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Monarch butterflies are famous for their annual long-distance migration. Decreasing temperatures and reduced daylight induce the migratory state in the autumn generation of monarch butterflies. Not only are they in a reproductive diapause, they also produce fat deposits to be prepared for the upcoming journey: Driven by their instinct to migrate, they depart from their eclosion grounds in the northern regions of the North American continent and start their southern journey to their hibernation spots in Central Mexico. The butterflies cover a distance of up to 4000 km across the United States. In the next spring, the same butterflies invert their preferred heading direction due to seasonal changes and start their northward spring migration. The spring migration is continued by three consecutive butterfly generations, until the animals repopulate the northern regions in North America as non-migratory monarch butterflies. The monarch butterflies’ migratory state is genetically and epigenetically regulated, including the directed flight behavior. Therefore, the insect’s internal compass system does not only have to encode the butterflies preferred, but also its current heading direction. However, the butterfly’s internal heading representation has to be matched to external cues, to avoid departing from its initial flight path and increasing its risk of missing its desired destination. During the migratory flight, visual cues provide the butterflies with reliable orientation information. The butterflies refer to the sun as their main orientation cue. In addition to the sun, the butterflies likely use the polarization pattern of the sky for orientation. The sky compass signals are processed within a region in the brain, termed the central complex (CX). Previous research on the CX neural circuitry of the monarch butterflies demonstrated that tangential central complex neurons (TL) carry the visual input information into the CX and respond to a simulated sun and polarized light. However, whether these cells process additional visual cues like the panoramic skyline is still unknown. Furthermore, little is known about how the migratory state affects visual cue processing. In addition to this, most experiments studying the monarch butterfly CX focused on how neurons process single visual cues. However, how combined visual stimuli are processed in the CX is still unknown.
This thesis is investigating the following questions:
1) How does the migratory state affect visual cue processing in the TL cells within the monarch butterfly brain?
2) How are multiple visual cues integrated in the TL cells?
3) How is compass information modulated in the CX?
To study these questions, TL neurons from both animal groups (migratory and non-migratory) were electrophysiologically characterized using intracellular recordings while presenting different simulated celestial cues and visual sceneries. I showed that the TL neurons of migratory butterflies are more narrowly tuned to the sun, possibly helping them in keeping a directed flight course during migration. Furthermore, I found that TL cells encode a panoramic skyline, suggesting that the CX network combines celestial and terrestrial information. Experiments with combined celestial stimuli revealed that the TL cells combine both cue information linearly. However, if exposing the animals to a simulated visual scenery containing a panoramic skyline and a simulated sun, the single visual cues are weighted differently. These results indicate that the CX’s input region can flexibly adapt to different visual cue conditions. Furthermore, I characterize a previously unknown neuron in the monarch butterfly CX which responds to celestial stimuli and connects the CX with other brain neuropiles. How this cell type affects heading direction encoding has yet to be determined.
After almost two decades of extensive research, some controversy has remained regarding the self-renewal of resident macrophages of the central nervous system (CNS). Concurrently, the vessel wall has emerged as a potentially ubiquitous niche for stem and progenitor cells, including committed macrophage precursors. It is conceivable that their occurrence in the CNS might explain the brain-resident hematopoietic potential, which has repeatedly been observed but not yet characterized in detail. In this work, the presence of hematopoietic progenitors inside and outside the vessel wall was studied in the adult mouse brain, as well as their possible contribution to the resident macrophage pool. An immunohistological analysis did not corroborate CD45+ SCA-1+ macrophage progenitors, which have been characterized in peripheral arteries, in the circle of Willis. Accordingly, the ex vivo culture of CNS vessels did not provide evidence for de novo formation of macrophages, but for the extensive proliferative capacity of mature cells. However, when analyzing whole brain suspensions in colony-forming unit (CFU) assays, rare Iba1- Cx3cr1- (immature) clonogenic cells were detected, which were enriched at the cerebral surface/meninges and differentiated into macrophages in culture. Intravenous antibody injection and cell sorting confirmed their residence behind the blood-brain barrier. Intriguingly, brain-derived CFUs produced a unique pattern of colony types compared to cells from bone marrow (BM) or blood. Still they displayed the same immunophenotype as BM-resident myeloid progenitors (CD45lo, LIN-, SCA-1-, IL7Rα-, c-KIT+) and could be further stratified into a progenitor hierarchy giving rise to all erythro-myeloid cell types in vitro. This similarity was substantiated by labeling of their progeny in Flt3Cre x Rosa26mT/mG mice, which indicated a descendance from hematopoietic stem cells. While forced repopulation of brain macrophages using the CSF-1R inhibitor PLX5622 did not point to a role of progenitors in in vivo microglia/macrophage maintenance, recent advances in hematology imply that they might be involved in CNS immunosurveillance. In conclusion, though there was no evidence for adventitial macrophage precursors in the CNS, this study confirms the presence of myeloid progenitors in the adult brain and provides the anatomical and phenotypical details necessary to elucidate their relevance in neuroinflammation.
