TY - JOUR A1 - Van Baelen, Anthony A1 - Mottet, Nicolas A1 - Spahn, Martin A1 - Briganti, Alberto A1 - Gontero, Paolo A1 - Joniau, Steven T1 - Sense and Nonsense of an Extended Pelvic Lymph Node Dissection in Prostate Cancer JF - Advances in Urology N2 - Lymph node metastases associated with prostate cancer (PCa) has been shown to be a poor prognostic factor. The role of pelvic lymph node dissection (PLND) itself in relation to survival remains unclear, however. A Medline search was conducted to address this issue. The following conclusions were drawn. Only recently, improved survival due to completion of radical prostatectomy (RP) (compared to abandoning RP) in known or presumed lymph-node-positive patients has been shown. Lymph node sampling can only be considered representative if an adequate number of nodes is removed. While several authors have suggested that a therapeutic benefit in patients undergoing RP is not provided by PLND, the reliability of these studies is uncertain. Contrary to this, several studies have indicated the possibility of long-term survival even in the presence of limited lymph node metastases. The role and timing of initiation of adjuvant androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) in patients who have node-positive disease after RP is controversial. Recent studies suggest that delaying ADT may not adversely impact survival. KW - Prostatakrebs Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-123990 VL - 2012 IS - 983058 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Leistner, Stefanie A1 - Benik, Steffen A1 - Laumeier, Inga A1 - Ziegler, Annerose A1 - Nieweler, Gabriele A1 - Nolte, Christian H. A1 - Heuschmann, Peter U. A1 - Audebert, Heinrich J. T1 - Secondary Prevention after Minor Stroke and TIA - Usual Care and Development of a Support Program JF - PLoS One N2 - Background: Effective methods of secondary prevention after stroke or TIA are available but adherence to recommended evidence-based treatments is often poor. The study aimed to determine the quality of secondary prevention in usual care and to develop a stepwise modeled support program. Methods: Two consecutive cohorts of patients with acute minor stroke or TIA undergoing usual outpatient care versus a secondary prevention program were compared. Risk factor control and medication adherence were assessed in 6-month follow-ups (6M-FU). Usual care consisted of detailed information concerning vascular risk factor targets given at discharge and regular outpatient care by primary care physicians. The stepwise modeled support program additionally employed up to four outpatient appointments. A combination of educational and behavioral strategies was employed. Results: 168 patients in the observational cohort who stated their openness to participate in a prevention program (mean age 64.7 y, admission blood pressure (BP): 155/84 mmHg) and 173 patients participating in the support program (mean age 67.6 y, BP: 161/84 mmHg) were assessed at 6 months. Proportions of patients with BP according to guidelines were 50% in usual-care and 77% in the support program (p<0.01). LDL<100 mg/dl was measured in 62 versus 71% (p = 0.12). Proportions of patients who stopped smoking were 50 versus 79% (p<0.01). 72 versus 89% of patients with atrial fibrillation were on oral anticoagulation (p = 0.09). Conclusions: Risk factor control remains unsatisfactory in usual care. Targets of secondary prevention were met more often within the supported cohort. Effects on (cerebro-)vascular recurrence rates are going to be assessed in a multicenter randomized trial. KW - atherothrombosis KW - multifactorial KW - clinical trial KW - hypertension KW - disease KW - transient ischemic attack KW - randomized controlled trial KW - cardiovascular risk factors KW - blood pressure KW - event rates Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-135247 VL - 7 IS - 12 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hsieh, Yu-Lung A1 - Linsenmair, Karl Eduard T1 - Seasonal dynamics of arboreal spider diversity in a temperate forest N2 - Measuring and estimating biodiversity patterns is a fundamental task of the scientist working to support conservation and informmanagement decisions.Most biodiversity studies in temperate regions were often carried out over a very short period of time (e.g., a single season) and it is often—at least tacitly—assumed that these short-termfindings are representative of long-termgeneral patterns.However, should the studied biodiversity pattern in fact contain significant temporal dynamics, perhaps leading to contradictory conclusions. Here, we studied the seasonal diversity dynamics of arboreal spider communities dwelling in 216 European beeches (Fagus sylvatica L.) to assess the spider community composition in the following seasons: two cold seasons (I:November 2005–January 2006; II: February–April) and two warm seasons (III: May–July; IV: August–October). We show that the usually measured diversity of the warmseason community (IV: 58 estimated species) alone did not deliver a reliable image of the overall diversity present in these trees, and therefore, we recommend it should not be used for sampling protocols aimed at providing a full picture of a forest’s biodiversity in the temperate zones. In particular, when the additional samplings of other seasons (I, II, III) were included, the estimated species richness nearly doubled (108). Community I possessed the lowest diversity and evenness due to the harsh winter conditions: this community was comprised of one dominant species together with several species low in abundance. Similarity was lowest (38.6%) between seasonal communities I and III, indicating a significant species turnover due to recolonization, so that community III had the highest diversity. Finally, using nonparametric estimators, we found that further sampling in late winter (February–April) is most needed to complete our inventory. Our study clearly demonstrates that seasonal dynamics of communities should be taken into account when studying biodiversity patterns of spiders, and probably forest arthropods in general. KW - Biologie KW - Araneae KW - canopy fogging KW - European beech KW - recolonization KW - species richness estimation KW - true diversity Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-75158 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Search for top and bottom squarks from gluino pair production in final states with missing transverse energy and at least three b-jets with the ATLAS detector JF - The European Physical Journal C N2 - This letter reports the results of a search for top and bottom squarks from gluino pair production in 4.7 fb\(^{−1}\) of pp collisions at √s=7 TeV using the ATLAS detector at the LHC. The search is performed in events with large missing transverse momentum and at least three jets identified as originating from a b-quark. Exclusion limits are presented for a variety of gluino-mediated models with gluino masses up to 1 TeV excluded. KW - SM Background KW - jet response KW - direct pair production KW - visible cross section KW - jet energy scale KW - Anti-k Jet KW - PDF set KW - validation region Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-127523 VL - 72 IS - 2174 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aad, G. A1 - Abbott, B. A1 - Abdallah, J. A1 - Abdel Khalek, S. A1 - Abdelalim, A. A. T1 - Search for the Standard Model Higgs boson in the H→WW(⋆)→ℓνℓνH→WW(⋆)→ℓνℓν decay mode with 4.7 fb\(^{−1}\) of ATLAS data at \(\sqrt{s}\)=7 TeV JF - Physics Letters B N2 - A search for the Standard Model Higgs boson in the H→WW(⋆)→ℓνℓνH→WW(⋆)→ℓνℓν (ℓ=e,μℓ=e,μ) decay mode is presented. The search is performed using proton–proton collision data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 4.7 fb\(^{−1}\) at a centre-of-mass energy of 7 TeV collected during 2011 with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. No significant excess of events over the expected background is observed. An upper bound is placed on the Higgs boson production cross section as a function of its mass. A Standard Model Higgs boson with mass in the range between 133 GeV and 261 GeV is excluded at 95% confidence level, while the expected exclusion range is from 127 GeV to 233 GeV. KW - ATLAS KW - LHC KW - Higgs KW - WW Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-127307 VL - 761 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Search for supersymmetry in events with large missing transverse momentum, jets, and at least one tau lepton in 7 TeV proton-proton collision data with the JF - The European Physical Journal C N2 - A search for supersymmetry (SUSY) in events with large missing transverse momentum, jets, and at least one hadronically decaying τ lepton, with zero or one additional light lepton (e/μ), has been performed using 4.7 fb\(^{−1}\) of proton-proton collision data at \(\sqrt s\)=7TeV recorded with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. No excess above the Standard Model background expectation is observed and a 95 % confidence level visible cross-section upper limit for new phenomena is set. In the framework of gauge-mediated SUSY-breaking models, lower limits on the mass scale Λ are set at 54 TeV in the regions where the \(\tilde τ_1\) is the next-to-lightest SUSY particle (tanβ>20). These limits provide the most stringent tests to date of GMSB models in a large part of the parameter space considered. KW - multi-jet background KW - jet energy scale KW - systematic uncertainty KW - jet background KW - anti-k jet KW - jet energy resolution KW - MC expectation KW - GMSB model KW - Cl Lowe limit KW - transverse momentum KW - single top event KW - SM background KW - MC simulation KW - transverse momentum vector KW - SUSY breaking scale Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-128891 VL - 72 IS - 2215 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Search for second generation scalar leptoquarks in pp collisions at √s=7 TeV with the ATLAS detector JF - The European Physical Journal C N2 - The results of a search for the production of second generation scalar leptoquarks are presented for final states consisting of either two muons and at least two jets or a muon plus missing transverse momentum and at least two jets. A total of 1.03 fb\(^{−1}\) integrated luminosity of proton-proton collision data produced by the Large Hadron Collider at s√=7 TeV and recorded by the ATLAS detector is used for the search. The event yields in the signal regions are found to be consistent with the Standard Model background expectations. The production of second generation leptoquarks is excluded for a leptoquark mass m\(_{LQ}\)<594 (685) GeV at 95 % confidence level, for a branching ratio of 0.5 (1.0) for leptoquark decay to a muon and a quark. KW - jet energy scale KW - top quark mass KW - multi-jet background KW - simulated event sample KW - SM background KW - acceptance time efficiency KW - top quark contribution KW - top quark pair KW - primary vertex KW - single top quark production KW - signal cross section KW - systematic uncertainty KW - single top quark Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-128957 VL - 72 IS - 2151 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Search for same-sign top-quark production and fourth-generation down-type quarks in pp collisions at √s=7 TeV with the ATLAS detector JF - Journal of High Energy Physics N2 - A search is presented for same-sign top-quark production and down-type heavy quarks of charge −1/3 in events with two isolated leptons (e or μ) that have the same electric charge, at least two jets and large missing transverse momentum. The data are selected from pp collisions at √s=7TeV recorded by the ATLAS detector and correspond to an integrated luminosity of 1.04 fb\(^{−1}\). The observed data are consistent with expectations from Standard Model processes. Upper limits are set at 95 % confidence level on the cross section of new sources of same-sign top-quark pair production of 1.4-2.0 pb depending on the assumed mediator mass. Upper limits are also set on the pair-production cross-section for new heavy down-type quarks; a lower limit of 450 GeV is set at 95 % confidence level on the mass of heavy down-type quarks under the assumption that they decay 100 % of the time to W t. KW - hadron-hadron scattering Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-128960 VL - 04 IS - 69 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Search for R-parity-violating supersymmetry in events with four or more leptons in √s=7 TeV pp collisions with the ATLAS detector JF - Journal of High Energy Physics N2 - A search for new phenomena in final states with four or more leptons (electrons or muons) is presented. The analysis is based on 4.7 fb\(^{−1}\) of √s=7 TeV proton-proton collisions delivered by the Large Hadron Collider and recorded with the ATLAS detector. Observations are consistent with Standard Model expectations in two signal regions: one that requires moderate values of missing transverse momentum and another that requires large effective mass. The results are interpreted in a simplified model of R-parity-violating supersymmetry in which a 95% CL exclusion region is set for charged wino masses up to 540 GeV. In an R-parity-violating MSUGRA/CMSSM model, values of m 1/2 up to 820 GeV are excluded for 10 < tan β < 40. KW - hadron-hadron scattering Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-129179 VL - 12 IS - 124 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Search for pair production of massive particles decaying into three quarks with the ATLAS detector in √s=7TeV pp collisions at the LHC JF - Journal of High Energy Physics N2 - A search is conducted for hadronic three-body decays of a new massive coloured particle in √s=7TeV pp collisions at the LHC using an integrated luminosity of 4.6 fb\(^{−1}\) collected by the ATLAS detector. Supersymmetric gluino pair production in the context of a model with R-parity violation is used as a benchmark scenario. The analysis is divided into two search channels, each optimised separately for their sensitivity to high-mass and low-mass gluino production. The first search channel uses a stringent selection on the transverse momentum of the six leading jets and is performed as a counting experiment. The second search channel focuses on low-mass gluinos produced with a large boost. Large-radius jets are selected and the invariant mass of each of the two leading jets is used as a discriminant between the signal and the background. The results are found to be consistent with Standard Model expectations and limits are set on the allowed gluino mass. KW - hadron-hadron scattering Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-128133 VL - 12 IS - 86 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Search for light scalar top-quark pair production in final states with two leptons with the ATLAS detector in √s=7 TeV proton–proton collisions JF - The European Physical Journal C N2 - A search is presented for the pair production of light scalar top quarks in √s=7 TeV proton–proton collisions recorded with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. This analysis uses the full data sample collected during 2011 running that corresponds to a total integrated luminosity of 4.7 fb\(^{−1}\). Light scalar top quarks are searched for in events with two opposite-sign leptons (e, μ), large missing transverse momentum and at least one jet in the final state. No excess over Standard Model expectations is found, and the results are interpreted under the assumption that the light scalar top decays to a b-quark in addition to an on-shell chargino whose decay occurs through a virtual W boson. If the chargino mass is 106 GeV, light scalar top-quark masses up to 130 GeV are excluded for neutralino masses below 70 GeV. KW - signal cross section KW - jet energy scale KW - jet energy scale uncertainty KW - dead region KW - jet energy resolution KW - top quark pair KW - charingo mass KW - top quark decay KW - SM background KW - simulaed event sample KW - MC simulation KW - visible cross section KW - anti-k jet KW - top event dilepton invariant mass Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-129561 VL - 72 IS - 2237 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Search for lepton flavour violation in the eμ continuum with the ATLAS detector in √s=7 TeV pp collisions at the LHC JF - The European Physical Journal C N2 - This paper presents a search for the t-channel exchange of an R-parity violating scalar top quark ( \(\tilde{t}\) ) in the e\(^±\) μ\(^∓\) continuum using 2.1 fb\(^{−1}\) of data collected by the ATLAS detector in √s=7 TeV pp collisions at the Large Hadron Collider. Data are found to be consistent with the expectation from the Standard Model backgrounds. Limits on R-parity-violating couplings at 95 % C.L. are calculated as a function of the scalar top mass (m\(_\tilde{t}\)). The upper limits on the production cross section for pp→eμX, through the t-channel exchange of a scalar top quark, ranges from 170 fb for m\(_\tilde{t}\)=95 GeV to 30 fb for m\(_\tilde{t}\)=1000 GeV. KW - Large Hadron Collider KW - Pp Collision KW - Atlas detector KW - top quark KW - production cross section Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-127632 VL - 72 IS - 2040 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Search for high-mass resonances decaying to dilepton final states in pp collisions at √s=7 TeV with the ATLAS detector JF - Journal of High Energy Physics N2 - The ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider is used to search for high-mass resonances decaying to an electron-positron pair or a muon-antimuon pair. The search is sensitive to heavy neutral Z′ gauge bosons, Randall-Sundrum gravitons, Z* bosons, techni-mesons, Kaluza-Klein Z/γ bosons, and bosons predicted by Torsion models. Results are presented based on an analysis of pp collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 7 TeV corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 4.9 fb\(^{−1}\) in the e\(^+\)e\(^−\) channel and 5.0 fb\(^{−1}\) in the μ\(^+\)μ\(^−\)channel. A Z′ boson with Standard Model-like couplings is excluded at 95 % confidence level for masses below 2.22 TeV. A Randall-Sundrum graviton with coupling k/\(\overline M_{Pl}\)=0.1 is excluded at 95 % confidence level for masses below 2.16 TeV. Limits on the other models are also presented, including Technicolor and Minimal Z′ Models. KW - hadron-hadron scattering Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-127974 VL - 11 IS - 138 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Search for heavy neutrinos and right-handed W bosons in events with two leptons and jets in pp collisions at \(\sqrt{s}\)=7TeV with the ATLAS detector JF - The European Physical Journal C N2 - This letter reports on a search for hypothetical heavy neutrinos, N, and right-handed gauge bosons, W R, in events with high transverse momentum objects which include two reconstructed leptons and at least one hadronic jet. The results were obtained from data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 2.1 fb\(^{−1}\) collected in proton–proton collisions at √s=7 TeV with the ATLAS detector at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. No excess above the Standard Model background expectation is observed. Excluded mass regions for Majorana and Dirac neutrinos are presented using two approaches for interactions that violate lepton and lepton-flavor numbers. One approach uses an effective operator framework, the other approach is guided by the Left–Right Symmetric Model. The results described in this letter represent the most stringent limits to date on the masses of heavy neutrinos and W\(_R\) bosons obtained in direct searches. KW - dilepton invariant mass, KW - heavy neutrino KW - non-prompt lepton KW - Anti-k Jet KW - fake lepton Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-127796 VL - 72 IS - 2056 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Search for doubly charged Higgs bosons in like-sign dilepton final states at √s=7 TeV with the ATLAS detector JF - The European Physical Journal C N2 - A search for doubly charged Higgs bosons decaying to pairs of electrons and/or muons is presented. The search is performed using a data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 4.7 fb\(^{−1}\) of pp collisions at √s = 7 TeV collected by the ATLAS detector at the LHC. Pairs of prompt, isolated, high-p\(_T\) leptons with the same electric charge (\(e^±e^±, e^±μ^±, μ^±μ^±\)) are selected, and their invariant mass distribution is searched for a narrow resonance. No significant excess over Standard Model background expectations is observed, and limits are placed on the cross section times branching ratio for pair production of doubly charged Higgs bosons. The masses of doubly charged Higgs bosons are constrained depending on the branching ratio into these leptonic final states. Assuming pair production, coupling to left-handed fermions, and a branching ratio of 100 % for each final state, masses below 409 GeV, 375 GeV, and 398 GeV are excluded for \(e^±e^±, e^±μ^±\), and \(μ^±μ^±\), respectively. KW - background expectation KW - cross section time KW - acceptance time efficiency KW - partial decay width KW - WZ production KW - extrapolation factor KW - dilepton mass KW - charge misidentification KW - systematic uncertainty KW - non-prompt lepton KW - neutral Higgs boson KW - producation cross section KW - invariant mass distribution KW - MC simulation KW - leptonic final state Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-129540 VL - 72 IS - 2244 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Search for charged Higgs bosons decaying via H\(^±\) → τν in \(t\overline t\) events using pp collision data at √s=7 TeV with the ATLAS detector JF - Journal of High Energy Physics N2 - The results of a search for charged Higgs bosons are presented. The analysis is based on 4.6fb\(^{−1}\) of proton-proton collision data at √s=7TeV collected by the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider, using top quark pair events with a τ lepton in the final state. The data are consistent with the expected background from Standard Model processes. Assuming that the branching ratio of the charged Higgs boson to a τ lepton and a neutrino is 100 %, this leads to upper limits on the branching ratio of top quark decays to a b quark and a charged Higgs boson between 5% and 1% for charged Higgs boson masses ranging from 90 GeV to 160 GeV, respectively. In the context of the m\(^{max}_h\) scenario of the MSSM, tan β above 12-26, as well as between 1 and 2-6, can be excluded for charged Higgs boson masses between 90 GeV and 150 GeV. KW - hadron-hadron scattering Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-129163 VL - 06 IS - 39 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Search for anomaly-mediated supersymmetry breaking with the ATLAS detector based on a disappearing-track signature in pp collisions at √s=7 TeV JF - The European Physical Journal C N2 - In models of anomaly-mediated supersymmetry breaking (AMSB), the lightest chargino is predicted to have a lifetime long enough to be detected in collider experiments. This letter explores AMSB scenarios in pp collisions at √s=7 TeV by attempting to identify decaying charginos which result in tracks that appear to have few associated hits in the outer region of the tracking system. The search was based on data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 1.02 fb\(^{−1}\) collected with the ATLAS detector in 2011. The p\(_T\) spectrum of candidate tracks is found to be consistent with the expectation from Standard Model background processes and constraints on the lifetime and the production cross section were obtained. In the minimal AMSB framework with m\(_{3/2}\)<32 TeV, m\(_0\)<1.5 TeV, tanβ=5 and μ>0, a chargino having mass below 92 GeV and a lifetime between 0.5 ns and 2 ns is excluded at 95 % confidence level. KW - chargino decay KW - anomaly mediation KW - supersymmetry KW - symmetry breaking KW - scattering KW - chargino lifetime KW - sparticle cascade decay KW - chargino mass KW - track data analysis KW - transverse momentum momentum spectrum KW - background KW - Monte Carlo KW - experimental results KW - sparticle pair production KW - chargino --> neutralino pi KW - CERN LHC Coll KW - ATLAS KW - 7000 GeV-cms Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-127850 VL - 72 IS - 1993 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Search for anomalous production of prompt like-sign lepton pairs at √s=7TeV with the ATLAS detector JF - Journal of High Energy Physics N2 - An inclusive search for anomalous production of two prompt, isolated leptons with the same electric charge is presented. The search is performed in a data sample corresponding to 4.7 fb\(^{−1}\) of integrated luminosity collected in 2011 at √s=7TeV with the ATLAS detector at the LHC. Pairs of leptons (e\(^{±}\)e\(^{±}\), e\(^{±}\)μ\(^{±}\), and μ\(^{±}\)μ\(^{±}\)) with large transverse momentum are selected, and the dilepton invariant mass distribution is examined for any deviation from the Standard Model expectation. No excess is found, and upper limits on the production cross section of like-sign lepton pairs from physics processes beyond the Standard Model are placed as a function of the dilepton invariant mass within a fiducial region close to the experimental selection criteria. The 95% confidence level upper limits on the cross section of anomalous e\(^{±}\)e\(^{±}\), e\(^{±}\)μ\(^{±}\), or μ\(^{±}\)μ\(^{±}\) production range between 1.7 fb and 64 fb depending on the dilepton mass and flavour combination. KW - hadron-hadron scattering Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-127983 VL - 12 IS - 7 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Search for a heavy top-quark partner in final states with two leptons with the ATLAS detector at the LHC JF - Journal of High Energy Physics N2 - The results of a search for direct pair production of heavy top-quark partners in 4.7 fb\(^{−1}\) of integrated luminosity from pp collisions at √s=7 TeV collected by the ATLAS detector at the LHC are reported. Heavy top-quark partners decaying into a top quark and a neutral non-interacting particle are searched for in events with two leptons in the final state. No excess above the Standard Model expectation is observed. Limits are placed on the mass of a supersymmetric scalar top and of a spin-1/2 top-quark partner. A spin-1/2 top-quark partner with a mass between 300 GeV and 480 GeV, decaying to a top quark and a neutral non-interacting particle lighter than 100 GeV, is excluded at 95% confidence level. KW - hadron-hadron scattering Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-127511 VL - 11 IS - 094 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Search for a fermiophobic Higgs boson in the diphoton decay channel with the ATLAS detector JF - The European Physical Journal C N2 - A search for a fermiophobic Higgs boson using diphoton events produced in proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of √s=7 TeV is performed using data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 4.9 fb\(^{−1}\) collected by the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider. A specific benchmark model is considered where all the fermion couplings to the Higgs boson are set to zero and the bosonic couplings are kept at the Standard Model values (fermiophobic Higgs model). The largest excess with respect to the background-only hypothesis is found at 125.5 GeV, with a local significance of 2.9 standard deviations, which reduces to 1.6 standard deviations when taking into account the look-elsewhere effect. The data exclude the fermiophobic Higgs model in the ranges 110.0–118.0 GeV and 119.5–121.0 GeV at 95 % confidence level. KW - unconverted photon KW - Higgs boson signal KW - photon energy scale KW - invariant mass resolution KW - diphoton invariant mass Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-127427 VL - 72 IS - 2157 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dandekar, Thomas A1 - Fieselmann, Astrid A1 - Popp, Jasmin A1 - Hensel, Michael T1 - Salmonella enterica: a surprisingly well-adapted intracellular lifestyle JF - Frontiers in Microbiology N2 - The infectious intracellular lifestyle of Salmonella enterica relies on the adaptation to nutritional conditions within the Salmonella-containing vacuole (SCV) in host cells. We summarize latest results on metabolic requirements for Salmonella during infection. This includes intracellular phenotypes of mutant strains based on metabolic modeling and experimental tests, isotopolog profiling using (13)C-compounds in intracellular Salmonella, and complementation of metabolic defects for attenuated mutant strains towards a comprehensive understanding of the metabolic requirements of the intracellular lifestyle of Salmonella. Helpful for this are also genomic comparisons. We outline further recent studies and which analyses of intracellular phenotypes and improved metabolic simulations were done and comment on technical required steps as well as progress involved in the iterative refinement of metabolic flux models, analyses of mutant phenotypes, and isotopolog analyses. Salmonella lifestyle is well-adapted to the SCV and its specific metabolic requirements. Salmonella metabolism adapts rapidly to SCV conditions, the metabolic generalist Salmonella is quite successful in host infection. KW - Salmonella enterica KW - metabolism KW - Salmonella-containing vacuole KW - regulation KW - virulence Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-123135 ER - TY - THES A1 - Berberich, Martin T1 - Rylene Bisimide-Diarylethene Photochromic Systems for Non-Destructive Memory Read-out T1 - Photochrome Rylenbisimid-Diarylethen-Systeme für Nichtdestruktives Datenspeicherauslesen N2 - Diese Doktorarbeit zeigt deutlich verbesserte aus Rylenbisimiden und Diarylethenen aufgebaute, photochrome Systeme für das nicht-destruktive Auslesen von Fluoreszenz. Dabei wird die Fluoreszenz der Emittereinheit durch photoinduzierten Elektronentransfer nur zu einer isomeren Form des Photochromes gelöscht. Die Triebkraft für den Fluoreszenz-löschenden Elektronentransfer wurde mittels Rehm-Weller-Gleichung berechnet. Die erhaltenen Systeme erfüllen die notwendigen Anforderungen für ein nicht-destruktives Auslesen in einem auf Schreiben, Auslesen und Löschen basierenden fluoreszierenden Datenspeicher. N2 - The thesis enhances the strategy of non-destructive fluorescence read-out in rylene bisimide-diarylethene containing photochromic systems. The fluorescence of the emitter unit is quenched by a photoinduced electron transfer only to one of the isomeric forms of the photochrome. The driving force of the fuorescence-quenching electron transfer was calculated by the help of the Rehm-Weller equation. The novel photochromic systems satisfy the necessary requirements for non-destructive read-out in write/read/erase fluorescent memory devices. KW - Photochromie KW - Elektronentransfer KW - Fluoreszenz KW - Perylenderivate KW - Terrylenderivate KW - Diarylethylene KW - Speicher KW - Perylenbisimid KW - Terrylenbisimid KW - Diarylethen KW - Perylene bisimide KW - Terrylene bisimide KW - Diarylethene Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-73517 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sütterlin, Stefan A1 - Paap, Muirne C. S. A1 - Babic, Stana A1 - Kübler, Andrea A1 - Vögele, Claus T1 - Rumination and Age: Some Things Get Better JF - Journal of Aging Research N2 - Rumination has been defined as a mode of responding to distress that involves passively focusing one's attention on symptoms of distress without taking action. This dysfunctional response style intensifies depressed mood, impairs interpersonal problem solving, and leads to more pessimistic future perspectives and less social support. As most of these results were obtained from younger people, it remains unclear how age affects ruminative thinking. Three hundred members of the general public ranging in age from 15 to 87 years were asked about their ruminative styles using the Response Styles Questionnaire (RSQ), depression and satisfaction with life. A Mokken Scale analysis confirmed the two-factor structure of the RSQ with brooding and reflective pondering as subcomponents of rumination. Older participants (63 years and older) reported less ruminative thinking than other age groups. Life satisfaction was associated with brooding and highest for the earlier and latest life stages investigated in this study. Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-124356 VL - 2012 IS - 267327 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Betz, Boris A1 - Schneider, Reinhard A1 - Kress, Tobias A1 - Schick, Martin Alexander A1 - Wanner, Christoph A1 - Sauvant, Christoph T1 - Rosiglitazone Affects Nitric Oxide Synthases and Improves Renal Outcome in a Rat Model of Severe Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury JF - PPAR Research N2 - Background. Nitric oxide (NO)-signal transduction plays an important role in renal ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury. NO produced by endothelial NO-synthase (eNOS) has protective functions whereas NO from inducible NO-synthase (iNOS) induces impairment. Rosiglitazone (RGZ), a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)-gamma agonist exerted beneficial effects after renal I/R injury, so we investigated whether this might be causally linked with NOS imbalance. Methods. RGZ (5 mg/kg) was administered i.p. to SD-rats (f) subjected to bilateral renal ischemia (60 min). Following 24 h of reperfusion, inulin-and PAH-clearance as well as PAH-net secretion were determined. Morphological alterations were graded by histopathological scoring. Plasma NOx-production was measured. eNOS and iNOS expression was analyzed by qPCR. Cleaved caspase 3 (CC3) was determined as an apoptosis indicator and ED1 as a marker of macrophage infiltration in renal tissue. Results. RGZ improves renal function after renal I/R injury (PAH-/inulin-clearance, PAH-net secretion) and reduces histomorphological injury. Additionally, RGZ reduces NOx plasma levels, ED-1 positive cell infiltration and CC3 expression. iNOS-mRNA is reduced whereas eNOS-mRNA is increased by RGZ. Conclusion. RGZ has protective properties after severe renal I/R injury. Alterations of the NO pathway regarding eNOS and iNOS could be an explanation of the underlying mechanism of RGZ protection in renal I/R injury. KW - dysfunction KW - activated-receptor gamma KW - ischemia-reperfusion injury KW - failure KW - kidney KW - agnoists KW - mices KW - inos KW - pathophysiology KW - pioglitazone Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-130872 VL - 2012 IS - Article ID 219319 ER - TY - THES A1 - Tyagi, Anu T1 - Role of SWI/SNF in regulating pre-mRNA processing in Drosophila melanogaster T1 - Funktion von SWI/SNF in der Regulation der prämRNA-Prozessierung in Drosophila melanogaster N2 - ATP dependent chromatin remodeling complexes are multifactorial complexes that utilize the energy of ATP to rearrange the chromatin structure. The changes in chromatin structure lead to either increased or decreased DNA accessibility. SWI/SNF is one of such complex. The SWI/SNF complex is involved in both transcription activation and transcription repression. The ATPase subunit of SWI/SNF is called SWI2/SNF2 in yeast and Brahma, Brm, in Drosophila melanogaster. In mammals there are two paralogs of the ATPase subunit, Brm and Brg1. Recent studies have shown that the human Brm is involved in the regulation of alternative splicing. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of Brm in pre-mRNA processing. The model systems used were Chironomus tentans, well suited for in situ studies and D. melanogaster, known for its full genome information. Immunofluorescent staining of the polytene chromosome indicated that Brm protein of C. tentans, ctBrm, is associated with several gene loci including the Balbiani ring (BR) puffs. Mapping the distribution of ctBrm along the BR genes by both immuno-electron microscopy and chromatin immunoprecipitation showed that ctBrm is widely distributed along the BR genes. The results also show that a fraction of ctBrm is associated with the nascent BR pre-mRNP. Biochemical fractionation experiments confirmed the association of Brm with the RNP fractions, not only in C. tentans but also in D. melanogaster and in HeLa cells. Microarray hybridization experiments performed on S2 cells depleted of either dBrm or other SWI/SNF subunits show that Brm affects alternative splicing and 3´ end formation. These results indicated that BRM affects pre-mRNA processing as a component of SWI/SNF complexes. 1 N2 - ATP abhängige Chromatin Remodelling Komplexe bestehen aus diversen Faktoren, welche die bei der Umsetzung von ATP freiwerdende Energie dazu nutzen, die Chromatinstruktur neu zu ordnen. Diese Veränderungen führen zu einer Zu- bzw. Abnahme in der Zugänglichkeit der DNA. Ein Beispiel dafür ist der SWI/SNF-Komplex, der sowohl in die Aktivierung als auch die Inhibierung der Transkription involviert ist. Die ATPase-Untereinheit von SWI/SNF heißt in Hefe SWI2/SNF2 und in Drosophila melanogaster Brahma (Brm). Im Gegensatz dazu besitzen Säuger zwei Paraloge der ATPase-Einheit, nämlich Brm und Brg1. Neueste Studien haben gezeigt, dass das humane Brm in der Regulation des Alternativen Spleißen beteiligt ist. Ziel dieser Arbeit ist es, die Rolle von Brm in der prä-mRNA-Prozessierung zu untersuchen. Als Versuchssysteme wurden Chironomus tentans und D. melanogaster herangezogen. Dabei eignete sich C. tentans vor allem für die in situ Studien während bei D. melanogaster das vollständig sequenzierte Genom von Vorteil war. Immunfluoreszenzfärbungen von Polytän-Chromosomen zeigen eine Assoziation von Brm von C. tentans, ctBrm; mit unterschiedlichen Genloci, einschließlich der Balbiani-Ringe (BR). Mit Hilfe von Immun-Elektronenmikroskopie und Chromatin-Immunpräzipitation (ChIP) wird die Verteilung von ctBrm entlang der BR-Gene untersucht. Dabei zeigt ctBrm eine weite Streuung. Die Ergebnisse lassen außerdem darauf schließen, dass ein Teil des ctBrm-Proteins mit naszierenden BRprä- mRNPs interagiert. Biochemische Fraktionierungs-experimente bestätigen die Assoziation von Brm mit RNP-Fraktionen nicht nur in C. tentans, sondern auch in D. melanogaster und in HeLa-Zellen. Microarray-Untersuchungen in S2-Zellen, in denen entweder dBrm oder eine andere Untereinheit von SWI/SNF depletiert war, zeigen, dass BRM als eine Komponente des SWI/SNF-Komplexes sowohl Alternatives Spleißen und die Formierung des 3´ Endes, als auch die prä-mRNA-Prozessierung beeinflusst. KW - Taufliege KW - Messenger-RNS KW - Prozessierung KW - SWI/SNF KW - mRNA processing KW - SWI/SNF KW - mRNA processing Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-72253 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Beitzinger, Christoph A1 - Stefani, Caroline A1 - Kronhardt, Angelika A1 - Rolando, Monica A1 - Flatau, Gilles A1 - Lemichez, Emanuel A1 - Benz, Roland T1 - Role of N-Terminal His6-Tags in Binding and Efficient Translocation of Polypeptides into Cells Using Anthrax Protective Antigen (PA) N2 - It is of interest to define bacterial toxin biochemical properties to use them as molecular-syringe devices in order to deliver enzymatic activities into host cells. Binary toxins of the AB7/8-type are among the most potent and specialized bacterial protein toxins. The B subunits oligomerize to form a pore that binds with high affinity host cell receptors and the enzymatic A subunit. This allows the endocytosis of the complex and subsequent injection of the A subunit into the cytosol of the host cells. Here we report that the addition of an N-terminal His6-tag to different proteins increased their binding affinity to the protective antigen (PA) PA63-channels, irrespective if they are related (C2I) or unrelated (gpJ, EDIN) to the AB7/8-family of toxins. His6-EDIN exhibited voltage-dependent increase of the stability constant for binding by a factor of about 25 when the trans-side corresponding to the cell interior was set to 270 mV. Surprisingly, the C. botulinum toxin C2II-channel did not share this feature of PA63. Cell-based experiments demonstrated that addition of an N-terminal His6-tag promoted also intoxication of endothelial cells by C2I or EDIN via PA63. Our results revealed that addition of His6-tags to several factors increase their binding properties to PA63 and enhance the property to intoxicate cells. KW - Biologie Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-76325 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Krehan, Mario A1 - Heubeck, Christian A1 - Menzel, Nicolas A1 - Seibel, Peter A1 - Schön, Astrid T1 - RNase MRP RNA and RNase P activity in plants are associated with a Pop1p containing complex JF - Nucleic Acids Research N2 - RNase P processes the 5'-end of tRNAs. An essential catalytic RNA has been demonstrated in Bacteria, Archaea and the nuclei of most eukaryotes; an organism-specific number of proteins complement the holoenzyme. Nuclear RNase P from yeast and humans is well understood and contains an RNA, similar to the sister enzyme RNase MRP. In contrast, no protein subunits have yet been identified in the plant enzymes, and the presence of a nucleic acid in RNase P is still enigmatic. We have thus set out to identify and characterize the subunits of these enzymes in two plant model systems. Expression of the two known Arabidopsis MRP RNA genes in vivo was verified. The first wheat MRP RNA sequences are presented, leading to improved structure models for plant MRP RNAs. A novel mRNA encoding the central RNase P/MRP protein Pop1p was identified in Arabidopsis, suggesting the expression of distinct protein variants from this gene in vivo. Pop1p-specific antibodies precipitate RNase P activity and MRP RNAs from wheat extracts. Our results provide evidence that in plants, Pop1p is associated with MRP RNAs and with the catalytic subunit of RNase P, either separately or in a single large complex. KW - enzyme KW - binding KW - sequence KW - cyanelle KW - in vitro KW - partial purification KW - protein subunit KW - ribonuclease-P KW - genes KW - identification Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-130648 VL - 40 IS - 16 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Greiser, Eberhard M. A1 - Greiser, Karin Halina A1 - Ahrens, Wolfgang A1 - Hagen, Rudolf A1 - Lazszig, Roland A1 - Maier, Heinz A1 - Schick, Bernhard A1 - Zenner, Hans Peter T1 - Risk factors for nasal malignancies in German men: the South-German Nasal cancer study JF - BMC Cancer N2 - Background: There are few studies of the effects of nasal snuff and environmental factors on the risk of nasal cancer. This study aimed to investigate the impact of using nasal snuff and of other risk factors on the risk of nasal cancer in German men. Methods: A population-based case-control study was conducted in the German Federal States of Bavaria and Baden-Wurttemberg. Tumor registries and ear, nose and throat departments provided access to patients born in 1926 or later. Results: Telephone interviews were conducted with 427 cases (mean age 62.1 years) and 2.401 population-based controls (mean age 60.8 years). Ever-use of nasal snuff was associated with an odds ratio (OR) for nasal cancer of 1.45 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.88-2.38) in the total study population, whereas OR in smokers was 2.01 (95% CI 1.00-4.02) and in never smokers was 1.10 (95% CI 0.43-2.80). The OR in ever-smokers vs. never-smokers was 1.60 (95% CI 1.24-2.07), with an OR of 1.06 (95% CI 1.05-1.07) per pack-year smoked, and the risk was significantly decreased after quitting smoking. Exposure to hardwood dust for at least 1 year resulted in an OR of 2.33 (95% CI 1.40-3.91) in the total population, which was further increased in never-smokers (OR 4.89, 95% CI 1.92-12.49) in analyses stratified by smoking status. The OR for nasal cancer after exposure to organic solvents for at least 1 year was 1.53 (1.17-2.01). Ever-use of nasal sprays/nasal lavage for at least 1 month rendered an OR of 1.59 (1.04-2.44). The OR after use of insecticides in homes was 1.48 (95% CI 1.04-2.11). Conclusions: Smoking and exposure to hardwood dust were confirmed as risk factors for nasal carcinoma. There is evidence that exposure to organic solvents, and in-house use of insecticides could represent novel risk factors. Exposure to asbestos and use of nasal snuff were risk factors in smokers only. KW - paranasal sinuses KW - case-control study KW - nasal snuff KW - nasopharyngeal carcinoma KW - sinonasal cancer KW - occupational exposures KW - cigarette smoking KW - Univted-States KW - maxillary sinus KW - wood dust KW - formaldehyde KW - cavity KW - nasal cancer KW - smoking KW - hardwood dust KW - asbestos KW - organic solvents KW - insecticides KW - nasal spray KW - nasal lavage Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-133365 VL - 12 IS - 506 ER - TY - THES A1 - Kistenpfennig, Christa T1 - Rhodopsin 7 and Cryptochrome - circadian photoreception in Drosophila T1 - Rhodopsin 7 und Cryptochrome - circadiane Photorezeption in Drosophila N2 - Many organisms evolved an endogenous clock to adapt to the daily environmental changes caused by the earth’s rotation. Light is the primary time cue (“Zeitgeber”) for entrainment of circadian clocks to the external 24-h day. In Drosophila, several visual pigments are known to mediate synchronization to light: The blue-light photopigment Cryptochrome (CRY) and six well-described rhodopsins (Rh1-Rh6). CRY is present in the majority of clock neurons as well as in the compound eyes, whereas the location of rhodopsins is restricted to the photoreceptive organs – the compound eyes, the ocelli and the HB-eyelets. CRY is thought to represent the key photoreceptor of Drosophila’s circadian clock. Nevertheless, mutant flies lacking CRY (cry01) are able to synchronize their locomotor activity rhythms to light-dark (LD) cycles, but need significantly longer than wild-type flies. In this behavior, cry01 mutants strongly resemble mammalian species that do not possess any internal photoreceptors and perceive light information exclusively through their photoreceptive organs (eyes). Thus, a mammalian-like phase-shifting behavior would be expected in cry01 flies. We investigated this issue by monitoring a phase response curve (PRC) of cry01 and wild-type flies to 1-h light pulses of 1000 lux irradiance. Indeed, cry01 mutants produced a mammalian-similar so called type 1 PRC of comparatively low amplitude (< 25% of wild-type) with phase delays to light pulses during the early subjective night and phase advances to light pulses during the late subjective night (~1 h each). Despite the predominant role of CRY, the visual system contributes to the light sensitivity of the fly’s circadian clock, mainly around dawn and dusk. Furthermore, this phase shifting allows for the slow re-entrainment which we observed in cry01 mutants to 8-h phase delays of the LD 12 h:12 h cycle. However, cry01 also showed surprising differences in their shifting ability: First of all, their PRC was characterized by a second dead zone in the middle of the subjective night (ZT17-ZT19) in addition to the usual unresponsiveness during the subjective day. Second, in contrast to wild-type flies, cry01 mutants did not increase their shift of activity rhythms neither in response to longer stimuli nor to light pulses of higher irradiance. In contrast, both 6-h light pulses of 1000 lux and 1-h light pulses of 10,000 lux light intensity during the early subjective night even resulted in phase advances instead of the expected delays. Thus, CRY seems to be not only responsible for the high light sensitivity of the wild-type circadian clock, but is apparently also involved in integrating and processing light information. Rhodopsin 7 (Rh7) is a yet uncharacterized protein, but became a good photoreceptor candidate due to sequence similarities to the six known Drosophila Rhs. The second part of this thesis investigated the expression pattern of Rh7 and its possible functions, especially in circadian photoreception. Furthermore, we were interested in a potential interaction with CRY and thus, tested cry01 and rh70 cry01 mutants as well. Rh1 is the main visual pigment of the Drosophila compound eye and expressed in six out of eight photoreceptors cells (R1-R6) in each of the ~800 ommatidia. Motion vision depends exclusively on Rh1 function but, moreover, Rh1 plays an important structural role and assures proper photoreceptor cell development and maintenance. In order to investigate its possible photoreceptive function, we expressed Rh7 in place of Rh1. Rh7 was indeed able to overtake the role of Rh1 in both aspects: It prevented retinal degeneration and mediated the optomotor response (OR), a motion vision-dependent behavior. At the transcriptional level, rh7 is expressed at approximately equal amounts in adult fly brains and retinas. Due to a reduced specificity of anti-Rh7 antibodies, we could not verify this result at the protein level. However, analysis of rh7 null mutants (rh70) suggested different Rh7 functions in vivo. Previous experiments strongly indicated an increased sensitivity of the compound eyes in the absence of Rh7 and suggested impaired light adaptation. We aimed to test this hypothesis at the levels of circadian photoreception. Locomotor activity rhythms are a reliable output of the circadian clock. Rh70 mutant flies generally displayed a wild-type similar bimodal activity pattern comprising morning (M) and evening (E) activity bouts. Activity monitoring supported the proposed “shielding” function, since rh70 mutants behaved like wild-type flies experiencing high irradiances. Under all investigated conditions, their activity peaks lay further apart resulting in a prolonged midday break. The behavior of cry01 mutants was mainly characterized by an unexpectedly high flexibility in the timing of M and E activity bouts which allowed tracking of lights-on and lights-off even under extreme photoperiods. Activity profiles of the corresponding rh70 cry01 double mutants reflected neither synergistic nor antagonistic effects of Rh7 and CRY and were dominated by a broad E activity peak. In the future, the different circadian phenotypes will be further investigated on the molecular level by analysis of clock protein cycling in the underlying pacemaker neurons. The work of this thesis confirmed that Rh7 is indeed able to work as a photoreceptor and to initiate the classical phototransduction cascade. On the other hand, it provided further evidence at the levels of circadian photoreception that Rh7 might serve as a shielding pigment for Rh1 in vivo, thereby mediating proper light adaptation. N2 - Viele Lebewesen haben eine endogene (circadiane) Uhr entwickelt, um sich an die im 24-Stunden-Rhythmus variierenden Umweltbedingungen anzupassen, die auf der Erdrotation beruhen. Zur Synchronisation auf den externen 24-Stunden-Tag nutzen circadiane Uhren in erster Linie Licht als Zeitgeber. An dieser Lichtsynchronisation sind bei Drosophila nachweislich eine Reihe von Sehpigmenten, der Blaulicht Photorezeptor Cryptochrom (CRY) sowie sechs bekannte Rhodopsine (Rh1-Rh6), beteiligt. CRY ist sowohl in der Mehrheit der Uhrneuronen als auch in den Komplexaugen zu finden. Die Lokalisation der Rhodopsine ist im Gegensatz dazu auf die Photorezeptoren – die Komplexaugen, die Ocellen und die HB-Äuglein – beschränkt. CRY gilt als der entscheidende Photorezeptor in der circadianen Uhr von Drosophila. Zwar können Mutanten, die kein CRY besitzen (cry01), ihre Laufaktivitätsrhythmen durch Licht-Dunkel-Zyklen synchronisieren, jedoch brauchen sie dafür mehrere Tage und damit erheblich länger als wildtypische Fliegen. In diesem Verhalten ähneln cry01-Mutanten den Säugetieren, die nicht über interne Photorezeptoren verfügen und Licht somit ausschließlich über ihre Lichtsinnesorgane (Augen) wahrnehmen. Demnach wären bei cry01-Fliegen säugetierähnliche Phasenverschiebungen des Laufaktivitäts-rhythmus auf Lichtpulse zu erwarten. Um diesen Sachverhalt zu untersuchen, wurde sowohl für cry01-Mutanten als auch für Wildtyp-Fliegen eine Phasenresponsekurve (PRC) aufgezeichnet, wobei einstündige Lichtpulse mit einer Intensität von 1000 lux als Stimulus dienten. Wir erhielten für die cry01-Mutanten tatsächlich eine säugetierähnliche PRC, welche auch als so genannte Typ 1 PRC bezeichnet wird und sich durch eine im Vergleich zum Wildtyp verringerte Amplitude (< 25%) auszeichnete. Die dabei beobachteten maximalen Phasenverschiebungen betrugen ungefähr eine Stunde. Dies galt sowohl für Lichtpulse, die in der ersten Hälfte der subjektiven Nacht gegeben wurden und die Laufaktivität verzögerten (nach hinten verschoben), als auch für Lichtpulse, die in der zweiten Hälfte der subjektiven Nacht gegeben wurden und die Laufaktivität beschleunigten (nach vorne verschoben). Die für cry01-Mutanten ermittelten Reaktionen auf einstündige Lichtpulse erklären die langsame Resynchronisation der Mutanten auf Phasenverschiebungen des Licht-Dunkel-Zyklus (LD-Zyklus). Allerdings zeigte die PRC von cry01-Mutanten auch überraschende Besonderheiten, die bisher für kein Tier berichtet wurden. Üblicherweise hat eine PRC eine so genannte „Tot-Zone“ am subjektiven Tag, d. h. die Tiere reagieren nicht auf Lichtreize, die während des subjektiven Tages verabreicht werden. Die PRC der cry01-Mutanten zeichnete sich durch eine zweite solche Tot-Zone in der Mitte der subjektiven Nacht (ZT17-ZT19) aus. Außerdem konnten die Phasenverschiebungen in cry01-Mutanten weder durch eine Verlängerung noch durch eine Verstärkung des Reizes gesteigert werden. Dies steht im Gegensatz zu wildtypischen Fliegen und anderen Tieren, deren PRC dosisabhängig ist. Bei cry01-Mutanten riefen dagegen sowohl sechsstündige Lichtpulse der zuvor verwendeten Intensität (1000 lux) als auch einstündige Lichtpulse hoher Intensität (10.000 lux) sogar gegenteilige Effekte auf die Phasenverschiebung hervor. Die cry01-Mutanten reagierten auf den Stimulus, der jeweils in der ersten Nachthälfte einsetzte, unter beiden Bedingungen mit einer Vorverschiebung ihres Aktivitätsrhythmus anstatt mit der eigentlich erwarteten Verzögerung. Obwohl CRY sicher die wichtigste Rolle einnimmt, trägt auch das visuelle System zur Lichtsensitivität und Synchronisation der inneren Uhr der Fliege bei. Dies ist vor allem morgens und abends in der Dämmerung der Fall. Cry01-Mutanten reagierten auf Lichtpulse, die morgens oder abends gegeben wurden, mit den oben beschriebenen einstündigen Phasenverschiebungen. Dies reicht aus, um die Aktivität der Fliegen auf einen Licht-Dunkel-Zyklus zu synchronisieren. Rhodopsin 7 (Rh7) ist ein noch nahezu unbeschriebenes Protein, das Ähnlichkeiten in seiner Aminosäuresequenz zu den bereits bekannten Drosophila-Rhodopsinen besitzt und daher als potentieller neuer Photorezeptor betrachtet wird. Der zweite Teil dieser Arbeit beschäftigte sich mit dem Expressionsmuster sowie den möglichen Funktionen von Rh7, insbesondere in der circadianen Photorezeption. Darüber hinaus wurden rh70 cry01-Doppelmutanten getestet, um eine eventuelle Interaktion zwischen Rh7 und CRY zu untersuchen. Rh1, das in jeweils sechs von acht Photorezeptorzellen (R1-R6) der insgesamt rund 800 Ommatidien exprimiert wird, stellt das häufigste Photopigment im Komplexauge von Drosophila dar. Zum einen vermittelt Rh1 die Wahrnehmung von Bewegungen, zum anderen besitzt es wichtige strukturelle Aufgaben, da es sowohl eine normale Entwicklung der Photorezeptorzellen als auch deren Erhaltung gewährleistet. Um eine mögliche Beteiligung in der Lichtwahrnehmung zu untersuchen, wurde Rh7 anstelle von Rh1 exprimiert. Rh7 konnte in der Tat Rh1 unter beiden Aspekten ersetzen. Seine Expression verhinderte nicht nur die Degeneration der Retina, sondern ermöglichte zudem optomotorische Reaktionen, die auf einem intakten Bewegungssehen beruhen. In adulten Fliegen wird Rh7 auf Ebene der Transkription in vergleichbaren Mengen im Gehirn und in der Retina exprimiert. Aufgrund der geringen Spezifität der anti-Rh7 Antikörper konnte dieses Ergebnis leider nicht auf Proteinebene bestätigt werden. Die Untersuchung von rh7-Knockout-Mutanten (rh70) befürwortete jedoch eine alternative Funktion von Rh7 in vivo. In vorangegangenen Versuchen führte der Verlust von Rh7 zu einer gesteigerten Sensitivität der Komplexaugen, was wahrscheinlich auf einer verminderten Lichtadaptation beruhte. Wir versuchten diese Hypothese auf Ebene der circadianen Photorezeption zu überprüfen und zeichneten dazu die Laufaktivität der Fliegen auf, da ihr Aktivitätsrhythmus einen verlässlichen Output der circadianen Uhr darstellt. Grundsätzlich wiesen die rh70-Mutanten das für Wildtyp-Fliegen typische bimodale Aktivitätsmuster auf, das sich durch zwei Aktivitätsmaxima auszeichnet, die entsprechend ihrer Lage als Morgen- beziehungsweise Abendaktivitätsgipfel bezeichnet werden. Dabei wurde beobachtet, dass sich rh70-Mutanten wie Wildtyp-Fliegen verhalten, die hohen Lichtintensitäten ausgesetzt sind. So zeigte deren Aktivitätsrhythmus unter allen Versuchsbedingungen eine verlängerte Mittagspause, die durch einen großen Abstand zwischen den beiden Aktivitätsmaxima hervorgerufen wurde. Durch diese Versuche wurde die Hypothese, dass Rh7 als eine Art Schirmpigment wirken könnte, auf Verhaltensebene bestätigt. Das Verhalten der cry01-Fliegen zeichnete sich im Wesentlichen durch eine unerwartet hohe Flexibilität der beiden Aktivitätsmaxima aus. Diese konnten auch unter extremen Photoperioden an die Übergänge von Licht und Dunkelheit gekoppelt werden. Der Aktivitätsrhythmus der entsprechenden rh70 cry01-Doppelmutanten wurde durch eine ausgeprägte Abendaktivität bestimmt und erlaubte es nicht, Rückschlüsse auf eine synergistische oder antagonistische Wirkung von Rh7 und CRY zu ziehen. Zukünftige Versuche könnten die verschiedenen circadianen Phänotypen auf molekularer Ebene charakterisieren, z. B. durch Untersuchung der Oszillationen der Uhrproteine in den verantwortlichen Schrittmacher-Neuronen. Zum einen konnten die Versuche dieser Arbeit bestätigen, dass Rh7 in der Tat über die klassische Phototransduktionskaskade als Photorezeptor wirken kann. Darüber hinaus wurden auf Ebene der circadianen Photorezeption weitere Anzeichen für eine alternative in vivo Funktion von Rh7 gesammelt. Diese sprechen für eine Rolle von Rh7 als Schirmpigment für Rh1, wodurch Rh7 an der einwandfreien Lichtadaptation beteiligt wäre. KW - Circadiane Rhythmik KW - Drosophila KW - Photorezeption KW - Circadian Rhythms Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-72209 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schneider, Christof W. A1 - Tautz, Jürgen A1 - Grünewald, Bernd A1 - Fuchs, Stefan T1 - RFID Tracking of Sublethal Effects of Two Neonicotinoid Insecticides on the Foraging Behavior of Apis mellifera JF - PLoS One N2 - The development of insecticides requires valid risk assessment procedures to avoid causing harm to beneficial insects and especially to pollinators such as the honeybee Apis mellifera. In addition to testing according to current guidelines designed to detect bee mortality, tests are needed to determine possible sublethal effects interfering with the animal's vitality and behavioral performance. Several methods have been used to detect sublethal effects of different insecticides under laboratory conditions using olfactory conditioning. Furthermore, studies have been conducted on the influence insecticides have on foraging activity and homing ability which require time-consuming visual observation. We tested an experimental design using the radiofrequency identification (RFID) method to monitor the influence of sublethal doses of insecticides on individual honeybee foragers on an automated basis. With electronic readers positioned at the hive entrance and at an artificial food source, we obtained quantifiable data on honeybee foraging behavior. This enabled us to efficiently retrieve detailed information on flight parameters. We compared several groups of bees, fed simultaneously with different dosages of a tested substance. With this experimental approach we monitored the acute effects of sublethal doses of the neonicotinoids imidacloprid (0.15-6 ng/bee) and clothianidin (0.05-2 ng/bee) under field-like circumstances. At field-relevant doses for nectar and pollen no adverse effects were observed for either substance. Both substances led to a significant reduction of foraging activity and to longer foraging flights at doses of >= 0.5 ng/bee (clothianidin) and >= 1.5 ng/bee (imidacloprid) during the first three hours after treatment. This study demonstrates that the RFID-method is an effective way to record short-term alterations in foraging activity after insecticides have been administered once, orally, to individual bees. We contribute further information on the understanding of how honeybees are affected by sublethal doses of insecticides. KW - memory KW - nicotinic acetylcholine-receptors KW - unpaired median neurons KW - honey bees KW - learning performances KW - toxicity KW - hymenoptera KW - pesticides KW - relevance KW - agonist Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-131753 VL - 7 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Holst, Alexandra Ioana A1 - Holst, Stefan A1 - Hirschfelder, Ursula A1 - von Seckendorff, Volker T1 - Retrieval analysis of different orthodontic brackets: the applicability of electron microprobe techniques for determining material heterogeneities and corrosive potential JF - Journal of applied oral science N2 - Objective: The objective of this study was to investigate the applicability of microanalytical methods with high spatial resolution to the characterization of the composition and corrosion behavior of two bracket systems. Material and methods: The surfaces of six nickel-free brackets and six nickel-containing brackets were examined for signs of corrosion and qualitative surface analysis using an electron probe microanalyzer (EPMA), prior to bonding to patient's tooth surfaces and four months after clinical use. The surfaces were characterized qualitatively by secondary electron (SE) images and back scattered electron (BSE) images in both compositional and topographical mode. Qualitative and quantitative wavelength-dispersive analyses were performed for different elements, and by utilizing qualitative analysis the relative concentration of selected elements was mapped two-dimensionally. The absolute concentration of the elements was determined in specially prepared brackets by quantitative analysis using pure element standards for calibration and calculating correction-factors (ZAF). Results: Clear differences were observed between the different bracket types. The nickel-containing stainless steel brackets consist of two separate pieces joined by a brazing alloy. Compositional analysis revealed two different alloy compositions, and reaction zones on both sides of the brazing alloy. The nickel-free bracket was a single piece with only slight variation in element concentration, but had a significantly rougher surface. After clinical use, no corrosive phenomena were detectable with the methods applied. Traces of intraoral wear at the contact areas