TY - THES A1 - Englmeier, Jana T1 - Consequences of climate change and land-use intensification for decomposer communities and decomposition processes T1 - Folgen von Klimawandel und intensiver Landnutzung für Zersetzergemeinschaften und Abbauprozesse N2 - The increase in intensively used areas and climate change are direct and indirect consequences of anthropogenic actions, caused by a growing population and increasing greenhouse gas emissions. The number of research studies, investigating the effects of land use and climate change on ecosystems, including flora, fauna, and ecosystem services, is steadily growing. This thesis contributes to this research area by investigating land-use and climate effects on decomposer communities (arthropods and microbes) and the ecosystem service ‘decomposition of dead material’. Chapter II deals with consequences of intensified land use and climate change for the ecosystem service ‘decomposition of dead organic material’ (necromass). Considering the severe decline in insects, we experimentally excluded insects from half of the study objects. The decomposition of both dung and carrion was robust to land-use changes. Dung decomposition, moreover, was unaffected by temperature and the presence/ absence of insects. Along the altitudinal gradient, however, highest dung decomposition was observed at medium elevation between 600 and 700 m above sea level (although insignificant). As a consequence, we assume that at this elevation there is an ideal precipitation:temperature ratio for decomposing organisms, such as earthworms or collembolans. Carrion decomposition was accelerated by increasing elevation and by the presence of insects, indicating that increasing variability in climate and an ongoing decline in insects could modify decomposition processes and consequently natural nutrient cycles. Moreover, we show that different types of dead organic material respond differently to environmental factors and should be treated separately in future studies. In Chapter III, we investigated land-use and climate effects on dung-visiting beetles and their resource specialization. Here, all beetles that are preferentially found on dung, carrion or other rotten material were included. Both α- and γ-diversity were strongly reduced in agricultural and urban areas. High precipitation reduced dung-visiting beetle abundance, whereas γ-diversity was lowest in the warmest regions. Resource specialization decreased with increasing temperatures. The results give evidence that land use as well as climate can alter dung-visiting beetle diversity and resource specialization and may hence influence the natural balance of beetle communities and their contribution to the ecosystem service ‘decomposition of dead material’. The following chapter, Chapter IV, contributes to the findings in Chapter II. Here, carrion decomposition is not only explained by land-use intensity and climate but also by diversity and community composition of two taxonomic groups found on carrion, beetles and bacteria. The results revealed a strong correlation between bacteria diversity and community composition with temperature. Carrion decomposition was to a great extent directed by bacterial community composition and precipitation. The role of beetles was neglectable in carrion decomposition. With this study, I show that microbes, despite their microscopic size, direct carrion decomposition and may not be neglected in future decomposition studies. In Chapter V a third necromass type is investigated, namely deadwood. The aim was to assess climate and land-use effects on deadwood-inhabiting fungi and bacteria. Main driver for microbial richness (measured as number of OTUs) was climate, including temperature and precipitation. Warmer climates promoted the diversity of bacteria, whereas fungi richness was unaffected by temperature. In turn, fungi richness was lower in urban landscapes compared to near-natural landscapes and bacteria richness was higher on meadows than on forest sites. Fungi were extremely specialized on their host tree, independent of land use and climate. Bacteria specialization, however, was strongly directed by land use and climate. These results underpin previous studies showing that fungi are highly specialized in contrast to bacteria and add new insights into the robustness of fungi specialization to climate and land use. I summarize that climate as well as intensive land use influence biodiversity. Temperature and precipitation, however, had positive and negative effects on decomposer diversity, while anthropogenic land use had mostly negative effects on the diversity of decomposers. N2 - Die Zunahme intensiv genutzter Landschaften und der Klimawandel sind direkte und indirekte Folgen menschlichen Handelns, verursacht durch eine wachsende Weltbevölkerung und zunehmende Mengen an Treibhausgasen. Die Zahl der wissenschaftlichen Studien, die sich mit den Veränderungen der Umwelt und den Konsequenzen für Ökosysteme, einschließlich Flora, Fauna und Ökosystemleistungen auseinandersetzen, steigt stetig. Mit dieser Thesis möchte ich meinen Beitrag zu diesem wichtigen und aktuellen Forschungsgebiet leisten. Dazu untersuche ich die Auswirkungen von Landnutzung und Klima auf die Ökosystemleistung „Zersetzung toten organischen Materials“ (Nekromasse) und die Auswirkungen auf die daran beteiligten Arthropoden- und Mikrobengemeinschaften. Kapitel II dieser Thesis setzt sich mit den Konsequenzen von intensiver Landnutzung und Klimawandel für die Ökosystemleistung „Zersetzung toten Materials“ auseinander. Unter Anbetracht des globalen Insektenrückgangs, wurde dieser Aspekt anhand eines Insektenausschluss-Experimentes zusätzlich simuliert. Es stellt sich heraus, dass sowohl der Abbau von Dung als auch von Aas sehr robust gegenüber landschaftlicher Nutzung war. Zudem blieb der Abbau von Dung unberührt von Temperaturänderungen und dem Ausschluss von Insekten. Entlang eines Höhengradienten wurde hingegen ein Trend zu einem unimodalen Muster mit maximaler Zersetzung bei ca. 600-700 m ü.M. beobachtet. Dieser Trend lässt vermuten, dass in dieser Höhe das Verhältnis von Niederschlag und Temperatur ideal für Dung zersetzende Gemeinschaften ist. Aas hingegen wurde in zunehmender Höhe und unter der Beteiligung von Insekten schneller zersetzt, was verdeutlich, dass Klimaänderungen und ein ansteigender Insektenrückgang starke Auswirkungen auf die Zersetzung von Aas und somit auf Nährstoffkreisläufe haben können. Hierbei wurde zudem ersichtlich, dass verschiedene Typen von Nekromasse unterschiedlich auf Umweltparameter reagieren und daher in künftigen Studien und Auswertungen separat betrachtet werden sollten. Kapitel III behandelt die Auswirkungen von Landnutzung und Klima auf die Biodiversität und Spezialisierung von Käfergemeinschaften an Dung. Hierbei wurden sämtliche Käfer berücksichtigt, welche vor allem an Dung, Aas oder sonstigem faulenden Material gefunden werden können. Sowohl α- als auch γ-Diversität von diesen Käfern wurde durch Agrarlandschaften und urbane Gebiete stark reduziert. Hohe Niederschlagsmengen wirkten sich negativ auf die Abundanz von Dungkäfern aus, wohingegen die γ-Diversität in warmen Regionen am niedrigsten war. Der Grad der Spezialisierung von Käfergemeinschaften auf verschiedene Dungressourcen nahm mit abnehmenden Temperaturen zu. Aus den Ergebnissen geht hervor, dass sowohl intensive Landnutzung als auch Klimaveränderungen Auswirkungen auf die Diversität und den Spezialisierungsgrad von Käfergemeinschaften an Dung haben können und somit das ökologische Gleichgewicht der Dungkäfergemeinschaften und ihren Ökosystemfunktionen beeinflussen können. Das darauffolgende Kapitel IV stellt eine Ergänzung zu Kapitel II dar. Hier wird die Zersetzung von Aas nicht nur anhand von Landnutzung und Klima erklärt, sondern auch anhand der α-Diversität und der Artenzusammensetzung von Käfern und Bakterien an Aas diskutiert. Es zeigte sich, dass Abundanz und Artenzusammensetzung der Bakteriengemeinschaft an Aas vor allem von der Temperatur abhingen. Außerdem wurde die Zersetzungsgeschwindigkeit maßgeblich von der Bakteriengemeinschaft und der Niederschlagsmenge bestimmt. Mit dieser Studie konnte ich zeigen, dass Bakterien trotz ihrer mikroskopischen Größe maßgeblich an der Zersetzung von Aas beteiligt sind und diese in Zersetzungsversuchen nicht vernachlässigt werden sollten. Das letzte Kapitel, Kapitel V, befasst sich mit den Konsequenzen von intensiver Landnutzung und Klimawandel auf mikrobielle Gemeinschaften in Totholz. Untersucht wurden hier sowohl Bakterien- als auch Pilzgemeinschaften. Haupttreiber der Artenvielfalt für beide Gruppen (gemessen als Anzahl an OTUs) war das Klima (Niederschlag und Temperatur). Ein wärmeres Klima kam der Vielfalt von Bakterien zugute, wohingegen die Pilzvielfalt nicht tangiert wurde. Außerdem reagierten Pilze negativ auf urbane Landnutzung, Bakterienvielfalt in Totholz war auf Wiesen jedoch höher als im Wald. Vor allem Pilze zeigten eine sehr starke Bindung zu ihrem Wirtsbaum, welche auch von äußeren Einflüssen wie Landnutzung und Klima nicht beeinflusst werden konnte. Die Spezialisierung von Bakterien hingegen wurde stark von Landnutzung und Klima beeinflusst. Diese Ergebnisse untermauern frühere Studien, die besagen, dass Pilze hoch spezialisiert sind und geben neue Erkenntnisse zur Robustheit der Spezialisierung gegenüber Landnutzungsintensität und Klima. Zusammenfassend kann ich sagen, dass sowohl Klima als auch Landnutzung Auswirkungen auf die Biodiversität haben. Während Temperatur und Niederschlag jedoch positive so wie negative Effekte hatten, wirkte sich anthropogene Landnutzung überwiegend negativ auf die Diversität von Zersetzergemeinschaften aus. KW - Mikroorganismus KW - decomposition KW - Klimaänderung KW - Zersetzungsprozess KW - microbes KW - dead organic material KW - Mikroben Y1 - 2024 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-313994 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wu, Hao A1 - Zhao, Xiufeng A1 - Hochrein, Sophia M. A1 - Eckstein, Miriam A1 - Gubert, Gabriela F. A1 - Knöpper, Konrad A1 - Mansilla, Ana Maria A1 - Öner, Arman A1 - Doucet-Ladevèze, Remi A1 - Schmitz, Werner A1 - Ghesquière, Bart A1 - Theurich, Sebastian A1 - Dudek, Jan A1 - Gasteiger, Georg A1 - Zernecke, Alma A1 - Kobold, Sebastian A1 - Kastenmüller, Wolfgang A1 - Vaeth, Martin T1 - Mitochondrial dysfunction promotes the transition of precursor to terminally exhausted T cells through HIF-1α-mediated glycolytic reprogramming JF - Nature Communications N2 - T cell exhaustion is a hallmark of cancer and persistent infections, marked by inhibitory receptor upregulation, diminished cytokine secretion, and impaired cytolytic activity. Terminally exhausted T cells are steadily replenished by a precursor population (Tpex), but the metabolic principles governing Tpex maintenance and the regulatory circuits that control their exhaustion remain incompletely understood. Using a combination of gene-deficient mice, single-cell transcriptomics, and metabolomic analyses, we show that mitochondrial insufficiency is a cell-intrinsic trigger that initiates the functional exhaustion of T cells. At the molecular level, we find that mitochondrial dysfunction causes redox stress, which inhibits the proteasomal degradation of hypoxia-inducible factor 1α (HIF-1α) and promotes the transcriptional and metabolic reprogramming of Tpex cells into terminally exhausted T cells. Our findings also bear clinical significance, as metabolic engineering of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells is a promising strategy to enhance the stemness and functionality of Tpex cells for cancer immunotherapy. KW - cytotoxic T cells KW - infection KW - lymphocyte differentiation KW - translational research Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-358052 VL - 14 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Müller, Jörg A1 - Mitesser, Oliver A1 - Schaefer, H. Martin A1 - Seibold, Sebastian A1 - Busse, Annika A1 - Kriegel, Peter A1 - Rabl, Dominik A1 - Gelis, Rudy A1 - Arteaga, Alejandro A1 - Freile, Juan A1 - Leite, Gabriel Augusto A1 - de Melo, Tomaz Nascimento A1 - LeBien, Jack A1 - Campos-Cerqueira, Marconi A1 - Blüthgen, Nico A1 - Tremlett, Constance J. A1 - Böttger, Dennis A1 - Feldhaar, Heike A1 - Grella, Nina A1 - Falconí-López, Ana A1 - Donoso, David A. A1 - Moriniere, Jerome A1 - Buřivalová, Zuzana T1 - Soundscapes and deep learning enable tracking biodiversity recovery in tropical forests JF - Nature Communications N2 - Tropical forest recovery is fundamental to addressing the intertwined climate and biodiversity loss crises. While regenerating trees sequester carbon relatively quickly, the pace of biodiversity recovery remains contentious. Here, we use bioacoustics and metabarcoding to measure forest recovery post-agriculture in a global biodiversity hotspot in Ecuador. We show that the community composition, and not species richness, of vocalizing vertebrates identified by experts reflects the restoration gradient. Two automated measures – an acoustic index model and a bird community composition derived from an independently developed Convolutional Neural Network - correlated well with restoration (adj-R² = 0.62 and 0.69, respectively). Importantly, both measures reflected composition of non-vocalizing nocturnal insects identified via metabarcoding. We show that such automated monitoring tools, based on new technologies, can effectively monitor the success of forest recovery, using robust and reproducible data. KW - animal behaviour KW - conservation biology Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-358130 VL - 14 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Beetz, M. Jerome A1 - Kraus, Christian A1 - el Jundi, Basil T1 - Neural representation of goal direction in the monarch butterfly brain JF - Nature Communications N2 - Neural processing of a desired moving direction requires the continuous comparison between the current heading and the goal direction. While the neural basis underlying the current heading is well-studied, the coding of the goal direction remains unclear in insects. Here, we used tetrode recordings in tethered flying monarch butterflies to unravel how a goal direction is represented in the insect brain. While recording, the butterflies maintained robust goal directions relative to a virtual sun. By resetting their goal directions, we found neurons whose spatial tuning was tightly linked to the goal directions. Importantly, their tuning was unaffected when the butterflies changed their heading after compass perturbations, showing that these neurons specifically encode the goal direction. Overall, we here discovered invertebrate goal-direction neurons that share functional similarities to goal-direction cells reported in mammals. Our results give insights into the evolutionarily conserved principles of goal-directed spatial orientation in animals. KW - animal behaviour KW - navigation KW - neuroscience Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-358073 VL - 14 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Djakovic, Lara A1 - Hennig, Thomas A1 - Reinisch, Katharina A1 - Milić, Andrea A1 - Whisnant, Adam W. A1 - Wolf, Katharina A1 - Weiß, Elena A1 - Haas, Tobias A1 - Grothey, Arnhild A1 - Jürges, Christopher S. A1 - Kluge, Michael A1 - Wolf, Elmar A1 - Erhard, Florian A1 - Friedel, Caroline C. A1 - Dölken, Lars T1 - The HSV-1 ICP22 protein selectively impairs histone repositioning upon Pol II transcription downstream of genes JF - Nature Communications N2 - Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) infection and stress responses disrupt transcription termination by RNA Polymerase II (Pol II). In HSV-1 infection, but not upon salt or heat stress, this is accompanied by a dramatic increase in chromatin accessibility downstream of genes. Here, we show that the HSV-1 immediate-early protein ICP22 is both necessary and sufficient to induce downstream open chromatin regions (dOCRs) when transcription termination is disrupted by the viral ICP27 protein. This is accompanied by a marked ICP22-dependent loss of histones downstream of affected genes consistent with impaired histone repositioning in the wake of Pol II. Efficient knock-down of the ICP22-interacting histone chaperone FACT is not sufficient to induce dOCRs in ΔICP22 infection but increases dOCR induction in wild-type HSV-1 infection. Interestingly, this is accompanied by a marked increase in chromatin accessibility within gene bodies. We propose a model in which allosteric changes in Pol II composition downstream of genes and ICP22-mediated interference with FACT activity explain the differential impairment of histone repositioning downstream of genes in the wake of Pol II in HSV-1 infection. KW - herpes virus KW - transcription Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-358161 VL - 14 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Haake, Markus A1 - Haack, Beatrice A1 - Schäfer, Tina A1 - Harter, Patrick N. A1 - Mattavelli, Greta A1 - Eiring, Patrick A1 - Vashist, Neha A1 - Wedekink, Florian A1 - Genssler, Sabrina A1 - Fischer, Birgitt A1 - Dahlhoff, Julia A1 - Mokhtari, Fatemeh A1 - Kuzkina, Anastasia A1 - Welters, Marij J. P. A1 - Benz, Tamara M. A1 - Sorger, Lena A1 - Thiemann, Vincent A1 - Almanzar, Giovanni A1 - Selle, Martina A1 - Thein, Klara A1 - Späth, Jacob A1 - Gonzalez, Maria Cecilia A1 - Reitinger, Carmen A1 - Ipsen-Escobedo, Andrea A1 - Wistuba-Hamprecht, Kilian A1 - Eichler, Kristin A1 - Filipski, Katharina A1 - Zeiner, Pia S. A1 - Beschorner, Rudi A1 - Goedemans, Renske A1 - Gogolla, Falk Hagen A1 - Hackl, Hubert A1 - Rooswinkel, Rogier W. A1 - Thiem, Alexander A1 - Romer Roche, Paula A1 - Joshi, Hemant A1 - Pühringer, Dirk A1 - Wöckel, Achim A1 - Diessner, Joachim E. A1 - Rüdiger, Manfred A1 - Leo, Eugen A1 - Cheng, Phil F. A1 - Levesque, Mitchell P. A1 - Goebeler, Matthias A1 - Sauer, Markus A1 - Nimmerjahn, Falk A1 - Schuberth-Wagner, Christine A1 - Felten, Stefanie von A1 - Mittelbronn, Michel A1 - Mehling, Matthias A1 - Beilhack, Andreas A1 - van der Burg, Sjoerd H. A1 - Riedel, Angela A1 - Weide, Benjamin A1 - Dummer, Reinhard A1 - Wischhusen, Jörg T1 - Tumor-derived GDF-15 blocks LFA-1 dependent T cell recruitment and suppresses responses to anti-PD-1 treatment JF - Nature Communications N2 - Immune checkpoint blockade therapy is beneficial and even curative for some cancer patients. However, the majority don’t respond to immune therapy. Across different tumor types, pre-existing T cell infiltrates predict response to checkpoint-based immunotherapy. Based on in vitro pharmacological studies, mouse models and analyses of human melanoma patients, we show that the cytokine GDF-15 impairs LFA-1/β2-integrin-mediated adhesion of T cells to activated endothelial cells, which is a pre-requisite of T cell extravasation. In melanoma patients, GDF-15 serum levels strongly correlate with failure of PD-1-based immune checkpoint blockade therapy. Neutralization of GDF-15 improves both T cell trafficking and therapy efficiency in murine tumor models. Thus GDF-15, beside its known role in cancer-related anorexia and cachexia, emerges as a regulator of T cell extravasation into the tumor microenvironment, which provides an even stronger rationale for therapeutic anti-GDF-15 antibody development. KW - cancer microenvironment