Refine
Has Fulltext
- yes (2786) (remove)
Year of publication
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (2786) (remove)
Language
- English (2786) (remove)
Keywords
- Maus (61)
- Taufliege (61)
- Drosophila (39)
- Signaltransduktion (39)
- Topologischer Isolator (37)
- Thrombozyt (36)
- Genexpression (34)
- Tissue Engineering (31)
- Leistungsbewertung (29)
- T-Lymphozyt (28)
Institute
- Graduate School of Life Sciences (778)
- Theodor-Boveri-Institut für Biowissenschaften (482)
- Physikalisches Institut (208)
- Institut für Informatik (139)
- Institut für Theoretische Physik und Astrophysik (123)
- Institut für Organische Chemie (113)
- Institut für Mathematik (112)
- Institut für Psychologie (111)
- Institut für Pharmazie und Lebensmittelchemie (103)
- Julius-von-Sachs-Institut für Biowissenschaften (88)
Schriftenreihe
Sonstige beteiligte Institutionen
- Helmholtz Institute for RNA-based Infection Research (HIRI) (7)
- Fraunhofer-Institut für Silicatforschung ISC (5)
- Technische Hochschule Nürnberg Georg Simon Ohm (3)
- Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR), Institut für Raumfahrtsysteme (2)
- EMBL Heidelberg (2)
- Institut für Tierökologie und Tropenbiologie (2)
- Rudolf Virchow Center for Integrative and Translational Bioimaging, University of Würzburg (2)
- Universität Belgrad, Serbien (2)
- Universitätsklinikum Münster (2)
- Universitätsklinikum Würzburg (2)
ResearcherID
- B-1911-2015 (1)
- B-4606-2017 (1)
- C-2593-2016 (1)
- D-1250-2010 (1)
- I-5818-2014 (1)
- J-8841-2015 (1)
- M-1240-2017 (1)
- N-2030-2015 (1)
- N-3741-2015 (1)
EU-Project number / Contract (GA) number
- 311781 (1)
- 320377 (1)
- EU (FP7/ 2007-2013) (1)
The prototyical tumor suppressor p53 is able to arrest cells after DNA damage or as a response to oncogene expression. The transactivation-competent (TA) isoforms of the more recently discovered p53 family member p73 also prevent tumors, but the underlying mechanisms are less well understood. The work presented here addressed this issue by using a cell culture model of tumorigenesis in which normal human diploid fibroblasts are stepwise transduced with oncogenes. Cells in pretransformed stages were shown to harbour high levels of TAp73 mRNA and protein. This positive regulation was probably a result of pRB inactivation and derepression of E2F1, a key activator of TAp73. Consequences for such cells included an increased sensitivity to the cytostatic drug adriamycin, slower proliferation and reduced survival at high cell density, as demonstrated by rescue experiments using siRNA-mediated knockdown of TAp73. In order to identify potential effector pathways, the gene expression profile of siRNA treated, matched fibroblast cell lines with high and low TAp73 levels were compared in DNA microarrays. These findings support the notion of TAp73 up-regulation as an anti-proliferative defense mechanism, blocking the progress towards full transformation. This barrier could be overcome by the introduction of a constitutively active form of Ras which caused a switch from TAp73 to oncogenic DeltaNp73 expression, presumably through the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) pathway. In summary, the results presented emphasize the tumor-suppressive function of TAp73 and indicate that its downregulation is a decisive event during the transformation of human cells by oncogenic Ras mutants.
The Ras/RAF/MEK/ERK cascade is a central cellular signal transduction pathway involved in cell proliferation, differentiation, and survival where RAF kinases are pivotal kinases implicated in cancer. The development of specific irreversible kinase inhibitors is a rewarding but difficult aim. CI-1033 was developed to irreversibly inhibit erbB receptor tyrosine kinases by reacting to the Cys113 residue (p38alpha MAP kinase numbering) of the kinase domain. In this study we tried a similar approach to target the RAF oncoproteins which posses a similar cysteine at position 108 in the hinge region between the small n-lobe and the large c-lobe of the kinase domain. A novel synthetic approach including a lyophilization step allowed us the synthesis of a diphenyl urea compound with an epoxide moiety (compound 1). Compound 1 possessed inhibitory activity in vitro. However our time kinetics experiments and mass spectroscopic studies clearly indicate that compound 1 does not react covalently with the cysteine residue in the hinge region. Moreover, in cell culture experiments, a strong activation of the RAF signaling pathway was observed, an effect which is known from several other RAF kinase inhibitors and is here reported for the first time for a diphenyl urea compound, to which the clinically used unspecific kinase inhibitor BAY 43-9006 (Sorafinib, Nexavar) belongs. Although activation was apparently independent on B- and C-RAF hetero-oligomerization in vitro, in vivo experiments support such a mechanism as the activation did not occur in starved knockout cells lacking either B-RAF or C-RAF. Furthermore, we developed a mathematical model of the Ras/RAF/MEK/ERK cascade demonstrating how stimuli induce different signal patterns and thereby different cellular responses, depending on cell type and the ratio between B-RAF and C-RAF. Based on biochemical data for activation and dephosphorylation, we set up differential equations for a dynamical model of the Ras/RAF/MEK/ERK cascade. We find a different signaling pattern and response result for B-RAF (strong activation, sustained signal) and C-RAF (steep activation, transient signal). We further support the significance of such differential modulatory signaling by showing different RAF isoform expression in various cell lines and experimental testing of the predicted kinase activities in B-RAF, C-RAF as well as mutated versions. Additionally the effect of the tumor suppressor DiRas3 (also known as Noey2 or ARHI) on RAF signaling was studied. I could show that DiRas3 down-regulates the mitogenic pathway by inhibition of MEK, a basis for a refined model of the Ras/RAF/MEK/ERK cascade.
Artificial light-harvesting (LH) systems have been obtained by self-assembly of naphthalene diimide-functionalized zinc chlorin dyads and triad in nonpolar, aprotic solvents. UV-vis, CD, and steady-state emission spectroscopy as well as atomic force microscopy showed that rod-like structures are formed by excitonic interactions of zinc chlorin units, while the appended naphthalene diimide dyes do not aggregate at the periphery of the cylinders. In all cases, photoexcitation of the enveloping naphthalene diimides at 540 and 620 nm, respectively, was followed by highly efficient energy-transfer processes to the inner zinc chlorin backbone, as revealed by time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy on the picosecond time-scale. As a consequence, the LH efficiencies of zinc chlorin rod aggregates were increased by up to 63%. The effective utilization of solar energy recommends these biomimetic systems for an application in electronic materials on the nanoscale.
NFAT transcription factors play critical roles in gene transcription during immune responses. Besides regulation of lymphokine promoters in T lymphocytes, NFAT factors are also expressed in other cell types and regulate the activity of numerous genes that control the generation of cardiac septa and valves in embryonic heart, the formation of blood vessels, the outgrowth of neuronal axons and the differentiation of osteoclasts during bone formation [10, 24]. Here we show that the induction of NFATc/αA in effector T cells is controlled by a strong inducible promoter, P1. It results in splicing of exon 1 to exon 3 transcripts and, in concert with the activity of a poly A site downstream of exon 9, leads to the massive synthesis of NFATc/αA in effector Th1 cells. A second, weak promoter, P2, lies in front of exon 2 and directs the synthesis of longer NFAT β isoforms. Both P1 and P2 direct the synthesis of three different RNAs: αA, αB, αC and βA, βB, βC correspondingly. The B and C isoforms arise from alternative splicing and poly A addition at the distal site pA2. P1 but not P2 activity is autoregulated by NFAT factors which bind to two tandemly arranged NFAT sites within P1 and enhance its induction. In resting T cells, the NFATc1/β RNAs are the most prominent nfatc1 transcripts and their synthesis is reduced upon T-cell activation. However, following activation in primary effector T cells or in T-cell lines of human or murine origin, a 15–20-fold induction of NFATc1/αA RNA was detected, whereas only a 2–5-fold increase was observed for the NFATc1/αB or NFATc1/αC RNAs. Optimal induction of P1 promoter require involving of a persistent increase in free cytosolic Ca2+ induced by ionomycin, which stimulates the nuclear translocation and transcriptional activation of all NFATc factors and phorbol esters, which activate protein kinase C and other protein kinase pathways in T cells. This suggests that both TCR and co-receptor signals contribute to give full P1 nfatc1 induction. Because NFATc1/αA induction is unaffected in NFATc2+c3 double-deficient T cells, NFATc1 autoregulates its own synthesis by controlling P1 activity and NFATc1/αA induction. P1 promoter contains tandemly arranged NFAT core binding motif TGGAAA to witch bind monomeric NFATc1 proteins and numerous conservative binding sites of other transcriptional factors like CREB, Fos, ATF-2, Sp1, NF-kB and GATA suggesting complex multi-factor regulation of NFATc1 gene. We also highlight that initial phase of nfatc1 transcription in naive CD4+ T cells is controlled by the promoter P2 which is constitutively active in resting T cells. The activation of resting T cells results in a decrease of P2 and the induction of P1 activity and, under optimal conditions, in the predominant synthesis of NFATc1/αA in effector T cells. In addition to the high concentrations of poly A factors required for optimal pA1 function, the levels of transcription factors, in particular NFATs, must also increase for P1 induction. That could be explained by achievement of certain threshold levels for transcriptional activation. Finally, the altered transactivation potential of NFATc1/αA suggests a specific role for this NFATc1 protein in gene control, such as in Th1 effector cells where NFATc1/αA is synthesized at high concentrations.
A comprehensive approach for currency crises theories stressing the role of the anchor country
(2008)
The approach is based on the finding that new generations of currency crises theories always had developed ex post after popular currency crises. Discussing the main theories of currency crises shows their disparity: The First Generation of currency crises models argues based on the assumption of a chronic budget deficit that is being monetized by the domestic central bank. The result is a trade-off between an expansionary monetary policy that is focused on the internal economic balance and a fixed exchange rate which is depending on the rules of interest parity and purchasing power parity. This imbalance inevitably results in a currency crisis. Altogether, this theory argues with a disrupted external balance on the foreign exchange market. Second Generation currency crises models on the other side focus on the internal macroeconomic balance. The stability of a fixed exchange rate is depending on the economic benefit of the exchange rate system in relation to the social costs of maintaining it. As soon as social costs are increasing and showing up in deteriorating fundamentals, this leads to a speculative attack on the fixed exchange rate system. The term Third Generation of currency crises finally summarizes a variety of currency crises theories. These are also arguing psychologically to explain phenomena as contagion and spill-over effects to rationalize crises detached from the fundamental situation. Apart from the apparent inconsistency of the main theories of currency crises, a further observation is that these explanations focus on the crisis country only while international monetary transmission effects are left out of consideration. These however are a central parameter for the stability of fixed exchange rate systems, in exchange rate theory as well as in empirical observations. Altogether, these findings provide the motivation for developing a theoretical approach which integrates the main elements of the different generations of currency crises theories and which integrates international monetary transmission. Therefore a macroeconomic approach is chosen applying the concept of the Monetary Conditions Index (MCI), a linear combination of the real interest rate and the real exchange rate. This index firstly is extended for international monetary influences and called MCIfix. MCIfix illustrates the monetary conditions required for the stability of a fixed exchange rate system. The central assumption of this concept is that the uncovered interest parity is maintained. The main conclusion is that the MCIfix only depends on exogenous parameters. In a second step, the analysis integrates the monetary policy requirements for achieving an internal macroeconomic stability. By minimizing a loss function of social welfare, a MCI is derived which pictures the economically optimal monetary policy MCIopt. Instability in a fixed exchange rate system occurs as soon as the monetary conditions for an internal and external balance are deviating. For discussing macroeconomic imbalances, the central parameters determining the MCIfix (and therefore the relation of MCIfix to MCIopt) are discussed: the real interest rate of the anchor country, the real effective exchange rate and a risk premium. Applying this theory framework, four constellations are discussed where MCIfix and MCIopt fall apart in order to show the central bank’s possibilities for reacting and the consequences of that behaviour. The discussion shows that the integrative approach manages to incorporate the central elements of traditional currency crises theories and that it includes international monetary transmission instead of reducing the discussion on an inconsistent domestic monetary policy. The theory framework for fixed exchange rates is finally applied in four case studies: the currency crises in Argentina, the crisis in the Czech Republic, the Asian currency crisis and the crisis of the European Monetary System. The case studies show that the developed monetary framework achieves integration of different generations of crises theories and that the monetary policy of the anchor country plays a decisive role in destabilising fixed exchange rate systems.
Many arthropods and vertebrates can cling to surfaces using adhesive pads on their legs. These pads are either smooth and characterised by a specialised, soft cuticle or they are hairy, i.e. densely covered with flexible adhesive setae. Animals climbing with adhesive organs are able to control attachment and detachment dynamically while running. The detailed mechanisms of how tarsal pads generate adhesive and frictional forces and how forces are controlled during locomotion are still largely unclear. The aim of this study was to clarify the attachment mechanism of smooth adhesive pads as present in many insects and tree frogs. To understand the function of these fluid-based adhesive systems, I characterized their performance under standardized conditions. To this end, experiments were conducted by simultaneously measuring adhesion, friction, and contact area in single adhesive pads. The first result of this study showed that friction in stick insect attachment pads is anisotropic: Attachment pads regularly detached when slid away from the body. Further analyses of "immobilized" arolia revealed that this anisotropy is not caused by an increased shear stress in the proximal direction, but by the instability of the tarsus when pushed distally. In the second part of this study, I analysed the role of the pad secretion present in insects and tree frogs. In stick insects, shear stress was largely independent of normal force and increased with velocity, seemingly consistent with the viscosity effect of a continuous fluid film. However, measurements of the remaining force two minutes after a sliding movement showed that adhesive pads could sustain considerable static friction in insects and tree frogs. Repeated sliding movements and multiple consecutive pull-offs of stick insect single legs to deplete adhesive secretion showed that on a smooth surface, friction and adhesion strongly increased with decreasing amount of fluid in insects. In contrast, stick insect pull-off forces significantly decreased on a rough substrate. Thus, the secretion does not generally increase attachment but does so only on rough substrates, where it helps to maximize contact area. When slides with stick insect arolia were repeated at one position so that secretion could accumulate, sliding shear stress decreased but static friction remained clearly present. This suggests that static friction in stick insects, which is biologically important to prevent sliding, is based on non-Newtonian properties of the adhesive emulsion rather than on a direct contact between the cuticle and the substrate. % Analogous measurements in toe pads of tree frogs showed that they are also able to generate static friction, even though their pads are wetted by mucus. In contrast to the mechanism proposed for insects, static friction in tree frogs apparently results from the very close contact of toe pads to the substrate and boundary lubrication. In the last section of this study, I investigated adhesive forces and the mode of detachment by performing pull-off measurements at different velocities and preloads. These experiments showed that preload has only an increasing effect on adhesion for faster pull-offs. This can be explained by the viscoelastic material properties of the stick insect arolium, which introduce a strong rate-dependence of detachment. During fast pull-offs, forces can spread over the complete area of contact, leading to forces scaling with area. In contrast, the pad material has sufficient time to withdraw elastically and peel during slow detachments. Under these conditions the adhesive force will concentrate on the circumference of the contact area, therefore scaling with a length, supporting models such as the peeling theory. The scaling of single-pad forces supported these conclusions, but large variation between pads of different stick insects did not allow statistically significant conclusions. In contrast, when detachment forces were quantified for whole insects using a centrifuge, forces scaled with pad contact area and not with length.
