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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.
Non-target effects of a multiple insect resistant Bt-maize on the honey bee (Apis mellifera L.)
(2011)
Honey bee pollination is an ecologically and economically important ecosystem service. New methodological developments are needed to research the underlying factors of globally observed bee losses. The honey bee (Apis mellifera) is a key non-target arthropod species for environmental risk assessment of genetically modified (GM) crops. For GM-crop risk assessments, mainly methods for monitoring adult honey bees under laboratory conditions are documented. However, protocols with robust methods for standardized colonies or in vitro reared honey bee larvae are currently lacking. Within the research, presented in this this dissertation, multiple methodological developments are achieved; a mortality trap (Chapter II), a ‘full life cycle test’ (III), a novel in vitro rearing methodology (IV), a standardized in vitro test for Bt-pollen (V), a mixed toxicity test for purified transgenic proteins (VI), and a bacterial flora test with pollen digestion rate monitoring (VII). Overall, the studies did not indicate a detrimental effect caused by Bt-maize pollen, or by purified Bt-proteins at worst case exposure levels. Considering the risk for honey bees and larvae, we conclude that the tested Bt-maize Mon89034xMon88017 is not likely to cause harm to honey bee colonies. The study methods presented are highly recommended for future environmental risk assessment studies testing GM-crop biosafety on honey bees.
Switches in trypanosome differentiation: ALBA proteins acting on post-transcriptional mRNA control
(2011)
Trypanosoma brucei is a digenetic eukaryotic parasite that develops in different tissues of a mammalian host and a tsetse fly. It is responsible for sleeping sickness in sub-saharan Africa. The parasite cycle involves more than nine developmental stages that can be clearly distinguished by their general morphology, their metabolism and the relative positioning of their DNA-containing organelles. During their development, trypanosomes remain exclusively extracellular and encounter changing environments with different physico-chemical properties (nutritional availability, viscosity, temperature, etc.). It has been proposed that trypanosomes use their flagellum as a sensing organelle, in agreement with the established role of structurally-related cilia in metazoa and ciliates. Recognition of environmental triggers is presumed to be at the initiation of differentiation events, leading to the parasite stage that is the best suited to the new environment. These changes are achieved by the modification of gene expression programmes, mostly underlying post-transcriptional control of mRNA transcripts. We first demonstrate that the RNA-binding proteins ALBA3/4 are involved in specific differentiation processes during the parasite development in the fly. They are cytosolic and expressed throughout the parasite cycle with the exception of the stages found in the tsetse fly proventriculus, as shown by both immunofluorescence and live cell analysis upon endogenous tagging with YFP. Knock-down of both proteins in the developmental stage preceding these forms leads to striking modifications: cell elongation, cell cycle arrest and relocalization of the nucleus in a posterior position, all typical of processes acting in parasites found in the proventriculus region. When ALBA3 is over-expressed from an exogenous copy during infection, it interferes with the relocalization of the nucleus in proventricular parasites. This is not observed for ALBA4 over-expression that does not visibly impede differentiation. Both ALBA3/4 proteins react to starvation conditions by accumulating in cytoplasmic stress granules together with DHH1, a recognized RNA-binding protein. ALBA3/4 proteins also partially colocalize with granules formed by polyA+ RNA in these conditions. We propose that ALBA are involved in trypanosome differentiation processes where they control a subset of developmentally regulated transcripts. These processes involving ALBA3/4 are likely to result from the specific activation of sensing pathways. In the second part of the thesis, we identify novel flagellar proteins that could act in sensing mechanisms. Several protein candidates were selected from a proteomic analysis of intact flagella performed in the host laboratory. This work validates their flagellar localization with high success (85% of the proteins examined) and defines multiple different patterns of protein distribution in the flagellum. Two proteins are analyzed during development, one of them showing down-regulation in proventricular stages. The functional analysis of one novel flagellar membrane protein reveals its rapid dynamics within the flagellum but does not yield a visible phenotype in culture. This is coherent with sensory function that might not be needed in stable culture conditions, but could be required in natural conditions during development. In conclusion, this work adds new pieces to the puzzle of identifying molecular switches involved in developmental mRNA control and environmental sensing in trypanosome stages in the tsetse fly.
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease of the brain. Today AD is the most common form of dementia in elderly people. It is clinically characterized by a progressive loss of memory and later on a decline in higher cognitive functions. The pathological hallmarks of AD, consistently demonstrated in brain tissue of patients, are extracellular amyloid-β (Aβ plaques, intracellular neurofibrillary tangles of tau protein and a profound loss of mainly cholinergic and glutamatergic synapses and ultimatively neurons. Estimates foresee that more than 80 million individuals will be affected by the disease by 2040 due to population aging worldwide underlining the high medical need for this disease. In order to find suitable drugs for the treatment of AD, experimental model systems are utilized to explore potential drug candidates. Such an experimental system is hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP), which is widely accepted as an in vitro model of cellular processes fundamentally involved in memory formation. The present thesis focuses on the establishment and validation of LTP in rat hippocampal slices to characterize memory enhancing drugs as a potential treatment of AD. First, a multi-slice recording system was set up enabling stable measurements of LTP for up to seven hours from several slices simultaneously (chapter 2). Then, distinct protocols to induce early and late CA1 LTP, resembling short-term and long-term memory, were established. They were validated by addressing the hallmarks accepted for these forms of LTP: protein-synthesis independence and NMDA receptor dependence without contribution of L-VDCCs for early LTP, as opposed to protein-synthesis and NMDA / L-VDCCs dependence for late LTP (chapter 3). As in AD patients a loss of mainly cholinergic and glutamatergic synapses is obvious, these validated forms of LTP were used to study drugs potentially being able to enhance cholinergic and/or glutamatergic neuronal functions. The effects of two drugs exclusively interfering with cholinergic function on LTP were tested: the α4β2 nicotinic acetylcholinergic receptor agonist TC-1827 (chapter 4) and the acetylcholine esterase inhibitor donepezil (chapter 5). Both drugs were found to increase early LTP, but to not affect late LTP. Furthermore, two drugs exclusively interfering with glutamatergic function were analyzed: the metabotropic glutamate 5 receptor postive allosteric modulator ADX-47273 (chapter 3) and the phosphodiesterase (PDE) 9A inhibitor BAY 73-6691 (chapter 5). ADX-47273 increased late LTP, but had no effect on early LTP, whereas BAY 73-6691 showed enhancing effects on both early and late LTP and even transformed early into late LTP. The same effects like for the PDE9A inhibitor were observed for the α7 nicotinic acetylcholinergic receptor partial agonist SSR180711 (chapter 4), which interferes with both, cholinergic and glutamatergic function. Thus, drugs facilitating glutamatergic function or both glutamatergic and cholinergic function seem to be more efficacious in enhancing LTP than drugs facilitating solely cholinergic function. To evaluate whether this finding also proves true for experimental circumstances mimicking decreased cognitive function together with pathophysiology in AD patients, the ability of the drugs to ameliorate LTP impaired by soluble Aβ oligomer was analyzed (chapter 6). Soluble Aβ oligomers, also referred to as amyloid-β derived diffusible ligands (ADDLs), are thought to a putative cause of AD. Here, they were demonstrated to impair early and late LTP to different extents by exclusively targeting NMDA receptors and/or their signaling. These results further contribute to the hypothesis that soluble Aβ oligomers cause synaptic dysfunction which might lead to cognitive decline seen in AD patients. Regarding drug effects, donepezil and TC-1827 slightly restored ADDLs induced impairment of early LTP, but had no effect on late LTP impaired by ADDLs. In contrast, both, SSR180711 and BAY 73-6691 completely rescued early as well as late LTP impaired by ADDLs. ADX-47273 had no restoring effect on ADDLs induced early LTP impairment, but partially restored late LTP impaired by ADDLs. Thus, the earlier finding of the present thesis was confirmed: drugs facilitating glutamatergic function not only seem to be more efficacious in enhancing LTP than drugs facilitating solely cholinergic function, but are also superior in ameliorating soluble Aβ oligomer induced LTP deficits. Therefore, from a preclinical perspective and based on the results of the present thesis, drugs interfering with glutamatergic function seem to have a high therapeutic potential as alternative treatment concerning cognitive deficits. Probably, they represent more efficacious approaches for the symptomatic treatment of AD than current treatments solely facilitating cholinergic function.
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.
In the last decades, both the incidence and the severity of asthma have steadily increased. Furthermore, available therapies only treat the symptoms but do not cure the disease. Immune modulation induced by TLR agonists may be a promising novel approach to effectively treat asthma as it targets the underlying immunopathology directly rather than one mediator alone. The aim of this thesis was to investigate if the immunostimulatory properties of Toll-like receptor (TLR) agonists can be utilized to develop novel therapeutic intervention strategies for the treatment of asthma using murine models of allergic inflammation. For this purpose five different TLR agonists were tested in preclinical mouse models of acute and chronic asthma, both in preventive and therapeutic settings. Firstly, TLR-2, 3, 4, 7/8 and 9 agonists were delivered intratracheally at different doses before pulmonary allergen exposure in the asthma model of acute inflammation. TLR9 agonist CpG-containing oligodeoxynucleotides (CpG) > TLR7 agonist Resiquimod (R848) > TLR3 agonists poly(I:C) strongly reduced allergen induced airway eosinophilia and IL-4 levels in a dose-dependent manner. All TLR agonists increased neutrophil numbers, TLR4 agonist lipopolysaccharide (LPS) > TLR2 agonist lipoteichonic acid (LTA) > poly(I:C) > CpG > R848 and, with the exception of R848, the amount of pro-inflammatory cytokines in the airways. Suppressive effects were not dependent upon IFN-γ and IL-10 or associated with increased numbers of regulatory T cells in the airways. All TLR agonists, except LTA, similarly reduced airway eosinophilia and IL-4 levels when applied therapeutically after allergen challenge. These results show that the TLR agonists have different suppressive effects on TH2 responses in the airways which further depend on the dose and the experimental setup in which they were tested. Interestingly, all agonists induced airway neutrophilia, albeit to different degrees, raising the question if TLR ligands are safe for human use when applied directly into the lung. Different TLR agonists are also being developed for human use as adjuvants combined with allergen in specific immunotherapy. Recent clinical data suggest that this may be achieved by induction of allergen-specific TH1 responses. For this reason, the ability of different TLR agonists to induce allergen-specific TH1 and suppress allergen-specific TH2 responses in a preclinical setting was investigated in this thesis. Different doses of the TLR agonists were applied together with allergen, then mice were exposed to allergen aerosol. CpG > LPS >LTA dose-dependently strongly suppressed the development of airway eosinophilia with poly(I:C) and R848 having no effect. The decrease in eosinophilic numbers was associated withincreased neutrophils present in the airways. IL-4 and IL-5 levels in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid were also decreased when poly(I:C), LPS, and CpG were used. All TLR agonists increased allergen-specific IgG2a, and with the exception of poly(I:C), reduced allergen-specific IgE levels in the serum. Cutaneous anaphylaxis to allergen was completely prevented when LPS or CpG were given as adjuvant. The strongest TH1 responses were induced by CpG and poly(I:C), characterized by the presence of IFN-γ in the bronchoalveolar lavage and the highest allergen-specific IgG2a levels in the serum. This data supports approaches to use TLR9 or TLR4 agonists for human therapy as adjuvant in combination with allergen in novel specific immunotherapy formulations. In the last part of the thesis, it was investigated if TLR activation can also affect the pathology of severe chronic asthma. Therapeutic administration of R848 or CpG reduced features of inflammation and remodeling. Both agonists showed superior effects to dexamethasone, with CpG being more efficient than R848. This result again supports a TLR9-based therapy as a viable option for the treatment of severe chronic asthma which may present a potential alternative for anti-inflammatory therapy with steroids. Taken together, the results of this thesis support the use of TLR agonists to treat asthma. The most favorable efficacy/safety ratio is to be expected from TLR-based therapies combining TLR4 or TLR9 agonists with allergen in specific immunotherapy. In regard to TLR agonist monotherapy, R848 and CpG showed the most promising profiles, CpG particularly in a model of severe chronic asthma. However, since all TLR agonists used in this study also showed pro-inflammatory potential, the safety aspect of such an approach needs to be taken into account.
A major goal of the main topics of ecology is to answer the question of how species can co-exist and maintain biodiversity. To understand how community dynamics operate in different spatio-temporal dimensions to govern biodiversity patterns requires a process-based knowledge. Thus, this study focused primarily on biodiversity patterns and ecological processes at both spatial and temporal scales. Spatially, the diversity and similarity of spider communities in high, intermediate, and low strata of beech trees represented a set of age-related effects: Old-growth trees provided unique and distinct resources to spiders and in turn possessed discrete spider compositions. Intra-annually, spider communities in different seasons showed a repeated, predictable temporal dynamics. Inter-annually, comparison revealed that neutral and niche models can operate in tandem, and that both are needed to fully explain the dynamics of arboreal spider assemblages among different canopy strata in this beech forest.
