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- DFG Forschungsgruppe 2757 / Lokale Selbstregelungen im Kontext schwacher Staatlichkeit in Antike und Moderne (LoSAM) (2)
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Schicksal von Mikrokernen bzw. mikrokernhaltigen Zellen und Bedeutung von Mikrokernen als Biomarker
(2021)
Mikrokerne sind als wichtiger Biomarker in der Gentoxizitätsforschung seit langer Zeit etabliert und ihre Bildung ist mechanistisch gut verstanden, wohingegen das Mikrokernschicksal und die genaue Funktion von Mikrokernen in der Kanzerogenese unzureichend erforscht sind. Um das Schicksal von Mikrokernen und mikrokernhaltigen Zellen über einen längeren Zeitraum zu untersuchen, wurden HeLa-Zellen, die mit einem GFP-markierten Histon H2B transfiziert worden sind, mittels Lebendzellmikroskopie nach Behandlung mit verschiedenen gentoxischen Agenzien für 96 h untersucht. Parameter wie die Mitose- oder Zelltodrate wurden dabei ebenso wie das Schicksal der Mikrokerne dokumentiert. Während Persistenz und Reinkorporation von Mikrokernen häufig beobachtet wurden, waren Degradation und Auswurf von Mikrokernen selten bis gar nicht zu sehen. Auch konnte ein Teil der mikrokernhaltigen Zellen über mehrere Zellteilungen persistieren und proliferieren, wodurch die in Mikrokernen manifestierte chromosomale Instabilität unverändert bleiben kann. Ein eindeutiger Substanzeinfluss auf das Mikrokernschicksal konnte nicht ausgemacht werden. Extrusion sollte weiterhin durch Behandlung mit Hydroxyurea oder Cytochalasin B in Kombination mit gentoxischer Behandlung induziert werden, es wurde jedoch kein Effekt auf die Extrusionsrate beobachtet. Degradation wurde mittels γH2AX-Antikörperfärbung und transduziertem dsRed-markierten Autophagiemarker LC3B in HeLa-H2B-GFP-Zellen untersucht. Trotz erhöhter DNA-Degradation in Mikrokernen wurde nur selten eine Ko-Lokalisierung mit LC3B beobachtet. Dafür gab es in HeLa-H2B-GFP-Zellen, die zusätzlich mit dsRed markierten Kernmembranmarker Lamin B1 transduziert worden sind, Anzeichen für eine eingeschränkte Mikrokernmembranintegrität. Weiterhin wurden Zytokinese-Block Mikrokerntests nach Behandlung mit Thebain mit und ohne metabolische Aktivierung sowie Celecoxib und Celecoxibderivaten durchgeführt. Hierbei wurde nach Thebainbehandlung nur ohne metabolische Aktivierung und bei Anwesenheit von Zytotoxizität mehr Mikrokerne gefunden, während nach Behandlung mit Celecoxib und Celecoxibderivaten kein Anstieg beobachtet wurde. Zusätzlich wurde der Einfluss durch neurodegenerative Veränderungen auf Mundschleimhautzellen in zwei großen Kohorten untersucht, wobei keine Effekte auf die Häufigkeit von Mikrokernen oder mikrokernhaltigen Zellen zugeordnet werden konnten, während es teilweise bei Parametern, die auf Zytotoxizität hindeuten, zu Veränderungen kam. Es konnte insgesamt gezeigt werden, dass Mikrokerne und mikrokernhaltige Zellen zusätzlich zu ihrer Funktion als Biomarker über wenigstens mehrere Zellteilungen bestehen bleiben können. Auf diese Weise können sie z. B. über Chromothripsis zu einer beschleunigten Kanzerogenese führen, was zu einer schlechten Prognose für Krebspatienten führen kann.
Die tiefe Hirnstimulation ist eine etablierte und hocheffiziente operative Behandlungsmethode für Patienten mit idiopathischem Parkinson- Syndrom (IPS). Als Zielgebiet dient in den meisten Fällen der Nucleus subthalamicus. Die Indikationen zur Implantation einer tiefen Hirnstimulation (THS) sind medikamentös nicht behandelbare motorische Fluktuationen und Dyskinesien oder ein medikamentös nicht kontrollierbarer Tremor.
Bislang erfolgt eine kontinuierliche Stimulation. Little et al. konnten jedoch bereits in ihrer 2013 veröffentlichen Studie zeigen, dass eine adaptive Stimulation, gemessen am UPDRS, um 27 % effektiver war und entsprechend die Stimulationszeit um 56 % gesenkt werden konnte.
Voraussetzung für die Anwendbarkeit einer adaptiven Stimulation im klinischen Alltag ist der Nachweis eines oder mehrerer Physiomarker, welche als Rückkopplungssignal für den Stimulationsbeginn dienen. Diese Marker müssen verlässlich mit dem Auftreten und der Ausprägung der Bewegungsstörungen korrelieren. Die Systeme müssen die Signale auslesen und entsprechend darauf reagieren können, damit ein sogenanntes Closed- loop- Verfahren entstehen kann. Bei diesen Markern handelt es sich um sogenannte lokale Feldpotenzialaktivitäten, das heißt niederfrequente Potentialänderungen von Zellen in subkortikalen Arealen des Gehirns, welche über Elektroden der THS abgeleitet werden können. Der Stimulator Activa PC+S (Medtronic) ermöglicht es erstmalig Aufzeichnungen von LFP- Daten, außerhalb eines experimentellen Laboraufbaus, mittels dauerhaft implantiertem Gerät vorzunehmen und damit auch Langzeitanalysen durchzuführen.
Erkenntnisse vergangener Studien ergaben, dass die synchronisierte, pathologisch gesteigerte oszillatorische Aktivität im Beta-Frequenzband (13- 35 Hz) eine bedeutende Rolle im Bezug auf die Pathophysiologie des IPS spielt und als krankheitsspezifische Aktivität gilt. Es konnte bereits belegt werden, dass die Verbesserung der motorischen Symptome (Bradykinese und Rigor) mit dem Ausmaß der Suppression der Betaband- Aktivität korreliert. Die Betabandaktivität als lokale Feldpotentialaktivität kann als Physiomarker einer adaptiven Stimulation dienen.
Unser Hauptaugenmerk galt daher der Analyse der Betabandaktivität oder anderer Frequenzbereiche während des Schlafes um hier die THS bedarfsgerecht einzusetzen. Hierfür wurden nächtliche subkortikale LFP- Aufzeichnungen parallel zur Schlaf- Polysomnographie durchgeführt. Zudem erfolgte in der vorliegenden Arbeit sowohl in unserem Vorversuch als auch in unserem Hauptversuch die Anwendung des UPDRS Teil III zur Erfassung der motorischen Symptome, sowie die Durchführung von Fragebögen zur Erfassung der nicht- motorischen Symptome, insbesondere des Schlafes vor und nach Implantation der tiefen Hirnstimulation.
Wir konnten belegen, dass es nach Implantation der THS zu einer Erhöhung der Schlafeffizienz und zu einer Erhöhung des Anteils der Schlafstadien II und III und damit einhergehend zu einer Steigerung der Schlafqualität kommt. Übereinstimmend mit anderen Studien konnten wir zeigen, dass sich die Motorik unter Stimulation deutlich verbessert. Im Vorversuch reduzierte sich der mittlere präoperative MDS- UPDRS III im MedsOFF verglichen mit dem mittleren postoperativ MDS- UPDRS III im MedsOFF/StimON um 37 %. In der PC+S- Studie imponierte eine Reduktion um 67%. Zudem zeigte sich eine Reduktion der nicht- motorischen Symptome durch die THS, insbesondere in der Kategorie Schlaf. Die Ergebnisse der vorliegenden Arbeit ergaben außerdem, dass die Betabandaktivität im Schlafstadium II und vor allem im Schlafstadium III am geringsten ist. Im Schlafstadium I und REM ist die Betabandaktivität höher als im Schlafstadium II und III. Hierbei war entscheidend, dass die Patienten eine klar abgrenzbare Betabandaktivität im Wachstadium aufwiesen und die Elektrodenkontakte im dorsolateralen Kerngebiet des STN lokalisiert waren.
Gegenläufig dazu verhält sich die Deltaaktivität. Sie ist im Schlafstadium II und besonders im Stadium III am höchsten. Stadium I ist mit durchschnittlich um 7,3 % niedriger als im Wachstadium. Am geringsten ist sie jedoch im REM-Schlafstadium.
Indem wir mit der Betabandaktivität und Deltaaktivität in den einzelnen Schlafstadien einen stabilen und reproduzierbaren Physiomarker finden konnten, sind wir unserem Ziel der adaptiven THS ein Stück näher gekommen.
Hintergrund: Die Entwicklung minimal-invasiver gewebeschonender Zugangswege in der Hüftendoprothetik ist im Allgemeinen mit einer schnelleren Rehabilitation, einer Verringerung der postoperativen Schmerzen und einem erhöhten Patientenkomfort verbunden. Das Ziel dieser Studie war es, einen anterioren minimal-invasiven mit einem transglutealen lateralen Zugangsweg für Hüftgelenksersatzoperationen in Bezug auf postoperatives Schmerzniveau, den Schmerzmittelgebrauch, die Länge des Krankenhausaufenthalts und die Zeit bis zum Erreichen eines definierten physiotherapeutischen Therapiezieles zu vergleichen.
Methoden: In dieser retrospektiven Kohortenstudie untersuchten wir 200 Patienten, die sich einer Hüftendoprothesenimplantation unterzogen. Gruppe I (n = 100) erhielt einen minimal-invasiven anterioren Hüftzugang (modifiziert nach Smith-Peterson), Gruppe II (n = 100) erhielt einen lateralen transglutealen Zugang (nach Bauer). Die Untersuchungsziele waren der Schmerz in Ruhe und während der Physiotherapie, der Schmerzmittelgebrauch, die Länge des stationären Aufenthaltes sowie die Zeitdauer bis zum Erreichen des physiotherapeutischen Therapiezieles.
Ergebnisse: Die Patienten der Gruppe I konsumierten weniger Schmerzmedikamente (19,6 ± 6,9 mg Piritramid gegenüber 23,6 ± 11,3 mg; p = 0,005) und hatten in der frühen postoperativen Phase weniger Schmerzen (Operationstag: VAS 1,3 ± 1 gegenüber 2,3 ± 1,3, p = 0,0001, erster postoperativer Tag: VAS 0,41 ± 0,8 vs. 0,66 ± 1,1, p = 0,036). Die Zeit bis zum Erreichen des definierten Therapiezieles (6,4 ± 2 Tage gegenüber 7,4 ± 2,1 Tagen; p = 0,001) und die Dauer des Krankenhausaufenthalts waren kürzer (10,2 ± 1,9 Tage gegenüber 13,4 ± 1,6 Tagen; p = 0,0001) für Gruppe I. Die Schmerzen während der Physiotherapie waren jedoch am dritten und sechsten bis neunten Tag nach der Operation im Vergleich zu Gruppe II höher (p = 0,001–0,013).
Schlussfolgerung: Die Implantation einer Hüftprothese über einen minimal-invasiven anterioren Zugang führt in der direkt postoperativen Phase zu einer Reduktion des Schmerzniveaus und des Schmerzmittelgebrauchs. Zusätzlich werden das Erreichen des physiotherapeutischen Therapiezieles und die Länge des stationären Aufenthaltes positiv beeinflusst. Den höheren Schmerzen während der Physiotherapie könnte durch eine Reduktion der erlaubten Gewichtsbelastung in der frühen postoperativen Phase entgegengewirkt werden.
Die menschliche Verwundbarkeit stellt eine unerhörte Macht dar im persönlichen und politischen, sozialen und ökonomischen, kulturellen und religiösen Leben. Das hat nicht zuletzt die Corona-Pandemie gezeigt. Wie menschliche Gemeinschaften mit dieser Vulnerabilität umgehen, ist gesellschaftlich relevant und zugleich prekär. Denn Vulnerabilität fordert zum Handeln auf und setzt destruktive und kreative Kräfte frei.
Die DFG-Forschungsstudie „Schöpfung durch Verlust“ liefert einen Beitrag zu jenem Wissenschaftsdiskurs, der „Vulnerabilität“ in den letzten Jahrzehnten zu einem Schlüsselbegriff interdisziplinärer Forschung machte. Sie bietet eine ausführliche Analyse des Vulnerabilitätsdiskurses und bringt mit dem Philosophen und Religionstheoretiker Georges Bataille (1897–1962) erstmals eine sakraltheoretische Perspektive ein. Warum sind Menschen bereit, Opfer zu bringen und Verletzungen in Kauf zu nehmen für das, was ihnen heilig ist?
Die menschliche Verwundbarkeit stellt eine unerhörte Macht dar im persönlichen und politischen, sozialen und ökonomischen, kulturellen und religiösen Leben. Wie menschliche Gemeinschaften mit dieser Vulnerabilität umgehen, ist gesellschaftlich relevant und zugleich prekär. Denn Vulnerabilität fordert zum Handeln auf. Sie setzt destruktive und kreative Kräfte frei.
Die DFG-Forschungsstudie „Schöpfung durch Verlust Band II“ liefert einen theologischen Beitrag zur interdisziplinären Vulnerabilitätsforschung. Sie führt die nach Michel de Certeau (1925–1986) benannte Methodik der Heterologie weiter und befragt die Gründungsnarrative des Christentums nach ihrem vulnerabilitätstheoretischen Gehalt. Wo tritt das Agency-Potential der Vulnerabilität zutage? Welche Alternative eröffnet sich zu jener gefährlichen Vulneranz, die das Vulnerabilitätsdispositiv persönlich und gesellschaftlich birgt?
Hintergrund: Geflüchtete haben ein hohes Risiko, Multiresistente Erreger (MRE) zu tragen. Infektionen mit MRE (Multiresistente Gram-negative Bakterien [MRGN] und Methicillin-resistenter Staphylococcus aureus [MRSA]) sind mit einer erhöhten Mortalität, Krankenhausaufenthaltsdauer und Krankenhauskosten assoziiert. Der Einfluss von prädisponierenden Faktoren für eine Besiedlung mit MRE ist für Geflüchtete noch unzureichend erforscht. Kenntnisse über prädisponierende Faktoren können helfen, Infektionsschutzmaßnahmen für Geflüchtete in Krankenhäusern anzupassen.
Methodik: Von November 2015 bis April 2016 wurden 134 Geflüchtete am Universitätsklinikum Würzburg auf MRE im Nasen-/Rachen- (MRSA), Rektal- (MDRGN-Enterobacteriaceae, MDRGN-Pseudomonas aeruginosa) und Haut-/Rachenabstrich (MDRGN-Acinetobacter baumannii) gescreent.
Ergebnisse: 62,7% von 134 gescreenten Flüchtlingen waren männlichen Geschlechts und das Durchschnittsalter lag bei 19 Jahren [IQR: 7–31]. 23,9% (n=32) zeigten einen positiven MRE-Befund (MRSA: 3,4 % von 118, 2MDRGN-Neopäd: 19,3 % von 57, 3MDRGN: 13,6 % von 125, 4MDRGN: 0 % von 125). Es wurden 25 Escherichia coli (98,3%), 3 Klebsiella pneumoniae (10,7%) und keine positiven Befunde auf Pseudomonas aeruginosa oder Acinetobacter baumannii gefunden. 3 Geflüchtete (9,6%) zeigten eine Mehrfachbesiedlung und 2 Geflüchtete (6,2%) wiesen eine durch MRE bedingte Infektionserkrankung auf (submandibulärer Abszess, Pyelonephritis). Bei 94 Geflüchteten mit vollständigem Screening waren Geflüchtete mit positivem MRE-Befund im Vergleich zu Geflüchteten mit negativem MRE-Befund jüngeren Alters (Medianalter: 8 Jahre [IQR: 3–36] vs. 24 Jahre [IQR: 14–33]) und vermehrt weiblichen Geschlechts (61,1%). Geflüchtete mit positivem MRE-Befund wiesen zudem im Vergleich vermehrt prädisponierende Faktoren auf, bspw. einen vorherigen Krankenhausaufenthalt (61,1 % vs. 35,5%), chronische Pflegebedürftigkeit (16,7 % vs. 1,3 %) oder eine Fluchtanamnese ≤ 3 Monate (80,0 % vs. 29,4 %).
Schlussfolgerung: Prädisponierende Faktoren spielen eine große Rolle für eine Besiedlung mit MRE. Prospektive Studien sollten folgen, um prädisponierende Faktoren für eine Besiedlung mit MRE bei Geflüchteten besser charakterisieren zu können.
A single, specific, sensitive biochemical biomarker that can reliably diagnose a traumatic brain injury (TBI) has not yet been found, but combining different biomarkers would be the most promising approach in clinical and postmortem settings. In addition, identifying new biomarkers and developing laboratory tests can be time-consuming and economically challenging. As such, it would be efficient to use established clinical diagnostic assays for postmortem biochemistry. In this study, postmortem cerebrospinal fluid samples from 45 lethal TBI cases and 47 controls were analyzed using commercially available blood-validated assays for creatine kinase (CK) activity and its heart-type isoenzyme (CK–MB). TBI cases with a survival time of up to two hours showed an increase in both CK and CK–MB with moderate (CK–MB: AUC = 0.788, p < 0.001) to high (CK: AUC = 0.811, p < 0.001) diagnostic accuracy. This reflected the excessive increase of the brain-type CK isoenzyme (CK–BB) following a TBI. The results provide evidence that CK immunoassays can be used as an adjunct quantitative test aid in diagnosing acute TBI-related fatalities.
Second hit hypothesis in dystonia: Dysfunctional cross talk between neuroplasticity and environment?
(2021)
One of the great mysteries in dystonia pathophysiology is the role of environmental factors in disease onset and development. Progress has been made in defining the genetic components of dystonic syndromes, still the mechanisms behind the discrepant relationship between dystonic genotype and phenotype remain largely unclear. Within this review, the preclinical and clinical evidence for environmental stressors as disease modifiers in dystonia pathogenesis are summarized and critically evaluated. The potential role of extragenetic factors is discussed in monogenic as well as adult-onset isolated dystonia. The available clinical evidence for a "second hit" is analyzed in light of the reduced penetrance of monogenic dystonic syndromes and put into context with evidence from animal and cellular models. The contradictory studies on adult-onset dystonia are discussed in detail and backed up by evidence from animal models. Taken together, there is clear evidence of a gene-environment interaction in dystonia, which should be considered in the continued quest to unravel dystonia pathophysiology.
Diabetic polyneuropathy (DPN) is the most common complication in diabetes and can be painful in up to 26% of all diabetic patients. Peripheral nerves are shielded by the blood-nerve barrier (BNB) consisting of the perineurium and endoneurial vessels. So far, there are conflicting results regarding the role and function of the BNB in the pathophysiology of DPN. In this study, we analyzed the spatiotemporal tight junction protein profile, barrier permeability, and vessel-associated macrophages in Wistar rats with streptozotocin-induced DPN. In these rats, mechanical hypersensitivity developed after 2 weeks and loss of motor function after 8 weeks, while the BNB and the blood-DRG barrier were leakier for small, but not for large molecules after 8 weeks only. The blood-spinal cord barrier remained sealed throughout the observation period. No gross changes in tight junction protein or cytokine expression were observed in all barriers to blood. However, expression of Cldn1 mRNA in perineurium was specifically downregulated in conjunction with weaker vessel-associated macrophage shielding of the BNB. Our results underline the role of specific tight junction proteins and BNB breakdown in DPN maintenance and differentiate DPN from traumatic nerve injury. Targeting claudins and sealing the BNB could stabilize pain and prevent further nerve damage.
Organoboron compounds are important building blocks in organic synthesis, materials science, and drug discovery. The development of practical and convenient ways to synthesize boronate esters attracted significant interest. Photoinduced borylations originated with stoichiometric reactions of arenes and alkanes with well-defined metal-boryl complexes. Now photoredox-initiated borylations, catalyzed either by transition-metal or organic photocatalysts, and photochemical borylations with high efficiency have become a burgeoning area of research. In this chapter, we summarize research in the field of photocatalytic C-X borylation, especially emphasizing recent developments and trends, based on transition-metal catalysis, metal-free organocatalysis and direct photochemical activation. We focus on reaction mechanisms involving single electron transfer (SET), triplet energy transfer (TET), and other radical processes.
