@article{KaluzaWallaceKelleretal.2017, author = {Kaluza, Benjamin F. and Wallace, Helen and Keller, Alexander and Heard, Tim A. and Jeffers, Bradley and Drescher, Nora and Bl{\"u}thgen, Nico and Leonhardt, Sara D.}, title = {Generalist social bees maximize diversity intake in plant species-rich and resource-abundant environments}, series = {Ecosphere}, volume = {8}, journal = {Ecosphere}, number = {3}, doi = {10.1002/ecs2.1758}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-171155}, pages = {e01758}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Numerous studies revealed a positive relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem functioning, suggesting that biodiverse environments may not only enhance ecosystem processes, but also benefit individual ecosystem members by, for example, providing a higher diversity of resources. Whether and how the number of available resources affects resource collection and subsequently consumers (e.g., through impacting functions associated with resources) have, however, been little investigated, although a better understanding of this relationship may help explain why the abundance and richness of many animal species typically decline with decreasing plant (resource) diversity. Using a social bee species as model (Tetragonula carbonaria), we investigated how plant species richness—recorded for study sites located in different habitats—and associated resource abundance affected the diversity and functionality (here defined as nutritional content and antimicrobial activity) of resources (i.e., pollen, nectar, and resin) collected by a generalist herbivorous consumer. The diversity of both pollen and resin collected strongly increased with increasing plant/tree species richness, while resource abundance was only positively correlated with resin diversity. These findings suggest that bees maximize resource diversity intake in (resource) diverse habitats. Collecting more diverse resources did, however, not increase their functionality, which appeared to be primarily driven by the surrounding (plant) source community in our study. In generalist herbivores, maximizing resource diversity intake may therefore primarily secure collection of sufficient amounts of resources across the entire foraging season, but it also ensures that the allocated resources meet all functional needs. Decreasing available resource diversity may thus impact consumers primarily by reduced resource abundance, but also by reduced resource functionality, particularly when resources of high functionality (e.g., from specific plant species) become scarce.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Redlich2020, author = {Redlich, Sarah}, title = {Opportunities and obstacles of ecological intensification: Biological pest control in arable cropping systems}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-17122}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-171228}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Modern agriculture is the basis of human existence, a blessing, but also a curse. It provides nourishment and well-being to the ever-growing human population, yet destroys biodiversity-mediated processes that underpin productivity: ecosystem services such as water filtration, pollination and biological pest control. Ecological intensification is a promising alternative to conventional farming, and aims to sustain yield and ecosystem health by actively managing biodiversity and essential ecosystem services. Here, I investigate opportunities and obstacles for ecological intensification. My research focuses on 1) the relative importance of soil, management and landscape variables for biodiversity and wheat yield (Chapter II); 2) the influence of multi-scale landscape-level crop diversity on biological pest control in wheat (Chapter III) and 3) on overall and functional bird diversity (Chapter IV). I conclude 4) by introducing a guide that helps scientists to increase research impact by acknowledging the role of stakeholder engagement for the successful implementation of ecological intensification (Chapter V). Ecological intensification relies on the identification of natural pathways that are able to sustain current yields. Here, we crossed an observational field study of arthropod pests and natural enemies in 28 real-life wheat systems with an orthogonal on-field insecticide-fertilizer experiment. Using path analysis, we quantified the effect of 34 factors (soil characteristics, recent and historic crop management, landscape heterogeneity) that directly or indirectly (via predator-prey interactions) contribute to winter wheat yield. Reduced soil preparation and high crop rotation diversity enhanced crop productivity independent of external agrochemical inputs. Concurrently, biological control by arthropod natural enemies could be restored by decreasing average field sizes on the landscape scale, extending crop rotations and reducing soil disturbance. Furthermore, reductions in agrochemical inputs decreased pest abundances, thereby facilitating yield quality. Landscape-level crop diversity is a promising tool for ecological intensification. However, biodiversity enhancement via diversification measures does not always translate into agricultural benefits due to antagonistic species interactions (intraguild predation). Additionally, positive effects of crop diversity on biological control may be masked by inappropriate study scales or correlations with other landscape variables (e.g. seminatural habitat). Therefore, the multiscale and context-dependent impact of crop diversity on biodiversity and ecosystem services is ambiguous. In 18 winter wheat fields along a crop diversity gradient, insect- and bird-mediated pest control was assessed using a natural enemy exclusion experiment with cereal grain aphids. Although birds did not influence the strength of insect-mediated pest control, crop diversity (rather than seminatural habitat cover) enhanced aphid regulation by up to 33\%, particularly on small spatial scales. Crop diversification, an important Greening measure in the European Common Agricultural Policy, can improve biological control, and could lower dependence on insecticides, if the functional identity of crops is taken into account. Simple measures such as 'effective number of crop types' help in science communication. Although avian pest control did not respond to landscape-level crop diversity, birds may still benefit from increased crop resources in the landscape, depending on their functional grouping (feeding guild, conservation status, habitat preference, nesting behaviour). Observational studies of bird functional diversity on 14 wheat study fields showed that non-crop landscape heterogeneity rather than crop diversity played a key role in determining the richness of all birds. Insect-feeding, non-farmland and non-threatened birds increased across multiple spatial scales (up to 3000 m). Only crop-nesting farmland birds declined in heterogeneous landscapes. Thus, crop diversification may be less suitable for conserving avian diversity, but abundant species benefit from overall habitat heterogeneity. Specialist farmland birds may require more targeted management approaches. Identifying ecological pathways that favour biodiversity and ecosystem services provides opportunities for ecological intensification that increase the likelihood of balancing conservation and productivity goals. However, change towards a more sustainable agriculture will be slow to come if research findings are not implemented on a global scale. During dissemination activities within the EU project Liberation, I gathered information on the advantages and shortcomings of ecological intensification and its implementation. Here, I introduce a guide ('TREE') aimed at scientists that want to increase the impact of their research. TREE emphasizes the need to engage with stakeholders throughout the planning and research process, and actively seek and promote science dissemination and knowledge implementation. This idea requires scientists to leave their comfort zone and consider socioeconomic, practical and legal aspects often ignored in classical research. Ecological intensification is a valuable instrument for sustainable agriculture. Here, I identified new pathways that facilitate ecological intensification. Soil quality, disturbance levels and spatial or temporal crop diversification showed strong positive correlations with natural enemies, biological pest control and yield, thereby lowering the dependence on agrochemical inputs. Differences between functional groups caused opposing, scale-specific responses to landscape variables. Opposed to our predictions, birds did not disturb insect-mediated pest control in our study system, nor did avian richness relate to landscape-level crop diversity. However, dominant functional bird groups increased with non-crop landscape heterogeneity. These findings highlight the value of combining different on-field and landscape approaches to ecological intensification. Concurrently, the success of ecological intensification can be increased by involving stakeholders throughout the research process. This increases the quality of science and reduces the chance of experiencing unscalable obstacles to implementation.}, language = {en} } @article{DegenHovestadtMitesseretal.2017, author = {Degen, Tobias and Hovestadt, Thomas and Mitesser, Oliver and H{\"o}lker, Franz}, title = {Altered sex-specific mortality and female mating success: ecological effects and evolutionary responses}, series = {Ecosphere}, volume = {8}, journal = {Ecosphere}, number = {5}, doi = {10.1002/ecs2.1820}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-170953}, pages = {e01820}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Theory predicts that males and females should often join the mating pool at different times (sexual dimorphism in timing of emergence [SDT]) as the degree of SDT affects female mating success. We utilize an analytical model to explore (1) how important SDT is for female mating success, (2) how mating success might change if either sex's mortality (abruptly) increases, and (3) to what degree evolutionary responses in SDT may be able to mitigate the consequences of such mortality increase. Increasing male pre-mating mortality has a non-linear effect on the fraction of females mated: The effect is initially weak, but at some critical level a further increase in male mortality has a stronger effect than a similar increase in female mortality. Such a change is expected to impose selection for reduced SDT. Increasing mortality during the mating season has always a stronger effect on female mating success if the mortality affects the sex that emerges first. This bias results from the fact that enhancing mortality of the earlier emerging sex reduces female-male encounter rates. However, an evolutionary response in SDT may effectively mitigate such consequences. Further, if considered independently for females and males, the predicted evolutionary response in SDT could be quite dissimilar. The difference between female and male evolutionary response in SDT leads to marked differences in the fraction of fertilized females under certain conditions. Our model may provide general guidelines for improving harvesting of populations, conservation management of rare species under altered environmental conditions, or maintaining long-term efficiency of pest-control measures.}, language = {en} } @article{ZieglerWeissSchmittetal.2017, author = {Ziegler, Sabrina and Weiss, Esther and Schmitt, Anna-Lena and Schlegel, Jan and Burgert, Anne and Terpitz, Ulrich and Sauer, Markus and Moretta, Lorenzo and Sivori, Simona and Leonhardt, Ines and Kurzai, Oliver and Einsele, Hermann and Loeffler, Juergen}, title = {CD56 Is a Pathogen Recognition Receptor on Human Natural Killer Cells}, series = {Scientific Reports}, volume = {7}, journal = {Scientific Reports}, number = {6138}, doi = {10.1038/s41598-017-06238-4}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-170637}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Aspergillus (A.) fumigatus is an opportunistic fungal mold inducing invasive aspergillosis (IA) in immunocompromised patients. Although antifungal activity of human natural killer (NK) cells was shown in previous studies, the underlying cellular mechanisms and pathogen recognition receptors (PRRs) are still unknown. Using flow cytometry we were able to show that the fluorescence positivity of the surface receptor CD56 significantly decreased upon fungal contact. To visualize the interaction site of NK cells and A. fumigatus we used SEM, CLSM and dSTORM techniques, which clearly demonstrated that NK cells directly interact with A. fumigatus via CD56 and that CD56 is re-organized and accumulated at this interaction site time-dependently. The inhibition of the cytoskeleton showed that the receptor re-organization was an active process dependent on actin re-arrangements. Furthermore, we could show that CD56 plays a role in the fungus mediated NK cell activation, since blocking of CD56 surface receptor reduced fungal mediated NK cell activation and reduced cytokine secretion. These results confirmed the direct interaction of NK cells and A. fumigatus, leading to the conclusion that CD56 is a pathogen recognition receptor. These findings give new insights into the functional role of CD56 in the pathogen recognition during the innate immune response.}, language = {en} } @article{KollmannsbergerKerschnitzkiReppetal.2017, author = {Kollmannsberger, Philip and Kerschnitzki, Michael and Repp, Felix and Wagermaier, Wolfgang and Weinkamer, Richard and Fratzl, Peter}, title = {The small world of osteocytes: connectomics of the lacuno-canalicular network in bone}, series = {New Journal of Physics}, volume = {19}, journal = {New Journal of Physics}, number = {073019}, doi = {10.1088/1367-2630/aa764b}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-170662}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Osteocytes and their cell processes reside in a large, interconnected network of voids pervading the mineralized bone matrix of most vertebrates. This osteocyte lacuno-canalicular network (OLCN) is believed to play important roles in mechanosensing, mineral homeostasis, and for the mechanical properties of bone. While the extracellular matrix structure of bone is extensively studied on ultrastructural and macroscopic scales, there is a lack of quantitative knowledge on how the cellular network is organized. Using a recently introduced imaging and quantification approach, we analyze the OLCN in different bone types from mouse and sheep that exhibit different degrees of structural organization not only of the cell network but also of the fibrous matrix deposited by the cells. We define a number of robust, quantitative measures that are derived from the theory of complex networks. These measures enable us to gain insights into how efficient the network is organized with regard to intercellular transport and communication. Our analysis shows that the cell network in regularly organized, slow-growing bone tissue from sheep is less connected, but more efficiently organized compared to irregular and fast-growing bone tissue from mice. On the level of statistical topological properties (edges per node, edge length and degree distribution), both network types are indistinguishable, highlighting that despite pronounced differences at the tissue level, the topological architecture of the osteocyte canalicular network at the subcellular level may be independent of species and bone type. Our results suggest a universal mechanism underlying the self-organization of individual cells into a large, interconnected network during bone formation and mineralization.}, language = {en} } @article{MemmelSisarioZoelleretal.2017, author = {Memmel, Simon and Sisario, Dmitri and Z{\"o}ller, Caren and Fiedler, Vanessa and Katzer, Astrid and Heiden, Robin and Becker, Nicholas and Eing, Lorenz and Ferreira, F{\´a}bio L.R. and Zimmermann, Heiko and Sauer, Markus and Flentje, Michael and Sukhorukov, Vladimir L. and Djuzenova, Cholpon S.}, title = {Migration pattern, actin cytoskeleton organization and response to PI3K-, mTOR-, and Hsp90-inhibition of glioblastoma cells with different invasive capacities}, series = {Oncotarget}, volume = {8}, journal = {Oncotarget}, number = {28}, doi = {10.18632/oncotarget.16847}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-170719}, pages = {45298-45310}, year = {2017}, abstract = {High invasiveness and resistance to chemo- and radiotherapy of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) make it the most lethal brain tumor. Therefore, new treatment strategies for preventing migration and invasion of GBM cells are needed. Using two different migration assays, Western blotting, conventional and super-resolution (dSTORM) fluorescence microscopy we examine the effects of the dual PI3K/mTOR-inhibitor PI-103 alone and in combination with the Hsp90 inhibitor NVP-AUY922 and/or irradiation on the migration, expression of marker proteins, focal adhesions and F-actin cytoskeleton in two GBM cell lines (DK-MG and SNB19) markedly differing in their invasive capacity. Both lines were found to be strikingly different in morphology and migration behavior. The less invasive DK-MG cells maintained a polarized morphology and migrated in a directionally persistent manner, whereas the highly invasive SNB19 cells showed a multipolar morphology and migrated randomly. Interestingly, a single dose of 2 Gy accelerated wound closure in both cell lines without affecting their migration measured by single-cell tracking. PI-103 inhibited migration of DK-MG (p53 wt, PTEN wt) but not of SNB19 (p53 mut, PTEN mut) cells probably due to aberrant reactivation of the PI3K pathway in SNB19 cells treated with PI-103. In contrast, NVP-AUY922 exerted strong anti-migratory effects in both cell lines. Inhibition of cell migration was associated with massive morphological changes and reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton. Our results showed a cell line-specific response to PI3K/mTOR inhibition in terms of GBM cell motility. We conclude that anti-migratory agents warrant further preclinical investigation as potential therapeutics for treatment of GBM.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Glogger2018, author = {Glogger, Marius}, title = {Single-molecule fluorescence microscopy in live \(Trypanosoma\) \(brucei\) and model membranes}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-169222}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Der eukaryotische Parasit Trypanosoma brucei hat komplexe Strategien entwickelt um der Immunantwort eines Wirtes zu entkommen und eine persistente Infektion innerhalb dessen aufrechtzuerhalten. Ein zentrales Element seiner Verteidigungsstrategie st{\"u}tzt sich auf die Schutzfunktion seines Proteinmantels auf der Zelloberfl{\"a}che. Dieser Mantel besteht aus einer dichten Schicht aus identischen, Glykosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-verankerten variablen Oberfl{\"a}chenglykoproteinen (VSG). Der VSG Mantel verhindert die Erkennung der darunterliegenden, invarianten Epitope durch das Immunsystem. Obwohl es notwendig ist die Funktionsweise des VSG Mantels zu verstehen, vor allem um ihn als m{\"o}gliches Angriffsziel gegen den Parasiten zu verwenden, sind seine biophysikalischen Eigenschaften bisher nur unzureichend verstanden. Dies ist vor allem der Tatsache geschuldet, dass die hohe Motilit{\"a}t der Parasiten mikroskopische Studien in lebenden Zellen bisher weitestgehend verhinderten. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird nun hochmoderne Einzelmolek{\"u}l-Fluoreszenzmikroskopie (EMFM) als M{\"o}glichkeit f{\"u}r mikroskopische Untersuchungen im Forschungsbereich der Trypanosomen vorgestellt. Die Arbeit umfasst Untersuchungen der VSG Dynamik unter definierten Bedingungen k{\"u}nstlicher Membransysteme. Es wurde zuerst der Einfluss der lateralen Proteindichte auf die VSG Diffusion untersucht. Experimente mittels Fluoreszenz- Wiederkehr nach irreversiblem Photobleichen und komplement{\"a}re Einzelmolek{\"u}l- Verfolgungs Experimente offenbarten, dass ein molekularer Diffusionsschwellenwert existiert. {\"U}ber diesem Schwellenwert wurde eine dichteabh{\"a}nige Reduzierung des Diffusionskoeffizienten gemessen. Eine relative Quantifizierung der rekonstituierten VSGs verdeutlichte, dass der Oberfl{\"a}chenmantel der Trypanosomen sehr nahe an diesem Schwellenwert agiert. Der VSG Mantel ist optimiert um eine hohe Proteindichte bei gleichzeitiger hoher Mobilit{\"a}t der VSGs zu gew{\"a}hrleisten. Des Weiteren wurde der Einfluss der VSG N-Glykosylierung auf die Diffusion des Proteins quantitativ untersucht. Die Messungen ergaben, dass die N-Glykosylierung dazu beitr{\"a}gt eine hohe Mobilit{\"a}t bei hohen Proteindichten aufrechtzuerhalten. Eine detaillierte Analyse von VSG Trajektorien offenbarte, dass zwei unterschiedliche Populationen frei diffundierender VSGs in der k{\"u}nstlichen Membran vorlagen. K{\"u}rzlich wurde entdeckt, dass VSGs zwei strukturell unterschiedliche Konformationen annehmen k{\"o}nnen. Die Messungen in der Arbeit stimmen mit diesen Beschreibungen {\"u}berein. Die Ergebnisse der EMFM in k{\"u}nstlichen Membranen wurden durch VSG Einzelmolek{\"u}l- Verfolgungs Experimente auf lebenden Zellen erg{\"a}nzt. Es wurde eine hohe Mobilit{\"a}t und Dynamik einzelner VSGs gemessen, was die allgemein dynamische Natur des VSG Mantels verdeutlicht. Dies f{\"u}hrte zu der Schlussfolgerung, dass der VSG Mantel auf lebenden Trypanosomen ein dichter und dennoch dynamischer Schutzmantel ist. Die F{\"a}higkeit der VSGs ihre Konformation flexibel anzupassen, unterst{\"u}tzt das Erhalten der Fluidit{\"a}t bei variablen Dichten. Diese Eigenschaften des VSG Mantels sind elementar f{\"u}r die Aufrechterhaltung einer presistenden Infektion eines Wirtes. In dieser Arbeit werden des Weiteren verschiedene, auf Hydrogel basierende Einbettungsmethoden vorgestellt. Diese erm{\"o}glichten die Zellimmobilisierung und erlaubten EMFM in lebenden Trypanosomen. Die Hydrogele wiesen eine hohe Zytokompatibilit{\"a}t auf. Die Zellen {\"u}berlebten in den Gelen f{\"u}r eine Stunde nach Beginn der Immobilisierung. Die Hydrogele erf{\"u}llten die Anforderungen der Superresolution Mikroskopie (SRM) da sie eine geringe Autofluoreszenz im Spektralbereich der verwendeten Fluorophore besaßen. Mittels SRM konnte nachgewiesen werden, dass die Hydrogele die Zellen effizient immobilisierten. Als erstes Anwendungsbeispiel der Methode wurde die Organisation der Plasmamembran in lebenden Trypanosomen untersucht. Die Untersuchung eines fluoreszenten Tracers in der inneren Membranschicht ergab, dass dessen Verteilung nicht homogen war. Es wurden spezifische Membrandom{\"a}nen gefunden, in denen das Molek{\"u}l entweder vermehrt oder vermindert auftrat. Dies f{\"u}hrte zu der Schlussfolgerung, dass diese Verteilung durch eine Interaktion des Tracers mit Proteinen des zellul{\"a}ren Zytoskeletts zustande kam. Die in dieser Arbeit pr{\"a}sentierten Ergebnisse zeigen, dass EMFM erfolgreich f{\"u}r verschiedene biologische Untersuchungen im Forschungsfeld der Trypanosomen angewendet werden kann. Dies gilt zum Beispiel f{\"u}r die Untersuchung von der VSG Dynamik in k{\"u}nstlichen Membransystemen, aber auch f{\"u}r Studien in lebenden Zellen unter Verwendung der auf Hydrogelen basierenden Zelleinbettung.