KW - immunotherapy KW - T cells KW - tumour immunology Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-357333 VL - 14 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Salehi, Saeede A1 - Zare, Abdolhossein A1 - Prezza, Gianluca A1 - Bader, Jakob A1 - Schneider, Cornelius A1 - Fischer, Utz A1 - Meissner, Felix A1 - Mann, Matthias A1 - Briese, Michael A1 - Sendtner, Michael T1 - Cytosolic Ptbp2 modulates axon growth in motoneurons through axonal localization and translation of Hnrnpr JF - Nature Communications N2 - The neuronal RNA-binding protein Ptbp2 regulates neuronal differentiation by modulating alternative splicing programs in the nucleus. Such programs contribute to axonogenesis by adjusting the levels of protein isoforms involved in axon growth and branching. While its functions in alternative splicing have been described in detail, cytosolic roles of Ptbp2 for axon growth have remained elusive. Here, we show that Ptbp2 is located in the cytosol including axons and growth cones of motoneurons, and that depletion of cytosolic Ptbp2 affects axon growth. We identify Ptbp2 as a major interactor of the 3’ UTR of Hnrnpr mRNA encoding the RNA-binding protein hnRNP R. Axonal localization of Hnrnpr mRNA and local synthesis of hnRNP R protein are strongly reduced when Ptbp2 is depleted, leading to defective axon growth. Ptbp2 regulates hnRNP R translation by mediating the association of Hnrnpr with ribosomes in a manner dependent on the translation factor eIF5A2. Our data thus suggest a mechanism whereby cytosolic Ptbp2 modulates axon growth by fine-tuning the mRNA transport and local synthesis of an RNA-binding protein. KW - molecular neuroscience KW - RNA-binding proteins KW - RNA transport Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-357639 VL - 14 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Bachert, Antonia A1 - Scheiner, Ricarda T1 - The ant’s weapon improves honey bee learning performance JF - Scientific Reports N2 - Formic acid is the main component of the ant’s major weapon against enemies. Being mainly used as a chemical defense, the acid is also exploited for recruitment and trail marking. The repelling effect of the organic acid is used by some mammals and birds which rub themselves in the acid to eliminate ectoparasites. Beekeepers across the world rely on this effect to control the parasitic mite Varroa destructor. Varroa mites are considered the most destructive pest of honey bees worldwide and can lead to the loss of entire colonies. Formic acid is highly effective against Varroa mites but can also kill the honeybee queen and worker brood. Whether formic acid can also affect the behavior of honey bees is unknown. We here study the effect of formic acid on sucrose responsiveness and cognition of honey bees treated at different live stages in field-relevant doses. Both behaviors are essential for survival of the honey bee colony. Rather unexpectedly, formic acid clearly improved the learning performance of the bees in appetitive olfactory conditioning, while not affecting sucrose responsiveness. This exciting side effect of formic acid certainly deserves further detailed investigations. KW - animal behaviour KW - animal physiology Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-358064 VL - 13 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kárpáti, Zsolt A1 - Deutsch, Ferenc A1 - Kiss, Balázs A1 - Schmitt, Thomas T1 - Seasonal changes in photoperiod and temperature lead to changes in cuticular hydrocarbon profiles and affect mating success in Drosophila suzukii JF - Scientific Reports N2 - Seasonal plasticity in insects is often triggered by temperature and photoperiod changes. When climatic conditions become sub-optimal, insects might undergo reproductive diapause, a form of seasonal plasticity delaying the development of reproductive organs and activities. During the reproductive diapause, the cuticular hydrocarbon (CHC) profile, which covers the insect body surface, might also change to protect insects from desiccation and cold temperature. However, CHCs are often important cues and signals for mate recognition and changes in CHC composition might affect mate recognition. In the present study, we investigated the CHC profile composition and the mating success of Drosophila suzukii in 1- and 5-day-old males and females of summer and winter morphs. CHC compositions differed with age and morphs. However, no significant differences were found between the sexes of the same age and morph. The results of the behavioral assays show that summer morph pairs start to mate earlier in their life, have a shorter mating duration, and have more offspring compared to winter morph pairs. We hypothesize that CHC profiles of winter morphs are adapted to survive winter conditions, potentially at the cost of reduced mate recognition cues. KW - ecology KW - zoology Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-358095 VL - 13 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Frank, Erik T. A1 - Kesner, Lucie A1 - Liberti, Joanito A1 - Helleu, Quentin A1 - LeBoeuf, Adria C. A1 - Dascalu, Andrei A1 - Sponsler, Douglas B. A1 - Azuma, Fumika A1 - Economo, Evan P. A1 - Waridel, Patrice A1 - Engel, Philipp A1 - Schmitt, Thomas A1 - Keller, Laurent T1 - Targeted treatment of injured nestmates with antimicrobial compounds in an ant society JF - Nature Communications N2 - Infected wounds pose a major mortality risk in animals. Injuries are common in the ant Megaponera analis, which raids pugnacious prey. Here we show that M. analis can determine when wounds are infected and treat them accordingly. By applying a variety of antimicrobial compounds and proteins secreted from the metapleural gland to infected wounds, workers reduce the mortality of infected individuals by 90%. Chemical analyses showed that wound infection is associated with specific changes in the cuticular hydrocarbon profile, thereby likely allowing nestmates to diagnose the infection state of injured individuals and apply the appropriate antimicrobial treatment. This study demonstrates that M. analis ant societies use antimicrobial compounds produced in the metapleural glands to treat infected wounds and reduce nestmate mortality. KW - animal behaviour KW - chemical ecology KW - entomology KW - microbial ecology KW - proteomics Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-358081 VL - 14 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Maichl, Daniela Simone A1 - Kirner, Julius Arthur A1 - Beck, Susanne A1 - Cheng, Wen-Hui A1 - Krug, Melanie A1 - Kuric, Martin A1 - Ade, Carsten Patrick A1 - Bischler, Thorsten A1 - Jakob, Franz A1 - Hose, Dirk A1 - Seckinger, Anja A1 - Ebert, Regina A1 - Jundt, Franziska T1 - Identification of NOTCH-driven matrisome-associated genes as prognostic indicators of multiple myeloma patient survival JF - Blood Cancer Journal N2 - No abstract available. KW - cancer microenvironment KW - myeloma Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-357598 VL - 13 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Klimm, Fabian S. A1 - Bräu, Markus A1 - König, Sebastian A1 - Mandery, Klaus A1 - Sommer, Carolin A1 - Zhang, Jie A1 - Krauss, Jochen T1 - Importance of habitat area, quality and landscape context for heteropteran diversity in shrub ecotones JF - Landscape Ecology N2 - Context Habitat loss and degradation impose serious threats on biodiversity. However, not all habitats receive the attention commensurate with their ecological importance. Shrub ecotones (successional stages between grasslands and forests) can be highly species-diverse but are often restricted to small areas as prevalent management practices either promote open grassland or forest habitats, threatening the effective conservation of ecotone species. Objectives In this study, we assessed the importance of habitat and landscape features of shrub ecotones for the rarely studied true bugs (Heteroptera), a functionally diverse taxon that comprises highly specialized species and broad generalists. Methods True bugs were sampled with a beating tray in 118 spatially independent shrub ecotones in a region of 45,000 square kilometers in Germany. In addition to habitat area and landscape context, we used a hedge index to evaluate habitat quality. Results Shrub ecotones in open habitats harbored a greater species richness and abundance compared to shaded ones in later seral stages, and species composition differed. Richness and abundance were positively affected by increasing habitat area and quality, whereas an increase in the proportion of semi-natural habitats within 1 km only enhanced richness. While feeding and habitat specialists were more sensitive to habitat area reduction than generalists, this was not the case for weak dispersers and carnivores. Conclusions Our findings emphasize the importance of large and high-quality ecotones that form a patchy mosaic of shrubs and herbaceous plants. Such ecotones can benefit both grassland species and species depending on woody plants. Conservation authorities should balance between promoting shrubs and keeping such habitats open to maximize species diversity. KW - hedge index KW - hedgerow KW - true bug KW - semi-natural habitat KW - bush ecotone KW - succession KW - transitional shrubland Y1 - 2024 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-358106 SN - 0921-2973 VL - 39 ER - TY - INPR A1 - Dandekar, Thomas T1 - How do qubits interact? Implications for fundamental physics N2 - Proteins fold in water and achieve a clear structure despite a huge parameter space. Inside a (protein) crystal you have everywhere the same symmetries as there is everywhere the same unit cell. We apply this to qubit interactions to do fundamental physics: We modify cosmological inflation: we replace the big bang by a condensation event in an eternal all-encompassing ocean of free qubits. Rare interactions of qubits in the ocean provide a nucleus or seed for a new universe (domain), as the qubits become decoherent and freeze-out into defined bit ensembles. Next, we replace inflation by a crystallization event triggered by the nucleus of interacting qubits to which rapidly more and more qubits attach (like in everyday crystal growth). The crystal unit cell guarantees same symmetries (and laws of nature) everywhere inside the crystal, no inflation scenario is needed. Interacting qubits solidify, quantum entropy decreases in the crystal, but increases outside in the ocean. The interacting qubits form a rapidly growing domain where the n**m states become separated ensemble states, rising long-range forces stop ultimately further growth. After this very early modified steps, standard cosmology with the hot fireball model takes over. Our theory agrees well with lack of inflation traces in cosmic background measurements. Applying the Hurwitz theorem to qubits we prove that initiation of qubit interactions can only be 1,2,4 or 8-dimensional (agrees with E8 symmetry of our universe). Repulsive forces at ultrashort distances result from quantization, long-range forces limit crystal growth. The phase space of the crystal agrees with the standard model of the basic four forces for n quanta. It includes all possible ensemble combinations of their quantum states m, a total of n**m states. We describe a six-bit-ensemble toy model of qubit interaction and the repulsive forces of qubits for ultra-short distances. Neighbor states reach according to transition possibilities (S-matrix) with emergent time from entropic ensemble gradients. However, in our four dimensions there is only one bit overlap to neighbor states left (almost solid, only below Planck´s quantum is liquidity left). The E8 symmetry of heterotic string theory has six curled-up, small dimensions. These keep the qubit crystal together and never expand. We give energy estimates for free qubits vs bound qubits, misplacements in the qubit crystal and entropy increase during qubit crystal formation. Implications are fundamental answers, e.g. why there is fine-tuning for life-friendliness, why there is string theory with rolled-up dimension and so many free parameters. We explain by cosmological crystallization instead of inflation the early creation of large-scale structure of voids and filaments, supercluster formation, galaxy formation, and the dominance of matter: the unit cell of our crystal universe has a matter handedness avoiding anti-matter. Importantly, crystals come and go in the qubit ocean. This selects for the ability to lay seeds for new crystals, for self-organization and life-friendliness. Vacuum energy gets appropriate low inside the crystal by its qubit binding energy, outside it is 10**20 higher. Scalar fields for color interaction/confinement and gravity could be derived from the qubit-interaction field. KW - protein folding KW - qubit interaction KW - early cosmology KW - qubit KW - modified inflation KW - crystallization KW - decoherence Y1 - 2024 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-357435 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Breyer, Maximilian A1 - Grüner, Julia A1 - Klein, Alexandra A1 - Finke, Laura A1 - Klug, Katharina A1 - Sauer, Markus A1 - Üçeyler, Nurcan T1 - \(In\) \(vitro\) characterization of cells derived from a patient with the GLA variant c.376A>G (p.S126G) highlights a non-pathogenic role in Fabry disease JF - Molecular Genetics and Metabolism Reports N2 - Highlights • The GLA variant S126G is not associated with Fabry symptoms in the presented case • S126G has no effect on α-GAL A activity or Gb3 levels in this patient • S126G sensory neurons show no electrophysiological abnormalities Abstract Fabry disease (FD) is a life-limiting disorder characterized by intracellular globotriaosylceramide (Gb3) accumulations. The underlying α-galactosidase A (α-GAL A) deficiency is caused by variants in the gene GLA. Variants of unknown significance (VUS) are frequently found in GLA and challenge clinical management. Here, we investigated a 49-year old man with cryptogenic lacunar cerebral stroke and the chance finding of the VUS S126G, who was sent to our center for diagnosis and initiation of a costly and life-long FD-specific treatment. We combined clinical examination with in vitro investigations of dermal fibroblasts (HDF), induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC), and iPSC-derived sensory neurons. We analyzed α-GAL A activity in iPSC, Gb3 accumulation in all three cell types, and action potential firing in sensory neurons. Neurological examination and small nerve fiber assessment was normal except for reduced distal skin innervation. S126G iPSC showed normal α-GAL A activity compared to controls and no Gb3 deposits were found in all three cell types. Baseline electrophysiological characteristics of S126G neurons showed no difference compared to healthy controls as investigated by patch-clamp recordings. We pioneer multi-level cellular characterization of the VUS S126G using three cell types derived from a patient and provide further evidence for the benign nature of S126G in GLA, which is of great importance in the management of such cases in clinical practice. KW - Fabry disease KW - variants of unknown significance KW - C.376A>G (p.S126G) KW - globotriaosylceramide KW - induced pluripotent stem cells KW - sensory neurons KW - disease model KW - α-Galactosidase A Y1 - 2024 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-350295 SN - 22144269 VL - 38 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Lu, Jinping A1 - Dreyer, Ingo A1 - Dickinson, Miles Sasha A1 - Panzer, Sabine A1 - Jaślan, Dawid A1 - Navarro-Retamal, Carlos A1 - Geiger, Dietmar A1 - Terpitz, Ulrich A1 - Becker, Dirk A1 - Stroud, Robert M. A1 - Marten, Irene A1 - Hedrich, Rainer T1 - Vicia faba SV channel VfTPC1 is a hyperexcitable variant of plant vacuole two pore channels JF - eLife N2 - To fire action-potential-like electrical signals, the vacuole membrane requires the two-pore channel TPC1, formerly called SV channel. The TPC1/SV channel functions as a depolarization-stimulated, non-selective cation channel that is inhibited by luminal Ca\(^{2+}\). In our search for species-dependent functional TPC1 channel variants with different luminal Ca\(^{2+}\) sensitivity, we found in total three acidic residues present in Ca\(^{2+}\) sensor sites 2 and 3 of the Ca\(^{2+}\)-sensitive AtTPC1 channel from Arabidopsis thaliana that were neutral in its Vicia faba ortholog and also in those of many other Fabaceae. When expressed in the Arabidopsis AtTPC1-loss-of-function background, wild-type VfTPC1 was hypersensitive to vacuole depolarization and only weakly sensitive to blocking luminal Ca\(^{2+}\). When AtTPC1 was mutated for these VfTPC1-homologous polymorphic residues, two neutral substitutions in Ca\(^{2+}\) sensor site 3 alone were already sufficient for the Arabidopsis At-VfTPC1 channel mutant to gain VfTPC1-like voltage and luminal Ca\(^{2+}\) sensitivity that together rendered vacuoles hyperexcitable. Thus, natural TPC1 channel variants exist in plant families which may fine-tune vacuole excitability and adapt it to environmental settings of the particular ecological niche. KW - A. thaliana KW - Brassicaceae KW - Fabaceae KW - pore KW - potassium channel KW - voltage gating KW - vacuolar calcium sensor Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-350264 VL - 12 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Thomas, Sarah A1 - Fiebig, Juliane E. A1 - Kuhn, Eva-Maria A1 - Mayer, Dominik S. A1 - Filbeck, Sebastian A1 - Schmitz, Werner A1 - Krischke, Markus A1 - Gropp, Roswitha A1 - Mueller, Thomas D. T1 - Design of glycoengineered IL-4 antagonists employing chemical and biosynthetic glycosylation JF - ACS Omega N2 - Interleukin-4 (IL-4) plays a key role in atopic diseases. It coordinates T-helper cell differentiation to subtype 2, thereby directing defense toward humoral immunity. Together with Interleukin-13, IL-4 further induces immunoglobulin class switch to IgE. Antibodies of this type activate mast cells and basophilic and eosinophilic granulocytes, which release pro-inflammatory mediators accounting for the typical symptoms of atopic diseases. IL-4 and IL-13 are thus major targets for pharmaceutical intervention strategies to treat atopic diseases. Besides neutralizing antibodies against IL-4, IL-13, or its receptors, IL-4 antagonists can present valuable alternatives. Pitrakinra, an Escherichia coli-derived IL-4 antagonist, has been evaluated in clinical trials for asthma treatment in the past; however, deficits such as short serum lifetime and potential immunogenicity among others stopped further development. To overcome such deficits, PEGylation of therapeutically important proteins has been used to increase the lifetime and proteolytic stability. As an alternative, glycoengineering is an emerging strategy used to improve pharmacokinetics of protein therapeutics. In this study, we have established different strategies to attach glycan moieties to defined positions in IL-4. Different chemical attachment strategies employing thiol chemistry were used to attach a glucose molecule at amino acid position 121, thereby converting IL-4 into a highly effective antagonist. To enhance the proteolytic stability of this IL-4 antagonist, additional glycan structures were introduced by glycoengineering utilizing eucaryotic expression. IL-4 antagonists