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Background
Fermented wheat germ extract (FWGE) sold under the trade name Avemar exhibits anticancer activity in vitro and in vivo. Its mechanisms of action are divided into antiproliferative and antimetabolic effects. Its influcence on cancer cell metabolism needs further investigation. One objective of this study, therefore, was to further elucidate the antimetabolic action of FWGE. The anticancer compound 2,6-dimethoxy-1,4-benzoquinone (DMBQ) is the major bioactive compound in FWGE and is probably responsible for its anticancer activity. The second objective of this study was to compare the antiproliferative properties in vitro of FWGE and the DMBQ compound.
Methods
The IC\(_{50}\) values of FWGE were determined for nine human cancer cell lines after 24 h of culture. The DMBQ compound was used at a concentration of 24 μmol/l, which is equal to the molar concentration of DMBQ in FWGE. Cell viability, cell cycle, cellular redox state, glucose consumption, lactic acid production, cellular ATP levels, and the NADH/NAD\(^+\) ratio were measured.
Results
The mean IC\(_{50}\) value of FWGE for the nine human cancer cell lines tested was 10 mg/ml. Both FWGE (10 mg/ml) and the DMBQ compound (24 μmol/l) induced massive cell damage within 24 h after starting treatment, with changes in the cellular redox state secondary to formation of intracellular reactive oxygen species. Unlike the DMBQ compound, which was only cytotoxic, FWGE exhibited cytostatic and growth delay effects in addition to cytotoxicity. Both cytostatic and growth delay effects were linked to impaired glucose utilization which influenced the cell cycle, cellular ATP levels, and the NADH/NAD\(^+\) ratio. The growth delay effect in response to FWGE treatment led to induction of autophagy.
Conclusions
FWGE and the DMBQ compound both induced oxidative stress-promoted cytotoxicity. In addition, FWGE exhibited cytostatic and growth delay effects associated with impaired glucose utilization which led to autophagy, a possible previously unknown mechanism behind the influence of FWGE on cancer cell metabolism.
Draft genome of the \(Arabidopsis\) \(thaliana\) phyllosphere bacterium, \(Williamsia\) sp. ARP1
(2016)
The Gram-positive actinomycete \(Williamsia\) sp. ARP1 was originally isolated from the \(Arabidopsis\) \(thaliana\) phyllosphere. Here we describe the general physiological features of this microorganism together with the draft genome sequence and annotation. The 4,745,080 bp long genome contains 4434 protein-coding genes and 70 RNA genes. To our knowledge, this is only the second reported genome from the genus \(Williamsia\) and the first sequenced strain from the phyllosphere. The presented genomic information is interpreted in the context of an adaptation to the phyllosphere habitat.
Functional and structural characterization of axonal opioid receptors as targets for analgesia
(2016)
Background
Opioids are the gold standard for the treatment of acute pain despite serious side effects in the central and enteric nervous system. µ-opioid receptors (MOPs) are expressed and functional at the terminals of sensory axons, when activated by exogenous or endogenous ligands. However, the presence and function of MOP along nociceptive axons remains controversial particularly in naïve animals. Here, we characterized axonal MOPs by immunofluorescence, ultrastructural, and functional analyses. Furthermore, we evaluated hypertonic saline as a possible enhancer of opioid receptor function.
Results
Comparative immunolabeling showed that, among several tested antibodies, which all provided specific MOP detection in the rat central nervous system (CNS), only one monoclonal MOP-antibody yielded specificity and reproducibility for MOP detection in the rat peripheral nervous system including the sciatic nerve. Double immunolabeling documented that MOP immunoreactivity was confined to calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) positive fibers and fiber bundles. Almost identical labeling and double labeling patterns were found using mcherry-immunolabeling on sciatic nerves of mice producing a MOP-mcherry fusion protein (MOP-mcherry knock-in mice). Preembedding immunogold electron microscopy on MOP-mcherry knock-in sciatic nerves indicated presence of MOP in cytoplasm and at membranes of unmyelinated axons. Application of [D-Ala\(^2\), N-MePhe\(^4\), Gly-ol]-enkephalin (DAMGO) or fentanyl dose-dependently inhibited depolarization-induced CGRP release from rat sciatic nerve axons ex vivo, which was blocked by naloxone. When the lipophilic opioid fentanyl was applied perisciatically in naïve Wistar rats, mechanical nociceptive thresholds increased. Subthreshold doses of fentanyl or the hydrophilic opioid DAMGO were only effective if injected together with hypertonic saline. In vitro, using β-arrestin-2/MOP double-transfected human embryonic kidney cells, DAMGO as well as fentanyl lead to a recruitment of β-arrestin-2 to the membrane followed by a β-arrestin-2 reappearance in the cytosol and MOP internalization. Pretreatment with hypertonic saline prevented MOP internalization.
Conclusion
MOPs are present and functional in the axonal membrane from naïve animals. Hypertonic saline acutely decreases ligand-induced internalization of MOP and thereby might improve MOP function. Further studies should explore potential clinical applications of opioids together with enhancers for regional analgesia.
Background
Enhanced macromolecule biosynthesis is integral to growth and proliferation of cancer cells. Lipid biosynthesis has been predicted to be an essential process in cancer cells. However, it is unclear which enzymes within this pathway offer the best selectivity for cancer cells and could be suitable therapeutic targets.
Results
Using functional genomics, we identified stearoyl-CoA desaturase (SCD), an enzyme that controls synthesis of unsaturated fatty acids, as essential in breast and prostate cancer cells. SCD inhibition altered cellular lipid composition and impeded cell viability in the absence of exogenous lipids. SCD inhibition also altered cardiolipin composition, leading to the release of cytochrome C and induction of apoptosis. Furthermore, SCD was required for the generation of poly-unsaturated lipids in cancer cells grown in spheroid cultures, which resemble those found in tumour tissue. We also found that SCD mRNA and protein expression is elevated in human breast cancers and predicts poor survival in high-grade tumours. Finally, silencing of SCD in prostate orthografts efficiently blocked tumour growth and significantly increased animal survival.
Conclusions
Our data implicate lipid desaturation as an essential process for cancer cell survival and suggest that targeting SCD could efficiently limit tumour expansion, especially under the metabolically compromised conditions of the tumour microenvironment.
Background
Medulloblastoma is the most common malignant brain tumor in children and can be divided in different molecular subgroups. Patients whose tumor is classified as a Group 3 tumor have a dismal prognosis. However only very few tumor models are available for this subgroup.
Methods
We established a robust orthotopic xenograft model with a cell line derived from the malignant pleural effusions of a child suffering from a Group 3 medulloblastoma.
Results
Besides classical characteristics of this tumor subgroup, the cells display cancer stem cell characteristics including neurosphere formation, multilineage differentiation, CD133/CD15 expression, high ALDH-activity and high tumorigenicity in immunocompromised mice with xenografts exactly recapitulating the original tumor architecture.
Conclusions
This model using unmanipulated, human medulloblastoma cells will enable translational research, specifically focused on Group 3 medulloblastoma.
First-order proximal methods that solve linear and bilinear elliptic optimal control problems with a sparsity cost functional are discussed. In particular, fast convergence of these methods is proved. For benchmarking purposes, inexact proximal schemes are compared to an inexact semismooth Newton method. Results of numerical experiments are presented to demonstrate the computational effectiveness of proximal schemes applied to infinite-dimensional elliptic optimal control problems and to validate the theoretical estimates.
In the present work, a simulation system is proposed that can be used as an educational tool by physicians in training basic skills of minimally invasive vascular interventions. In order to accomplish this objective, initially the physical model of the wire proposed by Konings has been improved. As a result, a simpler and more stable method was obtained to calculate the equilibrium configuration of the wire. In addition, a geometrical method is developed to perform relaxations. It is particularly useful when the wire is hindered in the physical method because of the boundary conditions. Then a recipe is given to merge the physical and the geometrical methods, resulting in efficient relaxations. Moreover, tests have shown that the shape of the virtual wire agrees with the experiment. The proposed algorithm allows real-time executions, and furthermore, the hardware to assemble the simulator has a low cost.
Comparative transcriptomics and post-transcriptional regulation in \(Campylobacter\) \(jejuni\)
(2016)
The transcriptome is defined as the set of all RNA molecules transcribed in a cell. These include protein-coding messenger RNAs (mRNAs) as well as non-coding RNAs, such as ribosomal RNAs (rRNAs), transfer RNAs (tRNAs), and small non-coding RNAs (sRNAs). sRNAs are known to play an important role in regulating gene expression and virulence in pathogens. In this thesis, the transcriptome of the food-borne pathogen Campylobacter jejuni was characterized at single nucleotide resolution by use of next-generation sequencing approaches. The first genome of a C. jejuni strain was published in the year 2000. However, its transcriptome remained uncharacterized at large.
C. jejuni can survive in a variety of ecological niches and hosts. However, how strain-specific transcriptional changes contribute to such adaptation is not known. In this study, the global transcriptome maps of four closely related C. jejuni strains were defined using a differential RNA-seq (dRNA-seq) approach. This analysis also included a novel automated method to annotate the transcriptional start sites (TSS) at a genome-wide scale. Next, the transcriptomes of four strains were simultaneously mapped and compared by the use of a common coordinate system derived from whole-genome alignment, termed as SuperGenome. This approach helped to refine the promoter maps by comparison of TSS within strains. Most of the TSS were found to be conserved among all four strains, but some single-nucleotide-polymorphisms (SNPs) around promoter regions led to strain-specific transcriptional output. Most of these SNPs altered transcription only slightly, but some others led to a complete abrogation of transcription leading to differential molecular phenotypes. These in turn might help the strains to adapt to their specific host or microniche. The transcriptome also unveiled a plethora of sRNAs, some of which were conserved among the four strains while others were strain specific. Furthermore, a Cas9-dependent minimal type-II CRISPR-Cas system with only three Cas genes and multiple promoters to drive the transcription of the CRISPR locus was also characterized in C. jejuni using the dRNA-seq dataset.
Apart from sRNAs, the role of global RNA binding proteins (RBPs) is also unclear in C. jejuni. Aided by the global transcriptome data, the role of RBPs in post-transcriptional regulation of C. jejuni was studied at a global scale. Two of the most widely studied RNA binding proteins in bacteria are Hfq and CsrA. The RNA interactome of the translational regulator CsrA was defined using another global deep-sequencing technique that combines co-immunoprecipitation (coIP) with RNA sequencing (RIP-seq). Using this interactome dataset, the direct targets of this widespread global post-transcriptional regulator were defined, revealing a significant enrichment for mRNAs encoding genes involved in flagella biosynthesis. Unlike Gammaproteobacteria, where sRNAs such as CsrB/C, antagonize CsrA activity, no sRNAs were enriched in the CsrA-coIP in C. jejuni, indicating absence of any sRNA antagonists and novel modes of CsrA activity regulation. Instead, the CsrA regulatory pathway revealed flaA mRNA, encoding the major flagellin, as a dual-function mRNA. flaA mRNA was the main target of CsrA but it also served to antagonize CsrA activity along with the protein antagonist FliW previously identified in the Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis. Furthermore, this regulatory mRNA was also shown in this thesis to localize to the poles of elongating C. jejuni cells in a translation-dependent manner. It was also shown that this localization is dependent on the CsrA-FliW regulon, which controls the translation of flaA mRNA. The role and mechanism of flaA mRNA localization or mRNA localization in general is not yet clear in bacteria when compared to their eukaryotic counterparts.
Overall, this study provides first insights into riboregulation of the bacterial pathogen C. jejuni. The work presented in this thesis unveils several novel modes of riboregulation in C. jejuni, which could be applicable more generally. Moreover, this study also lays out several unsolved intriguing questions, which may pave the way for interesting studies to come.
microRNAs in chronic pain
(2016)
Chronic pain is a common problem in clinical practice, not well understood clinically, and frequently tough to satisfactorily diagnose. Because the pathophysiology is so complex, finding effective treatments for people with chronic pain has been overall less than successful and typically reduced to an unsatisfactory trial-and-error process, all of which translates into a significant burden to society. Knowledge of the mechanisms underlying the development of chronic pain, and moreover why some patients experience pain and others not, may aid in developing specific treatment regimens. Although nerve injuries are major contributors to pain chronification, they cannot explain the entire phenomenon. Considerable research has underscored the importance of the immune system for the development and maintenance of chronic pain, albeit the exact factors regulating inflammatory reactions remain unclear. Understanding the putative molecular and cellular regulator switches of inflammatory reactions will open novel opportunities for immune modulatory analgesics with putatively higher specificity and less adverse effects. It has become clear that small, non- coding RNA molecules known as microRNAs are in fact potent regulators of many thousands of genes and possibly cross-communicate between cellular pathways in multiple systems acting as so-called “master-switches”. Aberrant expression of miRNAs is now implicated in numerous disorders, including nerve injuries as well as in inflammatory processes. Moreover, compelling evidence supports the idea that miRNAs also regulate pain, and in analogy to the oncology field aid in the differential diagnosis of disease subtypes. In fact, first reports describing characteristic miRNA expression profiles in blood or cerebrospinal fluid of patients with distinct pain conditions are starting to emerge, however evidence linking specific miRNA expression profiles to specific pain disorders is still insufficient. The present thesis aimed at first, identifying specific miRNA signatures in two distinct chronic pain conditions, namely peripheral neuropathies of different etiologies and fibromyalgia syndrome. Second, it aimed at identifying miRNA profiles to better understand potential factors that differentiate painful from painless neuropathies and third, study the mechanistic role of miRNAs in the pathophysiology of pain, to pave the way for new druggable targets.
Three studies were conducted in order to identify miRNA expression signatures that are characteristic for the given chronic pain disorder. The first study measured expression of miR-21, miR-146a and miR-155 in white blood cells, skin and nerve biopsies of patients with peripheral neuropathies. It shows that peripheral neuropathies of different etiologies are associated with increased peripheral miR-21 and miR-146a, but decreased miR-155 expression. More importantly, it was shown that painful neuropathies have increased sural nerve miR-21 and miR-155 expression, but reduced miR-146a and miR-155 expression in distal skin of painful neuropathies. These results point towards the potential use of miRNAs profiles to stratify painful neuropathies. The seconds study extends these findings and first analyzed the role of miR-132-3p in patients and subsequently in an animal model of neuropathic pain. Interestingly, miR-132-3p was upregulated in white blood cells and sural nerve biopsies of patients with painful neuropathies and in animals after spared nerve injury. Pharmacologically modulating the expression of miR-132-3p dose-dependently reversed pain behavior and pain aversion, indicating the pro-nociceptive effect of miR-132-3p in chronic pain. This study thus demonstrates the potential analgesic impact by modulating miRNA expression. Fibromyalgia is associated with chronic widespread pain and, at least in a subgroup, impairment in small nerve fiber morphology and function. Interestingly, the disease probably comprises subgroups with different underlying pathomechanisms. In accordance with this notion, the third study shows that fibromyalgia is associated with both aberrant white blood cell and cutaneous miRNA expression. Being the first of its kind, this study identified miR-let-7d and its downstream target IGF-1R as potential culprit for impaired small nerve fiber homeostasis in a subset of patients with decreased intra-epidermal nerve fiber density. The work presented in this thesis is a substantial contribution towards the goal of better characterizing chronic pain based on miRNA expression signatures and thus pave the way for new druggable targets.
This paper examines the relevance of tax havens for China by determining which tax havens are important for China and to what extent. Furthermore, the motives for Chinese tax haven activity are analysed and compared to the motives of Western companies that primarily use tax havens for the purpose of tax arbitrage. An analysis of two listed Chinese companies, a private and a state-owned entity (SOE), exemplifies how Chinese businesses incorporate tax havens into their business structure and discusses differences between the motives of private and state-owned companies. The magnitude of tax havens found in the business structures emphasise the importance of tax havens for Chinese companies, irrespective of whether the company is an SOE or private, or conducts its business in China or internationally. While the reasons why the state-influenced company incorporated tax havens into their structure seemed to be related to legitimate business motives, the motives behind the structure of the private company seemed questionable. The assessment furthermore confirms that China’s weak institutional framework and restricting business environment is a major push factor and gives companies plenty of incentive to go offshore.
Molecular Beam Epitaxy and Characterization of Bi-Based V\(_2\)VI\(_3\) Topological Insulators
(2016)
The present thesis is addressed to the growth and characterization of Bi-based V2VI3 topological insulators (TIs). The TIs were grown by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) on differently passivated Si(111) substrates, as well as InP(111) substrates. This allows the study of the influence of the substrate on the structural and electrical properties of the TIs.