Development of the central nervous system in Drosophila melanogaster relies on neural stem cells called neuroblasts. Neuroblasts divide asymmetrically to give rise to a new neuroblast as well as a small daughter cell which eventually generates neurons or glia cells. Between each division, neuroblasts have to re-grow to be able to divide again. In previous studies, it was shown that neuroblast proliferation, cell size and the number of progeny cells is negatively affected in larvae carrying a P-element induced disruption of the gene mushroom body miniature (mbm). This mbm null mutation called mbmSH1819 is homozygously lethal during pupation. It was furthermore shown that the nucleolar protein Mbm plays a role in the processing of ribosomal RNA (rRNA) as well as the translocation of ribosomal protein S6 (RpS6) in neuroblasts and that it is a transcriptional target of Myc. Therefore, it was suggested that Mbm might regulate neuroblast proliferation through a role in ribosome biogenesis.
In the present study, it was attempted to further elucidate these proposed roles of Mbm and to identify the protein domains that are important for those functions. Mbm contains an arginine/glycine rich region in which a di-RG as well as a di-RGG motif could be found. Together, these two motifs were defined as Mbm’s RGG-box. RGG-boxes can be found in many proteins of different families and they can either promote or inhibit protein-RNA as well as protein-protein interactions. Therefore, Mbm’s RGG-box is a likely candidate for a domain involved in rRNA binding and RpS6 translocation. It could be shown by deletion of the RGG-box, that MbmdRGG is unable to fully rescue survivability and neuroblast cell size defects of the null mutation mbmSH1819. Furthermore, Mbm does indeed rely on its RGG-box for the binding of rRNA in vitro and in mbmdRGG as well as mbmSH1819 mutants RpS6 is partially delocalized. Mbm itself also seems to depend on the RGG-box for correct localization since MbmdRGG is partially delocalized to the nucleus. Interestingly, protein synthesis rates are increased in mbmdRGG mutants, possibly induced by an increase in TOR expression. Therefore, Mbm might possess a promoting function in TOR signaling in certain conditions, which is regulated by its RGG-box. Moreover, RGG-boxes often rely on methylation by protein arginine methyltransferases (in Drosophila: Darts – Drosophila arginine methyltransferases) to fulfill their functions. Mbm might be symmetrically dimethylated within its RGG-box, but the results are very equivocal. In any case, Dart1 and Dart5 do not seem to be capable of Mbm methylation.
Additionally, Mbm contains two C2HC type zinc-finger motifs, which could be involved in rRNA binding. In an earlier study, it was shown that the mutation of the zinc-fingers, mbmZnF, does not lead to changes in neuroblast cell size, but that MbmZnF is delocalized to the cytoplasm. In the present study, mbmZnF mutants were included in most experiments. The results, however, are puzzling since mbmZnF mutant larvae exhibit an even lower viability than the mbm null mutants and MbmZnF shows stronger binding to rRNA than wild-type Mbm. This suggests an unspecific interaction of MbmZnF with either another protein, DNA or RNA, possibly leading to a dominant negative effect by disturbing other interaction partners. Therefore, it is difficult to draw conclusions about the zinc-fingers’ functions.
