Refine
Has Fulltext
- yes (26)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (26)
Year of publication
- 2023 (26) (remove)
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (26) (remove)
Keywords
- Biene (5)
- Hemibodies (2)
- Mikroskopie (2)
- Monarchfalter (2)
- Orientierung (2)
- Zellzyklus (2)
- bee (2)
- division of labor (2)
- honeybee (2)
- 18S rRNA (1)
Institute
- Theodor-Boveri-Institut für Biowissenschaften (26) (remove)
Sonstige beteiligte Institutionen
- Center for Computational and Theoretical Biology (CCTB), Universität Würzburg (1)
- Chemical Biology Laboratory, National Cancer Institue, Frederick (USA) (1)
- Fachgebiet für Populationsgenomik bei Nutztieren, Universität Hohenheim (1)
- Lehrstuhl für Chemie, Brooklyn College, City University of New York, Brooklyn (1)
- Lehrstuhl für Physiologische Chemie (1)
- Zentrale Abteilung für Mikroskopie, Universität Würzburg (1)
Most of the studies in cell biology primarily focus on models from the opisthokont group of eukaryotes. However, opisthokonts do not encompass the full diversity of eukaryotes. Thus, it is necessary to broaden the research focus to other organisms to gain a comprehensive understanding of basic cellular processes shared across the tree of life. In this sense, Trypanosoma brucei, a unicellular eukaryote, emerges as a viable alternative. The collaborative efforts in genome sequencing and protein tagging over the past two decades have significantly expanded our knowledge on this organism and have provided valuable tools to facilitate a more detailed analysis of this parasite. Nevertheless, numerous questions still remain.
The survival of T. brucei within the mammalian host is intricately linked to the endo-lysosomal system, which plays a critical role in surface glycoprotein recycling, antibody clearance, and plasma membrane homeostasis. However, the dynamics of the duplication of the endo-lysosomal system during T. brucei proliferation and its potential relationship with plasma membrane growth remain poorly understood. Thus, as the primary objective, this thesis explores the endo-lysosomal system of T. brucei in the context of the cell cycle, providing insights on cell surface growth, endosome duplication, and clathrin recruitment. In addition, the study revisits ferritin endocytosis to provide quantitative data on the involvement of TbRab proteins (TbRab5A, TbRab7, and TbRab11) and the different endosomal subpopulations (early, late, and recycling endosomes, respectively) in the transport of this fluid-phase marker. Notably, while these subpopulations function as distinct compartments, different TbRabs can be found within the same region or structure, suggesting a potential physical connection between the endosomal subpopulations. The potential physical connection of endosomes is further explored within the context of the cell cycle and, finally, the duplication and morphological plasticity of the lysosome are also investigated. Overall, these findings provide insights into the dynamics of plasma membrane growth and the coordinated duplication of the endo-lysosomal system during T. brucei proliferation. The early duplication of endosomes suggests their potential involvement in plasma membrane growth, while the late duplication of the lysosome indicates a reduced role in this process. The recruitment of clathrin and TbRab GTPases to the site of endosome formation supports the assumption that the newly formed endosomal system is active during cell division and, consequently, indicates its potential role in plasma membrane homeostasis.
Furthermore, considering the vast diversity within the Trypanosoma genus, which includes ~500 described species, the macroevolution of the group was investigated using the combined information of the 18S rRNA gene sequence and structure. The sequence-structure analysis of T. brucei and other 42 trypanosome species was conducted in the context of the diversity of Trypanosomatida, the order in which trypanosomes are placed. An additional analysis focused on Trypanosoma highlighted key aspects of the group’s macroevolution. To explore these aspects further, additional trypanosome species were included, and the changes in the Trypanosoma tree topology were analyzed. The sequence-structure phylogeny confirmed the independent evolutionary history of the human pathogens T. brucei and Trypanosoma cruzi, while also providing insights into the evolution of the Aquatic clade, paraphyly of groups, and species classification into subgenera.