between the bracket slot and the arch wire were verified. Conclusion: Electron probe microanalysis is a valuable tool for the characterization of element distribution and quantitative analysis for corrosion studies. KW - orthodontic brackets KW - dental casting alloys KW - metallurgical characterization KW - galvanic corrosion KW - surface analysis KW - nickel release KW - archwires KW - titanium KW - fluoride KW - biocompatibility KW - appliances KW - electron probe microanalysis KW - nickel Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-130415 VL - 20 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ritz, Thomas A1 - Enlow, Michelle Bosquet A1 - Schulz, Stefan M. A1 - Kitts, Robert A1 - Staudenmayer, John A1 - Wright, Rosalind J. T1 - Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia as an Index of Vagal Activity during Stress in Infants: Respiratory Influences and Their Control JF - PLoS One N2 - Respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) is related to cardiac vagal outflow and the respiratory pattern. Prior infant studies have not systematically examined respiration rate and tidal volume influences on infant RSA or the extent to which infants' breathing is too fast to extract a valid RSA. We therefore monitored cardiac activity, respiration, and physical activity in 23 six-month old infants during a standardized laboratory stressor protocol. On average, 12.6% (range 0-58.2%) of analyzed breaths were too short for RSA extraction. Higher respiration rate was associated with lower RSA amplitude in most infants, and lower tidal volume was associated with lower RSA amplitude in some infants. RSA amplitude corrected for respiration rate and tidal volume influences showed theoretically expected strong reductions during stress, whereas performance of uncorrected RSA was less consistent. We conclude that stress-induced changes of peak-valley RSA and effects of variations in breathing patterns on RSA can be determined for a representative percentage of infant breaths. As expected, breathing substantially affects infant RSA and needs to be considered in studies of infant psychophysiology. KW - responses KW - heart-rate-variability KW - pulmonary gas-exchange KW - still-face KW - baroreflex mechanism KW - period variability KW - preterm infants KW - waking states KW - reactivity KW - attention Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-135396 VL - 7 IS - 12 ER - TY - RPRT A1 - Linker, Ralf, A. A1 - Meuth, Sven G. A1 - Magnus, Tim A1 - Korn, Thomas A1 - Kleinschnitz, Christoph T1 - Report on the 4'th scientific meeting of the "Verein zur Förderung des Wissenschaftlichen Nachwuchses in der Neurologie" (NEUROWIND e.V.) held in Motzen, Germany, Nov. 2'nd - Nov. 4'th, 2012 [meeting report] N2 - From November 2nd - 4th 2012, the 4th NEUROWIND e.V. meeting was held in Motzen, Brandenburg, Germany. Again more than 60 participants, predominantly at the doctoral student or postdoc level, gathered to share their latest findings in the fields of neurovascular research, neurodegeneration and neuroinflammation. Like in the previous years, the symposium provided an excellent platform for scientific exchange and the presentation of innovative projects in the stimulating surroundings of the Brandenburg outback. This year’s keynote lecture on the pathophysiological relevance of neuronal networks was given by Christian Gerloff, Head of the Department of Neurology at the University Clinic of Hamburg-Eppendorf. Another highlight of the meeting was the awarding of the NEUROWIND e.V. prize for young scientists working in the field of experimental neurology. The award is donated by the Merck Serono GmbH, Darmstadt, Germany and is endowed with 20.000 Euro. This year the jury decided unanimously to adjudge the award to Michael Gliem from the Department of Neurology at the University Clinic of Düsseldorf (group of Sebastian Jander), Germany, for his outstanding work on different macrophage subsets in the pathogenesis of ischemic stroke published in the Annals of Neurology in 2012. KW - Medizin Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-76407 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kleinschnitz, Christph A1 - Meuth, Sven G. A1 - Magnus, Tim A1 - Korn, Thomas A1 - Linker, Ralf A. T1 - Report on the 3'rd scientific meeting of the "Verein zur Förderung des Wissenschaftlichen Nachwuchses in der Neurologie" (NEUROWIND e.V.) held in Motzen, Germany, Nov. 4'th - Nov. 6'th, 2011 N2 - From November 4th- 6th 2011, the 3rd NEUROWIND e.V. meeting was held in Motzen, Brandenburg, Germany. Like in the previous years, the meeting provided an excellent platform for scientific exchange and the presentation of innovative projects for young colleagues in the fields of neurovascular research, neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration. As kick-off to the scientific sessions, Reinhard Hohlfeld, Head of the Institute for Clinical Neuroimmunology in Munich, gave an illustrious overview on the many fascinations of neuroimmunologic research. A particular highlight on the second day of the meeting was the award of the 1’st NEUROWIND e.V. prize for young academics in the field of experimental neurology. This award is posted for young colleagues under the age of 35 with a significant achievement in the field of neurovascular research, neuroinflammation or neurodegeneration and comprises an amount of 20.000 Euro, founded by Merck Serono GmbH, Darmstadt. Germany. The first prize was awarded to Ivana Nikic from Martin Kerschensteiner’s group in Munich for her brilliant work on a reversible form of axon damage in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis and multiple sclerosis, published in Nature Medicine in 2011. This first prize award ceremony was a great incentive for the next call for proposals now upcoming in 2012. KW - Medizin Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-75388 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Erhardt, A. A1 - Akula, N. A1 - Schumacher, J. A1 - Czamara, D. A1 - Karbalai, N. A1 - Müller-Myhsok, B. A1 - Mors, O. A1 - Borglum, A. A1 - Kristensen, A. S. A1 - Woldbye, D. P. D. A1 - Koefoed, P. A1 - Eriksson, E. A1 - Maron, E. A1 - Metspalu, A. A1 - Nurnberger, J. A1 - Philibert, R. A. A1 - Kennedy, J. A1 - Domschke, K. A1 - Reif, A. A1 - Deckert, J. A1 - Otowa, T. A1 - Kawamura, Y. A1 - Kaiya, H. A1 - Okazaki, Y. A1 - Tanii, H. A1 - Tokunaga, K. A1 - Sasaki, T. A1 - Ioannidis, J. P. A. A1 - McMahon, F. J. A1 - Binder, E. B. T1 - Replication and meta-analysis of TMEM132D gene variants in panic disorder JF - Translational Psychiatry N2 - A recent genome-wide association study in patients with panic disorder (PD) identified a risk haplotype consisting of two single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) (rs7309727 and rs11060369) located in intron 3 of TMEM132D to be associated with PD in three independent samples. Now we report a subsequent confirmation study using five additional PD case-control samples (n = 1670 cases and n 2266 controls) assembled as part of the Panic Disorder International Consortium (PanIC) study for a total of 2678 cases and 3262 controls in the analysis. In the new independent samples of European ancestry (EA), the association of rs7309727 and the risk haplotype rs7309727-rs11060369 was, indeed, replicated, with the strongest signal coming from patients with primary PD, that is, patients without major psychiatric comorbidities (n 1038 cases and n 2411 controls). This finding was paralleled by the results of the meta-analysis across all samples, in which the risk haplotype and rs7309727 reached P-levels of P = 1.4e-8 and P = 1.1e-8, respectively, when restricting the samples to individuals of EA with primary PD. In the Japanese sample no associations with PD could be found. The present results support the initial finding that TMEM132D gene contributes to genetic susceptibility for PD in individuals of EA. Our results also indicate that patient ascertainment and genetic background could be important sources of heterogeneity modifying this association signal in different populations. KW - candidate gene KW - genome-wide association KW - Japanese population Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-133324 VL - 2 IS - e156 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kleinert, Stefan A1 - Roll, Petra A1 - Baumgaertner, Christian A1 - Himsel, Andrea A1 - Burkhardt, Harald A1 - Mueller, Adelheid A1 - Fleck, Martin A1 - Feuchtenberger, Martin A1 - Janett, Manfred A1 - Tony, Hans-Peter T1 - Renal Perfusion in Scleroderma Patients Assessed by Microbubble-Based Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasound N2 - Abstract: Objectives: Renal damage is common in scleroderma. It can occur acutely or chronically. Renal reserve might already be impaired before it can be detected by laboratory findings. Microbubble-based contrast-enhanced ultrasound has been demonstrated to improve blood perfusion imaging in organs. Therefore, we conducted a study to assess renal perfusion in scleroderma patients utilizing this novel technique. Materials and Methodology: Microbubble-based contrast agent was infused and destroyed by using high mechanical index by Siemens Sequoia (curved array, 4.5 MHz). Replenishment was recorded for 8 seconds. Regions of interests (ROI) were analyzed in renal parenchyma, interlobular artery and renal pyramid with quantitative contrast software (CUSQ 1.4, Siemens Acuson, Mountain View, California). Time to maximal Enhancement (TmE), maximal enhancement (mE) and maximal enhancement relative to maximal enhancement of the interlobular artery (mE%A) were calculated for different ROIs. Results: There was a linear correlation between the time to maximal enhancement in the parenchyma and the glomerular filtration rate. However, the other parameters did not reveal significant differences between scleroderma patients and healthy controls. Conclusion: Renal perfusion of scleroderma patients including the glomerular filtration rate can be assessed using microbubble-based contrast media. KW - Medizin KW - Scleroderma KW - renal perfusion KW - contrast-enhanced ultrasound. Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-75207 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Warnock, David G. A1 - Ortiz, Alberto A1 - Mauer, Michael A1 - Linthorst, Gabor E. A1 - Oliveira, João P. A1 - Serra, Andreas L. A1 - Maródi, László A1 - Mignani, Renzo A1 - Vujkovac, Bojan A1 - Beitner-Johnson, Dana A1 - Lemay, Roberta A1 - Cole, J. Alexander A1 - Svarstad, Einar A1 - Waldek, Stephen A1 - Germain, Dominique P. A1 - Wanner, Christoph T1 - Renal outcomes of agalsidase beta treatment for Fabry disease: role of proteinuria and timing of treatment initiation JF - Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation N2 - Background. The purpose of this study was to identify determinants of renal disease progression in adults with Fabry disease during treatment with agalsidase beta. Methods. Renal function was evaluated in 151 men and 62 women from the Fabry Registry who received agalsidase beta at an average dose of 1 mg/kg/2 weeks for at least 2 years. Patients were categorized into quartiles based on slopes of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) during treatment. Multivariate logistic regression analyses were used to identify factors associated with renal disease progression. Results. Men within the first quartile had a mean eGFR slope of –0.1 mL/min/1.73m2/year, whereas men with the most rapid renal disease progression (Quartile 4) had a mean eGFR slope of –6.7 mL/min/1.73m2/year. The risk factor most strongly associated with renal disease progression was averaged urinary protein:creatinine ratio (UP/Cr) ≥1 g/g (odds ratio 112, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 4–3109, P = 0.0054). Longer time from symptom onset to treatment was also associated with renal disease progression (odds ratio 19, 95% CI 2–184, P = 0.0098). Women in Quartile 4 had the highest averaged UP/Cr (mean 1.8 g/g) and the most rapid renal disease progression: (mean slope –4.4 mL/min/1.73m2/year). Conclusions. Adults with Fabry disease are at risk for progressive loss of eGFR despite enzyme replacement therapy, particularly if proteinuria is ≥1 g/g. Men with little urinary protein excretion and those who began receiving agalsidase beta sooner after the onset of symptoms had stable renal function. These findings suggest that early intervention may lead to optimal renal outcomes. KW - proteinuria KW - enzyme replacement therapy KW - alpha galactosidase KW - Fabry disease KW - genetic renal disease Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-124697 VL - 27 IS - 3 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Brevoord, Daniel A1 - Kranke, Peter A1 - Kuijpers, Marijn A1 - Weber, Nina A1 - Hollmann, Markus A1 - Preckel, Benedikt T1 - Remote Ischemic Conditioning to Protect against Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis JF - PLoS One N2 - Background: Remote ischemic conditioning is gaining interest as potential method to induce resistance against ischemia reperfusion injury in a variety of clinical settings. We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis to investigate whether remote ischemic conditioning reduces mortality, major adverse cardiovascular events, length of stay in hospital and in the intensive care unit and biomarker release in patients who suffer from or are at risk for ischemia reperfusion injury. Methods and Results: Medline, EMBASE and Cochrane databases were searched for randomized clinical trials comparing remote ischemic conditioning, regardless of timing, with no conditioning. Two investigators independently selected suitable trials, assessed trial quality and extracted data. 23 studies in patients undergoing cardiac surgery (15 studies), percutaneous coronary intervention (four studies) and vascular surgery (four studies), comprising in total 1878 patients, were included in this review. Compared to no conditioning, remote ischemic conditioning did not reduce mortality (odds ratio 1.22 [95% confidence interval 0.48, 3.07]) or major adverse cardiovascular events (0.65 [0.38, 1.14]). However, the incidence of myocardial infarction was reduced with remote ischemic conditioning (0.50 [0.31, 0.82]), as was peak troponin release (standardized mean difference -0.28 [-0.47, -0.09]). Conclusion: There is no evidence that remote ischemic conditioning reduces mortality associated with ischemic events; nor does it reduce major adverse cardiovascular events. However, remote ischemic conditioning did reduce the incidence of peri-procedural myocardial infarctions, as well as the release of troponin. KW - cardiac protection KW - stent KW - acute kidney injury KW - coronary artery bypass KW - randomized controlled trial KW - myocardial-infarction KW - aneurysm repair KW - graft surgery KW - humans KW - angioplasty Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-134471 VL - 7 IS - 7 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Roeser, Karolin A1 - Eichholz, Ruth A1 - Schwerdtle, Barbara A1 - Schlarb, Angelika A. A1 - Kübler, Andrea T1 - Relationship of sleep quality and health-related quality of life in adolescents according to self- and proxy ratings: a questionnaire survey N2 - Introduction: Sleep disturbances are common in adolescents and adversely affect performance, social contact, and susceptibility to stress. We investigated the hypothesis of a relationship between sleep and health-related quality of life (HRQoL), and applied self- and proxy ratings. Materials and Methods: The sample comprised 92 adolescents aged 11–17 years. All participants and their parents completed a HRQoL measure and the Sleep Disturbance Scale for Children (SDSC ). Children with SDSC T -scores above the normal range (above 60) were classified as poor sleepers. Results: According to self- and proxy ratings, good sleepers reported significantly higher HRQoL than poor sleep- ers. Sleep disturbances were significantly higher and HRQoL significantly lower in self- as compared to parental ratings. Parent-child agreement was higher for subscales measuring observable aspects. Girls experienced significantly stronger sleep disturbances and lower self-rated HRQoL than boys. Discussion: Our findings support the positive relationship of sleep and HRQoL. Furthermore, parents significantly underestimate sleep disturbances and overestimate HRQoL in their children. KW - Psychiatrie KW - quality of life KW - sleep KW - adolescence KW - parent-child agreement KW - sleep disorders Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-75953 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Pandurangan, Sudhakar A1 - Pajak, Agnieszka A1 - Molnar, Stephen J. A1 - Cober, Elroy R. A1 - Dhaubhadel, Sangeeta A1 - Hernández-Sebastià, Cinta A1 - Kaiser, Werner M. A1 - Nelson, Randall L. A1 - Huber, Steven C. A1 - Marsolais, Frédéric T1 - Relationship between asparagine metabolism and protein concentration in soybean seed JF - Journal of Experimental Botany N2 - The relationship between asparagine metabolism and protein concentration was investigated in soybean seed. Phenotyping of a population of recombinant inbred lines adapted to Illinois confirmed a positive correlation between free asparagine levels in developing seeds and protein concentration at maturity. Analysis of a second population of recombinant inbred lines adapted to Ontario associated the elevated free asparagine trait with two of four quantitative trait loci determining population variation for protein concentration, including a major one on chromosome 20 (linkage group I) which has been reported in multiple populations. In the seed coat, levels of asparagine synthetase were high at 50 mg and progressively declined until 150 mg seed weight, suggesting that nitrogenous assimilates are pre-conditioned at early developmental stages to enable a high concentration of asparagine in the embryo. The levels of asparaginase B1 showed an opposite pattern, being low at 50 mg and progressively increased until 150 mg, coinciding with an active phase of storage reserve accumulation. In a pair of genetically related cultivars, ∼2-fold higher levels of asparaginase B1 protein and activity in seed coat, were associated with high protein concentration, reflecting enhanced flux of nitrogen. Transcript expression analyses attributed this difference to a specific asparaginase gene, ASPGB1a. These results contribute to our understanding of the processes determining protein concentration in soybean seed. KW - soybean KW - seed protein concentration KW - quantitative trait locus KW - asparagine synthetase KW - asparagine KW - asparaginase Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-126900 VL - 63 IS - 8 ER - TY - THES A1 - Schmid, Benedikt T1 - Relation between cerebral arterio-venous transit time and neuropsychological performance in patients with vascular dementia T1 - Beziehung zwischen zerebraler arterio-venöser Transitzeit und neuropsychologischer Testleistung bei Patienten mit vaskulärer Demenz N2 - Dementia, or any form of degenerative cognitive decline, is one of the major problems in present, and even more will be in future medicine. With Alzheimer's disease (AD) being the most prevalent, Vascular Dementia is the second most entity of dementing processes in the elderly. As diagnostic criteria are still imprecise and in many cases do not embrace early stages of the disease, recent studies have proposed more detailed classifications of the newly created condition Vascular Cognitive Impairment (VCI). Of all conditions subsumed under this term, subcortical small-vessel alterations are the most common cause for cognitive decline. The diagnosis of dementia / cognitive impairment is presently often made in late stages of the disease, when therapeutical options are poor. Thus, early detection of changes of the subcortical small vessels is desirable, when there is still time to identify and aggressively treat risk factors and underlying conditions like diabetes, hyper- or hypotension, and hyperlipidemia. This study aimed to evaluate whether cTT correlates to cognitive dysfunction, i.e. if cTT is fit as an early diagnostic tool for VCI. The study cohort included 38 patients from the Neurological Clinic of the Würzburg University hospital admitted due to diagnoses other than dementia or stroke. As a result of this study it turned out that cTT is certainly capable of fulfilling the task to easily and effectively detect and evaluate possible microvascular lesions of the brain with respect to the actual clinical relevance for the patient. When compared to the other proposed diagnostic tools, neuropsychological testing and MRI, the advantages of cTT are obvious: its measurement is a low-cost and quick procedure which would spare both patients and examiners a long neuropsychological exam or complement it. cTT is safe to assess as the only possible risks derive from the use of the contrast agent, which are rare and easily manageable. It has also proven to be more accurate in showing the extent of cognitive impairment than MRI. Finally, it is widely available. The only prerequisite is an ultrasound machine capable of transcranial color-coded duplex sonography. No cost-intensive procedures like MRI are needed. So, with neuropsychological testing remaining the gold standard, cTT here proved to be a reliable alternative which is more time- and cost-effective than MRI. N2 - Demenzen und alle anderen Formen kongnitiver Leistungseinschränkungen gehören heute zu den bedeutendsten medizinischen Herausforderungen und werden in der Zukunft noch weiter an Bedeutung gewinnen. Die häufigste der Demenzerkrankungen bei älteren Patienten ist die Alzheimer-Krankheit, gefolgt von den vaskulären Demenzen. Da die Diagnosekriterien in vielen Fällen noch unpräzise sind und vor allem frühe Stadien der Erkrankung nicht erfassen, wurden in der neueren Literatur detailliertere Untergruppen der neu eingeführten Entität „vaskuläre kognitive Funktionsstörung“ (vascular cognitive impairment, VCI) etabliert. Subkortikale Veränderungen an den kleinsten Gefäßen stellen unter allen Pathologien, die unter diesem Begriff subsumiert sind, die häufigste Ursache für kognitive Leistungseinschränkungen dar. Die Diagnose Demenz bzw. VCI wird oft erst in späten Stadien der Krankheit gestellt, wenn die therapeutischen Mittel bereits stark begrenzt sind. Deshalb wäre eine Möglichkeit zur frühen Entdeckung subkortikaler Gefäßveränderungen wünschenswert in einem Stadium der Krankheit, in dem es noch möglich ist, Risikofaktoren wie Diabetes mellitus, arterielle Hyper- und Hypotonie und Fettstoffwechselstörungen auszumachen und konseqeuent zu behandeln. Das Ziel dieser Studie war es zu untersuchen, ob cTT mit dem Ausmaß kognitiver Dysfunktion korreliert, ob also cTT als frühes diagnostisches Verfahren für vaskuläre demenzielle Prozesse geeignet ist. Die Studienpopulation umfasste 38 Patienten aus der Klinik und Poliklinik für Neurologie der Universität Würzburg. Ein Ergebnis dieser Studie ist, dass die cTT sicherlich in der Lage ist, einfach und zuverlässig mögliche mikrovaskuläre Schädigungen des Gehirns auch im Hinblick auf ihre tatsächliche klinische Relevanz zu entdecken. Im Vergleich mit anderen Diagnoseverfahren (Testpsychologie und MRT) sind die Vorteile der cTT offensichtlich: die Messung ist ein kostengünstiges und schnelles Verfahren, das sowohl Patienten als auch Untersuchern eine langwierige neuropsychologische Untersuchung erspart. Die Messung der cTT ist ein sicheres Verfahren, da die wenigen aus der Anwendung des Kontrastmittels sich ergebenden Risiken selten und gegebenenfalls leicht behandelbar sind. Zudem erwies sich die cTT als präziser bei der Aufgabe, das Ausmaß kognitiver Dysfunktion zu messen, als es die MRT vermochte. Zuletzt ist die cTT auch flächendeckend verfügbar. Die einzige Voraussetzung ist ein Duplex-fähiges Ultraschallgerät. Kostenintesive Untersuchungen wie die MRT können vermieden werden. Wenn auch die Testpsychologie der Goldstandard bleiben wird, erwies sich die cTT als zuverlässige Alternative die im Vergleich zur MRT sowohl Zeit als auch Kosten spart. KW - Demenz KW - Psychologische Diagnostik KW - Neuropsychologie KW - Ultraschall KW - Ultraschalldiagnostik KW - dementia KW - neuropsychology KW - ultrasound Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-71234 ER - TY - THES A1 - Haydn, Johannes T1 - Regulation of ERK1/2 signaling in melanoma T1 - Regulation des ERK1/2 Signalwegs im Melanom N2 - Die Mechanismen in einer Zelle, die die Genexpression und somit den Stoffwechsel, das Wachstum und das gesamte Zellverhalten steuern, sind ebenso bedeutsam für das Verständnis der grundlegenden Biologie einer lebenden Zelle wie für die Vorgänge der Krebsentstehung. Dabei bilden hochvernetzte, und strikt regulierte Signaltransduktionswege die Basis für ein belastbares und zugleich hochflexibles regulatorisches Netzwerk. Die Störung solcher Signalkaskaden kann zum einen ursächlich aber auch modifizierend auf die Bildung von Tumoren wirken. Die von Rezeptortyrosinkinasen (RTK) und RAS abhängigen Signalwege, die zur Aktivierung von AKT und ERK1/2 führen, sind hierbei von besonderem Interesse für die Entstehung des malignen Melanoms. Mutationen in Komponenten dieser Wege (z.B. NRAS, BRAF oder PTEN), die die Signalstärke erhöhen kommen in Melanomen sehr häufig vor. Im ersten Teil dieser Arbeit wurden die unterschiedlichen und vielfältigen Funktionen von MKP2, einem Feedbackregulator des ERK1/2-Weges, unter verschiedenen zellulären Rahmenbedingungen, untersucht. Des Weiteren wird eine Funktion des zum AP1-Komplex gehörenden FOSL1, einem unter transkriptioneller Kontrolle des ERK1/2-Weges stehendem Transkriptionsfaktors, hinsichtlich der Steuerung der Zell-Proliferation gezeigt. Weiterhin habe ich Aspekte der direkten pharmakologischen Inhibition des ERK1/2-Weges hinsichtlich ihres Effekts auf die Auslösung von Apoptose untersucht. Aufgrund der Häufigkeit von Mutationen in Genen, die für Proteine des ERK1/2-Weges kodieren (z.B. NRASQ61K, BRAFV600E), gilt die Inhibition dieses Signalwegs als vielversprechende Strategie zur Behandlung des Melanoms. Auch wenn klinische Studien, die Inhibitoren für MEK oder RAF als Einzelmedikamente verwenden, bei mehrmonatiger Behandlung sehr erfolgreich sind, konnten so keine langfristigen Erfolge erzielt werden. Aus diesem Grund werden nun Kombinationstherapien, die einen Inhibitor des ERK1/2-Weges und eine weitere Form der Therapie kombinieren, untersucht. Der zweite Teil dieser Arbeit beschreibt, dass der spezifische MEK Inhibitor PD184352 Melanomzellen vor der Apoptosewirkung von Cisplatin schützen kann. Einzelbehandlung mit Cisplatin führt hierbei zur Akkumulation von DNA Schäden, die wiederum Caspase-abhängig Apoptose induzieren. Zusätzliche Anwendung des MEK Inhibitors verringerte jedoch in einigen Zelllinien das Potential von Cisplatin, Apoptose auszulösen. Diese Zellen zeigten eine verstärkte Aktivierung der Serin/Threonin-KInase AKT nach MEK Inhibition. Diese AKT Aktivierung führte zur Inaktivierung der FOXO Transkriptionsfaktoren, was wiederum die Expression des pro-apoptotischen BH3-only Proteins PUMA verringerte. PUMA selbst ist ein wichtiger Bestandteil der Apoptose Maschinerie, die durch Cisplatin aktiviert wird. Die im Rahmen dieser Arbeit erhaltenen Befunde deuten darauf hin, dass RTKs, im besonderen EGFR, bei diesem Crosstalk eine Rolle spielen. Diese Ergebnisse zeigen, dass die Inhibition des RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK Signalweges im Melanom nicht zwangsläufig von Vorteil sein muss, falls die Zellen gleichzeitig mit einem genotoxischen Medikament behandelt werden. Hier kann sie sogar die Überlebensfähigkeit von Melanomzellen unter Apoptose induzierenden Bedingungen verbessern. N2 - The mechanisms that enable cells to regulate their gene expression and thus their metabolism, proliferation or cellular behaviour are not only important to understand the basic biology of a living cell, but are also of crucial interest in cancerogenesis. Highly interwoven and tightly regulated pathways are the basis of a robust but also flexible regulatory network. Interference with these pathways can be either causative for tumorigenesis or can modify its outcome. The receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) and RAS dependent pathways leading to AKT or ERK1/2 activation are of particular interest in melanoma. These signaling modules are commonly activated by different mutations that can be found in various pathway components like NRAS, BRAF or PTEN. The first part of this work deals with the diverse and versatile functions of the ERK1/2 pathway feedbackregulator MKP2 in different cellular, melanoma relevant settings. In addition, a functional role of the AP1-complex member FOSL1, an ERK1/2 transcriptional target being implicated in the regulation of proliferation, is demonstrated. Secondly, aspects of direct pharmacological inhibition of the ERK1/2 pathway with regard to the induction of apoptosis have been analysed. Due to the high frequency of melanoma related mutations occurring in the RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK pathway (e.g. NRASQ61K, BRAFV600E), inhibition of this signaling cascade is deemed to be a promising therapeutic strategy for the treatment of malignant melanoma. However, although in clinical trials mono-therapeutic treatment with MEK- or RAF inhibitors was successful in the short run, it failed to show satisfactory long-lasting effects. Hence, combination therapies using a MAPK pathway inhibitor and an additional therapy are currently under investigation. I was able to demonstrate that inhibition of MEK using the highly specific inhibitor PD184352 can have a protective effect on melanoma cells with regard to their susceptibility towards the apoptosis inducing agent cisplatin. Single application of cisplatin led to strong DNA damage and the induction of caspase-dependent apoptosis. Additional administration of the MEK inhibitor, however, strongly reduced the apoptosis inducing effect of cisplatin in several melanoma cell lines, These cells displayed an increased activation of the serine/threonine kinase AKT after MEK inhibition. This AKT activation concomitantly led to the phosphorylation of FOXO transcription factors, attenuating the cisplatin induced expression of the BH3-only protein PUMA. PUMA in turn was important to mediate the apoptosis machinery after cisplatin treatment. My results also indicate a participation of RTKs, in particular EGFR, in mediating MEK inhibitor induced activation of AKT. These results demonstrate that inhibition of the RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK signaling pathway in melanoma cell lines does not necessilary have favourable effects in a cytotoxic co-treatment situation. Instead, it can even enhance melanoma survival under pro-apoptotic conditions. KW - Melanom KW - MAP-Kinase KW - melanoma KW - MAP-Kinase KW - ERK signaling KW - Signalkette Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-85727 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wu, Lingdan A1 - Pu, Jie A1 - Allen, John J. B. A1 - Pauli, Paul T1 - Recognition of facial expressions in individuals with elevated levels of depressive symptoms: an eye-movement study JF - Depression Research and Treatment N2 - Previous studies consistently reported abnormal recognition of facial expressions in depression. However, it is still not clear whether this abnormality is due to an enhanced or impaired ability to recognize facial expressions, and what underlying cognitive systems are involved. The present study aimed to examine how individuals with elevated levels of depressive