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Mit der vermehrten Nutzung zentralvenöser Katheter in der Pädiatrie stieg die Inzidenz der katheterassoziierten Komplikationen, darunter auch das Auftreten von katheterassoziierten Thrombosen, in den letzten Jahren an. Aufgrund der geringen Studienzahl und großer Unterschiede zwischen den existierenden Studien gibt es diesbezüglich für pädiatrische Patienten bisher noch wenig evidentes Wissen.
Ziel dieser Promotionsarbeit war es einerseits, eine aktuelle epidemiologische Erhebung der katheterassoziierten Thrombose bei onkologisch pädiatrischen Patienten durchzuführen. Zum anderen sollten Zusammenhänge zwischen patienten-/diagnose/katheterspezifischen Charakteristika und dem Auftreten katheterassoziierter Thrombosen erfasst werden, um mögliche Risikogruppen ausfindig zu machen, welche möglicherweise von der Anwendung präventiver Maßnahmen profitieren.
Zu diesem Zweck wurde die retrospektive Untersuchung an der onkologisch pädiatrischen Abteilung der Universitätskinderklinik Würzburg über den Zeitraum von 2008 bis 2012 durchgeführt.
Mittels der Datenerhebung über das klinikinterne SAP-System sowie anhand der Durchsicht von Patientenakten wurden insgesamt 448 neu diagnostizierte onkologisch pädiatrische Patienten, darunter 43 mit katheterassoziierter Thrombose, in die retrospektive Erhebung eingeschlossen.
Durch die statistische Auswertung der Daten konnte eine Inzidenz von 15.9% der katheterassoziierten Thrombose berechnet werden, wobei die Anzahl der neu aufgetretenen, dokumentierten Thrombosefälle im Laufe der beobachteten Jahre um fast das Doppelte anstiegen. Obwohl weder Geschlecht noch Alter als Risikofaktor für das Auftreten von katheterassoziierten Thrombosen identifiziert wurden, waren die weiblichen Patienten zum Zeitpunkt der Thrombose signifikant älter als die männlichen. Auf der Suche nach weiteren Risikofaktoren der katheterassoziierten Thrombose, konnten wir überdies feststellen, dass die Anwendung von Asparaginase Therapie signifikant mit dem Auftreten von Thrombosen assoziiert war.
Neben der Evaluation des thrombotischen Einflusses onkologischer Medikamente beobachteten wir, dass überlebende sowie die an ihrer Primärdiagnose verstorbenen Patienten mit fortschreitender Erkrankung mehr thrombotische Ereignisse zu verzeichnen hatten, als jene in kompletter Remission. Wir konnten folglich also in unseren Daten einen Zusammenhang zwischen Krankheitsstadium und Auftreten von katheterassoziierten Thrombosen nachweisen. Neben der Evaluation von patienten- und diagnoseassoziierter Risikofaktoren untersuchten wir auch, ob die erhobenen Parameter des implantierten Katheters mit einer erhöhten Thromboseinzidenz einhergingen. Dabei zeigte die Statistik unserer Daten, dass die in die Vena subclavia implantierten Katheter häufiger mit Thrombosen assoziiert waren als Katheter in der Vena jugularis externa und Vena cephalica.
Bezüglich der klinischen Manifestation der katheterassoziierten Thrombosen ergab die Auswertung unserer Daten zuletzt, dass sich der Großteil der Thrombosen anhand von Katheterdysfunktion manifestierte, während nur wenige Thrombosen mit klinischen Symptomen, wie lokalen Schmerzen, Schwellung von Arm, Hals und Gesicht, Ödembildung, Dilatation und Kollateralisierung oberflächlicher Venen einhergingen.
Wie in der Literatur weitgehend bekannt, konnten wir das thrombotische Risiko von Asparaginase Therapie bestätigen, wobei die Veränderung der Zusammensetzung der Blutgerinnungsfaktoren möglicherweise eine Rolle spielt.
Auch das erhöhte Thromboserisiko der Implantation zentralvenöser Katheter in die Vena subclavia wurde bereits in anderen Studien beobachtet und konnte in unserer pädiatrischen Kohorte bestätigt werden. Bezüglich des Zusammenhangs zwischen Tumorprogress und der erhöhten Inzidenz katheterassoziierter Thrombosen vermuten wir anhand unserer Daten und der vorliegenden Daten aus dem adulten Bereich, dass tumorspezifische Faktoren wie beispielsweise Metastasierung mit sekundärer Stase, Immobilisation, Dehydratation und Inflammation in der letzten Lebensphase zu einem erhöhten Risiko von Katheter assoziierten Thrombosen beitragen könnten.
Insgesamt ist die aktuelle Evidenz von Risikofaktoren katheterassoziierter Thrombosen in pädiatrischen Kohorten sehr limitiert. Prospektive, groß angelegte Studien werden daher dringend benötigt.
Anhand der von uns durchgeführten Studie konnte gezeigt werden, dass ein Zusammenspiel aus bestimmten patientenspezifischer, tumor sowie katheter assoziierter Faktoren auf das Auftreten katheterbedingter Thrombosen Einfluss nehmen kann. Da diese gefundenen Risikofaktoren mittels unserer retrospektiven Studie in erster Linie Hypothesen darstellen, die noch nicht eindeutig verifiziert werden können, sollten die beobachteten Tendenzen als auch Signifikanzen in einer größer angelegten prospektiven Studie evaluiert werden.