In the present study numerical methods are employed within the framework of multiscale modeling. Quantum mechanics and finite element method simulations have been used in order to calculate thermoelastic properties of ceramics. At the atomic scale, elastic constants of ten different ceramics (Al2O3, alpha- and beta-SiC, TiO2-rutile and anatase, AlN, BN, CaF2, TiB2, ZrO2) were calculated from the first principles (ab-initio) using the density functional theory with the general gradient approximation. The simulated elastic moduli were compared with measured values. These results have shown that the ab-initio computations can be used independently from experiment to predict elastic behavior and can provide a basis for the modeling of structural and elastic properties of more complex composite ceramics. In order to simulate macroscopic material properties of composite ceramics from the material properties of the constituting phases, 3D finite element models were used. The influence of microstructural features such as pores and grain boundaries on the effective thermoelastic properties is studied through a diversity of geometries like truncated spheres in cubic and random arrangement, modified Voronoi polyhedra, etc. A 3D model is used for modeling the microstructure of the ceramic samples. The measured parameters, like volume fractions of the two phases, grain size ratios and grain boundary areas are calculated for each structure. The theoretical model is then varied to fit the geometrical data derived from experimental samples. The model considerations are illustrated on two types of bi-continuous materials, a porous ceramic, alumina (Al2O3) and a dense ceramic, zirconia-alumina composite (ZA). For the present study, alumina samples partially sintered at temperatures between 800 and 1320 C, with fractional densities between 58.4% and 97% have been used. For ZA ceramic the zirconia powder was partially stabilized and the ratio between alumina and zirconia was varied. For these two examples of ceramics, Young’s modulus and thermal conductivity were calculated and compared to experimental data of samples of the respective microstructure. Comparing the experimental and simulated values of Young’s modulus for Al2O3 ceramic a good agreement was obtained. For the thermal conductivity the consideration of thermal boundary resistance (TBR) was necessary. It was shown that for different values of TBR the experimental data lie within the simulated thermal conductivities. In the case of ZA ceramic also a good agreement between simulated and experimental values was observed. For smaller ZrO2 fractions, a larger Young’s modulus and thermal conductivity was observed in the experimental samples. The discrepancies have been discussed by taking into account the effect of pressure. Considering the dependence of the thermoelastic properties on the pressure, it has been shown that the thermal stresses resulting from the cooling process were insufficient to explain the discrepancies between experimental and simulated thermoelastic properties.
In this study, murine ES cells and DT40 B cells were used in parallel to disrupt the Nfatc1 gene and to study the function of individual 6 Nfatc1 isoforms, especially the function of highly inducible NFATc1/aA.We found that the short isoform NFATc1/aA protects DT40 B cells against apoptosis while the long isoform NFATc1/aC appears to enforce apoptosis. DNA microarray studies have shown that in NFATc1" DT40 B cells expressing ectopically human NFATc1/aA, the pkc-theta gene is several fold stronger expressed as in wild type cells. Our results of EMSA (Electrophoretic Mobility Shift Assays) and ChIP (chromatin immuno-precipitation) experiments demonstrated the binding of NFATc1/aA to the pkc-theta promoter in vitro and in vivo. NF-kappa B was also found to bind to the NFATc1 P1-promoter in vitro and in vivo. These data suggest and further prove that NF-kappa B contributes to the induction of the NFATc1 P1 promoter upon activation of T cells. So, NFATc1/aA and NF-kappa B were found to cross-talk in the transcriptional upregulation of their target genes, such as the IL-2 gene and the Nfatc1 gene itself, at multiple steps upon induction of apoptosis. While the pro-apoptotic mechanism of NFATc1s long isoform(s) remains unclear, its corresponding “death partners” are worth further studies. The elucidation of functional roles of NFATc1s short or long isoforms in the control of apoptosis of lymphocytes helps to understand apoptosis regulation, and thereby, the fate of lymphocytes.
This thesis presents an experimental study of the thermoelectrical properties of semiconductor quantum dots (QD). The measurements give information about the interplay between first order tunneling and macroscopic quantum tunneling transport effects in the presence of thermal gradients by the direct comparison of the thermoelectric response and the energy spectrum of the QD. The aim of the thesis is to contribute to the understanding of the charge and spin transport in few-electron quantum dots with respect to potential applications in future quantum computing devices. It also gives new insight into the field of low temperature thermoelectricity. The investigated QDs were defined electrostatically in a two dimensional electron gas (2DEG) formed with a GaAs/(Al,Ga)As heterostructure by means of metallic gate electrodes on top of the heterostructure. Negative voltages with respect to the potential of the 2DEG applied to the gate electrodes were used to deplete the electron gas below them and to form an isolated island of electron gas in the 2DEG which contains a few ten electrons. This QD was electrically connected to the 2DEG via two tunneling barriers. A special electron heating technique was used to create a temperature difference between the two connecting reservoirs across the QD. The resulting thermoelectric voltage was used to study the charge and spin transport processes with respect to the discrete energy spectrum and the magnetic properties of the QD. Such a two dimensional island usually exhibits a discrete energy spectrum, which is comparable to that of atoms. At temperatures below a few degrees Kelvin, the electrostatic charging energy of the QDs exceeds the thermal activation energy of the electrons in the leads, and the transport of electrons through the QD is dominated by electron-electron interaction effects. The measurements clarify the overall line shape of thermopower oscillations and the observed fine structure as well as additional spin effects in the thermoelectrical transport. The observations demonstrate that it is possible to control and optimize the strength and direction of the electronic heat flow on the scale of a single impurity and create spin-correlated thermoelectric transport in nanostructures, where the experimenter has a close control of the exact transport conditions. The results support the assumption that the performance of thermoelectric devices can be enhanced by the adjustment of the QD energy levels and by exploiting the properties of the spin-correlated charge transport via localized, spin-degenerate impurity states. Within this context, spin entropy has been identified as a driving force for the thermoelectric transport in the spin-correlated transport regime in addition to the kinetic contributions. Fundamental considerations, which are based on simple model assumptions, suggest that spin entropy plays an important role in the presence of charge valence fluctuations in the QD. The presented model gives an adequate starting point for future quantitative analysis of the thermoelectricity in the spin-correlated transport regime. These future studies might cover the physics in the limit of single electron QDs or the physics of more complex structures such as QD molecules as well as QD chains. In particular, it should be noted that the experimental investigations of the thermopower of few-electron QDs address questions concerning the entropy transport and entropy production with respect to single-bit information processing operations. These questions are of fundamental physical interest due to their close connection to the problem of minimal energy requirements in communication, and thus ultimately to the so called "Maxwell's demon" with respect to the second law of thermodynamics.
Protein interactions as mediated by catalytic or non-catalytic protein domains contribute to cellular signal transduction processes by covalent protein modification of or non-covalent binding to interaction partners. Ena/VASP homology 1 (EVH1) domains are found in different signal transduction proteins as N-terminal non-catalytic adaptor modules of ~ 115 amino acids sharing a common fold. By targeting their host proteins to subcellular sites of action they are involved in several signalling cascades which include protein phosphorylation and cytoskeletal reorganisation. In this study, protein interactions of the two EVH1 domain containing proteins VASP and Spred2 were studied according to their involvement in different and non-overlapping signal transduction pathways of the cell. EVH1 domains were first described in the Ena/VASP protein family with the Vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein VASP being its founding member. As a cytoskeleton-associated protein VASP not only interacts with different proteins of the actin network but it is also a substrate for cAMP- and cGMP-dependent protein kinases. However the full complement of protein kinases targeting VASP as their substrate is still unknown. Here we used mouse cardiac fibroblast (MCFB) cells in order to study the phosphorylation status of VASP and identify new candidate protein kinases involved after serum stimulation of these cells. Using phosphosite-specific antibodies we found that serum stimulation induces a phosphorylation of VASP at Ser-157 in a time-dependent manner reaching its maximum after 90 min of stimulation. We developed an interaction graph model of possible candidate protein kinases involved. Using a pharmacological perturbation analysis with different combinations of specific protein kinase inhibitors and activators we excluded any contribution of cGMP-dependent protein kinase and Rho kinases to this process and identified a combined action of classical isoforms of PKCs and PKA in serum-stimulated VASP phosphorylation at Ser-157 positioning PKC upstream of PKA in this signalling pathway. We hypothesise that PKC receives an external stimulatory signal upon serum stimulation of MCFB cells which is passed either directly or indirectly to PKA which finally phosphorylates VASP at Ser-157. A new EVH1 domain has been described recently in the Spred proteins (Sprouty related proteins containing an EVH1 domain) which are inhibitors of the Ras/Raf/MAP kinase pathway. Our laboratory has been involved in the elucidation of the atomic structure of the human Spred2 EVH1 domain by protein NMR spectroscopy (PDB 2JP2; 2007). A positively charged binding interface of this EVH1 domain suggests an interaction with negatively charged ligands; however no interaction partners of this domain have been described so far. In the second part of this study, we used different genetic and biochemical screening methods to search for ligands of the Spred2 EVH1 domain. A bacterial two-hybrid system was established using a physically well characterized interaction of the VASP EVH1 domain with a panel of its ActA binding peptides as positive controls to screen a human brain cDNA expression library at different stringencies for candidate Spred2 EVH1 interaction partners. However none of the clones isolated could be genetically and physically validated to support Spred2 EVH1 specific interactions. An in-vitro screening of a 9-mer phage display peptide library using purified GST-Spred2 EVH1 fusion protein was performed together with a Fyn-SH3 fusion protein as a positive control. In contrast to the Fyn-SH3 domain the majority of phages isolated with the Spred2 EVH1 domain either carried no inserts or inserts with stop codons suggesting a highly non-specific interaction of the phage coat protein with the latter domain but neither the Fyn-SH3 domain nor the GST moiety. Isolation of a 13-mer proline-rich sequence was particularly surprising in this context. In order to address possible interactions of the Spred2 EVH1 domain with non-peptidergic ligands protein-lipid interaction assays were performed. Quantitative binding studies to purified Spred2 EVH1 using a liposome sedimentation assay however excluded any interaction of candidate phospholipids of the phosphatidyl inositol phosphate class with the Spred2 EVH1 domain. A natively folded and thus binding-competent conformation of the purified proteins used was assessed independently by 1H protein NMR spectroscopy. In summary the cumulative evidence of our genetic and biochemical screening experiments suggests that the still elusive Spred2 EVH1 ligand(s) may be formed of hydrophobic peptide epitopes larger than nine amino acids in size and carrying negative charge(s). A phosphorylation of Spred2 EVH1 binding epitopes by a post-translational modification should be seriously considered in future experiments.
In a first part the bilayer Heisenberg Model and the 2D Kondo necklace model are studied. Both models exhibit a quantum phase transition between an ordered and disordered phase. The question is addressed to the coupling of a single doped hole to the critical fluctuations. A self-consistent Born approximation predicts that the doped hole couples to the magnons such that the quasiparticle residue vanishes at the quantum critical point. In this work the delicate question about the fate of the quasiparticle residue across the quantum phase transition is also tackled by means of large scale quantum Monte Carlo simulations. Furthermore the dynamics of a single hole doped in the magnetic background is investigated. In the second part an analysis of the spiral staircase Heisenberg ladder is presented. The ladder consists of two ferromagnetic coupled spin-1/2 chains, where the coupling within the second chain can be tuned by twisting the ladder. Within this model the crossover between an ungapped spin-1/2 system and a gapped spin-1 system can be studied. In this work the emphasis is on the opening of the spin gap with respect to the ferromagnetic rung coupling. It is shown that there are essential differences in the scaling behavior of the spin gap depending on the twist of the model. Moreover, by means of the string order parameter it is shown, that the system remains in the Haldane phase within the whole parameter range although the spin gap scales differently. The tools which are used for the analyses are mainly large scale quantum Monte Carlo methods, but also exact diagonalization techniques as well as mean field approaches.
- 77/83 allerdings inaktiv in Kulturen und Embryonen von Medaka. Dieser Unterschied wird durch Daten aus humanen ES-Zellkulturen unterstützt. Letztere sind ebenfalls komplett STAT3 unabhängig. Die BMP-Smad Kaskade wiederum ist in Medaka-Stammzellen aktiv, Antidifferenzierungsgene wie id2, die durch BMP direkt kontrolliert werden, sind dementsprechend exprimiert. Diese Daten stimmen wiederum mit dem Maussystem überein, während humane ES-Zellen diesbezüglich bislang nicht untersucht wurden. Die Interaktion zwischen verschiedenen Signalwegen ist ein bisher noch nicht gut verstandenes Gebiet. Die Integration verschiedener Signale ist aber speziell für Stammzellen, die ihr Differenzierungsschicksal von winzigen Abweichungen in der Signalmixtur abhängig machen, von entscheidender Bedeutung. Im zweiten Teil der hier vorgelegten Arbeit konnte eine Interaktion zwischen dem BMP-Rezeptor 1a und STAT3 nachgewiesen werden. Diese Interaktion ist offenbar Teil eines variablen Komplexes. Zum ersten Mal war es auch möglich, funktionale Konsequenzen für STAT3 nach Stimulierung des BMP-Rezeptors 1a zu dokumentieren. Nach Belegung des BMP-Rezeptors 1a mit dem mutierten BMP2-A34D wird STAT3 trotz Aktivierung durch Phosphorylierung an Tyrosin 705 im Zytoplasma von Maus Stammzellen festgehalten. Zusammengenommen konnte hier gezeigt werden, dass eine Interaktion zwischen den bislang als isoliert betrachteten Signalwegen BMP-Smad und STAT3 besteht. Des Weiteren wurde das Medaka-Stammzellkultursystem benutzt, um zu zeigen, dass STAT3 für die Pluripotenz von Stammzellen nur im Maussystem eine Rolle spielt, wohingegen BMPZielgene wie id2 in bislang allen getesteten ES-Zellkultursystemen aktiv sind.
Henri J.M. Nouwen (1932-1996), a renowned pastoral theologian, has written more than 40 books among which several are about pastoral care and the spirituality of pastoral care. It was interesting for me to notice the parallel between his life and the contents of his books. He has undergone a tremendous personal development and spiritual maturity. His books invite all the christians and pastors to grow in the spiritual life. The spirituality is the underlying principle of creative ministry. Nouwen moves away from the traditional approach and concepts and develops his own concept of spiritual growth and pastoral care. Rooted in tradition and trained as a pastoral psychologist Nouwen is very appealing to the modern generation. This dissertation takes the reader through the life and writings of Nouwen to come to his original and new understanding of the spirituality of the pastoral care.
In order to test the effects of environmental factors on different characteristics of plant leaf waxes, barley plants (Hordeum vulgare) were abiotically stress treated (exposure to darkness, heavy metal, high salt concentrations and drought), and biotically stressed by the infection with powdery mildew (Blumeria graminis f.sp. hordei; Bgh). Different wax parameters like amount, chemical composition, and micromorphology of epicuticular wax crystals, were investigated. Etiolated leaves of barley showed distinctly reduced wax amounts and modifications in their relative composition. The alterations of these wax parameters might be a result of a developmental delay, which could have been caused by a decreased availability of energy for cellular processes, due to lack of light. Cadmium exposure led to a 1.5-fold increase of wax amount, while chemical composition was unaffected. In drought- and salt-stressed plants, all investigated leaf wax parameters remained unaltered. In each of the abiotic treatments, the microstructure of epicuticular wax crystals, formed as typical platelets, was not modified. Even after 6d infection with powdery mildew (Bgh), neither locally nor systemically enforced modifications of wax features were revealed.
The analyzed leave surfaces, resulting from these four abiotic and the biotic treatment (phenotypic approach), were compared to altered leaf surfaces’ characteristics of 18 analyzed eceriferum (cer-) wax mutants (genotypic approach). Within the screening, 5 mutants were selected which distinctly differed from the wild-type in wax amount, portions of epi- and intracuticular wax fraction, relative chemical composition, crystal morphology, and surface wettability (hydrophobicity).
Apart from quantitative and qualitative effects on the leaf waxes, environmentally enforced modifications in cuticular waxes might be reflected in molecular processes of wax biogenesis. Therefore, a barley wax-microarray was established. 254 genes were selected, which are putatively involved in processes of de novo fatty acid biosynthesis, fatty acid elongation, and modification, and which are supposed to take part in lipid-trafficking between cell compartments, and transport of wax components to the outer cell surface. The regulations within the expression pattern evoked by the respective treatments were correlated with the corresponding analytical wax data, and the observed molecular effects of a 3d powdery mildew infection were compared with succeeding fungal morphogenesis. Etiolation and cadmium exposition pointed to transcriptional modifications in the de novo fatty acid synthesis, and in the screened, transport-related mechanisms, which correlate with respective alterations in surface wax characteristics. Moderate changes in the gene expression pattern, evoked by drought- and salinity-stress, might give hints for evolved adaptations in barley to such common habitat stresses. Theinvasion of powdery mildew into the epidermal host cells was reflected in the regulation of several genes. Beside other functions, these genes take part in pathogen defense, and intracellular component transport, or they encode transcription factors. The different modifications within the molecular responses evoked by the investigated abiotic treatments, and the effects of powdery mildew infection representing a biotic stressor, were compared between the different treatments.
