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Chronic pain conditions are a major reason for the utilization of the health care system. Inflammatory pain states can persist facilitated by peripheral sensitization of nociceptors. The voltage-gated sodium channel 1.9 (NaV1.9) is an important regulator of neuronal excitability and is involved in inflammation-induced pain hypersensitivity. Recently, oxidized 1-palmitoyl-2-arachidonoyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphatidylcholine (OxPAPC) was identified as a mediator of acute inflammatory pain and persistent hyperalgesia, suggesting an involvement in proalgesic cascades and peripheral sensitization. Peripheral sensitization implies an increase in neuronal excitability. This thesis aims to characterize spontaneous calcium activity in neuronal compartments as a proxy to investigate neuronal excitability, making use of the computational tool Neural Activity Cubic (NA3). NA3 allows automated calcium activity event detection of signal-close-to-noise calcium activity and evaluation of neuronal activity states. Additionally, the influence of OxPAPC and NaV1.9 on the excitability of murine dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons and the effect of OxPAPC on the response of DRG neurons towards other inflammatory mediators (prostaglandin E2, histamine, and bradykinin) is investigated. Using calcium imaging, the presence of spontaneous calcium activity in murine DRG neurons was established. NA3 was used to quantify this spontaneous calcium activity, which revealed decreased activity counts in axons and somata of NaV1.9 knockout (KO) neurons compared to wildtype (WT). Incubation of WT DRG neurons with OxPAPC before calcium imaging did not show altered activity counts compared to controls. OxPAPC incubation also did not modify the response of DRG neurons treated with inflammatory mediators. However, the variance ratio computed by NA3 conclusively allowed to determine neuronal activity states. In conclusion, my findings indicate an important function of NaV1.9 in determining the neuronal excitability of DRG neurons in resting states. OxPAPC exposition does not influence neuronal excitability nor sensitizes neurons for other inflammatory mediators. This evidence reduces the primary mechanism of OxPAPC-induced hyperalgesia to acute effects. Importantly, it was possible to establish an approach for unbiased excitability quantification of DRG neurons by calcium activity event detection and calcium trace variance analysis by NA3. It was possible to show that signal-close-to-noise calcium activity reflects neuronal excitability states.
Humans spontaneously blink several times a minute. These blinks are strongly modulated during various cognitive task. However, the precise function of blinking and the reason for their modulation has not been fully understood. In the present work, I investigated the function of spontaneous blinks through various perceptual and cognitive tasks. Previous research has revealed that blinks rates decrease during some tasks but increase during others. When trying to understand these seemingly contradictory results, I observed that blink reduction occurs when one engages with an external input. For instance, a decrease has been observed due to the onset of a stimulus, sensory input processing and attention towards sensory input. However, for activities that do not involve such an engagement, e.g. imagination, daydreaming or creativity, the blink rate has been shown to increase. To follow up on the proposed hypothesis, I distinguished tasks that involve the processing of an external stimulus and tasks that involve disengagement.
In the first part of the project, I explored blinking during stimulus engagement. If the probability of blinking is low when engaging with the stimulus, then one should find a reduction in blinks specifically during the time period of processing but not during sensory input per se. To this end, in study 1, I tested the influence of task-relevant information duration on blink timing and additionally manipulated the overall sensory input using a visual and an auditory temporal simultaneity judgement task. The results showed that blinks were suppressed longer for longer periods of relevant information or in other words, blinks occurred at the end of relevant information processing for both the visual and the auditory modality. Since relevance is mediated through top-down processes, I argue that the reduction in blinks is a top-down driven suppression. In studies 2 and 3, I again investigated stimulus processing, but in this case, processing was triggered internally and not based on specific changes in the external input. To this end, I used bistable stimuli, in which the actual physical stimulus remains constant but their perception switches between different interpretations. Studies on the involvement of attention in such bistable perceptual changes indicate that the sensory input is reprocessed before the perceptual switch. The results revealed a reduction in eye blink rates before the report of perceptual switches. Importantly, I was able to decipher that the decrease was not caused by the perceptual switch or the behavioral response but likely started before the internal switch. Additionally, periods between a blink and a switch were longer than interblink intervals, indicating that blinks were followed by a period of stable percept. To conclude, the first part of the project revealed that there is a top-down driven blink suppression during the processing of an external stimulus.
In the second part of the project, I extended the idea of blinks marking the disengagement from external processing and tested if blinking is associated with better performance during internally directed processes. Specifically, I investigated divergent thinking, an aspect of creativity, and the link between performance and blink rates as well as the effect of motor restriction. While I could show that motor restriction was the main factor influencing divergent thinking, the relationship between eye blink rates and creative output also depended on restriction. Results showed that higher blink rates were associated with better performance during free movement, but only between subjects. In other words, subjects who had overall higher blink rates scored better in the task, but when they were allowed to sit or walk freely. Within a single subject, trial with higher blink rates were not associated with better performance. Therefore, possibly, people who are able to disengage easily, as indicated by an overall high blink rate, perform better in divergent thinking tasks. However, the link between blink rate and internal tasks is not clear at this point. Indeed, a more complex measurement of blink behavior might be necessary to understand the relationship.
In the final part of the project, I aimed to further understand the function of blinks through their neural correlates. I extracted the blink-related neural activity in the primary visual cortex (V1) of existing recordings of three rhesus monkeys during different sensory processing states. I analyzed spike related multi-unit responses, frequency dependent power changes, local field potentials and laminar distribution of activity while the animal watched a movie compared to when it was shown a blank screen. The results showed a difference in blink-related neural activity dependent on the processing state. This difference suggests a state dependent function of blinks.
Taken altogether, the work presented in this thesis suggests that eye blinks have an important function during cognitive and perceptual processes. Blinks seem to facilitate a disengagement from the external world and are therefore suppressed during intended processing of external stimuli.
Ubiquitylation is a protein post translational modification, in which ubiquitin is covalently attached to target protein substrates resulting in diverse cellular outcomes. Besides ubiquitin, various ubiquitin-like proteins including FAT10 exist, which are also conjugated to target proteins. The underlying modification mechanisms are conserved. In the initial step, ubiquitin or a ubiquitin-like protein is thioester-linked to a catalytic cysteine in the E1activating enzyme in an ATP-dependent manner. The respective protein modifier is then transferred to an E2 conjugating enzyme in a transthioesterification reaction. Finally, an E3 ubiquitin ligase E3 catalyzes the covalent attachment of the protein modifier to a substrate. In the case of ubiquitin, multiple ubiquitin molecules can be attached to a substrate in the form of either linear or branched polyubiquitin chains but also as single ubiquitin modifications. Depending on the nature of the ubiquitin chain, the substrates are destined to various cellular processes such as their targeted destruction by the proteasome but also non-degradative outcomes may occur.