In summary, this study provides further evidence that Mbm is involved in neuroblast proliferation as well as the regulation of ribosome biogenesis and that Mbm relies on its RGG-box to fulfill its functions.
Die Evolution der Primaten zeigt eine Verbindung zwischen der zunehmenden Komplexität des sozialen Verhaltens und der Vergrößerung des humanen Gehirns, insbesondere des präfrontalen Cortex. Deshalb stellt der präfrontale Cortex bezüglich der Evolution des Menschen eine der interessantesten Strukturen im humanen Gehirn dar. Es wird angenommen, dass nicht allein die Größe, sondern auch die Funktion, vor allem das Zusammenspiel von Neuronen und nicht-neuronalen Zellen, wie z.B. Gliazellen, zur Differenzierung des menschlichen Gehirns von dem rezenter Primaten geführt hat. Daraus lässt sich schließen, dass die Gehirnfunktionen über eine ausgeglichene und gut aufeinander abgestimmte transkriptionelle Landschaft kontrolliert werden, die durch ein zugrundeliegendes genetisches und epigentisches Rückgrat organisiert ist. In dieser Studie wurden das Methylierungsprofil neuronaler und nicht-neuronaler Zellen des präfrontalen Cortex (Brodmann-Areal 10) von drei Menschen und drei Schimpansen miteinander verglichen. Die intra- und interspezifischen differenziell methylierten Regionen (DMRs) waren in bestimmten genomischen Regionen angereichert. Intraspezifische Methylierungsunterschiede zwischen neuronalen und nicht-neuronalen Zellen konnten dreimal häufiger beobachtet werden als interspezifische Unterschiede in den einzelnen Zelltypen. Rund 90% der humanen intraspezifischen DMRs wiesen eine Hypomethylierung in den neuronalen Zellen im Vergleich zu den nicht-neuronalen Zellen auf. In den intraspezifischen DMRs (Mensch und Schimpanse) waren Gene angereichert, die mit verschiedenen neuropsychiatrischen Erkrankungen assoziiert sind. Der Vergleich zwischen Menschen und Schimpanse in den neuronalen und nicht-neuronalen Zelltypen zeigte eine Anreicherung von Genen mit human-spezifischer Histonsignatur. In den nicht-neuronalen Zellen konnten mehr interspezifische DMRs (n=666) detektiert werden als in den neuronalen Zellen (n=96). Ungefähr 95% der nicht-neuronalen interspezifischen DMRs waren im Menschen, im Vergleich zum Schimpansen, hypermethyliert. Daraus ergibt sich der Eindruck, dass mehrere hundert der nicht-neuronalen Gene während der humanen Gehirnevolution einer Methylierungswelle unterlagen. Dies führt zu der Annahme, dass der Einfluss dieser Veränderungen in den nicht-neuronalen Zellen auf die Vergößerung des menschlichen Gehirns bisher stark unterschätzt wurde.
Die bekannteste genetische Ursache für erblichen Brust- und Eierstockkrebs sind Mutationen in den Tumorsuppressorgenen (TSG) BRCA1 und BRCA2. Dennoch können nur rund 20-25% der familiären Brustkrebserkrankungen über Keimbahnmutationen in BRCA1/BRCA2 erklärt werden, besonders bei Frauen, deren Erkrankung vor dem vierzigsten Lebensjahr auftritt. Epigenetische Veränderungen, die zu einer aberranten Genexpression führen, spielen ebenfalls eine wichtige Rolle bei der Karzinogenese und der Entwicklung einer Brustkrebserkrankung. Es ist bekannt, dass TSG nicht nur durch den Verlust der Heterozygotie (engl. loss of heterozygosity, LOH) oder homozygote Deletionen, sondern auch durch transkriptionelle Stilllegung via DNA-Methylierung inaktiviert werden können. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde überprüft, welchen Einfluss aberrante Methylierungsmuster im Promotorbereich von TSG auf die Brustkrebskarzinogenese und die Expression der Gene haben. Für die Quantifizierung der Epimutationen wurden die Promotorbereiche von acht TSG (BRCA1, BRCA2, RAD51C, ATM, PTEN, TP53, MLH1, RB1) und des estrogene receptor (ESR1) Gens, welches eine Rolle in der Tumorprogression spielt, mittels Deep Bisulfite Amplicon Sequencing (DBAS) analysiert. Es wurden Blutproben von zwei unabhängigen BRCA1/BRCA2-mutationsnegativen Brustkrebs (BC)-Patientenkohorten, sowie von zwei unabhängigen alters-gematchten, gesunden Kontrollkohorten untersucht. BC-Kohorte 1 beinhaltet early-onset (EO) BC-Patientinnen. Kohorte 2 enthält BC-Patientinnen mit einem Risiko von >95% eine heterozygote Mutation in BRCA1/BRCA2 (high-risk, HR) zu tragen. Allele mit >50% methylierten CpGs werden als funktionell relevante Epimutationen