TY - JOUR A1 - Alfredson, Håkan A1 - Waldén, Markus A1 - Roberts, David A1 - Spang, Christoph T1 - Combined midportion Achilles and plantaris tendinopathy: a 1-year follow-up study after ultrasound and color-Doppler-guided WALANT surgery in a private setting in southern Sweden JF - Medicina N2 - Background and Objectives: Chronic painful midportion Achilles combined with plantaris tendinopathy can be a troublesome condition to treat. The objective was to prospectively follow patients subjected to ultrasound (US)- and color doppler (CD)-guided wide awake, local anesthetic, no-tourniquet (WALANT) surgery in a private setting. Material and Methods: Twenty-six Swedish patients (17 men and 9 women, mean age 50 years (range 29–62)) and eight international male patients (mean age of 38 years (range 25–71)) with combined midportion Achilles and plantaris tendinopathy in 45 tendons altogether were included. All patients had had >6 months of pain and had tried non-surgical treatment with eccentric training, without effect. US + CD-guided surgical scraping of the ventral Achilles tendon and plantaris removal under local anesthesia was performed on all patients. A 4–6-week rehabilitation protocol with an immediate full-weight-bearing tendon loading regime was used. The VISA-A score and a study-specific questionnaire evaluating physical activity level and subjective satisfaction with the treatment were used for evaluation. Results: At the 1-year follow-up, 32/34 patients (43 tendons) were satisfied with the treatment result and had returned to their pre-injury Achilles tendon loading activity. There were two dropouts (two tendons). For the Swedish patients, the mean VISA-A score increased from 34 (0–64) before surgery to 93 (61–100) after surgery (p < 0.001). There were two complications, one wound rupture and one superficial skin infection. Conclusions: For patients suffering from painful midportion Achilles tendinopathy and plantaris tendinopathy, US + CD-guided surgical Achilles tendon scraping and plantaris tendon removal showed a high satisfaction rate and good functional results 1 year after surgery. KW - Achilles tendinopathy KW - plantaris tendinopathy KW - surgical treatment KW - follow-up Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-303966 SN - 1648-9144 VL - 59 IS - 3 ER - TY - THES A1 - Alexander, Stephanie T1 - Collective cancer cell invasion \(in\) \(vivo\): function of β1 and β3 integrins in perivascular invasion and resistance to therapy T1 - Kollektive Tumorzellinvasion \(in\) \(vivo\): Funktion von β1 und β3 Integrinen in perivaskulärer Invasion und Therapieresistenz N2 - Pro-migratory signals mediated by the tumor microenvironment contribute to the cancer progression cascade, including invasion, metastasis and resistance to therapy. Derived from in vitro studies, isolated molecular steps of cancer invasion programs have been identified but their integration into the tumor microenvironment and suitability as molecular targets remain elusive. The purpose of the study was to visualize central aspects of tumor progression, including proliferation, survival and invasion by real-time intravital microscopy. The specific aims were to monitor the kinetics, mode, adhesion and chemoattraction mechanisms of tumor cell invasion, the involved guidance structures, and the response of invasion zones to anti-cancer therapy. To reach deeper tumor regions by optical imaging with subcellular resolution, near-infrared and infrared excited multiphoton microscopy was combined with a modified dorsal skinfold chamber model. Implanted HT-1080 fibrosarcoma and B16/F10 and MV3 melanoma tumors developed zones of invasive growth consisting of collective invasion strands that retained cell-cell contacts and high mitotic activity while invading at velocities of up to 200 μm per day. Collective invasion occurred predominantly along preexisting tissue structures, including blood and lymph vessels, collagen fibers and muscle strands of the deep dermis, and was thereby insensitive to RNAi based knockdown and/or antibody-based treatment against β1 and β3 integrins, chemokine (SDF-1/CXCL12) and growth factor (EGF) signaling. Therapeutic hypofractionated irradiation induced partial to complete regression of the tumor main mass, yet failed to eradicate the collective invasion strands, suggesting a microenvironmentally privileged niche. Whereas no radiosensitization was achieved by interference with EGFR or doxorubicin, the simultaneous inhibition of β1 and β3 integrins impaired cell proliferation and survival in spontaneously growing tumors and strongly enhanced the radiation response up to complete eradication of both main tumor and invasion strands. In conclusion, collective invasion in vivo is a robust process which follows preexisting tissue structures and is mainly independent of established adhesion and chemoattractant signaling. Due to its altered biological response to irradiation, collective invasion strands represent a microenvironmentally controlled and clinically relevant resistance niche to therapy. Therefore supportive regimens, such as anoikisinduction by anti-integrin therapy, may serve to enhance radio- and chemoefficacy and complement classical treatment regimens. N2 - Die Progression von Tumorerkrankungen, einschließlich Tumorinvasion, Metastasierung und Therapieresistenz wird unter anderem durch migrationsfördernde Signale aus der Tumorumgebung vermittelt. Zur bisherigen Aufklärung einzelner Schritte des Tumorinvasions- und Progressionsprogramms trugen dabei wesentlich In-vitro-Studien bei, jedoch erfordert die Darstellung der Relevanz molekularer Zielstrukturen und deren Funktion im Tumormikromilieu die Validierung in geeigneten In-vivo-Tumormodellen. Ziel dieser Studie war, zelluläre und molekulare Mechanismen der Tumorprogression inklusive Proliferation, Überleben und Invasion mittels Echtzeit-Intravitalmikroskopie darzustellen. Untersucht wurden insbesondere die Kinetik und Arten der Tumorzellinvasion, die zugrunde liegenden Adhäsionswege und pro-migratorischen Signale (EGF, SDF-1), beteiligte Leitstrukturen des Tumorstromas, und Strategien, therapeutisch gegen Invasionszonen vorzugehen. Um tiefe Tumorareale mittels subzellulär aufgelöster optischer Bildgebung zu erreichen, wurde nah-infrarote und infrarote Multiphotonenmikroskopie mit einem modifizierten Rückenkammermodell kombiniert. Orthotope Xeno- und Allotransplantate von HT-1080-Fibrosarkom- und B16/F10- oder MV3-Melanomzellen entwickelten dabei ausgeprägte invasive Wachstumszonen bestehend aus kollektiven Invasionssträngen mit intakten Zell-Zell-Kontakten und zeitgleicher Mitoseaktivität, die Geschwindigkeiten von bis zu 200 μm pro Tag erreichten. Diese kollektive Invasion orientierte sich bevorzugt entlang von Funktionsstrukturen der tiefen Dermis wie Blut- und Lymphgefäßen, Kollagenfasern und Muskelsträngen. RNAibasierende Herrunterregulation und/oder Injektion blockierender Antikörper gegen β1 und β3 Integrine, wie auch Inhibition von EGF führten nur zu minimaler Änderung der Invasionseffizienz. Therapeutische hypofraktionierte Bestrahlung induzierte partielle bis komplette Regression der Tumorhauptmasse, nicht jedoch der kollektiven Invasionsstränge, was auf eine kombinierte Invasions- und Resistenznische hinweist. Weder Doxorubicin noch gegen EGFR gerichtete Antikörper steigerten die Radiosensitivität, jedoch führte die simultane Inhibition von β1 und β3 Integrinen zu einer starken Hemmung von Proliferation und Überleben spontan wachsender Tumoren (Anoikis) und verstärkte die Strahlungssensitivität bis hin zum kompletten Verschwinden von sowohl Tumorhauptmasse wie auch Invasionsträngen. Kollektive Invasion ist somit ein wichtiger Invasionsmodus, der sich an vorbestehenden Gewebsstrukturen orientiert und unabhängig von Integrinen und EGF- und SDF-1-Signalen erfolgt. Die kollektiven Stränge entwickeln dabei eine vom Haupttumor verschiedene biologische Reaktion auf Bestrahlung und entsprechen damit einer durch die Mikroumgebung kontrollierten und von Integrinsignalen abhängenden Resistenznische. Somit könnte eine zusätzliche anti- Integrin-Therapie die Effizienz von Bestrahlung und Chemotherapie erhöhen und klassische Behandlungsschemen/-programme ergänzen. KW - Tumorzelle KW - Kollektive Invasion KW - Multiphotonenmikroskopie KW - Integrine KW - collective invasion KW - multiphoton microscopy KW - integrins KW - Invasion KW - Integrine Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-85435 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Alepee, Natalie A1 - Bahinski, Anthony A1 - Daneshian, Mardas A1 - De Weyer, Bart A1 - Fritsche, Ellen A1 - Goldberg, Alan A1 - Hansmann, Jan A1 - Hartung, Thomas A1 - Haycock, John A1 - Hogberg, Helena T. A1 - Hoelting, Lisa A1 - Kelm, Jens M. A1 - Kadereit, Suzanne A1 - McVey, Emily A1 - Landsiedel, Robert A1 - Leist, Marcel A1 - Lübberstedt, Marc A1 - Noor, Fozia A1 - Pellevoisin, Christian A1 - Petersohn, Dirk A1 - Pfannenbecker, Uwe A1 - Reisinger, Kerstin A1 - Ramirez, Tzutzuy A1 - Rothen-Rutishauser, Barbara A1 - Schäfer-Korting, Monika A1 - Zeilinger, Katrin A1 - Zurich, Marie-Gabriele T1 - State-of-the-Art of 3D Cultures (Organs-on-a-Chip) in Safety Testing and Pathophysiology JF - ALTEX - Alternatives to Animal Experimentation N2 - Integrated approaches using different in vitro methods in combination with bioinformatics can (i) increase the success rate and speed of drug development; (ii) improve the accuracy of toxicological risk assessment; and (iii) increase our understanding of disease. Three-dimensional (3D) cell culture models are important building blocks of this strategy which has emerged during the last years. The majority of these models are organotypic, i.e., they aim to reproduce major functions of an organ or organ system. This implies in many cases that more than one cell type forms the 3D structure, and often matrix elements play an important role. This review summarizes the state of the art concerning commonalities of the different models. For instance, the theory of mass transport/metabolite exchange in 3D systems and the special analytical requirements for test endpoints in organotypic cultures are discussed in detail. In the next part, 3D model systems for selected organs liver, lung, skin, brain are presented and characterized in dedicated chapters. Also, 3D approaches to the modeling of tumors are presented and discussed. All chapters give a historical background, illustrate the large variety of approaches, and highlight up- and downsides as well as specific requirements. Moreover, they refer to the application in disease modeling, drug discovery and safety assessment. Finally, consensus recommendations indicate a roadmap for the successful implementation of 3D models in routine screening. It is expected that the use of such models will accelerate progress by reducing error rates and wrong predictions from compound testing. KW - 3D models KW - organotypic KW - organ-on-a-chip KW - multicellular tumor spheroids KW - primary human hepatocytes KW - embryonic stem cell KW - reconstructed human epidermis KW - in-vitro models KW - full thickness skin KW - necrosis-factor-alpha KW - metabolic flux analysis KW - long-term KW - human liver cells Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-117826 VL - 31 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aldejohann, Alexander Maximilian A1 - Wiese-Posselt, Miriam A1 - Gastmeier, Petra A1 - Kurzai, Oliver T1 - Expert recommendations for prevention and management of Candida auris transmission JF - Mycoses N2 - Candida auris was first described as a yeast pathogen in 2009. Since then, the species has emerged worldwide. In contrast to most other Candida spp., C. auris frequently exhibits multi-drug resistance and is readily transmitted in hospital settings. While most detections so far are from colonised patients, C. auris does cause superficial and life-threatening invasive infections. During management of the first documented C. auris transmission in a German hospital, experts from the National Reference Centers for Invasive Fungal Infections (NRZMyk) and the National Reference Center for Surveillance of Nosocomial Infections screened available literature and integrated available knowledge on infection prevention and C. auris epidemiology and biology to enable optimal containment. Relevant recommendations developed during this process are summarised in this guidance document, intended to assist in management of C. auris transmission and potential outbreak situations. Rapid and effective measures to contain C. auris spread require a multi-disciplinary approach that includes clinical specialists of the affected unit, nursing staff, hospital hygiene, diagnostic microbiology, cleaning staff, hospital management and experts in diagnostic mycology / fungal infections. Action should be initiated in a step-wise process and relevant interventions differ between management of singular C. auris colonised / infected patients and detection of potential C. auris transmission or nosocomial outbreaks. KW - Candida auris KW - nosocomial transmission KW - infection prevention KW - expert recommendation Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-318570 VL - 65 IS - 6 SP - 590 EP - 598 ER - TY - THES A1 - Alcantarino Menescal, Luciana T1 - In vivo characterization of genetic factors involved in Xmrk driven melanoma formation in Medaka (Oryzias latipes): a closer look at braf, Stat5 and c-myc T1 - In vivo Charakterisierung genetischer Faktoren mit Einfluss auf Xmrk induzierte Melanome in Medaka (Oryzias latipes): Untersuchung von braf, Stat5 und c-myc. N2 - Melanoma arises from the malignant transformation of melanocytes and is one of the most aggressive forms of human cancer. In fish of the genus Xiphophorus, melanoma development, although very rarely, happens spontaneously in nature and can be induced by interspecific crossing. The oncogenic receptor tyrosine kinase, Xmrk, is responsible for melanoma formation in these fishes. Since Xiphophorus are live-bearing fishes and therefore not compatible with embryonic manipulation and transgenesis, the Xmrk melanoma model was brought to the medaka (Oryzias latipes) system. Xmrk expression under the control of the pigment cell specific mitf promoter leads to melanoma formation with 100% penetrance in medaka. Xmrk is an orthologue of the human epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and activates several downstream signaling pathways. Examples of these pathways are the direct phosphorylation of BRAF and Stat5, as well as the enhanced transcription of C-myc. BRAF is a serine-threonine kinase which is found mutated at high frequencies in malignant melanomas. Stat5 is a transcription factor known to be constitutively activated in fish melanoma. C-myc is a transcription factor that is thought to regulate the expression of approximately 15% of all human genes and is involved in cancer progression of a large number of different tumors. To gain new in vivo information on candidate factors known to be involved in melanoma progression, I identified and analysed BRAF, Stat5 and C-myc in the laboratory fish model system medaka. BRAF protein motifs are highly conserved among vertebrates and the results of this work indicate that its function in the MAPK signaling is maintained in medaka. Transgenic medaka lines carrying a constitutive active version of BRAF (V614E) showed more pigmented skin when compared to wild type. Also, some transiently expressing BRAF V614E fishes showed a disrupted eye phenotype. In addition, I was able to identify two Stat5 copies in medaka, named Stat5ab/a and Stat5ab/b. Sequence analysis revealed a higher similarity between both Stat5 sequences when compared to either human Stat5a or Stat5b. This suggests that the two Stat5 copies in medaka arose by an independent duplication processes. I cloned these two Stat5 present in medaka, produced constitutive active and dominant negative gene versions and successfully established transgenic lines carrying each version under the control of the MITF promoter. These lines will help to elucidate questions that are still remaining in Stat5 biology and its function in melanoma progression, like the role of Stat5 phosphorylation on tumor invasiveness. In a third project during my PhD work, I analysed medaka C-myc function and indentified two copies of this gene in medaka, named c-myc17 and c-myc20, according to the chromosome where they are located. I produced conditional transgenic medaka lines carrying the c-myc17 gene coupled to the hormone binding domain of the estrogen receptor to enable specific transgene activation at a given time point. Comparable to human C-myc, medaka C-myc17 is able to induce proliferation and apoptosis in vivo after induction. Besides that, C-myc17 long-term activation led to liver hyperplasia. In summary, the medaka models generated in this work will be important to bring new in vivo information on genes involved in cancer development. Also, the generated transgenic lines can be easily crossed to the melanoma developing Xmrk medaka lines, thereby opening up the possibility to investigate their function in melanoma progression. Besides that, the generated medaka fishes make it possible to follow the whole development of melanocytes, since the embryos are transparent and can be used for high throughput chemical screens. N2 - Melanome entstehen durch die krankhafte Transformation von Melanozyten und sind eine der aggressivsten Krebsarten beim Menschen. In Fischen der Gattung Xiphophorus können, wenn auch sehr selten, spontan Melanome entstehen oder durch spezielle Artenkreuzungen induziert werden. Grundlage für das Entstehen der Melanome in diesen Fischen ist die Rezeptortyrosinkinase Xmrk. Da alle Xiphophorus-Arten lebendgebärend sind und keine Manipulationen an Embryonen vorgenommen werden können, wurde ein Xmrk Melanommodel für Medaka (Oryzias latipes) etabliert. Die Expression von Xmrk in Pigmentzellen dieser Fischart resultiert mit 100%iger Penetranz in Melanomen. Das Xmrk ist ein Ortholog des menschlichen „epidermal growth factor“ (EGFR) und aktiviert verschiedene nachgeschaltete Signalwege. Beispiele für diese Aktivierungen sind die Phosphorylierung von BRAF, Stat5 und die erhöhte Expression von c-myc. BRAF ist eine Serin-Threoninkinase, welche oft in malignen Melanomen mutiert ist. Stat5 ist ein Transkriptionsfaktor, welcher dauerhaft in Fischtumoren aktiviert ist. C-myc ist ein Transkriptionsfaktor, welcher etwa 15% aller menschlichen Gene sowie die Entstehung vieler menschlicher Tumore reguliert. Um neue Einsichten in die Funktion der Kanidatengene im Prozess der Melanomentstehung in vivo zu erlangen, habe ich Orthologe von BRAF, Stat5 und C-myc bei Medaka identifiziert und analysiert. Die Domänen des BRAF Proteins sind hoch konserviert in allen Vertebraten. Weiterhin deuten die Ergebnisse meiner Arbeit auf eine Beibehaltung der Funktionen im MAPK Signalweg hin. Transgene Medakalinien, welche eine dauerhaft aktive Version des BRAF Gens (V614E) exprimieren, weisen einerseits eine stärkere Hautpigmentierung auf. Weiterhin treten in diesen Fischen Veränderungen der Augen auf. In einem weiteren Projekt meiner Arbeit gelang es mir, zwei Kopien des Stat5 Gens im Medaka zu identifizieren, Stat5ab/a und Stat5ab/b. Sequenzanalysen zeigten eine höhere Übereinstimmung zwischen den beiden Genkopien, als zwischen denen von Medaka und Menschen. Dieses Ergebnis deutet darauf hin, dass die beiden Medaka Gene durch eine unabhängige Duplikation entstanden. In meiner Arbeit habe ich beide Gene des Medakas kloniert und jeweils eine konstitutiv aktive und eine dominant negative Version der Gene hergestellt. Weiterhin konnte ich erfolgreich für jede Genversion eine transgene Medakalinie etablieren, welche die verschiedenen Genvarianten unter der Kontrolle des pigmentzellspezifischen Promoters des mitf Gens exprimieren. Diese Linien werden in Zukunft helfen, den Einfluss von Stat5 Signalen auf den Prozess der Melanomverbreitung und dessen Invasivität zu erklären. In einem dritten Projekt meiner Doktorarbeit untersuchte ich das Vorkommen und die Funktion der C-myc Gene des Medakas. Ich konnte zwei Genkopien identifizieren, c-myc17 und c-myc20, welche auf unterschiedlichen Chromosomen lokalisiert sind. Ich konnte induzierbare, stabil transgene Linien herstellen, welche ein Fusionsprotein aus C-myc17 und der Hormonbindungsdomäne des Östrogenrezeptors von Maus exprimiert. Diese Linie ermöglichte eine induzierbare Aktivität des Transgens. Vergleichbar zum menschlichen MYC ist C-myc17 fähig, nach Aktivierung Proliferation und Apoptose in vivo auszulösen. Dauerhafte Aktivierung über einen längeren Zeitraum führt in diesen Linien zu Hyperplasie in Leber. Die verschiedenen Fischmodelle, die während dieser Arbeit generiert wurden, werden essentiell sein, um neue Einsichten in die Rolle diese Faktoren während der Krebsentwicklung in vivo zu erlangen. Weiterhin ermöglichen diese transgenen Linien durch einfaches Auskreuzen auf Xmrk Linien, deren Einfluss auf die Verbreitung von Melanomen zu untersuchen. Letztendlich sind mit diesen Linien auch Untersuchungen der Entwicklung von Pigmentzellen über Zeit möglich, da die Embryonen transparent sind und sich für chemisches Hochdurchsatz-Screening eignen. KW - Japankärpfling KW - Melanom KW - Myc KW - Molekulargenetik KW - melanoma KW - medaka KW - BRAF KW - Stat5 KW - c-myc KW - melanoma KW - medaka KW - BRAF KW - Stat5 KW - c-myc Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-70762 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Albrecht, Marco A1 - Sharma, Cynthia M. A1 - Reinhardt, Richard A1 - Vogel, Joerg A1 - Rudel, Thomas T1 - Deep sequencing-based discovery of the Chlamydia trachomatis transcriptome N2 - Chlamydia trachomatis is an obligate intracellular pathogenic bacterium that has been refractory to genetic manipulations. Although the genomes of several strains have been sequenced, very little information is available on the gene structure of these bacteria. We used deep sequencing to define the transcriptome of purified elementary bodies (EB) and reticulate bodies (RB) of C. trachomatis L2b, respectively. Using an RNAseq approach, we have mapped 363 transcriptional start sites (TSS) of annotated genes. Semiquantitative analysis of mapped cDNA reads revealed differences in the RNA levels of 84 genes isolated from EB and RB, respectively. We have identified and in part confirmed 42 genome- and 1 plasmid-derived novel non-coding RNAs. The genome encoded non-coding RNA, ctrR0332 was one of the most abundantly and differentially expressed RNA in EB and RB, implying an important role in the developmental cycle of C. trachomatis. The detailed map of TSS in a thus far unprecedented resolution as a complement to the genome sequence will help to understand the organization, control and function of genes of this important pathogen. KW - Biologie Y1 - 2010 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-68389 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Albrecht, Marco A1 - Sharma, Cynthia M. A1 - Dittrich, Marcus T. A1 - Müller, Tobias A1 - Reinhardt, Richard A1 - Vogel, Jörg A1 - Rudel, Thomas T1 - The Transcriptional Landscape of Chlamydia pneumoniae N2 - Background: Gene function analysis of the obligate intracellular bacterium Chlamydia pneumoniae is hampered by the facts that this organism is inaccessible to genetic manipulations and not cultivable outside the host. The genomes of several strains have been sequenced; however, very little information is available on the gene structure and transcriptome of C. pneumoniae. Results: Using a differential RNA-sequencing approach with specific enrichment of primary transcripts, we defined the transcriptome of purified elementary bodies and reticulate bodies of C. pneumoniae strain CWL-029; 565 transcriptional start sites of annotated genes and novel transcripts were mapped. Analysis of adjacent genes for cotranscription revealed 246 polycistronic transcripts. In total, a distinct transcription start site or an affiliation to an operon could be assigned to 862 out of 1,074 annotated protein coding genes. Semi-quantitative analysis of mapped cDNA reads revealed significant differences for 288 genes in the RNA levels of genes isolated from elementary bodies and reticulate bodies. We have identified and in part confirmed 75 novel putative non-coding RNAs. The detailed map of transcription start sites at single nucleotide resolution allowed for the first time a comprehensive and saturating analysis of promoter consensus sequences in Chlamydia. Conclusions: The precise transcriptional landscape as a complement to the genome sequence will provide new insights into the organization, control and function of genes. Novel non-coding RNAs and identified common promoter motifs will help to understand gene regulation of this important human pathogen. KW - Chlamydia pneumoniae Y1 - 2011 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-69116 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Albrecht, Jörg A1 - Classen, Alice A1 - Vollstädt, Maximilian G.R. A1 - Mayr, Antonia A1 - Mollel, Neduvoto P. A1 - Schellenberger Costa, David A1 - Dulle, Hamadi I. A1 - Fischer, Markus A1 - Hemp, Andreas A1 - Howell, Kim M. A1 - Kleyer, Michael A1 - Nauss, Thomas A1 - Peters, Marcell K. A1 - Tschapka, Marco A1 - Steffan-Dewenter, Ingolf A1 - Böhning-Gaese, Katrin A1 - Schleuning, Matthias T1 - Plant and animal functional diversity drive mutualistic network assembly across an elevational gradient JF - Nature Communications N2 - Species' functional traits set the blueprint for pair-wise interactions in ecological networks. Yet, it is unknown to what extent the functional diversity of plant and animal communities controls network assembly along environmental gradients in real-world ecosystems. Here we address this question with a unique dataset of mutualistic bird-fruit, bird-flower and insect-flower interaction networks and associated functional traits of 200 plant and 282 animal species sampled along broad climate and land-use gradients on Mt. Kilimanjaro. We show that plant functional diversity is mainly limited by precipitation, while animal functional diversity is primarily limited by temperature. Furthermore, shifts in plant and animal functional diversity along the elevational gradient control the niche breadth and partitioning of the respective other trophic level. These findings reveal that climatic constraints on the functional diversity of either plants or animals determine the relative importance of bottom-up and top-down control in plant-animal interaction networks. KW - Traits-Environment Relationships KW - Species Traits KW - Ecological Networks KW - 4TH-Corner Problem KW - Multiple Traits KW - Bottom-up KW - Biodiversity KW - Community ecology KW - Ecological networks KW - Ecology KW - Ecosystem ecology Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-221056 VL - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Albrecht, Franziska A1 - Mueller, Karsten A1 - Ballarini, Tommaso A1 - Lampe, Leonie A1 - Diehl-Schmid, Janine A1 - Fassbender, Klaus A1 - Fliessbach, Klaus A1 - Jahn, Holger A1 - Jech, Robert A1 - Kassubek, Jan A1 - Kornhuber, Johannes A1 - Landwehrmeyer, Bernhard A1 - Lauer, Martin A1 - Ludolph, Albert C. A1 - Lyros, Epameinondas A1 - Prudlo, Johannes A1 - Schneider, Anja A1 - Synofzik, Matthis A1 - Wiltfang, Jens A1 - Danek, Adrian A1 - Otto, Markus A1 - Schroeter, Matthias L. T1 - Unraveling corticobasal syndrome and alien limb syndrome with structural brain imaging JF - Cortex N2 - Alien limb phenomenon is a rare syndrome associated with a feeling of non-belonging and disowning toward one's limb. In contrast, anarchic limb phenomenon leads to involuntary but goal-directed movements. Alien/anarchic limb phenomena are frequent in corticobasal syndrome (CBS), an atypical parkinsonian syndrome characterized by rigidity, akinesia, dystonia, cortical sensory deficit, and apraxia. The structure function relationship of alien/anarchic limb was investigated in multi centric structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data. Whole-group and single subject comparisons were made in 25 CBS and eight CBS-alien/anarchic limb patients versus controls. Support vector machine was used to see if CBS with and without alien/anarchic limb could be distinguished by structural MRI patterns. Whole-group comparison of CBS versus controls revealed asymmetric frontotemporal atrophy. CBS with alien/anarchic limb syndrome versus controls showed frontoparietal atrophy including the supplementary motor area contralateral to the side of the affected limb. Exploratory analysis identified frontotemporal regions encompassing the pre-/and postcentral gyrus as compromised in CBS with alien limb syndrome. Classification of CBS patients yielded accuracies of 79%. CBS-alien/anarchic limb syndrome was differentiated from CBS patients with an accuracy of 81%. Predictive differences were found in the cingulate gyrus spreading to frontomedian cortex, postcentral gyrus, and temporoparietoocipital regions. We present the first MRI-based group analysis on CBS-alien/anarchic limb. Results pave the way for individual clinical syndrome prediction and allow understanding the underlying neurocognitive architecture. (C) 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/). KW - Alien limb syndrome KW - Anarchic limb syndrome KW - Corticobasal syndrome KW - Diagnosis prediction KW - Support vector machine Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-221040 VL - 117 ER - TY - THES A1 - Alboteanu, Ana Maria T1 - The Noncommutative Standard Model : Construction Beyond Leading Order in Theta and Collider Phenomenology T1 - Das Nichtkommutative StandardmodellKonstruktion jenseits der führenden Ordnung in Theta und Phänomenologie an Teilchenbeschleunigern N2 - Trotz seiner präzisen Übereinstimmung mit dem Experiment ist die Gültigkeit des Standardmodells (SM) der Elementarteilchenphysik bislang nur bis zu einer Energieskala von einigen hundert GeV gesichert. Abgesehen davon erweist sich schon das Einbinden der Gravitation in einer einheitlichen Beschreibung aller fundamentalen Wechselwirkungen als ein durch gewöhnliche Quantenfeldtheorie nicht zu lösendes Problem. Das Interesse an Quantenfeldtheorien auf einer nichtkommutativen Raumzeit wurde durch deren Vorhersage als niederenergetischer Limes von Stringtheorien erweckt. Unabhängig davon, kann die Nichtlokalität einer solchen Theorie den Rahmen zur Einbeziehung der Gravitation in eine vereinheitlichende Theorie liefern. Die Hoffnung besteht, dass die Energieskala Lambda_NC, ab der solche Effekte sichtbar werden können und für die es einerlei theoretischen Vorhersagen gibt, schon bei der nächsten Generation von Beschleunigern erreicht wird. Auf dieser Annahme beruht auch die vorliegende Arbeit, im Rahmen deren eine mögliche Realisierung von Quantenfeldtheorien auf nichtkommutativer Raumzeit auf ihre phänomenologischen Konsequenzen hin untersucht wurde. Diese Arbeit ist durch fehlende LHC (Large Hadron Collider) Studien für nichkommutative Quantenfeldtheorien motiviert. Im ersten Teil des Vorhabens wurde der hadronische Prozess pp-> Z gamma -> l+l- gamma am LHC sowie die Elektron-Positron Paarvernichtung in ein Z-Boson und ein Photon am ILC (International Linear Collider) auf nichtkommutative Signale hin untersucht. Die phänomenlogischen Untersuchungen wurden im Rahmen dieses Modells in erster Ordnung des nichtkommutativen Parameters Theta durchgeführt. Eine nichtkommutative Raumzeit führt zur Brechung der Rotationsinvarianz bezüglich der Strahlrichtung der einlaufenden Teilchen. Im differentiellen Wirkungsquerschnitt für Streuprozesse äussert sich dieses als eine azimuthale Abhängigkeit, die weder im SM noch in anderen Modellen jenseits des SM auftritt. Diese klare, f\"ur nichtkommutative Theorien typische Signatur kann benutzt werden, um nichtkommutative Modelle von anderen Modellen, die neue Physik beschreiben, zu unterscheiden. Auch hat es sich erwiesen, dass die azimuthale Abhängigkeit des Wirkungsquerschnittes am besten daf\"ur geeignet ist, um die Sensitivität des LHC und des ILC auf der nichtkommutativen Skala $\Lnc$ zu bestimmen. Im phänomenologischen Teil der Arbeit wurde herausgefunden, dass Messungen am LHC für den Prozess pp-> Z gamma-> l+l- gamma nur in bestimmten Fällen auf nichtkommutative Effekte sensitiv sind. Für diese Fälle wurde für die nichtkommutative Energieskala Lambda_NC eine Grenze von Lambda_NC > 1.2 TeV bestimmt. Diese ist um eine Größenordnung höher als die Grenzen, die von bisherigen Beschleunigerexperimenten hergeleitet wurden. Bei einem zukünftigen Linearbeschleuniger, dem ILC, wird die Grenze auf Lambda_NC im Prozess e^+e^- -> Z gamma -> l^+ l^- gamma wesentlich erhöht (bis zu 6 TeV). Abgesehen davon ist dem ILC gerade der für den LHC kaum zugängliche Parameterbereich der nichtkommutativen Theorie erschlossen, was die Komplementarität der beiden Beschleunigerexperimente hinsichtlich der nichtkommutativen Parameter zeigt. Der zweite Teil der Arbeit entwickelte sich aus der Notwendigkeit heraus, den Gültigkeitsbereich der Theorie zu höheren Energien hin zu erweitern. Dafür haben wir den neutralen Sektor des nichtkommutativen SM um die nächste Ordnung in Theta ergänzt. Es stellte sich wider Erwarten heraus, dass die Theorie dabei um einige freie Parameter erweitert werden muss. Die zusätzlichen Parameter sind durch die homogenen Lösungen der Eichäquivalenzbedingungen gegeben, welche Ambiguit\"aten der Seiberg-Witten Abbildungen darstellen. Die allgemeine Erwartung war, dass die Ambiguitäten Feldredefinitionen entsprechen und daher in den Streumatrixelementen verschwinden m\"ussen. In dieser Arbeit wurde jedoch gezeigt, dass dies ab der zweiten Ordnung in Theta nicht der Fall ist und dass die Nichteindeutigkeit der Seiberg-Witten Abbildungen sich durchaus in Observablen niederschlägt. Die Vermutung besteht, dass jede neue Ordnung in Theta neue Parameter in die Theorie einführt. Wie weit und in welche Richtung die Theorie auf nichtkommutativer Raumzeit entwickelt werden muss, kann jedoch nur das Experiment entscheiden. N2 - Despite its precise agreement with the experiment, the validity of the standard model (SM) of elementary particle physics is ensured only up to a scale of several hundred GeV so far. Even more, the inclusion of gravity into an unifying theory poses a problem which cannot be solved by ordinary quantum field theory (QFT). String theory, which is the most popular ansatz for a unified theory, predicts QFT on noncommutative space-time as a low energy limit. Nevertheless, independently of the motivation given by string theory, the nonlocality inherent to noncommutative QFT opens up the possibility for the inclusion of gravity. There are no theoretical predictions for the energy scale Lambda_NC at which noncommutative effects arise and it can be assumed to lie in the TeV range, which is the energy range probed by the next generation of colliders. Within this work we study the phenomenological consequences of a possible realization of QFT on noncommutative space-time relying on this assumption. The motivation for this thesis was given by the gap in the range of phenomenological studies of noncommutative effects in collider experiments, due to the absence in the literature of Large Hadron Collider (LHC) studies regarding noncommutative QFTs. In the first part we thus performed a phenomenological analysis of the hadronic process pp -> Z gamma -> l^+l^- gamma at the LHC and of electron-positron pair annihilation into a Z boson and a photon at the International Linear Collider (ILC). The noncommutative extension of the SM considered within this work relies on two building blocks: the Moyal-Weyl star-product of functions on ordinary space-time and the Seiberg-Witten maps. The latter relate the ordinary fields and parameters to their noncommutative counterparts such that ordinary gauge transformations induce noncommutative gauge transformations. This requirement is expressed by a set of inhomogeneous differential equations (the gauge equivalence equations) which are solved by the Seiberg-Witten maps order by order in the noncommutative parameter Theta. Thus, by means of the Moyal-Weyl star-product and the Seiberg-Witten maps a noncommutative extension of the SM as an effective theory as expansion in powers of Theta can be achieved, providing the framework of our phenomenological studies. A consequence of the noncommutativity of space-time is the violation of rotational invariance with respect to the beam axis. This effect shows up in the azimuthal dependence of cross sections, which is absent in the SM as well as in other models beyond the SM. Thus, the azimuthal dependence of the cross section is a typical signature of noncommutativity and can be used in order to discriminate it against other new physics effects. We have found this dependence to be best suited for deriving the sensitivity bounds on the noncommutative scale Lambda_NC. By studying pp -> Z gamma -> l^+l^- gamma to first order in the noncommutative parameter Theta, we show in the first part of this work that measurements at the LHC are sensitive to noncommutative effects only in certain cases, giving bounds on the noncommutative scale of Lambda_NC > 1.2 TeV. Our result improved the bounds present in the literature coming from past and present collider experiments by one order of magnitude. In order to explore the whole parameter range of the noncommutativity, ILC studies are required. By means of e^+e^- -> Z gamma -> l^+l^- gamma to first order in Theta we have shown that ILC measurements are complementary to LHC measurements of the noncommutative parameters. In addition, the bounds on Lambda_NC derived from the ILC are significantly higher and reach Lambda_NC > 6 TeV. The second part of this work arose from the necessity to enlarge the range of validity of our model towards higher energies. Thus, we expand the neutral current sector of the noncommutative SM to second order in $\theta$. We found that, against the general expectation, the theory must be enlarged by additional parameters. The new parameters enter the theory as ambiguities of the Seiberg-Witten maps. The latter are not uniquely determined and differ by homogeneous solutions of the gauge equivalence equations. The expectation was that the ambiguities correspond to field redefinitions and therefore should vanish in scattering matrix elements. However, we proved that this is not the case, and the ambiguities do affect physical observables. Our conjecture is, that every order in Theta will introduce new parameters to the theory. However, only the experiment can decide to what extent efforts with still higher orders in Theta are reasonable and will also give directions for the development of theoretical models of noncommutative QFTs. KW - Feldtheorie KW - Proton-Proton-Streuung KW - Elektron-Positron-Streuung KW - Teilchenbeschleuniger KW - Feynman-Graph KW - Effektive Theorie KW - Monte-Carlo-Simulation KW - Seiberg-Witten Abbildung KW - nichtkommutative Raumzeit KW - Seiberg-Witten map KW - noncommutative space-time Y1 - 2007 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-24334 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Albert-Weißenberger, Christiane A1 - Várrallyay, Csanád A1 - Raslan, Furat A1 - Kleinschnitz, Christoph A1 - Sirén, Anna-Leena T1 - An experimental protocol for mimicking pathomechanisms of traumatic brain injury in mice N2 - Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a result of an outside force causing immediate mechanical disruption of brain tissue and delayed pathogenic events. In order to examine injury processes associated with TBI, a number of rodent models to induce brain trauma have been described. However, none of these models covers the entire spectrum of events that might occur in TBI. Here we provide a thorough methodological description of a straightforward closed head weight drop mouse model to assess brain injuries close to the clinical conditions of human TBI. KW - Medizin KW - closed head injury KW - traumatic brain injury KW - neurobehavioural deficits KW - astrocyte KW - microglia KW - neurons Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-75368 ER - TY - THES A1 - Albert-Weißenberger, Christiane T1 - Regulation of the Flagellar Biogenesis in Legionella pneumophila T1 - Die Regulation der Flagellenbiogenese in Legionella pneumophila N2 - The bacterial pathogen Legionella pneumophila replicates intracellularly in protozoa, but can also cause severe pneumonia, called Legionnaires' disease. The bacteria invade and proliferate in the alveolar macrophages of the human lung. L. pneumophila bacteria exhibit a biphasic life cycle: replicative bacteria are avirulent; in contrast, transmissive bacteria express virulence traits and flagella. Primarily aim of this thesis was to evaluate the impact of the regulatory proteins FleQ, FleR, and RpoN in flagellar gene regulation. Phenotypic analysis, Western blot and electron microscopy of regulatory mutants in the genes coding for FleQ, RpoN and FleR demonstrated that flagellin expression is strongly repressed and that these mutants are non-flagellated in transmissive phase. Transcriptomic studies of these putative flagellar gene expression regulators demonstrated that fleQ controls the expression of numerous flagellar biosynthetic genes. Together with RpoN, FleQ controls transcription of 14 out of 31 flagellar class II genes, coding for the basal body, hook, and regulatory proteins. Unexpectedly, 7 out of 15 late flagellar genes class III and IV) are expressed dependent on FleQ but independent of RpoN. Thus, in contrast to the commonly accepted view that enhancer binding proteins as FleQ always interact with RpoN to initiate transcription, our results strongly indicate that FleQ of L. pneumophila regulates gene expression RpoN-dependent as well as RpoN-independent. Moreover, transcriptome analysis of a fleR mutant strain elucidated that FleR does not regulate the flagellar class III genes as previously suggested. Instead FleR regulates together with RpoN numerous protein biosynthesis and metabolic genes. Based on these experimental results our modified model for the transcriptional regulation of flagellar genes in L. pneumophila is that flagellar class II genes are controlled by FleQ and RpoN, while flagellar class III and IV genes are controlled in a fleQ-dependent but rpoN-independent manner. Although all L. pneumophila strains share the same complex life style, various pathotypes have evolved. This is reflected by the genomes, which contain e.g. genomic islands. The genomic island Trb-1 of L. pneumophila Corby, carries all genes necessary for a type-IV conjugation system, an integrase gene and a putative oriT site. The second aim of this thesis was to investigate the implication of this genomic island in conjugative DNA transfer. Using conjugation assays we showed that the oriT site located on Trb-1 is functional and contributes to conjugation between different L. pneumophila strains. As this is the first oriT site of L. pneumophila known to be functional our results provide evidence that conjugation is a major mechanism for the evolution of new pathotypes in L. pneumophila. N2 - Das pathogene Bakterium Legionella pneumophila repliziert sich in der Natur intrazellulär in Protozoen. Beim Menschen kann das Bakterium eine schwere Pneumonie, die sogenannte Legionärskrankheit auslösen. Hierbei vermehren sich die Bakterien in Alveolarmakrophagen der Lunge. Der Lebenszyklus von L. pneumophila Bakterien ist gekennzeichnet durch zwei Phase: replikative Bakterien sind avirulent; im Gegensatz dazu sind transmissive Bakterien virulent und flagelliert. Hauptziel dieser Arbeit war es die Beteiligung der regulatorischen Proteins FleQ, FleR, and RpoN an der Flagellengenregulation zu ermitteln. Mutanten für die Gene welche für FleQ, FleR oder RpoN codieren exprimieren in der transmissiven Phase im Genesatz zum Wildtyp nur wenig Flagellin und sind nicht flagelliert. Nachgewiesen wurde dies durch eine phänotypische Analyse, Western blot und Ektronenmikroskopie. Studien des Transkripoms dieser Mutanten zeigten, daß FleQ die Expression zahlreicher Flagellenbiosynthesegenen kontrolliert. Gemeinsam mit RpoN kontrolliert FleQ die Transkription von 14 der 31 Klasse II Flagellengene, welche für Basalkörper, Haken und regulatorische Proteine codieren. Überraschenderweise sind 7 der 15 späten Flagellengenen (Klasse III und IV) abhängig von FleQ, aber unabhängig von RpoN exprimiert. Daher und entgegen der allgemeinen Auffassung dass sogenannte ‚enhancer binding' Proteine wie FleQ zur Transkriptionsinitiation immer mit RpoN interagieren, deuten unsere Ergebnisse darauf hin, dass FleQ von L. pneumophila Genexpression sowohl RpoN-abhängig, als auch RpoN-unabhängig reguliert. Ebenso anders als zuvor vorgeschlagen, verdeutlichen Studien des Transkriptoms einer fleR Mutante, dass FleR nicht die Expression der Klasse III Flagellengene induziert. Statt dessen reguliert FleR gemeinsam mit RpoN zahlreiche Gene der Proteinbiosynthese und des Metabolismus. Basierend auf diesen experimentellen Ergebnissen sind in unserem modifizierten Modell für die transkriptionelle Regulation der L. pneumophila Flagellengene die Flagellengene der Klasse II von FleQ und RpoN kontrolliert, während die Flagellengene der Klasse III und IV in einer fleQ-abhängigen aber rpoN-unabhängigen Weise kontrolliert sind. Obwohl alle L. pneumophila Stämme den zweiphasigen Lebenszyklus aufweisen haben sich unterschiedliche Pathotypen evolviert. Das ist auch in den Genomen sichtbar, die z. B. genomische Inseln enthalten. Die genomische Insel Trb-1 von L. pneumophila Corby trägt alle Gene eines Typ-IV Konjugationssystem, ein ntegrase-Gen und einen putative oriT-Bereich. Das zweite Ziel dieser Arbeit war es also zu untersuchen, inwieweit