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The acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is currently the most infectious disease worldwide. It is caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). At the moment there are ~33.3 million people infected with HIV. Sub-Saharan Africa, with ~22.5 million people infected accounts for 68% of the global burden. In most African countries antiretroviral therapy (ART) is administered in limited-resource settings with standardised first- and second-line ART regimens. During this study I analysed the therapy-naïve population of Cape Town, South Africa and Mwanza, Tanzania for any resistance associated mutations (RAMs) against protease inhibitors, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors and non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors. My results indicate that HIV-1 subtype C accounts for ~95% of all circulating strains in Cape Town, South Africa. I could show that ~3.6% of the patient derived viruses had RAMs, despite patients being therapy-naïve. In Mwanza, Tanzania the HIV drug resistance (HIVDR) prevalence in the therapy-naïve population was 14.8% and significantly higher in the older population, >25 years. Therefore, the current WHO transmitted HIVDR (tHIVDR) survey that is solely focused on the transmission of HIVDR and that excludes patients over 25 years of age may result in substantial underestimation of the prevalence of HIVDR in the therapy-naïve population. Based on the prevalence rates of tHIVDR in the study populations it is recommended that all HIV-1 positive individuals undergo a genotyping resistance test before starting ART. I also characterized vif sequences from HIV-1 infected patients from Cape Town, South Africa as the Vif protein has been shown to counteract the antiretroviral activity of the cellular APOBEC3G/F cytidine deaminases. There is no selective pressure on the HIV-1 Vif protein from current ART regimens and vif sequences was used as an evolutionary control. As the majority of phenotypic resistance assays are still based on HIV-1 subtype B, I wanted to design an infectious HIV-1 subtype C proviral molecular clone that can be used for in vitro assays based on circulating strains in South Africa. Therefore, I characterized an early primary HIV-1 subtype C isolate from Cape Town, South Africa and created a new infectious subtype C proviral molecular clone (pZAC). The new pZAC virus has a significantly higher transient viral titer after transfection and replication rate than the previously published HIV-1 subtype C virus from Botswana. The optimized proviral molecular clone, pZAC could be used in future cell culture and phenotypic HIV resistance assays regarding HIV-1 subtype C.
In recent years high-throughput experiments provided a vast amount of data from all areas of molecular biology, including genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics and metabolomics. Its analysis using bioinformatics methods has developed accordingly, towards a systematic approach to understand how genes and their resulting proteins give rise to biological form and function. They interact with each other and with other molecules in highly complex structures, which are explored in network biology. The in-depth knowledge of genes and proteins obtained from high-throughput experiments can be complemented by the architecture of molecular networks to gain a deeper understanding of biological processes. This thesis provides methods and statistical analyses for the integration of molecular data into biological networks and the identification of functional modules, as well as its application to distinct biological data. The integrated network approach is implemented as a software package, termed BioNet, for the statistical language R. The package includes the statistics for the integration of transcriptomic and functional data with biological networks, the scoring of nodes and edges of these networks as well as methods for subnetwork search and visualisation. The exact algorithm is extensively tested in a simulation study and outperforms existing heuristic methods for the calculation of this NP-hard problem in accuracy and robustness. The variability of the resulting solutions is assessed on perturbed data, mimicking random or biased factors that obscure the biological signal, generated for the integrated data and the network. An optimal, robust module can be calculated using a consensus approach, based on a resampling method. It summarizes optimally an ensemble of solutions in a robust consensus module with the estimated variability indicated by confidence values for the nodes and edges. The approach is subsequently applied to two gene expression data sets. The first application analyses gene expression data for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) and differences between the subgroups with and without an oncogenic BCR/ABL gene fusion. In a second application gene expression and survival data from diffuse large B-cell lymphomas are examined. The identified modules include and extend already existing gene lists and signatures by further significant genes and their interactions. The most important novelty is that these genes are determined and visualised in the context of their interactions as a functional module and not as a list of independent and unrelated transcripts. In a third application the integrative network approach is used to trace changes in tardigrade metabolism to identify pathways responsible for their extreme resistance to environmental changes and endurance in an inactive tun state. For the first time a metabolic network approach is proposed to detect shifts in metabolic pathways, integrating transcriptome and metabolite data. Concluding, the presented integrated network approach is an adequate technique to unite high-throughput experimental data for single molecules and their intermolecular dependencies. It is flexible to apply on diverse data, ranging from gene expression changes over metabolite abundances to protein modifications in a combination with a suitable molecular network. The exact algorithm is accurate and robust in comparison to heuristic approaches and delivers an optimal, robust solution in form of a consensus module with confidence values. By the integration of diverse sources of information and a simultaneous inspection of a molecular event from different points of view, new and exhaustive insights into biological processes can be acquired.
Type 1 diabetes affects around 0.5% of the population in developed countries and the incidence rates have been rising over the years. The destruction of beta cells is irreversible and the current therapy available to patients only manages the symptoms and does not prevent the associated pathological manifestations. The patients need lifelong therapy and intensive research is being carried out to identify ways to eliminate autoimmune responses directed against pancreatic beta cells and to replace or regenerate beta cells. The work presented herein aimed at analyzing the role of the Th17 T cell subset, characterized by secretion of the pro- inflammatory cytokine IL-17A, in autoimmune diabetes and also at generating a beta cell reporter mouse line in the NOD background, the most widely- used mouse model for type 1 diabetes. We generated IL- 17A knockdown (KD) NOD mice, using RNAi in combination with lentiviral transgenesis. We analyzed diabetes frequency in IL-17A deficient mice and found that the loss of IL-17A did not protect the transgenic mice from diabetes. Based on these observations, we believe that Th17 cells do not play a critical role in type 1 diabetes through the IL-17A pathway, though they might still be involved in the disease process through alternate pathways. We also generated NOD and NOD-SCID mice with a transgene that drives the beta cell specific expression of a luciferase reporter gene. We used a lentiviral construct, which combined a luciferase sequence and a short- hairpin RNA (shRNA) expression cassette, allowing gene- knockdown under the beta cell specific rat insulin promoter (RIP). These mice will be of use in studying beta cell phenotypes resulting from the knockdown of target genes, using non- invasive bioimaging. We believe that the generation of these reporter mouse lines for diabetes studies will prove valuable in future investigations. Furthermore, the demonstration that the loss of IL-17A does not alter susceptibility to type 1 diabetes should help clarify the controversial involvement of Th17 cells in this disease.
