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Malaria still persists as one of the deadliest infectious disease in addition to AIDS and tuberculosis. lt is a leading cause of high mortality and morbidity rates in the developing world despite of groundbreaking research on global eradication of the disease initiated by WHO, about half a century ago. Lack of a commercially available vaccine and rapid spread of drug resistance have hampered the attempts of extinguishing malaria, which still leads to an annual death toll of about one million people. Resistance to anti-malarial compounds thus renders search for new target proteins imperative. The kinome of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum comprises representatives of most eukaryotic protein kinase groups, including kinases which regulate proliferation and differentiation processes. Several reports till date have suggested involvement of parasite kinases in the human host and as well as in the mosquito vector. Kinases essential for life cycle stages of the parasite represent promising targets for anti-malarial compounds thus, provoking characterization of additional malarial kinases. Despite extensive research on most plasmodial enzymes, very little information is available regarding the four identified members of the cyclin dependent kinase like kinase (CLK) family. Thus, the present thesis dealt with the functional characterization of four members of the PfCLK kinase family of the parasite denoted as PfCLK-1/Lammer, PfCLK-2, PfCLK-3 and PfCLK-4 with a special focus on the first two kinases. Additionally, one Ca2+/Calmodulin dependent putative kinase-related protein, PfPKRP, presumed to be involved in sexual stage development of the parasite, was investigated for its expression in the life cycle of the parasite. In other eukaryotes, CLK kinases regulate mRNA splicing through phosphorylation of Serine/Arginine-rich proteins. Transcription analysis revealed abundance of PfCLK kinase genes throughout the asexual blood stages and in gametocytes. By reverse genetics approach it was demonstrated that all four kinases are essential for completion of the asexual replication cycle of P. falciparum. PfCLK 1/Lammer possesses two nuclear localization signals and PfCLK-2 possesses one of these signals upstream of the C-terminal catalytic domains. Protein level expression and sub-cellular localization of the two kinases was determined by generation of antiserum directed against the kinase domains of the respective kinase. Indirect immunofluorescence, Western blot and electron microscopy data confirm that the kinases are primarily localized in the parasite nucleus, and in vitro assays show that both enzymes are associated with phosphorylation activity. Finally, mass spectrometric analysis of co immunoprecipitated proteins shows interactions of the two PfCLK kinases with proteins, which have putative nuclease, phosphatase or helicase functions. PfPKRP on the other hand is predominantly expressed during gametocyte differentiation as identified from transcriptional analysis. Antiserum directed against the catalytic domain of PfPKRP detected the protein expression profile in both asexual and gametocyte parasite lysates. Via immunofluorescence assay, the kinase was localized in the parasite cytoplasm in a punctuated manner, mostly in the gametocyte stages. Reverse genetics resulted in the generation of PfPKRP gene-disruptant parasites, thus demonstrating that unlike CLK kinases, PfPKRP is dispensable for asexual parasite survival and hence might have crucial role in sexual development of the parasite. On one hand, characterization of PfCLK kinases exemplified the kinases involved in parasite replication cycle. Successful gene-disruption and protein expression of PfPKRP kinase on the other hand, demonstrated a role of the kinase in sexual stage development of the parasite. Both kinase families therefore, represent potential candidates for anti-plasmodial compounds.
Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococci) are Gram-positive bacteria and commensals of the nasopharyngeal cavity. Besides colonization, pneumococci are responsible for severe local infections such as otitis media, sinusitis and life-threatening invasive diseases, including pneumonia, sepsis and meningitis. The surface of pneumococci is decorated with proteins that are covalently or non-covalently anchored to the cell wall. The most unique group of cell wall associated proteins in pneumococci are the choline-binding proteins (CBPs). PspC, also known as SpsA or CbpA, is a multifunctional choline-binding protein that plays an essential role in pneumococcal pathogenesis by functioning as an adhesin. PspC promotes adherence of pneumococci to mucosal epithelial cells by interacting in a human specific manner with the free secretory component (SC) or to SC as part of the secretory IgA (SIgA) or polymeric immunoglobulin receptor (pIgR). PspC also interacts specifically with the soluble complement Factor H. Apparently, PspC uses two different epitopes for binding the soluble host protein Factor H and SC of pIgR. However, the mechanism by which these independent interactions facilitate pneumococcal infections under physiological and host specific conditions have not yet been completely elucidated. This study aims to explore the impact of the PspC interaction with human pIgR (hpIgR) or complement regulator Factor H on pneumococcal virulence. Here the cellular and molecular basis of PspC-mediated adherence to and invasion of host epithelial and endothelial cells was demonstrated. The genetic approach, specific pharmacological inhibitors and immunoblot analysis demonstrated the complexity of the induced signal transduction pathways during PspC-hpIgR mediated pneumococcal uptake by host cells. Inhibition studies with specific inhibitors of actin cytoskeleton and microtubules demonstrated