In the eusocial insect honeybee (Apis mellifera), many sterile worker bees live together with a reproductive queen in a colony. All tasks of the colony are performed by the workers, undergoing age-dependent division of labor. Beginning as hive bees, they take on tasks inside the hive such as cleaning or the producing of larval food, later developing into foragers. With that, the perception of sweetness plays a crucial role for all honeybees whether they are sitting on the honey stores in the hive or foraging for food. Their ability to sense sweetness is undoubtedly necessary to develop and evaluate food sources. Many of the behavioral decisions in honeybees are based on sugar perception, either on an individual level for ingestion, or for social behavior such as the impulse to collect or process nectar. In this context, honeybees show a complex spectrum of abilities to perceive sweetness on many levels. They are able to perceive at least seven types of sugars and decide to collect them for the colony. Further, they seem to distinguish between these sugars or at least show clear preferences when collecting them. Additionally, the perception of sugar is not rigid in honeybees. For instance, their responsiveness towards sugar changes during the transition from in-hive bees (e.g. nurses) to foraging and is linked to the division of labor. Other direct or immediate factors changing responsiveness to sugars are stress, starvation or underlying factors, such as genotype.
Interestingly, the complexity in their sugar perception is in stark contrast to the fact that honeybees seem to have only three predicted sugar receptors.
In this work, we were able to characterize the three known sugar receptors (AmGr1, AmGr2 and AmGr3) of the honeybee fully and comprehensively in oocytes (Manuscript II, Chapter 3 and Manuscript III, Chapter 4). We could show that AmGr1 is a broad sugar receptor reacting to sucrose, glucose, maltose, melezitose and trehalose (which is the honeybees’ main blood sugar), but not fructose. AmGr2 acts as its co-receptor altering AmGr1’s specificity, AmGr3 is a specific fructose receptor and we proved the heterodimerization of all receptors. With my studies, I was able to reproduce and compare the ligand specificity of the sugar receptors in vivo by generating receptor mutants with CRISPR/Cas9. With this thesis, I was able to define AmGr1 and AmGr3 as the honeybees’ basis receptors already capable to detect all sugars of its known taste spectrum.
In the expression analysis of my doctoral thesis (Manuscript I, Chapter 2) I demonstrated that both basis receptors are expressed in the antennae and the brain of nurse bees and foragers. This thesis assumes that AmGr3 (like the Drosophila homologue) functions as a sensor for fructose, which might be the satiety signal, while AmGr1 can sense trehalose as the main blood sugar in the brain. Both receptors show a reduced expression in the brain of foragers when compared with nurse bees. These results may reflect the higher concentrated diet of nurse bees in the hive. The higher number of receptors in the brain may allow nurse bees to perceive hunger earlier and to consume the food their sitting on. Forager bees have to be more persistent to hunger, when they are foraging, and food is not so accessible. The findings of reduced expression of the fructose receptor AmGr3 in the antennae of nurse bees are congruent with my other result that nurse bees are also less responsive to fructose at the antennae when compared to foragers (Manuscript I, Chapter 2). This is possible, since nurse bees sit more likely on ripe honey which contains not only higher levels of sugars but also monosaccharides (such as fructose), while foragers have to evaluate less-concentrated nectar.
My investigations of the expression of AmGr1 in the antennae of honeybees found no differences between nurse bees and foragers, although foragers are more responsive to the respective sugar sucrose (Manuscript I, Chapter 2). Considering my finding that AmGr2 is the co-receptor of AmGr1, it can be assumed that AmGr1 and the mediated sucrose taste might not be directly controlled by its expression, but indirectly by its co-receptor. My thesis therefore clearly shows that sugar perception is associated with division of labor in honeybees and appears to be directly or indirectly regulated via expression.
The comparison with a characterization study using other bee breeds and thus an alternative protein sequence of AmGr1 shows that co-expression of different AmGr1 versions with AmGr2 alters the sugar response differently. Therefore, this thesis provides first important indications that alternative splicing could also represent an important regulatory mechanism for sugar perception in honeybees.
Further, I found out that the bitter compound quinine lowers the reward quality in learning experiments for honeybees (Manuscript IV, Chapter 5). So far, no bitter receptor has been found in the genome of honeybees and this thesis strongly assumes that bitter substances such as quinine inhibit sugar receptors in honeybees. With this finding, my work includes other molecules as possible regulatory mechanism in the honeybee sugar perception as well. We showed that the inhibitory effect is lower for fructose compared to sucrose. Considering that sugar signals might be processed as differently attractive in honeybees, this thesis concludes that the sugar receptor inhibition via quinine in honeybees might depend on the receptor (or its co-receptor), is concentration-dependent and based on the salience or attractiveness and concentration of the sugar present.