symptoms differ from controls on facial expression recognition and to assess attention and information processing using eye tracking. Forty participants (18 with elevated depressive symptoms) were instructed to label facial expressions depicting one of seven emotions. Results showed that the high-depression group, in comparison with the low-depression group, recognized facial expressions faster and with comparable accuracy. Furthermore, the high-depression group demonstrated greater leftwards attention bias which has been argued to be an indicator of hyperactivation of right hemisphere during facial expression recognition. KW - Depression Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-123153 VL - 2012 IS - 249030 ER - TY - THES A1 - Curtef, Oana T1 - Rayleigh–quotient optimization on tensor products of Grassmannians T1 - Rayleigh–Quotient Optimierung auf Tensorprodukte von Graßmann-Mannigfaltigkeiten N2 - Applications in various research areas such as signal processing, quantum computing, and computer vision, can be described as constrained optimization tasks on certain subsets of tensor products of vector spaces. In this work, we make use of techniques from Riemannian geometry and analyze optimization tasks on subsets of so-called simple tensors which can be equipped with a differentiable structure. In particular, we introduce a generalized Rayleigh-quotient function on the tensor product of Grassmannians and on the tensor product of Lagrange- Grassmannians. Its optimization enables a unified approach to well-known tasks from different areas of numerical linear algebra, such as: best low-rank approximations of tensors (data compression), computing geometric measures of entanglement (quantum computing) and subspace clustering (image processing). We perform a thorough analysis on the critical points of the generalized Rayleigh-quotient and develop intrinsic numerical methods for its optimization. Explicitly, using the techniques from Riemannian optimization, we present two type of algorithms: a Newton-like and a conjugated gradient algorithm. Their performance is analysed and compared with established methods from the literature. N2 - Viele Fragestellungen aus den unterschiedlichen mathematischen Disziplinen, wie z.B. Signalverarbeitung, Quanten-Computing und Computer-Vision, können als Optimierungsprobleme auf Teilmengen von Tensorprodukten von Vektorräumen beschrieben werden. In dieser Arbeit verwenden wir Techniken aus der Riemannschen Geometrie, um Optimierungsprobleme für Mengen von sogenannten einfachen Tensoren, welche mit einer differenzierbaren Struktur ausgestattet werden können, zu untersuchen. Insbesondere führen wir eine verallgemeinerte Rayleigh-Quotienten-Funktion auf dem Tensorprodukt von Graßmann-Mannigfaltigkeiten bzw. Lagrange-Graßmann-Mannigfaltigkeiten ein. Dies führt zu einem einheitlichen Zugang zu bekannten Problemen aus verschiedenen Bereichen der numerischen linearen Algebra, wie z.B. die Niedrig–Rang–Approximation von Tensoren (Datenkompression), die Beschreibung geometrischer Maße für Quantenverschränkung (Quanten-Computing) und Clustering (Bildverarbeitung). Wir führen eine gründliche Analyse der kritischen Punkte des verallgemeinerten Rayleigh-Quotienten durch und entwickeln intrinsische numerische Methoden für dessen Optimierung. Wir stellen zwei Arten von Algorithmen vor, die wir mit Hilfe von Techniken aus der Riemannsche Optimierung entwickeln: eine mit Gemeinsamkeiten zum Newton-Verfahren und eine zum CG-Verfahren ähnliche. Wir analysieren die Performance der Algorithmen und vergleichen sie mit gängigen Methoden aus der Literatur. KW - Optimierung KW - Riemannsche Optimierung KW - Newtonverfahren KW - Verfahren der konjugierten Gradienten KW - Maße für Quantenverschränkung KW - Riemannian optimization KW - Grassmann Manifold KW - Newton method KW - Conjugate gradient method KW - tensor rank KW - subspace clustering KW - enatnglement measure KW - Riemannsche Geometrie KW - Grassmann-Mannigfaltigkeit KW - Konjugierte-Gradienten-Methode KW - Newton-Verfahren Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-83383 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Haeusler, Karl Georg A1 - Herm, Juliane A1 - Kunze, Claudia A1 - Krüll, Matthias A1 - Brechtel, Lars A1 - Lock, Jürgen A1 - Hohenhaus, Marc A1 - Heuschmann, Peter U. A1 - Fiebach, Jochen B. A1 - Haverkamp, Wilhelm A1 - Endres, Matthias A1 - Jungehulsing, Gerhard Jan T1 - Rate of cardiac arrhythmias and silent brain lesions in experienced marathon runners: rationale, design and baseline data of the Berlin Beat of Running study JF - BMC Cardiovascular Disorders N2 - Background: Regular exercise is beneficial for cardiovascular health but a recent meta-analysis indicated a relationship between extensive endurance sport and a higher risk of atrial fibrillation, an independent risk factor for stroke. However, data on the frequency of cardiac arrhythmias or (clinically silent) brain lesions during and after marathon running are missing. Methods/Design: In the prospective observational "Berlin Beat of Running" study experienced endurance athletes underwent clinical examination (CE), 3 Tesla brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), carotid ultrasound imaging (CUI) and serial blood sampling (BS) within 2-3 days prior (CE, MRI, CUI, BS), directly after (CE, BS) and within 2 days after (CE, MRI, BS) the 38\(^{th}\) BMW BERLIN-MARATHON 2011. All participants wore a portable electrocardiogram (ECG)-recorder throughout the 4 to 5 days baseline study period. Participants with pathological MRI findings after the marathon, troponin elevations or detected cardiac arrhythmias will be asked to undergo cardiac MRI to rule out structural abnormalities. A follow-up is scheduled after one year. Results: Here we report the baseline data of the enrolled 110 athletes aged 36-61 years. Their mean age was 48.8 \(\pm\) 6.0 years, 24.5% were female, 8.2% had hypertension and 2.7% had hyperlipidaemia. Participants have attended a mean of 7.5 \(\pm\) 6.6 marathon races within the last 5 years and a mean of 16 \(\pm\) 36 marathon races in total. Their weekly running distance prior to the 38\(^{th}\) BMW BERLIN-MARATHON was 65 \(\pm\) 17 km. Finally, 108 (98.2%) Berlin Beat-Study participants successfully completed the 38\(^{th}\) BMW BERLIN-MARATHON 2011. Discussion: Findings from the "Berlin Beats of Running" study will help to balance the benefits and risks of extensive endurance sport. ECG-recording during the marathon might contribute to identify athletes at risk for cardiovascular events. MRI results will give new insights into the link between physical stress and brain damage. KW - marathon running KW - cardiac arrhythmia KW - atrial fibrillation KW - physical activity KW - cardiovascular events KW - carotid artery KW - risk factor KW - stroke KW - exercise KW - death KW - metaanalysis KW - mechanisms KW - ECG-recording KW - magnetic resonance imaging KW - blood sampling Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-133677 VL - 12 IS - 69 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Rapidity gap cross sections measured with the ATLAS detector in pp collisions at √s=7TeV JF - The European Physical Journal C N2 - Pseudorapidity gap distributions in proton-proton collisions at √s=7 TeV are studied using a minimum bias data sample with an integrated luminosity of 7.1 μb\(^{−1}\). Cross sections are measured differentially in terms of Δη\(^F\), the larger of the pseudorapidity regions extending to the limits of the ATLAS sensitivity, at η=±4.9, in which no final state particles are produced above a transverse momentum threshold pcutT. The measurements span the region 0<Δη\(^F\)<8 for 200MeV KW - Therapie KW - vaccinia virus KW - microRNA KW - oncolytic virotherapy Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-69654 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Steinmann, Diana A1 - Paelecke-Habermann, Yvonne A1 - Geinitz, Hans A1 - Aschoff, Raimund A1 - Bayerl, Anja A1 - Bölling, Tobias A1 - Bosch, Elisabeth A1 - Bruns, Frank A1 - Eichenseder-Seiss, Ute A1 - Gerstein, Johanna A1 - Gharbi, Nadine A1 - Hagg, Juliane A1 - Hipp, Matthias A1 - Kleff, Irmgard A1 - Müller, Axel A1 - Schäfer, Christof A1 - Schleicher, Ursula A1 - Sehlen, Susanne A1 - Theodorou, Marilena A1 - Wypior, Hans-Joachim A1 - Zehentmayr, Franz A1 - van Oorschot, Birgitt A1 - Vordermark, Dirk T1 - Prospective evaluation of quality of life effects in patients undergoing palliative radiotherapy for brain metastases JF - BMC Cancer N2 - Background: Recently published results of quality of life (QoL) studies indicated different outcomes of palliative radiotherapy for brain metastases. This prospective multi-center QoL study of patients with brain metastases was designed to investigate which QoL domains improve or worsen after palliative radiotherapy and which might provide prognostic information. Methods: From 01/2007-01/2009, n=151 patients with previously untreated brain metastases were recruited at 14 centers in Germany and Austria. Most patients (82 %) received whole-brain radiotherapy. QoL was measured with the EORTC-QLQ-C15-PAL and brain module BN20 before the start of radiotherapy and after 3 months. Results: At 3 months, 88/142 (62 %) survived. Nine patients were not able to be followed up. 62 patients (70.5 % of 3-month survivors) completed the second set of questionnaires. Three months after the start of radiotherapy QoL deteriorated significantly in the areas of global QoL, physical function, fatigue, nausea, pain, appetite loss, hair loss, drowsiness, motor dysfunction, communication deficit and weakness of legs. Although the use of corticosteroid at 3 months could be reduced compared to pre-treatment (63 % vs. 37 %), the score for headaches remained stable. Initial QoL at the start of treatment was better in those alive than in those deceased at 3 months, significantly for physical function, motor dysfunction and the symptom scales fatigue, pain, appetite loss and weakness of legs. In a multivariate model, lower Karnofsky performance score, higher age and higher pain ratings before radiotherapy were prognostic of 3-month survival. Conclusions: Moderate deterioration in several QoL domains was predominantly observed three months after start of palliative radiotherapy for brain metastases. Future studies will need to address the individual subjective benefit or burden from such treatment. Baseline QoL scores before palliative radiotherapy for brain metastases may contain prognostic information. KW - breast cancer KW - brain tumours KW - survival KW - validation KW - symptoms KW - EORTC-QLQ-C15-PAL KW - EORTC-BN20 KW - whole-brain radiotherapy KW - partitioning analysis RPA KW - cancer patients KW - lung cancer KW - prognostic index KW - radiation oncology KW - clinical trials Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-135254 VL - 12 IS - 283 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Galimberti, Daniela A1 - Dell'Osso, Bernardo A1 - Fenoglio, Chiara A1 - Villa, Chiara A1 - Cortini, Francesca A1 - Serpente, Maria A1 - Kittel-Schneider, Sarah A1 - Weigl, Johannes A1 - Neuner, Maria A1 - Volkert, Juliane A1 - Leonhard, C. A1 - Olmes, David G. A1 - Kopf, Juliane A1 - Cantoni, Claudia A1 - Ridolfi, Elisa A1 - Palazzo, Carlotta A1 - Ghezzi, Laura A1 - Bresolin, Nereo A1 - Altamura, A.C. A1 - Scarpini, Elio A1 - Reif, Andreas T1 - Progranulin Gene Variability and Plasma Levels in Bipolar Disorder and Schizophrenia JF - PLoS One N2 - Basing on the assumption that frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD), schizophrenia and bipolar disorder (BPD) might share common aetiological mechanisms, we analyzed genetic variation in the FTLD risk gene progranulin (GRN) in a German population of patients with schizophrenia (n=271) or BPD (n=237) as compared with 574 age-, gender-and ethnicity-matched controls. Furthermore, we measured plasma progranulin levels in 26 German BPD patients as well as in 61 Italian BPD patients and 29 matched controls. A significantly decreased allelic frequency of the minor versus the wild-type allele was observed for rs2879096 (23.2 versus 34.2%, P<0.001, OR: 0.63, 95% CI: 0.49-0.80), rs4792938 (30.7 versus 39.7%, P=0.005, OR: 0.70, 95% CI: 0.55-0.89) and rs5848 (30.3 versus 36.8, P=0.007, OR: 0.71, 95% CI: 0.56-0.91). Mean +/- SEM progranulin plasma levels were significantly decreased in BPD patients, either Germans or Italians, as compared with controls (89.69 +/- 3.97 and 116.14 +/- 5.80 ng/ml, respectively, versus 180.81 +/- 18.39 ng/ml P<0.001) and were not correlated with age. In conclusion, GRN variability decreases the risk to develop BPD and schizophrenia, and progranulin plasma levels are significantly lower in BPD patients than in controls. Nevertheless, a larger replication analysis would be needed to confirm these preliminary results. KW - people KW - frontotemporal lobar degeneration KW - genome-wide association KW - Alzheimers disease KW - risk genes KW - dementia KW - GRN KW - mutation KW - families KW - linkage Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-131910 VL - 7 IS - 4 ER - TY - THES A1 - Shao, Changzhun T1 - Programming Self-assembly: Formation of Discrete Perylene Bisimide Aggregates T1 - Steuerung der Selbstassemblierung: Aufbau der diskreten Perylenbisimid-Aggregaten N2 - The objective of this thesis focuses on the development of strategies for precise control of perylene bisimide (PBI) self-assembly and the in-depth elucidation of structural and optical features of discrete PBI aggregates by means of NMR and UV/Vis spectroscopy. The strategy for discrete dimer formation of PBIs is based on delicate steric control that distinguishes the two facets of the central perylene surface. The strategy applied in this thesis for accessing discrete PBI quadruple and further oligomeric stacks relies on backbone-directed PBI self-assembly. For this purpose, two tweezer-like PBI dyads bearing the respective rigid backbones, diphenylacetylene (DPA) and diphenylbutydiyne (DPB), were synthesized. The distinct aggregation behavior of these structurally similar PBI dyads can be ascribed to the intramolecular distance between the two PBI chromophores imparted by the DPA and DPB spacers. N2 - Das Ziel dieser Arbeit ist die Entwicklung von Strategien für die präzise Steuerung der PBI-Selbstorganisation sowie die gründliche Aufklärung der strukturellen und optischen Eigenschaften von diskreten PBI-Aggregaten mittels NMR- und UV/Vis-Spektroskopie. Die Strategie der diskreten Dimerbildung von PBIs ist auf der empfindlichen sterischen Kontrolle begründet, die eine Differenzierung der beiden Facetten der zentralen Perylenoberfläche ermöglicht. Um diskrete vierfache und höhere oligomere PBI-Stapel zu erhalten, behilft sich die vorliegende Arbeit der PBI-Selbstorganisation, die durch ein Rückgrat vermittelt wird. Zu diesem Zweck wurden zwei pinzettenartige PBI-Dyaden synthetisiert, die die starren Rückgrate Diphenylacetylen (DPA) bzw. Diphenylbutydiyn (DPB) tragen (Abbildung 2). Das unterschiedliche Aggregationsverhalten dieser strukturell ähnlichen PBI-Dyaden kann den verschiedenen intramolekularen Abständen der beiden PBI-Chromophore zugeschrieben werden, die durch DPA bzw. DPB als Abstandshalter vorgegeben werden. KW - Farbstoff KW - perylene bisimide KW - self-assembly KW - dimer KW - Perylenderivate KW - Selbstorganisation Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-69298 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mehnert, Anja A1 - Koch, Uwe A1 - Schulz, Holger A1 - Wegscheider, Karl A1 - Weis, Joachim A1 - Faller, Hermann A1 - Keller, Monika A1 - Brähler, Elmar A1 - Härter, Martin T1 - Prevalence of mental disorders, psychosocial distress and need for psychosocial support in cancer patients – study protocol of an epidemiological multi-center study N2 - Background Empirical studies investigating the prevalence of mental disorders and psychological distress in cancer patients have gained increasing importance during recent years, particularly with the objective to develop and implement psychosocial interventions within the cancer care system. Primary purpose of this epidemiological cross-sectional multi-center study is to detect the 4-week-, 12-month-, and lifetime prevalence rates of comorbid mental disorders and to further assess psychological distress and psychosocial support needs in cancer patients across all major tumor entities within the in- and outpatient oncological health care and rehabilitation settings in Germany. Methods/Design In this multicenter, epidemiological cross-sectional study, cancer patients across all major tumor entities will be enrolled from acute care hospitals, outpatient cancer care facilities, and rehabilitation centers in five major study centers in Germany: Freiburg, Hamburg, Heidelberg, Leipzig and Würzburg. A proportional stratified random sample based on the nationwide incidence of all cancer diagnoses in Germany is used. Patients are consecutively recruited in all centers. On the basis of a depression screener (PHQ-9) 50% of the participants that score below the cutoff point of 9 and all patients scoring above are assessed using the Composite International Diagnostic Interview for Oncology (CIDI-O). In addition, all patients complete validated questionnaires measuring emotional distress, information and psychosocial support needs as well as quality of life. Discussion Epidemiological data on the prevalence of mental disorders and distress provide detailed and valid information for the estimation of the demands for the type and extent of psychosocial support interventions. The data will provide information about specific demographic, functional, cancer- and treatment-related risk factors for mental comorbidity and psychosocial distress, specific supportive care needs and use of psychosocial support offers. KW - metaanalysis KW - depression KW - survivors KW - care KW - sample KW - instrument KW - quality-of-life KW - generalized anxiety disorder KW - cooperative-oncology-group KW - decision making Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-153296 VL - 12 IS - 70 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Messi, Bernadette Biloa A1 - Ndjoko-Ioset, Karine A1 - Hertlein-Amslinger, Barbara A1 - Lannang, Alain Meli A1 - Nkengfack, Augustin E. A1 - Wolfender, Jean-Luc A1 - Hostettmann, Kurt A1 - Bringmann, Gerhard T1 - Preussianone, a New Flavanone-Chromone Biflavonoid from Garcinia preussii Engl. JF - Molecules N2 - A new flavanone-chromone biflavonoid, preussianone (1), has been isolated from the leaves of Garcinia preussii, along with four known biflavonoids. The absolute stereostructures were elucidated by chemical, spectroscopic, and chiroptical methods. The biological properties of the new biflavonoid against several bacterial strains were evaluated. KW - multiflora KW - minimal inhibitory concentration KW - absolute configuration KW - circular dichroism KW - C-13 NMR KW - guttiferae KW - flavenoids KW - extractives KW - biflavanoids KW - livingstonei KW - high-temperature NMR KW - antibacterial activity KW - Garcinia biflavonoids Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-130881 VL - 17 IS - 5 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Parker, H. E. A1 - Adriaenssens, A. A1 - Rogers, G. A1 - Richards, P. A1 - Koepsell, H. A1 - Reimann, F. A1 - Gribble, F. M. T1 - Predominant role of active versus facilitative glucose transport for glucagon-like peptide-1 secretion JF - Diabetologia N2 - Aims/hypothesis Several glucose-sensing pathways have been implicated in glucose-triggered secretion of glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) from intestinal L cells. One involves glucose metabolism and closure of ATP-sensitive K\(^+\) channels, and another exploits the electrogenic nature of Na\(^+\)-coupled glucose transporters (SGLTs). This study aimed to elucidate the role of these distinct mechanisms in glucose-stimulated GLP-1 secretion. Methods Glucose uptake into L cells (either GLUTag cells or cells in primary cultures, using a new transgenic mouse model combining proglucagon promoter-driven Cre recombinase with a ROSA26tdRFP reporter) was monitored with the FLII\(_{12}\)Pglu-700μδ6 glucose sensor. Effects of pharmacological and genetic interference with SGLT1 or facilitative glucose transport (GLUT) on intracellular glucose accumulation and metabolism (measured by NAD(P)H autofluorescence), cytosolic Ca\(^{2+}\) (monitored with Fura2) and GLP-1 secretion (assayed by ELISA) were assessed. Results L cell glucose uptake was dominated by GLUT-mediated transport, being abolished by phloretin but not phloridzin. NAD(P)H autofluorescence was glucose dependent and enhanced by a glucokinase activator. In GLUTag cells, but not primary L cells, phloretin partially impaired glucose-dependent secretion, and suppressed an amplifying effect of glucose under depolarising high K\(^+\) conditions. The key importance of SGLT1 in GLUTag and primary cells was evident from the impairment of secretion by phloridzin or Sglt1 knockdown and failure of glucose to trigger cytosolic Ca\(^{2+}\) elevation in primary L cells from Sglt1 knockout mice. Conclusions/interpretation SGLT1 acts as the luminal glucose sensor in L cells, but intracellular glucose concentrations are largely determined by GLUT activity. Although L cell glucose metabolism depends partially on glucokinase activity, this plays only a minor role in glucose-stimulated GLP-1 secretion. KW - KATP channel KW - glucokinase KW - glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) KW - SGLT1 KW - L cells Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-125927 VL - 55 IS - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Moremi, Nyambura A1 - Mshana, Stephen E. A1 - Kamugisha, Erasmus A1 - Kataraihya, Johannes B. A1 - Tappe, Dennis A1 - Vogel, Ulrich A1 - Lyamuya, Eligius F. A1 - Claus, Heike T1 - Predominance of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus-ST88 and new ST1797 causing wound infection and abscesses JF - Journal of Infection in Developing Countries N2 - Introduction: Although there has been a worldwide emergence and spread of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), little is known about the molecular epidemiology of MRSA in Tanzania. Methodology: In this study, we characterized MRSA strains isolated from clinical specimens at the Bugando Medical Centre, Tanzania, between January and December 2008. Of 160 S. aureus isolates from 600 clinical specimens, 24 (15%) were found to be MRSA. Besides molecular screening for the Panton Valentine leukocidin (PVL) genes by PCR, MRSA strains were further characterized by Multi-Locus Sequence Typing (MLST) and spa typing. Results: Despite considerable genetic diversity, the spa types t690 (29.1%) and t7231 (41.6%), as well as the sequence types (ST) 88 (54.2%) and 1797 (29.1%), were dominant among clinical isolates. The PVL genes were detected in 4 isolates; of these, 3 were found in ST 88 and one in ST1820. Resistance to erythromycin, clindamicin, gentamicin, tetracycline and co-trimoxazole was found in 45.8%, 62.5%, 41.6%, 45.8% and 50% of the strains, respectively. Conclusion: We present the first thorough typing of MRSA at a Tanzanian hospital. Despite considerable genetic diversity, ST88 was dominant among clinical isolates at the Bugando Medical Centre. Active and standardized surveillance of nosocomial MRSA infection should be conducted in the future to analyse the infection and transmission rates and implement effective control measures. KW - Tanzania KW - panton-valentine leukocidin KW - field gel-electrophoreresis KW - molecular epidemiology KW - aureus infections KW - MRSA KW - ST88 KW - ST1797 Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-134746 VL - 6 IS - 8 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gentschev, Ivaylo A1 - Adelfinger, Marion A1 - Josupeit, Rafael A1 - Rudolph, Stephan A1 - Ehrig, Klaas A1 - Donat, Ulrike A1 - Weibel, Stephanie A1 - Chen, Nanhai G. A1 - Yu, Yong A. A1 - Zhang, Qian A1 - Heisig, Martin A1 - Thamm, Douglas A1 - Stritzker, Jochen A1 - MacNeill, Amy A1 - Szalay, Aladar A. T1 - Preclinical Evaluation of Oncolytic Vaccinia Virus for Therapy of Canine Soft Tissue Sarcoma JF - PLoS One N2 - Virotherapy using oncolytic vaccinia virus (VACV) strains is one promising new strategy for canine cancer therapy. In this study we describe the establishment of an in vivo model of canine soft tissue sarcoma (CSTS) using the new isolated cell line STSA-1 and the analysis of the virus-mediated oncolytic and immunological effects of two different Lister VACV LIVP1.1.1 and GLV-1h68 strains against CSTS. Cell culture data demonstrated that both tested VACV strains efficiently infected and destroyed cells of the canine soft tissue sarcoma line STSA-1. In addition, in our new canine sarcoma tumor xenograft mouse model, systemic administration of LIVP1.1.1 or GLV-1h68 viruses led to significant inhibition of tumor growth compared to control mice. Furthermore, LIVP1.1.1 mediated therapy resulted in almost complete tumor regression and resulted in long-term survival of sarcoma-bearing mice. The replication of the tested VACV strains in tumor tissues led to strong oncolytic effects accompanied by an intense intratumoral infiltration of host immune cells, mainly neutrophils. These findings suggest that the direct viral oncolysis of tumor cells and the virus-dependent activation of tumor-associated host immune cells could be crucial parts of anti-tumor mechanism in STSA-1 xenografts. In summary, the data showed that both tested vaccinia virus strains and especially LIVP1.1.1 have great potential for effective treatment of CSTS. KW - breast-tumors KW - animal-model KW - nude-mice KW - cell-line KW - in-vitro KW - glv-1h68 KW - cancer KW - virotherapy KW - dogs KW - neutrophils Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-129998 VL - 7 IS - 5 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Steinbacher, Andreas A1 - Buback, Johannes A1 - Nürnberger, Patrick A1 - Brixner, Tobias T1 - Precise and rapid detection of optical activity for accumulative femtosecond spectroscopy JF - Optics Express N2 - We present polarimetry, i.e. the detection of optical rotation of light polarization, in a configuration suitable for femtosecond spectroscopy. The polarimeter is based on common-path optical heterodyne interferometry and provides fast and highly sensitive detection of rotatory power. Femtosecond pump and polarimeter probe beams are integrated into a recently developed accumulative technique that further enhances sensitivity with respect to single-pulse methods. The high speed of the polarimeter affords optical rotation detection during the pump-pulse illumination period of a few seconds. We illustrate the concept on the photodissociation of the enantiomers of methyl p-tolyl sulfoxide. The sensitivity of rotatory detection, i.e. the minimum rotation angle that can be measured, is determined experimentally including all noise sources to be 0.10 milli-degrees for a measurement time of only one second and an interaction length of 250 μm. The suitability of the presented setup for femtosecond studies is demonstrated in a non-resonant two-photon photodissociation experiment. Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-85913 UR - http://www.opticsinfobase.org/oe/fulltext.cfm?uri=oe-20-11-11838&id=233249 ER - TY - THES A1 - Cord, Anna T1 - Potential of multi-temporal remote sensing data for modeling tree species distributions and species richness in Mexico T1 - Eignung multi-temporaler Fernerkundungsdaten für die Modellierung von Artverbreitungsgebieten und Diversität von Baumarten in Mexiko N2 - Current changes of biodiversity result almost exclusively from human activities. This anthropogenic conversion of natural ecosystems during the last decades has led to the so-called ‘biodiversity crisis’, which comprises the loss of species as well as changes in the global distribution patterns of organisms. Species richness is unevenly distributed worldwide. Altogether, 17 so-called ‘megadiverse’ nations cover less than 10% of the earth’s land surface but support nearly 70% of global species richness. Mexico, the study area of this thesis, is one of those countries. However, due to Mexico’s large extent and geographical complexity, it is impossible to conduct reliable and spatially explicit assessments of species distribution ranges based on these collection data and field work alone. In the last two decades, Species distribution models (SDMs) have been established as important tools for extrapolating such in situ observations. SDMs analyze empirical correlations between geo-referenced species occurrence data and environmental variables to obtain spatially explicit surfaces indicating the probability of species occurrence. Remote sensing can provide such variables which describe biophysical land surface characteristics with high effective spatial resolutions. Especially during the last three to five years, the number of studies making use of remote sensing data for modeling species distributions has therefore multiplied. Due to the novelty of this field of research, the published literature consists mostly of selective case studies. A systematic framework for modeling species distributions by means of remote sensing is still missing. This research gap was taken up by this thesis and specific studies were designed which addressed the combination of climate and remote sensing data in SDMs, the suitability of continuous remote sensing variables in comparison with categorical land cover classification data, the criteria for selecting appropriate remote sensing data depending on species characteristics, and the effects of inter-annual variability in remotely sensed time series on the performance of species distribution models. The corresponding novel analyses were conducted with the Maximum Entropy algorithm developed by Phillips et al. (2004). In this thesis, a more comprehensive set of remote sensing predictors than in the existing literature was utilized for species distribution modeling. The products were selected based on their ecological relevance for characterizing species distributions. Two 1 km Terra-MODIS Land 16-day composite standard products including the Enhanced Vegetation Index (EVI), Reflectance Data, and Land Surface Temperature (LST) were assembled into enhanced time series for the time period of 2001 to 2009. These high-dimensional time series data were then transformed into 18 phenological and 35 statistical metrics that were selected based on an extensive literature review. Spatial distributions of twelve tree species were modeled in a hierarchical framework which integrated climate (WorldClim) and MODIS remote sensing data. The species are representative of the major Mexican forest types and cover a variety of ecological traits, such as range size and biotope specificity. Trees were selected because they have a high probability of detection in the field and since mapping vegetation has a long tradition in remote sensing. The result of this thesis showed that the integration of remote sensing data into species distribution models has a significant potential for improving and both spatial detail and accuracy of the model predictions. N2 - Sämtliche aktuell zu beobachtenden Veränderungen in der Biodiversität lassen sich fast ausschließlich auf menschliche Aktivitäten zurückführen. In den letzten Jahrzehnten hat insbesondere die anthropogene Umwandlung bisher unberührter, natürlicher Ökosysteme zur sogenannten ‚Biodiversitätskrise‘ geführt. Diese umfasst nicht nur das Aussterben von Arten, sondern auch räumliche Verschiebungen in deren Verbreitungsgebieten. Global gesehen ist der Artenreichtum ungleich verteilt. Nur insgesamt 17 sogenannte ‚megadiverse‘ Länder, welche 10% der globalen Landoberfläche umfassen, beherbergen fast 70% der weltweiten Artenvielfalt. Mexiko, das Studiengebiet dieser Arbeit, ist eine dieser außerordentlich artenreichen Nationen. Aufgrund seiner großen Ausdehnung und geographischen Komplexität kann eine verlässliche und detaillierte räumliche Erfassung von Artverbreitungsgebieten in Mexiko jedoch nicht nur auf Basis dieser Datenbanken sowie von Feldarbeiten erfolgen. In den letzten beiden Jahrzehnten haben sich Artverbreitungsmodelle (Species distribution models, SDMs) als wichtige Werkzeuge für die räumliche Interpolation solcher in situ Beobachtungen in der Ökologie etabliert. Artverbreitungsmodelle umfassen die Analyse empirischer Zusammenhänge zwischen georeferenzierten Fundpunkten einer Art und Umweltvariablen mit dem Ziel, räumlich kontinuierliche Vorhersagen zur Wahrscheinlichkeit des Vorkommens der jeweiligen Art zu treffen. Mittels Fernerkundung können Umweltvariablen mit Bezug zu den biophysikalischen Eigenschaften der Landoberfläche in hohen effektiven räumlichen Auflösungen bereitgestellt werden. Insbesondere in den letzten drei bis fünf Jahren ist daher die Verwendung von Fernerkundungsdaten in der Artverbreitungsmodellierung sprunghaft angestiegen. Da es sich hierbei jedoch immer noch um ein sehr neues Forschungsfeld handelt, stellen diese meist nur Einzelstudien mit Beispielcharakter dar. Eine systematische Untersuchung zur Modellierung von Artverbreitungsgebieten mit Hilfe von Fernerkundungsdaten fehlt bisher. Diese Forschungslücke wurde in der vorliegenden Arbeit aufgegriffen. Hierzu wurden spezifische Untersuchungen durchgeführt, welche insbesondere folgende Aspekte betrachteten: die sinnvolle Verknüpfung von Klima- und Fernerkundungsdaten im Rahmen von Artverbreitungsmodellen, den quantitativen Vergleich von kontinuierlichen Fernerkundungsdaten und einer bestehenden kategorialen Landbedeckungsklassifikation, die Identifizierung von Kriterien zur Auswahl geeigneter Fernerkundungsprodukte, welche die Eigenschaften der Studienarten berücksichtigen, sowie der Einfluss inter-annueller Variabilität in fernerkundlichen Zeitreihen auf die Ergebnisse und Leistungsfähigkeit von Artverbreitungsmodellen. Die entsprechenden neuen Analysen wurden mit Hilfe des von Phillips et al. (2004) entwickelten Maximum Entropy Algorithmus zur Artverbreitungsmodellierung durchgeführt. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde ein umfangreicherer Datensatz an Fernerkundungsvariablen als in der bisherigen Literatur verwendet. Die entsprechenden Fernerkundungsprodukte wurden spezifisch aufgrund ihrer Eignung für die Beschreibung ökologisch relevanter Parameter, die sich auf die Verbreitungsgebiete von Arten auswirken, ausgewählt. Für den Zeitraum von 2001 bis 2009 wurden zwei Terra-MODIS Standardprodukte mit 1 km räumlicher und 16-tägiger zeitlicher Auflösung zu geglätteten, kontinuierlichen Zeitreihen zusammengefügt. Diese Produkte beinhalten den verbesserten Vegetationsindex (Enhanced Vegetation Index, EVI), Reflexionsgrade und die Landoberflächentemperatur (Land Surface Temperature, LST). Diese hochdimensionalen Zeitreihendaten wurden in insgesamt 18 phänologische sowie 35 statistische Maßzahlen überführt, welche auf der Basis einer umfassenden Sichtung der vorhandenen Literatur zusammengestellt wurden. Die Verbreitungsgebiete von zwölf Baumarten wurden mit Hilfe eines hierarchisch aufgebauten Ansatzes, welcher sowohl Klimadaten (WorldClim) als auch Fernerkundungsdaten des MODIS-Sensors berücksichtigt, modelliert. Die Studienarten sind repräsentativ für die in Mexiko vorkommenden Waldtypen und decken eine breite Spannweite ökologischer Eigenschaften wie Größe des Verbreitungsgebietes und Breite der ökologischen Nische ab. Als Studienobjekte wurden Bäume ausgewählt, weil sie im Feld mit hoher Wahrscheinlichkeit richtig erfasst werden und außerdem die fernerkundungsbasierte Kartierung von Vegetation bereits auf eine Vielzahl an Studien zurückgreifen kann. Durch die im Rahmen dieser Dissertation durchgeführten Untersuchungen konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Integration von Fernerkundungsdaten in Artverbreitungsmodelle ein signifikantes Potential zur Verbesserung der räumlichen Detailgenauigkeit und der Güte der Modellvorhersagen bietet. KW - Fernerkundung KW - Biodiversität KW - Landnutzung KW - Zeitreihenanalyse KW - Mexiko KW - Artverbreitungsmodellierung KW - Maximum Entropy Algorithmus KW - MODIS KW - Modellierung KW - Remote sensing KW - Species distribution modeling KW - Maximum Entropy algorithm KW - MODIS KW - Mexico Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-71021 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Willems, Coen H. M. P. A1 - Urlichs, Florian A1 - Seidenspinner, Silvia A1 - Kunzmann, Steffen A1 - Speer, Christian P. A1 - Kramer, Boris W. T1 - Poractant alfa (Curosurf (R)) increases phagocytosis of apoptotic neutrophils by alveolar macrophages in vivo JF - Respiratory Research N2 - Background: Clearance of apoptotic neutrophils in the lung is an essential process to limit inflammation, since they could become a pro-inflammatory stimulus themselves. The clearance is partially mediated by alveolar macrophages, which phagocytose these apoptotic cells. The phagocytosis of apoptotic immune cells by monocytes in vitro has been shown to be augmented by several constituents of pulmonary surfactant, e. g. phospholipids and hydrophobic surfactant proteins. In this study, we assessed the influence of exogenous poractant alfa (Curosurf (R)) instillation on the in vivo phagocytosis of apoptotic neutrophils by alveolar macrophages. Methods: Poractant alfa (200 mg/kg) was instilled intratracheally in the lungs of three months old adult male C57/Black 6 mice, followed by apoptotic neutrophil instillation. Bronchoalveloar lavage was performed and alveolar macrophages and neutrophils were counted. Phagocytosis of apoptotic neutrophils was quantified by determining the number of apoptotic neutrophils per alveolar macrophages. Results: Exogenous surfactant increased the number of alveolar macrophages engulfing apoptotic neutrophils 2.6 fold. The phagocytosis of apoptotic neutrophils was increased in the presence of exogenous surfactant by a 4.7 fold increase in phagocytosed apoptotic neutrophils per alveolar macrophage. Conclusions: We conclude that the anti-inflammatory properties of surfactant therapy may be mediated in part by increased numbers of alveolar macrophages and increased phagocytosis of apoptotic neutrophils by alveolar macrophages. KW - preterm KW - surfactant protein-A KW - respiratory-distress-syndrome KW - synthetic surfactant KW - human monocytes KW - SIRP-alpha KW - lung KW - cells KW - inflammation KW - resolution KW - anti inflammation KW - drug therapy KW - surfactant Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-130721 VL - 13 IS - 17 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schwerk, Christian A1 - Papandreou, Thalia A1 - Schuhmann, Daniel A1 - Nickol, Laura A1 - Borkowski, Julia A1 - Steinmann, Ulrike A1 - Quednau, Natascha A1 - Stump, Carolin A1 - Weiss, Christel A1 - Berger, Jürgen A1 - Wolburg, Hartwig A1 - Claus, Heike A1 - Vogel, Ulrich A1 - Ishikawa, Hiroshi A1 - Tenenbaum, Tobias A1 - Schroten, Horst T1 - Polar Invasion and Translocation of Neisseria meningitidis and Streptococcus suis in a Novel Human Model of the Blood-Cerebrospinal Fluid Barrier JF - PLoS One N2 - Acute bacterial meningitis is a life-threatening disease in humans. Discussed as entry sites for pathogens into the brain are the blood-brain and the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier (BCSFB). Although human brain microvascular endothelial cells (HBMEC) constitute a well established human in vitro model for the blood-brain barrier, until now no reliable human system presenting the BCSFB has been developed. Here, we describe for the first time a functional human BCSFB model based on human choroid plexus papilloma cells (HIBCPP), which display typical hallmarks of a BCSFB as the expression of junctional proteins and formation of tight junctions, a high electrical resistance and minimal levels of macromolecular flux when grown on transwell filters. Importantly, when challenged with the zoonotic pathogen Streptococcus suis or the human pathogenic bacterium Neisseria meningitidis the HIBCPP show polar bacterial invasion only from the physiologically relevant basolateral side. Meningococcal invasion is attenuated by the presence of a capsule and translocated N. meningitidis form microcolonies on the apical side of HIBCPP opposite of sites of entry. As a functionally relevant human model of the BCSFB the HIBCPP offer a wide range of options for analysis of disease-related mechanisms at the choroid plexus epithelium, especially involving human pathogens. KW - gene expression KW - plexus epithelial-cells KW - central-nervous-system KW - microvascular endothelial-cells KW - choroid-plexus KW - in vitro KW - brain barrier KW - tight junctions KW - meningococcal disease KW - bacterial meningitis Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-131459 VL - 7 IS - 1 ER - TY - THES A1 - Förtsch, Christina T1 - Pneumolysin: the state of pore-formation in context to cell trafficking and inflammatory responses of astrocytes T1 - Pneumolysin: Einfluss der Porenbildung auf zelluläre Transportprozesse und inflammatorische Antworten in Astrozyten N2 - Pneumolysin, a protein toxin, represents one of the major virulence factors of Streptococcus pneumoniae. This pathogen causes bacterial meningitis with especially high disease rates in young children, elderly people and immunosuppressed patients. The protein toxin belongs to the family of cholesterol-dependent cytolysins, which require membrane cholesterol in order to bind and to be activated. Upon activation, monomers assemble in a circle and undergo conformational change. This conformational change leads to the formation of a pore, which eventually leads to cell lysis. This knowledge was obtained by studies that used a higher concentration compared to the concentration of pneumolysin found in the cerebrospinal fluid of meningitis patients. Thus, a much lower concentration of pneumolysin was used in this work in order to investigate effects of this toxin on primary mouse astrocytes. Previously, a small GTPase activation, possibly leading to cytoskeletal changes, was found in a human neuroblastoma cell line. This led to the hypothesis that pneumolysin can lead to similar cytoskeletal changes in primary cells. The aim of this work was to investigate and characterise the effects of pneumolysin on primary mouse astrocytes in terms of a possible pore formation, cellular trafficking and immunological responses. Firstly, the importance of pore-formation on cytoskeletal changes was to be investigated. In order to tackle this question, wild-type pneumolysin and two mutant variants were used. One variant was generated by exchanging one amino acid in the cholesterol recognising region, the second variant was generated by deleting two amino acids in a protein domain that is essential for oligomerisation. These variants should be incapable of forming a pore and were compared to the wild-type in terms of lytic capacities, membrane binding, membrane depolarisation, pore-formation in artificial membranes (planar lipid bilayer) and effects on the cytoskeleton. These investigations resulted in the finding that the pore-formation is required for inducing cell lysis, membrane depolarisation and cytoskeletal changes in astrocytes. The variants were not able to form a pore in planar lipid bilayer and did not cause cell lysis and membrane depolarisation. However, they bound to the cell membrane to the same extent as the wild-type toxin. Thus, the pore-formation, but not the membrane binding was the cause for these changes. Secondly, the effect of pneumolysin on cellular trafficking was investigated. Here, the variants showed no effect, but the wild-type led to an increase in overall endocytotic events and was itself internalised into the cell. In order to characterise a possible mechanism for internalisation, a GFP-tagged version of pneumolysin was used. Several fluorescence-labelled markers for different endocytotic pathways were used in a co-staining approach with pneumolysin. Furthermore, inhibitors for two key-players in classical endocytotic pathways, dynamin and myosin II, were used in order to investigate classical endocytotic pathways and their possible involvement in toxin internalisation. The second finding of this work is that pneumolysin is taken up into the cell via dynamin- and caveolin-independent pinocytosis, which could transfer the toxin to caveosomes. From there, the fate of the toxin remains unknown. Additionally, pneumolysin leads to an overall increase in endocytotic events. This observation led to the third aim of this work. If the toxin increases the overall rate of endocytosis, the question arises whether toxin internalisation favours bacterial tissue penetration of the host or whether it serves as a defence mechanism of the cell in order to degrade the protein. Thus, several proinflammatory cytokines were investigated, as previous studies describe an effect of pneumolysin on cytokine production. Surprisingly, only interleukin 6-production was increased after toxin-treatment and no effect of endocytotic inhibitors on the interleukin 6-production was observed. The conclusion from this finding is that pneumolysin leads to an increase of interleukin 6, which would not depend on the endocytotic uptake of pneumolysin. The production of interleukin 6 would enhance the production of acute phase proteins, T-cell activation, growth and differentiation. On the one hand, this activation could serve pathogen clearance from infected tissue. On the other hand, the production of interleukin 6 could promote a further penetration of pathogen into host tissue. This question should be further investigated. N2 - Das Protein-Toxin Pneumolysin ist einer der entscheidenden Virulenzfaktoren von Streptococcus pneumoniae. Dieses Protein-Toxin gehört zur Familie der cholesterinabhängigen Zytolysine, die Membrancholesterol für ihre Aktivierung und Bindung benötigen. Nach der Membranbindung ordnen sich die Toxinmonomere kreisförmig an und ändern ihre Konformation, wodurch eine Pore entsteht, die dann zu einer Lyse der Zelle führt. Vor kurzem wurde nach Pneumolysinbehandlung in einer humanen Neuroblastomzelllinie eine Aktivierung kleiner GTPasen gefunden, die für zytoskelettale Veränderungen entscheidend sind (z.B. Zellbewegungen). Deshalb wurde die Hypothese aufgestellt, dass Pneumolysin diese zytoskelettalen Veränderungen auch in primären neuronalen Zellen auslösen könnte. Das Ziel dieser Arbeit war, die Effekte von Pneumolysin auf primäre Mausastrozyten im Hinblick auf Porenbildung, zelluläre Transportprozesse und immunologische Antworten zu untersuchen. Im ersten Teil wird die Bedeutung der Porenbildung auf zytoskelettale Veränderungen untersucht. Hierbei wurden lytische Fähigkeiten, Membranbindung, Membrandepolarisation, Porenbildung im künstlichen Bilayer und Effekte auf das Zytoskelett untersucht. Sowohl der Wildtyp als auch die Varianten zeigten die gleiche Stärke an Membranbindung. Diese Untersuchungen weisen darauf hin, dass die Porenbildung für die Zell-Lyse, Membrandepolarisation und zytoskelettale Veränderungen in Mausastrozyten wichtig ist und führt zu der Schlussfolgerung, dass nicht die Membranbindung, sondern die Porenbildung entscheidend für die beobachteten zytoskelettalen Veränderungen ist. Im zweiten Teil dieser Arbeit wurde der Effekt des Pneumolysin auf zelluläre Transportprozesse untersucht. Erneut zeigten die Pneumolysinvarianten keine Wirkung, während der Wildtyp die Gesamtrate der Endozytose erhöhte. Weiterhin wurde nur der Wildtyp internalisiert. Um einen möglichen Mechanismus für die Internalisierung des Toxins vorschlagen zu können, wurde Pneumolysin als GFP-markiertes Toxin genutzt. Weiterhin wurden einige Marker für unterschiedliche endozytotische Transportprozesse genutzt um eine Ko-lokalisation mit Pneumolysin-GFP zu ermöglichen. Des Weiteren wurden Inhibitoren für zwei Schlüsselproteine endozytotischer Vorgänge, Dynamin und Myosin II, genutzt. Die Ergebnisse dieser Untersuchungen zeigten, dass Pneumolysin wahrscheinlich durch dynamin- und caveolin-unabhängige Pinozytose in die Zelle aufgenommen wird. Dieser Mechanismus führt zu der Bildung von Caveosomen, deren weiterer Transport, und somit das Schicksal des internalisierten Toxins, bis heute noch nicht aufgeklärt ist. Die Beobachtung, dass Pneumolysin die Gesamtrate an Endozytose erhöht, führte zum dritten Teil dieser Arbeit. Wenn das Toxin die Gesamtrate an Endozytose erhöht, stellt sich die Frage, ob dieser Vorgang der Zerstörung des Toxins – also einer Abwehr der Zelle – dient, oder ob diese Internalisierung eine Strategie des Pathogens ist, um tiefer in das Wirtsgewebe einzudringen. Aktuelle Studien belegen, dass Pneumolysin einen Einfluss auf inflammatorische Antworten des Immunsystems hat. Aus diesem Grund wurden unterschiedliche proinflammatorische Zytokine untersucht. Überraschenderweise zeigte sich nur eine Erhöhung des Interleukin 6 nach der Toxinbehandlung. Weiterhin hatten die Endozytoseinhibitoren keinen Effekt auf die Produktion dieses proinflammatorischen Zytokins. Pneumolysin führt also zu einem Anstieg der Interleukin 6 Produktion, diese Produktion ist jedoch unabhängig von der Internalisierung dieses Toxins. Die Produktion dieses Interleukins würde zur Produktion der Akute-Phase Proteine, der Aktivierung der T-Zell Antwort, zu Wachstum und Zelldifferenzierung führen. Einerseits könnte diese Aktivierung die Infektion durch das Pathogen bekämpfen. Andererseits könnte S. pneumoniae die erhöhte Produktion durch PLY an Interleukin 6 nutzen um weiter in das Wirtsgewebe vordringen zu können. Diese Frage sollte noch durch weitere Experimente untersucht werden. KW - Streptococcus pneumoniae KW - Toxin KW - Hirnhautentzündung KW - Entzündung KW - Astrozyt KW - Pore KW - Pneumolysin KW - Meningitis KW - Inflammation KW - Zelltransport KW - Porenbildung KW - Pneumolysin KW - Meningitis KW - Inflammation KW - cellular-trafficking KW - Pore-formation Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-70892 ER - TY - THES A1 - Zhang, Guoliang T1 - Phytochemical Research on Two Ancistrocladus Species, Semi-Synthesis of Dimeric Naphthylisoquinoline Alkaloids, and Structure Optimization of Antitumoral Naphthoquinones T1 - Phytochemische Untersuchungen an zwei Ancistrocladus-Arten, Semi-Synthese dimerer Naphthylisochinolin-Alkaloide und Strukturoptimierung von antitumoralen Naphthochinonen N2 - Plant-derived natural products and their analogs continue to play an important role in the discovery of new drugs for the treatment of human diseases. Potentially promising representatives of secondary metabolites are the naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids, which show a broad range of activities against protozoan pathogens, such as plasmodia, leishmania, and trypanosoma. Due to the increasing resistance of those pathogens against current therapies, highly potent novel agents are still urgently needed. Thus, it is worthy to discover new naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids hopefully with pronounced bioactivities by isolation from plants or by synthesis. The naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids are biosynthetically related to another class of plant-derived products, the naphthoquinones, some of which have been recently found to display excellent anti-multiple myeloma activities without showing any cytotoxicities on normal blood cells. Multiple myeloma still remains incurable, although remissions may be induced with co-opted therapeutic treatments. Therefore, more potent naphthoquinones are urgently required, and can be obtained by isolation from plants or by synthesis. In detail, the results in this thesis are listed as follows: 1) Isolation and characterization of naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids from the stems of a Chinese Ancistrocladus tectorius species. Nine new naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids, named ancistectorine A1 (60), N-methylancistectorine A1 (61), ancistectorine A2 (62a), 5-epi-ancistectorine A2 (62b), 4'-O-demethylancistectorine A2 (63), ancistectorine A3 (64), ancistectorine B1 (65), ancistectorine C1 (66), and 5-epi-ancistrolikokine D (67) were isolated from the Chinese A. tectorius and fully characterized by chemical, spectroscopic, and chiroptical methods. Furthermore, the in vitro anti-infectious activities of 60-62 and 63-66 have been tested. Three of the metabolites, 61, 62a, and 62b, exhibited strong antiplasmodial activities against the strain K1 of P. falciparum without showing significant cytotoxicities. With IC50 values of 0.08, 0.07, and 0.03 μM, respectively, they were 37 times more active than the standard chloroquine (IC50 = 0.26 μM). Moreover, these three compounds displayed high antiplasmodial selectivity indexes ranging from 100 to 3300. According to the TDR/WHO guidelines, they could be considered as lead compounds. In addition, seven alkaloids, 69-74 (structures not shown here), were isolated from A. tectorius that were known, but new to the plant, together with another fourteen known compounds (of these, only the structures of the three main alkaloids, 5a, 5b, and 78 are shown here), which had been previously found in the plant. The three metabolites ancistrocladine (5a), hamatine (5b), and (+)-ancistrocline (78) were found to show no or moderate activities against the MM cell lines. 2) Isolation and characterization of naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids from the root bark of a new, botanically yet undescribed Congolese Ancistrocladus species. An unprecedented dimeric Dioncophyllaceae-type naphthylisoquinoline alkaloid, jozimine A2 (84), as first recognized by G. Bauckmann from an as yet undescribed Ancistrocladus species, was purified and characterized as part of this thesis. Its full structural assignment was achieved by spectroscopic and chiroptical methods, and further confirmed by an X-ray diffraction analysis, which had never succeeded for any other dimeric naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids before. Structurally, the dimer is composed of two identical 4'-O-demethyldioncophylline A halves, coupled through a sterically hindered central axis at C-3',3'' of the two naphthalene moieties. Pharmacologically, jozimine A2 (84) showed an extraordinary antiplasmodial activity (IC50 = 1.4 nM) against the strain NF54 of P. falciparum. Beside jozimine A2 (85), another new alkaloid, 6-O-demethylancistrobrevine C (84), and four known ones, ancistrocladine (5a), hamatine (5b), ancistrobrevine C (86), and dioncophylline A (6) were isolated from the Ancistrocladus species, the latter in a large quantity (~500 mg), showing that the plant produces Ancistrocladaceae-type, mixed-Ancistrocladaceae/Dioncophyllaceae-type, and Dioncophyllaceae-type naphthyl- isoquinoline alkaloids. Remarkably, it is one of the very few plants, like A. abbreviatus, and A. barteri, that simultaneously contain typical representatives of all the above three classes of alkaloids. 3) Semi-synthesis of jozimine A2 (85), 3'-epi-85, jozimine A3 (93) and other alkaloids from dioncophylline A (6). The dimeric naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids, jozimine A2 (85) and 3'-epi-85, constitute rewarding synthetic targets for a comparative analysis of their antiplasmodial activities and for a further confirmation of the assigned absolute configurations of the isolated natural product of 85. They were semi-synthesized in a four-step reaction sequence from dioncophylline A (6) in cooperation with T. Büttner. The key step was a biomimetic phenol-oxidative dimerization at C-3' of the N,O-dibenzylated derivative of 89 by utilizing Pb(OAc)4. This is the first time that the synthesis of such an extremely sterically hindered (four ortho-substituents) naphthylisoquinoline alkaloid – with three consecutive biaryl axes! – has been successfully achieved. A novel dimeric naphthylisoquinoline, jozimine A3 (93), bearing a 6',6''-central biaryl axis, was semi-synthesized from 5'-O-demethyldioncophylline A (90) by a similar biomimetic phenol-oxidative coupling reaction as a key step, by employing Ag2O. HPLC analysis with synthetic reference material of 3'-epi-85 and 93 for co-elution revealed that these two alkaloids clearly are not present in the crude extract of the Ancistrocladus species from which jozimine A2 (85) was isolated. This evidences that jozimine A2 (85) is very specifically biosynthesized by the plant with a high regio- and stereoslectivity. Remarkably, the two synthetic novel dimeric naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids 3'-epi-85 and 93 were found to display very good antiplasmodial activities, albeit weaker than that of the natural and semi-synthetic product 85. Additionally, the two compounds 3'-epi-85 and 93 possessed high or moderate selectivity indexes, which were much lower than that of 85. However, they can still be considered as new lead structures. Two unprecedented oxidative products of dioncophylline A, the diastereomeric dioncotetralones A (94a) and B (94b), were synthesized from dioncophylline A (6) in a one-step reaction. Remarkably, the aromatic properties in the “naphthalene” and the “isoquinoline” rings of 94a and 94b are partially lost and the “biaryl” axis has become a C,C-double bond, so that the two halves are nearly co-planar to each other, which has never been found among any natural or synthetic naphthylisoquinoline alkaloid. Their full structural characterization was accomplished by spectroscopic methods and quantum-chemical CD calculations (done by Y. Hemberger). The presumed reaction mechanism was proposed in this thesis. In addition, one of the two compounds, 94a, exhibited a highly antiplasmodial activity (IC50 = 0.09 μM) with low cytotoxicity, and thus, can be considered as a new promising lead structure. Its 2'-epi-isomer, 94b, was inactive, evidencing a significant effect of chirality on the bioactivity. Of a number of naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids tested against the multiple-myeloma cell lines, the three compounds, dioncophylline A (6), 4'-O-demethyldioncophylline A (89), and 5'-O-demethyldioncophylline A (90) showed excellent activities, even much stronger than dioncoquinones B (10), C (102), the epoxide 175, or the standard drug melphalan. 4) Isolation and characterization of bioactive naphthoquinones from cell cultures of Triphyophyllum peltatum. Three new naphthoquinones, dioncoquinones C (102), D (103), and E (104), the known 8-hydroxydroserone (105), which is new to this plant, and one new naphthol dimer, triphoquinol A (107), were isolated from cell cultures of T. peltatum in cooperation with A. Irmer. Dioncoquinone C (102) showed an excellent activity against the MM cells, very similar to that of the previously found dioncoquinone B (10), without showing any inhibitory effect on normal cells. The other three naphthoquinones, 103105, were inactive or only weakly active. 5) Establishment of a new strategy for a synthetic access to dioncoquinones B (10) and C (102) on a large scale for in vivo experiments and for the synthesis of their analogs for first SAR studies. Before the synthesis of dioncoquinone B (10) described in this thesis, two synthetic pathways had previously been established in our group. The third approach described here involved the preparation of the joint synthetic intermediate 42 with the previous two routes. The tertiary benzamide 135 was ortho-deprotonated by using s-BuLi/TMEDA, followed by transmetallation with MgBr2▪2Et2O, and reaction with 2-methylallyl bromide (139). It resulted in the formation of ortho-allyl benzamide 140, which was cyclized by using methyl lithium to afford the naphthol 42. This strategy proved to be the best among the established three approaches with regard to its very low number of steps and high yields. By starting with 136, this third strategy yielded the related bioactive natural product, dioncoquinone C (102), which was accessed by total synthesis for the first time. To identify the pharmacophore of the antitumoral naphthoquinones, a library of dioncoquinone B (10) and C (102) analogs were synthesized for in vitro testing. Among the numerous naphthoquinones tested, the synthetic 7-O-demethyldioncoquinone C (or 7-O-hydroxyldioncoquinone B) (145), constitutes another promising basic structure to develop a new anti-MM agent. Furthermore, preliminary SAR results evidence that the three hydroxy functions at C-3, C-5, and C-6 are essential for the biological properties as exemplarily shown through the compounds 10, 102, and 145. All other mixed OH/OMe- or completely OMe-substituted structures were entirely inactive. By a serendipity the expoxide 175 was found to display the best anti-MM activity of all the tested isolated metabolites from T. peltatum, the synthesized naphthoquinones, and their synthetic intermediates. Toxic effects of 175 on normal cells were not observed, in contrast to the high toxicities of all other epoxides. Thus, the anti-MM activity of 175 is of high selectivity. The preliminary SAR studies revealed that the 6-OMe group in 175 is required, thus differed with the above described naphthoquinones (where 6-OH is a requisite in 10, 102, and 145), which evidenced potentially different modes of action for these two classes of compounds. 