}, subject = {Trypanosoma brucei}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Rost2020, author = {Rost, Isabell}, title = {Gezielte Anreicherungs- und neue DNA-Sequenzierungsstrategien f{\"u}r die molekulare Analyse von Fanconi-An{\"a}mie-Genen}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-15109}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-151096}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Fanconi-An{\"a}mie (FA) ist, mit Ausnahme von Mutationen in FANCR/RAD51, eine autosomal-rezessive oder X-chromosomal vererbte Krankheit, die sich durch eine ausgesprochene klinische als auch genetische Heterogenit{\"a}t auszeichnet. Neben einem fortschreitenden Knochenmarksversagen z{\"a}hlen zu den typischen Merkmalen eine Vielzahl an angeborenen Fehlbildungen, wie beispielsweise Radialstrahlanomalien, Minderwuchs oder Pigmentierungsst{\"o}rungen. Zudem besteht f{\"u}r FA-Patienten ein {\"u}berdurchschnittlich hohes Risiko bereits in jungen Jahren an akuter myeloischer Leuk{\"a}mie oder soliden Tumoren zu erkranken. Bislang konnten in 21 FA-Genen (FANCA, -B, -C, - D1, -D2, -E, -F, -G, -I, -J, -L, -M, -N, -O, -P, -Q, -R, -S, -T, -U oder -V) krankheitsverursachende Mutationen identifiziert werden, deren Proteinprodukte maßgeblich an der Aufrechterhaltung der Genomstabilit{\"a}t beteiligt sind und Komponenten des FA/BRCA-DNA-Reparaturweges darstellen. In der klassischen FA-Mutationsanalyse kommen meist Sanger-Sequenzierungen sowie MLPA- und Immunblot-Analysen zum Einsatz. Da im Wesentlichen keine Genotyp-Ph{\"a}notyp-Korrelation besteht, gestaltet sich, gerade bei seltenen FA-Komplementationsgruppen, der Nachweis von krankheitsverursachenden Mutationen oftmals sehr zeit- und kostenintensiv. W{\"a}hrend der letzten Jahre wurden verschiedene Strategien zur Anreicherung und Sequenzierung entwickelt, welche die parallele Sequenzanalyse einzelner ausgew{\"a}hlter Gene, ganzer Exome oder sogar des gesamten Genoms und somit eine kosten- und zeiteffiziente Mutationsanalyse erm{\"o}glichen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden unterschiedliche Anreicherungsmethoden mit anschließender Hochdurchsatzsequenzierung auf ihre Anwendbarkeit in der molekulargenetischen FA-Diagnostik getestet, um klassische Mutationsanalyse-Methoden zu erg{\"a}nzen oder m{\"o}glicherweise sogar ganz ersetzen zu k{\"o}nnen. Der erste Teil der Arbeit befasste sich mit der Etablierung eines FA-spezifischen Genpanels zur Genotypisierung von FA-Patienten. Nachdem die Methode zun{\"a}chst anhand von FA-Patienten mit bekannten Mutationen optimiert werden musste, erwies sie sich als effizienter Ansatz zum Nachweis krankheitsverursachender Mutationen bei FA-Patienten unbekannter Komplementationsgruppe. Durch die FA-Panelanalyse konnten 37 von 47 unklassifizierten Patienten einer FA-Komplementationsgruppe zugeordnet werden, indem deren kausalen Mutationen bestimmt wurden. In einem weiteren Ansatz sollte die Anwendbarkeit eines kommerziellen Anreicherungspanels zur FA-Diagnostik untersucht werden. Auch hier konnte ein Großteil der krankheitsverursachenden Mutationen von f{\"u}nf bekannten wie auch 13 nicht zugeordneten FA-Patienten detektiert und somit eine molekulargenetische Diagnose bei neun weiteren, zuvor unklassifizierten FA-Patienten, gestellt werden. Ferner wurden sechs ausgew{\"a}hlte Patienten, zus{\"a}tzlich zur Panelanreicherung, per Exomanalyse untersucht. Zum einen konnten Mutationen in bekannten FA-Genen best{\"a}tigt oder neu identifiziert werden. Zum anderen wurden auch potentiell pathogene Mutationen in DNA-Reparaturgenen außerhalb des FA/BRCA-Signalweges bei zwei Patienten mit unbest{\"a}tigter Verdachtsdiagnose FA verifiziert. So wurde bei mehreren Mitgliedern einer Familie mit unterschiedlichen Tumorerkrankungen eine zuvor unbeschriebene homozygote Nonsense-Mutation in der BER-Glykosylase NTHL1 nachgewiesen, f{\"u}r welche bislang erst zwei pathogene Mutationen als Ausl{\"o}ser eines neuen Krebssyndroms bekannt sind. Bei einem weiteren Patienten wurden compound-heterozygote Mutationen in RPA1 detektiert, ein Gen f{\"u}r das bislang noch kein Krankheitsbild bekannt ist. Mit Hilfe der drei verschiedenen Anreicherungsstrategien konnten insgesamt 47 von 60 unklassifizierten FA-Patienten 13 verschiedenen Komplementationsgruppen eindeutig zugeordnet werden. Es zeigte sich dabei ein breites Spektrum an neuen, bislang unbeschriebenen FA-Mutationen. Den gr{\"o}ßten Anteil an der Gesamtzahl der nachgewiesenen Mutationen hatten Spleißmutationen, die auf eine Auswirkung auf das kanonische Spleißmuster untersucht wurden, um einen pathogenen Effekt nachweisen zu k{\"o}nnen. Weiterhin schloss die Arbeit die Charakterisierung einzelner FA-Patienten bzw. Komplementationsgruppen mit ein. Dazu z{\"a}hlen die seltenen Untergruppen FA-T und FA-Q, f{\"u}r die jeweils ein neuer Patient identifiziert werden konnte. Durch die funktionelle Charakterisierung der dritten jemals beschriebenen FA-Q-Patientin konnten Einblicke in das Zusammenspiel der Reparatur von DNA-Quervernetzungen und der Nukleotidexzisionsreparatur gewonnen und die ph{\"a}notypische Variabilit{\"a}t von FA durch die subjektive als auch zellul{\"a}re UV-Sensitivit{\"a}t der Patientin erg{\"a}nzt werden. Dar{\"u}ber hinaus konnte das Mutationsspektrum in FA-I sowie FA-D2 erweitert werden. Eine genauere Untersuchung der Pseudogenregionen von FANCD2 erm{\"o}glichte dabei die gezielte Mutationsanalyse des Gens. Insgesamt konnten die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit dazu beitragen, das Mutationsspektrum in FA zu erweitern und durch die Identifizierung und Charakterisierung einzelner Patienten neue Einblicke in verschiedene Komponenten des FA/BRCA-Signalweges zu erhalten. Es zeigte sich, dass neue DNA-Sequenzierungsstrategien in der FA-Diagnostik eingesetzt werden k{\"o}nnen, um eine effiziente Mutationsanalyse zu gew{\"a}hrleisten und klassische Methoden in Teilbereichen zu ersetzen.}, subject = {Fanconi-An{\"a}mie}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Keppler2020, author = {Keppler, Sarah}, title = {Characterization of Novel Mutations in Receptor-Tyrosine Kinases in Multiple Myeloma}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-15572}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-155720}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Multiple myeloma (MM) is a disease of terminally differentiated B-cells which accumulate in the bone marrow leading to bone lesions, hematopoietic insufficiency and hypercalcemia. Genetically, MM is characterized by a great heterogeneity. A recent next-generation sequencing approach resulted in the identification of a signaling network with an accumulation of mutations in receptor-tyrosine kinases (RTKs), adhesion molecules and downstream effectors. A deep-sequencing amplicon approach of the coding DNA sequence of the six RTKs EPHA2, EGFR, ERBB3, IGF1R, NTRK1 and NTRK2 was conducted in a patient cohort (75 MM samples and 68 corresponding normal samples) of the "Deutsche Studiengruppe Multiples Myelom (DSMM)" to further elucidate the role of RTKs in MM. As an initial approach the detected mutations were correlated with cytogenetic abnormalities and clinical data in the course of this thesis. RTK mutations were present in 13\% of MM patients of the DSMM XI trial and accumulated in the ligand-binding and tyrosine-kinase domain. The newly identified mutations were associated with an adverse patient survival, but not with any cytogenetic abnormality common in MM. Especially rare patient-specific SNPs (single nucleotide polymorphism) had a negative impact on patient survival. For a more comprehensive understanding of the role of rare RTK SNPs in MM, a second amplicon sequencing approach was performed in a patient cohort of the DSMM XII trial that included 75 tumor and 184 normal samples. This approach identified a total of 23 different mutations in the six RTKs EPHA2, EGFR, ERBB3, IGF1R, NTRK1 and NTRK2 affecting 24 patients. These mutations could furthermore be divided into 20 rare SNPs and 3 SNVs (single nucleotide variant). In contrast to the first study, the rare SNPs were significantly associated with the adverse prognostic factor del17p. IGF1R was among the most commonly mutated RTKs in the first amplicon sequencing approach and is known to play an important role in diverse cellular processes such as cell proliferation and survival. To study the role of IGF1R mutations in the hard-to-transfect MM cells, stable IGF1R-knockdown MM cell lines were established. One of the knockdown cell lines (L363-C/C9) as well as a IGF1R-WT MM cell line (AMO1) were subsequently used for the stable overexpression of WT IGF1R and mutant IGF1R (N1129S, D1146N). Overall, an impact on the MAPK and PI3K/AKT signaling pathways was observed upon the IGF1R knockdown as well as upon WT and mutant IGF1R overexpression. The resulting signaling pattern, however, differed between different MM cell lines used in this thesis as well as in a parallel performed master thesis which further demonstrates the great heterogeneity described in MM. Taken together, the conducted sequencing and functional studies illustrate the importance of RTKs and especially of IGF1R and its mutants in the pathogenesis of MM. Moreover, the results support the potential role of IGF1R as a therapeutic target for a subset of MM patients with mutated IGF1R and/or IGF1R overexpression.}, subject = {Plasmozytom}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Franke2019, author = {Franke, Christian}, title = {Advancing Single-Molecule Localization Microscopy: Quantitative Analyses and Photometric Three-Dimensional Imaging}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-15635}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-156355}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Since its first experimental implementation in 2005, single-molecule localization microscopy (SMLM) emerged as a versatile and powerful imaging tool for biological structures with nanometer resolution. By now, SMLM has compiled an extensive track-record of novel insights in sub- and inter- cellular organization.\\ Moreover, since all SMLM techniques rely on the analysis of emission patterns from isolated fluorophores, they inherently allocate molecular information \$per\$ \$definitionem\$.\\ Consequently, SMLM transitioned from its origin as pure high-resolution imaging instrument towards quantitative microscopy, where the key information medium is no longer the highly resolved image itself, but the raw localization data set.\\ The work presented in this thesis is part of the ongoing effort to translate those \$per\$ \$se\$ molecular information gained by SMLM imaging to insights into the structural organization of the targeted protein or even beyond. Although largely consistent in their objectives, the general distinction between global or segmentation clustering approaches on one side and particle averaging or meta-analyses techniques on the other is usually made.\\ During the course of my thesis, I designed, implemented and employed numerous quantitative approaches with varying degrees of complexity and fields of application.\\ \\ In my first major project, I analyzed the localization distribution of the integral protein gp210 of the nuclear pore complex (NPC) with an iterative \textit{k}-means algorithm. Relating the distinct localization statistics of separated gp210 domains to isolated fluorescent signals led, among others, to the conclusion that the anchoring ring of the NPC consists of 8 homo-dimers of gp210.\\ This is of particular significance, both because it answered a decades long standing question about the nature of the gp210 ring and it showcased the possibility to gain structural information well beyond the resolution capabilities of SMLM by crafty quantification approaches.\\ \\ The second major project reported comprises an extensive study of the synaptonemal complex (SNC) and linked cohesin complexes. Here, I employed a multi-level meta-analysis of the localization sets of various SNC proteins to facilitate the compilation of a novel model of the molecular organization of the major SNC components with so far unmatched extend and detail with isotropic three-dimensional resolution.\\ In a second venture, the two murine cohesin components SMC3 and STAG3 connected to the SNC were analyzed. Applying an adapted algorithm, considering the disperse nature of cohesins, led to the realization that there is an apparent polarization of those cohesin complexes in the SNC, as well as a possible sub-structure of STAG3 beyond the resolution capabilities of SMLM.\\ \\ Other minor projects connected to localization quantification included the study of plasma membrane glycans regarding their overall localization distribution and particular homogeneity as well as the investigation of two flotillin proteins in the membrane of bacteria, forming clusters of distinct shapes and sizes.\\ \\ Finally, a novel approach to three-dimensional SMLM is presented, employing the precise quantification of single molecule emitter intensities. This method, named TRABI, relies on the principles of aperture photometry which were improved for SMLM.\\ With TRABI it was shown, that widely used Gaussian fitting based localization software underestimates photon counts significantly. This mismatch was utilized as a \$z\$-dependent parameter, enabling the conversion of 2D SMLM data to a virtual 3D space. Furthermore it was demonstrated, that TRABI can be combined beneficially with a multi-plane detection scheme, resulting in superior performance regarding axial localization precision and resolution.\\ Additionally, TRABI has been subsequently employed to photometrically characterize a novel dye for SMLM, revealing superior photo-physical properties at the single-molecule level.\\ Following the conclusion of this thesis, the TRABI method and its applications remains subject of diverse ongoing research.}, subject = {Einzelmolek{\"u}lmikroskopie}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{KissnergebStenger2018, author = {Kißner [geb. Stenger], Stefanie Martina}, title = {Morphologische Untersuchungen an Myoblasten von Patienten, die an facioscapulohumeraler Muskeldystrophie (FSHD) leiden}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-156676}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Die autosomal-dominant vererbte facioscapulohumerale Muskeldystrophie (FSHD) ist mit einer Pr{\"a}valenz von etwa 1:20.000 die dritth{\"a}ufigste Form der heredit{\"a}ren Myopathien. Erste Beschwerden werden meist in der zweiten Lebensdekade beobachtet. Betroffen sind vor allem die Muskulatur von Gesicht, Schultern, Oberarmen, die Fußhebermuskulatur und die Muskeln des H{\"u}ftg{\"u}rtels. FSHD wird durch einen Gendefekt ausgel{\"o}st, der den langen Arm des Chromosoms vier (4q35) betrifft, wobei es zur teilweisen Deletion des polymorphen Abschnitts D4Z4, der f{\"u}r das Protein DUX4 codiert, kommt. Dabei treten unter anderem St{\"o}rungen in der DUX4-Expression, Ver{\"a}nderungen der myogenen Genexpression, eine Unterdr{\"u}ckung der Muskelzelldifferenzierung und eine Inhibition der Muskelbildung auf. FSHD und eine andere Form der Muskeldystrophie, die Emery-Dreifuss-Muskeldystrophie (EDMD), zeigen trotz unterschiedlicher genetischer Ursachen ph{\"a}notypisch {\"A}hnlichkeiten in der Auspr{\"a}gung der Erkrankungen. In fr{\"u}heren Studien zeigte die Kernh{\"u}lle von EDMD-Myoblasten morphologische Auff{\"a}lligkeiten. In anderen Untersuchungen waren morphologische Ver{\"a}nderungen der Mitochondrien von FSHD-Patienten festzustellen. Daher wurden elektronenmikroskopische Untersuchungen der Kernh{\"u}lle und der Mitochondrien von FSHD-Myoblasten durchgef{\"u}hrt und mit der entsprechenden Kontrolle verglichen. Hierf{\"u}r wurden drei verschiedene Zelllinien-Paare in unterschiedlichen Passagen, das heißt unterschiedlicher Anzahl an Subkultivierungen, eingesetzt, wobei in den h{\"o}heren Passagen vermehrt morphologische Atypien beobachtet werden konnten. Die eingesetzten Zelllinien differenzieren sich durch verschiedene Parameter wie beispielsweise Alter und Geschlecht der Patienten. Dabei zeigten sich sowohl zwischen den Kontrollzellen als auch zwischen den FSHD-Myoblasten Unterschiede. Im Rahmen der Probenvorbereitung f{\"u}r die Elektronenmikroskopie kamen zwei verschiedene Fixierungsmethoden zum Einsatz: die konventionelle chemische Fixierung, Entw{\"a}sserung und Flacheinbettung von Kulturzellen und die Hochdruckgefrierung mit anschließender Gefriersubstitution. In Bezug auf die Qualit{\"a}t des Strukturerhalts, die beim Hochdruckgefrieren erreicht wird, wird dieser Art der Fixierung eine {\"U}berlegenheit gegen{\"u}ber allen anderen Verfahren zugeschrieben. Diese allgemeine Aussage kann nicht vollst{\"a}ndig auf die Untersuchungen an den Myoblasten {\"u}bertragen werden. F{\"u}r die Untersuchung der Kernmembranen sind beide Methoden geeignet, wobei der Abstand zwischen innerer und {\"a}ußerer Kernmembran nach der HPF-Fixierung sch{\"a}rfer abgebildet wurde. Bei der Darstellung der Mitochondrien zeigten die elektronenmikroskopischen Aufnahmen nach dem Hochdruckgefrieren bessere und sch{\"a}rfere Ergebnisse. Die Kernporen waren bei beiden Fixierungsmethoden gut erkennbar. Beim Vergleich der gesunden und erkrankten Myoblasten wiesen die Kontrollzellen deutlich weniger Auff{\"a}lligkeiten auf als die Myoblasten von FSHD-Patienten. Innere und {\"a}ußere Kernmembran verliefen bei den Kontrollzellen meist parallel und die Mitochondrien zeigten in den meisten F{\"a}llen eine typische wurmartige, l{\"a}ngliche Form mit Cristae. Dies traf sowohl f{\"u}r die konventionelle Fixierung als auch f{\"u}r das Hochdruckgefrieren zu. Die erkrankten Myoblasten wiesen im Vergleich zur Kontrolle bei beiden Fixierungsmethoden deutliche Auff{\"a}lligkeiten in der Mitochondrien-Morphologie auf. Neben einer oft großen Variationsbreite hinsichtlich Form und L{\"a}nge war auch das teilweise Fehlen der Cristae festzustellen. Bei Betrachtung der Kernh{\"u}lle fielen jedoch deutliche Unterschiede zwischen konventioneller und HPF-Fixierung auf. Die {\"a}ußere Kernmembran der konventionell fixierten FSHD-Myoblasten verlief unregelm{\"a}ßig und gewellt. Im Gegensatz dazu wies die Kernh{\"u}lle der HPF-fixierten erkrankten Myoblasten einen erstaunlich parallelen Verlauf auf. Da bei EDMD in vorangegangenen Untersuchungen auch fluoreszenzmikroskopisch Ver{\"a}nderungen der erkrankten Zellen auff{\"a}llig waren, wurde neben den Methoden der Elektronenmikroskopie das Vorliegen und die Verteilung verschiedener Proteine in FSHD-Myoblasten mittels indirekter Immunfluoreszenz untersucht und mit den Kontrollzellen verglichen. Zur Beurteilung der Kernh{\"u}lle wurden Antik{\"o}rper gegen Lamin A/C und Nukleoporine eingesetzt. Die Mitochondrien wurden mithilfe des Antik{\"o}rpers ANT1/2, der an den Adenin-Nukleotid-Translokator der inneren Mitochondrienmembran bindet, untersucht. Im Gegensatz zu den Untersuchungen an EDMD-Myoblasten waren die Lamine A und C sowie die Kernporen sowohl bei den Myoblasten der FSHD-Patienten als auch bei den Kontrollzellen nachweisbar und gleichm{\"a}ßig verteilt. Bei der indirekten Immunfluoreszenz mit ANT1/2 zeigten sich Unterschiede zwischen den untersuchten Myoblasten-Paaren. Durch die vorliegenden Ergebnisse ist darauf zu schließen, dass die Myoblasten von FSHD-Patienten Ver{\"a}nderungen Mitochondrien aufweisen. Die Untersuchungen der Kernh{\"u}lle liefern abh{\"a}ngig von der Fixierungsmethode unterschiedliche Ergebnisse.}, subject = {Landouzy-D{\´e}jerine-Atrophie}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Chen2018, author = {Chen, Jiangtian}, title = {Functions of allatostatin A (AstA) and myoinhibitory peptides (MIPs) in the regulation of food intake and sleep in Drosophila}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-156838}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Neuropeptides and peptide hormones carrying neural or physiological information are intercellular signalling substances. They control most if not all biological processes in vertebrates and invertebrates by acting on specific receptors on the target cell. In mammals, many different neuropeptides and peptide hormones are involved in the regulation of feeding and sleep. In \textit{Drosophila}, allatostatin A (AstA) and myoinhibitory peptides (MIPs) are brain-gut peptides. The AstA receptors are homologues of the mammalian galanin receptors and the amino acid sequences of MIPs are similar to a part of galanin, which has an orexigenic effect and is implicated in the control of sleep behaviour in mammals. I am interested in dissecting pleiotropic functions of AstA and MIPs in the regulation of food intake and sleep in \textit{Drosophila}. \par In the first part of the dissertation the roles of brain-gut peptide allatostatin A are analysed. Due to the genetic and molecular tools available, the fruit fly \textit{Drosophila melanogaster} is chosen to investigate functions of AstA. The aims in this part are to identify pleiotropic functions of AstA and assign specific effects to the activity of certain subsets of AstA expressing cells in \textit{Drosophila} adults. A new and restricted \textit{AstA\textsuperscript{34}-Gal4} line was generated. The confocal imaging result showed that AstA neurons are located in the posterior lateral protocerebrum (PLP), the gnathal ganglia (GNG), the medullae, and thoracic-abdominal ganglion (TAG). AstA producing DLAa neurons in the TAG innervate hindgut and the poterior part of midgut. In addition, AstA are detected in the enteroendocrine cells (EECs).\par Thermogenetic activation and neurogenetic silencing tools with the aid of the \textit{UAS/Gal4} system were employed to manipulate the activity of all or individual subsets of AstA cells and investigate the effects on food intake, locomotor activity and sleep. Our experimental results showed that thermogenetic activation of two pairs of PLP neurons and/or AstA expressing EECs reduced food intake, which can be traced to AstA signalling by using \textit{AstA} mutants. In the locomotor activity, thermogenetic activation of two pairs of PLP neurons and/or AstA expressing EECs resulted in strongly inhibited locomotor activity and promoted sleep without sexual difference, which was most apparent during the morning and evening activity peaks. The experimental and control flies were not impaired in climbing ability. In contrast, conditional silencing of the PLP neurons and/or AstA expressing EECs reduced sleep specifically in the siesta. The arousal experiment was employed to test for the sleep intensity. Thermogenetically activated flies walked significantly slower and a shorter distance than controls for all arousal stimulus intensities. Furthermore, PDF receptor was detected in the PLP neurons and the PLP neurons reacted with an intracellular increase of cAMP upon PDF, only when PDF receptor was present. Constitutive activation of AstA cells by tethered PDF increased sleep and thermogenetic activation of the PDF producing sLNvs promoted sleep specifically in the morning and evening. \par The study shows that the PLP neurons and/or EECs vis AstA signalling subserve an anorexigenic and sleep-regulating function in \textit{Drosophila}. The PLP neurons arborise in the posterior superior protocerebrum, where the sleep relevant dopaminergic neurons are located, and EECs extend themselves to reach the gut lumen. Thus, the PLP neurons are well positioned to regulate sleep and EECs potentially modulate feeding and possibly locomotor activity and sleep during sending the nutritional information from the gut to the brain. The results of imaging, activation of the PDF signalling pathway by tethered PDF and thermoactivation of PDF expressing sLNvs suggest that the PLP neurons are modulated by PDF from sLNv clock neurons and AstA in PLP neurons is the downstream target of the central clock to modulate locomotor activity and sleep. AstA receptors are homologues of galanin receptors and both of them are involved in the regulation of feeding and sleep, which appears to be conserved in evolutionary aspect.