With my thesis, I was able to expand the knowledge on honeybee’s sugar perception and formulate a complex, comprehensive overview. Thereby, I demonstrated the multidimensional mechanism that regulates the sugar receptors and thus the sugar perception of honeybees. With this work, I defined AmGr1 and AmGr3 as the basis of sugar perception and enlarged these components to the co-receptor AmGr2 and the possible splice variants of AmGr1. I further demonstrated how those sugar receptor components function, interact and that they are clearly involved in the division of labor in honeybees. In summary, my thesis describes the mechanisms that enable honeybees to perceive sugar in a complex way, even though they inhere a limited number of sugar receptors. My data strongly suggest that honeybees overall might not only differentiate sugars and their diet by their general sweetness (as expected with only one main sugar receptor). The found sugar receptor mechanisms and their interplay further suggest that honeybees might be able to discriminate directly between monosaccharides and disaccharides or sugar molecules and with that their diet (honey and nectar).
Coxiella burnetii, a Gram negative obligate intracellular bacterium, is the causative
agent of Q fever. It has a world wide distribution and has been documented to
be capable of causing infections in several domestic animals, livestock species,
and human beings. Outbreaks of Q fever are still being observed in livestock
across animal farms in Europe, and primary transmission to humans still oc-
curs especially in animal handlers. Public health authorities in some countries
like Germany are required by law to report human acute cases denoting the
significance of the challenge posed by C. burnetii to public health.
In this thesis, I have developed a platform alongside methods to address the
challenges of genomic analyses of C. burnetii for typing purposes. Identification
of C. burnetii isolates is an important task in the laboratory as well as in the
clinics and genotyping is a reliable method to identify and characterize known
and novel isolates. Therefore, I designed and implemented several methods
to facilitate the genotyping analyses of C. burnetii genomes in silico via a web
platform. As genotyping is a data intensive process, I also included additional
features such as visualization methods and databases for interpretation and
storage of obtained results. I also developed a method to profile the resistome
of C. burnetii isolates using a machine learning approach. Data about antibiotic
resistance in C. burnetii are scarce majorly due to its lifestyle and the difficulty
of cultivation in laboratory media. Alternative methods that rely on homology
identification of resistance genes are also inefficient in C. burnetii, hence, I
opted for a novel approach that has been shown to be promising in other
bacteria species. The applied method relied on an artificial neural network as
well as amino acid composition of position specific scoring matrix profile for
feature extraction. The resulting model achieved an accuracy of ≈ 0.96 on test
data and the overall performance was significantly higher in comparison to
existing models. Finally, I analyzed two new C. burnetii isolates obtained from
an outbreak in Germany, I compared the genome to the RSA 493 reference
isolate and found extensive deletions across the genome landscape.
This work has provided a new digital infrastructure to analyze and character-
ize C. burnetii genomes that was not in existence before and it has also made a
significant contribution to the existing information about antibiotic resistance
genes in C. burnetii.
Various types of cancer involve aberrant cell cycle regulation. Among the pathways responsible for tumor growth, the YAP oncogene, a key downstream effector of the Hippo pathway, is responsible for oncogenic processes including cell proliferation, and metastasis by controlling the expression of cell cycle genes. In turn, the MMB multiprotein complex (which is formed when B-MYB binds to the MuvB core) is a master regulator of mitotic gene expression, which has also been associated with cancer. Previously, our laboratory identified a novel crosstalk between the MMB-complex and YAP. By binding to enhancers of MMB target genes and promoting B-MYB binding to promoters, YAP and MMB co-regulate a set of mitotic and cytokinetic target genes which promote cell proliferation. This doctoral thesis addresses the mechanisms of YAP and MMB mediated transcription, and it characterizes the role of YAP regulated enhancers in transcription of cell cycle genes.
The results reported in this thesis indicate that expression of constitutively active, oncogenic YAP5SA leads to widespread changes in chromatin accessibility in untransformed human MCF10A cells. ATAC-seq identified that newly accessible and active regions include YAP-bound enhancers, while the MMB-bound promoters were found to be already accessible and remain open during YAP induction. By means of CRISPR-interference (CRISPRi) and chromatin immuniprecipitation (ChIP), we identified a role of YAP-bound enhancers in recruitment of CDK7 to MMB-regulated promoters and in RNA Pol II driven transcriptional initiation and elongation of G2/M genes. Moreover, by interfering with the YAP-B-MYB protein interaction, we can show that binding of YAP to B-MYB is also critical for the initiation of transcription at MMB-regulated genes. Unexpectedly, overexpression of YAP5SA also leads to less accessible chromatin regions or chromatin closing. Motif analysis revealed that the newly closed regions contain binding motifs for the p53 family of transcription factors. Interestingly, chromatin closing by YAP is linked to the reduced expression and loss of chromatin-binding of the p53 family member Np63. Furthermore, I demonstrate that downregulation of Np63 following expression of YAP is a key step in driving cellular migration.