We developed a highly selective photocatalytic C-F borylation method that employs a rhodium biphenyl complex as a triplet sensitizer and the nickel catalyst [Ni(IMes)2] (IMes = 1,3-dimesitylimidazolin-2-ylidene) for the C-F bond activation and defluoroborylation process. This tandem catalyst system operates with visible (400 nm) light and achieves borylation of a wide range of fluoroarenes with B2pin2 at room temperature in excellent yields and with high selectivity. Direct irradiation of the intermediary C-F bond oxidative addition product trans-[NiF(ArF)(IMes)2] leads to fast decomposition when B2pin2 is present. This destructive pathway can be bypassed by indirect excitation of the triplet states of the nickel(II) complex via the photoexcited rhodium biphenyl complex. Mechanistic studies suggest that the exceptionally long-lived triplet excited state of the Rh biphenyl complex used as the photosensitizer allows for efficient triplet energy transfer to trans-[NiF(ArF)(IMes)2], which leads to dissociation of one of the NHC ligands. This contrasts with the majority of current photocatalytic transformations, which employ transition metals as excited state single electron transfer agents. We have previously reported that C(arene)-F bond activation with [Ni(IMes)2] is facile at room temperature, but that the transmetalation step with B2pin2 is associated with a high energy barrier. Thus, this triplet energy transfer ultimately leads to a greatly enhanced rate constant for the transmetalation step and thus for the whole borylation process. While addition of a fluoride source such as CsF enhances the yield, it is not absolutely required. We attribute this yield-enhancing effect to (i) formation of an anionic adduct of B2pin2, i.e. FB2pin2-, as an efficient, much more nucleophilic {Bpin-} transfer reagent for the borylation/transmetalation process, and/or (ii) trapping of the Lewis acidic side product FBpin by formation of [F2Bpin]- to avoid the formation of a significant amount of NHC-FBpin and consequently of decomposition of {Ni(NHC)2} species in the reaction mixture.
We reported a highly selective and general photo-induced C-Cl borylation protocol that employs [Ni(IMes)2] (IMes = 1,3-dimesitylimidazoline-2-ylidene) for the radical borylation of chloroarenes. This photo-induced system operates with visible light (400 nm) and achieves borylation of a wide range of chloroarenes with B2pin2 at room temperature in excellent yields and with high selectivity, thereby demonstrating its broad utility and functional group tolerance. Mechanistic investigations suggest that the borylation reactions proceed via a radical process. EPR studies demonstrate that [Ni(IMes)2] undergoes very fast chlorine atom abstraction from aryl chlorides to give [NiI(IMes)2Cl] and aryl radicals. Control experiments indicate that light promotes the reaction of [NiI(IMes)2Cl] with aryl chlorides generating additional aryl radicals and [NiII(IMes)2Cl2]. The aryl radicals react with an anionic sp2-sp3 diborane [B2pin2(OMe)]- formed from B2pin2 and KOMe to yield the corresponding borylation product and the [Bpin(OMe)]•- radical anion, which reduces [NiII(IMes)2Cl2] under irradiation to regenerate [NiI(IMes)2Cl] and [Ni(IMes)2] for the next catalytic cycle.
A highly efficient and general protocol for traceless, directed C3-selective C-H borylation of indoles with [Ni(IMes)2] as the catalyst was achieved. Activation and borylation of N-H bonds by [Ni(IMes)2] is essential to install a Bpin moiety at the N-position as a traceless directing group, which enables the C3-selective borylation of C-H bonds. The N-Bpin group which is formed is easily converted in situ back to an N-H group by the oxidiative addition product of [Ni(IMes)2] and in situ-generated HBpin. The catalytic reactions are operationally simple, allowing borylation of of a variety of substituted indoles with B2pin2 in excellent yields and with high selectivity. The C-H borylation can be followed by Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling of the C-borylated indoles in an overall two-step, one-pot process providing an efficient method for synthesizing C3-functionalized heteroarenes.
Herpesviruses have mastered host cell modulation and immune evasion to augment productive infection, life-long latency and reactivation thereof 1,2. A long appreciated, yet elusively defined relationship exists between the lytic-latent switch and viral non-coding RNAs 3,4. Here, we identify miRNA-mediated inhibition of miRNA processing as a novel cellular mechanism that human herpesvirus 6A (HHV-6A) exploits to disrupt mitochondrial architecture, evade intrinsic host defense and drive the latent-lytic switch. We demonstrate that virus-encoded miR-aU14 selectively inhibits the processing of multiple miR-30 family members by direct interaction with the respective pri-miRNA hairpin loops. Subsequent loss of miR-30 and activation of miR-30/p53/Drp1 axis triggers a profound disruption of mitochondrial architecture, which impairs induction of type I interferons and is necessary for both productive infection and virus reactivation. Ectopic expression of miR-aU14 was sufficient to trigger virus reactivation from latency thereby identifying it as a readily drugable master regulator of the herpesvirus latent-lytic switch. Our results show that miRNA-mediated inhibition of miRNA processing represents a generalized cellular mechanism that can be exploited to selectively target individual members of miRNA families. We anticipate that targeting miR-aU14 provides exciting therapeutic options for preventing herpesvirus reactivations in HHV-6-associated disorders like myalgic encephalitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) and Long-COVID.
Hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) is a curative therapy for the treatment of malignant and non-malignant bone marrow diseases. The major complication of this treatment is a highly inflammatory reaction called Graft-versus-Host Disease (GvHD). Here, transplanted donor T cells cause massive tissue destruction and inflammation in the main target organs liver, skin and the intestine. Currently, this inflammatory reaction can be treated successfully using strong immunosuppressive agents. One efficient group of immunosuppressants are calcineurin inhibitors such as Cyclosporin A (CsA) and Tacrolimus (FK506). These treatment strategies target all T lymphocytes subsets equally and do not separate GvH from the desirable Graft-versus-Leukemia (GvL) effect. Therefore, we aimed to find immunological targets on alloreactive T cells in order to develop novel treatment strategies, which selectively modulates alloreactive T cells without impairing the GvL effect or hematopoietic immune reconstitution.
The aim of this thesis was to develop a predictive marker panel to track alloreactive T cells in the peripheral blood (PB) of murine allo-HCT recipients. In clinically relevant model of aGvHD we demonstrated that alloreactive T cells have a distinct surface marker expression profile and can be detected in the PB before aGvHD manifestation. Based on our data, we propose a combinatory panel consisting of 4 surface markers (a4b7 integrin, CD162E, CD162P und CD62L) on circulating CD8+ T cells to identify the risk of aGvHD after allo-HCT.
Since tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily (TNFR SF) members are involved in several immunological processes, we did extensive surface marker expression analysis of several TNFR superfamily members and other immunomodulatory molecules on conventional and regulatory T cells (Tcons vs. Tregs) on different time points during aGvHD progression. The aim of this study was to find subset-specific immunomodulatory molecules on recently activated Tcons and Tregs. We found that GITR, 4-1BB and CD27 were highly expressed on alloreactive and naïve Tregs. In contrast, PD1 expression was highly upregulated on recently activated alloreactive Tcons. The data of this study serves as basis for future approaches, which aim to develop T cell subset specific therapeutic antibody fusion proteins.
a4b7 integrin and CD162P (P-Selectin ligand) are highly upregulated on alloreactive T cells and mediate the infiltration of these cells into GvHD target organs. We developed recombinant (antibody) fusion proteins to target these two homing molecules and could show that antibody-based fusion proteins are superior to ligand-based fusion proteins regarding production efficiency and binding affinity. Therefore, we propose for future studies to focus on the described antibody-based fusion proteins for the selective targeting of T cells.
Since the widely used calcineurin inhibitors are impairing the desirable GvL effect, we investigated if selective NFATc1 inhibition might be a novel strategy to prevent or reduce alloreactivity, while hopefully maintaining the GvL effect. In particular, we addressed the role of the isoform NFATc1 and inhibited its posttranslational modification by SUMO (Small Ubiquitin-related Modifier). Indeed, inhibition of NFATc1 SUMOylation resulted in reduced inflammation and increased Treg frequencies in a murine MHC major mismatch aGvHD model.
Conclusively, we showed that alloreactive T cells can be identified by their surface profile in the PB of allo-HCT recipients before aGvHD symptoms appeared. Furthermore, we introduced a approach to selectively target alloreactive T cells by antibody fusion proteins, which might serve as a novel strategy to separate GvH from GvL. Additionally, we demonstrated that averted posttranslational modification of NFATc1 by SUMOylation serves as potential target to reduce alloreactivity of T cells.
Purpose
To fully automatically derive quantitative parameters from late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) cardiac MR (CMR) in patients with myocardial infarction and to investigate if phase sensitive or magnitude reconstructions or a combination of both results in best segmentation accuracy.
Methods
In this retrospective single center study, a convolutional neural network with a U-Net architecture with a self-configuring framework (“nnU-net”) was trained for segmentation of left ventricular myocardium and infarct zone in LGE-CMR. A database of 170 examinations from 78 patients with history of myocardial infarction was assembled. Separate fitting of the model was performed, using phase sensitive inversion recovery, the magnitude reconstruction or both contrasts as input channels.
Manual labelling served as ground truth. In a subset of 10 patients, the performance of the trained models was evaluated and quantitatively compared by determination of the Sørensen-Dice similarity coefficient (DSC) and volumes of the infarct zone compared with the manual ground truth using Pearson’s r correlation and Bland-Altman analysis.
Results
The model achieved high similarity coefficients for myocardium and scar tissue. No significant difference was observed between using PSIR, magnitude reconstruction or both contrasts as input (PSIR and MAG; mean DSC: 0.83 ± 0.03 for myocardium and 0.72 ± 0.08 for scars). A strong correlation for volumes of infarct zone was observed between manual and model-based approach (r = 0.96), with a significant underestimation of the volumes obtained from the neural network.
Conclusion
The self-configuring nnU-net achieves predictions with strong agreement compared to manual segmentation, proving the potential as a promising tool to provide fully automatic quantitative evaluation of LGE-CMR.
Facial masks have become and may remain ubiquitous. Though important for preventing infection, they may also serve as a reminder of the risks of disease. Thus, they may either act as cues for threat, priming avoidance-related behavior, or as cues for a safe interaction, priming social approach. To distinguish between these possibilities, we assessed implicit and explicit evaluations of masked individuals as well as avoidance bias toward relatively unsafe interactions with unmasked individuals in an approach-avoidance task in an online study. We further assessed Covid19 anxiety and specific attitudes toward mask-wearing, including mask effectiveness and desirability, hindrance of communication from masks, aesthetic appeal of masks, and mask-related worrying. Across one sample of younger (18–35 years, N = 147) and one of older adults (60+ years, N = 150), we found neither an average approach nor avoidance bias toward mask-wearing compared to unmasked individuals in the indirect behavior measurement task. However, across the combined sample, self-reported mask-related worrying correlated with reduced avoidance tendencies toward unmasked individuals when Covid19 anxiety was low, but not when it was high. This relationship was specific to avoidance tendencies and was not observed in respect to explicit or implicit preference for mask-wearing individuals. We conclude that unsafe interaction styles may be reduced by targeting mask-related worrying with public interventions, in particular for populations that otherwise have low generalized Covid19 anxiety.
Descriptors play an important role in point cloud registration. The current state-of-the-art resorts to the high regression capability of deep learning. However, recent deep learning-based descriptors require different levels of annotation and selection of patches, which make the model hard to migrate to new scenarios. In this work, we learn local registration descriptors for point clouds
in a self-supervised manner. In each iteration of the training, the input of the network is merely one unlabeled point cloud. Thus, the whole training requires no manual annotation and manual selection of patches. In addition, we propose to involve keypoint sampling into the pipeline, which further improves the performance of our model. Our experiments demonstrate the capability of our self-supervised local descriptor to achieve even better performance than the supervised model, while being easier to train and requiring no data labeling.
Two dipolar merocyanines consisting of the same π‐conjugated chromophore but different alkyl substituents adopt very different packing arrangements in their respective solid state with either H‐ or J‐type exciton coupling, leading to ultranarrow absorption bands at 477 and 750 nm, respectively, due to exchange narrowing. The social self‐sorting behavior of these push‐pull chromophores in their mixed thin films is evaluated and the impact on morphology as well as opto‐electronical properties is determined. The implementation of this well‐tuned two‐component material with tailored optical features allows to optimize planar heterojunction organic photodiodes with fullerene (C\(_{60}\)) with either dual or single wavelength selectivity in the blue and NIR spectral range with ultranarrow bandwidths of only 11 nm (200 cm\(^{-1}\)) and an external quantum efficiency of up to 18% at 754 nm under 0 V bias. The application of these photodiodes as low‐power consuming heart rate monitors is demonstrated by a reflectance‐mode photoplethysmography (PPG) sensor.
Progressive deterioration of the central nervous system (CNS) is commonly associated with aging. An important component of the neurovasculature is the blood-brain barrier (BBB), majorly made up of endothelial cells joined together by intercellular junctions. The relationship between senescence and changes in the BBB has not yet been thoroughly explored. Moreover, the lack of in vitro models for the study of the mechanisms involved in those changes impede further and more in-depth investigations in the field. For this reason, we herein present an in vitro model of the senescent BBB and an initial attempt to identify senescence-associated alterations within.
Sensitivity analysis for interpretation of machine learning based segmentation models in cardiac MRI
(2021)
Background
Image segmentation is a common task in medical imaging e.g., for volumetry analysis in cardiac MRI. Artificial neural networks are used to automate this task with performance similar to manual operators. However, this performance is only achieved in the narrow tasks networks are trained on. Performance drops dramatically when data characteristics differ from the training set properties. Moreover, neural networks are commonly considered black boxes, because it is hard to understand how they make decisions and why they fail. Therefore, it is also hard to predict whether they will generalize and work well with new data. Here we present a generic method for segmentation model interpretation. Sensitivity analysis is an approach where model input is modified in a controlled manner and the effect of these modifications on the model output is evaluated. This method yields insights into the sensitivity of the model to these alterations and therefore to the importance of certain features on segmentation performance.
Results
We present an open-source Python library (misas), that facilitates the use of sensitivity analysis with arbitrary data and models. We show that this method is a suitable approach to answer practical questions regarding use and functionality of segmentation models. We demonstrate this in two case studies on cardiac magnetic resonance imaging. The first case study explores the suitability of a published network for use on a public dataset the network has not been trained on. The second case study demonstrates how sensitivity analysis can be used to evaluate the robustness of a newly trained model.
Conclusions
Sensitivity analysis is a useful tool for deep learning developers as well as users such as clinicians. It extends their toolbox, enabling and improving interpretability of segmentation models. Enhancing our understanding of neural networks through sensitivity analysis also assists in decision making. Although demonstrated only on cardiac magnetic resonance images this approach and software are much more broadly applicable.
Perinatal inflammatory stress is strongly associated with adverse pulmonary outcomes after preterm birth. Antenatal infections are an essential perinatal stress factor and contribute to preterm delivery, induction of lung inflammation and injury, pre-disposing preterm infants to bronchopulmonary dysplasia. Considering the polymicrobial nature of antenatal infection, which was reported to result in diverse effects and outcomes in preterm lungs, the aim was to examine the consequences of sequential inflammatory stimuli on endogenous epithelial stem/progenitor cells and vascular maturation, which are crucial drivers of lung development. Therefore, a translational ovine model of antenatal infection/inflammation with consecutive exposures to chronic and acute stimuli was used. Ovine fetuses were exposed intra-amniotically to Ureaplasma parvum 42 days (chronic stimulus) and/or to lipopolysaccharide 2 or 7 days (acute stimulus) prior to preterm delivery at 125 days of gestation. Pulmonary inflammation, endogenous epithelial stem cell populations, vascular modulators and morphology were investigated in preterm lungs. Pre-exposure to UP attenuated neutrophil infiltration in 7d LPS-exposed lungs and prevented reduction of SOX-9 expression and increased SP-B expression, which could indicate protective responses induced by re-exposure. Sequential exposures did not markedly impact stem/progenitors of the proximal airways (P63+ basal cells) compared to single exposure to LPS. In contrast, the alveolar size was increased solely in the UP+7d LPS group. In line, the most pronounced reduction of AEC2 and proliferating cells (Ki67+) was detected in these sequentially UP + 7d LPS-exposed lambs. A similar sensitization effect of UP pre-exposure was reflected by the vessel density and expression of vascular markers VEGFR-2 and Ang-1 that were significantly reduced after UP exposure prior to 2d LPS, when compared to UP and LPS exposure alone. Strikingly, while morphological changes of alveoli and vessels were seen after sequential microbial exposure, improved lung function was observed in UP, 7d LPS, and UP+7d LPS-exposed lambs. In conclusion, although sequential exposures did not markedly further impact epithelial stem/progenitor cell populations, re-exposure to an inflammatory stimulus resulted in disturbed alveolarization and abnormal pulmonary vascular development. Whether these negative effects on lung development can be rescued by the potentially protective responses observed, should be examined at later time points.
Sequential optimality conditions for cardinality-constrained optimization problems with applications
(2021)
Recently, a new approach to tackle cardinality-constrained optimization problems based on a continuous reformulation of the problem was proposed. Following this approach, we derive a problem-tailored sequential optimality condition, which is satisfied at every local minimizer without requiring any constraint qualification. We relate this condition to an existing M-type stationary concept by introducing a weak sequential constraint qualification based on a cone-continuity property. Finally, we present two algorithmic applications: We improve existing results for a known regularization method by proving that it generates limit points satisfying the aforementioned optimality conditions even if the subproblems are only solved inexactly. And we show that, under a suitable Kurdyka–Łojasiewicz-type assumption, any limit point of a standard (safeguarded) multiplier penalty method applied directly to the reformulated problem also satisfies the optimality condition. These results are stronger than corresponding ones known for the related class of mathematical programs with complementarity constraints.
Serotonin deficiency induced after brain maturation rescues consequences of early life adversity
(2021)
Brain serotonin (5-HT) system dysfunction is implicated in depressive disorders and acute depletion of 5-HT precursor tryptophan has frequently been used to model the influence of 5-HT deficiency on emotion regulation. Tamoxifen (TAM)-induced Cre/loxP-mediated inactivation of the tryptophan hydroxylase-2 gene (Tph2) was used to investigate the effects of provoked 5-HT deficiency in adult mice (Tph2 icKO) previously subjected to maternal separation (MS). The efficiency of Tph2 inactivation was validated by immunohistochemistry and HPLC. The impact of Tph2 icKO in interaction with MS stress (Tph2 icKOxMS) on physiological parameters, emotional behavior and expression of 5-HT system-related marker genes were assessed. Tph2 icKO mice displayed a significant reduction in 5-HT immunoreactive cells and 5-HT concentrations in the rostral raphe region within four weeks following TAM treatment. Tph2 icKO and MS differentially affected food and water intake, locomotor activity as well as panic-like escape behavior. Tph2 icKO prevented the adverse effects of MS stress and altered the expression of the genes previously linked to stress and emotionality. In conclusion, an experimental model was established to study the behavioral and neurobiological consequences of 5-HT deficiency in adulthood in interaction with early-life adversity potentially affecting brain development and the pathogenesis of depressive disorders.
Antidepressants are used to treat several psychiatric disorders; however, a large proportion of patients do not respond to their first antidepressant therapy and often experience adverse drug reactions (ADR). A common insertion–deletion polymorphism in the promoter region (5-HTTLPR) of the serotonin transporter (SLC6A4) gene has been frequently investigated for its association with antidepressant outcomes. Here, we performed a systematic review and meta-analysis to assess 5-HTTLPR associations with antidepressants: (1) response in psychiatric disorders other than major depressive disorder (MDD) and (2) tolerability across all psychiatric disorders. Literature searches were performed up to January 2021, yielding 82 studies that met inclusion criteria, and 16 of these studies were included in the meta-analyses. Carriers of the 5-HTTLPR LL or LS genotypes were more likely to respond to antidepressant therapy, compared to the SS carriers in the total and European ancestry-only study populations. Long (L) allele carriers taking selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) reported fewer ADRs relative to short/short (SS) carriers. European L carriers taking SSRIs had lower ADR rates than S carriers. These results suggest the 5-HTTLPR polymorphism may serve as a marker for antidepressant outcomes in psychiatric disorders and may be particularly relevant to SSRI treatment among individuals of European descent.
