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The sequencing of several ant genomes within the last six years open new research avenues for understanding not only the genetic basis of social species but also the complex systems such as immune responses in general. Similar to other social insects, ants live in cooperative colonies, often in high densities and with genetically identical or closely related individuals. The contact behaviours and crowd living conditions allow the disease to spread rapidly through colonies. Nevertheless, ants can efficiently combat infections by using diverse and effective immune mechanisms. However, the components of the immune system of carpenter ant Camponotus floridanus and also the factors in bacteria that facilitate infection are not well understood.
To form a better view of the immune repository and study the C. floridanus immune responses against the bacteria, experimental data from Illumina sequencing and mass-spectrometry (MS) data of haemolymph in normal and infectious conditions were analysed and integrated with the several bioinformatics approaches. Briefly, the tasks were accomplished in three levels. First, the C. floridanus genome was re-annotated for the improvement of the existing annotation using the computational methods and transcriptomics data. Using the homology based methods, the extensive survey of literature, and mRNA expression profiles, the immune repository of C. floridanus were established. Second, large-scale protein-protein interactions (PPIs) and signalling network of C. floridanus were reconstructed and analysed and further the infection induced functional modules in the networks were detected by mapping of the expression data over the networks. In addition, the interactions of the immune components with the bacteria were identified by reconstructing inter-species PPIs networks and the interactions were validated by literature. Third, the stage-specific MS data of larvae and worker ants were analysed and the differences in the immune response were reported.
Concisely, all the three omics levels resulted to multiple findings, for instance, re-annotation and transcriptome profiling resulted in the overall improvement of structural and functional annotation and detection of alternative splicing events, network analysis revealed the differentially expressed topologically important proteins and the active functional modules, MS data analysis revealed the stage specific differences in C. floridanus immune responses against bacterial pathogens.
Taken together, starting from re-annotation of C. floridanus genome, this thesis provides a transcriptome and proteome level characterization of ant C. floridanus, particularly focusing on the immune system responses to pathogenic bacteria from a biological and a bioinformatics point of view. This work can serve as a model for the integration of omics data focusing on the immuno-transcriptome of insects.
Genetic foundation of unrivaled survival strategies - Of water bears and carnivorous plants -
(2018)
All living organisms leverage mechanisms and response systems to optimize reproduction, defense, survival, and competitiveness within their natural habitat. Evolutionary theories such as the universal adaptive strategy theory (UAST) developed by John Philip Grime (1979) attempt to describe how these systems are limited by the trade-off between growth, maintenance and regeneration; known as the universal three-way trade-off. Grime introduced three adaptive strategies that enable organisms to coop with either high or low intensities of stress (e.g., nutrient deficiency) and environmental disturbance (e.g., seasons). The competitor is able to outcompete other organisms by efficiently tapping available resources in environments of low intensity stress and disturbance (e.g., rapid growers). A ruderal specism is able to rapidly complete the life cycle especially during high intensity disturbance and low intensity stress (e.g., annual colonizers). The stress tolerator is able to respond to high intensity stress with physiological variability but is limited to low intensity disturbance environments. Carnivorous plants like D. muscipula and tardigrades like M. tardigradum are two extreme examples for such stress tolerators. D. muscipula traps insects in its native habitat (green swamps in North and South Carolina) with specialized leaves and thereby is able to tolerate nutrient deficient soils. M. tardigradum on the other side, is able to escape desiccation of its terrestrial habitat like mosses and lichens which are usually covered by a water film but regularly fall completely dry. The stress tolerance of the two species is the central study object of this thesis. In both cases, high througput sequencing data and methods were used to test for transcriptomic (D. muscipula) or genomic adaptations (M. tardigradum) which underly the stress tolerance. A new hardware resource including computing cluster and high availability storage system was implemented in the first months of the thesis work to effectively analyze the vast amounts of data generated for both projects. Side-by-side, the data management resource TBro [14] was established together with students to intuitively approach complex biological questions and enhance collaboration between researchers of several different disciplines. Thereafter, the unique trapping abilities of D. muscipula