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Die Diborane(4) Bis(catecholato)diboran und Bis(pinakolato)diboran können durch homogene und heterogene Katalysatoren durch eine Dehydrokupplungsreaktion ausgehend von Catecholboran und Pinakolboran dargestellt werden. Der effizienteste Katalysator für diese Reaktion ist Platin auf Aluminiumoxid, wobei Umsatzzahlen von maximal 11600 und Umsatzfrequenzen von 444 1/h erreicht werden.
Der Fluoreszenz-Resonanz-Energie-Transfer ist ein Phänomen, welches erstmals 1948 von Theodor Förster beschrieben wurde. Mit der Entwicklung von Fluoreszenzproteinen konnten in Kombination mit Mikroskopietechniken Einblicke in zellbiologische Vorgänge gewonnen werden, die durch biochemische oder physiologische Experimente nicht möglich sind. Dabei spielt die hohe zeitliche und räumliche Auflösung eine wichtige Rolle. Auf dem Forschungsgebiet der GPCR, welche die größte Gruppe von Membranproteinen bei den Säugetieren darstellen, wurden insbesondere Erkenntnisse über Konformationsänderungen der Rezeptoren, die Kinetik der Rezeptoraktivierung und die Interaktion mit intrazellulären Signalproteinen gewonnen. Der µ-Opioidrezeptor gehört zur Familie der GPCR und stellt aufgrund seiner analgetischen Wirkungen eine wichtige pharmakologische Zielstruktur dar. Das Ziel dieser Arbeit war sowohl den Rezeptor als auch seine Signalwege mittels FRET-Mikroskopie zu untersuchen. Zunächst sollte ein intramolekularer FRET-Sensor des µ-Opioidrezeptors entwickelt werden, dazu wurden basierend auf den Kenntnissen über die Tertiärstruktur und dem Aufbau bereits bekannter GPCR-Sensoren verschiedene Rezeptorkonstrukte kloniert. Bei den Konstrukten wurden entweder zwei Fluoreszenzproteine oder ein Fluoreszenzprotein und ein Fluorophor-bindendes Tetracysteinmotiv kombiniert. Auch die Positionen der eingefügten Sequenzen wurden in den intrazellulären Domänen variiert, da der Rezeptor auf die Modifikationen mit beeinträchtigter Membranlokalisation reagierte. Durch die Optimierung wurden Rezeptoren konstruiert, die an der Zellmembran lokalisiert waren. Jedoch zeigte keines der Rezeptorkonstrukte Funktionalität im Hinblick auf die Rezeptoraktivierung. Im zweiten Teil wurden die pharmakologischen Effekte der Metabolite von Morphin am humanen µ-Opioidrezeptor systematisch analysiert. Dazu wurde die Fähigkeit der Metabolite, Gi-Proteine zu aktivieren und β-Arrestin2 zu rekrutieren, mittels FRET-basierter Messungen an lebenden Zellen untersucht. Außerdem wurde die Affinität der Metabolite zum humanen µ Opioidrezeptor anhand der Verdrängung eines radioaktiven Liganden analysiert. Meine Experimente identifizierten eine Gruppe mit stark agonistischen und eine mit schwach agonistischen Eigenschaften. Die starken Partialagonisten aktivieren den Rezeptor bereits bei nanomolaren Konzentrationen, während die schwachen Metabolite den Rezeptor erst bei Konzentrationen im mikromolaren Bereich aktivieren. Die Metabolite Normorphin, Morphin-6-Glucuronid und 6-Acetylmorphin zeigen geringere Potenz als Morphin bei der Gi-Aktivierung aber überraschenderweise höhere Potenz und Effizienz für die β-Arrestin-Rekrutierung. Dies deutet auf eine bevorzugte Aktivierung von β-Arrestin2 hin. Die aus diesen Studien gewonnenen Ergebnisse liefern Hinweise darauf, welche Metabolite bei der Signalverarbeitung am µ Opioidrezeptor in vivo beteiligt sind.