In order to test the potential impact of different wax parameters on Bgh, conidia germination and differentiation was comparably investigated on leaf surfaces of abiotically stressed wild-type and cer-mutants, isolated cuticles, and further artificial surfaces. The rates of conidial development were similar on each of the leaf surfaces resulting from the abiotic treatments, while a significant reduction of the germination and differentiation success was revealed for the wax mutant cer-yp.949. Compared to the wild-type, developmental rates on isolated cuticles and extracted leaf waxes of the mutant cer-yp.949 indicated a modified embedding of cuticular waxes, and a possibly changed three-dimensional structure of the cer-yp.949 cuticle, which might explain the reduced conidial developmental rates on leaf surfaces of this particular mutant.
Experiments with Bgh conidia on mechanically de-waxed leaf surfaces (selective mechanical removal of the epicuticular leaf waxes with glue-like gum arabic, followed by an extraction of the intracuticular wax portion with chloroform) demonstrated the importance of the wax coverage for the germination and differentiation of the fungal conidia. On all dewaxed leaf surfaces, except those of cer-yp.949, the differentiation success of the germlings was significantly reduced, by about 20% (“wax-effect”). This result was verified through an artificial system with increased conidia developmental rates on glass slides covered with extracted leaf waxes. Further comparative tests with the major components of barley leaf wax, hexacosanol and hexacosanal, showed that the germination and differentiation of powdery mildew conidia not only depends on the different chemistry, but is also influenced by the respective surface hydrophobicity. Compared to hexacosanol, on hexacosanal coated glass surfaces, higher germination and differentiation rates were achieved, which correlated with increased levels of surface hydrophobicity. Developmental rates of conidia on hydrophobic foils demonstrated that hydrophobicity, as a sole surface factor, may stimulate the conidial germination and differentiation processes. Moreover, the survival of conidia on artificial surfaces is determined by additional surface derived factors, e.g. the availability of water, and a pervadable matrix.
Overlay networks establish logical connections between users on top of the physical network. While randomly connected overlay networks provide only a best effort service, a new generation of structured overlay systems based on Distributed Hash Tables (DHTs) was proposed by the research community. However, there is still a lack of understanding the performance of such DHTs. Additionally, those architectures are highly distributed and therefore appear as a black box to the operator. Yet an operator does not want to lose control over his system and needs to be able to continuously observe and examine its current state at runtime. This work addresses both problems and shows how the solutions can be combined into a more self-organizing overlay concept. At first, we evaluate the performance of structured overlay networks under different aspects and thereby illuminate in how far such architectures are able to support carrier-grade applications. Secondly, to enable operators to monitor and understand their deployed system in more detail, we introduce both active as well as passive methods to gather information about the current state of the overlay network.
Cutaneous leishmaniasis is an infectious disease that is endemic especially in tropical and desert regions with an incidence of 1.5 million cases per year and a prevalence of 12 million people infected worldwide. The infection can be caused by the intracellular parasite Leishmania major. The disease has been studied extensively in the murine model. It has become apparent that the induction of a class of interferon (IFN)--producing CD4+ T helper cells (TH1 cells) that activate macrophages to kill the parasites they harbor is desicive for the establishment of immunity. The redirection of the host’s immune response towards a protective TH1 phenotype will also be the key to an effective vaccine. Dendritic cells (DC) loaded with leishmanial antigens ex vivo were lately described as vaccines against L. major infections. One single recombinant Leishmania antigen, LeIF (Leishmania homologue of eukaryotic ribosomal initiation factor 4a), which was identified as a protein that stimulates DC to secrete interleukin (IL)-12 and discussed as a pattern-associated molecular pattern (PAMP), was found to mediate a protective TH1-dependent effect when used for pulsing of DC. The application of recombinant proteins is tied to many disadvantages, which is why other methods of antigen administration have been developed. RNA electroporation of DC has recently emerged from tumor research as a safe and versatile method of antigen delivery, by which a large number of RNA molecules encoding a specific antigen gains access to the cytosol of DC by an electrical impulse. The present study describes, for the first time, transfection of DC with RNA encoding a molecularly defined parasite antigen. Initially, a standardized protocol for RNA transfection was established, using the enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) as reporter antigen. EGFP-RNA was well translatable in an in vitro translation system, and both a DC cell line (fetal skin-derived DC; FSDC) and murine primary bone marrow-derived DC (BMDC) could be transfected efficiently, with a yield of up to 90% and 75%, respectively. In both cell types, maximal transfection efficiency was attained with 20 µg RNA and could not be further increased with larger amounts of RNA. The level of antigen expression, measured as the mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) by flow cytometry, was directly proportional to the amount of RNA used for transfection. In FSDC, transfection efficiency and MFI were generally higher than in BMDC when the same amounts of RNA were used. Furthermore, the kinetics was shown to be sensitive to treatment with lipopolysaccharide (LPS): the expression peak was higher and was reached sooner, followed by a more rapid decline. In transfection experiments with LeIF, two variants of LeIF-RNA were used: LeIF(fl)-RNA, encoding the complete LeIF sequence, and LeIF(226)-RNA, encoding only the aminoterminal half of the LeIF sequence (226 amino acids), the immunogenic part of LeIF. Only LeIF(fl) was detectable by Western Blot in whole cell lysates of BMDC after LeIF(fl)-RNA transfection, whereas LeIF(226) could never be detected in LeIF(226)-transfected BMDC. However, as both constructs were well translatable in a cell-free system, the failure to detect LeIF(226) in BMDC lysates did not represent a failure in RNA translation, but rather a rapid antigen degradation. It was therefore expected that LeIF(226)-transfected BMDC should nevertheless be able to present LeIF(226)-derived antigenic peptides to T cells from BALB/c mice primed with recombinant LeIF (rLeIF). This hypothesis was confirmed by measuring IFN- production in BMDC-T cell co-incubation assays, showing that rLeIF-pulsed, LeIF(226)- and LeIF(fl)-transfected day 7 BMDC did indeed activate T cells from LeIF-immunized mice in an antigen-specific manner. In contrast, IL-4 was not produced, which was consistent with the fact that T cells found in lymph nodes from LeIF-primed mice are primarily of the TH1 type. In the supernatants of LeIF-transfected BMDC cultures, in contrast to rLeIF-pulsed BMDC, the proinflammatory cytokines IL-1β, IL-6, IL-10 and IL-12 were not detected. This effect was not due to the electroporation procedure, as cytokine production by BMDC electroporated with rLeIF was only partially impaired. Also, the expression levels of CD86 were lower upon LeIF transfection than after pulsing with rLeIF. Thus, LeIF transfection did not induce maturation of DC. In conclusion, LeIF-transfected BMDC may have acted as semi-mature antigen-specific tolerance inducers, with regulatory T cells as responders. The effect of LeIF transfection on the immunostimulatory capacity of BMDC was not significantly increased when day 8 or 9 BMDC were used. However, day 8, and even more day 9 BMDC pulsed with rLeIF mounted a vigorous T cell response. Day 9 BMDC were able to activate naïve T cells. In conclusion, before a strong T cell response against LeIF can be induced, DC need to – besides presenting antigen and expressing co-stimulatory molecules – exhibit a susceptibility to the innate signaling molecule LeIF which is linked to their maturation age. This third signal is provided by extracellular rLeIF, but it is not conveyed – or is suppressed – by intracellular LeIF after LeIF-RNA transfection. Furthermore, electroporation of rLeIF abrogated IL-12 production by BMDC completely, the production of IL-1 was reduced with higher antigen doses, and the production of IL-10 was partially increased. The IL-6 production was unaffected. This altered cytokine profile suggests that LeIF as a PAMP might have a bipartite nature: besides exhibiting the capacity to stimulate IL-12 production upon extracellular presence, thereby enhancing host resistance against L. major, LeIF could also contribute to parasitic host evasion mechanisms from intracellular compartments of DC, possibly by interfering with mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase signaling pathways. Thus, the adjuvant properties of LeIF depend both on its mode of delivery (transfection with RNA vs. pulsing with the recombinant protein) and the targeted compartment (extra- vs. intracellular). From this work, it can be summarized that BMDC are well transfectable with a parasite antigen. The antigen is processed and presented, but it is not recognized as a PAMP by DC. Hence, transfection with antigen-encoding mRNA by itself does not convey all necessary signals for the elicitation of a potent immune response.
Encoding Redundancy for Task-dependent Optimal Control : A Neural Network Model of Human Reaching
(2008)
The human motor system is adaptive in two senses. It adapts to the properties of the body to enable effective control. It also adapts to different situational requirements and constraints. This thesis proposes a new neural network model of both kinds of adaptivity for the motor cortical control of human reaching movements, called SURE_REACH (sensorimotor unsupervised learning redundancy resolving control architecture). In this neural network approach, the kinematic and sensorimotor redundancy of a three-joint planar arm is encoded in task-independent internal models by an unsupervised learning scheme. Before a movement is executed, the neural networks prepare a movement plan from the task-independent internal models, which flexibly incorporates external, task-specific constraints. The movement plan is then implemented by proprioceptive or visual closed-loop control. This structure enables SURE_REACH to reach hand targets while incorporating task-specific contraints, for example adhering to kinematic constraints, anticipating the demands of subsequent movements, avoiding obstacles, or reducing the motion of impaired joints. Besides this functionality, the model accounts for temporal aspects of human reaching movements or for data from priming experiments. Additionally, the neural network structure reflects properties of motor cortical networks like interdependent population encoded body space representations, recurrent connectivity, or associative learning schemes. This thesis introduces and describes the new model, relates it to current computational models, evaluates its functionality, relates it to human behavior and neurophysiology, and finally discusses potential extensions as well as the validity of the model. In conclusion, the proposed model grounds highly flexible task-dependent behavior in a neural network framework and unsupervised sensorimotor learning.
Vertebrate and invertebrate visual systems exhibit similarities in early stages of visual processing. For instance, in the human brain, the modalities of color, form and motion are separately processed in parallel neuronal pathways. This basic property is also found in the fly Drosophila melanogaster which has a similar division in color- sensitive and (color blind) motion-sensitive pathways that are determined by two distinct subsets of photoreceptors (the R1-6 and the R7/8 system, respectively). Flies have a highly organized visual system that is characterized by its repetitive, retinotopic organization of four neuropils: the lamina, the medulla, the lobula and the lobula plate. Each of these consists of columns which contain the same set of neurons. In the lamina, axon bundles of six photoreceptors R1-6 that are directed towards the same point in space form columnar structures called cartridges. These are the visual sampling units and are associated with four types of first-order interneuron that receive common input from R1-6: L1, L2, L3 and the amacrine cells (amc, together with their postsynaptic partner T1). They constitute parallel pathways that have been studied in detail at the anatomical level. Little is known, however, about their functional role in processing behaviorally relevant information, e.g. for gaze stabilization, visual course control or the fixation of objects. The availability of a variety of neurogenetic tools for structure-function analysis in Drosophila allowed first steps into the genetic dissection of the neuronal circuitry mediating motion and position detection. In this respect, the choice of the effector turned out to be crucial. Surprisingly, it was found that the clostridial tetanus neurotoxin failed to block mature Drosophila photoreceptor synapses, but caused irreversible damage when expressed during their development. Therefore, the dominant-negative shibire allele shits1 which turned out to be better suited was used for blocking lamina interneurons and thereby analyzing the necessity of the respective pathways. To determine whether the latter were also sufficient for the same behavioral task, the inverse strategy was developed, based on the fact that lamina interneurons express histamine receptors encoded by the ort gene. The specific rescue of ort function in defined channels in an otherwise mutant background allowed studying their sufficiency in a given task. Combining these neurogenetic methods with the optomotor response and object induced orientation behavior as behavioral measures, the aim of the present thesis was to answer the following questions: (a) Which pathways feed into elementary motion detectors and which ones are necessary and/or sufficient for the detection of directional motion? (b) Do pathways exist which specifically mediate responses to unidirectional motion? (c) Which pathways are necessary and/or sufficient for object induced orientation behavior? Some basic properties of the visual circuitry were revealed: The two central cartridge pathways, represented by the large monopolar cells L1 and L2, are key players in motion detection. Under a broad range of stimulatory conditions, the two subsystems are redundant and are able to process motion independently of each other. To detect an impairment when only one of the pathways is intact, one has to drive the system to its operational limits. At low signal to noise ratios, i.e. at low pattern contrast or low background illumination, the L2 pathway has a higher sensitivity. At intermediate pattern contrast, both pathways are specialized in mediating responses to unidirectional motion of opposite stimulus direction. In contrast, neither the L3, nor the amc/T1 pathway is necessary or sufficient for motion detection. While the former may provide position information for orientation, the latter has a modulatory role at intermediate pattern contrast. Orientation behavior turned out to be even more robust than motion vision and may utilize a less sophisticated mechanism, as it does not require a nonlinear comparison of signals from neighboring visual sampling units. The position of objects is processed in several redundant pathways, involving both receptor subsystems. The fixation of objects does not generally require motion vision. However, motion detection improves the fixation of landmarks, especially when these are narrow or have a reduced contrast.
Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) or prion diseases are a group of infectious neurodegenerative diseases that are associated with misfolding of the cellular form of the cellular prion protein (PrPC) into a disease associated conformer (PrPSc). No therapy for prion diseases is available at present. So far, anti-PrPC vaccination is hampered by immunological tolerance of the mammalian immune system to endogenous PrPC. The aim of this thesis was to set up a new vaccination strategy based on virus-like particles (VLP) to induce anti-PrPC antibody responses in PrPC-competent mice. In a first step it was assessed whether VLP have the capacity to induce antibody responses that are protective against conventional pathogens. For this purpose, VLP displaying the vesicular stomatitis virus-gylcoprotein (VLP-VSV) were generated and tested for their immunogenicity. Similarly to live vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), replication deficient VLP-VSV induced T help-independent VSV neutralizing IgM responses that switched to the IgG subclass in a T help-dependent manner. Furthermore, type I IFN receptor (IFNAR) triggering only marginally affected VLP-VSV induced neutralizing IgM responses, whereas it was critically required to promote the IgG switch. The analysis of conditional knockout mice with a lymphocyte-specific IFNAR deletion revealed that IFNAR triggering of lymphocytes did not play a crucial role, neither upon VLP-VSV nor VSV immunization. Collectively, these data verified the high immunogenicity of VLP. Therefore, in a next step VLP were generated displaying the C-terminal half of PrP (residues 121-231aa) fused to the platelet derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR) transmembrane region (VLP-PrPD111) for anti-PrPC immunization. On the surface of such retroparticles, PrPC was expressed at high levels as determined by electron microscopy. VLP-PrPD111 immunization of Prnp-deficient (Prnp0/0) mice resulted in antibody response specifically binding the cellular form of PrPC. Upon intravenous injection of wild-type mice, high PrPC-specific IgM responses were induced, whereas the T cell-dependent switch from the IgM to the IgG subclass was less pronounced. As a consequence, anti-PrPC titers were rather short-lived. The impaired subclass switch was probably related with host T cell tolerance to endogenous PrPC. Attempts to increase anti-PrPC IgG responses in wild-type mice via administration of VLP-PrPD111 emulsified in various different adjuvants failed. Nevertheless, in single individuals low IgG antibodies were induced after immunization of VLP-PrPD111 emulsified in CFA. To circumvent T cell tolerance in wild-type mice, a multitude of different immunization strategies was tested, including priming and boosting protocols with different types of VLP or VLP expressing PrPC together with foreign T helper epitopes. Overall, those efforts did not improve anti-PrPC IgG responses in wild-type mice. Interestingly, anti-PrPC antibodies induced in Prnp0/0 mice reduced PrPSc levels in prion infected cell cultures, whereas serum of vaccinated wild-type mice did not. To assess the protective capacity of VLP-PrPD111 induced immune responses, vaccinated wild-type mice were infected with scrapie (RML 5.0). Unfortunately, vaccinated mice did not show a significant delay in the onset of scrapie. In a last part of the thesis it was studied whether in the absence of T cell help activated “memory” B cells were able to produce anti-PrPC specific antibodies. To address this question, PrPC-specific memory B cells were sorted from vaccinated Prnp0/0 mice and adoptively transferred into wild-type recipient mice. Upon VLP-PrPD111 challenge, no PrPC-specific IgG titers were induced in the recipients. Nevertheless, several VLP-PrPD111 challenged recipient mice were protected against scrapie infection. In conclusion, VLP were characterized as highly immunogenic vaccines that were used to elucidate various questions concerning adaptive immune response and basic mechanisms of PrPC-specific tolerance vs. immunity. Remarkably, VLP-PrPD111 was able to induce native PrPC-specific antibodies in wild-type mice but major difficulties associated with PrPC-specific tolerance made efficacious scrapie vaccination impossible. New vaccination approaches are being tested to overcome these limitations.