6) The first attempted total synthesis of the new naturally occurring triphoquinone (187a), which was recently isolated from the root cultures of T. peltatum in our group. A novel naphthoquinone-naphthalene dimer, 187a (structure shown in Chapter 10), was isolated in small quantities from the root cultures of T. peltatum. Thus, its total synthesis was attempted for obtaining sufficient amounts for selected biotestings. The key step was planned to prepare the extremely sterically hindered (four ortho-substituents) binaphthalene 188 by a coupling reaction between the two 2-methylnaphthalene derivatives. Test reactions involving a system of two simplified 2-methylnaphthylboron species and 2-methylnaphthyl bromide proved the Buchwald ligand as most promising. The optimized conditions were then applied to the two true - highly oxygenated - coupling substrates, between the 2-methylnaphthylboron derivatives 210, 211, 213, or 214 and the 2-methylnaphthyl iodides (or bromides) 215 (206), 215 (206), 212 (205), or 212 (205), respectively. Unfortunately, this crucial step failed although various bases and solvent systems were tested. This could be due to the high electron density of the two coupling substrates, both bearing strongly OMOM/OMe-donating function groups. Therefore, a more powerful catalyst system or an alternative synthetic strategy must be explored for the total synthesis of 187a. 7) Phytochemical investigation of the Streptomyces strain RV-15 derived from a marine sponge. Cyclodysidins A-D (216-219), four new cyclic lipopeptides with a- and ß-amino acids, were isolated from the Streptomyces strain RV15 derived from a marine sponge by Dr. U. Abdelmohsen. Their structures were established as cyclo-(ß-AFA-Ser-Gln-Asn-Tyr-Asn-Ser-Thr) by spectroscopic analysis using 2D NMR techniques and CID-MS/MS in the course of this thesis. In conclusion, the present work contributes to the discovery of novel antiplasmodial naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids and antitumoral naphthoquinones, which will pave the way for future studies on these two classes of compounds. N2 - Naturstoffe pflanzlichen Ursprungs und deren Derivate waren seit jeher eine wichtige Quelle für die Entdeckung neuer Arzneistoffe. Darunter stellen die Naphthylisochinolin-Alkaloide eine besonders bedeutsame Klasse an Sekundärmetaboliten dar, die gegen eine breite Vielfalt an pathogenen Protozoen, wie z.B. Plasmodien, Leishmanien und Trypanosomen, aktiv sind. Die zunehmende Resistenz dieser Krankheitserreger gegen vorhandene Therapeutika macht die Erschließung neuer hochwirksamer Substanzen – durch direkte Isolierung aus Pflanzenmaterial oder chemische Synthese – zu einer lohnenswerten Aufgabe. Kürzlich wurde entdeckt, dass Naphthochinone, eine biosynthetisch eng mit den Naphthylisochinolin-Alkaloiden verwandte Naturstoffklasse, exzellente Aktivitäten gegen das Multiple Myelom aufweist. Diese Krebserkrankung ist mit gegenwärtigen Arzneimitteln nicht heilbar, wenngleich unterstützende Therapeutika zu einer Remission führen können. Die Suche nach pharmakologisch wirksamen Naphthochinonen, mittels Isolierung aus Pflanzen oder durch chemische Synthese, ist daher dringend geboten. Die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit umfassen im Detail die folgenden Teilbereiche: 1) Isolierung diverser Naphthylisochinolin-Alkaloide aus dem Stamm der chinesischen Ancistrocladus tectorius Spezies. Es Wurch neun neue Naphthylisochinlin-Alkaloide aus der in China beheimateten Pflanze A. tectorius. Diese umfassten die sechs 5,1'-gekuppelten Verbindungen Ancistectorin A1 (60), N-Methylancistectorin A1 (61), Ancistectorin A2 (62a), 5-epi-Ancistectorin A2 (62b), 4'-O-Demethylancistectorin A2 (63), Ancistectorin A3 (64), das 7,1'-gekuppelte Ancistectorin B1 (65), das 7,8'-verknüpfte Ancistectorin C1 (66), sowie das 5,8'-verknüpfte 5-epi-Ancistrolikokin D (65) die allesamt vollständig charakterisiert und auf ihre antiplasmodiale Aktivität untersucht wurden. Drei dieser Metabolite, 61, 62a, und 62b, zeigten eine starke antiplasmodiale Aktivität gegen den Stamm K1 von P. falciparum und dennoch keine signifikante Cytotoxizität. Mit IC50-Werten von 0.08, 0.07 und 0.03 μM waren sie 37 mal aktiver als der Standard Chloroquin (IC50 = 0.26 μM). Darüber hinaus verfügten diese drei Verbindungen über einen hohen antiplasmodialen Index von 100 bis 300. Laut WHO-Richtlinien können diese erfolgversprechenden Antimalaria-Wirkstoffe als neue Leitstrukturen angesehen werden. Des Weiteren wurden sieben bekannte Alkaloide, 69-74 (nicht abgebildet), erstmals aus A. tectorius isoliert. 14 weitere, aus dieser Pflanze bereits bekannte, Verbindungen (z.B. 5a, 5b, und 78) wurden ebenfalls gefunden. Die drei Hauptalkaloide Ancistrocladin (5a), Hamatin (5b) und (+)-Ancistroclin (78) hatten jedoch keine bzw. nur mäßige Aktivitäten gegen MM-Zelllinien. 2) Isolierung der Naphthylisochinolin-Alkaloide aus der Stammrinde einer neuen und botanisch noch unbeschriebenen, kongolesichen Ancistrocladus Spezies. Ein beispielloses dimeres Naphthylisochinolin-Alkaloid aus der Klasse der Dioncophyllaceae, Jozimin A2 (85), wurde aus einer bis dahin noch nicht beschriebenen Ancistrocladus Spezies in Zusammenarbeit mit G. Bauckmann isoliert. Mithilfe von spektroskopischen und chiroptischen Methoden erfolgte die vollständige Strukturaufklärung. Zum ersten Mal bei einem dimeren Naphthylisochinolin-Alkaloid wurde darüber hinaus dessen Struktur mittels Röntgenstrukturanalyse verifiziert. Die Struktur weist zwei identische miteinander verknüpfte 4'-O-Demethyldioncophyllin A Hälften auf, die in den Naphthalin-Einheiten an C-3' und C-3'' sterisch so stark gehindert sind, dass eine dritte rotationsstabile – und daher chirale – Achse vorliegt. Jozimin A2 (85) ragt pharmakologisch betrachtet durch die beste bis dahin gemessene antiplasmodiale Aktivität (IC50 = 1.4 nM, P. falciparum NF54) aller natürlichen monomeren und dimeren Naphthylisochinoline heraus. Neben Jozimin A2 (85) wurde ein weiteres neues Alkaloid, 6-O-Demethylancistrobrevin C (84), und die vier bekannten Monomere Ancistrocladin (5a), Hamatin (5b), Dioncophyllin A (6), und Ancistrobrevin C (86) aus dieser Ancistrocladus Spezies isoliert. Man konnte zeigen, dass die Pflanze Naphthylisochinolin-Alkaloide vom Ancistrocladaceae Typ, vom gemischten Ancistrocladaceae/Dioncophyllaceae Typ und vom Dioncophyllaceae Typ produziert. Dies ist umso bemerkenswerter, als dass nur wenige Pflanzen wie A. abbreviatus und A. barteri bekannt sind, die typische Vertreter aller drei Alkaloid-Klassen beinhalten. 3) Semi-Synthese des dimeren Naphthylisochinolin-Alkaloids Jozimine A2 (85) und seiner Derivate. Aufgrund seiner exzellenten antiplasmodialen Aktivität stellte das Naphthylisochinolin-Alkaloid Jozimin A2 (85), eine lohneswerte Zielstruktur für eine Synthese dar. Die Verbindung wurde durch Semisynthese in vier Stufen aus Dioncophyllin A (6) in Zusammenarbeit mit T. Büttner erschlossen. Als Schlüsselschritt erwies sich die biomimetische, oxidative Kupplung von 89 an C-3’ unter Verwendung von Pb(OAc)4. Der Aufbau einer solch sterisch gehinderten, zentralen Achse mit vier ortho-Substituenten wurde zum ersten Mal an Naphthylisochinolin-Alkaloiden erfolgreich durchgeführt. Zusammen mit Jozimin A2 (85) erhielt man sein 3',3''-Atropisomer 3'-epi-85. Parallel dazu wurde Jozimine A3 (93) dargestellt, dessen 6',6''-Zentral-Achse ebenfalls ausgehend von Dioncophyllin A (6) in einer Schlüsselsequenz mittels Ag2O aufgebaut wurde. HPLC-Coelutionsexperimente der synthetisch erhaltenen Verbindungen 3'-epi-85 und 93 zeigten zweifelsfrei, dass die beiden Alkaloide nicht im Rohextrakt der bisher unbestimmten Ancistrocladus-Art, aus welcher Jozimin A2 (85) isoliert wurde, vorhanden waren. Die Biosynthese von 85 erfolgt in der Pflanze offensichtlich mit hoher Spezifität. Die neuen synthetisch hergestellten, dimeren Naphthylisochinolin-Alkaloide 3'-epi-85 und 93 zeigten sehr gute, wenn auch im Vergleich zum natürlichen und semi-synthetisch erhaltenen 85 schwächere, antiplasmodiale Aktivitäten. Desweiteren besitzen die beiden Verbindungen 3'-epi-85 und 93 hohe bzw. moderate Selektivitäts-Indices, welche allerdings weit unter dem Wert von 85 liegen. Nichtsdestotrotz können sie als neue Leitstrukturen betrachtet werden. Im Verlauf der Synthese von Jozimin A2-Derivaten wurden des weiteren die zwei unbekannten Diastereoisomere, Dioncophynon A (94a) and B (94b), synthetisiert. Man erhielt diese in einer Stufe aus Dioncophyllin A (6). Die Strukturen von 94a und 94b zeichneten sich durch einen partiellen Verlust der Aromatizität am Naphthalin-Ring und eine C,C-Doppelbindung an der früheren Biarylachse aus. Die gefundenen Strukturmotive waren bis dahin weder von natürlichen noch von synthetischen Naphthylisochinolinen bekannt. Die vollständige Charakterisierung gelang durch spektroskopische Methoden und quantenchemische CD-Berechnungen (Y. Hemberger). Ein möglicher Mechanismus zur Bildung dieser Moleküle wurde ebenfalls in dieser Arbeit vorgestellt. Darüber hinaus zeigte eine dieser Verbindungen, 94a, eine hohe antiplasmodiale Aktivität (IC50 = 0.09 μM) bei gleichzeitig nur geringer Toxizität und konnte daher als vielversprechende Leitstruktur betrachtet werden. Dagegen war 94b inaktiv, was den signifikanten Effekt stereogener Elemente auf die Bioaktivität unterstrich. Aus einer ganzen Reihe von Naphthylisochinolin-Alkaloiden, die bzgl. ihrer Aktivität gegen das Multiple Myelom getestet wurden, zeigten v.a. drei Verbindungen, nämlich Dioncophyllin A (6), 4'-O-Demethyldioncophyllin A (89) und 5'-O-Demethyldioncophyllin A (90), exzellente Wirksamkeiten und übertrafen dabei sogar die Dioncochinone B (10) und C (102), das Epoxid 175 und die Referenzsubstanz Melphalan. 4) Isolierung der bioaktiven Naphthochinone aus Zellkulturen von Triphyophyllum peltatum. Drei neue Dioncochinone C (102), D (103) und E (104), das für diese Pflanze noch unbekannte 8-Hydroxydroseron (105) und ein neues Naphthalin-Dimer 107 wurden aus Zellkulturen von T. peltatum in Kooperation mit A. Irmer isoliert. Dioncochinon C (102) wies eine ausgezeichnete Aktivität gegen MM-Zellen, ähnlich zu der von Dioncochinon B, auf, wobei jedoch kein inhibierender Effekt auf normale Zellen beobachtet wurde. Die anderen drei Naphthochinone 103105 waren inaktiv oder nur sehr schwach aktiv gegenüber MM-Zellen. 5) Etablierung neuer Strategien für einen Zugang zu den Dioncochinonen B und C im großen Maßstab für In-vivo-Biotests sowie Synthese von Dioncochinon B-Analoga für SAR-Untersuchungen. Vor Beginn dieser Arbeiten zur Synthese von Dioncochinon B (10) existierten bereits zwei, in unserem Arbeitskreis erschlossene, Synthesewege. Die hier beschriebene dritte Möglichkeit zur Darstellung von Dioncochinon B (10) etablierte einen neuen Zugang zu dem gemeinsamen Intermediat 42. Man ortho-deprotonierte zunächst das tertiäre Amid 135 mit sec-BuLiTMEDA, führte anschließend eine Transmetallierung mit MgBr2▪2Et2O durch und setzte das Intermediat mit 2-Methylallylbromid (139) zum ortho-Allylbenzamid 140 um, welches schließlich mit Methyllithium zum Naphthol 42 zyklisiert wurde. Diese Strategie war den beiden früheren Ansätzen hinsichtlich der hohen Ausbeute und der geringen Anzahl an Synthesestufen überlegen. Darauf aufbauend gelang die erste Totalsynthese des bioaktiven Naturstoffes Dioncochinon C (102). Zur Untersuchung der Struktur-Wirkungs-Beziehung und zur Identifizierung des Pharmakophors der antitumoralen Naphthochinone wurden ca. 30 Analoga von Dioncochinon B (10) und C (102) synthetisiert und auf ihre Anti-MM-Wirkung getestet. Unter den zahlreichen dabei untersuchten Derivaten stellte die synthetische Verbindung 7-O-Demethyldioncochinon C (oder 7-O-Hydroxyldioncochinon B) (145) eine weitere vielversprechende Leitstruktur für die Entwicklung neuer Anti-MM-Kandidaten dar. Als besonders bemerkenswert erwiesen sich die antitumoralen Eigenschaften der Verbindungen 10, 102, und 145. Diese besitzen drei Hydroxygruppen an C-3, C-5 und C-6, die für Ihre biologischen Eigenschaften essentiell zu sein scheinen, da alle anderen Strukturen mit einem gemischten OH/OMe-Muster und jene vollständig OMe-substituierten Verbindungen inaktiv waren. Das Expoxid 175, zeigte unter allen natürlich vorkommenden als auch synthetischen Naphthochinonen und deren Derivaten die beste Aktivität gegen das Multiple Myelom. Gleichzeitig wurde keine Toxizität gegenüber normalen Zellen festgestellt. Dies stand im Gegensatz zu anderen Epoxiden, die über recht hohe Toxizitäten verfügten, wenngleich bei sehr guten Anti-MM-Aktivitäten. Umso bemerkenswerter ist die hohe Selektivität von 175 gegenüber Multiple-Myelom-Zellen. Einleitende SAR Studien zu 175 zeigten, dass die O-Me-Gruppe unbedingt erforderlich ist. Dies lässt auf einen von den Naphthochinonen 10, 102 und 145 verschiedenen Wirkmechanismus schließen, da die drei genannten Verbindungen an C-6 eine OH-Funktionalität tragen. 6) Die erste Totalsynthese eines neuen natürlichen Dimers aus T. peltatum, bestehend aus einer Naphthalin- und einer 1,2-Naphthochinon-Einheit. Man isolierte nur in Spuren ein neuartiges Naphthochinon-Naphthalin-Dimer 187a aus Wurzelkulturen von T. peltatum. Die Totalsynthese von 187a sollte deshalb ausreichende Mengen für ausgewählte Biotests verfügbar machen. Den Schlüsselschritt stellte die Kupplung von zwei sterisch sehr stark gehinderten 2-Methylnaphthalin-Ringen mit jeweils zwei ortho-Substituenten dar. Die Kupplung der 2-Methylnaphthylboronsäure -Derivate mit 2-Methylnaphthylbromid führte unter Verwendung des von Buchwald entwickelten Liganden 196, Pd2(dba)3 und geeigneten Lösungsmitteln und Basen zum racemischen Produkt. Die für das oben beschriebene System optimierten Bedingungen wurden auf die beiden genuinen – hoch-oxygenierten – Substrate die 2-Methylnaphthyl boronsäure-Derivate 210, 211, 213, oder 214 und 2-Methylnaphthyliodide (oder -bromide) 215 (206), 215 (206), 212 (205) oder 212 (205) angewandt. Leider führten zahlreiche Versuche unter Erprobung diverser Basen- und Lösungsmittelsysteme nicht zum Erfolg. Eine mögliche Erklärung liegt in der hohen Elektronendichte der beiden Kupplungspartner, die von den zwei bzw. drei Sauerstoffsubstituenten herrührt. Eine alternative Synthesestrategie oder der Einsatz eines leistungsfähigeren Katalysatorsystems muss deshalb zur Totalsynthese von 187a in Erwägung gezogen werden. 7) Phytochemische Untersuchung des marinen Streptomyces-Stammes RV-15 aus Schwämmen. Die vier neuen cyclischen Lipopeptide Cyclodysidin A-D (216219), welche sowohl aus - als auch - Aminosäuren aufgebaut sind, wurden aus RV-15, einem Streptomyces- Stamm, der mit Schwämmen vergesellschaft ist, isoliert. In Zusammenarbeit mit Dr. U. Abdelmohsen identifizierte man deren Struktur als Cyclo-(ß-AFA-Ser-Gln-Asn-Tyr-Asn- Ser-Thr) mithilfe von 2D-NMR-Spektroskopie und CID-MS/MS. KW - Ancistrocladus KW - dimerer Naphthylisochinolin-Alkaloide KW - Naphthochinonen KW - Ancistrocladus KW - Dimeric Naphthylisoquinoline Alkaloids KW - Naphthoquinones Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-72734 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Tu, Xiaolin A1 - Chen, Jianquan A1 - Lim, Joohyun A1 - Karner, Courtney M. A1 - Lee, Seung-Yon A1 - Heisig, Julia A1 - Wiese, Cornelia A1 - Surendran, Kameswaran A1 - Kopan, Raphael A1 - Gessler, Manfred A1 - Long, Fanxin T1 - Physiological Notch Signaling Maintains Bone Homeostasis via RBPjk and Hey Upstream of NFATc1 JF - PLoS Genetics N2 - Notch signaling between neighboring cells controls many cell fate decisions in metazoans both during embryogenesis and in postnatal life. Previously, we uncovered a critical role for physiological Notch signaling in suppressing osteoblast differentiation in vivo. However, the contribution of individual Notch receptors and the downstream signaling mechanism have not been elucidated. Here we report that removal of Notch2, but not Notch1, from the embryonic limb mesenchyme markedly increased trabecular bone mass in adolescent mice. Deletion of the transcription factor RBPjk, a mediator of all canonical Notch signaling, in the mesenchymal progenitors but not the more mature osteoblast-lineage cells, caused a dramatic high-bone-mass phenotype characterized by increased osteoblast numbers, diminished bone marrow mesenchymal progenitor pool, and rapid age-dependent bone loss. Moreover, mice deficient in Hey1 and HeyL, two target genes of Notch-RBPjk signaling, exhibited high bone mass. Interestingly, Hey1 bound to and suppressed the NFATc1 promoter, and RBPjk deletion increased NFATc1 expression in bone. Finally, pharmacological inhibition of NFAT alleviated the high-bone-mass phenotype caused by RBPjk deletion. Thus, Notch-RBPjk signaling functions in part through Hey1-mediated inhibition of NFATc1 to suppress osteoblastogenesis, contributing to bone homeostasis in vivo. KW - expression KW - axial skeletal defects KW - transcription factor KW - alagille syndrome KW - osteoblast differentiation KW - human jagged1 KW - aortic-valve KW - T cells KW - mutations KW - mice Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-133490 VL - 8 IS - 3 ER - TY - INPR A1 - Reiss, Harald T1 - Physical time and existence of time holes in non-transparent media N2 - The analysis presented in this paper applies to experimental situations where observers or objects to be studied (both stationary, with respect to each other) are located in environments the optical thickness of which is strongly different. By their large optical thickness, non-transparent media are clearly distinguished from their transparent counterparts. Non-transparent media comprise thin metallic films, packed or fluidised beds, the Earth’s crust, and even dark clouds and other cosmological objects. As a representative example, a non-transparent slab is subjected to transient disturbances, and a rigorous analysis is presented whether physical time reasonably could be constructed under such condition. The analysis incorporates mapping functions that correlate physical events, e, in non-transparent media, with their images, f(e), tentatively located on a standard physical time scale. The analysis demonstrates, however, that physical time, in its rigorous sense, does not exist under non-transparency conditions. A proof of this conclusion is attempted in three steps: i) the theorem “there is no time without space and events” is accepted, (ii) images f[e(s,t)] do not constitute a dense, uncountably infinite set, and (iii) sets of images that are not uncountably infinite do not create physical time but only time-like sequences. As a consequence, mapping f[e(s,t)] in non-transparent space does not create physical analogues to the mathematical structure of the ordered, dense half-set R+ of real numbers, and reverse mapping, f-1f[e(s,t)] would not allow unique identification and reconstruction of original events from their images. In these cases, causality and determinism, as well as invariance of physical processes under time reversal, might be violated. Existence of time holes could be possible, as follows from the sequence of images, f[e(s,t)], that is not uncountably infinite, in contrast to R+. Practical impacts are expected for understanding physical diffusion-like, radiative transfer processes, stability models to protect superconductors against quenchs or for description of their transient local pair density and critical currents. Impacts would be expected also in mathematical formulations (differential equations) of classical physics, in relativity and perhaps in quantum mechanics, all as far as transient processes in non-transparent space would be concerned. An interesting problem is whether temporal cloaking (a time hole) in a transparent medium, as very recently reported in the literature, can be explained by the present analysis. The analysis is not restricted to objects of laboratory dimensions: Because of obviously existing radiation transfer analogues, it is tempting to discuss consequences also for much larger structures in particular if an origin of time is postulated. KW - Strahlungstransport KW - Zeitrichtung KW - Supraleiter KW - Computersimulation KW - Non-transparency KW - disturbance KW - physical time KW - time hole Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-67268 N1 - Von diesem Artikel gibt es eine überarbeitete Version unter urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-73554. ER - TY - THES A1 - Mingebach, Markus Harald T1 - Photocurrent in Organic Solar Cells T1 - Photostrom in Organischen Solarzellen N2 - A quite new approach to low-cost mass production of flexible solar cells are organic photovoltaics. Even though the device efficiencies increased rapidly during the last years, further imporvements are essential for a successful market launch. One important factor influencing the device efficiency is the photocurrent of a solar cell, which is defined as the difference between the current under illumination and in the dark. In case of organic bulk heterojunction (BHJ) solar cells it is — in contrast to inorganic devices — dependent on the applied bias voltage. The voltage dependence results in a reduced fill factor and thus an even more pronounced influence of the photocurrent on the device efficiency. It is therefore crucial to understand the underlying processes determining the photocurrent in order to be able to further improve the solar cell performance. In a first step the photocurrent of P3HT:PC61BM devices was investigated by a pulsed measurement technique in order to prevent disturbing influences due to device heating under continous illumination. The resulting photocurrent was hyperbolic tangent like and featured a point symmetry, whose origin and meaning were discussed. In addition, the photocurrent was described by a combined model of Braun–Onsager and Sokel–Hughes theory for field dependent polaron pair dissociation and charge extraction, respectively. After this macroscopic view on the photocurrent, the focus of this work moves to the more basic processes determining the photocurrent: charge photogeneration and recombination. In a comparative study the field-dependence of these was investigated by time-delayed collection field (TDCF) measurements for two well-known reference systems, namely P3HT:PC61BM and MDMO-PPV:PC61BM. It was possible to identify two different dominating scenarios for the generation of free charge carriers. The first one — via a thermalized charge transfer state (CTS) — is clearly influenced by geminate recombination and therefore less efficient. In the second scenario, the free charge carriers are either generated directly or via an excited, “hot” CTS. In addition, clear differences in the nongeminate recombination dynamics of both material systems were found. Similar studies were also be presented with two modern low bandgap polymers which only differ by the bridging atom in the cyclopentadithiophene (PCPDTBT:PC71BM vs. Si-PCPDTBT:PC71BM). Such small changes in the chemical structure were already sufficient to affect the charge photogeneration as well as the morphology of the blend. These findings were set into relation to current–voltage characteristics in order to discuss the origin of the clear differences in the solar cell performance of both materials. Another crucial parameter limiting the solar cell efficiency is the builtin potential of a device. Within the range of semiconducting pn-junctions, Mott–Schottky analysis is an established method to determine the built-in potential. As it was originally derived for abrupt pn-junctions, its validity for organic BHJ solar cells — a bipolar, effective medium — was discussed. Experimental findings as well as the contradictions to Mott–Schottky theory indicated, that a direct transfer of this method to organic photovoltaics is not appropriate. Finally, the results obtained in the framework of the MOPS-project (Massengedruckte Organische Papier-Solarzellen) will be presented, in which the first completely roll-to-roll printed paper solar cells were realized. N2 - Ein relativ neuer Ansatz für eine günstige Massenproduktion flexibler Solarzellen ist dabei die organische Photovoltaik. Obwohl die Wirkungsgrade in den letzten Jahren schnell anstiegen, sind weitere Verbesserungen für eine erfolgreiche Markteinführung dringend nötig. Ein wichtiger Faktor ist dabei der Photostrom einer Solarzelle, der als Differenz zwischen Hell- und Dunkelstrom definiert ist. Im Gegensatz zu anorganischen Solarzellen ist dieser im Falle der organischen “bulk heterojunction”(Heterogemisch, Abk.: BHJ) Solarzellen von der angelegten Spannung abhängig. Dies führt zu einer Reduzierung des Füllfaktors und so zu einem noch stärkeren Einlufss des Photostroms auf die Leistung der Solarzelle. Es ist daher äußerst wichtig die grundlegenden, den Photostrom bestimmenden Prozesse zu verstehen, um die Leistung der organischen Solarzellen weiter steigern zu können. Zunächst wurde der Photostrom von P3HT:PC61BM Solarzellen mittels einer gepulsten Messmethode untersucht, die störende Einflüsse durch das Erwärmen der Probe unter kontinuierlicher Beleuchtung verhindern soll. Der resultierenden Photostrom wies einen dem Tangens Hyperbolicus ähnlichen Verlauf auf und zeigte dabei eine Punktsymmetrie, deren Ursprung und Bedeutung im Verlauf dieser Arbeit genauer diskutiert werden. Für die Beschreibung des spannungsabhängigen Photostroms wird außerdem ein kombiniertes Modell vorgestellt, welches auf den Theorien von Braun–Onsager und Sokel–Hughes für die feldabhängige Polaronenpaartrennung bzw. die Ladungsträgerextraktion basiert. Nach der makroskopischen Betrachtung des Photostroms wird sich der Fokus dann auf die grundlegenden, den Photostrom bestimmenden Prozesse verschieben: Photogenerierung und Rekombination der Ladungsträger. Die Feldabhängigkeit dieser Prozesse wurde dabei mittels time-delayed collection field (TDCF) Messungen an den beiden Referenz-Systemen P3HT:PC61BM und MDMO-PPV:PC61BM untersucht. Dadurch ließen sich neben deutlichen Unterschieden in der nichtgeminalen Rekombinationsdynamik freier Ladungsträger auch bei deren Photogeneration zwei unterschiedliche dominierende Prozesse identifizieren: Im ersten Szenario werden freie Ladungsträger über einen relaxierten Ladungstransferzustand (“charge transfer state” —CTS) generiert. Dieser Prozess ist jedoch durch einen deutlichen Einfluss der geminalen Rekombination stark feldabhängig und somit weniger effizient. Im zweiten Szenario werden die freien Ladungsträger entweder direkt oder über einen angeregten (“hot”) CTS erzeugt. Ähnliche Versuche wurden zudem für zwei neuartige Polymere mit niedrigen Bandlücken präsentiert, die sich jeweils nur durch das Brückenatom im Cyclopentadithiophen unterscheiden (PCPDTBT:PC71BM im Vergleich zu Si-PCPDTBT:PC71BM). Dies hatte jedoch deutliche Auswirkungen auf die Photogeneration freier Ladungsträger und die Morphologie der aktiven Schicht. Die entsprechenden Ergebnisse wurden dann in Relation zu den Strom–Spannungs-Kennlinien gesetzt, um die deutlichen Unterschiede in der Effizienz der Solarzellen zu diskutieren. Ein weiterer wichtiger, die Leistung einer Solarzelle begrenzender Parameter ist deren Diffusionsspannung (built-in potential, VBi). In der Physik halbleitender pn-Übergange ist die Mott–Schottky Analyse eine etablierte Methode um VBi zu bestimmen. Diese wurde ursprünglich für abrupte pn-Übergänge hergeleitet, weshalb hier deren Gültigkeit für organische BHJ Solarzellen — und damit ein bipolares, effektives Medium — diskutiert wird. Die experimentellen Ergebnisse ebenso wie die Widersprüche zur Mott–Schottky Theorie deuten darauf hin, dass eine direkte Übertragbarkeit dieser Methode auf organische BHJ Solarzellen nicht gegeben ist. Abschließend werden noch die Ergebnisse des MOPS-Projekts (Massengedruckte Organische Papier-Solarzellen) präsentiert, in dessen Verlauf die ersten komplett auf Papier gedruckten Solarzellen entwickelt wurden. KW - Organische Solarzelle KW - Fotovoltaik KW - Mott-Schottky Analyse KW - Papier-Solarzelle KW - organic bulk heterojunction solar cell KW - printed paper photovoltaics KW - photocurrent KW - recombination KW - capacity KW - Kapazität KW - Rekombination KW - Photostrom Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-73569 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Cornelius, C. A1 - Leingärtner, A. A1 - Hoiss, B. A1 - Krauss, J. A1 - Steffan-Dewenter, I. A1 - Menzel, A. T1 - Phenological response of grassland species to manipulative snowmelt and drought along an altitudinal gradient N2 - Plant communities in the European Alps are assumed to be highly affected by climate change since temperature rise in this region is above the global average. It is predicted that higher temperatures will lead to advanced snowmelt dates and that the number of extreme weather events will increase. The aims of this study were to determine the impacts of extreme climatic events on flower phenology and to assess whether those impacts differed between lower and higher altitudes. In 2010 an experiment simulating advanced and delayed snowmelt as well as drought event was conducted along an altitudinal transect ca. every 250m (600-2000 m a.s.l.) in the Berchtesgaden National Park, Germany. The study showed that flower phenology is strongly affected by altitude; however there were few effects of the manipulative treatments on flowering. The effects of advanced snowmelt were significantly greater at higher than at lower sites, but no significant difference was found between both altitudinal bands for the other treatments. The response of flower phenology to temperature declined through the season and the length of flowering duration was not significantly influenced by treatments. The stronger effect of advanced snowmelt at higher altitudes might be a response to differences in treatment intensity across the gradient. Consequently, shifts in the date of snowmelt due to global warming may affect species more at higher than at lower altitudes since changes may be more pronounced at higher altitudes. Our data indicate a rather low risk of drought events on flowering phenology in the Bavarian Alps. KW - Biologie KW - Advanced snowmelt KW - Alps KW - BBCH KW - Climate change KW - Delayed snowmelt KW - Flowering Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-77969 N1 - ist zugleich: IV. Kapitel der Dissertation von Bernhard Hoiß ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aad, G. A1 - Abbott, B. A1 - Abdallah, J. A1 - Abdelalim, A. A. A1 - Abdesselam, A. T1 - Performance of the ATLAS Trigger System in 2010 JF - The European Physical Journal C N2 - Proton–proton collisions at √s=7 TeV and heavy ion collisions at \(\sqrt{sNN}\)=2.76 TeV were produced by the LHC and recorded using the ATLAS experiment’s trigger system in 2010. The LHC is designed with a maximum bunch crossing rate of 40 MHz and the ATLAS trigger system is designed to record approximately 200 of these per second. The trigger system selects events by rapidly identifying signatures of muon, electron, photon, tau lepton, jet, and B meson candidates, as well as using global event signatures, such as missing transverse energy. An overview of the ATLAS trigger system, the evolution of the system during 2010 and the performance of the trigger system components and selections based on the 2010 collision data are shown. A brief outline of plans for the trigger system in 2011 is presented. KW - ATLAS KW - Trigger System Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-127321 VL - 72 IS - 1849 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Performance of missing transverse momentum reconstruction in proton-proton collisions at √s=7 TeV with ATLAS JF - The European Physical Journal C N2 - The measurement of missing transverse momentum in the ATLAS detector, described in this paper, makes use of the full event reconstruction and a calibration based on reconstructed physics objects. The performance of the missing transverse momentum reconstruction is evaluated using data collected in pp collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 7 TeV in 2010. Minimum bias events and events with jets of hadrons are used from data samples corresponding to an integrated luminosity of about 0.3 nb\(^{−1}\) and 600 nb\(^{−1}\) respectively, together with events containing a Z boson decaying to two leptons (electrons or muons) or a W boson decaying to a lepton (electron or muon) and a neutrino, from a data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of about 36 pb\(^{−1}\). An estimate of the systematic uncertainty on the missing transverse momentum scale is presented KW - momentum scale KW - Atlas detector KW - pp collision KW - systematic uncertainty KW - transverse momentum Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-127530 VL - 72 IS - 1844 ER - TY - THES A1 - Zinner, Thomas T1 - Performance Modeling of QoE-Aware Multipath Video Transmission in the Future Internet T1 - Leistungsmodellierung einer Mehrpfad Video Übertragung im zukünftigen Internet unter Berücksichtigung der QoE N2 - Internet applications are becoming more and more flexible to support diverge user demands and network conditions. This is reflected by technical concepts, which provide new adaptation mechanisms to allow fine grained adjustment of the application quality and the corresponding bandwidth requirements. For the case of video streaming, the scalable video codec H.264/SVC allows the flexible adaptation of frame rate, video resolution and image quality with respect to the available network resources. In order to guarantee a good user-perceived quality (Quality of Experience, QoE) it is necessary to adjust and optimize the video quality accurately. But not only have the applications of the current