\par In the second part of the dissertation, I analysed the role of myoinhibitory peptides. MIPs are brain-gut peptides in insects and polychaeta. Also in \textit{Drosophila}, MIPs are expressed in the CNS and EECs in the gut. Previous studies have demonstrated the functions of MIPs in the regulation of food intake, gut motility and ecdysis in moths and crickets. Yet, the functions of MIPs in the fruit fly are little known. To dissect effects of MIPs regarding feeding, locomotor activity and sleep in \textit{Drosophila melanogater}, I manipulated the activity of MIP\textsuperscript{W{\"U}} cells by using newly generated \textit{Mip\textsuperscript{W{\"U}}-Gal4} lines. Thermogenetical activation or genetical silencing of MIP\textsuperscript{W{\"U}} celles did not affect feeding behaviour and resulted in changes in the sleep status. \par My results are in contradiction to a recent research of Min Soohong and colleagues who demonstrated a role of MIPs in the regulation of food intake and body weight in \textit{Drosophila}. They showed that constitutive silencing of MIP\textsuperscript{KR} cells increased food intake and body weight, whereas thermogenetic activation of MIP\textsuperscript{KR} cells decreased food intake and body weight by using \textit{Mip\textsuperscript{KR}-Gal4} driver. Then I repeated the experiments with the \textit{Mip\textsuperscript{KR}-Gal4} driver, but could not reproduce the results. Interestingly, I just observed the opposite phenotype. When MIP\textsuperscript{KR} cells were silenced by expressing UAS-tetanus toxin (\textit{UAS-TNT}), the \textit{Mip\textsuperscript{KR}\$>\$TNT} flies showed reduced food intake. The thermogenetic activation of MIP\textsuperscript{KR} cells did not affect food intake. Furthermore, I observed that the thermogenetic activation of MIP\textsuperscript{KR} cells strongly reduced the sleep duration.\par In the third part of the dissertation, I adapted and improved a method for metabolic labelling for \textit{Drosophila} peptides to quantify the relative amount of peptides and the released peptides by mass spectrometry under different physiological and behavioural conditions. qRT-PCR is a practical technique to measure the transcription and the corresponding mRNA level of a given peptide. However, this is not the only way to measure the translation and production of peptides. Although the amount of peptides can be quantified by mass spectrometry, it is not possible to distinguish between peptides stored in vesicles and released peptides in CNS extracts. I construct an approach to assess the released peptides, which can be calculated by comparing the relative amount of peptides between two timepoints in combination with the mRNA levels which can be used as semiquantitative proxy reflecting the production of peptides during this period. \par After optimizing the protocol for metabolic labelling, I carried out a quantitative analysis of peptides before and after eclosion as a test. I was able to show that the EH- and SIFa-related peptides were strongly reduced after eclosion. This is in line with the known function and release of EH during eclosion. Since this test was positive, I next used the metabolic labelling in \textit{Drosophila} adult, which were either fed \textit{ad libitum} or starved for 24 hrs, and analysed the effects on the amount of AstA and MIPs. In the mRNA level, my results showed that in the brain \textit{AstA} mRNA level in the 24 hrs starved flies was increased compared to in the \textit{ad libitum} fed flies, whereas in the gut the \textit{AstA} mRNA level was decreased. Starvation induced the reduction of \textit{Mip} mRNA level in the brain and gut. Unfortunately, due to technical problems I was unable to analyse the metabolic labelled peptides during the course of this thesis.\par}, subject = {AstA}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Borst2017, author = {Borst, Andreas}, title = {Apoptosis \& senescence: cell fate determination in inhibitor-treated melanoma cells}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-155085}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Neoplasms of the skin represent the most frequent tumors worldwide; fortunately, most of them are benign or semi-malignant and well treatable. However, the two most aggressive and deadly forms of malignant skin-neoplasms are melanoma and Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC), being responsible for more than 90\% of skin-cancer related deaths. The last decade has yielded enormous progress in melanoma therapy with the advent of targeted therapies, like BRAF or MEK inhibitors, and immune-stimulating therapies, using checkpoint antibodies targeting CTLA- 4, PD-1 or PD-L1. Very recent studies suggest that also MCC patients benefit from a treatment with checkpoint antibodies. Nevertheless, in an advanced metastatic stage, a cure for both of these aggressive malignancies is still hard to achieve: while only a subset of patients experience durable benefit from the immune-based therapies, the widely applicable targeted therapies struggle with development of resistances that inevitably occur in most patients, and finally lead to their death. The four articles included in this thesis addressed current questions concerning therapy and carcinogenesis of melanoma and MCC. Moreover, they are discussed in the light of the up-to-date research regarding targeted and immune-based therapies. In article I we demonstrated that besides apoptosis, MAPK pathway inhibition in BRAF-mutated melanoma cells also induces senescence, a permanent cell cycle arrest. These cells may provide a source for relapse, as even permanently arrested cancer cells can contribute to a pro-tumorigenic milieu. To identify molecular factors determining the differential response, we established M14 melanoma cell line derived single cell clones that either undergo cell death or arrest when treated with BRAF/MEK inhibitors. Using these single cell clones, we demonstrated in article IV that downregulation of the pro-apoptotic BH3-only protein BIK via epigenetic silencing is involved in apoptosis deficiency, which can be overcome by HDAC inhibitors. These observations provide a possible explanation for the lack of a complete and durable response to MAPK inhibitor treatment in melanoma patients, and suggest the application of HDAC inhibitors as a complimentary therapy to MAPK pathway inhibition. Concerning MCC, we scrutinized the interactions between the Merkel cell polyomavirus' (MCV) T antigens (TA) and the tumor suppressors p53 and Rb in article II and III, respectively. In article III, we demonstrated that the cell cycle master regulator Rb is the crucial target of MCV large T (LT), while it - in contrast to other polyomavirus LTs - exhibits much lower affinity to the related proteins p107 and p130. Knockdown of MCV LT led to proliferation arrest in MCC cells, which can be rescued by knockdown of Rb, but not by knockdown of p107 and p130. Contrary to Rb, restriction of p53 in MCC seems to be independent of the MCV TAs, as we demonstrated in article II. In conclusion, the presented thesis has revealed new molecular details, regarding the response of melanoma cells towards an important treatment modality and the mechanisms of viral carcinogenesis in MCC.}, subject = {Melanom}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Koenig2018, author = {K{\"o}nig, Julia Maria}, title = {Fungal grass endophytes and their dependence on land-use intensity}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-163890}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Plant-associated fungi can affect the plants' interaction with herbivores and other microorganisms. For example, many common forage grasses are infected with Epichlo{\"e} endophytes. The endophytes systemically colonize the aerial parts of the plants. They produce bioprotective alkaloids that can negatively affect insects and livestock feeding on the grasses, and interact with other fungal species which living from the plants' nutrients. Environmental conditions strongly influence Epichlo{\"e} endophytes. Endophyte-mediated effects on herbivores are more pronounced under increased temperatures and the endophytes may benefit from land use in managed grasslands. Under the framework of the large-scale German project "Biodiversity Exploratories", I investigated whether infection rates and alkaloid concentrations of Epichlo{\"e} festucae var. lolii in Lolium perenne (Chapter I) and Epichlo{\"e} endophytes (E. uncinata, E. siegelii) in Festuca pratensis (Chapter II) depend on land use and season. Further I analysed, whether foliar fungal assemblages of L. perenne are affected by the presence of Epichlo{\"e} endophytes (Chapter IV).}, subject = {Endophytische Pilze}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Boeck2018, author = {B{\"o}ck, Julia}, title = {Differenzielle Methylierungsanalysen mittels verschiedener Next-Generation Sequencing-basierter Techniken: Die Bedeutung von differenziell methylierten Regionen in der menschlichen Hirnevolution und bei der Krebsentstehung}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-164220}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Die Evolution der Primaten zeigt eine Verbindung zwischen der zunehmenden Komplexit{\"a}t des sozialen Verhaltens und der Vergr{\"o}ßerung des humanen Gehirns, insbesondere des pr{\"a}frontalen Cortex. Deshalb stellt der pr{\"a}frontale Cortex bez{\"u}glich der Evolution des Menschen eine der interessantesten Strukturen im humanen Gehirn dar. Es wird angenommen, dass nicht allein die Gr{\"o}ße, sondern auch die Funktion, vor allem das Zusammenspiel von Neuronen und nicht-neuronalen Zellen, wie z.B. Gliazellen, zur Differenzierung des menschlichen Gehirns von dem rezenter Primaten gef{\"u}hrt hat. Daraus l{\"a}sst sich schließen, dass die Gehirnfunktionen {\"u}ber eine ausgeglichene und gut aufeinander abgestimmte transkriptionelle Landschaft kontrolliert werden, die durch ein zugrundeliegendes genetisches und epigentisches R{\"u}ckgrat organisiert ist. In dieser Studie wurden das Methylierungsprofil neuronaler und nicht-neuronaler Zellen des pr{\"a}frontalen Cortex (Brodmann-Areal 10) von drei Menschen und drei Schimpansen miteinander verglichen. Die intra- und interspezifischen differenziell methylierten Regionen (DMRs) waren in bestimmten genomischen Regionen angereichert. Intraspezifische Methylierungsunterschiede zwischen neuronalen und nicht-neuronalen Zellen konnten dreimal h{\"a}ufiger beobachtet werden als interspezifische Unterschiede in den einzelnen Zelltypen. Rund 90\% der humanen intraspezifischen DMRs wiesen eine Hypomethylierung in den neuronalen Zellen im Vergleich zu den nicht-neuronalen Zellen auf. In den intraspezifischen DMRs (Mensch und Schimpanse) waren Gene angereichert, die mit verschiedenen neuropsychiatrischen Erkrankungen assoziiert sind. Der Vergleich zwischen Menschen und Schimpanse in den neuronalen und nicht-neuronalen Zelltypen zeigte eine Anreicherung von Genen mit human-spezifischer Histonsignatur. In den nicht-neuronalen Zellen konnten mehr interspezifische DMRs (n=666) detektiert werden als in den neuronalen Zellen (n=96). Ungef{\"a}hr 95\% der nicht-neuronalen interspezifischen DMRs waren im Menschen, im Vergleich zum Schimpansen, hypermethyliert. Daraus ergibt sich der Eindruck, dass mehrere hundert der nicht-neuronalen Gene w{\"a}hrend der humanen Gehirnevolution einer Methylierungswelle unterlagen. Dies f{\"u}hrt zu der Annahme, dass der Einfluss dieser Ver{\"a}nderungen in den nicht-neuronalen Zellen auf die Verg{\"o}ßerung des menschlichen Gehirns bisher stark untersch{\"a}tzt wurde. Die bekannteste genetische Ursache f{\"u}r erblichen Brust- und Eierstockkrebs sind Mutationen in den Tumorsuppressorgenen (TSG) BRCA1 und BRCA2. Dennoch k{\"o}nnen nur rund 20-25\% der famili{\"a}ren Brustkrebserkrankungen {\"u}ber Keimbahnmutationen in BRCA1/BRCA2 erkl{\"a}rt werden, besonders bei Frauen, deren Erkrankung vor dem vierzigsten Lebensjahr auftritt. Epigenetische Ver{\"a}nderungen, die zu einer aberranten Genexpression f{\"u}hren, spielen ebenfalls eine wichtige Rolle bei der Karzinogenese und der Entwicklung einer Brustkrebserkrankung. Es ist bekannt, dass TSG nicht nur durch den Verlust der Heterozygotie (engl. loss of heterozygosity, LOH) oder homozygote Deletionen, sondern auch durch transkriptionelle Stilllegung via DNA-Methylierung inaktiviert werden k{\"o}nnen. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde {\"u}berpr{\"u}ft, welchen Einfluss aberrante Methylierungsmuster im Promotorbereich von TSG auf die Brustkrebskarzinogenese und die Expression der Gene haben. F{\"u}r die Quantifizierung der Epimutationen wurden die Promotorbereiche von acht TSG (BRCA1, BRCA2, RAD51C, ATM, PTEN, TP53, MLH1, RB1) und des estrogene receptor (ESR1) Gens, welches eine Rolle in der Tumorprogression spielt, mittels Deep Bisulfite Amplicon Sequencing (DBAS) analysiert. Es wurden Blutproben von zwei unabh{\"a}ngigen BRCA1/BRCA2-mutationsnegativen Brustkrebs (BC)-Patientenkohorten, sowie von zwei unabh{\"a}ngigen alters-gematchten, gesunden Kontrollkohorten untersucht. BC-Kohorte 1 beinhaltet early-onset (EO) BC-Patientinnen. Kohorte 2 enth{\"a}lt BC-Patientinnen mit einem Risiko von >95\% eine heterozygote Mutation in BRCA1/BRCA2 (high-risk, HR) zu tragen. Allele mit >50\% methylierten CpGs werden als funktionell relevante Epimutationen erachtet, da bekannt ist, dass TSG {\"u}ber eine Methylierung im Promotorbereich transkriptionell stillgelegt werden. Im Vergleich zu ESR1 ({\O} Methylierung, 3\%), welches die Methylierungslevel eines durchschnittlichen Promotors wiederspiegelt, zeigten die TSG sehr geringe durchschnittliche Methylierungswerte von weniger als 1\%. Zudem waren die durchschnittlichen Epimutationsraten (EMR; <0,0001-0,1\%) der TSG sehr gering. Mit der Ausnahme von BRCA1, welches eine erh{\"o}hte EMR in der BC-Kohorte verglichen zu den Kontrollen (0,31\% gegen 0,06\%) zeigte, gab es keine signifikanten Gruppenunterschiede zwischen BC-Patientinnen und Kontrollen. Eine von 36 HR BC-Patientinnen zeigte im Vergleich zu den restlichen Proben eine stark erh{\"o}hte EMR von 14,7\% in BRCA1. Rund ein Drittel (15/44) der EO BC-Patientinnen wiesen eine erh{\"o}hte Rate an Einzel-CpG Fehlern in mehreren TSG auf. Die nachfolgenden Expressionsanalysen ergaben eine erniedrigte Expression vieler TSG je analysierter Patientin. Diese Ergebnisse f{\"u}hren zu der Annahme, dass epigenetische Ver{\"a}nderungen in normalen K{\"o}rperzellen als ein m{\"o}glicher Indikator f{\"u}r einen gest{\"o}rten Mechanismus, der f{\"u}r die Aufrechterhaltung des unmethylierten Status und der daraus resultierenden normalen Genexpression zust{\"a}ndig ist, angesehen werden k{\"o}nnen. Dies kann mit einem erh{\"o}hten BC-Risiko assoziiert werden.}, subject = {Epigenetik}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Aufmkolk2018, author = {Aufmkolk, Sarah}, title = {Super-Resolution Microscopy of Synaptic Proteins}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-151976}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, pages = {X, 97}, year = {2018}, abstract = {The interaction of synaptic proteins orchestrate the function of one of the most complex organs, the brain. The multitude of molecular elements influencing neurological correlations makes imaging processes complicated since conventional fluorescence microscopy methods are unable to resolve structures beyond the diffraction-limit. The implementation of super-resolution fluorescence microscopy into the field of neuroscience allows the visualisation of the fine details of neural connectivity. The key element of my thesis is the super-resolution technique dSTORM (direct Stochastic Optical Reconstruction Microscopy) and its optimisation as a multi-colour approach. Capturing more than one target, I aim to unravel the distribution of synaptic proteins with nanometer precision and set them into a structural and quantitative context with one another. Therefore dSTORM specific protocols are optimized to serve the peculiarities of particular neural samples. In one project the brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is investigated in primary, hippocampal neurons. With a precision beyond 15 nm, preand post-synaptic sites can be identified by staining the active zone proteins bassoon and homer. As a result, hallmarks of mature synapses can be exhibited. The single molecule sensitivity of dSTORM enables the measurement of endogenous BDNF and locates BDNF granules aligned with glutamatergic pre-synapses. This data proofs that hippocampal neurons are capable of enriching BDNF within the mature glutamatergic pre-synapse, possibly influencing synaptic plasticity. The distribution of the metabotropic glutamate receptor mGlu4 is investigated in physiological brain slices enabling the analysis of the receptor in its natural environment. With dual-colour dSTORM, the spatial arrangement of the mGlu4 receptor in the pre-synaptic sites of parallel fibres in the molecular layer of the mouse cerebellum is visualized, as well as a four to six-fold increase in the density of the receptor in the active zone compared to the nearby environment. Prior functional measurements show that metabotropic glutamate receptors influence voltage-gated calcium channels and proteins that are involved in synaptic vesicle priming. Corresponding dSTORM data indeed suggests that a subset of the mGlu4 receptor is correlated with the voltage-gated calcium channel Cav2.1 on distances around 60 nm. These results are based on the improvement of the direct analysis of localisation data. Tools like coordinated based correlation analysis and nearest neighbour analysis of clusters centroids are used complementary to map protein connections of the synapse. Limits and possible improvements of these tools are discussed to foster the quantitative analysis of single molecule localisation microscopy data. Performing super-resolution microscopy on complex samples like brain slices benefits from a maximised field of view in combination with the visualisation of more than two targets to set the protein of interest in a cellular context. This challenge served as a motivation to establish a workflow for correlated structured illumination microscopy (SIM) and dSTORM. The development of the visualisation software coSIdSTORM promotes the combination of these powerful super-resolution techniques even on separated setups. As an example, synapses in the cerebellum that are affiliated to the parallel fibres and the dendrites of the Purkinje cells are identified by SIM and the protein bassoon of those pre-synapses is visualised threedimensionally with nanoscopic precision by dSTORM. In this work I placed emphasis on the improvement of multi-colour super-resolution imaging and its analysing tools to enable the investigation of synaptic proteins. The unravelling of the structural arrangement of investigated proteins supports the building of a synapse model and therefore helps to understand the relation between structure and function in neural transmission processes.}, subject = {Hochaufl{\"o}sende Mikroskopie}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Hagen2017, author = {Hagen, Franziska}, title = {Sphingolipids in gonococcal infection}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-153852}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Neisseria gonorrhoeae, the causative agent of the sexually transmitted disease gonorrhea, has the potential to spread in the human host and cause a severe complication called disseminated gonococcal infection (DGI). The expression of the major outer membrane porin PorBIA is a characteristic of most gonococci associated with DGI. PorBIA binds to the scavenger receptor expressed on endothelial cells (SREC-I), which mediates the so-called low phosphate-dependent invasion (LPDI). This uptake mechanism enables N. gonorrhoeae to rapidly invade epithelial and endothelial cells in a phosphate-sensitive manner. We recently demonstrated that the neutral sphingomyelinase, which catalyses the hydrolysis of sphingomyelin to ceramide and phosphorylcholine, is required for the LPDI of gonococci in non-phagocytic cells. Neutral sphingomyelinase 2 (NSM2) plays a key role in the early PorBIA signaling by recruiting the PI3 kinase to caveolin. The following activation of the PI3 kinase-dependent downstream signaling leads to the engulfment of the bacteria. As a part of this work, I could confirm the involvement of the NSM2. The role of the enzyme was further elucidated by the generation of antibodies directed against NSM2 and the construction of an epithelium-based NSM2 knockout cell line using CRISPR/Cas9. The knockout of the NSM2 strongly inhibits the LPDI. The invasion could be, however, restored by the complementation of the knockout using an NSM2-GFP construct. However, the results could not be reproduced. In this work, I could show the involvement of further members of the sphingolipid pathway in the PorBIA-mediated invasion. Lipidome analysis revealed an increase of the bioactive molecules ceramide and sphingosine due to gonococcal infection. Both molecules do not only affect the host cell, but seem to influence the bacteria as well: while ceramide seems to be incorporated by the gonococci, sphingosine is toxic for the bacteria. Furthermore, the sphingosine kinase 2 (SPHK2) plays an important role in invasion, since the inhibition and knockdown of the enzyme revealed a negative effect on gonococcal invasion. To elucidate the role of the sphingosine kinases in invasion in more detail, an activity assay was established in this study. Additionally, the impact of the sphingosine-1-phosphate lyase (S1PL) on invasion was investigated. Inhibitor studies and infection experiments conducted with a CRISPR/Cas9 HeLa S1PL knockout cell line revealed a role of the enzyme not only in the PorBIA-mediated invasion, but also in the Opa50/HSPG-mediated gonococcal invasion. The signaling experiments allowed the categorization of the SPHK and S1PL activation in the context of infection. Like the NSM2, both enzymes play a role in the early PorBIA signaling events leading to the uptake of the bacteria. All those findings indicate an important role of sphingolipids in the invasion and survival of N. gonorrhoeae. In the last part of this work, the role of the NSM2 in the inhibition of apoptosis in neutrophils due to gonococcal infection was investigated. It could be demonstrated that the delayed onset of apoptosis is independent of neisserial porin and Opa proteins. Furthermore, the influence of neisserial peptidoglycan on PMN apoptosis was analysed using mutant strains, but no connection could be determined. Since the NSM2 is the most prominent sphingomyelinase in PMNs, fulfils manifold cell physiological functions and has already been connected to apoptosis, the impact of the enzyme on apoptosis inhibition due to gonococcal infection was investigated using inhibitors, with no positive results.