@article{WechAnkenbrandBleyetal.2022, author = {Wech, Tobias and Ankenbrand, Markus Johannes and Bley, Thorsten Alexander and Heidenreich, Julius Frederik}, title = {A data-driven semantic segmentation model for direct cardiac functional analysis based on undersampled radial MR cine series}, series = {Magnetic Resonance in Medicine}, volume = {87}, journal = {Magnetic Resonance in Medicine}, number = {2}, doi = {10.1002/mrm.29017}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-257616}, pages = {972-983}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Purpose Image acquisition and subsequent manual analysis of cardiac cine MRI is time-consuming. The purpose of this study was to train and evaluate a 3D artificial neural network for semantic segmentation of radially undersampled cardiac MRI to accelerate both scan time and postprocessing. Methods A database of Cartesian short-axis MR images of the heart (148,500 images, 484 examinations) was assembled from an openly accessible database and radial undersampling was simulated. A 3D U-Net architecture was pretrained for segmentation of undersampled spatiotemporal cine MRI. Transfer learning was then performed using samples from a second database, comprising 108 non-Cartesian radial cine series of the midventricular myocardium to optimize the performance for authentic data. The performance was evaluated for different levels of undersampling by the Dice similarity coefficient (DSC) with respect to reference labels, as well as by deriving ventricular volumes and myocardial masses. Results Without transfer learning, the pretrained model performed moderately on true radial data [maximum number of projections tested, P = 196; DSC = 0.87 (left ventricle), DSC = 0.76 (myocardium), and DSC =0.64 (right ventricle)]. After transfer learning with authentic data, the predictions achieved human level even for high undersampling rates (P = 33, DSC = 0.95, 0.87, and 0.93) without significant difference compared with segmentations derived from fully sampled data. Conclusion A 3D U-Net architecture can be used for semantic segmentation of radially undersampled cine acquisitions, achieving a performance comparable with human experts in fully sampled data. This approach can jointly accelerate time-consuming cine image acquisition and cumbersome manual image analysis.}, language = {en} } @article{BorovaSchluttNickeletal.2022, author = {Borova, Solomiia and Schlutt, Christine and Nickel, Joachim and Luxenhofer, Robert}, title = {A Transient Initiator for Polypeptoids Postpolymerization α-Functionalization via Activation of a Thioester Group}, series = {Macromolecular Chemistry and Physics}, volume = {223}, journal = {Macromolecular Chemistry and Physics}, number = {3}, doi = {10.1002/macp.202100331}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-257587}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Here, a postpolymerization modification method for an α-terminal functionalized poly-(N-methyl-glycine), also known as polysarcosine, is introduced. 4-(Methylthio)phenyl piperidine-4-carboxylate as an initiator for the ring-opening polymerization of N-methyl-glycine-N-carboxyanhydride followed by oxidation of the thioester group to yield an α-terminal reactive 4-(methylsulfonyl)phenyl piperidine-4-carboxylate polymer is utilized. This represents an activated carboxylic acid terminus, allowing straightforward modification with nucleophiles under mild reaction conditions and provides the possibility to introduce a wide variety of nucleophiles as exemplified using small molecules, fluorescent dyes, and model proteins. The new initiator yielded polymers with well-defined molar mass, low dispersity, and high end-group fidelity, as observed by gel permeation chromatography, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectroscopy. The introduced method can be of great interest for bioconjugation, but requires optimization, especially for protein conjugation.}, language = {en} } @article{HauptsteinForsterNadernezhadetal.2022, author = {Hauptstein, Julia and Forster, Leonard and Nadernezhad, Ali and Horder, Hannes and Stahlhut, Philipp and Groll, J{\"u}rgen and Blunk, Torsten and Teßmar, J{\"o}rg}, title = {Bioink Platform Utilizing Dual-Stage Crosslinking of Hyaluronic Acid Tailored for Chondrogenic Differentiation of Mesenchymal Stromal Cells}, series = {Macromolecular Bioscience}, volume = {22}, journal = {Macromolecular Bioscience}, number = {2}, doi = {10.1002/mabi.202100331}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-257556}, pages = {2100331}, year = {2022}, abstract = {3D bioprinting often involves application of highly concentrated polymeric bioinks to enable fabrication of stable cell-hydrogel constructs, although poor cell survival, compromised stem cell differentiation, and an inhomogeneous distribution of newly produced extracellular matrix (ECM) are frequently observed. Therefore, this study presents a bioink platform using a new versatile dual-stage crosslinking approach based on thiolated hyaluronic acid (HA-SH), which not only provides stand-alone 3D printability but also facilitates effective chondrogenic differentiation of mesenchymal stromal cells. A range of HA-SH with different molecular weights is synthesized and crosslinked with acrylated (PEG-diacryl) and allylated (PEG-diallyl) polyethylene glycol in a two-step reaction scheme. The initial Michael addition is used to achieve ink printability, followed by UV-mediated thiol-ene reaction to stabilize the printed bioink for long-term cell culture. Bioinks with high molecular weight HA-SH (>200 kDa) require comparably low polymer content to facilitate bioprinting. This leads to superior quality of cartilaginous constructs which possess a coherent ECM and a strongly increased stiffness of long-term cultured constructs. The dual-stage system may serve as an example to design platforms using two independent crosslinking reactions at one functional group, which allows adjusting printability as well as material and biological properties of bioinks.}, language = {en} } @article{DudekMaack2022, author = {Dudek, Jan and Maack, Christoph}, title = {Mechano-energetic aspects of Barth syndrome}, series = {Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease}, volume = {45}, journal = {Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease}, number = {1}, doi = {10.1002/jimd.12427}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-257512}, pages = {82-98}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Energy-demanding organs like the heart are strongly dependent on oxidative phosphorylation in mitochondria. Oxidative phosphorylation is governed by the respiratory chain located in the inner mitochondrial membrane. The inner mitochondrial membrane is the only cellular membrane with significant amounts of the phospholipid cardiolipin, and cardiolipin was found to directly interact with a number of essential protein complexes, including respiratory chain complexes I to V. An inherited defect in the biogenesis of cardiolipin causes Barth syndrome, which is associated with cardiomyopathy, skeletal myopathy, neutropenia and growth retardation. Energy conversion is dependent on reducing equivalents, which are replenished by oxidative metabolism in the Krebs cycle. Cardiolipin deficiency in Barth syndrome also affects Krebs cycle activity, metabolite transport and mitochondrial morphology. During excitation-contraction coupling, calcium (Ca\(^{2+}\)) released from the sarcoplasmic reticulum drives sarcomeric contraction. At the same time, Ca\(^{2+}\) influx into mitochondria drives the activation of Krebs cycle dehydrogenases and the regeneration of reducing equivalents. Reducing equivalents are essential not only for energy conversion, but also for maintaining a redox buffer, which is required to detoxify reactive oxygen species (ROS). Defects in CL may also affect Ca\(^{2+}\) uptake into mitochondria and thereby hamper energy supply and demand matching, but also detoxification of ROS. Here, we review the impact of cardiolipin deficiency on mitochondrial function in Barth syndrome and discuss potential therapeutic strategies.}, language = {en} } @article{RamlerSchwarzmannStoyetal.2022, author = {Ramler, Jacqueline and Schwarzmann, Johannes and Stoy, Andreas and Lichtenberg, Crispin}, title = {Two Faces of the Bi-O Bond: Photochemically and Thermally Induced Dehydrocoupling for Si-O Bond Formation}, series = {European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry}, volume = {2022}, journal = {European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry}, number = {7}, doi = {10.1002/ejic.202100934}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-257428}, year = {2022}, abstract = {The diorgano(bismuth)alcoholate [Bi((C\(_{6}\)H\(_{4}\)CH\(_{2}\))\(_{2}\)S)OPh] (1-OPh) has been synthesized and fully characterized. Stoichiometric reactions, UV/Vis spectroscopy, and (TD-)DFT calculations suggest its susceptibility to homolytic and heterolytic Bi-O bond cleavage under given reaction conditions. Using the dehydrocoupling of silanes with either TEMPO or phenol as model reactions, the catalytic competency of 1-OPh has been investigated (TEMPO=(tetramethyl-piperidin-1-yl)-oxyl). Different reaction pathways can deliberately be addressed by applying photochemical or thermal reaction conditions and by choosing radical or closed-shell substrates (TEMPO vs. phenol). Applied analytical techniques include NMR, UV/Vis, and EPR spectroscopy, mass spectrometry, single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis, and (TD)-DFT calculations.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Hauser2022, author = {Hauser, Tobias Gregor}, title = {Mineralocorticoid-receptor antagonism and its metabolic consequences in haemodialysis patients}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25938}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-259382}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Patients on haemodialysis are highly susceptible to different forms of heart failure. To date, the benefit of Mineralocorticoid-receptor antagonist (MRA) administration in haemodialysis patients remains subject to discussion. Biomarkers play an important role in therapy guidance and pose a promising tool to detect pathological processes of heart failure in an earlier stage. The randomised-controlled Mineralocorticoid-Receptor Antagonists in End-Stage Renal Disease (MiREnDa) trial was set up to investigate the effect of 50 mg of spironolactone once daily on left ventricular mass index in haemodialysis patients and several secondary endpoints. This dissertation reports findings from the MiREnDa trial on (a) the efficacy of spironolactone to influence serum levels of biomarkers of heart failure, fibrosis and inflammation and electrolytes and (b) the ability of N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP), Galectin-3 and soluble source of tumorigenicity 2 (sST2) to reflect left ventricular hypertrophy and diastolic dysfunction assessed by imaging characteristics. Treatment of spironolactone over a 40-week period did not alter serum levels of biomarkers of heart failure, fibrosis and inflammation including NT-proBNP, Galectin-3 and sST2. A small but significant effect on serum sodium but not potassium was observed. NT-proBNP was significantly different in the presence or absence of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) (normal vs. LVH (median [IQR]): 2,120 [810; 5,040] vs. 6,340 [2,410; 15,360] pg/ml, p<0.01) or moderate and severe diastolic dysfunction (DD) (normal diastolic function and DD grade I vs. DD grade II and DD grade III: 2,300 [850; 6,050] vs. 12,260 [3,340; 34,830] pg/ml, p=0.02). NT-proBNP further showed a significant correlation at baseline with LVMi (Spearman's rho=0.41, p<0.001), LAVi (Spearman's rho=0.55, p<0.001) and septal E/e' (Spearman's rho=0.45, p<0.001). No correlation was observed between Galectin-3 and the investigated functional and morphological parameters. sST2 was mildly correlated to LVMi at baseline (Spearman's rho=0.21, p=0.05) and NT-proBNP at baseline (Spearman's rho=0.37, p<0.001). In conclusion, spironolactone did not affect the investigated parameters but NT-proBNP proved to be significantly correlated to cardiac imaging measurements.}, subject = {Dialyse}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Meininger2022, author = {Meininger, Markus}, title = {Calcium hydroxide as antibacterial implant coating}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-26112}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-261122}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {In modern medicine hip and knee joint replacement are common surgical procedures. However, about 11 \% of hip implants and about 7 \% of knee implants need re-operations. The comparison of implant registers revealed two major indications for re-operations: aseptic loosening and implant infections, that both severely impact the patients' health and are an economic burden for the health care system. To address these problems, a calcium hydroxide coating on titanium was investigated in this thesis. Calcium hydroxide is a well-known antibacterial agent and used with success in dentistry. The coatings were applied with electrochemically assisted deposition, a versatile tool that combines easiness of process with the ability to coat complex geometries homogeneously. The pH-gradient during coating was investigated and showed the surface confinement of the coating process. Surface pre-treatment altered the surface morphology and chemistry of the titanium substrates and was shown to affect the morphology of the calcium hydroxide coatings. The influence of the coating parameters stirring speed and current pulsing were examined in various configurations and combinations and could also affect the surface morphology. A change in surface morphology results in a changed adhesion and behavior of cells and bacteria. Thus, the parameters surface pre-treatment, stirring speed and current pulsing presented a toolset for tailoring cellular response and antibacterial properties. Microbiological tests with S. aureus and S. epidermidis were performed to test the time-dependent antibacterial activity of the calcium hydroxide coatings. A reduction of both strains could be achieved for 13 h, which makes calcium hydroxide a promising antibacterial coating. To give insight into biofilm growth, a protocol for biofilm staining was investigated on titanium disks with S. aureus and S. epidermidis. Biofilm growth could be detected after 5 days of bacterial incubation, which was much earlier than the 3 weeks that are currently assumed in medical treatment. Thus, it should be considered to treat infections as if a biofilm were present from day 5 on. The ephemeral antibacterial properties of calcium hydroxide were further enhanced and prolonged with the addition of silver and copper ions. Both ionic modifications significantly enhanced the bactericidal potential. The copper modification showed higher antibacterial effects than the silver modification and had a higher cytocompatibility which was comparable to the pure calcium hydroxide coating. Thus, copper ions are an auspicious option to enhance the antibacterial properties. Calcium hydroxide coatings presented in this thesis have promising antibacterial properties and can easily be applied to complex geometries, thus they are a step in fighting aseptic loosening and implant infections.}, subject = {Calciumhydroxid}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Wu2022, author = {Wu, Zhu}, title = {Room Temperature Phosphorescence (RTP): Experimental And Theoretical Studies on Boron-Containing Materials}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-26084}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-260844}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Persistent room temperature phosphorescent (RTP) luminophores have gained remarkable interest recently for a number of applications in security printing, OLEDs, optical storage, time-gated biological imaging and oxygen sensors. We report the first persistent RTP with lifetimes up to 0.5 s from simple triarylboranes which have no lone pairs. We also have prepared 3 isomeric (o, m, p-bromophenyl)-bis(2,6-dimethylphenyl)boranes. Among the 3 isomers (o-, m- and p-BrTAB) synthesized, the ortho-one is the only one which shows dual phosphorescence, with a short lifetime of 0.8 ms and a long lifetime of 234 ms in the crystalline state at room temperature. At last, we checked the RTP properties from the boric acid. We found that the pure boric acid does not show RTP in the solid state.}, language = {en} } @article{MuthHeiligMarquardtetal.2022, author = {Muth, Felicitas V. and Heilig, Michael and Marquardt, Dorothea and Mittelberg, Linda and Sebald, Albrecht and Kunde, Wilfried}, title = {Lightness perception of structured surfaces}, series = {Color Research and Application}, volume = {47}, journal = {Color Research and Application}, number = {2}, doi = {10.1002/col.22740}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-257314}, pages = {377-387}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Visual perception of surfaces is of utmost importance in everyday life. Therefore, it comes naturally, that different surface structures evoke different visual impressions in the viewer even if the material underlying these surface structures is the same. This topic is especially virulent for manufacturing processes in which more than one stakeholder is involved, but where the final product needs to meet certain criteria. A common practice to address such slight but perceivable differences in the visual appearance of structured surfaces is that trained evaluators assess the samples and assign a pass or fail. However, this process is both time consuming and cost intensive. Thus, we conducted two studies to analyze the relationship between physical surface structure parameters and participants visual assessment of the samples. With the first experiment, we aimed at uncovering a relationship between physical roughness parameters and visual lightness perception while the second experiment was designed to test participants' discrimination sensitivity across the range of stimuli. Perceived lightness and the measured surface roughness were nonlinearly related to the surface structure. Additionally, we found a linear relationship between the engraving parameter and physical brightness. Surface structure was an ideal predictor for perceived lightness and participants discriminated equally well across the entire range of surface structures.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Reis2022, author = {Reis, Felix}, title = {Realization and Spectroscopy of the Quantum Spin Hall Insulator Bismuthene on Silicon Carbide}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25825}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-258250}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Topological matter is one of the most vibrant research fields of contemporary solid state physics since the theoretical prediction of the quantum spin Hall effect in graphene in 2005. Quantum spin Hall insulators possess a vanishing bulk conductivity but symmetry-protected, helical edge states that give rise to dissipationless charge transport. The experimental verification of this exotic state of matter in 2007 lead to a boost of research activity in this field, inspired by possible ground-breaking future applications. However, the use of the quantum spin Hall materials available to date is limited to cryogenic temperatures owing to their comparably small bulk band gaps. In this thesis, we follow a novel approach to realize a quantum spin Hall material with a large energy gap and epitaxially grow bismuthene, i.e., Bi atoms adopting a honeycomb lattice, in a \((\sqrt{3}\times\sqrt{3})\) reconstruction on the semiconductor SiC(0001). In this way, we profit both from the honeycomb symmetry as well as the large spin-orbit coupling of Bi, which, in combination, give rise to a topologically non-trivial band gap on the order of one electronvolt. An in-depth theoretical analysis demonstrates that the covalent bond between the Si and Bi atoms is not only stabilizing the Bi film but is pivotal to attain the quantum spin Hall phase. The preparation of high-quality, unreconstructed SiC(0001) substrates sets the basis for the formation of bismuthene and requires an extensive procedure in ultra-pure dry H\(_2\) gas. Scanning tunneling microscopy measurements unveil the (\(1\times1\)) surface periodicity and smooth terrace planes, which are suitable for the growth of single Bi layers by means of molecular beam epitaxy. The chemical configuration of the resulting Bi film and its oxidation upon exposure to ambient atmosphere are inspected with X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy reveals the excellent agreement of probed and calculated band structure. In particular, it evidences a characteristic Rashba-splitting of the valence bands at the K point. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy probes signatures of this splitting, as well, and allows to determine the full band gap with a magnitude of \(E_\text{gap}\approx0.8\,\text{eV}\). Constant-current images and local-density-of-state maps confirm the presence of a planar honeycomb lattice, which forms several domains due to different, yet equivalent, nucleation sites of the (\(\sqrt{3}\times\sqrt{3}\))-Bi reconstruction. Differential conductivity measurements demonstrate that bismuthene edge states evolve at atomic steps of the SiC substrate. The probed, metallic local density of states is in agreement with the density of states expected from the edge state's energy dispersion found in density functional theory calculations - besides a pronounced dip at the Fermi level. By means of temperature- and energy-dependent tunneling spectroscopy it is shown that the spectral properties of this suppressed density of states are successfully captured in the framework of the Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid theory and most likely originate from enhanced electronic correlations in the edge channel.}, subject = {Zweidimensionales Material}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Gaal2022, author = {Gaal, Chiara Claudia}, title = {Cardiac Antigens and T cell Specificity after Experimental Myocardial Infarction in Mice}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-26004}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-260047}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Cardiovascular diseases (CVD), subsuming atherosclerosis of the coronary arteries and subsequent myocardial infarction, are the leading cause of death in the European Union (over 4 million deaths annually), with devastating individual and economic consequences. Recent studies revealed that T cells play a crucial role in post-MI inflammation, healing and remodelling processes. Nevertheless, the specificity profile of adaptive immune responses in the infarcted myocardium has not yet been differentiated. The experiments portrayed in this thesis sought to assess whether post-MI CD4+ T cell responses in mice are triggered by heart specific antigens, and eventually identify relevant epitopes. We were able to create a murine antigen atlas including a list of 206 epitopes for I-Ab and 193 epitopes for I-Ad presented on MHC-II in the context of MI. We sought to consecutively test this panel by in vitro T cell proliferation and antigen recall assays ex vivo. The elispot assay was used as a readout for antigen-specific stimulation by measurement of IL-2 and IFN-γ production, currently the most sensitive approach available to detect even small counts of antigen producing cells. Splenocytes as well as lymphocytes from mediastinal lymph nodes were purified from animals 7 days or 56 days after EMI conducted by ligation of the left anterior descending artery. We were able to provide evidence that post-MI T cell responses in Balb/c mice are triggered by heart-specific antigens and that MYHCA, especially MYHCA614-628, is relevant for that response. Moreover, a significant specific T cell response after MI in C57BL/6J mice was observed for α actin, cardiac muscle 1 [ACTC1], myosin-binding protein C3 [MYBPC3] and myosin heavy chain α [MYHCA] derived heart specific antigens. Generally, the epitopes of interest for Balb/c as well as C57BL/6J could be further investigated and may eventually be modulated in the future.}, subject = {Regulatorische T-Lymphozyt}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Schmitt2022, author = {Schmitt, Nadine J. B.}, title = {What is integrity and how do we use it? - Enhancing the validity of integrity by reviewing integrity tests, expanding the nomological network, and reducing faking}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-26046}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-260468}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {This dissertation focuses on the construct and criterion validity of integrity tests and aims to enhance both. To accomplish this goal, three approaches were adopted: First, an overview and systematic comparison of integrity tests was conducted with reference to the construction and application of the tests. Second, the nomological network of integrity tests was expanded with reference to honesty-humility and organizational citizenship behavior at their factor and facet level. Third, two promising methods to reduce faking on integrity tests were tested: the double rating method (Hui, 2001) and the indirect questioning technique. In line with previous research, the results of the overview and comparison of integrity measures confirmed that integrity tests are multidimensional and heterogenous. A clear definition of integrity is urgently needed. The personality trait of honesty-humility and its facets of fairness, and modesty revealed the most significant relationships to integrity. Moreover, organizational citizenship behavior and its facets of altruism, conscientiousness, and sportsmanship were found to significantly relate to integrity. Furthermore, integrity tests were able not only to predict organizational citizenship behavior but also to incrementally predict job performance and organizational citizenship behavior beyond the factor and facet level of the personality traits of conscientiousness and honesty-humility. In contrast to the indirect questioning technique, the double rating method, which includes an other rating and a self rating, was shown to be able to significantly reduce faking on integrity tests in an anonymous survey setting. This dissertation makes an important contribution to better explain the construct and nomological network of integrity, provide a more detailed view on integrity tests and their protection against faking, and expand the predictive and incremental validity of these tests. The implications for future research and practice are further discussed.}, subject = {Integrit{\"a}t}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Hausoel2022, author = {Hausoel, Andreas}, title = {Electronic magnetism in correlated systems: from quantum materials down to Earth's core}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25444}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-254444}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {In the last decade continuous-time quantum Monte Carlo in the hybridization expansion (CTHYB) was one of the most successful Monte Carlo techniques to describe correlated quantum phenomena in conjunction with dynamical mean field theory (DMFT). The first part of the thesis consists of algorithmical developments regarding CTHYB and DMFT. I provide a complete derivation and an extensive discussion of the expansion formula. We generalized it to treat spin-orbit coupling, and invented the superstate sampling algorithm to make it efficient enough for describing systems with general interactions, crystal fields and spin-orbit coupling at low temperatures. But CTHYB is known to fail in the standard implementation for equal-time correlators, certain higher-order Green's functions and the atomic limit; we discovered that its estimator for the Greens function is also inconsistent for Anderson impurities with finite, discrete baths. I focus then on further improvements of CTHYB that we have conceived and worked on, in particular for f-orbitals and for taking physical symmetries into account in the calculation of the Monte Carlo observables. The second part of the thesis presents selected physical applications of these methods. I show DMFT calculations of highest accuracy for elemental iron and nickel and discover a new mechanism of magnetic ordering in nickel: the ordering of band structure-induced local moments. Then we analyze the stability of this phenomenon under pressure and temperatures, that characterize in the Earth's core. We find, that the mechanism survives these conditions and may give a significant contribution to the generation of the Earth's magnetic field. The next topic is the stability of double Dirac fermions against electronic correlations. We find, that the Coulomb interaction in the corresponding material Bi2 CuO4 are strong enough to destroy the double Dirac cone, and substantial uniform pressure is necessary to restore them. In the last chapter I derive the properties of Higgs and Goldstone bosons from Ginzburg-Landau theory, and identify these excitations in a model of an excitonic magnet.}, subject = {Monte-Carlo-Simulation}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Schindler2022, author = {Schindler, Dorothee}, title = {Water Oxidation with Multinuclear Ruthenium Catalysts}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-23309}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-233093}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {In terms of the need of environmentally benign renewable and storable energy sources, splitting of water into hydrogen and oxygen by using sunlight is a promising approach. Hereby, water oxidation catalysts (WOCs) are required to perform the water oxidation comprising the transfer of four electrons to provide the reducing equivalents for producing hydrogen. The class of Ru(bda) (bda = 2,2'-bipyridine-6,6'-dicarboxylate) catalysts has proven to be efficient for this reaction. In this thesis, ligand exchange processes in Ru(bda) complexes have been analyzed and the formation of multinuclear macrocyclic WOCs was studied. Based on the knowledge acquired by these studies, new multinuclear cyclic Ru(bda) complexes have been synthesized and their catalytic efficiencies in homogeneous water oxidation have been investigated. Going one step further for setting up functional devices, molecular WOCs have been immobilized on conducting or semiconducting supporting materials. Direct anchoring on carbon nanotubes generated a promising materials for further applications.}, subject = {Rutheniumkomplexe}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{BathePeters2022, author = {Bathe-Peters, Marc}, title = {Spectroscopic approaches for the localization and dynamics of β\(_1\)- and β\(_2\)-adrenergic receptors in cardiomyocytes}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25812}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-258126}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {In the heart the β\(_1\)-adrenergic receptor (AR) and the β\(_2\)-AR, two prototypical G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), are both activated by the same hormones, namely adrenaline and noradrenaline. Both receptors couple to stimulatory G\(_s\) proteins, mediate an increase in cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) and influence the contractility and frequency of the heart upon stimulation. However, activation of the β\(_1\)-AR, not the β\(_2\)-AR, lead to other additional effects, such as changes in gene transcription resulting in cardiac hypertrophy, leading to speculations on how distinct effects can arise from receptors coupled to the same downstream signaling pathway. In this thesis the question of whether this distinct behavior may originate from a differential localization of these two receptors in adult cardiomyocytes is addressed. Therefore, fluorescence spectroscopy tools are developed and implemented in order to elucidate the presence and dynamics of these endogenous receptors at the outer plasma membrane as well as on the T-tubular network of intact adult cardiomyocytes. This allows the visualization of confined localization and diffusion of the β\(_2\)-AR to the T-tubular network at endogenous expression. In contrast, the β\(_1\)-AR is found diffusing at both the outer plasma membrane and the T-tubules. Upon overexpression of the β\(_2\)-AR in adult transgenic cardiomyocytes, the receptors experience a loss of this compartmentalization and are also found at the cell surface. These data suggest that distinct signaling and functional effects can be controlled by specific cell surface targeting of the receptor subtypes. The tools at the basis of this thesis work are a fluorescent adrenergic antagonist in combination of fluorescence fluctuation spectroscopy to monitor the localization and dynamics of the lowly expressed adrenergic receptors. Along the way to optimizing these approaches, I worked on combining widefield and confocal imaging in one setup, as well as implementing a stable autofocus mechanism using electrically tunable lenses.}, subject = {G-Protein gekoppelte Rezeptoren}, language = {en} } @article{WillmsSchwabvonWebskyetal.2022, author = {Willms, A. G. and Schwab, R. and von Websky, M. W. and Berrevoet, F. and Tartaglia, D. and S{\"o}relius, K. and Fortelny, R. H. and Bj{\"o}rck, M. and Monchal, T. and Brennfleck, F. and Bulian, D. and Beltzer, C. and Germer, C. T. and Lock, J. F.}, title = {Factors influencing the fascial closure rate after open abdomen treatment: Results from the European Hernia Society (EuraHS) Registry. Surgical technique matters}, series = {Hernia}, volume = {26}, journal = {Hernia}, number = {1}, organization = {EURAHS Open Abdomen Group}, issn = {1265-4906}, doi = {10.1007/s10029-020-02336-x}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-234871}, pages = {61-73}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Purpose Definitive fascial closure is an essential treatment objective after open abdomen treatment and mitigates morbidity and mortality. There is a paucity of evidence on factors that promote or prevent definitive fascial closure. Methods A multi-center multivariable analysis of data from the Open Abdomen Route of the European Hernia Society included all cases between 1 May 2015 and 31 December 2019. Different treatment elements, i.e. the use of a visceral protective layer, negative-pressure wound therapy and dynamic closure techniques, as well as patient characteristics were included in the multivariable analysis. The study was registered in the International Clinical Trials Registry Platform via the German Registry for Clinical Trials (DRK00021719). Results Data were included from 630 patients from eleven surgical departments in six European countries. Indications for OAT were peritonitis (46\%), abdominal compartment syndrome (20.5\%), burst abdomen (11.3\%), abdominal trauma (9\%), and other conditions (13.2\%). The overall definitive fascial closure rate was 57.5\% in the intention-to-treat analysis and 71\% in the per-protocol analysis. The multivariable analysis showed a positive correlation of negative-pressure wound therapy (odds ratio: 2.496, p < 0.001) and dynamic closure techniques (odds ratio: 2.687, p < 0.001) with fascial closure and a negative correlation of intra-abdominal contamination (odds ratio: 0.630, p = 0.029) and the number of surgical procedures before OAT (odds ratio: 0.740, p = 0.005) with DFC. Conclusion The clinical course and prognosis of open abdomen treatment can significantly be improved by the use of treatment elements such as negative-pressure wound therapy and dynamic closure techniques, which are associated with definitive fascial closure.}, language = {en} } @article{GhafoorNordbeckRitteretal.2022, author = {Ghafoor, Hina and Nordbeck, Peter and Ritter, Oliver and Pauli, Paul and Schulz, Stefan M.}, title = {Can Religiosity and Social Support Explain Effects of Trait Emotional Intelligence on Health-Related Quality of Life: A Cross-Cultural Study}, series = {Journal of Religion and Health}, volume = {61}, journal = {Journal of Religion and Health}, number = {1}, issn = {0022-4197}, doi = {10.1007/s10943-020-01163-9}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-232823}, pages = {158-174}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Religion and social support along with trait emotional intelligence (EI) help individuals to reduce stress caused by difficult situations. Their implications may vary across cultures in reference to predicting health-related quality of life (HRQoL). A convenience sample of N = 200 chronic heart failure (CHF) patients was recruited at cardiology centers in Germany (n = 100) and Pakistan (n = 100). Results indicated that trait-EI predicted better mental component of HRQoL in Pakistani and German CHF patients. Friends as social support appeared relevant for German patients only. Qualitative data indicate an internal locus of control in German as compared to Pakistani patients. Strengthening the beneficial role of social support in Pakistani patients is one example of how the current findings may inspire culture-specific treatment to empower patients dealing with the detrimental effects of CHF.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Dietzsch2022, author = {Dietzsch, Julia}, title = {Nucleic acid-mediated fluorescence activation and chromophore assembly}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25976}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-259761}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Nucleic acids are not only one of the most important classes of macromolecules in biochemistry but also a promising platform for the defined arrangement of chromophores. Thanks to their precise organization by directional polar and hydrophobic interactions, oligonucleotides can be exploited as suitable templates for multichromophore assemblies with predictable properties. To expand the toolbox of emissive, base pairing nucleobase analogs several barbituric acid merocyanine (BAM) chromophores with tunable spectroscopic properties were synthesized and incorporated into RNA, DNA and glycol nucleic acid (GNA) oligonucleotides. A multitude of duplexes containing up to ten BAM chromophores was obtained and analysis by spectroscopic methods revealed the presence of dipolarly coupled merocyanine aggregates with properties strongly dependent on the chromophore orientation toward each other and the backbone conformation. These characteristics were exploited for various applications such as FRET pair formation and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) experiments. The observed formation of higher-order aggregates implies future applications of these new oligonucleotide-chromophore systems as light-harvesting DNA nanomaterials. Besides oligonucleotide templated covalent assembly of chromophores also non-covalent nucleic acid-chromophore complexes are a broad field of research. Among these, fluorogenic RNA aptamers are of special interest with the most versatile ones based on derivatives of the GFP chromophore hydroxybenzylidene imidazolone (HBI). Therefore, new HBI-derived chromophores with an expanded conjugated system and an additional exocyclic amino group for an enhanced binding affinity were synthesized and analyzed in complex with the Chili aptamer. Among these, structurally new fluorogenes with strong fluorescence activation upon binding to Chili were identified which are promising for further derivatization and application as color-switching sensor devices for example.}, subject = {Nucleins{\"a}uren}, language = {en} } @article{HuangHuKrummenacheretal.2022, author = {Huang, Mingming and Hu, Jiefeng and Krummenacher, Ivo and Friedrich, Alexandra and Braunschweig, Holger and Westcott, Stephen A. and Radius, Udo and Marder, Todd B.}, title = {Base-Mediated Radical Borylation of Alkyl Sulfones}, series = {Chemistry—A European Journal}, volume = {28}, journal = {Chemistry—A European Journal}, number = {3}, doi = {10.1002/chem.202103866}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-257281}, pages = {e202103866}, year = {2022}, abstract = {A practical and direct method was developed for the production of versatile alkyl boronate esters via transition metal-free borylation of primary and secondary alkyl sulfones. The key to the success of the strategy is the use of bis(neopentyl glycolato) diboron (B\(_{2}\)neop\(_{2}\)), with a stoichiometric amount of base as a promoter. The practicality and industrial potential of this protocol are highlighted by its wide functional group tolerance, the late-stage modification of complex compounds, no need for further transesterification, and operational simplicity. Radical clock, radical trap experiments, and EPR studies were conducted which show that the borylation process involves radical intermediates.