As stated above FAT10 is a ubiquitin-like protein modifier which typically targets proteins for proteasomal degradation. It consists of two ubiquitin-like domains and is mainly expressed in cells of the human immune system. The reported involvement of FAT10 modifications in cancers and other diseases has caught the attention of the scientific community as an inhibition of the FAT10ylation process may provide avenues for novel therapeutic approaches. UBA6 is the E1 activating enzyme that resides at the apex of the FAT10 proteasomal degradation pathway. UBA6 not only recognizes FAT10 but can also activate ubiquitin as efficiently as the ubiquitin specific E1 UBA1. The dual specificity of UBA6 may complicate the inhibition FAT10ylation since targeting the active site of UBA6 will also inhibit the UBA6-catalyzed ubiquitin activation. Therefore, it is important to understand the underlying principles for the dual specificity of UBA6 prior to the development of compounds interfering with FAT10ylation.
In this thesis important novel insights into the structure and function of UBA6 were derived by X-ray crystallography and biochemical methods. The first crystal structure of UBA6 reveals the multidomain architecture of this enzyme in atomic detail. The enzyme is composed of a rigid core including its active and inactive adenylation domains as well as a 4 helix bundle. Overall, the molecule adopts a “Y” shape architecture with the core at the base and the first and second catalytic half domains forming one arm of the “Y” and the ubiquitin fold domain constituting the other arm. While UBA6 shares the same domain architecture as UBA1, substantial differences were revealed by the crystal structure. In particular, the first catalytic half domain undergoes a significant shift to a position more distal from the core. This rigid body movement is assumed to generate room to accommodate the second ubiquitin-like domain of FAT10. Differences are also observed in a hydrophobic platform between the core and the first catalytic half domain and the adenylation active site in the core, which together from the binding sites for ubiquitin and FAT10. Site directed mutagenesis of key residues in these areas altered the UBA6-catalyzed activation of ubiquitin and FAT10. UBA6 variants were generated with the goal of trying to block the activation of FAT10 while still maintaining that of ubiquitin activation, in order to fully explain the dual specificity of UBA6. However, none of these mutations could block the activation of FAT10, while some of these UBA6 variants blocked ubiquitin activation. Preliminary inhibition assays with a group of E1 inhibitors belonging to the adenosyl sulfamate family demonstrated potent inhibition of FAT10ylation for two compounds. The dual specificity of UBA6 hence needs to be further examined by biochemical and structural methods. In particular, the structure of a complex between UBA6 and ubiquitin or FAT10 would provide key insights for further biochemical studies, ultimately allowing the targeted inhibition of the FAT10ylation machinery.
This thesis aimed at searching for new effective agents against Multidrug-Resistant Enterobacteriaceae. This is necessitated by the urgent need for new and innovative antibacterial agents addressing the critical priority pathogens prescribed by the World Health Organization (WHO). Among the available means for antibiotics discovery and development, nature has long remained a proven, innovative, and highly reliable gateway to successful antibacterial agents. Nevertheless, numerous challenges surrounding this valuable source of antibiotics among other drugs are limiting the complete realization of its potential. These include the availability of good quality data on the highly potential natural sources, limitations in methods to prepare and screen crude extracts, bottlenecks in reproducing biological potentials observed in natural sources, as well as hurdles in isolation, purification, and characterization of natural compounds with diverse structural complexities.
Through an extensive review of the literature, it was possible to prepare libraries of plant species and phytochemicals with reported high potentials against Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumnoniae. The libraries were profiled to highlight the existing patterns and relationships between the reported antibacterial activities and studied plants’ families and parts, the type of the extracting solvent, as well as phytochemicals’ classes, drug-likeness and selected parameters for enhanced accumulation within the Gram-negative bacteria. In addition, motivations, objectives, the role of traditional practices and other crucial experimental aspects in the screening of plant extracts for antibacterial activities were identified and discussed.
Based on the implemented strict inclusion criteria, the created libraries grant speedy access to well-evaluated plant species and phytochemicals with potential antibacterial activities. This way, further studies in yet unexplored directions can be pursued from the indicated or related species and compounds. Moreover, the availability of compound libraries focusing on related bacterial species serves a great role in the ongoing efforts to develop the rules of antibiotics penetrability and accumulation, particularly among Gram-negative bacteria. Here, in addition to hunting for potential scaffolds from such libraries, detailed evaluations of large pool compounds with related antibacterial potential can grant a better understanding of structural features crucial for their penetration and accumulation. Based on the scarcity of compounds with broad structural diversity and activity against Gram-negative bacteria, the creation and updating of such libraries remain a laborious but important undertaking.
A Pressurized Microwave Assisted Extraction (PMAE) method over a short duration and low-temperature conditions was developed and compared to the conventional cold maceration over a prolonged duration. This method aimed at addressing the key challenges associated with conventional extraction methods which require long extraction durations, and use more energy and solvents, in addition to larger quantities of plant materials. Furthermore, the method was intended to replace the common use of high temperatures in most of the current MAE applications. Interestingly, the yields of 16 of 18 plant samples under PMAE over 30 minutes were found to be within 91–139% of those obtained from the 24h extraction by maceration. Additionally, different levels of selectivity were observed upon an analytical comparison of the extracts obtained from the two methods. Although each method indicated selective extraction of higher quantities or additional types of certain phytochemicals, a slightly larger number of additional compounds were observed under maceration. The use of this method allows efficient extraction of a large number of samples while sparing heat-sensitive compounds and minimizing chances for cross-reactions between phytochemicals.
Moreover, findings from another investigation highlighted the low likelihood of reproducing antibacterial activities previously reported among various plant species, identified the key drivers of poor reproducibility, and proposed possible measures to mitigate the challenge. The majority of extracts showed no activities up to the highest tested concentration of 1024 µg/mL. In the case of identical plant species, some activities were observed only in 15% of the extracts, in which the Minimum Inhibitory Concentrations (MICs) were 4 – 16-fold higher than those in previous reports. Evaluation of related plant species indicated better outcomes, whereby about 18% of the extracts showed activities in a range of 128–512 μg/mL, some of the activities being superior to those previously reported in related species.
Furthermore, solubilizing plant crude extracts during the preparation of test solutions for Antibacterial Susceptibility Testing (AST) assays was outlined as a key challenge. In trying to address this challenge, some studies have used bacteria-toxic solvents or generally unacceptable concentrations of common solubilizing agents. Both approaches are liable to give false positive results. In line with this challenge, this study has underscored the suitability of acetone in the solubilization of crude plant extracts. Using acetone, better solubility profiles of crude plant extracts were observed compared to dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) at up to 10 %v/v. Based on lacking toxicity against many bacteria species at up to 25 %v/v, its use in the solubilization of poorly water-soluble extracts, particularly those from less polar solvents is advocated.