Together, the findings of this thesis provide insights into the role of YAP in the chromatin changes that contribute to the oncogenic activities of YAP. The overexpression of YAP5SA not only leads to the opening of chromatin at YAP-bound enhancers which together with the MMB complex stimulate the expression of G2/M genes, but also promotes the closing of chromatin at ∆Np63 -bound regions in order to lead to cell migration.
The monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) performs one of the most astonishing behaviors in the animal kingdom: every fall millions of these butterflies leave their breeding grounds in North Amerika and migrate more than 4.000 km southwards until they reach their overwintering habitat in Central Mexico. To maintain their migratory direction over this enormous distance, the butterflies use a time-compensated sun compass. Beside this, skylight polarization, the Earth’s magnetic field and specific mountain ranges seem to guide the butterflies as well the south. In contrast to this fascinating orientation ability, the behavior of the butterflies in their non-migratory state received less attention. Although they do not travel long distances, they still need to orient themselves to find food, mating partners or get away from competitors. The aim of the present doctoral thesis was to investigate use of visual cues for orientation in migrating as well as non-migrating monarch butterflies. For this, field experiments investigating the migration of the butterflies in Texas (USA) were combined with experiments testing the orientation performance of non-migratory butterflies in Germany.
In the first project, I recorded the heading directions of tethered butterflies during their annual fall migration. In an outdoor flight simulator, the butterflies maintained a southwards direction as long as they had a view of the sun’s position. Relocating the position of the sun by 180° using a mirror, revealed that the sun is the animals’ main orientation reference. Furthermore, I demonstrated that when the sun is blocked and a green light stimulus (simulated sun) is introduced, the animals interpreted this stimulus as the ‘real’ sun. However, this cue was not sufficient to set the migratory direction when simulated as the only visual cue in indoor experiments. When I presented the butterflies a linear polarization pattern additionally to the simulated sun, the animals headed in the correct southerly direction showing that multiple skylight cues are required to guide the butterflies during their migration.
In the second project, I, furthermore, demonstrated that non-migrating butterflies are able to maintain a constant direction with respect to a simulated sun. Interestingly, they ignored the spectral component of the stimulus and relied on the intensity instead. When a panoramic skyline was presented as the only orientation reference, the butterflies maintained their direction only for short time windows probably trying to stabilize their flight based on optic-flow information. Next, I investigated whether the butterflies combine celestial with local cues by simulating a sun stimulus together with a panoramic skyline. Under this conditions, the animals’ directedness was increased demonstrating that they combine multiple visual cues for spatial orientation.
Following up on the observation that a sun stimulus resulted in a different behavior than the panoramic skyline, I investigated in my third project which orientation strategies the butterflies use by presenting different simulated cues to them. While a bright stripe on a dark background elicited a strong attraction of the butterflies steering in the direction of the stimulus, the inverted version of the stimulus was used for flight stabilization. In contrast to this, the butterflies maintained arbitrary directions with a high directedness with respect to a simulated sun. In an ambiguous scenery with two identical stimuli (two bright stripes, two dark stripes, or two sun stimuli) set 180° apart, a constant flight course was only achieved when two sun stimuli were displayed suggesting an involvement of the animals’ internal compass. In contrast, the butterflies used two dark stripes for flight stabilization and were alternatingly attracted by two bright stripes. This shows that monarch butterflies use stimulus-dependent orientation strategies and gives the first evidence for different neuronal pathways controlling the output behavior.