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Mueller2022, author = {M{\"u}ller, Valentin Leander}, title = {Transport signatures of topological and trivial states in the three-dimensional topological insulator HgTe}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25952}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-259521}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {The thesis at hand is concerned with improving our understanding of and our control over transport properties of the three-dimensional topological insulator HgTe. Topological insulators are characterized by an insulating bulk and symmetry-protected metallic surface states. These topological surface states hold great promise for research and technology; at the same time, many properties of experimentally accessible topological insulator materials still need to be explored thoroughly. The overall aim of this thesis was to experimentally investigate micrometer-sized HgTe transport devices to observe the ballistic transport regime as well as intercarrier scattering and possibly identify special properties of the topological surface states. Part I of the thesis presents lithographic developments concerned with etching small HgTe devices. The aim was to replace existing processes which relied on dry etching with high-energy \(\text{Ar}^+\) ions and an organic etch mask. This etching method is known to degrade the HgTe crystal quality. In addition, the etch mask turned out to be not durable for long etching processes and difficult to remove completely after etching. First, \(\text{BaF}_2\) was introduced as a new etch mask for dry etching to replace the organic etch mask. With common surface characterization techniques like SEM and XPS it was shown that \(\text{BaF}_2\) etch masks are easy to deposit, highly durable in common dry etching processes for \(\text{Hg}_{1-x}\text{Cd}_x\text{Te}\), and easy to remove in deionized water. Transport results of HgTe devices fabricated with the new etch mask are comparable to results obtained with the old process. At the same time, the new etch mask can withstand longer etching times and does not cause problems due to incomplete removal. Second, a new inductively coupled plasma dry etching process based on \(\text{CH}_4\) and Ar was introduced. This etching process is compatible with \(\text{BaF}_2\) etch masks and yields highly reproducible results. Transport results indicate that the new etching process does not degrade the crystal quality and is suitable to produce high-quality transport devices even in the micrometer range. A comparison with wet-etched samples shows that inductively coupled plasma etching introduces a pronounced edge roughness. This - usually undesirable - property is actually beneficial for some of the experiments in this study and mostly irrelevant for others. Therefore, most samples appearing in this thesis were fabricated with the new process. Part II of the thesis details the advancements made in identifying topological and trivial states which contribute to transport in HgTe three-dimensional topological insulators. To this end, macroscopic Hall bar samples were fabricated from high-quality tensilely strained HgTe layers by means of the improved lithographic processes. All samples were equipped with a top gate electrode, and some also with a modulation doping layer or a back gate electrode to modify the carrier density of the surface states on both sides of the HgTe layer. Due to the high sample quality, Landau levels could be well-resolved in standard transport measurements down to magnetic fields of less than 0.5T. High-resolution measurements of the Landau level dispersion with gate voltage and magnetic field allowed disentangling different transport channels. The main result here is that the upper (electron) branches of the two topological surface states contribute to transport in all experimentally relevant density regimes, while the hole branch is not accessible. Far in n-regime bulk conduction band states give a minor contribution to transport. More importantly, trivial bulk valence band holes come into play close to the charge neutrality point. Further in p-regime, the strong applied gate voltage leads to the formation of two-dimensional, massive hole states at the HgTe surface. The interplay of different states gives rise to rich physics: Top gate-back gate maps revealed that an anticrossing of Landau levels from the two topological surface states occurs at equal filling. A possible explanation for this effect is a weak hybridization of the surface states; however, future studies need to further clarify this point. Furthermore, the superposition of n-type topological and p-type trivial surface states leads to an intriguing Landau level dispersion. The good quantization of the Hall conductance in this situation indicates that the counterpropagating edge states interact with each other. The nature of this interaction will be the topic of further research. Part III of the thesis is focused on HgTe microstructures. These "channel samples" have a typical width of 0.5 to 4µm and a typical length of 5 to 80µm. The quality of these devices benefits particularly from the improved lithographic processes. As a result, the impurity mean free path of the topological surface state electrons is on the order of the device width and transport becomes semiballistic. This was verified by measuring the channel resistance in small magnetic fields in n-regime. The deflection of carriers towards the dissipative channel walls results in a pronounced peak in the magnetoresistance, which scales in a predictable manner with the channel width. To investigate transport effects due to mutual scattering of charge carriers, the differential resistance of channel samples was measured as a function of carrier temperature. Selective heating of the charge carriers - but not the lattice - was achieved by passing a heating current through the channel. Increasing the carrier temperature has two pronounced effects when the Fermi level is situated in proximity to the bulk valence band maximum where the density of states is large. First, when both topological surface state electrons and bulk holes are present, electron-hole scattering leads to a pronounced increase in resistance with increasing carrier temperature. Second, a thermally induced increase of the electron and hole carrier densities reduces the resistance again at higher temperatures. A model considering these two effects was developed, which can well reproduce the experimental results. Current heating experiments in zero-gap HgTe quantum wells and compressively strained HgTe layers are consistent with this model. These observations raise the question as to how electron-hole scattering may affect other transport properties of HgTe-based three-dimensional topological insulators, which is briefly discussed in the outlook.}, subject = {Topologischer Isolator}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{ReuterWeissenberger2022, author = {Reuter-Weissenberger, Philipp}, title = {The role of a fungal-specific transcription regulator on vacuolar biology and host interaction in \(Candida\) \(albicans\)}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25928}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-259287}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Microorganisms that colonize the human body face large fluctuations in their surroundings. Therefore, those microbes developed sophisticated mechanisms that allow them to adapt their cell biology and maintain cellular homeostasis. One organelle vital to preserve cell physiology is the vacuole. The vacuole exhibits a wide range of functions and is able to adjust itself in response to both external and internal stimuli. Moreover, it plays an important role in host interaction and virulence in fungi such as Candida albicans. Despite this connection, only a few regulatory proteins have been described to modulate vacuolar biology in fungal pathogens. Furthermore, whether such regulation alters fungus-host interplay remains largely unknown. This thesis focuses on the characterization of ZCF8, a fungus-specific transcription regulator in the human-associated yeast C. albicans. To this end, I combined genome-wide protein-DNA interaction assays and gene expression analysis that identified genes regulated by Zcf8p. Fluorescence microscopy uncovered that several top targets of Zcf8p localize to the fungal vacuole. Moreover, deletion and overexpression of ZCF8 resulted in alterations in vacuolar morphology and in luminal pH and rendered the fungus resistant or susceptible to a vacuole-disturbing drug. Finally, in vitro adherence assays showed that Zcf8p modulates the attachment of C. albicans to human epithelial cells in a vacuole-dependent manner. Given those findings, I posit that the previously uncharacterized transcription regulator Zcf8p modulates fungal attachment to epithelial cells in a manner that depends on the status of the fungal vacuole. Furthermore, the results highlight that vacuolar physiology is a substantial factor influencing the physical interaction between Candida cells and mammalian mucosal surfaces.}, subject = {Vakuole}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Muralidhara2022, author = {Muralidhara, Prathibha}, title = {Perturbations in plant energy homeostasis alter lateral root plasticity via SnRK1-bZIP63-ARF19 signalling}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-20563}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-205636}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Photosynthetic plants have a remarkable ability to modify their metabolism and development according to ever changing environmental conditions. The root system displays continuous growth of the primary root and formation of lateral roots enabling efficient water and nutrient uptake and anchorage of the plant in soil. With regard to lateral roots, development is post-embryonic, originating from the pericycle of the primary root. Coordinated activity of several molecular signalling pathways controlled by the hormone auxin is important throughout all stages of lateral root development.At first, two adjacent Xylem Pole Pericycle (XPP) cells are activated and the nuclei of these cells migrate towards a common cell wall.This is followed by XPP cells acquiring volume thus swelling up.The XPP cells then undergo anticlinal cell division, followed by a series of periclinal and anticlinal divisions,leading to lateral root primordia.These break through the radial cell layers and emerge out the primary root. Although root system plasticity is well-described in response to environmental cues such as ion nutrition in the soil, little is known on how root development is shaped according to the endogenous energy status of the plant.In this study, we were able to connect limited perturbations in photosynthetic energy supply to lateral root development.We established two experimental systems - treatment with low light and unexpected darkness which led to short-term energy imbalance in the plant.These short perturbations administered, showed an increase in the emerged lateral root density and decrease in root hexose availability and activation of the low energy marker gene ASN1 (ASPARAGINE SYNTHETASE 1).Although not demonstrated, presumably, these disturbances in the plant energy homeo-stasis activates SnRK1 (SNF1 RELATED KINASE 1),an evolutionary conserved kinase mediat-ing metabolic and transcriptional responses towards low energy conditions. In A. thaliana, two catalytic α-subunits of this kinase (SnRK1.α1 and SnRK1.α2) are functionally active and form ternary complexes with the regulatory β- and γ- subunits. Whereas unexpected darkness results in an increase in emerged lateral root density, the snrk1.α1 loss-of-function mutant displayed decrease in emerged lateral root density. As this effect is not that pronounced in the snrk1.α2 loss-of-function mutant, the α1 catalytic subunit is important for the observed lateral root phenotype under short-term energy perturbations. Moreover, root expression patterns of SnRK1.α1:GFP supports a role of this catalytic subunit in lateral root development. Furthermore, the lateral root response during short-term perturbations requires the SnRK1 downstream transcriptional regulator bZIP63 (BASIC LEU-CINE ZIPPER 63), as demonstrated here by a loss-of-function approach. Phenotypic studies showed that in comparison to wild-type, bzip63 mutants displayed decreased lateral root density upon low-light and unexpected darkness conditions. Previous work has demonstrat-ed that SnRK1 directly phosphorylates bZIP63 at three serine residues. Alanine-exchange mutants of the SnRK1 dependent bZIP63 phosphorylation sites behave similarly to bzip63 loss-of-function mutants and do not display increased lateral root density upon short-term unexpected darkness. This data strongly supports an impact of SnRK1-bZIP63 signalling in mediating the observed lateral root density phenotype. Plants expressing a bZIP63:YFP fu-sion protein showed specific localization patterns in primary root and in all developmental stages of the lateral root. bzip63 loss-of-function mutant lines displayed reduced early stage lateral root initiation events under unexpected darkness as demonstrated by Differen-tial Interference Contrast microscopy (DIC) and the use of a GATA23 reporter line. This data supports a role of bZIP63 in early lateral root initiation. Next, by employing Chromatin Immunoprecitation (ChIP) sequencing, we were able to iden-tify global binding targets of bZIP63, including the auxin-regulated transcription factor (TF) ARF19 (AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR 19), a well-described central regulator of lateral root development. Additional ChIP experiments confirmed direct binding of bZIP63 to an ARF19 promoter region harboring a G-Box cis-element, a well-established bZIP63 binding site. We also observed that short-term energy perturbation upon unexpected darkness induced tran-scription of ARF19, which was impaired in the bzip63 loss-of-function mutant. These results propose that bZIP63 mediates lateral root development under short-term energy perturba-tion via ARF19. In conclusion, this study provides a novel mechanistic link between energy homeostasis and plant development. By employing reverse genetics, confocal imaging and high-throughput sequencing strategies, we were able to propose a SnRK1-bZIP63-ARF19 signalling module in integrating energy signalling into lateral root developmental programs.}, subject = {Arabidopsis thaliana}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Hoecker2022, author = {H{\"o}cker, Julian Harald}, title = {High-quality Organolead Trihalide Perovskite Crystals: Growth, Characterisation, and Photovoltaic Applications}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25859}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-258590}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Overview of the Organolead Trihalide Perovskite Crystal Area Studies of perovskite single crystals with high crystallographic quality is an important technological area of the perovskite research, which enables to estimate their full optoelectronic potential, and thus to boost their future applications [26]. It was therefore essential to grow high-quality single crystals with lowest structural as well as chemical defect densities and with a stoichiometry relevant for their thin-film counterparts [26]. Optoelectronic devices, e.g. solar cells, are highly complex systems in which the properties of the active layer (absorber) are strongly influenced by the adjacent layers, so it is not always easy to define the targeted properties and elaborate the design rules for the active layer. Currently, organolead trihalide perovskite (OLTP) single crystals with the structure ABX3 are one of the most studied crystalline systems. These hybrid crystals are solids composed of an organic cation such as methylammonium (A = MA+) or formamidinium (A = FA+) to form a three-dimensional periodic lattice together with the lead cation (B = Pb2+) and a halogen anion such as chloride, bromide or iodide (X = Cl-, Br- or I-) [23]. Among them are methylammonium lead tribromide (MAPbBr3), methylammonium lead triiodide (MAPbI3), as well as methylammonium lead trichloride (MAPbCl3) [62, 63]. Important representatives with the larger cation FA+ are formamidinium lead tribromide (FAPbBr3) and formamidinium lead triiodide (FAPbI3) [23, 64]. Besides the exchange of cations as well as anions, it was possible to grow crystals containing two halogens to obtain mixed crystals with different proportions of chlorine to bromine and bromine to iodine, as it is shown in Figure 70. By varying the mixing ratio of the halogens, it was therefore possible to vary the colour and thus the absorption properties of the crystals [85], as it can be done with thin polycrystalline perovskite films. In addition, since a few years it is also doable to grow complex crystals that contain several cations as well as anions [26, 80, 81]. These include the perovskites double cation - double halide formamidinium lead triiodide - methylammonium lead tribromide (FAPbI3)0.9(MAPbBr3)0.1 (FAMA) [26, 80] and formamidinium lead triiodide - methylammonium lead tribromide - caesium lead tribromide (FAPbI3)0.9(MAPbBr3)0.05(CsPbBr3)0.05 (CsFAMA) [81], which have made a significant contribution to increase the power conversion efficiency (PCE) in thin-film photovoltaics [47, 79, 182]. The growth of crystals to this day is performed exclusively from solution [23, 26, 56, 62]. Important preparation methods are the cooling acid-based precursor solution crystallisation [22], the inverse temperature crystallisation (ITC) [62], and the antisolvent vapour-assistant crystallisation (AVC) [137]. In the cooling crystallisation, the precursor salts AX and PbX2 are dissolved in an aqueous halogen-containing acid at high temperatures [56]. Controlled and slow cooling finally results in a supersaturated precursor solution, which leads to spontaneous nucleation of crystal nuclei, followed by subsequent crystal growth. The ITC method is based on the inverse or retrograde solubility of a dissociated perovskite in an organic solvent [23, 64]. With increasing temperature, the solubility of the perovskite decreases and mm-sized crystals can be grown within a few hours [23]. In the AVC method, the precursors are also dissolved in an organic solvent as well [137]. By slow evaporation of a so-called antisolvent [137], the solubility of the perovskite in the now present solvent mixture decreases and it finally precipitates. In addition, there are many other methods with the goal of growing high quality and large crystals in a short period of time [60, 61, 233, 310].}, subject = {Perowskit}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Wanner2022, author = {Wanner, Jonas Paul}, title = {Artificial Intelligence for Human Decision-Makers: Systematization, Perception, and Adoption of Intelligent Decision Support Systems in Industry 4.0}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25901}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-259014}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Innovative possibilities for data collection, networking, and evaluation are unleashing previously untapped potential for industrial production. However, harnessing this potential also requires a change in the way we work. In addition to expanded automation, human-machine cooperation is becoming more important: The machine achieves a reduction in complexity for humans through artificial intelligence. In fractions of a second large amounts of data of high decision quality are analyzed and suggestions are offered. The human being, for this part, usually makes the ultimate decision. He validates the machine's suggestions and, if necessary, (physically) executes them. Both entities are highly dependent on each other to accomplish the task in the best possible way. Therefore, it seems particularly important to understand to what extent such cooperation can be effective. Current developments in the field of artificial intelligence show that research in this area is particularly focused on neural network approaches. These are considered to be highly powerful but have the disadvantage of lacking transparency. Their inherent computational processes and the respective result reasoning remain opaque to humans. Some researchers assume that human users might therefore reject the system's suggestions. The research domain of explainable artificial intelligence (XAI) addresses this problem and tries to develop methods to realize systems that are highly efficient and explainable. This work is intended to provide further insights relevant to the defined goal of XAI. For this purpose, artifacts are developed that represent research achievements regarding the systematization, perception, and adoption of artificially intelligent decision support systems from a user perspective. The focus is on socio-technical insights with the aim to better understand which factors are important for effective human-machine cooperation. The elaborations predominantly represent extended grounded research. Thus, the artifacts imply an extension of knowledge in order to develop and/ or test effective XAI methods and techniques based on this knowledge. Industry 4.0, with a focus on maintenance, is used as the context for this development.