that the dynamics of host cell cytoskeleton are essential for pneumococcal uptake by mucosal epithelial cells. Moreover, this study reports for the first time that the small GTPase Cdc42 is essential for pneumococcal internalization into epithelial cells via the PspC-hpIgR mechanism. In addition, in infection experiments performed in presence of specific inhibitors of PI3-kinase/Akt and protein tyrosine kinase (PTKs), hpIgR-mediated pneumococcal uptake by host cells was significantly blocked. Amongst PTKs the Src kinase pathway, ERK1/2 and JNK pathways were implicated during pneumococcal ingestion by hpIgR expressing cells. In addition, inhibition experiments performed in the presence of individual inhibitors or with a combination of inhibitors suggested the independent activation of PI3-kinase/Akt and Src kinase pathways during pneumococcal infections of hpIgR expressing cells. By employing specific inhibitors and siRNA in cell culture infection experiments it was further demonstrated that pneumococcal endocytosis by host epithelial cells via the PspC-hpIgR mechanism depends on clathrin and dynamin. PspC recruits also Factor H to the pneumococcal cell surface. Consequently, the impact of pneumococcal cell surface bound Factor H on adherence to host cells and the molecular mechanism facilitating the uptake of Factor H bound pneumococci by epithelial cells was investigated. Flow cytometry and immunoblots revealed that S. pneumoniae has evolved the ability to recruit both purified Factor H as well as Factor H from human plasma or serum. Moreover, it was demonstrated that the recruitment of Factor H is independent of the PspC-subtypes and that capsular polysaccharide (CPS) interferes with its recruitment. Factor H bound to pneumococci significantly increased bacterial attachment to and invasion of host epithelial cells including nasopharyngeal cells (Detroit562), lung epithelial cells (A549), and human brain-derived endothelial cells (HBMEC). Blocking experiments demonstrated that bacteria bound Factor H interacts via the heparin binding sites on Factor H with eukaryotic cell surface glycosaminoglycans and that this interaction promotes pneumococcal adherence to host cells. In addition, inhibition studies with mAbs recognizing specifically different short consensus repeats (SCR) of Factor H suggested that SCR 19-20 of Factor H are essential for the pneumococcal interaction with host epithelial cells via Factor H. In the presence of Factor H, attachment of pneumococci to human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) is enhanced. The integrin CD11b/CD18 was identified as the cellular receptor on PMNs. By using pharmacological inhibitors the impact of host cell cytoskeleton and signalling molecules, such as PTKs and PI3-kinase, for Factor H-mediated pneumococcal internalization into eukaryotic cells was shown. Taken together, the results revealed that Factor-H mediated pneumococcal infection requires a concerted role of host epithelial cell surface glycosaminoglycans, integrins and host cell signalling pathways.
The bacterial pathogen Legionella pneumophila replicates intracellularly in protozoa, but can also cause severe pneumonia, called Legionnaires' disease. The bacteria invade and proliferate in the alveolar macrophages of the human lung. L. pneumophila bacteria exhibit a biphasic life cycle: replicative bacteria are avirulent; in contrast, transmissive bacteria express virulence traits and flagella. Primarily aim of this thesis was to evaluate the impact of the regulatory proteins FleQ, FleR, and RpoN in flagellar gene regulation. Phenotypic analysis, Western blot and electron microscopy of regulatory mutants in the genes coding for FleQ, RpoN and FleR demonstrated that flagellin expression is strongly repressed and that these mutants are non-flagellated in transmissive phase. Transcriptomic studies of these putative flagellar gene expression regulators demonstrated that fleQ controls the expression of numerous flagellar biosynthetic genes. Together with RpoN, FleQ controls transcription of 14 out of 31 flagellar class II genes, coding for the basal body, hook, and regulatory proteins. Unexpectedly, 7 out of 15 late flagellar genes class III and IV) are expressed dependent on FleQ but independent of RpoN. Thus, in contrast to the commonly accepted view that enhancer binding proteins as FleQ always interact with RpoN to initiate transcription, our results strongly indicate that FleQ of L. pneumophila regulates gene expression RpoN-dependent as well as RpoN-independent. Moreover, transcriptome analysis of a fleR mutant strain elucidated that FleR does not regulate the flagellar class III genes as previously suggested. Instead FleR regulates together with RpoN numerous protein biosynthesis and metabolic genes. Based on these experimental results our modified model for the transcriptional regulation of flagellar genes in L. pneumophila is that flagellar class II genes are controlled by FleQ and RpoN, while flagellar class III and IV genes are controlled in a fleQ-dependent but rpoN-independent manner. Although all L. pneumophila strains share the same complex life style, various pathotypes have evolved. This is reflected by the genomes, which contain e.g. genomic islands. The genomic island Trb-1 of L. pneumophila Corby, carries all genes necessary for a type-IV conjugation system, an integrase gene and a putative oriT site. The second aim of this thesis was to investigate the implication of this genomic island in conjugative DNA transfer. Using conjugation assays we showed that the oriT site located on Trb-1 is functional and contributes to conjugation between different L. pneumophila strains. As this is the first oriT site of L. pneumophila known to be functional our results provide evidence that conjugation is a major mechanism for the evolution of new pathotypes in L. pneumophila.