Human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) have revolutionized the generation of experimental disease models, but the development of protocols for the differentiation of functionally active neuronal subtypes with defined specification is still in its infancy. While dysfunction of the brain serotonin (5-HT) system has been implicated in the etiology of various neuropsychiatric disorders, investigation of functional human 5-HT specific neurons in vitro has been restricted by technical limitations. We describe an efficient generation of functionally active neurons from hiPSCs displaying 5-HT specification by modification of a previously reported protocol. Furthermore, 5-HT specific neurons were characterized using high-end fluorescence imaging including super-resolution microscopy in combination with electrophysiological techniques. Differentiated hiPSCs synthesize 5-HT, express specific markers, such as tryptophan hydroxylase 2 and 5-HT transporter, and exhibit an electrophysiological signature characteristic of serotonergic neurons, with spontaneous rhythmic activities, broad action potentials and large afterhyperpolarization potentials. 5-HT specific neurons form synapses reflected by the expression of pre- and postsynaptic proteins, such as Bassoon and Homer. The distribution pattern of Bassoon, a marker of the active zone along the soma and extensions of neurons, indicates functionality via volume transmission. Among the high percentage of 5-HT specific neurons (~ 42%), a subpopulation of CDH13 + cells presumably designates dorsal raphe neurons. hiPSC-derived 5-HT specific neuronal cell cultures reflect the heterogeneous nature of dorsal and median raphe nuclei and may facilitate examining the association of serotonergic neuron subpopulations with neuropsychiatric disorders.
Naturally occurring compounds such as sesquiterpenes and sesquiterpenoids (SQTs) have been shown to modulate GABA\(_{A}\) receptors (GABA\(_{A}\)Rs). In this study, the modulatory potential of 11 SQTs at GABA\(_{A}\)Rs was analyzed to characterize their potential neurotropic activity. Transfected HEK293 cells and primary hippocampal neurons were functionally investigated using electrophysiological whole-cell recordings. Significantly different effects of β-caryophyllene and α-humulene, as well as their respective derivatives β-caryolanol and humulol, were observed in the HEK293 cell system. In neurons, the concomitant presence of phasic and tonic GABA\(_{A}\)R configurations accounts for differences in receptor modulation by SQTs. The in vivo presence of the γ\(_{2}\) and δ subunits is important for SQT modulation. While phasic GABA\(_{A}\) receptors in hippocampal neurons exhibited significantly altered GABA-evoked current amplitudes in the presence of humulol and guaiol, negative allosteric potential at recombinantly expressed α\(_{1}\)β\(_{2}\)γ\(_{2}\) receptors was only verified for humolol. Modeling and docking studies provided support for the binding of SQTs to the neurosteroid-binding site of the GABA\(_{A}\)R localized between transmembrane segments 1 and 3 at the (\(^{+}\)α)-(\(^{-}\)α) interface. In sum, differences in the modulation of GABA\(_{A}\)R isoforms between SQTs were identified. Another finding is that our results provide an indication that nutritional digestion affects the neurotropic potential of natural compounds.
A deficiency in GM3-derived gangliosides, resulting from a lack of lactosylceramide-alpha-2,3-sialyltransferase (ST3GAL5), leads to severe neuropathology, including epilepsy and metabolic abnormalities. Disruption of ganglioside production by this enzyme may also have a role in the development of neuropsychiatric disorders. ST3Gal5 knock-out (St3gal5\(^{−/−}\)) mice lack a-, b-, and c-series gangliosides, but exhibit no overt neuropathology, possibly owing to the production of compensatory 0-series glycosphingolipids. Here, we sought to investigate the possibility that St3gal5\(^{−/−}\) mice might exhibit attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)-like behaviours. In addition, we evaluated potential metabolic and electroencephalogram (EEG) abnormalities. St3gal5\(^{−/−}\) mice were subjected to behavioural testing, glucose tolerance tests, and the levels of expression of brain and peripheral A and B isoforms of the insulin receptor (IR) were measured. We found that St3gal5\(^{−/−}\) mice exhibit locomotor hyperactivity, impulsivity, neophobia, and anxiety-like behavior. The genotype also altered blood glucose levels and glucose tolerance. A sex bias was consistently found in relation to body mass and peripheral IR expression. Analysis of the EEG revealed an increase in amplitude in St3gal5\(^{−/−}\) mice. Together, St3gal5\(^{−/−}\) mice exhibit ADHD-like behaviours, altered metabolic and EEG measures providing a useful platform for better understanding of the contribution of brain gangliosides to ADHD and associated comorbidities.
Sex-specific and caste-specific brain adaptations related to spatial orientation in Cataglyphis ants
(2021)
Cataglyphis desert ants are charismatic central place foragers. After long-ranging foraging trips, individual workers navigate back to their nest relying mostly on visual cues. The reproductive caste faces other orientation challenges, i.e. mate finding and colony foundation. Here we compare brain structures involved in spatial orientation of Cataglyphis nodus males, gynes, and foragers by quantifying relative neuropil volumes associated with two visual pathways, and numbers and volumes of antennal lobe (AL) olfactory glomeruli. Furthermore, we determined absolute numbers of synaptic complexes in visual and olfactory regions of the mushroom bodies (MB) and a major relay station of the sky-compass pathway to the central complex (CX). Both female castes possess enlarged brain centers for sensory integration, learning, and memory, reflected in voluminous MBs containing about twice the numbers of synaptic complexes compared with males. Overall, male brains are smaller compared with both female castes, but the relative volumes of the optic lobes and CX are enlarged indicating the importance of visual guidance during innate behaviors. Male ALs contain greatly enlarged glomeruli, presumably involved in sex-pheromone detection. Adaptations at both the neuropil and synaptic levels clearly reflect differences in sex-specific and caste-specific demands for sensory processing and behavioral plasticity underlying spatial orientation.
Aims
Various studies have reported that young European women are more likely to develop early‐onset periodontitis compared to men. A potential explanation for the observed variations in sex and age of disease onset is the natural genetic variation within the autosomal genomes. We hypothesized that genotype‐by‐sex (G × S) interactions contribute to the increased prevalence and severity.
Materials and methods
Using the case‐only design, we tested for differences in genetic effects between men and women in 896 North‐West European early‐onset cases, using imputed genotypes from the OmniExpress genotyping array. Population‐representative 6823 controls were used to verify that the interacting variables G and S were uncorrelated in the general population.
Results
In total, 20 loci indicated G × S associations (P < 0.0005), 3 of which were previously suggested as risk genes for periodontitis (ABLIM2, CDH13, and NELL1). We also found independent G × S interactions of the related gene paralogs MACROD1/FLRT1 (chr11) and MACROD2/FLRT3 (chr20). G × S‐associated SNPs at CPEB4, CDH13, MACROD1, and MECOM were genome‐wide‐associated with heel bone mineral density (CPEB4, MECOM), waist‐to‐hip ratio (CPEB4, MACROD1), and blood pressure (CPEB4, CDH13).
Conclusions
Our results indicate that natural genetic variation affects the different heritability of periodontitis among sexes and suggest genes that contribute to inter‐sex phenotypic variation in early‐onset periodontitis.
Sicherheit und Effektivität von Amisulprid zur Therapie von Übelkeit und Erbrechen nach Narkosen
(2021)
PONV stellt mit einer Inzidenz von circa 30 % ein relevantes Problem in der postoperativen Phase dar. Amisulprid ist ein atypisches Neuroleptikum, das zur Behandlung der Schizophrenie verwendet wird und gehört zur Gruppe der D2-Rezeptor-Antagonisten. Hierüber wirkt Amisulprid antiemetisch.
Ziel der Studie war, die Sicherheit und Effektivität einer intravenösen Einmalgabe von Amisulprid in den Dosierungen 5 mg und 10 mg zur Therapie von PONV, nach Versagen einer PONV-Prophylaxe, untereinander und gegenüber einem Placebo zu vergleichen. Es handelte sich hierbei um eine multizentrische, randomisierte, doppelblinde Phase-III-Studie.
Amisulprid zeigte ein benignes Nebenwirkungsprofil. Amisulprid zeigte in der Dosierung 10 mg eine statistisch signifikante Überlegenheit gegenüber Placebo sowohl zur Therapie von PONV, als auch im Auftreten signifikanter Übelkeit und im Gebrauch einer Rescue-Medikation.
Eine weitere interessante Fragestellung wäre der Vergleich der Sicherheit und Effektivität von Amisulprid mit einem weiteren Antiemetikum.
Im Zeitraum von 2004 bis 2016 erhielten an der Neurologischen Universitätsklinik Würzburg Patienten mit einer chronisch progredienten Multiplen Sklerose insgesamt 595 Injektionen von intrathekalem Triamcinolonacetonid. Diese Arbeit befasst sich mit Sicherheit, Nebenwirkungen und Wirksamkeit der intrathekalen Therapieform.
Murine infection models are widely used to study systemic candidiasis caused by C. albicans. Whole-blood models can help to elucidate host-pathogens interactions and have been used for several Candida species in human blood. We adapted the human whole-blood model to murine blood. Unlike human blood, murine blood was unable to reduce fungal burden and more substantial filamentation of C. albicans was observed. This coincided with less fungal association with leukocytes, especially neutrophils. The lower neutrophil number in murine blood only partially explains insufficient infection and filamentation control, as spiking with murine neutrophils had only limited effects on fungal killing. Furthermore, increased fungal survival is not mediated by enhanced filamentation, as a filament-deficient mutant was likewise not eliminated. We also observed host-dependent differences for interaction of platelets with C. albicans, showing enhanced platelet aggregation, adhesion and activation in murine blood. For human blood, opsonization was shown to decrease platelet interaction suggesting that complement factors interfere with fungus-to-platelet binding. Our results reveal substantial differences between murine and human whole-blood models infected with C. albicans and thereby demonstrate limitations in the translatability of this ex vivo model between hosts.
Industrially used semiconducting materials, building blocks of modern electronics and computer industry, are mostly based on inorganic, crystalline solids, which have the drawback of relatively high production costs. As an alternative, organic pi-conjugated systems show enhanced flexibility and processability as well as the opportunity to obtain light-weight materials. They have emerged as attractive candidates, especially since elements beyond hydrogen and carbon can be used to create pi-conjugated frameworks. In recent years, pi-conjugated oligomers and polymers with tricoordinate boron centers incorporated into the main chain of such organic polymers have attracted considerable attention as the interaction of the vacant p orbital on boron with an adjacent pi system of the chain leads to extended conjugated materials. These materials show intriguing optical and electronic properties and potential applications in organic electronics and optoelectronics (OLEDs, OFETs, photovoltaics) or as sensory materials.
In this thesis, a catalytic Si/B exchange reaction protocol is used as a facile and highly effective B-C bond formation method to synthesize organoboron molecules, oligomers, polymers and macrocycles. This reaction is applied to synthesize a series of thienyl- and furylborane based materials. Special focus is on furylborane based materials, which, in general, have been only scarcely explored so far. This is mainly due to synthetic challenges since furan decomposes readily in the presence of light and oxygen. Our mild and highly selective reaction protocol in combination with sufficient kinetic protection of the boron centers gives access to a series of extended organoboranes featuring furylborane units in the main chain. Furthermore, kinetically stabilized furylboranes are established as highly robust and versatile building blocks for pi conjugated materials. The obtained materials reveal remarkable luminescence properties. The scope of potential starting materials was investigated by a catalyst screening, demonstrating that the Si/B exchange reaction can also be performed for less reactive aryldichloroboranes. Furthermore, borazine-based hybrid cyclomatrix microspheres have been synthesized via a Si/B exchange condensation reaction under precipitation polymerization conditions. Finally, synthetic routes to tetrabora- and diboraporphyrinogens were attempted in a multi-step reaction procedure. In the case for tetraboraporphyrinogens, the final macrocyclization reaction under pseudo high-dilution conditions afforded a mixture of macrocycles with different ring sizes. UV-vis and fluorescence spectroscopic analysis indicated significant differences in comparison to their linear congeners.
Enhancing digital and precision agriculture is currently inevitable to overcome the economic and environmental challenges of the agriculture in the 21st century. The purpose of this study was to generate and compare management zones (MZ) based on the Sentinel-2 satellite data for variable rate application of mineral nitrogen in wheat production, calculated using different remote sensing (RS)-based models under varied soil, yield and crop data availability. Three models were applied, including (1) a modified “RS- and threshold-based clustering”, (2) a “hybrid-based, unsupervised clustering”, in which data from different sources were combined for MZ delineation, and (3) a “RS-based, unsupervised clustering”. Various data processing methods including machine learning were used in the model development. Statistical tests such as the Paired Sample T-test, Kruskal–Wallis H-test and Wilcoxon signed-rank test were applied to evaluate the final delineated MZ maps. Additionally, a procedure for improving models based on information about phenological phases and the occurrence of agricultural drought was implemented. The results showed that information on agronomy and climate enables improving and optimizing MZ delineation. The integration of prior knowledge on new climate conditions (drought) in image selection was tested for effective use of the models. Lack of this information led to the infeasibility of obtaining optimal results. Models that solely rely on remote sensing information are comparatively less expensive than hybrid models. Additionally, remote sensing-based models enable delineating MZ for fertilizer recommendations that are temporally closer to fertilization times.
Tensor tomography is fundamentally based on the assumption of a both anisotropic and linear contrast mechanism. While the X-ray or neutron dark-field contrast obtained with Talbot(-Lau) interferometers features the required anisotropy, a preceding detailed study of dark-field signal origination however found its specific orientation dependence to be a non-linear function of the underlying anisotropic mass distribution and its orientation, especially challenging the common assumption that dark-field signals are describable by a function over the unit sphere. Here, two approximative linear tensor models with reduced orientation dependence are investigated in a simulation study with regard to their applicability to grating based X-ray or neutron dark-field tensor tomography. By systematically simulating and reconstructing a large sample of isolated volume elements covering the full range of feasible anisotropies and orientations, direct correspondences are drawn between the respective tensors characterizing the physically based dark-field model used for signal synthesization and the mathematically motivated simplified models used for reconstruction. The anisotropy of freely rotating volume elements is thereby confirmed to be, for practical reconstruction purposes, approximable both as a function of the optical axis' orientation or as a function of the interferometer's grating orientation. The eigenvalues of the surrogate models' tensors are found to exhibit fuzzy, yet almost linear relations to those of the synthesization model. Dominant orientations are found to be recoverable with a margin of error on the order of magnitude of 1 degrees. Although the input data must adequately address the full orientation dependence of dark-field anisotropy, the present results clearly support the general feasibility of quantitative X-ray dark-field tensor tomography within an inherent yet acceptable statistical margin of uncertainty.
Simultaneous measurements of 3D wall shear stress and pulse wave velocity in the murine aortic arch
(2021)
Purpose
Wall shear stress (WSS) and pulse wave velocity (PWV) are important parameters to characterize blood flow in the vessel wall. Their quantification with flow-sensitive phase-contrast (PC) cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR), however, is time-consuming. Furthermore, the measurement of WSS requires high spatial resolution, whereas high temporal resolution is necessary for PWV measurements. For these reasons, PWV and WSS are challenging to measure in one CMR session, making it difficult to directly compare these parameters. By using a retrospective approach with a flexible reconstruction framework, we here aimed to simultaneously assess both PWV and WSS in the murine aortic arch from the same 4D flow measurement.
Methods
Flow was measured in the aortic arch of 18-week-old wildtype (n = 5) and ApoE\(^{−/−}\) mice (n = 5) with a self-navigated radial 4D-PC-CMR sequence. Retrospective data analysis was used to reconstruct the same dataset either at low spatial and high temporal resolution (PWV analysis) or high spatial and low temporal resolution (WSS analysis). To assess WSS, the aortic lumen was labeled by semi-automatically segmenting the reconstruction with high spatial resolution. WSS was determined from the spatial velocity gradients at the lumen surface. For calculation of the PWV, segmentation data was interpolated along the temporal dimension. Subsequently, PWV was quantified from the through-plane flow data using the multiple-points transit-time method. Reconstructions with varying frame rates and spatial resolutions were performed to investigate the influence of spatiotemporal resolution on the PWV and WSS quantification.
Results
4D flow measurements were conducted in an acquisition time of only 35 min. Increased peak flow and peak WSS values and lower errors in PWV estimation were observed in the reconstructions with high temporal resolution. Aortic PWV was significantly increased in ApoE\(^{−/−}\) mice compared to the control group (1.7 ± 0.2 versus 2.6 ± 0.2 m/s, p < 0.001). Mean WSS magnitude values averaged over the aortic arch were (1.17 ± 0.07) N/m\(^2\) in wildtype mice and (1.27 ± 0.10) N/m\(^2\) in ApoE\(^{−/−}\) mice.
Conclusion
The post processing algorithm using the flexible reconstruction framework developed in this study permitted quantification of global PWV and 3D-WSS in a single acquisition. The possibility to assess both parameters in only 35 min will markedly improve the analyses and information content of in vivo measurements.
Coupling N identical emitters to the same field mode is a well-established method to enhance light-matter interaction. However, the resulting √N boost of the coupling strength comes at the cost of a “linearized” (effectively semiclassical) dynamics. Here, we instead demonstrate a new approach for enhancing the coupling constant of a single quantum emitter, while retaining the nonlinear character of the light-matter interaction. We consider a single quantum emitter with N nearly degenerate transitions that are collectively coupled to the same field mode. We show that in such conditions an effective Jaynes-Cummings model emerges with a boosted coupling constant of order √N. The validity and consequences of our general conclusions are analytically demonstrated for the instructive case N=2. We further observe that our system can closely match the spectral line shapes and photon autocorrelation functions typical of Jaynes-Cummings physics, proving that quantum optical nonlinearities are retained. Our findings match up very well with recent broadband plasmonic nanoresonator strong-coupling experiments and will, therefore, facilitate the control and detection of single-photon nonlinearities at ambient conditions.
We describe a system for the analysis of an important unicellular eukaryotic flagellate in a confining and crowded environment. The parasite Trypanosoma brucei is arguably one of the most versatile microswimmers known. It has unique properties as a single microswimmer and shows remarkable adaptations (not only in motility, but prominently so), to its environment during a complex developmental cycle involving two different hosts. Specific life cycle stages show fascinating collective behaviour, as millions of cells can be forced to move together in extreme confinement. Our goal is to examine such motile behaviour directly in the context of the relevant environments. Therefore, for the first time, we analyse the motility behaviour of trypanosomes directly in a widely used assay, which aims to evaluate the parasites behaviour in collectives, in response to as yet unknown parameters. In a step towards understanding whether, or what type of, swarming behaviour of trypanosomes exists, we customised the assay for quantitative tracking analysis of motile behaviour on the single-cell level. We show that the migration speed of cell groups does not directly depend on single-cell velocity and that the system remains to be simplified further, before hypotheses about collective motility can be advanced.
Wissenschaftskompetenz ist eine Schlüsselqualifikation für jede ärztliche Tätigkeit und sollte ebenso wie die Auseinandersetzung mit Entscheidungsprozessen von Beginn an ins Medizinstudium integriert werden. Ziel der Studie war, die Themen der guten wissenschaftlichen Praxis und des wissenschaftlichen Fehlverhaltens zu vermitteln. Ferner wurde durch die methodische Intervention „Gruppendiskussion“ eine Reflexion im Kontext der wissenschaftlichen Angemessenheit herbeigeführt. Hierfür wurde der Situational Judgement Test (SJT) von den Studierenden (N = 743) (individuell und in der Gruppe) bearbeitet, und dessen Resultate wurden mit den Antworten von Expert/innen/en (N = 23) verglichen. Nach der Gruppendiskussion näherten sich die Ergebnisse in der Verteilung und Reihenfolge den Antwortmöglichkeiten der Expert/innen/en an. Jedoch tendierten die Studierenden signifikant häufiger zu jenen Antworten, die hilfesuchende, passive und verantwortungsübertragende Optionen bedeuteten. Insgesamt hat sich der SJT als didaktische Intervention bewährt. Die Studierenden setzten sich aktiv mit den Themen auseinander, eine Diskussion konnte angeregt und das eigene Verhalten kritisch reflektiert werden.