Internet changed. Within network and transport, new technologies evolved during the last years providing a more flexible and efficient usage of data transport and network resources. One of the most promising technologies is Network Virtualization (NV) which is seen as an enabler to overcome the ossification of the Internet stack. It provides means to simultaneously operate multiple logical networks which allow for example application-specific addressing, naming and routing, or their individual resource management. New transport mechanisms like multipath transmission on the network and transport layer aim at an efficient usage of available transport resources. However, the simultaneous transmission of data via heterogeneous transport paths and communication technologies inevitably introduces packet reordering. Additional mechanisms and buffers are required to restore the correct packet order and thus to prevent a disturbance of the data transport. A proper buffer dimensioning as well as the classification of the impact of varying path characteristics like bandwidth and delay require appropriate evaluation methods. Additionally, for a path selection mechanism real time evaluation mechanisms are needed. A better application-network interaction and the corresponding exchange of information enable an efficient adaptation of the application to the network conditions and vice versa. This PhD thesis analyzes a video streaming architecture utilizing multipath transmission and scalable video coding and develops the following optimization possibilities and results: Analysis and dimensioning methods for multipath transmission, quantification of the adaptation possibilities to the current network conditions with respect to the QoE for H.264/SVC, and evaluation and optimization of a future video streaming architecture, which allows a better interaction of application and network. N2 - Die Applikationen im Internet passen sich immer besser an unterschiedliche Anforderungen der Nutzer und variierende Netzwerkbedingungen an. Neue Mechanismen ermöglichen die zielgerichtete Anpassung der Anwendungsqualität und damit der benötigten Bandbreite. Im Falle von Videostreaming ermöglicht der skalierbare Videocodec H.264/SVC, die flexible Veränderung der Bildwiederholungsrate, der Auflösung des Videos und der Bildqualität an die vorhandenen Ressourcen im Netzwerk. Um eine gute vom Nutzer erfahrene Dienstgüte (Quality of Experience, QoE) zu garantieren, muss die Videoqualität richtig angepasst und optimiert werden. Aber nicht nur die Anwendungen des heutigen Internets haben sich verändert. Gerade in den letzten Jahren entstanden neue Netzwerk- und Transporttechnologien, welche eine flexiblere und effizientere Nutzung der Kommunikationsnetze erlauben. Eine dieser Techniken ist die Virtualisierung von Netzwerken. Sie erlaubt es auf einem gemeinsamen physikalischen Netz verschiedene logische Netze zu betreiben, die zum Beispiel Anwendungs-abhängige Adressierung unterstützen, eigene Namensgebung erlauben oder ein individuelles Ressourcen Management ermöglichen. Neuartige Transportmechanismen wie Mehrpfadübertragung auf Netzwerk- und Transportebene des ISO/OSI Stacks streben eine effiziente Ausnutzung der zur Verfügung stehenden Übertragungsmöglichkeiten an. Doch die simultane Übertragung von Daten über heterogene Kommunikationspfade und –technologien führt unausweichlich zu einer Veränderung der Reihenfolge, in der die Pakete ankommen. Es werden zusätzliche Mechanismen und Puffer benötigt, um die ursprüngliche Paketreihenfolge wieder herzustellen und so einen störenden Einfluss auf den Datentransport zu verhindern. Die richtige Dimensionierung dieser Puffer sowie die Klassifizierung des Einflusses von variierenden Pfadparametern wie Bandbreite und Verzögerungen setzen passende Evaluierungsmethoden voraus. Darüber hinaus werden für die Auswahl von geeigneten Pfaden aus einer Menge vorhandener Pfade echtzeitfähige Bewertungsmechanismen benötigt. Eine bessere Interaktion zwischen Applikationen und Netzwerk und der damit verbundene Informationsaustausch ermöglicht die effiziente Anpassung der Applikationsqualität an das Netzwerk und umgekehrt. Diese Doktorarbeit analysiert eine auf Mehrpfadübertragung und skalierbarer Videokodierung basierende Videostreaming Architektur und erarbeitet die folgenden Optimierungsmöglichkeiten und Auswertungen: Analyse- und Dimensionierungsmethoden für Mehrpfadübertragung, Quantifizierung der Anpassungsmöglichkeiten von SVC an das Netzwerk unter Berücksichtigung der QoE und Evaluierung und Optimierung einer zukünftigen Videostreaming Architektur, welche eine stärkere Interaktion zwischen Applikation und Netzwerk ermöglicht. T3 - Würzburger Beiträge zur Leistungsbewertung Verteilter Systeme - 03/12 KW - Videoübertragung KW - H.264 SVC KW - Modellierung KW - Quality-of-Experience KW - Mehrpfadübertragung KW - Multipath Transmission KW - Video Streaming KW - H.264/SVC KW - QoE KW - Performance Modeling Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-72324 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Zoephel, Judith A1 - Reiher, Wencke A1 - Rexer, Karl-Heinz A1 - Kahnt, Jörg A1 - Wegener, Christian T1 - Peptidomics of the Agriculturally Damaging Larval Stage of the Cabbage Root Fly Delia radicum (Diptera: Anthomyiidae) JF - PLoS One N2 - The larvae of the cabbage root fly induce serious damage to cultivated crops of the family Brassicaceae. We here report the biochemical characterisation of neuropeptides from the central nervous system and neurohemal organs, as well as regulatory peptides from enteroendocrine midgut cells of the cabbage maggot. By LC-MALDI-TOF/TOF and chemical labelling with 4-sulfophenyl isothiocyanate, 38 peptides could be identified, representing major insect peptide families: allatostatin A, allatostatin C, FMRFamide-like peptides, kinin, CAPA peptides, pyrokinins, sNPF, myosuppressin, corazonin, SIFamide, sulfakinins, tachykinins, NPLP1-peptides, adipokinetic hormone and CCHamide 1. We also report a new peptide (Yamide) which appears to be homolog to an amidated eclosion hormone-associated peptide in several Drosophila species. Immunocytochemical characterisation of the distribution of several classes of peptide-immunoreactive neurons and enteroendocrine cells shows a very similar but not identical peptide distribution to Drosophila. Since peptides regulate many vital physiological and behavioural processes such as moulting or feeding, our data may initiate the pharmacological testing and development of new specific peptide-based protection methods against the cabbage root fly and its larva. KW - adult drosophila KW - central-nervous-system KW - blowfly calliphora-vomitoria KW - drosophila melanogaster KW - mass spectometry KW - feeding behavior KW - fruit fly KW - functional characterization KW - immunoreactive neurons KW - neobellieria bullata Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-131727 VL - 7 IS - 7 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Brandt, Alexander U. A1 - Zimmermann, Hanna A1 - Kaufhold, Falko A1 - Promesberger, Julia A1 - Schippling, Sven A1 - Finis, David A1 - Aktas, Orhan A1 - Geis, Christian A1 - Ringelstein, Marius A1 - Ringelstein, E. Bernd A1 - Hartung, Hans-Peter A1 - Paul, Friedemann A1 - Kleffner, Ilka A1 - Dörr, Jan T1 - Patterns of Retinal Damage Facilitate Differential Diagnosis between Susac Syndrome and MS JF - PLoS One N2 - Susac syndrome, a rare but probably underdiagnosed combination of encephalopathy, hearing loss, and visual deficits due to branch retinal artery occlusion of unknown aetiology has to be considered as differential diagnosis in various conditions. Particularly, differentiation from multiple sclerosis is often challenging since both clinical presentation and diagnostic findings may overlap. Optical coherence tomography is a powerful and easy to perform diagnostic tool to analyse the morphological integrity of retinal structures and is increasingly established to depict characteristic patterns of retinal pathology in multiple sclerosis. Against this background we hypothesised that differential patterns of retinal pathology facilitate a reliable differentiation between Susac syndrome and multiple sclerosis. In this multicenter cross-sectional observational study optical coherence tomography was performed in nine patients with a definite diagnosis of Susac syndrome. Data were compared with age-, sex-, and disease duration-matched relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis patients with and without a history of optic neuritis, and with healthy controls. Using generalised estimating equation models, Susac patients showed a significant reduction in either or both retinal nerve fibre layer thickness and total macular volume in comparison to both healthy controls and relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis patients. However, in contrast to the multiple sclerosis patients this reduction was not distributed over the entire scanning area but showed a distinct sectorial loss especially in the macular measurements. We therefore conclude that patients with Susac syndrome show distinct abnormalities in optical coherence tomography in comparison to multiple sclerosis patients. These findings recommend optical coherence tomography as a promising tool for differentiating Susac syndrome from MS. KW - optical coherence tomography KW - vasculopathy KW - artery occlusion KW - hearing loss KW - microangiopathy KW - brain KW - endotheliopathy KW - antibodies KW - multiple-sclerosis KW - retinocochleocerebral Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-134013 VL - 7 IS - 6 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Matlach, Juliane A1 - Slobodda, Joerg A1 - Grehn, Franz A1 - Klink, Thomas T1 - Pars plana vitrectomy for malignant glaucoma in non-glaucomatous and in filtered glaucomatous eyes N2 - Purpose: To assess the outcomes of pars plana vitrectomy for the treatment of malignant glaucoma in patients with and without previous filtration surgery. Patients and methods: Data of 15 patients developing malignant glaucoma after trabeculectomy (60%) or following ophthalmic interventions other than filtration surgery (40%) were recorded retrospectively. Pars plana vitrectomy was performed in case of failed medical or laser treatment recreating the normal pathway of aqueous humor. The main outcome measures were the postoperative intraocular pressure (IOP), the frequency of complications, and success rate based on the following criteria: IOP reduction by $20% and to #21 mmHg (definition one) or an IOP , 18 mmHg (definition two) with (qualified success) and without (complete success) glaucoma medication. Results: Vitrectomy reduced IOP from baseline in eyes with and without previous trabeculectomy during a median follow-up of 16.4 months (range 7 days to 58 months); although the majority of patients required glaucoma medication to reach desired IOP. The complete success rates were 11% (both definitions) for patients with filtering blebs and none of the patients without previous trabeculectomy had complete success at the 12-month visit. Complications were few and included transient shallowing of the anterior chamber, choroidal detachment, corneal decompensation, filtering bleb failure, and need for further IOP-lowering procedures. Conclusion: Pars plana vitrectomy is equally effective for malignant glaucoma caused by trabeculectomy or interventions other than filtration surgery, although IOP-lowering medication is necessary in nearly all cases to maintain target IOP. KW - Medizin KW - ciliolenticular block glaucoma KW - malignant glaucoma KW - pars plana vitrectomy KW - trabeculectomy Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-76375 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Margapoti, E. A1 - Alves, F. M. A1 - Mahapatra, S. A1 - Lopez-Richard, V. A1 - Worschech, L. A1 - Brunner, K. A1 - Qu, F. A1 - Destefani, C. A1 - Menendez-Proupin, E. A1 - Bougerol, C. A1 - Forchel, A. A1 - Marques, G. E. T1 - Paramagnetic shift in thermally annealed Cd\(_x\)Zn\(_{1-x}\)Se quantum dots JF - New Journal of Physics N2 - The photoluminescence of annealed Cd\(_x\)Zn\(_{1-x}\)Se quantum dots (QDs) under the influence of an external magnetic field has been studied in this paper. Post-growth annealing was performed for different annealing times. Above a critical annealing time, the QD luminescence shows a pronounced red-shift of the Zeeman split magnetic subcomponents. This observation is in contrast to the blue-shift caused by the diamagnetic behavior that is usually observed in non-magnetic QDs. We attribute our finding to the paramagnetism caused by the mixing of heavy and light hole states. Hence, post-growth thermal annealing treatment might be employed to render undoped epitaxial QDs intrinsically magnetic in a controlled manner. Two theoretical models were developed: a few-particle model to account for excitonic complex effects and a multiband calculation that describes the valence band hybridization. Contrasting the two models allowed us to unambiguously elucidate the nature of such an effect. KW - semiconductors Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-133294 VL - 14 IS - 043038 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Jakubietz, Michael G. A1 - Gruenert, Joerg G. A1 - Jakubietz, Rafael G. T1 - Palmar and dorsal fixed-angle plates in AO C-type fractures of the distal radius: is there an advantage of palmar plates in the long term? JF - Journal of Orthopedic Surgery and Research N2 - Background: Current surgical approaches to the distal radius include dorsal and palmar plate fixation. While palmar plates have gained widespread popularity, few reports have provided data on long term clinical outcomes in comparison. This paper reports the result of a randomised clinical study comparing dorsal Pi plates and palmar, angle-stable plates for treatment of comminuted, intraarticular fractures of the distal radius over the course of twelve months. Methods: 42 patients with unilateral, intraarticular fractures of the distal radius were included and randomised to 2 groups, 22 were treated with a palmar plate, 20 received a dorsal Pi-plate. Results were evaluated after 6 weeks, 3, 6 and 12 months postoperatively focussing on functional recovery as well as radiological results. Results: The palmar plate group demonstrated significantly better results regarding range of motion and grip strength over the course of 12 months. While a comparable increase in function was observed in both groups, the better results from the early postoperative period in the palmar plate group prevailed over the whole course. Radiological results showed a significantly increased palmar tilt and carpal sag in dorsal plates, with other radiological parameters being comparable. Pain levels were decreased in dorsal plates after hardware removal and failed to show significant differences after 12 months. However, complications such as tendon ruptures were more frequent in the dorsal plate group. Conclusions: Functional advantage of palmar plates gained within the first 6 weeks prevails over the course of a year. Both groups demonstrate further gradual increase of function after 6 months, although dorsal plates did not catch up completely. Improved early postoperative function seems to be the cornerstone for the best possible results. Patients with dorsal plates benefit from hardware removal more than palmar plates in terms of reduction of pain levels. The advantage of palmar plates is a faster functional recovery with lower complication rates. This is especially important in the elderly population. Radiological results did not show a superiority of palmar plates over dorsal plates. KW - internal fixation KW - intraarticular fractures KW - percutaneous fixation KW - open reduction KW - trial Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-133987 VL - 7 IS - 8 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Roesler, Joachim A1 - Segerer, Florian A1 - Morbach, Henner A1 - Kleinert, Stefan A1 - Thieme, Sebastian A1 - Rösen-Wolff, Angela A1 - Liese, Johannes G. T1 - P67-phox (NCF2) Lacking Exons 11 and 12 Is Functionally Active and Leads to an Extremely Late Diagnosis of Chronic Granulomatous Disease (CGD) JF - PLoS One N2 - Two brothers in their fifties presented with a medical history of suspected fungal allergy, allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis, alveolitis, and invasive aspergillosis and pulmonary fistula, respectively. Eventually, after a delay of 50 years, chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) was diagnosed in the index patient. We found a new splice mutation in the NCF2 (p67-phox) gene, c.1000+2T -> G, that led to several splice products one of which lacked exons 11 and 12. This deletion was in frame and allowed for remarkable residual NADPH oxidase activity as determined by transduction experiments using a retroviral vector. We conclude that p67-phox which lacks the 34 amino acids encoded by the two exons can still exert considerable functional activity. This activity can partially explain the long-term survival of the patients without adequate diagnosis and treatment, but could not prevent progressing lung damage. KW - P67(PHOX) KW - NADPH oxidase KW - European experience KW - interferon gamma KW - gene KW - region KW - prophylaxis KW - infection KW - mutation Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-134948 VL - 7 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Fazel-Rezai, Reza A1 - Allison, Brendan Z. A1 - Guger, Christoph A1 - Sellers, Eric W. A1 - Kleih, Sonja C. A1 - Kübler, Andrea T1 - P300 brain computer interface: current challenges and emerging trends N2 - A brain-computer interface (BCI) enables communication without movement based on brain signals measured with electroencephalography (EEG). BCIs usually rely on one of three types of signals: the P300 and other components of the event-related potential (ERP), steady state visual evoked potential (SSVEP), or event related desynchronization (ERD). Although P300 BCIs were introduced over twenty years ago, the past few years have seen a strong increase in P300 BCI research. This closed-loop BCI approach relies on the P300 and other components of the ERP, based on an oddball paradigm presented to the subject. In this paper, we overview the current status of P300 BCI technology, and then discuss new directions: paradigms for eliciting P300s; signal processing methods; applications; and hybrid BCIs. We conclude that P300 BCIs are quite promising, as several emerging directions have not yet been fully explored and could lead to improvements in bit rate, reliability, usability, and flexibility. KW - Psychologie KW - brain computer interface KW - P300 KW - event-related potential Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-75941 ER - TY - THES A1 - Hu, Wanning T1 - Organometal half-sandwich complexes and their bioconjugates: Biological activity on cancer cells and potential applications in biolabelling T1 - Organometall-Halbsandwich Komplexe und ihre Biokonjugate: Die biologischen Eigenschaften auf Krebszellen und die potenziellen Anwendungen in Biolabelling N2 - In summary, structure-activity relationships in peptide and dendrimer carriers modified with different organometal complexes were studied on a human breast cancer cell line. Variation of the organometal cargo and carrier can significantly influence their biological properties and might open the way to new approaches in chemotherapy. Furthermore, the incorporation of complexes with different C≡O vibrational signatures in a model peptide was explored to examine information encoding in biomolecules in a barcoding strategy for potential imaging applications. In particular for the latter, additional stable metal-carbonyl markers need to be prepared in future work to expand the pool of vibrational labels available. N2 - In der vorliegenden Arbeit konnten also Struktur-Wirkungs-Beziehungen für Organometall-Peptid- und Dendrimer-Konjugate mit unterschiedlichen funktionellen Gruppen an einer humanen Brustkrebs-Zelllinie untersucht werden. Die Variation der Organometall-Gruppen und des Trägermoleküls führen zu signifikanten Unterschieden in ihrer biologischen Aktivität. Zusätzlich wurden Modell-Peptide mit verschiedenen Metallcarbonyl-basierten IR-Markern versehen um diese in einer Barcoding-Strategie zu labeln. In Zukunft soll das Spektrum der verfügbaren, nicht-überlappenden Schwingungsmarker noch deutlich erweitert werden. KW - Konjugate KW - Sandwich-Verbindungen KW - Metallorganische Verbindungen KW - bioconjugate KW - CPP-peptide KW - dendrimer KW - biolabelling KW - organometal complexes KW - cymantrene KW - Biokonjugate KW - CPP Peptide KW - Dendrimer KW - Biolabelling KW - Organometall-Komplexe KW - Cymantren Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-87899 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kotte, K. A1 - Löw, F. A1 - Huber, S. G. A1 - Krause, T. A1 - Mulder, I. A1 - Schöler, H. F. T1 - Organohalogen emissions from saline environments - spatial extrapolation using remote sensing as most promising tool JF - Biogeosciences N2 - Due to their negative water budget most recent semi-/arid regions are characterized by vast evaporates (salt lakes and salty soils). We recently identified those hyper-saline environments as additional sources for a multitude of volatile halogenated organohalogens (VOX). These compounds can affect the ozone layer of the stratosphere and play a key role in the production of aerosols. A remote sensing based analysis was performed in the Southern Aral Sea basin, providing information of major soil types as well as their extent and spatial and temporal evolution. VOX production has been determined in dry and moist soil samples after 24 h. Several C1- and C2 organohalogens have been found in hyper-saline topsoil profiles, including CH3Cl, CH3Br, CHBr3 and CHCl3. The range of organohalogens also includes trans-1,2-dichloroethene (DCE), which is reported here to be produced naturally for the first time. Using MODIS time series and supervised image classification a daily production rate for DCE has been calculated for the 15 000 km\(^2\) ranging research area in the southern Aralkum. The applied laboratory setup simulates a short-term change in climatic conditions, starting from dried-out saline soil that is instantly humidified during rain events or flooding. It describes the general VOX production potential, but allows only for a rough estimation of resulting emission loads. VOX emissions are expected to increase in the future since the area of salt affected soils is expanding due to the regressing Aral Sea. Opportunities, limits and requirements of satellite based rapid change detection and salt classification are discussed. KW - aral sea basin KW - methyl-bromide KW - methane emissions KW - abiotic formation KW - time series KW - salt lakes KW - land KW - Uzbekistan KW - soils/sediments KW - classifiaction Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-134265 VL - 9 IS - 3 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aeschlimann, Martin A1 - Bauer, Michael A1 - Bayer, Daniela A1 - Brixner, Tobias A1 - Cunovic, Stefan A1 - Fischer, Alexander A1 - Melchior, Pascal A1 - Pfeiffer, Walter A1 - Rohmer, Martin A1 - Schneider, Christian A1 - Strüber, Christian A1 - Tuchscherer, Philip A1 - Voronine, Dimitri V. T1 - Optimal open-loop near-field control of plasmonic nanostructures N2 - Optimal open-loop control, i.e. the application of an analytically derived control rule, is demonstrated for nanooptical excitations using polarization-shaped laser pulses. Optimal spatial near-field localization in gold nanoprisms and excitation switching is realized by applying a shift to the relative phase of the two polarization components. The achieved near-field switching confirms theoretical predictions, proves the applicability of predefined control rules in nanooptical light–matter interaction and reveals local mode interference to be an important control mechanism. KW - Chemie Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-75256 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hubert, Kerstin A1 - Pawlik, Marie-Christin A1 - Claus, Heike A1 - Jarva, Hanna A1 - Meri, Seppo A1 - Vogel, Ulrich T1 - Opc Expression, LPS Immunotype Switch and Pilin Conversion Contribute to Serum Resistance of Unencapsulated Meningococci JF - PLoS One N2 - Neisseria meningitidis employs polysaccharides and outer membrane proteins to cope with human serum complement attack. To screen for factors influencing serum resistance, an assay was developed based on a colorimetric serum bactericidal assay. The screening used a genetically modified sequence type (ST)-41/44 clonal complex (cc) strain lacking LPS sialylation, polysaccharide capsule, the factor H binding protein (fHbp) and MutS, a protein of the DNA repair mechanism. After killing of >99.9% of the bacterial cells by serum treatment, the colorimetric assay was used to screen 1000 colonies, of which 35 showed enhanced serum resistance. Three mutant classes were identified. In the first class of mutants, enhanced expression of Opc was identified. Opc expression was associated with vitronectin binding and reduced membrane attack complex deposition confirming recent observations. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) immunotype switch from immunotype L3 to L8/L1 by lgtA and lgtC phase variation represented the second class. Isogenic mutant analysis demonstrated that in ST-41/44 cc strains the L8/L1 immunotype was more serum resistant than the L3 immunotype. Consecutive analysis revealed that the immunotypes L8 and L1 were frequently observed in ST-41/44 cc isolates from both carriage and disease. Immunotype switch to L8/L1 is therefore suggested to contribute to the adaptive capacity of this meningococcal lineage. The third mutant class displayed a pilE allelic exchange associated with enhanced autoaggregation. The mutation of the C terminal hypervariable region D of PilE included a residue previously associated with increased pilus bundle formation. We suggest that autoaggregation reduced the surface area accessible to serum complement and protected from killing. The study highlights the ability of meningococci to adapt to environmental stress by phase variation and intrachromosomal recombination affecting subcapsular antigens. KW - factor H KW - C-reactive protein KW - B neisseria meningitidis KW - outer membrane protein KW - phase variation KW - serogroup B KW - bactericidal activity KW - epithelial cells KW - gene conversion KW - strain MC58 Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-135421 VL - 7 IS - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hartung, Andreas A1 - Seufert, Florian A1 - Berges, Carsten A1 - Gessner, Viktoria H. A1 - Holzgrabe, Ulrike T1 - One-Pot Ugi/Aza-Michael Synthesis of Highly Substituted 2,5-Diketopiperazines with Anti-Proliferative Properties JF - Molecules N2 - The well-known Ugi reaction of aldehydes with amines, carboxylic acids and isocyanides leads to the formation of acyclic alpha-acylaminocarboxamides. Replacement of the carboxylic acid derivatives with beta-acyl substituted acrylic acids gives access to highly substituted 2,5-diketopiperazines in one single reaction-step without additives or complex reaction procedures. The obtained diketopiperazines show anti-proliferative effects on activated T cells and represent therefore potential candidates for targeting unwanted T cell-mediated immune responses. KW - multicomponent Ugi-type reaction KW - intramolecular Michael addition KW - strategy KW - derivates KW - diketopiperazines KW - chemistry KW - T cell KW - 2,5-diketopiperazines KW - anti-proliferative effects Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-130423 VL - 17 IS - 12 ER - TY - THES A1 - Blumenstein, Christian T1 - One-Dimensional Electron Liquid at a Surface: Gold Nanowires on Ge(001) T1 - Eindimensionale Elektronenflüssigkeit an einer Oberfläche: Gold Nanodrähte auf Ge(001) N2 - Selbstorganisierte Nanodrähte auf Halbleiteroberflächen ermöglichen die Untersuchung von Elektronen in niedrigen Dimensionen. Interessanterweise werden die elektronischen Eigenschaften des Systems von dessen Dimensionalität bestimmt, und das noch über das Quasiteilchenbild hinaus. Das quasi-eindimensionale (1D) Regime zeichnet sich durch eine schwache laterale Kopplung zwischen den Ketten aus und ermöglicht die Ausbildung einer Peierls Instabilität. Durch eine Nesting Bedingung in der Fermi Fläche kommt es zu einer Bandrückfaltung und damit zu einem isolierenden Grundzustand. Dies wird begleitet von einer neuen Überstruktur im Realraum, die mit dem Nestingvektor korrespondiert. In früheren Nanodrahtsystemen wurde ein solcher Effekt gezeigt. Dazu geh ̈oren Indium Ketten auf Si(111) und die Gold rekonstruierten Substrate Si(553) und Si(557). Die Theorie sagt jedoch einen weiteren Zustand voraus, der nur im perfekten 1D Grenzfall existiert und der bei geringster Kopplung mit höheren Dimensionen zerstört wird. Dieser Zustand wird Tomonaga-Luttinger Flüssigkeit (TLL) genannt und führt zu einem Zusammenbruch des Quasiteilchenbildes der Fermi-Flüssigkeit. Hier sind nur noch kollektive Anregungen der Elektronen erlaubt, da die starke laterale Einschränkung zu einer erhöhten Kopplung zwischen den Teilchen führt. Dadurch treten interessante Effekte wie Spin-Ladungs-Trennung auf, bei dem sich die Ladung und der Spin eines Elektrons entkoppeln und getrennt voneinander durch den Nanodraht bewegen können. Bis heute wurde solch ein seltener Zustand noch nicht an einer Oberfläche beobachtet. In dieser Arbeit wird ein neuer Ansatz zur Herstellung von besser definierten 1D Ketten gewählt. Dazu wird die Au-rekonstruierte Ge(001) Nanodraht-Oberfläche untersucht. Für die Präparation des Substrates wird ein neues Rezept entwickelt, welches eine langreichweitig geordnete Oberfläche erzeugt. Um das Wachstum der Nanodrähte zu optimieren wird das Wachstums-Phasendiagramm ausgiebig untersucht. Außerdem werden die strukturellen Bausteine der Ketten sehr genau beschrieben. Es ist bemerkenswert, dass ein struktureller Phasenübergang der Ketten oberhalb von Raumtemperatur gefunden wird. Aufgrund von spektroskopischen Untersuchungen kann eine Peierls Instabilität als Ursache ausgeschlossen werden. Es handelt sich um einen 3D-Ising-Typ Übergang an dem das Substrat ebenfalls beteiligt ist. Die Untersuchungen zur elektronischen Struktur der Ketten zeigen zwei deutliche Erkennungsmerkmale einer TLL: Ein potenzgesetzartiger Verlauf der Zustandsdichte und universales Skalenverhalten. Daher wird zum ersten Mal eine TLL an einer Oberfläche nachgewiesen, was nun gezielt lokale Untersuchungen und Manipulationen ermöglicht. Dazu gehören (i) Dotierung mit Alkalimetallen, (ii) die Untersuchung von Kettenenden und (iii) die einstellbare Kopplung zwischen den Ketten durch zusätzliche Goldatome. Damit wird ein wichtiger Beitrag zu theoretischen Vorhersagen und Modellen geliefert und somit das Verständnis korrelierter Elektronen vorangetrieben. N2 - Self-organized nanowires at semiconductor surfaces offer the unique opportunity to study electrons in reduced dimensions. Notably the dimensionality of the system determines it’s electronic properties, beyond the quasiparticle description. In the quasi-one-dimensional (1D) regime with weak lateral coupling between the chains, a Peierls instability can be realized. A nesting condition in the Fermi surface leads to a backfolding of the 1D electron band and thus to an insulating state. It is accompanied by a charge density wave (CDW) in real space that corresponds to the nesting vector. This effect has been claimed to occur in