Infectious diseases caused by pathogenic microorganisms are one of the largest socioeconomic burdens today. Although infectious diseases have been studied for decades, in numerous cases, the precise mechanisms involved in the multifaceted interaction between pathogen and host continue to be elusive. Thus, it still remains a challenge for researchers worldwide to develop novel strategies to investigate the molecular context of infectious diseases in order to devise preventive or at least anti-infective measures. One of the major drawbacks in trying to obtain in-depth knowledge of how bacterial pathogens elicit disease is the lack of suitable infection models to authentically mimic the disease progression in humans. Numerous studies rely on animal models to emulate the complex temporal interactions between host and pathogen occurring in humans. While they have greatly contributed to shed light on these interactions, they require high maintenance costs, are afflicted with ethical drawbacks, and are not always predictive for the infection outcome in human patients. Alternatively, in-vitro two-dimensional (2D) cell culture systems have served for decades as representatives of human host environments to study infectious diseases. These cell line-based models have been essential in uncovering virulence-determining factors of diverse pathogens as well as host defense mechanisms upon infection. However, they lack the morphological and cellular complexity of intact human tissues, limiting the insights than can be gained from studying host-pathogen interactions in these systems.
The focus of this thesis was to establish and innovate intestinal human cell culture models to obtain in-vitro reconstructed three-dimensional (3D) tissue that can faithfully mimic pathogenesis-determining processes of the zoonotic bacterium Campylobacter jejuni (C. jejuni). Generally employed for reconstructive medicine, the field of tissue engineering provides excellent tools to generate organ-specific cell culture models in vitro, realistically recapitulating the distinctive architecture of human tissues. The models employed in this thesis are based on decellularized extracellular matrix (ECM) scaffolds of porcine intestinal origin. Reseeded with intestinal human cells, application of dynamic culture conditions promoted the formation of a highly polarized mucosal epithelium maintained by functional tight and adherens junctions. While most other in-vitro infection systems are limited to a flat monolayer, the tissue models developed in this thesis can display the characteristic 3D villi and crypt structure of human small intestine.
First, experimental conditions were established for infection of a previously developed, statically cultivated intestinal tissue model with C. jejuni. This included successful isolation of bacterial colony forming units (CFUs), measurement of epithelial barrier function, as well as immunohistochemical and histological staining techniques. In this way, it became possible to follow the number of viable bacteria during the infection process as well as their translocation over the polarized epithelium of the tissue model. Upon infection with C. jejuni, disruption of tight and adherens junctions could be observed via confocal microscopy and permeability measurements of the epithelial barrier. Moreover, C. jejuni wildtype-specific colonization and barrier disruption became apparent in addition to niche-dependent bacterial localization within the 3D microarchitecture of the tissue model. Pathogenesis-related phenotypes of C. jejuni mutant strains in the 3D host environment deviated from those obtained with conventional in-vitro 2D monolayers but mimicked observations made in vivo. Furthermore, a genome-wide screen of a C. jejuni mutant library revealed significant differences for bacterial factors required or dispensable for interactions with unpolarized host cells or the highly prismatic epithelium provided by the intestinal tissue model. Elucidating the role of several previously uncharacterized factors specifically important for efficient colonization of a 3D human environment, promises to be an intriguing task for future research.
At the frontline of the defense against invading pathogens is the protective, viscoelastic mucus layer overlying mucosal surfaces along the human gastrointestinal tract (GIT). The development of a mucus-producing 3D tissue model in this thesis was a vital step towards gaining a deeper understanding of the interdependency between bacterial pathogens and host-site specific mucins. The presence of a mucus layer conferred C. jejuni wildtype-specific protection against epithelial barrier disruption by the pathogen and prevented a high bacterial burden during the course of infection. Moreover, results obtained in this thesis provide evidence in vitro that the characteristic corkscrew morphology of C. jejuni indeed grants a distinct advantage in colonizing mucous surfaces.