The Bi2Se3 layers show a change of mosaicity-tilt and -twist for growth on the differently prepared Si(111) substrates, as well as a significant increase of crystalline quality for growth on the lateral nearly lattice matched InP(111). The rocking curve FWHMs observed for thick layers grown on InP are comparable to these of common zincblende layers, which are close to the resolution limit of standard high resolution X-ray diffraction (HRXRD) setups. The unexpected high structural crystalline quality achieved in this material system is remarkable due to the presence of weak van der Waals bonds between every block of five atomic layers, i.e. a quintuple layer (QL), in growth direction.
In addition to the mosaicity also twin domains, present in films of the V2VI3 material system, are studied. The twin defects are observed in Bi2Se3 layers grown on Si(111) and lattice matched InP(111) suggesting that the two dimensional surface lattice of the substrates can not determine the stacking order ABCABC... or ACBACB... in locally separated growth seeds. Therefore the growth on misoriented and rough InP(111) is analyzed.
The rough InP(111) with its facets within a hollow exceeding the height of a QL is able to provide its stacking information to the five atomic layers within a QL. By varying the roughness of the InP substrate surface, due to thermal annealing, the influence on the twinning within the layer is confirmed resulting in a complete suppression of twin domains on rough InP(111).
Focusing on the electrical properties of the Bi2Se3 films, the increased structural quality for films grown on lattice matched flat InP(111)B results in a marginal reduction of carrier density by about 10% compared to the layers grown on H-passivated Si(111), whereas the suppression of twin domains for growth on rough InP(111)B resulted in a reduction of carrier density by an order of magnitude. This implies, that the twin domains are a main crystal defect responsible for the high carrier density in the presented Bi2Se3 thin films.
Besides the binary Bi2Se3 also alloys with Sb and Te are fabricated to examine the influence of the compound specific point defects on the carrier density. Therefore growth series of the ternary materials Bi2Te(3-y)Se(y), Bi(2-x)Sb(x)Se3, and Bi(2-x)Sb(x)Te3, as well as the quaternary Bi(2-x)Sb(x)Te(3-y)Se(y) are studied.
To further reduce the carrier density of twin free Bi2Se3 layers grown on InP(111)B:Fe a series of Bi(2-x)Sb(x)Se3 alloys were grown under comparable growth conditions. This results in a reduction of the carrier density with a minimum in the composition range of about x=0.9-1.0.
The Bi(2-x)Sb(x)Te3 alloys exhibit a pn-transition, due to the dominating n-type and p-type point defects in its binary compounds, which is determined to reduce the bulk carrier density enabling the study the TI surface states. This pn-transition plays a significant role in realizing predicted applications and exotic effects, such as the quantum anomalous Hall effect.
The magnetic doping of topological insulators with transition metals is studied by incorporating Cr and V in the alloy Bi(2-x)Sb(x)Te3 by codeposition. The preferential incorporation of Cr on group-V sites is confirmed by EDX and XRD, whereas the incorporation of Cr reduces the crystalline quality of the layer. Magnetotransport measurements of the Cr-doped TIs display an anomalous Hall effect confirming the realization of a magnetic TI thin film. The quantum anomalous Hall effect is observed in V-doped Bi(2-x)Sb(x)Te3, where the V-doping results in higher Curie temperatures, as well as higher coercive fields compared to the Cr-doping of the TIs.
Moreover the present thesis contributes to the understanding of the role of the substrate concerning the crystalline quality of van der Waals bonded layers, such as the V2VI3 TIs, MoS2 and WoTe2. Furthermore, the fabrication of the thin film TIs Bi(2-x)Sb(x)Te(3-y)Se(y) in high crystalline quality serves as basis to explore the physics of topological insulators.
The requirements for the impurity profiling of substances for pharmaceutical use have become greater over time. They can be accomplished by the use of modern instrumental analysis techniques, which have been evolved in the last decades. New types of columns with HILIC, mixed-mode and chiral stationary phases are suitable for the separation of all kinds of substances mixtures, that were previously hardly possible with the use of common reversed phase columns. Modern, almost universal detectors like CAD, ELSD and CNLSD can be applied for a sensitive detection of substances without a chromophore. However, in addition to some small individual disadvantages to these methods, the costs are high and applications are still kind of rare. Thus, the introduction of these devices at a broader level has not yet taken place. While this presumably will change over time, there is a need for methods that enable the impurity profiling of challenging substances with widespread analytics devices.
Methionine is a substance with hydrophobic and hydrophilic impurities. With the help of a mixed-mode stationary phase, which is a combination of a reversed phase and a strong cationic exchanger, the separation of all putative impurities was found possible with good sensitivity and selectivity. The method requires apart from the column only standard isocratic HPLC equipment and was successfully validated.
The evaluation of the enantiomeric purity of amino acids is challenging. Two approaches were made. The first method utilizes CE by means of in-capillary derivation with OPA and the subsequent separation with a cyclodextrin. With the use of OPA/NAC and γ-cyclodextrin, a simple and cost-effective method for the indirect enantioseparation of 16 amino acids was developed. With the second approach, racemic amino acids can be analyzed with HPLC and in-needle derivatization. For this, different columns and chiral thiols were evaluated and the chromatographic parameters were optimized. A method with OPA/NIBLC, a pentafluorophenyl column made the enantioseparation of 17 amino acids feasible. A LOQ of the minor enantiomer down to 0.04 % can be achieved with UV spectrophotometric detection. A similar method was developed for impurity profiling of L-amino acids. This can be used alternatively for the amino acid analysis performed by the European Pharmacopoeia.
A simple, robust, precise and accurate method for the evaluation of impurities in glyceryl trinitrate solution was developed and validated. The four impurities of glyceryl trinitrate are separated by means of an acetonitrile-water gradient and the assay for this substance is also possible.
Chemoselective poly(oxazolines) (POx) and poly[(oligo ethylene glycol) acrylates] were synthesized. An initiator was produced for the preparation of poly(oxazoline)s capable of participating in click chemistry reactions which allows the functionalization of the polymer at the α terminus which was confirmed by 1H NMR spectroscopy. The initiator was used for the polymerization of hydrophilic 2 methyl 2 oxazoline (MeOx), whereby chemoselective, alkyne functionalized polymers could be prepared for Cu-catalyzed azide–alkyne cycloaddition. The desired molecular weight could be achieved through the living, ring opening cationic polymerization and was confirmed by 1H NMR, SEC and MALDI ToF measurements. Polymers were terminated with piperidine if no further functionalization was needed, or with an ester derivate for enabling amine attachment in a subsequent step. In addition, polymers were functionalized by termination with NaN3 in order to provide the counterpart to the azide–alkyne reaction. IR spectroscopy was suitable for the azide detection. The coupling of polymers showed the reactivity and could be confirmed by SEC, 1H NMR and IR spectroscopy.
The composition of cysteine functionalized POx was completed by thiol–ene chemistry. Since the commercially available iso 2 propyl 2 oxazoline is not available for the cationic polymerization, 2 butenyl and 2 decenyl 2 oxazoline (ButenOx and DecenOx) were first prepared. The synthesis of both copolymers, based on MeOx could be confirmed by 1H NMR as well as with SEC, whereby narrow distributions with dispersities of 1.06 could be achieved. The cysteine functionalization of the copolymers was enabled by the creation of a thiazolidine component which could be synthesized by acetal and formyl protection of cysteine and subsequent functionalization with a thiol. The component enabled the reaction with a polymer by thiol–ene reaction which was started by the addition of dimethoxyphenyl-acetophenone and was catalyzed by irradiation with UV light. Both copolymers, with a shorter (polymers with BuenOx) and longer (polymers with DecenOx) hydrophobic sidechain could be functionalized. 1H NMR spectroscopic analysis showed a quantitative reaction with the thiazolidine derivate. After deprotection by acidic workup the desired, cysteine functionalized polymer could be isolated. Quantification of cysteine functions was ensured by a modified TNBSA assay, whereby the thiols were first oxidized in order to confirm an independent measurement of amine functions. Both, the TNBSA assay as well as the NMR measurement showed the desired number of cysteine residues.
The cytotoxicity of functionalized polymers with different compositions was tested by a luminescent cell viability assay (LCVA). Both, the amount of cysteine functions (5–10%) in the copolymers as well as the length of the hydrophobic side chain were varied. All polymers did not show cytotoxicity up to concentrations of 10 mg∙mL-1. The cell activity and cell numbers only decreased below 50% and 20% respectively, when copolymers with 5% cysteine and longer sidechains were measured, which was attributed to a contamination of the sample itself. The cooperation partner performed Native Chemical Ligation (NCL) with model peptides and purified the products by HPLC. A sterically non demanding peptide was synthesized, consisting of an aromatic amino acid and four glycine units. The aromatic unit was used for the quantification of the polymer–peptide conjugate in the 1H NMR spectroscopy. A polymer having five cysteine side chains has been fully implemented by NCL to a conjugate of one polymer with five peptides. A sterically more demanding peptide was additionally used and MALDI ToF measurements confirmed the successful conjugation.
Furthermore the cysteine functionalized polymer was used for nanogel synthesis. The thiol of the cysteine function was oxidized in an inverse mini-emulsion by H2O2, resulting in nanogels (~500 nm) which could be confirmed by SEM, AFM, DLS and NTA measurements.
Besides POx, oligo (ethylene glycol)acrylates (OEGA) were polymerized; by copolymerization with the reactive pentafluorophenyl acrylate (PFPA) reactive and amphiphilic polymers were obtained. The synthesis of PFPA could be confirmed spectroscopically by 1H , 19F NMR, and by FT IR. Copolymers were synthesized by RAFT polymerization with narrow dispersities. Functionalization with an amine functionalized thiazolidine led to a hydrophilic cysteine functionalized polymer after acidic deprotection. Apart from this polymer, a thioester functionalization was successfully performed by reaction of the active polymer with a cyclic amine functionalized thioester which does not release a toxic by product (such as the resulting thiol) during NCL and thus features a very high potential to replace former thioester.
The key hypothesis of this work represented the question, if mimicking the zonal composition and structural porosity of musculoskeletal tissues influences invading cells positively and leads to advantageous results for tissue engineering. Conventional approaches in tissue engineering are limited in producing monolithic “scaffolds” that provide locally variating biological key signals and pore architectures, imitating the alignment of collagenous fibres in bone and cartilage tissues, respectively. In order to fill this gap in available tissue engineering strategies, a new fabrication technique was evolved for the production of scaffolds to validate the hypothesis.
Therefore, a new solidification based platform procedure was developed. This process comprises the directional solidification of multiple flowable precursors that are “cryostructured” to prepare a controlled anisotropic pore structure. Porous scaffolds are attained through ice crystal removal by lyophilisation. Optionally, electrostatic spinning of polymers may be applied to provide an external mesh on top or around the scaffolds. A consolidation step generates monolithic matrices from multi zonal structures. To serve as matrix for tissue engineering approaches or direct implantation as medical device, the scaffold is sterilized.
An Adjustable Cryostructuring Device (ACD) was successively developed; individual parts were conceptualized by computer aided design (CAD) and assembled. During optimisation, a significant performance improvement of the ACDs accessible external temperature gradient was achieved, from (1.3 ± 0.1) K/mm to (9.0 ± 0.1) K/mm. Additionally, four different configurations of the device were made available that enabled the directional solidification of collagenous precursors in a highly controlled manner with various sample sizes and shapes.
By using alginate as a model substance the process was systematically evaluated. Cryostructuring diagraphs were analysed yielding solidification parameters, which were associated to pore sizes and alignments that were determined by image processing. Thereby, a precise control over pore size and alignment through electrical regulation of the ACD could be demonstrated.
To obtain tissue mimetic scaffolds for the musculoskeletal system, collagens and calcium phosphates had to be prepared to serve as raw materials. Extraction and purification protocols were established to generate collagen I and collagen II, while the calcium phosphates brushite and hydroxyapatite were produced by precipitation reactions.
Besides the successive augmentation of the ACD also an optimization of the processing steps was crucial. Firstly, the concentrations and the individual behaviour of respective precursor components had to be screened. Together with the insights gained by videographic examination of solidifying collagen solutions, essential knowledge was gained that facilitated the production of more complex scaffolds. Phenomena of ice crystal growth during cryostructuring were discussed. By evolutionary steps, a cryostructuring of multi-layered precursors with consecutive anisotropic pores could be achieved and successfully transferred from alginate to collagenous precursors. Finally, very smooth interfaces that were hardly detectable by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) could be attained. For the used collagenous systems, a dependency relation between adjustable processing parameters and different resulting solidification morphologies was created.
Dehydrothermal-, diisocyanate-, and carbodiimide- based cross linking methods were evaluated, whereby the “zero length” cross linking by carbodiimide was found to be most suitable. Afterwards, a formulation for the cross linking solution was elaborated, which generated favourable outcomes by application inside a reduced pressure apparatus. As a consequence, a pore collapse during wet chemical cross linking could be avoided.
Complex monolithic scaffolds featuring continuous pores were fabricated that mimicked structure and respective composition of different areas of native tissues by the presence of biochemical key stimulants. At first, three types of bone scaffolds were produced from collagen I and hydroxyapatite with appropriate sizes to fit critical sized defects in rat femurs. They either featured an isotropic or anisotropic porosity and partly also contained glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). Furthermore, meniscus scaffolds were prepared by processing two precursors with biomimetic contents of collagen I, collagen II and GAGs. Here, the pore structures were created under boundary conditions, which allowed an ice crystal growth that was nearly orthogonal to the external temperature gradient. Thereby, the preferential alignment of collagen fibres in the natural meniscus tissue could be mimicked. Those scaffolds owned appropriate sizes for cell culture in well plates or even an authentic meniscus shape and size. Finally, osteochondral scaffolds, sized to either fit well plates or perfusion reactors for cell culture, were fabricated to mimic the composition of subchondral bone and different cartilage zones. Collagen I and the resorbable calcium phosphate brushite were used for the subchondral zone, whereas the cartilage zones were composed out of collagen I, collagen II and tissue mimetic contents of GAGs. The pore structure corresponded to the one that is dominating the volume of natural osteochondral tissue.
Energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX) and SEM were used to analyse the composition and pore structure of the individual scaffold zones, respectively. The cross section pore diameters were determined to (65 ± 25) µm, (88 ± 35) µm and(93 ± 42) µm for the anisotropic, the isotropic and GAG containing isotropic bone scaffolds. Furthermore, the meniscus scaffolds showed pore diameters of (93 ± 21) µm in the inner meniscus zone and (248 ± 63) µm inside the outer meniscus zone. Pore sizes of (82 ± 25) µm, (83 ± 29) µm and (85 ± 39) µm were present inside the subchondral, the lower chondral and the upper chondral zone of osteochondral scaffolds. Depending on the fabrication parameters, the respective scaffold zones were also found to feature a specific micro- and nanostructure at their inner surfaces.
Degradation studies were carried out under physiological conditions and resulted in a mean mass loss of (0.52 ± 0.13) %, (1.56 ± 0.10) % and (0.80 ± 0.10) % per day for bone, meniscus and osteochondral scaffolds, respectively. Rheological measurements were used to determine the viscosity changes upon cooling of different precursors. Micro computer tomography (µ-CT) investigations were applied to characterize the 3D microstructure of osteochondral scaffolds. To obtain an osteochondral scaffold with four zones of tissue mimetic microstructure alignment, a poly (D, L-lactide-co-glycolide) mesh was deposited on the upper chondral zone by electrostatic spinning. In case of the bone scaffolds, the retention / release capacity of bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP-2) was evaluated by an enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Due to the high presence of attractive BMP binding sites, only less than 0.1 % of the initially loaded cytokine was released. The suitability of combining the cryostructuring process with 3D powder printed calcium phosphate substrates was evaluated with osteochondral scaffolds, but did not appear to yield more preferable results than the non-combined approach.
A new custom build confined compression setup was elaborated together with a suitable evaluation procedure for the mechanical characterisation under physiological conditions. For bone and cartilage scaffolds, apparent elastic moduli of (37.6 ± 6.9) kPa and (3.14 ± 0.85) kPa were measured. A similar behaviour of the scaffolds to natural cartilage and bone tissue was demonstrated in terms of elastic energy storage. Under physiological frequencies, less than 1.0 % and 0.8 % of the exerted energy was lost for bone and cartilage scaffolds, respectively. With average relaxation times of (0.613 ± 0.040) sec and (0.815 ± 0.077) sec, measured for the cartilage and bone scaffolds, they respond four orders of magnitude faster than the native tissues. Additionally, all kinds of produced scaffolds were able to withstand cyclic compression at un-physiological frequencies as high as 20 Hz without a loss in structural integrity.
With the presented new method, scaffolds could be fabricated whose extent in mimicking of native tissues exceeded the one of scaffolds producible by state of the art methods. This allowed a testing of the key hypothesis: The biological evaluation of an anisotropic pore structure in vivo revealed a higher functionality of immigrated cells and led finally to advantageous healing outcomes. Moreover, the mimicking of local compositions in combination with a consecutive anisotropic porosity that approaches native tissue structures could be demonstrated to induce zone specific matrix remodelling in stem cells in vitro. Additionally, clues for a zone specific chondrogenic stem cell differentiation were attained without the supplementation of growth factors.