Processes of the Earth’s surface occur at different scales of time and intensity. Climate in particular determines the activity and seasonal development of vegetation. These dynamics are predominantly driven by temperature in the humid mid-latitudes and by the availability of water in semi-arid regions. Human activities are a modifying parameter for many ecosystems and can become the prime force in well-developed regions with an intensively managed environment. Accounting for these dynamics, i.e. seasonal dynamics of ecosystems and short- to long-term changes in land-cover composition, requires multiple measurements in time. With respect to the characterization of the Earth surface and its transformation due to global warming and human-induced global change, there is a need for appropriate data and methods to determine the activity of vegetation and the change of land cover. Space-borne remote sensing is capable of monitoring the activity and development of vegetation as well as changes of the land surface. In many instances, satellite images are the only means to comprehensively assess the surface characteristics of large areas. A high temporal frequency of image acquisition, forming a time series of satellite data, can be employed for mapping the development of vegetation in space and time. Time series allow for detecting and assessing changes and multi-year transformation processes of high and low intensity, or even abrupt events such as fire and flooding. The operational processing of satellite data and automated information-extraction techniques are the basis for consistent and continuous long-term product generation. This provides the potential for directly using remote-sensing data and products for analyzing the land surface in relation to global warming and global change, including deforestation and land transformation. This study aims at the development of an advanced approach to time-series generation using data-quality indicators. A second goal focuses on the application of time series for automated land-cover classification and update, using fractional cover estimates to accommodate for the comparatively coarse spatial resolution. Requirements of this study are the robustness and high accuracy of the approaches as well as the full transferability to other regions and datasets. In this respect, the developments of this study form a methodological framework, which can be filled with appropriate modules for a specific sensor and application. In order to attain the first goal, time-series compilation, a stand-alone software application called TiSeG (Time Series Generator) has been developed. TiSeG evaluates the pixel-level quality indicators provided with each MODIS land product. It computes two important data-availability indicators, the number of invalid pixels and the maximum gap length. Both indices are visualized in time and space, indicating the feasibility of temporal interpolation. The level of desired data quality can be modified spatially and temporally to account for distinct environments in a larger study area and for seasonal differences. Pixels regarded as invalid are either masked or interpolated with spatial or temporal techniques.
Aggression is a strikingly multi-faceted phenomenon occurring in vertebrates as well as in invertebrates. Despite its omnipresence, the neuronal basis of aggressive behaviours is yet barely understood. Many studies however, imply a role for biogenic amines in aggression. This PhD project aimed at contributing to the understanding of the neuronal correlates of aggression, with a main focus on the biogenic amine octopamine, using Drosophila melanogaster as the model system. In Drosophila, agonistic encounters of males and females are composed of a variety of both offensive and defensive components, some of which are displayed more often in one sex than in the other. To simplify analysis and to standardize evaluation, I chose to focus on a single indicator of aggression: the lunge, a striking feature unique to Drosophila male aggression. By evaluating the lunge I developed in cooperation with Andreas Eckart for the first time an automated, video-based analysis of Drosophila male aggression. The present software program gives the number of lunges for each fly in a certain time interval. In addition, it provides information such as the distance the fly walked and his size among others. In combination with a second software program that we developed, aggressive interactions between two male Drosophila melanogaster of a genotype of choice can now be registered either completely automatically or if preferred semi-automatically. Using these softwares, I demonstrate that (1) body size differences of 8% and higher influence the outcome of a fight in favour of the larger male; (2) walking activity alters lunge frequency with more lunges performed by more active pairs of males; (3) flies mutant for the white gene, one member of the ABC transporter family in Drosophila, are profoundly impaired in aggression, an effect that is partially due to reduced visual performance. (4) Either knocking-down white in various brain regions or chemically ablating the mushroom body located in the central brain by deleting its neuroblast precursors diminishes aggression, indicating that integrity of various neural circuits/brain regions is required for wild-type aggression to occur. Furthermore, I show that (5) flies lacking octopamine signalling but having altered tyramine signalling display hardly any lunge. A quantitative high-speed analysis revealed that lunge execution is almost indistinguishable from wild-type males. The results from the experiments in which octopamine levels and/or tyramine levels were restored suggest that an elaborate pattern of octopamine levels in time and space is required to enable flies to express wild-type aggressive behaviour.
The Transforming Growth Factor (TGF) superfamily of cytokines and their serine/threonine kinase receptors play an important role in the regulation of cell division, differentiation, adhesion, migration, organization, and death. Smad proteins are the major intracellular signal transducers for the TGF receptor superfamily that mediate the signal from the membrane into the nucleus. Bone Morphogenetic Protein-4 (BMP-4) is a representative of the TGF superfamily, which regulates the formation of teeth, limbs and bone, and also plays a role in fracture repair. Binding of BMP-4 to its receptor stimulates phosphorylation of Smad1, which subsequently recruits Smad4. A hetero-oligomeric complex consisting of Smad1 and Smad4 then translocates into the nucleus and regulates transcription of target genes by interacting with transcription factors. Although the individual steps of the signaling cascade from the receptor to the nucleus have been identified, the exact kinetics and the rate limiting step(s) have remained elusive. Standard biochemical techniques are not suitable for resolving these issues, as they do not offer sufficiently high sensitivity and temporal resolution. In this study, advanced optical techniques were used for direct visualization of Smad signaling in live mammalian cells. Novel fluorescent biosensors were developed by fusing cyan and yellow fluorescent proteins to the signaling molecules Smad1 and Smad4. By measuring Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) between the two fluorescent proteins, the kinetics of BMP/Smad signaling was unraveled. A rate-limiting delay of 2 - 5 minutes occurred between BMP receptor stimulation and Smad1 activation. A similar delay was observed in the complex formation between Smad1 and Smad4. Further experimentation indicated that the delay is dependent on the Mad homology 1 (MH1) domain of Smad1. These results give new insights into the dynamics of the BMP receptor – Smad1/4 signaling process and provide a new tool for studying Smads and for testing inhibitory drugs.
The covalent linkage of the aryloxy-substituents through macrocyclisation was applied for the synthesis of perylene bisimide atropo-enantiomers. The synthesis of macrocyclic perylene bisimides was achieved by using a tetra(3-hydroxyphenoxy)-functionalized perylene bisimide with achiral 2,6-diisopropylphenyl as imide substituent through Williamson´s etherfication which could be realized for four different oligoethylene glycol bridging units. Two regioisomeric macrocycles, namely the diagonally bridged (1,7- and 6,12- linkage) and the laterally bridged (1,12- and 6,7-linkage) isomers, were obtained for each bridging unit. The structural assignment of the isolated regioisomeric macrocycles was unambiguously accomplished by X-ray analysis of two macrocycles and by 1H NMR spectroscopy for all isomers. The conformational influence of the aryloxy-substituents on the functional properties of this class of chromophores could be derived by comparison of the optical and electrochemical properties of all isolated macrocylces with those of an open-chained reference compound. It was shown that the aryloxy-substituents prefer a lateral conformation in solution. Furthermore, solvent dependent fluorescence studies indicated that a photoinduced electron transfer process is of importance for the fluorescence quenching of electron-rich aryloxy-substituted perylene bisimides. The resolution of the atropo-diastereomers of diagonally bridged macrocyclic perylene bisimides with chiral 2-(R)-octylamine as imide substituent and diethylene glycol bridging units could be accomplished by semi-preparative HPLC on a chiral column. The chiroptical properties of the isolated epimerically pure macrocycles were determined by CD spectroscopy. Based on the experimental CD spectra, the stereochemical assignment of the isolated epimers was accomplished by application of the excition chirality method and confirmed by quantum chemical calculation of the CD spectra. The synthetical concept was extended successfully to 1,7-diaryloxy-substituted perylene bisimides. The structure of the diagonally bridged macrocycle was unambiguously confirmed by X-ray analysis and NMR spectroscopy. The atropo-enantiomers of this macrocycle could be resolved by semi-preparative HPLC on a chiral column and the assignment of the absolute configuration was achieved by comparison of the CD spectra of the resolved enantiomers with those of epimerically pure bis(macrocycles) reported before. By comparison of the X-ray structures obtained for the racemic mixture as well as one enantiomer important information could be extracted for the formation of p-dimers of perylene bisimides. The dependence of the interconversion barrier on the bulkiness of the bay-substituents was investigated for four halogen-substituted perylene bisimides. The dynamic properties were investigated by temperature-dependent NMR spectroscopy and kinectic measurements using CD spectroscopy. By applying the concept of the “apparent overlap” a convincing linear relationship between the size of the substituents and the free enthalpy of activation could be derived. Furthermore, the resolution of the atropo-diastereomers or enantiomers of the tetrachloro and tetrabromo-substituted derivates was accomplished, whereupon especially the 1,6,7,12-tetrabromosubstituted perylene bisimide provided at room temperature stable enantiomers. Additionally, the derived structure-property relationship allows the design of conformationally stable perylene bisimide enantiomers by proper choice of the bay substituents. In order to utilize the reversibility of self-assembly for the quantitative formation of macrocyclic perylene bisimides, a tetrazinc porphyrin-functionalized perylene bisimide was synthesized. The self-assembly of the zinc porphyrin perylene bisimide bichromophoric building block and diazabicyclo-[2.2.2]-undecane into the desired 1:2 sandwich complex was investigated by UV/Vis and 1H NMR spectroscopy and the macrocyclic structure was unequivocally proven by diffusion-ordered NMR spectroscopy (DOSY NMR). Furthermore, the controlled deposition of these well-defined macrocycles on highly ordered pyrolitic graphite (HOPG) was demonstrated by atomic force microscopy (AFM) investigations. The alignment of a linear amino functionalised p-conjugated polymers upon addition of the bichromphoric tetrazinc porphyrin-perylene bisimide was investigated by UV/Vis spectroscopy and AFM measurement. The surface analysis by AFM investigations revealed that the bichromophoric system composed of perylene bisimide and zinc porphyrin is able to cross-link the linear p-conjugated polymer over a wide range of the graphite surface which provided a defined arrangement of three different functional p-systems.
The RS1 protein, a 67 kDa protein, encoded by an intronless single copy gene that was only detected in mammals, mediates transcriptional and post-transcriptional down-regulation of the sodium-D-glucose co-transporter SGLT1. The short-term post-transcriptional down-regulation of SGTL1 by RS1 has been shown to occur at the trans-Golgi network (TGN). In the present study, two tripeptides from the human RS1 protein (hRS1), GlnCysPro and GlnSerPro, that induce the post-transcriptional down-regulation of SGLT1 at the TGN, were identified. The application of the tripeptides led to 40-50% reduction of the amount of the SGLT1 protein in the plasma membrane, which correlated to the degree of decrease in SGLT1-mediated glucose transport. For the short-term down-regulation of SGLT1 by the tripeptides, the effective intracellular concentrations IC50 values of 2.0 nM (GlnCysPro, QCP) and 0.16 nM (GlnSerPro, QSP) were estimated. The observed down-regulation of SGLT1 by the tripeptides QCP and QSP, similar to hRS1 protein, was attenuated by different intracellular monosaccharides including nonmetabolized methyl-α-D-glucopyranoside and 2-deoxyglucose. On the contrary, the short-term inhibition of the hOCT2 by QCP could only be observed after rising of intracellular concentration of AMG. QCP and QSP are transported by H+-peptide cotransporter PEPT1 that is co-located with SGLT1 in the small intestinal enterocytes and thereafter effectively down-regulate hSGLT1-mediated transport of AMG. The data indicates that orally applied tripeptides QCP or QSP can be used to down-regulate D-glucose absorption in small intestine and used for treatment of obesity and diabetes mellitus.
Although known about and investigated since the late 1970’s, the picture of the basic principles governing inhibitor strengths and the structure-activity relationships of the cysteine protease inhibition mechanism is still very incomplete. Computational approaches can be a very useful tool for investigating such questions, as they allow the inspection of single, specific effects in isolation from all others, in a manner very difficult to achieve experimentally. The ab initio treatments of such large systems like proteins are still not feasible. However, there is a vast number of computational approaches capable of dealing with protein structures with reasonable accuracy. This work presents a summary of theoretical investigations into cysteine protease cathepsin B using a range of methods. We have concentrated on the investigation of cysteine protease inhibition by epoxide- and aziridine-based inhibitors in order to obtain better insight into these important topics. Various model systems are simulated by means of pure quantum mechanical methods and by hybrid (QM/MM) methods. Both approaches provide a static picture. Dynamical effects are then accounted for by additional molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, using both classical and QM/MM MD approaches. The quantum mechanical approach was used to study very small model systems consisting only of the electrophilic warhead of the inhibitor (both substitituted and not) and molecular moieties simulating a very simplified protein active site (methylthiolate instead of Cys29 and methylimidazolium instead of His199 residue) and solvent surroundings (two waters or two ammonium ions, in combination with a continuum solvent model). Although simple, such a system provides a good description of the most important interactions involved in the inhibition reaction. It also allows investigation of the influence of the properties of the electrophilic warhead on the reaction rate. Beside the properties of the electrophilic warhead, the protein and solvent environment is also an important factor in the irreversible deactivation of the enzyme active site by the inhibitor. The non-covalent interactions of the inhibitor with the oxyanion hole and other subsites of the enzyme, as well as its interaction with the solvent molecules, need to be explicitly taken into account in the calculations, because of their possible impact on the reaction profile. As molecular modeling methods allow the treatment of such large systems, but lack the possibility of describing covalent interactions, our method of choice was the combined quantum mechanics/molecular modeling approach. By splitting the system into a smaller part that undergoes the bond cleavage/formation process and must be treated quantum mechanically, and a larger part, comprised of the rest of the protein, which could be treated using force fields, we managed to simulate the system at the desired precision. Our investigations concentrated on the role of His199 in the inhibition mechanism as well as on the structure-reactivity relationships between cysteine protease and various inhibitors, yielding new insight into the kinetics, regio- and stereospecificity of the inhibition. In particular, our calculations provide the following insights: i.) an explanation for the regioselectivity of the reaction, and original insight into which interactions affect the stereoselectivity; ii.) a clear model which explains the known structure-activity relationships and connects these effects with the pH-dependency of the inhibition; iii.) our computations question the generally accepted two-step model by showing that substituent effects accelerate the irreversible step to such an extent that the achievement of an equilibrium in the first step is doubtful; iv.) by way of theoretical characterizations of aziridine models, the reasons for similarities and differences in the mode of action of epoxide- and aziridine-based inhibitors are elucidated; and finally, v.) combining our results with experimental knowledge will allow rational design of new inhibitors. To account for dynamical effects as well, molecular dynamics (MD) computations were also performed. In these calculations the potential energy was computed at the force field level. The results not only supported and clarified the QM/MM results, but comparison with previous X-ray structures helped correct existing errors in the available geometrical models and resolved inconsistencies in the weighting of various factors governing the inhibition. In the work the first QM/MM MD calculations on the active site of the cysteine proteases are presented. In contrast to the MD simulations, these calculations used potential energies computed at the QM/MM-level. With the help of these computations we sought to address strongly disputed questions about the reasons for the existence of the active site ion pair and its role in the high activity of the enzyme.
Neural crest cells and sensory neurons are two prominent cell populations which are induced at the border between neural and non-neural ectoderm during early vertebrate development. The neural crest cells are multipotent and highly migratory precursors that give rise to face cartilage, peripheral neurons, glia cells, pigment cells and many other cell types unique to vertebrates. Sensory neurons are located dorsally in the neural tube and are essential for sensing and converting environmental stimuli into electrical motor reflexes. In my PhD thesis, I obtained novel insights into the complex processes of cell induction at the neural plate border by investigating the regulation and function of mdkb in zebrafish. First, it was possible to demonstrate that mdkb expression is spatiotemporally correlated with the induction of neural crest cells and primary sensory neurons at the neural plate border. Second, it became evident that the expression of mdkb is activated by known neural crest cell inducing signals, like Wnts, FGFs and RA, but that it is independent of Delta-Notch signals essential for lateral inhibition. Knockdown experiments showed that mdkb function is necessary for induction of neural crest cells and sensory neurons at the neural plate border, probably through determination of a common pool of progenitor cells during gastrulation. The present study also used the advantages of the zebrafish model system to investigate the in vivo function of all midkine gene family members during early brain development. In contrast to the situation in mouse, all three zebrafish genes show distinct expression patterns throughout CNS development. mdka, mdkb and ptn expression is detected in mostly non-overlapping patterns during embryonic brain development in the telencephalon, the mid-hindbrain boundary and the rhombencephalon. The possibility of simultaneously knocking down two or even three mRNAs by injection of morpholino mixtures allowed the investigation of functional redundancy of midkine factors during brain formation. Knockdown of Midkine proteins revealed characteristic defects in brain patterning indicating their association with the establishment of prominent signaling centers such as the mid-hindbrain boundary and rhombomere 4. Interestingly, combined knockdown of mdka, mdkb and ptn or single knockdown of ptn alone prevented correct formation of somites, either by interfering with the shifting of the somite maturation front or interferance with cell adhesion in the PSM. Thus, Ptn was identified as a novel secreted regulator of segmentation in zebrafish.
