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The knee joint is a complex composite joint containing the C-shaped wedge-like menisci composed of fibrocartilage. Due to their complex composition and structure, they provide mechanical resilience to the knee joint protecting the articular cartilage. Because of the limited repair potential, meniscal injuries do not only affect the meniscus itself but also lead to altered joint homeostasis and inevitably to secondary osteoarthritis.
The meniscus was characterized focusing on its anatomy, structure and meniscal markers such as aggrecan, collagen type I (Col I) and Col II. The components relevant for meniscus tissue engineering, namely cells, Col I scaffolds, biochemical and biomechanical stimuli were studied. Meniscal cells (MCs) were isolated from meniscus, mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) from bone marrow and dermal microvascular endothelial cells (d-mvECs) from foreskin biopsies. For the human (h) meniscus model, wedge-shape compression of a hMSC-laden Col I gel was successfully established. During three weeks of static culture, the biochemical stimulus transforming growth factor beta-3 (TGF beta-3) led to a compact collagen structure. On day 21, this meniscus model showed high metabolic activity and matrix remodeling as confirmed by matrix metalloproteinases detection. The fibrochondrogenic properties were illustrated by immunohistochemical detection of meniscal markers, significant GAG/DNA increase and increased compressive properties. For further improvement, biomechanical stimulation systems by compression and hydrostatic pressure were designed. As one vascularization approach, direct stimulation with ciclopirox olamine (CPX) significantly increased sprouting of hd-mvEC spheroids even in absence of auxiliary cells such as MSCs. Second, a cell sheet composed of hMSCs and hd-mvECs was fabricated by temperature triggered cell sheet engineering and transferred onto the wedge-shaped meniscus model. Third, a biological vascularized scaffold (BioVaSc-TERM) was re-endothelialized with hd-mvECs providing a viable vascularized network. The vascularized BioVaSc-TERM was suggested as wrapping scaffold of the meniscus model by using two suture techniques, the all-inside-repair (AIR) for the posterior horn, and the outside-in-refixation (OIR) for the anterior horn and the middle part.
This meniscus model for replacing torn menisci is a promising approach to be further optimized regarding vascularization, biochemical and biomechanical stimuli.
The thesis provides insights in reconstruction and analysis pipelines for processing of
three-dimensional cell and vessel images of megakaryopoiesis in intact murine bone.
The images were captured in a Light Sheet Fluorescence Microscope. The work
presented here is part of Collaborative Research Centre (CRC) 688 (project B07) of
the University of Würzburg, performed at the Rudolf-Virchow Center. Despite ongoing
research within the field of megakaryopoiesis, its spatio-temporal pattern of
megakaryopoiesis is largely unknown. Deeper insight to this field is highly desirable to
promote development of new therapeutic strategies for conditions related to
thrombocytopathy as well as thrombocytopenia. The current concept of
megakaryopoiesis is largely based on data from cryosectioning or in vitro studies
indicating the existence of spatial niches within the bone marrow where specific stages
of megakaryopoiesis take place. Since classic imaging of bone sections is typically
limited to selective two-dimensional views and prone to cutting artefacts, imaging of
intact murine bone is highly desired. However, this has its own challenges to meet,
particularly in image reconstruction. Here, I worked on processing pipelines to account
for irregular specimen staining or attenuation as well as the extreme heterogeneity of
megakaryocyte morphology. Specific challenges for imaging and image reconstruction
are tackled and solution strategies as well as remaining limitations are presented and
discussed. Fortunately, modern image processing and segmentation strongly benefits
from continuous advances in hardware as well as software-development. This thesis
exemplifies how a combined effort in biomedicine, computer vision, data processing
and image technology leads to deeper understanding of megakaryopoiesis. Tailored
imaging pipelines significantly helped elucidating that the large megakaryocytes are
broadly distributed throughout the bone marrow facing a surprisingly dense vessel
network. No evidence was found for spatial niches in the bone marrow, eventually
resulting in a revised model of megakaryopoiesis.
This dissertation highlights various aspects of basic social attention by choosing versatile approaches to disentangle the precise mechanisms underlying the preference to focus on other human beings. The progressive examination of different social processes contrasted with aspects of previously adopted principles of general attention. Recent research investigating eye movements during free exploration revealed a clear and robust social bias, especially for the faces of depicted human beings in a naturalistic scene. However, free viewing implies a combination of mechanisms, namely automatic attention (bottom-up), goal-driven allocation (top-down), or contextual cues and inquires consideration of overt (open exploration using the eyes) as well as covert orienting (peripheral attention without eye movement). Within the scope of this dissertation, all of these aspects have been disentangled in three studies to provide a thorough investigation of different influences on social attention mechanisms.