with a combination of chemical and biosynthetic glycoengineering could be useful as therapeutic alternatives to IL-4 neutralizing antibodies already used to treat atopic diseases. KW - Interleukin-4 (IL-4) KW - atopic diseases KW - IL-4 antagonists KW - glycoengineering KW - biosynthetic glycosylation KW - chemical glycosylation Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-350278 SN - 2470-1343 VL - 8 IS - 28 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Otieno, Mark A1 - Karpati, Zsolt A1 - Peters, Marcell K. A1 - Duque, Laura A1 - Schmitt, Thomas A1 - Steffan-Dewenter, Ingolf T1 - Elevated ozone and carbon dioxide affects the composition of volatile organic compounds emitted by Vicia faba (L.) and visitation by European orchard bee (Osmia cornuta) JF - PLoS One N2 - Recent studies link increased ozone (O\(_3\)) and carbon dioxide (CO\(_2\)) levels to alteration of plant performance and plant-herbivore interactions, but their interactive effects on plant-pollinator interactions are little understood. Extra floral nectaries (EFNs) are essential organs used by some plants for stimulating defense against herbivory and for the attraction of insect pollinators, e.g., bees. The factors driving the interactions between bees and plants regarding the visitation of bees to EFNs are poorly understood, especially in the face of global change driven by greenhouse gases. Here, we experimentally tested whether elevated levels of O\(_3\) and CO\(_2\) individually and interactively alter the emission of Volatile Organic Compound (VOC) profiles in the field bean plant (Vicia faba, L., Fabaceae), EFN nectar production and EFN visitation by the European orchard bee (Osmia cornuta, Latreille, Megachilidae). Our results showed that O\(_3\) alone had significant negative effects on the blends of VOCs emitted while the treatment with elevated CO\(_2\) alone did not differ from the control. Furthermore, as with O\(_3\) alone, the mixture of O\(_3\) and CO\(_2\) also had a significant difference in the VOCs’ profile. O\(_3\) exposure was also linked to reduced nectar volume and had a negative impact on EFN visitation by bees. Increased CO\(_2\) level, on the other hand, had a positive impact on bee visits. Our results add to the knowledge of the interactive effects of O\(_3\) and CO\(_2\) on plant volatiles emitted by Vicia faba and bee responses. As greenhouse gas levels continue to rise globally, it is important to take these findings into consideration to better prepare for changes in plant-insect interactions. KW - Volatile Organic Compound (VOC) KW - Vicia faba (L.) KW - European orchard bee (Osmia cornuta) KW - carbon dioxide (CO2) KW - ozone (O3) KW - bees KW - flowering plants KW - plant-insect interactions KW - flowers KW - plant physiology KW - plant-herbivore interactions Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-350020 VL - 18 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Bencurova, Elena A1 - Akash, Aman A1 - Dobson, Renwick C.J. A1 - Dandekar, Thomas T1 - DNA storage-from natural biology to synthetic biology JF - Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal N2 - Natural DNA storage allows cellular differentiation, evolution, the growth of our children and controls all our ecosystems. Here, we discuss the fundamental aspects of DNA storage and recent advances in this field, with special emphasis on natural processes and solutions that can be exploited. We point out new ways of efficient DNA and nucleotide storage that are inspired by nature. Within a few years DNA-based information storage may become an attractive and natural complementation to current electronic data storage systems. We discuss rapid and directed access (e.g. DNA elements such as promotors, enhancers), regulatory signals and modulation (e.g. lncRNA) as well as integrated high-density storage and processing modules (e.g. chromosomal territories). There is pragmatic DNA storage for use in biotechnology and human genetics. We examine DNA storage as an approach for synthetic biology (e.g. light-controlled nucleotide processing enzymes). The natural polymers of DNA and RNA offer much for direct storage operations (read-in, read-out, access control). The inbuilt parallelism (many molecules at many places working at the same time) is important for fast processing of information. Using biology concepts from chromosomal storage, nucleic acid processing as well as polymer material sciences such as electronical effects in enzymes, graphene, nanocellulose up to DNA macramé , DNA wires and DNA-based aptamer field effect transistors will open up new applications gradually replacing classical information storage methods in ever more areas over time (decades). KW - DNA KW - RNA KW - data storage KW - natural processing KW - synthetic biology Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-349971 SN - 2001-0370 VL - 21 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Brenzinger, Kristof A1 - Costa, Ohana Y. A. A1 - Ho, Adrian A1 - Koorneef, Guusje A1 - Robroek, Bjorn A1 - Molenaar, Douwe A1 - Korthals, Gerard A1 - Bodelier, Paul L. E. T1 - Steering microbiomes by organic amendments towards climate-smart agricultural soils JF - Biology and Fertility of Soils N2 - We steered the soil microbiome via applications of organic residues (mix of cover crop residues, sewage sludge + compost, and digestate + compost) to enhance multiple ecosystem services in line with climate-smart agriculture. Our result highlights the potential to reduce greenhouse gases (GHG) emissions from agricultural soils by the application of specific organic amendments (especially digestate + compost). Unexpectedly, also the addition of mineral fertilizer in our mesocosms led to similar combined GHG emissions than one of the specific organic amendments. However, the application of organic amendments has the potential to increase soil C, which is not the case when using mineral fertilizer. While GHG emissions from cover crop residues were significantly higher compared to mineral fertilizer and the other organic amendments, crop growth was promoted. Furthermore, all organic amendments induced a shift in the diversity and abundances of key microbial groups. We show that organic amendments have the potential to not only lower GHG emissions by modifying the microbial community abundance and composition, but also favour crop growth-promoting microorganisms. This modulation of the microbial community by organic amendments bears the potential to turn soils into more climate-smart soils in comparison to the more conventional use of mineral fertilizers. KW - greenhouse gases KW - agricultural soils KW - organic amendment KW - flux measurements KW - microbial community abundance and compositions KW - plant growth Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-326930 VL - 57 IS - 8 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Chumduri, Cindrilla A1 - Turco, Margherita Y. T1 - Organoids of the female reproductive tract JF - Journal of Molecular Medicine N2 - Healthy functioning of the female reproductive tract (FRT) depends on balanced and dynamic regulation by hormones during the menstrual cycle, pregnancy and childbirth. The mucosal epithelial lining of different regions of the FRT—ovaries, fallopian tubes, uterus, cervix and vagina—facilitates the selective transport of gametes and successful transfer of the zygote to the uterus where it implants and pregnancy takes place. It also prevents pathogen entry. Recent developments in three-dimensional (3D) organoid systems from the FRT now provide crucial experimental models that recapitulate the cellular heterogeneity and physiological, anatomical and functional properties of the organ in vitro. In this review, we summarise the state of the art on organoids generated from different regions of the FRT. We discuss the potential applications of these powerful in vitro models to study normal physiology, fertility, infections, diseases, drug discovery and personalised medicine. KW - female reproductive tract KW - organoids KW - reproductive health KW - pregnancy KW - fertility KW - infection KW - cancers Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-328374 VL - 99 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Moris, Victoria C. A1 - Christmann, Katharina A1 - Wirtgen, Aline A1 - Belokobylskij, Sergey A. A1 - Berg, Alexander A1 - Liebig, Wolf-Harald A1 - Soon, Villu A1 - Baur, Hannes A1 - Schmitt, Thomas A1 - Niehuis, Oliver T1 - Cuticular hydrocarbons on old museum specimens of the spiny mason wasp, Odynerus spinipes (Hymenoptera: Vespidae: Eumeninae), shed light on the distribution and on regional frequencies of distinct chemotypes JF - Chemoecology N2 - The mason wasp Odynerus spinipes shows an exceptional case of intrasexual cuticular hydrocarbon (CHC) profile dimorphism. Females of this species display one of two CHC profiles (chemotypes) that differ qualitatively and quantitatively from each other. The ratio of the two chemotypes was previously shown to be close to 1:1 at three sites in Southern Germany, which might not be representative given the Palearctic distribution of the species. To infer the frequency of the two chemotypes across the entire distributional range of the species, we analyzed with GC–MS the CHC profile of 1042 dry-mounted specimens stored in private and museum collections. We complemented our sampling by including 324 samples collected and preserved specifically for studying their CHCs. We were capable of reliably identifying the chemotypes in 91% of dry-mounted samples, some of which collected almost 200 years ago. We found both chemotypes to occur in the Far East, the presumed glacial refuge of the species, and their frequency to differ considerably between sites and geographic regions. The geographic structure in the chemotype frequencies could be the result of differential selection regimes and/or different dispersal routes during the colonization of the Western Palearctic. The presented data pave the route for disentangling these factors by providing information where to geographically sample O. spinipes for population genetic analyses. They also form the much-needed basis for future studies aiming to understand the evolutionary and geographic origin as well as the genetics of the astounding CHC profile dimorphism that O. spinipes females exhibit. KW - cuticular hydrocarbons KW - chemotypes KW - dry-mounted samples KW - collections KW - distribution Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-306999 SN - 0937-7409 SN - 1423-0445 VL - 31 IS - 5 ER - TY - THES A1 - König, Sebastian Thomas T1 - Temperature-driven assembly processes of Orthoptera communities: Lessons on diversity, species traits, feeding interactions, and associated faecal microorganisms from elevational gradients in Southern Germany (Berchtesgaden Alps) T1 - Temperaturabhängige Zusammensetzungsprozesse von Heuschreckengemeinschaften: Lektionen über die Diversität, Artmerkmale, Fraßinteraktionen, und Kot-Mikroorganismen von Höhengradienten in Süddeutschland (Berchtesgadener Alpen) N2 - Chapter I: Introduction Temperature is a major driver of biodiversity and abundance patterns on our planet, which becomes particularly relevant facing the entanglement of an imminent biodiversity and climate crisis. Climate shapes the composition of species assemblages either directly via abiotic filtering mechanisms or indirectly through alterations in biotic interactions. Insects - integral elements of Earth’s ecosystems - are affected by climatic variation such as warming, yet responses vary among species. While species’ traits, antagonistic biotic interactions, and even species’ microbial mutualists may determine temperature-dependent assembly processes, the lion’s share of these complex relationships remains poorly understood due to methodological constraints. Mountains, recognized as hotspots of diversity and threatened by rapidly changing climatic conditions, can serve as natural experimental settings to study the response of insect assemblages and their trophic interactions to temperature variation, instrumentalizing the high regional heterogeneity of micro- and macroclimate. With this thesis, we aim to enhance our mechanistic understanding of temperature-driven assembly processes within insect communities, exemplified by Orthoptera, that are significant herbivores in temperate mountain grassland ecosystems. Therefore, we combined field surveys of Orthoptera assemblages on grassland sites with molecular tools for foodweb reconstruction, primarily leveraging the elevational gradients offered by the complex topography within the Berchtesgaden Alpine region (Bavaria, Germany) as surrogate for temperature variation (space-for-time substitution approach). In this framework, we studied the effects of temperature variation on (1) species richness, abundance, community composition, and interspecific as well as intraspecific trait patterns, (2) ecological feeding specialisation, and (3) previously neglected links to microbial associates found in the faeces. Chapter II: Temperature-driven assembly processes Climate varies at multiple scales. Since microclimate is often overlooked, we assessed effects of local temperature deviations on species and trait compositions of insect communities along macroclimatic temperature gradients in Chapter II. Therefore, we employed joint species distribution modelling to explore how traits drive variation in the climatic niches of Orthoptera species at grassland sites characterized by contrasting micro- and macroclimatic conditions. Our findings revealed two key insights: (1) additive effects of micro- and macroclimate on the diversity, but (2) interactive effects on the abundance of several species, resulting in turnover and indicating that species possess narrower climatic niches than their elevational distributions might imply. This chapter suggests positive effects of warming on Orthoptera, but also highlights that the interplay of macro- and microclimate plays a pivotal role in structuring insect communities. Thus, it underscores the importance of considering both elements when predicting the responses of species to climate change. Additionally, this chapter revealed inter- and intraspecific effects of traits on the niches and distribution of species. Chapter III: Dietary specialisation along climatic gradients A crucial trait linked to the position of climatic niches is dietary specialisation. According to the ‘altitudinal niche-breadth hypothesis’, species of high-elevation habitats should be less specialized compared to their low-elevation counterparts. However, empirical evidence on shifts in specialization is scarce for generalist insect herbivores and existing studies often fail to control for the phylogeny and abundance of interaction partners. In Chapter III, we used a combination of field observations and amplicon sequencing to reconstruct dietary relationships between Orthoptera and plants along an extensive temperature gradient. We did not find close but flexible links between individual grasshopper and plant taxa in space. While interaction network specialisation increased with temperature, the corrected dietary specialisation pattern peaked at intermediate elevations on assemblage level. These nuanced findings demonstrate that (1) resource availability, (2) phylogenetic relationships, and (3) climate can affect empirical foodwebs intra- and interspecifically and, hence, the dietary specialisation of herbivorous insects. In this context, we discuss that the underlying mechanisms involved in shaping the specialisation of herbivore assemblages may switch along temperature clines. Chapter IV: Links between faecal microbe communities, feeding habits, and climate Since gut microbes affect the fitness and digestion of insects, studying their diversity could provide novel insights into specialisation patterns. However, their association with insect hosts that differ in feeding habits and specialisation has never been investigated along elevational climatic gradients. In Chapter IV, we utilized the dietary information gathered in Chapter III to characterize links between insects with distinct feeding behaviour and the microbial communities present in their faeces, using amplicon sequencing. Both, feeding and climate affected the bacterial communities. However, the large overlap of microbes at site level suggests that common bacteria are acquired from the shared feeding environment, such as the plants consumed by the insects. These findings emphasize the influence of a broader environmental context on the composition of insect gut microbial communities. Chapter V: Discussion & Conclusions Cumulatively, the sections of this dissertation provide support for the hypothesis that climatic conditions play a role in shaping plant–herbivore systems. The detected variation of taxonomic and functional compositions contributes to our understanding of assembly processes and resulting diversity patterns within Orthoptera communities, shedding light on the mechanisms that structure their trophic interactions in diverse climates. The combined results presented suggest that a warmer climate could foster an increase of Orthoptera species richness in Central European semi-natural grasslands, also because the weak links observed between insect herbivores and plants are unlikely to limit decoupled range shifts. However, the restructuring of Orthoptera communities in response to warmer temperatures depends on species' traits such as moisture preferences or phenology. Notably, we were able to demonstrate a crucial role of microclimate for many species, partly unravelling narrower climatic niches than their elevational ranges suggest. We found evidence that not only Orthoptera community composition, specialisation, and traits varied along elevational gradients, but even microbial communities in the faeces of Orthoptera changed, which is a novel finding. This complex restructuring and reassembly of communities, coupled with the nonlinear specialisation of trophic interactions and a high diversity of associated bacteria, emphasize our currently incomplete comprehension of how ecosystems will develop under future climatic conditions, demanding caution in making simplified predictions for biodiversity change under climate warming. Since these predictions may benefit from including biotic interactions and both, micro- and macroclimate based on our findings, conservation authorities and practitioners must not neglect improving microclimatic conditions to ensure local survival of a diverse set of threatened and demanding species. In this context, mountains can play a pivotal role for biodiversity conservation since these offer heterogeneous microclimatic conditions in proximity that can be utilized by species with distinct niches. N2 - Kapitel I: Einleitung Die Temperatur ist eine wichtige Triebkraft hinter den Artenvielfalts- und Abundanzmustern auf unserem Planeten, was angesichts der Verflechtung der unmittelbar bevorstehenden Biodiversitäts- und Klimakrise besonders relevant ist. Das Klima strukturiert die Artenvielfalt direkt durch abiotische Filtermechanismen oder indirekt durch Veränderungen biotischer Wechselwirkungen. Insekten - wesentliche Bestandteile der Ökosysteme der Erde - sind von klimatischen Veränderungen wie der Erwärmung betroffen, reagieren aber je nach Art