During the last few years an increasing number of physiological processes in plants have been shown to be regulated by NO. NO plays important roles in growth and development, plant disease resistance, abiotic stress, and in above and underground plant organs. In recent years several enzymatic pathways and few non-enzymatic pathways were proposed for nitric oxide production in plants. The major goal of this work was to quantify NO production by plants and especially by roots, and to identify the enzymes responsible for NO production. As a major method, NO production by roots was followed through on-line measurement of NO emission into the gas phase by chemiluminescence (= direct chemiluminescence), and also by indirect chemiluminescence where trace amounts of oxidized products like NO2- and NO3- can be easily measured. Plants used were tobacco wild-type (N. tabacum cv Xanthi or cv Gatersleben), NR-free mutants grown on ammonium in order to prevent NR induction, plants grown on tungstate to inhibit synthesis of functional MoCo-enzymes, and a NO-overproducing nitrite reductase (NiR)-deficient transformant as well as barley, rice and pea. Induction of a hypersensitive response (HR) in tobacco leaves was achieved by using avirulent Pseudomonas syringae pv phaseolicola. At oxygen concentrations of <1%, even completely nitrate reductase (NR)-free root tissues reduced added nitrite to NO, indicating that in roots, NR was not the only source for nitrite-dependent NO formation. By contrast, NR-free leaf slices were not able to reduce nitrite to NO. Root NO formation was blocked by inhibitors of mitochondrial electron transport (Myxothiazol and SHAM), whereas NO formation by NR containing leaf slices was insensitive to the inhibitors. Consistent with that, mitochondria purified from roots, but not those from leaves, reduced nitrite to NO at the expense of NADH. The inhibitor studies suggest that, in root mitochondria, both terminal oxidases participate in NO formation, and they also suggest that even in NR-containing roots, a large part of the reduction of nitrite to NO was catalysed by mitochondria, and less by NR. The differential capacity of root and leaf mitochondria to reduce nitrite to NO appears to be common among higher plants, since it was observed with Arabidopsis, barley, pea, and tobacco. Nitrite and NADH consumption by mitochondria were also measured. Anaerobic, nitrite-dependent NO emission was exclusively associated with the membrane fraction, without participation of matrix components. It was also examined whether root mitochondria and mitochondrial membranes produce nitric oxide (NO) exclusively by reduction of nitrite or also via a nitric oxide synthase (NOS),- and to what extent direct NO measurements could be falsified by NO oxidation. In addition to chemiluminescence, Diaminofluoresceins (DAF) were used as an NO indicators for comparison. In air, mitochondria apparently produced no nitrite-dependent NO, and no NOS activity was detected by direct or indirect chemiluminescence. In contrast, with DAF-2 and DAR-4M an L-arginine-dependent fluorescence increase took place. However, the response of this apparent NOS activity to inhibitors, substrates and cofactors was untypical when compared with commercial iNOS and is considered an artefact. With iNOS, about 2/3 of the NO were oxidized to (nitrite + nitrate). Mitochondria also appear to consume NO without increasing oxidation to (nitrite+ nitrate). We therefore assume formation of NO to a volatile intermediate (eventually N2O3). It was recently shown that the hypersensitive response (HR) of tobacco triggered by the fungal elicitor cryptogein occurred independent of the presence or absence of nitrate reductase (NR). One conclusion was that NR-dependent NO formation played no role in the HR. Here we present evidence that the described scenario may be specific for cryptogein. Pseudomonas syringae pv. phaseolicola was infiltrated into tobacco leaves from WT plant and from the NiR-deficient NO-overproducing clone 271, grown either on nitrate or ammonium. Lesion development as well as bacterial growth and sugar concentrations in leaves and in the leaf apoplast was monitored. Lesion development was positively and bacterial growth was negatively correlated with nitrate nutrition and eventually with NO formation. Bacterial growth was positively correlated with ammonium nutrition and apoplastic sugar concentrations. Total (free and conjugated) SA content were always drastically increased by bacterial infection, but there was no clear correlation with NO production. In the presence of cryptogein, Pseudomonas growth was drastically reduced. This shows that the assumed interdependence of bacterial growth, NO production and the HR is complex and not unifactorial.
Adaptive Polarization Pulse Shaping and Modeling of Light-Matter Interactions with Neural Networks
(2007)
The technique of ultrafast polarization shaping is applied to a model quantum system, the potassium dimer. The polarization dependence of the multiphoton ionization dynamics in this molecule is first investigated in pump–probe experiments, and it is then more generally addressed and exploited in an adaptive quantum control experiment utilizing near–IR polarization–shaped laser pulses. The extension of these polarization shaping techniques to the UV spectral range is presented, and methods for the generation and characterization of polarization–shaped laser pulses in the UV are introduced. Systematic scans of double–pulse sequences are introduced for the investigation and interpretation of control mechanisms. This concept is first introduced and illustrated for an optical demonstration experiment, and it is then applied for the analysis of the intrapulse dumping mechanism that is observed in the excitation of a large dye molecule in solution with ultrashort laser pulses. Shaped laser pulses are employed as a means for obtaining copious amounts of data on light–matter interactions. Neural networks are introduced as a novel tool for generating computer–based models for these interactions from the accumulated data. The viability of this approach is first tested for second harmonic generation (SHG) and molecular fluorescence processes. Neural networks are then utilized for modeling the far more complex coherent strong–field dynamics of potassium atoms.
RS1, a gene product of RSC1A1, is critically involved in cell density-dependent transcriptional down-regulation of SGLT1 in LLC-PK1 cells and in the post-transcriptional down-regulation of SGLT1 in small intestine. RS1 inhibits the release of SGLT1 containing vesicles from the trans-Golgi network and migrates into the nucleus where it inhibits transcription of SGLT1. In the present work we identified a novel 21 amino acids-long nonconventional nuclear localization sequence (RS1 NLS) in porcine RS1 (pRS1) that is necessary and sufficient for nuclear targeting of pRS1. RS1 NLS is framed by two consensus sequences for phosphorylation which are responsible for confluence-dependent regulation of RS1 NLS: a casein kinase 2 (CK2) site in position 348 and a protein kinase C (PKC) site in position 370. Confluence-dependent nuclear targeting was observed with amino acids 342-374 (R-NLS-Reg). Mutation analysis suggested that nuclear targeting is blocked by phosphorylation of serine 370 (PKC) and that phosphorylation of serine 348 (CK2) prevents phosphorylation of serine 370. Because CK2 is down-regulated and PKC is up-regulated during confluence of LLC-PK1 cells, our data suggest that nuclear localization coordinates cell density-dependent changes in transcriptional and post-transcriptional inhibition of SGLT1 expression.
Brassicaceae and a few related plant families are characterized by possession of the glucosinolate-myrosinase system. Glucosinolates are amino-acid derived allelochemicals which are hydrolysed upon tissue damage by myrosinase enzymes to produce various degradation products which can be toxic for generalist insects. The larvae of the crucifer-specialist Athalia rosae, the turnip sawfly, sequester glucosinolates into their haemolymph. The role of the glucosinolate-myrosinase system for the interaction of the turnip sawfly with Brassicaceae was examined in this study from two different perspectives: variation within individual plants and between plant species. The plant responses to the feeding by herbivores and the short-term effects this induction had on insect behaviour were investigated in white mustard. Furthermore, plants can use multiple defences. Hence correlations of glucosinolates and myrosinase activities with other defences and nutritional quality and their long-term effects on the development of the insects were investigated in seven different plant species.
In the first part of this work a new approach to measure transient absorption spectra of fluorescent compounds by means of laser flash photolysis technique was presented. Generally, the recorded transient absorption signal consists of transient absorption, fluorescence and ground state bleaching. Thus, for fluorescent chromophores a fluorescence correction is indispensable in order to obtain undisturbed absorption decay curves as well as accurate transient absorption spectra. Due to time response characteristics of the PMT detector the fluorescence contribution cannot be corrected by recording the fluorescence separately. Measuring two transient absorption signals with probe light differing in intensity, compounds with quantum yields up to ~ 35 % can be investigated. This is a major improvement because transient absorption spectroscopy is a powerful method to gain insight into the kinetics and the energy of excited states and information in the time domain of fluorescence are no longer lost. In the second part the synthesis and the photophysical characterisation of redox cascades were reported. These cascades consist of an acridine acceptor and up to three triarylamine donor subunits. The redox potentials of the triarylamines were tuned by adequate substituents in the para-position of the phenyl ring to ensure a directed redox gradient. Upon photoexcitation a locally excited state or a CT state is populated which then injects a hole onto the adjacent donor and consequently results in a CS state. Fluorescence and transient absorption measurements revealed that HT depends strongly on donor strength and solvent polarity. Formation of a CS state was only observed in case of strong terminal donors or polar solvents. A low lying localised triplet state acts as an energy trap and quenches all CS states even in case of the cascade with the strongest terminal donor in very polar solvents. Furthermore, population of a CS state catalyses the formation of this triplet states which results in a shorter lifetime of the CS state compared to the lifetime of the CT state of the corresponding reference compound. Compared to redox cascades already reported in literature, the electronic coupling between the redox centres was decreased by sterical as well as electronic effects. To prolong the lifetime of the CS state saturated spacers on the one hand and a perpendicular orientation of the acceptor and the adjacent donor on the other hand were selected. The twisting of the subunits forming the CT state results in a higher degree of charge separation but its contribution to increase the lifetimes of the CS states is of minor importance. The longer lifetime of the CS states can be ascribed to the saturated spacers. Experimental data in combination with calculated values indicate that charge recombination takes place in the Marcus normal region by a superexchange mechanisms. Although charge recombination of the known cascades is located in the Marcus inverted region, these CS states decay faster than the CS states of the compounds investigated in this work.
A small percentage (1-5%) of the blood lymphocytes expresses alternative T-cell antigen receptor that uses g and d TCR rearranging genes. A subset of them expresses the Vg9Vd2 TCR. Those cells respond to self-nonpeptide and foreign antigens presented by unknown antigen-presenting molecules. Vg9Vd2 T cells also express Toll-like receptors and natural killer receptors that allow them to respond to other nonpeptide microbial components or to alterations in the expression of stress cell surface ligands such as NKG2D ligands. Vg9Vd2 T cells frequently are regulated by the expression of activating and/or inhibitory NKRs (iNKRs) that can fine-tune their activation threshold and the activating NKG2D receptor is one of the most studied until now. NKG2D, a C-type lectin receptor directed against MICA/MICB and UL16-binding protein (ULBP) molecules, have been reported a powerful co-stimulus for Ag-mediated activation of CD8 and Vg9Vd2 T cells. Indeed, NKG2D is recruited within the Vg9Vd2 TCR immunological synapse and enhances recognition by Vg9Vd2 T cells of Mycobacteria-infected DCs and various MICA/MICB or ULBP hemopoietic and non-hemopoietic tumors. The level of NKG2D is upregulated by inflammatory cytokines (e.g. IL-15), and NKG2D ligands are induced after a physical or genotoxic stress and/or along infection by intracellular pathogens. Therefore, NKG2D is a key stress sensor that strongly enhances recognition of altered or infected self by human gd T cells. Recent progress in the field supports the idea that gd T cells fulfill a role in the innate and adaptative immune response in different way of the conventional ab T cells. We demonstrated direct activation of Vg9Vd2 T cells by NKG2D ligation through the association with DAP10 adapter molecules and independently of TCR-Ag recognition, similar to the NKG2D-mediated activation of NK cells. Culture of peripherical blood mononuclear cells with immobilized NKG2D mAb or NKG2D ligand MICA induces up-regulation of CD69 and CD25 in NK and Vg9Vd2 T cells but not in CD8 T cells. Additionally, the ligation of NKG2D induces in Vg9Vd2 T cells the up-regulation of molecules typical for antigenpresenting cells, such as co-stimulator molecules (CD86) antigen presenting molecules (CD1a, HLA-DR), adhesion molecules (CD54), and activation molecules (CD69). Furthermore, NKG2D ligation in Vg9Vd2 T cells induces the production of cytokines such as TNF-a and chemokines such as, MIP-1a, but cannot induce the production of cytokines such as IL-6 or IFN-g and chemokines such as RANTES, MCP-1 and GM-CSF. In addition, NKG2D triggers the activation of the cytolytic machinery as efficient as CD3 stimulation as shown by measurement of the release of granules with esterase activity (BLT assay), perforin and the up-regulation of CD107a on the surface of Vg9Vd2 T cells. This NKG2D dependent cytolysis has been confirmed using purified Vg9Vd2 T cells, which kill MICA-transduced RMA cells but not the control cells. The TCR independence and NKG2D dependence of this killing is supported by mAb inhibition experiment. Finally, DAP 10, which mediates NKG2D signaling of human NK cells, is found in resting and activated Vg9Vd2 T cells. Moreover, data of intracellular signaling studies suggest an important role of Scr kinases in the NKG2D mediated killing and involvement of DAP-10-PI3K and PLCg 1 pathways as mayor proteins implicated in target cell lysis, and shows remarkable difference with the TCR signaling. The identification of these similarities in NKG2D function between NK and Vg9Vd2 T cells may be of interest for development of new strategies for Vg9Vd2 T cell-based immunotherapy in certain types of cancer and help to understand Vg9Vd2 T cell function in general.
B cells play diverse roles in the immunopathogensis of autoimmune diseases several approaches targeting B cell directly or indirectly are in clinical practice in the treatment of autoimmunity. In this regard, temporal B cell depletion by rituximab (anti CD20 antibody) is being appreciated and gaining more importance in recent years. To date, little is known about the regeneration profile of B cells following B cell depletion. We wanted to investigate the early replenishing B cells and examine the dynamic changes in the repertoire. we studied the immunoglobulin receptor (IgR) modulation of Ig-VH4 genes as representative of the heavy chain family. Five patients were included in the study and therapy induced alterations were assessed. Three time points namely before therapy, early regeneration phase (ERP- the early time point during regeneration where just above 1% B cells were found in the peripheral lymphocyte pool) and later regeneration phase (LRP- which commenced 2-3 months following ERP) were chosen. In three patients (A-C), Ig-VH4 genes were amplified from total genomic DNA during the above-mentioned all time points and in another two patients (D and E), Ig genes during ERP were studied by single cell amplification technique. Firstly, B cell regeneration followed the characteristic regeneration pattern as reported by several groups, with a predominant circulation of CD38hi expressing plasma cells and immature B cells in the ERP. During LRP, the proportion of these cells reduced relatively and the levels of naïve B cells rose gradually. On a molecular level, Ig-VH4 variable gene usage prior and post B cell depletion was determined and it was noticed that a diverse set of Ig-VH4 genes were employed in the repertoire before and after therapy. Mini gene segments such as VH4-34 and VH-4-39, which were reported to be connected with autoimmunity, were over expressed in the B cell repertoire before therapy. Profound changes were noticed in the early reemerging repertoire with a relatively increased population of intensely mutated B cells. These B cells acquired >=9 mutations in the Ig genes. Immunophenotyping with specific surface markers revealed that these highly mutated B cells evolve from the isotype-switched memory compartment especially the plasma cells. To support the hypothesis that the highly mutated B cells observed during ERP were plasma cells we carried out single cell amplification of individual plasma cells in another two patients during ERP and compared the mutational load, which remained similar. Actually plasma cells do not express CD20 on their surface and are not eliminated by rituximab therapy. However they were not observed in the peripheral blood following B cell depletion. The earliest time point when plasma cells are found again in peripheral circulation is the early recovery period (ERP). Therefore, it was intriguing to ascertain if the plasma cells were also modulated by rituximab therapy although they were not directly targeted by the therapy. We investigated if there is a therapy mediated mutational modulation of the plasma cells though these are not directly targeted by the therapy. We examined the confinement of mutations to the pre-defined RGYW/WRCY hotspot motifs (R=purine, Y=pyrimidine, W=A/T) in the plasma cells, which provides information on the involvement of T cells in B cell somatic hypermutation (SHM). Plasma cells before rituximab manifested the characteristics of active disease, which was revealed by restricted mutational targeting to the RGYW/WRCY motifs. The reemerging plasma cells during ERP had an increased targeting of the RGYW/WRCY motifs which indicated for a more pronounced T cell mediated B cell mutations which is the scenario observed in the healthy subjects. To further support the hypothesis of rituximab-mediated plasma cell modulation, we delineated the replacement to silent mutations ratio (R/S) in the hypervariable regions (CDRs) of the plasma cell Ig sequences. Within our study, the mean R/S ratio in the plasma cell CDRs of the patient group was relatively low (1.87) before rituximab treatment and interestingly this ratio increased significantly in the recirculating plasma cells to values of 2.67 and 3.60 in ERP and LRP status respectively. The increase in R/S ratios in reemerging plasma cells can be interpreted as a shaping of the Ig-repertoire by positive antigen selection as seen in healthy individuals. To conclude, our study demonstrates temporal B cell depletion by rituximab therapy seems to modulate also the plasma cell compartment, which is not directly targeted by the therapy. Modulation of plasma cells in RA could be also used as a potential biomarker in studying the effective response in RA treatment. This needs to be further explored to gain deeper insights into the underlying processes, which may be influenced by future therapies.