According to a changing environment it is crucial for animals to make experience and learn about it. Sensing, integrating and learning to associate different kinds of modalities enables animals to expect future events and to adjust behavior in the way, expected as the most profitable. Complex processes as memory formation and storage make it necessary to investigate learning and memory on different levels. In this context Drosophila melanogaster represents a powerful model organism. As the adult brain of the fly is still quite complex, I chose the third instar larva as model - the more simple the system, the easier to isolate single, fundamental principles of learning. In this thesis I addressed several kinds of questions on different mechanism of olfactory associative and synaptic plasiticity in Drosophila larvae. I focused on short-term memory throughout my thesis. First, investigating larval learning on behavioral level, I developed a one-odor paradigm for olfactory associative conditioning. This enables to estimate the learnability of single odors, reduces the complexity of the task and simplify analyses of "learning mutants". It further allows to balance learnability of odors for generalization-type experiments to describe the olfactory "coding space". Furthermore I could show that innate attractiveness and learnability can be dissociated and found finally that paired presentation of a given odor with reward increase performance, whereas unpaired presentations of these two stimuli decrease performance, indicating that larva are able to learn about the presence as well as about the absence of a reward. Second, on behavioral level, together with Thomas Niewalda and colleagues we focussed on salt processing in the context of choice, feeding and learning. Salt is required in several physiological processes, but can neither be synthesized nor stored. Various salt concentrations shift the valence from attraction to repulsion in reflexive behaviour. Interestingly, the reinforcing effect of salt in learning is shifted by more than one order of magnitude toward higher concentrations. Thus, the input pathways for gustatory behavior appear to be more sensitive than the ones supporting gustatory reinforcement, which is may be due to the dissociation of the reflexive and the reinforcing signalling pathways of salt. Third, in cooperation with Michael Schleyer we performed a series of behavioral gustatory, olfactory preference tests and larval learning experiments. Based on the available neuroanatomical and behavioral data we propose a model regarding chemosensory processing, odor-tastant memory trace formation and the 'decision' like process. It incorporates putative sites of interaction between olfactory and gustatory pathways during the establishment as well as behavioral expression of odor-tastant memory. We claim that innate olfactory behavior is responsive in nature and suggest that associative conditioned behavior is not a simple substitution like process, but driven more likely by the expectation of its outcome. Fourth, together with Birgit Michels and colleagues we investigated the cellular site and molecular mode of Synapsin, an evolutionarily conserved, presynaptic vesicular phosphoprotein and its action in larval learning. We confirmed a previously described learning impairment upon loss of Synapsin. We localized this Synapsin dependent memory trace in the mushroom bodies, a third-order "cortical" brain region, and could further show on molecular level, that Synapsin is as a downstream element of the AC-cAMP-PKA signalling cascade. This study provides a comprehensive chain of explanation from the molecular level to an associative behavioral change. Fifth, in the main part of my thesis I focused on molecular level on another synaptic protein, the Synapse associated protein of 47kDa (Sap47) and its role in larval behavior. As a member of a phylogenetically conserved gene family of hitherto unknown function. It is localized throughout the whole neuropil of larval brains and associated with presynaptic vesicles. Upon loss of Sap47 larvae exhibit normal sensory detection of the to-be-associated stimuli as well as normal motor performance and basic synaptic transmission. Interestingly, short-term plasticity is distorted and odorant–tastant associative learning ability is reduced. This defect in associative function could be rescued by restoring Sap47 expression. Therefore, this report is the first to suggest a function for Sap47 and specifically argues that Sap47 is required for synaptic as well as for behavioral plasticity in Drosophila larva. This prompts the question whether its homologs are required for synaptic and behavioral plasticity also in other species. Further in the last part of my thesis I contributed to the study of Ayse Yarali. Her central topic was the role of the White protein in punishment and relief learning in adult flies. Whereas stimuli that precede shock during training are subsequently avoided as predictors for punishment, stimuli that follow shock during training are later on approached, as they predict relief. Concerning the loss of White we report that pain-relief learning as well as punishment learning is changed. My contribution was a comparison between wild type and the white1118 mutant larvae in odor-reward learning. It turned out that a loss of White has no effect on larval odorant-tastant learning. This study, regarding painrelief learning provides the very first hints concerning the genetic determinants of this form of learning.
The present work investigated the neural mechanisms underlying cognitive inhibition/thought suppression in Anderson’s and Green’s Think/No-Think paradigm (TNT), as well as different variables influencing these mechanisms at the cognitive, the neurophysiological, the electrophysiological and the molecular level. Neurophysiological data collected with fNIRS and fMRI have added up to the existing evidence of a fronto-hippocampal network interacting during the inhibition of unwanted thoughts. Some evidence has been presented suggesting that by means of external stimulation of the right dlPFC through iTBS thought suppression might be improved, providing further evidence for an implication of this region in the TNT. A combination of fNIRS with ERP has delivered evidence of a dissociation of early condition-independent attentional and later suppression-specific processes within the dlPFC, both contributing to suppression performance. Due to inconsistencies in the previous literature it was considered how stimulus valence would influence thought suppression by manipulating the emotional content of the to-be-suppressed stimuli. Findings of the current work regarding the ability to suppress negative word or picture stimuli have, however, been inconclusive as well. It has been hypothesized that performance in the TNT might depend on the combination of valence conditions included in the paradigm. Alternatively, it has been suggested that inconsistent findings regarding the suppression of negative stimuli or suppression at all might be due to certain personality traits and/or genetic variables, found in the present work to contribute to thought inhibition in the TNT. Rumination has been shown to be a valid predictor of thought suppression performance. Increased ruminative tendencies led to worse suppression performance which, in the present work, has been linked to less effective recruitment of the dlPFC and in turn less effective down-regulation of hippocampal activity during suppression trials. Trait anxiety has also been shown to interrupt thought suppression despite higher, however, inefficient recruitment of the dlPFC. Complementing the findings regarding ruminative tendencies and decreased thought inhibition a functional polymorphism in the KCNJ6 gene, encompassing a G-to-A transition, has been shown to disrupt thought suppression despite increased activation of the dlPFC. Through the investigation of thought suppression at different levels, the current work adds further evidence to the idea that the TNT reflects an executive control mechanism, which is sensitive to alterations in stimulus valence to some extent, neurophysiological functioning as indicated by its sensitivity to iTBS, functional modulations at the molecular level and personality traits, such as rumination and trait anxiety.
Honeybees (Apis mellifera) forage on a great variety of plant species, navigate over large distances to crucial resources, and return to communicate the locations of food sources and potential new nest sites to nest mates using a symbolic dance language. In order to achieve this, honeybees have evolved a rich repertoire of adaptive behaviours, some of which were earlier believed to be restricted to vertebrates. In this thesis, I explore the mechanisms involved in honeybee learning, memory, numerical competence and navigation. The findings acquired in this thesis show that honeybees are not the simple reflex automats they were once believed to be. The level of sophistication I found in the bees’ memory, their learning ability, their time sense, their numerical competence and their navigational abilities are surprisingly similar to the results obtained in comparable experiments with vertebrates. Thus, we should reconsider the notion that a bigger brain automatically indicates higher intelligence.
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a genetically complex childhood onset neurodevelopmental disorder which is highly persistent into adulthood. Several chromo-somal regions associated with this disorder were identified previously in genome-wide linkage scans, association (GWA) and copy number variation (CNV) studies. In this work the results of case-control and family-based association studies using a can-didate gene approach are presented. For this purpose, possible candidate genes for ADHD have been finemapped using mass array-based SNP genotyping. The genes KCNIP4, CDH13 and DIRAS2 have been found to be associated with ADHD and, in addition, with cluster B and cluster C personality disorders (PD) which are known to be related to ADHD. Most of the associations found in this work would not withstand correction for multiple testing. However, a replication in several independent populations has been achieved and in conjunction with previous evidence from linkage, GWA and CNV studies, it is assumed that there are true associations between those genes and ADHD. Further investigation of DIRAS2 by quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) revealed expression in the hippocampus, cerebral cortex and cerebellum of the human brain and a significant increase in Diras2 expression in the mouse brain during early development. In situ hybrid-izations on murine brain slices confirmed the results gained by qPCR in the human brain. Moreover, Diras2 is expressed in the basolateral amygdala, structures of the olfactory system and several other brain regions which have been implicated in the psychopatholo-gy of ADHD. In conclusion, the results of this work provide further support to the existence of a strong genetic component in the pathophysiology of ADHD and related disorders. KCNIP4, CDH13 and DIRAS2 are promising candidates and need to be further examined to get more knowledge about the neurobiological basis of this common disease. This knowledge is essential for understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying the emergence of this disorder and for the development of new treatment strategies.
Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit war es, zu untersuchen, ob nichtionisierende elektromagnetische Strahlung verschiedener Frequenzbereiche Genomschaden hervorrufen kann. Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde eine Biomonitoring-Studie zu dieser Thematik konzipiert und durchgeführt. Es wurden 131 Probanden detailliert zu ihrer Mobilfunknutzung befragt. Anschließend wurden Mundschleimhautzellen entnommen und für eine mikroskopische Untersuchung aufbereitet und angefärbt. In den Zellen wurden Mikrokerne und andere Kernanomalien quantifiziert. Es zeigte sich keine Erhöhung der Mikrokernfrequenz in Abhängigkeit von der Dauer der Mobiltelefonnutzung. Auch die anderen abgefragten Parameter hatten keinen Einfluss auf die Höhe des Genomschadens. Als Positivkontrollen wurden vier Patienten, die eine lokale Strahlentherapie (ionisierende Strahlung) erhielten, eingeschlossen. Hier zeigte sich eine deutliche Erhöhung der Mikrokernfrequenz. Um festzustellen, ob die Mikrokerninduktion erst bei höheren Leistungsflussdichten als denen, die beim Mobilfunk verwendet werden, auftritt, wurden in-vitro-Versuche durchgeführt, bei denen verschiedene Zelllinien einer Strahlung von 900 MHz ausgesetzt wurden. Nach Exposition und einer Postinkubationsperiode wurden die Zellen fixiert und die Mikrokernfrequenz bestimmt. Neben den Leistungen wurden hier auch die Expositionszeiten und die Postinkubationsperioden variiert. In keinem Fall konnte eine Erhöhung der Mikrokernfrequenz festgestellt werden. Insgesamt konnte ein Einfluss elektromagnetischer Strahlung auf das Genom weder am Menschen im Rahmen einer Biomonitoring-Studie noch an verschiedenen Zelllinien im Rahmen von in-vitro-Versuchen festgestellt werden. Terahertzstrahlung ist elektromagnetische Strahlung im Bereich von 0,1 bis 10 THz, d. h. sie liegt zwischen Mikrowellen und Infrarotlicht. Derzeit wird sie hauptsächlich für spektroskopische Untersuchungen und zur Qualitätskontrolle im Herstellungs-prozess verschiedener Produkte verwendet. Anwendungen in der Sicherheitstechnik (z. B. Ganzkörperscanner) und in der Medizintechnik (z. B. Bildgebung) stehen kurz vor der Markteinführung bzw. sind bereits etabliert. Diese Anwendungen bringen eine Exposition der betroffenen Menschen mit sich. Außerdem wird an weiteren Techniken wie etwa der Datenübertragung gearbeitet. Die Wirkungen auf biologische Systeme sind im Gegensatz zum Mobilfunkbereich bisher nur unzureichend untersucht. Da bisher keine vollständigen Literaturübersichten vorlagen, wurde eine umfassende Literaturrecherche durchgeführt. Ziel war es, alle bisher durchgeführten Studien zu diesem Thema aufzulisten. Um diese Datenbasis zu verbreitern wurden in-vitro-Versuche bei verschiedenen Frequenzen durchgeführt. Als Strahlungsquellen wurden eine Frequenzvervielfacherkaskade (0,106 THz), ein Rückwärtswellen-Oszillator (0,380 THz) und ein Ferninfrarot-Laser (2,520 THz) eingesetzt. Die Strahlung wurde in einen modifizierten Inkubator geführt, so dass die Expositionen bei definierter Temperatur und konstantem CO2-Gehalt durchgeführt werden konnten. Da Terahertzstrahlung durch Wasser sehr stark absorbiert wird, sind bei einer Exposition des Menschen primär die obersten Hautschichten betroffen. Aus diesem Grund wurden primäre Hautfibroblasten und HaCaT-Zellen, eine Keratinozyten-Zelllinie, als biologische Systeme verwendet. Die Zellen wurden für unterschiedliche Zeitperioden mit verschiedenen Leistungsflussdichten exponiert. Anschließend wurden die Zellen für den Comet Assay aufbereitet und analysiert. Der Comet Assay ist eine Methode zur Quantifizierung von Einzel- und Doppelstrangbrüchen der DNA. Weiterhin wurden die Zellen nach einer Postinkubationsperiode für den Mikrokerntest aufbereitet. Neben unbehandelten Kontrollen und Sham-Expositionen wurden auch Positivkontrollen durchgeführt. Es konnte keine Erhöhung der Anzahl der DNA-Strangbrüche bzw. der Mikrokernfrequenz festgestellt werden. Da bekannt war, dass im Mobilfunkbereich unter bestimmten Bedingungen Störungen der Mitose, nicht aber Erhöhungen der Mikrokernfrequenz, auftreten, wurden Mitosestörungen nach Exposition bei 0,106 THz untersucht. Hierzu wurden AL-Zellen für 30 Minuten exponiert und anschließend ohne Postinkubation direkt fixiert. Analysiert wurden Störungen in allen Phasen der Mitose. Es zeigte sich, dass die Frequenz der Störungen in der Pro- und Metaphase unverändert blieb. Die Störungen in der Ana- und Telophase nahmen dagegen mit steigender Leistungsflussdichte zu. Insgesamt konnte im Terahertzbereich unter den gewählten Expositionsbedingungen kein DNA-Schaden beobachtet werden. Bei 0,106 THz konnten Mitosestörungen als Folge der Exposition gezeigt werden. Der Zusammenhang zwischen diesen Mitosestörungen und DNA-Schäden, insbesondere der Mikrokerninduktion, konnte bisher nicht abschließend geklärt werden und bleibt Gegenstand weiterer Untersuchungen.
Platelet activation and adhesion results in thrombus formation that is essential for normal hemostasis, but can also cause irreversible vessel occlusion leading to myocardial infarction or stroke. The C-type lectin-like receptor 2 (CLEC-2) was recently identified to be expressed on the platelet surface, however, a role for this receptor in hemostasis and thrombosis had not been demonstrated. In the current study, the involvement of CLEC-2 in platelet function and thrombus formation was investigated using mice as a model system. In the first part of the thesis, it was found that treatment of mice with a newly generated monoclonal antibody against murine CLEC-2 (INU1) led to the complete and highly specific loss of the receptor in circulating platelets (a process termed “immunodepletion”). CLEC-2-deficient platelets were completely unresponsive to the CLEC-2-specific agonist rhodocytin, whereas activation induced by all other tested agonists was unaltered. This selective defect translated into severely decreased platelet aggregate formation under flow ex vivo; and in vivo thrombosis models revealed impaired stabilization of formed thrombi with enhanced embolization. Consequently, CLEC-2 deficiency profoundly protected mice from occlusive arterial thrombus formation. Furthermore, variable bleeding times in INU1-treated mice indicated a moderate hemostatic defect. This reveals for the first time that CLEC-2 significantly contributes to thrombus stability in vitro and in vivo and plays a crucial role in hemostasis and arterial thrombosis. Thus, CLEC-2 represents a potential novel anti-thrombotic target that can be functionally inactivated in vivo. This in vivo down-regulation of platelet surface receptors might be a promising approach for future anti-thrombotic therapy. The second part of the work investigated the effect of double-immunodepletion of the immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif (ITAM)- and hemITAM-coupled receptors, platelet glycoprotein (GP) VI and CLEC-2, on hemostasis and thrombosis using a combination of the GPVI- and CLEC-2-specific antibodies, JAQ1 and INU1, respectively. Isolated targeting of either GPVI or CLEC-2 in vivo did not affect expression or function of the respective other receptor. However, simultaneous treatment with both antibodies resulted in the sustained loss of GPVI and CLEC-2 signaling in platelets, while leaving other activation pathways intact. In contrast to single deficiency of either receptor, GPVI/CLEC-2 double-deficient mice displayed a dramatic hemostatic defect. Furthermore, this treatment resulted in profound impairment of arterial thrombus formation that far exceeded the effects seen in single-depleted animals. Importantly, similar results were obtained in Gp6-/- mice that were depleted of CLEC-2 by INU1-treatment, demonstrating that this severe bleeding phenotype was not caused by secondary effects of combined antibody treatment. These data suggest that GPVI and CLEC-2 can be independently or simultaneously down-regulated in platelets in vivo and reveal an unexpected functional redundancy of the two receptors in hemostasis and thrombosis. Since GPVI and CLEC-2 have intensively been discussed as potential anti-thrombotic targets, these results may have important implications for the development of novel, yet save anti-GPVI or anti-CLEC-2-based therapies.