Thereby, the hypothesis that an increased approximation of the hierarchically compositional and structurally anisotropic properties of musculoskeletal tissues would lead to an improved cellular response and a better healing quality, could be confirmed. With a special focus on cell free in situ tissue engineering approaches, the insights gained within this thesis may be directly transferred to clinical regenerative therapies.
In order to select the appropriate behavior, it is important to choose the right behavior at the right time out of many options. It still remains unclear nowadays how exactly this is managed. To address this question, I expose flies (Drosophila melanogaster) to uncontrollable stress to study their behavior under restrictive circumstances by using the so-called shock box. Exposing animals to uncontrollable stress may have an impact on subsequent behavior and can last for some time. The animal learns that whatever it does, it cannot change the situation and therefore can develop something called learned helplessness. The term was first conceptualized by two American psychologists Maier and Seligman (1967), who discovered this phenomenon while doing experiments with dogs. They found out that dogs which are exposed to inescapable stress, later fail in a learning task (‘shuttle box’).
In this work the walking patterns of three different types of experimental flies, walking in a small dark chamber, were evaluated. Using the triadic design (Seligman and Maier, 1967), flies were either exposed to electric shock randomly (yoked), could turn it off by being active (master) or did not receive punishment at all (control). Master flies were shocked whenever they sat for more than 0.9 seconds. At the same time yoked flies received a shock as well independent of what they were doing, to ensure the same amount of shocks received and to create random punishment pattern for the yoked group. With this so-called no-idleness paradigm flies were conditioned either 10 minutes, which resulted in a short (3 minutes) after-effect, or 20 minutes that turned out to be more stable (10 minutes).
In a second part, the behavior during the 20 minute conditioning and a 10 minutes post-test was described in detail. Female flies of the yoked group developed lower activity levels, longer pauses and walked more slowly than master and control flies during conditioning. In the time after the shocks while still in the box, the yoked flies also reduced the frequency and duration of walking bouts as well as their walking speed. Additionally, they took more time to resume walking after the onset of an electric shock than master flies (escape latency) and turned out to make less pauses lasting between 1-1.5 seconds which supports the finding concerning the escape latency.
Male flies, tested under the same conditions, showed a slightly weaker after-effect regarding the difference between master and yoked during conditioning and post-test when compared to female flies.
When comparing the 20 minutes conditioning with subsequent 10 minutes test in the heat and the shock box in parallel, one finds the same effect: Flies which do not have control over the shocks, lower their activity, make less but longer pauses and walk more slowly than their respective master flies. Despite the similar effect of heat and shock on the flies, some differences between the devices occurred, which can partly be explained by different humidity conditions as well as by different surfaces within the chambers.
When the control over the shocks is given back to the yoked flies, it takes them about seven minutes to realize it. One could also show that dopamine levels in the brain were reduced in comparison to flies which did not receive shocks. Yoked flies also were impaired in a place learning task (place learning) and their reaction to light (exit from the box towards the light) directly after conditioning.
After characterizing the walking behavior in the chambers, the study deals with the question whether the effects observed in the chambers transfer to different environments.
In free walk they only differed from flies which did not receive electric shocks and no effect of uncontrollability was transferred to courtship behavior. Handling as the cause could be excluded. Since handling could be exclude to be the cause of losing the effect, I assumed that the behavior shown in the boxes are context depend.
Not only were the after-effects of inescapable shock subject of the current research also the impact of the rearing situation on the response to electric shock was investigated in the present study. Flies which grew up in a single-reared situation turned out to be less affected by inescapable stress in both sexes.
In the next part, the first steps to unravel the neuronal underpinning were taken. A mutant – fumin – which is defective in the dopamine re-uptake transporter showed less reaction to inescapable foot shocks, while a mutant for the gene which encodes an adenylate cyclase (rutabaga2080) resulted in a good score during conditioning, but showed no stable after-effect. Downregulating the expression of the adenylate cyclase gene (rutabaga) in different parts of the mushroom bodies showed, that rutabaga is necessary in the α’β’-lobes for expressing the differences between master and yoked flies in the no-idleness paradigm. The study further confirmed previous findings, that rutabaga is needed in operant but not in classical conditioning.
As a result, the study could show that not the stimulus itself causes the state of uncontrollability but the fact that the fly learned that it was not in control of the stimulus. This state turned out to be context and time dependent.
This thesis deals with value sets, i.e. the question of what the set of values that a set of functions can take in a prescribed point looks like.
Interest in such problems has been around for a long time; a first answer was given by the Schwarz lemma in the 19th century, and soon various refinements were proven.
Since the 1930s, a powerful method for solving such problems has been developed, namely Loewner theory. We make extensive use of this tool, as well as variation methods which go back to Schiffer to examine the following questions:
We describe the set of values a schlicht normalised function on the unit disc with prescribed derivative at the origin can take by applying Pontryagin's maximum principle to the radial Loewner equation.
We then determine the value ranges for the set of holomorphic, normalised, and bounded functions that have only real coefficients in their power series expansion around 0, and for the smaller set of functions which are additionally typically real.
Furthermore, we describe the values a univalent self-mapping of the upper half-plane with hydrodynamical normalization which is symmetric with respect to the imaginary axis can take.
Lastly, we give a necessary condition for a schlicht bounded function f on the unit disc to have extremal derivative in a point z where its value f(z) is fixed by using variation methods.
To simplify a judgment, people often base it on easily accessible information. One cue that is usually readily available is processing fluency – a metacognitive feeling of ease of cognitive processing. Consequently, processing fluency is used as a cue for many different types of judgment, such as judgment of truth, confidence, and novelty. The present work describes results of three studies investigating various aspects of processing fluency effects on judgment.
Processing fluency has been sometimes equated with speed of a cognitive process. Therefore, response times have been used for evaluation of processing fluency. However, response times in experimental tasks often do not encompass only the time needed for a given process, but also the time needed for a decision based on the resulting information. The study described in Chapter II uses a novel experimental method that enables separation of reading and decision times. The results show that people make a decision about liking of pseudowords faster when the pseudowords are hard-to-pronounce (i.e., disfluent) than when they are moderate in pronounceability. This suggests that response times cannot be used as a proxy for processing fluency when they include the time needed to make a decision.
One of the studies of judgmental effects of processing fluency showed that food additives with easier pronounceable names are judged to be less harmful than those with hard-to-pronounce names. While people encounter food additives that are safe more often, this environmental association may be in the opposite direction for some categories of objects. For example, people are more likely to see names of especially dangerous criminals in the news. Chapter III describes a study which initially tested whether the fluency-safety association may be in the opposite direction for some categories of objects as a consequence of this selective exposure to especially dangerous exemplars. The results did not show support for this hypothesis. Furthermore, subsequent studies suggest that the previously found association between fluency and safety is replicable with the original stimuli used in the previous research, but not with newly constructed stimuli.
Chapter IV describes a study which applied a finding from the processing fluency literature to a positive psychology exercise in order to increase its effectiveness. Namely, the experiment manipulated the number of good things that participants listed daily for two weeks as part of the exercise. While listing more things was considered harder, the number of things listed each day had no effect on effectiveness of the exercise.
Metals are the most used materials for implant devices, especially in orthopedics, but despite their long history of application issues such as material failure through wear and corrosion remain unsolved leading to a certain number of revision surgeries. Apart from the problems associated with insufficient material properties, another serious issue is an implant associated infection due to the formation of a biofilm on the surface of the material after implantation. Thus, improvements in implant technology are demanded, especially since there is a projected rise of implants needed in the future. Surface modification methods such as physical vapour deposition (PVD), oxygen diffusion hardening and electrochemical anodization have shown to be efficient methods to improve the surfaces of metallic bulk materials regarding biomedical issues. This thesis was focused on the development of functional PVD coatings that are suitable for further treatment with surface modification techniques originally developed for bulk metals. The aim was to precisely adjust the surface properties of the implant according to the targeted application to prevent possible failure mechanisms such as coating delamination, wear or the occurrence of post-operative infections.
Initially, tantalum layers with approx 5 µm thickness were deposited at elevated substrate temperatures on cp Ti by RF magnetron sputtering. Due to the high affinity of tantalum to oxygen, these coatings are known to provide a self healing capacity since the rapid oxide formation is known to close surface cracks. Here, the work aimed to reduce the abrupt change of mechanical properties between the hard and brittle coating and the ductile substrate by creating an oxygen diffusion zone. It was found that the hardness and adhesion could be significantly increased when the coatings were treated afterwards by oxygen diffusion hardening in a two step process. Firstly, the surface was oxidized at a pressure of 6.7•10-3 mbar at 350 450 °C, followed by 1-2 h annealing in oxygen-free atmosphere at the same temperature leading to a diffusion of oxygen atoms into deeper parts of the substrate as proved by X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis. The hereby caused mechanical stress in the crystal lattice led to an increase in Vickers hardness of the Ta layers from 570 HV to over 900 HV. Investigations into the adhesion of oxygen diffusion treated samples by Rockwell measurements demonstrated an increase of critical force for coating delamination from 12 N for untreated samples up to 25 N for diffusion treated samples.
In a second approach, the development of modular targets aimed to produce functional coatings by metallic doping of titanium with biologically active agents. This was demonstrated by the fabrication of antimicrobial Ti(Ag) coatings using a single magnetron sputtering source equipped with a titanium target containing implemented silver modules under variation of bias voltage and substrate temperature. The deposition of both Ti and Ag was confirmed by X-ray diffraction and a clear correlation between the applied sputtering parameters and the silver content of the coatings was demonstrated by ICP-MS and EDX. Surface-sensitive XPS measurements revealed that higher substrate temperatures led to an accumulation of Ag in the near-surface region, while the application of a bias voltage had the opposite effect. SEM and AFM microscopy revealed that substrate heating during film deposition supported the formation of even and dense surface layers with small roughness values, which could even be enforced by applying a substrate bias voltage. Additional elution measurements using ICP-MS showed that the release kinetics depended on the amount of silver located at the film surface and hence could be tailored by variation of the sputter parameters.
In a final step, the applied Ti and Ti(Ag) coatings deposited on cp Ti, stainless steel (316L) and glass substrates were subsequently nanostructured using a self-ordering process induced by electrochemical anodization in aqueous fluoride containing electrolytes. SEM analysis showed that nanotube arrays could be grown from the Ti and Ti(Ag) coatings deposited at elevated temperatures on any substrate, whereby no influence of the substrate on nanotube morphology could be observed. EDX measurements indicated that the anodization process led to the selective etching of Ti from Ti(Ag) coating. Further experiments on coatings deposited on glass surfaces revealed that moderate substrate temperatures during deposition resulting in smooth Ti layers as determined by AFM measurements, are favorable for the generation of highly ordered nanotube arrays. Such arrays exhibited superhydrophilic behavior as proved by contact angle measurements. XRD analysis revealed that the nanostructured coatings were amorphous after anodization but could be crystallized to anatase structure by thermal treatment at temperatures of 450°C.
Traditional species identification based on morphological characters is laborious
and requires expert knowledge. It is further complicated in the case of
species assemblages or degraded and processed material. DNA-barcoding,
species identification based on genetic data, has become a suitable alternative,
yet species assemblages are still difficult to study. In the past decade
meta-barcoding has widely been adopted for the study of species communities,
due to technological advances in modern sequencing platforms and
because manual separation of individual specimen is not required. Here,
meta-barcoding is put into context and applied to the study of bee-collected
pollen as well as bacterial communities. These studies provide the basis
for a critical evaluation of the powers and limitations of meta-barcoding. Advantages
identified include species identification without the need for expert
knowledge as well as the high throughput of samples and sequences. In
microbiology, meta-barcoding can facilitate directed cultivation of taxa of interest
identified with meta-barcoding data. Disadvantages include insufficient
species resolution due to short read lengths and incomplete reference
databases, as well as limitations in abundance estimation of taxa and functional
profiling. Despite these, meta-barcoding is a powerful method for the
analysis of species communities and holds high potential especially for automated
biomonitoring.