unterschiedlich. Während die Merkmale der Arten, antagonistische biotische Interaktionen und sogar die mikrobiellen Partner der Arten temperaturabhängige Zusammensetzungsprozesse bestimmen können, bleibt ein Großteil dieser komplexen Beziehungen aufgrund methodischer Einschränkungen nach wie vor schlecht verstanden. Gebirge, die als Hotspots der Diversität gelten und von sich rasch verändernden klimatischen Bedingungen bedroht sind, können durch Nutzung der großen regionalen Heterogenität der Klein- und Großklimate als natürliche Experimente dienen, um die Reaktion von Insektengemeinschaften und deren trophischen Interaktionen auf Temperaturänderungen zu untersuchen. Mit dieser Arbeit möchten wir einen Beitrag zum mechanistischen Verständnis der temperaturbedingten Zusammensetzungsprozesse von Insektengemeinschaften leisten, am Beispiel von Heuschrecken, die bedeutende Pflanzenfresser in Grünlandökosystemen der gemäßigten Breiten sind. Hierfür kombinierten wir Felduntersuchungen von Heuschreckengemeinschaften in Grünlandstandorten mit molekularen Methoden zur Rekonstruktion von Nahrungsbeziehungen, wobei wir hauptsächlich die Höhengradienten, die die komplexe Topografie der Berchtesgadener Alpenregion (Bayern, Deutschland) bietet, stellvertretend für Temperaturveränderungen verwendeten (Raum-Zeit-Substitutionsansatz). In diesem Rahmen untersuchten wir die Auswirkungen von Temperaturvariation auf (1) den Artenreichtum, die Abundanz, die Zusammensetzung der Gemeinschaft und die inter- und intraspezifischen Merkmalsmuster, (2) die ökologische Nahrungsspezialisierung und (3) die bis dato vernachlässigte Verbindung zu den mikrobiellen Begleitarten im Kot. Kapitel II: Temperaturabhängige Zusammensetzungsprozesse Das Klima variiert auf verschiedenen Ebenen. Da Veränderungen im Kleinklima oft vernachlässigt werden, haben wir in Kapitel II die Auswirkungen der lokalen Temperaturunterschiede auf die Arten- und Merkmalszusammensetzung von Insektengemeinschaften entlang makroklimatischer Temperaturgradienten untersucht. Hierfür haben wir die Methode der gemeinsamen Artenverteilungsmodellierung verwendet, um zu untersuchen, wie Artmerkmale die Unterschiede in klimatischen Nischen von Heuschreckenarten auf Grünlandstandorten mit gegensätzlichen mikro- und makroklimatischen Bedingungen beeinflussen. Unsere Ergebnisse brachten zwei wichtige Erkenntnisse zutage: (1) additive Auswirkungen des Mikro- und Makroklimas auf die Vielfalt, aber (2) interaktive Effekte auf die Häufigkeit mehrerer Arten, die sich in Zusammensetzungsunterschieden niederschlagen und auf engere klimatische Nischen hinweisen, als es die Höhenverbreitung vermuten lässt. Dieses Kapitel deutet auf positive Auswirkungen einer Erwärmung auf Orthoptera hin, zeigt aber auch, dass das Zusammenspiel von Makro- und Mikroklima eine Schlüsselrolle bei der Strukturierung von Insektengemeinschaften spielt und beide Elemente bei der Vorhersage der Reaktionen von Arten auf den Klimawandel berücksichtigt werden sollten. Darüber hinaus wurden in diesem Kapitel die inter- und intraspezifischen Auswirkungen von Merkmalen auf die Nischen und die Verbreitung von Arten aufgezeigt. Kapitel III: Nahrungsspezialisierung entlang von Klimagradienten Ein entscheidendes Merkmal für die Lage der klimatischen Nische einer Art ist die Nahrungsspezialisierung. Nach der "Hypothese der Höhenlagen-abhängigen Nischenbreite" sollten Arten in hoch gelegenen Lebensräumen weniger spezialisiert sein als ihre Pendants in niedrigen Lagen. Empirische Belege für Verschiebungen in der Spezialisierung von generalistischen, herbivoren Insekten sind jedoch rar und es fehlt eine Berücksichtigung der Häufigkeit und Phylogenie von Interaktionspartnern. In Kapitel III haben wir eine Kombination aus Feldbeobachtungen und Amplikonsequenzierung verwendet, um die Nahrungsbeziehungen von Heuschrecken und Pflanzen entlang eines ausgedehnten Temperaturgradienten zu rekonstruieren. Wir konnten keine engen, sondern flexible Beziehungen zwischen einzelnen Herbivoren- und Pflanzentaxa feststellen. Während die Spezialisierung der Interaktionsnetzwerke mit der Temperatur zunahm, erreichte das korrigierte Muster der Nahrungsspezialisierung auf Gemeinschaftsebene seinen Höhepunkt in mittleren Höhenlagen. Diese differenzierten Ergebnisse zeigen, dass (1) die Verfügbarkeit von Ressourcen, (2) phylogenetische Beziehungen und (3) das Klima intra- und interspezifische empirische Nahrungsbeziehungen und damit die Nahrungsspezialisierung pflanzenfressender Insekten beeinflussen können. In diesem Kontext diskutieren wir, dass die zugrundeliegenden Mechanismen hinter der Nahrungsspezialisierung von herbivoren Insekten entlang von Temperaturgradienten wechseln könnten. Kapitel IV: Verbindungen zwischen Kotbakteriengemeinschaften, Ernährungsgewohnheiten und Klima. Da Darmbakterien die Fitness und Verdauung von Insekten beeinflussen, könnte die Untersuchung deren Vielfalt neue Erkenntnisse über Spezialisierungsmuster liefern. Ihre Verbindung mit Insekten, die sich in ihren Ernährungsgewohnheiten und ihrer Spezialisierung unterscheiden, wurde jedoch noch nie entlang klimatischer Höhengradienten untersucht. In Kapitel IV verwendeten wir Nahrungsinformationen aus Kapitel III, um mit Hilfe von Amplikonsequenzierung Verbindungen zwischen Insekten mit unterschiedlichem Ernährungsverhalten und mikrobiellen Gemeinschaften in deren Kot zu charakterisieren. Sowohl die Nahrung als auch das Klima hatten Auswirkungen auf die bakteriellen Gemeinschaften. Die große Überschneidung der Mikrobengemeinschaften auf Standortebene deutet jedoch darauf hin, dass gemeinsame Bakterien aus der geteilten Nahrungsumgebung, wie z.B. den von den Insekten verzehrten Pflanzen, stammen. Diese Ergebnisse unterstreichen den Einfluss eines breiteren Umweltkontextes auf die Zusammensetzung der mikrobiellen Gemeinschaften im Insektendarm. Kapitel V: Diskussion & Schlussfolgerungen Insgesamt stützen die Kapitel dieser Dissertation die Hypothese, dass klimatische Verhältnisse Pflanzen-Pflanzenfresser-Systeme prägen. Die festgestellten Unterschiede in der taxonomischen und funktionellen Zusammensetzung tragen zu unserem Verständnis der Zusammensetzungsprozesse und daraus resultierenden Diversitätsmustern von Heuschreckengemeinschaften sowie der Mechanismen bei, die deren trophische Interaktionen in verschiedenen Klimazonen strukturieren. Die Kombination der Ergebnisse deutet darauf hin, dass wärmeres Klima eine Zunahme des Heuschreckenartenreichtums in naturnahen Grünlandgebieten Mitteleuropas begünstigen könnte, auch weil die schwachen Verbindungen zwischen den herbivoren Insekten und Pflanzen entkoppelte Arealverschiebungen wahrscheinlich nicht limitieren. Jedoch könnten höhere Temperaturen die Zusammensetzung von Heuschreckengemeinschaften je nach den Merkmalen der Arten wie deren Feuchtigkeitsvorlieben oder der Schlupfphänologie verändern. Darüber hinaus konnten wir nachweisen, dass das Mikroklima für viele Arten eine entscheidende Rolle spielt, da es teilweise engere klimatische Nischen aufdeckt, als ihre Höhenverbreitung vermuten lassen. Wir fanden Hinweise darauf, dass sich nicht nur die Zusammensetzung, Spezialisierung und Merkmale der Heuschreckengemeinschaften entlang der Höhengradienten ändern, sondern dass sogar die mikrobiellen Gemeinschaften im Kot variieren, was eine neue Erkenntnis darstellt. Diese komplexe Umstrukturierung und Neuzusammensetzung von Gemeinschaften in Kombination mit der nichtlinearen Spezialisierung von Interaktionen und einer hohen Vielfalt an assoziierten Bakterien unterstreichen unser noch immer begrenztes Verständnis davon, wie sich Ökosysteme unter zukünftigen Klimabedingungen entwickeln werden, und mahnen zur Vorsicht bei vereinfachten Vorhersagen über die Veränderung der biologischen Vielfalt im Zuge der Klimaerwärmung. Da solche Vorhersagen auf Grundlage unserer Ergebnisse vom Einbezug biotischer Wechselwirkungen und des Mikro- und Makroklimas profitieren können, dürfen Naturschutzverantwortliche eine Verbesserung der mikroklimatischen Bedingungen nicht vernachlässigen, um das lokale Überleben einer Vielzahl bedrohter und anspruchsvoller Arten zu sichern. In diesem Zusammenhang können Berge eine entscheidende Rolle für den Erhalt der biologischen Vielfalt spielen, da sie in räumlicher Nähe heterogene mikroklimatische Bedingungen bieten, die von Arten mit unterschiedlichen Nischen genutzt werden können. KW - Heuschrecken KW - Mikroklima KW - Bayerische Alpen KW - Nahrung KW - Mikrobiom KW - biotic interactions KW - plant-herbivore-interactions KW - elevational gradients Y1 - 2024 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-354608 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Däullary, Thomas A1 - Imdahl, Fabian A1 - Dietrich, Oliver A1 - Hepp, Laura A1 - Krammer, Tobias A1 - Fey, Christina A1 - Neuhaus, Winfried A1 - Metzger, Marco A1 - Vogel, Jörg A1 - Westermann, Alexander J. A1 - Saliba, Antoine-Emmanuel A1 - Zdzieblo, Daniela T1 - A primary cell-based in vitro model of the human small intestine reveals host olfactomedin 4 induction in response to Salmonella Typhimurium infection JF - Gut Microbes N2 - Infection research largely relies on classical cell culture or mouse models. Despite having delivered invaluable insights into host-pathogen interactions, both have limitations in translating mechanistic principles to human pathologies. Alternatives can be derived from modern Tissue Engineering approaches, allowing the reconstruction of functional tissue models in vitro. Here, we combined a biological extracellular matrix with primary tissue-derived enteroids to establish an in vitro model of the human small intestinal epithelium exhibiting in vivo-like characteristics. Using the foodborne pathogen Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, we demonstrated the applicability of our model to enteric infection research in the human context. Infection assays coupled to spatio-temporal readouts recapitulated the established key steps of epithelial infection by this pathogen in our model. Besides, we detected the upregulation of olfactomedin 4 in infected cells, a hitherto unrecognized aspect of the host response to Salmonella infection. Together, this primary human small intestinal tissue model fills the gap between simplistic cell culture and animal models of infection, and shall prove valuable in uncovering human-specific features of host-pathogen interplay. KW - intestinal enteroids KW - biological scaffold KW - Salmonella Typhimurium KW - OLFM4 KW - NOTCH KW - filamentous Salmonella Typhimurium KW - bacterial migration KW - bacterial virulence KW - 3D tissue model KW - olfactomedin 4 KW - infection Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-350451 VL - 15 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Caliskan, Aylin A1 - Dangwal, Seema A1 - Dandekar, Thomas T1 - Metadata integrity in bioinformatics: bridging the gap between data and knowledge JF - Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal N2 - In the fast-evolving landscape of biomedical research, the emergence of big data has presented researchers with extraordinary opportunities to explore biological complexities. In biomedical research, big data imply also a big responsibility. This is not only due to genomics data being sensitive information but also due to genomics data being shared and re-analysed among the scientific community. This saves valuable resources and can even help to find new insights in silico. To fully use these opportunities, detailed and correct metadata are imperative. This includes not only the availability of metadata but also their correctness. Metadata integrity serves as a fundamental determinant of research credibility, supporting the reliability and reproducibility of data-driven findings. Ensuring metadata availability, curation, and accuracy are therefore essential for bioinformatic research. Not only must metadata be readily available, but they must also be meticulously curated and ideally error-free. Motivated by an accidental discovery of a critical metadata error in patient data published in two high-impact journals, we aim to raise awareness for the need of correct, complete, and curated metadata. We describe how the metadata error was found, addressed, and present examples for metadata-related challenges in omics research, along with supporting measures, including tools for checking metadata and software to facilitate various steps from data analysis to published research. Highlights • Data awareness and data integrity underpins the trustworthiness of results and subsequent further analysis. • Big data and bioinformatics enable efficient resource use by repurposing publicly available RNA-Sequencing data. • Manual checks of data quality and integrity are insufficient due to the overwhelming volume and rapidly growing data. • Automation and artificial intelligence provide cost-effective and efficient solutions for data integrity and quality checks. • FAIR data management, various software solutions and analysis tools assist metadata maintenance. KW - meta-data KW - error KW - annotation KW - error-transfer KW - wrong labelling KW - patient data KW - control group KW - tools overview Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-349990 SN - 2001-0370 VL - 21 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Caliskan, Aylin A1 - Caliskan, Deniz A1 - Rasbach, Lauritz A1 - Yu, Weimeng A1 - Dandekar, Thomas A1 - Breitenbach, Tim T1 - Optimized cell type signatures revealed from single-cell data by combining principal feature analysis, mutual information, and machine learning JF - Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal N2 - Machine learning techniques are excellent to analyze expression data from single cells. These techniques impact all fields ranging from cell annotation and clustering to signature identification. The presented framework evaluates gene selection sets how far they optimally separate defined phenotypes or cell groups. This innovation overcomes the present limitation to objectively and correctly identify a small gene set of high information content regarding separating phenotypes for which corresponding code scripts are provided. The small but meaningful subset of the original genes (or feature space) facilitates human interpretability of the differences of the phenotypes including those found by machine learning results and may even turn correlations between genes and phenotypes into a causal explanation. For the feature selection task, the principal feature analysis is utilized which reduces redundant information while selecting genes that carry the information for separating the phenotypes. In this context, the presented framework shows explainability of unsupervised learning as it reveals cell-type specific signatures. Apart from a Seurat preprocessing tool and the PFA script, the pipeline uses mutual information to balance accuracy and size of the gene set if desired. A validation part to evaluate the gene selection for their information content regarding the separation of the phenotypes is provided as well, binary and multiclass classification of 3 or 4 groups are studied. Results from different single-cell data are presented. In each, only about ten out of more than 30000 genes are identified as carrying the relevant information. The code is provided in a GitHub repository at https://github.com/AC-PHD/Seurat_PFA_pipeline. KW - single cell analysis KW - machine learning KW - explainability of machine learning KW - principal KW - feature analysis KW - model reduction KW - feature selection Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-349989 SN - 2001-0370 VL - 21 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Engstler, Markus A1 - Beneke, Tom T1 - Gene editing and scalable functional genomic screening in Leishmania species using the CRISPR/Cas9 cytosine base editor toolbox LeishBASEedit JF - eLife N2 - CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing has revolutionised loss-of-function experiments in Leishmania, the causative agent of leishmaniasis. As Leishmania lack a functional non-homologous DNA end joining pathway however, obtaining null mutants typically requires additional donor DNA, selection of drug resistance-associated edits or time-consuming isolation of clones. Genome-wide loss-of-function screens across different conditions and across multiple Leishmania species are therefore unfeasible at present. Here, we report a CRISPR/Cas9 cytosine base editor (CBE) toolbox that overcomes these limitations. We employed CBEs in Leishmania to introduce STOP codons by converting cytosine into thymine and created http://www.leishbaseedit.net/ for CBE primer design in kinetoplastids. Through reporter assays and by targeting single- and multi-copy genes in L. mexicana, L. major, L. donovani, and L. infantum, we demonstrate how this tool can efficiently generate functional null mutants by expressing just one single-guide RNA, reaching up to 100% editing rate in non-clonal populations. We then generated a Leishmania-optimised CBE and successfully targeted an essential gene in a plasmid library delivered loss-of-function screen in L. mexicana. Since our method does not require DNA double-strand breaks, homologous recombination, donor DNA, or isolation of clones, we believe that this enables for the first time functional genetic screens in Leishmania via delivery of plasmid libraries. KW - CRISPR/Cas9 KW - Leishmania KW - cytosine base editor (CBE) toolbox KW - gene editing KW - scalable functional genomic screening KW - LeishBASEedit Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-350002 VL - 12 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Salihoglu, Rana A1 - Srivastava, Mugdha A1 - Liang, Chunguang A1 - Schilling, Klaus A1 - Szalay, Aladar A1 - Bencurova, Elena A1 - Dandekar, Thomas T1 - PRO-Simat: Protein network simulation and design tool JF - Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal N2 - PRO-Simat is a simulation tool for analysing protein interaction networks, their dynamic change and pathway engineering. It provides GO enrichment, KEGG pathway analyses, and network visualisation from an integrated database of more than 8 million protein-protein interactions across 32 model organisms and the human proteome. We integrated dynamical network simulation using the Jimena framework, which quickly and efficiently simulates Boolean genetic regulatory networks. It enables simulation outputs with in-depth analysis of the type, strength, duration and pathway of the protein interactions on the website. Furthermore, the user can efficiently edit and analyse the effect of network modifications and engineering experiments. In case studies, applications of PRO-Simat are demonstrated: (i) understanding mutually exclusive differentiation pathways in Bacillus subtilis, (ii) making Vaccinia virus oncolytic by switching on its viral replication mainly in cancer cells and triggering cancer cell apoptosis and (iii) optogenetic control of nucleotide processing protein networks to operate DNA storage. Multilevel communication between components is critical for efficient network switching, as demonstrated by a general census on prokaryotic and eukaryotic networks and comparing design with synthetic networks using PRO-Simat. The tool is available at https://prosimat.heinzelab.de/ as a web-based query