erachtet, da bekannt ist, dass TSG über eine Methylierung im Promotorbereich transkriptionell stillgelegt werden. Im Vergleich zu ESR1 (Ø Methylierung, 3%), welches die Methylierungslevel eines durchschnittlichen Promotors wiederspiegelt, zeigten die TSG sehr geringe durchschnittliche Methylierungswerte von weniger als 1%. Zudem waren die durchschnittlichen Epimutationsraten (EMR; <0,0001-0,1%) der TSG sehr gering. Mit der Ausnahme von BRCA1, welches eine erhöhte EMR in der BC-Kohorte verglichen zu den Kontrollen (0,31% gegen 0,06%) zeigte, gab es keine signifikanten Gruppenunterschiede zwischen BC-Patientinnen und Kontrollen. Eine von 36 HR BC-Patientinnen zeigte im Vergleich zu den restlichen Proben eine stark erhöhte EMR von 14,7% in BRCA1. Rund ein Drittel (15/44) der EO BC-Patientinnen wiesen eine erhöhte Rate an Einzel-CpG Fehlern in mehreren TSG auf. Die nachfolgenden Expressionsanalysen ergaben eine erniedrigte Expression vieler TSG je analysierter Patientin. Diese Ergebnisse führen zu der Annahme, dass epigenetische Veränderungen in normalen Körperzellen als ein möglicher Indikator für einen gestörten Mechanismus, der für die Aufrechterhaltung des unmethylierten Status und der daraus resultierenden normalen Genexpression zuständig ist, angesehen werden können. Dies kann mit einem erhöhten BC-Risiko assoziiert werden.
The work presented in this thesis covers the effects of early-life adversity in the context of altered serotonin (5-HT; 5-hydroxytryptamine) system functioning in mice. The main body is focussing on a screening approach identifying molecular processes, potentially involved in distinct behavioural manifestations that emerge from or are concomitant with early adversity and, with regard to some behavioural manifestations, dependent on the functioning of the 5-HT system.
Although age is one of the most salient and fundamental aspects of human faces, its processing in the brain has not yet been studied by any neuroimaging experiment. Automatic assessment of temporal changes across faces is a prerequisite to identifying persons over their life-span, and age per se is of biological and social relevance. Using a combination of evocative face morphs controlled for global optical flow and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we segregate two areas that process changes of facial age in both hemispheres. These areas extend beyond the previously established face-sensitive network and are centered on the posterior inferior temporal sulcus (pITS) and the posterior angular gyrus (pANG), an evolutionarily new formation of the human brain. Using probabilistic tractography and by calculating spatial cross-correlations as well as creating minimum intersection maps between activation and connectivity patterns we demonstrate a hitherto unrecognized link between structure and function in the human brain on the basis of cognitive age processing. According to our results, implicit age processing involves the inferior temporal sulci and is, at the same time, closely tied to quantity decoding by the presumed neural systems devoted to magnitudes in the human parietal lobes. The ventral portion of Wernicke’s largely forgotten perpendicular association fasciculus is shown not only to interconnect these two areas but to relate to their activations, i.e. to transmit age-relevant information. In particular, post-hoc age-rating competence is shown to be associated with high response levels in the left angular gyrus. Cortical activation patterns related to changes of facial age differ from those previously elicited by other fixed as well as changeable face aspects such as gender (used for comparison), ethnicity and identity as well as eye gaze or facial expressions. We argue that this may be due to the fact that individual changes of facial age occur ontogenetically, unlike the instant changes of gaze direction or expressive content in faces that can be “mirrored” and require constant cognitive monitoring to follow. Discussing the ample evidence for distinct representations of quantitative age as opposed to categorical gender varied over continuous androgyny levels, we suggest that particular face-sensitive regions interact with additional object-unselective quantification modules to obtain individual estimates of facial age.
