TY - JOUR A1 - Klatt, Björn K. A1 - Holzschuh, Andrea A1 - Westphal, Catrin A1 - Clough, Yann A1 - Smit, Inga A1 - Pawelzik, Elke A1 - Tscharntke, Teja T1 - Bee pollination improves crop quality, shelf life and commercial value JF - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences N2 - Pollination improves the yield of most crop species and contributes to one-third of global crop production, but comprehensive benefits including crop quality are still unknown. Hence, pollination is underestimated by international policies, which is particularly alarming in times of agricultural intensification and diminishing pollination services. In this study, exclusion experiments with strawberries showed bee pollination to improve fruit quality, quantity and market value compared with wind and self-pollination. Bee-pollinated fruits were heavier, had less malformations and reached higher commercial grades. They had increased redness and reduced sugar–acid–ratios and were firmer, thus improving the commercially important shelf life. Longer shelf life reduced fruit loss by at least 11%. This is accounting for 0.32 billion US$ of the 1.44 billion US$ provided by bee pollination to the total value of 2.90 billion US$ made with strawberry selling in the European Union 2009. The fruit quality and yield effects are driven by the pollination-mediated production of hormonal growth regulators, which occur in several pollination-dependent crops. Thus, our comprehensive findings should be transferable to a wide range of crops and demonstrate bee pollination to be a hitherto underestimated but vital and economically important determinant of fruit quality. KW - commercial grades KW - ecosystem services KW - post-harvest quality KW - shelf life KW - strawberry KW - crop yield KW - ecology Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-120797 VL - 281 IS - 1775 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dandekar, Thomas A1 - Fieselmann, Astrid A1 - Fischer, Eva A1 - Popp, Jasmin A1 - Hensel, Michael A1 - Noster, Janina T1 - Salmonella—how a metabolic generalist adopts an intracellular lifestyle during infection JF - Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology N2 - The human-pathogenic bacterium Salmonella enterica adjusts and adapts to different environments while attempting colonization. In the course of infection nutrient availabilities change drastically. New techniques, “-omics” data and subsequent integration by systems biology improve our understanding of these changes. We review changes in metabolism focusing on amino acid and carbohydrate metabolism. Furthermore, the adaptation process is associated with the activation of genes of the Salmonella pathogenicity islands (SPIs). Anti-infective strategies have to take these insights into account and include metabolic and other strategies. Salmonella infections will remain a challenge for infection biology. KW - regulation KW - virulence KW - "-omics" KW - metabolism KW - Salmonella-containing vacuole (SCV) Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-120686 SN - 2235-2988 VL - 4 IS - 191 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Haydn, Johannes M. A1 - Hufnagel, Anita A1 - Grimm, Johannes A1 - Maurus, Katja A1 - Schartl, Manfred A1 - Meierjohann, Svenja T1 - The MAPK pathway as an apoptosis enhancer in melanoma JF - Oncotarget N2 - Inhibition of RAF/MEK/ERK signaling is beneficial for many patients with BRAFV600E–mutated melanoma. However, primary and secondary resistances restrict long-lasting therapy success. Combination therapies are therefore urgently needed. Here, we evaluate the cellular effect of combining a MEK inhibitor with a genotoxic apoptosis inducer. Strikingly, we observed that an activated MAPK pathway promotes in several melanoma cell lines the pro-apoptotic response to genotoxic stress, and MEK inhibition reduces intrinsic apoptosis. This goes along with MEK inhibitor induced increased RAS and P-AKT levels. The protective effect of the MEK inhibitor depends on PI3K signaling, which prevents the induction of pro-apoptotic PUMA that mediates apoptosis after DNA damage. We could show that the MEK inhibitor dependent feedback loop is enabled by several factors, including EGF receptor and members of the SPRED family. The simultaneous knockdown of SPRED1 and SPRED2 mimicked the effects of MEK inhibitor such as PUMA repression and protection from apoptosis. Our data demonstrate that MEK inhibition of BRAFV600E-positive melanoma cells can protect from genotoxic stress, thereby achieving the opposite of the intended anti-tumorigenic effect of the combination of MEK inhibitor with inducers of intrinsic apoptosis. KW - PI3K KW - melanoma KW - RAS KW - chemotherapy resistance KW - crosstalk Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-120649 SN - 1949-2553 VL - 5 IS - 13 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Naseem, Muhammad A1 - Kunz, Meik A1 - Dandekar, Thomas T1 - Probing the unknowns in cytokinin-mediated immune defense in Arabidopsis with systems biology approaches JF - Bioinformatics and Biology Insights N2 - Plant hormones involving salicylic acid (SA), jasmonic acid (JA), ethylene (Et), and auxin, gibberellins, and abscisic acid (ABA) are known to regulate host immune responses. However, plant hormone cytokinin has the potential to modulate defense signaling including SA and JA. It promotes plant pathogen and herbivore resistance; underlying mechanisms are still unknown. Using systems biology approaches, we unravel hub points of immune interaction mediated by cytokinin signaling in Arabidopsis. High-confidence Arabidopsis protein-protein interactions (PPI) are coupled