In the first study (section 2.1), we implemented top-down manipulations targeting non-social features in a social scene to test competing resources. Interestingly, attention towards social aspects prevailed, even though this was detrimental to completing the requirements. Furthermore, the tendency of this bias was evident for overall fixation patterns, as well as fixations occurring directly after stimulus onset, suggesting sustained as well as early preferential processing of social features. Although the introduction of tasks generally changes gaze patterns, our results imply only subtle variance when stimuli are social. Concluding, this experiment indicates that attention towards social aspects remains preferential even in light of top-down demands.
The second study (section 2.2) comprised of two separate experiments, one in which we investigated reflexive covert attention and another in which we tested reflexive as well as sustained overt attention for images in which a human being was unilaterally located on either the left or right half of the scene. The first experiment consisted of a modified dot-probe paradigm, in which peripheral probes were presented either congruently on the side of the social aspect, or incongruently on the non-social side. This was based on the assumption that social features would act similar to cues in traditional spatial cueing paradigms, thereby facilitating reaction times for probes presented on the social half as opposed to the non-social half. Indeed, results reflected such congruency effect. The second experiment investigated these reflexive mechanisms by monitoring eye movements and specifying the location of saccades and fixations for short as well as long presentation times. Again, we found the majority of initial saccades to be congruently directed to the social side of the stimulus. Furthermore, we replicated findings for sustained attention processes with highest fixation densities for the head region of the displayed human being.
The third study (section 2.3), tackled the other mechanism proposed in the attention dichotomy, the bottom-up influence. Specifically, we reduced the available contextual information of a scene by using a gaze-contingent display, in which only the currently fixated regions would be visible to the viewer, while the remaining image would remain masked. Thereby, participants had to voluntarily change their gaze in order to explore the stimulus. First, results revealed a replication of a social bias in free-viewing displays. Second, the preference to select social features was also evident in gaze-contingent displays. Third, we find higher recurrent gaze patterns for social images compared to non-social ones for both viewing modalities. Taken together, these findings imply a top-down driven preference for social features largely independent of contextual information.
Importantly, for all experiments, we took saliency predictions of different computational algorithms into consideration to ensure that the observed social bias was not a result of high physical saliency within these areas. For our second experiment, we even reduced the stimulus set to those images, which yielded lower mean and peak saliency for the side of the stimulus containing the social information, while considering algorithms based on low-level features, as well as pre-trained high-level features incorporated in deep learning algorithms.
Our experiments offer new insights into single attentional mechanisms with regard to static social naturalistic scenes and enable a further understanding of basic social processing, contrasting from that of non-social attention. The replicability and consistency of our findings across experiments speaks for a robust effect, attributing social attention an exceptional role within the general attention construct, not only behaviorally, but potentially also on a neuronal level and further allowing implications for clinical populations with impaired social functioning.
G protein-coupled receptors of the Adhesion family (aGPCRs) comprise the second largest group within the GPCR realm with over 30 mammalian homologs. They contain a unique structure with unusually large extracellular domains (ECDs) holding many structural folds known to mediate cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions. Furthermore, aGPCRs undergo autoproteolytic cleavage at the GPCR proteolysis site (GPS), an integral portion of the GPCR autoproteolysis inducing (GAIN) domain. Thus far, it is largely unknown if and how self-cleavage affects aGPCR activation and signaling and how these signals may shape the physiological function of cells.
Latrophilin, alternatively termed the calcium-independent receptor of α-latrotoxin (CIRL) constitutes a highly conserved, prototypic aGPCR and has been assigned roles in various biological processes such as synaptic development and maturation or the regulation of neurotransmitter release. The Drosophila melanogaster homolog dCIRL is found in numerous sensory neurons including the mechanosensory larval pentascolopidial chordotonal organs (CHOs), which rely on dCIRL function in order to sense mechanical cues and to modulate the mechanogating properties of present ionotropic receptors.
This study reveals further insight into the broad distribution of dCirl expression throughout the larval central nervous system, at the neuromuscular junction (NMJ), as well as subcellular localization of dCIRL in distal dendrites and cilia of chordotonal neurons. Furthermore, targeted mutagenesis which disabled GPS cleavage of dCIRL left intracellular trafficking in larval CHOs unaffected and proved autoproteolysis is not required for dCIRL function in vivo. However, substitution of a threonine residue, intrinsic to a putative tethered agonist called Stachel that has previously been documented for several other aGPCRs, abrogated receptor function. Conclusively, while this uncovered the presence of Stachel in dCIRL, it leaves the question about the biological relevance of the predetermined breaking point at the GPS unanswered. In an independent approach, the structure of the “Inter-RBL-HRM” (IRH) region, the region linking the N-terminal Rhamnose-binding lectin-like (RBL) and the hormone receptor motif (HRM) domains of dCIRL, was analyzed. Results suggest random protein folding, excessive glycosylation, and a drastic expansion of the size of IRH. Therefore, the IRH might represent a molecular spacer ensuring a certain ECD dimension, which in turn may be a prerequisite for proper receptor function.