Overall, the results obtained within this thesis highlight the strength of the tissue models to combine crucial features of native human intestine into accessible in-vitro infection models. Translation of these systems into infection research demonstrated their ability to expose in-vivo like infection outcomes. While displaying complex organotypic architecture and highly prismatic cellular morphology, these tissue models still represent an imperfect reflection of human tissue. Future advancements towards inclusion of human primary and immune cells will strive for even more comprehensive model systems exhibiting intricate multicellular networks of in-vivo tissue. Nevertheless, the work presented in this thesis emphasizes the necessity to investigate host-pathogen interactions in infection models authentically mimicking the natural host environment, as they remain among the most vital parts in understanding and counteracting infectious diseases.
Malaria and HIV are among the most important global health problems of our time and together are responsible for approximately 3 million deaths annually. These two diseases overlap in many regions of the world including sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia and South America, leading to a higher risk of co-infection. In this study, we generated and characterized hybrid molecules to target P. falciparum and HIV simultaneously for a potential HIV/malaria combination therapy. Hybrid molecules were synthesized by covalent fusion between azidothymidine (AZT) and dihydroartemisinin (DHA), tetraoxane or chloroquine (CQ); and a small library was generated and tested for antiviral and antimalarial activity. Our data suggest that dihyate is the most potent molecule in vitro, with antiplasmodial activity comparable to that of DHA (IC50 = 26 nM, SI > 3000), a moderate activity against HIV (IC50 = 2.9 µM; SI > 35) and safe to HeLa cells at concentrations used in the assay (CC50 > 100 µM). Pharmacokinetic studies further revealed that dihyate is metabolically unstable and is cleaved following an O-dealkylation once in contact with cytochrome P450 enzymes. The later further explains the uneffectiveness of dihyate against the CQ-sensitive P. berghei N strain in mice when administered by oral route at 20 mg/kg. Here, we report on a first approach to develop antimalarial/anti-HIV hybrid molecules and future optimization efforts will aim at producing second generation hybrid molecules to improve activity against HIV as well as compound bioavailability. With the emergence of resistant parasites against all the counterpart drugs of artemisinin derivatives used in artemisinin based combination therapies (ACTs), the introduction of antibiotics in the treatment of malaria has renewed interest on the identification of antibiotics with potent antimalarial properties. In this study we also investigated the antiplasmodial potential of thiostrepton and derivatives, synthesized using combinations of tail truncation, oxidation, and addition of lipophilic thiols to the terminal dehydroamino acid. We showed that derivatives SS231 and SS234 exhibit a better antiplasmodial activity (IC50 = 1 µM SI > 59 and SI > 77 respectively) than thiostrepton (IC50 = 8.95 µM, SI = 1.7). The antiplasmodial activity of these derivatives was observed at concentrations which are not hemolytic and non-toxic to human cell lines. Thiostrepton and derivatives appeared to exhibit transmission blocking properties when administered at their IC50 or IC90 concentrations and our data also showed that they attenuate proteasome activity of Plasmodium, which resulted in an accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins after incubation with their IC80 concentrations. Our results indicate that the parasite’s proteasome could be an attractive target for therapeutic intervention. In this regard, thiostrepton derivatives are promising candidates by dually acting on two independent targets, the proteasome and the apicoplast, with the capacity to eliminate both intraerythrocytic asexual and transmission stages of the parasite. To further support our findings, we evaluated the activity of a new class of antimalarial and proteasome inhibitors namely peptidyl sulfonyl fluorides on gametocyte maturation and analogues AJ34 and AJ38 were able to completely suppress gametocytogenesis at IC50 concentrations (0.23 µM and 0.17 µM respectively) suggesting a strong transmission blocking potential. The proteasome, a major proteolytic complex, responsible for the degradation and re-cycling of non-functional proteins has been studied only indirectly in P. falciparum. In addition, an apparent proteasome-like protein with similarity to bacterial ClpQ/hslV threonine-peptidases was predicted in the parasite. Antibodies were generated against the proteasome subunits alpha type 5 (α5-SU), beta type 5 (β5-SU) and pfhslV in mice and we showed that the proteasome is expressed in both sexual and asexual blood stages of P. falciparum, where they localize in the nucleus and in the cytoplasm. However, expression of PfhslV was only observed in trophozoites and shizonts. The trafficking of the studied proteasome subunits was further investigated by generating parasites expressing GFP tagged proteins. The expression of α5-SU-GFP in transgenic parasite appeared to localize abundantly in the cytoplasm of all blood stages, and no additional information was obtained from this parasite line. In conclusion, our data highlight two new tools towards combination therapy. Hybrid molecules represent promising tools for the cure of co-infected individuals, while very potent antibiotics with a wide scope of activities could be useful in ACTs by eliminating resistant parasites and limiting transmission of both, resistances and disease.