to changes in cytokinin-mediated gene expression. Nodes of the cellular interactome that are enriched in immune functions also reconstitute sub-networks. Topological analyses and their specific immunological relevance lead to the identification of functional hubs in cellular interactome. We discuss our identified immune hubs in light of an emerging model of cytokinin-mediated immune defense against pathogen infection in plants. KW - plant hormones KW - systems biology KW - interaction networks KW - gene expression KW - cytokinin Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-120199 SN - 1177-9322 VL - 8 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ahmed, Zeeshan A1 - Zeeshan, Saman A1 - Huber, Claudia A1 - Hensel, Michael A1 - Schomburg, Dietmar A1 - Münch, Richard A1 - Eylert, Eva A1 - Eisenreich, Wolfgang A1 - Dandekar, Thomas T1 - ‘Isotopo’ a database application for facile analysis and management of mass isotopomer data JF - Database N2 - The composition of stable-isotope labelled isotopologues/isotopomers in metabolic products can be measured by mass spectrometry and supports the analysis of pathways and fluxes. As a prerequisite, the original mass spectra have to be processed, managed and stored to rapidly calculate, analyse and compare isotopomer enrichments to study, for instance, bacterial metabolism in infection. For such applications, we provide here the database application ‘Isotopo’. This software package includes (i) a database to store and process isotopomer data, (ii) a parser to upload and translate different data formats for such data and (iii) an improved application to process and convert signal intensities from mass spectra of \(^{13}C\)-labelled metabolites such as tertbutyldimethylsilyl-derivatives of amino acids. Relative mass intensities and isotopomer distributions are calculated applying a partial least square method with iterative refinement for high precision data. The data output includes formats such as graphs for overall enrichments in amino acids. The package is user-friendly for easy and robust data management of multiple experiments. KW - stable-isotope Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-120102 VL - 2014 IS - bau077 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schartl, Manfred T1 - Beyond the zebrafish: diverse fish species for modeling human disease JF - Disease Models & Mechanisms N2 - In recent years, zebrafish, and to a lesser extent medaka, have become widely used small animal models for human diseases. These organisms have convincingly demonstrated the usefulness of fish for improving our understanding of the molecular and cellular mechanisms leading to pathological conditions, and for the development of new diagnostic and therapeutic tools. Despite the usefulness of zebrafish and medaka in the investigation of a wide spectrum of traits, there is evidence to suggest that other fish species could be better suited for more targeted questions. With the emergence of new, improved sequencing technologies that enable genomic resources to be generated with increasing efficiency and speed, the potential of non-mainstream fish species as disease models can now be explored. A key feature of these fish species is that the pathological condition that they model is often related to specific evolutionary adaptations. By exploring these adaptations, new disease-causing and disease-modifier genes might be identified; thus, diverse fish species could be exploited to better understand the complexity of disease processes. In addition, non-mainstream fish models could allow us to study the impact of environmental factors, as well as genetic variation, on complex disease phenotypes. This Review will discuss the opportunities that such fish models offer for current and future biomedical research. KW - evolutionary mutant model KW - natural variation KW - cancer KW - fish model Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-119919 SN - 1754-8411 VL - 7 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Andreska, Thomas A1 - Aufmkolk, Sarah A1 - Sauer, Markus A1 - Blum, Robert T1 - High abundance of BDNF within glutamatergic presynapses of cultured hippocampal neurons JF - Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience N2 - In the mammalian brain, the neurotrophin brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) has emerged as a key factor for synaptic refinement, plasticity and learning. Although BDNF-induced signaling cascades are well known, the spatial aspects of the synaptic BDNF localization remained unclear. Recent data provide strong evidence for an exclusive presynaptic location and anterograde secretion of endogenous BDNF at synapses of the hippocampal circuit. In contrast, various studies using BDNF overexpression in cultured hippocampal neurons support the idea that postsynaptic elements and other dendritic structures are the preferential sites of BDNF localization and release. In this study we used rigorously tested anti-BDNF antibodies and achieved a dense labeling of endogenous BDNF close to synapses. Confocal microscopy showed natural BDNF close to many, but not all glutamatergic synapses, while neither GABAergic synapses nor postsynaptic structures carried a typical synaptic BDNF label. To visualize the BDNF distribution within the fine structure of synapses, we implemented super resolution fluorescence imaging by direct stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (dSTORM). Two-color dSTORM images of neurites were acquired with a spatial resolution of ~20 nm. At this resolution, the synaptic scaffold proteins Bassoon and Homer exhibit hallmarks of mature synapses and form