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.
Cell adhesion and migration are essential for development and homeostasis. Adhesion to the extracellular matrix occurs at specialized plasma membrane domains where transmembrane adhesion receptors, signaling proteins such as kinases and phosphatases, and a large number of adaptor proteins interact with the cytoskeleton in a tightly regulated and synchronized fashion. Whereas altered cell adhesion and migration are known to be important in cardiovascular disease and malignant tumors, the target proteins and molecular interactions that regulate these complex processes still remain incompletely understood. Whereas numerous kinases are known to regulate cell adhesion dynamics, information about the involved protein phosphatases is still very limited. A newly emerging phosphatase family contains the unconventional active site sequence DXDX(T/V) and belongs to the haloacid dehalogenase (HAD) superfamily of hydrolases. Our laboratory has recently discovered AUM, a novel phosphatase that belongs to this poorly characterized enzyme family. Initial findings pointed toward a potential involvement of AUM in the regulation of cell adhesion to the extracellular matrix. The objective of the present study was to study the potential role of AUM in cell adhesion. We could show that cells stably depleted of AUM are characterized by accelerated adhesion on immobilized fibronectin. To confirm these findings, we used an siRNA-based approach for the acute depletion of AUM and observed a similar phenomenon. Rescue experiments were performed with stably AUM-depleted cells to ensure that the above mentioned effects are indeed AUM specific. We observed that the re-addition of AUM normalizes cellular adhesion kinetics on fibronectin. These results clearly show that AUM exerts important functions in cell-matrix adhesion. To investigate the molecular basis of these effects, we have characterized integrin expression patterns using flow cytometry. Interestingly, fibronectin-stimulated AUM-depleted cells are characterized by an increase in the cell surface expression of conformationally active 1-integrins. Consistent with the important role of 1-integrins in the regulation of RhoA activity, we also observed a specific increase in RhoA-GTP, but not Rac1-GTP-levels during cell adhesion to fibronectin. Consistent with these findings and with the important role of RhoA for focal adhesion maturation, AUM depleted cells showed more elongated and more centripetally oriented focal adhesions as compared to control cells when spread on fibronectin. Taken together, this study has revealed an important role of AUM for cell-matrix adhesion. Our findings strongly suggest that AUM functions as a negative regulator of 1-integrins and RhoA-dependent cytoskeletal dynamics during cell adhesion.
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.
The contribution of the present thesis consists of three parts. They are centered around investigating certain semiconductor heterointerfaces relevant to spin injection, exploring novel, diluted magnetic single barrier tunneling structures, and further developing diluted magnetic II-VI resonant tunneling diodes.
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.
A completely revised and enhanced version of the water balance model MODBIL of the regional water balance dynamics of Cyprus was developed for this study. The model is based on a physical, process-oriented, spatially distributed concept and is applied for the calculation of all important water balance components of the island for the time period of 1961-2004. The calibrated results are statistically analysed and visualised for the whole island area, and evaluated with respect to the renewability of natural water resources. Climate variability and changes of the past decades are analysed with regard to their influence on water balances. A further part of the study focusses on the simulation of impacts of potential climate change. The water balances are simulated under changing climatic conditions on the base of theoretical precipitation, temperature and relative humidity changes and the revealed impacts on the water balances and renewable resources are discussed. Furthermore, a first principal water balance scenario is developed for the assessment of the regional hydrological changes expected for Cyprus by the end of the 21st century. The scenarios are based on recently calculated climate change assessments for this part of the Mediterranean, under an assumed further increase of greenhouse gasses in the atmosphere.
Effective T cell immunity was believed to occur by mature DC, whereas tolerogenicity was attributed strictly to immature DC phenotypes. However, intermediate DC maturation stages were identified conditioned by inflammatory mediators like TNF. Furthermore, the T cell tolerance mechanisms are dependent on distinct modes and intensities of co-stimulation. Therefore, in this study it was addressed how distinct DC maturation signatures instruct CD4+ T cell tolerance mechanisms. DC acquire antigens from apoptotic cells for self-peptide-MHC presentation and functionally adapt presumed tolerogenic DC phenotypes. Here, immature murine bone-marrow derived DC representing both inflammatory and conventional DC subsets adapted a maturationresistant DC signature upon apoptotic cell recognition but no additional tolerogenic features. Immature DC instruct CD4+ FoxP3+ regulatory T cells in a TGF-β prone micro-environment or generate anergic CD4+ T cells hampered in the TCR-induced proliferation and IL-2 secretion. Secondary stimulation of such anergic CD4+ T cells by immature DC increased primarily IL-10 production and conferred regulatory function. These IL-10+ regulatory T cells expressed high levels of CTLA-4, which is potently induced by immature DC in particular. Data in this work showed that anergic T cells can be re-programmed to become IL-10+ regulatory T cells upon ligation of CTLA-4 and CD28 signalling cascades by B7 costimulatory ligands on immature DC. In contrast, semi-mature DC phenotypes conditioned by the inflammatory mediator TNF prevented autoimmune disorders by induction of IL-10+ Th2 responses as demonstrated previously. Here, it was shown that TNF as an endogenous maturation stimulus and pathogenic Trypanosoma brucei variant-specific surface glycoproteins (VSG) induced highly similar DC gene expression signatures which instructed default effector Th2 responses. Repetitive administration of the differentially conditioned semi-mature DC effectively skewed T cell immunity to IL-10+ Th2 cells, mediating immune deviation and suppression. Collectively, the data presented in this work provide novel insights how immature and partially mature DC phenotypes generate T cell tolerance mechanisms in vitro, which has important implications for the design of effective DC-targeted vaccines. Unravelling the DC maturation signatures is central to the long-standing quest to break tolerance mimicked by malignant tumours or re-establish immune homeostasis in allergic or autoimmune disorders.
Physiological Role of Fatty Acid Desaturation in Agrobacterium-induced Arabidopsis Crown Galls
(2011)
Crown gall development is accompanied by hypoxia, drought and oxidative stress. These abiotic stress factors are known to have an impact on fatty acid (FA) desaturation. Thus, an alteration in the lipid profile of plant tumors was expected. A comprehensive lipid analysis of Arabidopsis thaliana crown galls induced by Agrobacterium tumefaciens showed an increase in the degree of FA desaturation. The poly unsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) linolenic acid (18:3) of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) derived phospholipids was especially affected. The increased levels of desaturated FAs were reflected by a strong induction of two genes encoding desaturases, FAD3 and SAD6. In contrast to FAD3, which encodes the ER membrane bound fatty acid desaturase enzyme that synthesizes 18:3 PUFAs in the ER, the function of SAD6 is unknown. The ability of SAD6 to complement the extreme dwarf growth phenotype of the ssi2-2 mutant allele suggests that SAD6 is a functional stearoyl-acyl-carrier-protein delta-9 desaturase (SAD) which catalyzes the first step in FA desaturation and forms stearic acid (18:1). Overexpression of the SAD6 gene in Arabidopsis (SAD6-OE) to a similar degree as in tumors resulted in a light-dependent chlorosis phenotype and caused a similar shift in the lipid profile towards unsaturated phospholipids. Posttranscriptional down-regulation of SAD6 overexpression by RNA reverted the chlorosis phenotype and the changes in the lipid profile, showing that SAD6 overexpression forms the unsaturated FA profile and the phenotype in SAD6-OE. The subcellular localization of the SAD6 protein in chloroplasts, which is obligatory for SAD function was demonstrated. SSI2, which encodes the major contributor to the 18:1 FA levels in Arabidopsis is down-regulated in crown galls pointing to a replacement of SSI2 function by SAD6 in the tumor. SAD6 transcripts were almost undetectable in Arabidopsis under normal growth condition, whereas under hypoxia the gene was strongly activated. In the tumor hypoxia most likely caused the very high transcription of SAD6. Hypoxia is known to limit FA desaturation and it is associated with an elevated reactive oxygen species (ROS) production which is detrimental for unsaturated FAs. Thus, up-regulation of SAD6 in the crown gall, most likely serves as an adaptive mechanism to activate desaturation under low oxygen concentrations and to maintain the levels of unsaturated FA under oxidative stress. The ER localized FAD3 most likely is responsible for the rise in 18:3 of the phospholipid class to cope with drought stress in crown galls. This hypothesis was supported by the loss of function mutant, fad3-2, which developed significantly smaller tumors as the wild type under low relative humidity.Taken together, this study suggests that the induction of SAD6 and FAD3 shapes the tumor lipid profile by increasing the levels of unsaturated FAs. Unsaturated fatty acids prepare the crown gall to cope with ongoing hypoxia, drought and oxidative stress during growth and development.
XPD is a 5‘-3‘ helicase of the superfamily 2. As part of the transcription factor IIH it functions in transcription initiation and nucleotide excision repair. This work focus on the role of XPD in nucleotide excision repair. NER is a DNA repair pathway unique for its broad substrate range. In placental mammals NER is the only repair mechanism able to remove lesions induced by UV-light. NER can be divided into four different steps that are conserved between pro- and eukaryotes. Step 1 consists of the initial damage recognition, during step 2 the putative damage is verified, in step 3 the verified damage is excised and in the 4th and final step the resulting gap in the DNA is refilled. XPD was shown to be involved in the damage verification step. It was possible to solve the first apo XPD structure by a MAD approach using only the endogenous iron from the iron sulfur cluster. Based on the apo XPD structure several questions arise: where is DNA bound? Where is DNA separated? How is damage verification achieved? What is the role of the FeS cluster? These questions were addressed in this work. Hypothesis driven structure based functional mutagenesis was employed and combined with detailed biochemical characterization of the variants. The variants were analyzed by thermal unfolding studies to exclude the possibility that the overall stability could be affected by the point mutation. DNA binding assays, ATPase assays and helicase assays were performed to delineate amino acid residues important for DNA binding, helicase activity and damage recognition. A structure of XPD containing a four base pair DNA fragment was solved by molecular replacement. This structure displays the polarity of the translocated strand with respect to the helicase framework. Moreover the properties of the FeS cluster were studied by electron paramagnetic resonance to get insights into the role of the FeS cluster. Furthermore XPD from Ferroplasma acidarmanus was investigated since it was shown that it is stalled at CPD containing lesions. The data provide the first detailed insight into the translocation mechanism of a SF2B helicase and reveal how polarity is achieved. This provides a basis for further anlayses understanding the combined action of the helicase and the 4Fe4S cluster to accomplish damage verification within the NER cascade.
The voltage –gated calcium channel, Cav1.2, and the plasma membrane calcium ATPase, PMCA4b, play important roles in excitable and non-excitable cells. The central function of Cav1.2 is to regulate the calcium entry into cells upon depolarization, while PMCA4b is responsible for calcium extrusion and has an influence on cellular calcium homeostasis. Both proteins control fundamental functions in the heart and brain, but the specific functions and the precise mechanisms are still investigated. In order to identify new interaction partners that may regulate the activities of the Cav1.2 and the PMCA4b, we used three independent assays and co-localization studies. The assays, which were used are PDZ domain arrays (testing 124 different PDZ domains), GST pull-downs, and conventional immunoprecipitation assays. In the PDZ arrays, strongest interactions with Cav1.2 and PMCA4b were found for the PDZ domains of MAST-205, MAGI-1, MAGI-2, MAGI-3, and ZO-1. Additionally, we established interactions between Cav1.2 and the PDZ domains of NHERF1/2, Mint-2, and CASK. PMCA4b was observed to interact with Mint-2, and its interactions with Chapsyn-110 and CASK were confirmed. Furthermore, we validated interaction of Cav1.2 and PMCA4b with NHERF1, CASK, MAST-205 and MAGI-3 via immunoprecipitation. We also demonstrated direct interaction of the C-terminus of Cav1.2 and the PDZ domain of nNOS. We assumed that nNOS overexpression would reduce Ca2+ influx through Cav1.2. To address this question, we measured Ca2+ currents in stably transfected HEK 293 cells expressing the Cav1.2 (α1b and β2a subunit of the smooth muscle L-type calcium channel) and nNOS. It has been shown that NO modulates ion channel activity by nitrosylation of sulfhydryl groups on the channel protein. So we propose that the interaction between the C-terminus of Cav1.2 and the PDZ domain of nNOS inhibits the currents by an S-nitrosylation of the channel protein. All these interactions connect both proteins to signaling networks involved in signal transmission, cell adhesion, and apoptosis, which may help provide new hints about the physiological functions of Cav1.2 and PMCA4b in intra- and intercellular signaling.