While beneficial sponge-microbe associations have received much attention in recent years, less effort has been undertaken to investigate the interactions of sponges with potentially pathogenic microorganisms. Thus, the aim of this study was to examine two selected Caribbean disease conditions, termed “Sponge Orange Band” and “Sponge White Patch”, via ecological and molecular methods. Sponge Orange Band (SOB) disease affects the prominent Caribbean barrel sponge Xestospongia muta that is counted among the high-microbial-abundance (HMA) sponges, whereas Sponge White Patch (SWP) disease affects the abundant rope sponge Amphimedon compressa that belongs to the low-microbial-abundance (LMA) sponges. I have documented for both Caribbean sponge diseases a disease progression going along with massive tissue destruction as well as loss of the characteristic microbial signatures. Even though new bacteria were shown to colonize the bleached areas, the infection trials revealed in both cases no indication for the involvement of a microbial pathogen as an etiologic agent of disease leaving us still in the dark about the cause of Sponge Orange Band as well as Sponge White Patch disease.
Avian pathogenic Escherichia coli (APEC) represent a subset of the so-called extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli (ExPEC) pathotype that can cause various extraintestinal infections in humans and animals. APEC are the causative agent of localized colibacillosis or systemic infection in poultry. In this latter case, the syndrome starts as an infection of the upper respiratory tract and develops into a systemic infection. Generally, ExPEC are characterized by a broad variety of virulence-associated factors that may contribute to pathogenesis. Major virulence factors, however, that clearly define this pathotype, have not been identified. Instead, virulence-associated genes of ExPEC and thus also of APEC could be used in a mix-and-match-fashion. Both pathotypes could not be clearly distinguished by molecular epidemiology, and this suggested a hypothetical zoonotic risk caused by APEC. Accordingly, the main scientific question of this study was to characterize common traits as well as differences of APEC and human ExPEC variants that could either support the possible zoonotic risk posed by these pathogenic E. coli strains or indicate factors involved in host specificity. Comparative genomic analysis of selected APEC and human ExPEC isolates of the same serotype indicated that these variants could not be clearly distinguished on the basis of (i) general phenotypes, (ii) phylogeny, (iii) the presence of typical ExPEC virulence genes, and (iv) the presence of pathoadaptive mutations. Allelic variations in genes coding for adhesins such as MatB and CsgA or their regulators MatA and CsgD have been observed, but further studies are required to analyze their impact on pathogenicity. On this background, the second part of this thesis focused on the analysis of differences between human ExPEC and APEC isolates at the gene expression level. The analysis of gene expression of APEC and human ExPEC under growth conditions that mimick their hosts should answer the question whether these bacterial variants may express factors required for their host-specificity. The transcriptomes of APEC strain BEN374 and human ExPEC isolate IHE3034 were compared to decipher whether there was a specific or common behavior of APEC and human ExPEC, in response to the different body temperatures of man (37°C) or poultry (41°C). Only a few genes were induced at 41 °C in each strain relative to growth at 37 °C. The group of down-regulated genes in both strains was markedly bigger and mainly included motility and chemotaxis genes. The results obtained from the transcriptome, genomic as well as phenotypic comparison of human ExPEC and APEC, supports the idea of a potential zoonotic risk of APEC and certain human ExPEC variants. In the third part of the thesis, the focus was set on the characterization of Mat fimbriae, and their potential role during ExPEC infection. Comparison of the mat gene cluster in K-12 strain MG1655 and O18:K1 isolate IHE3034 led to the discovery of differences in (i) DNA sequence, (ii) the presence of transcriptional start and transcription factor binding sites as well as (iii) the structure of the matA upstream region that account for the different regulation of Mat fimbriae expression in these strains. A negative role of the H-NS protein on Mat fimbriae expression was also proven at 20 °C and 37 °C by real-time PCR. A major role of this fimbrial adhesin was demonstrated for biofilm formation, but a significant role of Mat fimbriae for APEC in vivo virulence could not yet be determined. Interestingly, the absence of either a functional matA gene or that of the structural genes matBCDEF independently resulted in upregulation of motility in E. coli strains MG1655 and IHE3034 by a so far unknown mechanism. In conclusion, the results of this thesis indicate a considerable overlap between human and animal ExPEC strains in terms of genome content and phenotypes. It becomes more and more apparent that the presence of a common set of virulence-associated genes among ExPEC strains as well as similar virulence gene expression patterns and phylogenetic backgrounds indicate a significant zoonotic risk of avian-derived E. coli isolates. In addition, new virulence factors identified in human ExPEC may also play a role in the pathogenesis of avian ExPEC.