The unusual occurrence and developmental diversity of asexual eukaryotes remain a puzzle. De novo formation of a functioning asexual genome requires a unique assembly of sets of genes or gene states to disrupt cellular mechanisms of meiosis and gametogenesis, and to affect discrete components of sexuality and produce clonal or hemiclonal offspring. We highlight two usually overlooked but essential conditions to understand the molecular nature of clonal organisms, that is, a nonrecombinant genomic assemblage retaining modifiers of the sexual program, and a complementation between altered reproductive components. These subtle conditions are the basis for physiologically viable and genetically balanced transitions between generations. Genomic and developmental evidence from asexual animals and plants indicates the lack of complementation of molecular changes in the sexual reproductive program is likely the main cause of asexuals' rarity, and can provide an explanatory frame for the developmental diversity and lability of developmental patterns in some asexuals as well as for the discordant time to extinction estimations.
SLC6A2-regulierende microRNAs bei Angsterkrankungen: Genexpressions- und Assoziationsuntersuchungen
(2021)
Angsterkrankungen sind häufige Krankheitsbilder mit bislang nicht vollständig geklärter multifaktorieller Ätiologie. Neben Umwelt- und psychosozialen Faktoren zeigen Studien eine signifikante familiäre Häufung und lassen eine genetische Komponente mit einer Heritabilität in einem Bereich von 30-60 % vermuten. Da hierbei am ehesten von einem komplexen Zusammenspiel verschiedenster Gene mit unterschiedlicher Relevanz auszugehen ist, stellen miRNAs eine bedeutende Größe dar, da sie es vermögen auf transkriptioneller Ebene Einfluss auf die Regulierung einer Vielzahl von Genen zu nehmen.
Verschiedene Aspekte liefern Hinweise darauf, dass eine Neurotransmitterdysregulation eine wichtige Komponente in der Pathogenese von Angsterkrankungen einnimmt – insbesondere veränderte noradrenerge Signalwege sind hierbei entscheidend beteiligt. Dies macht den Noradrenalin-Transporter bzw. SLC6A2 zu einem interessanten Kandidatengen, und stellt die Bezugsgröße der angestellten Untersuchungen in dieser Arbeit dar. miRNAs, welche die SLC6A2-Expression modulieren, können somit Einfluss auf zentrale Verarbeitungswege von Angst nehmen.
Im ersten Teil der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden potentielle miRNA-Regulatoren von SLC6A2 in silico ermittelt und in einem weiteren Schritt in vitro überprüft. Zehn der miRNAs (hsa-miR-378g, hsa-miR-330-5p, hsa-miR-4781-5p, hsa-miR664b-3p, hsa-miR-4715-3p, hsa-miR-579-3p, hsa-miR-3921, hsa-miR-3622b-5p, hsa-miR-4773, hsa-miR-532-3p) zeigten hierbei eine relevante Abnahme der Luciferase-Aktivität als Hinweis auf ihre funktionelle Relevanz und stellen damit die Basis der nachfolgenden Untersuchungen dar.
Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit wurden Einzelbasenpolymorphismen im Bereich der zuvor ermittelten miRNA-Gene sowie eines SNP innerhalb der 3’-UTR von SLC6A2 mittels Fall-Kontroll-Studie in einer Population von Patienten mit Panikstörung und entsprechenden Kontrollen untersucht. Eine nominelle Assoziation ließ sich für das (minor) T-Allel von rs2910931 (stromaufwärts von MIR579) (p-allel = 0,004) sowie das (major) A-Allel von rs2582372 (p-allel = 0,023) feststellen. In Einklang hiermit ließ sich weiterhin für rs2910931 eine signifikante Assoziation zwischen der Anzahl der (minor) T-Allele und dem ASI-Wert (β = 0,371, p = 0,029, 95 %-CI 0,039-0,702) sowie dem ACQ-Wert (β = 0,012, p = 0,041, 95 %-CI 0,000-0,023) ermitteln. Somit zeigt sich eine Einflussnahme der genetischen Variante um MIR579 auf die Feinmodulation der Noradrenalin-Homöostase als möglichem ätiopathogenetischen Faktor von Angsterkrankungen.
Small proteins, often defined as shorter than 50 amino acids, have been implicated
in fundamental cellular processes. Despite this, they have been largely understudied throughout all domains of life, since their size often makes their identification and characterization challenging.
This work addressed the knowledge gap surrounding small proteins with a focus
on the model bacterial pathogen Salmonella Typhimurium. In a first step,
new small proteins were identified with a combination of computational and experimental approaches. Infection-relevant datasets were then investigated with
the updated Salmonella annotation to prioritize promising candidates involved in virulence.
To implement the annotation of new small proteins, predictions from the algorithm
sPepFinder were merged with those derived from Ribo-seq. These were added to the Salmonella annotation and used to (re)analyse different datasets. Information
regarding expression during infection (dual RNA-seq) and requirement for virulence (TraDIS) was collected for each given coding sequence. In parallel,
Grad-seq data were mined to identify small proteins engaged in intermolecular
interactions.
The combination of dual RNA-seq and TraDIS lead to the identification of small
proteins with features of virulence factors, namely high intracellular induction
and a virulence phenotype upon transposon insertion. As a proof of principle of
the power of this approach in highlighting high confidence candidates, two small
proteins were characterized in the context of Salmonella infection.
MgrB, a known regulator of the PhoPQ two-component system, was shown to be essential for the infection of epithelial cells and macrophages, possibly via its stabilizing effect on flagella or by interacting with other sensor kinases of twocomponent
systems. YjiS, so far uncharacterized in Salmonella, had an opposite role in infection, with its deletion rendering Salmonella hypervirulent. The mechanism underlying this, though still obscure, likely relies on the interaction with
inner-membrane proteins.
Overall, this work provides a global description of Salmonella small proteins in
the context of infection with a combinatorial approach that expedites the identification
of interesting candidates. Different high-throughput datasets available for
a broad range of organisms can be analysed in a similar manner with a focus on small proteins. This will lead to the identification of key factors in the regulation
of various processes, thus for example providing targets for the treatment of bacterial
infections or, in the case of commensal bacteria, for the modulation of the microbiota composition.
The small, regulatory RNA RepG (Regulator of polymeric G-repeats) regulates the expression of the chemotaxis receptor TlpB in Helicobacter pylori by targeting a variable G-repeat in the tlpB mRNA leader. Here, we show that RepG additionally controls lipopolysaccharide (LPS) phase variation by also modulating the expression of a gene (hp0102) that is co-transcribed with tlpB. The hp0102 gene encodes a glycosyltransferase required for LPS O-chain biosynthesis and in vivo colonization of the mouse stomach. The G-repeat length defines a gradual (rather than ON/OFF) control of LPS biosynthesis by RepG, and leads to gradual resistance to a membrane-targeting antibiotic. Thus, RepG-mediated modulation of LPS structure might impact host immune recognition and antibiotic sensitivity, thereby helping H. pylori to adapt and persist in the host. The small RNA RepG modulates expression of chemotaxis receptor TlpB in Helicobacter pylori by targeting a length-variable G-repeat in the tlpB mRNA. Here, Pernitzsch et al. show that RepG also gradually controls lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis, antibiotic susceptibility, and in-vivo colonization of the stomach, by regulating a gene that is co-transcribed with tlpB.
SMART (Simple Modular Architecture Research Tool) is a web resource (https://smart.embl.de) for the identification and annotation of protein domains and the analysis of protein domain architectures. SMART version 9 contains manually curatedmodels formore than 1300 protein domains, with a topical set of 68 new models added since our last update article (1). All the new models are for diverse recombinase families and subfamilies and as a set they provide a comprehensive overview of mobile element recombinases namely transposase, integrase, relaxase, resolvase, cas1 casposase and Xer like cellular recombinase. Further updates include the synchronization of the underlying protein databases with UniProt (2), Ensembl (3) and STRING (4), greatly increasing the total number of annotated domains and other protein features available in architecture analysis mode. Furthermore, SMART's vector-based protein display engine has been extended and updated to use the latest web technologies and the domain architecture analysis components have been optimized to handle the increased number of protein features available.
The presence of a partner can attenuate physiological fear responses, a phenomenon known as social buffering. However, not all individuals are equally sociable. Here we investigated whether social buffering of fear is shaped by sensitivity to social anxiety (social concern) and whether these effects are different in females and males. We collected skin conductance responses (SCRs) and affect ratings of female and male participants when they experienced aversive and neutral sounds alone (alone treatment) or in the presence of an unknown person of the same gender (social treatment). Individual differences in social concern were assessed based on a well-established questionnaire. Our results showed that social concern had a stronger effect on social buffering in females than in males. The lower females scored on social concern, the stronger the SCRs reduction in the social compared to the alone treatment. The effect of social concern on social buffering of fear in females disappeared if participants were paired with a virtual agent instead of a real person. Together, these results showed that social buffering of human fear is shaped by gender and social concern. In females, the presence of virtual agents can buffer fear, irrespective of individual differences in social concern. These findings specify factors that shape the social modulation of human fear, and thus might be relevant for the treatment of anxiety disorders.
Emotion-motivation models propose that behaviors, including health behaviors, should be predicted by the same variables that also predict negative affect since emotional reactions should induce a motivation to avoid threatening situations. In contrast, social cognitive models propose that safety behaviors are predicted by a different set of variables that mainly reflect cognitive and socio-structural aspects. Here, we directly tested these opposing hypotheses in young adults (N = 4134) in the context of COVID-19-related safety behaviors to prevent infections. In each participant, we collected measures of negative affect as well as cognitive and socio-structural variables during the lockdown in the first infection wave in Germany. We found a negative effect of the pandemic on emotional responses. However, this was not the main predictor for young adults’ willingness to comply with COVID-19-related safety measures. Instead, individual differences in compliance were mainly predicted by cognitive and socio-structural variables. These results were confirmed in an independent data set. This study shows that individuals scoring high on negative affect during the pandemic are not necessarily more likely to comply with safety regulations. Instead, political measures should focus on cognitive interventions and the societal relevance of the health issue. These findings provide important insights into the basis of health-related concerns and feelings as well as behavioral adaptations.
Die Regulation der Genexpression steht am Anfang vieler zellbiologischer Prozesse wie beispielsweise dem Zellwachstum oder der Differenzierung. Gene werden an Promotoren transkribiert, wobei ein Promotor selbst aus vielen logischen Einheiten aufgebaut ist, den Transkriptionsfaktorbindestellen (TFBSs). Diese können sehr nah beieinander liegen, aber auch weit entfernt voneinander sein. Sie werden spezifisch von Transkriptionsfaktoren (TFs) gebunden, die die Transkritptionsrate z.B. verstärken (Enhancer) oder schwächen (Silencer) können. Zwei oder mehr dieser TFBSs mit bestimmtem Abstand werden als "Module" zusammengefasst, die über Spezies hinweg konserviert sein können. Typischerweise findet man Module in Zellen mit einem Zellkern. Spezies mit gemeinsamen Modulen können ein Hinweis auf die gemeinsame phylogenetische Abstammung darstellen, aber auch gemeinsame Funktionsmechanismen von TFs über Gene hinweg aufdecken. Heutzutage sind verschiedene Anwendungen verfügbar, mit denen nach TFBSs in DNA gesucht werden kann. Zum Zeitpunkt des Verfassens dieser Arbeit sind aber nur zwei kommerzielle Produkte bekannt, die nicht nur TFBSs, sondern auch Module erkennen. Deshalb stellen wir hier die freie und quelloffene Lösung "AIModules" vor, die diese Lücke füllt und einen Webservice zur Verfügung stellt, der es erlaubt nach TFBSs sowie nach Modulen auf DNA- und auf RNA-Abschnitten zu suchen. Für die Motivesuche werden entweder Matrizen aus der Jaspar Datenbank oder Matrizen vom Anwender verwendet. Darüberhinaus zeigen wir, dass unser Tool für die TF Suche nur Sekunden benötigt, wohingegen conTraV3 mindestens eine Stunde für dieselbe Analyse braucht. Zusätzlich kann der Anwender bei unserem Tool den Grad der Konserviertheit für TFs mit angeben und wir zeigen, dass wir mit unserer Lösung, die die Jaspar Datenbank heranzieht, mehr Module finden, als ein kommerziell verfügbares Produkt. Weiterhin kann mit unserer Lösung auch auf RNA-Sequenzen nach regulatorischen Motiven gesucht werden, wenn der Anwender die dafür nötigen Matrizen liefert. Wir zeigen dies am Beispiel von Polyadenylierungsstellen. Zusammenfassend stellen wir ein Werkzeug vor, das erstens frei und quelloffen ist und zweitens entweder auf Servern veröffentlicht werden kann oder On-Site auf einem Notebook läuft. Unser Tool erlaubt es Promotoren zu analysieren und nach konservierten Modulen sowie TFBSs in Genfamilien sowie nach regulatorischen Elementen in mRNA wie z.B. Polyadenylierungsstellen oder andere regulatorische Elemente wie beispielsweise Enhancern oder Silencern in genomischer DNA zu suchen.
A protecting group strategy was employed to synthesise a series of indolenine squaraine dye oligomers up to the nonamer. The longer oligomers show a distinct solvent dependence of the absorption spectra, that is, either a strong blue shift or a strong red shift of the lowest energy bands in the near infrared spectral region. This behaviour is explained by exciton coupling theory as being due to H- or J-type coupling of transition moments. The H-type coupling is a consequence of a helix folding in solvents with a small Hansen dispersity index. DOSY NMR, small angle neutron scattering (SANS), quantum chemical and force field calculations agree upon a helix structure with an unusually large pitch and open voids that are filled with solvent molecules, thereby forming a kind of clathrate. The thermodynamic parameters of the folding process were determined by temperature dependent optical absorption spectra.
Companies increasingly seek to use gay protagonists in audio-visual commercials to attract a new affluent target group. There is also growing demand for the diversity present in society to be reflected in media formats such as advertising. Studies have shown, however, that heterosexual consumers (especially men), who may be part of the company's loyal consumer base, tend to react negatively to gay-themed advertising campaigns. Searching for an instrument to mitigate this unwanted effect, the present study investigated whether carefully selected background music can shape the perceived gender of gay male advertising protagonists. In a 2 × 2 between-subjects online experiment (musical connotation × gender of the participant), 218 heterosexual participants watched a commercial promoting engagement rings that featured gay male protagonists, scored with feminine- or masculine-connoted background music. As expected, women generally reacted more positively than men to the advertising. Men exposed to the masculine-connoted background music rated the promoted brand more positively, and masculine music also enhanced (at least in the short term) these men's acceptance of gay men in general (low and medium effect sizes) more than was the case for feminine background music. Carefully selected background music affecting the perceived gender of gay male advertising protagonists may prevent negative reactions from heterosexual audiences and, therefore, motivate companies to use gay protagonists in television commercials on a more regular basis.
Plenty of theories, models, measures, and investigations target the understanding of virtual presence, i.e., the sense of presence in immersive Virtual Reality (VR). Other varieties of the so-called eXtended Realities (XR), e.g., Augmented and Mixed Reality (AR and MR) incorporate immersive features to a lesser degree and continuously combine spatial cues from the real physical space and the simulated virtual space. This blurred separation questions the applicability of the accumulated knowledge about the similarities of virtual presence and presence occurring in other varieties of XR, and corresponding outcomes. The present work bridges this gap by analyzing the construct of presence in mixed realities (MR). To achieve this, the following presents (1) a short review of definitions, dimensions, and measurements of presence in VR, and (2) the state of the art views on MR. Additionally, we (3) derived a working definition of MR, extending the Milgram continuum. This definition is based on entities reaching from real to virtual manifestations at one time point. Entities possess different degrees of referential power, determining the selection of the frame of reference. Furthermore, we (4) identified three research desiderata, including research questions about the frame of reference, the corresponding dimension of transportation, and the dimension of realism in MR. Mainly the relationship between the main aspects of virtual presence of immersive VR, i.e., the place-illusion, and the plausibility-illusion, and of the referential power of MR entities are discussed regarding the concept, measures, and design of presence in MR. Finally, (5) we suggested an experimental setup to reveal the research heuristic behind experiments investigating presence in MR. The present work contributes to the theories and the meaning of and approaches to simulate and measure presence in MR. We hypothesize that research about essential underlying factors determining user experience (UX) in MR simulations and experiences is still in its infancy and hopes this article provides an encouraging starting point to tackle related questions.
(1) Background: The aim of our study was to identify specific risk factors for fatal outcome in critically ill COVID-19 patients. (2) Methods: Our data set consisted of 840 patients enclosed in the LEOSS registry. Using lasso regression for variable selection, a multifactorial logistic regression model was fitted to the response variable survival. Specific risk factors and their odds ratios were derived. A nomogram was developed as a graphical representation of the model. (3) Results: 14 variables were identified as independent factors contributing to the risk of death for critically ill COVID-19 patients: age (OR 1.08, CI 1.06–1.10), cardiovascular disease (OR 1.64, CI 1.06–2.55), pulmonary disease (OR 1.87, CI 1.16–3.03), baseline Statin treatment (0.54, CI 0.33–0.87), oxygen saturation (unit = 1%, OR 0.94, CI 0.92–0.96), leukocytes (unit 1000/μL, OR 1.04, CI 1.01–1.07), lymphocytes (unit 100/μL, OR 0.96, CI 0.94–0.99), platelets (unit 100,000/μL, OR 0.70, CI 0.62–0.80), procalcitonin (unit ng/mL, OR 1.11, CI 1.05–1.18), kidney failure (OR 1.68, CI 1.05–2.70), congestive heart failure (OR 2.62, CI 1.11–6.21), severe liver failure (OR 4.93, CI 1.94–12.52), and a quick SOFA score of 3 (OR 1.78, CI 1.14–2.78). The nomogram graphically displays the importance of these 14 factors for mortality. (4) Conclusions: There are risk factors that are specific to the subpopulation of critically ill COVID-19 patients.
Genes encoding endocannabinoid and sphingolipid metabolism pathways were suggested to contribute to the genetic risk towards attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). The present pilot study assessed plasma concentrations of candidate endocannabinoids, sphingolipids and ceramides in individuals with adult ADHD in comparison with healthy controls and patients with affective disorders. Targeted lipid analyses of 23 different lipid species were performed in 71 mental disorder patients and 98 healthy controls (HC). The patients were diagnosed with adult ADHD (n = 12), affective disorder (major depression, MD n = 16 or bipolar disorder, BD n = 6) or adult ADHD with comorbid affective disorders (n = 37). Canonical discriminant analysis and CHAID analyses were used to identify major components that predicted the diagnostic group. ADHD patients had increased plasma concentrations of sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P d18:1) and sphinganine-1-phosphate (S1P d18:0). In addition, the endocannabinoids, anandamide (AEA) and arachidonoylglycerol were increased. MD/BD patients had increased long chain ceramides, most prominently Cer22:0, but low endocannabinoids in contrast to ADHD patients. Patients with ADHD and comorbid affective disorders displayed increased S1P d18:1 and increased Cer22:0, but the individual lipid levels were lower than in the non-comorbid disorders. Sphingolipid profiles differ between patients suffering from ADHD and affective disorders, with overlapping patterns in comorbid patients. The S1P d18:1 to Cer22:0 ratio may constitute a diagnostic or prognostic tool.
As viruses are obligatory intracellular parasites, any step during their life cycle strictly depends on successful interaction with their particular host cells. In particular, their interaction with cellular membranes is of crucial importance for most steps in the viral replication cycle. Such interactions are initiated by uptake of viral particles and subsequent trafficking to intracellular compartments to access their replication compartments which provide a spatially confined environment concentrating viral and cellular components, and subsequently, employ cellular membranes for assembly and exit of viral progeny. The ability of viruses to actively modulate lipid composition such as sphingolipids (SLs) is essential for successful completion of the viral life cycle. In addition to their structural and biophysical properties of cellular membranes, some sphingolipid (SL) species are bioactive and as such, take part in cellular signaling processes involved in regulating viral replication. It is especially due to the progress made in tools to study accumulation and dynamics of SLs, which visualize their compartmentalization and identify interaction partners at a cellular level, as well as the availability of genetic knockout systems, that the role of particular SL species in the viral replication process can be analyzed and, most importantly, be explored as targets for therapeutic intervention.