Pneumolysin, a protein toxin, represents one of the major virulence factors of Streptococcus pneumoniae. This pathogen causes bacterial meningitis with especially high disease rates in young children, elderly people and immunosuppressed patients. The protein toxin belongs to the family of cholesterol-dependent cytolysins, which require membrane cholesterol in order to bind and to be activated. Upon activation, monomers assemble in a circle and undergo conformational change. This conformational change leads to the formation of a pore, which eventually leads to cell lysis. This knowledge was obtained by studies that used a higher concentration compared to the concentration of pneumolysin found in the cerebrospinal fluid of meningitis patients. Thus, a much lower concentration of pneumolysin was used in this work in order to investigate effects of this toxin on primary mouse astrocytes. Previously, a small GTPase activation, possibly leading to cytoskeletal changes, was found in a human neuroblastoma cell line. This led to the hypothesis that pneumolysin can lead to similar cytoskeletal changes in primary cells. The aim of this work was to investigate and characterise the effects of pneumolysin on primary mouse astrocytes in terms of a possible pore formation, cellular trafficking and immunological responses. Firstly, the importance of pore-formation on cytoskeletal changes was to be investigated. In order to tackle this question, wild-type pneumolysin and two mutant variants were used. One variant was generated by exchanging one amino acid in the cholesterol recognising region, the second variant was generated by deleting two amino acids in a protein domain that is essential for oligomerisation. These variants should be incapable of forming a pore and were compared to the wild-type in terms of lytic capacities, membrane binding, membrane depolarisation, pore-formation in artificial membranes (planar lipid bilayer) and effects on the cytoskeleton. These investigations resulted in the finding that the pore-formation is required for inducing cell lysis, membrane depolarisation and cytoskeletal changes in astrocytes. The variants were not able to form a pore in planar lipid bilayer and did not cause cell lysis and membrane depolarisation. However, they bound to the cell membrane to the same extent as the wild-type toxin. Thus, the pore-formation, but not the membrane binding was the cause for these changes. Secondly, the effect of pneumolysin on cellular trafficking was investigated. Here, the variants showed no effect, but the wild-type led to an increase in overall endocytotic events and was itself internalised into the cell. In order to characterise a possible mechanism for internalisation, a GFP-tagged version of pneumolysin was used. Several fluorescence-labelled markers for different endocytotic pathways were used in a co-staining approach with pneumolysin. Furthermore, inhibitors for two key-players in classical endocytotic pathways, dynamin and myosin II, were used in order to investigate classical endocytotic pathways and their possible involvement in toxin internalisation. The second finding of this work is that pneumolysin is taken up into the cell via dynamin- and caveolin-independent pinocytosis, which could transfer the toxin to caveosomes. From there, the fate of the toxin remains unknown. Additionally, pneumolysin leads to an overall increase in endocytotic events. This observation led to the third aim of this work. If the toxin increases the overall rate of endocytosis, the question arises whether toxin internalisation favours bacterial tissue penetration of the host or whether it serves as a defence mechanism of the cell in order to degrade the protein. Thus, several proinflammatory cytokines were investigated, as previous studies describe an effect of pneumolysin on cytokine production. Surprisingly, only interleukin 6-production was increased after toxin-treatment and no effect of endocytotic inhibitors on the interleukin 6-production was observed. The conclusion from this finding is that pneumolysin leads to an increase of interleukin 6, which would not depend on the endocytotic uptake of pneumolysin. The production of interleukin 6 would enhance the production of acute phase proteins, T-cell activation, growth and differentiation. On the one hand, this activation could serve pathogen clearance from infected tissue. On the other hand, the production of interleukin 6 could promote a further penetration of pathogen into host tissue. This question should be further investigated.