Active galactic nuclei (AGNs) are among the brightest sources in our universe. These galaxies are considered active because their central region is brighter than the luminosities of all stars in a galxies can provide. In their center is a supermassive black hole (SMBH) surrounded by an accretion disk and further out a dusty torus. AGN can be found with emission over the whole electromagnetic spectrum, starting at radio frequencies over optical and X-ray emission up to the $\gamma$-rays. Not all of these sources are detected in each frequency regime. In this work mainly blazars are examined at low radio frequencies. Blazars are a subclass of radio-loud AGN. These radio-loud sources usually exhibit highly collimated jets perpendicular to the accretion disk. For blazars these jets are pointed in the direction of the observer and their emission is highly variable. \\
AGN are classified in different subclasses based on their morphology. These different subclasses are combined in the AGN unification model, which explains the different morphologies by having sources only varying in their luminosities and their angle to the line of sight to the observer. Blazars are these targets, where the jet is pointing towards the observer, while the AGN observed edge on are called radio galaxies. This means that blazars should be the counterparts to radio galaxies seen from a different angle. Testing this is one of the goals in this work. \\
After the discovery of AGN in the 1940s these objects have been studied at all wavelengths. With the development of interferometry with radio telescopes the angular resolution for radio observations could be improved. In the last 20 years many AGN are regularly monitored. One of these monitoring programs is the MOJAVE program, monitoring 274 AGNs with using the Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) technique. The monitoring provides information on the evolution and structure of AGN and their jets. However, the mechanisms of the jet formation and their collimation are not fully understood. Due to relativistic effects it is difficult to obtain intrinsic instead of apparent parameters of these jets. One approach to get closer to the intrinsic jet power is by observing the regions, in which the jets end and interact with the intergalactic medium. Observations at lower radio frequencies are more sensitive for extended diffuse emission. \\
Since December 2012 a new radio telescope for low frequencies is observing. It is a telescope with stations consisting of dipole antennas. The major part of the array located in the Netherlands (38 stations) with 12 additional international stations in Germany, France, Sweden, Poland and the United Kingdom. This instrument is called the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR). LOFAR offers the possibility to observe at frequencies between 30--250 MHz in combination with angular resolution (below 1 arcsec for the full array), which was not available with previous telescopes. \\
In this work results of blazar studies with LOFAR observations are presented. To take advantage of a large database with multi-wavelength observations and kinematic studies the MOJAVE 1.5 Jy flux limited sample was chosen. Based on the preliminary results of the LOFAR Multifrequency Snapshot Sky Survey (MSSS) the flux densities and spectral indices of blazars of the MOJAVE sample are examined. 125 counterparts of MOJAVE blazars were found in the MSSS catalog. Since the MSSS observations only contain the stations in the Netherlands and observes in snapshots, the angular resolution and the sensitivity is limited. The first MSSS catalog was produced with an angular resolution of $\sim$120 arcsec and a sensitivity of $\sim$50--100 mJy. Another advantage of the MOJAVE sample is the monitoring of these sources with the Owens Valley Radio Observatory (OVRO) at 15 GHz to produce radio lightcurves. With these observations it is possible to get quasi-simultaneous flux densities at 15 GHz for the corresponding MSSS observations. By having quasi-simultaneous observations the variability of the blazars affects the flux densities less than with the use of archival data. The spectral indices obtained by the combination of MSSS and OVRO flux densities can be used to estimate the contribution of the diffuse extended emission for these AGNs. \\
Comparing the MSSS catalog with the OVRO data points, the flux densities have a tendency to be higher at low frequencies. This is expected due to the higher contribution of extended emission. The broadband spectral index distribution shows a peak at $\sim-0.2$. While some sources seem to have steeper spectral indices meaning that extended emission contributes a large fraction of the total flux density, more than the half of the sample shows flat spectral indices. The flat spectral indices show that the total flux densities of these sources are dominated by their relativistic beamed emission regions, which is the same for the observations at GHz frequencies. \\
To obtain more detailed images of these sources the MSSS measurement sets including sources of the sample were reprocessed to improve the angular resolution to $\sim$30 arcsec. The higher angular resolution reveals extended diffuse emission of several blazars. Since the reimaging results were not fully calibrated only the morphology at this resolution could be examined. However, with the short snapshot observations the images obtained with this strategy are affected from artifacts. The reimaging could be successfully performed for 93 sources in one frequency band. For 45 of these sources all availabe frequency bands could be reprocessed and used to created averaged images. These images are presented in this work. As a results of the reimaging process a pilot sample was defined to observe targets with diffuse extended emission using the whole LOFAR array including the international stations. \\
The second part of this work presents the results of a pilot sample consisting of four blazars observed with the LOFAR international array. Since the calibration of this kind of LOFAR observation is still in development, the main focus was the description of the used calibration strategy. The calibration strategies still has some limitation but resulted in images with angular resolutions of less than 1 arcsec. The morphology of all four blazars show features confirming the expectations of their counterpart radio galaxies. With the flux densities of the extended emission found in these brightness distributions the extended radio luminosities are calculated. Comparing these to the radio galaxy classifications also confirm the expectations from the unification model. \\
By extending the sample of observed blazars with LOFAR international in future the calibration strategy can be used to create similar high resolution images. A larger sample can be used to test the unification model with statistical significant results. \\
Two thematic complexes were addressed within this work. One part is related to improvements and new implementations into the CAST program package. Thereby the main focus laid on the delivery of a tool which can be used to characterize complex reactions and their mechanisms. But also within the new force field (FF) method (SAPT-FF) within the CAST program, several improvements were made. The second topic is related to the description of dye molecules and their spectral properties. The main focus within these studies was set on the influence of the environment on these properties. In the first topic improvements of the local acting NEB (nudged elastic band) methods were included and the number of available methods was extended. The initial pathway generation was improved by implementing the IDPP (image dependent pair potential) method and a new method was implemented for describing temperature dependent pathways. Additionally, improvements have been made to the optimization routines (global NEB). As a second part the Pathopt (PO) method was considerably improved. In the beginning of the work the original PO idea was used. In this approach one starts with a global optimization on one n-1 dimensional hyperplane which divides the reaction into two sub-areas for obtaining guesses of TSs (transition states). These found TS guesses were used to optimize to the ”true” TS. Starting from the optimized ones a relaxation to the next connected minima is done. This idea has been automatically implemented and extended to several number of hyperplanes. In this manner a group of pathsegments is obtained which needs to be connected, but within this work it was realized that such a procedure might be not very efficient. Therefore, a new strategy was implemented which is founded on the same constrained global optimization scheme (MCM) for which the user defines the number of hyperplanes generated. The number of such generated hyperplanes should be large enough
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to describe the space between the concerning reactants in a sufficient way. The found minima are directly used to built up the reaction pathway. For this purpose a RMSD (root mean square deviation) criterion is used to walk along ways of minimal change from one to another hyperplane. To prove the implementations various test calculations were carried out and extensions included to prove the capabilities of the new strategy. Related to these tests a new strategy for applying the move steps in MCM (Monte Carlo with minimization) was realized which is also related to the question of the coordinates representation. We were able to show that the hopping steps in MCM can be improved by applying Cartesian steps in combination of random dihedral moves with respect to the constraint. In this way it was possible to show that a large variety of systems can be treated. An additional chapter shows the improvements of the SAPT-FF implementation and related test cases. It was possible to treat benzene dimer and cluster systems of different sizes consistently also in accordance with high level ab initio based approaches. Furthermore, we showed that the SAPT-FF with the right parameters outperforms the standard AMOEBA implementation which is the basis of the SAPT-FF implementation. In the last three chapters deal with the description of perlyene-based dyes. In the first smaller chapter ground state chemistry description of macro cycles of PBI (perylene bisimide) derivatives were investigated. Therefore, AFM (atomic force microscopy) based pictures were explained within our study. The methods to explain aggregation behavior in dependency of the ring size were MD simulations and configuration studies. The last two chapters deal with opto-electronic or photo-physical properties of PBI and PTCDA (perylene-3,4,9,10-tetracarboxylic dianhydride). In detail, we investigated the role of the environment and the aggregate or crystal surrounding by applying different models. In that way implicit and explicit solvation models, the size of aggregates and vibration motions were used. In the case of PBI the recent work is found on preliminary studies related to my bachelor thesis and extends it. It was shown that the direct influence of a polarizable surrounding, as well as explicit inclusion of solvent molecules on the overall description of the excitations and nature of the excited states is weaker as one might expect. However the inclusion of intra-molecular degrees of freedom showed a stronger influence on the state characteristics and can induce a change of the order of states within the dimer picture. For the PTCDA molecule the main focus was set on the description of the absorption spectrum of crystalline thin films. Related to this older works exist which already gave a description and assignment of the absorption band, but are based on different approaches compared to the one used in this work. We used the supermolecule ansatz, whereas the environment and different aggregate sizes were investigated. Within the dimer based approach we were able to show that using continuum solvation (IEFPCM/COSMO) based description for the environment the relative order of states remains unchanged. Similar to the PBI calculations the influence of the vibrational motions /distortions is larger. The simulation of the crystal environment by using QM/MM (quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics) approaches delivered that an asymmetric charge distribution might induce a localization of the excitation and a stronger mixing of states. For obtaining further insights we go beyond the dimer picture and aggregates of different sizes were used, whereas the simulations up to the octadecamer mono- and even dual-layer stack were carried out. Within these calculations it was shown that the H-coupling is dominating over a weaker J-coupling between different stacks. Additionally the calculations based on DFT (density functional theory) and semi-empirics showed that the lowest state in terms of energy are mostly of Frenkel type, whereas the higher lying states are CT ones which mix with embedded Frenkel type states. The first band of the absorption spectrum was explained by inclusion of vibrational motions within the stacks which induce an intensity gain of the first excited state. This intensity was not explainable by using the undistorted stacks. Also relaxations at the crystal surface might play a role, but are experimentally not explainable.
Neisseria meningitidis is a commensal bacterium which sometimes causes serious disease in humans. Recent studies in numerous human pathogenic bacteria have shown that the stringent response contributes to bacterial virulence. Therefore, this study analyzed the regulation of the stringent response in meningococci and in particular of RelA as well as its contribution to ex vivo fitness in a strain- and condition- dependent manner by using the carriage strain α522 and the hyperinvasive strain MC58 in different in vitro and ex vivo conditions.
Growth experiments revealed that both wild-type strains were almost indistinguishable in their ex vivo phenotypes. However, quantitative real time PCR (qRT-PCR) found differences in the gene expression of relA between both strains. Furthermore, in contrast to the MC58 RelA mutant strain α522 deficient in RelA was unable to survive in human whole blood, although both strains showed the same ex vivo phenotypes in saliva and cerebrospinal fluid. Moreover, strain α522 was depended on a short non-coding AT-rich repeat element (ATRrelA) in the promoter region of relA to survive in human blood. Furthermore, cell culture experiments with human epithelial cells revealed that in both strains the deletion of relA resulted in a significantly decreased invasion rate while not significantly affecting adhesion. In order to better understand the conditional lethality of the relA deletion, computational and experimental analyses were carried out to unravel differences in amino acid biosynthetic pathways between both strains. Whereas strain MC58 is able to synthesize all 20 amino acids, strain α522 has an auxotrophy for cysteine and glutamine. In addition, the in vitro growth experiments found that RelA is required for growth in the absence of external amino acids in both strains. Furthermore, the mutant strain MC58 harboring an ATRrelA in its relA promoter region showed improved growth in minimal medium supplemented with L-cysteine and/or L-glutamine compared to the wild-type strain. Contrary, in strain α522 no differences between the wild-type and the ATRrelA deletion mutant were observed.
Together this indicates that ATRrelA interferes with the complex regulatory interplay between the stringent response pathway and L-cysteine as well as L-glutamine metabolism. It further suggests that meningococcal virulence is linked to relA in a strain- and condition- depended manner. In conclusion, this work highlighted the role of the stringent response and of non-coding regulatory elements for bacterial virulence and indicates that virulence might be related to the way how meningococci accomplish growth within the host environments.
Although the physiological roles of BChE are not yet determined to date, the importance of this enzyme is continuously increasing as it was found to be associated with several disorders like diabetes mellitus type 2, cardiovascular diseases, obesity and especially with Alzheimer’s disease (AD). In consequence, for investigations of BChE’s pathological role in these diseases and to find new medication strategies, the development of selective and potent inhibitors is necessary.
For this purpose, the current work progresses in five chapters on the exploration of the chemical, physical and biochemical properties of tetrahydroquinazoline based carbamates which were previously reported to be selective BChE inhibitors with potency in the low nanomolar range.
1) A Novel Way to Radiolabel Human Butyrylcholinesterase for PET through Irreversible Transfer of the Radiolabeled Moiety:
PET-radiotracers represent an innovative tool to determine the distribution and the expression of a biological target in vivo. BChE lacks to a large degree of such tracers with a few exceptions. In this work, methods were developed to incorporate the radioisotopes 11C and 18F into the carbamate moiety of an tetrahydroquinazoline based inhibitor. In contrast to reversibly acting PET-probes, the described radiotracers were proven by kinetic studies to transfer the radioisotope covalently onto the active site of BChE, thus labeling the enzyme directly and permanently.
2) Discovery of Highly Selective and Nanomolar Carbamate-Based Butyrylcholinesterase Inhibitors by Rational Investigation into Their Inhibition Mode:
To investigate the role of the tetrahydroquinazoline carrier scaffold on BChE inhibition, carbamate based inhibitors were synthesized. These compounds were successively used to perform kinetic investigations to determine their inhibition mode. Based on these data, a plausible binding model was postulated explaining the influence of the tetrahydroquinazoline carrier scaffold for binding at BChE’s active site just before carbamate transfer takes place. Additionally, these compounds feature neuroprotective properties and prevent oxidative stress induced cell death in their carbamate form as well as after the release of the tetrahydroquinazoline carrier scaffold.
3) Dual Addressing of Butyrylcholinesterase by Targeting the Catalytic Active Site (CAS) and the Peripheral Anionic Site (PAS):
Compounds which are dual-targeting the CAS and the PAS of BChE are the most potent and selective BChE inhibitors to date with inhibition values in the picomolar range. In this work, a strategy is described how to turn tetrahydroquinazoline based carbamates into dual binding BChE inhibitors. These inhibitors feature a carbamate moiety which is covalently transferred onto the CAS of BChE, and in addition provide a second pharmacophore connected via a linker to the carbamate moiety which is proposed to target the PAS. Preliminary results reveal a high tolerance of BChE towards different linker lengths without decrease in affinity.
4) Investigation into Selective Debenzylation and Ring Cleavage of Quinazoline based Heterocycles:
The tetrahydroquinazoline system is well investigated in terms of its synthesis and its selective oxidation. To explore the reactivity of this system, a tetracyclic tetrahydroquinazoline was exposed to common reduction agents. These experiments revealed a high sensitivity of the tetrahydroquinazoline core towards several reduction conditions
5) Experimental and Theoretical Investigation into the Stability of Cyclic Aminals:
Tetrahydroquinazolines are known to degrade in acidic media through hydrolysis of their aminal system; but literature is lacking of a systematic investigation into this behavior. Therefore, different tetrahydroquinazolines were synthesized and exposed to phosphate buffered systems with defined pH-values. A clear increase of the hydrolysis rate of the aminal system was determined in dependency of an increasing acidic media. Computational studies predicted and experimental studies proved that hydrolysis takes place in an acidic environment while the condensation of this system is preferred in neutral or basic aqueous media.
This article introduces a new consistent variance-based estimator called ordinal consistent partial least squares (OrdPLSc). OrdPLSc completes the family of variance-based estimators consisting of PLS, PLSc, and OrdPLS and permits to estimate structural equation models of composites and common factors if some or all indicators are measured on an ordinal categorical scale. A Monte Carlo simulation (N =500) with different population models shows that OrdPLSc provides almost unbiased estimates. If all constructs are modeled as common factors, OrdPLSc yields estimates close to those of its covariance-based counterpart, WLSMV, but is less efficient. If some constructs are modeled as composites, OrdPLSc is virtually without competition.
Highly Strained Heterocycles Constructed from Boron–Boron Multiple Bonds and Heavy Chalcogens
(2016)
The reactions of a diborene with elemental selenium or tellurium are shown to afford a diboraselenirane or diboratellurirane, respectively. These reactions are reminiscent of the sequestration of subvalent oxygen and nitrogen in the formation of oxiranes and aziridines; however, such reactivity is not known between alkenes and the heavy chalcogens. Although carbon is too electronegative to affect the reduction of elements with lower relative electronegativity, the highly reducing nature of the B B double bond enables reactions with Se0 and Te0. The capacity of multiple bonds between boron atoms to donate electron density is highlighted in reactions where diborynes behave as nucleophiles, attacking one of the two Te atoms of diaryltellurides, forming salts consisting of diboratellurenium cations and aryltelluride anions.
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is characterized by symptoms of inattentiveness and hyperactivity/impulsivity. Besides, increasing evidence points to ADHD patients showing emotional dysfunctions and concomitant problems in social life. However, systematic research on emotional dysfunctions in ADHD is still rare, and to date most studies lack conceptual differentiation between emotion processing and emotion regulation. The aim of this thesis was to systematically investigate emotion processing and emotion regulation in adult ADHD in a virtual reality paradigm implementing social interaction. Emotional reactions were assessed on experiential, physiological, and behavioral levels.
Experiment 1 was conducted to develop a virtual penalty kicking paradigm implying social feedback and to test it in a healthy sample. This paradigm should then be applied in ADHD patients later on. Pleasant and unpleasant trials in this paradigm consisted of hits respectively misses and subsequent feedback from a virtual coach. In neutral trials, participants were teleported to different spots of the virtual stadium. Results indicated increased positive affectivity (higher valence and arousal ratings, higher zygomaticus activations, and higher expression rates of positive emotional behavior) in response to pleasant compared to neutral trials. Reactions to unpleasant trials were contradictory, indicating increased levels of both positive and negative affectivity, compared to neutral trials. Unpleasant vs. neutral trials revealed lower valence ratings, higher arousal ratings, higher zygomaticus activations, slightly lower corrugator activations, and higher expression rates of both positive and negative emotional behavior. The intensity of emotional reactions correlated with experienced presence in the virtual reality.
To better understand the impact of hits or misses per se vs. hits or misses with coach feedback healthy participants’ emotional reactions, only 50% of all shots were followed by coach feedback in experiment 2. Neutral trials consisted of shots over the free soccer field which were followed by coach feedback in 50 % of all trials. Shots and feedback evoked more extreme valence and arousal ratings, higher zygomaticus activations, lower corrugator activations, and higher skin conductance responses than shots alone across emotional conditions. Again, results speak for the induction of positive emotions in pleasant trials whereas the induction of negative emotions in unpleasant trials seems ambiguous. Technical improvements of the virtual reality were reflected in higher presence ratings than in experiment 1.
Experiment 3 investigated emotional reactions of adult ADHD patients and healthy controls after emotion processing and response-focused emotion regulation. Participants successively
went through an ostensible online ball-tossing game (cyber ball) inducing negative emotions, and an adapted version of the virtual penalty kicking game. Throughout cyber ball, participants were included or ostracized by two other players in different experimental blocks. Participants were instructed to explicitly show, not regulate, or hide their emotions in different experimental blocks. Results provided some evidence for deficient processing of positive emotions in ADHD. Patients reported slightly lower positive affect than controls during cyber ball, gave lower valence ratings than controls in response to pleasant penalty kicking trials, and showed lower zygomaticus activations than controls especially during penalty kicking. Patients in comparison with controls showed slightly increased processing of unpleasant events during cyber ball (higher ratings of negative affect, especially in response to ostracism), but not during penalty kicking. Patients showed lower baseline skin conductance levels than controls, and impaired skin conductance modulations. Compared to controls, patients showed slight over-expression of positive as well as negative emotional behavior. Emotion regulation analyses revealed no major difficulties of ADHD vs. controls in altering their emotional reactions through deliberate response modulation. Moreover, patients reported to habitually apply adaptive emotion regulation strategies even more frequently than controls. The analyses of genetic high-risk vs. low-risk groups for ADHD across the whole sample revealed similar results as analyses for patients vs. controls for zygomaticus modulations during emotion processing, and for modulations of emotional reactions due to emotion regulation.
To sum up, the virtual penalty kicking paradigm proved to be successful for the induction of positive, but not negative emotions. The importance of presence in virtual reality for the intensity of induced emotions could be replicated. ADHD patients showed impaired processing of primarily positive emotions. Aberrations in negative emotional responding were less clear and need further investigation. Results point to adult ADHD in comparison to healthy controls suffering from baseline deficits in autonomic arousal and deficits in arousal modulation. Deficits of ADHD in the deliberate application of response-focused emotion regulation could not be found.
Frontal asymmetry, a construct invented by Richard Davidson, linking positive and negative valence as well as approach and withdrawal motivation to lateralized frontal brain activation has been investigated for over thirty years. The frontal activation patterns described as relevant were measured via alpha-band frequency activity (8-13 Hz) as a measurement of deactivation in electroencephalography (EEG) for homologous electrode pairs, especially for the electrode position F4/ F3 to account for the frontal relative lateralized brain activation.