Just do it! Guilt as a moral intuition to cooperate - A parallel constraint satisfaction approach
(2011)
After a long dominance of rational models of judgment and decision-making in moral psychology (e.g. Kohlberg, 1969) there is now a strong interest in how intuitions and emotions influence moral judgments and decisions (e.g. Greene, 2007; Haidt, 2001; Monin, Pizarro, & Beer, 2007). In the literature, the influence of emotions on moral decisions is explained by heuristic or non-compensatory information processing (e.g. Sinnott-Armstrong, Young, & Cushman, 2010; Sunstein, 2005; Tobler, Kalis, & Kalenscher, 2008). However, the process of emotion elicitation is ignored. Appraisal theories postulate that emotion elicitation is due to the incoherence (or discrepancy) of behavioral representations like goals and actions (Moors, 2009). Emotion elicitation and intuitive decision-making can be combined if both processes apply a connectionist information processing structure (e.g. Barnes & Thagard, 1996). The current work contrasts both perspectives of intuitive-emotional decision-making with respect to guilt and cooperation.
The technology of organic photovoltaics offers the possibility of low-cost devices due to easy fabrication procedures and low material consumption and at the same time high flexibility concerning the applied substrates or design features such as the color palette. Owing to these benefits, this research field is highly active, being reflected by the continuously rising number of publications. Chapter 1 gives an extensive overview of a part of these reports, namely the field of solution-processed BHJ organic solar cells using small molecules as electron-donating materials. In the early years of this research area (2006-2008), well known hole transporting materials such as triphenylamine based chromophores, oligothiophenes and polyaromatic hydrocarbons were applied. However, many of these dyes lacked absorption at longer wavelengths and were therefore limited in their light harvesting qualities. Later, chromophores based on low band gap systems consisting of electron-donating and electron-accepting units showing internal charge transfer overcame this handicap. Today, donor-substituted diketopyrrolopyrroles (D-A-D chromophores), squaraines (D-A-D chromophores) and acceptor substituted oligothiophenes (A-D-A chromophores) are among the most promising dyes for small molecule based organic solar cells with PCEs of 4-5%. This work is based on the findings of the groups of Würthner and Meerholz, which tested merocyanine dyes for the first time in organic BHJ solar cells.4 According to the Bässler theory85, the high dipolarity of these dyes should hamper the charge transport, but the obtained first results with PCE of 1.7% proved the potenital of this class of dyes for this application. Merocyanine dyes offer the advantages of facile synthesis and purification, high tinctorial strength and monodispersity. Additionally, the electronic structure of the dyes, namely the absorption as well as the electrochemical properties, can be adjusted by using the right combination of donor and acceptor units. For these reasons, this class of dye is highly interesting for the application in organic solar cells. It was the aim of the thesis to build more knowledge about the potential and limitations of merocyanines in BHJ photovoltaic devices. By screening a variety of donor and acceptor groups a comprehensive data set both for the molecular materials as well as for the respective solar devices was generated and analyzed. As one focus, the arrangement of the chromophores in the solid state was investigated to gain insight about the packing in the solar cells and its relevance for the performance of the latter. To do so, X-ray single crystal analyses were performed for selected molecules. By means of correlations between molecular properties and the characteristics of the corresponding solar cells, several design rules to generate efficient chromophores for organic photovoltaics were developed. The different donor and acceptor moieties applied in this work are depicted in the following ...
Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease that leads to the destruction of insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells and consequently to hyperglycemia. In the last 60 years, the prevalence of type 1 diabetes has been increasing constantly and is predicted to continue rising. About 80% of the disease risk is attributable to the genetic variation. Thanks to genome wide association studies the number of known disease-associated polymorphisms climbed from five to 53 in the last 10 years. As these studies reveal possible candidate genes but not underlying mechanisms we strove to take the next step and explore the association of two genes suggested by these studies with type 1 diabetes. As a method of choice we decided to use lentiviral RNAi in non obese diabetic (NOD) mice, a widely-used model for type 1 diabetes, introducing a shRNA directed against the target message into the genome of this mouse strain via a lentivirus. This allowed us to study the partial loss-of-function of the target gene within the context of diabetes, directly seeing its effect on autoimmune mechanisms. In this thesis we examined two different genes in this manner, Ctla4 and Clec16a. A type 1 diabetes associated polymorphism in the CTLA4 gene had been found to alter the splicing ratio of its variants soluble CTLA-4 (sCTLA-4) and full length CTLA-4, the associated allele producing less sCTLA-4 than the protective allele. We mimicked this effect by specifically targeting the sCtla4 mRNA via lentiviral RNAi in the NOD model. As a result we could confirm the reduction of sCTLA-4 to accelerate type 1 diabetes development. Furthermore we could show a function of sCTLA-4 in regulatory T cells, more specifically at least partly in their ability to modulate costimulation by antigen presenting cells. The second candidate gene, Clec16a was targeted with the shRNA in a way that was designed to knock down most splice variants. As the gene function and the effect of the associated SUMMARY 10 polymorphism was unknown, we reasoned this method to be feasible to investigate its role in type 1 diabetes. The knockdown of Clec16a in NOD mice resulted in an almost complete protection from diabetes development that could be attributed to T cells dysfunction. However, as expression patterns and a study of the Drospophila orthologue suggested a possible role of CLEC16A in antigen presentation we also examined antigen presenting cells in the thymus and periphery. Although we did not detect any effect of the knockdown on peripheral antigen presenting cells, thymic epithelial cells were clearly affected by the loss of CLEC16A, rendering them more activated and shifting the ratio of cortical to medullary epithelial cells in favor of cortical cells. We therefore suggest a role of CLEC16A in the selection of T cells, that needs, however, to be further investigated. In this thesis we provided a feasible and fast method to study function of genes and even of single splice variants within the NOD mouse model. We demonstrate its usefulness on two candidate genes associated with type 1 diabetes by confirming and unraveling the cause of their connection to the disease.
This thesis concerned the quantification of cell adhesion molecules (CAM) in and on thin hydrogel films as surface modification of biomaterials. The established and well characterized, per se inert NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO) hydrogel system which allows the easy and reproducible bioactivation with peptides was used as basis for this thesis. Two methods can be used to functionalize the coatings. Ligands can either be mixed into the prepolymer solution in prior to layer formation (mix-in method), or freshly prepared coatings can be incubated with ligand solution (incubation method). Divided into three major parts, the first part of the thesis dealt with the concentration of ligands in the bulk hydrogel, whereas the second part of the thesis focused on the surface sensitive quantification of CAMs at the biointerface. The results were correlated with cell adhesion kinetics. The third part of this thesis investigated the biochemical and the structural mimicry of the extracellular matrix (ECM). ECM proteins were presented via sugar-lectin mediated binding and cell behavior on these surfaces was analyzed. Cell behavior on three-dimensional fibers with identical surface chemistry as the coatings in the previous sections of the thesis was analyzed and correlated with the amount of peptide used for bioactivation. Overall, the main question of this work was ‘How much?’ regarding maximal as well as optimal ligand concentrations for controlled cell-hydrogel interactions. The focus in the first practical part of this thesis was to analyze the amount of ligands in NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO) hydrogels using classical quantification methods. Coatings in 96-well plates as well as on glass were functionalized with GRGDS and 125I-YRGDS for radioisotopic detection (Chapter 3). Using the incubation method for functionalization, a maximal ligand binding using peptide concentrations of 600 µg/mL could be determined. When functionalization was introduced via the mix-in method, a clear tendency for higher ligand concentrations with increasing ligand to prepolymer ratio was observed, but no maximal ligand binding could be detected with a ligand to prepolymer ratio of 2/1 being the highest ratio investigated. This ratio of 2/1 was not exceeded to ensure that complete crosslinking of the hydrogel was not affected. In Chapter 4, a fluorinated amino acid and an iodinated peptide were immobilized to the hydrogels using the mix-in method and were detected by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF-SIMS). In these measurements, maximal ligand binding was detected for a ligand to prepolymer ratio of 1/1. Higher ligand to prepolymer ratios did not result in any significant increase in ligand concentrations in the surface near regions of the crosslinked hydrogels. To address the question of how many ligands were actually accessible for cell interaction at the interface, surface sensitive quantification methods were applied in the second part of this thesis. For the quantification with surface plasmon resonance (SPR) and surface acoustic wave technology (SAW) (Chapter 5), the hydrogel coating procedure needed to be transferred onto cystamine functionalized gold surfaces. Characterization with ellipsometry and atomic force microscopy (AFM) revealed inhomogeneous cystamine binding to the activated surfaces, which resulted in inhomogeneous coatings. Nevertheless, it could be shown that SPR as well as SAW were suitable methods for the surface sensitive quantification of the ligand concentration on NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO) hydrogels. Non-functionalized coatings resisted non-specific serum as well as streptavidin (SA) adsorption. Coatings functionalized with biocytin and GRGDSK-biotin introduced specific SA binding that was dependent on the biotin concentration at the surface. Additionally, enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and enzyme linked lectin assay (ELLA) (Chapter 6) were applied to coatings in 96-well plates and on glass. Coatings were functionalized with the model molecule biocytin, the biotinylated peptide GRGDSK-biotin, the ECM protein fibronectin (FN), as well as the carbohydrates N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) and N-acetyllactosamine (LacNAc). All ligands could be successfully detected with antibodies or SA via ELISA or ELLA. Maximal GRGDSK-biotin binding to the hydrogel coatings on glass was achieved at a peptide to prepolymer ratio of 1/5, which was used as reference value in Chapter 8. Last but not least, cell adhesion (Chapter 7) was quantified depending on the GRGDS concentration on hydrogel coatings on glass. Maximal adhesion of primary human dermal fibroblast (HDF) was observed at GRGDS to prepolymer ratios of 1/5, when adherent cells were counted on life cell images. Quantification of adherent cells using the CASY® cell counter revealed maximal HDF adhesion at molar ligand to prepolymer ratios of 1/2. However, cell vitality detected by intracellular enzyme activities was not dependent on the GRGDS concentration. Cells which managed to adhere were vital regardless of the amount of ligands present. Additionally, adhesion of fibroblasts from the murine cell line NIH L929 was analyzed by counting on life cell images. These cells, being much smaller than the HDF cells, needed higher GRGDS to prepolymer ratios (2/1) for proper cell adhesion. All quantification methods applied to analyze hydrogels which were functionalized by the mix-in method in Chapter 3, 4, 6 and 7, were compared in Chapter 8. Radiodetection gave information about the ligand concentrations throughout the whole hydrogel and no maximal amount of ligands could be detected when increasing the peptide to prepolymer ratio. In contrast, XPS and TOF-SIMS which only penetrated the surface near regions of the coating, a maximal ligand binding to the hydrogel was detected for 1/1 ratios. SPR and SAW were not included in this comparison, as the coatings on gold need to be optimized first. The two surface sensitive quantification methods (ELISA and HDF adhesion) could give information about the quantity of peptide which was sterically available for SA or cell binding. With these methods, maximal SA and cell binding was detected at ratios of 1/5. These results underline the importance of carefully compare the different methods. Beside ligand quantification on hydrogels, the third part of this thesis was concerned with the biochemical and structural mimicry of the ECM by advanced ECM engineering to design biomimetic biomaterials that are better accepted by cells and tissue. The subject of Chapter 9 was the biomimetic and flexible presentation of the ECM protein FN. FN was attached via sugar-lectin mediated binding to NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO) hydrogels. The build-up of the covalently immobilized sugar poly-N-acetyllactosamine (polyLacNAc), the subsequent non-covalent binding of the fungal galectin His6CGL2, and FN could be elegantly proven by fluorescent staining on coatings which were functionalized with the sugar by micro contact printing (MCP). Further experiments were carried out on build-ups, where polyLacNAc was immobilized on the hydrogel by incubation. Optimal parameters for the layer build-up were determined by ELLA/ELISA. Only the complete build-up induced proper adhesion of HDFs. Compared to tissue culture polystyrene (TCPS), cells adhered and spread faster on the biomimetic surfaces. The flexible presentation of FN allowed HDFs to rearrange homogenously immobilized FN into fibrillar structures, which seemed not to be possible when FN was adsorbed on glass or covalently bound directly to the hydrogel coatings. This new approach of a flexible and biomimetic presentation of an ECM protein allows new ways to design biomaterials with best possible cell-material interactions. The work described in Chapter 10 focused on the structural mimicry of the fibrous ECM structures by electrospinning of synthetic, bioactive, and degradable fibers. Poly(D,L-lactide-co-glycolide) (PLGA) and NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO) were electrospun out of one solution in an easy one-step preparation resulting in fibers with an ultrathin inert hydrogel layer at the surface. By adding GRGDS to the solution prior to electrospinning, specifically interacting fibers could be obtained. In comparison to PLGA, the adsorption of bovine serum albumin (BSA) could be reduced by 99.2%. As a control, the non-active peptide GRGES was immobilized to the fiber. These fibers did not allow cell adhesion, showing that the integrity of the hydrogel coated fibers was not affected by the immobilization of peptides. HDF adhesion was obtained by functionalization with GRGDS, leading to the adhesion, spreading, and proliferation of HDFs. Also mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) could adhere to GRGDS functionalized fibers. Additionally, for ligand quantification, the ELISA technique was successfully transferred to fiber substrates. To highlight the potential of the approaches for the biochemical and structural mimicry of the ECM, the sugar polyLacNAc was immobilized on the PLGA/sP(EO-stat-PO) fibers followed by the subsequent layer build-up with His6CGL2 and FN. These fibers triggered HDF adhesion.