Bei der Konzeption zukünftiger Studien sollte daher besonders auf die Definition von Thrombose, die Zusammensetzung des Patientenkollektivs sowie die diagnostischen Mittel zur Erhebung der Daten geachtet werden, um eine Vergleichbarkeit der Ergebnisse zu gewährleisten. Ein weiteres Ziel für die Zukunft besteht darin, den Nutzen therapeutischer Antikoagulation, sowie primärer und sekundärer Prophylaxe der katheterassoziierten Thrombose, wie auch weitere thromboseassoziierte Risikofaktoren bei kindlichmalignen Grunderkrankungen zu evaluieren, um auf Grundlage evidenter Daten allgemeingültige Empfehlungen zur optimalen Thromboseprävention aussprechen zu können.
TNF receptor type 2 (TNFR2) has gained attention as a costimulatory receptor for T cells and as critical factor for the development of regulatory T cells (Treg) and myeloid suppressor cells. Using the TNFR2-specific agonist TNCscTNF80, direct effects of TNFR2 activation on myeloid cells and T cells were investigated in mice. \(In\) \(vitro\), TNCscTNF80 induced T cell proliferation in a costimulatory fashion, and also supported \(in\) \(vitro\) expansion of Treg cells. In addition, activation of TNFR2 retarded differentiation of bone marrow-derived immature myeloid cells in culture and reduced their suppressor function. \(In\) \(vivo\) application of TNCscTNF80-induced mild myelopoiesis in naïve mice without affecting the immune cell composition. Already a single application expanded Treg cells and improved suppression of CD4 T cells in mice with chronic inflammation. By contrast, multiple applications of the TNFR2 agonist were required to expand Treg cells in naïve mice. Improved suppression of T cell proliferation depended on expression of TNFR2 by T cells in mice repeatedly treated with TNCscTNF80, without a major contribution of TNFR2 on myeloid cells. Thus, TNFR2 activation on T cells in naïve mice can lead to immune suppression \(in\) \(vivo\). These findings support the important role of TNFR2 for Treg cells in immune regulation.
Background:
According to only a handful of historical sources, Osmunda regalis, the royal fern, has been used already in the middle age as an anti-cancer remedy. To examine this ancient cancer cure, an ethanolic extract of the roots was prepared and analysed in vitro on its effectiveness against head and neck cancer cell lines.
Methods:
Proliferation inhibition was measured with the MTT assay. Invasion inhibition was tested in a spheroid-based 3-D migration assay on different extracellular matrix surfaces. Corresponding changes in gene expression were analysed by qRT-PCR array. Induction of apoptosis was measured by fluorescence activated cell sorting (FACS) with the Annexin V binding method. The plant extract was analysed by preliminary phytochemical tests, liquid chromatography/mass spectroscopy (LC-MS) and thin layer chromatography (TLC). Anti-angiogenetic activity was determined by the tube formation assay.
Results:
O. regalis extract revealed a growth inhibiting effect on the head and neck carcinoma cell lines HLaC78 and FaDu. The toxic effect seems to be partially modulated by p-glycoprotein, as the MDR-1 expressing HLaC79-Tax cells were less sensitive. O. regalis extract inhibited the invasion of cell lines on diverse extracellular matrix substrates significantly. Especially the dispersion of the highly motile cell line HlaC78 on laminin was almost completely abrogated. Motility inhibition on laminin was accompanied by differential gene regulation of a variety of genes involved in cell adhesion and metastasis. Furthermore, O. regalis extract triggered apoptosis in HNSCC cell lines and inhibited tube formation of endothelial cells. Preliminary phytochemical analysis proved the presence of tannins, glycosides, steroids and saponins. Liquid chromatography/mass spectroscopy (LC-MS) revealed a major peak of an unknown substance with a molecular mass of 864.15 Da, comprising about 50% of the total extract. Thin layer chromatography identified ferulic acid to be present in the extract.
Conclusion:
The presented results justify the use of royal fern extracts as an anti-cancer remedy in history and imply a further analysis of ingredients.
Several important cellular processes, including transcription, nucleotide excision repair and cell cycle control are mediated by the multifaceted interplay of subunits within the general transcription factor II H (TFIIH).
A better understanding of the molecular structure of TFIIH is the key to unravel the mechanism of action of this versatile protein complex within these pathways. This becomes especially important in the context of severe diseases like xeroderma pigmentosum, Cockayne syndrome and trichothiodystrophy, that arise from single point mutations in some of the TFIIH subunits.
In an attempt to structurally characterize the TFIIH complex, we harnessed the qualities of the eukaryotic thermophile Chaetomium thermophilum, a remarkable fungus, which has only recently been recognized as a novel model organism. Homologues of TFIIH from C. thermophilum were expressed in E. coli, purified to homogeneity and subsequently utilized for crystallization trials and biochemical studies.
