most aggressive forms of human cancer. In fish of the genus Xiphophorus, melanoma development, although very rarely, happens spontaneously in nature and can be induced by interspecific crossing. The oncogenic receptor tyrosine kinase, Xmrk, is responsible for melanoma formation in these fishes. Since Xiphophorus are live-bearing fishes and therefore not compatible with embryonic manipulation and transgenesis, the Xmrk melanoma model was brought to the medaka (Oryzias latipes) system. Xmrk expression under the control of the pigment cell specific mitf promoter leads to melanoma formation with 100\% penetrance in medaka. Xmrk is an orthologue of the human epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and activates several downstream signaling pathways. Examples of these pathways are the direct phosphorylation of BRAF and Stat5, as well as the enhanced transcription of C-myc. BRAF is a serine-threonine kinase which is found mutated at high frequencies in malignant melanomas. Stat5 is a transcription factor known to be constitutively activated in fish melanoma. C-myc is a transcription factor that is thought to regulate the expression of approximately 15\% of all human genes and is involved in cancer progression of a large number of different tumors. To gain new in vivo information on candidate factors known to be involved in melanoma progression, I identified and analysed BRAF, Stat5 and C-myc in the laboratory fish model system medaka. BRAF protein motifs are highly conserved among vertebrates and the results of this work indicate that its function in the MAPK signaling is maintained in medaka. Transgenic medaka lines carrying a constitutive active version of BRAF (V614E) showed more pigmented skin when compared to wild type. Also, some transiently expressing BRAF V614E fishes showed a disrupted eye phenotype. In addition, I was able to identify two Stat5 copies in medaka, named Stat5ab/a and Stat5ab/b. Sequence analysis revealed a higher similarity between both Stat5 sequences when compared to either human Stat5a or Stat5b. This suggests that the two Stat5 copies in medaka arose by an independent duplication processes. I cloned these two Stat5 present in medaka, produced constitutive active and dominant negative gene versions and successfully established transgenic lines carrying each version under the control of the MITF promoter. These lines will help to elucidate questions that are still remaining in Stat5 biology and its function in melanoma progression, like the role of Stat5 phosphorylation on tumor invasiveness. In a third project during my PhD work, I analysed medaka C-myc function and indentified two copies of this gene in medaka, named c-myc17 and c-myc20, according to the chromosome where they are located. I produced conditional transgenic medaka lines carrying the c-myc17 gene coupled to the hormone binding domain of the estrogen receptor to enable specific transgene activation at a given time point. Comparable to human C-myc, medaka C-myc17 is able to induce proliferation and apoptosis in vivo after induction. Besides that, C-myc17 long-term activation led to liver hyperplasia. In summary, the medaka models generated in this work will be important to bring new in vivo information on genes involved in cancer development. Also, the generated transgenic lines can be easily crossed to the melanoma developing Xmrk medaka lines, thereby opening up the possibility to investigate their function in melanoma progression. Besides that, the generated medaka fishes make it possible to follow the whole development of melanocytes, since the embryos are transparent and can be used for high throughput chemical screens.}, subject = {Japank{\"a}rpfling}, language = {en} }