On the Fragility Index
(2011)
The Fragility Index captures the amount of risk in a stochastic system of arbitrary dimension. Its main mathematical tool is the asymptotic distribution of exceedance counts within the system which can be derived by use of multivariate extreme value theory. Thereby the basic assumption is that data comes from a distribution which lies in the domain of attraction of a multivariate extreme value distribution. The Fragility Index itself and its extension can serve as a quantitative measure for tail dependence in arbitrary dimensions. It is linked to the well known extremal index for stochastic processes as well the extremal coefficient of an extreme value distribution.
Understanding the mechanisms of fragmentation within silicate melts is of great interest not only for material science, but also for volcanology, particularly regarding molten fuel coolant-interactions (MFCIs). Therefore edge-on hammer impact experiments (HIEs) have been carried out in order to analyze the fracture dynamics in well defined targets by applying a Cranz-Schardin highspeed camera technique. This thesis presents the corresponding results and provides a thorough insight into the dynamics of fragmentation, particularly focussing on the processes of energy dissipation. In HIEs two main classes of cracks can be identified, characterized by completely different fracture mechanisms: Shock wave induced “damage cracks” and “normal cracks”, which are exclusively caused by shear-stresses. This dual fracture situation is taken into account by introducing a new concept, according to which the crack class-specific fracture energies are linearly correlated with the corresponding fracture areas. The respective proportionality constants - denoted “fracture surface energy densities” (FSEDs) - have been quantified for all studied targets under various constraints. By analyzing the corresponding high speed image sequences and introducing useful dynamic parameters it has been possible to specify and describe in detail the evolution of fractures and, moreover, to quantify the energy dissipation rates during the fragmentation. Additionally, comprehensive multivariate statistical analyses have been carried out which have revealed general dependencies of all relevant fracture parameters as well as characteristics of the resulting particles. As a result, an important principle of fracture dynamics has been found, referred to as the “local anisotropy effect”: According to this principle, the fracture dynamics in a material is significantly affected by the location of directed stresses. High local stress gradients cause a more stable crack propagation and consequently a reduction of the energy dissipation rates. As a final step, this thesis focusses on the volcanological conclusions which can be drawn on the basis of the presented HIE results. Therefore fragments stemming from HIEs have been compared with natural and experimental volcanic ash particles of basaltic Grimsvötn and rhyolitic Tepexitl melts. The results of these comparative particle analyses substantiate HIEs to be a very suitable method for reproducing the MFCI loading conditions in silicate melts and prove the FSED concept to be a model which is well transferable to volcanic fragmentation processes.
The material system of interest in this thesis are II-VI-semiconductors. The first part of this thesis focuses on the formation of self-assembled CdSe-based quantum dots (QD) on ZnSe. The lattice constants of ZnSe and CdSe differ as much as about 7\% and therefore a CdSe layer grown on top of ZnSe experiences a huge strain. The aspired strain relief constitutes in the self-assembly of QDs (i.e. a roughened layer structure). Additionally, this QD layer is intermixed with Zn as this is also a possibility to decrease the strain in the layer. For CdSe on ZnSe, in Molecular Beam Epitaxy (MBE), various QD growth procedures were analysed with respect to the resulting Cd-content of the non-stoichiometric ternary (Zn,Cd)Se. The evaluation was performed by Raman Spectroscopy as the phonon frequency depends on the Cd-content. The second part of the thesis emphasis on the interface properties of n-ZnSe on n-GaAs. Different growth start procedures of the ZnSe epilayer may lead to different interface configurations with characteristic band-offsets and carrier depletion layer widths. The analysis is mainly focused on the individual depletion layer widths in the GaAs and ZnSe. This non-destructive analysis is performed by evaluating the Raman signal which comprises of phonon scattering from the depleted regions and coupled plasmon-phonon scattering from regions with free carriers.
Single-molecule microscopy is one of the decisive methodologies that allows one to clarify cellular signaling in both spatial and temporal dimentions by tracking with nanometer precision the diffusion of individual microscopic particles coupled to relevant biological molecules. Trajectory analysis not only enables determination of the mechanisms that drive and constrain the particles motion but also to reveal crucial information about the molecule interaction, mobility, stoichiometry, all existing subpopulations and unique functions of particular molecules. Efficacy of this technique depends on two problematic issues the usage of the proper fluorophore and the type of biochemical attachment of the fluorophore to a biomolecule. The goal of this study was to evolve a highly specific labeling method suitable for single molecule tracking, internalization and trafficking studies that would attain a calculable 1:1 fluorophore-to-receptor stoichiometry. A covalent attachment of quantum dots to transmembrane receptors was successfully achieved with a techinque that amalgamates acyl carrier protein (ACP) system as a comparatively small linker and coenzyme A (CoA)-functionalized quantum dots. The necessity of optimization of the quantum dot usage for more precise calculation of the membrane protein stoichiometries in larger assemblies led to the further study in which methods maximizing the number of signals and the tracking times of diverse QD types were examined. Next, the optimized techniques were applied to analyze behavior of interleukin-5 β-common chain receptor (IL-5Rβc) receptors that are endogenously expressed at low level on living differentiated eosinophil-like HL-60 cells. Obtained data disclosed that perused receptors form stable and higher order oligomers. Additionally, the mobility analysis based on increased in number (>10%) uninterrupted 1000-step trajectories revealed two patterns of confined motion. Thereupon methods were developed that allow both, determination of stoichiometries of cell surface protein complexes and the acquisition of long trajectories for mobility analysis. Sequentially, the aforementioned methods were used to scrutinize on the mobility, internalization and recycling dynamics characterization of a G protein-coupled receptor (GPCRs), the parathyroid hormone receptor (PTHR1) and several bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs), a member of the TGF-beta superfamily of receptors. These receptors are two important representatives of two varied membrane receptor classes. BMPs activate SMAD- and non-SMAD pathways and as members of the transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) superfamily are entailed in the regulation of proliferation, differentiation, chemotaxis, and apoptosis. For effective ligand induced and ligand independent signaling, two types of transmembrane serine/threonine kinases, BMP type I and type II receptors (BMPRI and BMPRII, respectively) are engaged. Apparently, the lateral mobility profiles of BMPRI and BMPRII receptors differ markedly, which determinate specificity of the signal. Non-SMAD signaling and subsequent osteoblastic differentiation of precursor cells particularly necessitate the confinement of the BMP type I receptor, resulting in the conclusion that receptor lateral mobility is a dominative mechanism to modulate SMAD versus non-SMAD signaling during differentiation. Confined motion was also predominantly observed in the studies devoted to, entailed in the regulation of calcium homeostasis and in bone remodeling, the parathyroid hormone receptor (PTHR1), in which stimulation with five peptide ligands, specific fragments of PTH: hPTH(1–34), hPTHrP(107–111)NH2; PTH(1–14); PTH(1–28) G1R19, bPTH(3–34), first four belonging to PTH agonist group and the last to the antagonist one, were tested in the wide concentration range on living COS-1 and AD293 cells. Next to the mobility, defining the internalization and recycling rates of the PTHR1 receptor maintained in this investigation one of the crucial questions. Internalization, in general, allows to diminish the magnitude of the receptor-mediated G protein signals (desensitization), receptor resensitization via recycling, degradation (down-regulation), and coupling to other signaling pathways (e.g. MAP kinases). Determinants of the internalization process are one of the most addressed in recent studies as key factors for clearer understanding of the process and linking it with biological responses evoked by the signal transduction. The internalization of the PTH-receptor complex occurs via the clathrin-coated pit pathway involving β-arrestin2 and is initiated through the agonist occupancy of the PTHR1 leading to activation of adenylyl cyclase (via Gs), and phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase Cβ (via Gq). Taken together, this work embodies complex study of the interleukin-5 β-common chain receptor (IL-5Rβc) receptors, bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) and the parathyroid hormone receptor with the application of single-molecule microscopy with the newly attained ACP-quantum dot labeling method and standard techniques.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a medical imaging method that involves no ionizing radiation and can be used non-invasively. Another important - if not the most important - reason for the widespread and increasing use of MRI in clinical practice is its interesting and highly flexible image contrast, especially of biological tissue. The main disadvantages of MRI, compared to other widespread imaging modalities like computed tomography (CT), are long measurement times and the directly resulting high costs. In the first part of this work, a new technique for accelerated MRI parameter mapping using a radial IR TrueFISP sequence is presented. IR TrueFISP is a very fast method for the simultaneous quantification of proton density, the longitudinal relaxation time T1, and the transverse relaxation time T2. Chapter 2 presents speed improvements to the original IR TrueFISP method. Using a radial view-sharing technique, it was possible to obtain a full set of relaxometry data in under 6 s per slice. Furthermore, chapter 3 presents the investigation and correction of two major sources of error of the IR TrueFISP method, namely magnetization transfer and imperfect slice profiles. In the second part of this work, a new MRI thermometry method is presented that can be used in MRI-safety investigations of medical implants, e.g. cardiac pacemakers and implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs). One of the major safety risks associated with MRI examinations of pacemaker and ICD patients is RF induced heating of the pacing electrodes. The design of MRI-safe (or MRI-conditional) pacing electrodes requires elaborate testing. In a first step, many different electrode shapes, electrode positions and sequence parameters are tested in a gel phantom with its geometry and conductivity matched to a human body. The resulting temperature increase is typically observed using temperature probes that are placed at various positions in the gel phantom. An alternative to this local thermometry approach is to use MRI for the temperature measurement. Chapter 5 describes a new approach for MRI thermometry that allows MRI thermometry during RF heating caused by the MRI sequence itself. Specifically, a proton resonance frequency (PRF) shift MRI thermometry method was combined with an MR heating sequence. The method was validated in a gel phantom, with a copper wire serving as a simple model for a medical implant.
Cross-striated muscles enable higher animals to perform directed movements and to create mechanical force. The cells of heart and skeletal muscles consist of myofibrils, serial arrays of the smallest contractile subunits, the sarcomeres. Main components of the sarcomeres are the thin and thick filaments, large protein assemblies consisting of mainly actin (thin filaments) and myosin (thick filaments), whose energy-dependent interaction is responsible for the contraction of sarcomeres and so of the whole muscle. The thin filaments are anchored in the sarcomere bordering Z-discs, while the thick filaments are anchored in the M-bands, traverse structures in the sarcomere center. Electron-microscopic studies revealed that the M-bands consist of regular, lattice-like structures that appear to cross-link the thick filaments. A number of proteins could be identified by immune-fluorescence and biochemical binding studies to be present and interact with each other in the M-bands. These data have been integrated into preliminary models of the M-bands. Detailed knowledge of how these proteins interact with each other in the center of the sarcomeres is, however, largely missing. The current study focuses on the structural characterization of the interactions between the titin, myomesin-1, obscurin and obscurin-like 1 (OBSL1), modular filamentous proteins interacting with each other in the M-bands. The high-resolution crystal structure of the titin M10 – OBSL1 Ig1 complex was solved. The structure and additional biophysical data show that titin and OBSL1 as well as titin and obscurin form stable binary complexes through the formation of a small intermolecular ß-sheet. In contrast to previously characterized intermolecular assemblies of sarcomeric proteins, this sheet is formed between parallel non- homologous ß-strands of the interaction partners. The investigation of disease-related variants of the M10 domain by biophysical methods did not allow to draw unambiguous conclusions on a direct connection between impaired OBSL1/obscurin binding and disease development. Two out of four known M10 variants have effects on the correct domain folding and so interfere with the ability to bind obscurin/OBSL1. The two other known variants displayed however only minor effects on fold and binding affinities. It should therefore be further elucidated whether a direct connection between impaired complex formation and disease development exists. -I- Abstract A direct interaction between titin and myomesin-1 could not be confirmed in vitro. Possible explanations for the different results are discussed. While the consequences of the inability of both proteins to interact are unclear, the further characterization of the putative interacting parts of titin and myomesin-1 led to the discovery of two new potential sites of self-assembly on M-band titin and myomesin-1. The crystal structure of titin M4 showed that this domain can form dimeric assemblies through the formation of a disulfide bridge and an intermolecular metal binding site between residues that are unique to this domain. On myomesin-1, in addition to the described C-terminal interaction site, a potential second site of self-assembly was found in its central Fn3-domain segment. The interacting site was mapped to the predicted Fn3 domain My5. The crystal structure of the domain in its dimeric form showed that the interaction is mediated by a mechanism that has previously not been observed in sarcomeric proteins. Two My5 interact with each other by the mutual exchange of an N-terminal ß-strand which complements the Fn3 fold on the binding partner. This type of interaction can be interpreted as misfolding. However, the position of the interacting domain and its mode of interaction allowed the postulation of a model of how myomesin-1 could be integrated in the M-bands. This model is in good agreement with the electron-microscopic appearance of the M-bands.