Spin defects in solid-state materials are strong candidate systems for quantum information technology and sensing applications. Here we explore in details the recently discovered negatively charged boron vacancies (V\(_B\)\(^−\)) in hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) and demonstrate their use as atomic scale sensors for temperature, magnetic fields and externally applied pressure. These applications are possible due to the high-spin triplet ground state and bright spin-dependent photoluminescence of the V\(_B\)\(^−\). Specifically, we find that the frequency shift in optically detected magnetic resonance measurements is not only sensitive to static magnetic fields, but also to temperature and pressure changes which we relate to crystal lattice parameters. We show that spin-rich hBN films are potentially applicable as intrinsic sensors in heterostructures made of functionalized 2D materials.
Spin-Orbit Torques and Galvanomagnetic Effects Generated by the 3D Topological Insulator HgTe
(2021)
Nature shows us only the tail of the lion. But I have no doubt that the lion belongs with it even if he cannot reveal himself all at once. Albert Einstein
In my dissertation, I addressed the question of whether the 3D topological insulator mercury telluride (3D TI HgTe) is a suitable material for spintronics applications. This question was addressed by investigating the SOTs generated by the 3D TI HgTe in an adjacent ferromagnet (Permalloy) by using the ferromagnetic resonance technique (SOT-FMR).
In the first part of the dissertation, the reader was introduced to the mathematical description of the SOTs of a hybrid system consisting of a topological insulator (TI) and a ferromagnet (FM). Furthermore, the sample preparation and the measurement setup for the SOT-FMR measurements were discussed. Our SOT-FMR measurements showed that at low temperatures (T = 4.2 K) the out-of-plane component of the torque is dominant. At room temperature, both in-plane and out-of-plane components of the torque could be observed. From the symmetry of the mixing voltage (Figs. 3.14 and 3.15) we could conclude that the 3D TI HgTe may be efficient for the generation of spin torques in the permalloy [1]. The investigations reported here showed that the SOT efficiencies generated by the 3D TI HgTe are comparable with other existent topological insulators (see Fig. 3.17). We also discussed in detail the parasitic effects (such as thermovoltages) that can contribute to the correct interpretation of the spin torque efficiencies.
Although the results reported here provide several indications that the 3D TI HgTe might be efficient in exerting spin-torques in adjacent ferromagnets [2], the reader was repeatedly made aware that parasitic effects might contaminate the correct writing and reading of the information in the ferromagnet. These effects should be taken into consideration when interpreting results in the published literature claiming high spin-orbit torque efficiencies [2–4]. The drawbacks of the SOT-FMR measurement method led to a further development of our measurement concept, in which the ferromagnet on top of the 3D TI HgTe was replaced by a
spin-valve structure. In contrast with our measurements, in this measurement setup, the current flowing through the HgTe is known and changes in the spin-valve resistance can be read via the GMR effect.
Moreover, the SOT-FMR experiments required the application of an in-plane magnetic field up to 300 mT to define the magnetization direction in the ferromagnet. Motivated by this fact, we investigated the influence of an in-plane magnetic field in the magnetoresistance of the 3D TI HgTe. The surprising results of these measurements are described in the second part of the dissertation. Although the TI studied here is non-magnetic, its transversal MR (Rxy) showed an oscillating behavior that depended on the angle between the in-plane magnetic field and the electrical current. This effect is a typical property of ferromagnetic materials and is called planar Hall effect (PHE) [5, 6]. Moreover, it was also shown that the PHE amplitude (Rxy) and the longitudinal resistance (Rxx) oscillate as a function of the in-plane magnetic field amplitude for a wide range of carrier densities of the topological insulator.
The PHE was already described in another TI material (Bi2−xSbxTe3) [7]. The authors suggested as a possible mechanism the scattering of the electron off impurities that are polarized by an in-plane magnetic field. We critically discussed this and other theoretical proposed mechanisms existent in the literature [8, 9].
In this thesis, we attempted to explain the origin of the PHE in the 3D TI HgTe by anisotropies in the band structure of this material. The k.p calculations based on 6-orbitals were able to demonstrate that an interplay between Rashba, Dresselhaus, and in-plane magnetic field deforms the Fermi contours of the camel back band of the 3D TI HgTe, which could lead to anisotropies in its conductivity. However, the magnetic fields needed to experimentally observe this effect are as
high as 40 T, i.e., one order of magnitude higher than reported in our experiments. Additionally, calculations of the DoS to assess if there is a difference in the states for Bin parallel and Bin perpendicular to the current were, so far, inconclusive. Moreover, the complicated dependence of Rashba in the p-conducting
regime of HgTe [10] makes it not straightforward the inclusion of this term in the band structure calculations.
Despite the extensive efforts to understand the origin of the galvanomagnetic effects in the 3D TI HgTe, we could not determine a clear mechanism for the origin of the PHE and the MR oscillations studied in this thesis. However, our work clarifies and excludes a few mechanisms reported in the literature as the origin of these effects in the 3D TI HgTe. The major challenge, which still needs to be overcome, is to find a model that simultaneously explains the PHE, the gate dependence, and the oscillations in the magnetoresistance of the 3D TI HgTe as a function of the in-plane magnetic field.
To conclude, the author would like to express her hope to have brought the reader closer to the complexity of the questions addressed in this thesis and to have initiated them into the art of properly conducting electrical transport measurements on topological insulators with in-plane magnetic fields.
3D cell cultures allow a better mimicry of the biological and mechanical environment of cells in vivo compared to 2D cultures. However, 3D cell cultures have been challenging for ultrasoft tissues such as the brain. The present study uses a microfiber reinforcement approach combining mouse primary spinal cord neurons in Matrigel with melt electrowritten (MEW) frames. Within these 3D constructs, neuronal network development is followed for 21 days in vitro. To evaluate neuronal development in 3D constructs, the maturation of inhibitory glycinergic synapses is analyzed using protein expression, the complex mechanical properties by assessing nonlinearity, conditioning, and stress relaxation, and calcium imaging as readouts. Following adaptation to the 3D matrix-frame, mature inhibitory synapse formation is faster than in 2D demonstrated by a steep increase in glycine receptor expression between days 3 and 10. The 3D expression pattern of marker proteins at the inhibitory synapse and the mechanical properties resemble the situation in native spinal cord tissue. Moreover, 3D spinal cord neuronal networks exhibit intensive neuronal activity after 14 days in culture. The spinal cord cell culture model using ultrasoft matrix reinforced by MEW fibers provides a promising tool to study and understand biomechanical mechanisms in health and disease.
Organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs) based on thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) utilize molecular systems with a small energy splitting between singlet and triplet states. This can either be realized in intramolecular charge transfer states of molecules with near‐orthogonal donor and acceptor moieties or in intermolecular exciplex states formed between a suitable combination of individual donor and acceptor materials. Here, 4,4′‐(9H,9′H‐[3,3′‐bicarbazole]‐9,9′‐diyl)bis(3‐(trifluoromethyl) benzonitrile) (pCNBCzoCF\(_{3}\)) is investigated, which shows intramolecular TADF but can also form exciplex states in combination with 4,4′,4′′‐tris[phenyl(m‐tolyl)amino]triphenylamine (m‐MTDATA). Orange emitting exciplex‐based OLEDs additionally generate a sky‐blue emission from the intramolecular emitter with an intensity that can be voltage‐controlled. Electroluminescence detected magnetic resonance (ELDMR) is applied to study the thermally activated spin‐dependent triplet to singlet up‐conversion in operating devices. Thereby, intermediate excited states involved in OLED operation can be investigated and the corresponding activation energy for both, intra‐ and intermolecular based TADF can be derived. Furthermore, a lower estimate is given for the extent of the triplet wavefunction to be ≥ 1.2 nm. Photoluminescence detected magnetic resonance (PLDMR) reveals the population of molecular triplets in optically excited thin films. Overall, the findings allow to draw a comprehensive picture of the spin‐dependent emission from intra‐ and intermolecular TADF OLEDs.
The objective of this study was to examine the therapeutic potential of multiple sessions of training on a split-belt treadmill (SBT) combined with cerebellar anodal transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) on gait and balance in People with Multiple Sclerosis (PwMS). Twenty-two PwMS received six sessions of anodal (PwMS\(_{real}\), n = 12) or sham (PwMS\(_{sham}\), n = 10) tDCS to the cerebellum prior to performing the locomotor adaptation task on the SBT. To evaluate the effect of the intervention, functional gait assessment (FGA) scores and distance walked in 2 min (2MWT) were measured at the baseline (T0), day 6 (T5), and at the 4-week follow up (T6). Locomotor performance and changes of motor outcomes were similar in PwMS\(_{real}\) and PwMS\(_{sham}\) independently from tDCS mode applied to the cerebellum (anodal vs. sham, on FGA, p = 0.23; and 2MWT, p = 0.49). When the data were pooled across the groups to investigate the effects of multiple sessions of SBT training alone, significant improvement of gait and balance was found on T5 and T6, respectively, relative to baseline (FGA, p < 0.001 for both time points). The FGA change at T6 was significantly higher than at T5 (p = 0.01) underlining a long-lasting improvement. An improvement of the distance walked during the 2MWT was also observed on T5 and T6 relative to T0 (p = 0.002). Multiple sessions of SBT training resulted in a lasting improvement of gait stability and endurance, thus potentially reducing the risk of fall as measured by FGA and 2MWT. Application of cerebellar tDCS during SBT walking had no additional effect on locomotor outcomes.
Background: Computed tomography (CT) pulmonary angiography is the diagnostic reference standard in suspected pulmonary embolism (PE). Favorable results for dual-energy CT (DECT) images have been reported for this condition. Nowadays, dual-energy data acquisition is feasible with different technical options, including a single-source split-filter approach. Therefore, the aim of this retrospective study was to investigate image quality and radiation dose of thoracic split-filter DECT in comparison to conventional single-energy CT in patients with suspected PE.
Methods: A total of 110 CT pulmonary angiographies were accomplished either as standard single-energy CT with automatic tube voltage selection (ATVS) (n=58), or as split-filter DECT (n=52). Objective [pulmonary artery CT attenuation, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR)] and subjective image quality [four-point Likert scale; three readers (R)] were compared among the two study groups. Size-specific dose estimates (SSDE), dose-length-product (DLP) and volume CT dose index (CTDIvol) were assessed for radiation dose analysis.
Results: Split-filter DECT images yielded 67.7% higher SNR (27.0 vs. 16.1; P<0.001) and 61.9% higher CNR (22.5 vs. 13.9; P<0.001) over conventional single-energy images, whereas CT attenuation was significantly lower (344.5 vs. 428.2 HU; P=0.013). Subjective image quality was rated good or excellent in 93.0%/98.3%/77.6% (R1/R2/R3) of the single-energy CT scans, and 84.6%/82.7%/80.8% (R1/R2/R3) of the split-filter DECT scans. SSDE, DLP and CTDIvol were significantly lower for conventional single-energy CT compared to split-filter DECT (all P<0.05), which was associated with 26.7% higher SSDE.
Conclusions: In the diagnostic workup of acute PE, the split-filter allows for dual-energy data acquisition from single-source single-layer CT scanners. The existing opportunity to assess pulmonary “perfusion” based on analysis of iodine distribution maps is associated with higher radiation dose in terms of increased SSDE than conventional single-energy CT with ATVS. Moreover, a proportion of up to 3.8% non-diagnostic examinations in the current reference standard test for PE is not negligible.
Causal therapies for the auditory-pathway and inner-ear diseases are still not yet available for clinical application. Regenerative medicine approaches are discussed and examined as possible therapy options. Neural stem cells could play a role in the regeneration of the auditory pathway. In recent years, neural stem and progenitor cells have been identified in the cochlear nucleus, the second nucleus of the auditory pathway. The current investigation aimed to analyze cell maturation concerning cellular calcium activity. Cochlear nuclei from PND9 CD rats were microscopically dissected and propagated as neurospheres in free-floating cultures in stem-cell medium (Neurobasal, B27, GlutaMAX, EGF, bFGF). After 30 days, the dissociation and plating of these cells took place under withdrawal of the growth factors and the addition of retinoic acid, which induces neural cell differentiation. Calcium imaging analysis with BAPTA-1/Oregon Green was carried out at different times during the differentiation phase. In addition, the influence of different voltage-dependent calcium channels was analyzed through the targeted application of inhibitors of the L-, N-, R- and T-type calcium channels. For this purpose, comparative examinations were performed on CN NSCs, and primary CN neurons. As the cells differentiated, a significant increase in spontaneous neuronal calcium activity was demonstrated. In the differentiation stage, specific frequencies of the spontaneous calcium oscillations were measured in different regions of the individual cells. Initially, the highest frequency of spontaneous calcium oscillations was ascertainable in the maturing somata. Over time, these were overtaken by calcium oscillations in the axons and dendrites. Additionally, in the area of the growth cones, an increasing activity was determined. By inhibiting voltage-dependent calcium channels, their expression and function in the differentiation process were confirmed. A comparable pattern of maturation of these channels was found in CN NSCs and primary CN neurons. The present results show that neural stem cells of the rat cochlear nucleus differentiated not only morphologically but also functionally. Spontaneous calcium activities are of great relevance in terms of neurogenesis and integration into existing neuronal structures. These functional aspects of neurogenesis within the auditory pathway could serve as future targets for the exogenous control of neuronal regeneration.
Bouldern ist eine noch relativ junge Trendsportart aus der Familie des Klettersports, die in den letzten Jahren starken Zuwachs gewonnen hat. Es gibt bisher wenig Literatur zu Verletzungen durch Bouldern generell und insbesondere zu Indoor-Bouldern. Das Ziel dieser Studie war Daten zu Verletzungshäufigkeit, -schwere und -lokalisation durch Indoor-Bouldern zu erheben sowie den Einfluss von potenziell das Verletzungsrisiko modulierenden Faktoren zu untersuchen.
Mittels eines Online-Fragebogens wurden Boulderer retrospektiv zu anthropometrischen Daten, potenziell risikomodulierendem Verhalten sowie Verletzungen in der Vergangenheit befragt. Anschließend wurde monatlich prospektiv über ein Jahr das Auftreten neuer Verletzungen erhoben. Zusätzlich wurden Patienten der Notaufnahme und Klettersprechstunde mit Verletzungen durch Indoor-Bouldern zu Diagnose, Unfallhergang sowie potenziell risikomodulierendem Verhalten befragt.
Knapp 60% aller Probanden hatten in der Vergangenheit bereits mindestens eine Verletzung erlitten, 44% eine Verletzung, die eine ärztliche Konsultation erforderte. Während der prospektiv beobachteten 12 Monate trat bei 44% der Probanden mindestens eine Verletzung durch Indoor-Bouldern auf, davon 78% im UIAA Schweregrad 1, 19% im Schweregrad 2 und 3% im Schweregrad 3. Die obere Extremität war von 63% aller Verletzungen betroffen, die untere Extremität von 23%. Verletzungen der unteren Extremität waren häufiger im UIAA Schweregrad ≥ 2 klassifiziert (p = 0,007).
Probanden, die Bouldern erst seit maximal einem Jahr betrieben, hatten ein erhöhtes Risiko für Verletzungen der unteren Extremität (p = 0,027). Keine der untersuchten protektiven Maßnahmen inklusive Spotten konnten das Verletzungsrisiko senken. Das Nutzen von Kletterschuhen mit starkem Downturn und Vorspann erhöhte das Risiko für Verletzungen im UIAA Schweregrad ≥ 2 (p = 0,003). Verletzungen der Patienten aus Notaufnahme und Klettersprechstunde waren in 5,1% im UIAA Schweregrad 1, 48,7% im Schweregrad 2 und 46,2% im Schweregrad 3. Verletzungen der unteren Extremität waren häufiger im Schweregrad 3 (p = 0,015).
Verletzungen durch Indoor Bouldern sind häufig, der Großteil erfordert jedoch keine medizinische Behandlung. Verletzungen der unteren Extremität sind gehäuft in einem höheren Schweregrad. Die untersuchten Präventivmaßnahmen senkten das Verletzungsrisiko nicht. Einsteigerkurse sollten insbesondere sicheres Abspringen und Stürzen trainieren. Das Nutzen eines weiteren Paares Kletterschuhe ohne starken Downturn und Vorspann für das Training scheint ratsam. Zukünftige Forschung sollte sich der Verletzungsprävention insbesondere durch Stürzen und Abspringen widmen.
Ziel dieser Arbeit war die Stabilisierung von Cadmiumsulfid CdS mit Pluronic P123, einem Polymer.
CdS ist ein Halbleiter, der zum Beispiel in der Photonik und bei optischen Anwendungen eingesetzt wird und ist deshalb äußerst interessant, da seine Bandlücke als Nanopartikel verschiebbar ist. Für die Photovoltaik ist es ein attraktives Material, da es im sichtbaren Licht absorbiert und durch die Bandlückenverschiebung effektiver absorbieren kann. Dies ist unter dem Namen Quantum Size Effekt bekannt. Als Feststoff ist CdS für einen solchen Anwendungsbereich weniger geeignet, zumal der Effekt der Bandlückenverschiebung dort nicht auftritt. Wissenschaftler bemühen sich deshalb CdS als Nanopartikeln zu stabilisieren, weil CdS in wässrigen Lösungen ein stark aggregierendes System, also stark hydrophob ist. Es wurden zwei Kriterien für die erfolgreiche Stabilisierung von CdS festgelegt. Zum einen muss das Cds homogen im Medium verteilt sein und darf nicht agglomerieren. Zum anderen, müssen die CdS Nanopartikel kleiner als 100 A sein.
In meiner Arbeit habe ich solche Partikel hergestellt und stabilisiert, d.h. verhindert, dass die Partikel weiterwachsen und gleichzeitig ihre Bandlücke verschoben wird. Die Herausforderung liegt nicht in der Herstellung, aber in der Lösung von CdS im Trägerstoff, da CdS in den meisten Flüssigkeiten nicht löslich ist und ausfällt. Die Stabilisierung in wässrigen Lösungen wurde das erste Mal durch Herrn Prof. Dr. Rempel mit Ethylendiamintetraessigsäure EDTA erfolgreich durchgeführt. Mit EDTA können jedoch nur sehr kleine Konzentrationen stabilisiert werden. Zudem können Parameter wie Größe und Geschwindigkeit der Reaktion beim Stabilisieren der CdS-Nanopartikel nicht angepasst oder beeinflusst werden. Dieses Problem ist dem, vieler medizinischer Wirkstoffe sehr ähnlich, die in hohen Konzentrationen verabreicht werden sollen, aber nicht oder nur schwer in Wasser löslich sind (Bsp. Kurkumin). Ein vielversprechender Lösungsweg ist dort, die Wirkstoffe in große Trägerpartikel (sog. Mizellen) einzuschleusen, die ihrerseits gut löslich sind. In meiner Arbeit habe ich genau diesen Ansatz für CdS verfolgt. Als Trägerpartikel/Mizelle wurde das bekannte Copolymer Pluronic P123 verwendet. Aus dieser Pluronic Produktreihe wird P123 gewählt, da es die größte Masse bei gleichzeitig höchstem Anteil von Polypropylenoxid PPO im Vergleich zur Gesamtkettenlänge hat. P123 ist ein ternäres Polyether oder Dreiblockkopolymer und wird von BASAF industriell produziert. Es besteht aus drei Böcken, dem mittlere Block Polypropylenoxid PPO und den beiden äußeren Blöcken Polyethylenoxid PEO. Der Buchstabe P steht für pastös, die ersten beiden Ziffern in P123 mit 300 multipliziert ergeben das molare Gewicht und die letzte Ziffer mit 10 multipliziert entspricht dem prozentualen Gewichtsanteil PEO. Die Bildung von Mizellen aus den P123 Molekülen kann bewusst über geringe Temperaturänderungen gesteuert werden. Bei ungefähr Raumtemperatur liegen Mizellen vor, die sich bei höheren Temperaturen von sphärischen in wurmartige Mizellen umwandeln. Oberhalb einer Konzentration von 30 Gewichtsprozent wtp bilden die Mizellen außerdem einen Flüssigkristall. Ich habe in meiner Arbeit zunächst P123 mit Hilfe von Röntgenstreuung untersucht. Anders als andere Methoden gibt Röntgenstreuung direkten Aufschluss über die Morphologie der Stoffe. Röntgenstreuung kann die Mischung von P123 mit CdS abbilden und lässt darauf schließen, ob das Ziel erreicht werden konnte, stabile CdS Nanopartikel in P123 zu binden.