Taken together, the results of this study are consistent with dCIRL’s mechanoceptive faculty and its role as a molecular sensor that translates mechanical cues into metabotropic signals through a yet undefined Stachel-dependent mechanism.
All living organisms need timekeeping mechanisms to track and anticipate cyclic changes in their environment. The ability to prepare for and respond to daily and seasonal changes is endowed by circadian clocks. The systemic features and molecular mechanisms that drive circadian rhythmicity are highly conserved across kingdoms. Therefore, Drosophila melanogaster with its relatively small brain (ca. 135.000 neurons) and the outstanding genetic tools that are available, is a perfect model to investigate the properties and relevance of the circadian system in a complex, but yet comprehensible organism.
The last 50 years of chronobiological research in the fruit fly resulted in a deep understanding of the molecular machinery that drives circadian rhythmicity, and various histological studies revealed the neural substrate of the circadian system. However, a detailed neuroanatomical and physiological description on the single-cell level has still to be acquired. Thus, I employed a multicolor labeling approach to characterize the clock network of Drosophila melanogaster with single-cell resolution and additionally investigated the putative in- and output sites of selected neurons.
To further study the functional hierarchy within the clock network and to monitor the “ticking clock“ over the course of several circadian cycles, I established a method, which allows us to follow the accumulation and degradation of the core clock genes in living brain explants by the means of bioluminescence imaging of single-cells.
Measles is an extremely contagious vaccine-preventable disease responsible
for more than 90000 deaths worldwide annually. The number of deaths has
declined from 8 million in the pre-vaccination era to few thousands every year due
to the highly efficacious vaccine. However, this effective vaccine is still unreachable
in many developing countries due to lack of infrastructure, while in developed
countries too many people refuse vaccination. Specific antiviral compounds are not
yet available. In the current situation, only an extensive vaccination approach
along with effective antivirals could help to have a measles-free future. To develop
an effective antiviral, detailed knowledge of viral-host interaction is required.
This study was undertaken to understand the interaction between MV and
the innate host restriction factor APOBEC3G (A3G), which is well-known for its
activity against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Restriction of MV
replication was not attributed to the cytidine deaminase function of A3G, instead,
we identified a novel role of A3G in regulating cellular gene functions. Among two
of the A3G regulated host factors, we found that REDD1 reduced MV replication,
whereas, KDELR2 hampered MV haemagglutinin (H) surface transport thereby
affecting viral release. REDD1, a negative regulator of mTORC1 signalling
impaired MV replication by inhibiting mTORC1. A3G regulated REDD1
expression was demonstrated to inversely correlate with MV replication. siRNA
mediated silencing of A3G in primary human blood lymphocytes (PBL) reduced
REDD1 levels and simultaneously increased MV titres. Also, direct depletion of
REDD1 improved MV replication in PBL, indicating its role in A3G mediated
restriction of MV. Based on these finding, a new role of rapamycin, a
pharmacological inhibitor of mTORC1, was uncovered in successfully diminishing
MV replication in Vero as well as in human PBL. The ER and Golgi resident
receptor KDELR2 indirectly affected MV by competing with MV-H for cellular
chaperones. Due to the sequestering of chaperones by KDELR2, they can no longer
assist in MV-H folding and subsequent surface expression. Taken together, the two
A3G-regulated host factors REDD1 and KDELR2 are mainly responsible for
mediating its antiviral activity against MV.