}, subject = {gonococcal}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Reis2017, author = {Reis, Helena}, title = {Characterization of telomere protein complexes in Trypanosoma brucei}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-151323}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2017}, abstract = {African trypanosomiasis is a disease endemic to sub-Saharan Africa. It affects humans as well as wild and domestic animals. The human form of the disease is known as sleeping sickness and the animal form as nagana, which are usually fatal if left untreated. The cause of African trypanosomiasis is the unicellular parasite Trypanosoma brucei. During its life cycle, Trypanosoma brucei shuttles between a mammalian host and the tsetse fly vector. In the mammalian host the parasite multiplies as bloodstream form (BSF) extracellularly in the bloodstream or the lymphatic system. Survival of BSF parasites relies on immune evasion by antigenic variation of surface proteins because its extracellular lifestyle leads to direct exposure to immune responses. At any given time each BSF cell expresses a single type of variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) on its surface from a large repertoire. The active VSG is transcribed from one of 15 specialized subtelomeric domains, termed bloodstream expression sites (BESs). The remaining 14 BESs are silenced. This monoallelic expression and periodic switching of the expressed VSG enables to escape the immune response and to establish a persistent infection in the mammalian host. During developmental differentiation from BSF to the insect vector-resident procyclic form (PCF), the active BES is transcriptionally silenced to stop VSG transcription. Thus, all 15 BESs are inactive in the PCF cells as surface protein expression is developmentally regulated. Previous reports have shown that the telomere complex components TbTRF, TbRAP1 and TbTIF2 are involved in VSG transcriptional regulation. However, the precise nature of their contribution remains unclear. In addition, no information is available about the role of telomeres in the initiation and regulation of developmental BES silencing. To gain insights into the regulatory mechanisms of telomeres on VSG transcription and developmental repression it is therefore essential to identify the complete composition of the trypanosome telomere complex. To this end, we used two complementary biochemical approaches and quantitative label-free interactomics to determine the composition of telomere protein complexes in T. brucei. Firstly, using a telomeric pull-down assay we found 17 potential telomere-binding proteins including the known telomere-binding proteins TbTRF and TbTIF2. Secondly, by performing a co-immunoprecipitation experiment to elucidate TbTRF interactions we co-purified five proteins. All of these five proteins were also enriched with telomeric DNA in the pull-down assay. To validate these data, I characterized one of the proteins found in both experiments (TelBP1). In BSF cells, TelBP1 co-localizes with TbTRF and interacts with already described telomere-binding proteins such as TbTRF, TbTIF2 and TbRAP1 indicating that TelBP1 is a novel component of the telomere complex in trypanosomes. Interestingly, protein interaction studies in PCF cells suggested a different telomere complex composition compared to BSF cells. In contrast to known members of the telomere complex, TelBP1 is dispensable for cell viability indicating that its function might be uncoupled from the known telomere-binding proteins. Overexpression of TelBP1 had also no effect on cell viability, but led to the discovery of two additional shorter isoforms of TelBP1. However, their source and function remained elusive. Although TelBP1 is not essential for cell viability, western blot analysis revealed a 4-fold upregulation of TelBP1 in the BSF stage compared to the PCF stage supporting the concept of a dynamic telomere complex composition. We observed that TelBP1 influences the kinetics of transcriptional BES silencing during developmental transition from BSF to PCF. Deletion of TelBP1 caused faster BES silencing compared to wild-type parasites. Taken together, TelBP1 function illustrates that developmental BES silencing is a fine-tuned process, which involves stage-specific changes in telomere complex formation.}, subject = {Trypanosoma brucei}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Pahlavan2019, author = {Pahlavan, Pirasteh}, title = {Integrated Systems Biology Analysis; Exemplified on Potyvirus and Geminivirus interaction with \(Nicotiana\) \(benthamiana\)}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-15341}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-153412}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Viral infections induce a significant impact on various functional categories of biological processes in the host. The understanding of this complex modification of the infected host immune system requires a global and detailed overview on the infection process. Therefore it is essential to apply a powerful approach which identifies the involved components conferring the capacity to recognize and respond to specific pathogens, which in general are defeated in so-called compatible virus-plant infections. Comparative and integrated systems biology of plant-virus interaction progression may open a novel framework for a systemic picture on the modulation of plant immunity during different infections and understanding pathogenesis mechanisms. In this thesis these approaches were applied to study plant-virus infections during two main viral pathogens of cassava: Cassava brown streak virus and African cassava mosaic virus. Here, the infection process was reconstructed by a combination of omics data-based analyses and metabolic network modelling, to understand the major metabolic pathways and elements underlying viral infection responses in different time series, as well as the flux activity distribution to gain more insights into the metabolic flow and mechanism of regulation; this resulted in simultaneous investigations on a broad spectrum of changes in several levels including the gene expression, primary metabolites, and enzymatic flux associated with the characteristic disease development process induced in Nicotiana benthamiana plants due to infection with CBSV or ACMV. Firstly, the transcriptome dynamics of the infected plant was analysed by using mRNA-sequencing, in order to investigate the differential expression profile according the symptom developmental stage. The spreading pattern and different levels of biological functions of these genes were analysed associated with the infection stage and virus entity. A next step was the Real-Time expression modification of selected key pathway genes followed by their linear regression model. Subsequently, the functional loss of regulatory genes which trigger R-mediated resistance was observed. Substantial differences were observed between infected mutants/transgenic lines and wild-types and characterized in detail. In addition, we detected a massive localized accumulation of ROS and quantified the scavenging genes expression in the infected wild-type plants relative to mock infected controls. Moreover, we found coordinated regulated metabolites in response to viral infection measured by using LC-MS/MS and HPLC-UV-MS. This includes the profile of the phytohormones, carbohydrates, amino acids, and phenolics at different time points of infection with the RNA and DNA viruses. This was influenced by differentially regulated enzymatic activities along the salicylate, jasmonate, and chorismate biosynthesis, glycolysis, tricarboxylic acid cycle, and pentose phosphate pathways, as well as photosynthesis, photorespiration, transporting, amino acid and fatty acid biosynthesis. We calculated the flux redistribution considering a gradient of modulation for enzymes along different infection stages, ranging from pre-symptoms towards infection stability. Collectively, our reverse-engineering study consisting of the generation of experimental data and modelling supports the general insight with comparative and integrated systems biology into a model plant-virus interaction system. We refine the cross talk between transcriptome modification, metabolites modulation and enzymatic flux redistribution during compatible infection progression. The results highlight the global alteration in a susceptible host, correlation between symptoms severity and the alteration level. In addition we identify the detailed corresponding general and specific responses to RNA and DNA viruses at different stages of infection. To sum up, all the findings in this study strengthen the necessity of considering the timing of treatment, which greatly affects plant defence against viral infection, and might result in more efficient or combined targeting of a wider range of plant pathogens.}, language = {en} } @article{KaluzaWallaceHeardetal.2016, author = {Kaluza, Benjamin F. and Wallace, Helen and Heard, Tim A. and Klein, Aelxandra-Maria and Leonhardt, Sara D.}, title = {Urban gardens promote bee foraging over natural habitats and plantations}, series = {Ecology and Evolution}, volume = {6}, journal = {Ecology and Evolution}, number = {5}, doi = {10.1002/ece3.1941}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-162713}, pages = {1304-1316}, year = {2016}, abstract = {Increasing human land use for agriculture and housing leads to the loss of natural habitat and to widespread declines in wild bees. Bee foraging dynamics and fitness depend on the availability of resources in the surrounding landscape, but how precisely landscape related resource differences affect bee foraging patterns remains unclear. To investigate how landscape and its interaction with season and weather drive foraging and resource intake in social bees, we experimentally compared foraging activity, the allocation of foragers to different resources (pollen, nectar, and resin) and overall resource intake in the Australian stingless bee Tetragonula carbonaria (Apidae, Meliponini). Bee colonies were monitored in different seasons over two years. We compared foraging patterns and resource intake between the bees' natural habitat (forests) and two landscapes differently altered by humans (suburban gardens and agricultural macadamia plantations). We found foraging activity as well as pollen and nectar forager numbers to be highest in suburban gardens, intermediate in forests and low in plantations. Foraging patterns further differed between seasons, but seasonal variations strongly differed between landscapes. Sugar and pollen intake was low in plantations, but contrary with our predictions, it was even higher in gardens than in forests. In contrast, resin intake was similar across landscapes. Consequently, differences in resource availability between natural and altered landscapes strongly affect foraging patterns and thus resource intake in social bees. While agricultural monocultures largely reduce foraging success, suburban gardens can increase resource intake well above rates found in natural habitats of bees, indicating that human activities can both decrease and increase the availability of resources in a landscape and thus reduce or enhance bee fitness.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Halboth2018, author = {Halboth, Florian}, title = {Building behavior and nest climate control in leaf-cutting ants: How environmental cues affect the building responses of workers of \(Atta\) \(vollenweideri\)}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-161701}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2018}, abstract = {The present work investigates the influence of environmental stimuli on the building behavior of workers of the leaf-cutting ant Atta vollenweideri. It focuses on cues related to the airflow-driven ventilation of their giant underground nests, i.e., air movements and their direction, carbon dioxide concentrations and humidity levels of the nest air. First, it is shown that workers are able to use airflow and its direction as learned orientation cue by performing learning experiments with individual foragers using a classical conditioning paradigm. This ability is expected to allow workers to also navigate inside the nest tunnels using the prevailing airflow directions for orientation, for example during tasks related to nest construction and climate control. Furthermore, the influence of carbon dioxide on the digging behavior of workers is investigated. While elevated CO2 levels hardly affect the digging rate of the ants, workers prefer to excavate at locations with lower concentrations and avoid higher CO2 levels when given a choice. Under natural conditions, shifting their digging activity to soil layers containing lower carbon dioxide levels might help colonies to excavate new or to broaden existing nest openings, if the CO2 concentration in the underground rises. It is also shown that workers preferably transport excavated soil along tunnels containing high CO2 concentrations, when carbon dioxide levels in the underground are elevated as well. In addition, workers prefer to carry soil pellets along outflow tunnels instead of inflow tunnels, at least for high humidity levels of the air. The material transported along tunnels providing outflow of CO2-rich air might be used by workers for the construction of ventilation turrets on top of the nest mound, which is expected to promote the wind-induced ventilation and the removal of carbon dioxide from the underground. The climatic conditions inside the nest tunnels also influence the structural features of the turrets constructed by workers on top the nest. While airflow and humidity have no effect on turret structure, outflow of CO2-rich air from the nest causes workers to construct turrets with additional openings and increased aperture, potentially enhancing the airflow-driven gas exchanges within the nest. Finally, the effect of airflow and ventilation turrets on the gas exchanges in Atta vollenweideri nests is tested experimentally on a physical model of a small nest consisting of a single chamber and two nest tunnels. The carbon dioxide clearance rate from the underground was measured depending on both the presence of airflow in the nest and the structural features of the built turrets. Carbon dioxide is removed faster from the physical nest model when air moves through the nest, confirming the contribution of wind-induced flow inside the nest tunnels to the ventilation of Atta vollenweideri nests. In addition, turrets placed on top of one of the tunnel openings of the nest further enhance the CO2 clearance rate and the effect is positively correlated with turret aperture. Taken together, climatic variables like airflow, carbon dioxide and humidity levels strongly affect the building responses of Atta vollenweideri leaf-cutting ants. Workers use these environmental stimuli as orientation cue in the nest during tasks related to excavation, soil transport and turret construction. Although the effects of these building responses on the microclimatic conditions inside the nest remain elusive so far, the described behaviors are expected to allow ant colonies to restore and maintain a proper nest climate in the underground.}, subject = {Verhalten}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{SchenkneeWolf2018, author = {Schenk [n{\´e}e Wolf], Mariela}, title = {Timing of wild bee emergence: mechanisms and fitness consequences}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-161565}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Solitary bees in seasonal environments have to align their life-cycles with favorable environmental conditions and resources. Therefore, a proper timing of their seasonal activity is highly fitness relevant. Most species in temperate environments use temperature as a trigger for the timing of their seasonal activity. Hence, global warming can disrupt mutualistic interactions between solitary bees and plants if increasing temperatures differently change the timing of interaction partners. The objective of this dissertation was to investigate the mechanisms of timing in spring-emerging solitary bees as well as the resulting fitness consequences if temporal mismatches with their host plants should occur. In my experiments, I focused on spring-emerging solitary bees of the genus Osmia and thereby mainly on O. cornuta and O. bicornis (in one study which is presented in Chapter IV, I additionally investigated a third species: O. brevicornis). Chapter II presents a study in which I investigated different triggers solitary bees are using to time their emergence in spring. In a climate chamber experiment I investigated the relationship between overwintering temperature, body size, body weight and emergence date. In addition, I developed a simple mechanistic model that allowed me to unite my different observations in a consistent framework. In combination with the empirical data, the model strongly suggests that solitary bees follow a strategic approach and emerge at a date that is most profitable for their individual fitness expectations. I have shown that this date is on the one hand temperature dependent as warmer overwintering temperatures increase the weight loss of bees during hibernation, which then advances their optimal emergence date to an earlier time point (due to an earlier benefit from the emergence event). On the other hand I have also shown that the optimal emergence date depends on the individual body size (or body weight) as bees adjust their emergence date accordingly. My data show that it is not enough to solely investigate temperature effects on the timing of bee emergence, but that we should also consider individual body conditions of solitary bees to understand the timing of bee emergence. In Chapter III, I present a study in which I investigated how exactly temperature determines the emergence date of solitary bees. Therefore, I tested several variants degree-day models to relate temperature time series to emergence data. The basic functioning of such degree-day models is that bees are said to finally emerge when a critical amount of degree-days is accumulated. I showed that bees accumulate degree-days only above a critical temperature value (~4°C in O. cornuta and ~7°C in O. bicornis) and only after the exceedance of a critical calendar date (~10th of March in O. cornuta and ~28th of March in O. bicornis). Such a critical calendar date, before which degree-days are not accumulated irrespective of the actual temperature, is in general less commonly used and, so far, it has only been included twice in a phenology model predicting bee emergence. Furthermore, I used this model to retrospectively predict the emergence dates of bees by applying the model to long-term temperature data which have been recorded by the regional climate station in W{\"u}rzburg. By doing so, the model estimated that over the last 63 years, bees emerged approximately 4 days earlier. In Chapter IV, I present a study in which I investigated how temporal mismatches in bee-plant interactions affect the fitness of solitary bees. Therefore, I performed an experiment with large flight cages serving as mesocosms. Inside these mesocosms, I manipulated the supply of blossoms to synchronize or desynchronize bee-plant interactions. In sum, I showed that even short temporal mismatches of three and six days in bee-plant interactions (with solitary bee emergence before flower occurrence) can cause severe fitness losses in solitary bees. Nonetheless, I detected different strategies by solitary bees to counteract impacts on their fitness after temporal mismatches. However, since these strategies may result in secondary fitness costs by a changed sex ratio or increased parasitism, I concluded that compensation strategies do not fully mitigate fitness losses of bees after short temporal mismatches with their food plants. In the event of further climate warming, fitness losses after temporal mismatches may not only exacerbate bee declines but may also reduce pollination services for later-flowering species and affect populations of animal-pollinated plants. In conclusion, I showed that spring-emerging solitary bees are susceptible to climate change as in response to warmer temperatures bees advance their phenology and show a decreased fitness state. As spring-emerging solitary bees not only consider overwintering temperature but also their individual body condition for adjusting emergence dates, this may explain differing responses to climate warming within and among bee populations which may also have consequences for bee-plant interactions and the persistence of bee populations under further climate warming. If in response to climate warming plants do not shift their phenologies according to the bees, bees may experience temporal mismatches with their host plants. As bees failed to show a single compensation strategy that was entirely successful in mitigating fitness consequences after temporal mismatches with their food plants, the resulting fitness consequences for spring-emerging solitary bees would be severe. Furthermore, I showed that spring-emerging solitary bees use a critical calendar date before which they generally do not commence the summation of degree-days irrespective of the actual temperature. I therefore suggest that further studies should also include the parameter of a critical calendar date into degree-day model predictions to increase the accuracy of model predictions for emergence dates in solitary bees. Although our retrospective prediction about the advance in bee emergence corresponds to the results of several studies on phenological trends of different plant species, we suggest that more research has to be done to assess the impacts of climate warming on the synchronization in bee-plant interactions more accurately.}, subject = {wild bees}, language = {en} } @article{VendelovadeLimaLorenzattoetal.2016, author = {Vendelova, Emilia and de Lima, Jeferson Camargo and Lorenzatto, Karina Rodrigues and Monteiro, Karina Mariante and Mueller, Thomas and Veepaschit, Jyotishman and Grimm, Clemens and Brehm, Klaus and Hrčkov{\´a}, Gabriela and Lutz, Manfred B. and Ferreira, Henrique B. and Nono, Justin Komguep}, title = {Proteomic Analysis of Excretory-Secretory Products of Mesocestoides corti Metacestodes Reveals Potential Suppressors of Dendritic Cell Functions}, series = {PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases}, volume = {10}, journal = {PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases}, number = {10}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pntd.0005061}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-166742}, pages = {e0005061}, year = {2016}, abstract = {Accumulating evidences have assigned a central role to parasite-derived proteins in immunomodulation. Here, we report on the proteomic identification and characterization of immunomodulatory excretory-secretory (ES) products from the metacestode larva (tetrathyridium) of the tapeworm Mesocestoides corti (syn. M. vogae). We demonstrate that ES products but not larval homogenates inhibit the stimuli-driven release of the pro-inflammatory, Th1-inducing cytokine IL-12p70 by murine bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (BMDCs). Within the ES fraction, we biochemically narrowed down the immunosuppressive activity to glycoproteins since active components were lipid-free, but sensitive to heat- and carbohydrate-treatment. Finally, using bioassay-guided chromatographic analyses assisted by comparative proteomics of active and inactive fractions of the ES products, we defined a comprehensive list of candidate proteins released by M. corti tetrathyridia as potential suppressors of DC functions. Our study provides a comprehensive library of somatic and ES products and highlight some candidate parasite factors that might drive the subversion of DC functions to facilitate the persistence of M. corti tetrathyridia in their hosts.