The results of the present work include the first crystal structure of the p34 subunit of TFIIH, comprising the N-terminal domain of the protein. The structure revealed a von Willebrand Factor A (vWA) like fold, which is generally known to be involved in a multitude of protein-protein interactions. Structural comparison allowed to delineate similarities as well as differences to already known vWA domains, providing insight into the role of p34 within TFIIH. These results indicate that p34 assumes the role of a structural scaffold for other TFIIH subunits via its vWA domain, while likely serving additional functions, which are mediated through its
C-terminal zinc binding domain and are so far unknown.
Within TFIIH p34 interacts strongly with the p44 subunit, a positive regulator of the XPD helicase, which is required for regulation of RNA Polymerase II mediated transcription and essential for eukaryotic nucleotide excision repair. Based on the p34 vWA structure putative protein-protein interfaces were analyzed and binding sites for the p34 p44 interaction suggested. Continuous crystallization efforts then led to the first structure of a p34 p44 minimal complex, comprising the N-terminal vWA domain of p34 and the C-terminal C4C4 RING domain of p44. The structure of the p34 p44 minimal complex verified the previous hypothesis regarding the involved binding sites. In addition, careful analysis of the complex interface allowed to identify critical residues, which were subsequently mutated and analyzed with respect to their significance in mediating the p34 p44 interaction, by analytical size exclusion chromatography, electrophoretic mobility shift assays and isothermal titration calorimetry. The structure of the p34 p44 complex also revealed a binding mode of the p44 C4C4 RING domain, which differed from that of other known RING domains in several aspects, supporting the hypothesis that p44 contains a novel variation of this domain.
The synapse-associated protein of 47 kDa (Sap47) in Drosophila melanogaster is the founding member of a phylogenetically conserved protein family of hitherto unknown molecular function. Sap47 is localized throughout the entire neuropil of adult and larval brains and closely associated with glutamatergic presynaptic vesicles of larval motoneurons. Flies lacking the protein are viable and fertile and do not exhibit gross structural or marked behavioral deficiencies indicating that Sap47 is dispensable for basic synaptic function, or that its function is compensated by other related proteins.
Syap1 - the mammalian homologue of Sap47 - was reported to play an essential role in Akt1 phosphorylation in various non-neuronal cells by promoting the association of mTORC2 with Akt1 which is critical for the downstream signaling cascade for adipogenesis. The function of Syap1 in the vertebrate nervous system, however, is unknown so far.
The present study provides a first description of the subcellular localization of mouse Syap1 in cultured motoneurons as well as in selected structures of the adult mouse nervous system and reports initial functional experiments. Preceding all descriptive experiments, commercially available Syap1 antibodies were tested for their specificity and suitability for this study. One antibody raised against the human protein was found to recognize specifically both the human and murine Syap1 protein, providing an indispensable tool for biochemical, immunocytochemical and immunohistochemical studies.
In the course of this work, a Syap1 knockout mouse was established and investigated. These mice are viable and fertile and do not show obvious changes in morphology or phenotype. As observed for Sap47 in flies, Syap1 is widely distributed in the synaptic neuropil, particularly in regions rich in glutamatergic synapses but it was also detected at perinuclear Golgi-associated sites in certain groups of neuronal somata. In motoneurons the protein is especially observed in similar perinuclear structures, partially overlapping with Golgi markers and in axons, dendrites and axonal growth cones. Biochemical and immunohistochemical analyses showed widespread Syap1 expression in the central nervous system with regionally distinct distribution patterns in cerebellum, hippocampus or olfactory bulb. Besides its expression in neurons, Syap1 is also detected in non-neuronal tissue e.g. liver, kidney and muscle tissue. In contrast, non-neuronal cells in the brain lack the typical perinuclear accumulation.
First functional studies with cultured primary motoneurons on developmental, structural and functional aspects reveal no influence of Syap1 depletion on survival and morphological features such as axon length or dendritic length. Contrary to expectations, in neuronal tissues or cultured motoneurons a reduction of Akt phosphorylation at Ser473 or Thr308 was not detected after Syap1 knockdown or knockout.
Desert ants of the genus Cataglyphis (Formicinae) are widely distributed in arid
areas of the palearctic ecozone. Their habitats range from relatively cluttered environments in the Mediterranean area to almost landmark free deserts. Due to their
sophisticated navigational toolkit, mainly based on the sky-compass, they were
studied extensively for the last 4 decades and are an exceptional model organism
for navigation. Cataglyphis ants exhibit a temporal polyethism: interior workers
stay inside the dark nest and serve as repletes for the first ∼2 weeks of their adult
life (interior I). They then switch to nursing and nest maintenance (interior II)
until they transition to become day-active outdoor foragers after ∼4 weeks. The
latter switch in tasks involves a transition phase of ∼2-3 days during which the
ants perform learning and orientation walks. Only after this last phase do the ants
start to scavenge for food as foragers.
In this present thesis I address two main questions using Cataglyphis desert ants
as a model organism:
1. What are the underlying mechanisms of temporal polyethism?
2. What is the neuronal basis of sky-compass based navigation in Cataglyphis
ants?