The process of sex-determination can be better understood through examinations of developing organs and cells, which are involved in the formation of undifferentiated gonad. This mechanisms show in fish a broad variety, ranging from hermaphroditism to gonochorism and environmental to genetic sex determination. Hormones and abiotic factors such as temperature and pH can influence teleost development and reproductive traits. These factors are vulnerable to pollutants and climate changes. Therefore, it is important to examine gonad development and sex-determination/differentiation in teleost fish. Teleost fish are the largest known group of vertebrates with approximately 25,000 species and are used for such kind of examinations as model organisms. Recently, in Oryzias latipes (medaka), dmrt1bY (or dmy), a member of the Dmrt gene family, has been described as testis-determining gene. However, this gene is not the universal master sex-determining gene in teleost fish. Although dmrt1bY is present in the most closely related species of the genus, namely Oryzias curvinotous, it is absent from other Oryzias species, like Oryzias celebensis, and other fish. During my thesis, I studied gonad development in medaka and in the closely related species Oryzias celebensis. Germ cell specification in medaka seems to be dependent on maternally provided cytoplasmatic determinants, so called germ plasm. Nanos and vasa are such germ cell specific genes. In zebrafish they are asymmetrically localized in the early embryo. I have shown that nanos mRNA is evenly distributed in the early embryo of medaka. A similar pattern has been already described for the medaka vasa homolog, olvas. This suggests differences in PGC specification in zebrafish and medaka. Further, the vasa homolog was isolated and the expression pattern examined in O. celebensis. The results show that it can be used as a germ cell specific marker. Additionally, the primordial germ cell migration in O. celebensis was followed, which is similar to medaka PGC migration. Primordial germ cell migration in vertebrates is dependent on the chemokine stromal cell-derived factor 1 (Sdf-1). Medaka has two different sdf-1 genes, sdf-1a and sdf-1b. Both genes are expressed in the lateral plate mesoderm (LPM). During late embryonic development, I could show that sdf-1a is expressed in newly formed somites and not longer in the LPM. Sdf-1b expression persisted in the posterior part of the lateral plate mesoderm in the developing gonad. In terms of early and late functions, this suggests subfunctionalization of sdf-1a and sdf-1b. In “higher” vertebrates, genes that are involved in the process of gonad development have been studied in detail, e.g. Wt1, Sox9, and Amh. I have analyzed the expression pattern of wt1 and sox9 co-orthologs and amh. In both, the medaka and O. celebensis, wt1a transcripts were localized in the LPM and its expression was similar to sdf-1a gene expression in medaka. Wt1b expression was restricted to the developing pronephric region. During later embryonic development, wt1a is specifically expressed in the somatic cells of the gonad primordium in both sexes. This is the first time that in fish wt1 gene expression in developing gonads has been described. Therefore, this result suggests that wt1a is involved in the formation of the bipotential gonad. Furthermore, I have analyzed the gonad specific function of the wt1 co-orthologs in medaka. I could show that a conditional co-regulation mechanism between Wt1a and Wt1b ensures PGC maintenance and/or survival. The expression of sox9 genes in medaka and sox9b in O. celebensis were detected in the somatic cells of the gonad primordium of both sexes. Additionally, I have shown that amh and amhrII in medaka are expressed in somatic cells of the gonad primordium of both sexes. This suggests that sox9b, amh and amhrII are involved in gonad development and have specific functions in the adult gonad. In O. celebensis I could detect an expression of dmrt1 already six days after fertilization in half of the embryos, which is similar to the dmrt1bY expression in medaka. Whether the expression of dmrt1 is male specific in O. celebensis is currently under investigation. Altogether, the obtained results provide new insights into gene expression patterns during the processes of gonad development. Furthermore, no differences in the expression pattern of wt1a and sox9b during gonad development between the medaka and O. celebensis could be detected. This might indicate that the genetic mechanisms during gonad development are similar in both species.
Spinal muscular atrophy with respiratory distress type 1 (SMARD1) is an autosomal recessive neuronal disorder in infants. The disease is marked by early onset of respiratory distress and predominantly distal muscle weakness, as consequences of diaphragmatic paralysis and progressive degeneration of  motor neurons in the spinal cord, respectively. Genetically, SMARD1 is caused by mutations in the single gene encoding Immunoglobulin µ-Binding Protein 2 (IGHMBP2). Despite the tissue specific degeneration observed in SMARD1 patients, the disease gene product IGHMBP2 is ubiquitously expressed in human and mouse tissues. Therefore, SMARD1 appears to be a motor neuron disease caused by the malfunction of a “housekeeping” protein, rather than a neuron specific factor. IGHMBP2 harbors an N-terminal DEXDc-type helicase/ATPase domain and has been classified as a member of the Superfamily 1 (SF1) of helicases. This protein has been assigned to various cellular activities such as DNA replication, pre-mRNA splicing and transcription. However its precise function in either process has remained elusive. The study presented here aimed at the enzymatic characterization of IGHMBP2, the identification of a specific cellular process to which IGHMBP2 is connected and the role of this factor in the pathophysiology of SMARD1. As a first step toward this end, a two-step purification strategy was established, which enabled the large-scale purification of properly folded and enzymatically active IGHMBP2. In vitro enzymatic studies using this recombinant protein defined IGHMBP2 as an ATP-dependent helicase that catalyzes unwinding of duplices composed of either DNA or RNA in a 5’→3’ direction. In contrast to previous reports, indirect immunofluorescence studies revealed a predominantly cytoplasmic localization of IGHMBP2. Size-fractionation studies and affinity-purification experiments further showed that IGHMBP2 is part of an RNase-sensitive macromolecular complex, which was identified as the ribosome. Interestingly, IGHMBP2 was abundantly detected in both subunits as well as to 80S ribosomes but only in small amounts in actively translating polysomes. These data strongly point to a role of IGHMBP2 in ribosomes-associated gene regulation control, such as in mRNA stabilization or mRNA translation. However, its precise function in those pathways remains to be identified. The biochemical and enzymatic characterization of IGHMBP2 allowed for the first time insights into the pathomechanism of SMARD1. SMARD1-causing pathogenic IGHMBP2 variants were investigated for their enzymatic activities and interaction with ribosomal subunits. Interestingly, among all missense mutations that have been tested thus far, none obstructs association with ribosomal subunits. However, these mutants exhibit specific defects in either the ATPase or RNA helicase activity or both. The data suggest that defects in the enzymatic activity of IGHMBP2 directly correlate with the pathogenesis of SMARD1. Furthermore, these data also raise the possibility that the disease SMARD1 is caused by alterations in the cellular translation machinery.
Infrared photodissociation spectroscopy of ionic hydrocarbons : microsolvation and protonation sites
(2007)
This work has presented a spectroscopic analysis of three types of hydrocarbon cations: two ionized aromatic hydrocarbons, two protonated aromatic hydrocarbons and the cation of a fundamental radical hydrocarbon. The experiments were centered on the proton stretch vibrations of mass-selected complexes of these systems and polar (H2O) and non polar (Ar, N2, CO2) ligands. The experiments have been done in a tandem mass spectrometer coupled with an electron impact ionization ion source; an OPO laser system was used as tunable IR light source. All the proposed dimer structures have been also modeled using quantum chemical calculations (QCC). These calculations have consistently been matched with the experimental results and have enabled clear identification of the spectral features observed. This has enabled the evaluation of thermochemical properties which could not be extracted directly from experiment. The experiments done on complexes of 1-Np+ and Im+ have allowed for the acidity of their various groups to be probed: the shifts in the frequency as well as the enhancement in the intensity of the OH and NH stretch vibrations resulting from the complexation have yielded dependences on both the species (L) and the number (n) of the ligands. OH bound 1-Np+···Ar has been detected for the first time, showing that the REMPI-IRPD method is severely limited with respect to the production of the most stable isomer of a given cationic complex. The detection of c-1-Np+···(N2)n corresponds to the first observation of c-1-Np+ complexes and enables thus direct comparison of both 1-Np+ rotamers. The shift of the NH vibration of Im+···N2(H) yielded the first experimental estimate for the PA of the imidazyl radical. It was also found that the most stable 1-Np+···Ar and Im+···Ar structures differ qualitatively from that of the corresponding neutral dimers (H-bound vs pi-bound), emphasizing the large impact of ionization on the interaction potential and the preferred recognition motif between acidic aromatic molecules (A) and nonpolar ligands. The IRPD spectra of 1-Np+···Ln and Im+···Ln yielded spectroscopic information about the CH, NH and OH stretch vibrations of bare 1-Np+ and Im+. The dependence of the shifts in the frequency of the OH and NH stretch vibrations allows for creating microsolvation models. The spectroscopic results obtained on size-selected 1-NpH+···Ln show that, in the output of the presently used ion source, three classes of 1-NpH+ isomers can be identified: oxonium ions (1-Np protonated at the O atom); carbenium ions obtained by protonation in the para and ortho positions with respect to the OH functional group; carbenium ions obtained by the addition of a proton to well-defined sites on the second naphthalene ring. The spectral identification of these three classes of protonation sites is supported by their different photofragmentation patterns. It was demonstrated that the spectroscopic monitoring of the microsolvation of ImH+ in Ar and N2 together with the QCCs paint a very detailed picture of the microsolvation process, evidencing clear differences between the microsolvation models as function of the PA of the ligands. Important differences have also been identified between the various binding sites, enabling the creation of a clear scale of priorities for occupation of the binding sites during microsolvation. The application of IRPD to the study of microhydrated ImH+ provided for the first time direct spectroscopic information on the properties of the N-H bonds of this biomolecular building block under controlled microhydration. It was demonstrated that, as protonation enhances the acidity of the NH groups, the ability for proton conductivity of ImH+ increases. A very important result is derived from the IRPD spectroscopy of C2H5+···L (L = Ar, N2, CO2, CH4) dimers. The equilibrium geometry of the C2H5+ has long been debated. Now, IRPD spectra were recorded over the range of the CH stretch fundamentals (covering possible sp3 and sp2 hybridization of C). Depending on the ligand species, the spectra are found to be dominated by the fingerprint of two largely different dimer geometries. Using the experimental C2H5+···Ar spectrum and the corresponding QCCs, the structure of the (weakly perturbed) C2H5+ was found to be the nonclassical one, with one proton straddling across the C=C bond of the H2C=CH2. On the other hand, ligands like N2 and CH4 are strongly influencing the geometry, as seen in the spectral signatures of the C2H5+···N2 and C2H5+···CH4, which correspond to the classical [H2CCH3]+. It was thus demonstrated that while the nonclassical C2H5+ is the global minimum on the PES of the free [C2,H5]+, the structure of the C2H5+ can be strongly influenced by the chemical properties of the environment.
A torsion free abelian group of finite rank is called almost completely decomposable if it has a completely decomposable subgroup of finite index. A p-local, p-reduced almost completely decomposable group of type (1,2) is briefly called a (1,2)-group. Almost completely decomposable groups can be represented by matrices over the ring Z/hZ, where h is the exponent of the regulator quotient. This particular choice of representation allows for a better investigation of the decomposability of the group. Arnold and Dugas showed in several of their works that (1,2)-groups with regulator quotient of exponent at least p^7 allow infinitely many isomorphism types of indecomposable groups. It is not known if the exponent 7 is minimal. In this dissertation, this problem is addressed.
The present work deals with the synthesis and the investigation of the photophysical properties of covalently constructed calix[4]arene–perylene bisimide dye arrays containing various PBI units. The obtained conjugates are characterized with respect towards their application in a new, zigzag-type architecture of artificial light-harvesting systems. For this purpose, orange (core-unsubstituted), red (6,7,11,12-tert-butylphenoxy-functionalized) and green (1,7-pyrrolidino-substituted) perylene bisimide building blocks have been attached to the calix[4]arene scaffold. First, the monochromophoric reference systems have been studied, and second, the photophysical properties of a comprehensive series of newly synthesized, multichromophoric calix[4]arene–perylene bisimide conjugates showing efficient energy transfer processes between the individual dye subunits have been investigated. Furthermore, a series of bichromophoric compounds containing identical chromophoric units has been obtained. Towards this goal, a variety of spectroscopic techniques such as UV/vis absorption, steady state and time-resolved fluorescence emission, and femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy as well as a spectrotemporal analysis of the obtained data has been applied. This work presents a new concept for an artificial light-harvesting system positioning the dye units by means of calix[4]arene spacers along a zigzag chain. The investigations start with the syntheses and optical properties of the monochromophoric building blocks and result in an elaborate study on the energy and electron transfer processes occurring after photoexcitation in a comprehensive series of multichromophoric calix[4]arene–perylene bisimide conjugates. Finally, the photophysical properties of a series of compounds containing each two identical PBI units are discussed.
Sumoylation of transcription factors modulate their activity (either upregulating or downregulating) by altering protein-protein interactions as well as subcelluar/subnuclear localization. The transcription factor family of NFAT (Nuclear Factor of Activated T cells) plays an important role in cytokine gene regulation in T cells. Due to alternative usage of two promoters (P1 & P2), two polyadenylation sites (pA1 and pA2) and alternative splicing events, NFATc1 is expressed in six isoforms which are NFATc1/alphaA, betaA, alphaB, betaB, alphaC and betaC, where alpha and beta refer to two different 1st exons and A, B, C to the differentially spliced and extended C-termini. The short isoforms of NFATc1 (NF-ATc1/A) contain a relatively short C terminus whereas, the longer isoforms, B and C, span the extra C-terminal peptides of 128 and 246 aa, respectively. To analyze the specific biological effects of NFATc1 isoform, a yeast two hybrid screening of a human spleen cDNA library with extra C-terminal peptide of NFATc1 as a bait, was performed. At the end of the assay, the proteins involved in the sumoylation pathway such as Ubc9, PIAS1 were detected with highest frequencies and subsequently were were able to demonstrate that NFATc1 is sumoylated. The extent of sumoylation is isoform specific. While NFATc1/A, harboring only one sumoylation site, shows very weak sumoylation, the two additional sites within NFATc1/C lead to efficient sumoylation. This modification directs NFATc1/C into SUMO-1 bodies, which in turn colocalize with PML-nbs. Furthermore, sumoylated NFATc1/C recruits the transcriptional co-repressors HDAC (both class I as well as class II HDACs) which results in a significant decrease of the level of histone acetylation on the IL-2 promoter, an important NFATc1 target gene. As a consequence of this, a decrease of IL-2 production was observed, while NFATc1/C, which can no longer be sumoylated due to mutating the target lysines, exhibited dramatic elevated transcriptional potential on the IL2 promoter. This supports our finding from IL-2 promoter-driven reporter gene assay, which shows downregulation of NFATc1/C transactivation upon sumoylation. Hence, sumoylation exerts a negative effect on NFATc1 transcriptioanl activity. Immunofluorescence studies showed SUMO modification to relocate NFATc1/C also into transcriptionally inactive heterochromatin regions, demonstrated by H3K9 m3 (tri-methylated histone lysine 9) colocalization studies. Interestingly, in the absence of sumoylation, NFATc1 was partially colocalized with transcriptional hotspots in the nucleus, which might contribute to the higher transcription potentiality of the non-sumoylated NFATc1. It is important to note that, the transcriptional activity of other NFATc1 target genes (IL-13, IFN-gamma etc.) was positively upregulated upon sumoylation of NFATc1, suggesting a non-universal effect of sumoylation on NFATc1/C function. In conclusion, sumoylation directs NFATc1 into nuclear bodies where it interacts with transcriptional co-repressors and relocalize itself with heterochromatin, leading to repression of NFATc1/C-mediated transcription. Most importantly, the effect of NFATc1/C sumoylation is promoter specific. Taken together, SUMO modification alters the function of NFATc1 from an activator to a site-specific transcriptional repressor. This study unraveled a novel regulatory mechanism, which controls isoform specific NFATc1 function.