T-Zell-aktivierende Formate, wie BiTE (bispecific T-cell engagers) Antikörper und CAR T Zellen haben in den vergangen Jahren die Therapiemöglichkeiten für Tumorpatienten erweitert. Diese Therapeutika verknüpfen T-Zellen mit malignen Zellen über je ein spezifisches Oberflächenmolekül und initiieren, über eine T-Zell-vermittelte Immunantwort, die Lyse der Tumorzelle. Tumorspezifische Antigene sind jedoch selten. Häufig werden Proteine adressiert, die neben den Tumorzellen auch auf gesunden Zellen exprimiert werden. Die Folgen sind toxische Effekte abseits der Tumorzellen auf Antigen-positiven gesunden Zellen (on target/off tumor), welche nicht nur die Dosis des Therapeutikums und dessen Effektivität limitieren, sondern zu geringen bis letalen Begleiterscheinungen führen können. Der Bedarf an effektiven Therapieformen mit geringen Nebenwirkungen ist folglich immer noch sehr hoch. Diese Lücke soll durch ein neues Antikörperformat, sogenannten Hemibodies, geschlossen werden. Hemibodies sind eine neue Klasse von T-Zell-aktivierenden Antikörpern, die sich gegen eine Antigenkombination und nicht einzelne Antigene auf Tumorzellen richten. Sie bestehen aus zwei komplementären Molekülen mit je einer Antigen-bindenden Sequenz, die entweder mit der leichten (VL) oder der schweren (VH) Kette eines T-Zell-aktivierenden anti CD3 Antikörpers fusioniert ist. Nur wenn beide Hemibody-Fragmente gleichzeitig in unmittelbarer Nähe an ihr jeweiliges Antigenepitop auf der Tumorzelle binden, komplementieren die beiden Antikörperkonstrukte über das geteilte anti-CD3 und bilden einen trivalenten T Zell aktivierenden Komplex aus. Diese funktionale Einheit rekrutiert T-Zellen zur Tumorzelle und induzierte die T-Zell-vermittelte Lyse der malignen Zelle.
Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden geeignete Antigenkombinationen identifiziert und die erste effektive und spezifische Hemibody-basierte Immuntherapie gegen das Multiple Myelom (MM), ohne Nebenwirkungen auf Antigen-einfach-positiven gesunden Zellen, entwickelt. Basierend auf einer umfangreichen Analyse von Kandidaten-Antigenen wurden Kombinationen aus bekannten MM Zielmolekülen, wie BCMA, CD38, CD138, CD229 und SLAMF7, und für das MM unbekannte Oberflächenmolekülen, wie CHRM5 und LAX1, untersucht. Gegen die vielversprechendsten Antigene wurden Hemibodies entwickelt und produziert. Im Zusammenhang mit Analysen zur Produzierbarkeit sowie biochemischen und funktionalen Charakterisierungen, konnte aus 75 initialen Hemibody-Kombinationen drei Kombinationen mit geeigneten Eigenschaften identifiziert werden. Die Bindung von zwei Hemibody-Partnern auf der Oberfläche der MM Zelle führte zur Ausbildung eines trivalenten T-Zell-rekrutierenden Komplexes. Dieser initiierte nachfolgend über eine T-Zell-vermittelte Immunantwort die spezifische Lyse der malignen Zellen, ohne die Viabilität von Antigen-einfach-positiven gesunden Körper- oder Effektor-Zellen zu beeinflussen. Zusätzlich führte eine Hemibody-Therapie in vivo in einem NOD SCID MM-Mausmodel innerhalb von 7 Tagen zur kompletten Remission der MM Zellen. Diese Daten zeigten Hemibodies als ein neues, sehr vielversprechendes Antikörperformat für eine effektive und tumorspezifische Immuntherapie mit potentiell geringen Nebenwirkungen.
The cancer stem cell hypothesis is a cancer development model which elicited great interest in the last decades stating that cancer heterogeneity arises from a stem cell through asymmetrical division. The Cancer Stem Cell subset is described as the only population to be tumorigenic and having the potential to renew. Conventional therapy often fails to eradicate CSC resulting in tumor relapse. Consequently, it is of great inter-est to eliminate this subset of cells to provide the best patient outcome. In the last years several approaches to target CSC were developed, one of them being immunotherapeu-tic targeting with antibodies. Since markers associated with CSC are also expressed on normal stem cells or healthy adjacent tissue in colorectal cancer, dual targeting strate-gies are preferred over targeting only a single antigen. Subsequently, the idea of dual targeting two CSC markers in parallel by a newly developed split T cell-engaging anti-body format termed as Hemibodies emerged. In a preliminary single cell RNA sequenc-ing analysis of colorectal cancer cells CD133, CD24, CD166 and CEA were identified as suitable targets for the combinatorial targeting strategy. Therefore, this study focused on trispecific and trivalent Hemibodies comprising a split binding moiety against CD3 and a binding moiety against either CD133, CD24, CD166 or CEA to overcome the occurrence of resistance and to efficiently eradicate all tumor cells including the CSC compartment. The study showed that the Hemibody combinations CD133xCD24, CD133xCD166 and CD133xCEA are able to eliminate double positive CHO cells with high efficacy while having a high specificity indicated by no killing of single antigen positive cells. A thera-peutic window ranging between one to two log levels could be achieved for all combina-tions mentioned above. The combinations CD133xCD24 and CD133xCD166 further-more proved its efficacy and specificity on established colorectal cancer cell lines. Be-sides the evaluation of specificity and efficacy the already introduced 1st generation of Hemibodies could be improved into a 2nd generation Hemibody format with increased half-life, stability and production yield. In future experiments the applicability of above-mentioned Hemibodies will be proven on patient-derived micro tumors to also include variables like tumor microenvironment and infiltration.