Ovarian cancer is one of the most common gynecological malignancies in the world. The prevalence of a microbial signature in ovarian cancer has been reported by several studies till date. In these microorganisms, Human herpesvirus 6 (HHV-6) and Chlamydia trachomatis (C.tr) are especially important as they have significantly high prevalence rate. Moreover, these pathogens are directly involved in causing DNA damage and thereby disrupting the integrity of host genome which is the underlying cause of any cancer. This study focuses on how the two pathogens, HHV-6 and C. trachomatis can affect the genome integrity in their individual capacities and thereby may drive ovarian epithelial cells towards transformation. HHV-6 has unique tendency to integrate its genome into the host genome at subtelomeric regions and achieve a state of latency. This latent virus may get reactivated during the course of life by stress, drugs such as steroids, during transplantation, pregnancy etc. The study presented here began with an interesting observation wherein the direct repeat (DR) sequences flanking the ends of double stranded viral genome were found in unusually high numbers in human blood samples as opposed to normal ratio of two DR copies per viral genome. This study was corroborated with in vitro data where cell lines were generated to mimic the HHV-6 status in human samples. The same observation of unusually high DR copies was found in these cell lines as well. Interestingly, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and inverse polymerase chain reaction followed by southern blotting showed that DR sequences were found to be integrated in nontelomeric regions as opposed to the usual sub-telomeric integration sites in both human samples and in cell lines. Sanger sequencing confirmed the non-telomeric integration of viral DR sequences in the host genome. Several studies have shown that C. trachomatis causes DNA damage and inhibits the signaling cascade of DNA damage response. However, the effect of C. trachomatis infection on process of DNA repair itself was not addressed. In this study, the effect of C. trachomatis infection on host base excision repair (BER) has been addressed. Base excision repair is a pathway which is responsible for replacing the oxidized bases with new undamaged ones. Interestingly, it was found that C. trachomatis infection downregulated polymerase β expression and attenuated polymerase β- mediated BER in vitro. The mechanism of the polymerase β downregulation was found to be associated with the changes in the host microRNAs and downregulation of tumor suppressor, p53. MicroRNA-499 which has a binding site in the polymerase β 3’UTR was shown to be upregulated during C. trachomatis infection. Inhibition of miR-499 using synthetic miR-499 inhibitor indeed improved the repair efficiency during C. trachomatis infection in the in vitro repair assay. Moreover, p53 transcriptionally regulates polymerase β and stabilizing p53 during C. trachomatis infection enhanced the repair efficiency. Previous studies have shown that C. trachomatis can reactivate latent HHV-6. Therefore, genomic instability due to insertions of unstable ‘transposon-like’ HHV-6 DR followed by compromised BER during C. trachomatis infection cumulatively support the hypothesis of pathogenic infections as a probable cause of ovarian cancer
In addition to bradykinesia and tremor, patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) are known to exhibit non-motor symptoms such as apathy and hypomimia but also impulsivity in response to dopaminergic replacement therapy. Moreover, a plethora of studies observe differences in electrocortical and autonomic responses to both visual and acoustic affective stimuli in PD subjects compared to healthy controls. This suggests that the basal ganglia (BG), as well as the hyperdirect pathway and BG thalamocortical circuits, are involved in affective processing. Recent studies have shown valence and dopamine-dependent changes in synchronization in the subthalamic nucleus (STN) in PD patients during affective tasks. This thesis investigates the role of dopamine, valence, and laterality in STN electrophysiology by analyzing event-related potentials (ERP), synchronization, and inter-hemispheric STN connectivity. STN recordings were obtained from PD patients with chronically implanted electrodes for deep brain stimulation during a passive affective picture presentation task. The STN exhibited valence-dependent ERP latencies and lateralized ‘high beta’ (28–40 Hz) event-related desynchronization. This thesis also examines the role of dopamine, valence, and laterality on STN functional connectivity with the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and the amygdala. The activity of these limbic structures was reconstructed using simultaneously recorded electroencephalographic signals. While the STN was found to establish early coupling with both structures, STN-ACC coupling in the ‘alpha’ range (7–11 Hz) and uncoupling in the ‘low beta’ range (14–21 Hz) were lateralized. Lateralization was also observed at the level of synchrony in both reconstructed sources and for ACC ERP amplitude, whereas dopamine modulated ERP latency in the amygdala. These results may deepen our current understanding of the STN as a limbic node within larger emotional-motor networks in the brain.