Neuropeptides are important regulators of insect physiology and behavior and as
such are promising candidates regarding the regulation of temporal polyethism in
Cataglyphis ants. Neuropeptides are processed from large precursor proteins and undergo substantial post-translational modifications. Therefore, it is crucial to biochemically identify annotated peptides. As hardly any peptide data are available
for ants and no relevant genomic data has been recorded for Cataglyphis, I started
out to identify the neuropeptidome of adult Camponotus floridanus (Formicinae)
workers (manuscript 1). This resulted in the first neuropeptidome described in an
ant species – 39 neuropeptides out of 18 peptide families. Employing a targeted
approach, I identified allatostatin A (AstA), allatotropin (AT), short neuropeptide
F (sNPF) and tachykinin (TK) using mass spectrometry and immunohistology to
investigate the distribution of AstA, AT and TK in the brain (manuscript 2). All
three peptides are localized in the central complex, a brain center for sensory integration and high-order control of locomotion behavior. In addition, AstA and
TK were also found in visual and olfactory input regions and in the mushroom
bodies, the centers for learning and memory formation. Comparing the TK immunostaining in the brain of 1, 7 and 14 days old dark kept animals revealed that
the distribution in the central complex changes, most prominently in the 14 day
old group. In the Drosophila central complex TK modulates locomotor activity
levels. I therefore hypothesize that TK is involved in the internal regulation of the
interior I–interior II transition which occurs after ∼2 weeks of age.
I designed a behavioral setup to test the effect of neuropeptides on the two traits:
’locomotor activity level’ and ’phototaxis’ (manuscript 3). The test showed that
interior I ants are less active than interior II ants, which again are less active
than foragers. Furthermore, interior ants are negatively phototactic compared to
a higher frequency of positive phototaxis in foragers. Testing the influence of AstA
and AT on the ants’ behavior revealed a stage-specific effect: while interior I behavior is not obviously influenced, foragers become positively phototactic and more
active after AT injection and less active after AstA injection. I further tested the
effect of light exposure on the two behavioral traits of interior workers and show that it rises locomotor activity and results in decreased negative phototaxis in
interior ants. However, both interior stages are still more negatively phototactic
than foragers and only the activity level of interior II ants is raised to the forager
level. These results support the hypothesis that neuropeptides and light influence
behavior in a stage-specific manner.
The second objective of this thesis was to investigate the neuronal basis of skycompass navigation in Cataglyphis (manuscript 4). Anatomical localization of the
sky-compass pathway revealed that its general organization is highly similar to
other insect species. I further focused on giant synapses in the lateral complex,
the last relay station before sky-compass information enters the central complex.
A comparison of their numbers between newly eclosed ants and foragers discloses
a rise in synapse numbers from indoor worker to forager, suggesting task-related
synaptic plasticity in the sky-compass pathway. Subsequently I compared synapse
numbers in light preexposed ants and in dark-kept, aged ants. This experiment
showed that light as opposed to age is necessary and sufficient to trigger this rise
in synapse number. The number of newly formed synapses further depends on the
spectral properties of the light to which the ants were exposed to.
Taken together, I described neuropeptides in C. floridanus and C. fortis, and provided first evidence that they influence temporal polyethism in Cataglyphis ants.
I further showed that the extent to which neuropeptides and light can influence
behavior depends on the animals’ state, suggesting that the system is only responsive under certain circumstances. These results provided first insight into the
neuronal regulation of temporal polyethism in Cataglyphis. Furthermore, I characterized the neuronal substrate for sky-compass navigation for the first time in
Cataglyphis. The high level of structural synaptic plasticity in this pathway linked
to the interior–forager transition might be particularly relevant for the initial calibration of the ants’ compass system.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde erfolgreich eine neue Gasphasen-Apparatur für
Photoelektronen-Imaging-Experimente simuliert, aufgebaut und in Verbindung mit einem ps-Lasersystem in Betrieb genommen.
Neben dem Aufbau der Apparatur stand die Aufklärung der Dynamik angeregter Zustände von aromatischen Heterocyclen und Pyrenen im Fokus dieser Arbeit. Die untersuchten Moleküle wurden durch Resonanzverstärkte Mehrphotonenionisation in einem Molekularstrahlexperiment sowohl zeit-, als auch frequenzaufgelöst untersucht.
Although the Letter of Aristeas mentions the translation of the Jewish nomos into Greek, it is striking that worship is not a fundamental theme of this writing. Nevertheless, six passages present acts of worship, which recount worship from different perspectives: Aristeas prays to God and explains his “Greek” idea of worship (Let. Aris. 17), whereas in Let. Aris. 132-140 the high priest explains the Jewish concept of worship. Sacrifices and prayers at the temple in Jerusalem for the Ptolemaic royal house are told in Let. Aris. 45, while at the Ptolemaic court in Alexandria one of the Jewish scholars prays at the beginning of the symposium (Let. Aris. 184-186). Then the daily prayer of the Jewish scholars are recounted in Let. Aris. 305-306 and finally the Ptolemaic king performs a proskynesis before the law at the end of the letter and thereby accepts the translation (Let. Aris. 317).