In this work, the laser control of molecules was investigated theoretically. In doing so, emphasis was layed on entering vectorial properties and in particular the orientation in the laboratory frame. Therefore, the rotational degree of freedom had to be included in the quantum mechanical description. The coupled vibrational and rotational dynamics was examined, which is usually not done in coherent control theory. Local control theory was applied, where the field is determined from the dynamics of a system, which reacts with an instantaneous response to the perturbation and, in turn, determines the field again. Thus, the field is entangled with the quantum mechanical motion and the presented examples document, that this leads to an intuitive interpretation of the fields in terms of the underlying molecular dynamics. The limiting case of a classical treatment was shown to give similar results and hence, eases to understand the complicated structure of the control fields. In a different approach, the phase- and amplitude shaping of laser fields was systematically studied in the context of controlling population transfer in molecules.
Microtubules are a fascinating component of the cellular scaffold protein network, the cytoskeleton. These hollow tubular structures are assembled of laterally associated proto-filaments containing ab-tubulin heterodimers in a head to tail arrangement. Accordingly microtubules have a defined polarity, which sets the base for the polarity of the cell. The microtubule lattice can be arranged in two conformations: In the more abundant B-lattice conformation, where the protofilaments interact laterally through a- to a- and b- to b-tubulin contacts and in the less stable A-lattice conformation, where a-tubulin interacts laterally with b-tubulin. In cells the microtubules generally contain 13 protofilaments of which usually one pair interacts in the A-lattice conformation, forming the so-called lattice seam. Microtubule dynamics and interactions are strongly regulated by micro-tubule associate proteins (MAPs). Structural investigations on MAPs and microtubule associated motor proteins in complex with microtubules have become possible in combination with modern electron microscopy (EM) and image processing. We have used biochemistry and different advanced EM techniques to study the interaction between microtubules and the MAP Mal3p in vitro. Mal3p is the sole member of the end-binding protein 1 (EB1) protein family in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Previous in vivo studies have shown that Mal3p promotes microtubule growth. Our studies with high-resolution unidirectional shadowing EM revealed that Mal3p interacts with the microtubule lattice in a novel way, using binding sites on the microtubule that are different from those reported for other MAPs or motor proteins. Full-length Mal3p preferentially binds between two protofilaments on the microtubule lattice, leaving the rest of the lattice free. A case where Mal3p was found in two adjacent protofilament, revealed an A-lattice conformation on the microtubules, surprisingly indicating specific binding of Mal3p to the microtubule seam. With a lattice enhancer, in form of a b-tubulin binding kinesin motor domain, it was demonstrated that Mal3p stabilizes the seam which is thought to be the weakest part of a microtubule. Further, the presence of Mal3p during microtubule polymerization enhances the closure of protofilament sheets into a tubular organization. Cryo-EM and 3-D helical reconstruction on a monomeric microtubule binding domain of Mal3p, confirm the localization in between the protofilament and result in an accurate localization on the microtubule lattice. The results also indicate Mal3p’s capacity to influence the microtubule lattice conformation. Together, studies approached in vitro demonstrate that an EB1-family homolog not only interacts with the microtubule plus end, but also with the microtubule lattice. The structure of Mal3p interacting with microtubules reveals a new mechanism for microtubule stabilization and further insight on how plus end binding proteins are able promote microtubule growth. These findings further suggest that microtubules exhibit two distinct reaction platforms on their surface that can independently interact with selected MAPs or motors.
The main focus of this work was to get a deeper understanding of the relationship between the structure of sol-gel films, their densification and their macroscopic cracking. First of all titania was chosen as model system. Therefore a synthesis route starting from the preparation of long-term stable amorphous redissoluble precursor powders based on acetylacetone as chelate ligand was utilized. The solubility and stability of the powders in various solvents can be determined by chemical synthesis and technological parameters. When dissolved in a solvent mixture of ethanol and 1,5-pentanediol, thin films can be easily prepared by dip-coating technique. Thereby the quality of the titania films enormously depends on the calcinations temperature and the solvent mixture is used. In order to investigate the influence of different solvents and solvent mixtures on the microstructure and densification of the precursors, the coating solutions were stripped off (sol powder) and analyzed as function of annealing temperature. It was pointed out that a high densification rate caused by the addition of 1,5-pentanediol, results in dense microstructure with trapped residual carbon. These impurities can retard the phase transformation of anatase to rutile. The analysis of so-called “film powders” scraped off multiple dip-coated substrates provides valuable information on the effect of air moisture and unidirectional densification during drying and aging on the structure of thin films. The high surface-to-volume ratio and access to air moisture determine the chemical composition of the as-prepared film, which controls shrinkage, crystallization and defect structure of the coatings. Further it was shown, that drying as a thin film results in the formation of closed pores and much denser microstructure than the respective sol powder. Without the addition of 1,5-pentanediol all –OEt moieties undergo hydrolysis reactions, which causes the formation of a rigid network. The presence of 1,5-pentanediol retards this hydrolysis reactions and provides some network plasticity. Generally the microstructure of thin films is comparatively close to the microstructure of the film powders. The addition of 1,5-pentandiol prevents hydrolysis and condensation reactions as like in the film powders. However even at 700 °C, thin films never transform to rutile, which was attributed to the tensile stresses in thin films. In thin films and in film powders as well a comparable amount of closed pores are formed during annealing. Further it was shown that most of the thin sol-gel films investigated form a dense crust on their tops during annealing. This explains why crack free films exhibit only closed pores. However, when cracks appear during thin film shrinkage in the coating, this crust is burst, which generates open porosity. The defect density in the coatings was determined by an automated analysis of surface images. The crack formation and quantity can be directly referred to tensile stresses in the coatings, which arise from hydrolysis and condensation during thin film drying and aging. Therefore when 1,5-pentanediol is added to the sol, thin film cracking was avoided, because hydrolysis and condensation reactions are retarded, which preserves a higher network flexibility. Furthermore the crack formation was significantly influenced by the atmospheric humidity that was used during the coating process, which was explained by different drying and condensation rates. Under certain chemical starting conditions water soluble precursor powders can be also obtained. In general the observations made with the water based coating solutions are mostly in agreement with the former results based on ethanol based coating solutions. For example the high surface-to-volume ratio of film powders compared to sol powders also significantly enhances film drying and densification. The addition of 1,5-pentanediol also clearly contributes to their densification behavior and phase evolution. As seen before in the case of ethanol based coatings, 1,5-pentanediol enhances the stability towards hydrolysis and condensation reactions and preserves some network plasticity. Therefore coatings prepared without the addition of 1,5-pentanediol already form cracks during film drying and aging because of tensile stresses. Thus, the addition of 1,5-pentanediol results in a reduction/prevention of crack formation. Nevertheless some differences were observed, i.e. the critical single coating film thickness of ethanol based coatings is nearly twice that of water based coatings. This was explained by the different surface tensions of the basis solvents, which during thin film drying causes significantly higher capillary forces and tensile stresses in water based coatings. When acetylacetone is replaced by triethanolamine as chelating ligand for titanium also re-dissolvable precursor powders can be synthesized. The film powders combine a high hydrolytic stability of the precursor with sufficient intermediate network flexibility. The different type of organics changes the drying and densification behavior: i.e. in contrast to film powders obtained from acetylacetone based precursor powders the structure of triethanolamine based film powders is unaffected by the thin film drying process. This high hydrolytic stability and plasticity of this precursor allows the preparation of defect free coatings up to single film thickness of 300 nm. However triethanolamine based thin films present at intermediary annealing temperatures a distinctively different microstructure compared to acetylacetone based films. The general validity of the conclusions was proved on the basis of zirconia coatings that were also prepared by the use of re-dissolvable precursor powders. In principle all conclusions concerning the interconnection of precursor chemistry, film formation, densification and structure were transferable to the respective zirconia coatings. Differences mainly arise only from differential material properties i.e. bulk density. Finally, it has been pointed out that the findings obtained on the densification behavior of thinsol-gel films are also a valuable tool for improved explanations of other important scientific questions concerning sol-gel films, i.e. scratch resistance of sol-gel coatings, fiber -bridging and – degradation of sol-gel coated fibers.
The effective binding of anions like carboxylates and phosphates in aqueous solutions is of particular interest for various reasons. The natural archetypes of effective anion receptors are enzymes that contain often arginine as relevant amino acid in the binding pocket. For this reason, one class of artificial anion receptors that emerged more than two decades ago mimics the anion binding with the guanidinium group present in the amino acid side chain. In 1999, Schmuck and coworkers developed a new class of guanidinium-based oxo anion receptor that binds carboxylates even in aqueous media. The binding modes of the 2-(guanidiniocarbonyl)-1H-pyrroles are based on individually weak non-covalent interaction between artificial host and substrate like ion pairing and multiple hydrogen bonds. The zwitterionic derivative with substitution of a carboxylate group in position 5 of the pyrrole ring system shows a strong self-assembly to discrete dimers (dimer 1) with an estimated association constant of 170 M-1 even in water. In order to further improve the structure motif for an effective oxo anion binding it is therefore of great interest to quantify the different intermolecular interactions between two monomeric units of 1. Against this background several theoretical ab initio studies were conducted in order to elucidate the influences of intrinsic properties as well as solvent effects on the stability of self-assembled dimers. In chapter 4.1 the molecular interactions in dimer 1 were investigated by comparison to various “knock-out” analogues. In these analogues single hydrogen bonds were switched off by substitution of hydrogen donor atoms with either methylene groups or ether bridges. The calculations were done for vacuum and solvation, as represented by a conductor-like polarizable continuum. It could be shown that the application of a simple continuum solvent model fails to predict the absolute energies of the knock-out analogues in strongly polar solvents. However, the calculated trends can explain the relative stabilities. In chapter 4.2 the structural similarity of arginine with structure 1 was used in order to examine the dependence of self-assembly from the flexibility of the molecular structure. In chapter 4.2.1 new global minimum structures of the canonical and zwitterionic arginine in gas phase were found by means of exhaustive force field based conformational searches in conjunction with ab initio structure optimizations of the lowest energy conformers. Most of the newly identified minimum conformers of both the zwitterionic and canonical tautomer revealed geometrical arrangements with hitherto unreported stacked orientations of the terminal groups. Finally a novel global minimum structure was detected that is more than 8 kJ mol-1 lower in energy than the previously published conformers. The same strategy for finding minimum energy conformers of the arginine monomer has also been employed for the arginine dimer structures. While previous theoretical studies favoured directed hydrogen bonds the new global minimum structure MMFF1 is about 60 kJ mol-1 more stable and exhibits a stacked orientation of the guanidinium and carboxylate groups. The importance of rigidity on the dimer stability was proven by calculations of an artificially stiffened arginine dimer system. The high binding affinity dimer 1 results by about 50% from the rigidity of the monomers which prevents any intramolecular stabilization. In chapter 4.3 novel structure motifs with varying ring systems have been examined on a DFT level of theory in order to make proposals for an improved carboxylate binding motif. The direct dependency of the dimerization energy on an increasing dipole moment was demonstrated by various anellated ring structures. The influence of the delocalization in the monomer on the dimerization energy was examined by variation of the electronic structure of electronically decoupled biphenylenes. With the aid of various substituted 7-guanidinioindole-2-carboxylate derivatives we could show that the carbonyl function is mainly responsible for the advantageous preorganisation, whereas the effect on the acidity seems to be only of minor importance. In the last chapter cooperativity effects in supramolecular assemblies have been investigated. This was achieved by NMR shift calculations of adenosine-carboxylic acid complexes as model systems and comparison to experimental low-temperature NMR studies. We could demonstrate that only by applying vibrational averaged NMR shifts the experimental proton shifts obtained at very low temperatures in the hydrogen bond exchange regime could be reproduced.
The continuously increase in resistance of human pathogenic microorganisms to the known antibiotics leads to the necessity for searching new sources for production of new active antimicrobial compounds from different natural sources especially plants, since many plants have been found to be able to produce antimicrobial compounds as a defense phenomenon against invading microorganisms. The aim of this work is to screen cultures for production of antimicrobial activity against representative of human pathogenic microorganisms and selection the most active cell culture producing antimicrobial protein(s) which are active against these pathogenic microorganisms and also isolation ,purification of the active protein(s) and cloning of its/their genes. Ten different plant suspension cultures have been screened in presence of nine elicitors for their antimicrobial activity against five selected human pathogenic microorganisms, and it has been found that the heterotrophic cultures are more active against the tester isolates than the autotrophic ones. The intracellular fraction of the mixotrophic Arabidopsis thaliana culture elicited with salicylic acid showed the highest antimicrobial activity against the tester isolates. The presence of proteinous antimicrobial activity has been elucidated by testing the activity of ammonium sulphate precipitate against Candida maltosa. High speed centrifugation technique has been used for partial purification of the active protein. The proteinous nature of the isolated compound has been confirmed by using bioautography technique and its molecular weight could be estimated to be around 26KDa. The active protein has been purified using gel filtration, and using mass spectrometry technique, for microsequencing of the active protein, it has been found that the function of the protein is unknown and we have termed it as AtPDP1 according to Arabidopsis thaliana Plat-Domain Protein1, since it contains a plant stress domain termed PLAT domain. It has been found that a second protein from the same plant with high homology level to AtPDP1 with the same domain, we termed it as AtPDP2. Genes for AtPDP1 and AtPDP2 have been cloned in E. coli using PGEM-T easy vector. The expression of both genes have been tested using Digital Northern program, and it has been observed that both genes are induced by different pathogens, chemicals known to induce defense in plant cells and also different hormones. We tried to clone the gene for AtPDP1 in PBI121 binary vector under the control of an elicitor inducible promoter of a proteinase inhibitor gene, to test its function in plant by overexpression, but we did not succeeded. Also the work aims to cloning the different known thaumatin genes from Arabidopsis thaliana for future work which represented by testing their expression under different stimuli, since most thaumatins have antimicrobial activity and some of them are active against Candida spp..Thirteen genes of known thaumatins from Arabidopsis thaliana have been cloned in PGEM-Teasy vector in DH5-alpha cells. coli cells. The expression of the thirteen genes has been done using Digital Northern program and it has been found that different genes show different expressions under different stimuli and the expression of At1g75800 gene was the maximum under all stimuli. The minimum expression of genes was for At1g75050. The rest of thaumatin genes showed moderate expressions under different stimuli.