Für die Stabilisierung der Nanopartikel ist es zunächst notwendig die richtigen Temperaturen für die Ausgangslösungen und gemischten Lösungen zu finden. Dazu muss P123 viel genauer untersucht werden, als der momentane Kenntnisstand in der Literatur. Zu diesem Zweck als auch für die Analyse des stabilisierten CdS habe ich ein neues Instrument am LRM entwickelt, sowie eine temperierbare Probenumgebung für Flüssigkeiten fürs Vakuum, um morphologische Eigenschaften aus Streuamplituden und -winkeln zu entschlüsseln. Diese Röntgenstreuanlage wurde konzipiert und gebaut, um auch im Labor P123 in kleinen Konzentrationen messen zu können. Röntgenkleinwinkelstreuung eignet sich besonders als Messmethode, da die Probe mit einer hohen statistischen Relevanz in Flüssigkeit und in verschiedenen Konzentrationen analysiert werden kann.
Für die Konzentrationen 5, 10 und 30 wtp konnte das temperaturabhängige Verhalten von P123 präzise mit Röntgenkleinwinkelstreuung SAXS gemessen und dargestellt werden. Für 5 wtp konnten die Größen der Unimere und Mizellen bestimmt werden. Trotz der nicht vorhandenen Absolutkalibration für diese Konzentration konnten dank des neu eingeführten Parameters kappa eine Dehydrierung der Mizellen mit steigender Temperatur abgeschätzt, sowie eine Hysterese zwischen dem Heizen und Abkühlen festgestellt werden. Für die Konzentration von 10 wtp wurden kleinere Temperaturschritte gewählt und die Messungen zusätzlich absolut kalibriert. Es wurden die Größen und Streulängendichten SLD der Unimere und Mizellen präzise bestimmt und ein vollständiges Form-Phasendiagramm erstellt. Auch für diese Konzentration konnte eine Hysterese eindeutig an der Größe, SLD und am Parameter kappa gezeigt werden, sowie eine Dehydrierung des Mizellenkerns. Dies beweist, dass der Parameter kappa geeignet ist, um bei nicht absolut kalibrierten Messungen, Aussagen über die Hydrierung und Hysterese komplexer Kern-Hülle Modelle zu machen. Für die Konzentration von 30 wtp konnte zwischen 23°C und 35°C eine FCC Struktur nachgewiesen werden. Dabei vergrößert sich die Gitterkonstante der FCC Struktur von 260 A auf 289 A in Abhängigkeit der Temperatur.
Durch das Mischen zweier Lösungen, zum einen CdCl2 und 30 wtp P123 und zum anderen Na2S und 30 wtp P123, konnte CdS erfolgreich stabilisiert werden. Mit einer Kamera wurde die Gelbfärbung der Lösung, und somit die Bildung des CdS, in Abhängigkeit der Zeit untersucht. Es konnte festgestellt werden, dass das Bilden der CdS Nanopartikel je nach Konzentration und Temperierprogramm zwischen 30 und 300 Sekunden dauert und einer logistischen Wachstumsfunktion folgt. Höhere Konzentrationen CdS bewirken einen schnelleren Anstieg der Wachstumsfunktion. Mittels UV-Vis Spektroskopie konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Bandlücke von CdS mit steigender Konzentration konstant bei 2,52 eV bleibt. Eine solche Verschiebung der Bandlücke von ungefähr 0,05 eV im Vergleich zum Festkörper, deutet auf einen CdS Partikeldurchmesser von 80A hin. Mit SAXS konnte gezeigt werden, dass sich die flüssigkristalline Struktur des P123 bei zwei verschiedenen Konzentrationen CdS, von 0,005 und 0,1 M, nicht ändert. Das CdS wird zwischen den Mizellen, also durch die Bildung des Flüssigkristalls, und im Kern der Mizelle aufgrund seiner Hydrophobizität stabilisiert. Die Anfangs definierten Kriterien für eine erfolgreiche Stabilisierung wurden erfüllt.
P123 ist ein hervorragend geeignetes Polymer, um hydrophobes CdS, sowohl durch die Bildung eines Flüssigkristalls, als auch im Kern der Mizelle zu stabilisieren.
Fluorinated groups are essential for drug design, agrochemicals, and materials science. The bis(trifluoromethyl)amino group is an example of a stable group that has a high potential. While the number of molecules containing perfluoroalkyl, perfluoroalkoxy, and other fluorinated groups is steadily increasing, examples with the N(CF\(_{3}\))\(_{2}\) group are rare. One reason is that transfer reagents are scarce and metal-based storable reagents are unknown. Herein, a set of Cu\(^{I}\) and Ag\(^{I}\) bis(trifluoromethyl)amido complexes stabilized by N- and P-donor ligands with unprecedented stability are presented. The complexes are stable solids that can even be manipulated in air for a short time. They are bis(trifluoromethyl)amination reagents as shown by nucleophilic substitution and Sandmeyer reactions. In addition to a series of benzylbis(trifluoromethyl)amines, 2-bis(trifluoromethyl)amino acetate was obtained, which, upon hydrolysis, gives the fluorinated amino acid N,N-bis(trifluoromethyl)glycine.
Serine/threonine kinase PknB and its corresponding phosphatase Stp are important regulators of many cell functions in the pathogen S. aureus. Genome-scale gene expression data of S. aureus strain NewHG (sigB\(^+\)) elucidated their effect on physiological functions. Moreover, metabolic modelling from these data inferred metabolic adaptations. We compared wild-type to deletion strains lacking pknB, stp or both. Ser/Thr phosphorylation of target proteins by PknB switched amino acid catabolism off and gluconeogenesis on to provide the cell with sufficient components. We revealed a significant impact of PknB and Stp on peptidoglycan, nucleotide and aromatic amino acid synthesis, as well as catabolism involving aspartate transaminase. Moreover, pyrimidine synthesis was dramatically impaired by stp deletion but only slightly by functional loss of PknB. In double knockouts, higher activity concerned genes involved in peptidoglycan, purine and aromatic amino acid synthesis from glucose but lower activity of pyrimidine synthesis from glucose compared to the wild type. A second transcriptome dataset from S. aureus NCTC 8325 (sigB\(^−\)) validated the predictions. For this metabolic adaptation, PknB was found to interact with CdaA and the yvcK/glmR regulon. The involved GlmR structure and the GlmS riboswitch were modelled. Furthermore, PknB phosphorylation lowered the expression of many virulence factors, and the study shed light on S. aureus infection processes.
Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) is well known to express a plethora of toxins of which the pore-forming hemolysin A (α-toxin) is the best-studied cytolysin. Pore-forming toxins (PFT) permeabilize host membranes during infection thereby causing concentration-dependent effects in host cell membranes ranging from disordered ion fluxes to cytolysis. Host cells possess defense mechanisms against PFT attack, resulting in endocytosis of the breached membrane area and delivery of repair vesicles to the insulted plasma membrane as well as a concurrent release of membrane repair enzymes. Since PFTs from several pathogens have been shown to recruit membrane repair components, we here investigated whether staphylococcal α-toxin is able to induce these mechanisms in endothelial cells. We show that S. aureus α-toxin induced increase in cytosolic Ca2+ in endothelial cells, which was accompanied by p38 MAPK phosphorylation. Toxin challenge led to increased endocytosis of an extracellular fluid phase marker as well as increased externalization of LAMP1-positive membranes suggesting that peripheral lysosomes are recruited to the insulted plasma membrane. We further observed that thereby the lysosomal protein acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) was released into the cell culture medium. Thus, our results show that staphylococcal α-toxin triggers mechanisms in endothelial cells, which have been implicated in membrane repair after damage of other cell types by different toxins.
Little research has focused on motivational state-trait interactions to explain impulse buying. Although the trait chronic regulatory focus has been linked to impulse buying, no evidence yet exists for an effect of situational regulatory focus and no research has examined whether the fit of chronic and situational regulatory focus can influence impulse buying with actual consumptive consequences rather than purchase intentions. Two laboratory experiments (total N = 250) manipulated situational regulatory focus before providing opportunities for impulse buying. In addition, cognitive constraint was manipulated as a potential boundary condition for regulatory focus effects. Situational promotion focus increased impulse buying relative to situational prevention focus in participants with strong chronic promotion, consistent with regulatory fit theory and independently of cognitive constraint. Surprisingly, situational promotion focus also increased impulse buying in participants with strong chronic prevention, but only under low cognitive constraint. These results may be explained by diverging mediating cognitive processes for promotion vs. prevention focus' effect on impulse buying. Future research must focus more on combining relevant states and traits in predicting consumer behavior. Marketing implications are discussed.
Based on the strand‐like coordination polymer (CP) type \(^{1}\)\(_{∞}\)[Ln(BSB)\(_{3}\)(py)\(_{2}\)], [BSB]−=bis‐salicylatoborate anion, mixed Eu/Tb‐containing compounds of the constitution \(^{1}\)\(_{∞}\)[Eu\(_{x}\)Tb\(_{1-x}\)(BSB)\(_{3}\)(py)\(_{2}\)] were synthesised ionothermally for a phase width of (x=0.25–0.75) and characterized regarding structure and optical properties. Previously, known only for other lanthanides, the mixed 1D−Eu/Tb‐CPs show excellent options for statistic replacement of the Ln‐cations during synthesis yielding solid solutions. The products are highly luminescent, with the chromaticity being a direct function of the amount of the respective Ln‐ions. Corresponding to an overall addition of emission intensities, the green Tb\(^{3+}\) emission and the red Eu\(^{3+}\) emission allow for a chromaticity control that also includes yellow emission. Control of the luminescence colour renders them suitable examples of the versatility of statistic replacement of metal ions in coordination chemistry. In addition, crystallization of [EMIm]\(_{2}\)[YCl\(_{5}\)(py)] illuminates possible other products of the ionothermal reactions of [EMIm][BSB] with LnCl\(_{3}\) constituted by components not being part of the main CPs.
Reliable near-surface soil moisture (θ) information is crucial for supporting risk assessment of future water usage, particularly considering the vulnerability of agroforestry systems of Mediterranean environments to climate change. We propose a simple empirical model by integrating dual-polarimetric Sentinel-1 (S1) Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) C-band single-look complex data and topographic information together with in-situ measurements of θ into a random forest (RF) regression approach (10-fold cross-validation). Firstly, we compare two RF models' estimation performances using either 43 SAR parameters (θNov\(^{SAR}\)) or the combination of 43 SAR and 10 terrain parameters (θNov\(^{SAR+Terrain}\)). Secondly, we analyze the essential parameters in estimating and mapping θ for S1 overpasses twice a day (at 5 a.m. and 5 p.m.) in a high spatiotemporal (17 × 17 m; 6 days) resolution. The developed site-specific calibration-dependent model was tested for a short period in November 2018 in a field-scale agroforestry environment belonging to the “Alento” hydrological observatory in southern Italy. Our results show that the combined SAR + terrain model slightly outperforms the SAR-based model (θNov\(^{SAR+Terrain}\) with 0.025 and 0.020 m3 m\(^{−3}\), and 89% compared to θNov\(^{SAR}\) with 0.028 and 0.022 m\(^3\) m\(^{−3}\, and 86% in terms of RMSE, MAE, and R2). The higher explanatory power for θNov\(^{SAR+Terrain}\) is assessed with time-variant SAR phase information-dependent elements of the C2 covariance and Kennaugh matrix (i.e., K1, K6, and K1S) and with local (e.g., altitude above channel network) and compound topographic attributes (e.g., wetness index). Our proposed methodological approach constitutes a simple empirical model aiming at estimating θ for rapid surveys with high accuracy. It emphasizes potentials for further improvement (e.g., higher spatiotemporal coverage of ground-truthing) by identifying differences of SAR measurements between S1 overpasses in the morning and afternoon.
Due to biased assumptions on the underlying ordinal rating scale in subjective Quality of Experience (QoE) studies, Mean Opinion Score (MOS)-based evaluations provide results, which are hard to interpret and can be misleading. This paper proposes to consider the full QoE distribution for evaluating, reporting, and modeling QoE results instead of relying on MOS-based metrics derived from results based on ordinal rating scales. The QoE distribution can be represented in a concise way by using the parameters of a multinomial distribution without losing any information about the underlying QoE ratings, and even keeps backward compatibility with previous, biased MOS-based results. Considering QoE results as a realization of a multinomial distribution allows to rely on a well-established theoretical background, which enables meaningful evaluations also for ordinal rating scales. Moreover, QoE models based on QoE distributions keep detailed information from the results of a QoE study of a technical system, and thus, give an unprecedented richness of insights into the end users’ experience with the technical system. In this work, existing and novel statistical methods for QoE distributions are summarized and exemplary evaluations are outlined. Furthermore, using the novel concept of quality steps, simulative and analytical QoE models based on QoE distributions are presented and showcased. The goal is to demonstrate the fundamental advantages of considering QoE distributions over MOS-based evaluations if the underlying rating data is ordinal in nature.
We steered the soil microbiome via applications of organic residues (mix of cover crop residues, sewage sludge + compost, and digestate + compost) to enhance multiple ecosystem services in line with climate-smart agriculture. Our result highlights the potential to reduce greenhouse gases (GHG) emissions from agricultural soils by the application of specific organic amendments (especially digestate + compost). Unexpectedly, also the addition of mineral fertilizer in our mesocosms led to similar combined GHG emissions than one of the specific organic amendments. However, the application of organic amendments has the potential to increase soil C, which is not the case when using mineral fertilizer. While GHG emissions from cover crop residues were significantly higher compared to mineral fertilizer and the other organic amendments, crop growth was promoted. Furthermore, all organic amendments induced a shift in the diversity and abundances of key microbial groups. We show that organic amendments have the potential to not only lower GHG emissions by modifying the microbial community abundance and composition, but also favour crop growth-promoting microorganisms. This modulation of the microbial community by organic amendments bears the potential to turn soils into more climate-smart soils in comparison to the more conventional use of mineral fertilizers.
Das Multiple Myelom ist eine komplexe Erkrankung, dessen Tumorbiologie noch immer nicht in Gänze verstanden ist. Mit dem Heavy Light Chain Assay (Hevylite®) war es erstmals möglich, mit spezifischen Antikörpern nicht nur zwischen den Klassen intakter Immunglobuline, sondern auch zwischen kappa- und lambda-Isotyp zu differenzieren.
Dies ist in der Behandlung von Patient*innen mit Multiplem Myelom sehr nützlich, um das vom Tumor produzierte klonale Immunglobulin von den funktionalen Immunglobulinen getrennt zu quantifizieren. Dadurch sollen die Tumorlast und die einhergehende Immunsuppression genauer erfasst werden.
Den zusätzlichen Nutzen für Diagnostik und Therapiemonitoring des Multiplen Myeloms untersuchen wir in dieser Arbeit anhand von Daten einer multizentrischen, randomisierten Phase 3- Medikamentenstudie (DSMM XIV) mit dem Vorteil, hierdurch eine große und weitgehend einheitlich behandelte Kohorte und Zugang zu modernen Messmethoden zu haben.
Wir bestätigen, dass das Heavy Light Chain Assays insbesondere zur Erkennung von IgA-Myelomen eine hohe Sensitivität bei negativer Serumproteinelektrophorese hat. Weiterhin zeigen wir, dass je nach Zeitpunkt in der Therapie das Heavy Light Chain Assay ein höheres Risiko für einen Progress vorhersagt als bisher verwendete Methoden. Signifikante Unterschiede im progressionsfreien Überleben finden wir nicht nur je nach Höhe der kappa/lambda Heavy Light Chain-Ratio des involvierten Immunglobulins, sondern auch bei Suppression der nicht involvierten Heavy Light Chain. Zudem beschreiben wir eine hohe Korrelation zwischen hoch abnormaler kappa/lambda Heavy Light Chain-Ratio des involvierten Immunglobulins und positivem Minimal Residual Disease Status in der Durchflusszytometrie.
Wir empfehlen daher anhand unserer Ergebnisse, dass das Heavy Light Chain Assay einen Platz in der diagnostischen Routine erhält und als prognostischer Faktor zusätzlich in die Response-Kriterien integriert wird.
CXCR4 ist der spezifische Rezeptor für das Chemokin CXCL12 und ist überexprimiert in Vestibularisschwannomzellen.
Das Ziel dieser Arbeit war es den Effekt des spezifischen Inhibitors AMD3100 auf die CXCR4 vermittelte Proliferation und Migration der Vestibularisschwannomzellen in verschiedenen Zellkuturmodellen zu analysieren.
Die nachgewiesene Inhibition von CXCR4 deutet auf einen möglichen Einsatz von AMD3100 in der systemischen Therapie von NF-2 Patienten hin.
Sterol O-Acyltransferasen (SOATs) spielen eine zentrale Rolle im Cholesterinstoffwechsel von Zellen, indem sie die Veresterung von freiem Cholesterin und Speicherung in Lipid droplets katalysieren. In Tumorzellen findet häufig eine Aktivierung alternativer Pfade des Energiestoffwechsels, unter anderem des Lipidstoffwechsels statt. Präklinische und klinische Daten unterstützen den Mechanismus der SOAT-Inhibierung als Therapiekonzept für bestimmte Tumore. Eine genaue Kenntnis sowohl dieser Inhibitoren als auch der Expression des Zielmoleküls ist Voraussetzung für eine klinische Anwendung.
Im ersten Teil dieser Arbeit wurde ein in-vitro SOAT-Aktivitätsassay etabliert und auf Grundlage dessen ein Vergleich der mittleren Hemmstärken ausgewählter SOAT-Inhibitoren gezogen. SOAT-transfizierte AD-293 Zellen sowie NCI-H295R Nebennieren-Zellen wurden mit dem fluoreszierenden 22-NBD-Cholesterin sowie den SOAT-Inhibitoren inkubiert und die Veresterung des Lipid-Analogons dann zunächst mikroskopisch und anschließend quantitativ mittels chromatographischer Auftrennung untersucht. Mitotane stellte sich mit einer IC50 von 1,3x10⁻⁶ M als schwächster SOAT-Inhibitor dar, gefolgt von Sandoz58-035 (IC50=1,4x10\(^{-8}\) M), ATR101 (IC50=3,1x10\(^{-9}\) M) und schließlich AZD3988 (IC50=8,8x10\(^{-10}\) M).
Im zweiten Teil dieser Arbeit wurde die SOAT-Expression in Prostatektomiepräparaten von Hochrisiko Prostatakarzinom-Patienten mittels Immunhistochemie bestimmt. Eine starke SOAT1 Expression (SOAT H-Score 3) war sowohl in der univariaten als auch in der multivariaten Analyse hoch signifikant mit einem kürzeren biochemisch progressfreien Überleben der Patienten assoziiert unabhängig von etablierten Prognoseparametern [HR für den biochemischen Progress 2,33 (95%KI 1,48-3,68), p<0,001)]. Für SOAT2 war dies erwartungsgemäß nicht der Fall. SOAT1 scheint bei diesem bestimmten Kollektiv einen vielversprechenden Stellenwert als prognostischer Marker zu haben und könnte darüber hinaus zukünftig als Zielmolekül im Rahmen einer individualisierten Therapie des Prostatakarzinoms in Frage kommen.
The Stiff-person syndrome (SPS) is a rare autoimmune disease that is characterized by symptoms including stiffness in axial and limb muscles as well as painful spasms. Different variants of SPS are known ranging from moderate forms like the stiff-limb syndrome to the most severe form progressive encephalomyelitis with rigidity and myoclonus (PERM). SPS is elicited by autoantibodies that target different pre- or postsynaptic proteins. The focus of the present work is on autoantibodies against the glycine receptor (GlyR). At start of the present thesis, as main characteristic of the GlyR autoantibody pathology, receptor cross-linking followed by enhanced receptor internalization and degradation via the lysosomal pathway was described. If binding of autoantibodies modulates GlyR function and therefore contributes to the GlyR autoantibody pathology has not yet been investigated. Moreover, not all patients respond well to plasmapheresis or other treatments used in the clinic. Relapses with even higher autoantibody titers regularly occur.