server. KW - network simulation KW - protein analysis KW - signalling pathways KW - dynamic protein-protein interactions KW - optogenetics KW - oncolytic virus KW - DNA storage Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-350034 SN - 2001-0370 VL - 21 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Conrad, David A1 - Kehl, Alexandra A1 - Müller, Tobias A1 - Klopfleisch, Robert A1 - Aupperle-Lellbach, Heike T1 - Immunohistochemical and molecular genetic analysis of canine digital mast cell tumours JF - Animals N2 - Grading, immunohistochemistry and c-kit mutation status are criteria for assessing the prognosis and therapeutic options of canine cutaneous mast cell tumours (MCTs). As a subset, canine digital MCTs have rarely been explored in this context. Therefore, in this retrospective study, 68 paraffin-embedded canine digital MCTs were analysed, and histological grading was assessed according to Patnaik and Kiupel. The immunohistochemical markers KIT and Ki67 were used, as well as polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for mutational screening in c-kit exons 8, 9, 11 and 14. Patnaik grading resulted in 22.1% grade I, 67.6% grade II and 10.3% grade III tumours. Some 86.8% of the digital MCTs were Kiupel low-grade. Aberrant KIT staining patterns II and III were found in 58.8%, and a count of more than 23 Ki67-positive cells in 52.3% of the cases. Both parameters were significantly associated with an internal tandem duplication (ITD) in c-kit exon 11 (12.7%). French Bulldogs, which tend to form well-differentiated cutaneous MCTs, had a higher proportion of digital high-grade MCTs and ITD in c-kit exon 11 compared with mongrels. Due to its retrospective nature, this study did not allow for an analysis of survival data. Nevertheless, it may contribute to the targeted characterisation of digital MCTs. KW - dog KW - digit KW - toe KW - CD117 KW - Ki67 KW - KIT KW - grading KW - PCR KW - sequencing KW - c-kit Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-319199 SN - 2076-2615 VL - 13 IS - 10 ER - TY - THES A1 - Nirchal, Naveen Kumar T1 - Mechanistische Regulierung des gastroösophagealen Übergangs und die Rolle der Retinsäure bei der Entwicklung des Barrett-Ösophagus T1 - Mechanistic regulation of gastroesophageal junction and role of retinoic acid in the development of Barrett's esophagus N2 - Der gastroösophageale Übergang (GEJ), der die Region abgrenzt, in der der distale Ösophagus auf die proximale Magenregion trifft, ist bekannt für die Entwicklung pathologischer Zustände, wie Metaplasie und Adenokarzinom des Ösophagus (EAC). Es ist wichtig, die Mechanismen der Entwicklungsstadien zu verstehen, die zu EAC führen, da die Inzidenzrate von EAC in den letzten 4 Jahrzehnten um das 7-fache gestiegen ist und die Gesamtüberlebensrate von 5 Jahren 18,4 % beträgt. In den meisten Fällenwird die Diagnose im fortgeschrittenen Stadium ohne vorherige Symptome erstellt. Der Hauptvorläufer für die Entwicklung von EAC ist eine prämaligne Vorstufe namens Barrett-Ösophagus (BE). BE ist der metaplastische Zustand, bei dem das mehrschichtige Plattenepithel des nativen Ösophagus durch ein spezialisiertes einschichtiges Säulenepithel ersetzt wird, das die molekularen Eigenschaften des Magen- sowie des Darmepithels aufweist. Zu den wichtigsten Risikofaktoren für die Entwicklung von BE gehören die chronische gastroösophageale Refluxkrankheit (GERD), eine veränderte Mikrobiota und veränderte Retinsäure-Signalwege (RA). Es ist unklar, welche Zelle der Ursprung für BE ist, da es keine eindeutigen Beweisen für den Prozess der BE-Initiation gibt. In dieser Arbeit habe ich untersucht, wie die GEJ-Homöostase in gesundem Gewebe durch stammzellregulatorische Morphogene aufrechterhalten wird, welche Rolle der Vitamin-A (RA-Signalübertragung) spieltund wie ihre Veränderung zur BE-Entwicklung beiträgt. Im ersten Teil meiner Dissertation habe ich anhand von Einzelmolekül-RNA in situ-Hybridisierung und Immunhistochemie eindeutig das Vorhandensein von zwei Arten von Epithelzellen nachweisen können, dem Plattenepithel in der Speiseröhre und dem Säulenepithel imMagenbereich des GEJ. Mittels Abstammungsanalysen im Mausmodell konnte ich zeigen, dass die Epithelzellen des Ösophagus und des Magens von zwei verschiedenen epithelialen Stammzelllinien imGEJ abstammen. Die Grenze zwischen Plattenepithel und Säulenepithelzellen im SCJ des GEJ wirddurch gegensätzliche Wnt-Mikroumgebungen streng reguliert. Plattenepithelstammzellen des Ösophagus werden durch das Wnt-hemmende Mikroumgebungssignal aufrechterhalten, während Magensäulenepithelzellen durch das Wnt-aktivierende Signal aus dem Stromakompartiment erhalten werden. Ich habe die in vivo Erhaltung der Epithelstammzellen des GEJ mit Hilfe eines in vitro Epithel-3D-Organoidkulturmodells rekonstruiert. Das Wachstum und die Vermehrung von Magensäulenepithel-Organoiden hängen von Wnt-Wachstumsfaktoren ab, während das Wachstum von Plattenepithel-Organoiden von Wnt-defizienten Kulturbedingungen abhängt. Darüber hinaus zeigte die Einzelzell-RNA-Sequenzanalyse (scRNA-seq) der aus Organoiden gewonnenenEpithelzellen, dass der nicht-kanonische Wnt/ planar cell polarity (PCP) Signalweg an der Regulierung der Plattenepithelzellen beteiligt ist. Im Gegensatz dazu werden säulenförmige Magenepithelzellen durch den kanonischen Wnt/beta-Catenin- und den nicht-kanonischen Wnt/Ca2+-Weg reguliert. Meine Daten zeigen, dass die SCJ-Epithelzellen, die am GEJ verschmelzen, durch entgegengesetzte stromale Wnt-Faktoren und unterschiedliche Wnt-Weg-Signalee in den Epithelzellen reguliert werden. Im zweiten Teil der Dissertation untersuchte ich die Rolle der bioaktiven Vitamin A Verbindung RA auf Ösophagus- und Magenepithelstammzellen. Die In-vitro-Behandlung von epithelialen Organoiden der Speiseröhre und des Magens mitRA oder seinem pharmakologischen Inhibitors BMS 493 zeigte, dass jeder Zelltyp unterschiedlich reguliert wurde. Ich beobachtete, dass eine verstärkte RA die Differenzierung von Stammzellen und den Verlust der Schichtung förderte, während die RA-Hemmung zu einer verstärkten Stammzellbildung und Regeneration im mehrschichtigen Epithel der Speiseröhre führte. Im Gegensatz zur Speiseröhre ist der RA-Signalweg in Magen-Organoiden aktiv, und die Hemmung von RA hat ein reduziertes Wachstum von Magen-Organoiden. Globale transkriptomische Daten und scRNA-seq-Daten zeigten, dass derRA-Signalweg einen Ruhephänotyp in den Ösophaguszellen induziert. Dagegen führt das Fehlen von RA in Magenepithelzellen zur Expression von Genen, die mit BE assoziiert sind. Daher isteine räumlich definierte Regulation der Wnt- und Retinsäure-Signalgebung amGEJ entscheidend für eine gesunde Homöostase, und ihre Störung führt zur Entwicklung von Krankheiten. N2 - Gastroesophageal junction (GEJ), demarcating the region where the distal esophagus meets with the proximal stomach region, is known for developing pathological conditions, including metaplasia and esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC). It is essential to understand the mechanisms of developmental stages which lead to EAC since the incidence rate of EAC increased over 7-fold during the past four decades, and the overall five years survival rate is 18.4%. In most cases, patients are diagnosed in the advanced stage without prior symptoms. The main precursor for the development of EAC is a pre-malignant condition called Barrett's esophagus (BE). BE is the metaplastic condition where the multilayered squamous epithelium of the native esophagus is replaced by specialized single-layered columnar epithelium, which shows the molecular characteristics of the gastric as well as intestinal epithelium. The main risk factors for BE development include chronic gastro-esophageal acid reflux disease (GERD), altered microbiota, and altered retinoic acid signaling (RA). The cell of origin of BE is under debate due to a lack of clear evidence demonstrating the process of BE initiation. Here, I investigated how GEJ homeostasis is maintained in healthy tissue by stem cell regulatory morphogens, the role of vitamin A (RA signaling), and how its alteration contributes to BE development. In the first part of my thesis, I showed the presence of two types of epithelial cells, the squamous type in the esophagus and the columnar type in the stomach region in the GEJ, using single-molecule RNA in situ hybridization (smRNA-ISH) and immunohistochemistry. Employing lineage tracing in the mouse model, I have demonstrated that the esophageal epithelial and stomach epithelial cells derived from two distinct epithelial stem cell lineages in the GEJ. The border between squamous and columnar epithelial cells in the Squamo-columnar junction (SCJ) of GEJ is regulated by opposing Wnt microenvironments. The regeneration of stomach columnar epithelial stem cells is maintained by Wnt activating signal from the stromal compartment while squamous epithelial stem cells of the esophagus are maintained by the Wnt inhibitory signals. I recapitulated the in vivo GEJ epithelial stem cell maintenance by using in vitro epithelial 3D organoid culture model. The growth and propagation of stomach columnar epithelial organoids depend on Wnt growth factors, while squamous epithelial organoids' development needs Wnt-deficient culture conditions. Further, single-cell RNA sequence (scRNA-seq) analysis of organoid-derived epithelial cells revealed the non-canonical Wnt/ planar cell polarity (PCP) pathway involvement in regulating the squamous epithelial cells. In contrast, columnar stomach epithelial cells are regulated by the canonical Wnt/ beta-catenin and non-canonical Wnt/Ca2+ pathways. My data indicate that the SCJ epithelial cells that merge at the GEJ are regulated by opposing stromal Wnt factors and distinct Wnt pathway signaling in the epithelial cells. In the second part of the thesis, I investigated the role of Vitamin A-derived bioactive compound RA on esophageal and stomach epithelial stem cells. In vitro treatment of esophageal and stomach, epithelial organoids with RA or its pharmacological inhibitor BMS 493 revealed that each cell type was regulated distinctly. I observed that enhanced RA promoted esophageal stem cell differentiation and loss of stratification, while RA inhibition led to enhanced stemness and regeneration of the esophagus stratified epithelium. As opposed to the esophagus, RA signaling is active in the stomach organoids, and inhibition of RA reduces the growth of stomach organoids. Global transcriptomic data and scRNA-seq data revealed that RA signaling induces dormancy phenotype in the esophageal cells. In contrast, the absence of RA in stomach epithelial cells induces the expression of genes associated with BE. Thus, spatially defined regulation of Wnt and RA signaling at GEJ is critical for healthy homeostasis, and its perturbation leads to disease development. KW - Retinoesäure KW - Esophageal adenocarcinoma KW - Intestinal metaplasia KW - Epithelial lineage KW - Organoid KW - Retinoic acid KW - Gastroesophageal reflux KW - Endobrachyösophagus KW - Esophageal disease Y1 - 2024 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-311556 ER - TY - THES A1 - Weisert, Nadine T1 - Characterization of telomere-associated proteins in \(Trypanosoma\) \(brucei\) T1 - Charakterisierung Telomer-assoziierter Proteine in \(Trypanosoma\) \(brucei\) N2 - The unicellular pathogen Trypanosoma brucei is the causative agent of African trypanosomiasis, an endemic disease prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa. Trypanosoma brucei alternates between a mammalian host and the tsetse fly vector. The extracellular parasite survives in the mammalian bloodstream by periodically exchanging their ˈvariant surface glycoproteinˈ (VSG) coat to evade the host immune response. This antigenic variation is achieved through monoallelic expression of one VSG variant from subtelomeric ˈbloodstream form expression sitesˈ (BES) at a given timepoint. During the differentiation from the bloodstream form (BSF) to the procyclic form (PCF) in the tsetse fly midgut, the stage specific surface protein is transcriptionally silenced and replaced by procyclins. Due to their subtelomeric localization on the chromosomes, VSG transcription and silencing is partly regulated by homologues of the mammalian telomere complex such as TbTRF, TbTIF2 and TbRAP1 as well as by ˈtelomere-associated proteinsˈ (TelAPs) like TelAP1. To gain more insights into transcription regulation of VSG genes, the identification and characterization of other TelAPs is critical and has not yet been achieved. In a previous study, two biochemical approaches were used to identify other novel TelAPs. By using ˈco-immunoprecipitationˈ (co-IP) to enrich possible interaction partners of TbTRF and by affinity chromatography using telomeric repeat oligonucleotides, a listing of TelAP candidates has been conducted. With this approach TelAP1 was identified as a novel component of the telomere complex, involved in the kinetics of transcriptional BES silencing during BSF to PCF differentiation. To gain further insights into the telomere complex composition, other previously enriched proteins were characterized through a screening process using RNA interference to deplete potential candidates. VSG expression profile changes and overall proteomic changes after depletion were analyzed by mass spectrometry. With this method, one can gain insights into the functions of the proteins and their involvement in VSG expression site regulation. To validate the interaction of proteins enriched by co-IP with TbTRF and TelAP1 and to identify novel interaction proteins, I performed reciprocal affinity purifications of the four most promising candidates (TelAP2, TelAP3, PPL2 and PolIE) and additionally confirmed colocalization of two candidates with TbTRF via immunofluorescence (TelAP2, TelAP3). TelAP3 colocalizes with TbTRF and potentially interacts with TbTRF, TbTIF2, TelAP1 and TelAP2, as well as with two translesion polymerases PPL2 and PolIE in BSF. PPL2 and PolIE seem to be in close contact to each other at the telomeric ends and fulfill different roles as only PolIE is involved in VSG regulation while PPL2 is not. TelAP2 was previously characterized to be associated with telomeres by partially colocalizing with TbTRF and cells show a VSG derepression phenotype when the protein was depleted. Here I show that TelAP2 interacts with the telomere-binding proteins TbTRF and TbTIF2 as well as with the telomere-associated protein TelAP1 in BSF and that TelAP2 depletion results in a loss of TelAP1 colocalization with TbTRF in BSF. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that characterizing potential TelAPs is effective in gaining insights into the telomeric complex's composition and its role in VSG regulation in Trypanosoma brucei. Understanding these interactions could potentially lead to new therapeutic targets for combatting African trypanosomiasis. N2 - Der einzellige Pathogen Trypanosoma brucei ist der Erreger der afrikanischen Trypanosomiasis, eine endemische Krankheit vertreten in der Sub-Sahara Zone Afrikas. Trypanosoma brucei wechselt zwischen einem Säugerwirt und dem Insektenvektor, der Tsetse-Fliege. Der im Blutstrom des Säugers vorkommende, extrazelluläre Parasit ändert seinen Oberflächenmantel bestehend aus dem ˈvariablen Oberflächenproteinˈ (VSG) in periodischen Abständen, um der Immunantwort des Wirtes auszuweichen. Diese antigenetische Variation wird durch die monoallelische Expression einer einzelnen VSG-Variante, lokalisiert auf den ˈBlutstromform Expressionsseitenˈ (BES), zu einem bestimmten Zeitpunkt erreicht. Diese stadienspezifischen Oberflächenproteine werden während der Differenzierung der ˈBlutstromformˈ (BSF) zur ˈprozyklischen Formˈ (PCF) im Mitteldarm der Tsetse-Fliege stillgelegt und durch Prozykline ersetzt. Wegen der subtelomeren Lokalisation wird die VSG Transkription und Stilllegung teilweise durch Homologe des Säuger Telomerkomplexes TbTRF, TbTIF2 und TbRAP1 als auch durch Telomer-assoziierte Proteine (TelAPs) wie TelAP1 reguliert. Um Einblicke in die Transkriptionsregulation der VSG Gene zu erhalten, ist die Identifikation und Charakterisierung anderer Telomer-assoziierter Proteine von großem Interesse. In einer vorherigen Studie wurden zwei komplementäre biochemische Versuchsansätze verwendet, um weitere neue TelAPs zu identifizieren. Es wurde eine ko-Immunpräzipitation (co-IP) durchgeführt, um mögliche Interaktionspartner von TbTRF zu identifizieren, sowie eine Affinitätschromatographie unter Verwendung telomerischen Wiederholungseinheiten. Hierdurch wurde eine Liste von potenziellen Kandidaten generiert. Mit diesem Ansatz wurde TelAP1 als neue Komponente des Telomerkomplexes identifiziert, welches an der Kinetik der transkriptionellen BES-Stilllegung während der Differenzierung von BSF zu PCF beteiligt ist. Um weitere Einblicke in die Zusammensetzung des Telomerkomplexes zu erhalten, wurden zuvor angereicherte Proteine durch einen Screening-Prozess unter Verwendung von RNA-Interferenz charakterisiert. Nach der Depletion von 21 Proteinen wurden massenspektrometrische Analysen der VSG Expressionsprofiländerungen sowie allgemeine Veränderungen des Proteomenprofils analysiert. Mit dieser Methode können Erkenntnisse über die Funktion der jeweiligen Proteine und ihrer Beteiligung an der Regulierung der antigenetischen Variation von T. brucei gewonnen werden. Um die Interaktionen von Proteinen zu validieren, welche bei den Co-Immunpräzipitationen mit TbTRF und TelAP1 angereichert wurden, habe ich eine reziproke Affinitätschromatographie mit vier der vielversprechendsten Kandidaten durchgeführt (TelAP2, TelAP3, PPL2 und PolIE). Zusätzlich bestätigte ich die Co-lokalisation von zwei Kandidaten mit TbTRF via Immunfluoreszenzaufnahmen (TelAP2, TelAP3). TelAP3 ko-lokalisiert mit TbTRF und TelAP1 und interagiert potenziell mit TbTRF, TbTIF2, TelAP1 und TelAP2 als auch mit den zwei Transläsionspolymerasen PPL2 und PolIE in BSF. PPL2 und PolIE stehen in engem Kontakt zueinander und nehmen an den Telomerenden unterschiedliche Funktionen ein, da nur PolIE an der VSG Regulation beteiligt ist. TelAP2 wurde in einer vorherigen Publikation als Telomer-assoziiertes Protein durch partielle Co-Lokalisation mit TbTRF identifiziert und Zellen zeigen nach der Depletion von TelAP2 eine Derepression von zuvor stillgelegten VSGs. In dieser Studie zeige ich, dass TelAP2 mit den Telomer-bindenden Proteinen TbTRF und TbTIF2 sowie mit dem telomerassoziierten Protein TelAP1 in BSF interagiert und dass die Depletion von TelAP2 zu dem Verlust der Co-Lokalisation von TelAP1 mit TbTRF in BSF führt. Zusammenfassend zeigt diese Studie, dass die Charakterisierung potenzieller TelAPs dazu beiträgt, Einblicke in die Zusammensetzung des Telomerkomplexes und dessen Rolle bei der VSG-Regulation in Trypanosoma brucei zu gewinnen. Das Verständnis dieser Interaktionen könnte möglicherweise zu neuen therapeutischen Ansatzpunkten zur Bekämpfung der afrikanischen Trypanosomiasis führen. KW - Telomer KW - Trypanosoma brucei KW - telomere-associated protein Y1 - 2024 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-352732 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Amatobi, Kelechi M. A1 - Ozbek-Unal, Ayten Gizem A1 - Schäbler, Stefan A1 - Deppisch, Peter A1 - Helfrich-Förster, Charlotte A1 - Mueller, Martin J. A1 - Wegener, Christian