Investigation on Distinct Roles of Smad Proteins in Mediating Bone Morphogenetic Proteins Signals
(2011)
Bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) belong to the transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) superfamily and play important roles in numerous biological events in the development of almost all multi-cellular organisms. Dysregulated BMP signaling is the underlying causes of numerous heritable and non-heritable human diseases including cancer. The vast range of biological responses induced by BMPs converges on three closely related Smad proteins that convey intracellular signals from BMP receptors to the nucleus. The specificity of BMP signaling has been intensively investigated at the level of ligand-receptor interactions, but how the different Smad proteins contribute to differential signals elicited by BMPs remains unclear. In this work, we investigated the BMP/Smad signaling in different aspects. In search for an appropriate fluorescence reporter in zebrafish, we compared different photo-switchable proteins and found EosFP the best candidate this model system for its fast maturation and fluorescence intensity. We modified and created appropriate vectors enabling Tol2-transposon based trangenesis in zebrafish, with which transgenic zebrafish lines were generated. We combined fluorescence protein tagging with high resolution microscopy and investigate the dynamics of Smad proteins in model system zebrafish. We observed that Smad5 undergoes nucleo-translocation as BMP signal transmitter during zebrafish gastrulation. We explored the Smad involvement during myogenic-to-osteogenic conversion of C2C12 cell line induced by BMP4. We created transient loss-of-function of Smads by siRNA-mediated knockdowns and analyzed the effects on these coupled yet distinct procedures by quantitative real-time PCR and terminal marker staining. We found that different Smad-complex stoichiometry might be responsible for distinct cellular signals elicited by BMPs.
Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) represents an important subgroup of patients suffering from heart failure. The disease is supposed to be associated with autoimmune mechanisms in about one third of the cases. In the latter patients functionally active conformational autoantibodies directed against the second extracellular loop of the β1-adrenergic receptor (AR, β1ECII-aabs) have been detected. Such antibodies chronically stimulate the β1-AR thereby inducing the adrenergic signaling cascade in cardiomyocytes, which, in the long run, contributes to heart failure progression. We analyzed the production of cAMP after aab-mediated β1-AR activation in vitro using a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) assay. This assay is based on HEK293 cells stably expressing human β1-AR as well as the cAMP-sensor Epac1-camps. The assay showed a concentration-dependent increase in intracellular cAMP upon stimulation with the full agonist (-) isoproterenol. This response was comparable to results obtained in isolated adult murine cardiomyocytes and was partially blockable by a selective β1-AR antagonist. In the same assay poly- and monoclonal anti-β1ECII-abs (induced in different animals) could activate the adrenergic signaling cascade, whereas isotypic control abs had no effect on intracellular cAMP levels. Using the same method, we were able to detect functionally activating aabs in the serum of heart failure patients with ischemic and hypertensive heart disease as well as patients with DCM, but not in sera of healthy control subjects. In patients with DCM we observed an inverse correlation between the stimulatory potential of anti-β1-aabs and left ventricular pump function. To adopt this assay for the detection of functionally activating anti-β1ECII-aabs in clinical routine we attempted to establish an automated large-scale approach. Neither flow cytometry nor FRET detection with a fluorescence plate reader provided an acceptable signal-to-noise ratio. It was possible to detect (-) isoproterenol in a concentration-dependent manner using two different FRET multiwell microscopes. However, due to focus problems large-scale detection of activating anti-β1ECII-abs could not be implemented. Neutralization of anti-β1-aabs with the corresponding epitope-mimicking peptides is a possible therapeutic approach to treat aab-associated autoimmune DCM. Using our FRET assay we could demonstrate a reduction in the stimulatory potential of anti-β1ECII-abs after in vitro incubation with β1ECII-mimicking peptides. Cyclic (and to a lesser extent linear) peptides in 40-fold molar excess acted as efficient ab-scavengers in vitro. Intravenously injected cyclic peptides in a rat model of DCM also neutralized functionally active anti-β1ECII-abs efficiently in vivo. For a detailed analysis of the receptor-epitope targeted by anti-β1ECII-abs we used sequentially alanine-mutated β1ECII-mimicking cyclic peptides. Our data revealed that the disulfide bridge between the cysteine residues C209 and C215 of the human β1-AR appears essential for the formation of the ab-epitope. Substitution of further amino acids relevant for ab-binding in the cyclic scavenger peptide by alanine reduced its affinity to the ab and the receptor-activating potential was blocked less efficiently. In contrast, the non-mutant cyclic peptide almost completely blocked ab-induced receptor activation. Using this ala-scan approach we were able to identify a “NDPK”-epitope as essential for ab binding to the β1ECII. In summary, neutralization of conformational activating anti-β1ECII-(a)abs by cyclic peptides is a plausible therapeutic concept in heart failure that should be further exploited based on the here presented data.