Die Glutamat-vermittelte Exzitotoxizität gilt als einer der wichtigsten neuropathologischen Faktoren der HIV-Demenz: Während Glutamat in physiologischer Konzentration als exzitatorischer Neurotransmitter fungiert, wirkt es in zu hoher Konzentration neurotoxisch. In vorliegender Arbeit wurde mittels Western Blotting die Proteinexpression der exzitatorischen Aminosäuretransporter EAAT1 und EAAT2 gemessen, die vor allem für den Abtransport von Glutamat aus dem synaptischen Spalt sorgen. Hierzu wurden Gehirne von mit dem simianen Immundefizienz Virus (SIV) infizierten chinesischen und indischen Rhesusaffen verwendet. SIV verursacht im SIV-Rhesusaffenmodell ähnliche Schäden wie das humane Immundefizienz Virus (HIV) beim Menschen. Zur Entstehung der SIV-Enzephalitis tragen, wie auch bei der HIV-Demenz, aktivierte Monozyten und Mikroglia bei, die u.a. das Neurotoxin Tumornekrosefaktor-alpha (TNF-alpha) sezernieren. Dessen Protein- und Genexpression wurde mittels ELISA und Real-Time-PCR ausgewertet. Für die vorliegende Arbeit wurden zwei für die HIV-Demenz besonders relevante Gehirnregionen ausgewählt: das Putamen, das als Teil der Basalganglien für die extrapyramidale Steuerung der Motorik zuständig ist, und der Nucleus Accumbens, der affektives und motivationales Verhalten in Bewegungsabläufe integriert. Als potentielle Pharmaka wurden der MAO-B-Hemmer Selegilin, der NMDAR-Antagonist Memantin sowie die Antioxidantien N-Acetylcystein (NAC) und Melatonin getestet. Es gelang in vorliegender Arbeit erstmals, eine Störung der Proteinexpression der glutamatergen Transporter EAAT1 und EAAT2 im Putamen mit zunehmender Dauer der SIV-Infektion und ihren dramatischen Verlust bei Entwicklung von AIDS nachzuweisen. Im Nucleus Accumbens fand sich eine relativ konstante Proteinexpression des EAAT1 und EAAT2 im Verlauf der SIV-Infektion. Weiterhin konnte ein Anstieg des TNF-alpha mit fortschreitender Infektionsdauer hinsichtlich der Genexpression im Putamen und der Proteinexpression im Nucleus Accumbens nachgewiesen werden. Die fehlende Eignung von Selegilin als neuroprotektive Substanz im Rahmen der SIV-Enzephalitis wurde repliziert. Memantin, NAC und Melatonin hingegen verbesserten in weiten Teilen die Expression von EAAT1 und EAAT2 und wirkten immunstimulierend, was sie zu interessanten Kandidaten für eine neuroprotektive Medikation macht. In beiden Hirnregionen zeigte sich bei den indischen Rhesusaffen eine höhere TNF-alpha-Expression als bei den chinesischen Tieren. Dies entspricht der Beobachtung, dass die SIV-Infektion bei indischen Rhesusaffen meist schneller und schwerer verläuft.