A1 - Fekete, Agnes T1 - The circadian clock is required for rhythmic lipid transport in Drosophila in interaction with diet and photic condition JF - Journal of Lipid Research N2 - Modern lifestyle is often at odds with endogenously driven rhythmicity, which can lead to circadian disruption and metabolic syndrome. One signature for circadian disruption is a reduced or altered metabolite cycling in the circulating tissue reflecting the current metabolic status. Drosophila is a well-established model in chronobiology, but day-time dependent variations of transport metabolites in the fly circulation are poorly characterized. Here, we sampled fly hemolymph throughout the day and analyzed diacylglycerols (DGs), phosphoethanolamines (PEs) and phosphocholines (PCs) using LC-MS. In wild-type flies kept on sugar-only medium under a light-dark cycle, all transport lipid species showed a synchronized bimodal oscillation pattern with maxima at the beginning and end of the light phase which were impaired in period01 clock mutants. In wild-type flies under constant dark conditions, the oscillation became monophasic with a maximum in the middle of the subjective day. In strong support of clock-driven oscillations, levels of the targeted lipids peaked once in the middle of the light phase under time-restricted feeding independent of the time of food intake. When wild-type flies were reared on full standard medium, the rhythmic alterations of hemolymph lipid levels were greatly attenuated. Our data suggest that the circadian clock aligns daily oscillations of DGs, PEs, and PCs in the hemolymph to the anabolic siesta phase, with a strong influence of light on phase and modality. KW - hemolymph lipids KW - lipidomics KW - circadian rhythm KW - feeding KW - locomotor activity KW - light-driven metabolism Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-349961 VL - 64 IS - 10 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schuhmann, Antonia A1 - Scheiner, Ricarda T1 - A combination of the frequent fungicides boscalid and dimoxystrobin with the neonicotinoid acetamiprid in field-realistic concentrations does not affect sucrose responsiveness and learning behavior of honeybees JF - Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety N2 - The increasing loss of pollinators over the last decades has become more and more evident. Intensive use of plant protection products is one key factor contributing to this decline. Especially the mixture of different plant protection products can pose an increased risk for pollinators as synergistic effects may occur. In this study we investigated the effect of the fungicide Cantus® Gold (boscalid/dimoxystrobin), the neonicotinoid insecticide Mospilan® (acetamiprid) and their mixture on honeybees. Since both plant protection products are frequently applied sequentially to the same plants (e.g. oilseed rape), their combination is a realistic scenario for honeybees. We investigated the mortality, the sucrose responsiveness and the differential olfactory learning performance of honeybees under controlled conditions in the laboratory to reduce environmental noise. Intact sucrose responsiveness and learning performance are of pivotal importance for the survival of individual honeybees as well as for the functioning of the entire colony. Treatment with two sublethal and field relevant concentrations of each plant protection product did not lead to any significant effects on these behaviors but affected the mortality rate. However, our study cannot exclude possible negative sublethal effects of these substances in higher concentrations. In addition, the honeybee seems to be quite robust when it comes to effects of plant protection products, while wild bees might be more sensitive. Highlights • Mix of SBI fungicides and neonicotinoids can lead to synergistic effects for bees. • Combination of non-SBI fungicide and neonicotinoid in field-realistic doses tested. • Synergistic effect on mortality of honeybees. • No effects on sucrose responsiveness and learning performance of honeybees. • Synergistic effects by other pesticide mixtures or on wild bees cannot be excluded. KW - Apis mellifera KW - non-SBI fungicide KW - insecticide KW - pesticide mixture KW - synergistic effect KW - sublethal effect Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-350047 VL - 256 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Coelho, Luis Pedro A1 - Alves, Renato A1 - Monteiro, Paulo A1 - Huerta-Cepas, Jaime A1 - Freitas, Ana Teresa A1 - Bork, Peer T1 - NG-meta-profiler: fast processing of metagenomes using NGLess, a domain-specific language JF - Microbiome N2 - Background Shotgun metagenomes contain a sample of all the genomic material in an environment, allowing for the characterization of a microbial community. In order to understand these communities, bioinformatics methods are crucial. A common first step in processing metagenomes is to compute abundance estimates of different taxonomic or functional groups from the raw sequencing data. Given the breadth of the field, computational solutions need to be flexible and extensible, enabling the combination of different tools into a larger pipeline. Results We present NGLess and NG-meta-profiler. NGLess is a domain specific language for describing next-generation sequence processing pipelines. It was developed with the goal of enabling user-friendly computational reproducibility. It provides built-in support for many common operations on sequencing data and is extensible with external tools with configuration files. Using this framework, we developed NG-meta-profiler, a fast profiler for metagenomes which performs sequence preprocessing, mapping to bundled databases, filtering of the mapping results, and profiling (taxonomic and functional). It is significantly faster than either MOCAT2 or htseq-count and (as it builds on NGLess) its results are perfectly reproducible. Conclusions NG-meta-profiler is a high-performance solution for metagenomics processing built on NGLess. It can be used as-is to execute standard analyses or serve as the starting point for customization in a perfectly reproducible fashion. NGLess and NG-meta-profiler are open source software (under the liberal MIT license) and can be downloaded from https://ngless.embl.de or installed through bioconda. KW - metagenomics KW - next-generation sequencing KW - domain-specific language Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-223161 VL - 7 IS - 84 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Coelho, Luis Pedro A1 - Kultima, Jens Roat A1 - Costea, Paul Igor A1 - Fournier, Coralie A1 - Pan, Yuanlong A1 - Czarnecki-Maulden, Gail A1 - Hayward, Matthew Robert A1 - Forslund, Sofia K. A1 - Schmidt, Thomas Sebastian Benedikt A1 - Descombes, Patrick A1 - Jackson, Janet R. A1 - Li, Qinghong A1 - Bork, Peer T1 - Similarity of the dog and human gut microbiomes in gene content and response to diet JF - Microbiome N2 - Background Gut microbes influence their hosts in many ways, in particular by modulating the impact of diet. These effects have been studied most extensively in humans and mice. In this work, we used whole genome metagenomics to investigate the relationship between the gut metagenomes of dogs, humans, mice, and pigs. Results We present a dog gut microbiome gene catalog containing 1,247,405 genes (based on 129 metagenomes and a total of 1.9 terabasepairs of sequencing data). Based on this catalog and taxonomic abundance profiling, we show that the dog microbiome is closer to the human microbiome than the microbiome of either pigs or mice. To investigate this similarity in terms of response to dietary changes, we report on a randomized intervention with two diets (high-protein/low-carbohydrate vs. lower protein/higher carbohydrate). We show that diet has a large and reproducible effect on the dog microbiome, independent of breed or sex. Moreover, the responses were in agreement with those observed in previous human studies. Conclusions We conclude that findings in dogs may be predictive of human microbiome results. In particular, a novel finding is that overweight or obese dogs experience larger compositional shifts than lean dogs in response to a high-protein diet. KW - microbiome KW - diet KW - metagenomics KW - dog microbiome KW - human microbiome KW - mouse microbiome KW - pig microbiome Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-223177 VL - 6 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dedukh, Dmitrij A1 - Da Cruz, Irene A1 - Kneitz, Susanne A1 - Marta, Anatolie A1 - Ormanns, Jenny A1 - Tichopád, Tomáš A1 - Lu, Yuan A1 - Alsheimer, Manfred A1 - Janko, Karel A1 - Schartl, Manfred T1 - Achiasmatic meiosis in the unisexual Amazon molly, Poecilia formosa JF - Chromosome Research N2 - Unisexual reproduction, which generates clonal offspring, is an alternative strategy to sexual breeding and occurs even in vertebrates. A wide range of non-sexual reproductive modes have been described, and one of the least understood questions is how such pathways emerged and how they mechanistically proceed. The Amazon molly, Poecilia formosa, needs sperm from males of related species to trigger the parthenogenetic development of diploid eggs. However, the mechanism, of how the unreduced female gametes are produced, remains unclear. Cytological analyses revealed that the chromosomes of primary oocytes initiate pachytene but do not proceed to bivalent formation and meiotic crossovers. Comparing ovary transcriptomes of P. formosa and its sexual parental species revealed expression levels of meiosis-specific genes deviating from P. mexicana but not from P. latipinna. Furthermore, several meiosis genes show biased expression towards one of the two alleles from the parental genomes. We infer from our data that in the Amazon molly diploid oocytes are generated by apomixis due to a failure in the synapsis of homologous chromosomes. The fact that this failure is not reflected in the differential expression of known meiosis genes suggests the underlying molecular mechanism may be dysregulation on the protein level or misexpression of a so far unknown meiosis gene, and/or hybrid dysgenesis because of compromised interaction of proteins from diverged genomes. KW - meiosis KW - parthenogenesis KW - synaptonemal complex KW - recombination KW - crossing-over KW - achiasmatic KW - transcriptome KW - oogenesis Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-325128 VL - 30 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rössler, Wolfgang A1 - Grob, Robin A1 - Fleischmann, Pauline N. T1 - The role of learning-walk related multisensory experience in rewiring visual circuits in the desert ant brain JF - Journal of Comparative Physiology A N2 - Efficient spatial orientation in the natural environment is crucial for the survival of most animal species. Cataglyphis desert ants possess excellent navigational skills. After far-ranging foraging excursions, the ants return to their inconspicuous nest entrance using celestial and panoramic cues. This review focuses on the question about how naïve ants acquire the necessary spatial information and adjust their visual compass systems. Naïve ants perform structured learning walks during their transition from the dark nest interior to foraging under bright sunlight. During initial learning walks, the ants perform rotational movements with nest-directed views using the earth’s magnetic field as an earthbound compass reference. Experimental manipulations demonstrate that specific sky compass cues trigger structural neuronal plasticity in visual circuits to integration centers in the central complex and mushroom bodies. During learning walks, rotation of the sky-polarization pattern is required for an increase in volume and synaptic complexes in both integration centers. In contrast, passive light exposure triggers light-spectrum (especially UV light) dependent changes in synaptic complexes upstream of the central complex. We discuss a multisensory circuit model in the ant brain for pathways mediating structural neuroplasticity at different levels following passive light exposure and multisensory experience during the performance of learning walks. KW - central complex KW - mushroom body KW - multisensory navigation KW - visual memory KW - neuronal and synaptic plasticity Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-325096 VL - 209 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Fricke, Ute A1 - Redlich, Sarah A1 - Zhang, Jie A1 - Tobisch, Cynthia A1 - Rojas-Botero, Sandra A1 - Benjamin, Caryl S. A1 - Englmeier, Jana A1 - Ganuza, Cristina A1 - Riebl, Rebekka A1 - Uhler, Johannes A1 - Uphus, Lars A1 - Ewald, Jörg A1 - Kollmann, Johannes A1 - Steffan-Dewenter, Ingolf T1 - Plant richness, land use and temperature differently shape invertebrate leaf-chewing herbivory on plant functional groups JF - Oecologia N2 - Higher temperatures can increase metabolic rates and carbon demands of invertebrate herbivores, which may shift leaf-chewing herbivory among plant functional groups differing in C:N (carbon:nitrogen) ratios. Biotic factors influencing herbivore species richness may modulate these temperature effects. Yet, systematic studies comparing leaf-chewing herbivory among plant functional groups in different habitats and landscapes along temperature gradients are lacking. This study was conducted on 80 plots covering large gradients of temperature, plant richness and land use in Bavaria, Germany. We investigated proportional leaf area loss by chewing invertebrates (‘herbivory’) in three plant functional groups on open herbaceous vegetation. As potential drivers, we considered local mean temperature (range 8.4–18.8 °C), multi-annual mean temperature (range 6.5–10.0 °C), local plant richness (species and family level, ranges 10–51 species, 5–25 families), adjacent habitat type (forest, grassland, arable field, settlement), proportion of grassland and landscape diversity (0.2–3 km scale). We observed differential responses of leaf-chewing herbivory among plant functional groups in response to plant richness (family level only) and habitat type, but not to grassland proportion, landscape diversity and temperature—except for multi-annual mean temperature influencing herbivory on grassland plots. Three-way interactions of plant functional group, temperature and predictors of plant richness or land use did not substantially impact herbivory. We conclude that abiotic and biotic factors can assert different effects on leaf-chewing herbivory among plant functional groups. At present, effects of plant richness and habitat type outweigh effects of temperature and landscape-scale land use on herbivory among legumes, forbs and grasses. KW - climate KW - ecosystem function KW - land use KW - plant guilds KW - plant–insect interactions Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-325079 VL - 199 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Zupanc, Günther K. H. A1 - Rössler, Wolfgang T1 - Government funding of research beyond biomedicine: challenges and opportunities for neuroethology JF - Journal of Comparative Physiology A N2 - Curiosity-driven research is fundamental for neuroethology and depends crucially on governmental funding. Here, we highlight similarities and differences in funding of curiosity-driven research across countries by comparing two major funding agencies—the National Science Foundation (NSF) in the United States and the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG). We interviewed representatives from each of the two agencies, focusing on general funding trends, levels of young investigator support, career-life balance, and international collaborations. While our analysis revealed a negative trend in NSF funding of biological research, including curiosity-driven research, German researchers in these areas have benefited from a robust positive trend in DFG funding. The main reason for the decrease in curiosity-driven research in the US is that the NSF has only partially been able to compensate for the funding gap resulting from the National Institutes of Health restricting their support to biomedical research using select model organisms. Notwithstanding some differences in funding programs, particularly those relevant for scientists in the postdoctoral phase, both the NSF and DFG clearly support curiosity-driven research. KW - German Research Foundation KW - Government research funding KW - National Science Foundation KW - Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft KW - neuroethology Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-325113 VL - 208 IS - 3 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Englmeier, Jana A1 - Mitesser, Oliver A1 - Benbow, M. Eric A1 - Hothorn, Torsten A1 - von Hoermann, Christian A1 - Benjamin, Caryl A1 - Fricke, Ute A1 - Ganuza, Cristina A1 - Haensel, Maria A1 - Redlich, Sarah A1 - Riebl, Rebekka A1 - Rojas Botero, Sandra A1 - Rummler, Thomas A1 - Steffan-Dewenter, Ingolf A1 - Stengel, Elisa A1 - Tobisch, Cynthia A1 - Uhler, Johannes A1 - Uphus, Lars A1 - Zhang, Jie A1 - Müller, Jörg T1 - Diverse effects of climate, land use, and insects on dung and carrion decomposition JF - Ecosystems N2 - Land-use intensification and climate change threaten ecosystem functions. A fundamental, yet often overlooked, function is decomposition of necromass. The direct and indirect anthropogenic effects on decomposition, however, are poorly understood. We measured decomposition of two contrasting types of necromass, rat carrion and bison dung, on 179 study sites in Central Europe across an elevational climate gradient of 168–1122 m a.s.l. and within both local and regional land uses. Local land-use types included forest, grassland, arable fields, and settlements and were embedded in three regional land-use types (near-natural, agricultural, and urban). The effects of insects on decomposition were quantified by experimental exclusion, while controlling for removal by vertebrates. We used generalized additive mixed models to evaluate dung weight loss and carrion decay rate along elevation and across regional and local land-use types. We observed a unimodal relationship of dung decomposition with elevation, where greatest weight loss occurred between 600 and 700 m, but no effects of local temperature, land use, or insects. In contrast to dung, carrion decomposition was continuously faster with both increasing elevation and local temperature. Carrion reached the final decomposition stage six days earlier when insect access was allowed, and this did not depend on land-use effect. Our experiment identified different major drivers of decomposition on each necromass form. The results show that dung and carrion decomposition are rather robust to local and regional land use, but future climate change and decline of insects could alter decomposition processes and the self-regulation of ecosystems. KW - decay KW - ecosystem function KW - global change KW - land-use intensification KW - necrobiome KW - urbanization Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-325064 SN - 1432-9840 VL - 26 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Shirakashi, Ryo A1 - Sisario, Dmitri A1 - Taban, Danush A1 - Korsa, Tessa A1 - Wanner, Sophia B. A1 - Neubauer, Julia A1 - Djuzenova, Cholpon S. A1 - Zimmermann, Heiko A1 - Sukhorukov, Vladimir L. T1 - Contraction