This work deals with nonlinear optics with wavefront controlled ultra-short laser pulses. The effects studied are self-phase modulation due to filamentation of ultra-short laser pulses and high-order harmonic generation in a jet of noble gas. Additionally, a way to optimize the spectral brilliance of the high-order harmonic source is studied by measuring the spectrum and wavefront of the generated XUV beam.
This thesis investigated the potential of Compressed Sensing (CS) applied to Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI). CS is a novel image reconstruction method that emerged from the field of information theory. The framework of CS was first published in technical reports in 2004 by Candès and Donoho. Two years later, the theory of CS was published in a conference abstract and two papers. Candès and Donoho proved that it is possible, with overwhelming probability, to reconstruct a noise-free sparse signal from incomplete frequency samples (e.g., Fourier coefficients). Hereby, it is assumed a priori that the desired signal for reconstruction is sparse. A signal is considered “sparse“ when the number of non-zero elements is significantly smaller than the number of all elements. Sparsity is the most important foundation of CS. When an ideal noise-free signal with few non-zero elements is given, it should be understandably possible to obtain the relevant information from fewer Fourier coefficients than dictated by the Nyquist-Shannon criterion. The theory of CS is based on noise-free sparse signals. As soon as noise is introduced, no exact sparsity can be specified since all elements have signal intensities that are non-zero. However, with the addition of little or moderate noise, an approximate sparsity that can be exploited using the CS framework will still be given. The ability to reconstruct noisy undersampled sparse MRI data using CS has been extensively demonstrated. Although most MR datasets are not sparse in image space, they can be efficiently sparsified by a sparsifying transform. In this thesis, the data are either sparse in the image domain, after Discrete Gradient transformation, or after subtraction of a temporally averaged dataset from the data to be reconstructed (dynamic imaging). The aim of this thesis was to identify possible applications of CS to MRI. Two different algorithms were considered for reconstructing the undersampled sparse data with the CS concept. The Nonlinear Conjugate Gradient based technique with a relaxed data consistency constraint as suggested by Lustig et al. is termed Relaxed DC method. An alternative represents the Gradient or Steepest Descent algorithm with strict data consistency and is, therefore, termed the Strict DC method. Chapter 3 presents simulations illustrating which of these two reconstruction algorithms is best suited to recover undersampled sparse MR datasets. The results lead to the decision for the Strict DC method as reconstruction technique in this thesis. After these simulations, different applications and extensions of CS are demonstrated. Chapter 4 shows how CS benefits spectroscopic 19F imaging at 7 T, allowing a significant reduction of measurement times during in vivo experiments. Furthermore, it allows highly resolved spectroscopic 3D imaging in acceptable measurement times for in vivo applications. Chapter 5 introduces an extension of the Strict DC method called CS-CC (CS on Combined Coils), which allows efficient processing of sparse undersampled multi-coil data. It takes advantage of a concept named “Joint Sparsity“, which exploits the fact that all channels of a coil array detect the same sparse object weighted with the coil sensitivity profiles. The practical use of this new algorithm is demonstrated in dynamic radial cardiac imaging. Accurate reconstructions of cardiac motion in free breathing without ECG triggering were obtained for high undersampling factors. An Iterative GRAPPA algorithm is introduced in Chapter 6 that can recover undersampled data from arbitrary (Non-Cartesian) trajectories and works solely in the Cartesian plane. This characteristic makes the proposed Iterative GRAPPA computationally more efficient than SPIRiT. Iterative GRAPPA was developed in a preceding step to combine parallel imaging with CS. Optimal parameters for Iterative GRAPPA (e.g. number of iterations, GRAPPA kernel size) were determined in phantom experiments and verified by retrospectively undersampling and reconstructing a radial cardiac cine dataset. The synergistic combination of the coil-by-coil Strict DC CS method and Iterative GRAPPA called CS-GRAPPA is presented in Chapter 7. CS-GRAPPA allows accurate reconstruction of undersampled data from even higher acceleration factors than each individual method. It is a formulation equivalent to L1-SPIRiT but computationally more efficient. Additionally, a comparison with CS-CC is given. Interestingly, exploiting joint sparsity in CS-CC is slightly more efficient than the proposed CS-GRAPPA, a hybrid of parallel imaging and CS. The last chapter of this thesis concludes the findings presented in this dissertation. Future applications expected to benefit from CS are discussed and possible synergistic combinations with other existing MR methodologies for accelerated imaging are also contemplated.
When there is an imbalance between reactive oxygen species (ROS) and endogenous antioxidants (glutathione (GSH), superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase etc.) the oxidative stress is increased and results in the oxidation of lipids, proteins and DNA. Although oxidation of lipids and proteins may also accumulates with age, only DNA oxidation leads to altered genomic information. As one pathway for increased ROS production, many endogenous and exogenous substances activate NADPH oxidase (NOX) enzyme and produce ROS. p47phox is a cytosolic organizer protein which plays an important role in NOX activation. Angiotensin II (Ang II) is an example for an endogenous compound which causes ROS through NOX activation. Rosuvastatin is an example for a drug with antioxidative capacity (upregulation of endogenous antioxidants). It is a lipid lowering drug which also reduces an elevated level of angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AT1R). Commonly, oxidative stress is elevated in ageing and age related diseases (eg. Parkinson’s disease (PD)). The aim of the present study was to investigate the role of NOX derived ROS induced oxidative DNA damage and the influence of ROS in ageing and age related diseases, using different in vitro and in vivo models.
There is evidence that pheromones are communicative signals in animals. However, the existence and function of human pheromones are still under discussion. During the last years several substances have been labeled as putative human pheromones and especially 4,16–androstadien-3-one (androstadienone), found in male and female sweat, became subject of intense investigation. In contrast to common odors androstadienone presumably modulates human physiological and psychological reactions. Data suggest that androstadienone might influence the processing of visual cues, specifically faces or affective stimuli, via projections from the fusiform gyrus and the amygdala. Moreover, attentional processes may be modulated, which is supported by explicit and implicit behavioral data. This thesis includes three experimental studies examining effects of androstadienone exposure on behavioral and cortical reactions to visual and emotional stimuli. The main hypotheses were that androstadienone might influence human behavior to and perception of visual cues. The first study sought to clarify androstadienone effects on attention-related reactions as well as on behavioral tendencies. Motoric approach-avoidance reactions in response to happy and angry facial expressions were investigated in 30 women and 32 men. Participants either inhaled androstadienone or a control solution, without knowing the real content, while performing the following task: they had to push away or to pull towards them a joystick as fast as possible in reaction to either an angry or a happy cartoon face, which was presented on a computer screen. Results showed that androstadienone modulated the participant´s task performance by accelerating the reaction speed compared to the control compound. Faster reactions were observed particularly when reacting to angry faces but not when reacting to happy faces. This might be explained by the finding that human body odors, the source of androstadienone, were found to activate the human fear system, i.e. modulating fear-related attentional processes. Therefore, the quicker reaction towards angry faces with exposure to androstadienone could be due to an enhanced allocation of attentional resources towards fear-related cues like angry faces. Results also showed that androstadienone enhanced men´s approach tendency towards faces independent of emotional expressions. This observation might be explained by androstadienone´s former shown ability to improve attractiveness ratings of other persons. In this regard, the endogenous odor might enhance evaluations of faces in men and, thus, might improve their willingness to approach social stimuli. In contrast to men, women already showed in the control condition higher approach tendency towards faces. Therefore, androstadienone might rather maintain than enhance the approach score in women. In the second study event-related brain potentials (ERPs) triggered by social and non-social visual stimuli were investigated by means of electroencephalography. In a double-blind between-subjects design 51 women participated. Twenty-eight women inhaled androstadienone, whereas 23 women inhaled a control solution. Four different picture categories, i.e. real faces, pictures with couples, pictures with social and non-social scenes, each including three different valence categories, i.e. positive, negative and neutral, should clarify the stimulus type or context androstadienone is acting on. The androstadienone compared to the control odor did not influence brain responses significantly. Explorative analyses, however, suggested that androstadienone influences the processing of faces. While in the control group angry faces elicited larger P300 amplitudes than happy faces, the androstadienone group showed similar P300 amplitudes concerning all emotional expressions. This observation tentatively indicates that the endogenous odor might indeed affect the neuronal responses to emotional facial stimuli, especially late components reflecting evaluative processes. However, this observation has to be verified and further investigated, in particular whether androstadienone caused reduced responses to angry faces or enhanced responses to happy faces. The third study investigated androstadienone effects on face processing especially in men. ERPs elicited by happy, angry and neutral cartoon faces, which were presented on a computer screen, were measured while 16 men, not knowing the applicated odor, inhaled either androstadienone or a control solution. Exposure to androstadienone significantly increased later neuronal responses, the P300 amplitude. This belated component of the ERP reflects attention allocation and evaluative processes towards important stimuli. Therefore, androstadienone might facilitate central nervous face processing by enhancing attention towards these stimuli. In sum, the current results corroborate the notion of androstadienone as an active social chemosignal. In minute amounts and not detectable as an odor it influenced cortical and motoric reactions. Therefore, it might be concluded that androstadienone indeed affects cognitive functions like attentional processes and in turn affects our behavior. The current results further support the notion that androstadienone acts like a human modulator pheromone, namely modulating ongoing behavior or a psychological reaction to a particular context, changing stimulus sensitivity, salience and sensory-motor integration. However, these conclusions remain tentative until further replication takes place, best in ecologically valid environments. Furthermore, one has to keep in mind that the current studies could not replicate several previous findings and could not verify some hypotheses assuming communicative effects of androstadienone. Thus, the main assumption of this thesis that androstadienone is an active chemosignal is still challenged. Also, whether the term “pheromone” is indeed suitable to label androstadienone remains open.
Replication-competent oncolytic viral therapies have shown great promise preclinically and in clinical trials for the treatment of various cancers. They are able to preferentially and selectively propagate in cancer cells, consequently destroying tumor tissue via cell lysis, while leaving noncancerous tissues unharmed. Currently, biopsy is the gold standard for monitoring of viral tumor colonization and oncolysis. This may be feasible in preclinical or early clinical trials; however, a noninvasive method facilitating ongoing monitoring of viral therapy is needed for human studies. The tracking of viral delivery could give clinicians the ability to assess the biodistribution of oncolytic viruses to ensure safety and correlation with treatment efficacy. This work centers on the construction and testing of a VACV strain, GLV-1h153, carrying the human sodium iodide symporter (hNIS) as a marker gene for non-invasive tracking of virus by imaging. Thus, this project aimed to help develop imaging techniques for use in clinical trials of oncolytic viral therapy. Further, the feasibility and effectiveness of virally induced targeted radiotherapy as an anti-cancer strategy was also investigated. hNIS is an intrinsic plasma membrane protein which mediates the active transport and concentration of iodide in the thyroid gland and some extra-thyroidal tissues. It is also one of several human genes currently being used as reporters in preclinical studies and has already been used in clinical studies for imaging viral replication in prostate cancer. hNIS gene transfer via viral vector may allow infected tumor cells to concentrate several carrier-free radionuclide probes such as Iodide-124 (124I), Iodide-131 (131I), and 99m-Technecium Pertechtenate (99mTcO4), which have long been approved for human use. hNIS also has the advantage of being of human origin thus minimizing immunogenicity, and its transporter based system allows intracellular signal amplification. GLV-1h153 was tested in pancreatic adenocarcinoma cell line PANC-1. GLV-1h153 infected, replicated within, and killed PANC-1 cells in cell culture as efficiently as GLV-1h68 and provided dose-dependent levels of hNIS transgene expression in infected cells. Immunofluorescence detected successful transport of the protein to the cell membrane prior to cell lysis, which enhanced dose and time-dependent intracellular uptake of 131I. In vivo, GLV-1h153 was as safe and effective as GLV-1h68 in regressing pancreatic cancer xenografts. Tumor infection by virus was confirmed via optical imaging and histology. GLV-1h153 further facilitated deep tissue imaging of virus replication in tumors via Iodide-124I positron emission tomography (PET) as well as 99mTcO4-mediated gamma scintigraphy. This was possible with both intratumoral and intravenous injection of the virus with radiouptake retained as long as 24 and 48 hours after radiotracer injection. PET image quantitation of radiouptake in tumors was found to correlate well with tissue radiouptake counts. Autoradiography of GLV-1h153-infected tumors revealed a need for presence of virus (visualized with green fluorescent protein expression), viable tissue, and adequate blood flow to enhance radiouptake in tumors. Dosimetric analysis of uptake in infected tumors displayed potential for therapeutic doses of radiotherapy to be delivered systemically to tumors. When GLV-1h153 was combined with 131I for treatment, a modest additive effect was seen as compared to GLV-1h153 alone. Therefore, GLV-1h153 is a promising new candidate for treating pancreatic cancer and noninvasively imaging viral therapy. These findings warrant further investigation into possible long term monitoring of viral therapy, as well as synergistic or additive effects of radioiodine combined with this novel treatment and imaging modality.