Studies on the role of platelet serotonin in platelet function, hemostasis, thrombosis and stroke
(2019)
Platelet activation and aggregation are important processes in hemostasis resulting in reduction of blood loss upon vessel wall injury. However, platelet activation can lead to thrombotic events causing myocardial infarction and stroke. A more detailed understanding of the regulation of platelet activation and the subsequent formation of thrombi is essential to prevent thrombosis and ischemic stroke. Cations, platelet surface receptors, cytoskeletal rearrangements, activation of the coagulation cas-cade and intracellular signaling molecules are important in platelet activation and thrombus formation. One such important molecule is serotonin (5 hydroxytryptamin, 5 HT), an indolamine platelet agonist, biochemically derived from tryptophan. 5 HT is secreted from the enterochromaffin cells into the gastrointestinal tract (GI) and blood. Blood borne 5 HT has been proposed to regulate hemostasis by acting as a vaso-constrictor and by triggering platelet signaling through 5 HT2A receptor. Although platelets do not synthetize 5 HT, they take it up from the blood and store it in their dense granules which are secreted upon platelet activation. To identify the molecu-lar composite of the 5 HT uptake system in platelets and elucidate the role of platelet released 5-HT in thrombosis and ischemic stroke, 5 HT transporter knock out mice (5Htt / ) were analyzed in different in vitro and in vivo assays and in a model of is-chemic stroke. In 5Htt / platelets, 5 HT uptake from the blood was completely abol-ished and agonist-induced Ca2+ influx through store operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE), integrin activation, degranulation and aggregation responses to glycoprotein (GP) VI and C type lectin-like receptor 2 (CLEC 2) were reduced. These observed in vitro defects in 5Htt / platelets could be normalized by the addition of exogenous 5 HT. Moreover, reduced 5 HT levels in the plasma, an increased bleeding time and the formation of unstable thrombi were observed ex vivo under flow and in vivo in the abdominal aorta and carotid artery of 5Htt / mice. Surprisingly, in the transient middle cerebral artery occlusion model (tMCAO) of ischemic stroke 5Htt / mice showed near-ly normal infarct volumes and a neurological outcome comparable to control mice. Although secreted platelet 5 HT does not appear to play a crucial role in the devel-opment of reperfusion injury after stroke, it is essential to amplify the second phase of platelet activation through SOCE and thus plays an important role in thrombus stabilization.
To further investigate the role of cations, granules and their contents and regulation of integrin activation in the process of thrombus formation, genetically modified mice were analyzed in the different in vivo thrombosis models. Whereas Tph1 / mice (lacking the enzyme responsible for the production of 5 HT in the periphery), Trpm7KI (point mu-tation in the kinase domain of Trpm7 channel, lacking kinase activity) and Unc13d / /Nbeal2 / mice (lacking α granules and the release machinery of dense granules) showed a delayed thrombus formation in vivo, MagT1y/ mice (lacking a specific Mg2+ transporter) displayed a pro thrombotic phenotype in vivo. Trpm7fl/fl Pf4Cre (lacking the non specific Mg2+ channel) and RIAM / mice (lacking a potential linker protein in integrin “inside out” signaling) showed no alterations in thrombus formation upon injury of the vessel wall.
Activated platelets and coagulation jointly contribute to physiological hemostasis. However, pathological conditions can also trigger unwanted platelet activation and initiation of coagulation resulting in thrombosis and precipitation of ischemic damage of vital organs such as the heart or brain. The specific contribution of procoagulant platelets, positioned at the interface of the processes of platelet activation and coagulation, in ischemic stroke had remained uninvestigated. The first section of the thesis addresses this aspect through experiments conducted in novel megakaryocyte- and platelet-specific TMEM16F conditional KO mice (cKO). cKO platelets phenocopied defects in platelets from Scott Syndrome patients and had severely impaired procoagulant characteristics. This led to decelerated platelet-driven thrombin generation and delayed fibrin formation. cKO mice displayed prolonged bleeding times and impaired arterial thrombosis. However, infarct volumes in cKO mice were comparable to wildtype (WT) mice in an experimental model of ischemic stroke. Therefore, while TMEM16F-regulated platelet procoagulant activity is critical for hemostasis and thrombosis, it is dispensable for cerebral thrombo-inflammation in mice.
The second section describes the generation and initial characterization of a novel knockin mouse strain that expresses human coagulation factor XII (FXII) instead of endogenous murine FXII. These knockin mice had normal occlusion times in an experimental model of arterial thrombosis demonstrating that human FXII is functional in mice. Therefore, these mice constitute a valuable tool for testing novel pharmacological agents against human FXII – an attractive potential target for antithrombotic therapy.
Glycoprotein (GP)VI and C-type lectin-like receptor 2 (CLEC-2)-mediated (hem)immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif (ITAM) signaling represent a major pathway for platelet activation. The last section of the thesis provides experimental evidence for redundant functions between the two members of the Grb2 family of adapter proteins - Grb2 and Gads that lie downstream of GPVI and CLEC-2 stimulation. In vitro and in vivo studies in mice deficient in both Grb2 and Gads (DKO) revealed that DKO platelets had defects in (hem)ITAM-stimulation-specific activation, aggregation and signal transduction that were more severe than the defects observed in single Grb2 KO or Gads KO mice. Furthermore, the specific role of these adapters downstream of (hem)ITAM signaling was essential for maintenance of hemostasis but dispensable for the known CLEC-2 dependent regulation of blood-lymphatic vessel separation.