Three different theories about frontal activation patterns linked to motivational states were investigated in two studies. The valence theory of Davidson (1984; 1998a; 1998b) and its extension to the motivational direction theory by Harmon-Jones and Allen (1998) refers to the approach motivation with relative left frontal brain activity (indicated by relative right frontal alpha activity) and to withdrawal motivation with relative right frontal brain activation (indicated by relative left frontal alpha activity). The second theory proposed by Hewig and colleagues (2004; 2005; 2006) integrates the findings of Davidson and Harmon – Jones and Allen with the reinforcement sensitivity theory of Jeffrey A. Gray (1982, 1991). Hewig sees the lateralized frontal approach system and withdrawal system proposed by Davidson as subsystems of the behavioral activation system proposed by Gray and bilateral frontal activation as a biological marker for the behavioral activation system. The third theory investigated in the present studies is the theory from Wacker and colleagues (2003; 2008; 2010) where the frontal asymmetrical brain activation patterns are linked to the revised reinforcement sensitivity theory of Gray and McNaughton (2000). Here, right frontal brain activity (indicated by lower relative right frontal alpha activity) accounts for conflict, behavioral inhibition and activity of the revised behavioral inhibition system, while left frontal brain activation (indicated by lower relative left frontal alpha activity) stands for active behavior and the activity of the revised behavioral activation system as well as the activation of the revised flight fight freezing system. In order to investigate these three theories, a virtual reality T-maze paradigm was introduced to evoke motivational states in the participants, offering the opportunity to measure frontal brain activation patterns via EEG and behavior simultaneously in the first study. In the second study the virtual reality paradigm was additionally compared to mental imagery and a movie paradigm, two well-known state inducing paradigms in the research field of frontal asymmetry.
In the two studies, there was confirming evidence for the theory of Hewig and colleages (2004; 2005; 2006), showing higher bilateral frontal activation for active behavior and lateralized frontal activation patterns for approach (left frontal brain activation) and avoidance (right frontal brain activation) behavior. Additionally a limitation for the capability model of anterior brain asymmetry proposed by Coan and colleagues (2006), where the frontal asymmetry should be dependent on the relevant traits driving the frontal asymmetry pattern if a relevant situation occurs, could be found. As the very intense virtual reality paradigm did not lead to a difference of frontal brain activation patterns compared to the mental imagery paradigm or the movie paradigm for the traits of the participants, the trait dependency of the frontal asymmetry in a relevant situation might not be given, if the intensity of the situation exceeds a certain level. Nevertheless there was an influence of the traits in the virtual reality T-maze paradigm, because the shown behavior in the maze was trait-dependent.
The implications of the findings are multifarious, leading from possible objective personality testing via diversification of the virtual reality paradigm to even clinical implications for depression treatments based on changes in the lateralized frontal brain activation patterns for changes in the motivational aspects, but also for changes in bilateral frontal brain activation when it comes to the drive and preparedness for action in patients. Finally, with the limitation of the capability model, additional variance in the different findings about frontal asymmetry can be explained by taking the intensity of a state manipulation into account.
„Perspective-taking“ is the ability to put yourself into the place of somebody else. Psychological research distinguishes three kinds of perspective-taking, namely, perceptual (visuo-spatial), affective (empathy), and cognitive (theory of mind) perspective-taking. The last two kinds of perspective-taking are often summarized as “psychological perspective-taking”. This dissertation tackles the question of whether these three kinds of perspective-taking should be conceptualized as independent constructs or as facets of one and the same construct.
Prior research findings concerning this are equivocal. While some authors consider correlations between the different kinds of perspective-taking as too low for a unitary construct, others interpret correlations of the same magnitude as evidence for this. A less arbitrary way of deciding this would be to identify common mechanisms that underlie all kinds of perspective-taking and to examine whether manipulating these mechanisms in psychological experiments affects measures of perceptual, affective, and cognitive perspective-taking in parallel.
In accordance with this reasoning, the present dissertation assumes that the mental self-rotation of the body schema into the physical location of another person, the main mechanism of perceptual perspective-taking, is a common mechanism of all kinds of perspective-taking. Thus, contrary to previous research a unitary construct is not only justified on the grounds of a common central functionality of all kinds of perspective-taking, that is, overcoming one’s egocentrism in favor of an alternative (perceptual, affective or cognitive) point of view, but additionally on the grounds of a common psychological mechanism. From this, the simple hypothesis that inducing visuo-spatial perspective-taking also leads to psychological consequences is derived. This hypothesis was tested in 6 experiments.
In these experiments, participants first had to adopt the visual perspective of another person. To this end, they saw a person sitting at a table with two objects. During every trial, participants had to decide which hand the person would have to use in order to grab one of the two objects. Furthermore, the angular disparity between the participant and the target was manipulated in such a way that during half of the trials the target person was within the same visuo-spatial reference frame as the participant and thus no perspective-taking was necessary to solve the task correctly. During the remaining trials, the target person was sitting in another visuo-spatial reference frame so that the participants had to engage in perspective-taking to solve the task correctly. After every such trial, the target person was imbued with a mental state. This was done using an adapted paradigm for the investigation of the anchoring heuristic. Specifically, participants were asked to answer a trivia question and also saw what the target person from the visuo-spatial perspective-taking task was guessing.
In line with the hypothesis that visuo-spatial perspective-taking leads to psychological outcomes, too, it was found that participants adopted the thoughts of the target person more strongly after visuo-spatial perspective-taking. This was evident in the absolute size of the anchoring effect, as well as the differences between participant and target estimations. Further experiments ruled out sample and stimulus characteristics and task difficulty as alternative explanations for these effects. The last two experiments furthermore established that the effects were specific to constellations where an embodied self-rotation into the target’s perspective was necessary and that the adoption of the target’s thoughts was associated with feelings of similarity.
Taken together, these findings support the theoretically elaborated unitary view of perspective-taking and furthermore distinguish this construct from other related phenomena. In the general discussion, the significance of these findings for research on empathy, theory of mind, and perspective-taking, as well as practical implications are discussed.
Clostridial neurotoxins (botulinum toxins and tetanus toxin) disrupt neurotransmitter release by cleaving neuronal SNARE proteins. We generated transgenic flies allowing for conditional expression of different botulinum toxins and evaluated their potential as tools for the analysis of synaptic and neuronal network function in Drosophila melanogaster by applying biochemical assays and behavioral analysis. On the biochemical level, cleavage assays in cultured Drosophila S2 cells were performed and the cleavage efficiency was assessed via western blot analysis. We found that each botulinum toxin cleaves its Drosophila SNARE substrate but with variable efficiency. To investigate the cleavage efficiency in vivo, we examined lethality, larval peristaltic movements and vision dependent motion behavior of adult Drosophila after tissue-specific conditional botulinum toxin expression. Our results show that botulinum toxin type B and botulinum toxin type C represent effective alternatives to established transgenic effectors, i.e. tetanus toxin, interfering with neuronal and non-neuronal cell function in Drosophila and constitute valuable tools for the analysis of synaptic and network function.
Characterization of a novel putative factor involved in host adaptation in Trypanosoma brucei
(2016)
Trypanosomes are masters of adaptation to different host environments
during their complex life cycle. Large-scale proteomic approaches provide information on changes at
the cellular level in a systematic way. However, a detailed work on single components is necessary
to understand the adaptation mechanisms on a molecular level. Here we have performed a detailed
characterization of a bloodstream form (BSF) stage-specific putative flagellar host adaptation
factor (Tb927.11.2400) identified previously in a SILAC-based comparative proteome study.
Tb927.11.2400 shares 38% amino acid identity with TbFlabarin (Tb927.11.2410), a procyclic form
(PCF) stage specific flagellar BAR domain protein. We named Tb927.11.2400 TbFlabarin like
(TbFlabarinL) and demonstrate that it is a result of a gene duplication event, which occurred in
African trypanosomes. TbFlabarinL is not essential for growth of the parasites under cell culture
conditions and it is dispensable for developmental differentiation from BSF to the PCF in vitro. We
generated a TbFlabarinL-specific antibody and showed that it localizes in the flagellum. The
co-immunoprecipitation experiment together with a biochemical cell fractionation indicated a dual
association of TbFlabarinL with the flagellar
membrane and the components of the paraflagellar rod.
Polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMNs) are phagocytic cells of the innate immune system that efficiently kill bacteria. However, they also have regulatory effects on other immune cells and contribute to immunosuppression in cancer, which worsens the outcome. In particular, this has been demonstrated for a subset of granulocytic cells called myeloid- derived suppressor cells (MDSCs), but its distinction from PMNs is controversial. Most authors have explored the suppressive effects of MDSCs on T cells, but recent data suggest that NK cells are also affected. NK cells are crucial for the combat of tumor cells, in particular leukemic cells. There is hardly data available on the interaction between NK cells and suppressive granulocytic cells. Therefore, the aim of this thesis was to explore the effects of MDSCs and PMNs on the NK cell function against the leukemia cell line K562.
In co-culture experiments, I demonstrate that granulocytic MDSCs and PMNs had similar effects on NK cell function and homeostasis. On the one hand, they positively influenced the survival and maturation of NK cells. On the other, they inhibited the activation, cytotoxicity and cytokine production of NK cells, both IFNγ and TNFα, in response to K562 target cells. Furthermore, I show a down-regulation of the activating receptor NKp30 on NK cells in the presence of MDSCs or PMNs, which may form part of the underlying suppressive mechanisms.
However, there is also evidence for the involvement of other molecules. Further investigations are needed to confirm a relevant suppression of NK cells by granulocytic cells in cancer patients, and to identify therapeutic targets. The recognition that regular PMNs have similar effects on NK cells as MDSCs could simplify future experiments, since MDSCs are heterogeneous and laborious to isolate and identify.
NKcells and granulocytes are among the first immune cells to reconstitute after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, and NK cells may be particularly exposed to suppressive effects of granulocytes this scenario. Modulating these suppressive effects of granulocytes on NK cells therapeutically may yield a better NK cell function and an improved cancer prognosis.

Among the numerous routes organic chemists have developed to synthesize benzene derivatives and heteroaro- matic compounds, transition-metal-catalyzed cycloaddition reactions are the most elegant. In contrast, cycloaddition reactions of heavier alkene and alkyne analogues, though limited in scope, proceed uncatalyzed. In this work we present the first spontaneous cycloaddition reactions of lighter alkene and alkyne analogues. Selective addition of unactivated alkynes to boron–boron multiple bonds under ambient con- ditions yielded diborocarbon equivalents of simple aromatic hydrocarbons, including the first neutral 6p-aromatic dibora- benzene compound, a 2 p-aromatic triplet biradical 1,3-dibor- ete, and a phosphine-stabilized 2 p-homoaromatic 1,3-dihydro- 1,3-diborete. DFT calculations suggest that all three com- pounds are aromatic and show frontier molecular orbitals matching those of the related aromatic hydrocarbons, C6H6 and C4H42+, and homoaromatic C4H5+.
Unsaturated bridges that link the two cyclopentadienyl ligands together in strained ansa metallocenes are rare and limited to carbon-carbon double bonds. The synthesis and isolation of a strained ferrocenophane containing an unsaturated two-boron bridge, isoelectronic with a C=C double bond, was achieved by reduction of a carbene-stabilized 1,1’-bis(dihaloboryl)ferrocene. A combination of spectroscopic and electrochemical measurements as well as density functional theory (DFT) calculations was used to assess the influence of the unprecedented strained cis configuration on the optical and electrochemical properties of the carbene-stabilized diborene unit. Initial reactivity studies show that the dibora[2]ferrocenophane is prone to boron-boron double bond cleavage reactions.
The main function of the small intestine is the absorption of essential nutrients, water and vitamins. Moreover, it constitutes a barrier protecting us from toxic xenobiotics and pathogens. For a better understanding of these processes, the development of intestinal in vitro models is of great interest to the study of pharmacological and pathological issues such as transport mechanisms and barrier function. Depending on the scientific questions, models of different complexity can be applied.
In vitro Transwell® systems based on a porous PET-membrane enable the standardized study of transport mechanisms across the intestinal barrier as well as the investigation of the influence of target substances on barrier integrity. However, this artificial setup reflects only limited aspects of the physiology of the native small intestine and can pose an additional physical barrier. Hence, the applications of this model for tissue engineering are limited.
Previously, tissue models based on a biological decellularized scaffold derived from porcine gut tissue were demonstrated to be a good alternative to the commonly used Transwell® system. This study showed that preserved biological extracellular matrix components like collagen and elastin provide a natural environment for the epithelial cells, promoting cell adhesion and growth. Intestinal epithelial cells such as Caco-2 cultured on such a scaffold showed a confluent, tight monolayer on the apical surface. Additionally, myofibroblasts were able to migrate into the scaffold supporting intestinal barrier formation.
In this thesis, dendritic cells were additionally introduced to this model mimicking an important component of the immune system. This co-culture model was then successfully proven to be suitable for the screening of particle formulations developed as delivery system for cancer antigens in peroral vaccination studies. In particular, nanoparticles based on PLGA, PEG-PAGE-PLGA, Mannose-PEG-PAGE-PLGA and Chitosan were tested. Uptake studies revealed only slight differences in the transcellular transport rate among the different particles. Dendritic cells were shown to phagocytose the particles after they have passed the intestinal barrier. The particles demonstrated to be an effective carrier system to transport peptides across the intestinal barrier and therefore present a useful tool for the development of novel drugs.
Furthermore, to mimic the complex structure and physiology of the gut including the presence of multiple different cell types, the Caco-2 cell line was replaced by primary intestinal cells to set up a de novo tissue model. To that end, intestinal crypts including undifferentiated stem cells and progenitor cells were isolated from human small intestinal tissue samples (jejunum) and expanded in vitro in organoid cultures. Cells were cultured on the decellularized porcine gut matrix in co-culture with intestinal myofibroblasts. These novel tissue models were maintained under either static or dynamic conditions.
Primary intestinal epithelial cells formed a confluent monolayer including the major differentiated cell types positive for mucin (goblet cells), villin (enterocytes), chromogranin A (enteroendocrine cells) and lysozyme (paneth cells). Electron microscopy images depicted essential functional units of an intact epithelium, such as microvilli and tight junctions. FITC-dextran permeability and TEER measurements were used to assess tightness of the cell layer. Models showed characteristic transport activity for several reference substances. Mechanical stimulation of the cells by a dynamic culture system had a great impact on barrier integrity and transporter activity resulting in a tighter barrier and a higher efflux transporter activity.
In Summary, the use of primary human intestinal cells combined with a biological decellularized scaffold offers a new and promising way to setup more physiological intestinal in vitro models. Maintenance of primary intestinal stem cells with their proliferation and differentiation potential together with adjusted culture protocols might help further improve the models. In particular, dynamic culture systems and co culture models proofed to be a first crucial steps towards a more physiological model. Such tissue models might be useful to improve the predictive power of in vitro models and in vitro in vivo correlation (IVIVC) studies. Moreover, these tissue models will be useful tools in preclinical studies to test pharmaceutical substances, probiotic active organisms, human pathogenic germs and could even be used to build up patient-specific tissue model for personalized medicine.
The thesis discusses aspects of the photocatalytic water oxidation reaction. The first chapter deals with a supramolecular macrocycle which contains three ruthenium metal centers. This novel catalyst shows promising catalytic activity and provides insides into the mechanism of the water oxidation reaction. After this part, the focus lies on the light interacting components of the photocatalytic water oxidation. In this regard, the azabenz-annulated perylene derivatives appeared to be a promising dye class. The combination of these chromophores and metal complexes result in metal organic compounds, which have photosensitizer potential.
The evolutionary success of insects is believed to be at least partially facilitated by symbioses between insects and prokaryotes. Bacterial endosymbionts confer various fitness advantages to their hosts, for example by providing nutrients lacking from the insects’ diet thereby enabling the inhabitation of new ecological niches. The Florida carpenter ant Camponotus floridanus harbours endosymbiotic bacteria of the genus Blochmannia. These primary endosymbionts mainly reside in the cytoplasm of bacteriocytes, specialised cells interspersed into the midgut tissue, but they were also found in oocytes which allows their vertical transmission. The social lifestyle of C. floridanus may facilitate the rapid spread of infections amongst genetically closely related animals living in huge colonies. Therefore, the ants require an immune system to efficiently combat infections while maintaining a “chronic” infection with their endosymbionts.