Trb-1 an konjugativem DNA-Transfer beteiligt ist. Mit Hilfe von Konjugationsexperimenten, zeigten wir, dass der oriT-Bereich von Trb-1 funktional ist und zur Konjugation zwischen verschiedenen L. pneumophila Stämmen beiträgt. Dies ist der erste oriT Bereich von L. pneumophila, dessen Funktionalität nachgewiesen wurde. Damit bekräftigen unsere Ergebnisse, dass Konjugation eine treibende Kraft für die Evolution neuer Pathotypen in L. pneumophila ist. KW - Legionella pneumophila KW - Genregulation KW - Legionella pneumophila KW - gene regulation Y1 - 2009 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-34335 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Albert-Weissenberger, Christiane A1 - Stetter, Christian A1 - Meuth, Sven G. A1 - Göbel, Kerstin A1 - Bader, Michael A1 - Sirén, Anna-Leena A1 - Kleinschnitz, Christoph T1 - Blocking of Bradykinin Receptor B1 Protects from Focal Closed Head Injury in Mice by Reducing Axonal Damage and Astroglia Activation JF - Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism N2 - The two bradykinin receptors B1R and B2R are central components of the kallikrein–kinin system with different expression kinetics and binding characteristics. Activation of these receptors by kinins triggers inflammatory responses in the target organ and in most situations enhances tissue damage. We could recently show that blocking of B1R, but not B2R, protects from cortical cryolesion by reducing inflammation and edema formation. In the present study, we investigated the role of B1R and B2R in a closed head model of focal traumatic brain injury (TBI; weight drop). Increased expression of B1R in the injured hemispheres of wild-type mice was restricted to the later stages after brain trauma, i.e. day 7 (P<0.05), whereas no significant induction could be observed for the B2R (P>0.05). Mice lacking the B1R, but not the B2R, showed less functional deficits on day 3 (P<0.001) and day 7 (P<0.001) compared with controls. Pharmacological blocking of B1R in wild-type mice had similar effects. Reduced axonal injury and astroglia activation could be identified as underlying mechanisms, while inhibition of B1R had only little influence on the local inflammatory response in this model. Inhibition of B1R may become a novel strategy to counteract trauma-induced neurodegeneration. KW - R-715 KW - kinin receptors KW - closed head injury KW - β-APP KW - astrocytes KW - TNF-α Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-125903 VL - 32 IS - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Albert-Weissenberger, Christiane A1 - Sirén, Anna-Leena T1 - Experimental traumatic brain injury N2 - Traumatic brain injury, a leading cause of death and disability, is a result of an outside force causing mechanical disruption of brain tissue and delayed pathogenic events which collectively exacerbate the injury. These pathogenic injury processes are poorly understood and accordingly no effective neuroprotective treatment is available so far. Experimental models are essential for further clarification of the highly complex pathology of traumatic brain injury towards the development of novel treatments. Among the rodent models of traumatic brain injury the most commonly used are the weight-drop, the fluid percussion, and the cortical contusion injury models. As the entire spectrum of events that might occur in traumatic brain injury cannot be covered by one single rodent model, the design and choice of a specific model represents a major challenge for neuroscientists. This review summarizes and evaluates the strengths and weaknesses of the currently available rodent models for traumatic brain injury. KW - Trauma Y1 - 2010 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-68131 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Albert-Weissenberger, Christiane A1 - Mencl, Stine A1 - Schuhmann, Michael K. A1 - Salur, Irmak A1 - Göb, Eva A1 - Langhauser, Friederike A1 - Hopp, Sarah A1 - Hennig, Nelli A1 - Meuth, Sven G. A1 - Nolte, Marc W. A1 - Sirén, Anna-Leena A1 - Kleinschnitz, Christoph T1 - C1-Inhibitor protects from focal brain trauma in a cortical cryolesion mice model by reducing thrombo-inflammation JF - Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience N2 - Traumatic brain injury (TBI) induces a strong inflammatory response which includes blood-brain barrier damage, edema formation and infiltration of different immune cell subsets. More recently, microvascular thrombosis has been identified as another pathophysiological feature of TBI. The contact-kinin system represents an interface between inflammatory and thrombotic circuits and is activated in different neurological diseases. C1-Inhibitor counteracts activation of the contact-kinin system at multiple levels. We investigated the therapeutic potential of C1-Inhibitor in a model of TBI. Male and female C57BL/6 mice were subjected to cortical cryolesion and treated with C1-Inhibitor after 1 h. Lesion volumes were assessed between day 1 and day 5 and blood-brain barrier damage, thrombus formation as well as the local inflammatory response were determined post TBI. Treatment of male mice with 15.0 IU C1-Inhibitor, but not 7.5 IU, 1 h after cryolesion reduced lesion volumes by ~75% on day 1. This protective effect was preserved in female mice and at later stages of trauma. Mechanistically, C1-Inhibitor stabilized the blood-brain barrier and decreased the invasion of immune cells into the brain parenchyma. Moreover, C1-Inhibitor had strong antithrombotic effects. C1-Inhibitor represents a multifaceted anti-inflammatory and antithrombotic compound that prevents traumatic neurodegeneration in clinically meaningful settings. KW - thrombosis KW - traumatic brain injury KW - C1-inhibitor KW - blood-brain barrier KW - contact-kinin system KW - edema KW - inflammation Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-119263 SN - 1662-5102 VL - 8 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Albert-Weissenberger, Christiane A1 - Mencl, Stine A1 - Hopp, Sarah A1 - Kleinschnitz, Christoph A1 - Siren, Anna-Leena T1 - Role of the kallikrein-kinin system in traumatic brain injury JF - Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience N2 - Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide. Despite improvements in acute intensive care, there are currently no specific therapies to ameliorate the effects of TBI. Successful therapeutic strategies for TBI should target multiple pathophysiologic mechanisms that occur at different stages of brain injury. The kallikrein-kinin system is a promising therapeutic target for TBI as it mediates key pathologic events of traumatic brain damage, such as edema formation, inflammation, and thrombosis. Selective and specific kinin receptor antagonists and inhibitors of plasma kallikrein and coagulation factor XII have been developed, and have already shown therapeutic efficacy in animal models of stroke and TBI. However, conflicting preclinical evaluation, as well as limited and inconclusive data from clinical trials in TBI, suggests that caution should be taken before transferring observations made in animals to humans. This review summarizes current evidence on the pathologic significance of the kallikrein-kinin system during TBI in animal models and, where available, the experimental findings are compared with human data. KW - bradykinin KW - factor XII KW - kallikrein–kinin system KW - kinin receptor KW - traumatic brain injury Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-118226 SN - 1662-5102 VL - 8 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Albert, Štefan A1 - Spaethe, Johannes A1 - Grübel, Kornelia A1 - Rössler, Wolfgang T1 - Royal jelly-like protein localization reveals differences in hypopharyngeal glands buildup and conserved expression pattern in brains of bumblebees and honeybees N2 - Royal jelly proteins (MRJPs) of the honeybee bear several open questions. One of them is their expression in tissues other than the hypopharyngeal glands (HGs), the site of royal jelly production. The sole MRJP-like gene of the bumblebee, Bombus terrestris (BtRJPL), represents a pre-diversification stage of the MRJP gene evolution in bees. Here we investigate the expression of BtRJPL in the HGs and the brain of bumblebees. Comparison of the HGs of bumblebees and honeybees revealed striking differences in their morphology with respect to sex- and caste-specific appearance, number of cells per acinus, and filamentous actin (F-actin) rings. At the cellular level, we found a temporary F-actin-covered meshwork in the secretory cells, which suggests a role for actin in the biogenesis of the end apparatus in HGs. Using immunohistochemical localization, we show that BtRJPL is expressed in the bumblebee brain, predominantly in the Kenyon cells of the mushroom bodies, the site of sensory integration in insects, and in the optic lobes. Our data suggest that a dual glandbrain function preceded the multiplication of MRJPs in the honeybee lineage. In the course of the honeybee evolution, HGs dramatically changed their morphology in order to serve a food-producing function. KW - Hypopharyngeal glands KW - Bumblebee KW - Bombus KW - Brain KW - Labial glands KW - Immunohistochemistry KW - Kenyon cells KW - Mushroom bodies KW - Honeybee Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-112733 ER - TY - THES A1 - Albert, Michael T1 - Intelligent analysis of medical data in a generic telemedicine infrastructure T1 - Intelligente Datenanalyse in einer generischen Telemedizinumgebung N2 - Telemedicine uses telecommunication and information technology to provide health care services over spatial distances. In the upcoming demographic changes towards an older average population age, especially rural areas suffer from a decreasing doctor to patient ratio as well as a limited amount of available medical specialists in acceptable distance. These areas could benefit the most from telemedicine applications as they are known to improve access to medical services, medical expertise and can also help to mitigate critical or emergency situations. Although the possibilities of telemedicine applications exist in the entire range of healthcare, current systems focus on one specific disease while using dedicated hardware to connect the patient with the supervising telemedicine center. This thesis describes the development of a telemedical system which follows a new generic design approach. This bridges the gap of existing approaches that only tackle one specific application. The proposed system on the contrary aims at supporting as many diseases and use cases as possible by taking all the stakeholders into account at the same time. To address the usability and acceptance of the system it is designed to use standardized hardware like commercial medical sensors and smartphones for collecting medical data of the patients and transmitting them to the telemedical center. The smartphone can also act as interface to the patient for health questionnaires or feedback. The system can handle the collection and transport of medical data, analysis and visualization of the data as well as providing a real time communication with video and audio between the users. On top of the generic telemedical framework the issue of scalability is addressed by integrating a rule-based analysis tool for the medical data. Rules can be easily created by medical personnel via a visual editor and can be personalized for each patient. The rule-based analysis tool is extended by multiple options for visualization of the data, mechanisms to handle complex rules and options for performing actions like raising alarms or sending automated messages. It is sometimes hard for the medical experts to formulate their knowledge into rules and there may be information in the medical data that is not yet known. This is why a machine learning module was integrated into the system. It uses the incoming medical data of the patients to learn new rules that are then presented to the medical personnel for inspection. This is in line with European legislation where the human still needs to be in charge of such decisions. Overall, we were able to show the benefit of the generic approach by evaluating it in three completely different medical use cases derived from specific application needs: monitoring of COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) patients, support of patients performing dialysis at home and councils of intensive-care experts. In addition the system was used for a non-medical use case: monitoring and optimization of industrial machines and robots. In all of the mentioned cases, we were able to prove the robustness of the generic approach with real users of the corresponding domain. This is why we can propose this approach for future development of telemedical systems. N2 - Telemedizin nutzt Telekommunikation und Informationstechnologie, um medizinische Dienstleistungen über räumliche Distanzen hinweg zu ermöglichen. Durch den demographischen Wandel hin zu einer älteren Bevölkerung, verschlechtert sich vor allem im ländlichen Raum der Betreuungsschlüssel zwischen (Fach-)ärzten und Patienten, während Experten in den jeweiligen medizinischen Spezialgebieten sehr weit verteilt sind und Anfahrtswege immer weiter werden. Gerade der ländliche Raum profitiert von der Telemedizin. Anfahrtswege entfallen, wenn Untersuchungen oder ärztliche Konzile über Telemedizinsysteme abgewickelt werden. Kritische Situationen können entschärft oder vermieden werden, wenn Spezialisten durch Telemedizin frühzeitig eingebunden werden. Aktuelle Telemedizinsysteme sind allerdings generell auf ein bestimmtes Krankheitsbild beschränkt und verwenden dedizierte Hardware, um den Patienten mit dem telemedizinischen Zentrum zu verbinden, obwohl ein breiteres Anwendungsspektrum in der gesamten Gesundheitsversorgung denkbar ist. Diese Arbeit beschreibt die Entwicklung eines Telemedizinsystems, das darauf ausgelegt ist das System so generisch zu planen und zu entwickeln, dass möglichst viele Krankheitsbilder und Anwendungsfälle abgebildet werden können. Dafür werden alle möglichen Beteiligten des Systems mit berücksichtigt und einbezogen. Um das Telemedizinsystem bedienerfreundlich zu gestalten und die Akzeptanz zu erhöhen, wurde auf den Einsatz von Standardhardware, wie kommerzielle medizinische Sensorik oder Smartphones, hoher Wert gelegt. Das Smartphone dient dabei unter anderem als Patientengerät, das die Daten verschiedenster Sensorik auslesen, aggregieren und an das zentrale System weiterleiten kann. Es kann interaktive Fragebögen anzeigen und verwendet werden, um dem Patienten Feedback zu den Daten zu geben. Das Telemedizinsystem unterstützt die komplette Kette der telemedizinischen Datenverarbeitung, von der Aufnahme der Daten über den abgesicherten Transport bis hin zur Analyse und Visualisierung der Daten. Zusätzlich wird eine Kommunikationsmöglichkeit der Beteiligten über Audio- oder Videotelefonie zur Verfügung gestellt. Um die Skalierbarkeit des Systems zu erhöhen, wurde ein regelbasiertes Auswertesystem für die Patientendaten implementiert. Das medizinische Personal kann über ein einfach zu bedienendes grafisches Interface patientenindividuelle Regeln anlegen. Das Regelsystem ist in der Lage die Daten anhand komplexer Regeln zu analysieren, Visualisierungen zu erzeugen oder Aktionen auszulösen, wie beispielsweise einen Alarm zu geben, wenn die Werte des Patienten sich verschlechtern. Es kommt vor, dass die Experten ihr Wissen nicht in konkrete Regeln formulieren können oder dass Wissen in den Daten steckt, das den Experten selbst nicht bekannt ist. Deshalb kommt ein weiteres Modul zum Einsatz, das anhand der eingehenden Daten mittels maschinellem Lernen neue Regeln erzeugt und dem Fachpersonal zur Überprüfung vorschlägt. Die letzte Entscheidung liegt immer bei dem jeweiligen Fachpersonal, so dass das System konform zu aktuellem europäischem Recht arbeitet. Der generische Ansatz des Telemedizinsystems wurde in drei verschiedenen medizinischen Anwendungsszenarien mit den entsprechenden Anwendern getestet: Langzeitmonitoring von COPD (chronisch obstruktive Lungenerkrankung) Patienten, Unterstützung von Heimdialyse Patienten und intensivmedizinische Konsile. Zusätzlich wurde das System im industriellen Anwendungskontext zum Überwachen und Optimieren von Industrieanlagen und Industrierobotern eingesetzt. In allen Anwendungsfällen konnten wir die Machbarkeit des Systems zeigen und mit Anwendern aus dem jeweiligen Fachbereich evaluieren. Das System kann somit als robuste Grundlage für die Entwicklung weiterer Telemedizinsysteme und Anwendungen dienen. T3 - Forschungsberichte in der Robotik = Research Notes in Robotics - 17 KW - Telemedizin KW - Regelbasiertes Modell KW - telemedicine KW - rulebased analysis Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-174213 SN - 978-3-945459-26-3 (Online) ER - TY - THES A1 - Albert, Julian T1 - Quantum Studies on Low-Dimensional Coupled Electron-Nuclear Dynamics T1 - Quantentheoretische Untersuchungen niederdimensionaler gekoppelter Elektronen-Kern-Dynamik N2 - In the context of quantum mechanical calculations, the properties of non-adiabatic coupling in a small system, the Shin-Metiu model, is investigated. The transition from adiabatic to non-adiabatic dynamics is elucidated in modifying the electron-nuclear interaction. This allows the comparison of weakly correlated electron-nuclear motion with the case where the strong correlations determine the dynamics. The studies of the model are extended to include spectroscopical transitions being present in two-dimensional and degenerate four-wave mixing spectroscopy. Furthermore, the quantum and classical time-evolution of the coupled motion in the complete electron-nuclear phase space is compared for the two coupling cases. Additionally, the numerically exact electron flux within the weak coupling case is compared to the Born-Oppenheimer treatment. In the last part of the thesis, the model is extended to two dimensions. The system then possesses potential energy surfaces which exhibit a typical 'Mexican hat'-like structure and a conical intersection in the adiabatic representation. Thus, it is possible to map properties of the system onto a vibronic coupling (Jahn-Teller) hamiltonian. Exact wave-packet propagations as well as nuclear wave-packet dynamics in the adiabatic and diabatic representation are performed. N2 - Im Rahmen quantenmechanischer Rechnungen werden die Eigenschaften nicht-adiabatischer Kopplungen in einem kleinen Modellsystem, dem Shin-Metiu Modell, untersucht. Die Fallunterscheidung zwischen adiabatischen und nicht-adiabatischen Prozessen wird durch eine Parameterisierung der Elektronen-Kernwechselwirkung realisiert. Dies ermöglicht den Vergleich zwischen korrelierter und unkorrelierter Elektronen-Kernbewegung. Innerhalb dieser zwei Extrema werden die Eigenfunktionen betrachtet und der Einfluss nicht-adiabtischer Kopplungen auf diese analysiert. Es wird gezeigt, dass im Fall einer schwachen Kopplung die Eigenfunktionen als adiabatisches Produkt dargestellt werden können, soweit die adiabatischen elektronischen Eigenfunktionen voneinander entkoppelt sind und unterschiedlichen elektronischen Charakter besitzen. Auf der anderen Seite sind die adiabatischen elektronischen Eigenfunktionen und die Vibrationseigenfunktionen im Bereich einer starken Kopplung miteinander gekoppelt, und es zeigt sich, dass die Eigenfunktionen in der diabatischen Darstellung eine zur adiabatischen äquivalente, aber intuitivere Beschreibung darstellen. Anhand dieser Ergebnisse wird eine Diabatisierung und ein Vergleich zwischen exakter Elektronen-Kernpropagation und der Propagation im diabatischen Bild durchgeführt. Dieser Vergleich ist in sehr guter Übereinstimmung und zeigt, dass der Ansatz der Diabatisierung für unkorrelierte Elektronen-Kernbewegungen hinreichend ist und gleichzeitig klassifiziert er die Wellepacket-dynamik im Bereich starker Kopplungen als diabatisch. Die theoretischen Untersuchungen des eindimensionalen Modells werden auf spektroskopische Übergänge erweitert, welche lineare und nichtlineare System-Feld Wechselwirkungen beinhalten. Ein Vergleich zwischen zweidimensionalen Spektren bezüglich schwach und stark gekoppelter Elektronen-Kern Dynamik zeigt, dass im Fall schwacher Kopplungen, die Spektren durch analoge Rechnungen im Rahmen der Born-Oppenheimer Näherung reproduzierbar sind. Es zeigt sich, dass diejenigen Teile des Spektrums, welche auf gleiche Weise nicht reproduzierbar sind, elektronisch gemischten Zuständen, aufgrund starker nicht-adiabtischer Kopplungen, zuzuordnen sind. Die Möglichkeit, das System zwischen schwacher und starker Kopplung zu variieren, erlaubt es Vibrationskohärenzen und elektronischen Kohärenzen in zweidimensionalen Spektren zu analysieren. Dazu werden die zweidimensionalen Spektren als Funktion der Populationszeit betrachtet. Es ergibt sich, dass im Fall schwacher Kopplungen die Kohärenzen während der Populationszeit Vibrationskohärenzen zugeordnet werden können. Im Gegensatz dazu ergeben sich im Bereich starker Kopplungen, aufgrund des gemischten elektronischen Charakters der Zustände, Kohärenzen vibronischer Art. Als weitere Methode wird die Degenerierte-Vier-Wellen-Mischen Spektroskopie (FWM) untersucht. Diese ist in der Lage Grundzustandsdynamiken und Dynamiken im angeregten Zustand separat zu verfolgen. Sowohl für negative als auch für positive Verzögerungszeiten werden die zwei verschiedenen Kopplungsszenarien untersucht und der Zusammenbruch dieser Methode bezüglich der nicht möglichen Trennung der Grundzustandsdynamik und Dynamik im angeregten Zustand innerhalb der adiabatischen Beschreibung betrachtet. Als weiterer Aspekt, wird die quantenmechanische und klassische Zeitentwicklung der gekoppelten Elektronen-Kernbewegung im vollständigen Phasenraum für verschiedene Kopplungsstärken verglichen. Im Fall schwacher Kopplung stimmt im Kurzzeitverhalten die klassische Berechung mit der quantenmechanischen gut überein. Dies kann auch im Fall starker Kopplungen gezeigt werden, was die weitere Schlussfolgerung zulässt, dass die Dynamik im Bereich starker Kopplungen hauptsächlich in einem diabatischen Zustand stattfindet. Das zeigt, dass die klassische Bewegung sehr ähnlich zu der diabatischen quantenmechanischen Bewegung verläuft. Als Konsequenz reproduziert eine klassische Bewegung im vollständigen Phasenraum eine quantenmechanische, bei der nicht-adiabatische Kopplungen stark involviert sind. Als letzte Betrachtung des eindimensionalen Shin-Metiu Modells, wird der Elektronenfluss im schwach gekoppelten Fall untersucht und der numerisch exakt berechnete Fluss mit dem in der Born-Oppenheimer Näherung verglichen. Innerhalb der üblichen Definition verschwindet der Elektronenfluss im Rahmen der Born-Oppenheimer Näherung. Durch die Verwendung der Kontinuitätsgleichung für den Elektronenfluss ergibt sich jedoch ein nicht-verschwindender Elektronenfluss. Weiter wurde ein Reflektionsprinzip hergeleitet, welches den Elektronenfluss auf den Kernfluss abbildet und umgekehrt. Zum Abschluss der Untersuchungen des eindimensionalen Shin-Metiu Modells wird das System auf zwei Dimensionen erweitert. Dabei zeigt sich, dass die adiabatischen Potentialflächen des Modells eine typische 'Mexican-hat' Topologie aufweist. Daraus ergibt sich, dass es möglich ist das System auf einen vibronischen (Jahn-Teller) Hamiltonian zurückzuführen. Im Zuge dessen wird das zweidimensionale System hinsichtlich der exakten Elektronen-Kerndynamik, sowie der Dynamik in den adiabatischen und diabatischen Anschauungen betrachtet. Die durchgeführten Rechnungen zeigen, dass das Passieren eines Wellenpaketes durch eine Konische Durchschneidung als eine diabatische Dynamik klassifiziert werden kann, wobei ein effizienter adiabatischer Populations-transfer stattfindet. Dieser Prozess kann sehr gut im diabatischen Bild reproduziert werden. Des Weiteren wird eine Wellenpaketdynamik um eine Konische Durchschneidung herum betrachtet und als adiabatische Dynamik klassifiziert. Der interessante Aspekt der geometrischen Phase, die mit dem Umrunden einer Konischen Durchschneidung assoziiert ist, wird mit der Rotation der elektronischen Wellenfunktion verknüpft. Zusätzlich wird hier das Auftreten der geometrische Phase in Autokorrelationsfunktionen und den daraus abgeleiteten Spektren charakterisiert. Die geometrische Phase wird zusätzlich als Mischungswinkel der Transformation zwischen dem diabatischen und adiabatischen Bild explizit berechnet. Zusammenfassend zeigen die Rechnugen an den verwendeten Modellsystemen viele fundamentale Aspekte der korrelierten Elektronen-Kerndynamik, obwohl sie auf lediglich zwei Partikel begrenzt sind. KW - Theoretische Chemie KW - Quantentheorie KW - Shin-Metiu Model KW - Coupled Electron-Nuclear Dynamics KW - Conical Intersection KW - Geometric Phase KW - Two-dimensional Spectroscopy KW - Electron Flux KW - Theoretical Chemistry Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-161512 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Albert, Judith A1 - Lezius, Susanne A1 - Störk, Stefan A1 - Morbach, Caroline A1 - Güder, Gülmisal A1 - Frantz, Stefan A1 - Wegscheider, Karl A1 - Ertl, Georg A1 - Angermann, Christiane E. T1 - Trajectories of Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction After Acute Decompensation for Systolic Heart Failure: Concomitant Echocardiographic and Systemic Changes, Predictors, and Impact on Clinical Outcomes JF - Journal of the American Heart Association N2 - Prospective longitudinal follow‐up of left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) trajectories after acute cardiac decompensation of heart failure is lacking. We investigated changes in LVEF and covariates at 6‐months' follow‐up in patients with a predischarge LVEF ≤40%, and determined predictors and prognostic implications of LVEF changes through 18‐months' follow‐up. Methods and Results Interdisciplinary Network Heart Failure program participants (n=633) were categorized into subgroups based on LVEF at 6‐months' follow‐up: normalized LVEF (>50%; heart failure with normalized ejection fraction, n=147); midrange LVEF (41%–50%; heart failure with midrange ejection fraction, n=195), or persistently reduced LVEF (≤40%; heart failure with persistently reduced LVEF , n=291). All received guideline‐directed medical therapies. At 6‐months' follow‐up, compared with patients with heart failure with persistently reduced LVEF, heart failure with normalized LVEF or heart failure with midrange LVEF subgroups showed greater reductions in LV end‐diastolic/end‐systolic diameters (both P<0.001), and left atrial systolic diameter (P=0.002), more increased septal/posterior end‐diastolic wall‐thickness (both P<0.001), and significantly greater improvement in diastolic function, biomarkers, symptoms, and health status. Heart failure duration <1 year, female sex, higher predischarge blood pressure, and baseline LVEF were independent predictors of LVEF improvement. Mortality and event‐free survival rates were lower in patients with heart failure with normalized LVEF (P=0.002). Overall, LVEF increased further at 18‐months' follow‐up (P<0.001), while LV end‐diastolic diameter decreased (P=0.048). However, LVEF worsened (P=0.002) and LV end‐diastolic diameter increased (P=0.047) in patients with heart failure with normalized LVEF hospitalized between 6‐months' follow‐up and 18‐months' follow‐up. Conclusions Six‐month survivors of acute cardiac decompensation for systolic heart failure showed variable LVEF trajectories, with >50% showing improvements by ≥1 LVEF category. LVEF changes correlated with various parameters, suggesting multilevel reverse remodeling, were predictable from several baseline characteristics, and were associated with clinical outcomes at 18‐months' follow‐up. Repeat hospitalizations were associated with attenuation of reverse remodeling." KW - acute heart failure KW - left ventricular ejection fraction KW - morbidity KW - mortality KW - natriuretic peptide KW - recovery Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-230210 VL - 10 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Albert, A. A1 - André, M. A1 - Anghinolfi, M. A1 - Anton, G. A1 - Ardid, M. A1 - Aubert, J.-J. A1 - Aublin, J. A1 - Avgitas, T. A1 - Baret, B. A1 - Barrios-Martít, J. A1 - Basa, S. A1 - Belhorma, B. A1 - Bertin, V. A1 - Biagi, S. A1 - Bormuth, R. A1 - Boumaaza, J A1 - Bourret, S. A1 - Bouwhuis, M. C. A1 - Brânzas, H. A1 - Bruijn, R. A1 - Brunner, J. A1 - Busto, J. A1 - Capone, A. A1 - Caramete, L. A1 - Carr, J. A1 - Celli, S. A1 - Chabab, M. A1 - Cherkaoui El Moursli, R. A1 - Chiarusi, T. A1 - Circella, M. A1 - Coelho, J. A. B. A1 - Coleiro, A. A1 - Colomer, M A1 - Coniglione, R. A1 - Costantini, H. A1 - Coyle, P. A1 - Creusot, A. A1 - Díaz, A. F. A1 - Deschamps, A. A1 - Distefano, C. A1 - Di Palma, I. A1 - Domi, A. A1 - Donzaud, C. A1 - Dornic, D. A1 - Drouhin, D. A1 - Eberl, T. A1 - El Bojaddaini, I. A1 - El Khayati, N. A1 - Elsässer, D. A1 - Enzenhöfer, A. A1 - Ettahiri, A. A1 - Fassi, F. A1 - Felis, I. A1 - Fermani, P. A1 - Ferrara, G. A1 - Fusco, L. A. A1 - Gay, P. A1 - Glotin, H. A1 - Grégoire, T. A1 - Gracia Ruiz, R. A1 - Graf, K. A1 - Hallmann, S. A1 - van Haren, H. A1 - Heijboer, A. J. A1 - Hello, Y. A1 - Hernández-Rey, J. J. A1 - Hößl, J. A1 - Hofestädt, J. A1 - Illuminati, G. A1 - de Jong, M. A1 - Jongen, M. A1 - Kadler, M. A1 - Kalekin, O. A1 - Katz, U. A1 - Khan-Chowdhury, N. R. A1 - Kouchner, A. A1 - Kreter, M. A1 - Kreykenbohm, I. A1 - Kulikovskiy, V. A1 - Lachaud, C. A1 - Lahmann, R. A1 - Lefèvre, D. A1 - Leonora, E. A1 - Levi, G. A1 - Lotze, M. A1 - Loucatos, S. A1 - Marcelin, M. A1 - Margiotta, A. A1 - Marinelli, A. A1 - Martínez-Mora, J. A. A1 - Mele, R. A1 - Melis, K. A1 - Migliozzi, P. A1 - Moussa, A. A1 - Navas, S. A1 - Nezri, E. A1 - Nuñez, A. A1 - Organokov, M. A1 - Pavalas, G. E. A1 - Pellegrino, C. A1 - Piattelli, P. A1 - Popa, V. A1 - Pradier, T. A1 - Quinn, L. A1 - Racca, C. A1 - Randazzo, N. A1 - Riccobene, G. A1 - Sánchez-Losa, A. A1 - Saldaña, M. A1 - Salvadori, I. A1 - Samtleben, D. F. E. A1 - Sanguineti, M. A1 - Sapienza, P. A1 - Schüssler, F. A1 - Spurio, M. A1 - Stolarczyk, Th. A1 - Taiuti, M. A1 - Tayalati, Y. A1 - Trovato, A. A1 - Vallage, B. A1 - Van Elewyck, V. A1 - Versari, F. A1 - Vivolo, D. A1 - Wilms, J. A1 - Zaborov, D. A1 - Zornoza, J. D. A1 - Zúñiga, J. T1 - The cosmic ray shadow of the Moon observed with the ANTARES neutrino telescope JF - European Physical Journal C N2 - One of the main objectives of the ANTARES telescope is the search for point- like neutrino sources. Both the pointing accuracy and the angular resolution of the detector are important in this context and a reliableway to evaluate this performance is needed. In order to measure the pointing accuracy of the detector, one possibility is to study the shadow of the Moon, i. e. the deficit of the atmospheric muon flux from the direction of the Moon induced by the absorption of cosmic rays. Analysing the data taken between 2007 and 2016, theMoon shadow is observed with 3.5s statistical significance. The detector angular resolution for downwardgoing muons is 0.73. +/- 0.14.. The resulting pointing performance is consistent with the expectations. An independent check of the telescope pointing accuracy is realised with the data collected by a shower array detector onboard of a ship temporarily moving around the ANTARES location. KW - Atmospheric muons Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-227802 VL - 78 ER - TY - RPRT A1 - Albers, Thilo N. H. A1 - Kersting, Felix A1 - Kosse, Fabian T1 - Income misperception and populism N2 - We propose that false beliefs about own current economic status are an important factor for explaining populist attitudes. Eliciting subjects’ receptiveness to rightwing populism and their perceived relative income positions in a representative survey of German households, we find that people with pessimistic beliefs about their income position are more attuned to populist statements. Key to understanding the misperception-populism relationship are strong gender differences in the mechanism: men are much more likely to channel their discontent into affection for populist ideas. A simple information provision does neither sustainably reduce misperception nor curb populism. T3 - Würzburg Economic Papers (W. E. P.) - 104 KW - Populismus KW - Perception KW - Income KW - Populism Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-321696 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Albers, Gregory W. A1 - Bernstein, Richard A. A1 - Brachmann, Johannes A1 - Camm, John A1 - Easton, J. Donald A1 - Fromm, Peter A1 - Goto, Shinya A1 - Granger, Christopher B. A1 - Hohnloser, Stefan H. A1 - Hylek, Elaine A1 - Jaffer, Amir K. A1 - Krieger, Derk W. A1 - Passman, Rod A1 - Pines, Jesse M. A1 - Reed, Shelby D. A1 - Rothwell, Peter M. A1 - Kowey, Peter R. T1 - Heart Rhythm Monitoring Strategies for Cryptogenic Stroke: 2015 Diagnostics and Monitoring Stroke Focus Group Report JF - Journal of the American Heart Association N2 - No abstract available. KW - anticoagulants KW - atrial fibrillation KW - diagnosis KW - electrocardiography KW - insertable cardiac monitor KW - stroke prevention Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-165709 VL - 5 IS - e00294 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Alb, Miriam A1 - Sie, Christopher A1 - Adam, Christian A1 - Chen, Suzie A1 - Becker, Jürgen C. A1 - Schrama, David T1 - Cellular and cytokine-dependent immunosuppressive mechanisms of grm1-transgenic murine melanoma JF - Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy N2 - Grm1-transgenic mice spontaneously develop cutaneous melanoma. This model allowed us to scrutinize the generic immune responses over the course of melanoma development. To this end, lymphocytes obtained from spleens, unrelated lymph nodes and tumor-draining lymph nodes of mice with no evidence of disease, and low or high tumor burden were analyzed ex vivo and in vitro. Thereby, we could demonstrate an increase in the number of activated CD4\(^+\) and CD8+ lymphocytes in the respective organs with increasing tumor burden. However, mainly CD4\(^+\) T cells, which could constitute both T helper as well as immunosuppressive regulatory T cells, but not CD8\(^+\) T cells, expressed activation markers upon in vitro stimulation when obtained from tumor-bearing mice. Interestingly, these cells from tumor-burdened animals were also functionally hampered in their proliferative response even when subjected to strong in vitro stimulation. Further analyses revealed that the increased frequency of regulatory T cells in tumor-bearing mice is an early event present in all lymphoid organs. Additionally, expression of the immunosuppressive cytokines TGF-β1 and IL-10 became more evident with increased tumor burden. Notably, TGF-β1 is strongly expressed in both the tumor and the tumor-draining lymph node, whereas IL-10 expression is more pronounced in the lymph node, suggesting a more complex regulation of IL-10. Thus, similar to the situation in melanoma patients, both cytokines as well as cellular immune escape mechanisms seem to contribute to the observed immunosuppressed state of tumor-bearing grm1-transgenic mice, suggesting that this model is suitable for preclinical testing of immunomodulatory therapeutics. KW - regulatory T cell KW - melanoma KW - immune suppression KW - tumor-draining lymph node Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-125096 VL - 61 IS - 12 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Alavipanah, Sadroddin A1 - Wegmann, Martin A1 - Qureshi, Salman A1 - Weng, Qihao A1 - Koellner, Thomas T1 - The role of vegetation in mitigating urban land surface temperatures: a case study of Munich, Germany during the warm season JF - Sustainability N2 - The Urban Heat Island (UHI) is the phenomenon of altered increased temperatures in urban areas compared to their rural surroundings. UHIs grow and intensify under extreme hot periods, such as during heat waves, which can affect human health and also increase the demand for energy for cooling. This study applies remote sensing and land use/land cover (LULC) data to assess the cooling effect of varying urban vegetation cover, especially during extreme warm periods, in the city of Munich, Germany. To compute the relationship between Land Surface Temperature (LST) and Land Use Land Cover (LULC), MODIS eight-day interval LST data for the months of June, July and August from 2002 to 2012 and the Corine Land Cover (CLC) database were used. Due to similarities in the behavior of surface temperature of different CLCs, some classes were reclassified and combined to form two major, rather simplified, homogenized classes: one of built-up area and one of urban vegetation. The homogenized map was merged with the MODIS eight-day interval LST data to compute the relationship between them. The results revealed that (i) the cooling effect accrued from urban vegetation tended to be non-linear; and (ii) a remarkable and stronger cooling effect in terms of LST was identified in regions where the proportion of vegetation cover was between seventy and almost eighty percent per square kilometer. The results also demonstrated that LST within urban vegetation was affected by the temperature of the surrounding built-up and that during the well-known European 2003 heat wave, suburb areas were cooler from the core of the urbanized region. This study concluded that the optimum green space for obtaining the lowest temperature is a non-linear trend. This could support urban planning strategies to facilitate appropriate applications to mitigate heat-stress in urban area. KW - Surface Urban Heat Island (SUHI) KW - cities KW - buildings KW - Land Surface Temperature (LST) KW - urban vegetation KW - climate change KW - heat waves Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-143447 VL - 7 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Alacevich, Massimo A1 - Carloni Calame, Carlo M. A1 - Chiesa, Mauro A1 - Montagna, Guido A1 - Nicrosini, Oreste A1 - Piccinini, Fulvio T1 - Muon-electron scattering at NLO JF - Journal of High Energy Physics N2 - We consider the process of muon-electron elastic scattering, which has been proposed as an ideal framework to measure the running of the electromagnetic coupling constant at space-like momenta and determine the leading-order hadronic contribution to the muon g-2 (MUonE experiment). We compute the next-to-leading (NLO) contributions due to QED and purely weak corrections and implement them into a fully differential Monte Carlo event generator, which is available for first experimental studies. We show representative phenomenological results of interest for the MUonE experiment and examine in detail the impact of the various sources of radiative corrections under different selection criteria, in order to study the dependence of the NLO contributions on the applied cuts. The study represents the first step towards the realisation of a high-precision Monte Carlo code necessary for data analysis. KW - NLO Computations KW - Anomalous magnetic-moment KW - Radiative-corrections KW - Reduction KW - G-2 Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-227777 VL - 155 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Al-Zaben, Naim A1 - Medyukhina, Anna A1 - Dietrich, Stefanie A1 - Marolda, Alessandra A1 - Hünniger, Kerstin A1 - Kurzai, Oliver A1 - Figge, Marc Thilo T1 - Automated tracking of label-free cells with enhanced recognition of whole tracks JF - Scientific Reports N2 - Migration and interactions of immune cells are routinely studied by time-lapse microscopy of in vitro migration and confrontation assays. To objectively quantify the dynamic behavior of cells, software tools for automated cell tracking can be applied. However, many existing tracking algorithms recognize only rather short fragments of a whole cell track and rely on cell staining to enhance cell segmentation. While our previously developed segmentation approach enables tracking of label-free cells, it still suffers from frequently recognizing only short track fragments. In this study, we identify sources of track fragmentation and provide solutions to obtain longer cell tracks. This is achieved by improving the detection of low-contrast cells and by optimizing the value of the gap size parameter, which defines the number of missing cell positions between track fragments that is accepted for still connecting them into one track. We find that the enhanced track recognition increases the average length of cell tracks up to 2.2-fold. Recognizing cell tracks as a whole will enable studying and quantifying more complex patterns of cell behavior, e.g. switches in migration mode or dependence of the phagocytosis efficiency on the number and type of preceding interactions. Such quantitative analyses will improve our understanding of how immune cells interact and function in health and disease. KW - image processing KW - software Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-221093 VL - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Al-Warhi, Tarfah A1 - Elmaidomy, Abeer H. A1 - Maher, Sherif A. A1 - Abu-Baih, Dalia H. A1 - Selim, Samy A1 - Albqmi, Mha A1 - Al-Sanea, Mohammad M. A1 - Alnusaire, Taghreed S. A1 - Ghoneim, Mohammed M. A1 - Mostafa, Ehab M. A1 - Hussein, Shaimaa A1 - El-Damasy, Ashraf K. A1 - Saber, Entesar Ali A1 - Elrehany, Mahmoud A. A1 - Sayed, Ahmed M. A1 - Othman, Eman M. A1 - El-Sherbiny, Mohamed A1 - Abdelmohsen, Usama Ramadan T1 - The wound-healing potential of Olea europaea L. Cv. Arbequina leaves extract: an integrated in vitro, in silico, and in vivo investigation JF - Metabolites N2 - Olea europaea L. Cv. Arbequina (OEA) (Oleaceae) is an olive variety species that has received little attention. Besides our previous work for the chemical profiling of OEA leaves using LC–HRESIMS, an additional 23 compounds are identified. An excision wound model is used to measure wound healing action. Wounds are provided with OEA (2% w/v) or MEBO\(^®\) cream (marketed treatment). The wound closure rate related to vehicle-treated wounds is significantly increased by OEA. Comparing to vehicle wound tissues, significant levels of TGF-β in OEA and MEBO\(^®\) (p < 0.05) are displayed by gene expression patterns, with the most significant levels in OEA-treated wounds. Proinflammatory TNF-α and IL-1β levels are substantially reduced in OEA-treated wounds. The capability of several lignan-related compounds to interact with MMP-1 is revealed by extensive in silico investigation of the major OEA compounds (i.e., inverse docking, molecular dynamics simulation, and ΔG calculation), and their role in the wound-healing process is also characterized. The potential of OEA as a potent MMP-1 inhibitor is shown in subsequent in vitro testing (IC\(_{50}\) = 88.0 ± 0.1 nM). In conclusion, OEA is introduced as an interesting therapeutic candidate that can effectively manage wound healing because of its anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties. KW - olive KW - LC–HRESIMS KW - wound KW - Olea KW - TNF-α KW - virtual docking KW - TGF-β KW - MMP-1 Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-286150 SN - 2218-1989 VL - 12 IS - 9 ER - TY - THES A1 - Al-Ouran, Nedal T1 - Environmental assessment, documentation and spatial modeling of heavy metal pollution along the Jordan Gulf of Aqaba using coral reefs as environmental indicator T1 - Umweltbewertung, Dokumentation und räumliche Modellierung der Schwermetallverschmutzung entlang der Küste von Aqaba (Jordanien) unter Verwendung von Korallenriffen als Umweltindikator N2 - Two phases of reef sampling were carried out. The first included regular samples taken along the coastline of Aqaba (27km long) at depths of 4-15m, and used to determine spatial distribution of pollution. The second phase included three 20cm-deep cores obtained from within the industrial zone. These cores were drilled from pre-dated communities, where the growth rate was determined earlier to be 10mm y-1, therefore the core obtained represented a period of 20 years (i.e. 1980-2000). The cores were used to reconstruct the metal pollution history at the most heavily used site along the coast (industrial zone).All samples were examined with respect to their metal content of Cd, Pb, Cu, Zn, Ni, and Cr. Almost all of them have shown records above the calculated background values. Mean values of Cd, Pb, Cu, Zn, Ni and Cr recorded along the coast were 1,25; 4,26; 9,76; 11,40; 2,29 and 10,522, µg g-1 respectively, and for core samples 1.4; 4.2; 5.7; 6.4; 2.3 and 8.21 µg g-1 respectively. Spatial distribution of metal enrichment in reef samples have shown a general and clear increasing trend towards the south. Same increasing trend was also in core samples where the six metals have shown a prominent increasing trend towards the core surface indicating an increase of coastal activities during the last twenty years. High and relatively high values were recorded at the oil port, the industrial area and main port, and thus categorized as highly impacted areas. Intermediate metal content were recorded in samples of the north beach, and thus classified as being relatively impacted, where the lowest metal concentrations were observed at the marine reserve, the least impacted site along the coast. The high enrichment of metal is attributed mainly to anthropogenic impacts. The natural inputs of the six metals studied in the Gulf of Aqaba are generally very low, due to the geographic positions and the absence of wadi discharge and as a result of low rainfall. Several potential sources of heavy metals were investigated. The industrial-related activities, port operations and phosphate dust were among the main sources currently threatening the marine ecosystem in Aqaba. Applying the Principle Components Analysis method (PCA) to all samples taken along the coastline has resulted in categorizing three different groups according to their metal enrichment, the first is composed of samples taken from the north beach and the main port with intermediate to high enrichment, the second joined the samples of the marine park and the marine reserve with low and relatively low enrichment, and the last group joined samples of the industrial zone and the oil port with high enrichment. The Principle Component Scores were also utilized to confirm the spatial distribution and relationships of the examined heavy metals along the coast. Two models (interpolated by SURFER  7.0 and ArcView 3.2a) were developed, the first was based on the PC scores of the first component, and shows clearly the positive anomalies in metal concentrations along the coast. The second model was developed by plotting the second factor scores on a landuse map of Aqaba. According to these models, it has shown that the positive anomalies are associated with three different zones; industrial area, the main port and the oil port. The results have shown that coral reefs can be used as good environmental indicator for assessments and monitoring processes, and they can provide data and information on both the spatial distribution of pollution and their history. The present work is the first to document the environmental status along the whole coast of Aqaba and the first to use coral reef as a tool/ indicator. N2 - Die Riff-Probenahmen wurden in zwei Phasen durchgeführt. Die erste Phase umfasste reguläre Proben, die entlang der Küste von Aqaba (27 km lang) in einer Tiefe von 4-15 m entnommen wurden, um die räumliche Verteilung der Verschmutzung zu bestimmen. Die zweite Phase umfasste drei 20 cm tiefe Bohrkerne, die im Bereich der Industriezone entnommen wurden, um die Geschichte der Metallverunreinigung in dem am stärksten betroffenen Bereich entlang der Küste (Industriezone) zu rekonstruieren. Diese Kerne wurden in bereits früher datierten Riff-Kommunen mit einer Wachstumsrate von 10 mm/Jahr gebohrt. Die in einem Kern erfasste Periode beträgt somit etwa 20 Jahre (d.h. 1980-2000). Alle Proben wurden auf den Metallgehalt von Cd, Pb, Cu, Zn, Ni und Cr geprüft. Fast alle Proben weisen Werte auf, die höher als die berechneten Hintergrundwerte liegen. Die verzeichneten Durchschnittswerte der regulären Proben entlang der Küste betrugen für Cd, Pb, Cu, Zn, Ni und Cr: 1,25; 4,26; 9,76; 11,40; 2,29 bzw. 10,522 µg g-1 und für die Kernproben betrugen die Werte: 1,4; 4,2; 5,7; 6,4; 2,3 bzw. 8,21 µg g-1. Die räumliche Verteilung der Metallanreicherung in den Riffen zeigt einen deutlich zunehmenden Trend in Richtung Süden. Der gleiche Trend findet sich auch in den Kernproben wieder, wobei die sechs Metalle zusätzlich auch einen deutlich zunehmenden Trend von unten nach oben aufweisen, und somitie die zunehmenden anthropogenen Aktivitäten im Küstenbereich während der letzten zwanzig Jahre anzeigen. Hohe und relativ hohe Werte wurden im Ölhafen, der Industriezone und im Haupthafen verzeichnet und somit als stark betroffene Bereiche eingestuft. Mittelmäßige Metallgehalte wurden in den Proben am Nordstrand ermittelt und somit als relativ betroffen klassifiziert. Die niedrigsten Metallkonzentrationen wurden im Bereich des Marineschutzgebietes beobachtet, das somit das am wenigsten betroffene Areal entlang der Küste darstellt. Die hohe Anreicherung der Metalle ist hauptsächlich auf anthropogene Einflüsse zurückzuführen. Der natürliche Eintrag in den Golf von Aqaba bei den sechs analysierten Metallen ist im Allgemeinen recht niedrig, aufgrund der geographischen Position, den kleinen Niederschlagsmengen und folglich auch der geringen Schuttzufuhr aus den Wadis. Verschiedene potentielle Herkunftsquellen der Schwermetalle wurden untersucht. Die industriebedingten Aktivitäten, Hafenbetrieb und Phosphatstaub konnten hierbei als Hauptverursacher der akuten Bedrohung für das Marine-Ecosystem in Aqaba erkannt werden. Eine Hauptkomponentenanalyse (PCA) angewendet auf alle entlang der Küste entnommenen Proben ergab, dass sich drei verschiedene Gruppen in Abhängigkeit von der Metallanreicherung herausstellen lassen: die erste Gruppe umfasst Proben vom Nord-Strand und dem Haupthafen mit mittelmässiger und hoher Anreicherung, die Zweite enthält die Proben vom Marine-Park und dem Marineschutzgebiet mit niedriger und relativ niedriger Anreicherung, und die letzte Gruppe besteht aus den Proben der Industriezone und dem Ölhafen mit hoher Anreicherung. Die Hauptkomponentenwerte (Principle Component Scores; PCS) wurden auch verwendet, um die räumliche Verteilung und die Beziehungen der getesteten Schwermetalle entlang der Küste zu bestätigen. Es wurden zwei Modelle entwickelt (interpoliert mit SURFER ® 7,0 and Arc View ® 3.2a). Das erste Modell basierte auf den PCS der ersten Hauptkomponente und zeigt klare positive Anomalien der Metallkonzentrationen entlang der Küste. Das zweite Modell basiert auf den PCS der zweiten Hauptkomponente und ist in einer Karte im Zusammenhang mit der Landnutzung von Aqaba dargestellt. Danach zeigt sich ein deutlicher Zusammenhang der positiven Anomalien im Zusammenhang mit den drei verschiedenen Landnutzungszonen, nämlich dem industriellen Areal, dem Haupthafen und dem Ölhafen. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass sich Korallenriffe als Indikator für die Bewertung und überwachung von Umwelt prozessen eignet. Sie können Daten und Informationen, sowohl über die räumliche Verteilung von Umweltverschmutzungen, als auch über ihre Geschichte liefern. Die vorliegende Arbeit ist die erste ihrer Art, die das Korallenriff als Instrument und Indikator verwendet, um den Umweltstatus entlang der gesamten Küste von Aqaba zu dokumentieren. KW - Golf von Akaba KW - Schwermetallbelastung KW - Korallenriff KW - Umweltbewertung KW - Schwermetallverschmutzung KW - Korallenriffen KW - Environmnet KW - assessment coral reef pollution Y1 - 2005 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-14090 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Al-Kassab, Jasser A1 - Thiesse, Frederic A1 - Buckel, Thomas T1 - RFID Data Analytics in Retail Logistics: A Case Example JF - Journal of Theoretical and Applied E-Commerce Research N2 - The growing interest in Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology in recent years has sparked an intensive debate on the benefits to be expected. With the growth of RFID implementations in size and scope comes a shift away from infrastructural aspects to the question of how to draw value from the large amounts of collected data. However, the necessary procedures for the handling of massive RFID data sets are still an under-researched issue. Against this background, the study presents results from a real-world trial conducted by a large apparel retailer. The objective of the trial was to explore the opportunities for generating novel performance indicators and reports on the reality of store processes and customer behavior on the sales floor. We give an overview of the algorithms used for RFID data processing and the interpretation of the resulting insights from a practitioner’s point of view. The case example thus provides an overview of the potential of RFID as a powerful tool for assortment optimization, customer research, store layout design, and other management tasks in retail. KW - RFID KW - apparel retail KW - store logistics KW - data management KW - business analytics Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-129500 VL - 8 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Al-Janabi, Omar A1 - Taubert, Helge A1 - Lohse-Fischer, Andrea A1 - Fröhner, Michael A1 - Wach, Sven A1 - Stöhr, Robert A1 - Keck, Bastian A1 - Burger, Max A1 - Wieland, Wolf A1 - Erdmann, Kati A1 - Wirth, Manfred P. A1 - Wullich, Bernd A1 - Baretton, Gustavo A1 - Magdolen, Viktor A1 - Kotzsch, Mathias A1 - Füssel, Susanne T1 - Association of Tissue mRNA and Serum Antigen Levels of Members of the Urokinase-Type Plasminogen Activator System with Clinical and Prognostic Parameters in Prostate Cancer JF - Biomed Research International N2 - The objective was to determine the mRNA expression and protein levels of uPA system components in tissue specimens and serum samples, respectively, from prostate cancer (PCa) patients and to assess their association with clinicopathological parameters and overall survival (OS). The mRNA expression levels of uPA, its receptor (uPAR), and its inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1) were analyzed in corresponding malignant and adjacent nonmalignant tissue specimens from 132 PCa patients by quantitative PCR. Preoperative serum samples from 81 PCa patients were analyzed for antigen levels of uPA system members by ELISA. RNA levels of uPA system components displayed significant correlations with each other in the tumor tissues. A significantly decreased uP AmRNA expression in PCa compared to the corresponding nonmalignant tissue was detected. High uPA mRNA level was significantly associated with a high Gleason score. Elevated concentration of soluble uPAR (suPAR) in serum was significantly associated with a poor OS of PCa patients (P = 0.022). PCa patients with high suPAR levels have a significantly higher risk of death (multivariate Cox's regression analysis; IIR - 7.12, P - 0.027). The association of high suPAR levels with poor survival of PCa patients suggests a prognostic impact of suPAR levels in serum of cancer patients. KW - receptor splice variant KW - primary breast cancer KW - radical prostatectomy KW - tumor tissue KW - progression KW - potential marker KW - inhibitor PAI-1 KW - gastric cancer KW - biomarkers UPA KW - expression Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-117967 SN - 2314-6141 IS - 972587 ER - TY - THES A1 - AL-Hijailan, Reem Saud T1 - Establishment of endothelialized cardiac tissue using human induced pluripotent stem cells generated cardiomyocytes T1 - Etablierung eines endothelialisierten kardialen Gewebes mittels Kardiomyozyten, differenziert aus induzierten pluripotenten Stammzellen N2 - Cardiovascular diseases are considered the leading cause of death worldwide according to the World Health Organization. Heart failure is the last stage of most of these diseases, where loss of myocardium leads to architectural and functional decline. The definitive treatment option for patients with CVDs is organ or tissue transplantation, which relies on donor availability. Therefore, generating an autologous bioengineered myocardium or heart could overcome this limitation. In addition, generating cardiac patches will provide ventricular wall support and enable reparative stem cells delivery to damaged areas. Although many hurdles still exist, a good number of researches have attempted to create an engineered cardiac tissue which can induce endogenous cardiac repair by replacing damaged myocardium. The present study provided cardiac patches in two models, one by a detergent coronary perfusion decellularization protocol that was optimized, and the other that resulted in a 3D cell-free extracellular matrix with intact architecture and preserved s-glycosaminoglycan and vasculature conduits. Perfusion with 1% Sodium dodecyle sulfate (SDS) under constant pressure resulted in cell-free porcine scaffold within two and cell-free rat scaffold in 7 days, whereas scaffold perfused with 4% sodium deoxycholate (SDO) was not able to remove cells completely. Re-reendothelialization of tissue vasculature was obtained by injecting human microvascular endothelial cell and human fibroblast in 2:1 ratio in a dynamic culture. One-week later, CD31 positive cells and endothelium markers were observed, indicating new blood lining. Moreover, functionality test of re-endothelialized tissue revealed improvement in clotting seen in decellularized tissues. When the tissue was ready to be repopulated, porcine induced pluripotent stem cells (PiPSc) were generated by transfected reprogramming of porcine skin fibroblast and then differentiated to cardiac cells following a robust protocol, for an autologous cardiac tissue model. However, due to the limitation in the PiPSc cell number, alternatively, human induced pluripotent stem cells generated cardiac cells were used. For reseeding a coculture of human iPSc generated cardiac cells, human mesenchymal stem cells and human fibroblast in 2:1:1 ratio respectively were used in a dynamic culture for 6-8 weeks. Contractions at different areas of the tissue were recorded at an average beating rate of 67 beats/min. In addition, positive cardiac markers (Troponin T), Fibroblast (vemintin), and mesenchymal stem cells (CD90) were detected. Not only that, but by week 3, MSC started differentiating to cardiac cells progressively until few CD90 positive cells were very few by week 6 with increasing troponin t positive cells in parallel. Electrophysiological and drug studies were difficult to obtain due to tissue thickness and limited assessment sources. However, the same construct was established using small intestine submucosa (SISer) scaffold, which recorded a spontaneous beating rate between 0.88 and 1.2 Hz, a conduction velocity of 23.9 ± 0.74 cm s−1, and a maximal contraction force of 0.453 ± 0.015 mN. Moreover, electrophysiological studies demonstrated a drug-dependent response on beating rate; a higher adrenalin frequency was revealed in comparison to the untreated tissue and isoproterenol administration, whereas a decrease in beating rate was observed with propranolol and untreated tissue. The present study demonstrated the establishment of vascularized cardiac tissue, which can be used for human clinical application. N2 - Etablierung eines endothelialisierten kardialen Gewebes mittels Kardiomyozyten, differenziert aus induzierten pluripotenten Stammzellen KW - cardiac tissue KW - biological scaffolds KW - decellularization KW - induced pluripotent stem cells Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-173979 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Al-Hejailan, Reem A1 - Weigel, Tobias A1 - Schürlein, Sebastian A1 - Berger, Constantin A1 - Al-Mohanna, Futwan A1 - Hansmann, Jan T1 - Decellularization of full heart — optimizing the classical sodium-dodecyl-sulfate-based decellularization protocol JF - Bioengineering N2 - Compared to cell therapy, where cells are injected into a defect region, the treatment of heart infarction with cells seeded in a vascularized scaffold bears advantages, such as an immediate nutrient supply or a controllable and persistent localization of cells. For this purpose, decellularized native tissues are a preferable choice as they provide an in vivo-like microenvironment. However, the quality of such scaffolds strongly depends on the decellularization process. Therefore, two protocols based on sodium dodecyl sulfate or sodium deoxycholate were tailored and optimized for the decellularization of a porcine heart. The obtained scaffolds were tested for their applicability to generate vascularized cardiac patches. Decellularization with sodium dodecyl sulfate was found to be more suitable and resulted in scaffolds with a low amount of DNA, a highly preserved extracellular matrix composition, and structure shown by GAG quantification and immunohistochemistry. After seeding human endothelial cells into the vasculature, a coagulation assay demonstrated the functionality of the endothelial cells to minimize the clotting of blood. Human-induced pluripotent-stem-cell-derived cardiomyocytes in co-culture with fibroblasts and mesenchymal stem cells transferred the scaffold into a vascularized cardiac patch spontaneously contracting with a frequency of 25.61 ± 5.99 beats/min for over 16 weeks. The customized decellularization protocol based on sodium dodecyl sulfate renders a step towards a preclinical evaluation of the scaffolds. KW - tissue engineering KW - decellularization KW - vascularized scaffold KW - cardiac patch KW - dynamic culture Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-270781 SN - 2306-5354 VL - 9 IS - 4 ER - TY - THES A1 - Al-Farajat, Mohammad T1 - Hydrogeo-Eco-Systems in Aquaba/Jordan - Coasts and Region T1 - Hydrogeo-Ökosysteme an der Küste und in der Region Aquaba/Jordanien N2 - The coast of Aqaba and the Aqaba region (Jordan) were investigated on their hydrogeo-ecosystem. The results of the research were translated into digits to build a geo-spatial data base. The fillings of the graben aquifer receive indirect type of recharge through the side wadis which drain the highlands. Surface water balance was modeled for a period of 20 years of daily climate records using MODBIL program which attributes direct recharge to wet years only. The hydrodynamic fresh water/seawater interface in the coastal zones was investigated by applying vertical geoelectric surveys and models of several methods to confirm its coincidence with the aquifer’s flow amounts, where human impacts in terms of over-pumping allowed more encroachment of seawater into land, and unintended recharge which led to seaward interface migration. A groundwater balance and solute transport were approached by developing a flow model from the hydrogeological and hydrochemical data. The nature of soil cover and aquifer whose physical properties enhance human impacts indicated the vulnerability of groundwater to pollution. This certainly threatens the marine ecology which forms the sink where the in-excess flow ends. The constructed digital background was exported into GIS to sub-zone the study area in terms of the aquifer’s vulnerability to pollution risks using DRASTIC index. However, it was unable to meet all geo-spatial factors that proved to have significant impacts on the vulnerability. Consequently, a comprehensive index -SALUFT- was developed. This suggests the suitable land use units for each zone in the light of vulnerability grades aiming at protecting the available groundwater resources. N2 - Die Küste und die Region von Aqaba (Jordanien) wurde im Hinblick auf ihre Hydrogeo-ökosysteme untersucht. Die Ergebnisse dieser Forschungsarbeiten wurden in eine digitale Form überführt, um bezüglich der Geofaktoren ein realitätsnahes Abbild der Umgebung zu erzeugen. Der Graben-Aquifer erhält seine Grundwasserneubildung meist indirekt von den Seiten, von denen Wadis ihr Wasser abführen. Die Bilanzierung des Oberflächenwassers wurde aus Tagesklimawerten der letzten 20 Jahre unter Benutzung des Programms MODBIL errechnet. Daraus ergab sich eine Neubildung des Grundwassers nur in feuchten Jahren. Die hydrodynamische Süßwasser-Salzwasser-Mischungsfront im Küstenbereich wurde durch geoelektrische Tiefensondierungen untersucht. Durch Modellierungen mit verschiedenen Methoden wurden Fließgeschwindigkeit und Wassermenge dort mit der des Aquifers in Einklang gebracht, wo durch Überpumpen das Salzwasser weiter ins Landesinnere vordringt. Durch die Entwicklung eines Fließmodells aus den hydrogeologischen und hydrochemischen Daten konnte die Grundwasserbilanzierung und der Stofftransport ermittelt werden. Die Natur des Bodens und des Aquifers, deren physikalische Eigenschaften die Einflüsse durch menschliche Aktivitäten steigern, führt zu einer Anfälligkeit gegenüber Verschmutzung, die die Qualität des Grundwassers verschlechtert. Dies beeinflusst die Ökologie des Meeres, das an den Stellen als Schadstoffsenke dient, an denen die Grundwasserströme enden. Die im Computer erstellte digitale Umgebung wurde dazu genutzt, den Aquifer im Untersuchungsgebiet mit Hilfe von GIS in Zonen unterschiedlicher Verschmutzungs-empfindlichkeit zu unterteilen. Dazu wurde der DRASTIC-Index benutzt. Im Laufe der Untersuchungen zeigte sich allerdings, dass es nicht möglich war, alle Faktoren, die einen signifikanten Einfluss auf das System haben, mit Hilfe dieses Index zu erfassen. Aus diesem Grund wurde der SALUFT-Index entwickelt. Damit wurde es möglich, bezüglich der Verschmutzungsempfindlichkeit für jede Zone die günstigste Art der Landnutzung zu ermitteln, um die verfügbaren Grundwasserressourcen zu schützen. KW - Golf von Akaba KW - Akaba KW - Hydrogeologie KW - Hydrologie KW - Ökosystem KW - farajat KW - aqaba KW - umwelt KW - grundwasser KW - verschmutzung KW - boden KW - geophysik KW - jordanien KW - wasser KW - farajat KW - aqaba KW - environment KW - groundwater KW - pollution KW - soil KW - geophysics KW - jordan KW - water Y1 - 2001 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-1182066 ER - TY - THES A1 - Al-Baidhani, Mohammed T1 - Spectroscopy as a tool to investigate the high energy optical properties of nanostructured magnetically doped topological insulator T1 - Spektroskopie als Methode zur Untersuchung der optischen Eigenschaften nanostrukturierter, magnetisch dotierter Topologischer Isolatoren bei hohen Energien N2 - In this dissertation the electronic and high-energy optical properties of thin nanoscale films of the magnetic topological insulator (MTI) (V,Cr)y(BixSb1-x)2-yTe3 are studied by means of X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS). Magnetic topological insulators are presently of broad interest as the combination of ferromagnetism and spin-orbit coupling in these materials leads to a new topological phase, the quantum anomalous Hall state (QAHS), with dissipation less conduction channels. Determining and controlling the physical properties of these complex materials is therefore desirable for a fundamental understanding of the QAHS and for their possible application in spintronics. EELS can directly probe the electron energy-loss function of a material from which one can obtain the complex dynamic dielectric function by means of the Kramers-Kronig transformation and the Drude-Lindhard model of plasmon oscillations. The XPS core-level spectra in (V,Cr)y(BixSb1-x)2-yTe3 are analyzed in detail with regards to inelastic background contributions. It is shown that the spectra can be accurately described based on the electron energy-loss function obtained from an independent EELS measurement. This allows for a comprehensive and quantitative analysis of the XPS data, which will facilitate future core-level spectroscopy studies in this class of topological materials. From the EELS data, furthermore, the bulk and surface optical properties were estimated, and compared to ab initio calculations based on density functional theory (DFT) performed in the GW approximation for Sb2Te3. The experimental results show a good agreement with the calculated complex dielectric function and the calculated energy-loss function. The positions of the main plasmon modes reported here are expected to be generally similar in other materials in this class of nanoscale TI films. Hence, the present work introduces EELS as a powerful method to access the high-energy optical properties of TI thin films. Based on the presented results it will be interesting to explore more systematically the effects of stoichiometry, magnetic doping, film thickness and surface morphology on the electron-loss function, potentially leading to a better understanding of the complex interplay of structural, electronic, magnetic and optical properties in MTI nanostructures. N2 - Die vorliegende Dissertation beschäftigt sich mit den elektronischen und hochen- ergetischen optischen Eigenschaften von auf der Nanoskala dünnen Filmen des magnetischen topologischen Isolators (MTI) (V,Cr)y(BixSb1−x)2−yTe3 mithilfe von Röntgenphotoelektronenspektroskopie (engl.: X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, XPS), sowie Elektronenenergieverlustspektroskopie (engl.: electron energy-loss spectroscopy, EELS). Magnetische topologische Isolatoren sind gegenwärtig von großem Interesse, da die Kombination von Ferromagnetismus und Spin-Bahn- Kopplung in diesen Materialien zu einer neuen topologischen Phase führt, der Quanten-Anomalen-Hall-Phase (engl.: quantum anomalous Hall state, QAHS), die sich durch verlustfreie Leitungskanäle auszeichnet. Bestimmung und Kontrolle der physikalischen Eigenschaften dieser komplexen Materialien ist somit erstrebenswert für ein fundamentales Verständnis des QAHS sowie für Anwendungen in der Spin- tronik. EELS erlaubt die direkte Untersuchung der Elektronenenergieverlustfunk- tion eines Materials, aus der man, mithilfe der Kramers-Kronig-Transformation und des Drude-Lindhard-Modells von Plasmonenoszillationen, die komplexe dynamis- che dielektrische Funktion des Materials erhält. In den XPS-Spektren der Rumpfniveaus in (V,Cr)y(BixSb1−x)2−yTe3 wird detail- liert insbesondere der Beitrag des inelastischen Untergrunds analysiert. Es kann gezeigt werden, dass, basierend auf der in einem unabhängigen EELS-Experiment gewonnenen Elektronenenergieverlustfunktion, die Rumpfniveauspektren präzise beschrieben werden können. Dies erlaubt eine umfangreiche und quantitative Anal- yse der Daten, was zukünftige Rumpfniveaustudien dieser Klasse topologischer Materialien erleichtern wird. Die mit EELS gewonnenen Daten ermöglichen weiter- hin eine Abschätzung der optischen Eigenschaften von Volumen und Oberfläche der Materialien, die in der vorliegenden Arbeit mit ab initio Berechnungen aus der Literatur für Sb2Te3 verglichen werden, welche auf Basis der Dichtefunktionaltheo- rie (DFT) in GW-näherung durchgeführt wurden. Die experimentellen Ergebnisse zeigen gute Übereinstimmungen mit der berechneten komplexen dielektrischen Funktion, sowie mit der Energieverlustfunktion. Es wird erwartet, dass die hier beschriebenen Positionen der Hauptplasmonenmoden im Allgemeinen ähnlich zu denen anderer Materialien dieser Klasse auf der Nanoskala dünner topologischer Isolatoren sind. Somit stellt die vorliegende Arbeit das EELS Experiment als eine mächtige Methode vor, die einen Zugang zu den hochenergetischen optischen Eigen- schaften dünner TIs schafft. Basierend auf den hier vorgestellten Ergebnissen bleibt es interessant sein die Auswirkungen von Stöchiometrie, magnetischer Dotierung, Filmdicke, sowie Oberflächenmorphologie auf die Energieverlustfunktion system- atischer zu untersuchen, um damit ein besseres Verständnis für das komplexe Zusammenspiel aus strukturellen, elektronischen und optischen Eigenschaften in MTI-Nanostrukturen zu erlangen. KW - spectroscopy KW - XPS KW - REELS KW - topological insulator KW - QAHE KW - Topologischer Isolator KW - Optische Eigenschaft KW - Elektronenspektroskopie Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-157221 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aktas, Bertal H. A1 - Upcin, Berin A1 - Henke, Erik A1 - Padmasekar, Manju A1 - Qin, Xuebin A1 - Ergün, Süleyman T1 - The Best for the Most Important: Maintaining a Pristine Proteome in Stem and Progenitor Cells JF - Stem Cells International N2 - Pluripotent stem cells give rise to reproductively enabled offsprings by generating progressively lineage-restricted multipotent stem cells that would differentiate into lineage-committed stem and progenitor cells. These lineage-committed stem and progenitor cells give rise to all adult tissues and organs. Adult stem and progenitor cells are generated as part of the developmental program and play critical roles in tissue and organ maintenance and/or regeneration. The ability of pluripotent stem cells to self-renew, maintain pluripotency, and differentiate into a multicellular organism is highly dependent on sensing and integrating extracellular and extraorganismal cues. Proteins perform and integrate almost all cellular functions including signal transduction, regulation of gene expression, metabolism, and cell division and death. Therefore, maintenance of an appropriate mix of correctly folded proteins, a pristine proteome, is essential for proper stem cell function. The stem cells' proteome must be pristine because unfolded, misfolded, or otherwise damaged proteins would interfere with unlimited self-renewal, maintenance of pluripotency, differentiation into downstream lineages, and consequently with the development of properly functioning tissue and organs. Understanding how various stem cells generate and maintain a pristine proteome is therefore essential for exploiting their potential in regenerative medicine and possibly for the discovery of novel approaches for maintaining, propagating, and differentiating pluripotent, multipotent, and adult stem cells as well as induced pluripotent stem cells. In this review, we will summarize cellular networks used by various stem cells for generation and maintenance of a pristine proteome. We will also explore the coordination of these networks with one another and their integration with the gene regulatory and signaling networks. KW - Endoplasmic-Reticulum Stress KW - Heme-regulated inhibitor KW - Human Muse Cells KW - Transcription factor NRF1 KW - ER-Stress KW - Hematopoietic Stem KW - Quality-control KW - Messenger-RNAs KW - Neural Differentiation KW - Translation Initiation Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-227769 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Akshat, Puri A1 - Aaboud, M. A1 - Aad, G. A1 - Abbott, B. A1 - Abdinov, O. A1 - Abeloos, B. A1 - Abhayasinghe, D. K. A1 - Abidi, S. H. A1 - Abou Zeid, O. S. A1 - Abraham, N. L. A1 - Abramowicz, H. A1 - Abreu, H. A1 - Abulaiti, Y. A1 - Acharya, B. S. A1 - Adachi, S. A1 - Adam, L. A1 - Adamczyk, L. A1 - Adelman, J. A1 - Adersberger, M. A1 - Adiguzel, A. A1 - Adye, T. A1 - Affolder, A. A. A1 - Afik, Y. A1 - Agheorghiesei, C. A1 - Aguilar-Saavedra, J. A. A1 - Ahmadov, F. A1 - Aiellil, G. A1 - Akatsuka, S. A1 - Akesson, T. P. A. A1 - Akilli, E. A1 - Akimov, A. V. A1 - Alberghi, G. L. A1 - Albert, J. A1 - Albicocco, P. A1 - Alconada Verzini, M. J. A1 - Alderweireld, S. A1 - Aleksa, M. A1 - Aleksandrov, I. N. A1 - Alexa, C. A1 - Alexopoulos, T. A1 - Alhroob, M. A1 - Ali, B. A1 - Alimonti, G. A1 - Alison, J. A1 - Andre, S. P. A1 - Allaire, C. A1 - Allbrooke, B. M. M. A1 - Allen, B. W. A1 - Allport, P. P. A1 - Aloisio, A. A1 - Alonso, A. A1 - Alonso, F. A1 - Alpigiani, C. A1 - Alshehri, A. A. A1 - Alstaty, M. I. A1 - Alvarez, Gonzalez B. A1 - Alvarez Piqueras, D. A1 - Alviggi, M. G. A1 - Amadio, B. T. A1 - Amaral, Coutinho, Y. A1 - Ambler, A. A1 - Ambroz, L. A1 - Amelung, C. A1 - Amidei, D. A1 - Amor Dos Santos, S. P. A1 - Amoroso, S. A1 - Amrouche, C. S. A1 - Anastopoulos, C. A1 - Ancu, L. S. A1 - Andari, N. A1 - Andeen, T. A1 - Anders, C. F. A1 - Anders, J. K. A1 - Anderson, K. J. A1 - Andreazza, A. A1 - Andrei, V. A1 - et al, T1 - Measurement of angular and momentum distributions of charged particles within and around jets in Pb plus Pb and pp collisions at root s(NN)=5.02 TeV with ATLAS at the LHC : XXVIIth International Conference on Ultrarelativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions (Quark Matter 2018) JF - Nuclear Physics A N2 - Studies of the fragmentation of jets into charged particles in heavy-ion collisions can help in understanding the mechanism of jet quenching by the hot and dense QCD matter created in such collisions, the quark-gluon plasma. These proceedings present a measurement of the angular distribution of charged particles around the jet axis in root s(NN) = 5.02 TeV Pb+Pb and pp collisions, done using the ATLAS detector at the LHC. The measurement is performed inside jets reconstructed with the anti-k(t) algorithm with radius parameter R = 0.4, and is extended to regions outside the jet cone. Results are presented as a function of Pb+Pb collision centrality, and both jet and charged-particle transverse momenta. KW - jets KW - fragmentation functions KW - jet shapes Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-224703 VL - 982 IS - 2 ER - TY - THES A1 - Akindeinde, Saheed Ojo T1 - Numerical Verification of Optimality Conditions in Optimal Control Problems T1 - Numerischen Verifizierung von Optimalitätsbedingungen für Optimalsteurungsprobleme N2 - This thesis is devoted to numerical verification of optimality conditions for non-convex optimal control problems. In the first part, we are concerned with a-posteriori verification of sufficient optimality conditions. It is a common knowledge that verification of such conditions for general non-convex PDE-constrained optimization problems is very challenging. We propose a method to verify second-order sufficient conditions for a general class of optimal control problem. If the proposed verification method confirms the fulfillment of the sufficient condition then a-posteriori error estimates can be computed. A special ingredient of our method is an error analysis for the Hessian of the underlying optimization problem. We derive conditions under which positive definiteness of the Hessian of the discrete problem implies positive definiteness of the Hessian of the continuous problem. The results are complemented with numerical experiments. In the second part, we investigate adaptive methods for optimal control problems with finitely many control parameters. We analyze a-posteriori error estimates based on verification of second-order sufficient optimality conditions using the method developed in the first part. Reliability and efficiency of the error estimator are shown. We illustrate through numerical experiments, the use of the estimator in guiding adaptive mesh refinement. N2 - Diese Arbeit widmet sich der numerischen Verifizierung von Optimalitaetsbedingungen fuer nicht konvexe Optimalsteuerungsprobleme. Im ersten Teil beschaeftigen wir uns mit der a-posteriori Ueberpruefung von hinreichenden Optimalitaetskriterien. Es ist bekannt, dass der Nachweis solcher Bedingungen fuer allgemeine nicht konvexe Optimierungsproblemem mit Nebenbedingungen in Form von partiellen Differentialgleichungen sehr schwierig ist. Wir stellen eine Methode vor, um die hinreichenden Bedingungen zweiter Ordnung fuer eine allgemeine Problemklasse zu testen. Falls die vorgeschlagene Strategie bestaetigt, dass diese Bedingungen erfuellt sind, koennen a-posteriori Fehlerschaetzungen berechnet werden. Ein wesentlicher Bestandteil unserer Methode ist eine Fehleranalyse fuer die Hessematrix des zugrunde liegenden Optimierungsproblems. Es werden Bedingungen hergeleitet, unter denen die positive Definitheit der Hessematrix des diskreten Problems die positive Definitheit der Hessematrix fuer das kontinuierliche Problem nach sich zieht. Diese Ergebnisse werden durch numerische Experimente ergaenzt. Im zweiten Teil untersuchen wir adaptive (Diskretisierungs-)methoden fuer Optimalsteuerungsprobleme mit endlich vielen Kontrollparametern. Basierend auf dem Nachweis hinreichender Optimalitaetsbedingungen zweiter Ordnung analysieren wir a posteriori Fehlerschaetzungen. Dies geschieht unter der Nutzung der Resultate des ersten Teils der Arbeit. Es wird die Zuverlaessigkeit und Effizienz des Fehlerschaetzers bewiesen. Mittels weiterer numerischer Experimente illustrieren wir, wie der Fehlerschaetzer zur Steuerung adaptiver Gitterverfeinerung eingesetzt werden kann. KW - Optimale Kontrolle KW - Nichtkonvexe Optimierung KW - Numerisches Verfahren KW - non-convex optimal control problems KW - sufficient optimality conditions KW - a-posteriori error estimates KW - numerical approximations KW - adaptive refinement Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-76065 ER - TY - THES A1 - Akimzhanov, Askar M. T1 - Epigenetic repression of the NFATc1 transcription factor in human lymphomas T1 - Epigenetische Repression des NFATc1 Transkriptionsfakors in menschlichen Lymphomen N2 - We examined the regulation of NFATc1 in different lymphomas and observed an inversed correlation between the methylation status and expression of NFATc1. Our data demonstrate that aberrant DNA methylation associated with chromatin remodeling within nfatc1 locus is a major mechanism for the repression of NFATc1 expression, suggesting that the DNA methylation-mediated transcriptional silencing of NFATc1 may be a critical event in the tumorogenesis of ALCLs and cHLs. Furthermore, the DNA methylation of human nfatc1 promoter region could be used as a novel biomarker of tumor progression. Our results indicate a close link between the loss of immunoreceptor signaling and NFATc1 expression in human lymphomas. For both ALCLs and cHLs, defects in immunoreceptor signaling have been described which result in a loss of receptor-mediated gene expression programs (Schwering et al., 2003; Bonzheim et al., 2004; Marafioti et al., 2004). In T cells, one indicator gene of these programs appears to be the nfatc1 gene whose expression is controlled by TCR signals (Chuvpilo et al., 2002a). In contrast, in T cells NFATc1 expression is unaffected by TCR signals, and NFATc2 was found to be expressed at normal levels in ALCLs and cHLs (L.K., unpubl. data). Moreover, the activity of NF-kappaB factors which can bind to certain NFAT binding sites and share a distantly-related DNA binding domain with NFATs is strongly elevated in cHL cells (Bargou et al., 1997; Hinz et al., 2001; Hinz et al., 2002) suggesting that NFATs and NF-kappaBs exert very different effects on generation and maintenance of Hodgkin’s lymhomas. However, it should be mentioned that in Burkitt’s and further B cell lymphomas in which NFATc1 proteins are strongly expressed and controlled by receptor signals (Kondo et al., 2003), they could exert a promoting function in tumor development. The genes of p53 family members p63 and p73 are prominent examples for mammalian genes whose products can act both as oncoproteins and tumor suppressor genes (Hibi et al., 2000; Stiewe and Putzer, 2002), and it is likely that more genes exist which encode both tumor suppressors and oncoproteins. It remains to be shown whether the nfatc1 gene is one of them. N2 - Wir haben die Regulation von NFATc1 in verschiedenen Lymphomen untersucht und beobachteten eine umgekehrte Korrelation zwischen dem Ausmaß an Methylierung und der Expression von NFATc1. Unsere Daten demonstrieren, dass eine aberrante DNA-Methylierung, die mit veränderter Chromatinstruktur innerhalb des nfatc1 Lokus assoziiert ist, der Hauptmechanismus für die Repression der NFATc1-Expression ist. Es wäre zu vermuten, dass die durch DNA-Methylierung verursachte transkriptionelle Abschaltung von NFATc1 der kritische Schritt bei der Tumorgenese von ALCLs und cHLs ist. Des weiteren könnte das Ausmaß der DNA-Methylierung in der humanen nfatc1-Promotorregion als neuer Biomarker für Tumorprogression genutzt werden. Unsere Daten indizieren eine enge Verbindung zwischen dem Verlust von Immunrezeptorsignalen und der NFATc1-Expression in humanen Lymphomen. Für sowohl ALCLs als auch cHLs wurden Defekte in der Immunrezeptorsignalgebung beschrieben, welche sich im Verlust des Rezeptor vermittelten Genexpressionsprogramms niederschlagen (Schwering et al., 2003; Bonzheim et al., 2004; Marafioti et al., 2004). In T-Zellen scheint das nfatc1-Gen eins der Indikatorgene dieses Programms zu sein, dessen Expression durch TCR-Signale kontrolliert wird (Chuvpilo et al., 2002a). Im Gegensatz dazu bleibt die NFATc2-Expression in T-Zellen unbeeinflusst von TCR-Signalen, weshalb NFATc2 in ALCLs und cHLs auch in normalem Ausmaß exprimiert wird (L.K., unpubl. data). Andererseits ist die Aktivität der NF-kappaB-Faktoren, die auch an bestimmte NFAT-Bindungsstellen binden können und deren DNA-Bindungsdomäne entfernt mit der der NFATs verwandt ist, in cHL-Zellen stark erhöht (Bargou et al., 1997; Hinz et al., 2001; Hinz et al., 2002). Das lässt vermuten, dass NFATc1 und die NF-kappa-Faktoren eine sehr unterschiedliche Rolle bei der Entstehung und dem Erhalt der Hodgkinlymphome spielen. Es sollte aber erwähnt werden, dass in Burkitts und anderen B-Zelllymphomen, in denen NFATc1-Proteine stark exprimiert und darüber hinaus durch Rezeptorsignale kontrolliert sind (Kondo et al., 2003), diese eine Tumor fördernde Funktion ausüben könnten. Die Gene der p53-Familienmitglieder p63 und p73 sind prominente Beispiele für Säugergene, deren Produkte sowohl als Onkoproteine als auch als Tumorsuppressoren fungieren können (Hibi et al., 2000; Stiewe and Putzer, 2002), und es ist wahrscheinlich, dass es noch weitere Gene gibt, die beide Funktionen ausüben. Es wird zu zeigen sein, ob das nfatc1-Gen eins von ihnen ist. KW - Lymphom KW - T-Lymphozyt KW - Transkriptionsfaktor KW - Methylierung KW - Epigenese KW - NFATc1 KW - Lymphome KW - Epigenetik KW - Methylierung KW - NFATc1 KW - Lymphoma KW - Epigenetics KW - Methylation Y1 - 2005 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-12921 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Akhundzadah, Noor Ahmad A1 - Soltani, Salim A1 - Aich, Valentin T1 - Impacts of climate change on the water resources of the Kunduz River Basin, Afghanistan JF - Climate N2 - The Kunduz River is one of the main tributaries of the Amu Darya Basin in North Afghanistan. Many communities live in the Kunduz River Basin (KRB), and its water resources have been the basis of their livelihoods for many generations. This study investigates climate change impacts on the KRB catchment. Rare station data are, for the first time, used to analyze systematic trends in temperature, precipitation, and river discharge over the past few decades, while using Mann–Kendall and Theil–Sen trend statistics. The trends show that the hydrology of the basin changed significantly over the last decades. A comparison of landcover data of the river basin from 1992 and 2019 shows significant changes that have additional impact on the basin hydrology, which are used to interpret the trend analysis. There is considerable uncertainty due to the data scarcity and gaps in the data, but all results indicate a strong tendency towards drier conditions. An extreme warming trend, partly above 2 °C since the 1960s in combination with a dramatic precipitation decrease by more than −30% lead to a strong decrease in river discharge. The increasing glacier melt compensates the decreases and leads to an increase in runoff only in the highland parts of the upper catchment. The reduction of water availability and the additional stress on the land leads to a strong increase of barren land and a reduction of vegetation cover. The detected trends and changes in the basin hydrology demand an active management of the already scarce water resources in order to sustain water supply for agriculture and ecosystems in the KRB. KW - climate change KW - Kunduz River Basin KW - trend analysis KW - river discharge KW - landcover changes Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-213199 SN - 2225-1154 VL - 8 IS - 10 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Akhrif, Atae A1 - Romanos, Marcel A1 - Domschke, Katharina A1 - Schmitt-Boehrer, Angelika A1 - Neufang, Susanne T1 - Fractal Analysis of BOLD Time Series in a Network Associated With Waiting Impulsivity JF - Frontiers in Physiology N2 - Fractal phenomena can be found in numerous scientific areas including neuroscience. Fractals are structures, in which the whole has the same shape as its parts. A specific structure known as pink noise (also called fractal or 1/f noise) is one key fractal manifestation, exhibits both stability and adaptability, and can be addressed via the Hurst exponent (H). FMRI studies using H on regional fMRI time courses used fractality as an important characteristic to unravel neural networks from artificial noise. In this fMRI-study, we examined 103 healthy male students at rest and while performing the 5-choice serial reaction time task. We addressed fractality in a network associated with waiting impulsivity using the adaptive fractal analysis (AFA) approach to determine H. We revealed the fractal nature of the impulsivity network. Furthermore, fractality was influenced by individual impulsivity in terms of decreasing fractality with higher impulsivity in regions of top-down control (left middle frontal gyrus) as well as reward processing (nucleus accumbens and anterior cingulate cortex). We conclude that fractality as determined via H is a promising marker to quantify deviations in network functions at an early stage and, thus, to be able to inform preventive interventions before the manifestation of a disorder. KW - fMRI KW - Hurst Exponent KW - frontal cortex KW - nucleus accumbens KW - biomarker KW - impulse control disorders Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-189191 SN - 1664-042X VL - 9 ER - TY - THES A1 - Akhrif, Atae T1 - The BOLD Signal is more than a Brain Activation Index T1 - Das BOLD Signal ist mehr als ein Maß für Hirnaktivierung N2 - In the recent years, translational studies comparing imaging data of animals and humans have gained increasing scientific interests with crucial findings stemming from both, human and animal work. In order to harmonize statistical analyses of data from different species and to optimize the transfer of knowledge between them, shared data acquisition protocols and combined statistical approaches have to be identified. Following this idea, methods of data analysis, which have until now mainly been used to model neural responses of electrophysiological recordings from rodent data, were applied on human hemodynamic responses (i.e. Blood-Oxygen-Level-Dependent BOLD signal) as measured via functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). At the example of two attention and impulsivity networks, timing dynamics and amplitude of the fMRI signal were determined (study 1). Study 2 described the same parameters frequency-specifically, and in study 3, the complexity of neural processing was quantified in terms of fractality. Determined parameters were compared with regard to the subjects’ task performance / impulsivity to validate findings with regard to reports of the current scientific debate. In a general discussion, overlapping as well as additional information of methodological approaches were discussed with regard to its potential for biomarkers in the context of neuropsychiatric disorders. N2 - In den letzten Jahren haben translationale Studien, in denen Befunde von Tieren und Menschen direkt verglichen werden, zunehmend an wissenschaftlichem Interesse gewonnen. Um statistische Analysen