In the present work, further insights into the disease pathology of GlyRα autoantibodies were achieved. We identified a common GlyRα1 autoantibody epitope located in the far N-terminus including amino acids A1-G34 which at least represent a part of the autoantibody epitope. This part of the receptor is easily accessible for autoantibodies due to its location at the outermost surface of the GlyRα1 extracellular domain. It was further investigated if the glycosylation status of the GlyR interferes with autoantibody binding. Using a GlyRα1 de-glycosylation mutant exhibited that patient autoantibodies are able to detect the de-glycosylated GlyRα1 variant as well. The direct modulation of the GlyR analyzed by electrophysiological recordings demonstrated functional alterations of the GlyR upon autoantibody binding. Whole cell patch clamp recordings revealed that autoantibodies decreased the glycine potency, shown by increased EC50 values. Furthermore, an influence on the desensitization behavior of the receptor was shown. The GlyR autoantibodies, however, had no impact on the binding affinity of glycine. These issues can be explained by the localization of the GlyR autoantibody epitope. The determined epitope has been exhibited to influence GlyR desensitization upon binding of allosteric modulators and differs from the orthosteric binding site for glycine, which is localized much deeper in the structure at the interface between two adjacent subunits. To neutralize GlyR autoantibodies, two different methods have been carried out. Transfected HEK293 cells expressing GlyRα1 and ELISA plates coated with the GlyRα1 extracellular domain were used to efficiently neutralize the autoantibodies. Finally, the successful passive transfer of GlyRα1 autoantibodies into zebrafish larvae and mice was shown. The autoantibodies detected their target in spinal cord and brain regions rich in GlyRs of zebrafish and mice. A passive transfer of human GlyRα autoantibodies to zebrafish larvae generated an impaired escape behavior in the animals compatible with the abnormal startle response in SPS or PERM patients.
Stranger, Lover, Friend?
(2021)
Social exclusion, even from minimal game-based interactions, induces negative consequences. We investigated whether the nature of the relationship with the excluder modulates the effects of ostracism. Participants played a virtual ball-tossing game with a stranger and a friend (friend condition) or a stranger and their romantic partner (partner condition) while being fully included, fully excluded, excluded only by the stranger, or excluded only by their close other. Replicating previous findings, full exclusion impaired participants’ basic-need satisfaction and relationship evaluation most severely. While the degree of exclusion mattered, the relationship to the excluder did not: Classic null hypothesis testing and Bayesian statistics showed no modulation of ostracism effects depending on whether participants were excluded by a stranger, a friend, or their partner.
Strategies in Times of Pandemic Crisis — Retailers and Regional Resilience in Würzburg, Germany
(2021)
Research on the COVID-19 crisis and its implications on regional resilience is still in its infancy. To understand resilience on its aggregate level it is important to identify (non)resilient actions of individual actors who comprise regions. As the retail sector among others represents an important factor in an urban regions recovery, we focus on the resilience of (textile) retailers within the city of Würzburg in Germany to the COVID-19 pandemic. To address the identified research gap, this paper applies the concept of resilience. Firstly, conducting expert interviews, the individual (textile) retailers’ level and their strategies in coping with the crisis is considered. Secondly, conducting a contextual analysis of the German city of Würzburg, we wish to contribute to the discussion of how the resilience of a region is influenced inter alia by actors. Our study finds three main strategies on the individual level, with retailers: (1) intending to “bounce back” to a pre-crisis state, (2) reorganising existing practices, as well as (3) closing stores and winding up business. As at the time of research, no conclusions regarding long-term impacts and resilience are possible, the results are limited. Nevertheless, detailed analysis of retailers’ strategies contributes to a better understanding of regional resilience.
Stronger reactivity to social gaze in virtual reality compared to a classical laboratory environment
(2021)
People show a robust tendency to gaze at other human beings when viewing images or videos, but were also found to relatively avoid gaze at others in several real‐world situations. This discrepancy, along with theoretical considerations, spawned doubts about the appropriateness of classical laboratory‐based experimental paradigms in social attention research. Several researchers instead suggested the use of immersive virtual scenarios in eliciting and measuring naturalistic attentional patterns, but the field, struggling with methodological challenges, still needs to establish the advantages of this approach. Here, we show using eye‐tracking in a complex social scenario displayed in virtual reality that participants show enhanced attention towards the face of an avatar at near distance and demonstrate an increased reactivity towards her social gaze as compared to participants who viewed the same scene on a computer monitor. The present study suggests that reactive virtual agents observed in immersive virtual reality can elicit natural modes of information processing and can help to conduct ecologically more valid experiments while maintaining high experimental control.
At the end of the first larval stage, the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans developing in harsh environmental conditions is able to choose an alternative developmental path called the dauer diapause. Dauer larvae exhibit different physiology and behaviors from non-dauer larvae. Using focused ion beam-scanning electron microscopy (FIB-SEM), we volumetrically reconstructed the anterior sensory apparatus of C. elegans dauer larvae with unprecedented precision. We provide a detailed description of some neurons, focusing on structural details that were unknown or unresolved by previously published studies. They include the following: (1) dauer-specific branches of the IL2 sensory neurons project into the periphery of anterior sensilla and motor or putative sensory neurons at the sub-lateral cords; (2) ciliated endings of URX sensory neurons are supported by both ILso and AMso socket cells near the amphid openings; (3) variability in amphid sensory dendrites among dauers; and (4) somatic RIP interneurons maintain their projection into the pharyngeal nervous system. Our results support the notion that dauer larvae structurally expand their sensory system to facilitate searching for more favorable environments.
The degradation of poly-adenosine tails of messenger RNAs (mRNAs) in the eukaryotic cells is a determining step in controlling the level of gene expression. The highly conserved Ccr4-Not complex was identified as the major deadenylation complex in all eukaryotic organisms. Plenty of biochemical studies have shown that this complex is also involved in many aspects of the mRNA metabolism, but we are still lacking the detailed structural information about its overall architecture and conformational states that could help to elucidate its multifunction and the way it is coordinated in the cells. Such information can also provide a basis to finding a possible way of intervention since the complex is also involved in some diseases such as cancer and cardiovascular disorders in humans. Meanwhile, the single particle Cryo-EM method has been through a “resolution revolution” recently due to the use of the newly developed direct electron detectors and has since resolved the high-resolution structures of many macromolecular protein complexes in their near-native state. Therefore, it was employed as a suitable method for studying the Ccr4-Not complex here. In this work, the Falcon 3EC direct detector mounted on the 300kV Titan Krios G3i Cryo-EM was evaluated for its practical performance at obtaining high-quality Cryo-EM data from protein samples of different molecular sizes. This served as a proof of principle for this detector’s capabilities and as a data collection guidance for studying the macromolecular complexes, such as the Ccr4-Not, when using an advanced high-performance microscope system. Next, the endogenous yeast Ccr4-Not complex was also purified via the immunoaffinity purification method and evaluated using negative staining EM to assess the conditions of the complex before proceeding to sample preparation for Cryo-EM. This has shown that the complex had an unexpected inherently dynamic property in vitro and extra optimisation procedures were needed to stabilise the complex during the purification and sample preparation. In addition, by using the label-free quantitative Mass spectrometry to examine the coimmunoprecipitated complex via different tagged subunits, it was deduced that two of the subunits (Not3/Not5) that shared some sequence similarity might compete for association with the scaffold subunit of the complex. An uncharacterised protein was also identified coimmunoprecipitating with the Caf130 subunit of the yeast complex. Cryo-EM data from the purified complex provided a low-resolution map that represents a surprisingly smaller partial complex as compared to 3D structures from previous studies, although gel electrophoresis and Mass spectrometry data have identified all of the nine subunits of the Ccr4-Not core complex in the sample. It was concluded that due to the presence of many predicted unstructured regions VI in the subunits and their dynamic composition in solution, the native complex could have been spontaneously denatured at the air/water interface during the sample preparation thus limiting the resolution of the Cryo-EM reconstruction. The purified complex was also examined for its deadenylase and ubiquitin ligase activity by in vitro assays. It was shown that the native complex has a different rate of activity and possibly also a different mode of action compared to the recombinant complexes from other species under similar reaction conditions. The Not4 E3 ligase was also shown to be active in the complex and was likely auto-ubiquitinated in the absence of a substrate. Both types of assays have also shown that the conformational flexibility does not seem to affect the enzymatic reactions when using a chemically crosslinked form of the complex for the assay, which implies that there can be other underlying mechanisms coordinating its structural and functional relationship. The findings from this work have therefore moved our understanding of the Ccr4-Not complex forward by looking at the different structural and functional behaviours of the endogenous complex, especially highlighting the obstacles in sample preparation for the native complex in high-resolution Cryo-EM. This would serve as foundation for future studies on the mechanism of this complex’s catalytic functions and also for optimising the Cryo-EM sample to generate better data that could eventually resolve the structure to a high-resolution.
Two di- and tetranuclear Ru(bda) (bda: 2,2′-bipyridine-6,6′-dicarboxylate) macrocyclic complexes were synthesized and their catalytic activities in chemical and photochemical water oxidation investigated in a comparative manner to our previously reported trinuclear congener. Our studies have shown that the catalytic activities of this homologous series of multinuclear Ru(bda) macrocycles in homogeneous water oxidation are dependent on their size, exhibiting highest efficiencies for the largest tetranuclear catalyst. The turnover frequencies (TOFs) have increased from di- to tetranuclear macrocycles not only per catalyst molecule but more importantly also per Ru unit with TOF of 6 \(^{-1}\) to 8.7 \(^{-1}\) and 10.5 s\(^{-1}\) in chemical and 0.6 s\(^{-1}\) to 3.3 \(^{-1}\) and 5.8 \(^{-1}\) in photochemical water oxidation per Ru unit, respectively. Thus, for the first time, a clear structure–activity relationship could be established for this novel class of macrocyclic water oxidation catalysts.
Inhibition of coronavirus (CoV)‐encoded papain‐like cysteine proteases (PL\(^{pro}\)) represents an attractive strategy to treat infections by these important human pathogens. Herein we report on structure‐activity relationships (SAR) of the noncovalent active‐site directed inhibitor (R)‐5‐amino‐2‐methyl‐N‐(1‐(naphthalen‐1‐yl)ethyl) benzamide (2 b), which is known to bind into the S3 and S4 pockets of the SARS‐CoV PL\(^{pro}\). Moreover, we report the discovery of isoindolines as a new class of potent PL\(^{pro}\) inhibitors. The studies also provide a deeper understanding of the binding modes of this inhibitor class. Importantly, the inhibitors were also confirmed to inhibit SARS‐CoV‐2 replication in cell culture suggesting that, due to the high structural similarities of the target proteases, inhibitors identified against SARS‐CoV PL\(^{pro}\) are valuable starting points for the development of new pan‐coronaviral inhibitors.
Ärztliche Kommunikation wird vielerorts bereits im Studium eingeübt. Das Aufklärungsgespräch vor einer Operation ist ein spezifischer Kommunikationsanlass, der einer differenzierten Rückmeldung an die Studierenden bedarf. Ziel war es, im Rahmen eines Kommunikationstrainings die Rückmeldung verschiedener Feedbackgeber (ärztlicher Experte, geschulte Tutorinnen und Tutoren, Studierende der Peer Group, Aufklärende selbst und Simulationspersonen) anhand von Bewertungschecklisten zu strukturieren und die Ergebnisse zu vergleichen. 171 Humanmedizinstudierende des 8. Semesters der Universität Würzburg nahmen in Kleingruppen an einem Training zur präoperativen Aufklärung teil. 50 Personen davon führten ein Aufklärungsgespräch und erhielten Feedback. Im Fokus der Gespräche standen „Kommunikation“ sowie „Komplikationen“. Die Studierenden bereiteten sich mittels Unterrichtsmaterialien auf der universitätseigenen E-Learning-Plattform vor. Gegenstand der statistischen Auswertungen waren die Testgüte der Bewertungschecklisten, die Bewertungspunkte in den Skalen und die Übereinstimmung der Bewertungen auf Basis des Intraklassenkorrelationskoeffizienten (ICC). Die Bewertungschecklisten wiesen zufriedenstellende Werte für interne Konsistenz, Itemschwierigkeit und Trennschärfe auf. Die Mittelwerte der Scores zur „Kommunikation“ unterschieden sich teilweise signifikant durch die 5 Bewertungsquellen, wobei hier die Selbsteinschätzung durch die studentischen Aufklärenden am strengsten ausfiel. Die studentischen Tutorinnen und Tutoren bewerteten identisch zum Experten. In Bezug auf die „Komplikationen“ gab es keine signifikanten Abweichungen zwischen den Bewertenden. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass innerhalb des hochspezifischen Settings eines Simulationstrainings und nach geplanter Vorbereitung geschulte studentische Tutoren/innen eine vergleichbar gute Rückmeldung wie der ärztliche Experte geben können. Bei überwiegenden Übereinstimmungen im strukturierten Feedback darf somit der Rückmeldung durch Tutoren/innen oder Peers zukünftig ein höherer Stellenwert eingeräumt werden.
Multiple Sklerose ist eine der häufigsten neurologischen Erkrankungen, die zu motorischen, sensiblen und vegetativen Einschränkungen führt. Häufig beginnt die Erkrankung mit einem schubförmigen Verlauf, dem eine progrediente Verschlechterung folgt. Trotzdem leiden ca. 15% der Patienten bereits von Beginn an, an einer primär progressiven Variante der MS, die bereits mit der progredienten Phase beginnt. Bis jetzt ist die Pathophysiologie nicht vollständig verstanden. Lange Zeit dachte man, dass MS primär eine reine Autoimmun-Erkrankung darstellt, aber in den letzten Jahren ergab sich die Frage, ob es vor allem in den progressiven Formen, eine zytodegenerative Komponente gibt, auf die eine sekundäre Inflammation folgt. Eine mögliche Ursache stellen hier Mutationen des PLP 1 Gens dar, die normalerweise mit leukodystrophischen Erkrankungen assoziiert sind. Es gab zwei Fallberichte, in denen von Patienten berichtet wurde, die unterschiedliche Mutationen in diesem Gen hatten und den klinischen Phänotyp einer MS zeigten. Diese Arbeit sollte nun die Auswirkungen der Mutationen, beziehungsweise einer Nullmutation des PLP 1 Gens in 18- und zum Teil 12-Monate alten Mausmutanten untersuchen. Hier konnten Myelin-Veränderungen und axonaler Schaden in immunhistochemischen Untersuchungen sowie mittels Elektronenmikroskopie und optischer Kohärenztomographie gezeigt werden. Weiter konnte eine Neuroinflammation und damit einhergehend eine zunehmende Anzahl CD8+ T-Zellen sowie einer erhöhten Anzahl an Mikroglia/Makrophagen gefunden werden. Dies ging mit vergleichsweise reduzierten Leistungen der Mutanten bei der motorischen Rotarod-Analyse einher. Interessanterweise wurde weniger neuraler Schaden in den heterozygoten Varianten gefunden, obwohl das Ausmaß der Entzündung gleichblieb. Dies könnte für eine zielgerichtete immunvermittelte Schädigung der Oligodendrozyten sprechen, die zu neuronalem Schaden führt. So konnte gezeigt werden, dass es durch Punktmutationen in einem Myelinprotein-codierendem Gen zu einer sekundären Entzündung kommen kann, die mit dem klinischen Phänotyp einer progressiven MS einhergeht. Weiter sind diese Mausmodelle ein Beispiel für eine genetische Erkrankung des ZNS, in denen die Klinik maßgeblich durch die begleitende Inflammation und nicht allein durch den genetischen Schaden verursacht wird.
This work consists of two parts. On the one hand, it describes simulation and
measurement of the effect of contaminations of the detector gas on the performance
of particle detectors, with special focus on Micromegas detectors. On the other
hand, it includes the setup of a production site for the finalization of drift panels
which are going to be used in the ATLAS NSW. The first part augments these
two parts to give an introduction into the theoretical foundations of gaseous particle
detectors.
Platelets are small anucleated cell fragments that originate from megakaryocytes (MKs), which are large cells located in the bone marrow (BM). MKs extend long cytoplasmic protrusions, a process which is called proplatelet formation, into the lumen of the sinusoidal vessels where platelets are sized by the bloodstream. During the process of platelet biogenesis, segments of the MK penetrate the endothelium and, through cytoskeletal remodeling inside the MK, proplatelet fragments are released. Rho GTPases, such as RhoA and RhoB, are critically involved in cytoskeletal rearrangements of both the actin and the tubulin cytoskeleton.
The first part of this thesis concentrated on the protein RhoB and its involvement in cytoskeletal organization in MKs and platelets. Single knockout (KO) mice lacking RhoB had a minor microthrombocytopenia, which means a smaller platelet size and reduced platelet number, accompanied by defects in the microtubule cytoskeleton in both MKs and platelets. In particular, tubulin organization and stability, which is regulated by posttranslational modifications of α-tubulin, were disturbed in RhoB-/- platelets. In contrast, RhoB-/- MKs produced abnormally shaped proplatelets but had unaltered posttranslational modifications of α-tubulin.
The second part focused on the influence of RhoA and RhoB on MK localization and platelet biogenesis in murine BM. Many intact RhoA-/- MKs are able to transmigrate through the endothelial layer and stay attached to the vessel wall, whereas only 1% of wildtype (wt) MKs are detectable in the intrasinusoidal space. Concomitant deficiency of RhoA and RhoB reverts this transmigration and results in macrothrombocytopenia, MK clusters around the vessel in the BM and defective MK development. The underlying mechanism that governs MKs to distinct localizations in the BM is poorly understood, thus this thesis suggests that this process may be dependent on RhoB protein levels, as RhoA deficiency is coincided with increased RhoB levels in MKs and platelets.
The third part of this thesis targeted the protein PDK1, a downstream effector of Rho GTPases, in regard to MK maturation and polarization throughout thrombopoiesis. MK- and platelet-specific KO in mice led to a significant macrothrombocytopenia, impaired actin cytoskeletal reorganization during MK spreading and proplatelet formation, with defective MK maturation. This was associated with decreased PAK activity and, subsequently, phosphorylation of its substrates LIMK and Cofilin. Together, the observations of this thesis highlight the importance of Rho GTPases and their downstream effectors on the regulation of the MK and platelet cytoskeleton.
Expansion microscopy (ExM) enables super-resolution fluorescence imaging on standard microscopes by physical expansion of the sample. However, the investigation of interactions between different organisms such as mammalian and fungal cells by ExM remains challenging because different cell types require different expansion protocols to ensure identical, ideally isotropic expansion of both partners. Here, we introduce an ExM method that enables super-resolved visualization of the interaction between NK cells and Aspergillus fumigatus hyphae. 4-fold expansion in combination with confocal fluorescence imaging allows us to resolve details of cytoskeleton rearrangement as well as NK cells' lytic granules triggered by contact with an RFP-expressing A. fumigatus strain. In particular, subdiffraction-resolution images show polarized degranulation upon contact formation and the presence of LAMP1 surrounding perforin at the NK cell-surface post degranulation. Our data demonstrate that optimized ExM protocols enable the investigation of immunological synapse formation between two different species with so far unmatched spatial resolution.
Background: Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is divided into three major histopathologic groups—clear cell (ccRCC), papillary (pRCC) and chromophobe RCC (chRCC). We performed a comprehensive re-analysis of publicly available RCC datasets from the TCGA (The Cancer Genome Atlas) database, thereby combining samples from all three subgroups, for an exploratory transcriptome profiling of RCC subgroups.
Materials and Methods: We used FPKM (fragments per kilobase per million) files derived from the ccRCC, pRCC and chRCC cohorts of the TCGA database, representing transcriptomic data of 891 patients. Using principal component analysis, we visualized datasets as t-SNE plot for cluster detection. Clusters were characterized by machine learning, resulting gene signatures were validated by correlation analyses in the TCGA dataset and three external datasets (ICGC RECA-EU, CPTAC-3-Kidney, and GSE157256).