Die Funktionalität β1- und β2-adrenerger Rezeptoren wird durch Polymorphismen in ihrer kodierenden Region moduliert. Wir haben uns die Technik des Fluoreszenz-Resonanz- Energie-Transfers (FRET) zu Nutze gemacht, um den Einfluss der am häufigsten vorkommenden Polymorphismen (Ser49Gly und Gly389Arg im β1AR, Arg16Gly und Gln27Glu im β2AR) auf die Rezeptorkonformation nach Aktivierung zu untersuchen. Dafür wurden FRET-Sensoren für die beiden βAR-Subtypen mit einem gelb-fluoreszierenden Protein (YFP) sowie einem cyan-fluoreszierenden Protein (CFP oder Cerulean) in der dritten intrazellulären Schleife bzw. am C-Terminus verwendet. Nach Stimulierung der βARSensoren konnte die Aktivierung der polymorphen Rezeptorvarianten in lebenden Zellen in Echtzeit untersucht werden. Dabei behielten die FRET-Sensoren sowohl die Bindungsaffinitäten der nativen Rezeptoren als auch eine intakte Funktionalität hinsichtlich der Bildung von sekundären Botenstoffen. Der Vergleich der Aktivierungskinetiken der verschieden polymorphen Varianten des β1AR und β2AR ergab keine signifikanten Unterschiede nach einer einmaligen Stimulation. Es zeigte sich jedoch, dass Rezeptorpolymorphismen die Aktivierungskinetik vorstimulierter βAR erheblich beeinflussen. So konnten wir im Vergleich zur ersten Aktivierung eine schnellere Aktivierung der Gly16-Varianten des β2AR sowie des Gly49Arg389-β1AR feststellen, während die Arg16-β2AR-Variante und der Ser49Gly389-β1AR dagegen bei einer wiederholten Stimulation langsamer aktiviert wurden. Diese Ergebnisse lassen auf ein "Rezeptorgedächtnis" schließen, das spezifisch für bestimmte polymorphe Rezeptorvarianten ist und eine βAR-Subtyp-spezische Ausprägung zeigt. Die Ausbildung der unterschiedlichen Aktivierungskinetiken hing von der Interaktion des Rezeptors mit löslichen intrazellulären Faktoren ab und bedurfte einer Phosphorylierung intrazellulärer Serin- und Threonin-Reste durch G-Protein-gekoppelte Rezeptorkinasen. Die Interaktion mit löslichen intrazellulären Faktoren scheint für den β1AR weniger stark ausgeprägt zu sein als für den β2AR. Die cAMP-Produktion war für die schneller werdenden, “hyperfunktionellen” Gly16-β2ARVarianten signifikant um mehr als 50% höher im Vergleich zur “hypofunktionellen” Arg16- Variante. Die unterschiedliche Funktionalität spiegelte sich im Therapieausgang bei Tokoysepatientinnen wider, dessen Erfolg mit dem Arg16Gly Polymorphismus verknüpft war. Die Daten implizieren eine intrinsische, polymorphismusabhängige Eigenschaft der βAR, die die Aktivierungskinetik der Rezeptoren bei wiederholten Stimulationen determiniert. Diese könnte auch für die zwischen Individuen variierende Ansprechbarkeit auf β-Agonisten und β-Blocker mitverantwortlich sein.
Thrombus formation at sites of vascular lesions is a dynamic process that requires a defined series of molecular events including the action of platelet adhesion/activation receptors, intracellular signal transduction, cytoskeletal rearrangements and activation of plasma coagulation factors. This process is essential to limit post-traumatic blood loss but may also contribute to acute thrombotic diseases such as myocardial infarction and stroke. With the help of genetically modified mice and the use of specific protein inhibitors and receptordepleting antibodies, the work presented in this thesis identified novel mechanisms underlying thrombus formation in hemostasis and thrombosis. In the first part of the study, it was shown that von Willebrand Factor (vWF) binding to glycoprotein (GP)Iba is critical for the formation of stable pathological thrombi at high shear rates, suggesting GPIba as an attractive pharmacological target for antithrombotic therapy. The subsequent analysis of recently generated phospholipase (PL)D1-deficient mice identified this enzyme, whose role in platelet function had been largely unknown, as a potential target protein downstream of GPIba. This was based on the finding that PLD1- deficient mice displayed severely defective GPIba-dependent thrombus stabilization under high shear conditions in vitro and in vivo without affecting normal hemostasis. The second part of the thesis characterizes the functional relevance of the immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif (ITAM)-bearing collagen receptor GPVI and the recently identified hemITAM-coupled C-type lectin-like receptor 2 (CLEC-2) for in vivo thrombus formation. Genetic- and antibody-induced GPVI deficiency was found to similarly protect mice from arterial vessel occlusion in three different thrombosis models. These results confirmed GPVI as a promising antithrombotic target and revealed that antibody-treatment had no obvious off-target effects on platelet function. Similarly, immunodepletion of CLEC-2 by treating mice with the specific antibody INU1 resulted in markedly impaired thrombus growth and stabilization under flow in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, it could be demonstrated that double-immunodepletion of GPVI and CLEC-2 resulted in severely decreased arterial thrombus formation accompanied by dramatically prolonged bleeding times. These data revealed an unexpected redundant function of the two receptors for in vivo thrombus formation and might have important implications for the potential development of anti-GPVI and anti-CLEC-2 antithrombotic agents. The third part of the thesis provides the first functional analysis of megakaryocyte- and platelet-specific RhoA knockout mice. RhoA-deficient mice displayed a defined signaling defect in platelet activation, leading to a profound protection from arterial thrombosis andand ischemic brain infarction, but at the same time also strongly increased bleeding times. These findings identified the GTPase as an important player for thrombus formation in hemostasis and thrombosis. Based on the previous proposal that the coagulation factor (F)XII might represent an ideal target for safe antithrombotic therapy without causing bleeding side effects, the last part of this thesis assesses the antithrombotic potential of the newly generated FXIIa inhibitor rHAInfestin- 4. It was found that rHA-Infestin-4 injection into mice resulted in virtually abolished arterial thrombus formation but no change in bleeding times. Moreover, rHA-Infestin-4 was similarly efficient in a murine model of ischemic stroke, suggesting that the inhibitor might be a promising agent for effective and safe therapy of cardio- and cerebrovascular diseases.
Desert ants of the genus Cataglyphis have become model systems for the study of insect navigation. An age-related polyethism subdivides their colonies into interior workers and short-lived light-exposed foragers. While foraging in featureless and cluttered terrain over distances up to several hundred meters, the ants are able to precisely return back to their often inconspicuous nest entrance. They accomplish this enormous navigational performance by using a path integration system - including a polarization compass and an odometer - as their main navigational means in addition to landmark-dependent orientation and olfactory cues. C. fortis, being the focus of the present thesis, is endemic to the salt flats of western North Africa, which are completely avoided by other Cataglyphis species. The fact that Cataglyphis ants undergo a behavioral transition associated with drastically changing sensory demands makes these ants particularly interesting for studying synaptic plasticity in visual and olfactory brain centers. This thesis focuses on plastic changes in the mushroom bodies (MBs) - sensory integration centers supposed to be involved in learning and memory presumably including landmark learning - and in synaptic complexes belonging to the lateral accessory lobe (LAL) known to be a relay station in the polarization processing pathway. To investigate structural synaptic plasticity in the MBs of C. fortis, synaptic complexes (microglomeruli, MG) in the visual (collar) and olfactory (lip) input regions of the MB calyx were immunolabeled and their pre- and postsynaptic profiles were quantified. The results show that a volume increase of the MB calyx during behavioral transition is associated with a decrease of MG number - an effect called pruning - in the collar and, less pronounced, in the lip that goes along with dendritic expansion in MB intrinsic Kenyon cells. Light-exposure of dark-reared ants of different age classes revealed similar effects and dark-reared ants age-matched to foragers had MG numbers comparable to those of interior workers. The results indicate that the enormous structural synaptic plasticity of the MB calyx collar is primarily driven by visual experience rather than by an internal program. Ants aged artificially for up to one year expressed a similar plasticity indicating that the system remains flexible over the entire life-span. To investigate whether light-induced synaptic reorganization is reversible, experienced foragers were transferred back to darkness with the result that their MBs exhibit only some reverse-type characteristics, in particular differences in presynaptic synapsin expression. To investigate the structure of large synaptic complexes in the LAL of C. fortis and to detect potential structural changes, pre- and postsynaptic profiles in interior workers and foragers were immunolabeled and quantified by using confocal imaging and 3D-reconstruction. The results show that these complexes consist of postsynaptic processes located in a central region that is surrounded by a cup-like presynaptic profile. Tracer injections identified input and output tracts of the LAL: projection neurons from the anterior optic tubercle build connections with neurons projecting to the central complex. The behavioral transition is associated with an increase by ~13% of synaptic complexes suggesting that the polarization pathway may undergo some sort of calibration process. The structural features of these synaptic contacts indicate that they may serve a fast and reliable signal transmission in the polarization vision pathway. Behavioral analyses of C. fortis in the field revealed that the ants perform exploration runs including pirouette-like turns very close to the nest entrance for a period of up to two days, before they actually start their foraging activity. During these orientation runs the ants gather visual experience and might associate the nest entrance with specific landmarks or get entrained to other visual information like the polarization pattern, and, concomitantly adapt their neuronal circuitries to the upcoming challenges. Moreover, the pirouettes may serve to stimulate and calibrate the neuronal networks involved in the polarization compass pathway. Video recordings and analyses demonstrate that light experience enhanced the ants’ locomotor activity after three days of exposure. The fact that both the light-induced behavioral and neuronal changes in visual brain centers occur in the same time frame suggests that there may be a link between structural synaptic plasticity and the behavioral transition from interior tasks to outdoor foraging. Desert ants of the genus Cataglyphis possess remarkable visual navigation capabilities, but also employ olfactory cues for detecting nest and food sites. Using confocal imaging and 3D-reconstruction, potential adaptations in primary olfactory brain centers were analyzed by comparing the number, size and spatial arrangement of olfactory glomeruli in the antennal lobe of C. fortis, C. albicans, C. bicolor, C. rubra, and C. noda. Workers of all Cataglyphis species have smaller numbers of glomeruli compared to those of more olfactory-guided Formica species - a genus closely related to Cataglyphis - and to those previously found in other olfactory-guided ant species. C. fortis has the lowest number of glomeruli compared to all other species, but possesses a conspicuously enlarged glomerulus that is located close to the antennal nerve entrance. Males of C. fortis have a significantly smaller number of glomeruli compared to female workers and queens and a prominent male-specific macroglomerulus likely to be involved in sex pheromone communication. The behavioral significance of the enlarged glomerulus in female workers remains elusive. The fact that C. fortis inhabits microhabitats that are avoided by all other Cataglyphis species suggests that extreme ecological conditions may not only have resulted in adaptations of visual capabilities, but also in specializations of the olfactory system. The present thesis demonstrates that Cataglyphis is an excellent candidate for studying the neuronal mechanisms underlying navigational features and for studying neuronal plasticity associated with the ant’s lifelong flexibility of individual behavioral repertoires.