Zerebrovaskuläre kavernöse Malformationen (CCM) sind Blutgefäßfehlbildungen, welche hauptsächlich im Gehirn vorkommen. Sie sind gekennzeichnet durch stark dilatierte kapillarähnliche Gefäße mit niedriger Flussrate („slow-flow lesions“). Intervenierendes Gehirnparenchym fehlt ebenso wie Perizyten oder glatte Gefäßmuskelzellen. Die klinischen Symptome reichen von starken Kopfschmerzen über Epilepsie bis hin zum Schlaganfall. Dennoch bleiben viele Kavernomträger aufgrund unvollständiger Penetranz ihr Leben lang asymptomatisch. Die Prävalenz beträgt ca. 0,5% in der Gesamtbevölkerung. Es gibt sowohl sporadische als auch dominant vererbte Krankheitsformen. In den letzten Jahren konnten 3 Gene ursächlich mit der Krankheit in Verbindung gebracht werden. Mutationen in CCM1, CCM2 oder CCM3 führen zu einem nicht unterscheidbaren klinischen Phänotyp. Alle drei Proteine bilden einen ternären Komplex in vitro, was eine Beteiligung an einem gemeinsamen molekularen Signalweg bekräftigt. Während die Proteine CCM1 und CCM2 in den letzten Jahren umfangreich erforscht wurden, ist über das CCM3-Protein bis heute wenig bekannt. In dieser Arbeit konnte gezeigt werden, dass CCM3 eine wichtige Rolle in der Angiogenese spielt und diese bei Überexpression in humanen Endothelzellen stark negativ reguliert: die Migration, die Proliferation und die Fähigkeit, kapillarähnliche Strukturen in Matrix-Gelen zu bilden kommt nahezu zum Erliegen. Ein gegenläufiger Effekt nach siRNA induziertem Knock-down von CCM3 war weniger stark ausgeprägt. Einzig die Fähigkeit, gefäßähnliche Strukturen in Matrigelen zu bilden, war erhöht. Um weiterhin Klarheit über die intrazellulären, von CCM3 beeinflussten Signalwege zu schaffen, wurden Tyrosin Kinase Arrays durchgeführt, bei welchen CCM3-überexprimierende HUVEC Lysate mit Kontrolllysaten verglichen wurden. Dabei stellte sich heraus, dass 5 Substrate signifikant erhöht phosphoryliert wurden: der Discoidin Domänen Rezeptor 1 (discoidin domain receptor; DDR1), die duale spezifitätstyrosinphosphorylierungsregulierte Kinase 1A (dual specificity tyrosine-phosphorylation-regulated kinase 1A; DYR1A), die Protoonkogen Tyrosin- Protein Kinase FER (proto-oncogene tyrosine-protein kinase FER; FER), die fynbezogene Kinase (Fyn-related kinase; FRK) und die phosphoinositolabhängige Kinase 1 (Phosphoinositide-dependent kinase 1, PDPK-1). Im Folgenden bestätigten Western Blot, dass die Überexpression von CCM3 in Endothelzellen die phosphoinositolabhängige Kinase 1 und die nachgeschaltete Serin-Threonin Kinase Akt/PBK aktiviert, welche ein bedeutsames Überlebenssignal der Zelle darstellt. Schließlich konnte gezeigt werden, dass CCM3 nicht nur antiangiogen, sondern auch antiapoptotisch wirkt. Die Ergebnisse der vorliegenden Arbeit legen nahe, dass CCM3 für die Integrität des ruhenden, adulten Endothelbettes wichtig ist.
Neuroanatomical data in fly brain research are mostly available as spatial gene expression patterns of genetically distinct fly strains. The Drosophila standard brain, which was developed in the past to provide a reference coordinate system, can be used to integrate these data. Working with the standard brain requires advanced image processing methods, including visualisation, segmentation and registration. The previously published VIB Protocol addressed the problem of image registration. Unfortunately, its usage was severely limited by the necessity of manually labelling a predefined set of neuropils in the brain images at hand. In this work I present novel tools to facilitate the work with the Drosophila standard brain. These tools are integrated in a well-known open-source image processing framework which can potentially serve as a common platform for image analysis in the neuroanatomical research community: ImageJ. In particular, a hardware-accelerated 3D visualisation framework was developed for ImageJ which extends its limited 3D visualisation capabilities. It is used for the development of a novel semi-automatic segmentation method, which implements automatic surface growing based on user-provided seed points. Template surfaces, incorporated with a modified variant of an active surface model, complement the segmentation. An automatic nonrigid warping algorithm is applied, based on point correspondences established through the extracted surfaces. Finally, I show how the individual steps can be fully automated, and demonstrate its application for the successful registration of fly brain images. The new tools are freely available as ImageJ plugins. I compare the results obtained by the introduced methods with the output of the VIB Protocol and conclude that our methods reduce the required effort five to ten fold. Furthermore, reproducibility and accuracy are enhanced using the proposed tools.