In a subsequent study, four galloylglucoses were isolated from the leaves of Paeonia officinalis L., whereby the isolation of three of them from this source was reported for the first time. The isolation and characterization of these compounds were driven by the crucial need to continually fill the pre-clinical antibiotics pipeline using all available means. Application of the bioautography-guided isolation and a matrix of extractive, chromatographic, spectroscopic, and spectrometric techniques enabled the isolation of the compounds at high purity levels and the ascertainment of their chemical structures.
Further, the compounds exhibited the Minimum Inhibitory Concentrations (MIC) in a range of 2–256 µg/mL against Multidrug-Resistant (MDR) strains of E. coli and K. pneumonia exhibiting diverse MDR phenotypes. In that, the antibacterial activities of three of the isolated compounds were reported for the first time. The observed in vitro activities of the compounds resonated with their in vivo potentials as determined using the Galleria mellonella larvae model. Additionally, the susceptibility of the MDR bacteria to the galloylglucoses was noted to vary depending on the nature of the resistance enzymes expressed by the MDR bacteria. In that, the bacteria expressing enzymes with higher content of aromatic amino acids and zero or positive net charges were generally more susceptible. Following these findings, a plausible hypothesis for the observed patterns was put forward.
The generally challenging pharmacokinetic properties of galloylglucoses limit their further development into therapeutic agents. However, the compounds can replace or reduce the use of antibiotics in livestock keeping as well as in the treatment of septic wounds and topical or oral cavity infections, among other potential uses.
Using nature-inspired approaches, a series of glucovanillin derivatives were prepared following feasible synthetic pathways which in most cases ensured good yields and high purity levels. Some of the prepared compounds showed MIC values in a range of 128 – 512 μg/mL against susceptible and MDR strains of Klebsiella pneumoniae, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococcus faecium (VRE). These findings emphasize the previously reported essence of small molecular size, the presence of protonatable amino groups and halogen atoms, as well as an amphiphilic character, as crucial features for potential antibacterial agents.
Due to the experienced limited success in the search for new antibacterial agents using purely synthetic means, pursuing semi-synthetic approaches as employed in this study are highly encouraged. This way, it is possible to explore broader chemical spaces around natural scaffolds while addressing their inherent limitations such as solubility, toxicity, and poor pharmacokinetic profiles.
Strumpellin is a member of the highly conserved pentameric WASH complex, which stimulates the Arp2/3 complex on endosomes and induces the formation of a branched actin network. The WASH complex is involved in the formation and stabilisation of endosomal retrieval subdomains and transport carriers, into which selected proteins are packaged and subsequently transported to their respective cellular destination, e.g. the plasma membrane. Up until now, the role of Strumpellin in platelet function and endosomal trafficking has not been researched. In order to examine its role, a conditional knockout mouse line was generated, which specifically lacked Strumpellin in megakaryocytes and platelets.
Conditional knockout of Strumpellin resulted in only a mild platelet phenotype. Loss of Strumpellin led to a decreased abundance of the αIIbβ3 integrin in platelets, including a reduced αIIbβ3 surface expression by approximately 20% and an impaired αIIbβ3 activation after platelet activation. The reduced surface expression of αIIbβ3 was also detected in megakaryocytes. The expression of other platelet surface glycoproteins was not affected. Platelet count, size and morphology remained unaltered. The reduction of αIIbβ3 expression in platelets resulted in a reduced fibrinogen binding capacity after platelet activation. However, fibrinogen uptake under resting conditions, although slightly delayed, as well as overall fibrinogen content in Strumpellin-deficient platelets were comparable to controls. Most notably, reduced αIIbβ3 expression did not lead to any platelet spreading and aggregation defects in vitro. Furthermore, reduced WASH1 protein levels were detected in the absence of Strumpellin.
In conclusion, loss of Strumpellin does not impair platelet function, at least not in vitro. However, the data demonstrates that Strumpellin plays a role in selectively regulating αIIbβ3 surface expression. As a member of the WASH complex, Strumpellin may regulate αIIbβ3 recycling back to the platelet surface. Furthermore, residual WASH complex subunits may still assemble and partially function in the absence of Strumpellin, which could explain the only 20% decrease in αIIbβ3 surface expression. Nonetheless, the exact mechanism still remains unclear.
Fabry disease (FD), an X-linked lysosomal storage disorder, is caused by variants in the gene α-galactosidase A (GLA). As a consequence, the encoded homonymous enzyme GLA is not produced in sufficient amount or does not function properly. Subsequently, globotriaosylceradmide (Gb3), the target substrate of GLA, starts accumulating in several cell types, especially neurons and endothelial cells. FD patients suffer from multiorgan symptoms including cardiomyopathy, nephropathy, stroke, and acral burning pain. It is suggested that the impact of pathological Gb3 accumulation, inflammatory and hypoxic processes, and vasculopathy are contributing to the specific FD pain phenotype. Thus, we investigated the role of inflammation, hypoxia, and vasculopathy on molecular level in dorsal root ganglia (DRG) of the GLA knockout (KO) mouse model. Further, we investigated pain-like characteristics of GLA KO mice at baseline (BS), after capsaicin administration, and after repeated enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) administration for a period of 1.5 years. Acquired data showed disturbances in immune response markers represented by downregulated inflammation-associated genes and lower numbers of CD206+ macrophages in DRG of GLA KO mice. Hypoxic mechanisms were active in DRG of GLA KO mice reflected by increased gene expression of hypoxia- and DNA damage-associated targets, higher numbers of hypoxia-inducible factor 1α-positive (HIF1α+) and carbonic anhydrase 9-positive (CA9+) neurons in DRG of GLA KO mice, and DRG neuronal HIF1α cytosolic-nuclear translocation in GLA KO mice. Vascularization in DRG of GLA KO mice was reduced including lower numbers of blood vessel branches and reduced total blood vessel length. Pain-like behavior of the GLA KO mouse model revealed no mechanical hypersensitivity at BS but age-dependent heat hyposensitivity, which developed also age-matched wild type (WT) mice. Capsaicin administration under isoflurane anesthesia did not elicit the development of nocifensive behavior in GLA KO mice after mechanical or heat stimulation. Repeated ERT administration did not show a clear effect in GLA KO mice in terms of restored heat hyposensitivity to BS paw withdrawal latencies. In summary, we demonstrated the impact of disturbed immune response markers, active hypoxic mechanisms, and reduced vascularization on molecular FD pathophysiology.
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is predominantly driven by mutations in KRAS and TP53. However, PDAC tumors display deregulated levels of MYC and are a paradigm example for MYC-driven and -addicted tumors. For many years MYC was described as a transcription factor that regulates a pleiotropic number of genes to drive proliferation. Recent work sheds a different light on MYC biology. First, changes in gene expression that come along with the activation of MYC are mild and MYC seems to act more as a factor that reduces stress and increases resilience towards challenges during transcription. Second, MYC is a strong driver of immune evasion in different entities. In this study we depleted MYC in murine PDAC cells and revealed the immune dependent regression of tumors in an orthotope transplant model, as well as the activation of the innate immune system using global expression analysis, immunoblotting and fCLIP.