1. Summary Candida albicans is an opportunistic human fungal pathogen that causes a variety of infections, ranging from superficial mucosal to deep-seated systemic infections, especially in immunocompromised patients. Although the ability of C.albicans to cause disease largely depends on the immune status of the host, the fungus also exhibits specific characteristics that facilitate colonization, dissemination, and adaptation to different host niches and thereby turn C.albicans from a harmless commensal to an aggressive pathogen. In response to various environmental stimuli C.albicans switches from growth as a budding yeast to invasive filamentous growth, and this morphogenetic switch plays an important role in C.albicans pathogenesis. Nitrogen limitation is one of the signals that induce filamentous growth in C.albicans, and the control of the morphogenetic transition by nitrogen availability was studied in detail in the present work. Ammonium is a preferred nitrogen source for yeasts that is taken up into the cells by specific transporters. It was found in this study that C.albicans possesses two major ammonium transporters, encoded by the CaMEP1 and CaMEP2 genes, expression of which is induced by nitrogen starvation. Whereas mep1 or mep2 single mutants grew as well as the wild-type strain on limiting concentrations of ammonium, deletion of both transporters rendered C.albicans unable to grow at ammonium concentrations below 5 mM. In contrast to mep1 mutants, mep2 mutants failed to filament and grew only in the yeast form under nitrogen starvation conditions, indicating that in addition to its role as an ammonium transporter CaMep2p also has a signaling function in the induction of filamentous growth. CaMep2p was found to be a less efficient ammonium transporter than CaMep1p and to be expressed at much higher levels, a distinguishing feature important for its signaling function. By the construction and analysis of serially truncated versions of CaMep2p, the C-terminal cytoplasmic tail of the protein was shown to be essential for signaling but dispensable for ammonium transport, demonstrating that these two functions of CaMep2p are separable. In C.albicans at least two signal transduction pathways, a MAP kinase cascade and a cAMP-dependent pathway ending in the transcriptional regulators Cph1p and Efg1p, respectively, control filamentous growth, and mutants defective in either one of these pathways are defective for filamentation under nitrogen starvation conditions. A hyperactive CaMEP2 allele rescued the filamentation defect of a cph1 or a efg1 mutant, but not of a cph1 efg1 double mutant or a mutant deleted for RAS1, which acts upstream of and activates both signaling pathways. Conversely, a dominant active RAS1 allele or addition of exogenous cAMP rescued the filamentation defect of mep2 mutants. These results suggest that CaMep2p activates both the MAP kinase and the cAMP pathway in a Ras1p dependent manner to promote filamentous growth under nitrogen starvation conditions. At sufficiently high concentrations, ammonium repressed filamentous growth even when the signaling pathways were artificially activated. Therefore, C.albicans has established a regulatory circuit in which a preferred nitrogen source, ammonium, serves as an inhibitor of morphogenesis that is taken up into the cell by the same transporter that induces filamentous growth in response to nitrogen starvation. Although a detailed understanding of virulence mechanisms of C.albicans may ultimately lead to novel approaches to combat infections caused by this pathogen, the identification and characterization of essential genes as potential targets for the development of antifungal drugs is a strategy favoured by most pharmaceutical companies. Therefore, C.albicans homologs of three genes that are essential in other fungi were selected in collaboration with an industrial partner and functionally characterized in this work. RAP1 encodes the repressor/activator protein 1, a transcription factor and telomere binding protein that is essential for viability in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. However, deletion of the C.albicans RAP1 homolog did not affect viability or growth of the mutants, suggesting that it is not a promising target. CBF1 (centromere binding factor 1) is necessary for proper chromosome segregation and transcriptional activation of methionine biosynthesis genes in S.cerevisiae and is essential for viability in the related yeasts Kluyveromyces lactis and Candida glabrata. Deletion of CBF1 in C.albicans did not result in an increased frequency of chromosome loss, indicating that it has no role in chromosome segregation in this organism. However, the C.albicans cbf1 mutants exhibited severe growth impairment, temperature sensitivity at 42°C, and auxotrophy for sulphur amino acids, suggesting that Cbf1p is a transcription factor that is important for normal growth of C.albicans. YIL19 is an essential gene in S.cerevisiae that is involved in 18S rRNA maturation. YIL19 was found to be an essential gene also in C.albicans. Conditional mutants in which the YIL19 gene could be excised from the genome by inducible, FLP-mediated recombination were non-viable and accumulated rRNA precursors, demonstrating that YIL19 is essential for this important cellular process and for viability of C.albicans and could serve as a target for the development of antifungal drugs.