The olfactory system of leafcutting ants: neuroanatomy and the correlation to social organization
(2009)
In leaf-cutting ants (genera Atta and Acromyrmex), the worker caste exhibits a pronounced size-polymorphism, and division of labor is largely dependent on worker size (alloethism). Behavioral studies have shown a rich diversity of olfactory-guided behaviors, and the olfactory system seems to be highly developed and very sensitive. To allow fine-tuned behavioral responses to different tasks, adaptations within the olfactory system of different sized workers are expected. In a recent study, two different phenotypes of the antennal lobe of Atta vollenweideri workers were found: MG- and RG-phenotype (with and without a macroglomerulus, MG). The existence of the macroglomerulus is correlated to the body size of workers, with small workers showing the RG-phenotype and large workers showing the MG-phenotype. In the MG, the information about the releaser component of the trail-pheromone is processed. In the first part of my PhD-project, I focus on quantifying behavioral differences between different sized workers in Atta vollenweideri. The study analyzes the trail following behavior; which can be generally performed by all workers. An artificial trail consisting of the releaser component of the trail-pheromone in decreasing concentration was used to test the trail-following performance of individual workers. The trail-following performance of the polymorphic workers is depended of the existence of the MG in the antennal lobe. Workers possessing the MG-phenotype were significantly better in following a decreasing trail then workers showing the RG-phenotype. In the second part I address the question if there are more structural differences, besides the MG, in the olfactory system of different sized workers. Therefore I analyze whether the glomerular numbers are related to worker size. The antennal lobes of small workers contain ~390 glomeruli (low-number; LN-phenotype), and in large workers I found a substantially higher number of ~440 glomeruli (high-number; HN-phenotype). All LN-phenotype workers and some of the small HN-phenotype workers do not possess an MG (LN-RG-phenotype and HN-RG-phenotype) at all, whereas the remaining majority of HN-phenotype workers do possess an MG (HN-MG-phenotype). Mass-stainings of antennal olfactory receptor neurons revealed that the sensory tracts divide the antennal lobe into six clusters of glomeruli (T1-T6). In the T4-cluster ~50 glomeruli are missing in the LN-phenotype workers. Selective staining of single sensilla and their associated receptor neurons showed that T4-glomeruli are innervated by receptor neurons from the main type of olfactory sensilla, the Sensilla trichodea curvata which are also projecting to glomeruli in all other clusters. The other type of olfactory sensilla, the Sensilla basiconica, exclusively innervates T6-glomeruli. Quantitative analyses revealed a correlation between the number of Sensilla basiconica and the volume of T6 glomeruli in different sized workers. The results of both behavioral and neuroanatomical studies in Atta vollenweideri suggest that developmental plasticity of antennal-lobe phenotypes promotes differences in olfactory-guided behavior which may underlie task specialization within ant colonies. The last part of my project focuses on the evolutionary origin of the macroglomerulus and the number of glomeruli in the antennal lobe. I compared the number, volumes and position of the glomeruli of the antennal lobe of 25 different species from all three major Attini groups (lower, higher and leaf-cutting Attini). The antennal lobes of all investigated Attini comprise a high number of glomeruli (257-630). The highest number was found in Apterostigma cf. mayri. This species is at a basal position within the Attini phylogeny, and a high number of glomeruli might have been advantageous in the evolution of the advanced olfactory systems of this Taxa. The macroglomerulus can be found in all investigated leaf-cutting Attini, but in none of the lower and higher Attini species. It is found only in large workers, and is located close to the entrance of the antennal nerve in all investigated species. The results indicate that the presence of a macroglomerulus in large workers of leaf-cutting Attini is a derived overexpression of a trait in the polymorphic leaf-cutting species. It presumably represents an olfactory adaptation to elaborate foraging and mass recruitment systems, and adds to the complexity of division of labor and social organization known for this group.