Streptococcus pneumoniae is one of the major causes of bacterial meningitis, which mainly affects young infants in the developing countries of Africa, Asia (esp. India) and South America, and which has case fatality rates up to 50% in those regions. Bacterial meningitis comprises an infection of the meninges and the sub-meningeal cortex tissue of the brain, whereat the presence of pneumolysin (PLY), a major virulence factor of the pneumococcus, is prerequisite for the development of a severe outcome of the infection and associated tissue damage (e. g. apoptosis, brain edema, and ischemia). Pneumolysin belongs to the family of pore forming, cholesterol-dependent cytolysins (CDCs), bacterial protein toxins, which basically use membrane-cholesterol as receptor and oligomerize to big aggregates, which induce cell lysis and cell death by disturbance of membrane integrity. Multiple recent studies, including this work, have revealed a new picture of pneumolysin, whose cell-related properties go far beyond membrane binding, pore formation and the induction of cell death and inflammatory responses. For a long time, it has been known that bacteria harm the tissues of their hosts in order to promote their own survival and proliferation. Many bacterial toxins aim to rather hijack cells than to kill them, by interacting with cellular components, such as the cytoskeleton or other endogenous proteins. This study was able to uncover a novel capacity of pneumolysin to interact with components of the actin machinery and to promote rapid, actin-dependent cell shape changes in primary astrocytes. The toxin was applied in disease-relevant concentrations, which were verified to be sub-lytic. These amounts of toxin induced a rapid actin cortex collapse in horizontal direction towards the cell core, whereat membrane integrity was preserved, indicating an actin severing function of pneumolysin, and being consistent with cell shrinkage, displacement, and blebbing observed in live cell imaging experiments. In contrast to neuroblastoma cells, in which pneumolysin led to cytoskeleton remodeling and simultaneously to activation of Rac1 and RhoA, in primary astrocytes the cell shape changes were seen to be primarily independent of small GTPases. The level of activated Rac1 and RhoA did not increase at the early time points after toxin application, when the initial shape changes have been observed, but at later time points when the actin-dependent displacement of cells was slower and less severe, probably presenting the cell’s attempt to re-establish proper cytoskeleton function. A GUV (giant unilamellar vesicle) approach provided insight into the effects of pneumolysin in a biomimetic system, an environment, which is strictly biochemical, but still comprises cellular components, limited to the factors of interest (actin, Arp2/3, ATP, and Mg2+ on one side, and PLY on the other side). This approach was able to show that the wildtype-toxin, but not the Δ6 mutant (mutated in the unfolding domain, and thus non-porous), had the capacity to exhibit its functions through a membrane bilayer, meaning it was able to aggregate actin, which was located on the other side of the membrane, either via direct interaction with actin or in an Arp2/3 activating manner. Taking a closer look at these two factors with the help of several different imaging and biochemical approaches, this work unveiled the capacity of pneumolysin to bind and interact both with actin and Arp2 of the Arp2/3 complex. Pneumolysin was capable to slightly stabilize actin in an actin-pyrene polymerization assay. The same experimental setup was applied to show that the toxin had the capacity to lead to actin polymerization through activation of the Arp2/3 complex. This effect was additionally confirmed with the help of fluorescent microscopy of rhodamine (TRITC)-tagged actin. Strongest Arp2/3 activation, and actin nucleation/polymerization is achieved by the VCA domain of the WASP family proteins. However, addition of PLY to the Arp2/3–VCA system led to an enhanced actin nucleation, suggesting a synergistic activation function of pneumolysin. Hence, two different effects of pneumolysin on the actin cytoskeleton were observed. On the one hand an actin severing property, and on the other hand an actin stabilization property, both of which do not necessarily exclude each other. Actin remodeling is a common feature of bacterial virulence strategies. This is the first time, however, that these properties were assigned to a toxin of the CDC family. Cytoskeletal dysfunction in astrocytes leads to dysfunction and unregulated movement of these cells, which, in context of bacterial meningitis, can favor bacterial penetration and spreading in the brain tissue, and thus comprises an additional role of pneumolysin as a virulence factor of Streptococcus pneumonia in the context of brain infection.
Die Entwicklung eines wissensbasierten Systems, speziell eines Diagnosesystems, ist eine Teildisziplin der künstlichen Intelligenz und angewandten Informatik. Im Laufe der Forschung auf diesem Gebiet wurden verschiedene Lösungsansätze mit unterschiedlichem Erfolg bei der Anwendung in der Kraftfahrzeugdiagnose entwickelt. Diagnosesysteme in Vertragswerkstätten, das heißt in Fahrzeughersteller gebundenen Werkstätten, wenden hauptsächlich die fallbasierte Diagnostik an. Zum einen hält sich hier die Fahrzeugvielfalt in Grenzen und zum anderen besteht eine Meldepflicht bei neuen, nicht im System vorhandenen Fällen. Die freien Werkstätten verfügen nicht über eine solche Datenbank. Somit ist der fallbasierte Ansatz schwer umsetzbar. In freien Werkstätten - Fahrzeughersteller unabhängigen Werkstätten - basiert die Fehlersuche hauptsächlich auf Fehlerbäumen. Wegen der wachsenden Fahrzeugkomplexität, welche wesentlich durch die stark zunehmende Anzahl der durch mechatronische Systeme realisierten Funktionen bedingt ist, und der steigenden Typenvielfalt ist die geführte Fehlersuche in freien Werkstätten nicht immer zielführend. Um die Unterstützung des Personals von freien Werkstätten bei der zukünftigen Fehlersuche zu gewährleisten, werden neue Generationen von herstellerunabhängigen Diagnosetools benötigt, die die Probleme der Variantenvielfalt und Komplexität lösen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird ein Lösungsansatz vorgestellt, der einen qualitativen, modellbasierten Diagnoseansatz mit einem auf heuristischem Diagnosewissen basierenden Ansatz vereint. Neben der Grundlage zur Wissenserhebung werden in dieser Arbeit die theoretische Grundlage zur Beherrschung der Variantenvielfalt sowie die Tests für die erstellten Diagnosemodelle behandelt. Die Diagnose ist symptombasiert und die Inferenzmechanismen zur Verarbeitung des Diagnosewissens sind eine Kombination aus Propagierung der abweichenden physikalischen Größen im Modell und der Auswertung des heuristischen Wissens. Des Weiteren werden in dieser Arbeit verschiedene Aspekte der Realisierung der entwickelten theoretischen Grundlagen dargestellt, zum Beispiel: Systemarchitektur, Wissenserhebungsprozess, Ablauf des Diagnosevorgangs in den Werkstätten. Die Evaluierung der entwickelten Lösung bei der Wissenserhebung in Form von Modellerstellungen und Modellierungsworkshops sowie Feldtests dient nicht nur zur Bestätigung des entwickelten Ansatzes, sondern auch zur Ideenfindung für die Integration der entwickelten Tools in die existierende IT-Infrastruktur.