}, subject = {K{\"u}nstliche Intelligenz}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Bangelesa2022, author = {Bangelesa, Freddy Fefe}, title = {Impacts of climate variability and change on Maize (\(Zea\) \(mays\)) production in tropical Africa}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25934}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-259347}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Climate change is undeniable and constitutes one of the major threats of the 21st century. It impacts sectors of our society, usually negatively, and is likely to worsen towards the middle and end of the century. The agricultural sector is of particular concern, for it is the primary source of food and is strongly dependent on the weather. Considerable attention has been given to the impact of climate change on African agriculture because of the continent's high vulnerability, which is mainly due to its low adaptation capac- ity. Several studies have been implemented to evaluate the impact of climate change on this continent. The results are sometimes controversial since the studies are based on different approaches, climate models and crop yield datasets. This study attempts to contribute substantially to this large topic by suggesting specific types of climate pre- dictors. The study focuses on tropical Africa and its maize yield. Maize is considered to be the most important crop in this region. To estimate the effect of climate change on maize yield, the study began by developing a robust cross-validated multiple linear regression model, which related climate predictors and maize yield. This statistical trans- fer function is reputed to be less prone to overfitting and multicollinearity problems. It is capable of selecting robust predictors, which have a physical meaning. Therefore, the study combined: large-scale predictors, which were derived from the principal component analysis of the monthly precipitation and temperature; traditional local-scale predictors, mainly, the mean precipitation, mean temperature, maximum temperature and minimum temperature; and the Water Requirement Satisfaction Index (WRSI), derived from the specific crop (maize) water balance model. The projected maize-yield change is forced by a regional climate model (RCM) REMO under two emission scenarios: high emission scenario (RCP8.5) and mid-range emission scenario (RCP4.5). The different effects of these groups of predictors in projecting the future maize-yield changes were also assessed. Furthermore, the study analysed the impact of climate change on the global WRSI. The results indicate that almost 27 \% of the interannual variability of maize production of the entire region is explained by climate variables. The influence of climate predictors on maize-yield production is more pronounced in West Africa, reaching 55 \% in some areas. The model projection indicates that the maize yield in the entire region is expected to decrease by the middle of the century under an RCP8.5 emission scenario, and from the middle of the century to the end of the century, the production will slightly recover but will remain negative (around -10 \%). However, in some regions of East Africa, a slight increase in maize yield is expected. The maize-yield projection under RCP4.5 remains relatively unchanged compared to the baseline period (1982-2016). The results further indicate that large-scale predictors are the most critical drivers of the global year-to-year maize-yield variability, and ENSO - which is highly correlated with the most important predictor (PC2) - seems to be the physical process underlying this variability. The effects of local predictors are more pronounced in the eastern parts of the region. The impact of the future climate change on WRSI reveals that the availability of maize water is expected to decrease everywhere, except in some parts of eastern Africa.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Harder2022, author = {Harder, Tristan H.}, title = {Topological Modes and Flatbands in Microcavity Exciton-Polariton Lattices}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25900}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-259008}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {The fascination of microcavity exciton-polaritons (polaritons) rests upon the combination of advanced technological control over both the III-V semiconductor material platform as well as the precise spectroscopic access to polaritonic states, which provide access to the investigation of open questions and complex phenomena due to the inherent nonlinearity and direct spectroscopic observables such as energy-resolved real and Fourier space information, pseudospin and coherence. The focus of this work was to advance the research area of polariton lattice simulators with a particular emphasis on their lasing properties. Following the brief introduction into the fundamental physics of polariton lattices in chapter 2, important aspects of the sample fabrication as well as the Fourier spectroscopy techniques used to investigate various features of these lattices were summarized in chapter 3. Here, the implementation of a spatial light modulator for advanced excitation schemes was presented. At the foundation of this work is the capability to confine polaritons into micropillars or microtraps resulting in discrete energy levels. By arranging these pillars or traps into various lattice geometries and ensuring coupling between neighbouring sites, polaritonic band structures were engineered. In chapter 4, the formation of a band structure was visualised in detail by investigating ribbons of honeycomb lattices. Here, the transition of the discrete energy levels of a single chain of microtraps to the fully developed band structure of a honeycomb lattice was observed. This study allows to design the size of individual domains in more complicated lattice geometries such that a description using band structures becomes feasible, as it revealed that a width of just six unit cells is sufficient to reproduce all characteristic features of the S band of a honeycomb lattice. In particular in the context of potential technological applications in the realms of lasing, the laser-like, coherent emission from polariton microcavities that can be achieved through the excitation of polariton condensates is intriguing. The condensation process is significantly altered in a lattice potential environment when compared to a planar microcavity. Therefore, an investigation of the polariton condensation process in a lattice with respect to the characteristics of the excitation laser, the exciton-photon detuning as well as the reduced trap distance that represents a key design parameter for polaritonic lattices was performed. Based on the demonstration of polariton condensation into multiple bands, the preferred condensation into a desired band was achieved by selecting the appropriate detuning. Additionally, a decreased condensation threshold in confined systems compared to a planar microcavity was revealed. In chapter 5, the influence of the peculiar feature of flatbands arising in certain lattice geometries, such as the Lieb and Kagome lattices, on polaritons and polariton condensates was investigated. Deviations from a lattice simulator described by a tight binding model that is solely based on nearest neighbour coupling cause a remaining dispersiveness of the flatbands along certain directions of the Brillouin zone. Therefore, the influence of the reduced trap distance on the dispersiveness of the flatbands was investigated and precise technological control over the flatbands was demonstrated. As next-nearest neighbour coupling is reduced drastically by increasing the distance between the corresponding traps, increasing the reduced trap distance enables to tune the S flatbands of both Lieb and Kagome lattices from dispersive bands to flatbands with a bandwidth on the order of the polariton linewidth. Additionally to technological control over the band structures, the controlled excitation of large condensates, single compact localized state (CLS) condensates as well as the resonant excitation of polaritons in a Lieb flatband were demonstrated. Furthermore, selective condensation into flatbands was realised. This combination of technological and spectroscopic control illustrates the capabilities of polariton lattice simulators and was used to study the coherence of flatband polariton condensates. Here, the ability to tune the dispersiveness from a dispersive band to an almost perfect flatband in combination with the selectivity of the excitation is particularly valuable. By exciting large flatband condensates, the increasing degree of localisation to a CLS with decreasing dispersiveness was demonstrated by measurements of first order spatial coherence. Furthermore, the first order temporal coherence of CLS condensates was increased from τ = 68 ps for a dispersive flatband, a value typically achieved in high-quality microcavity samples, to a remarkable τ = 459 ps in a flatband with a dispersiveness below the polarion linewidth. Corresponding to this drastic increase of the first order coherence time, a decrease of the second order temporal coherence function from g(2)(τ =0) = 1.062 to g(2)(0) = 1.035 was observed. Next to laser-like, coherent emission, polariton condensates can form vortex lattices. In this work, two distinct vortex lattices that can form in polariton condensates in Kagome flatbands were revealed. Furthermore, chiral, superfluid edge transport was realised by breaking the spatial symmetry through a localised excitation spot. This chirality was related to a change in the vortex orientation at the edge of the lattice and thus opens the path towards further investigations of symmetry breaking and chiral superfluid transport in Kagome lattices. Arguably the most influential concept in solid-state physics of the recent decades is the idea of topological order that has also provided a new degree of freedom to control the propagation of light. Therefore, in chapter 6, the interplay of topologically non-trivial band structures with polaritons, polariton condensates and lasing was emphasised. Firstly, a two-dimensional exciton-polariton topological insulator based on a honeycomb lattice was realised. Here, a topologically non-trivial band gap was opened at the Dirac points through a combination of TE-TM splitting of the photonic mode and Zeeman splitting of the excitonic mode. While the band gap is too small compared to the linewidth to be observed in the linear regime, the excitation of polariton condensates allowed to observe the characteristic, topologically protected, chiral edge modes that are robust against scattering at defects as well as lattice corners. This result represents a valuable step towards the investigation of non-linear and non-Hermitian topological physics, based on the inherent gain and loss of microcavities as well as the ability of polaritons to interact with each other. Apart from fundamental interest, the field of topological photonics is driven by the search of potential technological applications, where one direction is to advance the development of lasers. In this work, the starting point towards studying topological lasing was the Su-Schrieffer-Heeger (SSH) model, since it combines a simple and well-understood geometry with a large topological gap. The coherence properties of the topological edge defect of an SSH chain was studied in detail, revealing a promising degree of second order temporal coherence of g(2)(0) = 1.07 for a microlaser with a diameter of only d = 3.5 µm. In the context of topological lasing, the idea of using a propagating, topologically protected mode to ensure coherent coupling of laser arrays is particularly promising. Here, a topologically non-trivial interface mode between the two distinct domains of the crystalline topological insulator (CTI) was realised. After establishing selective lasing from this mode, the coherence properties were studied and coherence of a full, hexagonal interface comprised of 30 vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers (VCSELs) was demonstrated. This result thus represents the first demonstration of a topological insulator VCSEL array, combining the compact size and convenient light collection of vertically emitting lasers with an in-plane topological protection. Finally, in chapter 7, an approach towards engineering the band structures of Lieb and honeycomb lattices by unbalancing the eigenenergies of the sites within each unit cell was presented. For Lieb lattices, this technique opens up a path towards controlling the coupling of a flatband to dispersive bands and could enable a detailed study of the influence of this coupling on the polariton flatband states. In an unbalanced honeycomb lattice, a quantum valley Hall boundary mode between two distinct, unbalanced honeycomb domains with permuted sites in the unit cells was demonstrated. This boundary mode could serve as the foundation for the realisation of a polariton quantum valley Hall effect with a truly topologically protected spin based on vortex charges. Modifying polariton lattices by unbalancing the eigenenergies of the sites that comprise a unit cell was thus identified as an additional, promising path for the future development of polariton lattice simulators.}, subject = {Exziton-Polariton}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Youssef2022, author = {Youssef, Almoatazbellah}, title = {Fabrication of Micro-Engineered Scaffolds for Biomedical Application}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-23545}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-235457}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Thermoplastic polymers have a history of decades of safe and effective use in the clinic as implantable medical devices. In recent years additive manufacturing (AM) saw increased clinical interest for the fabrication of customizable and implantable medical devices and training models using the patients' own radiological data. However, approval from the various regulatory bodies remains a significant hurdle. A possible solution is to fabricate the AM scaffolds using materials and techniques with a clinical safety record, e.g. melt processing of polymers. Melt Electrowriting (MEW) is a novel, high resolution AM technique which uses thermoplastic polymers. MEW produces scaffolds with microscale fibers and precise fiber placement, allowing the control of the scaffold microarchitecture. Additionally, MEW can process medical-grade thermoplastic polymers, without the use of solvents paving the way for the production of medical devices for clinical applications. This pathway is investigated in this thesis, where the layout is designed to resemble the journey of a medical device produced via MEW from conception to early in vivo experiments. To do so, first, a brief history of the development of medical implants and the regenerative capability of the human body is given in Chapter 1. In Chapter 2, a review of the use of thermoplastic polymers in medicine, with a focus on poly(ε-caprolactone) (PCL), is illustrated, as this is the polymer used in the rest of the thesis. This review is followed by a comparison of the state of the art, regarding in vivo and clinical experiments, of three polymer melt AM technologies: melt-extrusion, selective laser sintering and MEW. The first two techniques already saw successful translation to the bedside, producing patient-specific, regulatory-approved AM implants. To follow in the footsteps of these two technologies, the MEW device parameters need to be optimized. The MEW process parameters and their interplay are further discussed in Chapter 3 focusing on the importance of a steady mass flow rate of the polymer during printing. MEW reaches a balance between polymer flow, the stabilizing electric field and moving collector to produce reproducible, high-resolution scaffolds. An imbalance creates phenomena like fiber pulsing or arcing which result in defective scaffolds and potential printer damage. Chapter 4 shows the use of X-ray microtomography (µCT) as a non-destructive method to characterize the pore-related features: total porosity and the pore size distribution. MEW scaffolds are three-dimensional (3D) constructs but have long been treated in the literature as two-dimensional (2D) ones and characterized mainly by microscopy, including stereo- and scanning electron microscopy, where pore size was simply reported as the distance between the fibers in a single layer. These methods, together with the trend of producing scaffolds with symmetrical pores in the 0/90° and 0/60/120° laydown patterns, disregarded the lateral connections between pores and the potential of MEW to be used for more complex 3D structures, mimicking the extracellular matrix. Here we characterized scaffolds in the aforementioned symmetrical laydown patterns, along with the more complex 0/45/90/135° and 0/30/60/90/120/150° ones. A 2D pore size estimation was done first using stereomicroscopy, followed by and compared to µCT scanning. The scaffolds with symmetrical laydown patterns resulted in the predominance of one pore size, while those with more complex patterns had a broader distribution, which could be better shown by µCT scans. Moreover, in the symmetrical scaffolds, the size of 3D pores was not able to reach the value of the fiber spacing due to a flattening effect of the scaffold, where the thickness of the scaffold was less than the fiber spacing, further restricting the pore size distribution in such scaffolds. This method could be used for quality assurance of fabricated scaffolds prior to use in in vitro or in vivo experiments and would be important for a clinical translation. Chapter 5 illustrates a proof of principle subcutaneous implantation in vivo experiment. MEW scaffolds were already featured in small animal in vivo experiments, but to date, no analysis of the foreign body reaction (FBR) to such implants was performed. FBR is an immune reaction to implanted foreign materials, including medical devices, aimed at protecting the host from potential adverse effects and can interfere with the function of some medical implants. Medical-grade PCL was used to melt electrowrite scaffolds with 50 and 60 µm fiber spacing for the 0/90° and 0/60/120° laydown patterns, respectively. These implants were implanted subcutaneously in immunocompetent, outbred mice, with appropriate controls, and explanted after 2, 4, 7 and 14 days. A thorough characterization of the scaffolds before implantation was done, followed by a full histopathological analysis of the FBR to the implants after excision. The scaffolds, irrespective of their pore geometry, induced an extensive FBR in the form of accumulation of foreign body giant cells around the fiber walls, in a manner that almost occluded available pore spaces with little to no neovascularization. This reaction was not induced by the material itself, as the same reaction failed to develop in the PCL solid film controls. A discussion of the results was given with special regard to the literature available on flat surgical meshes, as well as other hydrogel-based porous scaffolds with similar pore sizes. Finally, a general summary of the thesis in Chapter 6 recapitulates the most important points with a focus on future directions for MEW.