These experiments revealed that endogenous double-stranded RNA is binding as a viral mimicry to Toll-like receptor 3, causing activation of TBK1 and downstream activation of a proimmunogenic transcription program. The regression of tumors upon depletion of MYC is dependent on this pathway since the knockout of TBK1 prevents regression of tumors after depletion of MYC.
We can summarize this study in three main findings: First, the dominant and most important function of MYC in tumors is not to drive proliferation but to promote immune evasion and prevent immune-dependent regression of tumors. Second, cells monitor defects or delay in splicing and RNA processing and activate the immune system to clear cells that face problems with co-transcriptional processing. Third, MYC suppresses the activation of the cell-intrinsic innate immune system and shields highly proliferating cells from the recognition by the immune system.
To translate this into a therapeutically approach, we replaced the shRNA mediated depletion of MYC by treatment with cardiac glycosides. Upon treatment with cardiac glycosides tumor cells reduce uptake of nutrients, causing a downregulation of MYC translation, inhibition of proliferation, glycolysis and lactate secretion. Lactate is a major reason for immune evasion in solid tumors since it dampens, amongst others, cytotoxic T cells and promotes regulatory T cells.
Treatment of mice with cardiac glycosides causes a complete and immune-dependent remission of PDAC tumors in vivo, pointing out that cardiac glycosides have strong proimmunogenic, anti-cancer effects. More detailed analyses will be needed to dissect the full mechanism how cardiac glycosides act on MYC translation and immune evasion in PDAC tumors.
Most of the studies in cell biology primarily focus on models from the opisthokont group of eukaryotes. However, opisthokonts do not encompass the full diversity of eukaryotes. Thus, it is necessary to broaden the research focus to other organisms to gain a comprehensive understanding of basic cellular processes shared across the tree of life. In this sense, Trypanosoma brucei, a unicellular eukaryote, emerges as a viable alternative. The collaborative efforts in genome sequencing and protein tagging over the past two decades have significantly expanded our knowledge on this organism and have provided valuable tools to facilitate a more detailed analysis of this parasite. Nevertheless, numerous questions still remain.
The survival of T. brucei within the mammalian host is intricately linked to the endo-lysosomal system, which plays a critical role in surface glycoprotein recycling, antibody clearance, and plasma membrane homeostasis. However, the dynamics of the duplication of the endo-lysosomal system during T. brucei proliferation and its potential relationship with plasma membrane growth remain poorly understood. Thus, as the primary objective, this thesis explores the endo-lysosomal system of T. brucei in the context of the cell cycle, providing insights on cell surface growth, endosome duplication, and clathrin recruitment. In addition, the study revisits ferritin endocytosis to provide quantitative data on the involvement of TbRab proteins (TbRab5A, TbRab7, and TbRab11) and the different endosomal subpopulations (early, late, and recycling endosomes, respectively) in the transport of this fluid-phase marker. Notably, while these subpopulations function as distinct compartments, different TbRabs can be found within the same region or structure, suggesting a potential physical connection between the endosomal subpopulations. The potential physical connection of endosomes is further explored within the context of the cell cycle and, finally, the duplication and morphological plasticity of the lysosome are also investigated. Overall, these findings provide insights into the dynamics of plasma membrane growth and the coordinated duplication of the endo-lysosomal system during T. brucei proliferation. The early duplication of endosomes suggests their potential involvement in plasma membrane growth, while the late duplication of the lysosome indicates a reduced role in this process. The recruitment of clathrin and TbRab GTPases to the site of endosome formation supports the assumption that the newly formed endosomal system is active during cell division and, consequently, indicates its potential role in plasma membrane homeostasis.
Furthermore, considering the vast diversity within the Trypanosoma genus, which includes ~500 described species, the macroevolution of the group was investigated using the combined information of the 18S rRNA gene sequence and structure. The sequence-structure analysis of T. brucei and other 42 trypanosome species was conducted in the context of the diversity of Trypanosomatida, the order in which trypanosomes are placed. An additional analysis focused on Trypanosoma highlighted key aspects of the group’s macroevolution. To explore these aspects further, additional trypanosome species were included, and the changes in the Trypanosoma tree topology were analyzed. The sequence-structure phylogeny confirmed the independent evolutionary history of the human pathogens T. brucei and Trypanosoma cruzi, while also providing insights into the evolution of the Aquatic clade, paraphyly of groups, and species classification into subgenera.
In the recent years, translational studies comparing imaging data of animals and humans have gained increasing
scientific interests with crucial findings stemming from both, human and animal work. In order to harmonize
statistical analyses of data from different species and to optimize the transfer of knowledge between them, shared
data acquisition protocols and combined statistical approaches have to be identified. Following this idea, methods
of data analysis, which have until now mainly been used to model neural responses of electrophysiological
recordings from rodent data, were applied on human hemodynamic responses (i.e. Blood-Oxygen-Level-
Dependent BOLD signal) as measured via functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).
At the example of two attention and impulsivity networks, timing dynamics and amplitude of the fMRI signal were
determined (study 1). Study 2 described the same parameters frequency-specifically, and in study 3, the
complexity of neural processing was quantified in terms of fractality. Determined parameters were compared with
regard to the subjects’ task performance / impulsivity to validate findings with regard to reports of the current
scientific debate.
In a general discussion, overlapping as well as additional information of methodological approaches were
discussed with regard to its potential for biomarkers in the context of neuropsychiatric disorders.
Predictability of threat is one of the key modulators of neural activity in fear and anxiety-related threat processes and there is a considerable number of studies focusing on the exact contribution of centromedial amygdala and Bed nucleus of stria terminalis (BNST) in animals as well as in humans. In this research field, some studies already investigated the differential involvement of both areas during temporally predictable and unpredictable threat processes in humans. However, these studies showed several limitations e.g. small sample size, no predictable threat conditions, no separation of anticipation and confrontation processes, which should be addressed in future studies. Furthermore, evidence for group-based inter-individual differences of amygdala and BNST activity during predictable and unpredictable threat processes have not been studied extensively.
Several studies suggest a relevant role of the amygdala and BNST activity in phobic processes in patients with specific phobia, but no study so far has investigated the exact contribution of centromedial amygdala (CM) and BNST during temporally predictable and unpredictable threat processes in specific phobia.