many surface-defined nanowire systems, such as the In chains on Si(111) or the Au reconstructions on the terraced Si(553) and Si(557) surfaces. Therefore a weak coupling between the nanowires in these systems has to be concluded. However theory proposes another state in the perfect 1D limit, which is completely destroyed upon slight coupling to higher dimensions. In this so-called Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid (TLL) state, the quasiparticle description of the Fermi liquid breaks down. Since the interaction between the electrons is enhanced due to the strong confinement, only collective excitations are allowed. This leads to novel effects like spin charge separation, where spin and charge degrees of freedom are decoupled and allowed to travel independently along the 1D-chain. Such rare state has not been realized at a surface until today. This thesis uses a novel approach to realize nanowires with improved confinement by studying the Au reconstructed Ge(001) surface. A new cleaning procedure using piranha solution is presented, in order to prepare a clean and long-range ordered substrate. To ensure optimal growth of the Au nanowires the phase diagram is extensively studied by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and low energy electron diffraction (LEED). The structural elements of the chains are revealed and described in high detail. Remarkably a structural phase transition of the delicate wire structure is found to occur above room temperature. Due to the lack of energy gaps a Peierls transition can be excluded as its origin. The transition is rather determined as 3D Ising type and therefore includes the substrate as well. Two hallmark properties of a TLL are found in the Au/Ge(001) wires by spectroscopic studies: Power-law suppression of the density of states (DOS) and universal scaling. This impressively proves the existence of a TLL in these chains and opens up a gateway to an atomic playground. Local studies and manipulations of a TLL state become possible for the first time. These comprise (i) doping by alkaline atoms, (ii) studies on chain ends and (iii) tunable coupling between the chains by additional Au atoms. Most importantly these manipulations offer input and test for theoretical models and predictions, and are thereby ultimately advancing the field of correlated electrons. KW - Nanodraht KW - Germanium KW - Gold KW - Elektronenflüssigkeit KW - Luttinger liquide KW - Tunneling spectroscopy KW - nanowires KW - one-dimensional KW - nano KW - Luttinger-Flüssigkeit KW - Rastertunnelmikroskop KW - Oberflächenphysik Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-72801 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Patil, Sandeep S. A1 - Gentschev, Ivaylo A1 - Nolte, Ingo A1 - Ogilvie, Gregory A1 - Szalay, Aladar A. T1 - Oncolytic virotherapy in veterinary medicine: current status and future prospects for canine patients N2 - Oncolytic viruses refer to those that are able to eliminate malignancies by direct targeting and lysis of cancer cells, leaving non-cancerous tissues unharmed. Several oncolytic viruses including adenovirus strains, canine distemper virus and vaccinia virus strains have been used for canine cancer therapy in preclinical studies. However, in contrast to human studies, clinical trials with oncolytic viruses for canine cancer patients have not been reported. An ‘ideal’ virus has yet to be identified. This review is focused on the prospective use of oncolytic viruses in the treatment of canine tumors - a knowledge that will undoubtedly contribute to the development of oncolytic viral agents for canine cancer therapy in the future. KW - Medizin KW - cancer KW - canine cancer therapy KW - oncolytic virus KW - oncolysis KW - target molecule KW - combination therapy Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-75128 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wang, Huiqiang A1 - Chen, Nanhai G. A1 - Minev, Boris R. A1 - Szalay, Aladar A. T1 - Oncolytic vaccinia virus GLV-1h68 strain shows enhanced replication in human breast cancer stem-like cells in comparison to breast cancer cells JF - Journal of Translational Medicine N2 - Background: Recent data suggest that cancer stem cells (CSCs) play an important role in cancer, as these cells possess enhanced tumor-forming capabilities and are responsible for relapses after apparently curative therapies have been undertaken. Hence, novel cancer therapies will be needed to test for both tumor regression and CSC targeting. The use of oncolytic vaccinia virus (VACV) represents an attractive anti-tumor approach and is currently under evaluation in clinical trials. The purpose of this study was to demonstrate whether VACV does kill CSCs that are resistant to irradiation and chemotherapy. Methods: Cancer stem-like cells were identified and separated from the human breast cancer cell line GI-101A by virtue of increased aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 (ALDH1) activity as assessed by the ALDEFLUOR assay and cancer stem cell-like features such as chemo-resistance, irradiation-resistance and tumor-initiating were confirmed in cell culture and in animal models. VACV treatments were applied to both ALDEFLUOR-positive cells in cell culture and in xenograft tumors derived from these cells. Moreover, we identified and isolated CD44\(^+\)CD24\(^+\)ESA\(^+\) cells from GI-101A upon an epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). These cells were similarly characterized both in cell culture and in animal models. Results: We demonstrated for the first time that the oncolytic VACV GLV-1h68 strain replicated more efficiently in cells with higher ALDH1 activity that possessed stem cell-like features than in cells with lower ALDH1 activity. GLV-1h68 selectively colonized and eventually eradicated xenograft tumors originating from cells with higher ALDH1 activity. Furthermore, GLV-1h68 also showed preferential replication in CD44\(^+\)CD24\(^+\)ESA\(^+\) cells derived from GI-101A upon an EMT induction as well as in xenograft tumors originating from these cells that were more tumorigenic than CD44\(^+\)CD24\(^-\)ESA\(^+\) cells. Conclusions: Taken together, our findings indicate that GLV-1h68 efficiently replicates and kills cancer stem-like cells. Thus, GLV-1h68 may become a promising agent for eradicating both primary and metastatic tumors, especially tumors harboring cancer stem-like cells that are resistant to chemo and/or radiotherapy and may be responsible for recurrence of tumors. KW - tumors KW - therapy KW - metastasis KW - identification KW - lines KW - gene expression KW - in-vitro propagation KW - acute myeloid leukemia KW - epithelial-mesenchymal transition KW - subpopulation Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-130019 VL - 10 IS - 167 ER - TY - THES A1 - Leikam, Claudia T1 - Oncogene-induced senescence in melanocytes T1 - Onkogen-induzierte Seneszenz in Melanozyten N2 - Melanoma is the most aggressive skin cancer with very limited treatment options. Upon appearance of metastases chemotherapeutics are used to either kill or slow down the growth of cancer cells by inducing apoptosis or senescence, respectively. With melanomas originating from melanocytes, it is vital to elucidate the mechanisms that distinguish senescence induction from proliferation and tumourigenicity. Xmrk (Xiphophorus melanoma receptor kinase), the fish orthologue of the human epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), causes highly aggressive melanoma in fish. Using an inducible variant, HERmrk, I showed that high receptor levels result in melanocyte senescence, whereas low and medium expression allows for cell proliferation and tumourigenicity. Mechanistically, HERmrk leads to increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels, which trigger a DNA damage response. Consequently, multinucleated, senescent cells develop by both endomitosis and fusion. Furthermore, oncogenic N‐RAS (N-‐RAS61K) induces a similar multinucleated phenotype in melanocytes. In addition, I found that both overexpression of C‐MYC and the knockdown of miz­‐1 (Myc­‐interacting zinc finger protein 1) diminished HERmrk‐induced senescence entry. C‐MYC prevent ROS induction, DNA damage and senescence, while acting synergistically with HERmrk in conveying tumourigenic features to melanocytes. Further analyses identified cystathionase (CTH) as a novel target gene of Myc and Miz-­1 crucial for senescence prevention. CTH encodes an enzyme involved in the synthesis of cysteine from methionine, thereby allowing for increased ROS detoxification. Even though senescence was thought to be irreversible and hence tumour protective, I demonstrated that prolonged expression of the melanoma oncogene N­‐RAS61K in pigment cells overcomes initial OIS by triggering the emergence of tumour‐initiating, mononucleated stem‐like cells from multinucleated senescent cells. This progeny is dedifferentiated, highly proliferative, anoikis­‐resistant and induces fast­‐growing, metastatic tumours upon transplantation into nude mice. Our data demonstrate that induction of OIS is not only a cellular failsafe mechanism, but also carries the potential to provide a source for highly aggressive, tumour­‐initiating cells. N2 - Das Melanom ist der aggressivste Hautkrebstyp mit aeußerst begrenzten Therapiemoeglichkeiten. Sobald Metastasen diagnostiziert werden, kommen Chemotherapeutika zum Einsatz, deren Aufgabe darin besteht, die Krebszellen durch Apotoseinduktion zu toeten oder ihre Verbreitung mittels Seneszenz zu verlangsamen. Da Melanome aus Melanozyten hervorgehen, ist es essentiell, die Mechanismen zu analysieren, die entscheiden, ob Zellen seneszent oder tumorigen werden. Xmrk, die Xiphophorus­‐Melanom‐Rezeptor­‐Kinase und Fischortholog des humanen epidermalen Wachstumsfaktors (EGFR), verursacht aggressive Melanome in Fischen. Durch den Einsatz von HERmrk, einer induzierbaren Variante des Rezeptors, konnte ich zeigen, dass hohe Expressionslevel Seneszenz in Melanozyten zur Folge haben, wohingegen niedrige oder mittlere Rezeptorlevel mit erhöhter Zellproliferation und Tumorigenitaet der Zellen einhergehen. Mechanistisch gesehen, führt die Aktivierung von HERmrk zu gesteigerten Level an reaktiven Sauerstoffspezies (ROS), die wiederum DNA‐Schäden verursachen und dadurch bestimmte Signalwege auslösen. Durch Endomitose und Fusion entstehen letztendlich multinukleaere, seneszente Zellen. Interessanterweise, führte die Expression von onkogenem N‐RAS (N‐RAS61K) in Melanozyten zu einem sehr ähnlichen Phaenotyp. Des Weiteren konnte ich zeigen, dass sowohl die Überexpression von C-­MYC als auch der Knockdown von miz‐1 (Myc­‐interagierendes Zinkfingerprotein 1) der HERmrk-­induzierten Seneszenz entgegenwirkten. C‐MYC verhindert einerseits die Entstehung von ROS, die dadurch verursachten DNA‐Schaeden und damit die Seneszenz und wirkt andererseits synergistisch mit HERmrk, indem es den Melanozyten tumorigene Eigenschaften verleiht. In weiteren Analysen wurde Cystathionase (CTH) als neues Zielgen von Myc und Miz-­1 identifiziert, dem eine zentrale Rolle in der Seneszenzverhinderung zukommt. CTH kodiert fuer ein Enzym, das die Synthese von Cystein aus Methionin und damit die Entsorgung von ROS ermöglicht. Obwohl man davon ausgeht, dass Seneszenz einen irreversiblen Mechanismus darstellt, der die Tumorentstehung verhindert, konnte ich zeigen, dass die langfristige Expression des Melanomonkogens N‐RAS61K die initiale Seneszenzinduktion durchbricht. Dabei gehen mononukleaere, tumorigene, stammzellaehnliche Zellen aus seneszenten Zellen hervor. Diese Tochterzellen sind dedifferenziert, hochproliferativ, Anoikis­‐resistent und induzieren schnellwachsende, metastasierende Tumoren in Nacktmaeusen. Damit machen meine Daten deutlich, dass Seneszenz nicht nur als zellulaerer Schadensbegrenzungsmechanismus fungiert, sondern auch das Potential hat, aeußerst aggressive Tumorzellen zu generieren. KW - Melanom KW - Altern KW - Onkogen KW - Melanophor KW - Hautkrebs KW - Seneszenz KW - Xmrk KW - N-RAS KW - melanoma KW - senescence KW - OIS KW - skin cancer KW - oncogenes Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-79316 ER - TY - THES A1 - Akindeinde, Saheed Ojo T1 - Numerical Verification of Optimality Conditions in Optimal Control Problems T1 - Numerischen Verifizierung von Optimalitätsbedingungen für Optimalsteurungsprobleme N2 - This thesis is devoted to numerical verification of optimality conditions for non-convex optimal control problems. In the first part, we are concerned with a-posteriori verification of sufficient optimality conditions. It is a common knowledge that verification of such conditions for general non-convex PDE-constrained optimization problems is very challenging. We propose a method to verify second-order sufficient conditions for a general class of optimal control problem. If the proposed verification method confirms the fulfillment of the sufficient condition then a-posteriori error estimates can be computed. A special ingredient of our method is an error analysis for the Hessian of the underlying optimization problem. We derive conditions under which positive definiteness of the Hessian of the discrete problem implies positive definiteness of the Hessian of the continuous problem. The results are complemented with numerical experiments. In the second part, we investigate adaptive methods for optimal control problems with finitely many control parameters. We analyze a-posteriori error estimates based on verification of second-order sufficient optimality conditions using the method developed in the first part. Reliability and efficiency of the error estimator are shown. We illustrate through numerical experiments, the use of the estimator in guiding adaptive mesh refinement. N2 - Diese Arbeit widmet sich der numerischen Verifizierung von Optimalitaetsbedingungen fuer nicht konvexe Optimalsteuerungsprobleme. Im ersten Teil beschaeftigen wir uns mit der a-posteriori Ueberpruefung von hinreichenden Optimalitaetskriterien. Es ist bekannt, dass der Nachweis solcher Bedingungen fuer allgemeine nicht konvexe Optimierungsproblemem mit Nebenbedingungen in Form von partiellen Differentialgleichungen sehr schwierig ist. Wir stellen eine Methode vor, um die hinreichenden Bedingungen zweiter Ordnung fuer eine allgemeine Problemklasse zu testen. Falls die vorgeschlagene Strategie bestaetigt, dass diese Bedingungen erfuellt sind, koennen a-posteriori Fehlerschaetzungen berechnet werden. Ein wesentlicher Bestandteil unserer Methode ist eine Fehleranalyse fuer die Hessematrix des zugrunde liegenden Optimierungsproblems. Es werden Bedingungen hergeleitet, unter denen die positive Definitheit der Hessematrix des diskreten Problems die positive Definitheit der Hessematrix fuer das kontinuierliche Problem nach sich zieht. Diese Ergebnisse werden durch numerische Experimente ergaenzt. Im zweiten Teil untersuchen wir adaptive (Diskretisierungs-)methoden fuer Optimalsteuerungsprobleme mit endlich vielen Kontrollparametern. Basierend auf dem Nachweis hinreichender Optimalitaetsbedingungen zweiter Ordnung analysieren wir a posteriori Fehlerschaetzungen. Dies geschieht unter der Nutzung der Resultate des ersten Teils der Arbeit. Es wird die Zuverlaessigkeit und Effizienz des Fehlerschaetzers bewiesen. Mittels weiterer numerischer Experimente illustrieren wir, wie der Fehlerschaetzer zur Steuerung adaptiver Gitterverfeinerung eingesetzt werden kann. KW - Optimale Kontrolle KW - Nichtkonvexe Optimierung KW - Numerisches Verfahren KW - non-convex optimal control problems KW - sufficient optimality conditions KW - a-posteriori error estimates KW - numerical approximations KW - adaptive refinement Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-76065 ER - TY - THES A1 - Luitz, David J. T1 - Numerical methods and applications in many fermion systems T1 - Numerische Methoden und Anwendungen in Vielfermionensystemen N2 - This thesis presents results covering several topics in correlated many fermion systems. A Monte Carlo technique (CT-INT) that has been implemented, used and extended by the author is discussed in great detail in chapter 3. The following chapter discusses how CT-INT can be used to calculate the two particle Green’s function and explains how exact frequency summations can be obtained. A benchmark against exact diagonalization is presented. The link to the dynamical cluster approximation is made in the end of chapter 4, where these techniques are of immense importance. In chapter 5 an extensive CT-INT study of a strongly correlated Josephson junction is shown. In particular, the signature of the first order quantum phase transition between a Kondo and a local moment regime in the Josephson current is discussed. The connection to an experimental system is made with great care by developing a parameter extraction strategy. As a final result, we show that it is possible to reproduce experimental data from a numerically exact CT-INT model-calculation. The last topic is a study of graphene edge magnetism. We introduce a general effective model for the edge states, incorporating a complicated interaction Hamiltonian and perform an exact diagonalization study for different parameter regimes. This yields a strong argument for the importance of forbidden umklapp processes and of the strongly momentum dependent interaction vertex for the formation of edge magnetism. Additional fragments concerning the use of a Legendre polynomial basis for the representation of the two particle Green’s function, the analytic continuation of the self energy for the Anderson Kane Mele Model, as well as the generation of test data with a given covariance matrix are documented in the appendix. A final appendix provides some very important matrix identities that are used for the discussion of technical details of CT-INT. N2 - In der vorliegenden Dissertation werden verschiedene Themen aus dem Feld der stark korrelierten Viel-Fermionensysteme präsentiert. Zunächst wird in Kapitel 3 eine Monte Carlo Methode (CT-INT), welche der Autor implementiert, angewandt und erweitert hat, auf detaillierte Weise eingeführt. Das nachfolgende Kapitel diskutiert wie die Zweiteilchen Greensche Funktion in CT-INT berechnet werden kann und wie exakte Frequenzsummen ausgewertet werden können. Dies wird in einem Vergleich mit Daten aus exakter Diagonalisierung demonstriert. Abschließend wird die Verbindung zur dynamischen Cluster Näherung am Ende von Kapitel 4 aufgezeigt, wo diese Methoden von außerordentlicher Bedeutung sind. In Kapitel 5 wird eine umfangreiche CT-INT Studie eines stark korrelierten Josephson Kontakts vorgestellt. Insbesondere wird die Verbindung zwischen dem Phasenübergang erster Ordnung von einem Kondoregime zu einem Regime mit lokalem magnetischem Moment mit der Phasenverschiebung um pi des Josephson-Stroms herausgearbeitet. Es wird gezeigt, wie der Übergang zu einem realen experimentellen System durchgeführt werden kann, wobei besondere Sorgfalt auf die Entwicklung einer Strategie zur Extraktion der Modellparameter aus den experimentellen Daten gelegt wurde. Als Endergebnis demonstrieren wir, dass es es möglich ist, experimentelle Daten mit Hilfe einer numerisch exakten Modellrechnung zu reproduzieren. Als letztes Projekt wird eine Untersuchung des Randmagnetismus von Graphen vorgestellt. Dazu wird ein allgemeines effektives Modell eingeführt, welches einen komplizierten Wechselwirkungshamiltonian enthält. Hierfür wird eine Studie mit Hilfe von exakter Diagonalisierung des Hamiltonians in verschiedenen Parameterbereichen erarbeitet, wodurch wir argumentieren können, dass das Verbot von Umklappprozessen und die starke Impulsabhängigkeit der Wechselwirkung für die Bildung des Randmagnetismus verantwortlich sind. Zusätzlich dokumentieren einige Fragmente im Anhang theoretische Arbeiten zur Benutzung einer Basis von Legendre Polynomen zur Darstellung der Zweiteilchen Greenschen Funktion, zur analytischen Fortsetzung der Selbstenergie für das Anderson Kane Mele Modell sowie zur Erstellung von Testdaten mit einer analytisch bestimmbaren Kovarianzmatrix. Ein Anhang mit einigen Matrix Identitäten die wichtig für die Diskussion der technischen Details von CT-INT sind schließt diese Arbeit ab. KW - Fermionensystem KW - DCA KW - CT-INT KW - QMC KW - Monte Carlo KW - Strong correlations KW - Numerisches Verfahren KW - Festkörpertheorie Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-75927 ER - TY - THES A1 - Förster, Sabine T1 - Nuclear Hormone Receptors and Fibroblast Growth Factor Receptor Signaling in Echinococcus multilocularis T1 - Signalwege in Echinococcus multilocularis am Beispiel der Nukleären Hormonrezeptoren und des Fibroblast Growth Factor Rezeptors N2 - Parasitic helminths share a large degree of common genetic heritage with their various hosts. This includes cell-cell-communication mechanisms mediated by small peptide cytokines and lipophilic/steroid hormones. These cytokines are candidate molecules for host-parasite cross-communication in helminth diseases. In this work the function of two evolutionary conserved signaling pathways in the model cestode Echinococcus multilocularis has been studied. First, signaling mechanisms mediated through fibroblast growth factors (FGF) and their cognate receptors (FGFR) which influence a multitude of biological functions, like homeostasis and differentiation, were studied. I herein investigated the role of EmFR which is the only FGFR homolog in E. multilocularis. Functional analyses using the Xenopus oocyte expression system clearly indicate that EmFR can sense both acidic and basic FGF of human origin, resulting in an activation of the EmFR tyrosine kinase domain. In vitro experiments demonstrate that mammalian FGF significantly stimulates proliferation and development of E. multilocularis metacestode vesicles and primary cells. Furthermore, DNA synthesis and the parasite’s Erk-like MAPK cascade module was stimulated in the presence of exogenously added mammalian FGF. By using the FGFR inhibitor BIBF1120 the activity of EmFR in the Xenopus oocyte system was effectively blocked. Addition of BIBF1120 to in vitro cultivated Echinococcus larval material led to detrimental effects concerning the generation of metacestode vesicles from parasite stem cells, the proliferation and survival of metacestode vesicles, and the dedifferentiation of protoscoleces towards the metacestode. In conclusion, these data demonstrate the presence of a functional EmFR-mediated signaling pathway in E. multilocularis that is able to interact with host-derived cytokines and that plays an important role in larval parasite development. Secondly, the role of nuclear hormone receptor (NHR) signaling was addressed. Lipophilic and steroid hormone signaling contributes to the regulation of metazoan development. By means of in silico analyses I demonstrate that E. multilocularis expresses a set of 17 NHRs that broadly overlaps with that of the related flatworms Schistosoma mansoni and S. japonicum, but also contains several NHR encoding genes that are unique to this parasite. One of these, EmNHR1, is homolog to the DAF-12/HR-96 subfamily of NHRs which regulate cholesterol homeostasis in metazoans. Modified yeast-two hybrid analyses revealed that host serum contains a ligand which induces homodimerization of the EmNHR1 ligand-binding domain. Also, a HNF4-like homolog, EmHNF4, was characterized. Human HNF4 plays an important role in liver development. RT-PCR experiments showed that both isoforms of the EmHNF4 encoding gene are expressed stage-dependently suggesting distinct functions of the two isoforms in the parasite. Moreover, specific regulatory mechanisms on the convergence of NHR signaling and TGF-β/BMP signaling pathways in E. multilocularis have been identified. On the one hand, EmNHR1 directly interacted with the EmSmadC and on the other hand EmHNF4b interacted with EmSmadD, EmSmadE which are all downstream signaling components of the TGF-β/BMP signaling pathway. This suggests cross-communication in order to regulate target gene expression. With these results, further studies on the role of NHR signaling in the cestode will be facilitated. Also, the first serum-free in vitro cultivation system for E. multilocularis was established using PanserinTM401 as medium. Serum-free co-cultivation with RH-feeder cells and an axenic cultivation method have been established. With the help of this serum-free cultivation system investigations on the role of specific peptide hormones, like FGFs, or lipophilic/steroid hormones, like cholesterol, for the development of helminths will be much easier. N2 - Parasitäre Würmer weisen eine große genetische Verwandtschaft mit ihren Wirten auf. Diese schließt auch Zell-Zell-Kommunikationsmechanismen ein, die sowohl durch Peptidhormone als auch durch lipophile/steroidale Hormone vermittelt werden. Man vermutet, dass diese Stoffe eine wichtige Rolle bei der Wirt-Parasiten-Kreuzkommunikation spielen. Deshalb untersuchte diese Arbeit die Funktion von zwei konservierten Signalwegen im Modellorganismus Echinococcus multilocularis. Der erste Teil dieser Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit den Fibroblast Growth Factors (FGF). Diese steuern durch die Bindung an spezifische FGF-Rezeptoren (FGFR) eine Vielzahl von biologischen Funktionen, wie beispielsweise Homöostase- und Differenzierungsprozesse. Zunächst wurde EmFR, das einzige FGFR-Homolog im Fuchsbandwurm in Xenopus Oozyten heterolog exprimiert. Dabei wurde nachgewiesen, dass der Rezeptor sowohl acidic als auch basic FGF erkennen kann und dies zur Aktivierung der Tyrosinkinasedomäne führt. Außerdem förderte im in vitro Experiment die exogene Zugabe dieser Wirtsfaktoren die Proliferation und Entwicklung von Metacestodenvesikeln und Primärzellen. Darüber hinaus wurden die DNA-Synthese und die Erk-MAPK-Kaskade des Parasiten stimuliert. Im Gegensatz dazu konnte durch die Hinzugabe des FGFR-Inhibitor BIBF1120 die Aktivität des Rezeptors im Xenopus Oozytensystem erfolgreich blockieret werden. Durch den Inhibitor wurde die Regeneration von Metacestodenvesikeln aus Stammzellen, die Proliferation und das Überleben von Metacestodenvesikeln verhindert und eine Dedifferenzierung von Protoskolizes verursacht. Zusammengefasst zeigen diese Daten, dass E. multilocularis einen funktionellen durch EmFR-vermittelten Signalweg besitzt, welcher in der Lage ist, mit Wirtszytokinen zu interagieren und eine wichtige Rolle bei der Entwicklung von Echinococcus Larvenstadien spielt. Außerdem wurde die Bedeutung der Nukleären Hormon Rezeptoren (NHR) für den Parasiten untersucht. Lipophile und steroidale Hormone regulieren viele Entwicklungsprozesse in Metazoen. Mittels in silico Analyse konnten 17 Rezeptoren der NHR-Familie in E. multilocularis identifiziert werden, die größtenteils mit dem NHR Repertoire von Schistosoma mansoni und S. japonicum übereinstimmen. Allerdings wurden auch Rezeptoren identifiziert, die einzigartig für E. multilocularis sind. Einer dieser Rezeptoren, EmNHR1, ist homolog zur DAF-12/HR-96 Familie, die den Cholesterinstoffwechsel in Metazoen reguliert. Yeast-Two Hybrid Experimente zeigten, dass Wirtsserum den putativen Liganden von EmNHR1 enthält, da dessen Zugabe zur Homodimerisierung der EmNHR1-Liganden-bindungsdomäne führte. Außerdem wurde mit EmHNF4 ein weiterer Rezeptor charakterisiert, dessen humanes Homolog die Entwicklung der Leber beeinflusst. RT-PCR-Experimente zeigten, dass die zwei entdeckten Isoformen von EmHNF4 stadienspezifisch exprimiert werden, was auf mögliche Funktionsunterschiede deutet. Darüber hinaus wurde sowohl für EmNHR1, als auch für EmHNF4 beobachtet, dass die DNA-Bindungsdomänen mit Komponenten des TGF-β/BMP-Signalwegs direkte Proteininteraktionen eingehen. Während EmNHR1 mit EmSmadC interagiert, zeigte EmHNF4b eine Reaktion mit EmSmadD und EmSmadE, was auf eine Kreuzkommunikation zwischen beiden Signalwegen deutet. Diese Ergebnisse werden zukünftige Studien bezüglich der Funktion von NHR-Signalwegen in Zestoden deutlich erleichtern. Weiterhin wurde in dieser Arbeit das erste serum-freie in vitro Kultivierungssystem für E. multilocularis etabliert. PanserinTM401 diente als Medium sowohl für die Kultur mit Fütterzellen als auch für eine axenische Kulturmethode. Mit Hilfe dieses Systems können in Zukunft Untersuchungen über die Rolle von Peptidhormonen wie FGF, oder lipophilen bzw. steroidalen Substanzen, wie Cholesterin, bei der Parasitenentwicklung besser untersucht werden. KW - Signaltransduktion KW - Fuchsbandwurm KW - Echinococcus multilocularis KW - Alveoläre Echinokokkose KW - FGF KW - Nukleäre Hormonrezeptoren KW - Echinococcus multilocularis KW - Alveolar Echinococcosis KW - FGF Signaling KW - Hormone Receptor Signaling KW - Fibroblastenwachstumsfaktor Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-85832 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Harrington, John M. A1 - Scelsi, Chris A1 - Hartel, Andreas A1 - Jones, Nicola G. A1 - Engstler, Markus A1 - Capewell, Paul A1 - MacLeod, Annette A1 - Hajduk, Stephen T1 - Novel African Trypanocidal Agents: Membrane Rigidifying Peptides JF - PLoS One N2 - The bloodstream developmental forms of pathogenic African trypanosomes are uniquely susceptible to killing by small hydrophobic peptides. Trypanocidal activity is conferred by peptide hydrophobicity and charge distribution and results from increased rigidity of the plasma membrane. Structural analysis of lipid-associated peptide suggests a mechanism of phospholipid clamping in which an internal hydrophobic bulge anchors the peptide in the membrane and positively charged moieties at the termini coordinate phosphates of the polar lipid headgroups. This mechanism reveals a necessary phenotype in bloodstream form African trypanosomes, high membrane fluidity, and we suggest that targeting the plasma membrane lipid bilayer as a whole may be a novel strategy for the development of new pharmaceutical agents. Additionally, the peptides we have described may be valuable tools for probing the biosynthetic machinery responsible for the unique composition and characteristics of African trypanosome plasma membranes. KW - depth KW - trypanosome lytic factor KW - signal peptides KW - cell surface KW - protein KW - brucei KW - environment KW - bilayers KW - binding KW - probes Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-135179 VL - 7 IS - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Chenchiah, Isaac A1 - Schlömerkemper, Anja T1 - Non-laminate microstructures in monoclinic-I martensite N2 - We study the symmetrised rank-one convex hull of monoclinic-I martensite (a twelve-variant material) in the context of geometrically-linear elasticity. We construct sets of T3s, which are (non-trivial) symmetrised rank-one convex hulls of 3-tuples of pairwise incompatible strains. Moreover we construct a five-dimensional continuum of T3s and show that its intersection with the boundary of the symmetrised rank-one convex hull is four-dimensional. We also show that there is another kind of monoclinic-I martensite with qualitatively different semi-convex hulls which, so far as we know, has not been experimentally observed. Our strategy is to combine understanding of the algebraic structure of symmetrised rank-one convex cones with knowledge of the faceting structure of the convex polytope formed by the strains. KW - Martensit KW - Mehrskalenmodell KW - Phasenumwandlung KW - Variationsrechnung KW - kubisch-monokliner Phasenübergang KW - semi-konvexe Hüllen KW - geometrisch lineare Elastizitätstheorie KW - T3s KW - cubic-monoclinic martensites KW - semi-convex hulls KW - geometrically linear elasticity KW - T3s Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-72134 ER -