In this work the epitaxial growth and characterization of the half-metallic ferromagnet NiMnSb was presented. NiMnSb crystallizes in the C1b structure which is similar to the zinc blende structure from widely used III-V semiconductors. One special property of NiMnSb is the theoretical 100% spin-polarization at the Fermi edge. This makes it a perfect candidate for spintronic experiments and the material of choice for building novel spintronic devices. Another important topic in this work were the magnetic properties of NiMnSb, especially the low magnetic damping of the grown thin films. All grown layers were fabricated with the technique of MBE. The layer stacks for all different experiments and devices were grown on InP substrate in (001) or (111)B orientation. Before the NiMnSb layer a buffer layer of undoped (In,Ga)As was grown. Additional for some samples on InP(111)B, a Si doped (In,Ga)As layer was grown on top of the undoped (In,Ga)As layer. The dopant concentration of this n-doped layer was determined by ETCH-CV. All layers were investigated by structural and the NiMnSb layer additional by magnetic properties. For the structural investigation the in-situ technique RHEED and ex-situ tool HRXRD were used. RHEED observations showed a good quality of the grown buffer and half-metallic ferromagnet layers on both orientations. These results were strengthened by the HRXRD measurement. The vertical lattice constant could be determined. The received value of a(NiMnSb_vertical) = 5.925 Å for NiMnSb on InP(001) is in good agreement to the value a(NiMnSb_Lit) = 5.903 Å found in literature [Cas55]. For NiMnSb on InP(111)B a vertical lattice constant of a(NiMnSb_vertikal) = 6.017 Å could be determined. The horizontal lattice constant of the buffer and the half-metallic ferromagnet layer could be determined as the same of the substrate. For NiMnSb this conclusion is only valid up to a thickness of ≈40nm. To increase this maximum thickness, NiMnSb samples were grown on InP(001) substrates and capped with Ti/Au layers. Afterwards a reciprocal space map of the (533) reflex was drawn with GIXRD at the synchrotron beamline BW2 of HASYLAB [Kum07]. It has been shown that the critical thickness is more than doubled by depositing a Ti/Au capping directly after growth of NiMnSb without breaking the ultrahigh vacuum (UHV). The magnetic properties were determined with FMR experiments and SQUID measurements. The received magnetic damping parameter α from a 40nm thick NiMnSb layer on InP(001) could be determined to 3.19e−3 along [1-10]. The resulting line width of our NiMnSb layers on InP(001) is more than 4.88 times smaller than measured before [Hei04]. Another result is the direction dependence of the damping. It has been measured that the difference of the damping is changed by more than 42% when rotating the applied field by 45° from [1-10] to [100].With SQUID we measured a saturation magnetization of a 40nm thick NiMnSb layer as 4µB. NiMnSb layers on InP(111)B substrate where also measured with FMR with a surprising result. These layers not only showed a decreasing in the anisotropy field with increasing thickness but also an uniaxial anisotropy. This behaviour can be explained with defects on these samples. With an AFM triangle-like defects were measured. These defects originated from the buffer layer and influenced the magnetic properties. Another part of this work is dedicated to the behaviour of NiMnSb at temperatures around 80K. With our samples, no phase transition can be observed in the data of the Hall, anomalous Hall term and resistivity. The last part of this work discusses different spintronic devices build with our NiMnSb layers. In a first device the magnetization acts on the current. This Giant Magneto Resistance (GMR) device consisted of InP:S(001) - 180nm undoped (In,Ga)As - 40nm NiMnSb - 10nm Cu - 6nm NiFe - 10nm Ru in current perpendicular to plane (CPP) geometry. We received a Magneto-Resistance-Ratio of 3.4%. In a second device the current acts on the magnetization and makes use of the spin torque phenomena. This so called Spin Torque Oscillator (STO) emitted frequencies in the GHz range (13.94GHz - 14.1GHz). The last fabricated device is based on the magnetic vortex phenomena. For switching the core polarity the gyrotropic frequencies f + = 254MHz f − = 217MHz and a total static magnetic field of only mµ0H = 65mT were necessary. The reversal efficiency has been determined as better than 99% [Lou09].
While beneficial sponge-microbe associations have received much attention in recent years, less effort has been undertaken to investigate the interactions of sponges with potentially pathogenic microorganisms. Thus, the aim of this study was to examine two selected Caribbean disease conditions, termed “Sponge Orange Band” and “Sponge White Patch”, via ecological and molecular methods. Sponge Orange Band (SOB) disease affects the prominent Caribbean barrel sponge Xestospongia muta that is counted among the high-microbial-abundance (HMA) sponges, whereas Sponge White Patch (SWP) disease affects the abundant rope sponge Amphimedon compressa that belongs to the low-microbial-abundance (LMA) sponges. I have documented for both Caribbean sponge diseases a disease progression going along with massive tissue destruction as well as loss of the characteristic microbial signatures. Even though new bacteria were shown to colonize the bleached areas, the infection trials revealed in both cases no indication for the involvement of a microbial pathogen as an etiologic agent of disease leaving us still in the dark about the cause of Sponge Orange Band as well as Sponge White Patch disease.
Pluripotency describes the ability of stem cells to form every cell type of the body.. Pluripotent stem cells are e.g. embryonic stem cells (ESCs), but also the so called induced pluripotent stem cells (IPS cells), that are generated by reprogramming differentiated somatic cells into a pluripotent state. Furthermore, it has been shown that spermatogonia (SG) derived from adult testes of mouse or human are pluripotent. Because of their ability to differentiate into every somatic cell type, pluripotent stem cells have a unique status in research and regenerative medicine. For the latter, they offer a valuable opportunity to replace destroyed tissues or organs. For basic research, stem cells represent a useful system to study differentiation or developmental processes that are difficult to access in the physiological situation e.g. during embryogenesis. Both applications, however, require methods that allow efficient and directed differentiation of stem cells into defined specialized cell types. This study first aims to investigate the differentiation potential of SG derived from the teleost fish medaka (Oryzias latipes). My results demonstrate that medaka SG are able to form different somatic cell types, namely adipocytes, melanocytes, osteoblasts, and neurons. This indicates that medake SG have retained a broad differentiation potential suggesting that pluripotency is not restricted to mouse and human SG but might be conserved among vertebrates. Next, I wanted to establish a differentiation method that is solely based on ectopic expression of genes known to be essential for the formation of certain somatic cell types – so called master regulators (MRs). My findings show that ectopic expression of the melanocyte-specific transcription factor mitf-m that has previously been shown to induce differentiation of medaka ESCs into pigment cells resulted in the formation of the same cell type in medaka SG. This approach could be used to generate other somatic cell types. Thus, ectopic expression of the MRs cbfa1 and mash1 in MF-SG was sufficient to induce differentiation into osteoblasts and neurons, respectively. Interestingly, these differentiation processes included the activation of genes that are expressed earlier during embryogenesis than the differentiation-inducing MR. Furthermore, my findings show that the approach of MR-induced differentiation can be transferred to mammalian stem cell systems. Ectopic expression of the neural transcription factor ngn2 was sufficient to induce efficient and rapid differentiation of neurons in mouse ESCs. This differentiation process also included the induction of genes that in vivo are activated at earlier stages that ngn2. By generating a transgenic cell line allowing induction of ectopic ngn2 expression, it was possible to obtain a relatively pure culture of functional neurons. Ngn2-induced differentiation did not require any additional signals and occurred even under pluripotency promoting conditions. Moreover, ectopic expression of ngn2 did also induce the formation of cells with neuronal morphology in IPS cells indicating that MR-induced differentiation is operative in different stem cell types. Furthermore, protein transduction of Ngn2 into mouse ESCs also resulted in a neuronal differentiation process up to the appearance of neural precursor cells. Last, my results show that MR-induced differentiation can also be used to generate other cell types than neurons from mouse ESCs. Myoblasts and macrophage-like cells were generated by ectopic expression of the MRs myoD and cebpa, respectively. Using transgenic cell lines enabling induction of MR expression it was possible to obtain mixed cultures with two different differentiation processes occurring in parallel. Altogether this study shows that ectopic expression of single genes is sufficient to induce directed differentiation of stem cells into defined cell types. The feasibility of this approach was demonstrated for different MRs and consequently different somatic cell types. Furthermore, MR induced differentiation was operative in different stem cell types from fish and mouse. Thus, one can conclude that certain genes are able to define cell fates in in vitro stem cell systems and that this cell fate defining potential appears to be a conserved feature in vertebrates. These findings therefore provide new insights in the role of MRs in cell commitment and differentiation processes. Furthermore, this study presents a new method to induce directed differentiation of stem cells that offers several advantages regarding efficiency, rapidness, and reproducibility. MR-induced differentiation therefore represents a promising tool for both stem cell research and regenerative medicine.
This study was conducted to determine the influence of different stress factors on the honeybee Apis mellifera. The investigation was motivated by previous experiments that suggested the existence of an unspecific defense mechanism causing a generalized change of flight behavior after the onset of different diseases. This mechanism is thought to impede the ability of flight bees to return to their respective colonies thereby removing the disease from the colony over time. During the last years, the existence of such a “suicidal behavior” was supported by further studies. Thus, an unnoticed, potentially highly effective defense mechanism of social insects was revealed whose spectrum of activity and physiological basics require further investigation. Suggesting that the reaction by the bees is unspecific to different diseases as well as to other potential stress factors, this study was designed to investigate the influence of pathogens, insecticides, and different brood rearing temperatures on different parameters like lifespan, foraging activity, and foraging trip duration of worker bees.
The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor of skeletal muscle is one of the best-investigated synaptic proteins and often serves as model for the entire family of pentameric ligand gated ion channels (pLGICs). Receptors of this superfamily share a common architecture. After binding the agonist the characteristic C-loop structure closes around the ligand-binding site and triggers a wave of conformational changes that spread through the protein and finally result in the opening of the channel gate. As shown before, high-resolution single channel data can hardly be described by simple kinetic mechanisms (Parzefall et al., 1998, Hallermann et al., 2005). Recent advances in the field of kinetic modelling on receptor currents demonstrate that the introduction of additional short lived shut states in kinetic schemes enhances the quality of estimates of reaction rates. The additional shut states that immediately follow ligand bound states in the mechanism are suggested to resemble the closing movement of the C-loop (Lape et al., 2008; Mukhtasimova et al., 2009). It has not been described yet whether and how the structural differences of the 2 binding sites of the receptor influence the opening behaviour. To address this question, high-resolution single channel recordings, in combination with agonists that are known to exhibit different binding site selectivity, were performed. Thereby, a detailed description of the binding site dependent generation of channel currents is possible. At the embryonic mouse-muscle receptor used in this study the ligand binding sites are located at the α-γ and α-δ subunit interfaces. By allocation of opening characteristics to the α-δ and α-γ sites it is possible to show the binding site dependent activation of distinct kinetic states. Furthermore, it will be shown that the recently introduced short-lived shut states are sufficient to describe high-resolution single channel data. Finally an enhanced kinetic mechanism based on the ‘primed states’ model, published in 2009 by Mukhtasimova et al., will be presented. In this model the structurally diverse α-δ and α-γ binding sites elicit different kinetic channel characteristics. Thus the complex high-resolution kinetic characteristics of the embryonic receptor can be described coherently.
We investigate transport measurements on all II-VI semiconductor resonant tunneling diodes (RTDs). Being very versatile, the dilute magnetic semiconductor (DMS) system (Zn,Be,Mn,Cd)Se is a perfect testbed for various spintronic device designs, as it allows for separate control of electrical and magnetic properties. In contrast to the ferromagnetic semiconductor (Ga,Mn)As, doping ZnSe with Mn impurities does not alter the electrical properties of the semiconductor, as the magnetic dopant is isoelectric in the ZnSe host.