This thesis consisted of three studies and aimed to evaluate the exact contribution of CM and BNST during temporally predictable and unpredictable threat anticipation and confrontation with the use of an optimized functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) paradigm, which aimed to solve methodological limitations of recent studies. Study 1 used a large sample of healthy participants who were grouped based on NPSR1 genotype, and study 2 and study 3 used a sample of patients with spider phobia. In sum, the results of all three studies indicated, that BNST is more relevant for anticipation processes as compared to the CM. Contrary, during the confrontation phase the CM displays a greater relevance for threat confrontation processes.
In recent years, various studies have investigated the extent to which treatment success can be predicted in patients with anxiety disorders based on pre-treatment fMRI activity. Therefore, this was investigated for the first time in study 3 in patients with spider phobia during temporally predictable and unpredictable threat processes. Results indicated that independent of temporal predictability lower anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) activity during threat anticipation and engaged BNST during threat confrontation might be benefitting factors for successful therapy response in spider phobia.
Abstract
Neuropathic pain affects 6.9 to 10% of the general population, arises from lesion or disease of the somatosensory nervous system and is still challenging to treat. Indeed, current treatments efficacy are relatively low and present strong side effects. To that extent, identifying new targets and developing new treatment strategies constitute a priority. The blood nerve barrier consists of the endoneurial micro-blood vessels and the perineurium sealed by tight junctions constituted of tight junction proteins such claudin-5 and claudin-1. As the functional blood nerve barrier allows nerve tissue protection from external elements and maintains homeostasis, a destabilization or a disruption leads to infiltration of immunocytes promoting neuroinflammation and increased inflammatory mediators that can sensitize nociceptors and enhance pain. Thus resealing the blood nerve barrier in case of neuropathic pain could be a possible treatment strategy.
Specialised proresolving mediators such lipoxin A4 and resolvin D1 are small lipids that bind to receptors such the formylpeptide recptor 2 (FPR2) and resolve inflammation. Specially resolvin D1 as anti-inflammatory and analgesic properties. Thus using resolvin D1 or eventually other specialized proresolving mediators in neuropathic pain could reseal the blood nerve barrier and resolve neuropathic pain. The present work aimed to characterize the blood nerve barrier in a preclinical model of diabetic polyneuropathy and nerve injury (chronic constriction injury) and to identify specialized proresolving mediators that seal the blood nerve barrier and thereby alleviate neuropathic pain.
In diabetic polyneuropathy, the blood nerve barrier is permeable only to small molecules, which is due to the loss of claudin-1 in the perineurium and a reduced number of blood vessel- associated macrophages. Interestingly, blood nerve barrier permeability did not occur until four to eight weeks after diabetes induction, whereas mechanical hyperalgesia was measurable as early as two weeks. This suggests a pain-maintaining rather than a pain-triggering role of the blood nerve barrier.
In case of chronic constriction injury, a resolution process of both mechanical and thermal hyperalgesia occurs between three to six weeks after injury. Here, the blood nerve barrier is permeable to both small and large molecules from the beginning. The pain recovery process occurs primarily in parallel with the sealing of the endoneurial barrier to large molecules such as fibrinogen from the plasma and its degradation. Perineurium is still permeable nine weeks after injury. Metabolomic analyses show that especially precursors of Resolvin D1 as well as its receptor FPR2, are upregulated at the beginning of pain resolution. Application of resolvin
D1 loaded nanoparticles or agonists of FPR2 at the injury site before the onset of pain resolution accelerates the process and fibrinogen is no longer detectable in the endoneurium. Depending on the nerve damage, the blood nerve barrier is affected to varying degrees. Direct mechanical trauma and the accompanying inflammation lead to a more pronounced and long-lasting permeability - independent hyperalgesia. Possibly permeability, at least for small molecules, is important for prolonged reparative processes. In the nerve, permeability of capillaries in particular depends not only on tight junctions but also on other cells: in addition to macrophages, pericytes could also have a sealing effect. Endoneurial fibrinogen triggers pain; the exact mechanism remains to be investigated. Resolvin-containing nanoparticles were particularly effective and could be used locally as they contain endogenous substances in non- toxic particles.
Depressive disorders represent one of the main sources for the loss of healthy years of life. One of the reasons for this circumstance is the recurrent course of these disorders, which can be interrupted by current therapeutic approaches, especially in the shortterm, but seem to be maintained at least in part in the long-term. Subsequently, on one hand, this thesis deals with methodological measurement issues in the longitudinal prediction of depressive courses. On the other hand, it addresses two currently discussed neuroscience-based treatment approaches, which are investigated experimentally in a basic-psychological manner and reviewed in the light of their potential to translate results to the application in patient care. These two approaches each address potential mechanisms that may negatively impact long-term disease trajectories: First, stable endophenotypes for vulnerability factors that could regain control over the organism and reactivate maladaptive experiences, or behaviors with increasing temporal distance from therapeutic methods are focused on. In the studies presented, these were influenced by a recently rediscovered method of neuromodulation (transcranial low-intensity focused ultrasound) which is discussed in light of its unique capability to address even deepest, subcortical regions at a high spatial resolution. Lastly, as a second approach, an experimental design for the use of reconsolidation interference is presented, which could provide a first insight into the applicability of corresponding protocols in the field of depressive disorders and thus contribute to the modification, instead of inhibition, of already mentioned endophenotypes. In sum, methodological considerations for monitoring and predicting long-term courses of depression are deducted before two approaches are discussed that could potentially exert positive influences on the recurrent nature of depressive symptoms on their own, in combination with each other, or as augmentation for existing therapeutic procedures.
Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative disease with still no cure available. The prominent feature of PD is the loss of dopaminergic neurons at the Substantia nigra (SN). Genetic and environmental insults affecting the SNCA gene encoding the alpha-Synuclein (alpha-Syn) protein result into an aberrant form of the protein with higher propensity towards oligomerization becoming part of insoluble inclusions called Lewy Bodies (LB). LB impart cytotoxicity leading to neurodegeneration, activate resident microglia and escape to the periphery where they get captured by dendritic cells and presented to naïve T cells. Proliferating effector T lymphocytes invade the brain releasing proinflammatory cytokines and performing a cytotoxic effect on neurons.
In this study, we examine the hypothesis that the expansion of regulatory T cells (Treg) could exert an anti-inflammatory effect that averts neurodegeneration in the AAV1/2-A53T-alpha-Syn mouse model for PD.
Mice brains were transfected by a unilateral stereotaxic injection at the SN region with a chimeric Adeno-Associated Viral vector of serotypes 1 and 2 (AAV1/2) carrying the A53T-mutated human SNCA gene encoding the readily aggregating aberrant alpha-Syn (AAV1/2-A53T-alpha-Syn). One week after injection, mice were treated with the CD28 superagonistic antibody (CD28SA), known to significantly expand the Treg population. Mice were then analyzed by behavioral analysis using the Rotarod performance test and the Cylinder test. The impact of CD28SA on the immune system was examined by flow cytometry. The integrity of the nigrostriatal system was assessed by stereological quantification of Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-stained dopaminergic neurons in SN and optical density measurements of TH-stained striatum. The mechanism of action of CD28SA was analyzed by treating PD mice alternatively with a Treg adoptive transfer, while CD28SA effect on levels of neurotrophic factors was quantified by ELISA.