Although recent developmental studies exploring the predictive power of intelligence and working memory (WM) for educational achievement in children have provided evidence for the importance of both variables, findings concerning the relative impact of IQ and WM on achievement have been inconsistent. Whereas IQ has been identified as the major predictor variable in a few studies, results from several other developmental investigations suggest that WM may be the stronger predictor of academic achievement. In the present study, data from the Munich Longitudinal Study on the Genesis of Individual Competencies (LOGIC) were used to explore this issue further. The secondary data analysis included data from about 200 participants whose IQ and WM was first assessed at the age of six and repeatedly measured until the ages of 18 and 23. Measures of reading, spelling, and math were also repeatedly assessed for this age range. Both regression analyses based on observed variables and latent variable structural equation modeling (SEM) were carried out to explore whether the predictive power of IQ and WM would differ as a function of time point of measurement (i.e., early vs. late assessment). As a main result of various regression analyses, IQ and WM turned out to be reliable predictors of academic achievement, both in early and later developmental stages, when previous domain knowledge was not included as additional predictor. The latter variable accounted for most of the variance in more comprehensive regression models, reducing the impact of both IQ and WM considerably. Findings from SEM analyses basically confirmed this outcome, indicating IQ impacts on educational achievement in the early phase, and illustrating the strong additional impact of previous domain knowledge on achievement at later stages of development.
HINTERGRUND. In zahlreichen epidemiologischen Studien, so auch in der bevölkerungsbasierten Würzburger Kohortenstudie STAAB (STAdien A und B der Herzinsuffizienz) mit primären kardiologischen Fragestellungen, wird die Körperzusammensetzung mittels bioelektrischer Impedanzanalyse (BIA) gemessen. In einer Pilotstudie wurden das Messprotokoll und die Reproduzierbarkeit der Messungen überprüft. Außerdem wurde untersucht, wie sich die Verletzung bestimmter Protokollvorschriften (Messung am nüchternen Probanden im Ruhezustand) verzerrend auf die Messwerte auswirken.
METHODEN. Die Probanden (16 Männer, 18 Frauen) waren volljährig, hatten keine mit dem Protokoll unverträglichen Erkrankungen oder Medikationen und erteilten ihre schriftliche informierte Einwilligung. In sechs konsekutiven BIA-Messungen wurden mittels Seca® mBCA 515 fettfreie Masse, Muskelmasse, Fettmasse, Fettanteil, Gesamtkörperwasser und extrazelluläres Wasser unter verschiedenen Bedingungen bestimmt. Zunächst wurden unter den vorgeschriebenen Standardbedingungen zwei direkt aufeinander folgende Messungen durchgeführt, zwischen denen die Probanden das Gerät verließen. Die dritte Messung erfolgte unmittelbar nach dem Trinken von 500mL Mineralwasser, die vierte nach 20-30min Wartezeit. Anschließend unterzogen sich die Probanden unterzogen einer körperlichen Belastung (Laufen im Stand, Springen, Kniebeugen) bis zum Einsetzen einer deutlichen Schweißproduktion. Die fünfte BIA-Messung erfolgte im unmittelbaren Anschluss an die Belastung, die sechste nach weiteren 5min Ruhepause.
ERGEBNISSE. Die beiden unter Standardbedingungen durchgeführten Messungen lieferten bei den Probanden jeweils fast identische Werte. Die Wasseraufnahme wurde vom Gerät bei Männern nur marginal (+100g), bei Frauen gar nicht als solche registriert. Vielmehr wurde eine signifikante Zunahme der Fettmasse angezeigt (Männer +300g, Frauen +500g, siehe Abbildung). Die Fehlzuordnung des aufgenommenen Wassers verschob sich nach der Wartezeit nur geringfügig. Nach der körperlichen Belastung wurde bei den Männern eine gestiegene Fettmasse gemessen (+400g, siehe Abbildung), die sich nach der kurzen Ruhepause wieder reduzierte (–300g), während sich die angezeigte Körperwassermasse genau gegenläufig verhielt. Bei den Frauen waren die Veränderungen unter Belastung und nach der Ruhepause geringfügig. Die Verlaufsprofile der Geschlechter unterschieden sich in allen Messvariablen signifikant (Interaktionstest).
SCHLUSSFOLGERUNG. Die Messwerte des BIA-Geräts sind unter den definierten Standardbedingungen gut reproduzierbar. Die experimentellen Veränderungen der Protokollstandards simulierten alltäglich vorkommende Einflussfaktoren wie Wasserzufuhr oder körperliche Belastung kurz vor der Untersuchung. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass die Nichteinhaltung der Standards zu messbaren Verzerrungen führen. Dies ist umso gravierender, da die Verzerrungen in den vom Gerät angezeigten Messwerten physikalisch nicht ihren kausalen Ursachen entsprechen und zudem bei den Geschlechtern verschieden ausgeprägt sind. Vor dem Hintergrund dieser Ergebnisse sollten bei der epidemiologischen Interpretation statistischer Zusammenhänge von BIA-Werten mit anderen Messgrößen auch immer die möglichen Auswirkungen fehlerhafter Zuordnung von Körperanteilen kritisch geprüft und erörtert werden.
During my PhD I studied two principal biological aspects employing Drosophila melanogaster. Therefore, this study is divided into Part I and II.
Part I: Bruchpilot and Complexin interact to regulate synaptic vesicle tethering to the
active zone cytomatrix
At the presynaptic active zone (AZ) synaptic vesicles (SVs) are often physically linked to an electron-dense cytomatrix – a process referred to as “SV tethering”. This process serves to concentrate SVs in close proximity to their release sites before contacting the SNARE complex for subsequent fusion (Hallermann and Silver, 2013). In Drosophila, the AZ protein Bruchpilot (BRP) is part of the proteinous cytomatrix at which SVs accumulate (Kittel et al., 2006b; Wagh et al., 2006; Fouquet et al., 2009). Intriguingly, truncation of only 1% of the C-terminal region of BRP results in a severe defect in SV tethering to this AZ scaffold (hence named brpnude; Hallermann et al., 2010b).