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Beck2019, author = {Beck, Katharina}, title = {Die nitrerge Neurotransmission im Gastrointestinaltrakt der Maus}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-15989}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-159896}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Die NO-sensitive Guanylyl-Cyclase (NO-GC) ist ein zentrales Enzym der NO/cGMP-Signalkaskade, das {\"u}ber die Aktivierung von NO zur Bildung des second messangers cGMP f{\"u}hrt. Die NO-GC setzt sich aus zwei Untereinheiten zusammen, sodass zwei Isoformen des Enzyms gebildet werden k{\"o}nnen (α1β1 und α2β1). Da die genaue Verteilung der beiden Isoformen im Colon nicht bekannt ist, wurde diese im ersten Teil dieser Arbeit charakterisiert. Immunhistochemie und In-situ-Hybridisierung zeigten die Expression beider Isoformen sowohl in der glatten Muskelschicht als auch in der Submukosa und Lamina propria. Dabei war die α1β1-Isoform ubiquit{\"a}r, die α2β1-Isoform dagegen haupts{\"a}chlich im Bereich des myenterischen Plexus vorzufinden. In der glatten Muskelschicht des Colons ist die NO-GC in glatten Muskelzellen (SMC), interstitiellen Zellen von Cajal (ICC) sowie Fibroblasten-{\"a}hnliche Zellen (FLC) exprimiert und haupts{\"a}chlich in die Modulation der gastrointestinalen Motilit{\"a}t involviert. Zur spezifischen Charakterisierung der Funktion der NO-GC in den einzelnen Zelltypen wurden Knockout-M{\"a}use generiert, denen die NO-GC global (GCKO) oder spezifisch in SMC (SMC-GCKO), ICC (ICC-GCKO) oder beiden Zelltypen (SMC/ICC-GCKO) fehlt. Anhand dieser Mausmodelle sollten im zweiten Teil dieser Arbeit die modulatorischen Effekte der NO-GC auf die spontanen Kontraktionen des Colons bestimmt werden. Zur Charakterisierung der spontanen Kontraktionen der zirkul{\"a}ren Muskelschicht wurden Myographiestudien mit 2,5 mm langen Colonringen durchgef{\"u}hrt. Hierbei konnten drei verschiedene Kontraktionen gemessen werden: Kleine, hochfrequente Ripples, mittlere Kontraktionen und große Kontraktionen. Die detaillierte Analyse der einzelnen Kontraktionen zeigte einerseits eine NO-unabh{\"a}ngige Regulation der Ripples, andererseits eine NO-abh{\"a}ngige Modulation der mittleren und großen Kontraktionen {\"u}ber die NO-GC in SMC und ICC. Die NO-GC in SMC beeinflusst die Kontraktionen vermutlich vor allem {\"u}ber die Regulation des Muskeltonus der zirkul{\"a}ren Muskelschicht. Die NO-GC in ICC dagegen modifiziert die spontanen Kontraktionen m{\"o}glicherweise {\"u}ber eine Ver{\"a}nderung der Schrittmacheraktivit{\"a}t. Allerdings f{\"u}hrt erst ein Funktionsverlust des NO/cGMP-Signalweges in beiden Zelltypen zu einem sichtbar ver{\"a}nderten Kontraktionsmuster, das dem von globalen Knockout-Tieren glich. Dies weist auf eine kompensatorische Wirkung der NO-GC im jeweils anderen Zelltyp hin. Zur Analyse der propulsiven Kontraktionen entlang des gesamten Colons wurden Videoaufnahmen der Darmbewegungen in Kontraktionsmusterkarten transformiert. Zudem wurde der Darm durchsp{\"u}lt und die Ausflusstropfen aufgezeichnet, um die Effektivit{\"a}t der Kontraktionen beurteilen zu k{\"o}nnen. Hierbei zeigte sich, dass eine Beeintr{\"a}chtigung des NO/cGMP-Signalweges eine verminderte Effektivit{\"a}t der Kontraktionen zur Folge hat und vermutlich durch eine beeintr{\"a}chtige Synchronisation der Kontraktionen erkl{\"a}rt werden kann. In diesem Regulationsmechanismus konnte vor allem der NO-GC in SMC eine {\"u}bergeordnete Rolle zugewiesen werden. Der dritte Teil der Arbeit thematisierte den Befund, dass SMC-GCKO-Tiere ca. 5 Monate nach Tamoxifen-Behandlung Entartungen der Mukosa entwickelten. Diese Entartung war lediglich in Tamoxifen-induzierten Knockout-Tieren vorzufinden. Histologische Analysen identifizierten die Entartungen als tubulovill{\"o}ses Adenom. Die Genexpressionsanalyse von Mukosafalten von SMC-GCKO- und heterozygoten Kontrolltieren zeigte eine Vielzahl von Genen, welche spezifisch bei colorectalem Karzinom differenziell exprimiert sind. Einer dieser Faktoren war der BMP-Antagonist Gremlin1. Dieser Faktor erschien von besonderem Interesse, da er in Zellen der Lamina muscularis mucosae und kryptennahen Myofibroblasten exprimiert wird. Immunhistochemische Analysen ließen vermuten, dass diese Zellen sowohl die NO-GC als auch die Cre-Rekombinase unter dem SMMHC-Promotor exprimieren. Diese Arbeit liefert demnach Hinweise darauf, dass die NO-GC einen wichtigen Regulator innerhalb der Stammzellnische bildet. Die Deletion der NO-GC f{\"u}hrt vermutlich zu einer verst{\"a}rkten Bildung bzw. Sekretion von Gremlin1, was die Hom{\"o}ostase der mukosalen Erneuerung st{\"o}rt und somit zur Entwicklung von Adenomen f{\"u}hrt.}, subject = {Gastrointestinaltrakt}, language = {de} } @article{DrakulićFeldhaarLisičićetal.2016, author = {Drakulić, Sanja and Feldhaar, Heike and Lisičić, Duje and Mioč, Mia and Cizelj, Ivan and Seiler, Michael and Spatz, Theresa and R{\"o}del, Mark-Oliver}, title = {Population-specific effects of developmental temperature on body condition and jumping performance of a widespread European frog}, series = {Ecology and Evolution}, volume = {6}, journal = {Ecology and Evolution}, number = {10}, doi = {10.1002/ece3.2113}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-164960}, pages = {3115-3128}, year = {2016}, abstract = {All physiological processes of ectotherms depend on environmental temperature. Thus, adaptation of physiological mechanisms to the thermal environments is important for achieving optimal performance and fitness. The European Common Frog, Rana temporaria, is widely distributed across different thermal habitats. This makes it an exceptional model for studying the adaptations to different thermal conditions. We raised tadpoles from Germany and Croatia at two constant temperature treatments (15°C, 20°C), and under natural temperature fluctuations (in outdoor treatments), and tested how different developmental temperatures affected developmental traits, that is, length of larval development, morphometrics, and body condition, as well as jumping performance of metamorphs. Our results revealed population-specific differences in developmental time, body condition, and jumping performance. Croatian frogs developed faster in all treatments, were heavier, in better body condition, and had longer hind limbs and better jumping abilities than German metamorphs. The populations further differed in thermal sensitivity of jumping performance. While metamorphs from Croatia increased their jumping performance with higher temperatures, German metamorphs reached their performance maximum at lower temperatures. These population-specific differences in common environments indicate local genetic adaptation, with southern populations being better adapted to higher temperatures than those from north of the Alps.}, language = {en} } @article{MenaDiegelmannWegeneretal.2016, author = {Mena, Wilson and Diegelmann, S{\"o}ren and Wegener, Christian and Ewer, John}, title = {Stereotyped responses of Drosophila peptidergic neuronal ensemble depend on downstream neuromodulators}, series = {eLife}, volume = {5}, journal = {eLife}, doi = {10.7554/eLife.19686}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-165003}, pages = {e19686}, year = {2016}, abstract = {Neuropeptides play a key role in the regulation of behaviors and physiological responses including alertness, social recognition, and hunger, yet, their mechanism of action is poorly understood. Here, we focus on the endocrine control ecdysis behavior, which is used by arthropods to shed their cuticle at the end of every molt. Ecdysis is triggered by ETH (Ecdysis triggering hormone), and we show that the response of peptidergic neurons that produce CCAP (crustacean cardioactive peptide), which are key targets of ETH and control the onset of ecdysis behavior, depends fundamentally on the actions of neuropeptides produced by other direct targets of ETH and released in a broad paracrine manner within the CNS; by autocrine influences from the CCAP neurons themselves; and by inhibitory actions mediated by GABA. Our findings provide insights into how this critical insect behavior is controlled and general principles for understanding how neuropeptides organize neuronal activity and behaviors.}, language = {en} } @article{KonteTerpitzPlemenitaš2016, author = {Konte, Tilen and Terpitz, Ulrich and Plemenitaš, Ana}, title = {Reconstruction of the High-Osmolarity Glycerol (HOG) Signaling Pathway from the Halophilic Fungus Wallemia ichthyophaga in Saccharomyces cerevisiae}, series = {Frontiers in Microbiology}, journal = {Frontiers in Microbiology}, doi = {10.3389/fmicb.2016.00901}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-165214}, year = {2016}, abstract = {The basidiomycetous fungus Wallemia ichthyophaga grows between 1.7 and 5.1 M NaCl and is the most halophilic eukaryote described to date. Like other fungi, W. ichthyophaga detects changes in environmental salinity mainly by the evolutionarily conserved high-osmolarity glycerol (HOG) signaling pathway. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the HOG pathway has been extensively studied in connection to osmotic regulation, with a valuable knock-out strain collection established. In the present study, we reconstructed the architecture of the HOG pathway of W. ichthyophaga in suitable S. cerevisiae knock-out strains, through heterologous expression of the W. ichthyophaga HOG pathway proteins. Compared to S. cerevisiae, where the Pbs2 (ScPbs2) kinase of the HOG pathway is activated via the SHO1 and SLN1 branches, the interactions between the W. ichthyophaga Pbs2 (WiPbs2) kinase and the W. ichthyophaga SHO1 branch orthologs are not conserved: as well as evidence of poor interactions between the WiSho1 Src-homology 3 (SH3) domain and the WiPbs2 proline-rich motif, the absence of a considerable part of the osmosensing apparatus in the genome of W. ichthyophaga suggests that the SHO1 branch components are not involved in HOG signaling in this halophilic fungus. In contrast, the conserved activation of WiPbs2 by the S. cerevisiae ScSsk2/ScSsk22 kinase and the sensitivity of W. ichthyophaga cells to fludioxonil, emphasize the significance of two-component (SLN1-like) signaling via Group III histidine kinase. Combined with protein modeling data, our study reveals conserved and non-conserved protein interactions in the HOG signaling pathway of W. ichthyophaga and therefore significantly improves the knowledge of hyperosmotic signal processing in this halophilic fungus.}, language = {en} } @article{HeldBerzHensgenetal.2016, author = {Held, Martina and Berz, Annuska and Hensgen, Ronja and Muenz, Thomas S. and Scholl, Christina and R{\"o}ssler, Wolfgang and Homberg, Uwe and Pfeiffer, Keram}, title = {Microglomerular Synaptic Complexes in the Sky-Compass Network of the Honeybee Connect Parallel Pathways from the Anterior Optic Tubercle to the Central Complex}, series = {Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience}, volume = {10}, journal = {Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience}, number = {186}, doi = {10.3389/fnbeh.2016.00186}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-165080}, year = {2016}, abstract = {While the ability of honeybees to navigate relying on sky-compass information has been investigated in a large number of behavioral studies, the underlying neuronal system has so far received less attention. The sky-compass pathway has recently been described from its input region, the dorsal rim area (DRA) of the compound eye, to the anterior optic tubercle (AOTU). The aim of this study is to reveal the connection from the AOTU to the central complex (CX). For this purpose, we investigated the anatomy of large microglomerular synaptic complexes in the medial and lateral bulbs (MBUs/LBUs) of the lateral complex (LX). The synaptic complexes are formed by tubercle-lateral accessory lobe neuron 1 (TuLAL1) neurons of the AOTU and GABAergic tangential neurons of the central body's (CB) lower division (TL neurons). Both TuLAL1 and TL neurons strongly resemble neurons forming these complexes in other insect species. We further investigated the ultrastructure of these synaptic complexes using transmission electron microscopy. We found that single large presynaptic terminals of TuLAL1 neurons enclose many small profiles (SPs) of TL neurons. The synaptic connections between these neurons are established by two types of synapses: divergent dyads and divergent tetrads. Our data support the assumption that these complexes are a highly conserved feature in the insect brain and play an important role in reliable signal transmission within the sky-compass pathway.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Maierhofer2018, author = {Maierhofer, Anna}, title = {Altersassoziierte und strahleninduzierte Ver{\"a}nderungen des genomweiten DNA-Methylierungs-Profils}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-174134}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Der Prozess des Alterns ist ein komplexer multifaktorieller Vorgang, der durch eine sukzessive Verschlechterung der physiologischen Funktionen charakterisiert ist. Ein hohes Alter ist der Hauptrisikofaktor f{\"u}r die meisten Krankheiten, einschließlich Krebs und Herz-Kreislauf-Erkrankungen. Das Verst{\"a}ndnis der epigenetischen Mechanismen, die in den Prozess des Alterns involviert sind, k{\"o}nnte zur Entwicklung pharmakologischer Interventionen beitragen, die nicht nur die Lebenserwartung erh{\"o}hen, sondern auch den Beginn des altersassoziierten funktionellen Abbaus verz{\"o}gern k{\"o}nnten. Durch die Langzeit-Kultivierung prim{\"a}rer humaner Fibroblasten wurde ein in vitro Modell f{\"u}r das Altern etabliert, das die Identifizierung altersassoziierter DNA-Methylierungs-Ver{\"a}nderungen erm{\"o}glichte. Die in vitro Alterung konnte mit einer globalen Hypomethylierung und einer erh{\"o}hten DNA-Methylierung der ribosomalen DNA assoziiert werden. Dar{\"u}ber hinaus konnten DNA-Methylierungs-Ver{\"a}nderungen in Genen und Signalwegen, die f{\"u}r das Altern relevant sind, und ein erh{\"o}htes epigenetisches Alter nachgewiesen werden. Das in vitro Modell f{\"u}r das Altern wurde verwendet, um neben den direkten Effekten ionisierender Strahlung auf die DNA-Methylierung auch deren Langzeit-Effekte zu untersuchen. Die Strahlentherapie ist ein entscheidendes Element der Krebstherapie, hat aber auch negative Auswirkungen und kann unter anderem das Risiko f{\"u}r die Entwicklung eines Zweittumors erh{\"o}hen. Bei externer Bestrahlung wird neben dem Tumor auch gesundes Gewebe ionisierender Strahlung ausgesetzt. Daher ist es wichtig zu untersuchen, wie Zellen mit intakten DNA-Reparatur-Mechanismen und funktionierenden Zellzyklus-Checkpoints durch diese beeinflusst werden. In der fr{\"u}hen Phase der DNA-Schadensantwort auf Bestrahlung wurden in normalen Zellen keine wesentlichen DNA-Methylierungs-Ver{\"a}nderungen beobachtet. Mehrere Populations-Verdoppelungen nach Strahlenexposition konnten dagegen eine globale Hypomethylierung, eine erh{\"o}hte DNA-Methylierung der ribosomalen DNA und ein erh{\"o}htes epigenetisches Alter detektiert werden. Des Weiteren zeigten Gene und Signalwege, die mit Krebs in Verbindung gebracht wurden, Ver{\"a}nderungen in der DNA-Methylierung. Als Langzeit-Effekte ionisierender Strahlung traten somit die mit der in vitro Alterung assoziierten DNA-Methylierungs-Ver{\"a}nderungen verst{\"a}rkt auf und ein epigenetisches Muster, das stark an das DNA-Methylierungs-Profil von Tumorzellen erinnert, entstand. Man geht davon aus, dass Ver{\"a}nderungen der DNA-Methylierung eine aktive Rolle in der Entwicklung eines Tumors spielen. Die durch ionisierende Strahlung induzierten DNA-Methylierungs-Ver{\"a}nderungen in normalen Zellen k{\"o}nnten demnach in die Krebsentstehung nach Strahlenexposition involviert sein und zu dem sekund{\"a}ren Krebsrisiko nach Strahlentherapie beitragen. Es ist bekannt, dass Patienten unterschiedlich auf therapeutische Bestrahlung reagieren. Die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit weisen darauf hin, dass die individuelle Sensitivit{\"a}t gegen{\"u}ber ionisierender Strahlung auch auf epigenetischer Ebene beobachtet werden kann. In einem zweiten Projekt wurden Gesamtblutproben von Patienten mit Werner-Syndrom, einer segmental progeroiden Erkrankung, und gesunden Kontrollen analysiert, um mit dem vorzeitigen Altern in Verbindung stehende DNA-Methylierungs-Ver{\"a}nderungen zu identifizieren. Werner-Syndrom konnte nicht mit einer globalen Hypomethylierung, jedoch mit einer erh{\"o}hten DNA-Methylierung der ribosomalen DNA und einem erh{\"o}hten epigenetischen Alter assoziiert werden. Das vorzeitige Altern geht demzufolge mit spezifischen epigenetischen Ver{\"a}nderungen einher, die eine Beschleunigung der mit dem normalen Altern auftretenden DNA-Methylierungs-Ver{\"a}nderungen darstellen. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit konnte die Bedeutung epigenetischer Mechanismen im Prozess des Alterns hervorgehoben werden und gezeigt werden, dass sowohl exogene Faktoren, wie ionisierende Strahlung, als auch endogene Faktoren, wie das in Werner-Syndrom-Patienten mutiert vorliegende WRN-Gen, altersassoziierte DNA-Methylierungs-Ver{\"a}nderungen beeinflussen k{\"o}nnen.}, subject = {Methylierung}, language = {de} } @article{TauscherNakagawaVoelkeretal.2018, author = {Tauscher, Sabine and Nakagawa, Hitoshi and V{\"o}lker, Katharina and Werner, Franziska and Krebes, Lisa and Potapenko, Tamara and Doose, S{\"o}ren and Birkenfeld, Andreas L. and Baba, Hideo A. and Kuhn, Michaela}, title = {β Cell-specific deletion of guanylyl cyclase A, the receptor for atrial natriuretic peptide, accelerates obesity-induced glucose intolerance in mice}, series = {Cardiovascular Diabetology}, volume = {17}, journal = {Cardiovascular Diabetology}, number = {103}, doi = {10.1186/s12933-018-0747-3}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-176322}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Background: The cardiac hormones atrial (ANP) and B-type natriuretic peptides (BNP) moderate arterial blood pressure and improve energy metabolism as well as insulin sensitivity via their shared cGMP-producing guanylyl cyclase-A (GC-A) receptor. Obesity is associated with impaired NP/GC-A/cGMP signaling, which possibly contributes to the development of type 2 diabetes and its cardiometabolic complications. In vitro, synthetic ANP, via GC-A, stimulates glucose-dependent insulin release from cultured pancreatic islets and β-cell proliferation. However, the relevance for systemic glucose homeostasis in vivo is not known. To dissect whether the endogenous cardiac hormones modulate the secretory function and/or proliferation of β-cells under (patho)physiological conditions in vivo, here we generated a novel genetic mouse model with selective disruption of the GC-A receptor in β-cells. Methods: Mice with a floxed GC-A gene were bred to Rip-CreTG mice, thereby deleting GC-A selectively in β-cells (β GC-A KO). Weight gain, glucose tolerance, insulin sensitivity, and glucose-stimulated insulin secretion were monitored in normal diet (ND)- and high-fat diet (HFD)-fed mice. β-cell size and number were measured by immunofluorescence-based islet morphometry. Results: In vitro, the insulinotropic and proliferative actions of ANP were abolished in islets isolated from β GC-A KO mice. Concordantly, in vivo, infusion of BNP mildly enhanced baseline plasma insulin levels and glucose-induced insulin secretion in control mice. This effect of exogenous BNP was abolished in β GC-A KO mice, corroborating the efficient inactivation of the GC-A receptor in β-cells. Despite this under physiological, ND conditions, fasted and fed insulin levels, glucose-induced insulin secretion, glucose tolerance and β-cell morphology were similar in β GC-A KO mice and control littermates. However, HFD-fed β GC-A KO animals had accelerated glucose intolerance and diminished adaptative β-cell proliferation. Conclusions: Our studies of β GC-A KO mice demonstrate that the cardiac hormones ANP and BNP do not modulate β-cell's growth and secretory functions under physiological, normal dietary conditions. However, endogenous NP/GC-A signaling improves the initial adaptative response of β-cells to HFD-induced obesity. Impaired β-cell NP/GC-A signaling in obese individuals might contribute to the development of type 2 diabetes.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Horn2019, author = {Horn, Jessica}, title = {Molecular and functional characterization of the long non-coding RNA SSR42 in \(Staphylococcus\) \(aureus\)}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-175778}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Staphylococcus aureus asymptomatically colonizes the skin and anterior nares of 20-30\% of the healthy human population. As an opportunistic human pathogen it elicits a variety of infections ranging from skin and soft tissue infections to highly severe manifestations such as pneumonia, endocarditis and osteomyelitis. Due to the emergence of multi resistant strains, treatment of staphylococcal infections becomes more and more challenging and the WHO therefore classified S. aureus as a "superbug". The variety of diseases triggered by S. aureus is the result of a versatile expression of a large set of virulence factors. The most prominent virulence factor is the cytotoxic and haemolytic pore-forming α-toxin whose expression is mediated by a complex regulatory network involving two-component systems such as the agr quorum-sensing system, accessory transcriptional regulators and alternative sigma-factors. However, the intricate regulatory network is not yet understood in its entirety. Recently, a transposon mutation screen identified the AraC-family transcriptional regulator 'Repressor of surface proteins' (Rsp) to regulate haemolysis, cytotoxicity and the expression of various virulence associated factors. Deletion of rsp was accompanied by a complete loss of transcription of a 1232 nt long non-coding RNA, SSR42. This doctoral thesis focuses on the molecular and functional characterization of SSR42. By analysing the transcriptome and proteome of mutants in either SSR42 or both SSR42 and rsp, as well as by complementation of SSR42 in trans, the ncRNA was identified as the main effector of Rsp-mediated virulence. Mutants in SSR42 exhibited strong effects on transcriptional and translational level when compared to wild-type bacteria. These changes resulted in phenotypic alterations such as strongly reduced haemolytic activity and cytotoxicity towards epithelial cells as well as reduced virulence in a murine infection model. Deletion of SSR42 further promoted the formation of small colony variants (SCV) during long term infection of endothelial cells and demonstrated the importance of this molecule for intracellular bacteria. The impact of this ncRNA on staphylococcal haemolysis was revealed to be executed by modulation of sae mRNA stability and by applying mutational studies functional domains within SSR42 were identified. Moreover, various stressors modulated the transcription of SSR42 and antibiotic challenge resulted in SSR42-dependently increased haemolysis and cytotoxicity. Transcription of SSR42 itself was found under control of various important global regulators including AgrA, SaeS, CodY and σB, thereby illustrating a central position in S. aureus virulence gene regulation. The present study thus demonstrates SSR42 as a global virulence regulatory RNA which is important for haemolysis, disease progression and adaption of S. aureus to intracellular conditions via formation of SCVs.