In order to investigate the immune repertoire of the ants, the Illumina sequencing method was used. The previously published genome sequence of C. floridanus was functionally re-annotated and 0.53% of C. floridanus proteins were assigned to the gene ontology (GO) term subcategory “immune system process”. Based on homology analyses, genes encoding 510 proteins with possible immune function were identified. These genes are involved in microbial recognition and immune signalling pathways but also in cellular defence mechanisms, such as phagocytosis and melanisation. The components of the major signalling pathways appear to be highly conserved and the analysis revealed an overall broad immune repertoire of the ants though the number of identified genes encoding pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) and antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) is comparatively low. Besides three genes coding for homologs of thioester-containing proteins (TEPs), which have been shown to act as opsonins promoting phagocytosis in other insects, six genes encoding the AMPs defesin-1 and defensin-2, hymenoptaecin, two tachystatin-like peptides and one crustin-like peptide are present in the ant genome. Although the low number of known AMPs in comparison to 13 AMPs in the honey bee Apis mellifera and 46 AMPs in the wasp Nasonia vitripennis may indicate a less potent immune system, measures summarised as external or social immunity may enhance the immune repertoire of C. floridanus, as it was discussed for other social insects. Also, the hymenoptaecin multipeptide precursor protein may be processed to yield seven possibly bioactive peptides. In this work, two hymenoptaecin derived peptides were heterologously expressed and purified. The preliminary antimicrobial activity assays indicate varying bacteriostatic effects of different hymenoptaecin derived peptides against Escherichia coli D31 and Staphylococcus aureus which suggests a functional amplification of the immune response further increasing the antimicrobial potency of the ants.
Furthermore, 257 genes were differentially expressed upon immune challenge of C. floridanus and most of the immune genes showing differential expression are involved in recognition of microbes or encode immune effectors rather than signalling components. Additionally, genes coding for proteins involved in storage and metabolism were downregulated upon immune challenge suggesting a trade-off between two energy-intensive processes in order to enhance effectiveness of the immune response. The analysis of gene expression via qRT-PCR was used for validation of the transcriptome data and revealed stage-specific immune gene regulation. Though the same tendencies of regulation were observed in larvae and adults, expression of several immune-related genes was generally more strongly induced in larvae. Immune gene expression levels depending on the developmental stage of C. floridanus are in agreement with observations in other insects and might suggest that animals from different stages revert to individual combinations of external and internal immunity upon infection.
The haemolymph proteome of immune-challenged ants further established the immune-relevance of several proteins involved in classical immune signalling pathways, e.g. PRRs, extracellularly active proteases of the Toll signalling pathway and effector molecules such as AMPs, lysozymes and TEPs. Additionally, non-canonical proteins with putative immune function were enriched in immune-challenged haemolymph, e.g. Vitellogenins, NPC2-like proteins and Hemocytin. As known from previous studies, septic wounding also leads to the upregulation of genes involved in stress responses. In the haemolymph, proteins implicated in protein stabilisation and in the protection against oxidative stress and insecticides were enriched upon immune challenge. In order to identify additional putative immune effectors, haemolymph peptide samples from immune-challenged larvae and adults were analysed. The analysis in this work focussed on the identification of putative peptides produced via the secretory pathway as previously described for neuropeptides of C. floridanus. 567 regulated peptides derived from 39 proteins were identified in the larval haemolymph, whereas 342 regulated peptides derived from 13 proteins were found in the adult haemolymph. Most of the peptides are derived from hymenoptaecin or from putative uncharacterised proteins. One haemolymph peptide of immune-challenged larvae comprises the complete amino acid sequence of a predicted peptide derived from a Vitellogenin. Though the identified peptide lacks similarities to any known immune-related peptide, it is a suitable candidate for further functional analysis.
To establish a stable infection with the endosymbionts, the bacteria have to be transmitted to the next generation of the ants. The vertical transmission of B. floridanus is guaranteed by bacterial infestation of oocytes. This work presents the first comprehensive and detailed description of the localisation of the bacterial endosymbionts in C. floridanus ovaries during oogenesis. Whereas the most apical part of the germarium, which contains the germ-line stem cells, is not infected by the bacteria, small somatic cells in the outer layers of each ovariole were found to be infected in the lower germarium. Only with the beginning of cystocyte differentiation, endosymbionts are exclusively transported from follicle cells into the growing oocytes, while nurse cells were never infected with B. floridanus. This infestation of the oocytes by bacteria very likely involves exocytosis-endocytosis processes between follicle cells and the oocytes. A previous study suggested a down-modulation of the immune response in the midgut tissue which may promote endosymbiont tolerance. Therefore, the expression of several potentially relevant immune genes was analysed in the ovarial tissue by qRT-PCR. The relatively low expression of genes involved in Toll and IMD signalling, and the high expression of genes encoding negative immune regulators, such as PGRP-LB, PGRP-SC2, and tollip, strongly suggest that a down-modulation of the immune response may also facilitate endosymbiont tolerance in the ovaries and thereby contribute to their vertical transmission.
Overall, the present thesis improves the knowledge about the immune repertoire of C. floridanus and provides new candidates for further functional analyses. Moreover, the involvement of the host immune system in maintaining a “chronic” infection with symbiotic bacteria was confirmed and extended to the ovaries.
Cross-Modal Action Control
(2016)
Nowadays, multitasking is ubiquitously discussed within many different scientific disciplines. The present work addressed multitasking from the perspective of cognitive behavioural sciences by investigating the role of conflict resolution processes that arise during the requirements of multiple-action control. More specifically, the present work focuses on cognitive mechanisms in the case of cross-modal action control, which involves the performance of two actions in different effector systems. One aim was to broaden the scope of action modalities typically considered in the literature by studying oculomotor responses (i.e. saccades) – an action modality that has been largely neglected in previous research – in combination with responses in other effector systems (i.e. manual and vocal responses). A further aim was to specify the mechanisms of crosstalk as an explanatory concept referring to the action content, which is particularly relevant since cross-modal actions usually differ regarding their response characteristics. The present work comprises four studies (each involving two or three experiments).
In Study A, cross-modal response compounds based on a single stimulus were studied with respect to the interplay of the presence of response alternatives and between-response compatibility (i.e. crosstalk potential). In three experiments, this study showed that crosstalk can be dissociated into a component that determines the amount of current conflict (i.e. online crosstalk) and a memory-based component that originates either from residual activation of previous action demands (retrospective crosstalk) or from preparation for future demands (prospective crosstalk).
Study B provided first evidence that oculomotor responses are subject to interference based on both structural and content-based origins. In three experiments, an overlapping tasks paradigm was employed in which the onsets between two stimuli that triggered oculomotor and manual responses were varied. Evidence for both serial and parallel processing of the two tasks was found. The results further indicated that based on the between-task compatibility participants shifted between these processing modes, i.e. to more parallel processing during compatible task demands and to more serial processing during incompatible task demands.
Study C examined processing priorities among effector systems and demonstrated in two experiments that the previously reported prioritisation scheme, in which the oculomotor system is prioritised over the vocal and manual effector system, can be replicated, but is also adjusted in its strength by the presence of response conflict. Specifically, processing priorities were shifted towards the response that already is involved in conflict resolution (in terms of stimulus-response compatibility), suggesting that processing priorities can be flexibly adapted to particular task demands.
Study D addressed response order control in dual tasks, an issue that has been widely neglected in previous research. In a comprehensive study of three experiments including several factors that are known to be relevant for dual-task interference mechanisms, it was shown that the final response order in a given trial is the result of a continuous adjustment process based on the interplay of several top-down factors, such as the anticipation of response characteristics, and bottom-up factors, such as stimulus order and between-task compatibility.
In summary, the present work advances the theoretical understanding of complex action control by providing a cross-modal action perspective, by proposing mechanisms for effector-system prioritisation and response order control, and by proposing a novel taxonomy of crosstalk as an overarching framework for interference mechanisms in multiple-response control.
Human Vγ9Vδ2 T cells are the main γδ T cell subset in the circulation, accounting for up to 5% of the total peripheral blood lymphocyte population. They have been suggested to be important in response to tumors and infections. Their immune mechanisms encompass cell killing via cytotoxicity and secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as IFNγ and tumor necrosis factor (TNF). The main stimulators of Vγ9Vδ2 T cells are isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP) and (E)-4-hydroxy-3-methyl-but-2-enyl pyrophosphate (HMBPP), denominated phosphoantigens (PAg).
A major advance in the understanding of PAg detection and Vγ9Vδ2 T cell activation has been the identification of the butyrophlin 3A (BTN3A) proteins as key mediators in these processes. In humans, three isoforms constitute the BTN3A family: BTN3A1, BTN3A2, and BTN3A3; and their genes are localized on the short arm of chromosome 6. The role of BTN3A1 has been highlighted by BTN3A-specific monoclonal antibody 20.1 (mAb 20.1), which has an agonist effect and causes proliferation, expansion, and activation of primary human Vγ9Vδ2 T cells. On the other hand, BTN3A-specific monoclonal antibody 103.2 (mAb 103.2) is antagonistic, inhibiting the Vγ9Vδ2 T cell response. The actual mechanism underlying both PAg- and mAb 20.1-mediated activation is not completely elucidated, but the importance of BTN3A1 is clear.
The main objective of this dissertation was to characterize the role of BTN3A1 in the PAg-dependent and PAg-independent Vγ9Vδ2 T cell activation and to evaluate its contribution in the response to influeza A virus infected cells. This research work demonstrated, by using Vγ9Vδ2 TCR MOP-transduced murine cells (reporter cells), that human chromosome 6 (Chr6) is mandatory for PAg-induced stimulation, but not for stimulation with mAb 20.1. The reporter cells responded to mAb 20.1 in cultures with BTN3A1-transduced Chinese hamster ovary cells (CHO BTN3A1) as antigen presenting cells. Nevertheless, for PAg-dependent activation the presence of Chr6 in CHO BTN3A1 was mandatory.
Although reporter cells expressing clonotypically different Vγ9Vδ2 TCRs showed similar PAg response, they clearly differed in the mAb 20.1 response. The reporter cell line transduced with Vγ9Vδ2 TCR D1C55 demonstrated essentially no response to mAb 20.1 compared to Vγ9Vδ2 TCR MOP cells. These findings were further supported by experiments performed with human PBMCs-derived Vγ9Vδ2 T cell clones. The results indicate heterogeneity in the PAg- and 20.1-dependent responses, in terms of CD25 and CD69 expression, among three different Vγ9Vδ2 T cells clones.
Co-cultures of reporter cells with Raji RT1BI and PAg plus mAb 20.1 or single chain antibody 20.1 (sc 20.1) revealed no additive or synergistic activating effects. In contrast, mAb 20.1 or sc 20.1 inhibited the PAg-mediated activation of the reporter cells.
The comparison of the relative contribution of the isoforms BTN3A2 and BTN3A3, in the activation of Vγ9Vδ2 T cells, was undertaken by overexpression of these isoforms in CHO cells. The results showed that BTN3A2 contributes to both PAg- and mAb-induced Vγ9Vδ2 T cell activation. On the contrary, BTN3A3 does not support PAg-mediated γδ T cell response.
Additionally, mutations in the proposed PAg- and mAb 20.1-binding sites of the extracellular BTN3A1 domain were generated by means of site-directed mutagenesis. These mutations revoked the mAb 20.1-induced Vγ9Vδ2 T cell activation, but not that induced by PAg.
Finally, co-cultures of Vγ9Vδ2 TCR MOP-transduced murine reporter cells with influenza A/PR/8/34-infected cells, or infection of PBMCs with this virus strain indicated that BTN3A1 might be dispensable for the Vγ9Vδ2 T cell response against influenza A.
The data of this research work points out that: i) in addition to BTN3A1, other Chr6-encoded genes are necessary for Vγ9Vδ2 T cell activation with PAg; ii) clonotypical (CDR3) differences influence the PAg- and mAb 20.1-mediated Vγ9Vδ2 T cell activation; iii) the PAg- and mAb 20.1-induced responses are not synergistic and interfere with each other; iv) BTN3A2 and BTN3A3 isoforms differ in the ability to support PAg- or mAb 20.1-dependent Vγ9Vδ2 T cell activation; v) the importance of the intracellular B30.2 domain of BTN3A1, in the Vγ9Vδ2 T cell activation, might be higher than that of the extracellular domain; and vi) in spite of the importance of BTN3A1 in the activation of Vγ9Vδ2 T cells, it is possible that many molecules with redundant functions are involved in the elimination of influenza virus infection by these cells.
In summary, it is possible to hypothesize a model in which BTN3A1 detects prenyl pyrophosphates in the cytoplasm via its B30.2 domain and in association with another protein(s). The binding of PAg to this domain induces a multimerization of BTN3A1 or a conformational change of its extracellular domain (mimicked by mAb 20.1). These modifications might be recognized by the Vγ9Vδ2 TCR or by an associated T cell protein. In the case that the TCR directly recognizes BTN3A1, the intensity of the response will depend on the Vγ9Vδ2 TCR clonotype. Future research will allow to gain a better understanding of BTN3A1, its interaction with other proteins, its actual role in the activation of Vγ9Vδ2 T cells, and its importance in specific models of cancer or infection. This knowledge will be necessary to transform these cells into effective tools in the clinic.
The present work addressed the influence of spins on fundamental processes in organic
semiconductors. In most cases, the role of spins in the conversion of sun light
into electricity was of particular interest. However, also the reversed process, an electric
current creating luminescence, was investigated by means of spin sensitive measurements.
In this work, many material systems were probed with a variety of innovative
detection techniques based on electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy.
More precisely, the observable could be customized which resulted in the experimental
techniques photoluminescence detected magnetic resonance (PLDMR), electrically
detected magnetic resonance (EDMR), and electroluminescence detected magnetic
resonance (ELDMR). Besides the commonly used continuous wave EPR spectroscopy,
this selection of measurement methods yielded an access to almost all intermediate
steps occurring in organic semiconductors during the conversion of light into electricity
and vice versa. Special attention was paid to the fact that all results were applicable
to realistic working conditions of the investigated devices, i.e. room temperature application and realistic illumination conditions.
Motoneuron diseases form a heterogeneous group of pathologies characterized by the progressive degeneration of motoneurons. More and more genetic factors associated with motoneuron diseases encode proteins that have a function in RNA metabolism, suggesting that disturbed RNA metabolism could be a common underlying problem in several, perhaps all, forms of motoneuron diseases. Recent results suggest that SMN interacts with hnRNP R and TDP-43 in neuronal processes, which are not part of the classical SMN complex. This point to an additional function of SMN, which could contribute to the high vulnerability of spinal motoneurons in spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The current study elucidates functional links between SMN, the causative factor of SMA (spinal muscular atrophy), hnRNP R, and TDP-43, a genetic factor in ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis). In order to characterize the functional interaction of SMN with hnRNP R and TDP-43, we produced recombinant proteins and investigated their interaction by co-immunoprecipitation. These proteins bind directly to each other, indicating that no other co-factors are needed for this interaction. SMN potentiates the ability of hnRNP R and TDP-43 to bind to ß-actin mRNA. Depletion of SMN alters the subcellular distribution of hnRNP R in motoneurons both in SMN-knockdown motoneurons and SMA mutant mouse (delta7 SMA). These data point to functions of SMN beyond snRNP assembly which could be crucial for recruitment and transport of RNA particles into axons and axon terminals, a mechanism which may contribute to SMA pathogenesis and ALS.
ALS and FTLD (frontotemporal lobar degeneration) are linked by several lines of evidence with respect to clinical and pathological characteristics. Both sporadic and familial forms are a feature of the ALS-FTLD spectrum, with numerous genes having been associated with these pathological conditions. Both diseases are characterized by the pathological cellular aggregation of proteins. Interestingly, some of these proteins such as TDP-43 and FUS have also common relations not only with ALS-FTLD but also with SMA. Intronic hexanucleotide expansions in C9ORF72 are common in ALS and FTLD but it is unknown whether loss of function, toxicity by the expanded RNA or dipeptides from non ATG-initiated translation is responsible for the pathophysiology. This study tries to characterize the cellular function of C9ORF72 protein. To address this, lentiviral based knockdown and overexpression of C9ORF72 was used in isolated mouse motoneurons. The results clearly show that survival of these motoneurons was not affected by altered C9ORF72 levels, whereas adverse effects on axon growth and growth cone size became apparent after C9ORF72 suppression. Determining the protein interactome revealed several proteins in complexes with C9ORF72. Interestingly, C9ORF72 is present in a complex with cofilin and other actin binding proteins that modulate actin dynamics. These interactions were confirmed both by co-precipitation analyses and in particular by functional studies showing altered actin dynamics in motoneurons with reduced levels of C9ORF72. Importantly, the phosphorylation of cofilin is enhanced in C9ORF72 depleted motoneurons and patient derived lymphoblastoid cells with reduced C9ORF72 levels. These findings indicate that C9ORF72 regulates axonal actin dynamics and the loss of this function could contribute to disease pathomechanisms in ALS and FTLD.
Virtualization allows the creation of virtual instances of physical devices, such as network and processing units. In a virtualized system, governed by a hypervisor, resources are shared among virtual machines (VMs). Virtualization has been receiving increasing interest as away to reduce costs through server consolidation and to enhance the flexibility of physical infrastructures. Although virtualization provides many benefits, it introduces new security challenges; that is, the introduction of a hypervisor introduces threats since hypervisors expose new attack surfaces.