von Daten verschiedener Spezies zu harmonisieren und somit den Wissenstransfer zu optimieren, müssen gemeinsame Datenerfassungsprotokolle sowie kombinierte statistische Ansätze identifiziert werden. Diesem Gedanken folgend werden in dieser Arbeit Methoden der Datenanalyse, die bisher hauptsächlich zur Modellierung neuronaler Antworten aus elektrophysiologischer Aufzeichnungen bei Nagetierdaten verwendet wurden, auf hämodynamische Antworten (d.h. Blood-Oxygen-Level-Dependent BOLD-Signal), welche mittels funktionaler Magnetresonanztomo-graphie (fMRT) gemessen werden, im Menschen angewendet. Am Beispiel zweier Aufmerksamkeits- und Impulsivitätsnetzwerke wurden der zeitliche Verlauf und Amplitude des fMRI-Signals bestimmt (Studie 1). In Studie 2 wurden die gleichen Parameter frequenzspezifisch ausgewertet, und in Studie 3 wurde die Komplexität neuronaler Verarbeitung anhand von Fraktalität quantifiziert. Die ermittelten Parameter wurden hinsichtlich der Task Performance / Impulsivität der Probanden verglichen, um die Ergebnisse im Kontext von Befunden aus der aktuellen wissenschaftlichen Debatte zu validieren. In einer allgemeinen Diskussion wurden sowohl überlappende als auch zusätzliche Informationen zu methodischen Ansätzen hinsichtlich ihres Potenzials für Biomarker im Zusammenhang mit neuropsychiatrischen Erkrankungen diskutiert. KW - funktionelle Kernspintomographie KW - BOLD signal KW - fMRI time series Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-207299 N1 - Aus datenschutzrechtlichen Gründen wurde der Zugriff auf den Volltext zu diesem Dokument gesperrt. Eine inhaltlich identische neue Version ist erhältlich unter: https://doi.org/10.25972/OPUS-32287 ER - TY - THES A1 - Akhrif, Atae T1 - The BOLD Signal is more than a Brain Activation Index T1 - Das BOLD Signal ist mehr als ein Maß für Hirnaktivierung N2 - In the recent years, translational studies comparing imaging data of animals and humans have gained increasing scientific interests with crucial findings stemming from both, human and animal work. In order to harmonize statistical analyses of data from different species and to optimize the transfer of knowledge between them, shared data acquisition protocols and combined statistical approaches have to be identified. Following this idea, methods of data analysis, which have until now mainly been used to model neural responses of electrophysiological recordings from rodent data, were applied on human hemodynamic responses (i.e. Blood-Oxygen-Level- Dependent BOLD signal) as measured via functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). At the example of two attention and impulsivity networks, timing dynamics and amplitude of the fMRI signal were determined (study 1). Study 2 described the same parameters frequency-specifically, and in study 3, the complexity of neural processing was quantified in terms of fractality. Determined parameters were compared with regard to the subjects’ task performance / impulsivity to validate findings with regard to reports of the current scientific debate. In a general discussion, overlapping as well as additional information of methodological approaches were discussed with regard to its potential for biomarkers in the context of neuropsychiatric disorders. N2 - In den letzten Jahren haben translationale Studien, in denen Befunde von Tieren und Menschen direkt verglichen werden, zunehmend an wissenschaftlichem Interesse gewonnen. Um statistische Analysen von Daten verschiedener Spezies zu harmonisieren und somit den Wissenstransfer zu optimieren, müssen gemeinsame Datenerfassungsprotokolle sowie kombinierte statistische Ansätze identifiziert werden. Diesem Gedanken folgend werden in dieser Arbeit Methoden der Datenanalyse, die bisher hauptsächlich zur Modellierung neuronaler Antworten aus elektrophysiologischer Aufzeichnungen bei Nagetierdaten verwendet wurden, auf hämodynamische Antworten (d.h. Blood-Oxygen-Level-Dependent BOLD-Signal), welche mittels funktionaler Magnetresonanztomo-graphie (fMRT) gemessen werden, im Menschen angewendet. Am Beispiel zweier Aufmerksamkeits- und Impulsivitätsnetzwerke wurden der zeitliche Verlauf und Amplitude des fMRI-Signals bestimmt (Studie 1). In Studie 2 wurden die gleichen Parameter frequenzspezifisch ausgewertet, und in Studie 3 wurde die Komplexität neuronaler Verarbeitung anhand von Fraktalität quantifiziert. Die ermittelten Parameter wurden hinsichtlich der Task Performance / Impulsivität der Probanden verglichen, um die Ergebnisse im Kontext von Befunden aus der aktuellen wissenschaftlichen Debatte zu validieren. In einer allgemeinen Diskussion wurden sowohl überlappende als auch zusätzliche Informationen zu methodischen Ansätzen hinsichtlich ihres Potenzials für Biomarker im Zusammenhang mit neuropsychiatrischen Erkrankungen diskutiert. KW - BOLD signal KW - functional neuroimaging KW - fMRI time series KW - funktionelle Kernspintomographie Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-322879 N1 - Dieses Dokument wurde aus Datenschutzgründen - ohne inhaltliche Änderungen - erneut veröffentlicht. Die ursprüngliche Veröffentlichung war am 08.07.2020 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Akhoon, Bashir A. A1 - Singh, Krishna P. A1 - Varshney, Megha A1 - Gupta, Shishir K. A1 - Shukla, Yogeshwar A1 - Gupta, Shailendra K. T1 - Understanding the Mechanism of Atovaquone Drug Resistance in Plasmodium falciparum Cytochrome b Mutation Y268S Using Computational Methods JF - PLOS ONE N2 - The rapid appearance of resistant malarial parasites after introduction of atovaquone (ATQ) drug has prompted the search for new drugs as even single point mutations in the active site of Cytochrome b protein can rapidly render ATQ ineffective. The presence of Y268 mutations in the Cytochrome b (Cyt b) protein is previously suggested to be responsible for the ATQ resistance in Plasmodium falciparum (P. falciparum). In this study, we examined the resistance mechanism against ATQ in P. falciparum through computational methods. Here, we reported a reliable protein model of Cyt bc1 complex containing Cyt b and the Iron-Sulphur Protein (ISP) of P. falciparum using composite modeling method by combining threading, ab initio modeling and atomic-level structure refinement approaches. The molecular dynamics simulations suggest that Y268S mutation causes ATQ resistance by reducing hydrophobic interactions between Cyt bc1 protein complex and ATQ. Moreover, the important histidine contact of ATQ with the ISP chain is also lost due to Y268S mutation. We noticed the induced mutation alters the arrangement of active site residues in a fashion that enforces ATQ to find its new stable binding site far away from the wild-type binding pocket. The MM-PBSA calculations also shows that the binding affinity of ATQ with Cyt bc1 complex is enough to hold it at this new site that ultimately leads to the ATQ resistance. KW - molecular-dynamics simulations KW - HIV-1 protease KW - structure prediction KW - saccharomyces cerevisiae KW - I-tasser KW - inhibitors KW - binding KW - malaria KW - complex KW - protein-protein interactions Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-114882 VL - 9 IS - 10 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Akhoon, Bashir A. A1 - Gupta, Shishir K. A1 - Tiwari, Sudeep A1 - Rathor, Laxmi A1 - Pant, Aakanksha A1 - Singh, Nivedita A1 - Gupta, Shailendra K. A1 - Dandekar, Thomas A1 - Pandey, Rakesh T1 - C. elegans protein interaction network analysis probes RNAi validated pro-longevity effect of nhr-6, a human homolog of tumor suppressor Nr4a1 JF - Scientific Reports N2 - Protein-protein interaction (PPI) studies are gaining momentum these days due to the plethora of various high-throughput experimental methods available for detecting PPIs. Proteins create complexes and networks by functioning in harmony with other proteins and here in silico network biology hold the promise to reveal new functionality of genes as it is very difficult and laborious to carry out experimental high-throughput genetic screens in living organisms. We demonstrate this approach by computationally screening C. elegans conserved homologs of already reported human tumor suppressor and aging associated genes. We select by this nhr-6, vab-3 and gst-23 as predicted longevity genes for RNAi screen. The RNAi results demonstrated the pro-longevity effect of these genes. Nuclear hormone receptor nhr-6 RNAi inhibition resulted in a C. elegans phenotype of 23.46% lifespan reduction. Moreover, we show that nhr-6 regulates oxidative stress resistance in worms and does not affect the feeding behavior of worms. These findings imply the potential of nhr-6 as a common therapeutic target for aging and cancer ailments, stressing the power of in silico PPI network analysis coupled with RNAi screens to describe gene function. KW - Computer modelling KW - Embryonic induction KW - RNAi Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-202666 VL - 9 ER - TY - THES A1 - Akakpo, Martin Gameli T1 - The influence of learner characteristics on interactions to seek and share information in e-learning: A media psychology perspective T1 - Der Einfluss von Lernendenmerkmale auf die Interaktionen zur Suche und zum Austausch von Informationen im E-Learning: Eine medienpsychologische Perspektive N2 - Research on the deployment and use of technology to assist learning has seen a significant rise over the last decades (Aparicio et al., 2017). The focus on course quality, technology, learning outcome and learner satisfaction in e-learning has led to insufficient attention by researchers to individual characteristics of learners (Cidral et al., 2017 ; Hsu et al., 2013). The current work aims to bridge this gap by investigating characteristics identified by previous works and backed by theory as influential individual differences in e-learning. These learner characteristics have been suggested as motivational factors (Edmunds et al., 2012) in decisions by learners to interact and exchange information (Luo et al., 2017). In this work e-learning is defined as interaction dependent information seeking and sharing enabled by technology. This is primarily approached from a media psychology perspective. The role of learner characteristics namely, beliefs about the source of knowledge (Schommer, 1990), learning styles (Felder & Silverman, 1988), need for affect (Maio & Esses, 2001), need for cognition (Cacioppo & Petty, 1982) and power distance (Hofstede, 1980) on interactions to seek and share information in e-learning are investigated. These investigations were shaped by theory and empirical lessons as briefly mentioned in the next paragraphs. Theoretical support for investigations is derived from the technology acceptance model(TAM) by psychologist Davis (1989) and the hyper-personal model by communication scientist Walther (1996). The TAM was used to describe the influence of learner characteristics on decisions to use e-learning systems (Stantchev et al., 2014). The hyper-personal model described why computer-mediated communication thrives in e-learning (Kaye et al., 2016) and how learners interpret messages exchanged online (Hansen et al., 2015). This theoretical framework was followed by empirical reviews which justified the use of interaction and information seeking-sharing as key components of e-learning as well as the selection of learner characteristics. The reviews provided suggestions for the measurement of variables (Kühl et al., 2014) and the investigation design (Dascalau et al., 2015). Investigations were designed and implemented through surveys and quasi experiments which were used for three preliminary studies and two main studies. Samples were selected from Germany and Ghana with same variables tested in both countries. Hypotheses were tested with interaction and information seeking-sharing as dependent variables while beliefs about the source of knowledge, learning styles, need for affect, need for cognition and power distance were independent variables. Firstly, using analyses of variance, the influence of beliefs about the source of knowledge on interaction choices of learners was supported. Secondly, the role of need for cognition on interaction choices of learners was supported by results from a logistic regression. Thirdly, results from multiple linear regressions backed the influence of need for cognition and power distance on information seeking-sharing behaviour of learners. Fourthly, the relationship between need for affect and need for cognition was supported. The findings may have implications for media psychology research, theories used in this work, research on e-learning, measurement of learner characteristics and the design of e-learning platforms. The findings suggest that, the beliefs learners have about the source of knowledge, their need for cognition and their power distance can influence decisions to interact and seek or share information. The outlook from reviews and findings in this work predicts more research on learner characteristics and a corresponding intensity in the use of e-learning by individuals. It is suggested that future studies investigate the relationship between learner autonomy and power distance. Studies on inter-cultural similarities amongst e-learners in different populations are also suggested. N2 - Forschungsbemühungen zur Bereitstellung und die Nutzung von Technologien zur Unterstützung des Lernens nahm in den letzten Jahrzehnten erheblich zu (Aparicio et al., 2017). Der Fokus auf Kursqualität, Technologie, Lernergebnisse und Zufriedenheit der Lernenden im E-Learning führte dazu, dass die Forschenden den individuellen Eigenschaften der Lernenden nicht genügend Aufmerksamkeit schenkten (Cidral et al., 2017; Hsu et al., 2013). Die vorliegende Arbeit ist bestrebt, diese Lücke zu schließen. Sie untersucht Lernendenmerkmale, die in früheren Arbeiten identifiziert und theoretisch als einflussreiche individuelle Unterschiede beim E-Learning unterstrichen wurden. Diese Eigenschaften des Lernenden wurden als Motivationsfaktoren (Edmunds et al., 2012) in Entscheidungen des Lernenden bei Interaktion mit und zum Austausch von Informationen vorgeschlagen (Luo et al., 2017). In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird E-Learning definiert als Informationssuche und -austausch, der durch Technologie ermöglicht wird und auf Interaktionen basiert. Diese Ideen werden vor allem aus medienpsychologischer Sicht angegangen. Die Rolle der Merkmale des Lernenden, nämlich seine jeweiligen Überzeugungen über die Quelle des Wissens (Schommer, 1990), Lernstile (Felder & Silverman, 1988), Bedürfnis nach Zuwendung (Maio & Esses, 2001), Erkenntnisdrang (Cacioppo & Petty, 1982) und Machtdistanz (Hofstede, 1980) werden bzgl. der Interaktionen, die zur Suche und zum Austausch von Informationen dienen, untersucht. Diese Untersuchungen berücksichtigen theoretische Annahmen und empirische Erkenntnisse, die hier kurz skizziert werden. Das ‚Technology Acceptance Model‘ (TAM) des Psychologen Davis (1989) und das ‚Hyper-Personal Model‘ des Kommunikationswissenschaftlers Walther (1996) liegen den durchgeführten Untersuchungen zugrunde. Mit dem TAM wurde der Einfluss der Eigenschaften eines Lernenden auf Entscheidungen zur Verwendung von E-Learning-Systemen erklärt (Stantchev et al., 2014). Das ‚Hyper-Personal Model‘ skizzierte Ursachen, warum computervermittelte Kommunikation im E-Learning gelingt (Kaye et al., 2016) und wie Lernende online ausgetauschte Nachrichten interpretieren (Hansen et al., 2015). Diesem theoretischen Rahmen folgend, werden empirische Arbeiten umrissen, die die Verwendung von Interaktion, zur Suche und zum Austausch von Informationen als Schlüsselkomponenten des E-Learning beschreiben sowie die Auswahl der zu untersuchenden Eigenschaften der Lernenden rechtfertigten. Aus diesen Arbeiten wurden Ideen für die Messung der Variablen (Kühl et al., 2014) und das Untersuchungsdesign (Dascalau et al., 2015) abgeleitet. Umfragen und Quasi-Experimente wurden hierzu durchgeführt. Diese Instrumente wurden für drei Vorstudien und zwei Hauptstudien verwendet. Probanden wurden aus Deutschland und Ghana ausgewählt, wobei in beiden Ländern die gleichen Variablen getestet wurden. Die Hypothesentestung berücksichtigte Interaktion und Informationssuche und -austausch als abhängige Variablen, während die Überzeugungen bzgl. der Quellen des Wissens, Lernstile, Bedürfnis nach Zuwendung, Erkenntnisdrang und Machtdistanz als unabhängige Variablen dienten. Durchgeführte Varianzanalysen (1.) belegen die Annahme, dass Überzeugungen über die Wissensquelle Einfluss auf die Interaktionswahl der Lernenden haben. Zudem konnte ein Effekt (2.) des Erkenntnisdrangs auf die Wahlentscheidung der Lernenden durch die Ergebnisse einer logistischen Regression unterstützt werden. Des Weiteren (3.) unterstützten die Ergebnisse mehrerer linearer Regressionen den Einfluss des Erkenntnisdrangs und der Machtdistanz auf das Verhalten der Lernenden bezüglich Informationssuche und -austausch. Schließlich (4.) wurde die Wechselbeziehung zwischen Bedürfnis nach Zuwendung und Erkenntnisdrang unterstützt. Die Ergebnisse sind relevant für die medienpsychologische Forschung, Theorien, die in dieser Arbeit verwendet werden, die Untersuchung von E-Learning, die Messung der Merkmale der Lernenden, sowie für die Gestaltung von E-Learning-Plattformen. Die Ergebnisse deuten darauf hin, dass die Überzeugungen der Lernenden über die Wissensquelle, ihr Erkenntnisdrang (NfC) und ihre Machtdistanz, die Entscheidungen, wie sie interagieren und Informationen suchen oder sie auszutauschen, beeinflussen können. Schlußfolgerungen aus der erarbeiteten Theorie und Empirie sowie aus dieser Arbeit befürworten eine stärkere Erforschung der Eigenschaften der Lernenden. Es erscheint darüber hinaus ratsam, dass zukünftige Studien den Zusammenhang zwischen der Autonomie der Lernenden und der Machtdistanz untersuchen. Es werden außerdem weitere Studien zu interkulturellen Ähnlichkeiten zwischen E-Learning-Lernenden in verschiedenen Bevölkerungsgruppen vorgeschlagen. KW - e-learning KW - Individualität KW - E-Learning KW - Media Psychology KW - Interactions KW - Information seeking and sharing KW - information sharing KW - learner characteristics Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-185934 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aistleitner, Karin A1 - Heinz, Christian A1 - Hoermann, Alexandra A1 - Heinz, Eva A1 - Montanaro, Jacqueline A1 - Schulz, Frederik A1 - Maier, Elke A1 - Pichler, Peter A1 - Benz, Roland A1 - Horn, Matthias T1 - Identification and Characterization of a Novel Porin Family Highlights a Major Difference in the Outer Membrane of Chlamydial Symbionts and Pathogens JF - PLoS ONE N2 - The Chlamydiae constitute an evolutionary well separated group of intracellular bacteria comprising important pathogens of humans as well as symbionts of protozoa. The amoeba symbiont Protochlamydia amoebophila lacks a homologue of the most abundant outer membrane protein of the Chlamydiaceae, the major outer membrane protein MOMP, highlighting a major difference between environmental chlamydiae and their pathogenic counterparts. We recently identified a novel family of putative porins encoded in the genome of P. amoebophila by in silico analysis. Two of these Protochlamydia outer membrane proteins, PomS (pc1489) and PomT (pc1077), are highly abundant in outer membrane preparations of this organism. Here we show that all four members of this putative porin family are toxic when expressed in the heterologous host Escherichia coli. Immunofluorescence analysis using antibodies against heterologously expressed PomT and PomS purified directly from elementary bodies, respectively, demonstrated the location of both proteins in the outer membrane of P. amoebophila. The location of the most abundant protein PomS was further confirmed by immuno-transmission electron microscopy. We could show that pomS is transcribed, and the corresponding protein is present in the outer membrane throughout the complete developmental cycle, suggesting an essential role for P. amoebophila. Lipid bilayer measurements demonstrated that PomS functions as a porin with anion-selectivity and a pore size similar to the Chlamydiaceae MOMP. Taken together, our results suggest that PomS, possibly in concert with PomT and other members of this porin family, is the functional equivalent of MOMP in P. amoebophila. This work contributes to our understanding of the adaptations of symbiotic and pathogenic chlamydiae to their different eukaryotic hosts. KW - cell wall KW - protochlamydia amoebophila KW - escherichia coli KW - matrix protein porin KW - gram negative bacteria KW - single channel analysis KW - developmental cycle KW - mycobacterium smegmatis KW - monoclonal antibodies KW - signal peptides Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-131176 VL - 8 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aintablian, Arpa A1 - Strozniak, Sandra A1 - Heuer, Marion A1 - Lutz, Manfred B. T1 - M-MDSC in vitro generation from mouse bone marrow with IL-3 reveals high expression and functional activity of arginase 1 JF - Frontiers in Immunology N2 - Myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSC) represent major regulators of immune responses, which can control T cells via their inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS)- and arginase 1 (Arg1)-mediated effector functions. While GM-CSF is well documented to promote MDSC development, little is known about this potential of IL-3, an established growth factor for mast cells. Here, we show that IL-3, similar to GM-CSF, generates monocytic MDSC (M-MDSC) from murine bone marrow (BM) cells after 3 days of in vitro culture. At this time point, predominantly CD11b+ CD49a+ monocytic and CD11b+ CD49a- FcεR I- neutrophilic cells were detectable, while CD11blow/neg FcεR I+ mast cells accumulated only after extended culture periods. Both growth factors were equivalent in generating M-MDSC with respect to phenotype, cell yield and typical surface markers. However, IL-3 generated M-MDSC produced less TNF, IL-1β and IL-10 after activation with LPS + IFN-γ but showed higher Arg1 expression compared to GM-CSF generated M-MDSC. Arg1 was further induced together with iNOS after MDSC activation. Accordingly, an increased Arg1-dependent suppressor activity by the IL-3 generated M-MDSC was observed using respective iNOS and Arg1 inhibitors. Together, these data indicate that M-MDSC can be generated in vitro by IL-3, similar to GM-CSF, but with increased Arg1 expression and Arg1-mediated suppression capacity. This protocol now allows further in vitro studies on the role of IL-3 for MDSC biology. KW - myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSC) KW - bone marrow KW - IL-3 KW - GM-CSF KW - in vitro culture KW - protocol Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-317769 VL - 14 ER - TY - THES A1 - Aigner, Max T1 - Establishing successful protocols and imaging pipelines for Expansion Microscopy in murine blood platelets T1 - Etablierung erfolgreicher Protokolle zur Probenpräparation und Bildgebung für die ‚Expansion Microscopy‘ in murinen Thrombozyten N2 - Platelets play an important role in the body, since they are part of the hemostasis system, preventing and stopping blood loss. Nevertheless, when platelet or coagulation system function are impaired, uncontrolled bleedings but also irreversible vessel occlusion followed by ischemic tissue damage can occur. Therefore, understanding platelet function and activation, mechanisms which are controlled by a variety of platelet membrane receptors and other factors is important to advance out knowledge of hemostasis and platelet malfunction. For a complete picture of platelet function and their modulating behavior it is desired to be able to quantify receptor distributions and interactions of these densely packed molecular ensembles in the membrane. This challenges scientists for several reasons. Most importantly, platelets are microscopically small objects, challenging the spatial resolution of conventional light microscopy. Moreover, platelet receptors are highly abundant on the membrane so even super-resolution microscopy struggles with quantitative receptor imaging on platelets. With Expansion microscopy (ExM), a new super-resolution technique was introduced, allowing resolutions to achieve super-resolution without using a super-resolution microscope, but by combining a conventional confocal microscopy with a highly processed sample that has been expanded physically. In this doctoral thesis, I evaluated the potential of this technique for super-resolution platelet imaging by optimizing the sample preparation process and establishing an imaging and image processing pipeline for dual-color 3D images of different membrane receptors. The analysis of receptor colocalization using ExM demonstrated a clear superiority compared to conventional microscopy. Furthermore, I identified a library of fluorescently labeled antibodies against different platelet receptors compatible with ExM and showed the possibility of staining membrane receptors and parts of the cytoskeleton at the same time. N2 - Thrombozyten spielen eine wichtige Rolle im Körper, denn als Teil des Gerinnungssystems, sind sie daran beteiligt Blutverlust vorzubeugen und zu stoppen. Gleichwohl können sie bei Störungen des Gerinnungssystems zu unkontrollierbaren Blutungen und auch durch Aggregation zu kardiovaskulären Ereignissen, wie Herzinfarkt und Schlaganfällen führen. Für ein besseres Verständnis von Hämostase und Gerinnungsstörungen ist es deshalb nötig die Funktion und Aktivierung von Thrombozyten zu verstehen, welche durch eine Vielzahl von Membranrezeptoren und anderen Faktoren gesteuert wird. Eine Methode, um weitere Einblicke in diese Prozesse zu bekommen ist die mikroskopische Darstellung von Rezeptorverteilungen auf der Zellmembran und deren Interaktionen. Dies zu realisieren ist aus verschiedenen Gründen anspruchsvoll. Der mikroskopisch kleine Durchmesser der Thrombozyten macht es konventioneller Lichtmikroskopie schwer, einzelne Rezeptoren auf der Membran darzustellen. Außerdem befinden sich sehr viele Rezeptoren dicht gepackt auf der Membran, sodass sogar superhochauflösende Mikroskope Schwierigkeiten haben, die Rezeptoren quantitativ zu beurteilen. Mit ‚Expansion microscopy‘ (ExM) wurde eine relativ junge superhochaufösende Technik auf Thrombozyten angewendet. Diese Technik erreicht Auflösungen vergleichbar mit sogenannten ‚super-resolution‘ Mikroskopen, ohne die Benutzung selbiger, sondern durch die Kombination von konfokaler Mikroskopie mit einer physikalisch expandierten Probe. In dieser Arbeit evaluierte ich das Potential dieser Technik für superhochauflösende Bilder von Thrombozytenrezeptoren und optimierte die Probenvorbereitung, sodass zweifarbige 3D Bilder von verschiedenen Membranrezeptoren möglich waren. Die Ergebnisse der Kolokationsanalyse zeigten einen deutlich vergrößerten Dynamikumfang durch ExM. Außerdem katalogisierte ich fluoreszenzmarkierte Antikörper gegen verschiedene Thrombozyten Rezeptoren bezüglich ihrer Tauglichkeit mit ExM und zeigte, dass es möglich ist Membranrezeptoren und Bestandteile des Zytoskeletts gleichzeitig zu färben. KW - Expansion Microscopy KW - platelets KW - Mikroskopie KW - Microscopy Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-309003 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aido, Ahmed A1 - Zaitseva, Olena A1 - Wajant, Harald A1 - Buzgo, Matej A1 - Simaite, Aiva T1 - Anti-Fn14 antibody-conjugated nanoparticles display membrane TWEAK-like agonism JF - Pharmaceutics N2 - Conventional bivalent IgG antibodies targeting a subgroup of receptors of the TNF superfamily (TNFSF) including fibroblast growth factor-inducible 14 (anti-Fn14) typically display no or only very limited agonistic activity on their own and can only trigger receptor signaling by crosslinking or when bound to Fcγ receptors (FcγR). Both result in proximity of multiple antibody-bound TNFRSF receptor (TNFR) molecules, which enables engagement of TNFR-associated signaling pathways. Here, we have linked anti-Fn14 antibodies to gold nanoparticles to mimic the “activating” effect of plasma membrane-presented FcγR-anchored anti-Fn14 antibodies. We functionalized gold nanoparticles with poly-ethylene glycol (PEG) linkers and then coupled antibodies to the PEG surface of the nanoparticles. We found that Fn14 binding of the anti-Fn14 antibodies PDL192 and 5B6 is preserved upon attachment to the nanoparticles. More importantly, the gold nanoparticle-presented anti-Fn14 antibody molecules displayed strong agonistic activity. Our results suggest that conjugation of monoclonal anti-TNFR antibodies to gold nanoparticles can be exploited to uncover their latent agonism, e.g., for immunotherapeutic applications. KW - Fn14 KW - nanoparticles KW - surface modification KW - drug-delivery KW - anti-TNFRSF receptor (TNFR) antibodies Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-242710 SN - 1999-4923 VL - 13 IS - 7 ER - TY - THES A1 - Aido, Ahmed T1 - Development of anti-TNF antibody-gold nanoparticles (anti-TNF-AuNPs) T1 - Entwicklung von Anti-TNF-Antikörper-Gold-Nanopartikeln N2 - Gold nanoparticles of diameter ca. 60 nm have been synthesized based on Turkevich and Frens protocols. We have demonstrated that the carboxyl-modified gold nanoparticles can be coupled covalently with antibodies (Ab) of interest using the EDC/NHS coupling procedure. Binding studies with Ab-grafted AuNPs and GpL fusion proteins proved that conjugation of AuNPs with antibodies enables immobilization of antibodies with preservation of a significant antigen binding capacity. More importantly, our findings showed that the conjugation of types of anti-TNF receptors antibodies such as anti-Fn14 antibodies (PDL192 and 5B6) (Aido et al., 2021), anti-CD40, anti-4-1BB and anti-TNFR2 with gold nanoparticles confers them with potent agonism. Thus, our results suggest that AuNPs can be utilized as a platform to immobilize anti-TNFR antibodies which, on the one hand, helps to enhance their agonistic activity in comparison to “free” inactive antibodies by mimicking the effect of cell-anchored antibodies or membrane-bound TNF ligands and, on the other hand, allows to develop new generations of drug delivery systems. These constructs are characterized with their biocompatibility and their tunable synthesis process. In a further work part, we combined the benefits of the established system of Ab-AuNPs with materials used widely in the modern biofabrication approaches such as the photo-crosslinked hydrogels, methacrylate-modified gelatin (GelMA), combined with embedded variants of human cell lines. The acquired results demonstrated clearly that the attaching of proteins like antibodies to gold nanoparticles might reduce their release rate from the crosslinked hydrogels upon the very low diffusion of gold nanoparticles from the solid constructs to the surrounding medium yielding long-term local functioning proteins-attached particles. Moreover, our finding suggests that hydrogel-embedded AuNP-immobilized antibodies, e.g. anti-TNFα-AuNPs or anti-IL1-AuNPs enable local inhibitory functions, To sum up, our results demonstrate that AuNPs can act as a platform to attach anti-TNFR antibodies to enhance their agonistic activity by resembling the output of cell-anchoring or membrane bounding. Gold nanoparticles are considered, thus, as promising tool to develop the next generation of drug delivery systems, which may contribute to cancer therapy. On top of that, the embedding of anti-inflammatory-AuNPs in the biofabricated hydrogel presents new innovative strategy of the treatment of autoinflammatory diseases. N2 - Gold-Nanopartikel mit einem Durchmesser von ca. 60 nm wurden auf Basis der Turkevich- und Frens-Protokolle synthetisiert. Bindungsstudien mit Ab-verankerten AuNPs und GpL-Fusionsproteinen haben gezeigt, dass die Konjugation von AuNPs mit Antikörpern die Immobilisierung von Antikörpern mit Erhaltung einer signifikanten Antigenbindungs-Kapazität ermöglicht. Noch wichtiger ist, dass unsere Ergebnisse zeigen, dass die Konjugation von Typen von Antikörpern gegen TNFRs wie anti-Fn14-Antikörper (PDL192 und 5B6), anti-CD40, anti-4-1BB und anti-TNFR2 mit Gold-Nanopartikeln ihnen eine starke agonistische Wirkung verleiht. Unsere Ergebnisse legen nahe, dass AuNPs als Plattform genutzt werden können, um Antikörper gegen TNFR zu immobilisieren, was einerseits dazu beiträgt, ihre agonistische Aktivität im Vergleich zu "freien" inaktiven Antikörpern zu erhöhen, indem sie die Wirkung von zellgebundenen Antikörpern oder membranverankerten TNF-Liganden nachahmen und andererseits die Entwicklung neuer Generationen von Wirkstoffabgabe Systemen ermöglicht. Diese Konstrukte zeichnen sich durch ihre Biokompatibilität und ihren einstellbaren Syntheseprozess aus. In einem weiteren Teil der Arbeit haben wir die Vorteile des etablierten Systems von Ab-AuNPs mit Materialien kombiniert, die in modernen Biofabrikationsansätzen weit verbreitet sind, nämlich Hydrogele, z.b. methacrylatmodifiziertes Gelatine (GelMA), kombiniert mit eingebetteten Varianten von menschlichen Zelllinien. Die erzielten Ergebnisse zeigten deutlich, dass die Anbindung von Proteinen wie Antikörpern an Gold-Nanopartikel ihre Freisetzung aus den vernetzten Hydrogelen reduzieren könnte, da die Diffusion von Gold-Nanopartikeln aus den festen Konstrukten in das umgebende Medium sehr gering ist und so langfristig Konstrukte mit lokalem Proteine load - erzeugt werden können. Darüber hinaus legt unser Befund nahe, dass in das Hydrogel eingebettete AuNP-immobilisierte Antikörper wie Anti-TNFα-AuNPs oder Anti-IL1-AuNPs eine lokal Immunsuppression erlauben. Diese können als vielversprechende Ansätze betrachtet werden, um verschiedene Arten von Autoimmunerkrankungen zu behandeln. Zusammenfassend zeigen unsere Ergebnisse, dass AuNPs als Plattform dienen können, um Anti-TNFR-Antikörper anzubinden und ihre agonistische Aktivität zu erhöhen. Goldnanopartikel werden daher als vielversprechendes Werkzeug zur Entwicklung der nächsten Generation von Wirkstofftransportsystemen angesehen, die zur Krebstherapie beitragen können. Darüber hinaus stellt die Einbettung von entzündungshemmenden-AuNPs in das biofabrizierte Hydrogel eine neue innovative Strategie für die Behandlung von autoinflammatorischen Erkrankungen dar. KW - AuNPs KW - TNF KW - Nanoparticles KW - Antibody KW - Gold Nanoparticles KW - Drug delivery system (DDS) KW - Nanopartikel Y1 - 2024 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-349212 ER - TY - GEN A1 - Aichele, Thorsten A1 - Heurich, Tina A1 - Müller, Noemi A1 - Odenbreit, Carina A1 - Radičević, Jana A1 - Raith, Sarah A1 - Röseler, Christoph A1 - Zaus, Petra T1 - 7 + 4. SEED – Scenarios for the Use of ePortfolios in Digital Learning N2 - The SEED project is developing ePortfolios for teaching at the Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg. ePortfolios make it possible to further develop teaching and learning in a competence-oriented manner and to strengthen the individual reflection aspect of academic studies to support training professional skills. A total of seven use cases were developed. They provide examples of how ePortfolios can be used in university teaching. Four exam variants help to illustrate both subject-specific and reflective components when examining using ePortfolios. KW - ePortfolio KW - action orientation KW - theory-praxis-transfer KW - reflective practice KW - peer-feedback KW - collaborative work KW - Handlungsorientierung Y1 - 2024 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-370091 N1 - Deutsche Ausgabe unter https://doi.org/10.25972/OPUS-37007 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aich, Valentin A1 - Akhundzadah, Noor Ahmad A1 - Knuerr, Alec A1 - Khoshbeen, Ahmad Jamshed A1 - Hattermann, Fred A1 - Paeth, Heiko A1 - Scanlon, Andrew A1 - Paton, Eva Nora T1 - Climate change in Afghanistan deduced from reanalysis and coordinated regional climate downscaling experiment (CORDEX)—South Asia Simulations JF - Climate N2 - Past and the projected future climate change in Afghanistan has been analyzed systematically and differentiated with respect to its different climate regions to gain some first quantitative insights into Afghanistan’s vulnerability to ongoing and future climate changes. For this purpose, temperature, precipitation and five additional climate indices for extremes and agriculture assessments (heavy precipitation; spring precipitation; growing season length (GSL), the Heat Wave Magnitude Index (HWMI); and the Standardized Precipitation Evapotranspiration Index (SPEI)) from the reanalysis data were examined for their consistency to identify changes in the past (data since 1950). For future changes (up to the year 2100), the same parameters were extracted from an ensemble of 12 downscaled regional climate models (RCM) of the Coordinated Regional Climate Downscaling Experiment (CORDEX)-South Asia simulations for low and high emission scenarios (Representative Concentration Pathways 4.5 and 8.5). In the past, the climatic changes were mainly characterized by a mean temperature increase above global level of 1.8 °C from 1950 to 2010; uncertainty with regard to reanalyzed rainfall data limited a thorough analysis of past changes. Climate models projected the temperature trend to accelerate in the future, depending strongly on the global carbon emissions (2006–2050 Representative Concentration Pathways 4.5/8.5: 1.7/2.3 °C; 2006–2099: 2.7/6.4 °C, respectively). Despite the high uncertainty with regard to precipitation projections, it became apparent that the increasing evapotranspiration is likely to exacerbate Afghanistan’s already existing water stress, including a very strong increase of frequency and magnitude of heat waves. Overall, the results show that in addition to the already extensive deficiency in adaptation to current climate conditions, the situation will be aggravated in the future, particularly in regard to water management and agriculture. Thus, the results of this study underline the importance of adequate adaptation to climate change in Afghanistan. This is even truer taking into account that GSL is projected to increase substantially by around 20 days on average until 2050, which might open the opportunity for extended agricultural husbandry or even additional harvests when water resources are properly managed. KW - climate change KW - Afghanistan KW - Coordinated Regional Climate Downscaling Experiment (CORDEX)-South Asia KW - trend analysis KW - Heat Wave Magnitude Index (HWMI) KW - Standardized Precipitation Evapotranspiration Index (SPEI) KW - growing season length (GSL) Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-198024 SN - 2225-1154 VL - 5 IS - 2 ER - TY - THES A1 - Ahrens, Lea Marlen T1 - The Role of Attentional Control and Fear Acquisition and Generalization in Social Anxiety Disorder T1 - Die Rolle von Aufmerksamkeitskontrolle und Furchtlernen und Generalisierung bei Sozialer Angststörung N2 - Although Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD) is one of the most prevalent mental disorders, still little is known about its development and maintenance. Cognitive models assume that deviations in attentional as well as associative learning processes play a role in the etiology of SAD. Amongst others, deficits in inhibitory attentional control as well as aberrations during fear generalization, which have already been observed in other anxiety disorders, are two candidate mechanisms that might contribute to the onset and retention of SAD. However, a review of the literature shows that there is a lack of research relating to these topics. Thus, the aim of the present thesis was to examine in which way individuals with SAD differ from healthy controls regarding attentional control and generalization of acquired fear during the processing of social stimuli. Study 1 tested whether impairment in the inhibitory control of attention is a feature of SAD, and how it might be influenced by emotional expression and gaze direction of an interactional partner. For this purpose, individuals with SAD and healthy controls (HC) participated in an antisaccade task with faces displaying different emotional expressions (angry, neutral and happy) and gaze directions (direct and averted) serving as target stimuli. While the participants performed either pro- or antisaccades in response to the peripherally presented faces, their gaze behavior was recorded via eye-tracking, and ratings of valence and arousal were obtained. Results revealed that both groups showed prolonged latencies and increased error rates in trials with correct anti- compared to prosaccades. However, there were no differences between groups with regard to response latency or error rates, indicating that SAD patients did not exhibit impairment on inhibitory attentional control in comparison to HC during eye-tracking. Possible explanations for this finding could be that reduced inhibitory attentional control in SAD only occurs under certain circumstances, for example, when these individuals currently run the risk of being negatively evaluated by others and not in the mere presence of phobic stimuli, or when the cognitive load of a task is so high that it cannot be unwound by compensatory strategies, such as putting more effort into a task. As not only deviations in attentional, but also associative learning processes might be pathogenic markers of SAD, these mechanisms were further addressed in the following experiments. Study 2 is the first that attempted to investigate the generalization of conditioned fear in patients with SAD. To this end, patients with SAD and HC were conditioned to two neutral female faces serving as conditioned stimuli (CS+: reinforced; CS-: non-reinforced) and a fearful face paired with a loud scream serving as unconditioned stimulus (US). Fear generalization was tested by presenting morphs of the two faces (GS: generalization stimuli), which varied in their similarity to the original faces. During the whole experiment, self-report ratings, heart rate (HR) and skin conductance responses (SCR) were recorded. Results demonstrated that SAD patients rated all stimuli as less pleasant and more arousing, and overestimated the occurrence of the US compared to HC, indicating a general hyperarousal in individuals with SAD. In addition, ratings and SCR indicated that both groups generalized their acquired fear from the CS+ to intermediate GSs as a function of their similarity to the CS+. However, except for the HR data, which indicated that only SAD patients but not HC displayed a generalization response in this measure, most of the results did not support the hypothesis that SAD is characterized by overgeneralization. A plausible reason for this finding could be that overgeneralization is just a key characteristic of some anxiety disorders and SAD is not one of them. Still, other factors, such as comorbidities in the individuals with SAD, could also have had an influence on the results, which is why overgeneralization was further examined in study 3. The aim of study 3 was to investigate fear generalization on a neuronal level. Hence, high (HSA) and low socially anxious participants (LSA) underwent a conditioning paradigm, which was an adaption of the experimental design used study 2 for EEG. During the experiment, steady-state visually evoked potentials (ssVEPs) and ratings of valence and arousal were recorded. Analyses revealed significant generalization gradients in all ratings with highest fear responses to the CS+ and a progressive decline of these reactions with increasing similarity to the CS-. In contrast, the generalization gradient on a neuronal level showed highest amplitudes for the CS+ and a reduction in amplitude to the most proximal, but not distal GSs in the ssVEP signal, which might be interpreted as lateral inhibition in the visual cortex. The observed dissociation among explicit and implicit measures points to different functions of behavioral and sensory cortical processes during fear generalization: While the ratings might reflect an individual’s consciously increased readiness to react to threat, the lateral inhibition pattern in the occipital cortex might serve to maximize the contrast among stimuli with and without affective value and thereby improve adaptive behavior. As no group differences could be observed, the finding of study 2 that overgeneralization does not seem to be a marker of SAD is further consolidated. In sum, the conducted experiments suggest that individuals with SAD are characterized by a general hyperarousal during the exposition to disorder-relevant stimuli as indicated by enhanced arousal and reduced valence ratings of the stimuli compared to HC. However, the hypotheses that reduced inhibitory attentional control and overgeneralization of conditioned fear are markers of SAD were mostly not confirmed. Further research is required to elucidate whether they only occur under certain circumstances, such as high cognitive load (e.g. handling two tasks simultaneously) or social stress (e.g. before giving a speech), or whether they are not characteristics of SAD at all. With the help of these findings, new interventions for the treatment of SAD can be developed, such as attentional bias modification or discrimination learning. N2 - Obwohl die Soziale Angststörung (SAS) eine der häufigsten psychischen Erkrankungen ist, ist über ihre Entstehung und Aufrechterhaltung noch wenig bekannt. Kognitive Modelle nehmen an, dass Abweichungen sowohl in Aufmerksamkeits- als auch assoziativen Lernprozessen eine Rolle bei ihrer Entwicklung spielen. Unter anderem werden Defizite in der Aufmerksamkeitskontrolle sowie Abweichungen während der Generalisierung von konditionierter Furcht als für die Ätiologie potentiell bedeutsame Faktoren gehandelt, da