Integrating neurobiological markers of depression: an fMRI-based pattern classification approach
(2010)
While depressive disorders are, to date, diagnosed based on behavioral symptoms and course of illness, the interest in neurobiological markers of psychiatric disorders has grown substantially in recent years. However, current classification approaches are mainly based on data from a single biomarker, making it difficult to predict diseases such as depression which are characterized by a complex pattern of symptoms. Accordingly, none of the previously investigated single biomarkers has shown sufficient predictive power for practical application. In this work, we therefore propose an algorithm which integrates neuroimaging data associated with multiple, symptom-related neural processes relevant in depression to improve classification accuracy. First, we identified the core-symptoms of depression from standard classification systems. Then, we designed and conducted three experimental paradigms probing psychological processes known to be related to these symptoms using functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging. In order to integrate the resulting 12 high-dimensional biomarkers, we developed a multi-source pattern recognition algorithm based on a combination of Gaussian Process Classifiers and decision trees. Applying this approach to a group of 30 healthy controls and 30 depressive in-patients who were on a variety of medications and displayed varying degrees of symptom-severity allowed for high-accuracy single-subject classification. Specifically, integrating biomarkers yielded an accuracy of 83% while the best of the 12 single biomarkers alone classified a significantly lower number of subjects (72%) correctly. Thus, integrated biomarker-based classification of a heterogeneous, real-life sample resulted in accuracy comparable to the highest ever achieved in previous single biomarker research. Furthermore, investigation of the final prediction model revealed that neural activation during the processing of neutral facial expressions, large rewards, and safety cues is most relevant for over-all classification. We conclude that combining brain activation related to the core-symptoms of depression using the multi-source pattern classification approach developed in this work substantially increases classification accuracy while providing a sparse relational biomarker-model for future prediction.
Schlagwörter: Salmonella , Salmonella enterica , Salmonella typhimurium , Salmonellose , Escherichia coli , Shigella , Infektion , Bakterielle Infektion , Zellkultur , HeLa-Zelle , Apoptosis , Metabolismus , Stoffwechsel , Glucose , Glucosetransport , Glucosestoffwechsel , Katabolismus , Kohlenstoff , Kohlenstoffbedarf , Kohlenstoffhaushalt , Kohlenstoffstoffwechsel , Kohlenstoff-13 , Kohlenstoffisotop Salmonella Typhimurium und enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC) sind fakultativ intrazelluläre Bakterien aus der Familie der Enterobacteriaceae. Während erstere sich nach der Internalisierung durch eukaryotische Zellen normalerweise in einem spezialisierten Phagosom, der Salmonella-enthaltenden Vakuole (SCV), vermehren, replizieren EIEC im Zytoplasma der Wirtszellen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde zunächst durch Mikroinjektion die Fähigkeit von S. Typhimurium 14028s untersucht, ebenfalls im Zytoplasma von Caco-2-Zellen replizieren zu können. Dabei wurde festgestellt, daß ein früher als S. Typhimurium 14028s WT bezeichneter Stamm eine Insertion eines Desoxythymidins an Position 76 des offenen Leserasters von rfbP trägt, einem Gen, dessen Protein an der LPS-Synthese beteiligt ist. Weiterhin synthetisierte dieser Stamm ein rauhes LPS. Aufgrund von Agglutination konnte der Rauh-Stamm nur mit geringem Erfolg mikroinjiziert werden. Hingegen lag 5 h nach der Mikroinjektion einer nicht invasiven Mutante von Salmonella mit vollständigem LPS der Anteil an Caco-2-Zellen, die mehr als 32 Bakterien enthielten, bei etwa 30 %. Der Anteil war 2-3 mal höher als bei früheren Mikroinjektionen in HeLa-Zellen. Daher wurde das Verhalten von HeLa-Zellen nach einer Infektion durch S. Typhimurium ΔsifA - einer Mutante, die aus der SCV ins Zytoplasma entkommt - untersucht. Dabei wurde festgestellt, daß die sifA-Mutante 10 h nach der Infektion die Aktivität der Caspasen 9 und 3 in HeLa-Zellen, aber nicht in Caco-2-Zellen induziert. In weiteren Versuchen wurde die Bedeutung von Glukose, Glukose-6-phosphat und Mannose als Kohlenstoffquellen für die extra- und intrazelluläre Replikation zweier Isolate enteroinvasiver E. coli und eines S. Typhimurium Stammes analysiert. Zu diesem Zweck wurden zunächst definierte Mutanten in den beiden wichtigsten Phosphoenolpyruvat-abhängigen Phosphotransferasesystemen (PTS) für die Aufnahme von Glukose und Mannose, ptsG und manXYZ, sowie im Antiporter für die Aufnahme von Glukose-6-phosphat, uhpT, konstruiert. Bei Wachstum im Minimalmedium mit Glukose als einziger C-Quelle waren die Generationszeiten aller ΔptsG- und ΔptsG, manXYZ-Mutanten im Vergleich zu den Wildstämmen deutlich verlängert. Ebenso wuchsen ΔmanXYZ-Mutanten bzw. ΔuhpT-Mutanten deutlich langsamer auf Mannose bzw. Glukose-6-phosphat. Jedoch ergaben sich hierbei Stamm-spezifische Unterschiede. So erreichte EIEC 4608-58 ΔuhpT in der stationären Phase eine ähnliche Zelldichte wie der Wildstamm in Gegenwart von Glukose-6-phosphat und eine ΔptsG, manXYZ-Mutante von S. Typhimurium 14028s konnte immer noch effizient mit Glukose wachsen. Infektionsversuche mit Caco-2-Zellen zeigten weiterhin, daß die Deletion von ptsG zu einer signifikanten Erhöhung der Adhärenz und Invasivität von EIEC 4608-58 führt, während sich die intrazellulären Generationszeiten aller hier untersuchten Mutanten kaum veränderten. Selbst die ΔptsG, manXYZ, uhpT-Dreifachmutanten der drei hier verwendeten Enterobakterien und die ΔptsG, manXYZ, glk-Mutante von S. Typhimurium 14028s konnten immer noch in Caco-2-Zellen replizieren, wenn auch mit Stamm-spezifisch verringerten Geschwindigkeiten. 13C-Markierungsexperimente mit [U-13C6]-Glukose als Substrat ergaben jedoch, daß in der Tat alle hier untersuchten enterobakteriellen Wildstämme Glukose während der Replikation in Caco-2-Zellen unter Zellkulturbedingungen verwerten. Glukose-6-phosphat, Glukonat oder Fettsäuren konnten dagegen als wichtigste Kohlenstoffquellen für das intrazelluläre Wachstum ausgeschlossen werden. EIEC 4608-58 metabolisierte Glukose jedoch weniger effizient als EIEC HN280 und schien zudem noch zusätzlich C3-Substrate aus der Wirtszelle aufzunehmen. Das Markierungsmuster zeigte einen Stamm-spezifischen Kohlenstofffluß durch Glykolyse und/oder Entner-Doudoroff-Weg, Pentosephosphatzyklus, Citratzyklus und den anaplerotischen Reaktionen zwischen PEP und Oxalacetat. Mutanten mit Deletionen in ptsG und manXYZ konnten auf alternative C3-Substrate wechseln und glichen dies durch eine erhöhte Aufnahme von Aminosäuren aus den Wirtszellen aus.