Intrusion detection is a common cyber security mechanism whose task is to detect malicious activities in host and/or network environments. This enables timely reaction in order to stop an on-going attack, or to mitigate the impact of a security breach. The wide adoption of virtualization has resulted in the increasingly common practice of deploying conventional intrusion detection systems (IDSs), for example, hardware IDS appliances or common software-based IDSs, in designated VMs as virtual network functions (VNFs). In addition, the research and industrial communities have developed IDSs specifically designed to operate in virtualized environments (i.e., hypervisorbased IDSs), with components both inside the hypervisor and in a designated VM. The latter are becoming increasingly common with the growing proliferation of virtualized data centers and the adoption of the cloud computing paradigm, for which virtualization is as a key enabling technology.
To minimize the risk of security breaches, methods and techniques for evaluating IDSs in an accurate manner are essential. For instance, one may compare different IDSs in terms of their attack detection accuracy in order to identify and deploy the IDS that operates optimally in a given environment, thereby reducing the risks of a security breach. However, methods and techniques for realistic and accurate evaluation of the attack detection accuracy of IDSs in virtualized environments (i.e., IDSs deployed as VNFs or hypervisor-based IDSs) are lacking. That is, workloads that exercise the sensors of an evaluated IDS and contain attacks targeting hypervisors are needed. Attacks targeting hypervisors are of high severity since they may result in, for example, altering the hypervisors’s memory and thus enabling the execution of malicious code with hypervisor privileges. In addition, there are no metrics and measurement methodologies
for accurately quantifying the attack detection accuracy of IDSs in virtualized environments with elastic resource provisioning (i.e., on-demand allocation or deallocation of virtualized hardware resources to VMs). Modern hypervisors allow for hotplugging virtual CPUs and memory on the designated VM where the intrusion detection engine of hypervisor-based IDSs, as well as of IDSs deployed as VNFs, typically operates. Resource hotplugging may have a significant impact on the attack detection accuracy of an evaluated IDS, which is not taken into account by existing metrics for quantifying IDS attack detection accuracy. This may lead to inaccurate measurements, which, in turn, may result in the deployment of misconfigured or ill-performing IDSs, increasing
the risk of security breaches.
This thesis presents contributions that span the standard components of any system
evaluation scenario: workloads, metrics, and measurement methodologies. The scientific contributions of this thesis are:
A comprehensive systematization of the common practices and the state-of-theart on IDS evaluation. This includes: (i) a definition of an IDS evaluation design space allowing to put existing practical and theoretical work into a common context in a systematic manner; (ii) an overview of common practices in IDS evaluation reviewing evaluation approaches and methods related to each part of the design space; (iii) and a set of case studies demonstrating how different IDS evaluation approaches are applied in practice. Given the significant amount of existing practical and theoretical work related to IDS evaluation, the presented systematization is beneficial for improving the general understanding of the topic by providing an overview of the current state of the field. In addition, it is beneficial for identifying and contrasting advantages and disadvantages of different IDS evaluation methods and practices, while also helping to identify specific requirements and best practices for evaluating current and future IDSs.
An in-depth analysis of common vulnerabilities of modern hypervisors as well as a set of attack models capturing the activities of attackers triggering these vulnerabilities. The analysis includes 35 representative vulnerabilities of hypercall handlers (i.e., hypercall vulnerabilities). Hypercalls are software traps from a kernel of a VM to the hypervisor. The hypercall interface of hypervisors, among device drivers and VM exit events, is one of the attack surfaces that hypervisors expose. Triggering a hypercall vulnerability may lead to a crash of the hypervisor or to altering the hypervisor’s memory. We analyze the origins
of the considered hypercall vulnerabilities, demonstrate and analyze possible attacks that trigger them (i.e., hypercall attacks), develop hypercall attack models(i.e., systematized activities of attackers targeting the hypercall interface), and discuss future research directions focusing on approaches for securing hypercall interfaces.
A novel approach for evaluating IDSs enabling the generation of workloads that contain attacks targeting hypervisors, that is, hypercall attacks. We propose an approach for evaluating IDSs using attack injection (i.e., controlled execution of attacks during regular operation of the environment where an IDS under test is deployed). The injection of attacks is performed based on attack models that capture realistic attack scenarios. We use the hypercall attack models developed as part of this thesis for injecting hypercall attacks.
A novel metric and measurement methodology for quantifying the attack detection accuracy of IDSs in virtualized environments that feature elastic resource provisioning. We demonstrate how the elasticity of resource allocations in such environments may impact the IDS attack detection accuracy and show that using existing metrics in such environments may lead to practically challenging and inaccurate measurements. We also demonstrate the practical use of the metric we propose through a set of case studies, where we evaluate common conventional IDSs deployed as VNFs.
In summary, this thesis presents the first systematization of the state-of-the-art on IDS evaluation, considering workloads, metrics and measurement methodologies as integral parts of every IDS evaluation approach. In addition, we are the first to examine the hypercall attack surface of hypervisors in detail and to propose an approach using attack injection for evaluating IDSs in virtualized environments. Finally, this thesis presents the first metric and measurement methodology for quantifying the attack detection accuracy of IDSs in virtualized environments that feature elastic resource provisioning.
From a technical perspective, as part of the proposed approach for evaluating IDSsthis thesis presents hInjector, a tool for injecting hypercall attacks. We designed hInjector to enable the rigorous, representative, and practically feasible evaluation of IDSs using attack injection. We demonstrate the application and practical usefulness of hInjector, as well as of the proposed approach, by evaluating a representative hypervisor-based IDS designed to detect hypercall attacks. While we focus on evaluating the capabilities of IDSs to detect hypercall attacks, the proposed IDS evaluation approach can be generalized and applied in a broader context. For example, it may be directly used to also evaluate security mechanisms of hypervisors, such as hypercall access control (AC) mechanisms. It may also be applied to evaluate the capabilities
of IDSs to detect attacks involving operations that are functionally similar to hypercalls,
for example, the input/output control (ioctl) calls that the Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM) hypervisor supports. For IDSs in virtualized environments featuring elastic resource provisioning, our approach for injecting hypercall attacks can be applied in combination with the attack detection accuracy metric and measurement methodology we propose. Our approach for injecting hypercall attacks, and our metric and measurement methodology, can also be applied independently beyond the scenarios considered in this thesis. The wide spectrum of security mechanisms in virtualized environments whose evaluation can directly benefit from the contributions of this thesis (e.g., hypervisor-based IDSs, IDSs deployed as VNFs, and AC mechanisms) reflects the practical implication of the thesis.
Costly signaling with mobile devices: An evolutionary psychological perspective on smartphones
(2016)
In the last decade, mobile device ownership has largely increased. In particular, smartphone ownership is constantly rising (A. Smith, 2015; Statista, 2016a), and there is a real hype for luxury brand smartphones (Griffin, 2015). These observations raise the question of which functions smartphones serve in addition to their original purposes of making and receiving calls, searching for information, and organizing. Beyond these obvious functions, studies suggest that smartphones express fashion, lifestyle, and one’s economic status (e.g., Bødker et al., 2009; Statista, 2016b; Vanden Abeele, Antheunis, & Schouten, 2014). Specifically, individuals seem to purchase and use conspicuous luxury brand smartphones to display and enhance status (D. Kim et al., 2014; Müller-Lietzkow et al., 2014; Suki, 2013). But how does owning a conspicuous, high-status smartphone contribute to status, and which benefits may these status boosts provide to their owners? From an evolutionary perspective, status carries a lot of advantages, particularly for males; high status grants them priority access to resources and correlates with their mating success (van Vugt & Tybur, 2016). In this sense, research suggests that men conspicuously display their cell phones to attract mates and to distinguish themselves from rivals (Lycett & Dunbar, 2000). In a similar vein, evolutionarily informed studies on conspicuous consumption indicate that the purchase and display of conspicuous luxuries (including mobile phones and smartphones) relate to a man’s interest in uncommitted sexual relationships and enhance his desirability as a short-term mate (Hennighausen & Schwab, 2014; Saad, 2013; Sundie et al., 2011). Drawing on these findings, this doctoral dissertation investigated how a man is perceived given that he is an owner of a high-status (vs. nonconspicuous, low-status) smartphone as a romantic partner and male rival. This was done in three experiments. In addition, it was examined how male conspicuous consumption of smartphones interacted with further traits that signal a man’s mate quality, namely facial attractiveness (Studies 1 and 2) and social dominance (Study 3). Study 1 revealed that men and women perceived a male owner of a conspicuous smartphone as a less desirable long-term mate and as more inclined toward short-term mating. Study 2 replicated these results and showed that men and women assigned traits that are associated with short-term mating (e.g., low loyalty, interest in flirts, availability of tangible resources) to a male owner of a conspicuous smartphone and perceived him as a stronger male rival and mate poacher, and less as a friend. The results of Study 2 further suggested that specifically more attractive men might benefit from owning a conspicuous smartphone in a short-term mating context and might be hence considered as stronger male rivals. Study 3 partially replicated the findings of Studies 1 and 2 pertaining to the effects of owning a conspicuous smartphone. Study 3 did not show different effects of conspicuous consumption of smartphones on perceptions of a man dependent on the level of his social dominance.
To conclude, the findings of this doctoral dissertation suggest that owning a conspicuous, high-status smartphone might not only serve proximate functions (e.g., making and receiving calls, organization) but also ultimate functions, which relate to mating and reproduction. The results indicate that owning a conspicuous smartphone might yield benefits for men in a short-term rather than in a long-term mating context. Furthermore, more attractive men appear to benefit more from owning a conspicuous smartphone than less attractive men. These findings provide further insights into the motivations that underlie men’s purchases and displays of conspicuous, high-status smartphones from luxury brands that reach beyond the proximate causes frequently described in media and consumer psychological research. By applying an evolutionary perspective, this doctoral dissertation demonstrates the power and utility of this research paradigm for media psychological research and shows how combining a proximate and ultimate perspective adds to a more profound understanding of smartphone phenomena.
Project Borylene
A new borylene ligand ({BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)}) has been successfully synthesized bound in a terminal manner to base metal scaffolds of the type [M(CO)\(_5\)] (M = Cr, Mo, and W), yielding complexes [(OC)\(_5\)Cr{BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)}] (19), [(OC)\(_5\)Mo{BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t- Bu)}] (20), and [(OC)\(_5\)W{BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)}] (21) (Figure 5-1). Synthesis of complexes 19, 20, and 21 was accomplished by double salt elimination reactions of Na\(_2\)[M(CO)\(_5\)] (M = Cr (11), Mo (1), and W (12)) with the dihaloborane Br\(_2\)BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu) (18). This new “first generation” unsymmetrical borylene ligand is closely akin to the bis(trimethylsilyl)aminoborylene ligand and has been shown to display similar structural characteristics and reactivity. The unsymmetrical borylene ligand {BN((SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)} does display some individual characteristics of note and has experimentally been shown to undergo photolytic transfer to transition metal scaffolds in a more rapid manner, and appears to be a more reactive borylene ligand, than the previously published symmetrical {BN(SiMe\(_3\))\(_2\)} ligand, based on NMR and IR spectroscopic evidence.
Photolytic transfer reactions with this new borylene ligand ({BN((SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)}) were conducted with other metal scaffolds, resulting in either complete borylene transfer or partial transfer to form bridging borylene ligand interactions between the two transition metals. The unsymmetrical ligand’s coordination to early transition metals (up to Group 6) indicates a preference for a terminal coordination motif while bound to these highly Lewis acidic species. The ligand appears to form more energetically stable bridging coordination modes when bound to transition metals with high Lewis basicity (beyond Group 9) and has been witnessed to transfer to transition metal scaffolds in a terminal manner and subsequently rearrange in order to achieve a more energetically stable bridging final state.
Figure 5-2 lists the four different transfer reactions conducted between the chromium borylene species [(OC)\(_5\)Cr{BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)}] (19) and the transition metal complexes [(η\(^5\)-C\(_5\)H\(_5\))V(CO)\(_4\)] (51), [(η\(^5\)-C\(_5\)Me\(_5\))Ir(CO)\(_2\)] (56), [(η\(^5\)-C\(_5\)H\(_4\)Me)Co(CO)\(_2\)] (59), and [{(η\(^5\)-C\(_5\)H\(_5\))Ni}\(_2\){μ-(CO)\(_2\)}] (53). These reactions successfully yielded the new “second generation” borylene complexes [(η\(^5\)-C\(_5\)H\(_5\))(OC)\(_3\)V{BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)}] (55), [(η\(^5\)-C\(_5\)Me\(_5\))Ir{BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)}\(_2\)] (58), [{(η\(^5\)-C\(_5\)H\(_4\)Me)Co}\(_2\)(μ-CO)\(_2\){μ- BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)}] (61), and [{(η\(^5\)-C\(_5\)H\(_5\))Ni}\(_2\)(μ-CO){μ-BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)}] (62), respectively.
Analysis of the accumulated data for all of the terminal borylene species discussed in this section, particularly bond distances, infrared spectroscopy, and \(^{11}\)B{\(^1\)H} NMR spectroscopic data, has been performed, and a trend in the data has led to the following conclusions:
[1] NMR spectroscopic data for the \(^{11}\)B{\(^1\)H} boron and \(^{13}\)C{\(^1\)H} carbonyl environments of the first generation borylene species ([(OC)\(_5\)M{BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)}] (M = Cr (19), Mo (20), and W (21))) all show progressive up-field shifting as the Group 6 metal becomes heavier (Cr (19) to Mo (20) to W (21)), indicating maximum deshielding for these nuclei in the [(OC)\(_5\)Cr{BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)}] (19) complex.
[2] The boron-metal-trans-carbon (B-M-C\(_{trans}\)) axes of the first generation borylene complexes [(OC)\(_5\)M{BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)}] (M = Mo (20), and W (21)) are not completely linear, preventing direct IR spectroscopic comparison. The chromium analog [(OC)\(_5\)Cr{BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)}] (19), however, is essentially linear and displays the expected three carbonyl IR stretching frequencies, all at higher energy than those of the chromium bis(trimethylsilyl)aminoborylene complex [(OC)\(_5\)Cr{BN(SiMe\(_3\))\(_2\)}] (13), indicating that the ({BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)}) ligand is either a stronger σ-donor or a poorer π-acceptor compared to the chromium metal center.
[3] In transfer reactions, the {BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)} fragment appears to be more stable as a terminal ligand when bound to more Lewis acidic first row transition metals and appears to prefer coordination in a bridging motif when coordinated to more Lewis basic first row transition metals.
Project Borirene
The synthesis of the first platinum bis(borirene) complexes are presented along with findings from structural and electronic examination of the role of platinum in allowing increased coplanarity and conjugation of twin borirene systems. This series of trans-platinum-linked bis(borirene) complexes (119/120, 122/123, and 125/126) all show coplanarity in the twin ring systems and stand as the first verified structural representations of two coplanar borirene systems across a linking unit. The role of a platinum atom in mediating communication between chromophoric ligands can be generalized by an expected bathochromic (red) shift in the absorption spectrum due to an increase in the electronic delocalization between the formerly independent aromatic systems when compared to the platinum mono-σ-borirenyl systems. The trans-platinum bis(borirene) scaffold serves as a simplified monomeric system that allows not only study of the effects of transition metals in mitigating electronic conjugation, but also the tunability of the overall photophysical profile of the system by exocyclic augmentation of the three-membered aromatic ring.
A series of trans-platinum bis(alkynyl) complexes were prepared (Figure 5-3) to serve as stable platforms to transfer terminal borylene ligands {BN(SiMe\(_3\))\(_2\)} onto 95, 102, 106, and 63. Mixing of cis-[PtCl\(_2\)(PEt\(_3\))\(_2\)] (93) with two equivalents of corresponding alkynes in diethylamine solutions successfully yielded trans-[Pt(C≡C-Ph)\(_2\)(PEt\(_3\))\(_2\)] (95), trans-[Pt(C≡C-p-C\(_6\)H\(_4\)OMe)\(_2\)(PEt\(_3\))\(_2\)] (102), trans-[Pt(C≡C-p-C\(_6\)H\(_4\)CF\(_3\))\(_2\)(PEt\(_3\))\(_2\)](106), and trans-[Pt(C≡C-9-C\(_{14}\)H\(_9\))\(_2\)(PEt\(_3\))\(_2\)] (63) through salt elimination reactions.