diese Auffälligkeiten bereits bei anderen Angststörungen beobachtet wurden. Eine Literaturübersicht zeigt jedoch, dass zu dieser Thematik ein Mangel an Forschung besteht. Das Ziel der vorliegenden Doktorarbeit war es daher zu untersuchen, auf welche Weise sich Individuen mit Sozialer Angststörung bei der Verarbeitung sozialer Stimuli von gesunden Kontrollprobanden in Hinblick auf ihre Aufmerksamkeitskontrolle und die Generalisierung gelernter Furchtreaktionen unterscheiden. Studie 1 testete, ob das Vorliegen einer Beeinträchtigung der inhibitorischen Aufmerksamkeitskontrolle ein Merkmal der SAS ist, und auf welche Weise diese vom emotionalen Gesichtsausdruck sowie der Blickrichtung von Interaktionspartnern beeinflusst werden kann. Zu diesem Zweck nahmen Patienten mit SAS und eine gesunde Kontrollgruppe (KG) an einer Antisakkaden-Aufgabe teil, bei welcher Gesichter mit unterschiedlichem emotionalen Ausdruck (wütend, neutral und fröhlich) und unterschiedlicher Blickrichtung (direkter und abgewandter Blick) als Stimuli dienten. Während die Probanden in Abhängigkeit eines Hinweisreizes entweder Pro- oder Antisakkaden in Reaktion auf die peripher präsentierten Gesichter ausübten, wurde ihr Blickverhalten mittels Eye-Tracking aufgezeichnet. Außerdem wurden anschließend Valenz- und Arousal-Ratings der Stimuli erfasst. Die Ergebnisse zeigten, dass beide Gruppen erhöhte Latenzzeiten sowie Fehlerraten in Durchgängen mit korrekt ausgeführten Antisakkaden im Vergleich zu Prosakkaden aufwiesen. Jedoch gab es keinen Gruppenunterschied in Bezug auf die Antwortlatenz und Fehlerrate, was darauf hindeutet, dass Patienten mit SAS im Vergleich zur KG kein Defizit der inhibitorischen Aufmerksamkeitskontrolle während des Eye-Trackings erkennen ließen. Eine mögliche Ursache für diesen Befund könnte sein, dass eine reduzierte inhibitorische Aufmerksamkeitskontrolle bei SAS nur unter bestimmten Umständen auftritt, beispielsweise, wenn betroffene Individuen akut Gefahr laufen von anderen negativ bewertet zu werden, und nicht bloß phobischen Stimuli ausgesetzt sind, oder wenn die kognitive Belastung durch eine Aufgabe so groß ist, dass sie nicht durch kompensatorische Strategien, wie beispielsweise mehr Anstrengung, ausgeglichen werden kann. Da nicht nur abweichende Aufmerksamkeitsprozesse, sondern auch abweichende assoziative Lernprozesse pathogene Marker von SAS sein könnten, wurden letztere in den folgenden Experimenten genauer untersucht. Studie 2 stellt den ersten Versuch dar die Generalisierung konditionierter Furcht in Patienten mit SAS zu erforschen. Hierfür wurden sowohl SAS Patienten als auch eine KG auf zwei neutrale, weibliche Gesichter konditioniert, welche als Konditionierungsstimuli (conditioned stimuli [CS]: CS+: verstärkt; CS-: unverstärkt) dienten. Bei dem unkonditionierten Stimulus (unconditioned stimulus [US]) handelte es sich um die bereits bekannten Gesichter mit ängstlichem Ausdruck, die mit einem lauten Schrei gepaart wurden. Die Furchtgeneralisierung wurde mittels der Präsentation von Gesichtern, welche aus den beiden Ursprungsgesichtern gemorpht worden waren und als Generalisierungsstimuli (generalization stimuli [GS]) dienten, getestet. Während des Experiments wurden Selbstauskunftsratings sowie Herzrate (heart rate [HR]) und Hautleitfähigkeit (skin conductance response [SCR]) aufgezeichnet. Die Ergebnisse zeigten, dass Patienten mit SAS im Vergleich zur KG alle Stimuli als unangenehmer und aufregender bewerteten sowie die Auftretenswahrscheinlichkeit des US überschätzten, was auf eine generelle Übererregung in Individuen mit SAS hinweist. Darüber hinaus ergaben die Ergebnisse, dass beide Gruppen ihre erworbene Furcht vom CS+ in Abhängigkeit ihrer Ähnlichkeit mit dem CS+ auf intermediäre GSs übertrugen. Allerdings stützen abgesehen von den Daten der Herzrate, in denen nur SAS Patienten und nicht die KG eine Generalisierungsreaktion zeigten, die meisten Befunde nicht die Hypothese, dass Übergeneralisierung ein Merkmal von SAS ist. Eine mögliche Ursache dieses Ergebnisses könnte sein, dass Übergeneralisierung nur ein wichtiges Merkmal einiger bestimmter Angststörungen ist und SAS nicht zu ihnen gehört. Dennoch könnten auch andere Faktoren, wie beispielsweise die Komorbiditäten der untersuchten SAS Patienten, einen Einfluss auf die Ergebnisse gehabt haben. Aus diesem Grund wurde Übergeneralisierung in Studie 3 näher untersucht. Das Ziel von Studie 3 war es Furchtgeneralisierung auf neuronaler Ebene zu untersuchen. Folglich wurde das Paradigma der zweiten Studie an einen Versuchsplan, der für die Messung von neuronaler Aktivität mittels EEG geeignet war, angepasst und auf eine hoch (high socially anxious [HSA])- sowie eine niedrig sozialängstliche Gruppe (low socially anxious [LSA]) angewandt. Während des Experiments wurden sowohl steady-state visually evoked potentials (ssVEPs) als auch Valenz- und Arousal-Ratings erfasst. Die Analyse ergab signifikante Generalisierungsgradienten in allen Ratings mit der höchsten Furchtreaktion auf den CS+ und einem fortschreitenden Abfall der Reaktion auf die GSs mit zunehmender Ähnlichkeit zum CS-. Im Gegensatz dazu zeigte sich in der ssVEP-Amplitude ein anderes Muster: hier erreichte der Generalisierungsgradient zwar auch die höchste Amplitude in Reaktion auf den CS+, jedoch eine anschließende Reduktion der Amplitude auf den nächst proximalen, nicht jedoch distale GS, was ein Hinweis auf laterale Hemmungsprozesse im visuellen Kortex sein könnte. Die beobachtete Dissoziation zwischen expliziten und impliziten Maßen könnte auf unterschiedliche Funktionen von behavioralen und sensorischen kortikalen Prozessen während der Generalisierung von Furcht hinweisen: Während die Ratings möglicherweise die bewusste Bereitschaft eines Individuums auf Bedrohung zu reagieren widerspiegeln, könnte das Muster lateraler Hemmung im okzipitalen Kortex dazu dienen den Kontrast zwischen Stimuli mit und ohne affektivem Wert zu maximieren und somit adaptives Verhalten verbessern. Da zwischen beiden Gruppen keine signifikanten Unterschiede gefunden wurden, untermauerte Studie 3 das Ergebnis von Studie 2, welches bereits eher dagegen sprach, dass Übergeneralisierung von Furcht ein Merkmal von Individuen mit SAS sei. Insgesamt suggerieren die Ergebnisse der durchgeführten Studien, dass Individuen mit SAS während der Exposition von störungsspezifischen Reizen im Vergleich zu Kontrollprobanden durch eine generelle Übererregung gekennzeichnet sind, was an erhöhten Arousal- und verringerten Valenz-Ratings erkennbar war. Jedoch konnten die Hypothesen, dass reduzierte Aufmerksamkeitskontrolle sowie Übergeneralisierung Merkmale von Individuen mit SAS sind, zum größten Teil nicht bestätigt werden. Weitere Forschung ist nötig um herauszufinden, ob diese Phänomene nur unter besonderen äußeren Umständen, wie beispielsweise hohen kognitiven Anforderungen (e.g. bei der Bearbeitung zweier Aufgaben gleichzeitig) oder sozialem Stress (e.g. vor dem Halten einer Rede), auftreten, oder ob sie gar kein Merkmal von SAS darstellen. Mit Hilfe der sich daraus ergebenden Befunde könnten neue Interventionen für die Behandlung von SAS entwickelt werden, wie beispielsweise Aufmerksamkeitsbias-Modifikations-Trainings oder Diskriminationslernen. KW - Sozialangst KW - Aufmerksamkeit KW - social anxiety KW - fear generalization KW - visual attention KW - Psychologie KW - Visuelle Aufmerksamkeit KW - Aversive Konditionierung Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-171622 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ahmed, Zeeshan A1 - Zeeshan, Saman A1 - Huber, Claudia A1 - Hensel, Michael A1 - Schomburg, Dietmar A1 - Münch, Richard A1 - Eylert, Eva A1 - Eisenreich, Wolfgang A1 - Dandekar, Thomas T1 - ‘Isotopo’ a database application for facile analysis and management of mass isotopomer data JF - Database N2 - The composition of stable-isotope labelled isotopologues/isotopomers in metabolic products can be measured by mass spectrometry and supports the analysis of pathways and fluxes. As a prerequisite, the original mass spectra have to be processed, managed and stored to rapidly calculate, analyse and compare isotopomer enrichments to study, for instance, bacterial metabolism in infection. For such applications, we provide here the database application ‘Isotopo’. This software package includes (i) a database to store and process isotopomer data, (ii) a parser to upload and translate different data formats for such data and (iii) an improved application to process and convert signal intensities from mass spectra of \(^{13}C\)-labelled metabolites such as tertbutyldimethylsilyl-derivatives of amino acids. Relative mass intensities and isotopomer distributions are calculated applying a partial least square method with iterative refinement for high precision data. The data output includes formats such as graphs for overall enrichments in amino acids. The package is user-friendly for easy and robust data management of multiple experiments. KW - stable-isotope Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-120102 VL - 2014 IS - bau077 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ahmed, Zeeshan A1 - Zeeshan, Saman A1 - Dandekar, Thomas T1 - Mining biomedical images towards valuable information retrieval in biomedical and life sciences JF - Database - The Journal of Biological Databases and Curation N2 - Biomedical images are helpful sources for the scientists and practitioners in drawing significant hypotheses, exemplifying approaches and describing experimental results in published biomedical literature. In last decades, there has been an enormous increase in the amount of heterogeneous biomedical image production and publication, which results in a need for bioimaging platforms for feature extraction and analysis of text and content in biomedical images to take advantage in implementing effective information retrieval systems. In this review, we summarize technologies related to data mining of figures. We describe and compare the potential of different approaches in terms of their developmental aspects, used methodologies, produced results, achieved accuracies and limitations. Our comparative conclusions include current challenges for bioimaging software with selective image mining, embedded text extraction and processing of complex natural language queries. KW - humans KW - software KW - image processing KW - animals KW - computer-assisted KW - data mining/methods KW - natural language processing Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-162697 VL - 2016 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ahmed, Bilal A1 - Ojha, Animesh K. A1 - Hirsch, Florian A1 - Fischer, Ingo A1 - Patrice, Donfack A1 - Materny, Arnulf T1 - Tailoring of enhanced interfacial polarization in WO\(_3\) nanorods grown over reduced graphene oxide synthesized by a one-step hydrothermal method JF - RSC Advances N2 - In the present report, well-defined WO3 nanorods (NRs) and a rGO–WO\(_3\) composite were successfully synthesized using a one-pot hydrothermal method. The crystal phase, structural morphology, shape, and size of the as-synthesized samples were studied using X-ray diffraction (XRD) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) measurements. The optical properties of the synthesized samples were investigated by Raman, ultraviolet-visible (UV-Vis) and photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy. Raman spectroscopy and TEM results validate the formation of WO\(_3\) (NRs) on the rGO sheet. The value of the dielectric constant (ε′) of WO3 NRs and rGO–WO\(_3\) composite is decreased with an increase in frequency. At low frequency (2.5 to 3.5 Hz), the value of ε′ for the rGO–WO3 composite is greater than that of pure WO\(_3\) NRs. This could be due to the fact that the induced charges follow the ac signal. However, at higher frequency (3.4 to 6.0), the value of ε′ for the rGO–WO\(_3\) composite is less compared to that of the pure WO3 NRs. The overall decrease in the value of ε′ could be due to the occurrence of a polarization process at the interface of the rGO sheet and WO3 NRs. Enhanced interfacial polarization in the rGO–WO\(_3\) composite is observed, which may be attributed to the presence of polar functional groups on the rGO sheet. These functional groups trap charge carriers at the interface, resulting in an enhancement of the interfacial polarization. The value of the dielectric modulus is also calculated to further confirm this enhancement. The values of the ac conductivity of the WO\(_3\) NRs and rGO–WO\(_3\) composite were calculated as a function of the frequency. The greater value of the ac conductivity in the rGO–WO\(_3\) composite compared to that of the WO\(_3\) NRs confirms the restoration of the sp:\(^{++}\) network during the in situ synthesis of the rGO–WO\(_3\) composite, which is well supported by the results obtained by Raman spectroscopy. KW - chemistry Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-181829 VL - 7 IS - 23 ER - TY - THES A1 - Ahmed, Arabe T1 - Assessing particle deposition in a representative in vitro model of the rat respiratory tract T1 - Entwicklung eines in vitro Modells (IVR) der Rattenlunge für die Untersuchung der Deposition von Wirkstoffpartikeln in den Atemwegen der Ratte N2 - The aim of this thesis was to develop an in vitro model (IVR) of the rat lung for the purpose of investigating the deposition of drug particles in the rat airways. The model attempted to account for the affect of drug product characteristics and physiological parameters on deposition in the lungs. In addition, the model outputs were compared with in vivo lung deposition results from live rats and in silico predictions using published computer model of lung deposition in pre-clinical species. Initial work focussed on developing an aerosol exposure system capable of dosing small rodent to a range of airborne test materials. The system consists of two main parts; a fluidised bed aerosol generator and connection of the generator output to a nose only exposure chamber capable of accommodating 12 small animals in a single layer. In addition, an aerodynamic particle spectrometer (APS) was installed for continuously measuring the size distribution and airborne concentration of aerosol particles generated in the exposure chamber. System validation showed acceptable degree of variation of the test material tested, Fluorescent Microspheres (FMS) throughout the exposure chamber (CV < 15.0%). Particle size (MMAD ± GSD) using the APS was shown to be stable throughout the exposure periods. The IVR model developed in this project was based on a number of euthanased (n=7), female Sprague-Dawley rats (weight: 372 ± 56 g), which underwent high-resolution micro-CT scans. The physical model consisted of five sub sections; Extra-Thoracic region containing the snout and nasophyarynx, trachea-bronchial region containing the trachea, bronchi, and bronchioles. All sections of the model were attached to one another in numerical order and housed within a containment unit. At the rear end of the cast, a flexible diaphragm was attached in order to collect the fraction of inhaled particles exiting the TB section and possibly reaching the lung, referred to as the Post-TB section. A study was conducted to assess the influence of inhalation parameters such as the breathing frequency and tidal volume on total and regional dose distribution using FMS as test material. The major finding of this study was the demonstration of the model sensitivity to changes in breathing parameters especially respiratory frequency, where the data showed increased deposition in the peripheral regions of the model with decreased respiratory frequency. Other studies assessed the effect of particle characteristics on deposition on the IVR model, such as particle size, dose increase and formulation changes. The results assessing particle size effect showed a slightly higher deposition levels for the 4µm sized particles versus 2µm sized particles in the head region; 90.8 ± 3.6% and 88.2 ± 6.6%. However, this difference did not reach statistical significance (P> 0.05) probably due to the polydispersity of aerosolised FMS particles. In addition, the regional deposition analysis showed an increased lung peripheral deposition with the smaller particles. In addition, the model was shown to be sensitive to changes in formulation composition mediated by inclusion of MgSt. The next stage of work was to validate the model in terms of comparison with lung deposition for in vivo rats. For lung deposition comparison, the absolute amount deposited in the IVR lung model (expressed as µg/kg) was shown to have a reasonably strong correlation with in vivo lung concentration measures (µg/kg); R2= 0.66, P < 0.05. Compounds were predicted well and within 2-folds of the measured lung deposition values. However, knowing the variability in biological systems and the multiple components required to estimate lung doses, predictions within 2-fold of the measured values would seem reasonable In terms of comparison with in silico model predictions using MPPD, similar deposition levels were noted between the two models, particularly when the data was expressed as percentage of total particles inhaled. The data showed the highest deposition levels were noted in the head region (> 80%) and less than 5.0% deposition for the peripheral lung fractions. With regards to using the IVR model to assess the relationship between dose, particle size and efficacy, an in vivo study using FP with different particle sizes (2.0 and 4.0 µm) but same doses ( 100 and 1000 µg/kg). This study demonstrated that exposure of rat to FP powder resulted in a dose-dependent inhibition of neutrophils in BAL fluids. However, a clear difference in neutrophils suppression was demonstrated for equivalent doses but different particle sizes of FP, where the smaller FP particles (2.0 µm) induced a greater level of neutrophils suppression in comparison with larger FP particles (4.0 µm). In addition, a reasonably good correlation for the relationship between lung deposition in the IVR model and a neutrophils suppression level was demonstrated. Furthermore this data support the hypothesis that regional deposition is an important determinant in efficacy. Therefore, this suggests that the IVR model may be a useful as a tool to describe in vivo efficacy with in vitro data. However, further studies should be conducted to evaluate the validity of this model and relationship. The IVR model has a number of important limitations. First, the model is based on scans up to generation four of the rat respiratory tract as this represented the limits of the micro-CT scanning technology at the time of this study. Therefore deposition in the deeper region of the lung may not be reflected precisely in the IVR model. Second, the regional deposition data generated using the model tended to show an overestimation of deposition in head region and an underestimation of deposition in the peripheral regions of the lung, in comparison with in vivo lung deposition data. Third, the current model does not take into account lung clearance. However, the amount of the drug present in the in vivo lungs is dependent on numerous physiological processes such as dissolution, passive or active absorption into the systemic circulation, binding to lung tissue and mucociliary clearance. Consequently, the results generated using this IVR model for drug molecules with high lung clearance rate should be treated with some caution. Future work extending this research could go in a number of directions. In this research, a representative model of the rat respiratory tract was constructed from analysis of imaging data from a number of euthanised Sprague-Dawley rats. This model represented the “average respiratory tract” in terms of dimensions of Sprague-Dawley rats. However, there is considerable variability in the airway dimensions between rats. This variability encompasses a number of factors such as the strains of rats, sex and age, and disease state. Thus, it may be possible to produce a small number of airway models to represent small and large rats and scaled to represent the extrathoracic and peripheral regions based on literature reports of their dimensions in different rat populations. This approach will then enable the effect of intersubject airway dimensions for different rat populations on aerosol deposition to be thoroughly examined. In addition, due to the limitation of the micro-CT technology used to construct the physical IVR model, detailed morphology only up to generation 4 were captured. However, recent advances in MRI technology, such as the use of in situ-MRI based scanning technology have enabled rat airway morphometry to be extended to 16 airway generation. This coupled with improvements in the resolutions of rapid-prototyping process means it may be possible to construct a rat model that reflects the in vivo lung morphology more accurately, and thus enable greater understanding of the link between aerosol deposition and airway geometry. In conclusion, a model cast of the rat lung was developed and validated to allow the deposition of inhaled particles in the rat lung to be investigated. The model may be used to estimate the lung concentration in vivo rats in preference to exposure concentration measurements based on filter samples which have been shown to be a poor indicator of the lung concentration immediately after exposure. In addition, the model has the potential to be used along with live rats in an inhalation rig in pulmonary pharmaceutics research and may facilitate in development of inhaled formulations to target specific regions within the lung as well as screening of inhaled drugs in preclinical setting. N2 - Das Ziel dieser Arbeit war es, ein in vitro Modell (IVR) der Rattenlunge für die Untersuchung der Deposition von Wirkstoffpartikeln in den Atemwegen der Ratte zu entwickeln. Das Modell sollte dabei den Einfluss der Arzneistoffeigenschaften und physiologischer Parameter auf die pulmonale Deposition berücksichtigen. Darüber hinaus wurden die Modellergebnisse mit in vivo Daten aus Versuchen mit Ratten und in silico Vorhersagen eines etablierten Computermodells der Partikeldeposition in präklinischen Spezies verglichen. Erste Arbeiten konzentrierten sich auf die Entwicklung eines Aerosol-Expositionssystems, das in der Lage war, kleine Nagetiere einer Reihe von inhalativ verabreichten Testmaterialien auszusetzen. Das System bestand aus zwei Hauptteilen, einem Wirbelbett-Aerosolgenerator und einer Verabreichungskammer, die eine nasale Partikelexposition und –inhalation („Nose only Inhalation“) bei 12 Kleintieren auf einer Etage ermöglichte. Darüber hinaus wurde ein aerodynamisches Partikelspektrometer (APS) zur kontinuierlichen Messung der Größenverteilung und Konzentration der erzeugten Aerosolpartikel eingebaut. Die Systemvalidierung zeigte einen akzeptablen Grad der Variabilität des Testmaterials, Fluoreszenz-Mikrosphären (FMS), in der gesamten Expositionskammer (VK < 15,0%). Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass die aerodynamische Partikelgröße (MMAD ± GSD) der APS über die Expositionszeiten konstant blieb. Das IVR-Modell, das in diesem Projekt entwickelt wurde, basierte auf einer Anzahl euthanasierter, weiblicher Sprague-Dawley-Ratten (Gewicht: 372 ± 56 g), die hochauf¬lösenden Mikro-CT-Scans unterzogen wurden. Das physikalische Modell gliederte sich in fünf Teilabschnitte, dem extrathorakalen Bereich bestehend aus der Schnauze und dem Nasopharynx, und dem tracheo-bronchialen Bereich (TB), der die Luftröhre, Bronchien und Bronchiolen umfasste. Alle Abschnitte des Modells wurden miteinander in numerische Reihenfolge gebracht und innerhalb einer Behältereinheit untergebracht. Am hinteren Ende des Gusses wurde eine flexible Membran angebracht, um den Anteil der inhalierten Partikel, der den TB-Abschnitt verlässt und möglicherweise die Lunge erreicht, zu sammeln. Dieses wurde als Post-TB-Anteil bezeichnet. Eine Untersuchung sollte zeigen, welchen Einfluss Inhalationsparameter wie die Atem¬frequenz und –volumen auf die gesamte und regionale Dosisverteilung der FMS als Test¬material hatten. Das wichtigste Ergebnis dieser Studie war der Nachweis, dass das Modell empfindlich gegenüber Änderungen in der Respirationsparameter, vor allem der Atem¬frequenz, war. Die Daten zeigten, dass es unter verminderter Atemfrequenz zu einer verstärkten Partikeldeposition in den peripheren Modellbereichen kam. In weiteren Versuchsansätzen wurden die Wirkung von Partikeleigenschaften, wie Partikelgröße, Dosiserhöhung und Formulierungsänderungen auf die Deposition in dem IVR-Modell ermittelt. Die Ergebnisse der Untersuchung des Partikelgrößeneffektes zeigten eine etwas höhere Deposition der 4 µm großen Partikel, verglichen mit den 2 µm Partikeln, im Kopfbereich, 90,8 ± 3,6% bzw. 88,2 ± 6,6%. Allerdings war dieser Unterschied statistisch nicht signifikant (P > 0,05), wahrscheinlich aufgrund der Polydispersität der FMS-Aerosolpartikel. Darüber hinaus zeigte die Analyse der regionalen Verteilung eine erhöhte periphere Lungendeposition bei kleineren Partikeln. Zudem war das Modell empfindlich gegenüber Veränderungen in der Formulierungszusammensetzung durch Zugabe von Magnesium¬stearat. In nächsten Schritt sollte das Modell in Bezug auf den Vergleich mit der Lungendeposition bei Ratten in vivo validiert werden. Es zeigte sich, dass die absolut im IVR-Lungenmodell deponierte Menge (ausgedrückt in µg/kg) eine annehmbar starke Korrelation mit in vivo Daten (µg/kg) aufwies; R2 = 0,66, p < 0,05. Substanzen konnten gut innerhalb des 2-fachen Bereiches der gemessenen Lungendepositionsrate vorhergesagt werden. Angesichts der bekannt hohen Variabilität in biologischen Systemen und der Komplexität der Schätzung der Lungendeposition erscheinen Schwankungen der Vorhersagen innerhalb des 2-fachen Bereiches der tatsächlichen Werte akzeptabel. Der Vergleich der in silico Vorhersagen mit den IVR-Resultaten zeigte ähnliche Depositions¬raten in beiden Modellen, insbesondere dann, wenn die Daten als Prozentsatz der insgesamt inhalierten Partikel ausgedrückt wurden. Die höchste Deposition fand im Kopfbereich (> 80%) statt und weniger als 5,0 % der Partikel erreichte den peripheren Lungenbereich. Das IVR-Modell wurde nachfolgend auch in einer in vivo Studie mit Fluticasonpropionat (FP) eingesetzt, um die Beziehung zwischen der Dosis, Partikelgröße und Wirksamkeit unterschiedlicher Teilchengrößen (2,0 und 4,0 µm) bei gleichen Dosen (100 und 1000 µg/kg) zu beurteilen. Diese Studie zeigte eine dosisabhängige Hemmung der Neutrophilen in der bronchoalveolären Lavage. Es wurde jedoch ein deutlicher Unterschied in der Neutrophilensuppression unter äquivalenten Dosen unterschiedlicher Partikelgrößen beobachtet. Kleinere Partikel (2,0 µm) von FP hemmten die Neutrophilen stärker als die größeren FP-Partikel (4,0 µm). Darüber hinaus konnte eine recht gute Korrelation zwischen der Lungendepositionsrate im IVR-Modell und der Neutrophilensuppression gezeigt werden. Diese Daten unterstützen die Hypothese, dass die regionale Deposition eine wichtige Determinante der Wirksamkeit ist. Die Ergebnisse legen die mögliche Eignung des IVR-Modells als Hilfsmittel zur Beschreibung der in vivo Effektivität, ausgehend von in vitro Daten, nahe. Allerdings sollten weitere Studien durchgeführt werden, um die Valididtät dieses Modells und der gefundenen Beziehung zu bestätigen. Das IVR-Modell hat eine Reihe von wichtigen Einschränkungen. Erstens basiert das Modell auf Scans lediglich bis zu vierten Generation der Atemwege, was zum Zeitpunkt dieser Studie die Grenze der Mikro-CT-Scan-Technik darstellte. Daher wird in dem IVR-Modell eine Deposition in tieferen Bereichen der Lunge nicht präzise beschrieben. Zweitens zeigten die regionalen Depositionsdaten, die unter Verwendung des Modells ermittelt wurden, im Vergleich zu in vivo Ergebnissen eine Überschätzung der Deposition im Kopfbereich und eine Unterschätzung der Deposition in den peripheren Regionen der Lunge. Drittens berücksichtigt das Modell nicht die Clearance des Arzneistoffes. Die Arzneistoffkonzentration in der Lunge hängt in vivo von zahlreichen physiologischen Prozessen ab, wie Auflösung, aktive und passive Absorption in den systemischen Kreislauf, die Bindung an das Lungengewebe und mukoziliäre Clearance. Daher sollten die Ergebnisse, die unter Verwendung dieses IVR-Modells gewonnen werden, für Wirkstoff¬moleküle mit hoher Clearance-Rate mit einer gewissen Vorsicht behandelt werden. Zukünftige weiterführende Arbeiten könnten in eine Reihe von Richtungen gehen. In der vorliegenden Untersuchung wurde ein repräsentatives Modell des Rattenrespirationstraktes aus der Analyse der Bilddaten mehrerer anästhesierter Sprague-Dawley-Ratten erstellt. Dieses Modell repräsentiert die "durchschnittlichen Atemwege " in Bezug auf Abmessungen der Sprague-Dawley-Ratten. Es gibt jedoch eine beträchtliche Variabilität basierend auf einer Reihe von Faktoren wie den Rattenstamm, Geschlecht, Alter und Krankheitszustand. Es wäre möglich, mehrere verschiedene Atemwegsmodelle zu erstellen, um kleine und große Ratten zu repräsentieren. Es könnten, basierend auf Literaturangaben, die extra¬thorakalen und peripheren Regionen in ihren Abmessungen skaliert werden, um verschiedenen Rattenpopulationen zu repräsentieren. Dieser Ansatz würde dann die detaillierte Untersuchung des Einflusses interindividueller Unterschiede der Atemwegs¬dimensionen verschiedener Rattenpopulationen auf die Aerosoldeposition ermöglichen. Aufgrund der Beschränkung der Mikro-CT-Technologie, die eingesetzt wurde, um das IVR-Modell zu erstellen, konnte eine detaillierte Morphologie nur bis zur vierten Atemwegs¬generation abgebildet werden. Jüngste Fortschritte in der MRI-Technologie, wie die in situ MRI-Scan-Technologie, ermöglichen die Erfassung der Atemwegsmorphometrie bis zu 16 Atemwegsgenerationen. Dieser Ansatz, in Verbindung mit Verbesserungen in den räumlichen Auflösungen der „Rapid-Prototyping“-Verfahren, könnte die Konstruktion eines Rattenmodells ermöglichen, das die in vivo Lungenmorphologie genauer widerspiegelt, und so zu einem besseren Verständnis für den Zusammenhang zwischen Aerosoldeposition und Atemwegsgeometrie führen. Zusammenfassend lässt sich sagen, dass in der vorliegenden Arbeit ein Modellguss der Rattenlunge entwickelt und validiert wurde, um die Untersuchung der Deposition von inhalierten Partikel in der Rattenlunge zu ermöglichen. Das Modell kann verwendet werden, um die in vivo Lungenkonzentrationen von Arzneistoffen in Ratten abzuschätzen. Es bietet Vorteile gegenüber der Expositionsabschätzung auf der Basis von Filterproben, die ein schlechter Indikator der Lungenkonzentrationen unmittelbar nach der Exposition sind. Darüber hinaus hat das Modell das Potenzial, zusammen mit lebenden Ratten in einer Inhalationskammer in der Forschung verwendet zu werden und könnte in der Entwicklung von inhalativen Formulierungen erleichtern, die in bestimmten Regionen innerhalb der Lunge deponiert werden sollen. Darüber hinaus ermöglicht das Modell ein Screening inhalativ verabreichter Arzneistoffe in der präklinischen Phase. KW - In vitro rat KW - Ratte KW - in silico models KW - lung KW - deposition KW - Atemwege KW - In vitro KW - Wirkstoff KW - Inhalation Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-104912 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ahmad, Ruhel A1 - Wolber, Wanja A1 - Eckardt, Sigrid A1 - Koch, Philipp A1 - Schmitt, Jessica A1 - Semechkin, Ruslan A1 - Geis, Christian A1 - Heckmann, Manfred A1 - Brüstle, Oliver A1 - McLaughlin, John K. A1 - Sirén, Anna-Leena A1 - Müller, Albrecht M. T1 - Functional Neuronal Cells Generated by Human Parthenogenetic Stem Cells JF - PLoS One N2 - Parent of origin imprints on the genome have been implicated in the regulation of neural cell type differentiation. The ability of human parthenogenetic (PG) embryonic stem cells (hpESCs) to undergo neural lineage and cell type-specific differentiation is undefined. We determined the potential of hpESCs to differentiate into various neural subtypes. Concurrently, we examined DNA methylation and expression status of imprinted genes. Under culture conditions promoting neural differentiation, hpESC-derived neural stem cells (hpNSCs) gave rise to glia and neuron-like cells that expressed subtype-specific markers and generated action potentials. Analysis of imprinting in hpESCs and in hpNSCs revealed that maternal-specific gene expression patterns and imprinting marks were generally maintained in PG cells upon differentiation. Our results demonstrate that despite the lack of a paternal genome, hpESCs generate proliferating NSCs that are capable of differentiation into physiologically functional neuron-like cells and maintain allele-specific expression of imprinted genes. Thus, hpESCs can serve as a model to study the role of maternal and paternal genomes in neural development and to better understand imprinting-associated brain diseases. KW - methylation KW - derivation KW - blastocysts KW - pluripotent KW - differentiation KW - lines KW - brain development KW - in-vitro KW - mice KW - specification Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-130268 VL - 7 IS - 8 ER - TY - THES A1 - Ahmad, Ruhel T1 - Neurogenesis from parthenogenetic human embryonic stem cells T1 - Neurogenese von parthenogenetischen humanen embryonalen Stammzellen N2 - Imprinted genes play important roles in brain development. As the neural developmental capabilities of human parthenogenetic embryonic stem cells (hpESCs) with only a maternal genome were not assessed in great detail, hence here the potential of hpESCs to differentiate into various neural subtypes was determined. In addition DNA methylation and expression of imprinted genes upon neural differentiation was also investigated. The results demonstrated that hpESC-derived neural stem cells (hpNSCs) showed expression of NSC markers Sox1, Nestin, Pax6, and Musashi1 (MS1), the silencing of pluripotency genes (Oct4, Nanog) and the absence of activation of neural crest (Snai2, FoxD3) and mesodermal (Acta1) markers. Moreover, confocal images of hpNSC cultures exhibited ubiquitous expression of NSC markers Nestin, Sox1, Sox2 and Vimentin. Differentiating hpNSCs for 28 days generated neural subtypes with neural cell type-specific morphology and expression of neuronal and glial markers, including Tuj1, NeuN, Map2, GFAP, O4, Tau, Synapsin1 and GABA. hpNSCs also responded to region-specific differentiation signals and differentiated into regional phenotypes such as midbrain dopaminergic- and motoneuron-type cells. hpESC-derived neurons showed typical neuronal Na+/K+ currents in voltage clamp mode, elicited multiple action potentials with a maximum frequency of 30 Hz. Cell depicted a typical neuron-like current pattern that responded to selective pharmacological blockers of sodium (tetrodotoxin) and potassium (tetraethylammonium) channels. Furthermore, in hpESCs and hpNSCs the majority of CpGs of the differentially methylated regions (DMRs) KvDMR1 were methylated whereas DMR1 (H19/Igf2 locus) showed partial or complete absence of CpG methylation, which is consistent with a parthenogenetic (PG) origin. Upon differentiation parent-of-origin-specific gene expression was maintained in hpESCs and hpNSCs as demonstrated by imprinted gene expression analyses. Together this shows that despite the lack of a paternal genome, hpNSCs are proficient in differentiating into glial- and neuron-type cells, which exhibit electrical activity similar to newly formed neurons. Moreover, maternal-specific gene expression and imprinting-specific DNA-methylation are largely maintained upon neural differentiation. hpESCs are a means to generate histocompatible and disease allele-free ESCs. Additionally, hpESCs are a unique model to study the influence of imprinting on neurogenesis. N2 - Imprinted Gene spielen eine wichtige Rolle bei der Gehirnentwicklung. Da das neurale Entwicklungspotenzial von hpESCs bisher noch nicht ausführlich untersucht wurde, war das Ziel dieser Arbeit das Differenzierungspotenzial von hpESCs zu verschiedenen neuralen Subtypen zu untersuchen. Außerdem wurden die DNA-Methylierung und Expression imprinted Gene in hpESCs während der neuralen Differenzierung analysiert. Die Ergebnisse zeigten, dass von hpESCs abgeleitete neurale Stammzellen (hpNSCs) die NSC-Marker Sox1, Nestin, Pax6 und Musashi1 (MS1) exprimierten, Pluripotenzmarker-Gene (Oct4, Nanog) abschalteten und keine Aktivierung von Markern der Neuralleistenzellen (Snai2, FoxD3) sowie dem mesodermalen Marker Acta1 stattfand. Immunfärbungen zeigten weiterhin, dass aus hpESCs abgeleitete Stammzellen die NSC-Marker Nestin, Sox1, Sox2 und Vimentin auf Proteinebene exprimierten. Durch gerichtete neurale Differenzierung für 28 Tage konnten aus hpESCs neurale Subtypen abgeleitet werden, die eine neurale Zelltyp-spezifische Morphologie aufweisen und positiv für neuronale und gliale Marker wie Tuj1, NeuN, Map2, GFAP, O4, Tau, Synapsin1 und GABA sind. Um aus hpNSCs dopaminerge und Motoneuronen abzuleiten, wurden während der Differenzierung Morphogene und trophische Faktoren zugegeben. Elektrophysiologische Analysen konnten zeigen, dass die in vitro differenzierten Neuronen, die von hpESCs abgeleitet wurden, für Neurone typische Na+/K+ Ströme sowie Aktionspotentiale (30 Hz) vorweisen ausbilden und auf ausgewählte pharmakologische Natrium- (Tetrodotoxin) und Kalium- (Tetraethylammonium) Kanal-Blocker reagierten. Desweiteren war der Großteil der CpGs von differentiell methylierten Regionen (DMRs) KvDMR1 in hpESCs und hpNSCs methyliert, während DMR1 (H19/Igf2 Locus) eine partiell oder komplett abwesende CpG-Methylierung zeigte, was dem parthenogenetischen Ursprung entspricht. Während der Differenzierung wurde die elternabhängige (parent-of-origin) spezifische Genexpression in hpESCs und hpNSCs aufrechterhalten, wie mit Genexpressionsanalysen imprinted Gene gezeigt werden konnte. In der Summe zeigen die hier dargestellten Ergebnisse, dass hpESCs, die kein paternales Genom besitzen, keine Beeinträchtigung im neuralen Differenzierungspotential zeigten und zu Gliazellen und Neurone differenziert werden konnten. Elektrophysiologische Analysen zeigten ferner, dass von hpESCs abgeleitete Neurone funktionell sind. Zudem wird die Expression maternal-spezifischer Gene und die Imprinting-spezifische DNA-Methylierung während der Differenzierung größtenteils aufrechterhalten. In der Summe stellen hpESCs ein einzigartiges Modell dar, um den Einfluss des Imprintings auf die Neurogenese zu untersuchen. KW - Embryonale Stammzelle KW - Neurogenese KW - Zelldifferenzierung KW - Stammzelle KW - human parthenogenetic stem cells KW - in vitro neural differentiation KW - human parthenogenetic neural stem cells KW - PG neurons KW - imprinting. Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-75935 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aguzzi, A. A1 - Wagner, E. F. A1 - Netzer, K. O. A1 - Bothe, K. A1 - Anhauser, I. A1 - Rethwilm, Axel T1 - Human foamy virus proteins accumulate in neurons and induce multinucleated giant cells in the brain of transgenic mice N2 - Humanfoamy virus (HFV) is a retrovirus encoding structural genes and, like human immunodeficiency virus and human T ceU leukemia virus I, several anciUary reading frames collectively termed the belgenes. We have previously shown that HFV transgenic mice develop an encephalopathy with neuronal loss in hippocampus and cerebral cortex. We have now raised and characterized rabbit antisera to various recombinant portions of gag, pot, env, and bel-I, the viraltransactivator. Immunoreactivity for gag and bel-I was observed in nuclei and processes of hippocampal and cortical neurons before the onset of morphological lesions and correlated with the appearance of HFV mRNA. Astrocyte-derived multinucleated giant ceUs containing HFV proteins were present in the brain oftransgenic mice coexpressingfuU- length HFV genes but not in mice expressing truncated gag and env, suggesting that these genes contain afusogenic domain. Expression of fuU-length structural genes decreased the life expectancy oftransgenic mice, implying an a4Juvant rolefor these proteins in HFV-induced brain damage. (Am] Pathol 1993, 142:1061-1072) KW - Molekularpathologie Y1 - 1993 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47356 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aguzzi, A. A1 - Both, K. A1 - Anhauser, I. A1 - Horak, I. A1 - Rethwilm, Axel A1 - Wagner, EF. T1 - Expression of human foamy virus is differentially regulated during development in transgenic mice N2 - Tbe human foamy virus (HFV) is a recently characterized member ofthe spumavirus family. Although no diseases have been unequivocally associated with HFV infection, expression of HFV regulatory genes in transgenie mice induces a characteristic aeute neuro degenerative disease and a myopathy. To better eharaeterize the sequenee of events leading to disease, and to gain a better understanding of the underlying pathogenetic meehanisms, we have analyzed in detail the transgene expression pattern during development. Transcription of a construet containing all regulatory elements and aneillary genes of mv was analyzed by in situ hybridization and was shown to occur in two distinct phases. At midgestation, low but widespread expression was first deteeted in eells of extraembryonie tissues. Later, various tissues originating from embryonie mesoderm, neuroeetoderm, and neural erest transeribed the transgene at moderate levels. However, expression deereased dramatically during late gestation and was suppressed shortly after birth. After a latency period of up to 5 weeks, transeription of the transgene resumed in single eelJs distributed irregularly in the central nervous system and in the skeletal museIe. By the age of 8 weeks, an increasing number of eells displayed much higher expression levels than in embryonie Iife and eventually underwent severe degenerative ehanges. These findings demonstrate that HFV transgene expression is differentially regulated in development and that HFV cytotoxicity may be dose-dependent. Such biphasic pattern of expression differs from that of murine retroviruses and may be explained by the specificity of HFV regulatory elements in combination with cellular faetors. Future studies of this model system should, therefore, provide novel insights in the mechanisms controlling retrovirallatency. KW - Virologie Y1 - 1992 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-55290 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Agranovsky, A. A. A1 - Dolya, V. V. A1 - Gorboulev, Valentin G. A1 - Kozlov, J. V. A1 - Atabekov, J. G. T1 - Aminoacylation of barley stripe mosaic virus RNA: polyadenylate-containing RNA has a 3'-terminal tyrosine-accepting structure N2 - Barley stripe mosaic virus (BSMV) RNA which was previously reported to contain poly(A) sequences (Agranovsky et al., 1978) can be specifically esterified with tyrosine in vitro in the presence of an aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase fraction from wheat embryos. All the three RNA components of the BSMV strain with a three-component genome (Norwich) and both RNA components of a two-component strain (Russian) can be tyrosylated. The poly(A)-containing (bound to oligo(dT)-cellulose) and poly(A)-deficient(not bound to oligo(dT)-cellulose) fractions of BSMV RNA display a similar amino acidaccepting ability. The nucleotide sequence which accepts tyrosine is coupled with the intact genomic polyadenylated BSMV RNA. The viral RNA isolated after sucrose density gradient centrifugation under drastic denaturing conditions retains its aminoacylating activity, which suggests that this activity is not due to the presence in a BSMV RNA preparation of a tyrosine tRNA associated with BSMV RNA. Inhibition of aminoacylation of the 3’-oxidized (treated with sodium metaperiodate) BSMV RNA suggests that the tyrosine-accepting structure is localized at the 3’ terminus of BSMV RNA molecules. It is shown that segments of different lengths obtained upon random fragmentation can be tyrosylated. The 3’-terminal (tyrosine-accepting) poly(A)+ segments can be isolated. The shortest segments of viral RNA capable of being aminoacylated [i.e., containing both tRNA-like structure and poly(A)] consists of approximately 150-200 nucleotides. The analysis of the oligonucleotides derived from individual BSMV RNA components labeled with 32P at the 3’ end revealed two types of 3’-terminal sequences different from poly(A). It is suggested that a poly(A) sequence is intercalated between a 3’-terminal tyrosineaccepting structure and the 5’-terminal portion of poly(A)+ BSMV RNA. Y1 - 1981 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-32566 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Agoston, Zsuzsa A1 - Li, Naixin A1 - Haslinger, Anja A1 - Wizenmann, Andrea A1 - Schulte, Dorothea T1 - Genetic and physical interaction of Meis2, Pax3 and Pax7 during dorsal midbrain development JF - BMC Developmental Biology N2 - Background: During early stages of brain development, secreted molecules, components of intracellular signaling pathways and transcriptional regulators act in positive and negative feed-back or feed-forward loops at the mid-hindbrain boundary. These genetic interactions are of central importance for the specification and subsequent development of the adjacent mid-and hindbrain. Much less, however, is known about the regulatory relationship and functional interaction of molecules that are expressed in the tectal anlage after tectal fate specification has taken place and tectal development has commenced. Results: Here, we provide experimental evidence for reciprocal regulation and subsequent cooperation of the paired-type transcription factors Pax3, Pax7 and the TALE-homeodomain protein Meis2 in the tectal anlage. Using in ovo