We observed an expansion of Treg by FACS analyses three days after CD28SA treatment, demonstrating target engagement. CD28SA treatment of AAV1/2-A53T-alpha-Syn mice provided neuroprotection evident through elevated numbers of dopaminergic neurons in the SN and higher optical density of TH-staining in the striatum, in CD28SA-treated mice compared to PBS-treated control mice, and that was reflected in an enhanced performance in behavioral studies. Additionally, brain infiltration of proinflammatory activated T lymphocytes (CD4+CD69+ and CD8+CD69+ cells), that were obvious in PBS-treated AAV1/2-A53T-alpha-Syn control mice, was augmented in PD mice receiving CD28SA. The alternative treatment with Treg adoptive transfer did replicate the beneficial effects of CD28SA indicating that Treg expansion is the main effector mechanism by which it exerts its neuroprotective effect. CD28SA treatment of PD mice led to an increase of GDNF and BDNF in some brain structures that was not observed in untreated mice.
We conclude that in the AAV1/2-A53T-alpha-Syn PD mouse model, CD28SA suppresses proinflammation, reverses behavioral deficits and is neuroprotective on SN dopaminergic cells.
Ibrutinib serves as an efficient second-line therapy in relapsed/refractory mantle cell lymphoma. However, resistance to the BTK inhibitor results in a poor prognosis for patients. Since the mechanisms leading to resistance in initially responding tumor cells are poorly understood, this work aimed to decipher acquired features in ibrutinib-surviving cells of a sensitive mantle cell lymphoma cell line and evaluate these potential therapeutic targets in ibrutinib-treated mantle cell lymphoma.
Time-resolved single-cell RNA sequencing was performed to track the transcriptomic evolution of REC-1 cells across 6 and 48 hours of treatment. Single-cell analysis uncovered a subpopulation of REC-1 with potentially greater aggressiveness and survival advantage by benefiting from interaction with the tumor microenvironment. Upregulation of B-cell receptor genes, elevated surface antigen expression of CD52 and metabolic rewiring to higher dependence on oxidative phosphorylation were identified as further potential resistance features of ibrutinib-surviving cells. RNA sequencing after prolonged incubation corroborated the increase in CD52 and oxidative phosphorylation as dominant characteristics of the cells surviving the 4-day treatment, highlighting their potential as therapeutic targets in combination with ibrutinib treatment. Concomitant use of ibrutinib and the oxidative phosphorylation inhibitor IACS-010759 increased toxicity compared to ibrutinib monotherapy due to higher apoptosis and greater inhibition of proliferation. For anti-CD52 therapy, a consecutive approach with ibrutinib pretreatment followed by incubation of surviving cells with a CD52 monoclonal antibody and human serum yielded a synergistic effect, as ibrutinib-surviving mantle cell lymphoma cells were rapidly depleted by complement-dependent cytotoxicity. Regarding the effects on primary tumor cells from mantle cell lymphoma patients, ibrutinib induced upregulation of CD52 in some cases, and increased toxicity of anti-CD52 therapy was observed in ibrutinib-sensitive patient samples after pretreatment with the BTK inhibitor. The likely favorable in vivo efficacy of an anti-CD52 therapy might therefore be restricted to a subgroup of mantle cell lymphoma patients, also in view of the associated side effects.
Given the need for new therapeutic options in mantle cell lymphoma to overcome resistance to ibrutinib, this work highlights the potentially beneficial use of an oxidative phosphorylation inhibitor as add-on therapy. In addition, the findings suggest to further assess the value of anti-CD52 therapy as consolidation to ibrutinib in ibrutinib-sensitive patients with elevated CD52 surface levels on tumor cells to target resistant clones and minimize risk of minimal residual disease and relapse.
Systemic and local mechanisms of small fiber pathology in female patients with fibromyalgia syndrome
(2023)
Fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) is a largely heterogeneous chronic pain syndrome of unclear pathophysiology, which lacks objective diagnostics and specific treatment. An immune-related shift towards a pro-inflammatory profile is discussed at a systemic level. Small fiber pathology (SFP) and local participation of non-neuronal skin cells like keratinocytes in cutaneous nociception are potential peripheral contributors. Small RNAs, particularly microRNAs (miRs) and newly described tRNA fragments (tRFs) act as posttranscriptional key regulators of gene expression and may modulate systemic and peripheral cell pathways. On cellular level, the exact mechanisms of keratinocyte-intraepidermal nerve fiber (IENF) interaction in the skin are insufficiently understood.
Via small RNA sequencing and quantitative real-time PCR, we investigated miR and tRF signatures in whole blood cells and skin biopsy-derived keratinocytes of female FMS patients versus healthy controls. We applied gene target prediction analysis to uncover underlying cellular pathways affected by dysregulated small RNAs. Altered FMS small RNAs from blood were compared with their expression in disease controls, i.e. Parkinson`s patients and patients with major depression and chronic pain. Association of SFP with small RNAs was investigated via correlation with clinical parameter. To explore keratinocyte-nerve fiber interactions with high relevance for SFP and cutaneous nociception, we adapted a super-resolution array tomography (srAT) approach and expansion microscopy (ExM) for human skin samples. Further, we created a fully human 2D co-culture model of primary keratinocytes and induced pluripotent stem cell derived sensory neurons.
Blood miR deregulation indicated systemic modulation of immune processes exerted by CholinomiRs and by miRs targeting the FoxO signaling pathway. Short sized tRFs were associated with mRNA metabolism and splicing. This supports the hypothesis of an inflammatory/autoimmunity component in FMS. Expression of blood small RNAs in FMS were discriminative against disease controls, highlighting their potential as objective biomarker. Blood small RNAs were predominantly upregulated and correlations between miR and clinical parameter reflected rather pain in general than SFP.
In FMS keratinocytes, a downregulation of miRs and tRFs was evident. Pathways for adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK), adherens junction, and focal adhesion were predicted to be affected by miRs, while tRFs may influence proliferation, migration, and cell growth. Similar to blood miRs, altered miRs in keratinocytes correlated mostly with widespread pain and pain severity parameter. TRFs were partially associated with more severe IENF loss. Small RNAs in FMS keratinocytes may modulate pathways that define how keratinocytes interact with each other and with IENF.
These interactions include nerve fiber ensheathment, a conserved epithelial mechanism, which we visualize in human epidermis and a fully human co-culture model. Additionally, we revealed plaques of connexin 43, a pore forming protein involved in intercellular communication, at keratinocyte- nerve fiber contact sites. Objective quantification of these morphological findings in FMS and other diseases with SFP may inherit diagnostic value similar to IENF density.