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Niklaus2022, author = {Niklaus, Lukas}, title = {Electrochromic systems based on metallopolymers and metal oxides: towards neutral tint and near-infrared transmission modulation}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25855}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-258554}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {While the field of electrochromic (EC) materials and devices (ECDs) continues to advance in terms of color palette and understanding the underlying mechanism, several scientific and technological challenges need to be addressed by optimizing the materials and understanding the electrochemical interplay of these materials in full cells. The main issue here is to further improve the EC profile for color neutrality and cycling stability in order to commercialize dimmable EC products. The transparent conductive substrates used in this work (FTO and ultra-thin ITO glass) have high visible light transmittance (τv > 85\%) and low sheet resistance (< 25 Ω·sq-1). In addition, the Li+-containing gel electrolyte has sufficient ionic conductivity (2.8·10-4 S·cm-1 at 25 °C), so the investigated ECDs could achieve a fast response (required ionic conductivity is between 10-3 and 10-7 S·cm-1). This work shows that the combination of cathodically-coloring Fe-MEPE with anodically-coloring non-stoichiometric nickel oxide (Ni1-xO) electrodes (prepared by the National Institute of Chemistry in Ljubljana, Slovenia) can be used in neutral-coloring type III ECDs. The Fe-MEPE/Ni1-xO ECD with the underbalanced CE (ECD1-1, 2: 1) and the balanced configuration (ECD1-2, 1: 1) are both nearly neutrally-colored (ECD1-1: a* = -6.7, b* = 8.8; ECD1-2: a* = -9.0, b* = 10.1) in the bright state with a τv of almost 70\%. Due to the overbalancing of the CE (ECD1-3, 1:3), a deviation (a* = -2.8, b* = 19.9) from the neutral coloration occurred here. The balanced as well as the overbalanced ECD configurations show high electrochemical cycling stability (over 1,000 potentiostatic switching cycles). In general, the overbalanced configuration offers the advantage of a smaller operating voltage range (-1 V ↔ 2.5 V to -1 V ↔ 1.5 V), i.e., avoiding possible electrochemical degradation of the EC materials, electrolyte, or conductive layers. By using a Li RE in the full cell, insights into the optimal matching of electrochemical and optical properties between the two electrodes are obtained to achieve more stable ECDs. Thereby, the redox potentials of both EC electrodes (Fe-MEPE and Ni1-xO) can be measured during operation. The incomplete decolorization of ECD1-1 can be explained by the measured electrode potentials (below the required 4 V vs. Li/Li+), excluding side reactions and degradation at both electrodes. The results demonstrate the importance of using balanced and (slightly) overbalanced ECD configurations with complementary-coloring EC electrodes to achieve high cycling stability and fast switching at low operating voltages. Therefore, this three-electrode configuration provides an excellent method for in situ electrochemical characterization of the individual EC electrodes to better understand the redox processes during device operation and to further improve the optical contrast and cycle stability of ECDs. The Fe-MEPE/Ni1-xO combination was tested on flexible ultrathin ITO glass (ECD1-4). Here, by applying a low voltage of -1 V ↔ 2.5 V, the MEPE/Ni1-xO ECDs can be reversibly switched from a colored (L* = 35.6, a* = 19.4, b* = -26.7) to a nearly colorless (L* = 78.5, a* = -14.0, b* = 21.3) state. This is accompanied by a change in τv from 6\% to 53\%. The ECDs exhibit fast response and good cycling stability (5\% loss of optical contrast over 100 switching cycles). To further improve color neutrality and cycling stability, ECDs combining Fe-MEPE and mixed metal oxides as ion storage layers were investigated. Titanium manganese oxide (TMO, Fraunhofer IST) and titanium vanadium oxide (TiVOx, EControl-Glas GmbH \& Co. KG) electrodes are compared for use as optically-passive ion storage layers. TiVOx with a maximum charge density of approx. 27 mC·cm-2 and a coloration efficiency of η = 2 cm·C-1 at 584 nm shows a color change from yellow to light gray at 2 V vs. Ag/AgCl, while the slightly anodically-coloring Ti-rich TMO (10.5 mC·cm-², η584 nm = -4 cm·C-1) switches from light yellow to colorless at -2.5 V vs. Ag/AgCl. These materials show only a slight change in τv value from 85\% to 75\% and from 72\% to 81\%, respectively, thus reaching the requirements for highly transmissive optical-passive ion storage layers. The ECDs with Fe-MEPE in combination with TiVOx (ECD2-1) and TMO-1 (ECD2-2) are blue-purple in the dark state (0 V) and turn colorless by applying a voltage of 1.5 V, changing the τv value from 28\% to 69\% and from 21\% to 57\% in 3 s and 13 s, respectively. The ECDs show fast responses and high cyclability over more than 100 cycles. In the last section, the simplification of cell architecture by using redox mediators shows that different redox mediators (KHCF(III), Fc-PF6, Fc-BF4, and TMTU) can be used in type II ECDs (4 instead of 5 layers) consisting of Fe-MEPE or Ni1-xO thin film electrodes. The combination of KHCF(III) with Fe-MEPE has a low cycling stability due to the electrochemical formation of Prussian blue (PB). This side reaction is undesirable as it decreases the optical contrast. It can be avoided by using Fc+- (ECD3-5/6) or TMTU-based (ECD3-7) redox mediators, which exhibit reversible redox behavior. A high τv value of 72\% is obtained for the use of TMTU. Low concentrations (<0.1 M) of redox mediators decrease the cell voltage for complete switching without affecting the optical properties of the ECDs. The redox couple TMTU/TMFDS2+ (molar ratio of 1:0.1 in 1 M LiClO4/PC as electrolyte) works well in combination with Ni1-xO electrodes (ECD3-10), with a change in τv value from 38\% (colored at 2 V, L* = 67.1, a* = 3.9, b* = 17.2) to 70\% at (decolored at -2 V, L* = 86.6, a* = -0.6, b* = 17.2). This result implies that incorporating redox mediators into the electrolyte is an effective means to simplify the cell assembly and color neutrality can be obtained with one optically active WE and a color-neutral redox mediator. Moreover, the combination of Ni1-xO and the colorless TMTU/TMFDS2+ redox mediator is a potential candidate to obtain neutrally colored ECDs. It is shown that the lab-sized FTO- and ultra-thin ITO-glass-based ECDs are very attractive for energy-efficient EC applications, e.g., in architectural or automotive glazing, aircraft, ships, home appliances and displays. To monitor the EC performance and to prevent diverging electrode potentials during the switching process, the studied three-electrode configuration can help to extend the cycle stability as well as to improve the charge balancing of dimmable applications. The studied ECDs display a route towards neutral tint, e.g., EC active Ni1-xO, optically-inactive mixed metal oxides, and colorless redox mediators. Nevertheless, color neutrality should be further improved to meet the requirements for industrial applications. For future work, a scale-up process from lab-sized (few cm²) to prototype (few m²) ECDs will be necessary.}, subject = {Elektrochromie}, language = {en} } @unpublished{SednevLiaqatHoebartner2022, author = {Sednev, Maksim V. and Liaqat, Anam and H{\"o}bartner, Claudia}, title = {High-Throughput Activity Profiling of RNA-Cleaving DNA Catalysts by Deoxyribozyme Sequencing (DZ-seq)}, series = {Journal of the American Chemical Society}, journal = {Journal of the American Chemical Society}, doi = {10.1021/jacs.1c12489}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-258520}, year = {2022}, abstract = {RNA-cleaving deoxyribozymes have found broad application as useful tools for RNA biochemistry. However, tedious in vitro selection procedures combined with laborious characterization of individual candidate catalysts hinder the discovery of novel catalytic motifs. Here, we present a new high-throughput sequencing method, DZ-seq, which directly measures activity and localizes cleavage sites of thousands of deoxyribozymes. DZ-seq exploits A-tailing followed by reverse transcription with an oligo-dT primer to capture the cleavage status and sequences of both deoxyribozyme and RNA substrate. We validated DZ-seq by conventional analytical methods and demonstrated its utility by discovery of novel deoxyribozymes that allow for cleaving challenging RNA targets or the analysis of RNA modification states.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Gall2022, author = {Gall, Dominik}, title = {Increasing the effectiveness of human-computer interfaces for mental health interventions}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-23012}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-230120}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Human-computer interfaces have the potential to support mental health practitioners in alleviating mental distress. Adaption of this technology in practice is, however, slow. We provide means to extend the design space of human-computer interfaces for mitigating mental distress. To this end, we suggest three complementary approaches: using presentation technology, using virtual environments, and using communication technology to facilitate social interaction. We provide new evidence that elementary aspects of presentation technology affect the emotional processing of virtual stimuli, that perception of our environment affects the way we assess our environment, and that communication technologies affect social bonding between users. By showing how interfaces modify emotional reactions and facilitate social interaction, we provide converging evidence that human-computer interfaces can help alleviate mental distress. These findings may advance the goal of adapting technological means to the requirements of mental health practitioners.}, subject = {Mensch-Maschine-Kommunikation}, language = {en} } @masterthesis{Busch2022, type = {Bachelor Thesis}, author = {Busch, Marlene Corinna}, title = {Developing a virtual Control Room for future satellite missions}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25826}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-258261}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {This thesis deals with the first part of a larger project that follows the ultimate goal of implementing a software tool that creates a Mission Control Room in Virtual Reality. The software is to be used for the operation of spacecrafts and is specially developed for the unique real-time requirements of unmanned satellite missions. Beginning from launch, throughout the whole mission up to the recovery or disposal of the satellite, all systems need to be monitored and controlled in continuous intervals, to ensure the mission's success. Mission Operation is an essential part of every space mission and has been undertaken for decades. Recent technological advancements in the realm of immersive technologies pave the way for innovative methods to operate spacecrafts. Virtual Reality has the capability to resolve the physical constraints set by traditional Mission Control Rooms and thereby delivers novel opportunities. The paper highlights underlying theoretical aspects of Virtual Reality, Mission Control and IP Communication. However, the focus lies upon the practical part of this thesis which revolves around the first steps of the implementation of the virtual Mission Control Room in the Unity Game Engine. Overall, this paper serves as a demonstration of Virtual Reality technology and shows its possibilities with respect to the operation of spacecrafts.}, subject = {Control room}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Lasway2022, author = {Lasway, Julius Vincent}, title = {Impact of human land use on bee diversity and plant-pollinator interactions in Tanzania savannah ecosystems}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25772}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-257726}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {One of the pronounced global challenges facing ecologists is how to feed the current growing human population while sustaining biodiversity and ecosystem services. To shed light on this, I investigated the impact of human land use on bee diversity and plant-pollinator interactions in Tanzania Savannah ecosystems. The thesis comprises the following chapters: Chapter I: General Introduction This chapter provides the background information including the study objectives and hypotheses. It highlights the ecological importance of bees and the main threats facing bee pollinators with a focus on two land-use practices namely livestock grazing and agriculture. It also highlights the diversity and global distribution of bees. It further introduces the tropical savannah ecosystem, its climate, and vegetation characteristics and explains spectacular megafauna species of the system that form centers of wildlife tourism and inadequacy knowledge on pollinators diversity of the system. Finally, this chapter describes the study methodology including, the description of the study area, study design, and data collection. Chapter II: Positive effects of low livestock grazing intensity on East African bee assemblages mediated by increases in floral resources The impact of livestock grazing intensity on bee assemblage has been subjected to research over decades. Moreover, most of these studies have been conducted in temperate Europe and America leaving the huge tropical savannah of East Africa less studied. Using sweep netting and pan traps, a total of 183 species (from 2,691 individuals) representing 55 genera and five families were collected from 24 study sites representing three levels of livestock grazing intensity in savannah ecosystem of northern Tanzania. Results have shown that moderate livestock grazing slightly increased bee species richness. However, high livestock grazing intensity led to a strong decline. Besides, results revealed a unimodal distribution pattern of bee species richness and mean annual temperature. It was also found that the effect of livestock grazing and environmental temperature on bee species richness was mediated by a positive effect of moderate grazing on floral resource richness. The study, therefore, reveals that bee communities of the African savannah zone may benefit from low levels of livestock grazing as this favors the growth of flowering plant species. A high level of livestock grazing intensity will cause significant species losses, an effect that may increase with climatic warming. Chapter III: Agricultural intensification with seasonal fallow land promotes high bee diversity in Afrotropical drylands This study investigated the impact of local agriculture intensification on bee diversity in the Afro tropical drylands of northern Tanzania. Using sweep netting and pan traps, a total of 219 species (from 3,428 individuals) representing 58 genera and six families were collected from 24 study sites (distributed from 702 to 1708 m. asl) representing three levels of agriculture intensity spanning an extensive gradient of mean annual temperature. Results showed that bee species richness increased with agricultural intensity and with increasing temperature. However, the effects of agriculture intensity and temperature on bee species richness were mediated by the positive effects of agriculture and temperature on floral resource richness used by bee pollinators. Moreover, results showed that variation of bee body sizes increases with agricultural intensification, "that effect", however, diminished in environments with higher temperatures. This study reveals that bee assemblages in Afrotropical drylands benefit from agriculture intensification in the way it is currently practiced. Further intensification, including year-round irrigated crop monocultures and extensive use of agrochemicals, is likely to exert a negative impact on bee diversity and pollination services, as reported in temperate regions. Moreover, several bee species were restricted to natural savannah habitats. Therefore, to conserve bee communities in Afro tropical drylands and guarantee pollination services, a mixture of savannah and agriculture, with long periods of fallow land should be maintained. Chapter IV: Impact of land use intensification and local features on plants and pollinators in Sub-Saharan smallholder farms For the first time in the region, this study explores the impact of land-use intensification on plants and pollinators in Sub-Saharan smallholder farms. The study complemented field surveys of bees with a modern DNA metabarcoding approach to characterize the foraged plants and thus built networks describing plant-pollinator interactions at the individual insect level. This information was coupled with quantitative traits of landscape composition and floral availability surrounding each farm. The study found that pollinator richness decreased with increasing impervious and agricultural cover in the landscape, whereas the flower density at each farm correlated with pollinator richness. The intensification of agricultural land use and urbanization correlated with a higher foraging niche overlap among pollinators due to the convergence of individuals' flower-visiting strategies. Furthermore, within farms, the higher availability of floral resources drove lower niche overlap among individuals, greater abundance of flower visitors shaped higher generalization at the networks level (H2I), possibly due to increased competition. These mechanistic understandings leading to individuals' foraging niche overlap and generalism at the network level, could imply stability of interactions and the pollination ecosystem service. The integrative survey proved that plant-pollinator systems are largely affected by land use intensification and by local factors in smallholder farms of Sub-Saharan Africa. Thus, policies promoting nature-based solutions, among which the introduction of more pollinator-friendly practices by smallholder farmers, could be effective in mitigating the intensification of both urban and rural landscapes in this region, as well as in similar Sub-Saharan contexts. Chapter V: A synopsis of the Bee occurrence data of northern Tanzania This study represents a synopsis of the bee occurrence data of northern Tanzania obtained from a survey in the Kilimanjaro, Arusha, and Manyara regions. Bees were sampled using two standardized methods, sweep netting and colored pan traps. The study summed up 953 species occurrences of 45 species belonging to 20 genera and four families (Halictidae, Apidae, Megachilidae, and andrenidae) A. This study serves as the baseline information in understanding the diversity and distribution of bees in the northern parts of the country. Understanding the richness and distribution of bees is a critical step in devising robust conservation and monitoring strategies for their populations since limited taxonomic information of the existing and unidentified bee species makes their conservation haphazard. Chapter VI: General discussion In general, findings obtained in these studies suggest that livestock grazing and agriculture intensification affects bee assemblages and floral resources used by bee pollinators. Results have shown that moderate livestock grazing intensity may be important in preserving bee diversity. However, high level of livestock grazing intensity may result in a strong decline in bee species richness and abundance. Moreover, findings indicate that agriculture intensification with seasonal fallow lands supports high floral resource richness promoting high bee diversity in Afrotropical drylands. Nonetheless, natural savannahs were found to contain unique bee species. Therefore, agriculture intensification with seasonal fallow should go in hand with conserving remnant savannah in the landscapes to increase bee diversity and ensure pollination services. Likewise, findings suggest that increasing urbanization and agriculture cover at the landscape level reduce plant and pollinator biodiversity with negative impacts on their complex interactions with plants. Conversely, local scale availability of floral resources has shown the positive effects in buffering pollinators decline and mitigating all detrimental effects induced by land-use intensification. Moreover, findings suggest that the impact of human land use (livestock grazing and agriculture) do not act in isolation but synergistically interacts with climatic factors such as mean annual temperature, MAT. The impact of MAT on bee species richness in grazing gradient showed to be more detrimental than in agriculture habitats. This could probably be explained by the remaining vegetation cover following anthropogenic disturbance. Meaning that the remaining vegetation cover in the agricultural gradient probably absorbs the solar radiations hence reducing detrimental effect of mean annual temperature on bee species richness. This one is not the case in grazing gradient since the impact of livestock grazing is severe, leaving the bare land with no vegetation cover. Finally, our findings conclude that understanding the interplay of multiple anthropogenic activities and their interaction with MAT as a consequence of ongoing climate change is necessary for mitigating their potential consequences on bee assemblages and the provision of ecosystem services. Morever, future increases in livestock grazing and agriculture intensification (including year-round crop irrigated monocultures and excessive use of agrochemicals) may lead to undesirable consequences such as species loss and impair provision of pollination services.