electroporation of the mesencephalic vesicle of chick embryos we show that (i) Pax3 and Pax7 mutually regulate each other's expression in the mesencephalic vesicle, (ii) Meis2 acts downstream of Pax3/7 and requires balanced expression levels of both proteins, and (iii) Meis2 physically interacts with Pax3 and Pax7. These results extend our previous observation that Meis2 cooperates with Otx2 in tectal development to include Pax3 and Pax7 as Meis2 interacting proteins in the tectal anlage. Conclusion: The results described here suggest a model in which interdependent regulatory loops involving Pax3 and Pax7 in the dorsal mesencephalic vesicle modulate Meis2 expression. Physical interaction with Meis2 may then confer tectal specificity to a wide range of otherwise broadly expressed transcriptional regulators, including Otx2, Pax3 and Pax7. KW - dosage KW - quali-chick chimeras KW - drosophila embryo KW - neural crest KW - transcription activation KW - hindbrain boundary KW - isthmic oragnizer KW - sonic hedghog KW - expression KW - induction Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-132626 VL - 12 IS - 10 ER - TY - THES A1 - Agnetta, Luca T1 - Novel Photoswitchable and Dualsteric Ligands Acting on Muscarinic Acetylcholine Receptors for Receptor Function Investigation T1 - Neue lichtschaltbare und dualstere Liganden für die muskarinischen Acetylcholin Rezeptoren zur Untersuchung der Rezeptorfunktion N2 - G protein-coupled receptor research looks out for new technologies to elucidate the complex processes of receptor activation, function and downstream signaling with spatiotemporal resolution, preferably in living cells and organisms. A thriving approach consists in making use of the unsurpassed properties of light, including its high precision in space and time, noninvasiveness and high degree of orthogonality regarding biological processes. This is realized by the incorporation of molecular photoswitches, which are able to effectively respond to light, such as azobenzene, into the structure of a ligand of a given receptor. The muscarinic acetylcholine receptors belong to class A GPCRs and have received special attention in this regard due to their role as a prototypic pharmacological system and their therapeutic potential. They mediate the excitatory and inhibitory effects of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine and thus regulate diverse important biological processes, especially many neurological functions in our brain. In this work, the application of photopharmacological tool compounds to muscarinic receptors is presented, consisting of pharmacophores extended with azobenzene as light-responsive motif. Making use of the dualsteric concept, such photochromic ligands can be designed to bind concomitantly to the orthosteric and allosteric binding site of the receptor, which is demonstrated for BQCAAI (M1) and PAI (M2) and may lead to subtype- and functionalselective photoswitchable ligands, suitable for further ex vivo and in vivo studies. Moreover, photoswitchable ligands based on the synthetic agonist iperoxo were investigated extensively with regard to their photochemical behavior and pharmacological profile, outlining the advantages and challenges of using red-shifted molecular photoswitches, such as tetraortho- fluoro azobenzene. For the first time on a GPCR it was examined, which impact the different substitution pattern has on both the binding and the activity on the M1 receptor. Results show that substituted azobenzenes in photopharmacological compounds (F4-photoiperoxo and F4-iper-azo-iper) not just represent analogs with other photophysical properties but can exhibit a considerably different biological profile that has to be investigated carefully. The achievements gained in this study can give important new insights into the binding mode and time course of activation processes, enabling precise spatial and temporal resolution of the complex signaling pathway of muscarinic receptors. Due to their role as exemplary model system, these findings may be useful for the investigation into other therapeutically relevant GPCRs. N2 - Die Forschung an G-Protein-gekoppelten Rezeptoren verlangt nach neuen Technologien zur Aufklärung der komplexen Prozesse der Rezeptoraktivierung, -funktion und ihrer nachgeschalteten Signalwege mit räumlicher und zeitlicher Auflösung, vorzugsweise in lebenden Zellen und Organismen. Ein erfolgreicher Ansatz besteht darin, die unübertroffenen Eigenschaften des Lichts zu nutzen, welche die hohe Präzision in Raum und Zeit, die Nicht- Invasivität und die hohe Orthogonalität in Bezug auf biologische Prozesse einschließt. Dies wird durch den Einbau von molekularen Photoschaltern, wie z. B. Azobenzolen, in die Struktur eines Liganden eines bestimmten Rezeptors realisiert, welche effektiv auf Licht reagieren. Die muskarinischen Acetylcholin Rezeptoren gehören zur Klasse A der GPCRs und haben aufgrund ihrer Rolle als prototypisches pharmakologisches System und ihres therapeutischen Potenzials diesbezüglich besondere Beachtung gefunden. Sie vermitteln die stimulierenden und hemmenden Wirkungen des Neurotransmitters Acetylcholin und regulieren somit verschiedene wichtige biologische Prozesse, insbesondere viele neurologische Funktionen in unserem Gehirn. In dieser Arbeit wird die Anwendung photopharmakologischer „Tool“-Verbindungen auf die muskarinischen Rezeptoren vorgestellt, die aus Pharmakophoren bestehen, welche mit Azobenzol als lichtempfindlichem Motiv modifiziert wurden. Mit Hilfe des Konzepts der Dualsterie können solche photochromen Liganden so gestaltet werden, dass sie gleichzeitig an die orthosterische und allosterische Bindungsstelle des Rezeptors binden, was für BQCAAI (M1) und PAI (M2) gezeigt wurde und zu subtypen- und funktionsselektiven photoschaltbaren Liganden führen kann, die für weitere Ex- und In-Vivo-Studien geeignet sind. Darüber hinaus wurden photoschaltbare Liganden auf Basis des synthetischen Agonisten Iperoxo hinsichtlich ihres photochemischen Verhaltens und ihres pharmakologischen Profils ausführlich untersucht, um die Vorteile und Herausforderungen der Verwendung rotverschobener molekularer Photoschalter wie tetra-ortho-Fluor-azobenzol zu erläutern. Es wurde erstmals an einem GPCR untersucht, welche Auswirkungen das unterschiedliche Substitutionsmuster sowohl auf die Bindung, als auch auf die Aktivität am M1-Rezeptor hat. Diese Ergebnisse zeigen, dass substituierte Azobenzole in photopharmakologischen Verbindungen (F4-Photoiperoxo und F4-Iper-azo-iper) nicht nur Analoga mit anderen photophysikalischen Eigenschaften darstellen, sondern auch ein deutlich unterschiedliches biologisches Profil aufweisen können, das sorgfältig untersucht werden muss. Die in dieser Studie erzielten Ergebnisse geben neue und wichtige Einblicke in den Bindungsmodus und den zeitlichen Verlauf von Aktivierungsprozessen und ermöglichen eine präzise räumliche und zeitliche Auflösung der komplexen Signalwege von muskarinischen Rezeptoren. Aufgrund ihrer Rolle als exemplarisches Modellsystem können diese Befunde für die Untersuchung anderer therapeutisch relevanter GPCRs sehr nützlich sein. KW - Muscarinrezeptor KW - G-Protein gekoppelte Rezeptor KW - G Protein-coupled receptor Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-187170 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aghai, Fatemeh A1 - Zimmermann, Sebastian A1 - Kurlbaum, Max A1 - Jung, Pius A1 - Pelzer, Theo A1 - Klinker, Hartwig A1 - Isberner, Nora A1 - Scherf-Clavel, Oliver T1 - Development and validation of a sensitive liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry assay for the simultaneous determination of ten kinase inhibitors in human serum and plasma JF - Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry N2 - A liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry method for the analysis of ten kinase inhibitors (afatinib, axitinib, bosutinib,cabozantinib, dabrafenib, lenvatinib, nilotinib, osimertinib, ruxolitinib, and trametinib) in human serum and plasma for theapplication in daily clinical routine has been developed and validated according to the US Food and Drug Administration andEuropean Medicines Agency validation guidelines for bioanalytical methods. After protein precipitation of plasma samples withacetonitrile, chromatographic separation was performed at ambient temperature using a Waters XBridge® Phenyl 3.5μm(2.1×50 mm) column. The mobile phases consisted of water-methanol (9:1, v/v) with 10 mM ammonium bicarbonate as phase A andmethanol-water (9:1, v/v) with 10 mM ammonium bicarbonate as phase B. Gradient elution was applied at a flow rate of 400μL/min. Analytes were detected and quantified using multiple reaction monitoring in electrospray ionization positive mode. Stableisotopically labeled compounds of each kinase inhibitor were used as internal standards. The acquisition time was 7.0 min perrun. All analytes and internal standards eluted within 3.0 min. The calibration curves were linear over the range of 2–500 ng/mLfor afatinib, axitinib, bosutinib, lenvatinib, ruxolitinib, and trametinib, and 6–1500 ng/mL for cabozantinib, dabrafenib, nilotinib,and osimertinib (coefficients of correlation≥0.99). Validation assays for accuracy and precision, matrix effect, recovery,carryover, and stability were appropriate according to regulatory agencies. The rapid and sensitive assay ensures high throughputand was successfully applied to monitor concentrations of kinase inhibitors in patients. KW - kinase inhibitors KW - therapeutic drug monitoring KW - liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS KW - afatinib KW - osimertinib Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-231925 SN - 1618-2642 VL - 413 ER - TY - BOOK A1 - Agbokhan, Serena A1 - Sandig, Anna A1 - Haas, Thea A1 - Valentin, Francesca A1 - Gasteiger, Annika A1 - von Keller, Anna A1 - Friedmann, Fiona A1 - Wicht, Rebecca A1 - Wintermeyer, Nina A1 - Hofmann, Anna-Lena A1 - Liebich, Alexander A1 - Bördlein, Sophie A1 - Lüderitz, Cathrin A1 - Philipp, Sonja A1 - Watermann, Anne A1 - Hercher, Anna ED - Nelson-Teutsch, Hannah T1 - Insights; N2 - The cluster of texts assembled here were imagined, crafted, and brought together as a collaborative writing project that emerged from the seminar titled "Words Matter Worlds: Activist Scholarship and Literary Praxis," which convened over the course of the 2021/22 winter semester as an offering of the American Studies department of the Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg. Like the seminar that nurtured the considerations that evolve here, these contributions engage with how scholarly writing practices in general, and literary and cultural studies in particular, can remake the world. KW - Aktivist KW - Literaturwissenschaft KW - Amerikanistik KW - Feminist KW - Kreatives Schreiben KW - Activist Scholarship KW - Literary and Cultural Studies KW - American Studies Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-317007 SN - 978-3-945459-44-7 ER - TY - THES A1 - Agarwal, Vaibhav T1 - Role of PspC interaction with human polymeric immunoglobulin receptor and Factor H in Streptococcus pneumoniae infections and host cell induced signalling N2 - Streptococcus pneumoniae ist ein Gram-positives Bakterium und ein Kommensale des humanen Nasenrachenraums. Pneumokokken sind andererseits auch die Verursacher schwerer lokaler Infektionen wie der Otitis media, Sinusitis und von lebensbedrohenden invasiven Erkrankungen. So sind Pneumokokken die wichtigsten Erreger einer ambulant erworbenen Pneumonie und sie sind häufige Verursacher von Septikämien und bakteriellen Meningitiden. Die initiale Phase der Pathogenese ist verbunden mit der Besiedelung der mukosalen Epithelzellen des Rachenraumes. Diese Kolonisierung erleichtert die Aufnahme der Bakterien in die Zelle bzw. deren Dissemination in submukosale Bereiche und den Blutstrom. Die Konversion des Kommensalen zu einem invasiven Mikroorganismus ist assoziiert mit der Anpassung des Krankheitserregers an die verschiedenen Wirtsnischen und wird auf der Wirtsseite durch die Zerstörung der transepithelialen Barriere begleitet. Die Anpassung des Erregers ist vermutlich ein in hohem Grade regulierter Prozess. Die Oberfläche von Streptococcus pneumoniae ist mit Proteinen bedeckt, die kovalent oder nicht kovalent mit der Zellwand verknüpft sind. Eine einzigartige Gruppe von Oberflächenproteinen in der Zellwand der Pneumokokken sind die cholinbindenden Proteine (CBPs). Für einige der CBPs konnte bereits die Bedeutung für die Virulenz gezeigt werden. PspC, auch als SpsA oder CbpA bezeichnet, ist ein multifunktionales Oberflächenprotein, das als Adhesin und Faktor H-Bindungsprotein eine wichtige Rolle in der Pathogenese der Pneumokokken hat. PspC vermittelt als Adhesin die Anheftung der Bakterien an die mukosalen Epithelzellen, indem es human-spezifisch an die sekretorische Komponente (SC) des polymeren Immunoglobulinrezeptors (pIgR) bindet. SC ist die Ektodomäne des pIgR und PspC kann ebenso die freie SC binden oder an die SC des sekretorischen IgA Moleküls binden. PspC interagiert auch mit dem löslichen Komplement Faktor H. Die SC und der Faktor erkennen zwei verschiedene Epitope im bakteriellen PspC Protein. Der genaue Mechanismus der jeweiligen Interaktionen unter physiologischen- bzw. wirtspezifischen Bedingungen ist noch nicht vollständig verstanden. In dieser Arbeit wurde die Auswirkung der PspC Interaktion mit dem humanen pIgR (hpIgR) bzw. dem Faktor H auf die Virulenz der Pneumokokken und die Wirtszellantwort, d.h. die induzierten Signalkaskaden in den eukaryotischen Zellen untersucht. Die molekulare Analyse und die Verwendung von spezifischen pharmakologischen Inhibitoren der Signalmoleküle zeigten, dass verschiedene Signalmoleküle an der PspC-pIgR vermittelten Internalisierung beteiligt sind. Die Aktivierung, d.h. die Phosphorylierung der Signalmoleküle wurde in Immunblots demonstriert. Die Studien zeigten, dass das Aktinzytoskelett und die Mikrotubuli für die bakterielle Aufnahme essentiell sind. Es konnte auch zum ersten Mal nachgewiesen werden, dass Cdc42 die entscheidende GTPase für die Invasion der Pneumokokken in die Wirtsepithelzellen, vermittelt über den PspC-hpIgR Mechanismus, ist. Der Einsatz von PI3-kinase und Akt Kinase Inhibitoren reduzierte signifikant die hpIgR-vermittelte Aufnahme der Pneumokokken in die Wirtszelle. Zusätzlich durchgeführte Infektionen von hpIgR exprimierenden Zellen zeigten eine zeitabhängige Phosphorylierung von Akt und der p85α Untereinheit der PI3-Kinase. Damit ist neben der GTPase Cdc42 der PI3K und Akt Signalweg entscheidend für die PspC-pIgR vermittelte Invasion der Pneumokokken. Des Weiteren sind an der Infektion mit Pneumokokken auch die Protein Tyrosin Kinasen Src, ERK1/2 und JNK beteiligt. Dabei wird die Src Kinase unabhängig von der PI3K in hpIgR exprimierenden Zellen aktiviert. Inhibitionsexperimente und genetische Knockdown Versuche mit siRNA bewiesen, dass die Endozytose der Pneumokokken über PspC-pIgR ein Clathrin und Dynamin abhängiger Mechanismus ist. Im weiterenn Teil der Arbeit wurde der Einfluss des PspC gebundenen Faktor H auf die Anheftung an und Invasion in die Epithelzellen analysiert. Die Bindung von Faktor H erfolgte unabhängig vom PspC-Subtyp. Die Bindungsversuche bewiesen, dass die Kapselmenge negativ korreliert mit der Bindung des Faktor H. Der Einsatz von Faktor H aus Maus oder Ratte zeigte keine typische Bindung. Daraus kann abgeleitet werden, dass diese Interaktion humanspezifisch ist. Die Infektionsexperimente demonstrierten, dass Faktor H die Adhärenz und die Invasion der Bakterien in die Nasenrachenraumzellen (Detroit562), alveolären Lungenepithelzellen (A549) und humanen Hirnendothelzellen (HBMEC) steigert. Der Faktor H hat Heparin Bindestellen. Diese Bindestellen vermitteln die Adhärenz der Faktor H gebundenen Pneumokokken mit Epithelzellen. Inhibitionsstudien mit spezifischen monoklonalen Antikörpern, die gegen die short consensus repeats (SCRs) von Faktor H gerichtet waren, konnten die essentielle Bedeutung der SCR19-20 für die Anheftung der Pneumokokken über Faktor H an die Wirtszellen nachweisen. Die Faktor H vermittelte Assoziation der Pneumokokken an polymorphonukleäre Leukozyten (PMNs) erfolgt über das Integrin CD11b/CD18. Die weiteren Inhibitionsstudien zeigten dann auch zum ersten Mal den Einfluss des Aktinzytoskeletts der Wirtszelle auf die Faktor H-vermittelten bakterieller Internalisierung und den dabei bedeutsamen Signaltransduktionswegen in der eukaryotischen Zelle. Dabei wurden insbesondere die Proteintyrosinkinasen und die PI3K als wichtige Signalmoleküle für die Faktor H vermittelte Invasion der Pneumokokken identifiziert. Die in dieser Arbeit erhaltenen Resultate belegen, dass die Faktor H vermittelte Infektion der Zellen mit S. pneumoniae ein konzertierter Mechanismus ist, bei dem Oberflächen-Glycosaminoglycane, Integrine und Signaltransduktionswege der Wirtsepithelzellen involviert sind. Des Weiteren wurde aufgezeigt, dass die PspC-pIgR-vermittelte Invasion in mukosale Epithelzellen unterschiedliche Signalwege wie z.B. den PI3K und Akt Weg induziert und abhängig von Cdc42 und einer Clathrin vermittelten Endozytosemechanismus ist. N2 - Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococci) are Gram-positive bacteria and commensals of the nasopharyngeal cavity. Besides colonization, pneumococci are responsible for severe local infections such as otitis media, sinusitis and life-threatening invasive diseases, including pneumonia, sepsis and meningitis. The surface of pneumococci is decorated with proteins that are covalently or non-covalently anchored to the cell wall. The most unique group of cell wall associated proteins in pneumococci are the choline-binding proteins (CBPs). PspC, also known as SpsA or CbpA, is a multifunctional choline-binding protein that plays an essential role in pneumococcal pathogenesis by functioning as an adhesin. PspC promotes adherence of pneumococci to mucosal epithelial cells by interacting in a human specific manner with the free secretory component (SC) or to SC as part of the secretory IgA (SIgA) or polymeric immunoglobulin receptor (pIgR). PspC also interacts specifically with the soluble complement Factor H. Apparently, PspC uses two different epitopes for binding the soluble host protein Factor H and SC of pIgR. However, the mechanism by which these independent interactions facilitate pneumococcal infections under physiological and host specific conditions have not yet been completely elucidated. This study aims to explore the impact of the PspC interaction with human pIgR (hpIgR) or complement regulator Factor H on pneumococcal virulence. Here the cellular and molecular basis of PspC-mediated adherence to and invasion of host epithelial and endothelial cells was demonstrated. The genetic approach, specific pharmacological inhibitors and immunoblot analysis demonstrated the complexity of the induced signal transduction pathways during PspC-hpIgR mediated pneumococcal uptake by host cells. Inhibition studies with specific inhibitors of actin cytoskeleton and microtubules demonstrated that the dynamics of host cell cytoskeleton are essential for pneumococcal uptake by mucosal epithelial cells. Moreover, this study reports for the first time that the small GTPase Cdc42 is essential for pneumococcal internalization into epithelial cells via the PspC-hpIgR mechanism. In addition, in infection experiments performed in presence of specific inhibitors of PI3-kinase/Akt and protein tyrosine kinase (PTKs), hpIgR-mediated pneumococcal uptake by host cells was significantly blocked. Amongst PTKs the Src kinase pathway, ERK1/2 and JNK pathways were implicated during pneumococcal ingestion by hpIgR expressing cells. In addition, inhibition experiments performed in the presence of individual inhibitors or with a combination of inhibitors suggested the independent activation of PI3-kinase/Akt and Src kinase pathways during pneumococcal infections of hpIgR expressing cells. By employing specific inhibitors and siRNA in cell culture infection experiments it was further demonstrated that pneumococcal endocytosis by host epithelial cells via the PspC-hpIgR mechanism depends on clathrin and dynamin. PspC recruits also Factor H to the pneumococcal cell surface. Consequently, the impact of pneumococcal cell surface bound Factor H on adherence to host cells and the molecular mechanism facilitating the uptake of Factor H bound pneumococci by epithelial cells was investigated. Flow cytometry and immunoblots revealed that S. pneumoniae has evolved the ability to recruit both purified Factor H as well as Factor H from human plasma or serum. Moreover, it was demonstrated that the recruitment of Factor H is independent of the PspC-subtypes and that capsular polysaccharide (CPS) interferes with its recruitment. Factor H bound to pneumococci significantly increased bacterial attachment to and invasion of host epithelial cells including nasopharyngeal cells (Detroit562), lung epithelial cells (A549), and human brain-derived endothelial cells (HBMEC). Blocking experiments demonstrated that bacteria bound Factor H interacts via the heparin binding sites on Factor H with eukaryotic cell surface glycosaminoglycans and that this interaction promotes pneumococcal adherence to host cells. In addition, inhibition studies with mAbs recognizing specifically different short consensus repeats (SCR) of Factor H suggested that SCR 19-20 of Factor H are essential for the pneumococcal interaction with host epithelial cells via Factor H. In the presence of Factor H, attachment of pneumococci to human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) is enhanced. The integrin CD11b/CD18 was identified as the cellular receptor on PMNs. By using pharmacological inhibitors the impact of host cell cytoskeleton and signalling molecules, such as PTKs and PI3-kinase, for Factor H-mediated pneumococcal internalization into eukaryotic cells was shown. Taken together, the results revealed that Factor-H mediated pneumococcal infection requires a concerted role of host epithelial cell surface glycosaminoglycans, integrins and host cell signalling pathways. KW - Streptococcus pneumoniae KW - Polymeric Immunoglobulin receptor KW - Factor H Y1 - 2008 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-36526 ER - TY - THES A1 - Agarwal, Shruti T1 - Functional characterization of four CDK-like kinases and one Calmodulin-dependent kinase of the human malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum T1 - Funktionelle Charakterisierung von vier CDK-like kinasen und eine Calmodulin-dependent kinasen des human Malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum N2 - Malaria still persists as one of the deadliest infectious disease in addition to AIDS and tuberculosis. lt is a leading cause of high mortality and morbidity rates in the developing world despite of groundbreaking research on global eradication of the disease initiated by WHO, about half a century ago. Lack of a commercially available vaccine and rapid spread of drug resistance have hampered the attempts of extinguishing malaria, which still leads to an annual death toll of about one million people. Resistance to anti-malarial compounds thus renders search for new target proteins imperative. The kinome of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum comprises representatives of most eukaryotic protein kinase groups, including kinases which regulate proliferation and differentiation processes. Several reports till date have suggested involvement of parasite kinases in the human host and as well as in the mosquito vector. Kinases essential for life cycle stages of the parasite represent promising targets for anti-malarial compounds thus, provoking characterization of additional malarial kinases. Despite extensive research on most plasmodial enzymes, very little information is available regarding the four identified members of the cyclin dependent kinase like kinase (CLK) family. Thus, the present thesis dealt with the functional characterization of four members of the PfCLK kinase family of the parasite denoted as PfCLK-1/Lammer, PfCLK-2, PfCLK-3 and PfCLK-4 with a special focus on the first two kinases. Additionally, one Ca2+/Calmodulin dependent putative kinase-related protein, PfPKRP, presumed to be involved in sexual stage development of the parasite, was investigated for its expression in the life cycle of the parasite. In other eukaryotes, CLK kinases regulate mRNA splicing through phosphorylation of Serine/Arginine-rich proteins. Transcription analysis revealed abundance of PfCLK kinase genes throughout the asexual blood stages and in gametocytes. By reverse genetics approach it was demonstrated that all four kinases are essential for completion of the asexual replication cycle of P. falciparum. PfCLK 1/Lammer possesses two nuclear localization signals and PfCLK-2 possesses one of these signals upstream of the C-terminal catalytic domains. Protein level expression and sub-cellular localization of the two kinases was determined by generation of antiserum directed against the kinase domains of the respective kinase. Indirect immunofluorescence, Western blot and electron microscopy data confirm that the kinases are primarily localized in the parasite nucleus, and in vitro assays show that both enzymes are associated with phosphorylation activity. Finally, mass spectrometric analysis of co immunoprecipitated proteins shows interactions of the two PfCLK kinases with proteins, which have putative nuclease, phosphatase or helicase functions. PfPKRP on the other hand is predominantly expressed during gametocyte differentiation as identified from transcriptional analysis. Antiserum directed against the catalytic domain of PfPKRP detected the protein expression profile in both asexual and gametocyte parasite lysates. Via immunofluorescence assay, the kinase was localized in the parasite cytoplasm in a punctuated manner, mostly in the gametocyte stages. Reverse genetics resulted in the generation of PfPKRP gene-disruptant parasites, thus demonstrating that unlike CLK kinases, PfPKRP is dispensable for asexual parasite survival and hence might have crucial role in sexual development of the parasite. On one hand, characterization of PfCLK kinases exemplified the kinases involved in parasite replication cycle. Successful gene-disruption and protein expression of PfPKRP kinase on the other hand, demonstrated a role of the kinase in sexual stage development of the parasite. Both kinase families therefore, represent potential candidates for anti-plasmodial compounds. N2 - Malaria stellt neben AIDS und Tuberkulose weiterhin eine der bedeutendsten Infektionskrankheiten dar. Trotz intensiver, auf die Auslöschung der Krankheit abzielender Forschung, welche vor etwa 50 Jahren durch die Weltgesundheitsorganisation initiiert wurde, bleibt Malaria einer der Hauptgründe für hohe Mortalität und Morbidität in Entwicklungsländern. Das Fehlen eines Impfstoffes und die schnelle Ausbreitung von Resistenzen erschweren die Versuche, Malaria zu eliminieren, welche jährlich weiterhin eine Todesrate von einer Millionen Menschen aufweist. Aufgrund der Zunahme an Resistenzen ist die Suche nach neuen Angriffspunkten für Antimalariamedikamente zwingend erforderlich. Das Kinom des humanpathogen Parasiten Plasmodium falciparum besteht aus Vertretern der meisten eukaryotischen Proteinkinasegruppen, einschließlich einiger Kinasen, welche Proliferations- und Differenzierungsprozesse regulieren. Verschiedenen Berichten zufolge ist eine Rolle von Parasitenkinasen sowohl im menschlichen Wirt als auch in der die Krankenheit übertragende Mücke denkbar. Kinasen, welche für verschiedene Parasitenstadien essentiell sind, stellen viel versprechende Angriffspunkte für Malariamedikamente dar. Dies bestätigt die Bedeutung der Erforschung von weiteren, bisher uncharakterisierten Kinasen. Trotz extensiver Forschungsarbeit an den meisten Enzymen des Parasiten ist bisher sehr wenig über die vier identifizierten Mitglieder der Proteinfamilie Zyklin-abhängige Kinase-ähnlicher Kinasen (cyclin-dependent kinase like kinases, CLK) bekannt. Aufgrund dessen war die Charakterisierung der vier Mitglieder der PfCLK Kinasefamilie, PfCLK-1/PfLAMMER, PfCLK-2, PfCLK-3 und PfCLK-4 Bestandteil dieser Arbeit. Der Forschungsschwerpunkt lag hierbei auf den beiden erstgenannten Kinasen. Zusätzlich wurde die stadienspezifische Expression von PfPKRP, einer Kinase, welche vermutlich in der Entwicklung der Sexualstadien des Parasiten beteiligt ist, untersucht. In anderen Eukaryoten regulieren die CLK kinases das Spleißen von mRNA durch die Phosphorylierung von Serin-/Arginin-reichen Proteinen. Untersuchungen hinsichtlich der Expression der CLK kinase zeigten eine Transkriptabundanz in allen asexuellen Blutstadien sowie in Gametozyten. Mit Hilfe der Reverse-Genetics-Technik, wurde festgestellt, dass alle vier Kinasen essentiell sind für die asexuelle Replikation von P. falciparum. PfCLK-1/Lammer besitzt zwei Kernlokalisationssequenzen, während PfCLK-2 ein solches Signal stromaufwärts der C-terminalen katalytischen Domäne aufweist. Die Expression auf Proteinebene sowie die subzelluläre Lokalisation der beiden Kinasen wurde durch die Herstellung von Antiseren gegen die jeweilige Kinasedomainen hergestellt. Indirekte Immunfluoreszenzstudien, Westernblots und elektronenmikroskopische Daten bestätigten die Lokalisation vornehmlich in Zellkern des Parasiten. In-vitro-Studien demonstrierten, das beide Enzyme mit Phosphorylierungsaktivität assoziierte sind. Die massenspektrometrische Analyse von ko-immunopräzipitierten Proteinen zeigten Interaktionen der beiden PfCLK Kinasen mit Proteinen, welche vermutlich Nuklease-, Phosphatase- oder Helikase-Funktion besitzen. Im Gegensatz zu den CLK-Kinasen wird PfPKRP wird hauptsächlich während der Differenzierung der Gametozyten exprimiert wie Transkriptanalysen zeigten. Antiseren gegen die katalytische Domäne von PfPKRP detektierten jedoch Proteinexpression sowohl in Lysaten asexueller Parasiten als auch in Gametozytenlysaten. In Immunfluoreszenzstudien wurde ein punktiertes Expressionsmuster im Zytoplasma beobachtet, wobei die Expression vornehmlich in Gametozyten stattfand. Die Tatsache, dass die Herstellung einer PfPKRP-Knock out Mutante möglich war, zeigt, dass PfPKRP für das Überleben asexueller Parasiten entbehrlich ist, weshalb eine wichtige Rolle in der sexuellen Entwicklung der Parasiten möglich ist. Zum Einen dient die Charakterisierung der PfCLK-Kinasen als Beispiel für Kinasen, welche eine wichtige Rolle im Replikationszyklus der Parasiten spielen. Das erfolgreiche Ausschalten von PfPKRP sowie Untersuchungen zur Expression der PfPKRP-Kinase lassen zum Anderen eine Rolle in den Sexual- oder Transmissionstadien vermuten. Aufgrund dessen stellen beide Kinasefamilien viel versprechende Kandidaten für die Herstellung von malariamedikamenten dar. KW - Plasmodium falciparum KW - Kinasen KW - RNS-Spleißen KW - Malaria KW - Kinase KW - Calcium KW - Splicing Y1 - 2010 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48522 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Agarwal, Shailesh R. A1 - Yang, Pei-Chi A1 - Rice, Monica A1 - Singer, Cherie A. A1 - Nikolaev, Viacheslav O. A1 - Lohse, Martin J. A1 - Clancy, Colleen E. A1 - Harvey, Robert D. T1 - Role of Membrane Microdomains in Compartmentation of cAMP Signaling JF - PLOS ONE N2 - Spatially restricting cAMP production to discrete subcellular locations permits selective regulation of specific functional responses. But exactly where and how cAMP signaling is confined is not fully understood. Different receptors and adenylyl cyclase isoforms responsible for cAMP production are not uniformly distributed between lipid raft and non-lipid raft domains of the plasma membrane. We sought to determine the role that these membrane domains play in organizing cAMP responses in HEK293 cells. The freely diffusible FRET-based biosensor Epac2-camps was used to measure global cAMP responses, while versions of the probe targeted to lipid raft (Epac2-MyrPalm) and non-raft (Epac2-CAAX) domains were used to monitor local cAMP production near the plasma membrane. Disruption of lipid rafts by cholesterol depletion selectively altered cAMP responses produced by raft-associated receptors. The results indicate that receptors associated with lipid raft as well as non-lipid raft domains can contribute to global cAMP responses. In addition, basal cAMP activity was found to be significantly higher in non-raft domains. This was supported by the fact that pharmacologic inhibition of adenylyl cyclase activity reduced basal cAMP activity detected by Epac2-CAAX but not Epac2-MyrPalm or Epac2-camps. Responses detected by Epac2-CAAX were also more sensitive to direct stimulation of adenylyl cyclase activity, but less sensitive to inhibition of phosphodiesterase activity. Quantitative modeling was used to demonstrate that differences in adenylyl cyclase and phosphodiesterase activities are necessary but not sufficient to explain compartmentation of cAMP associated with different microdomains of the plasma membrane. KW - protein-coupled-receptors KW - adenylyl-cyclase isoforms KW - adult cardiac myocytes KW - plasma membrane KW - lipid rafts KW - cholesterol depletion KW - BETA(2)-adrenergic receptor KW - living vells KW - cyclic-AMP KW - domains Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-116673 SN - 1932-6203 VL - 9 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Afonso-Grunz, Fabian A1 - Hoffmeier, Klaus A1 - Müller, Sören A1 - Westermann, Alexander J. A1 - Rotter, Björn A1 - Vogel, Jörg A1 - Winter, Peter A1 - Kahl, Günter T1 - Dual 3'Seq using deepSuperSAGE uncovers transcriptomes of interacting Salmonella enterica Typhimurium and human host cells JF - BMC Genomics N2 - Background: The interaction of eukaryotic host and prokaryotic pathogen cells is linked to specific changes in the cellular proteome, and consequently to infection-related gene expression patterns of the involved cells. To simultaneously assess the transcriptomes of both organisms during their interaction we developed dual 3'Seq, a tag-based sequencing protocol that allows for exact quantification of differentially expressed transcripts in interacting pro-and eukaryotic cells without prior fixation or physical disruption of the interaction. Results: Human epithelial cells were infected with Salmonella enterica Typhimurium as a model system for invasion of the intestinal epithelium, and the transcriptional response of the infected host cells together with the differential expression of invading and intracellular pathogen cells was determined by dual 3'Seq coupled with the next-generation sequencing-based transcriptome profiling technique deepSuperSAGE (deep Serial Analysis of Gene Expression). Annotation to reference transcriptomes comprising the operon structure of the employed S. enterica Typhimurium strain allowed for in silico separation of the interacting cells including quantification of polycistronic RNAs. Eighty-nine percent of the known loci are found to be transcribed in prokaryotic cells prior or subsequent to infection of the host, while 75% of all protein-coding loci are represented in the polyadenylated transcriptomes of human host cells. Conclusions: Dual 3'Seq was alternatively coupled to MACE (Massive Analysis of cDNA ends) to assess the advantages and drawbacks of a library preparation procedure that allows for sequencing of longer fragments. Additionally, the identified expression patterns of both organisms were validated by qRT-PCR using three independent biological replicates, which confirmed that RELB along with NFKB1 and NFKB2 are involved in the initial immune response of epithelial cells after infection with S. enterica Typhimurium. KW - complete genome sequence KW - secretion systems KW - RNA-Seq KW - deepSuperSAGE KW - transcriptome KW - gene expression KW - serovar Typhimurium KW - human macrophages KW - epithelial cells KW - infection KW - SuperSAGE KW - receptors KW - Dual 3'seq KW - MACE KW - tag based KW - simultaneous KW - genome wide KW - gene expression profiling KW - host pathogen interaction KW - Salmonella enterica Typhimurium strain SL1344 Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-143230 VL - 16 IS - 323 ER - TY - THES A1 - Afify, Samar T1 - Drug targeting delivery systems for treatment of Raf-1 induced lung tumors in mice T1 - Trägersystem der Medikamente für Raf1- induzierte Lungentumor in Mäusen anzuzielen N2 - The aim of the present study was to design different dosage forms as carrier systems to deliver sorafenib to the lung of BXB-23 transgenic mice using different routes of administration. Three dosage forms were used one of them was an oil-in-water emulsion and the oral route was chosen for this experiment. The other delivery system was a liposome preparation for intratracheal instillation. In this case the oral route was considered as a control experiment. The last dosage form was PLGA microspheres. Before sorafenib administration it was important to develop a HPLC method to assess sorafenib absorption after its administration and to determine its concentrations in mouse serum. The HPLC method allowed sorafenib quantification in small volumes (30 µl) of mouse serum and tissues. The developed HPLC method was validated resulting in satisfactory selectivity, good linearity, good accuracy and precision over the concentration range examined. Sorafenib was successfully incorporated in a fat emulsion (o/w) using a traditional method resulting in a white homogenous emulsion and no particle aggregation was observed. Sorafenib exhibited antitumor activity on the lung adenoma in BXB-23 transgenic mice when administered orally (2 mg sorafenib per mouse) in the emulsion preparation. The determined effect was an approximately 29 % reduction in the tumor area of the adenoma foci and a proliferation reduction. In order to improve the pharmacological effects of sorafenib on the lung adenoma in BXB-23 mice, the targeting of sorafenib directly to the site of action (the lung) was an attractive concept. For this purpose the intratracheal route was used. Since sorafenib administration by instillation required incorporation of sorafenib in a dosage form suitable for its lipophilic nature, a liposome suspension was the second dosage form used. A lyophilization method was employed for sorafenib liposome preparation utilizing dilauroylphosphatidylcholine (DLPC) which is safe and tolerable for the lung. Incorporation of sorafenib in the liposomes did not influence the particle size and its distribution. The sorafenib liposomes showed high encapsulation efficiency, good stability at 4 °C for one month and satisfactory in vitro release properties and inhibited Raf-1 mediated activation of ERK in cell culture assay. In a pharmacokinetic experiment sorafenib loaded liposomes were instilled directly into the lung. The results revealed that a significant level of sorafenib was achieved in the lung tissues after 2 hours and then reduced after 48 h and remained nearly constant for one week. On the other hand, only traces of sorafenib were found in the mice serum up to 48 h. Subsequently, the pharmacological activity of sorafenib (1 mg per mouse) was studied when delivered in a liposomal suspension intratracheally to treat the lung adenoma of BXB-23 mice. The data of this experiment demonstrated that sorafenib intratracheal instillation resulted in a reduction of tumor area of adenoma foci (67 %) and an elevation of the percent of apoptotic cells. In contrast, prolongation of the treatment period did not further enhance sorafenib activity on the lung adenoma. This previous finding suggested a development of multidrug resistance (MDR) by the adenoma foci cells against sorafenib instillation, which was examined by immunohistochemistry staining. The percent of MDR positive cells was higher after two and three weeks sorafenib liposome instillation treatment than that after one week treatment. The last dosage form used for sorafenib was microspheres, which were prepared by emulsion-diffusion-evaporation method using biodegradable PLGA 50:50 resulting in a white lyophilized powder. The system was characterized physicochemically and revealed a good microspheres yield, high encapsulation efficiency, a homogenous particle size distribution and slow in vitro release of sorafenib. The other strategy studied in the present research project was gene delivery to target the lung bearing tumor of BXB-23 mice using a non-viral vector (polyethylenimine). Polyethylenimine (PEI) was used to investigate its efficiency in transfecting lung bearing tumor of BXB-23 mice model and its ability to transfect the adenoma foci cells. LacZ, which encodes Beta-galactosidase was used in the present study as a reporter gene and was complexed with PEI before delivered intravenously. A high LacZ expression in the alveolar region with some expression in the adenoma foci was observed. On contrary, a low LacZ expression in the alveoli and in the adenoma foci was achieved after instillation of the same polyplex intratracheally. N2 - Das Ziel der vorliegenden Dissertation war es, verschiedene galenische Darreichungsformen als Trägersystem für Sorafenib zu entwickeln, um den direkten Transport des Arzneistoffes zum Zielorgan Lunge von BXB-23 transgenen Mäusen zu ermöglichen. Für die verschiedenen Applikationswege wurden drei Darreichungsformen gewählt. Eine Öl-in-Wasser-Emulsion sollte oral verabreicht werden. Für die intratracheale Instillation wurde ein liposomales Präparat gewählt. Die letzte Darreichungsform stellten PLGA Mikrosphären dar. Um die Absorption von Sorafenib nach Administration bestimmen zu können, wurde die Konzentration des Arzneistoffes im Mäuseserum gemessen. Zur Quantifizierung von Sorafenib in einem geringen Volumen Serum und in Gewebe wurde eine HPLC-Methode entwickelt und validiert. Sorafenib wurde erfolgreich in eine Fettemulsion (o/w) mittels einer traditionellen Methode eingearbeitet. Nach oraler Verabreichung der Emulsion (2 mg/Maus) zeigte Sorafenib auf Lungenadenome eine Antitumor-Aktivität, wobei eine Reduktion der Tumorfläche der Adenomfoci um etwa 29 % und eine Reduktion der Proliferation verzeichnet werden konnte. Zur Verbesserung der pharmakologischen Effekte von Sorafenib auf die Lungenadenome in BXB-23 Mäusen zu verbessern, sollte Sorafenib direkt dem Zielorgan Lunge zugeführt werden. Zu diesem Zweck wurde der intratracheale Administrationsweg gewählt. Da die Instillation von Sorafenibaufgrund seiner lipophilen Natur nur durch Einschluß in eine andere Darreichungsform zu erreichen ist, wurde für die zweite Darreichungsform eine Liposomen-Suspension verwendet. Für die Zubereitung von Sorafenib in Liposomen wurde eine Lyophilisierungsmethode unter Verwendung von DPLC erarbeitet. Die Einschluss-Effektivität der Sorafenib-beladenen Liposomen war hoch und zeigte bei 4°C eine gute Stabilität für einen Monat. Die erzielten Effekte bei der in vitro Freisetzung und die Hemmung der von Raf1-induzierten Aktivierung von ERK in Zellkulturexperimenten lieferten zufrieden stellende Ergebnisse. In einem pharmakokinetischen Experiment wurden mit Sorafenib beladenen Liposomen direkt in die Lunge appliziert. Die Ergebnisse zeigten, dass nach 2 h eine signifikante Konzentration von Sorafenib im Lungengewebe erreicht wurde. Nach 48 h nahm diese Konzentration ab und blieb dann für eine Woche fast konstant. Andererseits wurden bis zu 48 h nach Gabe des Arzneistoffes nur Spuren von Sorafenib im Mäuseserum gefunden. Folglich wurde die pharmakologische Aktivität von Sorafenib (1 mg/Maus) bei intratrachealer Verabreichung in einer liposomalen Suspension untersucht. Die Ergebnisse zeigten, dass die intratracheale Gabe von Sorafenib eine Reduktion der Tumorfläche der Adenomfoci um 67 % bewirkte, sowie eine Erhöhung des prozentualen Anteils apoptotischer Zellen. Eine Verlängerung der Behandlungszeit zeigte keine zusätzliche Verbesserung der Effekte. Dies lies vermuten, dass hier eine Entwicklung von Multidrug-Resistenz in den Adenomfocizellen gegenüber der Instillation von Sorafenib erfolgte. Dies wurde in immunochemischen Anfärbe-Experimenten untersucht. Die Prozentzahl von MDR-positiven Zellen war nach zwei und drei Wochen Instillation von Sorafenib-Liposomen höher als nach einer Woche. Die letzte verwendete Darreichungsform für Sorafenib waren Mikrosphären, die durch Emulsions-Diffusions-Evaporations-Methoden in biologisch abbaubarem PLGA 50:50 hergestellt wurden. Dies ergab ein weißes, lyophilisiertes Pulver. Das System wurde physiochemisch charakterisiert und ergab ein gutes Mikrosphären-Ergebnis, hohe Einschluss-Effektivität, eine homogene Verteilung der Partikelgrößen und eine langsame in vitro Freisetzung von Sorafenib. Die andere untersuchte Strategie war Gen-Delivery, um den Lungentumor von BXB-23 Mäusen mittels eines nicht-viralen Vektors (Polyethylenimin, PEI) anzuzielen. PEI wurde verwendet, um die Effektivität der Transfektion des Lungentumors zu untersuchen und seine Fähigkeit, die Adenomfocizellen zu transfizieren. LacZ, das Beta-Galactosidase codiert, diente bei diesem Experiment als Reportergen und wurde vor intravenöser Gabe mit PEI komplexiert. Eine hohe LacZ-Expression in der alveolaren Region, aber nur eine geringe Expression in den Adenomfoci wurde beobachtet. Im Gegensatz dazu wurde eine geringe Expression von LacZ in den Alveolen und den Adenomfoci nach intratrachealer Instillation des gleichen Polyplex erreicht. KW - Maus KW - Transgene Tiere KW - Targeted drug delivery KW - Lungenkrebs KW - Sorafenib KW - Liposomen KW - MDR KW - Mikrosphären KW - Antitumor KW - Sorafenib KW - liposomes KW - MDR KW - microspheres KW - Antitumor Y1 - 2007 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-22249 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aeschlimann, Martin A1 - Brixner, Tobias A1 - Cinchetti, Mirko A1 - Frisch, Benjamin A1 - Hecht, Bert A1 - Hensen, Matthias A1 - Huber, Bernhard A1 - Kramer, Christian A1 - Krauss, Enno A1 - Loeber, Thomas H. A1 - Pfeiffer, Walter A1 - Piecuch, Martin A1 - Thielen, Philip T1 - Cavity-assisted ultrafast long-range periodic energy transfer between plasmonic nanoantennas JF - Light: Science & Applications N2 - Radiationless energy transfer is at the core of diverse phenomena, such as light harvesting in photosynthesis\(^1\), energy-transfer-based microspectroscopies\(^2\), nanoscale quantum entanglement\(^3\) and photonic-mode hybridization\(^4\). Typically, the transfer is efficient only for separations that are much shorter than the diffraction limit. This hampers its application in optical communication and quantum information processing, which require spatially selective addressing. Here, we demonstrate highly efficient radiationless coherent energy transfer over a distance of twice the excitation wavelength by combining localized and delocalized\(^5\) plasmonic modes. Analogous to the Tavis-Cummings model, two whispering-gallery-mode antennas\(^6\) placed in the foci of an elliptical plasmonic cavity\(^7\) fabricated from single-crystal gold plates act as a pair of oscillators coupled to a common cavity mode. Time-resolved two-photon photoemission electron microscopy (TR 2P-PEEM) reveals an ultrafast long-range periodic energy transfer in accordance with the simulations. Our observations open perspectives for the optimization and tailoring of mesoscopic energy transfer and long-range quantum emitter coupling. KW - chemistry KW - nanocavities KW - nanophotonics and plasmonics KW - photonic devices Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-173265 VL - 6 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aeschlimann, Martin A1 - Bauer, Michael A1 - Bayer, Daniela A1 - Brixner, Tobias A1 - Cunovic, Stefan A1 - Fischer, Alexander A1 - Melchior, Pascal A1 - Pfeiffer, Walter A1 - Rohmer, Martin A1 - Schneider, Christian A1 - Strüber, Christian A1 - Tuchscherer, Philip A1 - Voronine, Dimitri V. T1 - Optimal open-loop near-field control of plasmonic nanostructures N2 - Optimal open-loop control, i.e. the application of an analytically derived control rule, is demonstrated for nanooptical excitations using polarization-shaped laser pulses. Optimal spatial near-field localization in gold nanoprisms and excitation switching is realized by applying a shift to the relative phase of the two polarization components. The achieved near-field switching confirms theoretical predictions, proves the applicability of predefined control rules in nanooptical light–matter interaction and reveals local mode interference to be an important control mechanism. KW - Chemie Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-75256 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aerts, An A1 - Eberlein, Uta A1 - Holm, Sören A1 - Hustinx, Roland A1 - Konijnenberg, Mark A1 - Strigari, Lidia A1 - van Leeuwen, Fijs W. B. A1 - Glatting, Gerhard A1 - Lassmann, Michael T1 - EANM position paper on the role of radiobiology in nuclear medicine JF - European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging N2 - With an increasing variety of radiopharmaceuticals for diagnostic or therapeutic nuclear medicine as valuable diagnostic or treatment option, radiobiology plays an important role in supporting optimizations. This comprises particularly safety and efficacy of radionuclide therapies, specifically tailored to each patient. As absorbed dose rates and absorbed dose distributions in space and time are very different between external irradiation and systemic radionuclide exposure, distinct radiation-induced biological responses are expected in nuclear medicine, which need to be explored. This calls for a dedicated nuclear medicine radiobiology. Radiobiology findings and absorbed dose measurements will enable an improved estimation and prediction of efficacy and adverse effects. Moreover, a better understanding on the fundamental biological mechanisms underlying tumor and normal tissue responses will help to identify predictive and prognostic biomarkers as well as biomarkers for treatment follow-up. In addition, radiobiology can form the basis for the development of radiosensitizing strategies and radioprotectant agents. Thus, EANM believes that, beyond in vitro and preclinical evaluations, radiobiology will bring important added value to clinical studies and to clinical teams. Therefore, EANM strongly supports active collaboration between radiochemists, radiopharmacists, radiobiologists, medical physicists, and physicians to foster research toward precision nuclear medicine. KW - radionuclide therapy KW - radiobiology KW - dosimetry KW - biodosimetry KW - biomarkers Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-265595 VL - 48 IS - 11 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Adrián-Martínez, S. A1 - Albert, A. A1 - André, M. A1 - Anton, G. A1 - Ardid, M. A1 - Aubert, J.