For the realization of a programmable logic device, or indeed any nanoscale device, we need a reliable method to probe the magnetization direction of local domains. For this purpose we extend investigations on the previously discovered tunneling anisotropic magneto resistance effect (TAMR) by scaling the pillar size from 100 µm down to 260 nm. We start in chapter 4 with a theoretical description of the TAMR effect and show experimental data of miniaturized pillars in chapter 5. With such small TAMR probes we are able to locally sense the magnetization on the 100 nm scale. Sub-micron TAMR and anisotropic magneto resistance (AMR) measurements of sub-millimeter areas show that the behavior of macroscopic (Ga,Mn)As regions is not that of a true macrospin, but rather an ensemble average of the behavior of many nearly identical macrospins. This shows that the magnetic anisotropies of the local regions are consistent with the behavior extracted from macroscopic characterization. A fully electrically controllable read-write memory device out the ferromagnetic semiconductor (Ga,Mn)As is presented in chapter 6. The structure consists of four nanobars which are connected to a circular center region. The first part of the chapter describes the lithography realization of the device. We make use of the sub-micron TAMR probes to read-out the magnetization state of a 650 nm central disk. Four 200 nm wide nanobars are connected to the central disk and serve as source and drain of a spin-polarized current. With the spin-polarized current we are able to switch the magnetization of the central disk by means of current induced switching. Injecting polarized holes with a spin angular momentum into a magnetic region changes the magnetization direction of the region due to the p-d exchange interaction between localized Mn spins and itinerant holes. The magnetization of the central disk can be controlled fully electrically and it can serve as one bit memory element as part of a logic device. In chapter 7 we discuss the domain wall resistance in (Ga,Mn)As. At the transition from nanobars to central disk we are able to generate 90° and 180° domain walls and measure their resistance. The results presented from chapter 5 to 7 combined with the preexisting ultracompact (Ga,Mn)As-based memory cell of ref. [Papp 07c] are the building blocks needed to realize a fully functioning programmable logic device. The work of ref. [Papp 07c] makes use of lithographically engineered strain relaxation to produce a structure comprised of two nanobars with mutually orthogonal uniaxial easy axes, connected by a narrow constriction. Measurements showed that the resistance of the constriction depends on the relative orientation of the magnetization in the two bars. The programmable logic device consists of two central disks connected by a small constriction. The magnetization of the two central disks are used as the input bits and the constriction serves as the output during the logic operation. The concept is introduced in the end of chapter 6 and as an example for a logic operation an XOR gate is presented. The functionality of the programmable logic scheme presented here can be straightforwardly extended to produce multipurpose functional elements, where the given geometry can be used as various different computational elements depending on the number of input bits and the chosen electrical addressing. The realization of such a programmable logic device is shown in chapter 8, where we see that the constriction indeed can serve as a output of the logic operation because its resistance is dependent on the relative magnetization state of both disks. Contrary to ref. [Papp 07c], where the individual magnetic elements connected to the constriction only have two non-volatile magnetic states, each disk in our scheme connected to the constriction has four non-volatile magnetic states. Switching the magnetization of a central disk with an electrical current does not only change the TAMR read-out of the respective disk, it also changes the resistance of the constriction. The resistance polar plot of the constriction maps the relative magnetization states of the individual disks. The presented device design serves as an all-electrical, all-semiconductor logic element. It combines a memory cell and data processing in a single monolithic paradigm.
Urinary tract infection (UTI) is one of the most serious health problems worldwide. It accounts for a million hospital visits annually in the United States. Among the many uropathogenic bacteria, uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) is the most common causative agent of UTI. However, not all E. coli that inhabit the urinary tract can cause UTI. Some of them thrive for long periods of time in the urinary bladder without causing overt symptoms of infection. This carrier state is called asymptomatic bacteriuria (ABU). E. coli ABU isolates can live in the host without inducing host response due to deletions, insertions and point mutations in the genome leading to the attenuation of virulence genes. They therefore behave in the same way as commensals. Since bacteria that inhabit the urinary tract are said to originate from the lower intestinal tract and ABU behave in a similar way as commensals, this study compared various phenotypic and genotypic characteristics of ABU and commensal E. coli fecal isolates. The two groups did not show a strict clustering with regards to phylogenetic lineage since there appears to be overlaps in their distribution in some clonal complexes. In addition, it was observed that the UPEC virulence genes were more frequently inactivated in ABU than in fecal isolates. Hence, ABU tend to have less functional virulence traits compared to the fecal isolates. The ABU model organism E. coli 83972 which is known not only for its commensal behavior in the urinary bladder but its ability to outcompete other bacteria in the urinary tract is currently being used as prophylactic treatment in patients who have recurrent episodes of UTI at the University Hospital in Lund, Sweden. The pilot studies showed that upon deliberate long-term colonization of the patients with E. coli 83972, they become protected from symptomatic UTI. In this study, the phenotypic and genotypic characteristics of eight re-isolates taken from initially asymptomatically colonized patients enrolled in the deliberate colonization study who reported an episode of symptoms during the colonization period were investigated. Two out of the eight re-isolates were proven to be a result of super infection by another uropathogen. Six re-isolates, on the other hand, were E. coli 83972. The urine re-isolates confirmed to be E. coli 83972 were phenotypically heterogeneous in that they varied in colony size as well as in swarming motility. Four of these re-isolates were morphologically homogenous and similar to the parent isolate E. coli 83972 whereas one of them appeared phenotypically heterogenous as a mixture of smaller and normal-sized colonies. Still another re-isolate phenotypically resembled small colony variants. Meanwhile, three of the six re-isolates did not differ from the parent isolate with regards to motility. On the other hand, three exhibited a markedly increased motility compared to the parent isolate. Transcriptome analysis demonstrated the upregulation of a cascade of genes involved in flagellar expression and biosynthesis in one of the three motile re-isolates. However, upon further investigation, it was found out that the expression of flagella had no effect on bacterial adhesion to host cells in vitro as well as to the induction of host inflammatory markers. Thus, this implies that the increased motility in the re-isolates is used by the bacteria as a fitness factor for its benefit and not as a virulence factor. In addition, among the various deregulated genes, it was observed that gene regulation tends to be host-specific in that there is no common pattern as to which genes are deregulated in the re-isolates. Taken together, results of this study therefore suggest that the use of E. coli 83972 for prophylactic treatment of symptomatic UTI remains to be very promising.
In this thesis I studied psychological aspects in the behaviour of Drosophila, and especially Drosophila larvae. After an introduction where I present the general scientific context and describe the mechanisms of olfactory perception as well as of classical and operant conditioning, I present the different experiments that I realised during my PhD. Perception The second chapter deals with the way adult Drosophila generalise between single odours and binary mixtures of odours. I found that flies perceive a mixture of two odours as equally similar to the two elements composing it; and that the intensity as well as the physico-chemical nature of the elements composing a mixture affect the degree of generalisation between this mixture and one of its elements. These findings now call for further investigation on the physiological level, using functional imaging. Memory The third chapter presents a series of experiments in Drosophila larvae in order to define some characteristics of a new protocol for classical aversive learning which involves associating odours with mechanical disturbance as a punishment. The protocol and the first results should open new doors for the study of classical conditioning in Drosophila larvae, by allowing the comparison between two types of aversive memory (gustatory vs. mechanical reinforcement), including a comparison of their neurogenetic bases. It will also allow enquiries into the question whether these respective memories are specific for the kind of reinforcer used. Agency The fourth chapter documents our attempts to establish operant memory in Drosophila larvae. By analysing the first moments of the test, I could reveal that the larvae modified their behaviour according to their previous operant training. However, this memory seems to be quickly extinguished during the course of the test. We now aim at repeating these results and improving the protocol, in order to be able to systematically study the mechanisms allowing and underlying operant learning in Drosophila larvae. In the fifth chapter, I use the methods developed in chapter four for an analysis of larval locomotion. I determine whether larval locomotion in terms of speed or angular speed is affected by a treatment with the “cognitive enhancer” Rhodiola rosea, or by mutations in the Synapsin or SAP47 genes which are involved in the formation of olfactory memory. I also characterize the modifications induced by the presence of gustatory stimuli in the substrate on which the larvae are crawling. This thesis thus brings new elements to the current knowledge of Drosophila
By the end of the year 2011, both the CMS and ATLAS experiments at the Large Hadron Collider have recorded around 5 inverse femtobarns of data at an energy of 7 TeV. There are only vague hints from the already analysed data towards new physics at the TeV scale. However, one knows that around this scale, new physics should show up so that theoretical issues of the standard model of particle physics can be cured. During the last decades, extensions to the standard model that are supposed to solve its problems have been constructed, and the corresponding phenomenology has been worked out. As soon as new physics is discovered, one has to deal with the problem of determining the nature of the underlying model. A first hint is of course given by the mass spectrum and quantum numbers such as electric and colour charges of the new particles. However, there are two popular model classes, supersymmetric models and extradimensional models, which can exhibit almost equal properties at the accessible energy range. Both introduce partners to the standard model particles with the same charges and thus one needs an extended discrimination method. From the origin of these partners arises a relevant difference: The partners constructed in extradimensional models have the same spin as their standard model partners while in Supersymmetry they differ by spin 1/2.\\ These different spins have an impact on the phenomenology of the two models. For example, one can exploit the fact that the total cross sections are affected, but this requires a very good knowledge of the couplings and masses involved. Another approach uses angular distributions depending on the particle spins. A prevailing method based on this idea uses the invariant mass distribution of the visible particles in decay chains. One can relate these distributions to the spin of the particle mediating the decay since it reflects itself in the highest power of the invariant mass $\sff$ of the adjacent particles. In this thesis we first study the influence of higher than dimension 4 operators on spin determination in such decay chains. We write down the relevant dimension 5 and 6 operators and calculate their contributions to the invariant mass distribution. We discuss how they affect the determination of spin and couplings.\\ We then address two scenarios which do not involve decay chains in the usual sense. In three body decays, the method pointed out above cannot be applied since it can only be used if the mediating particle is produced on-shell. For off-shell decays, which are important e.g. in split-Supersymmetry or split-Universal Extra Dimensions, the narrow width approximation cannot be made which previously led to the simple relation between spin and the highest power of $\sff$. We work out a strategy for these three body decays that can distinguish between the different spin scenarios. The method relies on the fact that the differential decay width $d\Gamma /d\sff$ can be rewritten in this limit as a global phase space function and a polynomial in $\sff$. The coefficients in this polynomial are functions of masses and couplings and we show that they have distinct signs or ratios depending on the spins involved in the decay. We test the strategy in a series of Monte Carlo studies and discuss the influence of the intermediate particle's mass. In the last part we consider a topology with very short decay chains. Again one cannot use the relation between spin and invariant mass. We investigate one variable that has been invented for the discrimination of Supersymmetry and Universal Extra Dimensions in the high energy limit which reduces the problem to the underlying production process. We show how this variable can also be used in new physics scenarios where the high energy limit is not a viable approximation. We include all possible spin scenarios with renormalizable interactions and study in detail the influence of the involved masses and couplings on the discrimination power of this variable. We find for example that the scenario containing the supersymmetric case is well distinguishable from most other spin scenarios.
Although age is one of the most salient and fundamental aspects of human faces, its processing in the brain has not yet been studied by any neuroimaging experiment. Automatic assessment of temporal changes across faces is a prerequisite to identifying persons over their life-span, and age per se is of biological and social relevance. Using a combination of evocative face morphs controlled for global optical flow and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we segregate two areas that process changes of facial age in both hemispheres. These areas extend beyond the previously established face-sensitive network and are centered on the posterior inferior temporal sulcus (pITS) and the posterior angular gyrus (pANG), an evolutionarily new formation of the human brain. Using probabilistic tractography and by calculating spatial cross-correlations as well as creating minimum intersection maps between activation and connectivity patterns we demonstrate a hitherto unrecognized link between structure and function in the human brain on the basis of cognitive age processing. According to our results, implicit age processing involves the inferior temporal sulci and is, at the same time, closely tied to quantity decoding by the presumed neural systems devoted to magnitudes in the human parietal lobes. The ventral portion of Wernicke’s largely forgotten perpendicular association fasciculus is shown not only to interconnect these two areas but to relate to their activations, i.e. to transmit age-relevant information. In particular, post-hoc age-rating competence is shown to be associated with high response levels in the left angular gyrus. Cortical activation patterns related to changes of facial age differ from those previously elicited by other fixed as well as changeable face aspects such as gender (used for comparison), ethnicity and identity as well as eye gaze or facial expressions. We argue that this may be due to the fact that individual changes of facial age occur ontogenetically, unlike the instant changes of gaze direction or expressive content in faces that can be “mirrored” and require constant cognitive monitoring to follow. Discussing the ample evidence for distinct representations of quantitative age as opposed to categorical gender varied over continuous androgyny levels, we suggest that particular face-sensitive regions interact with additional object-unselective quantification modules to obtain individual estimates of facial age.