Results: Many RCC samples co-clustered according to histopathology. However, a substantial number of samples clustered independently from histopathologic origin (mixed subgroup)—demonstrating divergence between histopathology and transcriptomic data. Further analyses of mixed subgroup via machine learning revealed a predominant mitochondrial gene signature—a trait previously known for chRCC—across all histopathologic subgroups. Additionally, ccRCC samples from mixed subgroup presented an inverse correlation of mitochondrial and angiogenesis-related genes in the TCGA and in three external validation cohorts. Moreover, mixed subgroup affiliation was associated with a highly significant shorter overall survival for patients with ccRCC—and a highly significant longer overall survival for chRCC patients.
Conclusions: Pan-RCC clustering according to RNA-sequencing data revealed a distinct histology-independent subgroup characterized by strengthened mitochondrial and weakened angiogenesis-related gene signatures. Moreover, affiliation to mixed subgroup went along with a significantly shorter overall survival for ccRCC and a longer overall survival for chRCC patients. Further research could offer a therapy stratification by specifically addressing the mitochondrial metabolism of such tumors and its microenvironment.
Objectives
The present investigation aimed to evaluate the subjective perception of deformational cranial asymmetries by different observer groups and to compare these subjective perceptions with objective parameters.
Materials and methods
The 3D datasets of ten infants with different severities of deformational plagiocephaly (DP) were presented to 203 observers, who had been subdivided into five different groups (specialists, pediatricians, medical doctors (not pediatricians), parents of infants with DP, and laypersons). The observers rated their subjective perception of the infants’ cranial asymmetries using a 4-point Likert-type scale. The ratings from the observer groups were compared with one another using a multilevel modelling linear regression analysis and were correlated with four commonly used parameters to objectively quantify the cranial asymmetries.
Results
No significant differences were found between the ratings of the specialists and those of the parents of infants with DP, but both groups provided significantly more asymmetric ratings than did pediatricians, medical doctors, or laypersons. Moreover, the subjective perception of cranial asymmetries correlated significantly with commonly used parameters for objectively quantifying cranial asymmetries.
Conclusions
Our results demonstrate that different observer groups perceive the severity of cranial asymmetries differently. Pediatricians’ more moderate perception of cranial asymmetries may reduce the likelihood of parents to seek therapeutic interventions for their infants. Moreover, we identified some objective symmetry-related parameters that correlated strongly with the observers’ subjective perceptions.
Clinical relevance
Knowledge about these findings is important for clinicians when educating parents of infants with DP about the deformity.
Rezente Studien mit kleineren Fallzahlen offenbaren bei Patienten mit chronischer Nebenniereninsuffizienz eine sehr negative Krankheitswahrnehmung, große Ängste und Sorgen hinsichtlich der Substitutionstherapie mit Glucocorticoiden sowie eine geringe Therapieadhärenz.
Ziel der vorliegenden Beobachtungsstudie war es daher im Rahmen einer monozentrischen Querschnittstudie nebenniereninsuffiziente Patienten zu Therapieadhärenz, subjektiver Krankheits- und Glucocorticoidwahrnehmung und Zufriedenheit mit erhaltenen Informationen zu befragen. Zudem wurden erstmalig die Zusammenhänge zwischen der Teilnahme an einer standardisierten NNI-Schulung und oben genannten Aspekten im Rahmen einer multizentrischen Längschnittstudie untersucht.
Die Ergebnisse der Querschnittstudie zeichnen insgesamt ein deutlich positiveres Bild von der subjektiven Krankheits- und Therapiewahrnehmung als bisher in der Literatur beschrieben. Die subjektive Therapieadhärenz war hoch. Zudem waren Sorgen und Ängste hinsichtlich der Glucocorticoid-Substitution geringer ausgeprägt als erwartet. Nichtsdestotrotz ließ sich konkordant zu früheren Publikationen eine zum Teil sehr große Unzufriedenheit mit erhaltenen Informationen zu möglichen Problemen der Glucocorticoid-Substitution feststellen. Die Ergebnisse der Längschnittstudie deuten darauf hin, dass die standardisierte Patientenschulung ein geeignetes Instrument sein könnte, um die Zufriedenheit von Patienten mit NNI zu steigern, das Selbstmanagement zu stärken und gleichzeitig positiven Einfluss auf die Wahrnehmung der Substitutionstherapie nehmen könnte.
Hintergrund: Bei erwachsenen Patient*innen mit Erkrankungen aus dem Schizophrenie-Spektrum konnte im transkraniellen Ultraschall im Vergleich zu gesunden Proband*innen eine signifikant erhöhte Echogenität der Substantia Nigra (SN) nachgewiesen werden. Zudem bestand ein Zusammenhang zwischen der SN-Fläche und stärker ausgeprägten extrapyramidalmotorischen Bewegungsstörungen unter Antipsychotikatherapie. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde überprüft, inwiefern die Echogenität der SN auch bei Jugendlichen und jungen Erwachsenen als Biomarker für Erkrankungen aus dem psychotischen Formenkreis und als Korrelat psychopharmakologischer Nebenwirkungen herangezogen werden kann. Des Weiteren wurde der Einfluss von Alter, Krankheitsdauer sowie Antipsychotika-Lebenszeitdosis auf die SN-Echogenität untersucht sowie Zusammenhänge mit peripheren Eisenparametern.
Methoden: Hierfür wurden insgesamt 16 stationär behandelte Patient*innen zwischen 14 – 22 Jahren mit Erkrankungen aus dem schizophrenen Formenkreis sowie nach Alter und Geschlecht gematchte gesunde Kontrollen mittels TCS untersucht. Aus peripher entnommenem Blut wurden Parameter des Eisenhaushalts bestimmt.
Ergebnisse: Es konnten entgegen der Hypothese keine signifikanten Unterschiede in Bezug auf die Echogenität der SN im Vergleich zur gesunden Kontrollgruppe festgestellt werden. Bezüglich der Schwere der beobachteten EPMS ergab sich entgegen der Hypothese und im Kontrast zu Befunden bei Erwachsenen kein Zusammenhang mit der SN-Echogenität. Das Alter der Proband*innen, die Krankheitsdauer sowie die Dosis der eingenommenen Antipsychotika zeigten keine Zusammenhänge mit der SN-Echogenität. Interessanterweise zeigte sich eine signifikant negative Korrelation zwischen der echogenen Fläche der SN und Eisen sowie Transferrin.
Schlussfolgerung: Im Jugend- und jungen Erwachsenenalter eignet sich die SN-Echogenität vermutlich nicht als Biomarker für Erkrankungen aus dem Schizophrenie-Spektrum oder für die Prädiktion von Nebenwirkungen antipsychotischer Medikation. Möglicherweise manifestiert sich eine erhöhte Echogenität der SN, welche als Zeichen für eine Schädigung der dopaminergen Neurone gesehen wird, bei schizophrenen Psychosen erst im Verlauf der Krankheit. Da wir die Studienteilnehmer*innen nur zu einem einzigen Zeitpunkt im Laufe ihrer Krankheitsgeschichte untersuchten, kann keine Aussage über den weiteren Verlauf der SN-Echogenität getroffen werden. Hierfür wären longitudinale Untersuchungen zielführend, da nur so mögliche entwicklungsbedingte Veränderungen festgestellt werden können.
Purpose
Traditionally, previous wound infection was considered a contraindication to secondary skin closure; however, several case reports describe successful secondary wound closure of wounds "preconditioned" with negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT). Although this has been increasingly applied in daily practice, a systematic analysis of its feasibility has not been published thus far. The aim of this study was to evaluate secondary skin closure in previously infected abdominal wounds following treatment with NPWT.
Methods
Single-center retrospective analysis of patients with infected abdominal wounds treated with NPWT followed by either secondary skin closure referenced to a group receiving open wound therapy. Endpoints were wound closure rate, wound complications (such as recurrent infection or hernia), and perioperative data (such as duration of NPWT or hospitalization parameters).
Results
One hundred ninety-eight patients during 2013-2016 received a secondary skin closure after NPWT and were analyzed and referenced to 67 patients in the same period with open wound treatment after NPWT. No significant difference in BMI, chronic immunosuppressive medication, or tobacco use was found between both groups. The mean duration of hospital stay was 30 days with a comparable duration in both patient groups (29 versus 33 days, p = 0.35). Interestingly, only 7.7% of patients after secondary skin closure developed recurrent surgical site infection and in over 80% of patients were discharged with closed wounds requiring only minimal outpatient wound care.
Conclusion
Surgical skin closure following NPWT of infected abdominal wounds is a good and safe alternative to open wound treatment. It prevents lengthy outpatient wound therapy and is expected to result in a higher quality of life for patients and reduce health care costs.
Plasma membrane receptors are the most crucial and most commonly studied components of cells, since they not only ensure communication between the extracellular space and cells, but are also responsible for the regulation of cell cycle and cell division. The composition of the surface receptors, the so-called "Receptome", differs and is characteristic for certain cell types. Due to their significance, receptors have been important target structures for diagnostic and therapy in cancer medicine and often show aberrant expression patterns in various cancers compared to healthy cells. However, these aberrations can also be exploited and targeted by different medical approaches, as in the case of personalized immunotherapy. In addition, advances in modern fluorescence microscopy by so-called single molecule techniques allow for unprecedented sensitive visualization and quantification of molecules with an attainable spatial resolution of 10-20 nm, allowing for the detection of both stoichiometric and expression density differences.
In this work, the single molecule sensitive method dSTORM was applied to quantify the receptor composition of various cell lines as well as in primary samples obtained from patients with hematologic malignancies. The focus of this work lies on artefact free quantification, stoichiometric analyses of oligomerization states and co localization analyses of membrane receptors.
Basic requirements for the quantification of receptors are dyes with good photoswitching properties and labels that specifically mark the target structure without generating background through non-specific binding. To ensure this, antibodies with a predefined DOL (degree of labeling) were used, which are also standard in flow cytometry. First background reduction protocols were established on cell lines prior analyses in primary patient samples. Quantitative analyses showed clear expression differences between the cell lines and the patient cells, but also between individual patients.
An important component of this work is the ability to detect the oligomerization states of receptors, which enables a more accurate quantification of membrane receptor densities compared to standard flow cytometry. It also provides information about the activation of a certain receptor, for example of FLT3, a tyrosine kinase, dimerizing upon activation. For this purpose, different well-known monomers and dimers were compared to distinguish the typical localization statistics of single bound antibodies from two or more antibodies that are in proximity. Further experiments as well as co localization analyses proved that antibodies can bind to closely adjacent epitopes despite their size.
These analytical methods were subsequently applied for quantification and visualization of receptors in two clinically relevant examples. Firstly, various therapeutically relevant receptors such as CD38, BCMA and SLAMF7 for multiple myeloma, a malignant disease of plasma cells, were analyzed and quantified on patient cells. Furthermore, the influence of TP53 and KRAS mutations on receptor expression levels was investigated using the multiple myeloma cell lines OPM2 and AMO1, showing clear differences in certain receptor quantities.
Secondly, FLT3 which is a therapeutic target receptor for acute myeloid leukemia, was quantified and stoichiometrically analyzed on both cell lines and patient cells. In addition, cells that have developed resistance against midostaurin were compared with cells that still respond to this type I tyrosine-kinase-inhibitor for their FLT3 receptor expression and oligomerization state.
The development of cellular life on earth is coupled to the formation of lipid-based biological membranes. Although many tools to analyze their biophysical properties already exist, their variety and number is still relatively small compared to the field of protein studies. One reason for this, is their small size and complex assembly into an asymmetric tightly packed lipid bilayer showing characteristics of a two-dimensional heterogenous fluid. Since membranes are capable to form dynamic, nanoscopic domains, enriched in sphingolipids and cholesterol, their detailed investigation is limited to techniques which access information below the diffraction limit of light. In this work, I aimed to extend, optimize and compare three different labeling approaches for sphingolipids and their subsequent analysis by the single-molecule localization microscopy (SMLM) technique direct stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (dSTORM). First, I applied classical immunofluorescence by immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibody labeling to detect and quantify sphingolipid nanodomains in the plasma membrane of eukaryotic cells. I was able to identify and characterize ceramide-rich platforms (CRPs) with a size of ~ 75nm on the basal and apical membrane of different cell lines. Next, I used click-chemistry to characterize sphingolipid analogs in living and fixed cells. By using a combination of fluorescence microscopy and anisotropy experiments, I analyzed their accessibility and configuration in the plasma membrane, respectively. Azide-modified, short fatty acid side chains, were accessible to membrane impermeable dyes and localized outside the hydrophobic membrane core. In contrast, azide moieties at the end of longer fatty acid side chains were less accessible and conjugated dyes localized deeper within the plasma membrane. By introducing photo-crosslinkable diazirine groups or chemically addressable amine groups, I developed methods to improve their immobilization required for dSTORM. Finally, I harnessed the specific binding characteristics of non-toxic shiga toxin B subunits (STxBs) and cholera toxin B subunits (CTxBs) to label and quantify glycosphingolipid nanodomains in the context of Neisseria meningitidis infection. Under pyhsiological conditions, these glycosphingolipids were distributed homogenously in the plasma membrane but upon bacterial infection CTxB detectable gangliosides accumulated around invasive Neisseria meningitidis. I was able to highlight the importance of cell cycle dependent glycosphingolipid expression for the invasion process. Blocking membrane accessible sugar headgroups by pretreatment with CTxB significantly reduced the number of invasive bacteria which confirmed the importance of gangliosides for bacterial uptake into cells. Based on my results, it can be concluded that labeling of sphingolipids should be carefully optimized depending on the research question and applied microscopy technique. In particular, I was able to develop new tools and protocols which enable the characterization of sphingolipid nanodomains by dSTORM for all three labeling approaches.
Like human Th1 cells, mouse Th1 cells also secrete IFN‐γ upon stimulation with a superagonistic anti‐CD28 monoclonal antibody (CD28‐SA). Crosslinking of the CD28‐SA via FcR and CD40‐CD40L interactions greatly increased IFN‐γ release. Our data stress the utility of the mouse as a model organism for immune responses in humans.
The diffraction limit of light confines fluorescence imaging of subcellular structures in fungi. Different super-resolution methods are available for the analysis of fungi that we briefly discuss. We exploit the filamentous fungus Fusarium fujikuroi expressing a YFP-labeled membrane protein showing the benefit of correlative light- and electron microscopy (CLEM), that combines structured illumination microscopy (SIM) and scanning election microscopy (SEM).
Adipose tissue-derived stromal cells (ASCs) represent a capable source for cell-based therapeutic approaches. For monitoring a cell-based application in vivo, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of cells labeled with iron oxide particles is a common method. It is the aim of the present study to analyze potential DNA damage, cytotoxicity and impairment of functional properties of human (h)ASCs after labeling with citrate-coated very small superparamagnetic iron oxide particles (VSOPs). Cytotoxic as well as genotoxic effects of the labeling procedure were measured in labeled and unlabeled hASCs using the MTT assay, comet assay and chromosomal aberration test. Trilineage differentiation was performed to evaluate an impairment of the differentiation potential due to the particles. Proliferation as well as migration capability were analyzed after the labeling procedure. Furthermore, the labeling of the hASCs was confirmed by Prussian blue staining, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and high-resolution MRI. Below the concentration of 0.6 mM, which was used for the procedure, no evidence of genotoxic effects was found. At 0.6 mM, 1 mM as well as 1.5 mM, an increase in the number of chromosomal aberrations was determined. Cytotoxic effects were not observed at any concentration. Proliferation, migration capability and differentiation potential were also not affected by the procedure. Labeling with VSOPs is a useful labeling method for hASCs that does not affect their proliferation, migration and differentiation potential. Despite the absence of cytotoxicity, however, indications of genotoxic effects have been demonstrated.
The aim of the first part of this thesis was to investigate (R,R)-PBI as a model system for polymorphism at its origin by a supramolecular approach. The pathway complexity of (R,R)-PBI was fine-tuned by experimental parameters such as solvent, temperature and concentration to make several supramolecular polymorphs accessible. Mechanistic and quantum chemical studies on the kinetics and thermodynamics of the supramolecular polymerization of (R,R)-PBI were conducted to shed light on the initial stages of polymorphism. The second part of this work deals with mechanistic investigations on the supramolecular polymerization of the racemic mixture of (R,R)- and (S,S)-PBI with regard to homochiral and heterochiral aggregation leading to conglomerates and a racemic supramolecular polymer, respectively.
Increasing demand for biomass has led to an on‐going intensification of fuel wood plantations with possible negative effects on open land biodiversity. Hence, ecologists increasingly call for measures that reduce those negative effects on associated biodiversity. However, our knowledge about the efficiency of such measures remains scarce.
We investigated the effects of gap implementation in short rotation coppices (SRCs) on carabid diversity and assemblage composition over 3 years, with pitfall traps in gaps, edges and interiors. In parallel, we quantified soil surface temperature, shrub‐ and herb cover.
Edges had the highest number of species and abundances per trap, whereas rarefied species richness was significantly lower in short rotation coppice interiors than in other habitat types. Carabid community composition differed significantly between habitat types. The main environmental drivers were temperature for number of species and abundance and shrub cover for rarefied species richness.
We found significantly higher rarefied species richness in gaps compared with interiors. Hence, we argue that gap implementation benefits overall diversity in short rotation coppices. Furthermore, the differences in species community composition between habitat types through increased species turnover support carabid diversity in short rotation coppices. These positive effects were largely attributed to microclimate conditions. However, to maintain positive effects, continuous management of herb layer might be necessary.
A new Ru oligomer of formula {[Ru-\(^{II}\)(bda-\(\kappa\)-N\(^2\)O\(^2\))(4,4'-bpy)]\(_{10}\)(4,4'-bpy)}, 10 (bda is [2,2'-bipyridine]-6,6'-dicarbox-ylate and 4,4'-bpy is 4,4'-bipyridine), was synthesized and thoroughly characterized with spectroscopic, X-ray, and electrochemical techniques. This oligomer exhibits strong affinity for graphitic materials through CH-\(\pi\) interactions and thus easily anchors on multiwalled carbon nanotubes (CNT), generating the molecular hybrid material 10@CNT. The latter acts as a water oxidation catalyst and converts to a new species, 10'(H\(_2\)O)\(_2\)@CNT, during the electrochemical oxygen evolution process involving solvation and ligand reorganization facilitated by the interactions of molecular Ru catalyst and the surface. This heterogeneous system has been shown to be a powerful and robust molecular hybrid anode for electrocatalytic water oxidation into molecular oxygen, achieving current densities in the range of 200 mA/cm\(^2\) at pH 7 under an applied potential of 1.45 V vs NHE. The remarkable long-term stability of this hybrid material during turnover is rationalized based on the supramolecular interaction of the catalyst with the graphitic surface.
To study the interaction of human pathogens with their host target structures, human tissue models based on primary cells are considered suitable. Complex tissue models of the human airways have been used as infection models for various viral and bacterial pathogens. The Gram-negative bacterium Bordetella pertussis is of relevant clinical interest since whooping cough has developed into a resurgent infectious disease. In the present study, we created three-dimensional tissue models of the human ciliated nasal and tracheo-bronchial mucosa. We compared the innate immune response of these models towards the B. pertussis virulence factor adenylate cyclase toxin (CyaA) and its enzymatically inactive but fully pore-forming toxoid CyaA-AC\(^-\). Applying molecular biological, histological, and microbiological assays, we found that 1 µg/ml CyaA elevated the intracellular cAMP level but did not disturb the epithelial barrier integrity of nasal and tracheo-bronchial airway mucosa tissue models. Interestingly, CyaA significantly increased interleukin 6, interleukin 8, and human beta defensin 2 secretion in nasal tissue models, whereas tracheo-bronchial tissue models were not significantly affected compared to the controls. Subsequently, we investigated the interaction of B. pertussis with both differentiated primary nasal and tracheo-bronchial tissue models and demonstrated bacterial adherence and invasion without observing host cell type-specific significant differences. Even though the nasal and the tracheo-bronchial mucosa appear similar from a histological perspective, they are differentially susceptible to B. pertussis CyaA in vitro. Our finding that nasal tissue models showed an increased innate immune response towards the B. pertussis virulence factor CyaA compared to tracheo-bronchial tissue models may reflect the key role of the nasal airway mucosa as the first line of defense against airborne pathogens.