-J. A1 - Avgitas, T. A1 - Baret, B. A1 - Barrios-Martí, J. A1 - Basa, S. A1 - Bertin, V. A1 - Biagi, S. A1 - Bormuth, R. A1 - Bouwhuis, M.C. A1 - Bruijn, R. A1 - Brunner, J. A1 - Busto, J. A1 - Capone, A. A1 - Caramete, L. A1 - Carr, J. A1 - Celli, S. A1 - Chiarusi, T. A1 - Circella, M. A1 - Coleiro, A. A1 - Coniglione, R. A1 - Costantini, H. A1 - Coyle, P. A1 - Creusot, A. A1 - Deschamps, A. A1 - De Bonis, G. A1 - Distefano, C. A1 - Donzaud, C. A1 - Dornic, D. A1 - Drouhin, D. A1 - Eberl, T. A1 - El Bojaddaini, I. A1 - Elsässer, D. A1 - Enzenhöfer, A. A1 - Fehn, K. A1 - Felis, I. A1 - Fusco, L.A. A1 - Galatà, S. A1 - Gay, P. A1 - Geißelsöder, S. A1 - Geyer, K. A1 - Giordano, V. A1 - Gleixner, A. A1 - Glotin, H. A1 - Gracia-Ruiz, R. A1 - Graf, K. A1 - Hallmann, S. A1 - van Haren, H. A1 - Heijboer, A.J. A1 - Hello, Y. A1 - Hernández-Rey, J.J. A1 - Hößl, J. A1 - Hofestädt, J. A1 - Hugon, C. A1 - Illuminati, G. A1 - James, C.W. A1 - de Jong, M. A1 - Jongen, M. A1 - Kadler, M. A1 - Kalekin, O. A1 - Katz, U. A1 - Kießling, D. A1 - Kouchner, A. A1 - Kreter, M. A1 - Kreykenbohm, I. A1 - Kulikovskiy, V. A1 - Lachaud, C. A1 - Lahmann, R. A1 - Lefèvre, D. A1 - Leonora, E. A1 - Loucatos, S. A1 - Marcelin, M. A1 - Margiotta, A. A1 - Marinelli, A. A1 - Martínez-Mora, J.A. A1 - Mathieu, A. A1 - Melis, K. A1 - Michael, T. A1 - Migliozzi, P. A1 - Moussa, A. A1 - Mueller, C. A1 - Nezri, E. A1 - Pavalas, G.E. A1 - Pellegrino, C. A1 - Perrina, C. A1 - Piattelli, P. A1 - Popa, V. A1 - Pradier, T. A1 - Racca, C. A1 - Riccobene, G. A1 - Roensch, K. A1 - Saldaña, M. A1 - Samtleben, D.F.E. A1 - Sánchez-Losa, A. A1 - Sanguineti, M. A1 - Sapienza, P. A1 - Schnabel, J. A1 - Schüssler, F. A1 - Seitz, T. A1 - Sieger, C. A1 - Spurio, M. A1 - Stolarczyk, Th. A1 - Taiuti, M. A1 - Tönnis, C. A1 - Trovato, A. A1 - Tselengidou, M. A1 - Turpin, D. A1 - Vallage, B. A1 - Vallée, C. A1 - Van Elewyck, V. A1 - Vivolo, D. A1 - Wagner, S. A1 - Wilms, J. A1 - Zornoza, J.D. A1 - Zúñiga, J. T1 - Limits on dark matter annihilation in the sun using the ANTARES neutrino telescope JF - Physics Letters B N2 - A search for muon neutrinos originating from dark matter annihilations in the Sun is performed using the data recorded by the ANTARES neutrino telescope from 2007 to 2012. In order to obtain the best possible sensitivities to dark matter signals, an optimisation of the event selection criteria is performed taking into account the background of atmospheric muons, atmospheric neutrinos and the energy spectra of the expected neutrino signals. No significant excess over the background is observed and 90% C.L. upper limits on the neutrino flux, the spin-dependent and spin-independent WIMP-nucleon cross-sections are derived for WIMP masses ranging from 50 GeV to 5 TeV for the annihilation channels WIMP + WIMP→ b\(\overline{b}\), W\(^{+}\)W\(^{−}\) and τ\(^{+}\)τ\(^{−}\). KW - dark matter KW - WIMP KW - neutralino KW - indirect detection KW - neutrino telescope KW - sun Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-166642 VL - 759 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Adrián-Martínez, S. A1 - Albert, A. A1 - André, M. A1 - Anton, G. A1 - Ardid, M. A1 - Aubert, J.-J. A1 - Avgitas, T. A1 - Baret, B. A1 - Barrios-Martí, J. A1 - Basa, S. A1 - Bertin, V. A1 - Biagi, S. A1 - Bormuth, R. A1 - Bou-Cabo, M. A1 - Bouwhuis, M.C. A1 - Bruijn, R. A1 - Brunner, J. A1 - Busto, J. A1 - Capone, A. A1 - Caramete, L. A1 - Carr, J. A1 - Celli, S. A1 - Chiarusi, T. A1 - Circella, M. A1 - Coleiro, A. A1 - Coniglione, R. A1 - Costantini, H. A1 - Coyle, P. A1 - Creusot, A. A1 - Deschamps, A. A1 - De Bonis, G. A1 - Distefano, C. A1 - Donzaud, C. A1 - Dornic, D. A1 - Drouhin, D. A1 - Eberl, T. A1 - El Bojaddaini, I. A1 - Elsässer, D. A1 - Enzenhöfer, A. A1 - Fehn, K. A1 - Felis, I. A1 - Fusco, L.A. A1 - Galatà, S. A1 - Gay, P. A1 - Geißelsöder, S. A1 - Geyer, K. A1 - Giordano, V. A1 - Gleixner, A. A1 - Glotin, H. A1 - Gracia-Ruiz, R. A1 - Graf, K. A1 - Hallmann, S. A1 - van Haren, H. A1 - Heijboer, A.J. A1 - Hello, Y. A1 - Hernández-Rey, J.-J. A1 - Hößl, J. A1 - Hofestädt, J. A1 - Hugon, C. A1 - Illuminati, G. A1 - James, C.W. A1 - de Jong, M. A1 - Kadler, M. A1 - Kalekin, O. A1 - Katz, U. A1 - Kießling, D. A1 - Kouchner, A. A1 - Kreter, M. A1 - Kreykenbohm, I. A1 - Kulikovskiy, V. A1 - Lachaud, C. A1 - Lahmann, R. A1 - Lefèvre, D. A1 - Leonora, E. A1 - Loucatos, S. A1 - Marcelin, M. A1 - Margiotta, A. A1 - Marinelli, A. A1 - Martínez-Mora, J.A. A1 - Mathieu, A. A1 - Michael, T. A1 - Migliozzi, P. A1 - Moussa, A. A1 - Mueller, C. A1 - Nezri, E. A1 - Păvălaș, G.E. A1 - Pellegrino, C. A1 - Perrina, C. A1 - Piattelli, P. A1 - Popa, V. A1 - Pradier, T. A1 - Racca, C. A1 - Riccobene, G. A1 - Roensch, K. A1 - Saldaña, M. A1 - Samtleben, D.F.E. A1 - Sanguineti, M. A1 - Sapienza, P. A1 - Schnabel, J. A1 - Schüssler, F. A1 - Seitz, T. A1 - Sieger, C. A1 - Spurio, M. A1 - Stolarczyk, Th. A1 - Sánchez-Losa, A. A1 - Taiuti, M. A1 - Trovato, A. A1 - Tselengidou, M. A1 - Turpin, D. A1 - Tönnis, C. A1 - Vallage, B. A1 - Vallée, C. A1 - Van Elewyck, V. A1 - Vivolo, D. A1 - Wagner, S. A1 - Wilms, J. A1 - Zornoza, J.D. A1 - Zúñiga, J. T1 - A search for Secluded Dark Matter in the Sun with the ANTARES neutrino telescope JF - Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics N2 - A search for Secluded Dark Matter annihilation in the Sun using 2007-2012 data of the ANTARES neutrino telescope is presented. Three different cases are considered: a) detection of dimuons that result from the decay of the mediator, or neutrino detection from: b) mediator that decays into a dimuon and, in turn, into neutrinos, and c) mediator that decays directly into neutrinos. As no significant excess over background is observed, constraints are derived on the dark matter mass and the lifetime of the mediator. KW - dark matter experiments KW - neutrino detectors KW - dark matter detectors KW - neutrino astronomy Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-189035 VL - 2016 IS - 5 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Adrián-Martínez, S. A1 - Albert, A. A1 - André, M. A1 - Anghinolfi, M. A1 - Anton, G. A1 - Ardid, M. A1 - Aubert, J.-J. A1 - Baret, B. A1 - Barrios-Marti, J. A1 - Basa, S. A1 - Bertin, V. A1 - Biagi, S. A1 - Bormuth, R. A1 - Bouwhuis, M.C. A1 - Bruijn, R. A1 - Brunner, J. A1 - Buto, J. A1 - Capone, A. A1 - Caramete, L. A1 - Carr, J. A1 - Chiarusi, T. A1 - Circella, M. A1 - Coniglione, R. A1 - Costantini, H. A1 - Coyle, P. A1 - Creusot, A. A1 - Dekeyser, I. A1 - Deschamps, A. A1 - De Bonis, G. A1 - Distefano, C. T1 - Stacked search for time shifted high energy neutrinos from gamma ray bursts with the ANTARES neutrino telescope JF - European Physical Journal C N2 - A search for high-energy neutrino emission correlated with gamma-ray bursts outside the electromagnetic prompt-emission time window is presented. Using a stacking approach of the time delays between reported gamma-ray burst alerts and spatially coincident muon-neutrino signatures, data from the Antares neutrino telescope recorded between 2007 and 2012 are analysed. One year of public data from the IceCube detector between 2008 and 2009 have been also investigated. The respective timing profiles are scanned for statistically significant accumulations within 40 days of the Gamma Ray Burst, as expected from Lorentz Invariance Violation effects and some astrophysical models. No significant excess over the expected accidental coincidence rate could be found in either of the two data sets. The average strength of the neutrino signal is found to be fainter than one detectable neutrino signal per hundred gamma-ray bursts in the Antares data at 90% confidence level. KW - Search window KW - Neutrino data KW - Neutrino telescope KW - Neutrino emission KW - Accidental coincidence KW - Gamma-ray bursts Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-181251 VL - 77 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Adrián-Martínez, S. A1 - Albert, A. A1 - André, M. A1 - Anghinolfi, M. A1 - Anton, G. A1 - Ardid, M. A1 - Aubert, J.-J. A1 - Avgitas, T. A1 - Baret, B. A1 - Barrios-Martí, J. A1 - Basa, S. A1 - Bertin, V. A1 - Biagi, S. A1 - Bormuth, R. A1 - Bouwhuis, M.C. A1 - Bruijn, R. A1 - Brunner, J. A1 - Busto, J. A1 - Capone, A. A1 - Caramete, L. A1 - Carr, J. A1 - Celli, S. A1 - Chiarusi, T. A1 - Circella, M. A1 - Coleiro, A. A1 - Coniglione, R. A1 - Constantini, H. A1 - Coyle, P. A1 - Creusot, A. A1 - Deschamps, A. A1 - De Bonis, G. A1 - Distefano, C. A1 - Donzaud, C. A1 - Dornic, D. A1 - Drouhin, D. A1 - Eberl, T. A1 - El Bojaddaini, I. A1 - Elsässer, D. A1 - Enzenhöfer, A. A1 - Fehn, K. A1 - Felis, I. A1 - Fusco, L.A. A1 - Galatà, S. A1 - Gay, P. A1 - Geißelsöder, S. A1 - Geyer, K. A1 - Giordano, V. A1 - Gleixner, A. A1 - Glotin, H. A1 - Gracia-Ruiz, R. A1 - Graf, K. A1 - Hallmann, S. A1 - van Haren, H. A1 - Heijboer, A.J. A1 - Hello, Y. A1 - Hernández-Rey, J.J. A1 - Hößl, J. A1 - Hofestädt, J. A1 - Hugon, C. A1 - Illuminati, G. A1 - James, C.W. A1 - de Jong, M. A1 - Kadler, M. A1 - Kalekin, O. A1 - Katz, U. A1 - Kießling, D. A1 - Kouchner, A. A1 - Kreter, M. A1 - Kreykenbohm, I. A1 - Kulikovskiy, V. A1 - Lachaud, C. A1 - Lahmann, R. A1 - Lefèvre, D. A1 - Leonora, E. A1 - Loucatos, S. A1 - Marcelin, M. A1 - Margiotta, A. A1 - Marinelli, A. A1 - Martínez-Mora, J.A. A1 - Mathieu, A. A1 - Michael, T. A1 - Migliozzi, P. A1 - Moussa, A. A1 - Mueller, C. A1 - Nezri, E. A1 - Pavalas, G.E. A1 - Pellegrino, C. A1 - Perrina, C. A1 - Piattelli, P. A1 - Popa, V. A1 - Pradier, T. A1 - Racca, C. A1 - Riccobene, G. A1 - Roensch, K. A1 - Saldaña, M. A1 - Samtleben, D.F.E. A1 - Sánchez-Losa, A. A1 - Sanguineti, M. A1 - Sapienza, P. A1 - Schnabel, J. A1 - Schüssler, F. A1 - Seitz, T. A1 - Sieger, C. A1 - Spurio, M. A1 - Stolarczyk, Th. A1 - Taiuti, M. A1 - Trovato, A. A1 - Tselengidou, M. A1 - Turpin, D. A1 - Tönnis, C. A1 - Vallage, B. A1 - Vallée, C. A1 - Van Elewyck, V. A1 - Visser, E. A1 - Vivolo, D. A1 - Wagner, S. A1 - Wilms, J. A1 - Zornoza, J.D. A1 - Zúñiga, J. T1 - Constraints on the neutrino emission from the Galactic Ridge with the ANTARES telescope JF - Physics Letters B N2 - A highly significant excess of high-energy astrophysical neutrinos has been reported by the IceCube Collaboration. Some features of the energy and declination distributions of IceCube events hint at a North/South asymmetry of the neutrino flux. This could be due to the presence of the bulk of our Galaxy in the Southern hemisphere. The ANTARES neutrino telescope, located in the Mediterranean Sea, has been taking data since 2007. It offers the best sensitivity to muon neutrinos produced by galactic cosmic ray interactions in this region of the sky. In this letter a search for an extended neutrino flux from the Galactic Ridge region is presented. Different models of neutrino production by cosmic ray propagation are tested. No excess of events is observed and upper limits for different neutrino flux spectral indices Γ are set. For Γ=2.4 the 90% confidence level flux upper limit at 100 TeV for one neutrino flavour corresponds to Φ\(^{1f}_{0}\) (100 TeV) = 2.0 · 10\(^{−17}\) GeV\(^{−1}\) cm\(^{−2}\)s\(^{−1}\)sr\(^{−1}\). Under this assumption, at most two events of the IceCube cosmic candidates can originate from the Galactic Ridge. A simple power-law extrapolation of the Fermi-LAT flux to account for IceCube High Energy Starting Events is excluded at 90% confidence level. KW - neutrino emission KW - Galactic Ridge KW - ANTARES telescope Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-166608 VL - 760 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Adrián-Martínez, S. A1 - Ageron, M. A1 - Aharonian, F. A1 - Aiello, S. A1 - Albert, A. A1 - Ameli, F. A1 - Annasontzis, E. A1 - Andre, M. A1 - Androulakis, G. A1 - Anghinolfi, M. A1 - Anton, G. A1 - Ardid, M. A1 - Avgitas, T. A1 - Barbarino, G. A1 - Baret, B. A1 - Barrios-Martí, J. A1 - Belhorma, B. A1 - Belias, A. A1 - Berbee, A. A1 - van den Berg, A. A1 - Bertin, V. A1 - Beurthey, S. A1 - van Beeveren, V. A1 - Beverini, N. A1 - Biagi, S. A1 - Biagioni, A. A1 - Billault, M. A1 - Bondì, M. A1 - Bormuth, R. A1 - Bouhadef, B. A1 - Bourlis, G. A1 - Bourret, S. A1 - Boutonnet, C. A1 - Bouwhuis, M. A1 - Bozza, C. A1 - Bruijn, R. A1 - Brunner, J. A1 - Buis, E. A1 - Busto, J. A1 - Cacopardo, G. A1 - Caillat, L. A1 - Calmai, M. A1 - Calvo, D. A1 - Capone, A. A1 - Caramete, L. A1 - Cecchini, S. A1 - Celli, S. A1 - Champion, C. A1 - Cherkaoui El Moursli, R. A1 - Cherubini, S. A1 - Chiarusi, T. A1 - Circella, M. A1 - Classen, L. A1 - Cocimano, R. A1 - Coelho, J. A. B. A1 - Coleiro, A. A1 - Colonges, S. A1 - Coniglione, R. A1 - Cordelli, M. A1 - Cosquer, A. A1 - Coyle, P. A1 - Creusot, A. A1 - Cuttone, G. A1 - D'Amico, A. A1 - De Bonis, G. A1 - De Rosa, G. A1 - De Sio, C. A1 - Di Capua, F. A1 - Di Palma, I. A1 - Díaz García, A. F. A1 - Distefano, C. A1 - Donzaud, C. A1 - Dornic, D. A1 - Dorosti-Hasankiadeh, Q. A1 - Drakopoulou, E. A1 - Drouhin, D. A1 - Drury, L. A1 - Durocher, M. A1 - Eberl, T. A1 - Eichie, S. A1 - van Eijk, D. A1 - El Bojaddaini, I. A1 - El Khayati, N. A1 - Elsaesser, D. A1 - Enzenhöfer, A. A1 - Fassi, F. A1 - Favali, P. A1 - Fermani, P. A1 - Ferrara, G. A1 - Filippidis, C. A1 - Frascadore, G. A1 - Fusco, L. A. A1 - Gal, T. A1 - Galatà, S. A1 - Garufi, F. A1 - Gay, P. A1 - Gebyehu, M. A1 - Giordano, V. A1 - Gizani, N. A1 - Gracia, R. A1 - Graf, K. A1 - Grégoire, T. A1 - Grella, G. A1 - Habel, R. A1 - Hallmann, S. A1 - van Haren, H. A1 - Harissopulos, S. A1 - Heid, T. A1 - Heijboer, A. A1 - Heine, E. A1 - Henry, S. A1 - Hernández-Rey, J. J. A1 - Hevinga, M. A1 - Hofestädt, J. A1 - Hugon, C. M. F. A1 - Illuminati, G. A1 - James, C. W. A1 - Jansweijer, P. A1 - Jongen, M. A1 - de Jong, M. A1 - Kadler, M. A1 - Kalekin, O. A1 - Kappes, A. A1 - Katz, U. F. A1 - Keller, P. A1 - Kieft, G. A1 - Kießling, D. A1 - Koffeman, E. N. A1 - Kooijman, P. A1 - Kouchner, A. A1 - Kulikovskiy, V. A1 - Lahmann, R. A1 - Lamare, P. A1 - Leisos, A. A1 - Leonora, E. A1 - Lindsey Clark, M. A1 - Liolios, A. A1 - Llorenz Alvarez, C. D. A1 - Lo Presti, D. A1 - Löhner, H. A1 - Lonardo, A. A1 - Lotze, M. A1 - Loucatos, S. A1 - Maccioni, E. A1 - Mannheim, K. A1 - Margiotta, A. A1 - Marinelli, A. A1 - Mariş, O. A1 - Markou, C. A1 - Martínez-Mora, J. A. A1 - Martini, A. A1 - Mele, R. A1 - Melis, K. W. A1 - Michael, T. A1 - Migliozzi, P. A1 - Migneco, E. A1 - Mijakowski, P. A1 - Miraglia, A. A1 - Mollo, C. M. A1 - Mongelli, M. A1 - Morganti, M. A1 - Moussa, A. A1 - Musico, P. A1 - Musumeci, M. A1 - Navas, S. A1 - Nicoleau, C. A. A1 - Olcina, I. A1 - Olivetto, C. A1 - Orlando, A. A1 - Papaikonomou, A. A1 - Papaleo, R. A1 - Păvălaş, G. E. A1 - Peek, H. A1 - Pellegrino, C. A1 - Perrina, C. A1 - Pfutzner, M. A1 - Piattelli, P. A1 - Pikounis, K. A1 - Poma, G. E. A1 - Popa, V. A1 - Pradier, T. A1 - Pratolongo, F. A1 - Pühlhofer, G. A1 - Pulvirenti, S. A1 - Quinn, L. A1 - Racca, C. A1 - Raffaelli, F. A1 - Randazzo, N. A1 - Rapidis, P. A1 - Razis, P. A1 - Real, D. A1 - Resvanis, L. A1 - Reubelt, J. A1 - Riccobene, G. A1 - Rossi, C. A1 - Rovelli, A. A1 - Saldaña, M. A1 - Salvadori, I. A1 - Samtleben, D. F. E. A1 - Sánchez García, A. A1 - Sánchez Losa, A. A1 - Sanguineti, M. A1 - Santangelo, A. A1 - Santonocito, D. A1 - Sapienza, P. A1 - Schimmel, F. A1 - Schmelling, J. A1 - Sciacca, V. A1 - Sedita, M. A1 - Seitz, T. A1 - Sgura, I. A1 - Simeone, F. A1 - Siotis, I. A1 - Sipala, V. A1 - Spisso, B. A1 - Spurio, M. A1 - Stavropoulos, G. A1 - Steijger, J. A1 - Stellacci, S. M. A1 - Stransky, D. A1 - Taiuti, M. A1 - Tayalati, Y. A1 - Tézier, D. A1 - Theraube, S. A1 - Thompson, L. A1 - Timmer, P. A1 - Tönnis, C. A1 - Trasatti, L. A1 - Trovato, A. A1 - Tsirigotis, A. A1 - Tzamarias, S. A1 - Tzamariudaki, E. A1 - Vallage, B. A1 - Van Elewyk, V. A1 - Vermeulen, J. A1 - Vicini, P. A1 - Viola, S. A1 - Vivolo, D. A1 - Volkert, M. A1 - Voulgaris, G. A1 - Wiggers, L. A1 - Wilms, J. A1 - de Wolf, E. A1 - Zachariadou, K. A1 - Zornoza, J. D. A1 - Zúñiga, J. T1 - Letter of intent for KM3NeT 2.0 JF - Journal of Physics G-Nuclear and Particle Physics N2 - The main objectives of the KM3NeT Collaboration are (i) the discovery and subsequent observation of high-energy neutrino sources in the Universe and (ii) the determination of the mass hierarchy of neutrinos. These objectives are strongly motivated by two recent important discoveries, namely: (1) the high-energy astrophysical neutrino signal reported by IceCube and (2) the sizable contribution of electron neutrinos to the third neutrino mass eigenstate as reported by Daya Bay, Reno and others. To meet these objectives, the KM3NeT Collaboration plans to build a new Research Infrastructure consisting of a network of deep-sea neutrino telescopes in the Mediterranean Sea. A phased and distributed implementation is pursued which maximises the access to regional funds, the availability of human resources and the synergistic opportunities for the Earth and sea sciences community. Three suitable deep-sea sites are selected, namely off-shore Toulon (France), Capo Passero (Sicily, Italy) and Pylos (Peloponnese, Greece). The infrastructure will consist of three so-called building blocks. A building block comprises 115 strings, each string comprises 18 optical modules and each optical module comprises 31 photo-multiplier tubes. Each building block thus constitutes a three-dimensional array of photo sensors that can be used to detect the Cherenkov light produced by relativistic particles emerging from neutrino interactions. Two building blocks will be sparsely configured to fully explore the IceCube signal with similar instrumented volume, different methodology, improved resolution and KW - neutrino astronomy KW - eutrino physics KW - deep sea neutrino telescope KW - neutrino mass hierarchy Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-188050 VL - 43 IS - 8 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Adolph, Jonas E. A1 - Fleischhack, Gudrun A1 - Gaab, Christine A1 - Mikasch, Ruth A1 - Mynarek, Martin A1 - Rutkowski, Stefan A1 - Schüller, Ulrich A1 - Pfister, Stefan M. A1 - Pajtler, Kristian W. A1 - Milde, Till A1 - Witt, Olaf A1 - Bison, Brigitte A1 - Warmuth-Metz, Monika A1 - Kortmann, Rolf-Dieter A1 - Dietzsch, Stefan A1 - Pietsch, Torsten A1 - Timmermann, Beate A1 - Tippelt, Stephan T1 - Systemic chemotherapy of pediatric recurrent ependymomas: results from the German HIT-REZ studies JF - Journal of Neuro-Oncology N2 - Purpose Survival in recurrent ependymoma (EPN) depends mainly on the extent of resection achieved. When complete resection is not feasible, chemotherapy is often used to extend progression-free and overall survival. However, no consistent effect of chemotherapy on survival has been found in patients with recurrent EPN. Methods Systemic chemotherapeutic treatment of 138 patients enrolled in the German HIT-REZ-studies was analyzed. Survival depending on the use of chemotherapy, disease-stabilization rates (RR), duration of response (DOR) and time to progression (TTP) were estimated. Results Median age at first recurrence was 7.6 years (IQR: 4.0–13.6). At first recurrence, median PFS and OS were 15.3 (CI 13.3–20.0) and 36.9 months (CI 29.7–53.4), respectively. The Hazard Ratio for the use of chemotherapy in local recurrences in a time-dependent Cox-regression analysis was 0.99 (CI 0.74–1.33). Evaluable responses for 140 applied chemotherapies were analyzed, of which sirolimus showed the best RR (50%) and longest median TTP [11.51 (CI 3.98; 14.0) months] in nine patients, with the strongest impact found when sirolimus was used as a monotherapy. Seven patients with progression-free survival > 12 months after subtotal/no-resection facilitated by chemotherapy were found. No definitive survival advantage for any drug in a specific molecularly defined EPN type was found. Conclusion No survival advantage for the general use of chemotherapy in recurrent EPN was found. In cases with incomplete resection, chemotherapy was able to extend survival in individual cases. Sirolimus showed the best RR, DOR and TTP out of all drugs analyzed and may warrant further investigation. KW - ependymoma KW - chemotherapy KW - recurrence KW - children KW - sirolimus Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-308302 SN - 0167-594X SN - 1573-7373 VL - 155 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Adolfi, Mateus C. A1 - Herpin, Amaury A1 - Regensburger, Martina A1 - Sacquegno, Jacopo A1 - Waxman, Joshua S. A1 - Schartl, Manfred T1 - Retinoic acid and meiosis induction in adult versus embryonic gonads of medaka JF - Scientific Reports N2 - In vertebrates, one of the first recognizable sex differences in embryos is the onset of meiosis, known to be regulated by retinoic acid (RA) in mammals. We investigated in medaka a possible meiotic function of RA during the embryonic sex determination (SD) period and in mature gonads. We found RA mediated transcriptional activation in germ cells of both sexes much earlier than the SD stage, however, no such activity during the critical stages of SD. In adults, expression of the RA metabolizing enzymes indicates sexually dimorphic RA levels. In testis, RA acts directly in Sertoli, Leydig and pre-meiotic germ cells. In ovaries, RA transcriptional activity is highest in meiotic oocytes. Our results show that RA plays an important role in meiosis induction and gametogenesis in adult medaka but contrary to common expectations, not for initiating the first meiosis in female germ cells at the SD stage. KW - developmental biology KW - molecular biology Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-147843 VL - 6 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Adolfi, Mateus C. A1 - Herpin, Amaury A1 - Martinez-Bengochea, Anabel A1 - Kneitz, Susanne A1 - Regensburger, Martina A1 - Grunwald, David J. A1 - Schartl, Manfred T1 - Crosstalk Between Retinoic Acid and Sex-Related Genes Controls Germ Cell Fate and Gametogenesis in Medaka JF - Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology N2 - Sex determination (SD) is a highly diverse and complex mechanism. In vertebrates, one of the first morphological differences between the sexes is the timing of initiation of the first meiosis, where its initiation occurs first in female and later in male. Thus, SD is intimately related to the responsiveness of the germ cells to undergo meiosis in a sex-specific manner. In some vertebrates, it has been reported that the timing for meiosis entry would be under control of retinoic acid (RA), through activation of Stra8. In this study, we used a fish model species for sex determination and lacking the stra8 gene, the Japanese medaka (Oryzias latipes), to investigate the connection between RA and the sex determination pathway. Exogenous RA treatments act as a stress factor inhibiting germ cell differentiation probably by activation of dmrt1a and amh. Disruption of the RA degrading enzyme gene cyp26a1 induced precocious meiosis and oogenesis in embryos/hatchlings of female and even some males. Transcriptome analyzes of cyp26a1–/–adult gonads revealed upregulation of genes related to germ cell differentiation and meiosis, in both ovaries and testes. Our findings show that germ cells respond to RA in a stra8 independent model species. The responsiveness to RA is conferred by sex-related genes, restricting its action to the sex differentiation period in both sexes. KW - sex determination KW - retinoic acid KW - meiosis KW - gametogenesis KW - medaka Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-222669 SN - 2296-634X VL - 8 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Adolfi, Mateus C. A1 - Du, Kang A1 - Kneitz, Susanne A1 - Cabau, Cédric A1 - Zahm, Margot A1 - Klopp, Christophe A1 - Feron, Romain A1 - Paixão, Rômulo V. A1 - Varela, Eduardo S. A1 - de Almeida, Fernanda L. A1 - de Oliveira, Marcos A. A1 - Nóbrega, Rafael H. A1 - Lopez-Roques, Céline A1 - Iampietro, Carole A1 - Lluch, Jérôme A1 - Kloas, Werner A1 - Wuertz, Sven A1 - Schaefer, Fabian A1 - Stöck, Matthias A1 - Guiguen, Yann A1 - Schartl, Manfred T1 - A duplicated copy of id2b is an unusual sex-determining candidate gene on the Y chromosome of arapaima (Arapaima gigas) JF - Scientific Reports N2 - Arapaima gigas is one of the largest freshwater fish species of high ecological and economic importance. Overfishing and habitat destruction are severe threats to the remaining wild populations. By incorporating a chromosomal Hi-C contact map, we improved the arapaima genome assembly to chromosome-level, revealing an unexpected high degree of chromosome rearrangements during evolution of the bonytongues (Osteoglossiformes). Combining this new assembly with pool-sequencing of male and female genomes, we identified id2bbY, a duplicated copy of the inhibitor of DNA binding 2b (id2b) gene on the Y chromosome as candidate male sex-determining gene. A PCR-test for id2bbY was developed, demonstrating that this gene is a reliable male-specific marker for genotyping. Expression analyses showed that this gene is expressed in juvenile male gonads. Its paralog, id2ba, exhibits a male-biased expression in immature gonads. Transcriptome analyses and protein structure predictions confirm id2bbY as a prime candidate for the master sex-determiner. Acting through the TGF beta signaling pathway, id2bbY from arapaima would provide the first evidence for a link of this family of transcriptional regulators to sex determination. Our study broadens our current understanding about the evolution of sex determination genetic networks and provide a tool for improving arapaima aquaculture for commercial and conservation purposes. KW - evolutionary genetics KW - genetic markers KW - genome Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-265672 VL - 11 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Adolfi, Mateus C. A1 - Carreira, Ana C. O. A1 - Jesus, Lázaro W. O. A1 - Bogerd, Jan A1 - Funes, Rejane M. A1 - Schartl, Manfred A1 - Sogayar, Mari C. A1 - Borella, Maria I. T1 - Molecular cloning and expression analysis of dmrt1 and sox9 during gonad development and male reproductive cycle in the lambari fish, Astyanax altiparanae JF - Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology N2 - Background The dmrt1 and sox9 genes have a well conserved function related to testis formation in vertebrates, and the group of fish presents a great diversity of species and reproductive mechanisms. The lambari fish (Astyanax altiparanae) is an important Neotropical species, where studies on molecular level of sex determination and gonad maturation are scarce. Methods Here, we employed molecular cloning techniques to analyze the cDNA sequences of the dmrt1 and sox9 genes, and describe the expression pattern of those genes during development and the male reproductive cycle by qRT-PCR, and related to histology of the gonad. Results Phylogenetic analyses of predicted amino acid sequences of dmrt1 and sox9 clustered A. altiparanae in the Ostariophysi group, which is consistent with the morphological phylogeny of this species. Studies of the gonad development revealed that ovary formation occurred at 58 days after hatching (dah), 2 weeks earlier than testis formation. Expression studies of sox9 and dmrt1 in different tissues of adult males and females and during development revealed specific expression in the testis, indicating that both genes also have a male-specific role in the adult. During the period of gonad sex differentiation, dmrt1 seems to have a more significant role than sox9. During the male reproductive cycle dmrt1 and sox9 are down-regulated after spermiation, indicating a role of these genes in spermatogenesis. Conclusions For the first time the dmrt1 and sox9 were cloned in a Characiformes species. We show that both genes have a conserved structure and expression, evidencing their role in sex determination, sex differentiation and the male reproductive cycle in A. altiparanae. These findings contribute to a better understanding of the molecular mechanisms of sex determination and differentiation in fish. KW - spermatogenesis KW - SOX9 KW - DMRT1 KW - sex differentiation KW - teleostei Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-126486 VL - 13 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Adolf, Christian A1 - Braun, Leah T. A1 - Fuss, Carmina T. A1 - Hahner, Stefanie A1 - Künzel, Heike A1 - Handgriff, Laura A1 - Sturm, Lisa A1 - Heinrich, Daniel A. A1 - Schneider, Holger A1 - Bidlingmaier, Martin A1 - Reincke, Martin T1 - Spironolactone reduces biochemical markers of bone turnover in postmenopausal women with primary aldosteronism JF - Endocrine N2 - Context Primary aldosteronism (PA) is the most frequent form of endocrine hypertension. Besides its deleterious impact on cardiovascular target organ damage, PA is considered to cause osteoporosis. Patients and methods We assessed bone turnover in a subset of 36 postmenopausal women with PA. 18 patients had unilateral PA and were treated by adrenalectomy, whereas 18 patients had bilateral PA and received mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist (MRA) therapy respectively. 18 age- and BMI-matched females served as controls. To estimate bone remodeling, we measured the bone turnover markers intact procollagen 1 N-terminal propeptide, bone alkaline phosphatase, osteocalcin and tartrate resistant acid phosphatase 5b in plasma by chemiluminescent immunoassays at time of diagnosis and one year after initiation of treatment. Study design Observational longitudinal cohort study. Setting Tertiary care hospital. Results Compared with controls, patients with PA had mildly elevated osteocalcin at baseline (p = 0.013), while the other bone markers were comparable between both groups. There were no differences between the unilateral and the bilateral PA subgroup. One year after initiation of MRA treatment with spironolactone bone resorption and bone formation markers had significantly decreased in patients with bilateral PA. In contrast, patients adrenalectomized because of unilateral PA showed no significant change of bone turnover markers. Conclusion This study shows that aldosterone excess in postmenopausal women with PA is not associated with a relevant increase of bone turnover markers at baseline. However, we observed a significant decrease of bone markers in patients treated with spironolactone, but not in patients treated by adrenalectomy. KW - aldosterone KW - osteocalcin KW - osteoporosis KW - hyperparathyroidism KW - cortisol Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-315966 SN - 1355-008X SN - 1559-0100 VL - 69 IS - 3 ER - TY - THES A1 - Adler, Melanie T1 - New approaches to improve prediction of drug-induced liver injury T1 - Neue Ansätze zur verbesserten Vorhersage arzneimittelinduzierter Leberschäden N2 - Das häufige Scheitern neuer Arzneistoffkandidaten aufgrund von Lebertoxizität in präklinischen und klinischen Studien stellt ein erhebliches Problem in der Entwicklung von neuen Arzneimitteln dar. Deshalb ist es wichtig, neue Ansätze zu entwickeln, mit deren Hilfe unerwünschte Wirkungen von Arzneimitteln früher und zuverlässiger erkannt werden können. Um die Vorhersage von Lebertoxizität in präklinischen Studien zu verbessern, wurden im Rahmen dieser Arbeit zwei wesentliche Ansätze gewählt: 1) die Evaluierung neuer Biomarker, durch die Lebertoxizität zuverlässiger und empfindlicher detektiert werden könnte und 2.) wirkmechanistische Untersuchungen mittels Toxcicogenomics für ein besseres Verständnis der zugrunde liegenden Mechanismen der Arzneimittel-induzierten Toxizität. Ein Ziel dieser Arbeit war, die Fähigkeit einiger neuer potenzieller Biomarker (NGAL, Thiostatin, Clusterin und PON1) zu bewerten, Arzmeimittel-induzierte Lebertoxizität in Ratten frühzeitig zu erkennen. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass PON1 und Clusterin infolge eines durch die verabreichten Arzneistoffkandidaten verursachten Leberschadens nicht konsistent verändert waren. Diese beiden Marker sind daher, verglichen mit bestehenden klinisch-chemischen Markern, nicht für eine sichere Vorhersage von Arzneistoff-induzierten Leberschäden geeignet. Bei Thiostatin und NGAL zeigte sich hingegen ein zeit- und dosisabhängiger Anstieg im Serum und Urin behandelter Tiere. Diese Veränderungen, die gut mit der mRNA Expression im Zielorgan übereinstimmten, korrelierten mit dem Schweregrad der Arzneistoff-induzierten Leberschäden. Die Analyse mittels ROC zeigte, Thiostatin im Serum, nicht aber NGAL, ein besserer Indikator für Arzneimittel-induzierte hepatobiliäre Schäden ist als die routinemäßig verwendeten klinische-chemischen Marker, wie z.B. die Leberenzyme ALP, ALT und AST. Thiostatin wird jedoch als Akute-Phase-Protein in einer Vielzahl von Geweben exprimiert und kann somit nicht spezifisch als Lebermarker betrachtet werden. Dennoch zeigen unsere Ergebnisse, dass Thiostatin als sensitiver, minimal-invasiver diagnostischer Marker für Entzündungsprozesse und Gewebeschäden eine sinnvolle Ergänzung in der präklinischen Testung auf Lebertoxizität darstellt. Im zweiten Teil dieser Arbeit wurde mittels RNA-Interferenz das pharmakologische Target des Arzneistoffkandidaten BAY16, der Glukagonrezeptor, auf mRNA-Ebene gehemmt und anhand von Genexpressionsanalysen untersucht, ob die pharmakologisch-bedingte Modulation des Glukagonrezeptors eine Rolle in der Toxizität von BAY16 spielt. Desweiteren sollten diese Arbeiten Aufschluss geben, welche molekularen Veränderungen auf die pharmakologische Wirkung des Arzneistoffs zurückzuführen sind, und daher für den Mechanismus der Toxizität möglicherweise wenig relevant sind. Während BAY16 in Konzentrationen von 75 µM starke zytotoxische Wirkungen aufwies, hatte die siRNA vermittelte Depletion des Glukagonrezeptors keinen Einfluss auf die Vitalität primärer Rattenhepatozyten. Daraus lässt sich ableiten, dass die Hepatotoxiziät von BAY16 in vitro und in vivo nicht mit der pharmakologischen Modulation des Glukagonrezeptors assoziiert ist. Diese Ergebnisse wurden durch die Tatsache gestützt, dass die meisten der durch BAY16 induzierten Genexpressionsveränderungen unabhängig von der pharmakologischen Modulation des Glucagonrezeptors auftraten. Diese beobachteten off-target-Effekte beinhalteten Veränderungen im Fremdstoffmetabolismus, oxidativer Stress, erhöhte Fettsäuresynthese und Veränderungen im Cholesterol- und Gallensäuremetabolismus. Obwohl Veränderungen in diesen molekularen Mechanismen zum Fortschreiten eines Leberschadens beitragen können, ist es anhand dieser Daten nicht möglich einen eindeutigen Mechanismus für die Toxizität von BAY16 abzuleiten. In dieser Arbeit konnte jedoch gezeigt werden, dass die Anwendung der siRNA-Technologie einen neuen methodischen Ansatz darstellt, um Mechanismen arzneimittelbedingter Toxizität besser verstehen zu können. N2 - The high failure rate of new drug candidates in preclinical or clinical studies due to hepatotoxicity represents a considerable problem in the drug development. Hence, there is an urgent need to develop new approaches for early and reliable prediction of drug-induced hepatotoxicity that enables a better identification of drug candidates with high potential for toxicity at early stages of drug development. Therefore, the aim of this work was to improve the prediction of drug-induced liver injury in preclinical studies through evaluation of more reliable and sensitive biomarkers of hepatotoxicity and a better understanding of the underlying mechanistic basis for drug-induced toxicity. First, the ability of a set of potential markers (NGAL, thiostatin, clusterin, PON1) to detect early signs of liver injury was assessed in rats treated with drug candidates that were dropped from further development, in part due to toxic adverse effects in the liver. In summary, PON1 and clusterin were not consistently altered in response to liver injury and thus provide no additive information to the traditional liver enzymes in detecting drug-induced hepatotoxicity. In contrast, thiostatin and NGAL were increased in serum and urine of treated animals in a time- and dose-dependent manner. These changes correlated well with mRNA expression in the target organ and generally reflected the onset and degree of drug-induced liver injury. Receiver-operating characteristics analyses supported serum thiostatin, but not NGAL, as a better indicator of drug-induced hepatobiliary injury than conventional clinical chemistry parameters, such as ALP, ALT and AST. Although thiostatin, an acute phase protein expressed in a range of tissues, may not be specific for liver injury, our results indicate that thiostatin may serve as a sensitive, minimally-invasive diagnostic marker of inflammation and tissue damage in preclinical safety assessment. In the second part of this work, combined application of genomics profiling technology and RNAi to inhibit the pharmacological target of a drug candidate BAY16, a glucagon receptor (GCGR) antagonist, was used to determine if interference with the pharmacological target plays a role in the toxic response to BAY16, and to narrow down those molecular changes that are associated with toxicity, and not the pharmacological action of BAY16. In contrast to Bay 16, which was found to be cytotoxic at concentrations of 75 µM, silencing of the glucagon receptor did not affect cell viability in primary rat hepatocytes. Thus, it can be concluded that hepatotoxicity of Bay 16 was not related to the drugs inhibitory effect on the glucagon receptor in vitro and in vivo. These findings were supported by the fact that most of BAY16-induced changes in gene expression occurred independently of the pharmacological modulation of GCGR. These off-target effects include altered xenobiotic metabolism, oxidative stress, increased fatty acid synthesis, and alterations in cholesterol and bile acid metabolic processes. Although it was not possible to draw a final conclusion about the mechanism of BAY16 hepatotoxicity, changes in these molecular mechanisms appear contribute to progression of hepatic injury. With regard to drug safety assessment in preclinical studies, the utilization of siRNA technology in vitro represents a new approach to improve mechanistic understanding of the nature of drug’s toxicity, being either chemically mediated or due to primary or secondary pharmacological mode of action. KW - Biomarker KW - Leber KW - Hepatotoxizität KW - Lebertoxizität KW - biomarker KW - liver KW - hepatotoxicity Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-69512 ER - TY - THES A1 - Adler, Florian Rudolf T1 - Electronic Correlations in Two-dimensional Triangular Adatom Lattices T1 - Elektronische Korrelationen in zweidimensionalen Adatom-Dreiecksgittern N2 - Two-dimensional triangular lattices of group IV adatoms on semiconductor substrates provide a rich playground for the investigation of Mott-Hubbard physics. The possibility to combine various types of adatoms and substrates makes members of this material class versatile model systems to study the influence of correlation strength, band filling and spin-orbit coupling on the electronic structure - both experimentally and with dedicated many-body calculation techniques. The latter predict exotic ground states such as chiral superconductivity or spin liquid behavior for these frustrated lattices, however, experimental confirmation is still lacking. In this work, three different systems, namely the \(\alpha\)-phases of Sn/SiC(0001), Pb/Si(111), and potassium-doped Sn/Si(111) are investigated with scanning tunneling microscopy and photoemission spectroscopy in this regard. The results are potentially relevant for spintronic applications or quantum computing. For the novel group IV triangular lattice Sn/SiC(0001), a combined experimental and theoretical study reveals that the system features surprisingly strong electronic correlations because they are boosted by the substrate through its partly ionic character and weak screening capabilities. Interestingly, the spectral function, measured for the first time via angle-resolved photoemission, does not show any additional superstructure beyond the intrinsic \(\sqrt{3} \times \sqrt{3} R30^{\circ}\) reconstruction, thereby raising curiosity regarding the ground-state spin pattern. For Pb/Si(111), preceding studies have noted a phase transition of the surface reconstruction from \(\sqrt{3} \times \sqrt{3} R30^{\circ}\) to \(3 \times 3\) at 86 K. In this thesis, investigations of the low-temperature phase with high-resolution scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy unveil the formation of a charge-ordered ground state. It is disentangled from a concomitant structural rearrangement which is found to be 2-up/1-down, in contrast to previous predictions. Applying an extended variational cluster approach, a phase diagram of local and nonlocal Coulomb interactions is mapped out. Based on a comparison of theoretical spectral functions with scattering vectors found via quasiparticle interference, Pb/Si(111) is