}, subject = {Human land use}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Bertero2022, author = {Bertero, Edoardo}, title = {Mechano-energetic uncoupling in Barth syndrome cardiomyopathy}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25517}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-255176}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {In this Doctoral Thesis we investigated the consequences of perturbed mitochondrial calcium handling in the context of a rare human disease, Barth syndrome, in which the altered phospholipid composition of the inner mitochondrial membrane affects the structural organization of several protein complexes, including the mitochondrial calcium uniporter. We discovered that loss of the mitochondrial calcium uniporter in cardiac, but not skeletal muscle mitochondria hinders the calcium-induced adaptation of mitochondrial oxidative metabolism during workload transitions. This mechano-energetic uncoupling impairs the physiological increase in contractile force during physical exercise and might predispose Barth syndrome patients to the development of arrhythmias.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Vellmer2022, author = {Vellmer, Tim}, title = {New insights into the histone variant H2A.Z incorporation pathway in \(Trypanosoma\) \(brucei\)}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25796}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-257960}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {The histone variant H2A.Z is a key player in transcription regulation in eukaryotes. Histone acetylations by the NuA4/TIP60 complex are required to enable proper incorporation of the histone variant and to promote the recruitment of other complexes and proteins required for transcription initiation. The second key player in H2A.Z-mediated transcription is the chromatin remodelling complex SWR1, which replaces the canonical histone H2A with its variant. By the time this project started little was known about H2A.Z in the unicellular parasite Trypanosoma brucei. Like in other eukaryotes H2A.Z was exclusively found in the transcription start sites of the polycistronic transcription units where it keeps the chromatin in an open conformation to enable RNA-polymerase II-mediated transcription. Previous studies showed the variant colocalizing with an acetylation of lysine on histone H4 and a methylation of lysine 4 on histone H3. Data indicated that HAT2 is linked to H2A.Z since it is required for acetylation of lyinse 10 on histone H4. A SWR1-like complex and a complex homologous to the NuA4/TIP60 could not be identified yet. This study aimed at identifying a SWR1-like remodelling complex in T. brucei and at identifying a protein complex orthologous to NuA4/TIP60 as well as at answering the question whether HAT2 is part of this complex or not. To this end, I performed multiple mass spectrometry-coupled co-Immunoprecipitation assays with potential subunits of a SWR1 complex, HAT2 and a putative homolog of a NuA4/TIP60 subunit. In the course of these experiments, I was able to identify the TbSWR1 complex. Subsequent cell fractionation and chromatin immunoprecipitation-coupled sequencing analysis experiments confirmed, that this complex is responsible for the incorporation of the histone variant H2A.Z in T. brucei. In addition to this chromatin remodelling complex, I was also able to identify two histone acetyltransferase complexes assembled around HAT1 and HAT2. In the course of my study data were published by the research group of Nicolai Siegel that identified the histone acetyltransferase HAT2 as being responsible for histone H4 acetylation, in preparation to promote H2A.Z incorporation. The data also indicated that HAT1 is responsible for acetylation of H2A.Z. According to the literature, this acetylation is required for proper transcription initiation. Experimental data generated in this study indicated, that H2A.Z and therefore TbSWR1 is involved in the DNA double strand break response of T. brucei. The identification of the specific complex composition of all three complexes provided some hints about how they could interact with each other in the course of transcription regulation and the DNA double strand break response. A proximity labelling approach performed with one of the subunits of the TbSWR1 complex identified multiple transcription factors, PTM writers and proteins potentially involved in chromatin maintenance. Overall, this work will provide some interesting insights about the composition of the complexes involved in H2A.Z incorporation in T. brucei. Furthermore, it is providing valuable information to set up experiments that could shed some light on RNA-polymerase II-mediated transcription and chromatin remodelling in T. brucei in particular and Kinetoplastids in general.}, subject = {Chromatinremodelling}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Weissenseel2022, author = {Weißenseel, Sebastian G{\"u}nter}, title = {Spin-Spin Interactions and their Impact on Organic Light-Emitting Devices}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25745}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-257458}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {This work investigates the correlations between spin states and the light emission properties of organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs), which are based on the principle of thermally activated delayed fluorescence. The spin-spin interactions responsible for this mechanism are investigated in this work using methods based on spin-sensitive electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR). In particular, this method has been applied to electrically driven OLEDs. The magnetic resonance has been detected by electroluminescence, giving this method its name: electroluminescence detected magnetic resonance (ELDMR). Initial investigations on a novel deep blue TADF emitter were performed. Furthermore, the ELDMR method was used in this work to directly detect the spin states in the OLED. These measurements were further underlined by time-resolved experiments such as transient electro- and photoluminescence.}, subject = {Elektronenspinresonanz}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Huang2022, author = {Huang, Mingming}, title = {C-S Bond Borylation and Diborylation of Alkyl Halides, Tosylates, and Alcohols}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25718}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-257186}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Alkylboronates play an important role in synthetic chemistry, materials science and drug discovery. They are easy to handle due to their good air and moisture stability, and can be readily employed to form carbon-carbon and carbon-heteroatom bonds and can be converted to various functional groups under mild reaction conditions. Compared with conventional groups, such as aryl (pseudo)halides or alcohols, organosulfur compounds represent an alternative and complimentary substitute in coupling reactions. The construction of C-B bond from C-SO bond of aryl sulfoxide is presented in Chapter 2. The selective cleavage of either alkyl(C)-sulfonyl or aryl(C)-sulfonyl bonds of an aryl alkyl sulfone via Cu-free or Cu-mediated processes generates the corresponding boronate esters, which are presented in Chapter 3 and Chapter 4. 1,2-Bis(boronate esters) are emerging as important synthetic intermediates for preparing 1,2-difunctional compounds. In addition, the boryl moieties in different environments in a 1,2-bis(boronate ester) can be differentiated and converted selectively, allowing the synthesis of a wide variety of complex molecules. A direct and selective diboration of C-X and C-O bonds for the preparation of 1,2-bis(boronate esters) is presented in Chapter 5.}, language = {en} } @article{FischerDirksKlaussneretal.2022, author = {Fischer, Jonas and Dirks, Johannes and Klaussner, Julia and Haase, Gabriele and Holl-Wieden, Annette and Hofmann, Christine and Hackenberg, Stephan and Girschick, Hermann and Morbach, Henner}, title = {Effect of clonally expanded PD-1\(^h\)\(^i\)\(^g\)\(^h\) CXCR5-CD4+ peripheral T Helper cells on B cell differentiation in the joints of patients with antinuclear antibody-positive juvenile idiopathic arthritis}, series = {Arthritis \& Rheumatology}, volume = {74}, journal = {Arthritis \& Rheumatology}, number = {1}, doi = {10.1002/art.41913}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-256607}, pages = {150-162}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Objective Antinuclear antibody (ANA)-positive juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is characterized by synovial B cell hyperactivity, but the precise role of CD4+ T cells in promoting local B cell activation is unknown. This study was undertaken to determine the phenotype and function of synovial CD4+ T cells that promote aberrant B cell activation in JIA. Methods Flow cytometry was performed to compare the phenotype and cytokine patterns of PD-1\(^h\)\(^i\)\(^g\)\(^h\)CD4+ T cells in the synovial fluid (SF) of patients with JIA and T follicular helper cells in the tonsils of control individuals. TCRVB next-generation sequencing was used to analyze T cell subsets for signs of clonal expansion. The functional impact of these T cell subsets on B cells was examined in cocultures in vitro. Results Multidimensional flow cytometry revealed the expansion of interleukin-21 (IL-21) and interferon-γ (IFNγ)-coexpressing PD-1\(^h\)\(^i\)\(^g\)\(^h\)CXCR5-HLA-DR+CD4+ T cells that accumulate in the joints of ANA-positive JIA patients. These T cells exhibited signs of clonal expansion with restricted T cell receptor clonotypes. The phenotype resembled peripheral T helper (Tph) cells with an extrafollicular chemokine receptor pattern and high T-bet and B lymphocyte-induced maturation protein 1 expression, but low B cell lymphoma 6 expression. SF Tph cells, by provision of IL-21 and IFNy, skewed B cell differentiation toward a CD21\(^l\)\(^o\)\(^w\)\(^/\)\(^-\)CD11c+ phenotype in vitro. Additionally, SF Tph cell frequencies correlated with the appearance of SF CD21\(^l\)\(^o\)\(^w\)\(^/\)\(^-\)CD11c+CD27-IgM- double-negative (DN) B cells in situ.}, language = {en} } @article{SchulzWuerthner2022, author = {Schulz, Alexander and W{\"u}rthner, Frank}, title = {Folding-induced fluorescence enhancement in a series of merocyanine hetero-folda-trimers}, series = {Angewandte Chemie International Edition}, volume = {61}, journal = {Angewandte Chemie International Edition}, number = {2}, doi = {10.1002/anie.202114667}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-256582}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Many dyes suffer from fast non-radiative decay pathways, thereby showing only short-lived excited states and weak photoluminescence. Here we show a pronounced fluorescence enhancement for a weakly fluorescent merocyanine (MC) dye by being co-facially stacked to other dyes in hetero-folda-trimer architectures. By means of fluorescence spectroscopy (lifetime, quantum yield) the fluorescence enhancement was explained by the rigidification of the emitting chromophore in the defined foldamer architecture and the presence of a non-forbidden lowest exciton state in H-coupled hetero-aggregates. This folding-induced fluorescence enhancement (FIFE) for specific sequences of π-stacked dyes points at a viable strategy toward improved fluorophores that relates to the approach used by nature in the green fluorescent protein (GFP).}, language = {en} } @article{LuJayaramanFantuzzietal.2022, author = {Lu, Wei and Jayaraman, Arumugam and Fantuzzi, Felipe and Dewhurst, Rian D. and H{\"a}rterich, Marcel and Dietz, Maximilian and Hagspiel, Stephan and Krummenbacher, Ivo and Hammond, Kai and Cui, Jingjing and Braunschweig, Holger}, title = {An unsymmetrical, cyclic diborene based on a chelating CAAC ligand and its small-molecule activation and rearrangement chemistry}, series = {Angewandte Chemie International Edition}, volume = {61}, journal = {Angewandte Chemie International Edition}, number = {3}, doi = {10.1002/anie.202113947}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-256576}, year = {2022}, abstract = {A one-pot synthesis of a CAAC-stabilized, unsymmetrical, cyclic diborene was achieved via consecutive two-electron reduction steps from an adduct of CAAC and B\(_2\)Br\(_4\)(SMe\(_2\))\(_2\). Theoretical studies revealed that this diborene has a considerably smaller HOMO-LUMO gap than those of reported NHC- and phosphine-supported diborenes. Complexation of the diborene with [AuCl(PCy\(_3\))] afforded two diborene-Au\(^I\) π complexes, while reaction with DurBH\(_2\), P\(_4\) and a terminal acetylene led to the cleavage of B-H, P-P, and C-C π bonds, respectively. Thermal rearrangement of the diborene gave an electron-rich cyclic alkylideneborane, which readily coordinated to Ag\(^I\) via its B=C double bond.}, language = {en} } @article{BoldStolteShoyamaetal.2022, author = {Bold, Kevin and Stolte, Matthias and Shoyama, Kazutaka and Holzapfel, Marco and Schmiedel, Alexander and Lambert, Christoph and W{\"u}rthner, Frank}, title = {Macrocyclic donor-acceptor dyads composed of a perylene bisimide dye surrounded by oligothiophene bridges}, series = {Angewandte Chemie Internationale Edition}, volume = {61}, journal = {Angewandte Chemie Internationale Edition}, number = {1}, doi = {10.1002/anie.202113598}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-256569}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Two macrocyclic architectures comprising oligothiophene strands that connect the imide positions of a perylene bisimide (PBI) dye have been synthesized via a platinum-mediated cross-coupling strategy. The crystal structure of the double bridged PBI reveals all syn-arranged thiophene units that completely enclose the planar PBI chromophore via a 12-membered macrocycle. The target structures were characterized by steady-state UV/Vis absorption, fluorescence and transient absorption spectroscopy, as well as cyclic and differential pulse voltammetry. Both donor-acceptor dyads show ultrafast F{\"o}rster Resonance Energy Transfer and photoinduced electron transfer, thereby leading to extremely low fluorescence quantum yields even in the lowest polarity cyclohexane solvent.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Dietz2022, author = {Dietz, Christopher Andreas}, title = {Distinguishing phenotypes of Complex Regional Pain Syndrome}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25632}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-256327}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {This work investigated phenotypes of complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) with special interest in sensory abnormalities. Quantitative sensory testing (QST) was used to assess sensory function. In addition, clinical and sensory differences of fracture and CRPS patients were addressed. Finally, the longitudinal outcome of CRPS patients was part of this thesis.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Bertelsmann2022, author = {Bertelsmann, Dietmar}, title = {Analysis of the Frequency of Kidney Toxicity in Preclinical Safety Studies using the eTOX Database}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25710}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-257104}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {This research aimed to obtain reliable data on the frequency of different types of renal toxicity findings in 28-day oral gavage studies in Wistar rats, their consistency across species and study duration, as well as the correlation between histopathological endpoints and routinely used clinical chemistry parameters indicative of kidney injury. Analysis of renal histopathological findings was carried out through extraction of information from the IMI eTOX database. Spontaneous renal histopathological findings in 28-day oral gavage studies in control Wistar rats and beagle dogs confirmed tubular basophilia and renal dilation as the most frequent incidental findings in controls, whereas necrosis and glomerulosclerosis were not identified at all or only rarely as a background lesion. Histopathological evidence of necrosis and glomerulosclerosis was associated with changes in clinical chemistry parameters in 28-day oral gavage Wistar rat studies. Necrosis was frequently accompanied by a statistically significant rise in serum creatinine and serum urea, whereas serum albumin was frequently found to decrease statistically significantly in treatment groups in which necrosis was recorded. In contrast to necrosis, glomerulosclerosis was not associated with statistically significant changes in serum creatinine and urea in any of the 28-day oral gavage Wistar rat treatment groups, but appears to be best reflected by a pattern of statistically significantly lowered serum albumin and serum protein together with a statistically significant increase in serum cholesterol. As might have been expected based on the high background incidences of tubular basophilia and dilation, no consistent changes in any of the clinical chemistry parameters were evident in animals in which renal lesions were con� fined to renal tubular basophilia or dilation. In summary, the routinely provided clinical chemistry parameters are rather insensitive - novel kidney biomarkers such as Cystatin C, β-trace protein and Kidney injury molecule 1 should further be evaluated and integrated into routine preclinical and clinical practice. However, evaluation of clinical chemistry data was limited by the lack of individual animal data. Even though an extensive amount of preclinical studies is accessible through the eTOX database, comparison of consistency across time was limited by the limited number of shorter- and longer term studies conducted with the compounds identified as causing renal histopathological changes within a 28- day study in rats. A high consistency across time for both treatment-related tubular basophilia and treatment-related dilation cannot be confirmed for either of the two effects as these two findings were both induced only rarely in studies over a different treatment-duration other than 28 days after administration of the compounds which provoked the respective effect in a 28-day study. For the finding of necrosis consistency across time was low with the exception of "AZ_GGA_200002321", in which renal papillary necrosis was identified consist� ently throughout different treatment durations (2, 4, 26, 104 weeks). No shorter and longer-term studies were available for the compounds identified as causing glomerulosclerosis within a 28-day study in rats. No consistent findings of the selected histopathological endpoints were identified in any of the corresponding 28-day oral gavage beagle dog studies after treatment with the identical compounds, which caused the respective ef� fect after 28-day treatment in rats. However, in the overwhelming majority of cases, beagle dogs were administered lower doses in these studies in compar� ison to the corresponding 28-day Wistar rat studies. Searching the eTOX database yielded no 28-day oral gavage studies in Wistar and Wistar Han rats in which accumulation of hyaline droplets, tubular atrophy or hyperplasia was recorded. Only one 28-day oral gavage Wistar rat study was identified with the histopathological result of neutrophilic inflammation. Consequently, evaluation of these four renal findings in relation to clinical chemistry parameters and consistency across time and species cannot be made. In summary, this work contributes knowledge through mining and evaluating the eTOX database on a variety of specific renal endpoints that frequently occur after administration of trial substances in 28-day oral gavage studies in Wistar rats in the field of preclinical toxicity with specific focus on their frequency relation to background findings, as well as consistency across time and species. Targeted statistical evaluation of in vivo data within joint research ventures such as the eTOX project, presents an enormous opportunity for an innovative future way of aiding preclinical research towards a more efficient research in the preclinical stage of drug development. This could be achieved through the aug� mentation of methodological strategies and possibly novel software tools in order to predict in vivo toxicology of new molecular entities by means of information that is already available before early stages of the drug development pipeline begin.