Nitrogen-regulated pathogenesis describes the expression of virulence attributes as direct response to the quantity and quality of an available nitrogen source. As consequence of nitrogen availability, the opportunistic human fungal pathogen Candida albicans changes its morphology and secretes aspartic proteases [SAPs], both well characterized virulence attributes. C. albicans, contrarily to its normally non-pathogenic relative Saccharomyces cerevisiae, is able to utilize proteins, which are considered as abundant and important nitrogen source within the human host. To assimilate complex proteinaceous matter, extracellular proteolysis is followed by uptake of the degradation products through dedicated peptide transporters (di-/tripeptide transporters [PTRs] and oligopeptide transporters [OPTs]). The expression of both traits is transcriptionally controlled by Stp1 - the global regulator of protein utilization - in C. albicans. The aim of the present study was to elucidate the regulation of virulence attributes of the pathogenic fungus C. albicans by nitrogen availability in more detail. Within a genome wide binding profile of Stp1, during growth with proteins, more than 600 Stp1 target genes were identified, thereby confirming its role in the usage of proteins, but also other nitrogenous compounds as nitrogen source. Moreover, the revealed targets suggest an involvement of Stp1 in the general adaption to nutrient availability as well as in the environmental stress response. With the focus on protein utilization and nitrogen-regulated pathogenesis, the regulation of the major secreted aspartic protease Sap2 - additionally one of the prime examples of allelic heterogeneity in C. albicans - was investigated in detail. Thereby, the heterogezygous SAP2 promoter helped to identify an unintended genomic alteration as the true cause of a growth defect of a C. albicans mutant. Additionally, the promoter region, which was responsible for the differential activation of the SAP2 alleles, was delimited. Furthermore, general Sap2 induction was demonstrated to be mediated by distinct cis-acting elements that are required for a high or a low activity of SAP2 expression. For the utilization of proteins as nitrogen source it is also crucial to take up the peptides that are produced by extracellular proteolysis. Therefore, the function and importance of specific peptide transporters was investigated in C. albicans mutants, unable to use peptides as nitrogen source (opt1Δ/Δ opt2Δ/Δ opt3Δ/Δ opt4Δ/Δ opt5Δ/Δ ptr2Δ/Δ ptr22Δ/Δ septuple null mutants). The overexpression of individual transporters in these mutants revealed differential substrate specificities and expanded the specificity of the OPTs to dipeptides, a completely new facet of these transporters. The peptide-uptake deficient mutants were further used to elucidate, whether indeed proteins and peptides are an important in vivo nitrogen source for C. albicans. It was found that during competitive colonization of the mouse intestine these mutants exhibited wild-type fitness, indicating that neither proteins nor peptides are primary nitrogen sources required to efficiently support growth of C. albicans in the mouse gut. Adequate availability of the preferred nitrogen source ammonium represses the utilization of proteins and other alternative nitrogen sources, but also the expression of virulence attributes, like Sap secretion and nitrogen-starvation induced filamentation. In order to discriminate, whether ammonium availability is externally sensed or determined inside the cell by C. albicans, the response to exterior ammonium concentrations of ammonium-uptake deficient mutants (mep1Δ/Δ mep2Δ/Δ null mutants) was investigated. This study showed that presence of an otherwise suppressing ammonium concentration did not inhibit Sap2 proteases secretion and arginine-induced filamentation in these mutants. Conclusively, ammonium availability is primarily determined inside the cell in order to control the expression of virulence traits. In sum, the present work contributes to the current understanding of how C. albicans regulates expression of virulence-associated traits in response to the presence of available nitrogen sources - especially proteins and peptides - in order to adapt its lifestyle within a human host.