In this thesis eight robust and reliable LC-MS/MS methods were developed and validated to analyze atorvastatin, clopidogrel, furosemide, itraconazole, loratadine, naproxen, nisoldipine and sunitinib in human plasma. The active metabolites 2-hydroxyatorvastatin, 4-hydroxyatorvastatin, hydroxyitraconazole, descarboethoxy-loratadine, 4-hydroxynisoldipine and N-desethylsunitinib were also included in the corresponding methods. Due to the different physical, chemical and pharmacokinetic properties of the analytes a wide spectrum regarding sample preparation techniques, chromatography and mass spectrometric detection was covered. Protein precipitation methods were developed for furosemide, itraconazole, naproxen, nisoldipine and sunitinib. Liquid-liquid extraction methods were developed for atorvastatin, clopidogrel and loratadine. Criteria to choose protein precipitation or liquid-liquid extraction were the final plasma concentrations of the drugs, which are mainly dependant on the dose, bioavailability and t1/2 and of course cost-effectiveness. Altogether, the methods have a concentration range from 0.001 ng/mL (LLOQ of clopidogrel) to 50000 ng/mL (highest calibration point for naproxen), covering 5 x 107 orders of magnitude. The runtime of the methods ranged from 2 to 4 minutes, facilitating a high sample throughput. All developed methods were validated according to recent guidelines as they were used to analyze sampes from clinical trials. Excellent linearity, intra-day and inter-day precision and accuracy were observed in the validated calibration ranges. Hemolyzed, lipemic and different batches of human plasma as well as sample dilution did not affect the determiantion of the analytes. Clopidogrel, loratadine, nisoldipine and sunitinib and if available their metabolites were subjected to a matrix effect test, resulting in no influence of different batches of human plasma on the analytical methods. Noteworthy is clopidogrel that shows a slight effect on one of the two used mass spectrometers. However, that effect was reproducible and did therefore not affect clopidogrel determination. No evidence of instability during chromatography, extraction and sample storage processes for all analytes except 4-hydroxyatorvastatin was found, for which a significant decrease was observed after three months. During incurred sample reanalysis of study samples 95 % of the samples were within ±15 % with respect to the first analysis. Moreover, the atorvastatin, loratadine and clopidogrel method were compared on two generations of triple quadrupole mass spectrometers, the API 3000™ and the API 5000™. The new ion source and the changes in the ion path of the API 5000™ provided higher sensitivity, the extend depending on the substance. However, the API 3000™ had very good precision in the performed system comparison. The validated methods showed excellent performance and quality data during routine sample analysis of eight clinical trials. Moreover, they are suitable for high sample throughput due to their short run times.
Growth factor induced signaling cascades are key regulatory elements in tissue development, maintenance and regeneration. Deregulation of the cascades has severe consequences, leading to developmental disorders and neoplastic diseases. As a major function in signal transduction, activating mutations in RAF family kinases are the cause of many human cancers. In the first project described in this thesis we focused on B-RAF V600E that has been identified as the most prevalent B-RAF mutant in human cancer. In order to address the oncogenic function of B-RAF V600E, we have generated transgenic mice expressing the activated oncogene specifically in lung alveolar epithelial type II cells. Constitutive expression of B-RAF V600E caused abnormalities in alveolar epithelium formation that led to airspace enlargements. These lung lesions showed signs of tissue remodeling and were often associated with chronic inflammation and low incidence of lung tumors. Inflammatory cell infiltration did not precede the formation of emphysema-like lesions but was rather accompanied with late tumor development. These data support a model where the continuous regenerative process initiated by oncogenic B-RAF-driven alveolar disruption provides a tumor-promoting environment associated with chronic inflammation. In the second project we focused on wild type B-RAF and its role in an oncogenic-C-RAF driven mouse lung tumor model. Toward this aim we have generated compound mice in which we could conditionally deplete B-RAF in oncogenic-C-RAF driven lung tumors. Conditional elimination of B-RAF did not block lung tumor formation however led to reduced tumor growth. The diminished tumor growth was not caused by increased cell death instead was a consequence of reduced cell proliferation. Moreover, B-RAF ablation caused a reduction in the amplitude of the mitogenic signalling cascade. These data indicate that in vivo B-RAF is dispensable for the oncogenic potential of active C-RAF; however it cooperates with oncogenic C-RAF in the activation of the mitogenic cascade.
Characterisation of Mena Promoter Activity and Protein Expression in Wild-type and Gene-trapped Mice
(2011)
Proteins of the Ena/VASP protein family are important regulators of actin and participate in cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesions. To date, the physiological importance of Ena/VASP proteins for integrity of the cardiovascular system has remained unclear. To study cardiovascular functions of Mena and VASP, we used an established VASP knockout mouse in combination with a novel gene-trap-based model to ablate Mena function. In the mutated Mena mouse, the endogenous Mena gene is disrupted by the insertion of a β-galactosidase construct and β-galactosidase expression is under the control of the endogenous Mena promoter. X-gal staining of mouse organs revealed Mena promoter activity in smooth muscle layers of vessels, intestines and bronchioles, but also in cells of the brain, in cardiomyocytes and in the respiratory epithelium of bronchioles. In wild-type mice, Western blotting revealed differing protein expression patterns of VASP and Mena. Mena expression was observed in almost every tissue, predominantly in heart, lung, stomach, large intestine, testis, brain and eye. Additionally, the neuronalspecific Mena isoform was expressed in brain, eye, and slightly in heart and stomach. VASP protein, in contrast, was predominantly detected in spleen and thrombocytes. In gene-trapped mice, Mena expression was largely reduced in heart, lung and stomach but only slightly decreased in brain and testis. Immunofluorescence microscopy revealed colocalisation of Mena and F-actin at intercalated discs of cardiomyocytes and strong colocalisation of Mena and α- smooth-muscle-actin in vessels and bronchioles. Functional analysis of Mena/VASP-mutated and wild-type mice using electrocardiography suggested that the depletion of either Mena or VASP does not interfere with normal heart function. However, in double-deficient mice, the resting heart rate was significantly increased, probably reflecting a mechanism to compensate defects in ventricle contraction and to maintain a normal cardiac output. In agreement, cardiac catheter investigations suggested dilated cardiomyopathy in doubledeficient mice. Thus, although Western blot analysis showed differing protein expression patterns of Mena and VASP, these findings suggest that Mena and VASP mutually compensate for each other. Concerning Mena, we propose an important role of the protein in vessel walls, cardiomyocytes and bronchioles.
The Nucleotide Excision Repair (NER) pathway is able to remove a vast diversity of structurally unrelated DNA lesions and is the only repair mechanism in humans responsible for the excision of UV induced DNA damages. The NER mechanism raises two fundamental questions: 1) How is DNA damage recognition achieved discriminating damaged from non damaged DNA? 2) How is DNA incision regulated preventing endonucleases to cleave DNA non specifically but induce and ensure dual incision of damaged DNA? Thus, the aim of this work was to investigate the mechanisms leading from recognition to incision of damaged DNA. To decipher the underlying process of damage recognition in a prokaryotic model system, the intention of the first part of this work was to co crystallize the helicase UvrB form Bacillus caldotenax together with a DNA substrate comprising a fluorescein adducted thymine as an NER substrate. Incision assays were performed to address the question whether UvrB in complex with the endonuclease UvrC is able to specifically incise damaged DNA employing DNA substrates with unpaired regions at different positions with respect to the DNA lesion. The results presented here indicate that the formation of a specific pre incision complex is independent of the damage sensor UvrA. The preference for 5’ bubble substrate suggests that UvrB is able to slide along the DNA favorably in a 5’ → 3’ direction until it directly encounters a DNA damage on the translocating strand to then recruit the endonuclease UvrC. In the second part of this work, the novel endonuclease Bax1 from Thermoplasma acidophilum was characterized. Due to its close association to archaeal XPB, a potential involvement of Bax1 in archaeal NER has been postulated. Bax1 was shown to be a Mg2+ dependent, structure specific endonuclease incising 3’ overhang substrates in the single stranded region close to the ssDNA/dsDNA junction. Site directed mutagenesis of conserved amino acids was employed to identify putative active site residues of Bax1. In complex with the helicase XPB, however, incision activity of Bax1 is altered regarding substrate specificity. The presence of two distinct XPB/Bax1 complexes with different endonuclease activities indicates that XPB regulates Bax1 incision activity providing insights into the physical and functional interactions of XPB and Bax1.
It has been proposed that different features of a face provide a source of information for separate perceptual and cognitive processes. Properties of a face that remain rather stable over time, so called invariant facial features, yield information about a face’s identity, and changeable aspects of faces transmit information underlying social communication such as emotional expressions and speech movements. While processing of these different face properties was initially claimed to be independent, a growing body of evidence suggests that these sources of information can interact when people recognize faces with whom they are familiar. This is the case because the way a face moves can contain patterns that are characteristic for that specific person, so called idiosyncratic movements. As a face becomes familiar these idiosyncratic movements are learned and hence also provide information serving face identification. While an abundance of experiments has addressed the independence of invariant and variable facial features in face recognition, little is known about the exact nature of the impact idiosyncratic facial movements have on face recognition. Gaining knowledge about the way facial motion contributes to face recognition is, however, important for a deeper understanding of the way the brain processes and recognizes faces. In the following dissertation three experiments are reported that investigate the impact familiarity of changeable facial features has on processes of face recognition. Temporal aspects of the processing of familiar idiosyncratic facial motion were addressed in the first experiment via EEG by investigating the influence familiar facial movement exerts on event-related potentials associated to face processing and face recognition. After being familiarized with a face and its idiosyncratic movement, participants viewed familiar or unfamiliar faces with familiar or unfamiliar facial movement while their brain potentials were recorded. Results showed that familiarity of facial motion influenced later event-related potentials linked to memory processes involved in face recognition. The second experiment used fMRI to investigate the brain areas involved in processing familiar facial movement. Participants’ BOLD-signal was registered while they viewed familiar and unfamiliar faces with familiar or unfamiliar idiosyncratic movement. It was found that activity of brain regions, such as the fusiform gyrus, that underlie the processing of face identity, was modulated by familiar facial movement. Together these two experiments provide valuable information about the nature of the involvement of idiosyncratic facial movement in face recognition and have important implications for cognitive and neural models of face perception and recognition. The third experiment addressed the question whether idiosyncratic facial movement could increase individuation in perceiving faces from a different ethnic group and hence reduce impaired recognition of these other-race faces compared to own-race faces, a phenomenon named the own-race bias. European participants viewed European and African faces that were each animated with an idiosyncratic smile while their attention was either directed to the form or the motion of the face. Subsequently recognition memory for these faces was tested. Results showed that the own-race bias was equally present in both attention conditions indicating that idiosyncratic facial movement was not able to reduce or diminish the own-race bias. In combination the here presented experiments provide further insight into the involvement of idiosyncratic facial motion in face recognition. It is necessary to consider the dynamic component of faces when investigating face recognition because static facial images are not able to provide the full range of information that leads to recognition of a face. In order to reflect the full process of face recognition, cognitive and neural models of face perception and recognition need to integrate dynamic facial features as a source of information which contributes to the recognition of a face.
Polarity and migration are essential for T cell activation, homeostasis, recirculation and effector function. To address how T cells coordinate polarization and migration when interacting with dendritic cells (DC) during homeostatic and activating conditions, a low density collagen model was used for confocal live-cell imaging and high-resolution 3D reconstruction of fixed samples. During short-lived (5 to 15 min) and migratory homeostatic interactions, recently activated T cells simultaneously maintained their amoeboid polarization and polarized towards the DC. The resulting fully dynamic and asymmetrical interaction plane comprised all compartments of the migrating T cell: the actin-rich leading edge drove migration but displayed only moderate signaling activity; the mid-zone mediated TCR/MHC induced signals associated with homeostatic proliferation; and the rear uropod mediated predominantly MHC independent signals possibly connected to contact-dependent T cell survival. This “dynamic immunological synapse” with distinct signaling sectors enables moving T cells to serially sample antigen-presenting cells and resident tissue cells and thus to collect information along the way. In contrast to homeostatic contacts, recognition of the cognate antigen led to long-lasting T cell/DC interaction with T cell rounding, disintegration of the uropod, T cell polarization towards the DC, and the formation of a symmetrical contact plane. However, the polarity of the continuously migrating DC remained intact and T cells aggregated within the DC uropod, an interesting cellular compartment potentially involved in T cell activation and regulation of the immune response. Taken together, 3D collagen facilitates high resolution morphological studies of T cell function under realistic, in vivo-like conditions.