Formation oft the central nervous system (CNS) from multipotent neuronal stem cells (NSCs) requires a tightly controlled, step-wise activation of the neuronal gene expression program. Expression of neuronal genes at the transition from neural stem cell to mature neuron (i. e. neuronal cell differentiation) is controlled by the Repressor element 1 (RE1) silencing transcription factor (REST) complex. As a master transcriptional regulator, the REST-complex specifically inhibits expression of neuronal genes in non-neuronal tissues and neuronal progenitor cells. Differentiation of NSCs to mature neurons requires the activation of genes controlled by the REST-complex, but how abrogation of REST-complex mediated repression is achieved during neurogenesis is only poorly understood. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are a class of small regulatory RNAs that posttranscriptionally control target gene expression. Binding of miRNAs to target sequences in the 3’UTR of mRNAs, leads either to degradation or translational inhibition of the mRNA. Distinct neuronal miRNAs (e.g. miR-124) were shown to modulate REST-complex activity by silencing expression of REST-complex components. Interestingly, these miRNAs are also under transcriptional control of the REST-complex and inactivation of the REST-complex precedes their expression. Hence, additional factors are required for derepression of neuronal genes at the onset of neurogenesis. In this study function of the miR-26 family during neurogenesis of the zebrafish (Danio rerio) was analyzed. Computational target prediction revealed a number of REST-complex components as putative miR-26 targets. One of these predicted target genes, the C-terminal domain small phosphatase 2 (Ctdsp2) was validated as an in vivo target for miR-26b. Ctdsps are important cofactors of REST and suppress neuronal gene expression by dephosphorylating the C-terminal domain (CTD) of RNA polymerase II (Pol II). Interestingly, miR-26b is encoded in an intron of the ctdsp2 primary transcript and is cotranscribed together with its host gene. Hence, miR-26b modulates expression of its host gene ctdsp2 in an intrinsic negative autoregulatory loop. This negative autoregulatory loop is inactive in NSCs because miR-26b biogenesis is inhibited at the precursor level. Generation of mature miR-26b is activated during neurogenesis, where it suppresses Ctdsp2 protein expression and is required for neuronal cell differentiation in vivo. Strikingly, miR-26b is expressed prior to miR-124 during neuronal cell differentiation. Thus, it is reasonable to speculate about a function of miR-26b in early events of neurogenesis. In line with this assumption, knockdown of miR-26b in zebrafish embryos results in downregulation of REST-complex controlled neuronal genes and a block in neuronal cell differentiation, most likely due to aberrant regulation of Ctdsp2 expression. This is evident by reduced numbers of secondary motor neurons compared to control siblings. In contrast, motor neuron progenitor cells and glia cells were not affected by depletion of miR-26b.This study identifies the ctdsp2/miR-26b autoregulatory loop as the first experimentally validated interaction between an intronic miRNA and its host gene transcript. Silencing of ctdsp2 by miR-26b in neurons is possible because biogenesis of the ctdsp2 mRNA and mature mir-26b is uncoupled at the posttranscriptional level. Furthermore the obtained data indicate a cell type specific role for miR-26b in vertebrate neurogenesis and CNS development.