Stem cells with the particular potential to self renew and to differentiate into multiple cell lineages are fascinating cell types for basic and applied research. Pluripotent embryonic stem (ES) cells are derived from the inner cell mass (ICM) of preimplantation embryos. Upon differentiation ES cells can give rise to cells of ecto-, meso- and endoderm including germ cells. In contrast, multipotent adult stem cells are more restricted in their differentiation outcomes,they differentiate into cells of their tissue of origin. For example, hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) that reside in hemogenic tissues such as the bone marrow (BM) differentiate into hemato-/lymphoid cell lineages. Upon differentiation of stem cells not the genome, but the epigenetic regulation changes. Differentiation-associated epigenetic changes generate cell types with distinct phenotypes and functions. For stem cell-based therapies it is important to deeper understand the relation between epigenome and cellular function. In the scope of this thesis I aimed to analyze cultures of differentiating stem cells with respect to gene expression, chromatin regulation and differentiation potential. For the analysis of global histone modification levels, which represent one mechanism for epigenetic regulation, fow cytometric protocols were established that allow single cell measurements. By applying this methodology decreased histone acetylation levels were shown in differentiated ES cell populations. In contrast, comparable histone acetylation levels were observed in differentiated and undifferentiated BM cells. In addition, I investigated effects of the histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor trichostatin A (TSA) on murine BM cells, comprising also HSCs. Upon TSA treatment the frequency of cells with in vitro and in vivo hematopoietic activity was increased, while lineage committed cells underwent apoptosis. Next, the loss of pluripotency was assessed in differentiating ES cell cultures. Using short-term in vitro differentiation protocols marker-based analyses and functional assays were performed.Functionally pluripotency was diminished after 2 days of differentiation as assessed by colony formation, embryoid body (EB) formation and cardiomyogenic differentiation approaches. In contrast, pluripotency marker expression was reduced at later time points. Further, the application of distinct differentiation systems (aggregation EB, clonal EB or monolayer (ML) culture) had an impact on the progression and homogeneity of differentiation cultures. To further study the end of pluripotency, differentiated ES cells were placed under ES cell culture conditions. The data suggest that 3 days differentiated ES cells had passed a point of no return and failed to regain Oct4-eGFP expression and that HDAC inhibitor treatment selectively killed differentiated ES cells. Finally, I aimed to study the effect of EED - a core subunit of the histone methylating Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) - on ES cell chromatin and function. ES cells lacking EED showed loss of histone H3 lysine 27 trimethylation (H3K27me3) accompanied by increased histone acetylation and reduced H3K9me3 levels. Despite typical ES cell morphology and pluripotency marker expression, EED knockout (KO) ES cells exhibited altered nuclear heterochromatin organization, delayed chromatin mobility and a failure in proper differentiation. Conclusively, my data provide insights into the epigenetic regulation of stem cells. Particularly, the results suggest that HDAC inhibitor treatment was detrimental for differentiated BM as well as for differentiated ES cells and that ES cells after 3 days of differentiation had lost pluripotency. Further, the data demonstrate that EED KO ES cells self renewed, exhibited morphology and pluripotency marker expression similar to wild type ES cells, but failed to differentiate. This indicates an important role of EED not only for undifferentiated but also for differentiating ES cells.
Semaphorin receptors in the immunological synapse: regulation and measles virus-driven modulation
(2010)
Measles virus (MV) infection causes approximately 164,000 deaths per year worldwide (WHO, 2008). The main cause of death is MV-induced immunosuppression but the underlying mechanisms are not fully understood. It has been suggested that MV renders T cells dysfunctional by disrupting the integrity of actin dynamics while MV infection of dendritic cells results in their inability to sustain T cell activation. During neuronal development, semaphorins (SEMAs), especially SEMA3A, induce a collapse of growing dendrites via the binding to plexin-A1 (plexA1) and its coreceptor neuropilin-1 (NP-1). The collapse results from a disruption of actin dynamics. In this study, the roles of these three molecules were investigated in human immune cells and their possible role in MV induced immunosuppression. The present data have shown that plexA1 is an important component of human immunological synapse (IS). It translocated transiently to the surface of T cells after CD3/28 ligation and accumulated at the stimulatory interface between T cells and DCs (or CD3/28 coated beads). When plexA1 expression was inhibited (RNAi) or its function was disrupted (exogenous blocking or dominant negative expression), T cell expansion was reduced. Upon MV exposure, translocation of plexA1 and NP-1, another important component of IS, towards the stimulatory interface in T cells was abrogated. Moreover, MV infection interfered with plexA1/NP-1 turnover in maturing DCs and promoted early and substantial release of SEMA3A from these cells, particularly in the presence of allogenic T cells. As revealed by scanning electron microscopy, the release of SEMA3A caused a transient loss of actin-based protrusions on T cells. SEMA3A affected chemotactic migration of T cells and DCs, and reduced formation of allogenic DC/T cell conjugates. In conclusion, MV targeted SEMA receptor function both by disrupting their recruitment to the IS and by promoting a premature release of their repulsive ligand, SEMA3A. Both of which could contribute to MV-induced immunosuppression.