We provide evidence for distinct miR and tRF signatures in FMS with implications for systemic immune regulation and local cell-cell interaction pathways. In the periphery we explored novel keratinocyte-nerve fiber interactions relevant for SFP and cutaneous nociception.
Alzheimer´s disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disease and the most common form of dementia with still no preventive or curative treatment. Besides several risk factors, age is one of the major risks for AD and with an aging society, there is an urgent need for disease modifying agents. The strategy to address only one target within the intertwined network of AD failed so far.
Natural products especially the phytochemical flavonoids, which are poly-phenolic natural products, have shown great potential as disease modifying agents against neurodegenerative disorders like Alzheimer´s disease (AD) with activities even in vivo. Flavonoids are produced by many plants and the native Californian plant Eriodictyon californicum is particularly rich in flavonoids. One of the major flavonoids of E. californicum is sterubin, a very potent agent against oxidative stress and inflammation, two hallmarks and drivers of AD and neurodegeneration. Herein, racemic sterubin was synthesized and separated into its pure (R)- and (S)-enantiomer by chiral HPLC. The pure enantiomers showed comparable neuroprotection in vitro with no significant differences. The stereoisomers were configurationally stable in methanol, but fast racemization was observed in culture medium. Moreover, the activity of sterubin was investigated in vivo, in an AD mouse model. Sterubin showed a significant positive impact on short- and long-term memory at low dosages.
A promising concept for the increase of activity of single flavonoids is hybridization with aromatic acids like cinnamic or ferulic acids. Hybridization of the natural products taxifolin and silibinin with cinnamic acid led to an overadditive effect of these compounds in phenotypic screening assays related to neurodegeneration and AD. Because there are more potent agents as taxifolin or silibinin, the hybrids were further developed, and different flavonoid cinnamic acid hybrids were synthesized. The connection between flavonoids and cinnamic acid was achieved by an amide instead of a labile ester to improve the stability towards hydrolysis to gain better “druggability” of the compounds. To investigate the oxidation state of the C-ring of the flavonoid part, the dehydro analogues of the respective hybrids were also synthesized. The compounds show neuroprotection against oxytosis, ferroptosis and ATP-depletion in the murine hippocampal cell line HT22. While no overall trend within the flavanones compared to the flavones could be assigned, the taxifolin and the quercetin derivative were the most active compounds in course of all assays. The quercetin derivate even shows greater activity than the taxifolin derivate in every assay. As desired no hydrolysis product was found in cellular uptake experiments after 4h, whereas different metabolites were found. The last part of this work focused on synthetic bioisoteres of the natural product curcumin. Due to the drawbacks of curcumin and flavonoids arising from poor pharmacokinetics, rapid metabolism and sometimes instability in aqueous medium, we have examined the biological activity of azobenzene compounds designed as bioisoteres of curcumin, carrying the pharmacophoric catechol group of flavonoids. These bioisosteres exceeded their parent compounds in counteracting intracellular oxidative stress, neuroinflammation and amyloid-beta aggregation. By incorporating an azobenzene moiety and the isosteric behaviour to the natural parent compounds, these compounds may act as molecular tools for further investigation towards the molecular mode of action of natural products.
This decade saw the development of new high-end light microscopy approaches. These technologies are increasingly used to expand our understanding of cellular function and the molecular mechanisms of life and disease. The precision of state-of-the-art super resolution microscopy is limited by the properties of the applied fluorescent label. Here I describe the synthesis and evaluation of new functional fluorescent probes that specifically stain gephyrin, universal marker of the neuronal inhibitory post-synapse. Selected probe precursor peptides were synthesised using solid phase peptide synthesis and conjugated with selected super resolution capable fluorescent dyes. Identity and purity were defined using chromatography and mass spectrometric methods. To probe the target specificity of the resulting probe variants in cellular context, a high-throughput assay was established. The established semi-automated and parallel workflow was used for the evaluation of three selected probes by defining their co-localization with the expressed fluorescent target protein. My work provided NN1Dc and established the probe as a visualisation tool for essentially background-free visualisation of the synaptic marker protein gephyrin in a cellular context. Furthermore, NN1DA became part of a toolbox for studying the inhibitory synapse ultrastructure and brain connectivity and turned out useful for the development of a label-free, high-throughput protein interaction quantification assay.
Empathy, the act of sharing another person’s affective state, is a ubiquitous driver for helping others and feeling close to them. These experiences are integral parts of human behavior and society. The studies presented in this dissertation aimed to investigate the sustainability and stability of social closeness and prosocial decision-making driven by empathy and other social motives. In this vein, four studies were conducted in which behavioral and neural indicators of empathy sustainability were identified using model-based functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).
Applying reinforcement learning, drift-diffusion modelling (DDM), and fMRI, the first two studies were designed to investigate the formation and sustainability of empathy-related social closeness (study 1) and examined how sustainably empathy led to prosocial behavior (study 2). Using DDM and fMRI, the last two studies investigated how empathy combined with reciprocity, the social norm to return a favor, on the one hand and empathy combined with the motive of outcome maximization on the other hand altered the behavioral and neural social decision process.
The results showed that empathy-related social closeness and prosocial decision tendencies persisted even if empathy was rarely reinforced. The sustainability of these empathy effects was related to recalibration of the empathy-related social closeness learning signal (study 1) and the maintenance of a prosocial decision bias (study 2). The findings of study 3 showed that empathy boosted the processing of reciprocity-based social decisions, but not vice versa. Study 4 revealed that empathy-related decisions were modulated by the motive of outcome maximization, depending on individual differences in state empathy.
Together, the studies strongly support the concept of empathy as a sustainable driver of social closeness and prosocial behavior.
In the eusocial insect honeybee (Apis mellifera), many sterile worker bees live together with a reproductive queen in a colony. All tasks of the colony are performed by the workers, undergoing age-dependent division of labor. Beginning as hive bees, they take on tasks inside the hive such as cleaning or the producing of larval food, later developing into foragers. With that, the perception of sweetness plays a crucial role for all honeybees whether they are sitting on the honey stores in the hive or foraging for food. Their ability to sense sweetness is undoubtedly necessary to develop and evaluate food sources. Many of the behavioral decisions in honeybees are based on sugar perception, either on an individual level for ingestion, or for social behavior such as the impulse to collect or process nectar. In this context, honeybees show a complex spectrum of abilities to perceive sweetness on many levels. They are able to perceive at least seven types of sugars and decide to collect them for the colony. Further, they seem to distinguish between these sugars or at least show clear preferences when collecting them. Additionally, the perception of sugar is not rigid in honeybees. For instance, their responsiveness towards sugar changes during the transition from in-hive bees (e.g. nurses) to foraging and is linked to the division of labor. Other direct or immediate factors changing responsiveness to sugars are stress, starvation or underlying factors, such as genotype.