}, subject = {Staphylococcus aureus}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Ruedenauer2021, author = {R{\"u}denauer, Fabian}, title = {Nutrition facts of pollen: nutritional quality and how it affects reception and perception in bees}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-21254}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-212548}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2021}, abstract = {Nutrients belong to the key elements enabling life and influencing an organism's fitness. The intake of nutrients in the right amounts and ratios can increase fitness; strong deviations from the optimal intake target can decrease fitness. Hence, the ability to assess the nutritional profile of food would benefit animals. To achieve this, they need the according nutrient receptors, the ability to interpret the receptor information via perceptive mechanisms, and the ability to adjust their foraging behavior accordingly. Additionally, eventually existing correlations between the nutrient groups and single nutrient compounds in food could help them to achieve this adjustment. A prominent interaction between food and consumer is the interaction between flowering plants (angiosperms) and animal pollinators. Usually both of the interacting partners benefit from this mutualistic interaction. Plants are pollinated while pollinators get a (most of the times) nutritional reward in form of nectar and/or pollen. As similar interactions between plants and animals seem to have existed even before the emergence of angiosperms, these interactions between insects and angiosperms very likely have co-evolved right from their evolutionary origin. Therefore, insect pollinators with the ability to assess the nutritional profile may have shaped the nutritional profile of plant species depending on them for their reproduction via selection pressure. In Chapter I of this thesis the pollen nutritional profile of many plant species was analyzed in the context of their phylogeny and their dependence on insect pollinators. In addition, correlations between the nutrients were investigated. While the impact of phylogeny on the pollen protein content was little, the mutual outcome of both of the studies included in this chapter is that protein content of pollen is mostly influenced by the plant's dependence on insect pollinators. Several correlations found between nutrients within and between the nutrient groups could additionally help the pollinators to assess the nutrient profile of pollen. An important prerequisite for this assessment would be that the pollinators are able to differentiate between pollen of different plant species. Therefore, in Chapter II it was investigated whether bees have this ability. Specifically, it was investigated whether honeybees are able to differentiate between pollen of two different, but closely related plant species and whether bumblebees prefer one out of three pollen mixes, when they were fed with only one of them as larvae. Honeybees indeed were able to differentiate between the pollen species and bumblebees preferred one of the pollen mixes to the pollen mix they were fed as larvae, possibly due to its nutritional content. Therefore, the basis for pollen nutrient assessment is given in bees. However, there also was a slight preference for the pollen fed as larvae compared to another non-preferred pollen mix, at least hinting at the retention of larval memory in adult bumblebees. Chapter III looks into nutrient perception of bumblebees more in detail. Here it was shown that they are principally able to perceive amino acids and differentiate between them as well as different concentrations of the same amino acid. However, they do not seem to be able to assess the amino acid content in pollen or do not focus on it, but instead seem to focus on fatty acids, for which they could not only perceive concentration differences, but also were able to differentiate between. These findings were supported by feeding experiments in which the bumblebees did not prefer any of the pollen diets containing less or more amino acids but preferred pollen with less fatty acids. In no choice feeding experiments, bumblebees receiving a diet with high fatty acid content accepted undereating other nutrients instead of overeating fat, leading to increased mortality and the inability to reproduce. Hence, the importance of fat in pollen needs to be looked into further. In conclusion, this thesis shows that the co-evolution of flowering plants and pollinating insects could be even more pronounced than thought before. Insects do not only pressure the plants to produce high quality nectar, but also pressure those plants depending on insect pollination to produce high quality pollen. The reason could be the insects' ability to receive and perceive certain nutrients, which enables them to forage selectively leading to a higher reproductive success of plants with a pollinator-suitable nutritional pollen profile.}, subject = {Pollen}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Bruehlmann2017, author = {Br{\"u}hlmann, David}, title = {Tailoring Recombinant Protein Quality by Rational Media Design}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-147345}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Nowadays, more than half of the biotherapeutics are produced in mammalian cell lines as a result of correct protein folding and assembly as well as their faculty to bring about a variety of post-translational modifications. The widespread progression of biosimilars has moved the focus in mammalian cell-culture process development. Thereby, the modulation of quality attributes of recombinant therapeutic proteins has increasingly gained importance from early process development stages. Protein quality directly shapes the clinical efficacy and safety in vivo, and therefore, the control of the complex post-translational modifications, such as glycosylation (e.g. high mannose, fucosylation, galactosylation and sialylation), charge variants, aggregates and low-molecular-weight species formation, is pivotal for efficient receptor binding and for triggering the desired immune responses in patients. In the frame of biosimilar development, product quality modulation methods using the potential of the host cell line are particularly sought after to match the quality profile of the targeted reference medicinal product (RMP) as closely as possible. The environment the cell is dwelling in directly influences its metabolism and the resulting quality profile of the expressed protein. Thereby the cell culture medium plays a central role in upstream manufacturing. In this work, concentration adjustment of selected media components and supplementation with a variety of compounds was performed to alter various metabolic pathways, enzyme activities and in some cases the gene expression levels of Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) cells in culture. The supplementation of cell culture medium with the trisaccharide raffinose in fed-batch cultures entailed an increase of the abundance of high mannose glycans in two different CHO cell lines. Raffinose especially favored mannose 5 glycans. At the same time, it impaired cell culture performance, induced changes on the intracellular nucleotide levels and even varied the expression levels of glycosylation-related genes. Supplementation with a number of galactosyltransferase inhibiting compounds, in particular fluorinated galactose analogs (alpha- and beta-2F-peracetyl-galactose), consistently decreased the production of galactosylated monoclonal antibodies (mAb). By means of targeted addition during the culture rather than at the beginning, the inhibition was further increased, while limiting detrimental effects on both growth and productivity. High-throughput screening in 96-deepwell plates showed that spermine and L-ornithine also reduced the level of galactosylation. On the other hand, exploratory screening of a variety of potentially disulfide-bridge-reducing agents highlighted that the inherent low-molecular-species level of the proprietary platform cell culture process was likely due to favored reduction. This hypothesis was reinforced by the observation that supplementation of cysteine and N-acetylcysteine promoted fragmentation. Additionally, fragmentation decreased with higher protein expression. At that point, aiming to improve the efficiency in process development, a rational experimental design method was developed to identify and to define the optimal concentration range of quality modulating compounds by calling on a combination of high throughput fed-batch testing and multivariate data analysis. Seventeen medium supplements were tested in five parallel 96-deepwell plate experiments. The selection process of promising modulators for the follow-up experiment in shake tubes consisted in a three-step procedure, including principal component analysis, quantitative evaluation of their performance with respect to the specifications for biosimilarity and selection following a hierarchical order of decisions using a decision tree. The method resulted in a substantial improvement of the targeted glycosylation profile in only two experimental rounds. Subsequent development stages, namely validation and transfer to industrial-scale facilities require tight control of product quality. Accordingly, further mechanistic understanding of the underlying processes was acquired by non-targeted metabolomic profiling of a CHO cell line expressing a mAb cultured in four distinct process formats. Univariate analysis of intra- and extracellular metabolite and temporal glycosylation profiles provided insights in various pathways. The numerous of parameters were the main driver to carry out principal component analysis, and then, using the methodology of partial-least-square (PLS) projection on latent structures, a multivariate model was built to correlate the extracellular data with the distinct glycosylation profiles. The PLS observation model proved to be reliable and showed its great benefit for glycan pattern control in routine manufacturing, especially at large scale. Rather than relying on post-production interpretation of glycosylation results, glycosylation can be predicted in real-time based on the extracellular metabolite levels in the bioreactor. Finally, for the bioactivity assessment of the glycan differences between the biosimilar and the reference medicinal product (RMP), the health agencies may ask for in the drug registration process, extended ranges of glycan variants need to be generated so that the in vitro assays pick up the changes. The developed glycosylation modulator library enabled the generation of extreme glycosylation variants, including high mannose, afucosylated, galactosylated as well as sialic acid species of both a mAb and an antibody fusion molecule with three N-glycosylation sites. Moreover, to create increased variety, enzymatic glycoengineering was explored for galactosylation and sialylation. The glyco variants induced significant responses in the respective in vitro biological activity assays. The data of this work highlight the immense potential of cell culture medium optimization to adjust product quality. Medium and feed supplementation of a variety of compounds resulted in reproducible and important changes of the product quality profile of both mAbs and a fusion antibody. In addition to the intermediate modulation ranges that largely met the requirements for new-biological-entity and biosimilar development, medium supplementation even enabled quick and straightforward generation of extreme glycan variants suitable for biological activity testing.}, subject = {Zellkultur}, language = {en} } @article{KunzLiangNillaetal.2016, author = {Kunz, Meik and Liang, Chunguang and Nilla, Santosh and Cecil, Alexander and Dandekar, Thomas}, title = {The drug-minded protein interaction database (DrumPID) for efficient target analysis and drug development}, series = {Database}, volume = {2016}, journal = {Database}, doi = {10.1093/database/baw041}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-147369}, pages = {baw041}, year = {2016}, abstract = {The drug-minded protein interaction database (DrumPID) has been designed to provide fast, tailored information on drugs and their protein networks including indications, protein targets and side-targets. Starting queries include compound, target and protein interactions and organism-specific protein families. Furthermore, drug name, chemical structures and their SMILES notation, affected proteins (potential drug targets), organisms as well as diseases can be queried including various combinations and refinement of searches. Drugs and protein interactions are analyzed in detail with reference to protein structures and catalytic domains, related compound structures as well as potential targets in other organisms. DrumPID considers drug functionality, compound similarity, target structure, interactome analysis and organismic range for a compound, useful for drug development, predicting drug side-effects and structure-activity relationships.}, language = {en} } @article{BeckerKucharskiRoessleretal.2016, author = {Becker, Nils and Kucharski, Robert and R{\"o}ssler, Wolfgang and Maleszka, Ryszard}, title = {Age-dependent transcriptional and epigenomic responses to light exposure in the honey bee brain}, series = {FEBS Open Bio}, volume = {6}, journal = {FEBS Open Bio}, number = {7}, doi = {10.1002/2211-5463.12084}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-147080}, pages = {622-639}, year = {2016}, abstract = {Light is a powerful environmental stimulus of special importance in social honey bees that undergo a behavioral transition from in-hive to outdoor foraging duties. Our previous work has shown that light exposure induces structural neuronal plasticity in the mushroom bodies (MBs), a brain center implicated in processing inputs from sensory modalities. Here, we extended these analyses to the molecular level to unravel light-induced transcriptomic and epigenomic changes in the honey bee brain. We have compared gene expression in brain compartments of 1- and 7-day-old light-exposed honey bees with age-matched dark-kept individuals. We have found a number of differentially expressed genes (DEGs), both novel and conserved, including several genes with reported roles in neuronal plasticity. Most of the DEGs show age-related changes in the amplitude of light-induced expression and are likely to be both developmentally and environmentally regulated. Some of the DEGs are either known to be methylated or are implicated in epigenetic processes suggesting that responses to light exposure are at least partly regulated at the epigenome level. Consistent with this idea light alters the DNA methylation pattern of bgm, one of the DEGs affected by light exposure, and the expression of microRNA miR-932. This confirms the usefulness of our approach to identify candidate genes for neuronal plasticity and provides evidence for the role of epigenetic processes in driving the molecular responses to visual stimulation.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Zimmermann2020, author = {Zimmermann, Henriette}, title = {Antigenic variation and stumpy development in \(Trypanosoma\) \(brucei\)}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-14690}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-146902}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2020}, abstract = {The eukaryotic parasite Trypanosoma brucei has evolved sophisticated strategies to persist within its mammalian host. Trypanosomes evade the hosts' immune system by antigenic variation of their surface coat, consisting of variant surface glycoproteins (VSGs). Out of a repertoire of thousands of VSG genes, only one is expressed at any given time from one of the 15 telomeric expression sites (ES). The VSG is stochastically exchanged either by a transcriptional switch of the active ES (in situ switch) or by a recombinational exchange of the VSG within the active ES. However, for infections to persist, the parasite burden has to be limited. The slender (sl) bloodstream form secretes the stumpy induction factor (SIF), which accumulates with rising parasitemia. SIF induces the irreversible developmental transition from the proliferative sl to the cell cycle-arrested but fly-infective stumpy (st) stage once a concentration threshold is reached. Thus, antigenic variation and st development ensure persistent infections and transmissibility. A previous study in monomorphic cells indicated that the attenuation of the active ES could be relevant for the development of trypanosomes. The present thesis investigated this hypothesis using the inducible overexpression of an ectopic VSG in pleomorphic trypanosomes, which possess full developmental competence. These studies revealed a surprising phenotypic plasticity: while the endogenous VSG was always down-regulated upon induction, the ESactivity determined whether the VSG overexpressors arrested in growth or kept proliferating. Full ES-attenuation induced the differentiation of bona fide st parasites independent of the cell density and thus represents the sole natural SIF-independent differentiation trigger to date. A milder decrease of the ES-activity did not induce phenotypic changes, but appeared to prime the parasites for SIF-induced differentiation. These results demonstrate that antigenic variation and development are linked and indicated that the ES and the VSG are independently regulated. Therefore, I investigated in the second part of my thesis how ES-attenuation and VSG-silencing can be mediated. Integration of reporters with a functional or defective VSG 3'UTR into different genomic loci showed that the maintenance of the active state of the ES depends on a conserved motif within the VSG 3'UTR. In situ switching was only triggered when the telomere-proximal motif was partially deleted, suggesting that it serves as a DNA-binding motif for a telomere-associated protein. The VSG levels seem to be additionally regulated in trans based on the VSG 3'UTR independent of the genomic context, which was reinforced by the regulation of a constitutively expressed reporter with VSG 3' UTR upon ectopic VSG overexpression.}, subject = {Trypanosoma brucei}, language = {en} } @article{FalibeneRocesRoessleretal.2016, author = {Falibene, Augustine and Roces, Flavio and R{\"o}ssler, Wolfgang and Groh, Claudia}, title = {Daily Thermal Fluctuations Experienced by Pupae via Rhythmic Nursing Behavior Increase Numbers of Mushroom Body Microglomeruli in the Adult Ant Brain}, series = {Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience}, volume = {10}, journal = {Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience}, number = {73}, doi = {10.3389/fnbeh.2016.00073}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-146711}, year = {2016}, abstract = {Social insects control brood development by using different thermoregulatory strategies. Camponotus mus ants expose their brood to daily temperature fluctuations by translocating them inside the nest following a circadian rhythm of thermal preferences. At the middle of the photophase brood is moved to locations at 30.8°C; 8 h later, during the night, the brood is transferred back to locations at 27.5°C. We investigated whether daily thermal fluctuations experienced by developing pupae affect the neuroarchitecture in the adult brain, in particular in sensory input regions of the mushroom bodies (MB calyces). The complexity of synaptic microcircuits was estimated by quantifying MB-calyx volumes together with densities of presynaptic boutons of microglomeruli (MG) in the olfactory lip and visual collar regions. We compared young adult workers that were reared either under controlled daily thermal fluctuations of different amplitudes, or at different constant temperatures. Thermal regimes significantly affected the large (non-dense) olfactory lip region of the adult MB calyx, while changes in the dense lip and the visual collar were less evident. Thermal fluctuations mimicking the amplitudes of natural temperature fluctuations via circadian rhythmic translocation of pupae by nurses (amplitude 3.3°C) lead to higher numbers of MG in the MB calyces compared to those in pupae reared at smaller or larger thermal amplitudes (0.0, 1.5, 9.6°C), or at constant temperatures (25.4, 35.0°C). We conclude that rhythmic control of brood temperature by nursing ants optimizes brain development by increasing MG densities and numbers in specific brain areas. Resulting differences in synaptic microcircuits are expected to affect sensory processing and learning abilities in adult ants, and may also promote interindividual behavioral variability within colonies.}, language = {en} } @article{KaltdorfSrivastavaGuptaetal.2016, author = {Kaltdorf, Martin and Srivastava, Mugdha and Gupta, Shishir K. and Liang, Chunguang and Binder, Jasmin and Dietl, Anna-Maria and Meir, Zohar and Haas, Hubertus and Osherov, Nir and Krappmann, Sven and Dandekar, Thomas}, title = {Systematic Identification of Anti-Fungal Drug Targets by a Metabolic Network Approach}, series = {Frontiers in Molecular Bioscience}, volume = {3}, journal = {Frontiers in Molecular Bioscience}, doi = {10.3389/fmolb.2016.00022}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-147396}, pages = {22}, year = {2016}, abstract = {New antimycotic drugs are challenging to find, as potential target proteins may have close human orthologs. We here focus on identifying metabolic targets that are critical for fungal growth and have minimal similarity to targets among human proteins. We compare and combine here: (I) direct metabolic network modeling using elementary mode analysis and flux estimates approximations using expression data, (II) targeting metabolic genes by transcriptome analysis of condition-specific highly expressed enzymes, and (III) analysis of enzyme structure, enzyme interconnectedness ("hubs"), and identification of pathogen-specific enzymes using orthology relations. We have identified 64 targets including metabolic enzymes involved in vitamin synthesis, lipid, and amino acid biosynthesis including 18 targets validated from the literature, two validated and five currently examined in own genetic experiments, and 38 further promising novel target proteins which are non-orthologous to human proteins, involved in metabolism and are highly ranked drug targets from these pipelines.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Ruf2016, author = {Ruf, Franziska}, title = {The circadian regulation of eclosion in \(Drosophila\) \(melanogaster\)}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-146265}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2016}, abstract = {Eclosion is the emergence of an adult insect from the pupal case at the end of development. In the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, eclosion is a circadian clock-gated event and is regulated by various peptides. When studied on the population level, eclosion reveals a clear rhythmicity with a peak at the beginning of the light-phase that persists also under constant conditions. It is a long standing hypothesis that eclosion gating to the morning hours with more humid conditions is an adaption to reduce water loss and increase the survival. Eclosion behavior, including the motor pattern required for the fly to hatch out of the puparium, is orchestrated by a well-characterized cascade of peptides. The main components are ecdysis-triggering hormone (ETH), eclosion hormone (EH) and crustacean cardioactive peptide (CCAP). The molt is initiated by a peak level and pupal ecdysis by a subsequent decline of the ecdysteroid ecdysone. Ecdysteroids are produced by the prothoracic gland (PG), an endocrine tissue that contains a peripheral clock and degenerates shortly after eclosion. Production and release of ecdysteroids are regulated by the prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH). Although many aspects of the circadian clock and the peptidergic control of the eclosion behavior are known, it still remains unclear how both systems are interconnected. The aim of this dissertation research was to dissect this connection and evaluate the importance of different Zeitgebers on eclosion rhythmicity under natural conditions. Potential interactions between the central clock and the peptides regulating ecdysis motor behavior were evaluated by analyzing the influence of CCAP on eclosion rhythmicity. Ablation and silencing of CCAP neurons, as well as CCAP null-mutation did not affect eclosion rhythmicity under either light or temperature entrainment nor under natural conditions. To dissect the connection between the central and the peripheral clock, PTTH neurons were ablated. Monitoring eclosion under light and temperature entrainment revealed that eclosion became arrhythmic under constant conditions. However, qPCR expression analysis revealed no evidence for cycling of Ptth mRNA in pharate flies. To test for a connection with pigment-dispersing factor (PDF)-expressing neurons, the PDF receptor (PDFR) and short neuropeptide F receptor (sNPFR) were knocked down in the PTTH neurons. Knockdown of sNPFR, but not PDFR, resulted in arrhythmic eclosion under constant darkness conditions. PCR analysis of the PTTH receptor, Torso, revealed its expression in the PG and the gonads, but not in the brain or eyes, of pharate flies. Knockdown of torso in the PG lead to arrhythmicity under constant conditions, which provides strong evidence for the specific effect of PTTH on the PG. These results suggest connections from the PDF positive lateral neurons to the PTTH neurons via sNPF signaling, and to the PG via PTTH and Torso. This interaction presumably couples the period of the peripheral clock in the PG to that of the central clock in the brain. To identify a starting signal for eclosion and possible further candidates in the regulation of eclosion behavior, chemically defined peptidergic and aminergic neurons were optogenetically activated in pharate pupae via ChR2-XXL. This screen approach revealed two candidates for the regulation of eclosion behavior: Dromyosuppressin (DMS) and myo-inhibitory peptides (MIP). However, ablation of DMS neurons did not affect eclosion rhythmicity or success and the exact function of MIP must be evaluated in future studies. To assess the importance of the clock and of possible Zeitgebers in nature, eclosion of the wildtype Canton S and the clock mutant per01 and the PDF signaling mutants pdf01 and han5304 was monitored under natural conditions. For this purpose, the W{\"u}rzburg eclosion monitor (WEclMon) was developed, which is a new open monitoring system that allows direct exposure of pupae to the environment. A general decline of rhythmicity under natural conditions compared to laboratory conditions was observed in all tested strains. While the wildtype and the pdf01 and han5304 mutants stayed weakly rhythmic, the per01 mutant flies eclosed mostly arrhythmic. PDF and its receptor (PDFR encoded by han) are required for the synchronization of the clock network and functional loss can obviously be compensated by a persisting synchronization to external Zeitgebers. The loss of the central clock protein PER, however, lead to a non-functional clock and revealed the absolute importance of the clock for eclosion rhythmicity. To quantitatively analyze the effect of the clock and abiotic factors on eclosion rhythmicity, a statistical model was developed in cooperation with Oliver Mitesser and Thomas Hovestadt. The modelling results confirmed the clock as the most important factor for eclosion rhythmicity. Moreover, temperature was found to have the strongest effect on the actual shape of the daily emergence pattern, while light has only minor effects. Relative humidity could be excluded as Zeitgeber for eclosion and therefore was not further analyzed. Taken together, the present dissertation identified the so far unknown connection between the central and peripheral clock regulating eclosion. Furthermore, a new method for the analysis of eclosion rhythms under natural conditions was established and the necessity of a functional clock for rhythmic eclosion even in the presence of multiple Zeitgebers was shown.