Einflüsse der Photophysik und Photochemie von Cyaninfarbstoffen auf die Lokalisationsmikroskopie
(2023)
In den letzten Jahren haben sich hochauflösende Fluoreszenzmikroskopiemethoden, basierend auf der Lokalisation einzelner Fluorophore, zu einem leistungsstarken Werkzeug etabliert, um Fluoreszenzbilder weit unterhalb der Auflösungsgrenze zu generieren. Hiermit können räumliche Auflösungen von ~ 20 nm erzielt werden, was weit unterhalb der Beugungsgrenze liegt. Dabei haben zahlreiche Optimierungen und Entwicklungen neuer Methoden in der Einzelmolekül-Lokalisationsmikroskopie die Genauigkeit der orstspezifischen Bestimmung einzelner Fluorophore auf bis zu ~ 1 – 3 nm erhöht. Eine Auflösung im molekularen Bereich, weit unterhalb von ~ 10 nm bleibt allerdings herausfordernd, da die Lokalisationsgenauigkeit nur ein Kriterium hierfür ist. Allerdings wurde sich in den letzten Jahren überwiegend auf die Verbesserung dieses Parameters konzentriert. Weitere Kriterien für die fluoreszenzmikroskopische Auflösung sind dabei unter anderem die Markierungsdichte und die Kopplungseffizienz der Zielstruktur, sowie der Kopplungsfehler (Abstand zur Zielstruktur nach Farbstoffkopplung), die sich herausfordernd für eine molekulare Auflösung darstellen. Auch wenn die Kopplungseffizienz und -dichte hoch und der Kopplungsfehler gering ist, steigt bei Interfluorophordistanzen < 5nm, abhängig von den Farbstoffen, die Wahrscheinlichkeit von starken und schwachen Farbstoffwechselwirkungen und damit von Energieübertragungsprozessen zwischen den Farbstoffen, stark an. Daneben sollten Farbstoffe, abhänging von der Lokalisationsmikroskopiemethode, spezifische Kriterien, wie beispielsweise die Photoschaltbarkeit bei dSTORM, erfüllen, was dazu führt, dass diese Methoden häufig nur auf einzelne Farbstoffe beschränkt sind. In dieser Arbeit konnte mithilfe von definierten DNA-Origami Konstrukten gezeigt werden, dass das Blinkverhalten von Cyaninfarbstoffen unter dSTORM-Bedingungen einer Abstandsabhängigkeit aufgrund von spezifischen Energieübertragungsprozessen folgt, womit Farbstoffabstände im sub-10 nm Bereich charakterisiert werden konnten. Darüber hinaus konnte diese Abstandsabhängigkeit an biologischen Proben gezeigt werden. Hierbei konnten verschiedene zelluläre Rezeptoren effizient und mit geringem Abstandsfehler zur Zielstruktur mit Cyaninfarbstoffen gekoppelt werden. Diese abstandsabhänigen Prozesse und damit Charakterisierungen könnten dabei nicht nur spezifisch für die häufig unter dSTORM-Bedingungen verwendeten Cyaninfarbstoffen gültig sein, sondern auch auf andere Farbstoffklassen, die einen Auszustand zeigen, übertragbar sein. Darüber hinaus konnte gezeigt werden, dass hochauflösende dSTORM Aufnahmen unabhängig vom Farbstoffkopplungsgrad der Antikörpern sind, welche häufig für Standardfärbungen von zellulären Strukturen verwendet werden. Dabei konnte durch Photonenkoinzidenzmessungen dargelegt werden, dass aufgrund komplexer Farbstoffwechselwirkungen im Mittel nur ein Farbstoff aktiv ist, wobei höhere Kopplungsgrade ein komplexes Blinkverhalten zu Beginn der Messung zeigen. Durch die undefinierten Farbstoffabstände an Antikörpern konnte hier kein eindeutiger Energieübertragungsmechanismus entschlüsselt werden. Dennoch konnte gezeigt werden, dass Farbstoffaggregate bzw. H-Dimere unter dSTORM-Bedingungen destabilisiert werden. Durch die zuvor erwähnten DNA-Origami Konstrukte definierter Interfluorophordistanzen konnten Energieübertragungsmechanismen entschlüsselt werden, die auch für die Antikörper diverser Kopplungsgrade gültig sind. Des Weiteren konnten, ausgelöst durch komplexe Energieübertragungsprozesse höherer Kopplungsgrade am Antikörper, Mehrfarbenaufnahmen zellulärer Strukturen generiert werden, die über die spezifische Fluoreszenzlebenszeit separiert werden konnten. Dies stellt hier eine weitere Möglichkeit dar, unter einfachen Bedingungen, schnelle Mehrfarbenaufnahmen zellulärer Strukturen zu