placed in said phase diagram and electronic correlations are found to be the driving force of the charge-ordered state. In order to realize a doped Mott insulator in a frustrated geometry, potassium was evaporated onto the well-known correlated Sn/Si(111) system. Instead of the expected insulator-to-metal transition, scanning tunneling spectroscopy data indicates that the electronic structure of Sn/Si(111) is only affected locally around potassium atoms while a metallization is suppressed. The potassium atoms were found to be adsorbed on empty \(T_4\) sites of the substrate which eventually leads to the formation of two types of K-Sn alloys with a relative potassium content of 1/3 and 1/2, respectively. Complementary measurements of the spectral function via angle-resolved photoemission reveal that the lower Hubbard band of Sn/Si(111) gradually changes its shape upon potassium deposition. Once the tin and potassium portion on the surface are equal, this evolution is complete and the system can be described as a band insulator without the need to include Coulomb interactions. N2 - Zweidimensionale Dreiecksgitter aus Adatomen der vierten Hauptgruppe auf Halbleitersubstraten bieten eine reichhaltige Spielwiese für die Untersuchung von Mott-Hubbard-Physik. Die Möglichkeit, verschiedene Adatomsorten und Substrate zu kombinieren, macht die Mitglieder dieser Materialklasse zu vielseitigen Modellsystemen, um den Einfluss von Korrelationsstärke, Bandfüllung und Spin-Bahn-Kopplung auf die elektronische Struktur zu untersuchen - sowohl im Experiment als auch mit Vielkörper-Rechnungen. Letztere prognostizieren exotische Grundzustände, wie z.B. chirale Supraleitung oder eine Spin-Flüssigkeit, wobei eine experimentelle Bestätigung jeweils noch aussteht. In dieser Dissertation werden drei derartige Systeme, nämlich die \(\alpha\)-Phasen von Sn/SiC(0001), Pb/Si(111) und kaliumdotiertem Sn/Si(111) mittels Rastertunnelmikroskopie und Photoemissionsspektroskopie diesbezüglich untersucht. Die Resultate sind potentiell relevant für Anwendungen im Bereich der Spintronik oder Quantencomputer. Für das erst kürzlich realisierte Gruppe-IV-Dreiecksgitter Sn/SiC(0001) zeigt diese Studie, bei der experimentelle und theoretische Methoden kombiniert werden, dass das System unerwartet starke Korrelationen aufweist, weil sie durch den teilweise ionischen Charakter und das geringe Abschirmungsvermögen des Substrats verstärkt werden. Die Spektralfunktion, die erstmals mit winkelaufgelöster Photoemission gemessen wird, zeigt keine überstruktur außer der intrinsischen \(\sqrt{3} \times \sqrt{3} R30^{\circ}\) Rekonstruktion des Gitters, was die Frage nach der Anordnung der Spins im Grundzustand aufwirft. Bei Pb/Si(111) haben bereits frühere Veröffentlichungen einen Phasenübergang bei der Oberflächenrekonstruktion von \(\sqrt{3}\times\sqrt{3}R30^{\circ}\) auf \(3 \times 3\) bei 86 K festgestellt. In dieser Arbeit zeigen Untersuchungen der Niedrigtemperaturphase mit hochaufgelöster Rastertunnelmikroskopie und -spektroskopie die Entstehung eines ladungsgeordneten Zustands. Dieser wird von der begleitend auftretenden strukturellen Neuordnung getrennt, welche entgegen bisheriger Voraussagen eine 2-hoch/1-tief-Anordnung aufweist. Mit Hilfe einer neu entwickelten Cluster-Rechenmethode wird ein Phasendiagramm erstellt, in dem die lokale und nichtlokale Coulomb-Wechselwirkung gegeneinander aufgetragen sind. Durch einen Vergleich zwischen theoretischen Spektralfunktionen mit Streuvektoren, die mittels Quasiteilchen-Interferenz bestimmt werden, kann Pb/Si(111) in besagtem Phasendiagramm platziert werden. Dadurch stellt sich heraus, dass elektronische Korrelationen die treibende Kraft für den ladungsgeordneten Zustand in Pb/Si(111) sind. Um einen dotierten Mott-Isolator in einem frustrierten System zu verwirklichen, wird Kalium auf das bekannte, korrelierte System Sn/Si(111) aufgebracht. Statt des erwarteten Isolator-Metall übergangs zeigen Messungen mit Rastertunnelspektroskopie, dass die elektronische Struktur von Sn/Si(111) nur lokal in der unmittelbaren Umgebung der Kaliumatome beeinflusst wird, ohne dass das System metallisch wird. Die Kaliumatome werden auf freien \(T_4\)-Plätzen des Substrats adsorbiert, was letztendlich zur Ausbildung von zwei unterschiedlichen Kalium-Zinn-Legierungen mit einem Kaliumanteil von 1/3 bzw. 1/2 führt. Komplementäre Messungen der Spektralfunktion mit winkelaufgelöster Photoemission zeigen, dass das untere Hubbardband von Sn/Si(111) durch die Kalium-Deposition allmählich seine Form verändert. Sobald Zinn und Kalium zu gleichen Teilen auf der Oberfläche vorliegen, ist diese Transformation beendet und das System kann als einfacher Bandisolator ohne die Notwendigkeit, elektronische Korrelationen zu berücksichtigen, beschrieben werden. KW - Rastertunnelmikroskopie KW - ARPES KW - Elektronenkorrelation KW - Oberflächenphysik Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-241758 ER - TY - THES A1 - Adhikari, Bikash T1 - Targeted degradation of Myc-interacting oncoproteins T1 - Gezielte Degradation von mit Myc interagierenden Onkoproteinen N2 - The hallmark oncoprotein Myc is a major driver of tumorigenesis in various human cancer entities. However, Myc’s structural features make it challenging to develop small molecules against it. A promising strategy to indirectly inhibit the function of Myc is by targeting its interactors. Many Myc-interacting proteins have reported scaffolding functions which are difficult to target using conventional occupancy- driven inhibitors. Thus, in this thesis, the proteolysis targeting chimera (PROTAC) approach was used to target two oncoproteins interacting with Myc which promote the oncogenicity of Myc, Aurora-A and WDR5. PROTACs are bifunctional small molecules that bind to the target protein with one ligand and recruit a cellular E3- ligase with the other ligand to induce target degradation via the ubiquitin- proteasome system. So far, the most widely used E3-ligases for PROTAC development are Cereblon (CRBN) and von Hippel–Lindau tumor suppressor (VHL). Furthermore, there are cases of incompatibility between some E3-ligases and proteins to bring about degradation. Hence there is a need to explore new E3- ligases and a demand for a tool to predict degradative E3-ligases for the target protein in the PROTAC field. In the first part, a highly specific mitotic kinase Aurora-A degrader, JB170, was developed. This compound utilized Aurora-A inhibitor alisertib as the target ligand and thalidomide as the E3-ligase CRBN harness. The specificity of JB170 and the ternary complex formation was supported by the interactions between Aurora-A and CRBN. The PROTAC-mediated degradation of Aurora-A induced a distinct S- phase defect rather than mitotic arrest, shown by its catalytic inhibition. The finding demonstrates that Aurora-A has a non-catalytic role in the S-phase. Furthermore, the degradation of Aurora-A led to apoptosis in various cancer cell lines. In the second part, two different series of WDR5 PROTACs based on two protein- protein inhibitors of WDR5 were evaluated. The most efficient degraders from both series recruited VHL as a E3-ligase and showed partial degradation of WDR5. In addition, the degradation efficiency of the PROTACs was significantly affected by the linker nature and length, highlighting the importance of linker length and composition in PROTAC design. The degraders showed modest proliferation defects at best in cancer cell lines. However, overexpression of VHL increased the degradation efficiency and the antiproliferative effect of the PROTACs. In the last part, a rapamycin-based assay was developed to predict the degradative E3-ligase for a target. The assay was validated using the WDR5/VHL and Aurora- A/CRBN pairs. The result that WDR5 is degraded by VHL but not CRBN and Aurora-A is degraded by CRBN, matches observations made with PROTACs. This technique will be used in the future to find effective tissue-specific and essential E3-ligases for targeted degradation of oncoproteins using PROTACs. Collectively, the work presented here provides a strategy to improve PROTAC development and a starting point for developing Aurora-A and WDR5 PROTACs for cancer therapy. N2 - Das Onkoprotein Myc ist ein wichtiger Faktor bei der Tumorentstehung in verschiedenen menschlichen Krebsarten. Die strukturellen Merkmale von Myc machen es jedoch schwierig, kleine Moleküle gegen dieses Protein zu entwickeln. Eine vielversprechende Strategie zur indirekten Hemmung der Funktion von Myc besteht darin, auf seine Interaktoren abzuzielen. Viele Proteine, die mit Myc interagieren, haben Gerüstfunktionen, die mit herkömmlichen Inhibitoren nur schwer zu hemmen sind. Daher wurde in dieser Arbeit der PROTAC-Ansatz (Proteolysis Targeting Chimera) verwendet, um zwei Onkoproteine, die mit Myc interagieren und die Onkogenität von Myc fördern, ins Visier zu nehmen: Aurora-A und WDR5. PROTACs sind bifunktionale kleine Moleküle, die mit einem Liganden an das Zielprotein binden und mit dem anderen Liganden eine zelluläre E3-Ligase rekrutieren, um den Abbau des Zielproteins über das Ubiquitin-Proteasom-System einzuleiten. Die bisher am häufigsten verwendeten E3-Ligasen für die Entwicklung von PROTACs sind Cereblon (CRBN) und der von Hippel-Lindau-Tumorsuppressor (VHL). Außerdem gibt es Fälle von Inkompatibilität zwischen einigen E3-Ligasen und Proteinen, die abgebaut werden sollen. Daher besteht die Notwendigkeit, neue E3-Ligasen zu erforschen und Werkzeuge zur Vorhersage abbauender E3-Ligasen für das Zielprotein zu entwickeln. Im ersten Teil wurde ein hochspezifischer Degrader der mitotischen Kinase Aurora-A, JB170, entwickelt. Bei dieser Verbindung wurde der Aurora-A-Inhibitor Alisertib als Zielligand und Thalidomid als Binder für die E3-Ligase CRBN verwendet. Die Spezifität von JB170 und die ternäre Komplexbildung wurden durch die Wechselwirkungen zwischen Aurora-A und CRBN unterstützt. Der durch PROTAC vermittelte Abbau von Aurora-A führte zu einem deutlichen Defekt in der S-Phase und nicht zu einem mitotischen Stillstand, wie es für dessen katalytische Hemmung beobachtet wurde. Dies zeigt, dass Aurora-A eine nicht-katalytische Funktion in der S-Phase hat. Außerdem führte der Abbau von Aurora-A in verschiedenen Krebszelllinien zur Apoptose. Im zweiten Teil wurden zwei verschiedene Serien von WDR5 PROTACs auf der Grundlage von zwei Protein-Protein-Inhibitoren von WDR5 untersucht. Die effizientesten Degrader aus beiden Serien rekrutierten VHL als E3-Ligase und zeigten einen teilweisen Abbau von WDR5. Darüber hinaus wurde die Abbaueffizienz der PROTACs erheblich von der Art und Länge des Linkers beeinflusst, was die Bedeutung der Linkerlänge und -zusammensetzung bei der Entwicklung von PROTACs unterstreicht. Die Abbauprodukte zeigten bestenfalls bescheidene Proliferationsdefekte in Krebszelllinien. Eine Überexpression von VHL erhöhte jedoch die Abbaueffizienz und den antiproliferativen Effekt der PROTACs. Im letzten Teil wurde ein auf Rapamycin basierender Assay entwickelt, um die abbauende E3-Ligase für ein Target vorherzusagen. Der Assay wurde anhand der Paare WDR5/VHL und Aurora-A/CRBN validiert. Das Ergebnis, dass WDR5 von VHL, aber nicht von CRBN abgebaut wird und Aurora-A von CRBN abgebaut wird, stimmt mit den Beobachtungen überein, die mit PROTACs gemacht wurden. Diese Technik wird in Zukunft eingesetzt werden, um wirksame gewebespezifische und essentielle E3-Ligasen für den gezielten Abbau von Onkoproteinen mit Hilfe von PROTACs zu finden. Insgesamt bieten die hier vorgestellten Arbeiten eine Strategie zur Verbesserung der PROTAC-Entwicklung und einen Ausgangspunkt für die Entwicklung von Aurora-A- und WDR5-PROTACs für die Krebstherapie. KW - Degradation KW - PROTACs KW - Oncoprotein KW - Cancer KW - Onkoprotein Y1 - 2024 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-317326 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Adeyemo, O. M. A1 - Shapira, S. A1 - Tombaccini, D. A1 - Pollard, H. A1 - Feuerstein, G. A1 - Sirén, Anna-Leena T1 - A goldfish model for evaluation of the neurotoxicit of \(\omega\)-conotoxin GVIA and screening of monoclonal antibodies N2 - A Goldfish Model for Evaluation of the Neurotaxicity of \(\omega\)-Conotoxin GVI A and Screening of Monoclonal Antibodies. ADEYEMO, 0. M .. SHAPIRA, S., TOMBACCINI, D., POLLARD, H. 8 .• FEUERSTEIN, G .. AND SIREN, A-L. ( 1991 ). Toxicol. App/. Pharmaco/. 108, 489-496. The neurotoxicity of \(\omega\)-conotoxin (\(\omega\)-CgTx), a potent neuronal voltage-sensitive calcium channel blocker, was measured using a new bioassay. \(\omega\)-CgTx was administered intraperitoneally (ip) to goldfish weighing approximately 1.6 g, and dose-related changes were observed over a 2-hr period. \(\omega\)CgTx induced time- and dose-dependent abnormal swimming behavior (ASB) and mortality. The antitoxin activity of the antiborlies was investigated in vivo by either ( l) preincubation of the antibody with w-CgTx at 4°C overnight, or (2) pretreatment with antibody, 30 min before \(\omega\)CgTx injection in a 10:1 antibody/\(\omega\)-CgTx molar ratio. The LD50 dose of \(\omega\)-CgTx in goldfish was 5 nmol/kg ip, and preincubation of monoclonal antibody (50 nmol/kg ip) with \(\omega\)-CgTx (5 nmol/kg ip) significantly (p < 0.05) reduced mortality. ASB, and toxicity time. The antitoxin activity of the monoclonal antiborlies evidenced in the goldfish bioassay was further tested in the conscious rat. In the rat, the increases in mean arterial pressure and heart rate induced by \(\omega\)-CgTx (0.03 nmol/rat icv) were significantly (p < 0.02 and p < 0.0 l, respectively) attenuated by preincubation of the toxin with the antibody (0.3 nmol/rat). We conclude that the goldfish bioassay provides a simple. accurate, and inexpensive in vivo model for the study of the toxicity of \(\omega\)CgTx KW - Neurobiologie Y1 - 1991 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-63087 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Adeyemo, M. A1 - Sirén, Anna-Leena T1 - Cardio-respiratory changes and mortality in the conscious rat induced by (+)- and (±)- anatoxin-a N2 - 0. M. ADEYEMO and A.-L. SIREN. Cardio-respiratory changes and mortality in the conscious rat induced by ( + )- and ( ± )-anatoxin-a. Toxicon 30, 899-905, 1992.-Anatoxin-a (AnTx-a) isapotent nicotinic cholinergic receptor agonist. The relative potencies of the ( + )-AnTx-a and the racemic mixture ( ± )-AnTxa were investigated in the conscious rat by comparing their effects on mean arterial blood pressure (BP), heart rate (HR), blood oxygen and carbon dioxide pressures (p02 and pC02, respective1y), acid-base balance (pH) and mortality. The present experiments show that while both forms of AnTx-a produce dose-dependent increases in BP and decreases in HR, ( + )-AnTx-a is about IO-fo1d morepotent than the optically inactive isomer. ( + )-AnTx-a was also 6-fo1d more potent than ( ± )-AnTx-a in produclog severe hypoxemia, and more than 4-fold as potent as the (±}-AnTx-a in producing significant hypercapnia accompanied with severe acidosis. The approximate median Iethai dose (Ln so) of ( + )-AnTx-a was about 5-fold less than that of ( ± )-AnTx-a. We conclude that ( + )-AnTx-a is more potent than the ( ± )-AnTx-a racemic mixture in causing detrimental cardio-respiratory changes and therefore increased mortality in the rat. KW - Neurobiologie Y1 - 1992 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-63027 ER - TY - THES A1 - Adenugba, Akinbami Raphael T1 - Functional analysis of the gene organization of the pneumoviral attachment protein G T1 - Funktionelle Analyse der Genorganisation des pneumoviralen Attachment-Protein G N2 - The putative attachment protein G of pneumonia virus of mice (PVM), a member of the Pneumoviruses, is an important virulence factor with so far ambiguous function in a virus-cell as well as in virus-host context. The sequence of the corresponding G gene is characterized by significant heterogeneity between and even within strains, affecting the gene and possibly the protein structure. This accounts in particular for the PVM strain J3666 for which two differing G gene organizations have been described: a polymorphism in nucleotide 65 of the G gene results in the presence of an upstream open reading frame (uORF) that precedes the main ORF in frame (GJ366665A) or extension of the major G ORF for 18 codons (GJ366665U). Therefore, this study was designed to analyse the impact of the sequence variations in the respective G genes of PVM strains J3666 and the reference strain 15 on protein expression, replication and virulence. First, the controversy regarding the consensus sequence of PVM J3666 was resolved. The analysis of 45 distinct cloned fragments showed that the strain separated into two distinct virus populations defined by the sequence and structure of the G gene. This division was further supported by nucleotide polymorphisms in the neighbouring M and SH genes. Sequential passage of this mixed strain in the cell line standardly used for propagation of virus stocks resulted in selection for the GJ366665A-containing population in one of two experiments pointing towards a moderate replicative advantage. The replacement of the G gene of the recombinant PVM 15 with GJ366665A or GJ366665U, respectively, using a reverse genetic approach indicated that the presence of uORF within the GJ366665A significantly reduced the expression of the main G ORF on translational level while the potential extension of the ORF in GJ366665U increased G protein expression. In comparison, the effect of the G gene-structure on virus replication was inconsistent and dependent on cell line and type. While the presence of uORF correlated with a replication advantage in the standardly used BHK-21 cells and primary murine embryonic fibroblasts, replication in the murine macrophage cell line RAW 264.7 did not. In comparison, the GJ366665U variant was not associated with any effect on replication in cultured cells at all. Nonetheless, in-vivo analysis of the recombinant viruses associated the GJ366665U gene variant, and hence an increased G expression, with higher virulence whereas the GJ366665A gene, and therefore an impaired G expression, conferred an attenuated phenotype to the virus. To extend the study to other G gene organizations, a recombinant PVM expressing a G protein without the cytoplasmic domain and for comparison a G-deletion mutant, both known to be attenuated in vivo, were studied. Not noticed before, this structure of the G gene was associated with a 75% reduction in G protein expression and a significant attenuation of replication in macrophage-like cells. This attenuation was even more prominent for the virus lacking G. Taking into consideration the higher reduction in G protein levels compared to the GJ366665A variant indicates that a threshold amount of G is required for efficient replication in these cells. In conclusion, the results gathered indicated that the expression levels of the G protein were modulated by the sequence of the 5’ untranslated region of the gene. At the same time the G protein levels modulated the virulence of PVM. N2 - Das mutmaßliche „attachment“ Protein G des Pneumonievirus der Maus (PVM), einem Mitglied des Genus Pneumovirus, ist ein bedeutender Virulenzfaktor, mit allerdings noch nicht vollständig verstandener Funktion. Dabei zeichnet sich die Sequenz des G-Gens durch Nukleotid-Polymorphismen und damit verbundenen Variationen in der Genorganisation und möglicherweise der Proteinstruktur sowohl zwischen als auch innerhalb von PVM-Stämmen aus. Insbesondere für den PVM-Stamm J3666 wurden zwei verschiedene Organisationen des G-Gens beschrieben: ein Polymorphismus des Nukleotids 65 des G-Genes erzeugt einen neuen „upstream Open reading frame“ (uORF), der dem eigentlichen G-ORF vorausgeht (GJ366665A), oder führt zu einer Verlängerung des eigentlichen G-ORF von G um 18 Kodons (GJ366665U). Ziel dieser Studie war es deshalb, die Auswirkung dieser Sequenzvariabilitäten der für PVM J3666 beschriebenen G-Gene im Vergleich zu dem des Referenzstamms PVM 15 bezüglich Proteinexpression, der Virusreplikation und der Virulenz zu untersuchen. Als erstes wurden die beschriebenen Sequenzunterschiede bezüglich des PVM-Stamms J3666 untersucht. Die Analyse von 45 verschiedenen klonierten Fragmenten von PVM J3666 zeigte, dass es sich bei diesem Stamm eigentlich um zwei separate Viruspopulationen handelt, die sich durch die Sequenz und Struktur des G-Genes definieren lassen. Diese Unterscheidung wird durch weitere Nukleotid-Polymorphismen in den benachbarten Genen, M und SH, gestärkt. Sequenzielle Passagierung dieses gemischten Stammes in der standardmäßig zur Virusanzucht verwendeten BHK-21-Zelllinie resultierte in einem von zwei Experimenten in der Selektion der GJ366665A-Population, das ein Hinweis auf einen moderaten Replikationsvorteil darstellt. Der Austausch des G-Gens des Referenzstamms PVM 15 durch GJ366665A oder GJ366665U mithilfe der Reversen Genetik, zeigte, dass der uORF innerhalb von GJ366665A zu einer deutlich reduzierten Expression des eigentlichen G-ORF führt. Andererseits führte die potenzielle Verlängerung des ORF in GJ366665U zu einer im gleichen Maße erhöhten Expression des G-Proteins. Dagegen war der Einfluss der G-Genorganisation auf die Virusvermehrung in Zellkultur in Abhängigkeit von Zelllinie und Zelltyp inkonsistent. Während ein uORF mit einem Replikationsvorteil in BHK-21-Zellen und primären murinen embryonen Fibroblasten korrelierte, war dies in der murinen Makrophagen-Zelllinie RAW 264.7 nicht zu beobachten. Im Vergleich dazu konnte die GJ366665U-Variante nicht mit einem Einfluss auf die Virusvermehrung in Verbindung gebracht werden. Nichtsdestotrotz, konnte die GJ366665U-Variante, und damit eine erhöhte Expression von G, mit einer gesteigerten Virulenz assoziiert werden, während die GJ366665A-Variante, d. h. eine verringerte G-Expression zur Attenuierung des Virus führte. Die Untersuchungen wurden auf weitere G-Genstrukturen, d.h. ein rekombinantes PVM, rPVM-Gt, das ein N-terminal verkürztes G-Protein exprimiert, ausgeweitet. Zum Vergleich wurde eine Deletionsmutante des kompletten G-Gens, rPVM-ΔG, mit einbezogen. Von beiden Viren war bereits bekannt, dass sie in vivo attenuiert sind. Die Organisation des Gt-Gens war mit einer um 75 % verringerten Expression des entsprechenden Proteins assoziiert, was zuvor nicht beobachtet worden war. Zugleich zeigte rPVM-Gt eine deutliche Attenuierung der Replikation in RAW 264.7-Zellen und primären Mausmakrophagen, die von der G-Deletionsmutante noch übertroffen wurde. Die im Vergleich zu der GJ366665A-Variante deutlich höhere Reduktion der G-Expression dieser beiden G-Mutanten in Betracht ziehend, scheint dies darauf hinzuweisen, dass eine bestimmte Mindestexpression von G für eine effiziente Virusvermehrung in diesen Zellen benötigt wird. Zusammenfassend deuten die erhaltenen Ergebnisse darauf hin, dass die Expression des G-Proteins durch die jeweiligen 5’ nicht-translatierte Region des Gens moduliert wird, was einen neuen Mechanismus für Negativstrang-RNA-Viren darstellt. Zugleich moduliert die Expressionsrate von G die Virulenz von PVM. KW - G glycoprotein KW - protein regulation and expression KW - Pneumoviruses KW - regulation KW - expression KW - replication KW - virulence KW - 5`-UTR KW - PVM KW - RSV Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-128146 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ademmer, Martin A1 - Horn, Wolfram A1 - Quast, Josefine T1 - Stock market dynamics and the relative importance of domestic, foreign, and common shocks JF - International Journal of Finance & Economics N2 - We quantify the contemporaneous relationships among stock markets in the euro area, the United States, and a group of emerging economies over the period from 2008 to 2017. Exploiting the heteroskedasticity in the stock market data, we identify shocks that originated in the respective domestic markets and shocks that are common to all markets. Our results underline the leading role of the United States in international equity markets, but also point to the importance of indirect spillovers for all economies. Variance decompositions show that while domestic shocks explain the bigger part of the variation in each stock market, a substantial part of the variation in the euro area and the emerging economies can be attributed to foreign shocks. A comparison with a sample covering the pre‐crisis period from 1999 to 2007 suggests a strengthening of the linkages among global stock markets in recent years. In particular, the spillovers from advanced to emerging economies have become more pronounced. KW - financial linkages KW - heteroskedasticity KW - identification KW - spillovers KW - stock markets Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-225729 VL - 27 IS - 4 SP - 3911 EP - 3923 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Adelfinger, Marion A1 - Gentschev, Ivaylo A1 - de Guibert, Julio Grimm A1 - Weibel, Stephanie A1 - Langbein-Laugwitz, Johanna A1 - Härtl, Barbara A1 - Escobar, Hugo Murua A1 - Nolte, Ingo A1 - Chen, Nanhai G. A1 - Aguilar, Richard J. A1 - Yu, Yong A. A1 - Zhang, Qian A1 - Frentzen, Alexa A1 - Szalay, Aladar A. T1 - Evaluation of a New Recombinant Oncolytic Vaccinia Virus Strain GLV-5b451 for Feline Mammary Carcinoma Therapy JF - PLoS ONE N2 - Virotherapy on the basis of oncolytic vaccinia virus (VACV) infection is a promising approach for cancer therapy. In this study we describe the establishment of a new preclinical model of feline mammary carcinoma (FMC) using a recently established cancer cell line, DT09/06. In addition, we evaluated a recombinant vaccinia virus strain, GLV-5b451, expressing the anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) single-chain antibody (scAb) GLAF-2 as an oncolytic agent against FMC. Cell culture data demonstrate that GLV-5b451 virus efficiently infected, replicated in and destroyed DT09/06 cancer cells. In the selected xenografts of FMC, a single systemic administration of GLV-5b451 led to significant inhibition of tumor growth in comparison to untreated tumor-bearing mice. Furthermore, tumor-specific virus infection led to overproduction of functional scAb GLAF-2, which caused drastic reduction of intratumoral VEGF levels and inhibition of angiogenesis. In summary, here we have shown, for the first time, that the vaccinia virus strains and especially GLV-5b451 have great potential for effective treatment of FMC in animal model. KW - antibodies KW - cancer treatment KW - carcinomas KW - vaccinia virus KW - oncolytic viruses KW - viral replication KW - cell cultures KW - enzyme-linked immunoassays Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-119387 VL - 9 IS - 8 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Adelfinger, Marion A1 - Bessler, Simon A1 - Cecil, Alexander A1 - Langbein-Laugwitz, Johanna A1 - Frentzen, Alexa A1 - Gentschev, Ivaylo A1 - Szalay, Aladar A. T1 - Preclinical Testing Oncolytic Vaccinia Virus Strain GLV-5b451 Expressing an Anti-VEGF Single-Chain Antibody for Canine Cancer Therapy JF - Viruses N2 - Virotherapy on the basis of oncolytic vaccinia virus (VACV) strains is a novel approach for canine cancer therapy. Here we describe, for the first time, the characterization and the use of VACV strain GLV-5b451 expressing the anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) single-chain antibody (scAb) GLAF-2 as therapeutic agent against different canine cancers. Cell culture data demonstrated that GLV-5b451 efficiently infected and destroyed all four tested canine cancer cell lines including: mammary carcinoma (MTH52c), mammary adenoma (ZMTH3), prostate carcinoma (CT1258), and soft tissue sarcoma (STSA-1). The GLV-5b451 virus-mediated production of GLAF-2 antibody was observed in all four cancer cell lines. In addition, this antibody specifically recognized canine VEGF. Finally, in canine soft tissue sarcoma (CSTS) xenografted mice, a single systemic administration of GLV-5b451 was found to be safe and led to anti-tumor effects resulting in the significant reduction and substantial long-term inhibition of tumor growth. A CD31-based immuno-staining showed significantly decreased neo-angiogenesis in GLV-5b451-treated tumors compared to the controls. In summary, these findings indicate that GLV-5b451 has potential for use as a therapeutic agent in the treatment of CSTS. KW - canine cancer therapy KW - canine soft tissue sarcoma (CSTS) KW - oncolytic virus KW - cancer KW - canine cancer cell lines KW - antibody production KW - angiogenesis Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-125705 VL - 7 ER - TY - THES A1 - Adel Abdelrehim Mohamed Soliman, Hadya T1 - Structural Equation Modeling of Factors Influencing EFL Reading comprehension: Comparative study between Egypt and Germany T1 - Strukturgleichungsmodellierung von Faktoren, die das EFL-Leseverständnis beeinflussen: Vergleichende Studie zwischen Ägypten und Deutschland N2 - In most foreign language learning contexts, there are only rare chance for contact with native speakers of the target language. In such a situation, reading plays an important role in language acquisition as well as in gaining cultural information about the target language and its speakers. Previous research indicated that reading in foreign language is a complex process, which is influenced by various linguistic, cognitive and affective factors. The aim of the present study was to test two structural models of the relationship between reading comprehension in native language (L1), English language (L2) reading motivation, metacognitive awareness of L2 reading strategies, and reading comprehension of English as a foreign language among the two samples. Furthermore, the current study aimed to examine the differences between Egyptian and German students in their perceived usage of reading strategies during reading English texts, as well as to explore the pattern of their motivation toward reading English texts. For this purpose, 401 students were recruited from Germany (n=200) and Egypt (n=201) to participate in the current study. In order to have information about metacognitive awareness of reading strategies, a self-report questionnaire (SORS) developed by Moktari and Sheory (2002) was used. While the L2 reading motivation variable, was measured by a reading motivation survey (L2RMQ) which was based on reviewed reading motivation research. In addition, two reading tests were administrated one to measure reading comprehension for native language (German/Arabic) and the other to measure English reading comprehension. To analyze the collected data, descriptive statistics and independent t-tests were performed. In addition, further analysis using structural equation modeling was applied to test the strength of relationships between the variables under study. The results from the current research revealed that L1 reading comprehension, whether in a German or Arabic language, had the strongest relationship with L2 reading comprehension. However, the relationship between L2 intrinsic reading motivation was not proven to be significant in either the German or Egyptian models. On the other hand, the relationship between L2 extrinsic reading motivation, metacognitive awareness of reading strategies, and L2 reading comprehension was only proven significant in the German sample. The discussion of these results along with their pedagogical implications for education and practice will be illustrated in the following study. N2 - In den meisten Kontexten des Fremdsprachenlernens gibt es nur selten eine Chance auf Kontakt mit Muttersprachlern der Zielsprache. In einer solchen Situation spielt das Lesen eine wichtige Rolle beim Spracherwerb sowie bei der Gewinnung kultureller Informationen über die Zielsprache und ihre Sprecher. Frühere Untersuchungen haben gezeigt, dass das Lesen in der Fremdsprache ein komplexer Prozess ist, der von verschiedenen linguistischen, kognitiven und affektiven Faktoren beeinflusst wird. Ziel der vorliegenden Studie war es, zwei Strukturmodelle der Beziehung zwischen Leseverständnis in der Muttersprache (L1), englischer Sprache (L2) Lesemotivation, metakognitivem Bewusstsein für L2-Lesestrategien und Leseverständnis von Englisch als Fremdsprache zwischen den beiden Stichproben zu testen. Zur Analyse der gesammelten Daten wurden deskriptive Statistiken und unabhängige t-Tests durchgeführt. Darüber hinaus wurde eine weitere Analyse mit Hilfe der Strukturgleichungsmodellierung durchgeführt, um die Stärke der Beziehungen zwischen den untersuchten Variablen zu testen. Die Ergebnisse der aktuellen Forschung zeigten, dass das L1-Leseverständnis, ob in deutscher oder arabischer Sprache, die stärkste Beziehung zum L2-Leseverständnis hatte. Der Zusammenhang zwischen L2 intrinsischer Lesemotivation wurde jedoch weder im deutschen noch im ägyptischen Modell nachgewiesen. Andererseits war der Zusammenhang zwischen L2 extrinsischer Lesemotivation, metakognitivem Bewusstsein für Lesestrategien und L2-Leseverständnis nur in der deutschen Stichprobe signifikant. Die Diskussion dieser Ergebnisse sowie ihre pädagogischen Implikationen für Bildung und Praxis werden in der folgenden Studie dargestellt. KW - L1 reading comprehension KW - metacognition KW - L2 reading motivation KW - L2 reading comprehension KW - Leseverstehen Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-186957 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Adami, Hans-Olov A1 - Dragsted, Lars A1 - Enig, Bent A1 - Hansen, Jens A1 - Haraldsdóttir, Jóhanna A1 - Hill, Michael J. A1 - Holm, Lars Erik A1 - Knudsen, Ib A1 - Larsen, Jens-Jorgen A1 - Lutz, Werner K. A1 - Osler, Merete A1 - Overvad, Kim A1 - Sabroe, Svend A1 - Sanner, Tore A1 - Strube, Michael A1 - Sorensen, Thorkild I. A. A1 - Thorling, Eivind B. T1 - Report from the working group on diet and cancer. N2 - No abstract available. KW - Krebs KW - Ernährung Y1 - 1993 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-71601 ER - TY - THES A1 - Adamek, Julian T1 - Classical and Quantum Aspects of Anisotropic Cosmology T1 - Klassische und Quantentheoretische Gesichtspunkte der Anisotropen Kosmologie N2 - The idea that our observable Universe may have originated from a quantum tunneling event out of an eternally inflating false vacuum state is a cornerstone of the multiverse paradigm. Modern theories that are considered as an approach towards the ultraviolet-complete fundamental theory of particles and gravity, such as the various types of string theory, even suggest that a vast landscape of different vacuum configurations exists, and that gravitational tunneling is an important mechanism with which the Universe can explore this landscape. The tunneling scenario also presents a unique framework to address the initial conditions of our observable Universe. In particular, it allows to introduce deviations from the cosmological concordance model in a controlled and well-motivated way. These deviations are a central topic of this work. An important feature in most of the theories mentioned above is the presumed existence of additional space dimensions in excess of the three which we observe in our every-day experience. It was realized that these extra dimensions could avoid our detection if they are compactified to microscopic length scales far beyond the reach of current experiments. There also seem to be natural mechanisms available for dynamical compactification in those theories. These typically lead to a vast landscape of different vacuum configurations which also may differ in the number of macroscopic dimensions, only the total number of dimensions being determined by the theory. Transitions between these vacuum configurations may hence open up new directions which were previously compact, spontaneously compactify some previously macroscopic directions, or otherwise re-arrange the configuration of compact and macroscopic dimensions in a more general way. From within the bubble Universe, such a process may be perceived as an anisotropic background spacetime - intuitively, the dimensions which open up may give rise to preferred directions. If our 3+1 dimensional observable Universe was born in a process as described above, one may expect to find traces of a preferred direction in cosmological observations. For instance, two directions could be curved like on a sphere, while the third space direction is flat. Using a scenario of gravitational tunneling to fix the initial conditions, I show how the primordial signatures in such an anisotropic Universe can be obtained in principle and work out a particular example in more detail. A small deviation from isotropy also has phenomenological consequences for the later evolution of the Universe. I discuss the most important effects and show that backreaction can be dynamically important. In particular, under certain conditions, a buildup of anisotropic stress in different components of the cosmic fluid can lead to a dynamical isotropization of the total stress-energy tensor. The mechanism is again demonstrated with the help of a physical example. N2 - Die Vorstellung von einem Multiversum baut unter anderem auf dem Gedanken auf, dass unser beobachtbares Universum in einem Tunnelprozess entstanden sein könnte. Demzufolge hätte es sich dabei von einem ewig währenden, inflationären Vakuumzustand abgekoppelt. Die so entstehende Blase gleicht einer bewohnbaren Insel inmitten eines gewaltigen Ozeans. Moderne Theorien, die als gute Ansätze bezüglich einer fundamentalen und ultraviolett-vollständigen Beschreibung von Elementarteilchen und Gravitation angesehen werden, wie etwa die verschiedenen Ausprägungen der Stringtheorie, legen sogar nahe, dass eine ganze "Landschaft" (im Englischen "landscape") verschiedener Vakuumzustände existiert, und dass Tunnelprozesse einen wichtigen Mechanismus darstellen, mit dem das Universum die Vielzahl an Möglichkeiten erforschen und realisieren kann. Das Tunnelszenario stellt auch einen einzigartigen Rahmen zur Verfügung, um die Anfangsbedingungen unseres beobachtbaren Universums zu untersuchen. Insbesondere besteht damit die Möglichkeit, geringfügige Abweichungen vom kosmologischen Standardmodell in kontrollierter und gut motivierter Art und Weise zu realisieren. Solche Abweichungen stellen eines der zentralen Themen dieser Arbeit dar. Eine wichtige Besonderheit der eben erwähnten Theorien ist die Annahme, dass neben den drei uns bekannten Raumdimensionen eine Vielzahl weiterer existieren könnte. Diese Zusatzdimensionen könnten vor uns verborgen sein, wenn sie kompakt sind und nur extrem mikroskopische Ausmaße haben, so dass sie sich weit unterhalb des Auflösungsvermögens heutiger Experimente befinden. Mechanismen, welche eine solche mikroskopische Gestalt dynamisch erklären könnten, sind in den gängigen Theorien auf ganz natürliche Weise verfügbar. Typischerweise ergibt sich daraus das eben gezeichnete Bild einer ausgedehnten "Landschaft" verschiedener Konfigurationen. Die Vakuumzustände können sich nun auch in der Anzahl und Gestalt der mikroskopischen Dimensionen unterscheiden, da nur die Gesamtzahl an Raumdimensionen von der Theorie vorgegeben wird. Übergänge zwischen diesen Zuständen können also dazu führen, dass neue Raumrichtungen entstehen, indem mikroskopische Dimensionen sich plötzlich aufblähen, alte Raumrichtungen verschwinden, indem sie sich spontan ins Mikroskopische zusammenziehen, oder dass die Konfiguration der Raumdimensionen auf eine noch kompliziertere Art und Weise verändert wird. Aus Sicht des neu entstehenden "Universums" in der Blase führt ein solcher Prozess effektiv zu einem anisotropen Hintergrund - vereinfacht ausgedrückt können die neu entstehenden Raumrichtungen eine Vorzugsrichtung ausweisen. Wenn unser 3+1 dimensionales beobachtbares Universum in einem solchen Prozess entstanden ist, kann man vermuten, dass sich in kosmologischen Beobachtungen Hinweise auf eine Vorzugsrichtung finden lassen müssten. Zum Beispiel könnten zwei Raumrichtungen gekrümmt wie eine Kugeloberfläche sein, während die dritte Richtung keinerlei Krümmung aufweist. Indem ich ein Tunnelszenario benutze, um die Anfangsbedingungen festzulegen, gelingt es mir zu zeigen wie die primordialen Spuren eines solchen anisotropen Universums prinzipiell auszusehen haben und führe eine Berechnung anhand eines speziellen Beispiels explizit vor. Eine geringfügige Abweichung von Isotropie hat ebenfalls phänomenologische Auswirkungen auf die spätere Entwicklung des Universums. Ich gehe auf die wichtigsten Effekte ein und zeige außerdem, dass Rückkopplung dynamisch relevant sein kann. Insbesondere kann sich unter gewissen Voraussetzungen ein Ungleichgewicht der Druckkräfte in verschiedenen Komponenten der "kosmischen Flüssigkeit" aufbauen, das insgesamt zu einer dynamischen Isotropisierung des kollektiven Energie-Impuls-Tensors führt. Dieser Mechanismus wird ebenfalls anhand eines konkreten Beispiels beleuchtet. KW - Kosmologie KW - Anisotropes Universum KW - Quantenkosmologie KW - Bianchi-Kosmologie KW - Anisotropic Universe Y1 - 2011 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-65908 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Adam, W. A1 - Ahrweiler, M. A1 - Saha-Möller, C. R. A1 - Sauter, M. A1 - Schönberger, A. A1 - Epe, B. A1 - Müller, E. A1 - Schiffmann, D. A1 - Stopper, Helga A1 - Wild, D. T1 - Genotoxicity studies of benzofuran dioxetanes and epoxides with isolated DNA, bacteria and mammalian cells N2 - 1.2-Dioxetanes, very reactive and high energy molecules. are involved as labile intermediates in dioxygenase- activated aerobic metabolism and in physiological processes. Various toxico1ogica1 tests reveal that dioxetanes are indeed genotoxic. In supercoiled DNA of bacteriophage PM2 they induce endonucleasesensitive sites, most of them are FPG protein-sensitive base modifications (8-hydroxyguanine, fonnamidopyrimidines). Pyrimidinedimersand sites ofbase loss (AP sites) which were probed by UV endonuclease and exonuclease 111 are minor lesions in this system. While the alky1-substituted dioxetanes do not show any significant mutagenic activity in different Salmonella typhimurium strains, heteroarene dioxetanes such as benzofuran and furocoumarin dioxetanes are strongly mutagenic in S. typhimurium strain TA I 00. DNA adducts formed with an intermediary alkyJating agent appear to be responsible for the mutagenic activity of benzofuran dioxetane. We assume that the benzofuran epoxides, generated in situ from benzofuran dioxetanes by deoxygenation are the ultimate mutagens of the latter. since benzofuran epoxides are highly mutagenic in the S. typhimurium strain TAIOO and they form DNA adducts. as detected by the 212Ppostlabelling technique. Our results imply that the type of D NA darnage promoted by dioxetanes is dependent on the structural feature of dioxetanes. Furthermore, the direct photochemical DNA darnage by energy transfer. i.e., pyrimidine dimers, plays a minor role in the genotoxicity of dioxetanes. Instead, photooxidation dominates in isolated DNA. while radical darnage and alkylation prevail in the cellular system. KW - Toxikologie KW - 1 KW - 2-Dioxetane KW - Benzefuran dioxetane KW - Benzefuran epoxide KW - DNA damage KW - Mutagenicity KW - DNA adduct . Repair endonuclease KW - FPG protein Y1 - 1993 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-63420 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Adam, Pia A1 - Kircher, Stefan A1 - Sbiera, Iuliu A1 - Koehler, Viktoria Florentine A1 - Berg, Elke A1 - Knösel, Thomas A1 - Sandner, Benjamin A1 - Fenske, Wiebke Kristin A1 - Bläker, Hendrik A1 - Smaxwil, Constantin A1 - Zielke, Andreas A1 - Sipos, Bence A1 - Allelein, Stephanie A1 - Schott, Matthias A1 - Dierks, Christine A1 - Spitzweg, Christine A1 - Fassnacht, Martin A1 - Kroiss, Matthias T1 - FGF-Receptors and PD-L1 in Anaplastic and Poorly Differentiated Thyroid Cancer: Evaluation of the Preclinical Rationale JF - Frontiers in Endocrinology N2 - Background Treatment options for poorly differentiated (PDTC) and anaplastic (ATC) thyroid carcinoma are unsatisfactory and prognosis is generally poor. Lenvatinib (LEN), a multi-tyrosine kinase inhibitor targeting fibroblast growth factor receptors (FGFR) 1-4 is approved for advanced radioiodine refractory thyroid carcinoma, but response to single agent is poor in ATC. Recent reports of combining LEN with PD-1 inhibitor pembrolizumab (PEM) are promising. Materials and Methods Primary ATC (n=93) and PDTC (n=47) tissue samples diagnosed 1997-2019 at five German tertiary care centers were assessed for PD-L1 expression by immunohistochemistry using Tumor Proportion Score (TPS). FGFR 1-4 mRNA was quantified in 31 ATC and 14 PDTC with RNAscope in-situ hybridization. Normal thyroid tissue (NT) and papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) served as controls. Disease specific survival (DSS) was the primary outcome variable. Results PD-L1 TPS≥50% was observed in 42% of ATC and 26% of PDTC specimens. Mean PD-L1 expression was significantly higher in ATC (TPS 30%) than in PDTC (5%; p<0.01) and NT (0%, p<0.001). 53% of PDTC samples had PD-L1 expression ≤5%. FGFR mRNA expression was generally low in all samples but combined FGFR1-4 expression was significantly higher in PDTC and ATC compared to NT (each p<0.001). No impact of PD-L1 and FGFR 1-4 expression was observed on DSS. Conclusion High tumoral expression of PD-L1 in a large proportion of ATCs and a subgroup of PDTCs provides a rationale for immune checkpoint inhibition. FGFR expression is low thyroid tumor cells. The clinically observed synergism of PEM with LEN may be caused by immune modulation. KW - tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) KW - immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) KW - immunohistochemistry KW - immunotherapy KW - PD-L1 KW - FGFR Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-244653 SN - 1664-2392 VL - 12 ER -