Interestingly, the complexity in their sugar perception is in stark contrast to the fact that honeybees seem to have only three predicted sugar receptors.
In this work, we were able to characterize the three known sugar receptors (AmGr1, AmGr2 and AmGr3) of the honeybee fully and comprehensively in oocytes (Manuscript II, Chapter 3 and Manuscript III, Chapter 4). We could show that AmGr1 is a broad sugar receptor reacting to sucrose, glucose, maltose, melezitose and trehalose (which is the honeybees’ main blood sugar), but not fructose. AmGr2 acts as its co-receptor altering AmGr1’s specificity, AmGr3 is a specific fructose receptor and we proved the heterodimerization of all receptors. With my studies, I was able to reproduce and compare the ligand specificity of the sugar receptors in vivo by generating receptor mutants with CRISPR/Cas9. With this thesis, I was able to define AmGr1 and AmGr3 as the honeybees’ basis receptors already capable to detect all sugars of its known taste spectrum.
In the expression analysis of my doctoral thesis (Manuscript I, Chapter 2) I demonstrated that both basis receptors are expressed in the antennae and the brain of nurse bees and foragers. This thesis assumes that AmGr3 (like the Drosophila homologue) functions as a sensor for fructose, which might be the satiety signal, while AmGr1 can sense trehalose as the main blood sugar in the brain. Both receptors show a reduced expression in the brain of foragers when compared with nurse bees. These results may reflect the higher concentrated diet of nurse bees in the hive. The higher number of receptors in the brain may allow nurse bees to perceive hunger earlier and to consume the food their sitting on. Forager bees have to be more persistent to hunger, when they are foraging, and food is not so accessible. The findings of reduced expression of the fructose receptor AmGr3 in the antennae of nurse bees are congruent with my other result that nurse bees are also less responsive to fructose at the antennae when compared to foragers (Manuscript I, Chapter 2). This is possible, since nurse bees sit more likely on ripe honey which contains not only higher levels of sugars but also monosaccharides (such as fructose), while foragers have to evaluate less-concentrated nectar.
My investigations of the expression of AmGr1 in the antennae of honeybees found no differences between nurse bees and foragers, although foragers are more responsive to the respective sugar sucrose (Manuscript I, Chapter 2). Considering my finding that AmGr2 is the co-receptor of AmGr1, it can be assumed that AmGr1 and the mediated sucrose taste might not be directly controlled by its expression, but indirectly by its co-receptor. My thesis therefore clearly shows that sugar perception is associated with division of labor in honeybees and appears to be directly or indirectly regulated via expression.
The comparison with a characterization study using other bee breeds and thus an alternative protein sequence of AmGr1 shows that co-expression of different AmGr1 versions with AmGr2 alters the sugar response differently. Therefore, this thesis provides first important indications that alternative splicing could also represent an important regulatory mechanism for sugar perception in honeybees.
Further, I found out that the bitter compound quinine lowers the reward quality in learning experiments for honeybees (Manuscript IV, Chapter 5). So far, no bitter receptor has been found in the genome of honeybees and this thesis strongly assumes that bitter substances such as quinine inhibit sugar receptors in honeybees. With this finding, my work includes other molecules as possible regulatory mechanism in the honeybee sugar perception as well. We showed that the inhibitory effect is lower for fructose compared to sucrose. Considering that sugar signals might be processed as differently attractive in honeybees, this thesis concludes that the sugar receptor inhibition via quinine in honeybees might depend on the receptor (or its co-receptor), is concentration-dependent and based on the salience or attractiveness and concentration of the sugar present.
With my thesis, I was able to expand the knowledge on honeybee’s sugar perception and formulate a complex, comprehensive overview. Thereby, I demonstrated the multidimensional mechanism that regulates the sugar receptors and thus the sugar perception of honeybees. With this work, I defined AmGr1 and AmGr3 as the basis of sugar perception and enlarged these components to the co-receptor AmGr2 and the possible splice variants of AmGr1. I further demonstrated how those sugar receptor components function, interact and that they are clearly involved in the division of labor in honeybees. In summary, my thesis describes the mechanisms that enable honeybees to perceive sugar in a complex way, even though they inhere a limited number of sugar receptors. My data strongly suggest that honeybees overall might not only differentiate sugars and their diet by their general sweetness (as expected with only one main sugar receptor). The found sugar receptor mechanisms and their interplay further suggest that honeybees might be able to discriminate directly between monosaccharides and disaccharides or sugar molecules and with that their diet (honey and nectar).
Studies on the role of cytoskeletal-regulatory and -crosslinking proteins in platelet function
(2023)
Cytoskeletal reorganization in platelets is highly regulated and important for proper platelet function during activation and aggregation at sites of vascular injury. In this thesis, the role of three different cytoskeletal-regulatory and -crosslinking proteins was studied in platelet physiology using megakaryocyte- and platelet-specific knockout mice. The generation of branched actin filaments is regulated by nucleation promoting factors (NPF) and the Arp2/3 complex.
(1.) The WAVE complex is a NPF, which upregulates the Arp2/3 complex activity at the plasma membrane. As shown in this thesis, the loss of the WAVE complex subunit Cyfip1 in mice did not alter platelet production and had only a minor impact on platelet activation. However, Cyfip1 played an essential role for branching of actin filaments and consequently for lamellipodia formation in vitro. The importance of lamellipodia for thrombus formation and stability has been controversially discussed. Cyfip1-deficient platelets were able to form a stable thrombus ex vivo and in vivo and a hemostatic plug comparable to controls. Moreover, Cyfip1-deficient mice maintained vascular integrity at the site of inflammation. These data show that platelet lamellipodia formation is not required for hemostatic function and pathophysiological thrombus formation.
(2.) The WASH complex is another NPF, which mediates actin filament polymerization on endosomal vesicles via the Arp2/3 complex. Loss of the WASH complex subunit Strumpellin led to a decreased protein abundance of the WASH protein and to a 20% reduction in integrin αIIbβ3 surface expression on platelets and megakaryocytes, whereas the expression of other surface receptors as well as the platelet count, size, ex vivo thrombus formation and bleeding time remained unaltered. These data point to a distinct role of Strumpellin in maintaining integrin αIIbβ3 expression and provide new insights into regulatory mechanisms of platelet integrins.
(3.) MACF1 has been described as a cytoskeletal crosslinker of microtubules and F-actin. However, MACF1-deficient mice displayed no alterations in platelet production, activation, thrombus formation and hemostatic function. Further, no compensatory up- or downregulation of other proteins could be found that contain an F-actin- and a microtubule-binding domain. These data indicate that MACF1 is dispensable for platelet biogenesis, activation and thrombus formation. Nevertheless, functional redundancy among different proteins mediating the cytoskeletal crosstalk may exist.