juxtaposed bars, separated by a synaptic cleft. BDNF imaging signals form granule-like clusters with a mean size of ~60 nm and are preferentially found within the fine structure of the glutamatergic presynapse. Individual glutamatergic presynapses carried up to 90% of the synaptic BDNF immunoreactivity, and only a minor fraction of BDNF molecules was found close to the postsynaptic bars. Our data proof that hippocampal neurons are able to enrich and store high amounts of BDNF in small granules within the mature glutamatergic presynapse, at a principle site of synaptic plasticity. KW - hippocampal neurons KW - synapse structure KW - presynapse KW - synaptic localization KW - BDNF Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-119793 SN - 1662-5102 VL - 8 IS - 107 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Proppert, Sven A1 - Wolter, Steve A1 - Holm, Thorge A1 - Klein, Theresa A1 - van de Linde, Sebastian A1 - Sauer, Markus T1 - Cubic B-spline calibration for 3D super-resolution measurements using astigmatic imaging JF - Optics Express N2 - In recent years three-dimensional (3D) super-resolution fluorescence imaging by single-molecule localization (localization microscopy) has gained considerable interest because of its simple implementation and high optical resolution. Astigmatic and biplane imaging are experimentally simple methods to engineer a 3D-specific point spread function (PSF), but existing evaluation methods have proven problematic in practical application. Here we introduce the use of cubic B-splines to model the relationship of axial position and PSF width in the above mentioned approaches and compare the performance with existing methods. We show that cubic B-splines are the first method that can combine precision, accuracy and simplicity. KW - three-dimensional microscopy KW - fluorescence microscopy KW - medical and biological imaging KW - superresolution Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-119730 SN - 1094-4087 VL - 22 IS - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Batram, Christopher A1 - Jones, Nivola G. A1 - Janzen, Christian J. A1 - Markert, Sebastian M. A1 - Engstler, Markus T1 - Expression site attenuation mechanistically links antigenic variation and development in Trypanosoma brucei JF - eLife N2 - We have discovered a new mechanism of monoallelic gene expression that links antigenic variation, cell cycle, and development in the model parasite Trypanosoma brucei. African trypanosomes possess hundreds of variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) genes, but only one is expressed from a telomeric expression site (ES) at any given time. We found that the expression of a second VSG alone is sufficient to silence the active VSG gene and directionally attenuate the ES by disruptor of telomeric silencing-1B (DOT1B)-mediated histone methylation. Three conserved expression-site-associated genes (ESAGs) appear to serve as signal for ES attenuation. Their depletion causes G1-phase dormancy and reversible initiation of the slender-to-stumpy differentiation pathway. ES-attenuated slender bloodstream trypanosomes gain full developmental competence for transformation to the tsetse fly stage. This surprising connection between antigenic variation and developmental progression provides an unexpected point of attack against the deadly sleeping sickness. KW - antigenic variation KW - expression site attenuation KW - developmental reprogramming KW - cell biology KW - genes and chromosomes KW - Trypanosoma brucei KW - variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) KW - monoallelic expression Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-119727 SN - 2050-084X VL - 3 IS - e02324 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Yilmaz, Ayse A1 - Aksoy, Volkan A1 - Camlitepe, Yilmaz A1 - Giurfa, Martin T1 - Eye structure, activity rhythms, and visually-driven behavior are tuned to visual niche in ants JF - Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience N2 - Insects have evolved physiological adaptations and behavioral strategies that allow them to cope with a broad spectrum of environmental challenges and contribute to their evolutionary success. Visual performance plays a key role in this success. Correlates between life style and eye organization have been reported in various insect species. Yet, if and how visual ecology translates effectively into different visual discrimination and learning capabilities has been less explored. Here we report results from optical and behavioral analyses performed in two sympatric ant species, Formica cunicularia and Camponotus aethiops. We show that the former are diurnal while the latter are cathemeral. Accordingly, F. cunicularia workers present compound eyes with higher resolution, while C. aethiops workers exhibit eyes with lower resolution but higher sensitivity. The discrimination and learning of visual stimuli differs significantly between these species in controlled dual-choice experiments: discrimination learning of small-field visual stimuli is achieved by F. cunicularia but not by C. aethiops, while both species master the discrimination of large-field visual stimuli. Our work thus provides a paradigmatic example about how timing of foraging activities and visual environment match the organization of compound eyes and visually-driven behavior. This correspondence underlines the relevance of an ecological/evolutionary framework for analyses in behavioral neuroscience. KW - visual learning KW - ant KW - activity rhythm KW - camponotus aethiops KW - formica cunicularia KW - compound eye Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-119595 VL - 8 ER -