Consistent with these findings, cell-specific overexpression of a C-terminal BRP fragment, named mBRPC-tip (corresponds to 1% absent in brpnude; m = mobile) phenocopied the brpnude mutant in behavioral and functional experiments. These data indicate that mBRPC-tip suffices to saturate putative SV binding sites, which induced a functional tethering deficit at motoneuronal AZs. However, the molecular identity of the BRP complement to tether SVs to the presynaptic AZ scaffold remains unknown. Moreover, within larval motoneurons membrane-attached C-terminal portions of BRP were sufficient to tether SVs to sites outside of the AZ. Based on this finding a genetic screen was designed to identify BRP interactors in vivo. This screen identified Complexin (CPX), which is known to inhibit spontaneous SV fusion and to enhance stimulus evoked SV release (Huntwork and Littleton, 2007; Cho et al., 2010; Martin et al., 2011). However, so far CPX has not been associated with a function upstream of priming/docking and release of SVs. This work provides morphological and functional evidence, which suggests that CPX promotes recruitment of SVs to the AZ and thereby curtails synaptic short-term depression. Together, the presented findings indicate a functional interaction between BRP and CPX at Drosophila AZs.
Part II: The Adhesion-GPCR Latrophilin/CIRL shapes mechanosensation
The calcium independent receptor of α-latrotoxin (CIRL), also named Latrophilin, represents a prototypic Adhesion class G-protein coupled-receptor (aGPCR). Initially, Latrophilin was identified based on its capacity to bind the α-component of latrotoxin (α-LTX; Davletov et al., 1996; Krasnoperov et al., 1996), which triggers massive exocytotic activity from neurons of the peripheral nervous system (Scheer et al., 1984; Umbach et al., 1998; Orlova et al., 2000). As a result Latrophilin is considered to play a role in synaptic transmission. Later on, Latrophilins have been associated with other biological processes including tissue polarity (Langenhan et al., 2009), fertility (Prömel et al., 2012) and synaptogenesis (Silva et al., 2011). However, thus far its subcellular localization and the identity of endogenous ligands, two aspects crucial for the comprehension of Latrophilin’s in vivo function, remain enigmatic.
Drosophila contains only one latrophilin homolog, named dCirl, whose function has not been investigated thus far.
This study demonstrates abundant dCirl expression throughout the nervous system of Drosophila larvae. dCirlKO animals are viable and display no defects in development and neuronal differentiation. However, dCirl appears to influence the dimension of the postsynaptic sub-synaptic reticulum (SSR), which was accompanied by an increase in the postsynaptic Discs-large abundance (DLG). In contrast, morphological and functional properties of presynaptic motoneurons were not compromised by the removal of dCirl. Instead, dCirl is required for the perception of mechanical challenges (acoustic-, tactile- and proprioceptive stimuli) through specialized mechanosensory devices, chordotonal organs (Eberl, 1999). The data indicate that dCirl modulates the sensitivity of chordotonal neurons towards mechanical stimulation and thereby adjusts their input-output relation. Genetic interaction analyses suggest that adaption of the molecular mechanotransduction machinery by dCirl may underlie this process. Together, these results uncover an unexpected function of Latrophilin/dCIRL in mechanosensation and imply general modulatory roles of aGPCR in mechanoception.
Adhesion-type G protein-coupled receptors (aGPCRs), a large molecule family with over 30 members in humans, operate in organ development, brain function and govern immunological responses. Correspondingly, this receptor family is linked to a multitude of diverse human diseases. aGPCRs have been suggested to possess mechanosensory properties, though their mechanism of action is fully unknown. Here we show that the Drosophila aGPCR Latrophilin/dCIRL acts in mechanosensory neurons by modulating ionotropic receptor currents, the initiating step of cellular mechanosensation. This process depends on the length of the extended ectodomain and the tethered agonist of the receptor, but not on its autoproteolysis, a characteristic biochemical feature of the aGPCR family. Intracellularly, dCIRL quenches cAMP levels upon mechanical activation thereby specifically increasing the mechanosensitivity of neurons. These results provide direct evidence that the aGPCR dCIRL acts as a molecular sensor and signal transducer that detects and converts mechanical stimuli into a metabotropic response.