generieren. Durch die Verwendung des selben Farbstoffes unterschiedlicher Kopplungsgrade kann hier nur mit einer Anregungswellenlänge und frei von chromatischer Aberration gearbeitet werden. Neben den photophysikalischen Untersuchungen der Cyaninfarbstoffe Cy5 und Alexa Fluor 647 wurden diese ebenso photochemisch näher betrachtet. Dabei konnte ein neuartiger chemischer Mechanismus entschlüsselt werden. Dieser Mechanismus führt, ausgelöst durch Singulett-Sauerstoff (1O2), zu einer Photozerschneidung des konjugierten Doppelbindungssystems um zwei Kohlenstoffatome, was zu strukturellen und spektroskopischen Veränderungen dieser Farbstoffe führt. Auf Grundlage dieses Mechanismus konnte eine neue DNA-PAINT Methode entwickelt werden, die zu einer Beschleunigung der Aufnahmezeit führt.
For all animals the cold represents a dreadful danger. In the event of severe heat loss, animals
fall into a chill coma. If this state persists, it is inevitably followed by death. In poikilotherms
(e.g. insects), the optimal temperature range is narrow compared to homeotherms
(e.g. mammals), resulting in a critical core temperature being reached more quickly. As a
consequence, poikilotherms either had to develop survival strategies, migrate or die. Unlike
the majority of insects, the Western honeybee (Apis mellifera) is able to organize itself into
a superorganism. In this process, worker bees warm and cool the colony by coordinated
use of their flight muscles. This enables precise control of the core temperature in the hive,
analogous to the core body temperature in homeothermic animals. However, to survive the
harsh temperatures in the northern hemisphere, the thermogenic mechanism of honeybees
must be in constant readiness. This mechanism is called shivering thermogenesis, in which
honeybees generate heat using their flight muscles.
My thesis presents the molecular and neurochemical background underlying shivering thermogenesis
in worker honeybees. In this context, I investigated biogenic amine signaling.
I found that the depletion of vesicular monoamines impairs thermogenesis, resulting in
a decrease in thoracic temperature. Subsequent investigations involving various biogenic
amines showed that octopamine can reverse this effect. This clearly indicates the involvement
of the octopaminergic system. Proceeding from these results, the next step was to elucidate
the honeybee thoracic octopaminergic system. This required a multidisciplinary approach to
ultimately provide profound insights into the function and action of octopamine at the flight
muscles. This led to the identification of octopaminergic flight muscle controlling neurons,
which presumably transport octopamine to the flight muscle release sites. These neurons
most likely innervate octopamine β receptors and their activation may stimulate intracellular
glycolytic pathways, which ensure sufficient energy supply to the muscles.
Next, I examined the response of the thoracic octopaminergic system to cold stress conditions.
I found that the thoracic octopaminergic system tends towards an equilibrium,
even though the initial stress response leads to fluctuations of octopamine signaling. My
results indicate the importance of the neuro-muscular octopaminergic system and thus the need for its robustness. Moreover, cold sensitivity was observed for the expression of one
transcript of the octopamine receptor gene AmOARβ2. Furthermore, I found that honeybees
without colony context show a physiological disruption within the octopaminergic system.
This disruption has profound effects on the honeybees protection against the cold.
I could show how important the neuro-muscular octopaminergic system is for thermogenesis
in honeybees. In this context, the previously unknown neurochemical modulation of the
honeybee thorax has now been revealed. I also provide a broad basis to conduct further
experiments regarding honeybee thermogenesis and muscle physiology.