of the rigor actomyosin complex drives bulk hemoglobin expulsion from hemolyzing erythrocytes JF - Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology N2 - Erythrocyte ghost formation via hemolysis is a key event in the physiological clearance of senescent red blood cells (RBCs) in the spleen. The turnover rate of millions of RBCs per second necessitates a rapid efflux of hemoglobin (Hb) from RBCs by a not yet identified mechanism. Using high-speed video-microscopy of isolated RBCs, we show that electroporation-induced efflux of cytosolic ATP and other small solutes leads to transient cell shrinkage and echinocytosis, followed by osmotic swelling to the critical hemolytic volume. The onset of hemolysis coincided with a sudden self-propelled cell motion, accompanied by cell contraction and Hb-jet ejection. Our biomechanical model, which relates the Hb-jet-driven cell motion to the cytosolic pressure generation via elastic contraction of the RBC membrane, showed that the contributions of the bilayer and the bilayer-anchored spectrin cytoskeleton to the hemolytic cell motion are negligible. Consistent with the biomechanical analysis, our biochemical experiments, involving extracellular ATP and the myosin inhibitor blebbistatin, identify the low abundant non-muscle myosin 2A (NM2A) as the key contributor to the Hb-jet emission and fast hemolytic cell motion. Thus, our data reveal a rapid myosin-based mechanism of hemolysis, as opposed to a much slower diffusive Hb efflux. KW - electroporation KW - cell velocimetry KW - hemoglobin jet KW - non-muscle myosin KW - echinocytes KW - cytoskeleton Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-325107 VL - 22 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Moustafa, Moataz A. M. A1 - Fouad, Eman A. A1 - Ibrahim, Emad A1 - Erdei, Anna Laura A1 - Kárpáti, Zsolt A1 - Fónagy, Adrien T1 - The comparative toxicity, biochemical and physiological impacts of chlorantraniliprole and indoxacarb on Mamestra brassicae (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) JF - Toxics N2 - Background: The cabbage moth, Mamestra brassicae, is a polyphagous pest that attacks several crops. Here, the sublethal and lethal effects of chlorantraniliprole and indoxacarb were investigated on the developmental stages, detoxification enzymes, reproductive activity, calling behavior, peripheral physiology, and pheromone titer of M. brasssicae. Methods: To assess pesticide effects, the second instar larvae were maintained for 24 h on a semi-artificial diet containing insecticides at their LC\(_{10}\), LC\(_{30}\), and LC\(_{50}\) concentrations. Results: M. brassicae was more susceptible to chlorantraniliprole (LC\(_{50}\) = 0.35 mg/L) than indoxacarb (LC\(_{50}\) = 1.71 mg/L). A significantly increased developmental time was observed with both insecticides at all tested concentrations but decreases in pupation rate, pupal weight, and emergence were limited to the LC50 concentration. Reductions in both the total number of eggs laid per female and the egg viability were observed with both insecticides at their LC\(_{30}\) and LC\(_{50}\) concentrations. Both female calling activity and the sex pheromone (Z11-hexadecenyl acetate and hexadecenyl acetate) titer were significantly reduced by chlorantraniliprole in LC\(_{50}\) concentration. Antennal responses of female antennae to benzaldehyde and 3-octanone were significantly weaker than controls after exposure to the indoxocarb LC\(_{50}\) concentration. Significant reductions in the enzymatic activity of glutathione S-transferases, mixed-function oxidases, and carboxylesterases were observed in response to both insecticides. KW - toxicity KW - sublethal effects KW - chlorantraniliprole KW - indoxacarb KW - Mamestra brassicae Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-303931 SN - 2305-6304 VL - 11 IS - 3 ER - TY - THES A1 - Pitsch, Maximilian Jonathan T1 - Zyklisches Adenosinmonophosphat (cAMP) als Äquivalent akkumulierter neuronaler Evidenz T1 - Cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) as an equivalent of accumulated neuronal evidence N2 - Die vier Crz-Neurone des ventralen Nervensystems von Drosophila melanogaster sammeln Evidenz, wann im Rahmen eines Paarungsakts zirka 6 Minuten vergangen sind. Diese Entscheidung ist für die männliche Fliege von Bedeutung, da das Männchen vor Ablauf dieser ~6 Minuten, welche den Zeitpunkt der Ejakulation darstellen, eher das eigene Leben opfern würde, als dass es die Paarung beenden würde. Nach Ablauf der ~6 Minuten fällt die Motivation des Männchens dagegen dramatisch ab. Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde zunächst mittels optogenetischer neuronaler Inhibitionsprotokolle sowie Verhaltensanalysen das Phänomen der Evidenz-akkumulation in den Crz-Neuronen genauer charakterisiert. Dabei zeigte sich, dass die akkumulierte Evidenz auch während einer elektrischen Inhibition der Crz-Neurone persistierte. Dieses Ergebnis warf die Hypothese auf, dass das Äquivalent der akkumulierten Evidenz in den Crz-Neuronen biochemischer Natur sein könnte. Es wurde daraufhin ein Hochdurchsatzscreening-Verfahren entwickelt, mittels dessen 1388 genetische Manipulationen der Crz-Neurone durchgeführt und auf eine Änderung der Evidenzakkumulation getestet wurden. Nur ~30 genetische Manipulationen zeigten eine veränderte Evidenzakkumulation, wobei die meisten dieser Manipulationen den cAMP-Signalweg betrafen. Mittels der optogenetischen Photoadenylatzyklase bPAC, einer Reihe weiterer genetischer Manipulationen des cAMP-Signalwegs sowie der ex vivo Kalzium-Bildgebung und Fluoreszenzlebensdauer-Mikroskopie konnte bestätigt werden, dass cAMP das Äquivalent der in den Crz-Neuronen spannungsabhängig akkumulierten Evidenz darstellt, wobei die Kombination dieser Methoden nahelegte, dass der Schwellenwert der Evidenzakkumulation durch die cAMP-Bindungsaffinität der regulatorischen PKA-Untereinheiten festgelegt sein könnte. Mittels genetischer Mosaikexperimente sowie bildgebenden Verfahren konnte darüber hinaus gezeigt werden, dass innerhalb des Crz-Netzwerks eine positive Rückkopplungsschleife aus rekurrenter Aktivität sowie der cAMP-Akkumulation besteht, welche, sobald die cAMP-Spiegel den Schwellenwert erreichen, zu einem netzwerkweit synchronisierten massiven Kalziumeinstrom führt, was die Abgabe des Crz-Signals an nachgeschaltete Netzwerke triggert. Dieses Phänomen könnte ein Analogon des Aktionspotenzials auf Netzwerkebene sowie auf Intervallzeitskalen darstellen und wurde als „Eruption“ bezeichnet. Genetische, optogenetische sowie Bildgebungsexperimente konnten zeigen, dass die CaMKII derartige Eruptionen durch Niedrighalten der cAMP-Spiegel unterdrückt, was den Zeitmessmechanismus des ersten beschriebenen Intervallzeitmessers CaMKII offenlegt. N2 - The four Crz neurons of the ventral nervous system of Drosophila melanogaster collect evidence about when approximately 6 minutes have elapsed during a mating act. This decision is of importance for the male fly as the male would rather sacrifice his own life than terminate mating before the expiration of these ~6 minutes, which represent the time of ejaculation. After these ~6 minutes, however, the male's motivation drops dramatically. In this dissertation, optogenetic neuronal inhibition protocols as well as behavioral analyses were used to characterize the phenomenon of evidence accumulation in the Crz neurons in more detail. This showed that the accumulated evidence persisted during electrical inhibition of the Crz neurons. This result raised the hypothesis that the equivalent of accumulated evidence in the Crz neurons might be biochemical in nature. A high-throughput-screening-assay was developed using which 1388 genetic manipulations of the Crz neurons were performed and tested for a change in evidence accumulation. Only ~30 genetic manipulations showed altered evidence accumulation, with most of these manipulations involving the cAMP pathway. Using the optogenetic photoadenylyl cyclase bPAC, a number of other genetic manipulations of the cAMP pathway, as well as ex vivo calcium imaging and fluorescence lifetime microscopy techniques, it was confirmed that cAMP represents the equivalent of accumulated evidence in the Crz neurons, and the combination of these methods suggested that the evidence accumulation threshold may be set by the cAMP-binding affinity of regulatory PKA subunits. Using genetic mosaic experiments as well as imaging techniques, it was further shown that within the Crz network there is a positive feedback loop between the recurrent activity as well as the cAMP accumulation, which, once cAMP levels reach the threshold, leads to a network-wide synchronized massive calcium influx, triggering the delivery of the Crz signal to downstream networks. This phenomenon could represent an analog of the action potential at the network level as well as at interval time scales and has been termed an "eruption." Genetic, optogenetic as well as imaging experiments could show that CaMKII suppresses such eruptions by keeping cAMP levels low, revealing the timing mechanism of CaMKII, the first described interval timer. KW - Evidenz KW - Drosophila KW - Biologische Uhr KW - cAMP KW - Intervallzeitmessung Y1 - 2024 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-351292 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Römer, Daniela A1 - Aguilar, Gonzalo Pacheco A1 - Meyer, Annika A1 - Roces, Flavio T1 - Symbiont demand guides resource supply: leaf-cutting ants preferentially deliver their harvested fragments to undernourished fungus gardens JF - The Science of Nature N2 - Leaf-cutting ants are highly successful herbivores in the Neotropics. They forage large amounts of fresh plant material to nourish a symbiotic fungus that sustains the colony. It is unknown how workers organize the intra-nest distribution of resources, and whether they respond to increasing demands in some fungus gardens by adjusting the amount of delivered resources accordingly. In laboratory experiments, we analyzed the spatial distribution of collected leaf fragments among nest chambers in Acromyrmex ambiguus leaf-cutting ants, and how it changed when one of the fungus gardens experienced undernourishment. Plant fragments were evenly distributed among nest chambers when the fungal symbiont was well nourished. That pattern changed when one of the fungus gardens was undernourished and had a higher leaf demand, resulting in more leaf discs delivered to the undernourished fungus garden over at least 2 days after deprivation. Some ants bypassed nourished gardens to directly deliver their resource to the chamber with higher nutritional demand. We hypothesize that cues arising from that chamber might be used for orientation and/or that informed individuals, presumably stemming from the undernourished chamber, may preferentially orient to them. KW - insect-fungus symbiosis KW - nutrition KW - pheromone trail KW - local cues KW - decision-making KW - decentralized control Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-325080 VL - 109 IS - 3 ER - TY - THES A1 - Bakari Soale, Majeed T1 - Regulation of the Variant Surface Glycoprotein (VSG) Expression and Characterisation of the Nucleolar DExD/H box Protein Hel66 in \(Trypanosoma\) \(brucei\) T1 - Regulation der Expression des variable Oberflächen- Glykoprotein (VSG) und Charakterisierung des nukleolären DExD/H box Protein Hel66 in \(Trypanosoma\) \(brucei\) N2 - The variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) of African trypanosomes plays an essential role in protecting the parasites from host immune factors. These trypanosomes undergo antigenic variation resulting in the expression of a single VSG isoform out of a repertoire of around 2000 genes. The molecular mechanism central to the expression and regulation of the VSG is however not fully understood. Gene expression in trypanosomes is unusual due to the absence of typical RNA polymerase II promoters and the polycistronic transcription of genes. The regulation of gene expression is therefore mainly post-transcriptional. Regulatory sequences, mostly present in the 3´ UTRs, often serve as key elements in the modulation of the levels of individual mRNAs. In T. brucei VSG genes, a 100 % conserved 16mer motif within the 3´ UTR has been shown to modulate the stability of VSG transcripts and hence their expression. As a stability-associated sequence element, the absence of nucleotide substitutions in the motif is however unusual. It was therefore hypothesised that the motif is involved in other essential roles/processes besides stability of the VSG transcripts. In this study, it was demonstrated that the 100 % conservation of the 16mer motif is not essential for cell viability or for the maintenance of functional VSG protein levels. It was further shown that the intact motif in the active VSG 3´ UTR is neither required to promote VSG silencing during switching nor is it needed during differentiation from bloodstream forms to procyclic forms. Crosstalk between the VSG and procyclin genes during differentiation to the insect vector stage is also unaffected in cells with a mutated 16mer motif. Ectopic overexpression of a second VSG however requires the intact motif to trigger silencing and exchange of the active VSG, suggesting a role for the motif in transcriptional VSG switching. The 16mer motif therefore plays a dual role in VSG in situ switching and stability of VSG transcripts. The additional role of the 16mer in the essential process of antigenic variation appears to be the driving force for the 100 % conservation of this RNA motif. A screen aimed at identifying candidate RNA-binding proteins interacting with the 16mer motif, led to the identification of a DExD/H box protein, Hel66. Although the protein did not appear to have a direct link to the 16mer regulation of VSG expression, the DExD/H family of proteins are important players in the process of ribosome biogenesis. This process is relatively understudied in trypanosomes and so this candidate was singled out for detailed characterisation, given that the 16mer story had reached a natural end point. Ribosome biogenesis is a major cellular process in eukaryotes involving ribosomal RNA, ribosomal proteins and several non-ribosomal trans-acting protein factors. The DExD/H box proteins are the most important trans-acting protein factors involved in the biosynthesis of ribosomes. Several DExD/H box proteins have been directly implicated in this process in yeast. In trypanosomes, very few of this family of proteins have been characterised and therefore little is known about the specific roles they play in RNA metabolism. Here, it was shown that Hel66 is involved in rRNA processing during ribosome biogenesis. Hel66 localises to the nucleolus and depleting the protein led to a severe growth defect. Loss of the protein also resulted in a reduced rate of global translation and accumulation of rRNA processing intermediates of both the small and large ribosomal subunits. Hel66 is therefore an essential nucleolar DExD/H protein involved in rRNA processing during ribosome biogenesis. As very few protein factors involved in the processing of rRNAs have been described in trypanosomes, this finding represents an important platform for future investigation of this topic. N2 - Das variable Oberflächen-Glykoprotein (“varaint surface glycoprotein“, VSG) der Afrikanischen Trypanosomen schützt den Parasiten vor Immunfaktoren des Wirtes. Trypanosomen beherrschen die antigene Variation und expremieren nur eine einzige VSG Isoform aus einem Repertoire von ungefähr 2000 Genen. Der molekulare Mechanismus der die Expression dieser VSG Gene reguliert ist nicht komplett bekannt. Die Genexpression ist in Trypanosomen sehr ungewöhnlich. Es gibt keine typischen Promotoren für RNA Polymerase II und Gene werden polycistronisch transkribiert. Daher ist die Regulation der Genexpression hauptsächlich posttranskriptional. Die Expression individueller mRNAs wird durch regulatorische Sequenzen reguliert, die sich häufig in den 3´ UTRs befinden. In den VSG Genen von T. brucei moduliert ein zu 100% konserviertes 16mer Motiv in der 3´ UTR die Stabilität der VSG Transkripte und damit deren Expression. Für eine Sequenz, die die Stabilität der mRNA reguliert, ist das Fehlen von Nukleotid Substitutionen sehr ungewöhnlich. Es wurde deshalb spekuliert, dass das 16mer Motiv neben der Stabilisierung des VSG Transkriptes noch an anderen essentiellen Prozessen beteiligt ist. In dieser Arbeit wurde gezeigt, dass die 100%ige Konservierung des 16mer Motives weder für das Überleben der Zellen, noch für den Erhalt der Expression des VSG Protein in funktioneller Menge notwendig ist. Außerdem wurde gezeigt dass das intakte Motiv in der 3´UTR des aktiven VSGs weder für das „VSG silencing“ während des VSG Austausches („switching“) noch für die Differenzierung von Blutbahnformen zu prozyklischen Formen benötigt wird. Auch die Interaktionen („crosstalk“), die während der Differenzierung zum Insekten Stadium zwischen den VSG und Prozyklin Genen stattfinden, sind in Zellen mit mutiertem 16mer Motiv noch funktionell. Die ektopische Überexpression eines zweiten VSGs benötigt allerdings das intakte Motiv, um das aktive VSG zu inaktivieren und auszutauschen: dies suggeriert eine Rolle des Motivs im transkriptionalen „VSG switching“. Das 16mer Motif spielt daher eine Doppelrolle bei der Regulation der Stabilität der VSG Transkripte und im VSG in situ „switching“. Letzteres, die Rolle im essentiellen Prozess der antigenen Variation, ist dabei offensichtlich die treibende Kraft hinter der 100%igen Konservierung des RNA Motives. Eine Suche nach möglichen RNA bindenden Proteinen, die mit dem 16mer interagieren, führte zur Identifikation des DExD/H box Proteins Hel66. Obwohl das Protein wohl nicht direkt an der Regulation der VSG Expression über das 16mer beteiligt ist, spielen Mitglieder der DexD/H Proteinfamilie eine wichtige Rolle in der Biogenese von Ribosomen. Dieser Prozess ist in Trypanosomen noch nicht komplett verstanden und daher wurde das Protein für eine nähere Analyse ausgewählt, auch weil die 16mer Story ohne weitere Kandidaten zu einem Ende gekommen war. Die Biogenese von Ribosomen ist ein wichtiger zellulärer Prozess in Eukaryoten und benötigt ribosomale RNA, ribosomale Proteine sowie einige nicht-ribosomale, trans-agierende Protein Faktoren. Proteine der DExD/H box Familie sind die wichtigsten trans- agierenden Proteinfaktoren, die an der Biogenese der Ribosomen beteiligt sind. In der Hefe sind mehrere DExD/H box Proteine bekannt, die eine direkte Rolle in diesem Prozess spielen. In Trypanosomen sind erst sehr wenige Proteine aus dieser Familie untersucht worden und es ist daher kaum bekannt, welche spezifische Rollen sie im RNA Metabolismus spielen. In dieser Arbeit wurde gezeigt, dass Hel66 an der rRNA Prozessierung während der Biogenese der Ribosomen beteiligt ist. Hel66 ist im Nukleolus lokalisiert und die Reduktion des Proteins durch RNAi führte zu einem schweren Wachstumsphänotyp. Reduktion von Hel66 führte auch zu einer globalen Reduktion der Translation sowie zur Akkumulation von Synthese- Zwischenstadien der rRNAs sowohl der kleinen und als auch der großen ribosomalen Untereinheit. Hel66 ist daher ein essentielles nukleoläres DExD/H Protein dass an der Prozessierung der rRNA während der Biogenese der Ribosomen