Three of the trans-platinum bis(alkynyl) complexes (95, 102, and 106) successfully yielded trans-platinum bis(borirenyl) complexes 119/120, 122/123, and 125/126 through photolytic transfer of two equivalents of the terminal borylene ligand {BN(SiMe\(_3\))\(_2\)} from [(OC)\(_5\)Cr{BN(SiMe\(_3\))\(_2\)}] (13) (Figure 5-4). Attempted borylene transfer reactions to the trans-platinum bis(alkynyl) complex trans-[Pt(C≡C-9-C\(_{14}\)H\(_9\))\(_2\)(PEt\(_3\))\(_2\)] (63) failed due to the complex’s photoinstability. Although a host of other variants of platinum alkynyl species were prepared and attempted, these three were the only ones that successfully yielded trans-platinum bis(borirenyl) units. Attempts were also made to create a cis variant for direct UV-vis comparison to the trans-platinum bis(borirenyl) variants, however, these attempts were also not successful. Gladysz-type platinum end-capped alkynyl species were also synthesized to serve as transfer platforms for borirene synthesis in sequential order, however, these species were also shown to not be photolytically stable.
A host of new monoborirenes: Ph-(μ-{BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)}C=C)-Ph (148), trans- [PtCl{(μ-{BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)}C=C)-Ph}(PEt\(_3\))\(_2\)] (149), and [(η\(^5\)-C\(_5\)Me\(_5\))(OC)\(_2\)Fe(μ- {BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)}C=C)Ph] (150) were synthesized by photo- and thermolytic transfer of the unsymmetrical {BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)} ligand from the complexes [(OC)\(_5\)M{BN(SiMe\(_3\))(t-Bu)}] (M = Cr (19), Mo (20), and W (21)) to organic and organometallic alkynyl species to verify that the borylene complexes all display similar reactivity to the symmetrical terminal borylenes of the type [(OC)\(_5\)M{BN(SiMe\(_3\))\(_2\)}] (M = Cr (13), Mo (14), and W (15)). These monoborirenes are all found to be oils when in their pure states and X-ray structural determination was impossible for these species.
Project Boratabenzene
The bis(boratabenzene) complex [{(η\(^5\)-C\(_5\)H\(_5\))Co}\(_2\){μ:η\(^6\),η\(^6\)-(BC\(_5\)H\(_5\))\(_2\)}] (189) was successfully prepared by treatment of tetrabromodiborane (65) with six equivalents of cobaltocene (176) in a unique reaction that utilized cobaltocene as both a reagent and reductant (Figure 5-5). The bimetallic transition metal complex features a new bridging bis(boratabenzene) ligand linked through a boron-boron single bond that can manifest delocalization of electron density by providing an accessible LUMO orbital for π-communication between the cobalt centers and heteroaromatic rings.
This dianionic diboron ligand was shown to facilitate electronic coupling between the cobalt metal sites, as evidenced by the potential separations between successive single-electron redox events in the cyclic voltammogram. Four formal redox potentials for complex 189 were found: E\(_{1/2}\)(1) = −0.84 V, E\(_{1/2}\)(2) = −0.94 V, E\(_{1/2}\)(3) = −2.09 V, and E\(_{1/2}\)(4) = −2.36 V (relative to the Fc/Fc+ couple) (Figure 5-6). These potentials correlate to two closely-spaced oxidation waves and two well-resolved reduction waves ([(189)]\(^{0/+1}\), [(189)]\(^{+1/+2}\), [(189)]\(^{0/–1}\), and [(189)]\(^{–1/–2}\) redox couples, respectively). The extent of metal-metal communication was found to be relative to the charge of the metal atoms, with the negative charge being more efficiently delocalized across the bis(boratabenzene) unit (class II Robin-Day system). Magnetic studies indicate that the Co(II) ions are weakly antiferromagnetically coupled across the B-B bridge.
While reduction of the bis(boratabenzene) system resulted in decomposition of the complex, oxidation of the system by one- and two-electron steps resulted in isolable stable monocationic (194) and dicationic (195) forms of the bis(boratabenzene) complex (Figure 5-7). Study of these systems verified the results of the cyclic voltammetry studies performed on the neutral species. These species are unfortunately not stable in acetonitrile or nitromethane solutions, which until this point are the only solvents that have been observed to dissolve the cationic species. Unfortunately, this instability in solution complicates reactivity studies of these cationic complexes.
Finally, reactivity studies were performed on the neutral bis(boratabenzene) complex 189 in which the compound was tested for: (A) cleavage of the boratabenzene (cyclo-BC\(_5\)H\(_5\)) ring from the cobalt center, and (B) oxidative addition of the B-B bond to a transition metal scaffold to attempt synthesis of the first ever L\(_x\)M-η\(^1\)-(BC\(_5\)H\(_5\)) complex. Both of these reactivity studies, however, proved unsuccessful and typically witnessed decomposition of the bis(boratabenzene) complex or no reactivity. After repeated attempts of these reactions, no oxidative addition of the bis(boratabenzene) system could be confirmed.
Starting with a terminological and phenomenological perspective on the question “What is an emotion?”, particularly as developed by Aaron Ben Zeʾev , the kiling scene in the book of Judith (Jdt 12:10–13:9 is analysed. This crucial scene in the book’s plot reports the intense emotions of Holofernes but nothing is said about any emotions on the part of of Judith. The only emotional glimpse occurs in Judith’s short prayers in the killing scene. The highly emotional Holofernes and the unemotional Judith together reveal that Holofernes is already made “headless” by his own emotions, whereas the unemotional Judith, unencumbered by emotions, is able to behead the “headless” Holofernes.
This dissertation focuses on the drivers of international capital flows to emerging markets, as well as the determinants of crises in emerging markets. Particular emphasis is devoted to the role of U.S. monetary policy. The dissertation consists of three independent chapters.
Chapter 1 is a survey of the voluminous empirical literature on the drivers of capital flows to emerging markets. The contribution of the survey is to provide a comprehensive assessment of what we can say with relative confidence about the empirical drivers of EM capital flows. The evidence is structured based on the recognition that the drivers of capital flows vary over time and across different types of capital flows. The drivers are classified using the traditional framework for external and domestic factors (often referred to as “push versus pull” drivers), which is augmented by a distinction between cyclical and structural factors. Push factors are found to matter most for portfolio flows, somewhat less for banking flows, and least for foreign direct investment (FDI). Pull factors matter for all three components, but most for banking flows. A historical perspective suggests that the recent literature may have overemphasized the importance of cyclical factors at the expense of longer-term structural trends.
Chapter 2 undertakes an empirical analysis of the drivers of portfolio flows to emerging markets, focusing on the role of Fed policy. A time series model is estimated to analyze two different concepts of high frequency portfolio flows, including monthly data on flows into investment funds and a novel dataset on monthly portfolio flows obtained from individual national sources. The evidence presented in this chapter suggests a more nuanced interpretation of the role of U.S. monetary policy. In the existing literature, it is traditionally argued that Fed policy tightening is unambiguously negative for capital flows to emerging markets. By contrast, the findings presented in this dissertation suggest that it is the surprise element of monetary policy that affects EM portfolio inflows. A shift in market expectations towards easier future U.S. monetary policy leads to greater foreign portfolio inflows and vice versa. Given current market expectations of sustained increases in the federal funds rate in coming years, EM portfolio flows could be boosted by a slower pace of Fed tightening than currently expected or could be reduced by a faster pace of Fed tightening.
Chapter 3 examines the role of U.S. monetary policy in determining the incidence of emerging market crises. A negative binomial count model and a panel logit model are estimated to analyze the determinants of currency crises, banking crises, and sovereign defaults in a group of 27 emerging economies. The estimation results suggest that the probability of crises is substantially higher (1) when the federal funds rate is above its natural level, (2) during Fed policy tightening cycles, and (3) when market participants are surprised by signals that the Fed will tighten policy faster than previously expected. These findings contrast with the existing literature, which generally views domestic factors as the dominant determinants of emerging market crises. The findings also point to a heightened risk of emerging market crises in the coming years if the Fed continues to tighten monetary policy.
Computer systems have replaced human work-force in many parts of everyday life, but there still exists a large number of tasks that cannot be automated, yet. This also includes tasks, which we consider to be rather simple like the categorization of image content or subjective ratings. Traditionally, these tasks have been completed by designated employees or outsourced to specialized companies. However, recently the crowdsourcing paradigm is more and more applied to complete such human-labor intensive tasks. Crowdsourcing aims at leveraging the huge number of Internet users all around the globe, which form a potentially highly available, low-cost, and easy accessible work-force.
To enable the distribution of work on a global scale, new web-based services emerged, so called crowdsourcing platforms, that act as mediator between employers posting tasks and workers completing tasks. However, the crowdsourcing approach, especially the large anonymous worker crowd, results in two types of challenges. On the one hand, there are technical challenges like the dimensioning of crowdsourcing platform infrastructure or the interconnection of crowdsourcing platforms and machine clouds to build hybrid services. On the other hand, there are conceptual challenges like identifying reliable workers or migrating traditional off-line work to the crowdsourcing environment. To tackle these challenges, this monograph analyzes and models current crowdsourcing systems to optimize crowdsourcing workflows and the underlying infrastructure. First, a categorization of crowdsourcing tasks and platforms is developed to derive generalizable properties. Based on this categorization and an exemplary analysis of a commercial crowdsourcing platform, models for different aspects of crowdsourcing platforms and crowdsourcing mechanisms are developed. A special focus is put on quality assurance mechanisms for crowdsourcing tasks, where the models are used to assess the suitability and costs of existing approaches for different types of tasks. Further, a novel quality assurance mechanism solely based on user-interactions is proposed and its feasibility is shown. The findings from the analysis of existing platforms, the derived models, and the developed quality assurance mechanisms are finally used to derive best practices for two crowdsourcing use-cases, crowdsourcing-based network measurements and crowdsourcing-based subjective user studies. These two exemplary use-cases cover aspects typical for a large range of crowdsourcing tasks and illustrated the potential benefits, but also resulting challenges when using crowdsourcing.
With the ongoing digitalization and globalization of the labor markets, the crowdsourcing paradigm is expected to gain even more importance in the next years. This is already evident in the currently new emerging fields of crowdsourcing, like enterprise crowdsourcing or mobile crowdsourcing. The models developed in the monograph enable platform providers to optimize their current systems and employers to optimize their workflows to increase their commercial success. Moreover, the results help to improve the general understanding of crowdsourcing systems, a key for identifying necessary adaptions and future improvements.
Neuropathic pain, caused by neuronal damage, is a severely impairing mostly chronic condition. Its underlying molecular mechanisms have not yet been thoroughly understood in their variety. In this doctoral thesis, I investigated the role of microRNAs (miRNAs) in a murine model of peripheral neuropathic pain. MiRNAs are small, non-coding RNAs known to play a crucial role in post-transcriptional gene regulation, mainly in cell proliferation and differentiation. Initially, expression patterns in affected dorsal root ganglia (DRG) at different time points after setting a peripheral nerve lesion were studied. DRG showed an increasingly differential expression pattern over the course of one week. Interestingly, a similar effect, albeit to a smaller extent, was observed in corresponding contralateral ganglia. Five miRNA (miR-124, miR-137, miR-183, miR-27b, and miR-505) were further analysed. qPCR, in situ hybridization, and bioinformatical analysis point towards a role for miR-137 and -183 in neuropathic pain as both were downregulated. Furthermore, miR-137 is shown to be specific for non-peptidergic non-myelinated nociceptors (C fibres) in DRG. As the ganglia consist of highly heterocellular tissue, I also developed a neuron-specific approach. Primarily damaged neurons were separated from intact adjacent neurons using fluorescence-activated cell-sorting and their gene expression pattern was analysed using a microarray. Thereby, not only were information obtained about mRNA expression in both groups but, by bioinformatical tools, also inferences on miRNA involvement. The general expression pattern was consistent with previous findings. Still, several genes were found differentially expressed that had not been described in this context before. Among these are corticoliberin or cation-regulating proteins like Otopetrin1. Bioinformatical data conformed, in part, to results from whole DRG, e.g. they implied a down-regulation of miR-124, -137, and -183. However, these results were not significant.
In summary, I found that a) miRNA expression in DRG is influenced by nerve lesions typical of neuropathic pain and that b) these changes develop simultaneously to over-expression of galanin, a marker for neuronal damage. Furthermore, several miRNAs (miR-183, -137) exhibit distinct expression patterns in whole-DRG as well as in neuron-specific approaches. Therefore, further investigation of their possible role in initiation and maintenance of neuropathic pain seems promising.
Finally, the differential expression of genes like Corticoliberin or Otopetrin 1, previously not described in neuropathic pain, has already resulted in follow-up projects.
Classical novae are thermonuclear explosions occurring on the surface of white dwarfs.
When co-existing in a binary system with a main sequence or more evolved star, mass
accretion from the companion star to the white dwarf can take place if the companion
overflows its Roche lobe. The envelope of hydrogen-rich matter which builds on
top of the white dwarf eventually ignites under degenerate conditions, leading to
a thermonuclear runaway and an explosion in the order of 1046 erg, while leaving
the white dwarf intact. Spectral analyses from the debris indicate an abundance of
isotopes that are tracers of nuclear burning via the hot CNO cycle, which in turn
reveal some sort of mixing between the envelope and the white dwarf underneath.
The exact mechanism is still a matter of debate.
The convection and deflagration in novae develop in the low Mach number regime.
We used the Seven League Hydro code (SLH ), which employs numerical schemes
designed to correctly simulate low Mach number flows, to perform two and three-
dimensional simulations of classical novae. Based on a spherically-symmetric model
created with aid of a stellar evolution code, we developed our own nova model and
tested it on a variety of numerical grids and boundary conditions for validation. We
focused on the evolution of temperature, density and nuclear energy generation rate at
the layers between white dwarf and envelope, where most of the energy is generated,
to understand the structure of the transition region, and its effect on the nuclear
burning. We analyzed the resulting dredge-up efficiency stemming from the convective
motions in the envelope. Our models yield similar results to the literature, but seem
to depend very strongly on the numerical resolution. We followed the evolution of
the nuclear species involved in the CNO cycle and concluded that the thermonuclear
reactions primarily taking place are those of the cold and not the hot CNO cycle.
The reason behind this could be that under the conditions generally assumed for
multi-dimensional simulations, the envelope is in fact not degenerate. We performed
initial tests for 3D simulations and realized that alternative boundary conditions are
needed.
The enteric nervous system (ENS) innervates the gastrointestinal (GI) tract and controls central aspects of GI physiology including contractility of the intestinal musculature, glandular secretion and intestinal blood flow. The ENS is composed of neurons that conduct electrical signals and of enteric glial cells (EGCs). EGCs resemble central nervous system (CNS) astrocytes in their morphology and in the expression of shared markers such as the intermediate filament protein glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP). They are strategically located at the interface of ENS neurons and their effector cells to modulate intestinal motility, epithelial barrier stability and inflammatory processes. The specific contributions of EGCs to the maintenance of intestinal homeostasis are subject of current research.
From a clinical point of view EGC involvement in pathophysiological processes such as intestinal inflammation is highly relevant. Like CNS astrocytes ECGs can acquire a reactive, tissue-protective phenotype in response to intestinal injury. In patients with chronic inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) such as Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, alterations in the EGC network are well known, particularly a differential expression of GFAP, which is a hallmark of reactive gliosis in the CNS.
With increasing recognition of the role of EGCs in intestinal health and disease comes the need to study the glial population in its complexity. The overall aim of this thesis was to comprehensively study EGCs with focus on the reactive GFAP-expressing subpopulation under inflammatory conditions in vivo and in vitro. In a first step, a novel in vivo rat model of acute systemic inflammation mimicking sepsis was employed to investigate rapidly occuring responses of EGCs to inflammation. This study revealed that within a short time frame of a few hours, EGCs responded to the inflammation with an upregulation of Gfap gene expression. This inflammation-induced upregulation was confined to the myenteric plexus and varied in intensity along the intestinal rostro-caudal axis. This highly responsive myenteric GFAP-expressing EGC population was further characterized in vivo andin vitro using a transgenic mouse model (hGFAP-eGFP mice). Primary purified murine GFAP-EGC cultures in vitro were established and it was assessed how the transcriptomic and proteomic profiles of these cells change upon inflammatory stimulation. Here, myenteric GFAP-EGCs were found to undergo a shift in gene expression profile that predominantly affects expression of genes associated with inflammatory responses. Further, a secretion of inflammatory mediators was validated on protein level. The GFAP+ subpopulation is hence an active participant in inflammatory pathophysiology. In an acute murine IBD model in vivo, GFAP-EGCs were found to express components of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II in inflamed tissue, which also indicates a crosstalk of EGCs with the innate and the adaptive lamina propria immune system in acute inflammation.
Taken together, this work advances our knowledge on EGC (patho-)physiology by identifying and characterizing an EGC subpopulation rapidly responsive to inflammation. This study further provides the transcriptomic profile of this population in vivo and in vitro, which can be used to identify targets for therapeutic intervention. Due to the modulating influence of EGCs on the intestinal microenvironment, the study further underlines the importance of integrating EGCs into in vitro test systems that aim to model intestinal tissues in vitro and presents an outlook on a potential strategy.