ß-Arrestin/Rezeptor-Interaktionen - Ein endogenes "Werkzeug" ligandenspezifischer Signaltransduktion
(2010)
Die Bedeutung der β-Arrestine als multifunktionelle Adapterproteine GPCR-vermittelter Signaltransduktion hat in den letzten Jahren immer mehr zugenommen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit lag der Schwerpunkt auf der Untersuchung der molekularen Basis und der Ligandenabhängigkeit sowohl der β-Arrestin/Rezeptor-Interaktion als auch β-Arrestin- (un-)abhängiger Signaltransduktionsmechanismen. Im ersten Teil wurde der Einfluß potentieller Phosphorylierungsstellen im C-Terminus des β2AR bzw. im C-Terminus und der TM3 des P2Y1R auf die agonisteninduzierte β-Arrestin/Rezeptor-Interaktion, Internalisierung und Desensibilisierung untersucht. Durch Mutationsanalysen konnten Ser 352/Thr 358 im distalen C-Terminus des P2Y1R als Schlüsselstellen der β-Arrestin-Translokation und Internalisierung identifiziert werden, während ein oder mehrere Phosphorylierungsstellen im proximalen P2Y1R C-Terminus die molekulare Grundlage der Rezeptordesensibilisierung darstellen. Darüber hinaus machte die Anwendung verschiedener PKC- oder CaMK-Inhibitoren sowie der Einsatz des PKC-Aktivators PMA deutlich, dass die P2Y1R-Desensibilisierung und β-Arrestin-Translokation durch unterschiedliche Kinasen kontrolliert werden. Zudem konnte mit Hilfe der FRET-Technik gezeigt werden, dass die Phosphorylierungsstellen zwischen den Positionen 355 und 364 im proximalen β2AR C-Terminus essentielle Bereiche der β-Arrestin-Translokation darstellen. Im zweiten Teil der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden Agonisten am β2-adrenergen Rezeptor bzw. dem P2Y2R auf ihre Fähigkeit hin untersucht verschiedene mit dem jeweiligen Rezeptor verknüpfte G-Protein- bzw. β-Arrestin-Funktionen in unterschiedlichem Ausmaß zu aktivieren („biased agonism“). Da eine solche ligandenselektive Aktivierung rezeptorvermittelter Signalwege bis dato nur mit synthetischen Liganden detailliert untersucht wurde, galt das besondere Interesse der Analyse der durch die endogenen Substanzen induzierten Signalmuster. Die Betrachtung der Noradrenalin- bzw. Adrenalin-induzierten β-Arrestin/Rezeptor-Interaktion, β-Arrestin2-Translokation, Rezeptorinternalisierung, G-Protein-Aktivierung sowie cAMP-Produktion am β2AR machte deutlich, dass es sich beim Phänomen des „biased agonism“ um einen endogenen Mechanismus handelt. Darüber hinaus konnte gezeigt werden, dass auch zur Tokolyse eingesetzte β2AR-Agonisten spezifische Signalmuster induzieren. Die Beobachtung, dass UTP und ATP sowohl unterschiedliche β-Arrestin1/2-Translokationsals auch ERK-Aktivierungsmuster am P2Y2R induzieren bestärkte das Konzept des „biased agonism“ als endogenes Phänomen. Das ligandenabhängige β-Arrestin-Translokationsverhalten des P2Y2R ließ zudem die agonistenbedingte Zuteilung des Rezeptors zu den „Klasse A“ oder „Klasse B“ Rezeptoren zu. Die detaillierte Untersuchung agonisteninduzierter Rezeptor/Effektor-Interaktionen und Signalmuster dürfte helfen die Anwendung klinisch relevanter Substanzen zu optimieren.
Cooperation is beneficial for social groups and is exemplified in its most sophisticated form in social insects. In particular, eusocial Hymenoptera, like ants and honey bees, exhibit a level of cooperation only rarely matched by other animals. To assure effective defense of group members, foes need to be recognized reliably. Ants use low-volatile, colony-specific profiles of cuticular hydrocarbons (colony odor) to discriminate colony members (nestmates) from foreign workers (non-nestmates). For colony recognition, it is assumed that multi-component colony odors are compared to a neuronal template, located in a so far unidentified part of the nervous system, where a mismatch results in aggression. Alternatively, a sensory filter in the periphery of the nervous system has been suggested to act as a template, causing specific anosmia to nestmate colony odor due to sensory adaptation and effectively blocking perception of nestmates. Colony odors are not stable, but change over time due to environmental influences. To adjust for this, the recognition system has to be constantly updated (template reformation). In this thesis, I provide evidence that template reformation can be induced artificially, by modifying the sensory experience of carpenter ants (Camponotus floridanus; Chapter 1). The results of the experiments showed that template reformation is a relatively slow process taking several hours and this contradicts the adaptation-based sensory filter hypothesis. This finding is supported by first in-vivo measurements describing the neuronal processes underlying template reformation (Chapter 5). Neurophysiological measurements were impeded at the beginning of this study by the lack of adequate technical means to present colony odors. In a behavioral assay, I showed that tactile interaction is not necessary for colony recognition, although colony odors are of very low volatility (Chapter 2). I developed a novel stimulation technique (dummy-delivered stimulation) and tested its suitability for neurophysiological experiments (Chapter 3). My experiments showed that dummy-delivered stimulation is especially advantageous for presentation of low-volatile odors. Colony odor concentration in headspace was further increased by moderately heating the dummies, and this allowed me to measure neuronal correlates of colony odors in the peripheral and the central nervous system using electroantennography and calcium imaging, respectively (Chapter 4). Nestmate and non-nestmate colony odor elicited strong neuronal responses in olfactory receptor neurons of the antenna and in the functional units of the first olfactory neuropile of the ant brain, the glomeruli of the antennal lobe (AL). My results show that ants are not anosmic to nestmate colony odor and this clearly invalidates the previously suggested sensory filter hypothesis. Advanced two-photon microscopy allowed me to investigate the neuronal representation of colony odors in different neuroanatomical compartments of the AL (Chapter 5). Although neuronal activity was distributed inhomogeneously, I did not find exclusive representation restricted to a single AL compartment. This result indicates that information about colony odors is processed in parallel, using the computational power of the whole AL network. In the AL, the patterns of glomerular activity (spatial activity patterns) were variable, even in response to repeated stimulation with the same colony odor (Chapter 4&5). This finding is surprising, as earlier studies indicated that spatial activity patterns in the AL reflect how an odor is perceived by an animal (odor quality). Under natural conditions, multi-component odors constitute varying and fluctuating stimuli, and most probably animals are generally faced with the problem that these elicit variable neuronal responses. Two-photon microscopy revealed that variability was higher in response to nestmate than to non-nestmate colony odor (Chapter 5), possibly reflecting plasticity of the AL network, which allows template reformation. Due to their high variability, spatial activity patterns in response to different colony odors were not sufficiently distinct to allow attribution of odor qualities like ‘friend’ or ‘foe’. This finding challenges our current notion of how odor quality of complex, multi-component odors is coded. Additional neuronal parameters, e.g. precise timing of neuronal activity, are most likely necessary to allow discrimination. The lower variability of activity patterns elicited by non-nestmate compared to nestmate colony odor might facilitate recognition of non-nestmates at the next level of the olfactory pathway. My research efforts made the colony recognition system accessible for direct neurophysiological investigations. My results show that ants can perceive their own nestmates. The neuronal representation of colony odors is distributed across AL compartments, indicating parallel processing. Surprisingly, the spatial activity patterns in response to colony are highly variable, raising the question how odor quality is coded in this system. The experimental advance presented in this thesis will be useful to gain further insights into how social insects discriminate friends and foes. Furthermore, my work will be beneficial for the research field of insect olfaction as colony recognition in social insects is an excellent model system to study the coding of odor quality and long-term memory mechanisms underlying recognition of complex, multi-component odors.