beteiligt ist. Da bisher erst wenige Proteine bekannt sind, die in Trypanosomen an diesem Prozess beteiligt sind, sind diese Ergebnisse ein sehr wichtiger Ausgangspunkt für weitere Untersuchungen in der Zukunft. KW - Trypanosoma brucei KW - Genexpression KW - Variant Surface Glycoprotein KW - VSG KW - DExD/H box protein KW - Ribosome biogenesis KW - rRNA processing KW - Ribosome Y1 - 2024 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-258090 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Maloukh, Lina A1 - Nazzal, Yousef A1 - Kumarappan, Alagappan A1 - Howari, Fares A1 - Ambika, Lakshmi Kesari A1 - Yahmadi, Rihab A1 - Sharma, Manish A1 - Iqbal, Jibran A1 - Al-Taani, Ahmed A. A1 - Salem, Imen Ben A1 - Xavier, Cijo M. A1 - Naseem, Muhamad T1 - Metagenomic analysis of the outdoor dust microbiomes: a case study from Abu Dhabi, UAE JF - Atmosphere N2 - Outdoor dust covers a shattered range of microbial agents from land over transportation, human microbial flora, which includes pathogen and commensals, and airborne from the environment. Dust aerosols are rich in bacterial communities that have a major impact on human health and living environments. In this study, outdoor samples from roadside barricades, safety walls, and fences (18 samples) were collected from Abu Dhabi, UAE and bacterial diversity was assessed through a 16S rRNA amplicon next generation sequencing approach. Clean data from HiSeq produced 1,099,892 total reads pairs for 18 samples. For all samples, taxonomic classifications were assigned to the OTUs (operational taxonomic units) representative sequence using the Ribosomal Database Project database. Analysis such as alpha diversity, beta diversity, differential species analysis, and species relative abundance were performed in the clustering of samples and a functional profile heat map was obtained from the OTUs by using bioinformatics tools. A total of 2814 OTUs were identified from those samples with a coverage of more than 99%. In the phylum, all 18 samples had most of the bacterial groups such as Actinobacteria, Proteobacteria, Firmicutes, and Bacteroidetes. Twelve samples had Propionibacteria acnes and were mainly found in RD16 and RD3. Major bacteria species such as Propionibacteria acnes, Bacillus persicus, and Staphylococcus captis were found in all samples. Most of the samples had Streptococcus mitis, Staphylococcus capitis. and Nafulsella turpanensis and Enhydrobacter aerosaccus was part of the normal microbes of the skin. Salinimicrobium sp., Bacillus alkalisediminis, and Bacillus persicus are halophilic bacteria found in sediments. The heat map clustered the samples and species in vertical and horizontal classification, which represents the relationship between the samples and bacterial diversity. The heat map for the functional profile had high properties of amino acids, carbohydrate, and cofactor and vitamin metabolisms of all bacterial species from all samples. Taken together, our analyses are very relevant from the perspective of out-door air quality, airborne diseases, and epidemics, with broader implications for health safety and monitoring. KW - dust microbiomes KW - metagenomics KW - microbial diversity KW - pollution KW - GIS Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-304391 SN - 2073-4433 VL - 14 IS - 2 ER - TY - THES A1 - Maier [verh. Hartmann], Carina Ramona T1 - Regulation of the Mevalonate Pathway by the Deubiquitinase USP28 in Squamous Cancer T1 - Regulation des Mevalonat Stoffwechselwegs durch die Deubiquitinase USP28 in Plattenepithelkarzinomen N2 - The reprogramming of metabolic pathways is a hallmark of cancer: Tumour cells are dependent on the supply with metabolites and building blocks to fulfil their increased need as highly proliferating cells. Especially de novo synthesis pathways are upregulated when the cells of the growing tumours are not able to satisfy the required metabolic levels by uptake from the environment. De novo synthesis pathways are often under the control of master transcription factors which regulate the gene expression of enzymes involved in the synthesis process. The master regulators for de novo fatty acid synthesis and cholesterogenesis are sterol regulatory element-binding proteins (SREBPs). While SREBP1 preferably controls the expression of enzymes involved in fatty acid synthesis, SREBP2 regulates the transcription of the enzymes of the mevalonate pathway and downstream processes namely cholesterol, isoprenoids and building blocks for ubiquinone synthesis. SREBP activity is tightly regulated at different levels: The post-translational modification by ubiquitination decreases the stability of active SREBPs. The attachment of K48-linked ubiquitin chains marks the transcription factors for the proteasomal degradation. In tumour cells, high levels of active SREBPs are essential for the upregulation of the respective metabolic pathways. The increased stability and activity of SREBPs were investigated in this thesis. SREBPs are ubiquitinated by the E3 ligase Fbw7 which leads to the subsequential proteolysis of the transcription factors. The work conducted in this thesis identified the counteracting deubiquitination enzyme USP28 which removes the ubiquitin chains from SREBPs and prevents their proteasomal degradation. It further revealed that the stabilization of SREBP2 by USP28 plays an important role in the context of squamous cancers. Increased USP28 levels are associated with a poor survival in patients with squamous tumour subtypes. It was shown that reduced USP28 levels in cell lines and in vivo result in a decrease of SREBP2 activity and downregulation of the mevalonate pathway. This manipulation led to reduced proliferation and tumour growth. A direct comparison of adenocarcinomas and squamous cell carcinomas in lung cancer patients revealed an upregulation of USP28 as well as SREBP2 and its target genes. Targeting the USP28-SREBP2 regulatory axis in squamous cell lines by inhibitors also reduced cell viability and proliferation. In conclusion, this study reports evidence for the importance of the mevalonate pathway regulated by the USP28-SREBP2 axis in tumour initiation and progression of squamous cancer. The combinatorial inhibitor treatment of USP28 and HMGCR, the rate limiting enzyme of the mevalonate pathway, by statins opens the possibility for a targeted therapeutic treatment of squamous cancer patients. N2 - Die Reprogrammierung metabolischer Stoffwechselwege ist ein Kennzeichen von Krebs: Tumorzellen sind abhängig von der Versorgung mit Metaboliten und Bausteinen, um ihren wachsenden Bedarf als hoch proliferierende Zellen zu decken. Vor allem die de novo Stoffwechselsynthesewege sich hochreguliert, wenn die Zellen des wachsenden Tumors nicht mehr in der Lage sind, ihr erforderliches metabolisches Niveau mithilfe der Aufnahme aus der Umgebung zu erfüllen. De novo Synthesewege sind oft unter der Kontrolle von zentralen Transkriptionsfaktoren die die Genexpression von Enzymen, die im Syntheseprozess beteiligt sind, regulieren. Die vorherrschenden Regulatoren, für die de novo Fettsäuresynthese und der Cholesterogenese sind die Steroid-regulatorisches-Element-bindende Proteine (SREBPs). Während SREBP1 bevorzugt die Expression von Enzymen die an der Fettsäuresynthese beteiligt sind kontrolliert, reguliert SREBP2 die Transkription von Enzymen des Mevalonat Stoffwechselwegs, sowie Prozesse unterhalb, namentlich die Cholesterol-, Isoprenoid- und die die Synthese von Bausteinen für die Ubiquinonsynthese. Die Aktivität von SREBP ist streng reguliert auf verschiedenen Ebenen: Die post-translationale Modifikation mittels Ubiquitinierung reduziert die Stabilität von aktiven SREBPs. Das Anhängen von K48-verlinkten Ubiquitinketten markiert die Transkriptionsfaktoren für den proteasomalen Abbau. In Tumorzellen sind hohe Niveaus von aktiven SREBPs essentiell für die Induktion der entsprechenden metabolischen Stoffwechselwege. Die erhöhte Stabilität und Aktivität von SREBPs wurden im Rahmen dieser Arbeit untersucht. SREBPs werden von der E3-Ligase Fbw7 ubiquitiniert, was zur Proteolyse der Transkriptionsfaktoren führt. In dieser Arbeit wurde gezeigt, dass das entgegenwirkende Deubiquitinierungsenzym USP28 die Ubiquitinketten von SREBPs entfernt und deren proteasomalen Abbau verhindert. Diese Forschungsarbeit zeigt weiterhin, dass die Stabilisierung von SREBP2 durch USP28 eine wichtige Rolle im Kontext von Epithelkarzinomen spielt. Erhöhte USP28 Niveaus werden mit einem schlechten Überleben von Patienten in der Krebs-Untergruppe der Plattenepithelkarzinomen verbunden. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass reduzierte USP28 Niveaus, in Zelllinien und in vivo, niedrigere SREBP2-Aktivität und eine Herunterregulierung des Mevalonat Stoffwechselwegs ergeben. Diese Manipulation führte zu reduzierter Proliferation und Tumorwachstum. Ein direkter Vergleich von Adenokarzinomen und Plattenepithelkarzinomen in Lungenkrebspatienten zeigte zudem eine Hochregulierung von USP28 ebenso wie SREBP2 und dessen Zielgenen. Der gezielte Einsatz von Inhibitoren gegen die USP28-SREBP2 regulatorische Achse in Plattenepithelzellen reduzierte die Lebensfähigkeit und Proliferation der Zellen. Abschließend berichtet diese Forschungsarbeit von der Bedeutung des durch die USP28-SREBP2 Achse regulierten Mevalonat Stoffwechselwegs bei der Tumorinitiation und dem Fortschreiten von Plattenepithelkarzinomen. Die kombinatorische Behandlung mit USP28- und Inhibitoren der HMGCR, dem Schlüsselenzym des Mevalonat Stoffwechselwegs, mithilfe von Statinen eröffnet die Möglichkeit für eine gezielte therapeutische Behandlung von Patienten mit Plattenepithelkarzinomen. KW - Ubiquitin KW - Metabolismus KW - Deubiquitination KW - Mevalonate Pathway KW - Cancer Metabolism KW - Lung squamous cancer cells Y1 - 2024 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-348740 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dhillon, Maninder Singh A1 - Kübert-Flock, Carina A1 - Dahms, Thorsten A1 - Rummler, Thomas A1 - Arnault, Joel A1 - Steffan-Dewenter, Ingolf A1 - Ullmann, Tobias T1 - Evaluation of MODIS, Landsat 8 and Sentinel-2 data for accurate crop yield predictions: a case study using STARFM NDVI in Bavaria, Germany JF - Remote Sensing N2 - The increasing availability and variety of global satellite products and the rapid development of new algorithms has provided great potential to generate a new level of data with different spatial, temporal, and spectral resolutions. However, the ability of these synthetic spatiotemporal datasets to accurately map and monitor our planet on a field or regional scale remains underexplored. This study aimed to support future research efforts in estimating crop yields by identifying the optimal spatial (10 m, 30 m, or 250 m) and temporal (8 or 16 days) resolutions on a regional scale. The current study explored and discussed the suitability of four different synthetic (Landsat (L)-MOD13Q1 (30 m, 8 and 16 days) and Sentinel-2 (S)-MOD13Q1 (10 m, 8 and 16 days)) and two real (MOD13Q1 (250 m, 8 and 16 days)) NDVI products combined separately to two widely used crop growth models (CGMs) (World Food Studies (WOFOST), and the semi-empiric Light Use Efficiency approach (LUE)) for winter wheat (WW) and oil seed rape (OSR) yield forecasts in Bavaria (70,550 km\(^2\)) for the year 2019. For WW and OSR, the synthetic products’ high spatial and temporal resolution resulted in higher yield accuracies using LUE and WOFOST. The observations of high temporal resolution (8-day) products of both S-MOD13Q1 and L-MOD13Q1 played a significant role in accurately measuring the yield of WW and OSR. For example, L- and S-MOD13Q1 resulted in an R\(^2\) = 0.82 and 0.85, RMSE = 5.46 and 5.01 dt/ha for WW, R\(^2\) = 0.89 and 0.82, and RMSE = 2.23 and 2.11 dt/ha for OSR using the LUE model, respectively. Similarly, for the 8- and 16-day products, the simple LUE model (R\(^2\) = 0.77 and relative RMSE (RRMSE) = 8.17%) required fewer input parameters to simulate crop yield and was highly accurate, reliable, and more precise than the complex WOFOST model (R\(^2\) = 0.66 and RRMSE = 11.35%) with higher input parameters. Conclusively, both S-MOD13Q1 and L-MOD13Q1, in combination with LUE, were more prominent for predicting crop yields on a regional scale than the 16-day products; however, L-MOD13Q1 was advantageous for generating and exploring the long-term yield time series due to the availability of Landsat data since 1982, with a maximum resolution of 30 m. In addition, this study recommended the further use of its findings for implementing and validating the long-term crop yield time series in different regions of the world. KW - MODIS KW - Sentinel-2 KW - Landsat 8 KW - sustainable agriculture KW - decision-making KW - winter wheat KW - oil seed rape KW - resolution Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-311132 SN - 2072-4292 VL - 15 IS - 7 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dhillon, Maninder Singh A1 - Dahms, Thorsten A1 - Kübert-Flock, Carina A1 - Liepa, Adomas A1 - Rummler, Thomas A1 - Arnault, Joel A1 - Steffan-Dewenter, Ingolf A1 - Ullmann, Tobias T1 - Impact of STARFM on crop yield predictions: fusing MODIS with Landsat 5, 7, and 8 NDVIs in Bavaria Germany JF - Remote Sensing N2 - Rapid and accurate yield estimates at both field and regional levels remain the goal of sustainable agriculture and food security. Hereby, the identification of consistent and reliable methodologies providing accurate yield predictions is one of the hot topics in agricultural research. This study investigated the relationship of spatiotemporal fusion modelling using STRAFM on crop yield prediction for winter wheat (WW) and oil-seed rape (OSR) using a semi-empirical light use efficiency (LUE) model for the Free State of Bavaria (70,550 km\(^2\)), Germany, from 2001 to 2019. A synthetic normalised difference vegetation index (NDVI) time series was generated and validated by fusing the high spatial resolution (30 m, 16 days) Landsat 5 Thematic Mapper (TM) (2001 to 2012), Landsat 7 Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus (ETM+) (2012), and Landsat 8 Operational Land Imager (OLI) (2013 to 2019) with the coarse resolution of MOD13Q1 (250 m, 16 days) from 2001 to 2019. Except for some temporal periods (i.e., 2001, 2002, and 2012), the study obtained an R\(^2\) of more than 0.65 and a RMSE of less than 0.11, which proves that the Landsat 8 OLI fused products are of higher accuracy than the Landsat 5 TM products. Moreover, the accuracies of the NDVI fusion data have been found to correlate with the total number of available Landsat scenes every year (N), with a correlation coefficient (R) of +0.83 (between R\(^2\) of yearly synthetic NDVIs and N) and −0.84 (between RMSEs and N). For crop yield prediction, the synthetic NDVI time series and climate elements (such as minimum temperature, maximum temperature, relative humidity, evaporation, transpiration, and solar radiation) are inputted to the LUE model, resulting in an average R\(^2\) of 0.75 (WW) and 0.73 (OSR), and RMSEs of 4.33 dt/ha and 2.19 dt/ha. The yield prediction results prove the consistency and stability of the LUE model for yield estimation. Using the LUE model, accurate crop yield predictions were obtained for WW (R\(^2\) = 0.88) and OSR (R\(^2\) = 0.74). Lastly, the study observed a high positive correlation of R = 0.81 and R = 0.77 between the yearly R\(^2\) of synthetic accuracy and modelled yield accuracy for WW and OSR, respectively. KW - MOD13Q1 KW - precision agriculture KW - fusion KW - sustainable agriculture KW - decision making KW - winter wheat KW - oil-seed rape KW - crop models Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-311092 SN - 2072-4292 VL - 15 IS - 6 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aupperle-Lellbach, Heike A1 - Heidrich, Daniela A1 - Kehl, Alexandra A1 - Conrad, David A1 - Brockmann, Maria A1 - Törner, Katrin A1 - Beitzinger, Christoph A1 - Müller, Tobias T1 - KITLG copy number germline variations in schnauzer breeds and their relevance in digital squamous cell carcinoma in black giant schnauzers JF - Veterinary Sciences N2 - Copy number variations (CNVs) of the KITLG gene seem to be involved in the oncogenesis of digital squamous cell carcinoma (dSCC). The aims of this study were (1) to investigate KITLG CNV in giant (GS), standard (SS), and miniature (MS) schnauzers and (2) to compare KITLG CNV between black GS with and without dSCC. Blood samples from black GS (22 with and 17 without dSCC), black SS (18 with and 4 without dSSC; 5 unknown), and 50 MS (unknown dSSC status and coat colour) were analysed by digital droplet PCR. The results are that (1) most dogs had a copy number (CN) value > 4 (range 2.5–7.6) with no significant differences between GS, SS, and MS, and (2) the CN value in black GS with dSCC was significantly higher than in those without dSCC (p = 0.02). CN values > 5.8 indicate a significantly increased risk for dSCC, while CN values < 4.7 suggest a reduced risk for dSCC (grey area: 4.7–5.8). Diagnostic testing for KITLG CNV may sensitise owners to the individual risk of their black GS for dSCC. Further studies should investigate the relevance of KITLG CNV in SS and the protective effects in MS, who rarely suffer from dSCC. KW - tumour KW - toe KW - miniature schnauzer KW - standard schnauzer KW - CNV KW - ddPCR KW - breed predisposition Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-303913 SN - 2306-7381 VL - 10 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Cerezo-Echevarria, Argiñe A1 - Kehl, Alexandra A1 - Beitzinger, Christoph A1 - Müller, Tobias A1 - Klopfleisch, Robert A1 - Aupperle-Lellbach, Heike T1 - Evaluating the histologic grade of digital squamous cell carcinomas in dogs and copy number variation of KIT Ligand — a correlation study JF - Veterinary Sciences N2 - Dark-haired dogs are predisposed to the development of digital squamous cell carcinoma (DSCC). This may potentially suggest an underlying genetic predisposition not yet completely elucidated. Some authors have suggested a potential correlation between the number of copies KIT Ligand (KITLG) and the predisposition of dogs to DSCC, containing a higher number of copies in those affected by the neoplasm. In this study, the aim was to evaluate a potential correlation between the number of copies of the KITLG and the histological grade of malignancy in dogs with DSCC. For this, 72 paraffin-embedded DSCCs with paired whole blood samples of 70 different dogs were included and grouped according to their haircoat color as follow: Group 0/unknown haircoat color (n = 11); Group 1.a/black non-Schnauzers (n = 15); group 1.b/black Schnauzers (n = 33); group 1.c/black and tan dogs (n = 7); group 2/tan animals (n = 4). The DSCCs were histologically graded. Additionally, KITLG Copy Number Variation (CNV) was determined by ddPCR. A significant correlation was observed between KITLG copy number and the histological grade and score value. This finding may suggest a possible factor for the development of canine DSCC, thus potentially having an impact on personalized veterinary oncological strategies and breeding programs. KW - canine KW - cancer KW - toe KW - grading KW - haircoat KW - color KW - genetics KW - gene Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-304824 SN - 2306-7381 VL - 10 IS - 2 ER -