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Kneer2022, author = {Kneer, Katharina Johanna}, title = {The association of three anxiety dimensions in children and adolescents: their influence on the brain and malleability by a prevention program}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25746}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-257468}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Anxiety disorders are the most prevalent group of neuropsychiatric disorders and go along with high personal suffering. They often arise during childhood and show a progression across the life span, thus making this age a specific vulnerable period during development. Still most research about these disorders is done in adults. In light of this, it seems of utmost importance to identify predictive factors of anxiety disorders in children and adolescents. Temperament or personality traits have been proclaimed as risk markers for the development of subsequent anxiety disorders, but their exact interplay is not clear. In this dissertation an effort is made to contribute to the understanding of how risk markers of early temperamental traits, in this case Trait Anxiety, Anxiety Sensitivity and Separation Anxiety are interplaying. While Trait Anxiety is regarded as a more general tendency to react anxiously to threatening situations or stimuli (Unnewehr, Joormann, Schneider, \& Margraf, 1992), Anxiety Sensitivity is the tendency to react with fear to one's own anxious sensations (Allan et al., 2014; S. Reiss, Peterson, Gursky, \& McNally, 1986), and Separation Anxiety is referring to the extent to which the child is avoiding certain situations because of the fear of being separated from primary care givers (In-Albon \& Schneider, 2011). In addition, it will be addressed how these measurements are associated with negative life events, as well as brain functioning and if they are malleable by a prevention program in children and adolescents. In study 1 the aim was to extend the knowledge about the interrelations of this anxiety dimensions and negative life events. Results indicated positive correlations of all three anxiety traits as well as with negative life events. Thus, a close connection of all three anxiety measures as well as with negative life events could be indicated. The closest association was found between Anxiety Sensitivity and Trait Anxiety and between Separation Anxiety and Anxiety Sensitivity. Furthermore, negative life events functioned as mediator between Anxiety Sensitivity and Trait Anxiety, indicating that a part of the association was explained by negative life events. In study 2 we extended the findings from study 1 with neurobiological parameters and examined the influence of anxiety traits on emotional brain activation by administering the "emotional face matching task". This task activated bilateral prefrontal regions as well as both hippocampi and the right amygdala. Further analyses indicated dimension-specific brain activations: Trait Anxiety was associated with a hyperactivation of the left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) and Separation Anxiety with a lower activation bilaterally in the IFG and the right middle frontal gyrus (MFG). Furthermore, the association between Separation Anxiety and Anxiety Sensitivity was moderated by bi-hemispheric Separation-Anxiety-related IFG activation. Thus, we could identify distinct brain activation patterns for the anxiety dimensions (Trait Anxiety and Separation Anxiety) and their associations (Separation Anxiety and Anxiety Sensitivity). The aim of study 3 was to probe the selective malleability of the anxiety dimensions via a prevention program in an at-risk population. We could identify a reduction of all three anxiety traits from pre- to post-prevention-assessment and that this effect was significant in Anxiety Sensitivity and Trait Anxiety scores. Furthermore, we found that pre-intervention Separation Anxiety and Anxiety Sensitivity post-intervention were associated. In addition, pre-interventive scores were correlated with the intervention-induced change within the measure (i.e., the higher the score before the intervention the higher the prevention-induced change) and pre-intervention Anxiety Sensitivity correlated with the change in Separation Anxiety scores. All relations, seemed to be direct, as mediation/moderation analyses with negative life events did not reveal any significant effect. These results are very promising, because research about anxiety prevention in children and adolescents is still rare and our results are indicating that cognitive-behavioural-therapy based prevention is gilding significant results in an indicated sample even when samples sizes are small like in our study. In sum the present findings hint towards distinct mechanisms underlying the three different anxiety dimensions on a phenomenological and neurobiological level, though they are highly overlapping (Higa-McMillan, Francis, Rith-Najarian, \& Chorpita, 2016; Taylor, 1998). Furthermore, the closest associations were found between Anxiety Sensitivity and Trait Anxiety, as well as between Separation Anxiety and Anxiety Sensitivity. Specifically, we were able to find a neuronal manifestation of the association between Separation Anxiety and Anxiety Sensitivity (Separation Anxiety-specific IFG activation) and a predictive potential on prevention influence. The results of these studies lead to a better understanding of the etiology of anxiety disorders and the interplay between different anxiety-related temperamental traits and could lead to further valuable knowledge about the intervention as well as further prevention strategies.}, subject = {Pr{\"a}vention}, language = {en} } @article{GernertTonyFroehlichetal.2022, author = {Gernert, Michael and Tony, Hans-Peter and Fr{\"o}hlich, Matthias and Schwaneck, Eva Christina and Schmalzing, Marc}, title = {Immunosuppressive therapy after autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in systemic sclerosis patients — high efficacy of Rituximab}, series = {Frontiers in Immunology}, volume = {12}, journal = {Frontiers in Immunology}, issn = {1664-3224}, doi = {10.3389/fimmu.2021.817893}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-254345}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Background Systemic sclerosis (SSc) patients often need immunosuppressive medication (IS) for disease control. If SSc is progressive despite IS, autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (aHSCT) is a treatment option for selected SSc patients. aHSCT is effective with good available evidence, but not all patients achieve a treatment-free remission after aHSCT. Thus far, data about the need of IS after aHSCT in SSc is not published. The aim of this study was to investigate the use of IS after aHSCT, its efficacy, and the occurrence of severe adverse events (SAEs). Methods Twenty-seven patients with SSc who had undergone aHSCT were included in this single-center retrospective cohort study. Clinical data, including IS, SAEs, and lung function data, were collected. Results Sixteen of 27 (59.3\%) patients received IS after aHSCT. Methotrexate, rituximab, mycophenolate, cyclophosphamide, and hydroxychloroquine were most commonly used. The main reason for starting IS was SSc progress. Nine patients received rituximab after aHSCT and showed an improvement in modified Rodnan skin score and a stabilization of lung function 2 years after rituximab. SAEs in patients with IS after aHSCT (50.0\%) were not more common than in patients without IS (54.6\%). SAEs were mostly due to SSc progress, secondary autoimmune diseases, or infections. Two deaths after aHSCT were transplantation related and three during long-term follow-up due to pulmonary arterial hypertension. Conclusion Disease progression and secondary autoimmune diseases may necessitate IS after aHSCT in SSc. Rituximab seems to be an efficacious treatment option in this setting. Long-term data on the safety of aHSCT is reassuring.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Ji2022, author = {Ji, Changhe}, title = {The role of 7SK noncoding RNA in development and function of motoneurons}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-22463}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-224638}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {In mammals, a major fraction of the genome is transcribed as non-coding RNAs. An increasing amount of evidence has accumulated showing that non-coding RNAs play important roles both for normal cell function and in disease processes such as cancer or neurodegeneration. Interpreting the functions of non-coding RNAs and the molecular mechanisms through which they act is one of the most important challenges facing RNA biology today. In my Ph.D. thesis, I have been investigating the role of 7SK, one of the most abundant non-coding RNAs, in the development and function of motoneurons. 7SK is a highly structured 331 nt RNA transcribed by RNA polymerase III. It forms four stem-loop (SL) structures that serve as binding sites for different proteins. Larp7 binds to SL4 and protects the 3' end from exonucleolytic degradation. SL1 serves as a binding site for HEXIM1, which recruits the pTEFb complex composed of CDK9 and cyclin T1. pTEFb has a stimulatory role for transcription and is regulated through sequestration by 7SK. More recently, a number of heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnRNPs) have been identified as 7SK interactors. One of these is hnRNP R, which has been shown to have a role in motoneuron development by regulating axon growth. Taken together, 7SK's function involves interactions with RNA binding proteins, and different RNA binding proteins interact with different regions of 7SK, such that 7SK can be considered as a hub for recruitment and release of different proteins. The questions I have addressed during my Ph.D. are as follows: 1) which region of 7SK interacts with hnRNP R, a main interactor of 7SK? 2) What effects occur in motoneurons after the protein binding sites of 7SK are abolished? 3) Are there additional 7SK binding proteins that regulate the functions of the 7SK RNP? Using in vitro and in vivo experiments, I found that hnRNP R binds both the SL1 and SL3 region of 7SK, and also that pTEFb cannot be recruited after deleting the SL1 region but is able to bind to a 7SK mutant with deletion of SL3. In order to answer the question of how the 7SK mutations affect axon outgrowth and elongation in mouse primary motoneurons, we proceeded to conduct rescue experiments in motoneurons by using lentiviral vectors. The constructs were designed to express 7SK deletion mutants under the mouse U6 promoter and at the same time to drive expression of a 7SK shRNA from an H1 promoter for the depletion of endogenous 7SK. Using this system we found that 7SK mutants harboring deletions of either SL1 or SL3 could not rescue the axon growth defect of 7SK-depleted motoneurons suggesting that 7SK/hnRNP R complexes are integral for this process. In order to identify novel 7SK binding proteins and investigate their functions, I proceeded to conduct pull-down experiments by using a biotinylated RNA antisense oligonucleotide that targets the U17-C33 region of 7SK thereby purifying endogenous 7SK complexes. Following mass spectrometry of purified 7SK complexes, we identified a number of novel 7SK interactors. Among these is the Smn complex. Deficiency of the Smn complex causes the motoneuron disease spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) characterized by loss of lower motoneurons in the spinal cord. Smn has previously been shown to interact with hnRNP R. Accordingly, we found Smn as part of 7SK/hnRNP R complexes. These proteomics data suggest that 7SK potentially plays important roles in different signaling pathways in addition to transcription.}, subject = {Spliceosome}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Goettler2022, author = {G{\"o}ttler, David Johannes}, title = {Smoking cessation patterns in patients with established coronary heart disease}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-22395}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-223955}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Background Tobacco smoking is accountable for more than one in ten deaths in patients with cardiovascular disease. Thus, smoking cessation has a high priority in secondary prevention of coronary heart disease (CHD). The present study meant to assess smoking cessation patterns, identify parameters associated with smoking cessation and investigate personal reasons to change or maintain smoking habits in patients with established CHD. Methods Quality of CHD care was surveyed in 24 European countries in 2012/13 by the fourth European Survey of Cardiovascular Disease Prevention and Diabetes. Patients 18 to 79 years of age at the date of the CHD index event hospitalized due to first or recurrent diagnosis of coronary artery bypass graft, percutaneous coronary intervention, acute myocardial infarction or acute myocardial ischemia without infarction (troponin negative) were included. Smoking status and clinical parameters were iteratively obtained a) at the cardiovascular disease index event by medical record abstraction, b) during a face-to-face interview 6 to 36 months after the index event (i.e. baseline visit) and c) by telephone-based follow-up interview two years after the baseline visit. Parameters associated with smoking status at the time of follow-up interview were identified by logistic regression analysis. Personal reasons to change or maintain smoking habits were assessed in a qualitative interview and analyzed by qualitative content analysis. Results One hundred and four of 469 (22.2\%) participants had been classified current smokers at the index event and were available for follow-up interview. After a median observation period of 3.5 years (quartiles 3.0, 4.1), 65 of 104 participants (62.5\%) were classified quitters at the time of follow-up interview. There was a tendency of diabetes being more prevalent in quitters vs non-quitters (37.5\% vs 20.5\%, p=0.07). Higher education level (15.4\% vs 33.3\%, p=0.03) and depressed mood (17.2\% vs 35.9\%, p=0.03) were less frequent in quitters vs non-quitters. Quitters more frequently participated in cardiac rehabilitation programs (83.1\% vs 48.7\%, p<0.001). Cardiac rehabilitation appeared as factor associated with smoking cessation in multivariable logistic regression analysis (OR 5.19, 95\%CI 1.87 to 14.46, p=0.002). Persistent smokers at telephone-based follow-up interview reported on addiction as wells as relaxation and pleasure as reasons to continue their habit. Those current and former smokers who relapsed at least once after a quitting attempt, stated future health hazards as their main reason to undertake quitting attempts. Prevalent factors leading to relapse were influence by their social network and stress. Successful quitters at follow-up interview referred to smoking-related harm done to their health having had been their major reason to quit. Interpretation Participating in a cardiac rehabilitation program was strongly associated with smoking cessation after a cardiovascular disease index event. Smoking cessation counseling and relapse prophylaxis may include alternatives for the pleasant aspects of smoking and incorporate effective strategies to resist relapse.}, subject = {Tabakkonsum}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Klinke2022, author = {Klinke, Christopher Matthias}, title = {Experimental investigation of the effect of distal stress induction on threat conditioning in humans}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-22556}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-225562}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Stress constitutes a major risk factor for the development of psychiatric disorders, such as PTSD and anxiety disorders, by shifting the brain into a state of sensitization and makes it more vulnerable when being exposed to further aversive events. This was experimentally in-vestigated in rodents by examining the effect of a distal stress induction on threat conditioning, where stress impaired extinction learning and caused spontaneous recovery. However, this effect has never been experimentally investigated in humans, so far. Thus, the aim of this dissertation was to investigate the effect of distal stress on threat conditioning in humans. Therefore, two subsequent studies were conducted. For both studies, the threat conditioning paradigm comprised threat acquisition, extinction learning, and re-extinction. In the threat acquisition phase, two geometrical shapes were used as conditioned stimulus (CS), from which one (CS+) was paired with a painful electric stimulus (unconditioned stimulus, US), but not the other one (CS-). During extinction learning 24 h later and re-extinction seventeen days later, CSs were again presented but without any US delivery. In Study 1, 69 participants underwent either a stress (socially evaluated cold pressor test; SECPT) or sham protocol 10 days prior to threat conditioning. Furthermore, context effects were examined by placing the stress protocol in the same context (context-A stress, and sham group) or a different context (context-B stress group) than conditioning. Results revealed that the context-A, but not context-B, stress group displayed impaired safety learning (i.e. potenti-ation towards CS-) for startle response during threat acquisition. Moreover, the same stress group showed impaired threat extinction, evident in sustained CS discrimination in valence and arousal ratings during extinction learning, and memory recall. In sum, distal stress on the one hand impaired safety learning during threat conditioning on a level of startle response. On the other hand, stress impaired threat extinction on a level of ratings. Noteworthy, the effect of distal stress was only found when the stressor was placed in the same context as later threat learning. Hence, suggesting that the combination of stressor and stressor-associated context exerted the effect on threat extinction. In Study 2, it was examined if distal stress induction could also have an impact on threat and extinction processes without the necessity of context association. Therefore, the same stress (n = 45) or sham protocol (n = 44) as in Study 1 was conducted in a different context than and 24 h prior to a threat conditioning paradigm. Similar to Study 1, weakened extinction learning was found in fear ratings for the stress (vs. sham) group, which was indicated by persistent CS+/CS- differentiation after the first block of extinction trials. Alterations in safety learning towards the CS- during threat acquisition were only supported by significant correlations between stress measures on the stress day and conditioned startle response of the CS- during acquisition. Taken together, in two subsequent studies this dissertation provided first evidence of impaired threat extinction after distal stress induction in humans. Furthermore, impairments in safety learning, as can be observed in PTSD, were additionally demonstrated. Interestingly, the effects were boosted and more profound when associating the stressor to the later learning context. These results have clinical implications as they can be translated to the notion that prior stress exposure makes an individual more vulnerable for later aversive events.