Polyneuropathien sind eine ätiologisch heterogene Erkrankung des peripheren Nervensystems. In bis zu 30% der Fälle ist eine Zuordnung zu einem bestimmten PNP Subtyp auch nach aufwändiger und zum Teil invasiver Diagnostik nicht möglich. Bislang fehlt ein diagnostischer Biomarker bei PNP, der z.B. bei der Unterscheidung zwischen einzelnen diagnostischen Subgruppen oder entzündlichen und nicht-entzündlichen Erkrankungsformen helfen könnte. In einer prospektiven Studie mit insgesamt 97 Patienten mit Neuropathien verschiedenster Ätiologie und 17 gesunden Kontrollpersonen erstellten wir Genexpressionsprofile von inflammatorischen Markern und Markern der Regeneration peripherer Nerven in Haut- und N. suralis-Biopsaten. Es wurden Inflammationsmarker (TAC1, CRMP2, AIF1, IL-6) und Marker, die in die Regeneration peripherer Nerven involviert sind (SCD, Netrin-1, DCC, UNC5H2, NEO1, Netrin-G1, Netrin-G2), mittels qRT-PCR untersucht. Alle Patienten erhielten eine N. suralis-Biopsie und/oder eine Hautbiopsie von Ober- beziehungsweise Unterschenkel. Weder in den Haut- noch in den N. suralis-Biopsaten konnten Unterschiede in der Genexpression dieser Marker zwischen einzelnen diagnostischen Subgruppen gefunden werden. Der Inflammationsmarker AIF1 war jedoch in Patienten-Hautproben sowohl proximal als auch distal höher exprimiert als bei gesunden Kontrollpersonen (p < 0,05 bzw. p < 0,01). Zudem fand sich in den Hautproben von PNP-Patienten eine deutlich reduzierte Genexpression von Regenerationsmarkern aus der Netrin-Familie verglichen mit den Hautproben gesunder Probanden (Netrin-1, DCC, UNC5H2, NEO1 sowie Netrin-G1 und G2; p < 0,05 bis p < 0,001). Ferner wies Netrin-1 in distalen Hautproben bei Patienten mit einer entzündlichen PNP eine niedrigere Genexpression auf, als bei Patienten mit einer nicht-entzündlichen Erkrankungsform (p < 0,05). Die Genexpression von NEO1 in distalen Hautproben war bei schmerzloser PNP und gesunden Kontrollpersonen höher als bei schmerzhafter PNP (p < 0,05). Sowohl eine Erhöhung bestimmter Inflammationsmarker als auch eine Verminderung von Regenerationsmarkern peripherer Nerven können bei der Pathophysiologie von Polyneuropathien involviert sein. Insbesondere Mitglieder der Netrin-Familie scheinen eine komplexe Rolle für das Axonwachstum, jedoch auch für entzündliche Prozesse zu spielen.
Do people evaluate an open-minded midwife less positively than a caring midwife? Both open-minded and caring are generally seen as positive attributes. However, consistency varies—the attribute caring is consistent with the midwife stereotype while open-minded is not. In general, both stimulus valence and consistency can influence evaluations. Six experiments investigated the respective influence of valence and consistency on evaluative judgments in the domain of stereotyping. In an impression formation paradigm, valence and consistency of stereotypic information about target persons were manipulated orthogonally and spontaneous evaluations of these target persons were measured. Valence reliably influenced evaluations. However, for strongly valenced stereotypes, no effect of consistency was observed. Parameters possibly preventing the occurrence of consistency effects were ruled out, specifically, valence of inconsistent attributes, processing priority of category information, and impression formation instructions. However, consistency had subtle effects on evaluative judgments if the information about a target person was not strongly valenced and experimental conditions were optimal. Concluding, in principle, both stereotype valence and consistency can play a role in evaluative judgments of stereotypic target persons. However, the more subtle influence of consistency does not seem to substantially influence evaluations of stereotyped target persons. Implications for fluency research and stereotype disconfirmation are discussed.
Fullerenols, water-soluble C60-fullerene derivatives, have been shown to exert neuroprotective effects in vitro and in vivo, most likely due to their capability to scavenge free radicals. However, little is known about the effects of fullerenols on the blood–brain barrier (BBB), especially on cerebral endothelial cells under inflammatory conditions. Here, we investigated whether the treatment of primary mouse brain microvascular endothelial cells with fullerenols impacts basal and inflammatory blood–brain barrier (BBB) properties in vitro. While fullerenols (1, 10, and 100 µg/mL) did not change transendothelial electrical resistance under basal and inflammatory conditions, 100 µg/mL of fullerenol significantly reduced erk1/2 activation and resulted in an activation of NFκB in an inflammatory milieu. Our findings suggest that fullerenols might counteract oxidative stress via the erk1/2 and NFκB pathways, and thus are able to protect microvascular endothelial cells under inflammatory conditions.
Background:
Ischemic stroke causes a strong inflammatory response that includes T cells, monocytes/macrophages, and neutrophils. Interaction of these immune cells with platelets and endothelial cells facilitates microvascular dysfunction and leads to secondary infarct growth. We recently showed that blocking of platelet glycoprotein (GP) receptor Ib improves stroke outcome without increasing the risk of intracerebral hemorrhage. Until now, it has been unclear whether GPIb only mediates thrombus formation or also contributes to the pathophysiology of local inflammation.
Methods:
Focal cerebral ischemia was induced in C57BL/6 mice by a 60-min transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (tMCAO). Animals were treated with antigen-binding fragments (Fab) against the platelet surface molecules GPIb (p0p/B Fab). Rat immunoglobulin G (IgG) Fab was used as control treatment. Stroke outcome, including infarct size and functional deficits as well as the local inflammatory response, was assessed on day 1 after tMCAO.