}, subject = {Taufliege}, language = {en} } @article{DejungSubotaBuceriusetal.2016, author = {Dejung, Mario and Subota, Ines and Bucerius, Ferdinand and Dindar, G{\"u}lcin and Freiwald, Anja and Engstler, Markus and Boshart, Michael and Butter, Falk and Janzen, Chistian J.}, title = {Quantitative proteomics uncovers novel factors involved in developmental differentiation of Trypanosoma brucei}, series = {PLoS Pathogens}, volume = {12}, journal = {PLoS Pathogens}, number = {2}, doi = {10.1371/journal.ppat.1005439}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-146362}, pages = {e1005439}, year = {2016}, abstract = {Developmental differentiation is a universal biological process that allows cells to adapt to different environments to perform specific functions. African trypanosomes progress through a tightly regulated life cycle in order to survive in different host environments when they shuttle between an insect vector and a vertebrate host. Transcriptomics has been useful to gain insight into RNA changes during stage transitions; however, RNA levels are only a moderate proxy for protein abundance in trypanosomes. We quantified 4270 protein groups during stage differentiation from the mammalian-infective to the insect form and provide classification for their expression profiles during development. Our label-free quantitative proteomics study revealed previously unknown components of the differentiation machinery that are involved in essential biological processes such as signaling, posttranslational protein modifications, trafficking and nuclear transport. Furthermore, guided by our proteomic survey, we identified the cause of the previously observed differentiation impairment in the histone methyltransferase DOT1B knock-out strain as it is required for accurate karyokinesis in the first cell division during differentiation. This epigenetic regulator is likely involved in essential chromatin restructuring during developmental differentiation, which might also be important for differentiation in higher eukaryotic cells. Our proteome dataset will serve as a resource for detailed investigations of cell differentiation to shed more light on the molecular mechanisms of this process in trypanosomes and other eukaryotes.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Bartossek2018, author = {Bartossek, Thomas}, title = {Structural and functional analysis of the trypanosomal variant surface glycoprotein using x-ray scattering techniques and fluorescence microscopy}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-144775}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Trypanosoma brucei is an obligate parasite and causative agent of severe diseases affecting humans and livestock. The protist lives extracellularly in the bloodstream of the mammalian host, where it is prone to attacks by the host immune system. As a sophisticated means of defence against the immune response, the parasite's surface is coated in a dense layer of the variant surface glycoprotein (VSG), that reduces identification of invariant epitopes on the cell surface by the immune system to levels that prevent host immunity. The VSG has to form a coat that is both dense and mobile, to shield invariant surface proteins from detection and to allow quick recycling of the protective coat during immune evasion. This coat effectively protects the parasite from the harsh environment that is the mammalian bloodstream and leads to a persistent parasitemia if the infection remains untreated. The available treatment against African Trypanosomiasis involves the use of drugs that are themselves severely toxic and that can lead to the death of the patient. Most of the drugs used as treatment were developed in the early-to-mid 20th century, and while developments continue, they still represent the best medical means to fight the parasite. The discovery of a fluorescent VSG gave rise to speculations about a potential interaction between the VSG coat and components of the surrounding medium, that could also lead to a new approach in the treatment of African Trypanosomiasis that involves the VSG coat. The initially observed fluorescence signal was specific for a combination of a VSG called VSG'Y' and the triphenylmethane (TPM) dye phenol red. Exchanging this TPM to a bromo-derivative led to the observation of another fluorescence effect termed trypanicidal effect which killed the parasite independent of the expressed VSG and suggests a structurally conserved feature between VSGs that could function as a specific drug target against T. b. brucei. The work of this thesis aims to identify the mechanisms that govern the unique VSG'Y' fluorescence and the trypanocidal effect. Fluorescence experiments and protein mutagenesis of VSG'Y' as well as crystallographic trials with a range of different VSGs were utilized in the endeavour to identify the binding mechanisms between TPM compounds and VSGs, to find potentially conserved structural features between VSGs and to identify the working mechanisms of VSG fluorescence and the trypanocidal effect. These trials have the potential to lead to the formulation of highly specific drugs that target the parasites VSG coat. During the crystallographic trials of this thesis, the complete structure of a VSG was solved experimentally for the first time. This complete structure is a key component in furthering the understanding of the mechanisms governing VSG coat formation. X-ray scattering techniques, involving x-ray crystallography and small angle x-ray scattering were applied to elucidate the first complete VSG structures, which reveal high flexibility of the protein and supplies insight into the importance of this flexibility in the formation of a densely packed but highly mobile surface coat.}, subject = {Trypanosoma brucei brucei}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Cicova2016, author = {Cicova, Zdenka}, title = {Characterization of a novel putative factor involved in host adaptation in Trypanosoma brucei}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-142462}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2016}, abstract = {Trypanosomes are masters of adaptation to different host environments during their complex life cycle. Large-scale proteomic approaches provide information on changes at the cellular level in a systematic way. However, a detailed work on single components is necessary to understand the adaptation mechanisms on a molecular level. Here we have performed a detailed characterization of a bloodstream form (BSF) stage-specific putative flagellar host adaptation factor (Tb927.11.2400) identified previously in a SILAC-based comparative proteome study. Tb927.11.2400 shares 38\% amino acid identity with TbFlabarin (Tb927.11.2410), a procyclic form (PCF) stage specific flagellar BAR domain protein. We named Tb927.11.2400 TbFlabarin like (TbFlabarinL) and demonstrate that it is a result of a gene duplication event, which occurred in African trypanosomes. TbFlabarinL is not essential for growth of the parasites under cell culture conditions and it is dispensable for developmental differentiation from BSF to the PCF in vitro. We generated a TbFlabarinL-specific antibody and showed that it localizes in the flagellum. The co-immunoprecipitation experiment together with a biochemical cell fractionation indicated a dual association of TbFlabarinL with the flagellar membrane and the components of the paraflagellar rod.}, subject = {Trypanosoma brucei}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Kupper2016, author = {Kupper, Maria}, title = {The immune transcriptome and proteome of the ant Camponotus floridanus and vertical transmission of its bacterial endosymbiont Blochmannia floridanus}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-142534}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2016}, abstract = {The evolutionary success of insects is believed to be at least partially facilitated by symbioses between insects and prokaryotes. Bacterial endosymbionts confer various fitness advantages to their hosts, for example by providing nutrients lacking from the insects' diet thereby enabling the inhabitation of new ecological niches. The Florida carpenter ant Camponotus floridanus harbours endosymbiotic bacteria of the genus Blochmannia. These primary endosymbionts mainly reside in the cytoplasm of bacteriocytes, specialised cells interspersed into the midgut tissue, but they were also found in oocytes which allows their vertical transmission. The social lifestyle of C. floridanus may facilitate the rapid spread of infections amongst genetically closely related animals living in huge colonies. Therefore, the ants require an immune system to efficiently combat infections while maintaining a "chronic" infection with their endosymbionts. In order to investigate the immune repertoire of the ants, the Illumina sequencing method was used. The previously published genome sequence of C. floridanus was functionally re-annotated and 0.53\% of C. floridanus proteins were assigned to the gene ontology (GO) term subcategory "immune system process". Based on homology analyses, genes encoding 510 proteins with possible immune function were identified. These genes are involved in microbial recognition and immune signalling pathways but also in cellular defence mechanisms, such as phagocytosis and melanisation. The components of the major signalling pathways appear to be highly conserved and the analysis revealed an overall broad immune repertoire of the ants though the number of identified genes encoding pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) and antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) is comparatively low. Besides three genes coding for homologs of thioester-containing proteins (TEPs), which have been shown to act as opsonins promoting phagocytosis in other insects, six genes encoding the AMPs defesin-1 and defensin-2, hymenoptaecin, two tachystatin-like peptides and one crustin-like peptide are present in the ant genome. Although the low number of known AMPs in comparison to 13 AMPs in the honey bee Apis mellifera and 46 AMPs in the wasp Nasonia vitripennis may indicate a less potent immune system, measures summarised as external or social immunity may enhance the immune repertoire of C. floridanus, as it was discussed for other social insects. Also, the hymenoptaecin multipeptide precursor protein may be processed to yield seven possibly bioactive peptides. In this work, two hymenoptaecin derived peptides were heterologously expressed and purified. The preliminary antimicrobial activity assays indicate varying bacteriostatic effects of different hymenoptaecin derived peptides against Escherichia coli D31 and Staphylococcus aureus which suggests a functional amplification of the immune response further increasing the antimicrobial potency of the ants. Furthermore, 257 genes were differentially expressed upon immune challenge of C. floridanus and most of the immune genes showing differential expression are involved in recognition of microbes or encode immune effectors rather than signalling components. Additionally, genes coding for proteins involved in storage and metabolism were downregulated upon immune challenge suggesting a trade-off between two energy-intensive processes in order to enhance effectiveness of the immune response. The analysis of gene expression via qRT-PCR was used for validation of the transcriptome data and revealed stage-specific immune gene regulation. Though the same tendencies of regulation were observed in larvae and adults, expression of several immune-related genes was generally more strongly induced in larvae. Immune gene expression levels depending on the developmental stage of C. floridanus are in agreement with observations in other insects and might suggest that animals from different stages revert to individual combinations of external and internal immunity upon infection. The haemolymph proteome of immune-challenged ants further established the immune-relevance of several proteins involved in classical immune signalling pathways, e.g. PRRs, extracellularly active proteases of the Toll signalling pathway and effector molecules such as AMPs, lysozymes and TEPs. Additionally, non-canonical proteins with putative immune function were enriched in immune-challenged haemolymph, e.g. Vitellogenins, NPC2-like proteins and Hemocytin. As known from previous studies, septic wounding also leads to the upregulation of genes involved in stress responses. In the haemolymph, proteins implicated in protein stabilisation and in the protection against oxidative stress and insecticides were enriched upon immune challenge. In order to identify additional putative immune effectors, haemolymph peptide samples from immune-challenged larvae and adults were analysed. The analysis in this work focussed on the identification of putative peptides produced via the secretory pathway as previously described for neuropeptides of C. floridanus. 567 regulated peptides derived from 39 proteins were identified in the larval haemolymph, whereas 342 regulated peptides derived from 13 proteins were found in the adult haemolymph. Most of the peptides are derived from hymenoptaecin or from putative uncharacterised proteins. One haemolymph peptide of immune-challenged larvae comprises the complete amino acid sequence of a predicted peptide derived from a Vitellogenin. Though the identified peptide lacks similarities to any known immune-related peptide, it is a suitable candidate for further functional analysis. To establish a stable infection with the endosymbionts, the bacteria have to be transmitted to the next generation of the ants. The vertical transmission of B. floridanus is guaranteed by bacterial infestation of oocytes. This work presents the first comprehensive and detailed description of the localisation of the bacterial endosymbionts in C. floridanus ovaries during oogenesis. Whereas the most apical part of the germarium, which contains the germ-line stem cells, is not infected by the bacteria, small somatic cells in the outer layers of each ovariole were found to be infected in the lower germarium. Only with the beginning of cystocyte differentiation, endosymbionts are exclusively transported from follicle cells into the growing oocytes, while nurse cells were never infected with B. floridanus. This infestation of the oocytes by bacteria very likely involves exocytosis-endocytosis processes between follicle cells and the oocytes. A previous study suggested a down-modulation of the immune response in the midgut tissue which may promote endosymbiont tolerance. Therefore, the expression of several potentially relevant immune genes was analysed in the ovarial tissue by qRT-PCR. The relatively low expression of genes involved in Toll and IMD signalling, and the high expression of genes encoding negative immune regulators, such as PGRP-LB, PGRP-SC2, and tollip, strongly suggest that a down-modulation of the immune response may also facilitate endosymbiont tolerance in the ovaries and thereby contribute to their vertical transmission. Overall, the present thesis improves the knowledge about the immune repertoire of C. floridanus and provides new candidates for further functional analyses. Moreover, the involvement of the host immune system in maintaining a "chronic" infection with symbiotic bacteria was confirmed and extended to the ovaries.}, subject = {Camponotus floridanus}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Das2018, author = {Das, Sudip}, title = {Genome-wide identification of virulence-associated genes in Staphylococcus aureus using Transposon insertion-site deep sequencing}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-143362}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Staphylococcus aureus asymptomatically colonises one third of the healthy human population, finding its niche in the nose and on skin. Apart from being a commensal, it is also an important opportunistic human pathogen capable of destructing tissue, invading host cells and killing them from within. This eventually contributes to severe hospital- and community-acquired infections. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), resistant to commonly used antibiotics are protected when residing within the host cell. This doctoral thesis is focused on the investigation of staphylococcal factors governing intracellular virulence and subsequent host cell death. To initiate an unbiased approach to conduct this study, complex S. aureus mutant pools were generated using transposon insertional mutagenesis. Genome-wide infection screens were performed using these S. aureus transposon mutant pools in vitro and in vivo, followed by analysis using Transposon insertion site deep sequencing (Tn-seq) technology. Amongst several other factors, this study identified a novel regulatory system in S. aureus that controls pathogen-induced host cytotoxicity and intra-host survival. The primary components of this system are an AraC-family transcription regulator called Repressor of surface proteins (Rsp) and a virulence associated non-coding RNA, SSR42. Mutants within rsp exhibit enhanced intra-host survival in human epithelial cells and delayed host cytotoxicity. Global gene-expression profiling by RNA-seq demonstrated that Rsp controls the expression of SSR42, several cytotoxins and other bacterial factors directed against the host immune system. Rsp enhances S. aureus toxin response when triggered by hydrogen peroxide, an antimicrobial substance employed by neutrophils to destroy pathogens. Absence of rsp reduces S. aureus-induced neutrophil damage and early lethality during mouse pneumonia, but still permits blood stream infection. Intriguingly, S. aureus lacking rsp exhibited enhanced survival in human macrophages, which hints towards a Trojan horse-like phenomenon and could facilitate dissemination within the host. Hence, Rsp emerged as a global regulator of bacterial virulence, which has an impact on disease progression with prolonged intra-cellular survival, delayed-lethality but allows disseminated manifestation of disease. Moreover, this study exemplifies the use of genome-wide approaches as useful resources for identifying bacterial factors and deduction of its pathogenesis.