The western honeybee (Apis mellifera) is widely known as the honey producer and pollinator managed by beekeepers but neglected as a wild bee species. Central European honeybee populations have been anthropogenically disturbed since about 1850 through introgression and moderate artificial selection but have never been truly domesticated due to a lack of mating control. While their decline in the wild was historically attributed to the scarcity of nesting cavities, a contemporary view considers the invasion of the parasitic mite Varroa destructor in the 1970s as the major driver. However, there are no longitudinal population data available that could substantiate either claim. Based on the insight that introduced European honeybees form viable wild populations in eastern North America and reports on the occurrence of wild-living colonies from various European countries, we systematically studied the ecology of wild-living honeybees in Germany. First, we investigated whether wild-living honeybees colonising German forests form a self-sustaining population. Second, we asked how the parasite burden of wild-living colonies relates to that of managed colonies. And third, we explored whether the winter mortality of wild-living colonies is associated with parasite burden, nest depredation, or the lack of resources on the landscape scale.
Between 2017 and 2021, we monitored listed trees with black woodpecker cavities for honeybees in the managed forests of three study regions (Swabian Alb, counties Coburg and Lichtenfels, county Weilheim-Schongau). Continuity of occupation was determined using microsatellite genetic markers. Wild-living colonies predictably colonised forests in summer, when about 10% of all cavities were occupied. The annual colony survival rate and colony lifespan (based on N=112 colonies) were 10.6% and 0.6 years, with 90% of colonies surviving summer (July–September), 16% surviving winter (September–April), and 72% surviving spring (April–July). The average maximum and minimum colony densities were 0.23 (July) and 0.02 (April) colonies per km^2. During the (re-)colonisation of forests in spring, swarms preferred cavities that had already been occupied by other honeybee colonies. We estimate the net reproductive rate of the population to be R0= 0.318, meaning that it is currently not self-sustaining but maintained by the annual immigration of swarms from managed hives. The wild-living colonies are feral in a behavioural sense.
We compared the occurrence of 18 microparasites among feral colonies (N=64) and managed colonies (N=74) using qPCR. Samples were collected in four regions (the three regions mentioned above and the city of Munich) in July 2020; they consisted of 20 workers per colony captured at flight entrances. We distinguished five colony types representing differences in colony age and management histories. Besides strong regional variation, feral colonies consistently hosted fewer microparasite taxa (median: 5, range 1–8) than managed colonies (median: 6, range 4–9) and had different parasite communities. Microparasites that were notably less prevalent among feral colonies were Trypanosomatidae, Chronic bee paralysis virus, and Deformed wing viruses A and B. In the comparison of five colony types, parasite burden was lowest in newly founded feral colonies, intermediate in overwintered feral colonies and managed nucleus colonies, and highest in overwintered managed colonies and hived swarms. This suggests that the natural mode of colony reproduction by swarming, which creates pauses in brood production, and well-dispersed nests, which reduce horizontal transmission, explain the reduced parasite burden in feral compared to managed colonies.
To explore the roles of three potential drivers of feral colony winter mortality, we combined colony observations gathered during the monitoring study with data on colony-level parasite burden, observations and experiments on nest depredation, and landscape analyses. There was no evidence for an effect of summertime parasite burden on subsequent winter mortality: colonies that died (N=57) did not have a higher parasite burden than colonies that survived (N=10). Camera traps (N=15) installed on cavity trees revealed that honeybee nests are visited by a range of vertebrate species throughout the winter at rates of up to 10 visits per week. Four woodpecker species, great tits, and pine martens acted as true nest depredators. The winter survival rate of colonies whose nest entrances were protected by screens of wire mesh (N=32) was 50% higher than that of colonies with unmanipulated entrances (N=40). Analyses of land cover maps revealed that the landscapes surrounding surviving colonies (N=19) contained on average 6.4 percentage points more resource-rich cropland than landscapes surrounding dying colonies (N=94).
We estimate that tens of thousands of swarms escape from apiaries each year to occupy black woodpecker cavities and other hollow spaces in Germany and that feral colonies make up about 5% of the regional honeybee populations. They are unlikely to contribute disproportionately to the spread of bee diseases. Instead, by spatially complementing managed colonies, they contribute to the pollination of wild plants in forests. Honeybees occupying tree cavities likely have various effects on forest communities by acting as nest site competitors or prey, and by accumulating biomass in tree holes. Nest depredation (a consequence of a lack of well-protected nest sites) and food resource limitation seem to be more important than parasites in hampering feral colony survival. The outstanding question is how environmental and intrinsic factors interact in preventing population establishment. Nest boxes with movable frames could be used to better study the environmental drivers of feral colonies’ mortality. Pairs of wild (self-sustaining) and managed populations known to exist outside Europe could provide answers to whether modern apiculture creates honeybee populations maladapted to life in the wild. In Europe, large continuous forests might represent evolutionary refuges for wild honeybees.