Recent progresses and developments in molecular biology provide a wealth of new but insufficiently characterised data. This fund comprises amongst others biological data of genomic DNA, protein sequences, 3-dimensional protein structures as well as profiles of gene expression. In the present work, this information is used to develop new methods for the characterisation and classification of organisms and whole groups of organisms as well as to enhance the automated gain and transfer of information. The first two presented approaches (chapters 4 und 5) focus on the medically and scientifically important enterobacteria. Its impact in medicine and molecular biology is founded in versatile mechanisms of infection, their fundamental function as a commensal inhabitant of the intestinal tract and their use as model organisms as they are easy to cultivate. Despite many studies on single pathogroups with clinical distinguishable pathologies, the genotypic factors that contribute to their diversity are still partially unknown. The comprehensive genome comparison described in Chapter 4 was conducted with numerous enterobacterial strains, which cover nearly the whole range of clinically relevant diversity. The genome comparison constitutes the basis of a characterisation of the enterobacterial gene pool, of a reconstruction of evolutionary processes and of comprehensive analysis of specific protein families in enterobacterial subgroups. Correspondence analysis, which is applied for the first time in this context, yields qualitative statements to bacterial subgroups and the respective, exclusively present protein families. Specific protein families were identified for the three major subgroups of enterobacteria namely the genera Yersinia and Salmonella as well as to the group of Shigella and E. coli by applying statistical tests. In conclusion, the genome comparison-based methods provide new starting points to infer specific genotypic traits of bacterial groups from the transfer of functional annotation. Due to the high medical importance of enterobacterial isolates their classification according to pathogenicity has been in focus of many studies. The microarray technology offers a fast, reproducible and standardisable means of bacterial typing and has been proved in bacterial diagnostics, risk assessment and surveillance. The design of the diagnostic microarray of enterobacteria described in chapter 5 is based on the availability of numerous enterobacterial genome sequences. A novel probe selection strategy based on the highly efficient algorithm of string search, which considers both coding and non-coding regions of genomic DNA, enhances pathogroup detection. This principle reduces the risk of incorrect typing due to restrictions to virulence-associated capture probes. Additional capture probes extend the spectrum of applications of the microarray to simultaneous diagnostic or surveillance of antimicrobial resistance. Comprehensive test hybridisations largely confirm the reliability of the selected capture probes and its ability to robustly classify enterobacterial strains according to pathogenicity. Moreover, the tests constitute the basis of the training of a regression model for the classification of pathogroups and hybridised amounts of DNA. The regression model features a continuous learning capacity leading to an enhancement of the prediction accuracy in the process of its application. A fraction of the capture probes represents intergenic DNA and hence confirms the relevance of the underlying strategy. Interestingly, a large part of the capture probes represents poorly annotated genes suggesting the existence of yet unconsidered factors with importance to the formation of respective virulence phenotypes. Another major field of microarray applications is gene expression analysis. The size of gene expression databases rapidly increased in recent years. Although they provide a wealth of expression data, it remains challenging to integrate results from different studies. In chapter 6 the methodology of an unsupervised meta-analysis of genome-wide A. thaliana gene expression data sets is presented, which yields novel insights in function and regulation of genes. The application of kernel-based principal component analysis in combination with hierarchical clustering identified three major groups of contrasts each sharing overlapping expression profiles. Genes associated with two groups are known to play important roles in Indol-3 acetic acid (IAA) mediated plant growth and development as well as in pathogen defence. Yet uncharacterised serine-threonine kinases could be assigned to novel functions in pathogen defence by meta-analysis. In general, hidden interrelation between genes regulated under different conditions could be unravelled by the described approach. HMMs are applied to the functional characterisation of proteins or the detection of genes in genome sequences. Although HMMs are technically mature and widely applied in computational biology, I demonstrate the methodical optimisation with respect to the modelling accuracy on biological data with various distributions of sequence lengths. The subunits of these models, the states, are associated with a certain holding time being the link to length distributions of represented sequences. An adaptation of simple HMM topologies to bell-shaped length distributions described in chapter 7 was achieved by serial chain-linking of single states, while residing in the class of conventional HMMs. The impact of an optimisation of HMM topologies was underlined by performance evaluations with differently adjusted HMM topologies. In summary, a general methodology was introduced to improve the modelling behaviour of HMMs by topological optimisation with maximum likelihood and a fast and easily implementable moment estimator. Chapter 8 describes the application of HMMs to the prediction of interaction sites in protein domains. As previously demonstrated, these sites are not trivial to predict because of varying degree in conservation of their location and type within the domain family. The prediction of interaction sites in protein domains is achieved by a newly defined HMM topology, which incorporates both sequence and structure information. Posterior decoding is applied to the prediction of interaction sites providing additional information of the probability of an interaction for all sequence positions. The implementation of interaction profile HMMs (ipHMMs) is based on the well established profile HMMs and inherits its known efficiency and sensitivity. The large-scale prediction of interaction sites by ipHMMs explained protein dysfunctions caused by mutations that are associated to inheritable diseases like different types of cancer or muscular dystrophy. As already demonstrated by profile HMMs, the ipHMMs are suitable for large-scale applications. Overall, the HMM-based method enhances the prediction quality of interaction sites and improves the understanding of the molecular background of inheritable diseases. With respect to current and future requirements I provide large-scale solutions for the characterisation of biological data in this work. All described methods feature a highly portable character, which allows for the transfer to related topics or organisms, respectively. Special emphasis was put on the knowledge transfer facilitated by a steadily increasing wealth of biological information. The applied and developed statistical methods largely provide learning capacities and hence benefit from the gain of knowledge resulting in increased prediction accuracies and reliability.