}, subject = {Staphylococcus aureus}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Schoenwaelder2016, author = {Sch{\"o}nw{\"a}lder, Sina Maria Siglinde}, title = {Entwicklung und Charakterisierung von Gelatine-basierten Hydrogelen und PLGA-basierten Janus-Partikeln}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-142636}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2016}, abstract = {Zusammenfassung In der Regenerativen Medizin sind polymerbasierte Biomaterialien von großer Bedeutung f{\"u}r die Entwicklung und Anwendung verbesserter bzw. neuer Therapien. Die Erforschung der Oberfl{\"a}cheneigenschaften von Biomaterialien, welche als Implantate eingesetzt werden, ist eine grundlegende Voraussetzung f{\"u}r deren erfolgreichen Einsatz. Die Protein-Oberfl{\"a}chen- Interaktion geschieht initial, sobald ein Implantat mit K{\"o}rperfl{\"u}ssigkeiten oder mit Gewebe in Kontakt kommt, und tr{\"a}gt maßgeblich zur direkten Wechselwirkung von Implantat und umgebenden Zellen bei. Dieser Prozess wird in der vorliegenden Arbeit an Gelatine untersucht. Daher bestand ein Ziel darin, stabile, nanometerd{\"u}nne Gelatineoberfl{\"a}chen herzustellen und darauf die Adsorption von humanen Plasmaproteinen und bakteriellen Proteinen zu analysieren. Die Abscheidung der Gelatinefilme in variabler Schichtdicke auf zuvor mit PPX-Amin modifizierten Oberfl{\"a}chen wurde unter Verwendung eines Rotationsbeschichters durchgef{\"u}hrt. Um stabile Hydrogelfilme zu erhalten, wurden die Amingruppen der disaggregierten Gelatinefibrillen untereinander und mit denen der Amin-Modifizierung durch ein biokompatibles Diisocyanat quervernetzt. Dieser Prozess lieferte einen reproduzierbaren und chemisch stabilen Gelatinefilm, welcher durch die substratunabh{\"a}ngige Amin-Modifizierung kovalent auf unterschiedlichste Oberfl{\"a}chen aufgebracht werden konnte. Die durch den Herstellungsprozess pr{\"a}zise eingestellte Schichtdicke (Nano- bzw. Mikrometermaßstab) wurde mittels Ellipsometrie und Rasterkraftmikroskopie ermittelt. Die ebenso bestimmte Rauheit war unabh{\"a}ngig von der Schichtdicke sehr gering. Gelatinefilme, die auf funktionalisierte und strukturierte Proben aufgebracht wurden, konnten durch Elektronenmikroskopie dargestellt werden. Mit Hilfe der Infrarot-Reflexions-Absorptions-Spektroskopie wurden die Gelatinefilme im Hinblick auf ihre Stabilit{\"a}t chemisch charakterisiert. Zur Quantifizierung der Adsorption humaner Plasmaproteine (Einzelproteinl{\"o}sungen) und komplexer Proteingemische aus steril filtrierten Kultur{\"u}berst{\"a}nden des humanpathogenen Bakteriums Pseudomonas aeruginosa wurde die Quarzkristall-Mikrowaage mit Dissipations{\"u}berwachung eingesetzt. Hiermit konnte nicht nur die adsorbierte Menge an Proteinen auf dem Gelatinehydrogel bzw. Referenzoberfl{\"a}chen (Gold, PPX-Amin, Titan), sondern auch die viskoelastischen Eigenschaften des adsorbierten Proteinfilms bestimmt werden. Allgemein adsorbierte auf dem Gelatinehydrogel eine geringere Proteinmasse im Vergleich zu den Referenzoberfl{\"a}chen. Circa ein Viertel der adsorbierten Proteine migrierte in die Poren des gequollenen Gels und ver{\"a}nderte dessen viskoelastische Eigenschaften. Durch anschließende MALDI-ToF/MS- und MS/MS-Analyse konnten die bakteriellen Proteine auf den untersuchten Oberfl{\"a}chen identifiziert und untereinander verglichen werden. Hierbei zeigten sich nur geringf{\"u}gige Unterschiede in der Proteinzusammensetzung. Zudem wurde eine Sekund{\"a}rionenmassenspektrometrie mit Flugzeitanalyse an reinen Gelatinefilmen und an mit humanen Plasmaproteinen beladenen Gelatinefilmen durchgef{\"u}hrt. Durch eine anschließende multivariante Datenanalyse konnte zwischen den untersuchten Proben eindeutig differenziert werden. Dieser Ansatz erm{\"o}glicht es, die Adsorption von unterschiedlichen Proteinen auf proteinbasierten Oberfl{\"a}chen markierungsfrei zu untersuchen und kann zur Aufkl{\"a}rung der in vivo-Situation beitragen. Dar{\"u}ber hinaus bietet dieser Untersuchungsansatz neue Perspektiven f{\"u}r die Gestaltung und das schnelle und effiziente Screening von unterschiedlichen Proteinzusammensetzungen. Biomaterialien k{\"o}nnen jedoch nicht nur als Implantate oder Implantatbeschichtungen eingesetzt werden. Im Bereich des drug delivery und der Depotarzneimittel sind biologisch abbaubare Polymere, aufgrund ihrer variablen Eigenschaften, von großem Interesse. Die Behandlung von bakteriellen und fungalen Pneumonien stellt insbesondere bei Menschen mit Vorerkrankungen wie Cystische Fibrose oder prim{\"a}re Ziliendyskinesie eine große Herausforderung dar. Oral oder intraven{\"o}s applizierte Wirkstoffe erreichen die Erreger aufgrund der erh{\"o}hten Z{\"a}higkeit des Bronchialsekretes oft nicht in ausreichender Konzentration. Daher besteht ein weiteres Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit darin, mittels electrohydrodynamic cojetting mikrometergroße, inhalierbare, wirkstoffbeladene Partikel mit zwei Kompartimenten (Janus-Partikel) herzustellen und deren Eignung f{\"u}r die therapeutische Anwendung bei Lungeninfektionen zu untersuchen. Durch das in dieser Arbeit entwickelte L{\"o}sungsmittelsystem k{\"o}nnen Janus-Partikel aus biologisch abbaubaren Co-Polymeren der Polymilchs{\"a}ure (Poly(lactid-co-glycolid), PLGA) hergestellt und mit verschiedenen Wirkstoffen beladen werden. Darunter befinden sich ein Antibiotikum (Aztreonam, AZT), ein Antimykotikum (Itraconazol, ICZ), ein Mukolytikum (Acetylcystein, ACC) und ein Antiphlogistikum (Ibuprofen, IBU). Die Freisetzung der eingelagerten Wirkstoffe, mit Ausnahme von ICZ, konnte unter physiologischen Bedingungen mittels Dialyse und anschließender Hochleistungsfl{\"u}ssigkeitschromatographie gemessen werden. Die Freisetzungsrate wird von der Kettenl{\"a}nge des Polymers beeinflusst, wobei eine k{\"u}rzere Kettenl{\"a}nge zu einer schnelleren Freisetzung f{\"u}hrt. Das in die Partikel eingelagerte Antimykotikum zeigte in vitro eine gute Wirksamkeit gegen Aspergillus nidulans. Durch das Einlagern von ICZ in die Partikel ist es m{\"o}glich diesen schlecht wasserl{\"o}slichen Wirkstoff in eine f{\"u}r Patienten zug{\"a}ngliche und wirksame Applikationsform zu bringen. In Interaktion mit P. aeruginosa erzielten die mit Antibiotikum beladenen Partikel in vitro bessere Ergebnisse als der Wirkstoff in L{\"o}sung, was sich in einem in vivo-Infektionsmodell mit der Wachsmotte Galleria mellonella best{\"a}tigte. AZT-beladene Partikel hatten gegen{\"u}ber einer identischen Wirkstoffmenge in L{\"o}sung eine 27,5\% bessere {\"U}berlebensrate der Wachsmotten zur Folge. Des Weiteren hatten die Partikel keinen messbaren negativen Einfluss auf die Wachsmotten. Dreidimensionale Atemwegsschleimhautmodelle, hergestellt mit Methoden des Tissue Engineerings, bildeten die Basis f{\"u}r Untersuchungen der Partikel in Interaktion mit humanen Atemwegszellen. Die Untersuchung von Apoptose- und Entz{\"u}ndungsmarkern im {\"U}berstand der 3D-Modelle zeigte diesbez{\"u}glich keinen negativen Einfluss der Partikel auf die humanen Zellen. Diese gut charakterisierten und standardisierten in vitro-Testsysteme machen es m{\"o}glich, Medikamentenuntersuchungen an menschlichen Zellen durchzuf{\"u}hren. Hinsichtlich der histologischen Architektur und funktionellen Eigenschaften der 3D-Modelle konnte eine hohe in vitro-/in vivo-Korrelation zu menschlichem Gewebe festgestellt werden. Humane Mucine auf den 3D-Modellen dienten zur Untersuchung der schleiml{\"o}senden Wirkung von ACC-beladenen Partikeln. Standen diese in r{\"a}umlichem Kontakt zu den Mucinen, wurde deren Z{\"a}higkeit durch das freigesetzte ACC herabgesetzt, was qualitativ mittels histologischen Methoden best{\"a}tigt werden konnte. Die in dieser Arbeit entwickelten Herstellungsprotokolle dienen als Grundlage und k{\"o}nnen f{\"u}r die Synthese {\"a}hnlicher Systeme, basierend auf anderen Polymeren und Wirkstoffen, modifiziert werden. Gelatine und PLGA erwiesen sich als vielseitig einsetzbare Werkstoffe und bieten eine breite Anwendungsvielfalt in der Regenerativen Medizin, was die erzielten Resultate bekr{\"a}ftigen.}, subject = {Gelatine}, language = {de} } @article{ThormannRaupachWagneretal.2011, author = {Thormann, Birthe and Raupach, Michael J. and Wagner, Thomas and W{\"a}gele, Johann W. and Peters, Marcell K.}, title = {Testing a Short Nuclear Marker for Inferring Staphylinid Beetle Diversity in an African Tropical Rain Forest}, series = {PLoS ONE}, volume = {6}, journal = {PLoS ONE}, number = {3}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0018101}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-142666}, pages = {e18101}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Background: The use of DNA based methods for assessing biodiversity has become increasingly common during the last years. Especially in speciose biomes as tropical rain forests and/or in hyperdiverse or understudied taxa they may efficiently complement morphological approaches. The most successful molecular approach in this field is DNA barcoding based on cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) marker, but other markers are used as well. Whereas most studies aim at identifying or describing species, there are only few attempts to use DNA markers for inventorying all animal species found in environmental samples to describe variations of biodiversity patterns. Methodology/Principal Findings: In this study, an analysis of the nuclear D3 region of the 28S rRNA gene to delimit species-like units is compared to results based on distinction of morphospecies. Data derived from both approaches are used to assess diversity and composition of staphylinid beetle communities of a Guineo-Congolian rain forest in Kenya. Beetles were collected with a standardized sampling design across six transects in primary and secondary forests using pitfall traps. Sequences could be obtained of 99\% of all individuals. In total, 76 molecular operational taxonomic units (MOTUs) were found in contrast to 70 discernible morphospecies. Despite this difference both approaches revealed highly similar biodiversity patterns, with species richness being equal in primary and secondary forests, but with divergent species communities in different habitats. The D3-MOTU approach proved to be an efficient tool for biodiversity analyses. Conclusions/Significance: Our data illustrate that the use of MOTUs as a proxy for species can provide an alternative to morphospecies identification for the analysis of changes in community structure of hyperdiverse insect taxa. The efficient amplification of the D3-marker and the ability of the D3-MOTUs to reveal similar biodiversity patterns as analyses of morphospecies recommend its use in future molecular studies on biodiversity.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Reimer2017, author = {Reimer, Anastasija}, title = {Search for novel antimicrobials against \(Neisseria\) \(gonorrhoeae\) and \(Chlamydia\) \(trachomatis\)}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-143168}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2017}, abstract = {The obligate human pathogen Neisseria gonorrhoeae is responsible for the widespread sexually transmitted disease gonorrhoea, which in rare cases also leads to the development of disseminated gonococcal infection (DGI). DGI is mediated by PorBIA-expressing bacteria that invade host cells under low phosphate condition by interaction with the scavenger receptor-1 (SREC-I) expressed on the surface of endothelial cells. The interaction of PorBIA and SREC-I was analysed using different in vitro approaches, including surface plasmon resonance experiments that revealed a direct phosphate-independent high affinity interaction of SREC-I to PorBIA. However, the same binding affinity was also found for the other allele PorBIB, which indicates unspecific binding and suggests that the applied methods were unsuitable for this interaction analysis. Since N. gonorrhoeae was recently classified as a "super-bug" due to a rising number of antibiotic-resistant strains, this study aimed to discover inhibitors against the PorBIA-mediated invasion of N. gonorrhoeae. Additionally, inhibitors were searched against the human pathogen Chlamydia trachomatis, which causes sexually transmitted infections as well as infections of the upper inner eyelid. 68 compounds, including plant-derived small molecules, extracts or pure compounds of marine sponges or sponge-associated bacteria and pipecolic acid derivatives, were screened using an automated microscopy based approach. No active substances against N. gonorrhoeae could be identified, while seven highly antichlamydial compounds were detected. The pipecolic acid derivatives were synthesized as potential inhibitors of the virulence-associated "macrophage infectivity potentiator" (MIP), which exhibits a peptidyl prolyl cis-trans isomerase (PPIase) enzyme activity. This study investigated the role of C. trachomatis and N. gonorrhoeae MIP during infection. The two inhibitors PipN3 and PipN4 decreased the PPIase activity of recombinant chlamydial and neisserial MIP in a dose-dependent manner. Both compounds affected the chlamydial growth and development in epithelial cells. Furthermore, this work demonstrated the contribution of MIP to a prolonged survival of N. gonorrhoeae in the presence of neutrophils, which was significantly reduced in the presence of PipN3 and PipN4. SF2446A2 was one of the compounds that had a severe effect on the growth and development of C. trachomatis. The analysis of the mode of action of SF2446A2 revealed an inhibitory effect of the compound on the mitochondrial respiration and mitochondrial ATP production of the host cell. However, the chlamydial development was independent of proper functional mitochondria, which excluded the connection of the antichlamydial properties of SF2446A2 with its inhibition of the respiratory chain. Only the depletion of cellular ATP by blocking glycolysis and mitochondrial respiratory chain inhibited the chlamydial growth. A direct effect of SF2446A2 on C. trachomatis was assumed, since the growth of the bacteria N. gonorrhoeae and Staphylococcus aureus was also affected by the compound. In summary, this study identified the severe antichlamydial activity of plant-derived naphthoquinones and the compounds derived from marine sponges or sponge-associated bacteria SF2446A2, ageloline A and gelliusterol E. Furthermore, the work points out the importance of the MIP proteins during infection and presents pipecolic acid derivatives as novel antimicrobials against N. gonorrhoeae and C. trachomatis.}, subject = {Neisseria gonorrhoeae}, language = {en} } @article{WallaceLeonhardt2015, author = {Wallace, Helen Margaret and Leonhardt, Sara Diana}, title = {Do Hybrid Trees Inherit Invasive Characteristics? Fruits of Corymbia torelliana X C. citriodora Hybrids and Potential for Seed Dispersal by Bees}, series = {PLoS One}, volume = {10}, journal = {PLoS One}, number = {9}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0138868}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-141777}, pages = {e0138868}, year = {2015}, abstract = {Tree invasions have substantial impacts on biodiversity and ecosystem functioning, and trees that are dispersed by animals are more likely to become invasive. In addition, hybridisation between plants is well documented as a source of new weeds, as hybrids gain new characteristics that allow them to become invasive. Corymbia torelliana is an invasive tree with an unusual animal dispersal mechanism: seed dispersal by stingless bees, that hybridizes readily with other species. We examined hybrids between C. torelliana and C. citriodora subsp. citriodora to determine whether hybrids have inherited the seed dispersal characteristics of C. torelliana that allow bee dispersal. Some hybrid fruits displayed the characteristic hollowness, resin production and resin chemistry associated with seed dispersal by bees. However, we did not observe bees foraging on any hybrid fruits until they had been damaged. We conclude that C. torelliana and C. citriodora subsp. citriodora hybrids can inherit some fruit characters that are associated with dispersal by bees, but we did not find a hybrid with the complete set of characters that would enable bee dispersal. However, around 20,000 hybrids have been planted in Australia, and ongoing monitoring is necessary to identify any hybrids that may become invasive.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Hofmann2017, author = {Hofmann, Stefan}, title = {Hybridisierungsbasierte Multiplex-Detektion von microRNA mit CMOS-Technologie f{\"u}r die Anwendung in der Point-of-Care-Diagnostik}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-150949}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2017}, abstract = {MicroRNAs sind kurze, nicht-kodierende Ribonukleins{\"a}uren, die eine wichtige Rolle bei der Genregulation spielen. Sie sind an vielen physiologischen Prozessen beteiligt und werden als vielversprechende Kandidaten f{\"u}r eine neue Generation von Biomarkern gehandelt. Die Quantifizierung von miRNAs aus Blut oder anderen K{\"o}rperfl{\"u}ssigkeiten verspricht eine fr{\"u}he Diagnose verschiedener Krankheitsbilder. Dazu z{\"a}hlen neben zahlreichen Krebsformen unter anderem auch Autoimmun- oder Herz-Kreislauferkrankungen. Um diese Biomarker schnell, sensitiv und spezifisch detektieren zu k{\"o}nnen, werden geeignete Detektionssysteme ben{\"o}tigt. Dabei liegt ein besonderer Fokus auf der Entwicklung von Point-of-Care-Systemen, die eine automatisierte Durchf{\"u}hrung mit einfacher Handhabung verlangen. Mikrochips k{\"o}nnen als leistungsf{\"a}hige technische Hilfsmittel f{\"u}r eine robuste und miniaturisierte Signalerfassung an biochemischen Grenzfl{\"a}chen dienen. Auf der Grundlage eines CMOS-Chips mit einem Sensorarray aus interdigitalen Gold-Elektroden sollte in dieser Arbeit eine quantitative und multiplexf{\"a}hige miRNA-Detektionsmethode mit elektrochemischer Signaltransduktion entworfen und untersucht werden. Weitere wichtige Zielfaktoren waren eine einfache und schnelle Durchf{\"u}hrbarkeit, eine hohe Spezifit{\"a}t und eine gute Sensitivit{\"a}t bei gleichzeitigem Verzicht auf Amplifikation und Vormarkierung des Ausgangsmaterials. Es wurden verschiedene Methoden entworfen, {\"u}berpr{\"u}ft, untersucht, optimiert und weiterentwickelt. Das beste Ergebnis wurde letztlich mit einem als Sandwich-Ligations-Methode bezeichneten Verfahren erzielt. Dabei wird zun{\"a}chst ein aus zwei doppelstr{\"a}ngigen Assay-Komponenten und der Ziel-miRNA bestehender dreiteiliger Hybridisierungskomplex gebildet, der eine beidseitige spezifische Ligation der miRNA mit einem auf der Sensoroberfl{\"a}che immobilisierten F{\"a}ngerstrang und einem enzymmarkierten Reporterstrang vermittelt. Durch einen anschließenden Waschschritt werden alle {\"u}bersch{\"u}ssigen Markierungen vom Detektionsbereich entfernt, so dass bei der Detektion nur Reporterenzyme ausgelesen werden, die {\"u}ber die Ziel-miRNA kovalent mit dem immobilisierten Strang verbunden sind. Dieses Signal ist daher proportional zur Ausgangskonzentration der gesuchten miRNA. Die Methode wurde mit Hilfe von synthetischen miRNAs etabliert und optimiert. Sie erreichte eine analytische Sensitivit{\"a}t von unter 1 pM Ziel-Nukleins{\"a}ure bei einer Gesamt-Versuchsdauer von nur 30 Minuten. Konzentrationsreihen demonstrierten einen linearen dynamischen Messbereich zwischen 1 pM und 1 nM, der eine verl{\"a}ssliche Quantifizierung der detektierten miRNAs in diesem Bereich erm{\"o}glicht. Die sehr gute Spezfifit{\"a}t des Assays zeigte sich bei der Untersuchung des Einflusses verschiedener IsomiRs auf das Messergebnis sowie im Rahmen von Experimenten mit miRNAs der let-7-Familie. Dabei konnten Ziel-Nukleins{\"a}uren mit Einzelbasenunterschieden klar differenziert werden. Die Multiplexf{\"a}higkeit der vorgestellten Methode wurde durch die gleichzeitige Quantifizierung von bis zu acht miRNAs auf einem CMOS-Chip demonstriert, zuz{\"u}glich Kontrollen. Die Validierung der Detektionsmethode erfolgte mit Gesamt-RNA-Extrakten aus Vollblutproben. Dazu wurde ein kardiales Panel aus acht miRNAs, die auf Basis von Studien zu zirkulierenden miRNAs bei Herzerkrankungen ausgew{\"a}hlt wurden, festgelegt. Mit Hilfe der entsprechenden optimierten Detektionskomponenten wurden aus Spenderblut gewonnene endogene miRNAs analysiert. Dabei zeigte sich f{\"u}r f{\"u}nf der acht Kandidaten sowohl eine solide Korrelation zwischen eingesetzter Gesamt-RNA-Menge und Messsignal, als auch eine gute Reproduzierbarkeit der Ergebnisse. Die Konzentrationen der {\"u}brigen drei miRNAs lagen nah am unteren Detektionslimit und lieferten daher keine verl{\"a}sslichen Daten. Mit Hilfe sogenannter branched DNA zur Signalamplifikation k{\"o}nnte bei Bedarf die Sensitivit{\"a}t des Assays noch verbessert werden, was durch weitere Experimente dieser Arbeit demonstriert wurde. Ein Vergleichsexperiment zwischen der Sandwich-Ligations-Methode und qRT-PCR zeigte nur eine schwache Korrelation der Messergebnisse. Dies ist jedoch konsistent mit anderen Studien zur Vergleichbarkeit unterschiedlicher Detektionsmethoden. Abschließend wurden die miRNAs des kardialen Panels in Gesamt-RNA-Extrakten aus Vollblut von Herzinfarktpatienten und Kontrollen mit der entwickelten Detektionsmethode analysiert und die Ergebnisse verglichen. Dabei konnten Abweichungen in den Konzentrationen von miR-15a und miR-425 aufgedeckt werden. Eine entsprechende diagnostische Untersuchung mit der hier vorgelegten und validierten Detektionsmethode k{\"o}nnte eine Alternative oder Erg{\"a}nzung zu aktuell eingesetzten proteinbasierten Tests bieten.}, subject = {miRNS}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Joschinski2018, author = {Joschinski, Jens}, title = {Is the phenology of pea aphids (\(Acyrthosiphon\) \(pisum\)) constrained by diurnal rhythms?}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-148099}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2018}, abstract = {The rotation of the earth leads to a cyclic change of night and day. Numerous strategies evolved to cope with diurnal change, as it is generally advantageous to be synchronous to the cyclic change in abiotic conditions. Diurnal rhythms are regulated by the circadian clock, a molecular feedback loop of RNA and protein levels with a period of circa 24 hours. Despite its importance for individuals as well as for species interactions, our knowledge of circadian clocks is mostly confined to few model organisms. While the structuring of activity is generally adaptive, a rigid temporal organization also has its drawbacks. For example, the specialization to a diurnal pattern limits the breadth of the temporal niche. Organisms that are adapted to a diurnal life style are often poor predators or foragers during night time, constraining the time budget to only diurnal parts of the day/night cycle. Climate change causes shifts in phenology (seasonal timing) and northward range expansions, and changes in season or in latitude are associated with novel day length - temperature correlations. Thus, seasonal organisms will have some life history stages exposed to novel day lengths, and I hypothesized that the diurnal niche determines whether the day length changes are beneficial or harmful for the organism. I thus studied the effects of day length on life-history traits in a multi-trophic system consisting of the pea aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum and predatory larvae of Chrysoperla carnea (common green lacewing) and Episyrphus balteatus (marmalade hoverfly). In order to identify the mechanisms for phenological constraints I then focused on diurnal rhythms and the circadian clock of the pea aphid. Aphids reacted to shorter days with a reduced fecundity and shorter reproductive period. Short days did however not impact population growth, because the fitness constraints only became apparent late in the individual's life. In contrast, E. balteatus grew 13\% faster in the shorter day treatment and preyed on significantly more aphids, whereas C. carnea grew 13\% faster under longer days and the elevation of predation rates was marginally significant. These results show that day length affects vital life-history traits, but that the direction and effect size depends on species. I hypothesized that the constraints or fitness benefits are caused by a constricted or expanded time budget, and hence depend on the temporal niche. E. balteatus is indeed night-active and C. carnea appears to be crepuscular, but very little data exists for A. pisum. Hence, I reared the pea aphid on an artificial diet and recorded survival, moulting and honeydew excretion. The activity patterns were clearly rhythmic and molting and honeydew excretion were elevated during day-time. Thus, the diurnal niche could explain the observed, but weak, day length constraints of aphids. The diurnal niche of some organisms is remarkably flexible, and a flexible diurnal niche may explain why the day length constrains were relatively low in A. pisum. I thus studied its circadian clock, the mechanism that regulates diurnal rhythms. First, I improved an artificial diet for A. pisum, and added the food colorant Brilliant Blue FCF. This food colorant stained gut and honeydew in low concentration without causing mortalities, and thus made honeydew excretion visible under dim red light. I then used the blue diet to raise individual aphids in 16:08 LD and constant darkness (DD), and recorded honeydew excretion and molting under red light every three hours. In addition, we used a novel monitoring setup to track locomotor activity continuously in LD and DD. Both the locomotor rhythm and honeydew excretion of A. pisum appeared to be bimodal, peaking in early morning and in the afternoon in LD. Both metabolic and locomotor rhythm persisted also for some time under constant darkness, indicating that the rhythms are driven by a functional circadian clock. However, the metabolic rhythm damped within three to four days, whereas locomotor rhythmicity persisted with a complex distribution of several free-running periods. These results fit to a damped circadian clock that is driven by multiple oscillator populations, a model that has been proposed to link circadian clocks and photoperiodism, but never empirically tested. Overall, my studies integrate constraints in phenological adaptation with a mechanistic explanation. I showed that a shorter day length can constrain some species of a trophic network while being beneficial for others, and linked the differences to the diurnal niche of the species. I further demonstrated that a flexible circadian clock may alleviate the constraints, potentially by increasing the plasticity of the diurnal niche.}, subject = {Tagesrhythmus}, language = {en} }