}, subject = {Stress}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Zuefle2022, author = {Z{\"u}fle, Marwin Otto}, title = {Proactive Critical Event Prediction based on Monitoring Data with Focus on Technical Systems}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25575}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-255757}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {The importance of proactive and timely prediction of critical events is steadily increasing, whether in the manufacturing industry or in private life. In the past, machines in the manufacturing industry were often maintained based on a regular schedule or threshold violations, which is no longer competitive as it causes unnecessary costs and downtime. In contrast, the predictions of critical events in everyday life are often much more concealed and hardly noticeable to the private individual, unless the critical event occurs. For instance, our electricity provider has to ensure that we, as end users, are always supplied with sufficient electricity, or our favorite streaming service has to guarantee that we can watch our favorite series without interruptions. For this purpose, they have to constantly analyze what the current situation is, how it will develop in the near future, and how they have to react in order to cope with future conditions without causing power outages or video stalling. In order to analyze the performance of a system, monitoring mechanisms are often integrated to observe characteristics that describe the workload and the state of the system and its environment. Reactive systems typically employ thresholds, utility functions, or models to determine the current state of the system. However, such reactive systems cannot proactively estimate future events, but only as they occur. In the case of critical events, reactive determination of the current system state is futile, whereas a proactive system could have predicted this event in advance and enabled timely countermeasures. To achieve proactivity, the system requires estimates of future system states. Given the gap between design time and runtime, it is typically not possible to use expert knowledge to a priori model all situations a system might encounter at runtime. Therefore, prediction methods must be integrated into the system. Depending on the available monitoring data and the complexity of the prediction task, either time series forecasting in combination with thresholding or more sophisticated machine and deep learning models have to be trained. Although numerous forecasting methods have been proposed in the literature, these methods have their advantages and disadvantages depending on the characteristics of the time series under consideration. Therefore, expert knowledge is required to decide which forecasting method to choose. However, since the time series observed at runtime cannot be known at design time, such expert knowledge cannot be implemented in the system. In addition to selecting an appropriate forecasting method, several time series preprocessing steps are required to achieve satisfactory forecasting accuracy. In the literature, this preprocessing is often done manually, which is not practical for autonomous computing systems, such as Self-Aware Computing Systems. Several approaches have also been presented in the literature for predicting critical events based on multivariate monitoring data using machine and deep learning. However, these approaches are typically highly domain-specific, such as financial failures, bearing failures, or product failures. Therefore, they require in-depth expert knowledge. For this reason, these approaches cannot be fully automated and are not transferable to other use cases. Thus, the literature lacks generalizable end-to-end workflows for modeling, detecting, and predicting failures that require only little expert knowledge. To overcome these shortcomings, this thesis presents a system model for meta-self-aware prediction of critical events based on the LRA-M loop of Self-Aware Computing Systems. Building upon this system model, this thesis provides six further contributions to critical event prediction. While the first two contributions address critical event prediction based on univariate data via time series forecasting, the three subsequent contributions address critical event prediction for multivariate monitoring data using machine and deep learning algorithms. Finally, the last contribution addresses the update procedure of the system model. Specifically, the seven main contributions of this thesis can be summarized as follows: First, we present a system model for meta self-aware prediction of critical events. To handle both univariate and multivariate monitoring data, it offers univariate time series forecasting for use cases where a single observed variable is representative of the state of the system, and machine learning algorithms combined with various preprocessing techniques for use cases where a large number of variables are observed to characterize the system's state. However, the two different modeling alternatives are not disjoint, as univariate time series forecasts can also be included to estimate future monitoring data as additional input to the machine learning models. Finally, a feedback loop is incorporated to monitor the achieved prediction quality and trigger model updates. We propose a novel hybrid time series forecasting method for univariate, seasonal time series, called Telescope. To this end, Telescope automatically preprocesses the time series, performs a kind of divide-and-conquer technique to split the time series into multiple components, and derives additional categorical information. It then forecasts the components and categorical information separately using a specific state-of-the-art method for each component. Finally, Telescope recombines the individual predictions. As Telescope performs both preprocessing and forecasting automatically, it represents a complete end-to-end approach to univariate seasonal time series forecasting. Experimental results show that Telescope achieves enhanced forecast accuracy, more reliable forecasts, and a substantial speedup. Furthermore, we apply Telescope to the scenario of predicting critical events for virtual machine auto-scaling. Here, results show that Telescope considerably reduces the average response time and significantly reduces the number of service level objective violations. For the automatic selection of a suitable forecasting method, we introduce two frameworks for recommending forecasting methods. The first framework extracts various time series characteristics to learn the relationship between them and forecast accuracy. In contrast, the other framework divides the historical observations into internal training and validation parts to estimate the most appropriate forecasting method. Moreover, this framework also includes time series preprocessing steps. Comparisons between the proposed forecasting method recommendation frameworks and the individual state-of-the-art forecasting methods and the state-of-the-art forecasting method recommendation approach show that the proposed frameworks considerably improve the forecast accuracy. With regard to multivariate monitoring data, we first present an end-to-end workflow to detect critical events in technical systems in the form of anomalous machine states. The end-to-end design includes raw data processing, phase segmentation, data resampling, feature extraction, and machine tool anomaly detection. In addition, the workflow does not rely on profound domain knowledge or specific monitoring variables, but merely assumes standard machine monitoring data. We evaluate the end-to-end workflow using data from a real CNC machine. The results indicate that conventional frequency analysis does not detect the critical machine conditions well, while our workflow detects the critical events very well with an F1-score of almost 91\%. To predict critical events rather than merely detecting them, we compare different modeling alternatives for critical event prediction in the use case of time-to-failure prediction of hard disk drives. Given that failure records are typically significantly less frequent than instances representing the normal state, we employ different oversampling strategies. Next, we compare the prediction quality of binary class modeling with downscaled multi-class modeling. Furthermore, we integrate univariate time series forecasting into the feature generation process to estimate future monitoring data. Finally, we model the time-to-failure using not only classification models but also regression models. The results suggest that multi-class modeling provides the overall best prediction quality with respect to practical requirements. In addition, we prove that forecasting the features of the prediction model significantly improves the critical event prediction quality. We propose an end-to-end workflow for predicting critical events of industrial machines. Again, this approach does not rely on expert knowledge except for the definition of monitoring data, and therefore represents a generalizable workflow for predicting critical events of industrial machines. The workflow includes feature extraction, feature handling, target class mapping, and model learning with integrated hyperparameter tuning via a grid-search technique. Drawing on the result of the previous contribution, the workflow models the time-to-failure prediction in terms of multiple classes, where we compare different labeling strategies for multi-class classification. The evaluation using real-world production data of an industrial press demonstrates that the workflow is capable of predicting six different time-to-failure windows with a macro F1-score of 90\%. When scaling the time-to-failure classes down to a binary prediction of critical events, the F1-score increases to above 98\%. Finally, we present four update triggers to assess when critical event prediction models should be re-trained during on-line application. Such re-training is required, for instance, due to concept drift. The update triggers introduced in this thesis take into account the elapsed time since the last update, the prediction quality achieved on the current test data, and the prediction quality achieved on the preceding test data. We compare the different update strategies with each other and with the static baseline model. The results demonstrate the necessity of model updates during on-line application and suggest that the update triggers that consider both the prediction quality of the current and preceding test data achieve the best trade-off between prediction quality and number of updates required. We are convinced that the contributions of this thesis constitute significant impulses for the academic research community as well as for practitioners. First of all, to the best of our knowledge, we are the first to propose a fully automated, end-to-end, hybrid, component-based forecasting method for seasonal time series that also includes time series preprocessing. Due to the combination of reliably high forecast accuracy and reliably low time-to-result, it offers many new opportunities in applications requiring accurate forecasts within a fixed time period in order to take timely countermeasures. In addition, the promising results of the forecasting method recommendation systems provide new opportunities to enhance forecasting performance for all types of time series, not just seasonal ones. Furthermore, we are the first to expose the deficiencies of the prior state-of-the-art forecasting method recommendation system. Concerning the contributions to critical event prediction based on multivariate monitoring data, we have already collaborated closely with industrial partners, which supports the practical relevance of the contributions of this thesis. The automated end-to-end design of the proposed workflows that do not demand profound domain or expert knowledge represents a milestone in bridging the gap between academic theory and industrial application. Finally, the workflow for predicting critical events in industrial machines is currently being operationalized in a real production system, underscoring the practical impact of this thesis.}, subject = {Prognose}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Upcin2022, author = {Upcin, Berin}, title = {Contribution of vascular adventitia-resident progenitor cells to new vessel formation in \(ex\) \(vivo\) 3D models}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25507}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-255070}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Ongoing research to fight cancer, one of the dominant diseases of the 21st century has led to big progress especially when it comes to understanding the tumor growth and metastasis. This includes the discovery of the molecular mechanisms of tumor vascularization, which is critically required for establishment of tumor metastasis. Formation of new blood vessels is the first step in tumor vascularization. Therefore, understanding the molecular and cellular basis of tumor vascularization attracted a significant effort studying in biomedical research. The blood vessels for supplying tumor can be formed by sprouting from pre-existing vessels, a process called angiogenesis, or by vasculogenesis, that is de novo formation of blood vessels from not fully differentiated progenitor cell populations. Vasculogenic endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) can either be activated from populations in the bone marrow reaching the pathological region via the circulation or they can be recruited from local reservoirs. Neovessel formation influences tumor progression, hence therapeutic response model systems of angiogenesis/vasculogenesis are necessary to study the underlying mechanisms. Although, initially the research in this area focused more on angiogenesis, it is now well understood that both angiogenesis and postnatal vasculogenesis contribute to neovessel formation in adult under both most pathological as well as physiological conditions. Studies in the last two decades demonstrate that in addition to the intimal layer of fully differentiated mature endothelial cells (ECs) and various smaller supplying vessels (vasa vasorum) that can serve as a source for new vessels by angiogenesis, especially the adventitia of large and medium size blood vessels harbors various vascular wall-resident stem and progenitor cells (VW-SPCs) populations that serve as a source for new vessels by postnatal vasculogenesis. However, little is known about the potential role of VW-SPCs in tumor vascularization. To this end, the present work started first to establish a modified aortic ring assay (ARA) using mouse aorta in order to study the contribution of vascular adventitia-resident VW-SPCs to neovascularization in general and in presence of tumor cells. ARA is already established an ex vivo model for neovascularization allows to study the morphogenetic events of complex new vessel formation that includes all layers of mature blood vessels, a significant advantage over the assays that employ monolayer endothelial cell cultures. Moreover, in contrast to assays employing endothelial cells monocultures, both angiogenic and vasculogenic events take place during new vessel formation in ARA although the exact contribution of these two processes to new vessel formation cannot be easily distinguished in conventional ARA. Thus, in this study, a modified protocol for the ARA (mdARA) was established by either removing or keeping the aortic adventitia in place. The mdARA allows to distinguish the role of VW-SPCs from those of other aortic layers. The present data show that angiogenic sprouting from mature aortic endothelium was markedly delayed when the adventitial layer was removed. Furthermore, the network between the capillary-like sprouts was significantly reduced in absence of aortic adventitia. Moreover, the stabilization of new sprouts by assembling the NG2+ pericyte-like cells that enwrapped the endothelial sprouts from the outside was improved when the adventitial layer remained in place. Next, mimicking the tumor-vessel adventitia-interaction, multicellular tumor spheroids (MCTS) and aortic rings (ARs) with or without adventitia of C57BL/6-Tg (UBC-GFP) mice were confronted within the collagen gel and cultured ex vivo. This 3D model enabled analysis of the mobilization, migration and capillary-like sprouts formation by VW-SPCs within tumor-vessel wall-interface in comparison to tumor-free side of the ARs. Interestingly, while MCTS preferred the uptake of single vascular adventitia-derived cells, neural spheroids were directly penetrated by capillary-like structures that were sprouted from the aortic adventitia. In summary, the model established in this work allows to study new vessel formation by both postnatal vasculogenesis and angiogenesis under same conditions. It can be applied in various mouse models including reporter mouse models, e.g. Cxcr1 CreER+/mTmG+/- mice, in which GFP-marked macrophages of the vessel wall were directly observed as they mobilized from their niche and migrated into collagen gel. Another benefit of the model is that it can be used for testing different factors such as small molecules, growth factors, cytokines, and drugs with both pro- and anti-angiogenic/vasculogenic effects.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Lisowski2022, author = {Lisowski, Clivia}, title = {Maturation of the \(Salmonella\) containing vacuole is compromised in G1 arrested host cells}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-18523}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-185239}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {The interaction of bacterial pathogens and the human host is a complex process that has shaped both organisms on a molecular, cellular and population level. When pathogenic bacteria infect the human body, a battle ensues between the host immune system and the pathogen. In order to escape an immune response and to colonize the host, pathogenic bacteria have developed diverse virulence strategies and some pathogens even replicate within host cells. For survival and propagation within the dynamic environment of a host cell, these bacteria interfere with the regulation of host pathways, such as the cell cycle, for their own benefit. The intracellular pathogen Salmonella Typhimurium invades eukaryotic cells and resides and replicates in a modified vacuolar compartment in which it is protected from the innate immune response. To this end, it employs a set of virulence factors that help to invade cells (SPI-1 effectors) and to hijack and modify the host endolysosomal system, in order to stabilize and mature its vacuolar niche (SPI-2 effectors). Previous studies have shown that Salmonella arrests host cells in G2/M phase and that Salmonella infected cells progress faster from G1 into S phase, suggesting that the G1 phase is disadvantageous for Salmonella infection. In fact, it has already been observed that Salmonella replication is impaired in G1 arrested cells. However, the reason for this impairment remained unclear. The current study addressed this question for the first time and revealed that the highly adapted, intracellular lifestyle of Salmonella is drastically altered upon G1 arrest of the host cell. It is shown that proteasomal degradation in G1 arrested cells is delayed and endolysosomal and autophagosomal trafficking is compromised. Accordingly, processing of lysosomal proteins is insufficient and lysosomal activity is decreased; resulting in uneven distribution and accumulation of endolysosomes and autophagosomes, containing undegraded cargo. The deregulation of these cellular signaling pathways affects maturation of the Salmonella containing vacuole (SCV). For the first time it is shown that acidification of SCVs is impaired upon G1 arrest. Thus, an important environmental factor for the switch from SPI-1 to SPI-2 gene expression is missing and the SPI-2 system is not activated. Consequently, targeting and modification of host cell structures by SPI-2 effectors e.g. recruitment of endolysosomal membrane proteins, like LAMP1, or exchange of endosomal cargo, is compromised. In addition, degradation of Salmonella SPI-1 effectors by the host proteasome is delayed. Their prolonged presence sustained the recruitment of early endosomes and contributed to the SCV remaining in an early, vulnerable maturation stage. Finally, it was shown that SCV membrane integrity is compromised; the early SCV ruptures and bacteria are released into the cytoplasm. Depending on the host cell type, SPI-2 independent, cytoplasmic replication is promoted. This might favor bacterial spreading, dissemination into the tissue and provide an advantage in host colonization. Overall, the present study establishes a link between host cell cycle regulation and the outcome of Salmonella infection. It fills the gap of knowledge as to why the host cell cycle stage is of critical importance for Salmonella infection and sheds light on a key aspect of host-pathogen interaction.}, subject = {Salmonella Typhimurium}, language = {en} }