were studied using a whole transcriptome approach. Prey-dependent changes of the transcriptional landscape as well as individual tissue-specific aspects of the whole plant were studied. The analysis revealed that non-stimulated traps of D. muscipula exhibit the expected hallmarks of any typical leaf but operates evolutionary conserved stress-related pathways including defense-associated responses when digesting prey. An integrative approach, combining proteome and transcriptome data further enabled the detailed description of the digestive cocktail and the potential nutrient uptake machinery of the plant. The published work [25] as well as a accompanying video material (https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/ 2016-05/cshl-fgr042816.php; Video credit: Sönke Scherzer) gained global press coverage and successfully underlined the advantages of D. muscipula as experimental system to understand the carnivorous syndrome. The analysis of the peculiar stress tolerance of M. tardigradum during cryptobiosis was carried out using a genomic approach. First, the genome size of M. tardigradum was estimated, the genome sequenced, assembled and annotated. The first draft of M. tardigradum and the workflow used to established its genome draft helped scrutinizing the first ever released tardigrade genome (Hypsibius dujardini) and demonstrated how (bacterial) contamination can influence whole genome analysis efforts [27]. Finally, the
M. tardigradum genome was compared to two other tardigrades and all species present in the current release of the Ensembl Metazoa database. The analysis revealed that tardigrade genomes are not that different from those of other Ecdysozoa. The availability of the three genomes allowed the delineation of their phylogenetic position within the Ecdysozoa and placed them as sister taxa to the nematodes. Thereby, the comparative analysis helped to identify evolutionary trends within this metazoan lineage. Surprisingly, the analysis did not reveal general mechanisms (shared by all available tardigrade genomes) behind the arguably most peculiar feature of tardigrades; their enormous stress tolerance. The lack of molecular evidence for individual tardigrade species (e.g., gene expression data for M. tardigradum) and the non-existence of a universal experimental framework which enables hypothesis testing withing the whole phylum Tardigrada, made it nearly impossible to link footprints of genomic adaptations to the unusual physiological capabilities. Nevertheless, the (comparative) genomic framework established during this project will help to understand how evolution tinkered, rewired and modified existing molecular systems to shape the remarkable phenotypic features of tardigrades.
Ionisierende Strahlung (IR) ist in der medizinischen Diagnostik und in der Tumortherapie von zentraler Bedeutung, kann aber Genominstabilität und Krebs auslösen. Strahleninduzierte Genominstabilität (RIGI) ist in den klonalen Nachkommen bestrahlter Zellen zu beobachten, die zugrundeliegenden Mechanismen sind jedoch noch unverstanden. Zur Erforschung von verzögerten Strahleneffekten wurden primäre embryonale Fibroblastenkulturen mit 2 Gray bestrahlt und für 20 Populationsverdopplungen klonal expandiert. Zellen, die keiner Strahlung ausgesetzt waren, dienten als Kontrolle für normale Alterungsprozesse. Die Klone wurden durch klassische Chromosomenbänderungstechniken analysiert und in Abhängigkeit der Stabilität ihres Genoms in Gruppen eingeteilt. Ein Klon wurde als stabil gewertet, wenn die analysierten Metaphasen keinerlei Auffälligkeiten zeigten, während instabile Klone ein Mosaik aus normalen und abnormalen Metaphasen waren. Die Zellen von zwei Spendern wurden untersucht, um interindividuelle Strahleneffekte zu beurteilen. Nach Bestrahlung hatten mehr als die Hälfte der Klone Metaphasen mit strukturellen Aberrationen und wurden dementsprechend als instabil eingestuft. Drei Klone zeigten zudem numerische Aberrationen, die ausschließlich das Y Chromosom betrafen. Fluoreszenz in situ Hybridisierungen verifizierten diese Beobachtung in weiteren Klonen und deuteten an, dass der Verlust des Y Chromosoms mit RIGI assoziiert ist.
Molekulare Karyotypisierungen mit SNP Arrays ergaben, dass IR in den Klonen Veränderungen der Kopienzahl auslöst. Ein Unterschied zwischen chromosomal stabilen und instabilen Klonen konnte jedoch nicht detektiert werden. Chromosomale Regionen, in denen sich bekanntermaßen fragile Stellen befinden, zeigten eine Anhäufung von CNVs. Ein RIGI Effekt konnte für die fragile Stelle 3B, in der sich das Gen FHIT befindet, identifiziert werden.
Exom Sequenzierungen von Klonen und der entsprechenden Massenkultur zeigten eine alterungsassoziierte Entstehung von Varianten. Der Effekt wurde durch die Einwirkung von Strahlung erhöht. Auf Ebene von einzelnen Nukleotiden konnten ebenfalls Anhäufungen von Schäden in bestimmten genomischen Bereichen detektiert werden, dieser Effekt ging ohne die typischen RIGI Endpunkte einher.
Die Ergebnisse der vorliegenden Arbeit zeigen, dass strahlenbedingte Veränderungen auf verschiedenen Ebenen (Chromosomen, Genkopienzahl und einzelnen Nukleotiden) beobachtet werden können, welche, unabhängig von RIGI, die Tumorentstehung begünstigen. Speziell Veränderungen im FRA3B Lokus und der Verlust des Y Chromosoms scheinen jedoch über die Destabilisierung des Genoms zur Krebsentstehung beizutragen.