Despite its precise agreement with the experiment, the validity of the standard model (SM) of elementary particle physics is ensured only up to a scale of several hundred GeV so far. Even more, the inclusion of gravity into an unifying theory poses a problem which cannot be solved by ordinary quantum field theory (QFT). String theory, which is the most popular ansatz for a unified theory, predicts QFT on noncommutative space-time as a low energy limit. Nevertheless, independently of the motivation given by string theory, the nonlocality inherent to noncommutative QFT opens up the possibility for the inclusion of gravity. There are no theoretical predictions for the energy scale Lambda_NC at which noncommutative effects arise and it can be assumed to lie in the TeV range, which is the energy range probed by the next generation of colliders. Within this work we study the phenomenological consequences of a possible realization of QFT on noncommutative space-time relying on this assumption. The motivation for this thesis was given by the gap in the range of phenomenological studies of noncommutative effects in collider experiments, due to the absence in the literature of Large Hadron Collider (LHC) studies regarding noncommutative QFTs. In the first part we thus performed a phenomenological analysis of the hadronic process pp -> Z gamma -> l^+l^- gamma at the LHC and of electron-positron pair annihilation into a Z boson and a photon at the International Linear Collider (ILC). The noncommutative extension of the SM considered within this work relies on two building blocks: the Moyal-Weyl star-product of functions on ordinary space-time and the Seiberg-Witten maps. The latter relate the ordinary fields and parameters to their noncommutative counterparts such that ordinary gauge transformations induce noncommutative gauge transformations. This requirement is expressed by a set of inhomogeneous differential equations (the gauge equivalence equations) which are solved by the Seiberg-Witten maps order by order in the noncommutative parameter Theta. Thus, by means of the Moyal-Weyl star-product and the Seiberg-Witten maps a noncommutative extension of the SM as an effective theory as expansion in powers of Theta can be achieved, providing the framework of our phenomenological studies. A consequence of the noncommutativity of space-time is the violation of rotational invariance with respect to the beam axis. This effect shows up in the azimuthal dependence of cross sections, which is absent in the SM as well as in other models beyond the SM. Thus, the azimuthal dependence of the cross section is a typical signature of noncommutativity and can be used in order to discriminate it against other new physics effects. We have found this dependence to be best suited for deriving the sensitivity bounds on the noncommutative scale Lambda_NC. By studying pp -> Z gamma -> l^+l^- gamma to first order in the noncommutative parameter Theta, we show in the first part of this work that measurements at the LHC are sensitive to noncommutative effects only in certain cases, giving bounds on the noncommutative scale of Lambda_NC > 1.2 TeV. Our result improved the bounds present in the literature coming from past and present collider experiments by one order of magnitude. In order to explore the whole parameter range of the noncommutativity, ILC studies are required. By means of e^+e^- -> Z gamma -> l^+l^- gamma to first order in Theta we have shown that ILC measurements are complementary to LHC measurements of the noncommutative parameters. In addition, the bounds on Lambda_NC derived from the ILC are significantly higher and reach Lambda_NC > 6 TeV. The second part of this work arose from the necessity to enlarge the range of validity of our model towards higher energies. Thus, we expand the neutral current sector of the noncommutative SM to second order in $\theta$. We found that, against the general expectation, the theory must be enlarged by additional parameters. The new parameters enter the theory as ambiguities of the Seiberg-Witten maps. The latter are not uniquely determined and differ by homogeneous solutions of the gauge equivalence equations. The expectation was that the ambiguities correspond to field redefinitions and therefore should vanish in scattering matrix elements. However, we proved that this is not the case, and the ambiguities do affect physical observables. Our conjecture is, that every order in Theta will introduce new parameters to the theory. However, only the experiment can decide to what extent efforts with still higher orders in Theta are reasonable and will also give directions for the development of theoretical models of noncommutative QFTs.
Oxylipins are important biological active compounds that play essential roles in defense, growth, development, and reproduction of plants and animals. Oxylipins are formed either by enzymatic pathways or radical catalyzed reaction from polyunsaturated fatty acids. Products of oxidation of arachidonic acid (C20:4) in animals by enzymatic and non-enzymatic pathways are prostaglandins and isoprostanes, respectively. In plants, radical catalyzed reaction of -linolenic acid (C18:3) forms phytoprostanes and enzymatic oxidation of this fatty acid produces OPDA and jasmonic acid. Like plants, cyanobacterial membranes contain a high ratio of polyunsaturated fatty acid, about 25% of total fatty acids. Oxylipin biosynthesis and function was studied in two model cyanobacteria, Anabaena PCC 7120 and Synechocystis PCC 6803, for the first time: 1. The filamentous cyanobaterium Anabaena PCC 7120 can naturally produce phytoprostanes type I and II as well as hydroxy fatty acids like in plants but lacks the enzymatic capacity to form jasmonates (12-oxo-phytodienoic acid and jasmonic acid) and prostaglandins. Data obtained provide the first evidence for the occurence of phytoprostanes in cyanobacteria as well as in the baterial kingdom. 2. By GC-MS analysis, the E1- and F1-phytoprostanes in Anabaena PCC 7120 were detected both in free and esterified form. Their levels are comparable with those in plants, in the range of ng/g DW. In one week old cultures, there was no evidence of PPF1 in the medium but its level accumulated up to 142 ng/l in six weeks old cultures. In contrast, PPE1 was stable over time, about 20 ng/g DW. Free cellular PPE1 was found about 4 times higher than that of PPF1, 80.5  23.6 and 24.1  10.9 ng/g DW, respectively. However, there was no significant difference in the total cellular levels of PPF1 and PPE1, ranging from 150 to about 200 ng/g DW. 3. Phytoprostanes are inducible in Anabaena. In the combination of oxidative stress (200 µM H2O2 or 10 µM CuSO4) with high light intensity (330 µE.m-2.s-1) for 8 h, levels of total cellular PPE1 and PPF1 were increased about 2 to 4 times. Interestingly, unlike in higher plants, application of oxidative stress or high light intensity alone showed no phytoprostaneous induction in this cyanobacterium. 4. When Anabaena cells were treated with phytoprostanes, Anabaena cells became remarkably resistant against subsequently applied – otherwise lethal – oxidative stress. All phytoprostanes displayed a high protective effect except for PPE1. The highest protection level was contributed by a mixture of PPA1 type I and II. After preincubation of Anabena cells with 100 µM PPA1–type I/II for 16 h followed by application of 1 mM H2O2 or 50 µM CuSO4 for 5 h, A1-phytoprostane pre-treatment protected 84.2% and 77.5% of the cells from cell death, respectively. Without oxylipins pre-treatment, about 98% of the cells were dead. Surprisingly, preincubation of Anabaena with other oxylipins derived from enzymatic pathway in plants and animals showed also an effect, however, the protection effect was low and ranged from 10 to 30%. In contrast, phytoprostanes did not protect Pseudomonas syringae and Escherichia coli from the toxicity of hydrogen peroxide. However, these bacteria do not synthesize polyunsaturated fatty acids and are therefore devoid of and not exposed to endogenously formed oxidized lipids. 5. Exogenous application of 100 µM PPF1 or 1.5 mM H2O2 for 90 min did not activate the expression of isiA in Anabaena. Oxylipins also displayed no effect on shinorine and tocopherol levels in Anabaena. However, application of 100 µM PPF1 for 6 h altered the protein expression in Anabaena. Most PPF1-modulated proteins are down-regulated and related to photosynthesis. Since oxidative stress only in combination with high light intensity increased lipid peroxidation, down-regulation of photosynthesis after recognition of oxidised lipids (phytoprostanes) may be a survival strategy of Anabaena to avoid damage by peroxidized lipids. 6. Dead plants may be the main source of (exogenous) phytoprostanes in the natural environment of Anabaena. Dry hay releases PPE1 and PPF1 (11 µg/g DW) into an aqueous environment. Anabaena is the typical cyanobacterium in paddy rice fields. After harvesting, most of uneconomical parts of rice plants are abundant on the field, which may release phytoprostanes that in turn might have an impact on cyanobacteria in the rice ecosystems. However, field research is needed to clarify this suspection. 7. A new class of oxylipins, phytoprostanes type III and IV, was identified and quantified in vitro. The two main phytoprostanes, PPE1 and PPF1 (type III and IV), can be obtained by autoxidation of -linolenic acid or Borage oil (containing 25% esterified -linolenic acid). After 12 days of autoxidation and subsequent hydrolysis, 1 g of Borage oil yielded 112.71 ± 1.93 µg of PPF1 and 3.80 ± 0.14 mg of PPE1. PPB1 and PPA1 (type III and IV) were prepared by isomerization and dehydration of PPE1 (type III and IV). The overall yield of PPB1 was 1.71 ± 0.04 mg/g oil (type III) and 2.09 ± 0.12 mg/g oil (type IV). Those of PPA1 were 8.38 ± 0.35 µg/g and 10.18 ± 0.30 µg/oil, respectively. 8. A rapid HPLC-MS/MS method for phytoprostane and phytohormone analysis has been developed. This method was applied to quantify free and esterified E1- and F1-phytoprostanes type III and IV in Synechocystis PCC 6803. The in vivo phytoprostanes type III and IV are present both in free and esterified form. The total cellular level of PPE1 type III and IV in Synechocystis is at least 2 times higher than that of PPF1. Unlike Anabaena, PPE1 and PPF1 were detectable in the medium of one week old Synechocystis cultures. Free levels of PPF1 in the medium (231.8 ± 36.2 ng/l) and in the cells (164.9 ± 15.2 ng/g DW) are lower than those of PPE1 (1003.3 ± 365.2 ng/l and 2331.0 ± 87.7 ng/g DW).
With ageing, the loss of bone mass correlates with the expansion of adipose tissue in human bone marrow thus facilitating bone-related diseases like osteopenia and osteoporosis. The molecular mechanisms underlying these events are still largely unknown. Reduced osteogenesis and concurrently enhanced adipogenesis might not only occur due to the impairment of conventional osteogenic differentiation originating from mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). Additionally, transdifferentiation of (pre-)osteoblasts into adipocytes could contribute to the fatty conversion. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to prove the existence of transdifferentiation between the adipogenic and osteogenic lineage and to elucidate molecular mechanisms underlying this phenomenon. At first, a cell culture system of primary human MSCs was established that allowed for differentiation into the adipogenic and osteogenic lineage and proved that the MSC-derived adipocytes and pre-osteoblasts were capable of transdifferentiation (reprogramming) from one into the other lineage. Thereby, lineage-specific markers were completely reversed after reprogramming of pre-osteoblasts into adipocytes. The osteogenic transdifferentiation of adipocytes was slightly less efficient since osteogenic markers were present but the adipogenic ones partly persisted. Hence, plasticity also reached into the differentiation pathways of both lineages and the better performance of adipogenic reprogramming further supported the assumption of its occurrence in vivo. The subsequent examination of gene expression changes by microarray analyses that compared transdifferentiated cells with conventionally differentiated ones revealed high numbers of reproducibly regulated genes shortly after initiation of adipogenic and osteogenic reprogramming. Thereof, many genes were correlated with metabolism, transcription, and signal transduction as FGF, IGF, and Wnt signalling, but only few of the established adipogenesis- and none of the osteogenesis-associated marker genes were detected within 24 h after initiation of transdifferentiation. To find possible key control factors of transdifferentiation amongst the huge amount of regulated genes, a novel bioinformatic scoring scheme was developed that ranked genes due to their potential relevance for reprogramming. Besides the reproducibility and level of their regulation, also the possible reciprocity between the adipogenic and osteogenic transdifferentiation pathway was taken into account. Fibroblast growth factor 1 (FGF1) that ranked as one of the leading candidates to govern reprogramming was proven to inhibit adipogenic differentiation as well as adipogenic transdifferentiation in our cell culture system. Further examination of the FGF signalling pathway and other highly ranked genes could help to better understand the age-related fatty degeneration at the molecular level and therefore provide target molecules for therapeutic modulation of the plasticity of both lineages in order to inhibit adipogenic degeneration and to enhance osteogenesis.
The Nuclear Factors of Activated T cells (NFATs) are critical transcription factors that direct gene expression in immune and non-immune cells. Interaction of T cells with Ag-presenting cells results in the clustering of T-cell antigen receptor (TCR), co-receptors and integrins. Subsequent signal transduction resulting in NFAT activation leads to cytokine gene expression. Among the NFATs expressed in T cells, NFATc1 shows a unique induction property, which is essential for T cell differentiation and activation. It was revealed before that 3 major isoforms of NFATc1 are generated in activated T cells – the inducible short NFATc1/A, and the longer isoforms NFATc1/B and C. However, due to alternative splicing events and the existence of two different promoters and two alternative polyadenylation, we show here that 6 isoforms are synthesized in T cells which differ in their N-terminal and C-terminal peptides. In these experiments, we have identified these 6 isoforms by semi-quantitative long distance RT-PCR in several T cells subsets, and the inducible properties of 6 isoforms were investigated in those cells. The short NFATc1/A which is under control of the P1 promoter and the proximal pA1 polyadenylation site was the most prominent and inducible isoform in T effector cells. The transcription of the longer NFATc1/B and C isoforms is constitutive and even reduced in activated T lymphocytes. In addition to NFATc1 autoregulation, we tried to understand the NFATc1 gene regulation under the control of PKC pathways by microarray analysis. Compared to treatment of T cells with ionomycin alone (which enhances Ca++ flux), treatment of cells with the phorbolester TPA (leading to PKC activation) enhanced the induction of NFATc1. Microarray analysis revealed that PKC activation increased the transcription of NF-B1, Fos and JunB, which are important transcription factors binding to the regulatory regions of the NFATc1 gene. Besides the promoting effect of these transcription factors, we provided evidence that p53 and its targeting gene, Gadd45, exerted a negative effect on NFATc1 gene transcription. Summarizing all these results, we drew novel conclusions on NFATc1 expression, which provide a more detailed view on the regulatory mechanisms of NFATc1 transcription. Considering the high transcription and strong expression of NFATc1 in various human lymphomas, we propose that similar to NF-B, NFATc1/A plays a pivotal role in lymphomagenesis.
Cardiovascular disease is the major cause of mortality morbidity in both men and women in industrialized countries. The incidence of cardiovascular diseases in pre-menopausal women is lower compared to age-matched men but the risk of heart diseases increases dramatically after the onset of menopause.Therefore, it has been postulated that female sex hormones play an important role in cardiovascular health in pre-menopausal women. In contrast to clinical data, which failed to show positive estrogen effects on cardiovascular system of post- menopausal women, extensive experimental studies indicated cardioprotective effects of estrogens in laboratory animals. The majority of experimental estrogen substitution studies were performed with young individuals, thus the effects of ageing remain neglected and are poorly understood. The present project is the first attempt to study the cardiac effects of each estrogen receptor isoform (estrogen receptor alpha (ERa) and estrogen receptor beta (ERb)) in adult (“menopausal”) and senescent (“post- menopausal”) hypertensive rats. The female senescent spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) served as a model system for age- associated hypertension in females whereas young individuals were used for control experiments. Young and senescent SHR rats were treated with 17b- estradiol as well as new estrogen receptor isoform selective ligands 16a-LE2 (ERa agonist) and 8b-VE2 (ERb agonist). The results showed different functions of both estrogen receptor isoforms in cardiovascular system: ERa attenuated cardiac hypertrophy but not hypertension whereas ERb could significantly reduce both, blood pressure and cardiac hypertrophy. Surprisingly, both agonists and 17b- estradiol were effective in young animals but not in senescent SHR rats. These findings match with the clinical data and could be related to altered estrogen metabolism in senescent rats, since estrogen plasma levels did not increase to measurable extent in senescent animals receiving estrogen. Estrogen is metabolized by several 17b- hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase isoforms. In the current study, 17b- hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 10 (17b- HSD10) was identified as a novel protein- protein interaction partner of estrogen receptor alpha ligand binding domain (ERaLBD) in human heart. Cellular localization experiments of ERa in the cardiac myocytes showed nuclear and cytosolic localization pattern which overlapped partially with that of cardiac mitochondria. 17b-HSD10 is localized only in mitochondria. Direct interaction of both proteins was confirmed by pull- down experiments where 17b-HSD10 could be co-precipitated with ERa. Interestingly, protein interaction could be detected only under estrogen- free conditions whereas the presence of estrogen in the system blocked this interaction. Enzymatic assay which was developed in our laboratory, helped to define functional relevance of this interaction. The data obtained from enzymatic assays and protein- protein interaction studies strongly suggest that estrogen receptor could play an important role in the control of intracellular (or mitochondrial) estogen metabolism. The second potential ERa interaction partner in the heart- bladder cancer associated protein 10 (BLCAP10) - was initially identified in non- invasive bladder cancer cell lines. BLCAP10 protein expression in the heart as well as its localization pattern in cardiac myocytes is shown in the last part of the theses. Due to perinuclear localization similarity with ERb, we conclude that BLCAP10 could interact with ERb rather than with ERa. Poor BLCAP10 protein overexpression and toxicity in both, bacteria and eukaryotic cells, suggested that BLCAP10 could be involved in cell- cycle and/ or protein expression control. In summary, the results showed that isoform selective activation of estrogen receptors exert divergent effects in the cardiovascular system both by upregulation of aMHC expression or by lowering blood pressure. Hormones were effective in young animals but had only minor effects in senescent rats. The new ERa protein- protein interaction partners identified during the project provide new information about estrogen receptor function in the heart and its possible role in the regulation of estrogen homeostasis.