Results:
Blocking of GPIb reduced stroke size and improved functional outcome on day 1 after tMCAO without increasing the risk of intracerebral hemorrhage. As expected, disruption of GPIb-mediated pathways in platelets significantly reduced thrombus burden in the cerebral microvasculature. In addition, inhibition of GPIb limited the local inflammatory response in the ischemic brain as indicated by lower numbers of infiltrating T cells and macrophages and lower expression levels of inflammatory cytokines compared with rat IgG Fab-treated controls.
Conclusion:
In acute ischemic stroke, thrombus formation and inflammation are closely intertwined (“thrombo-inflammation”). Blocking of platelet GPIb can ameliorate thrombo-inflammation.
Background
Lymphocytes have been shown to play an important role in the pathophysiology of acute ischemic stroke, but the properties of B cells remain controversial. The aim of this study was to unravel the role of B cells during acute cerebral ischemia using pharmacologic B cell depletion, B cell transgenic mice, and adoptive B cell transfer experiments.
Methods
Transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (60 min) was induced in wild-type mice treated with an anti-CD20 antibody 24 h before stroke onset, JHD\(^{−/−}\) mice and Rag1\(^{−/−}\) mice 24 h after adoptive B cell transfer. Stroke outcome was assessed at days 1 and 3. Infarct volumes were calculated from 2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride (TTC)-stained brain sections, and neurological scores were evaluated. The local inflammatory response was determined by real-time PCR and immunohistochemistry. Apoptosis was analyzed by TUNEL staining, and astrocyte activation was revealed using immunohistochemistry and Western blot.
Results
Pharmacologic depletion of B cells did not influence infarct volumes and functional outcome at day 1 after stroke. Additionally, lack of circulating B cells in JHD\(^{−/−}\) mice also failed to influence stroke outcome at days 1 and 3. Furthermore, reconstitution of Rag1\(^{−/−}\) mice with B cells had no influence on infarct volumes.
Conclusion
Targeting B cells in experimental stroke did not influence lesion volume and functional outcome during the acute phase. Our findings argue against a major pathophysiologic role of B cells during acute ischemic stroke.
Emerging evidence emphasizes the strong impact of regulatory genomic elements in neurodevelopmental processes and the complex pathways of brain disorders. The present genome-wide quantitative trait loci analyses explore the \(cis\)-regulatory effects of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) on DNA methylation (meQTL) and gene expression (eQTL) in 110 human hippocampal biopsies. We identify \(cis\)-meQTLs at 14,118 CpG methylation sites and \(cis\)-eQTLs for 302 3′-mRNA transcripts of 288 genes. Hippocampal \(cis\)-meQTL-CpGs are enriched in flanking regions of active promoters, CpG island shores, binding sites of the transcription factor CTCF and brain eQTLs. \(Cis\)-acting SNPs of hippocampal meQTLs and eQTLs significantly overlap schizophrenia-associated SNPs. Correlations of CpG methylation and RNA expression are found for 34 genes. Our comprehensive maps of \(cis\)-acting hippocampal meQTLs and eQTLs provide a link between disease-associated SNPs and the regulatory genome that will improve the functional interpretation of non-coding genetic variants in the molecular genetic dissection of brain disorders.
The highly motile and versatile protozoan pathogen Trypanosoma brucei undergoes a complex life cycle in the tsetse fly. Here we introduce the host insect as an expedient model environment for microswimmer research, as it allows examination of microbial motion within a diversified, secluded and yet microscopically tractable space. During their week-long journey through the different microenvironments of the fly´s interior organs, the incessantly swimming trypanosomes cross various barriers and confined surroundings, with concurrently occurring major changes of parasite cell architecture. Multicolour light sheet fluorescence microscopy provided information about tsetse tissue topology with unprecedented resolution and allowed the first 3D analysis of the infection process. High-speed fluorescence microscopy illuminated the versatile behaviour of trypanosome developmental stages, ranging from solitary motion and near-wall swimming to collective motility in synchronised swarms and in confinement. We correlate the microenvironments and trypanosome morphologies to high-speed motility data, which paves the way for cross-disciplinary microswimmer research in a naturally evolved environment.
The limited intrinsic self-healing capability of articular cartilage requires treatment of
cartilage defects. Material assisted and cell based therapies are in clinical practice but
tend to result in formation of mechanical inferior fibro-cartilage in long term follow up. If
a lesion has not been properly restored degenerative diseases are diagnosed as late sequela
causing pain and loss in morbidity. Complex three dimensional tissue models mimicking
physiological situation allow investigation of cartilage metabolism and mechanisms involved
in repair. A standardized and reproducible model cultured under controllable conditions
ex vivo to maintain tissue properties is of relevance for comparable studies.
Topic of this thesis was the establishment of an cartilage defect model that allows for
testing novel biomaterials and investigate the effect of defined defect depths on formation
of repair tissue.
In part I an ex vivo osteochondral defect model was established based on isolation of
porcine osteochondral explants (OCE) from medial condyles, 8 mm in diameter and 5 mm
in height. Full thickness cartilage defects with 1 mm to 4 mm in diameter were created
to define ex vivo cartilage critical size after 28 days culture with custom developed static
culture device. In part II of this thesis hydrogel materials, namely collagen I isolated from
rat tail, commercially available fibrin glue, matrix-metalloproteinase clevable poly(ethylene
glycol) polymerized with heparin (starPEGh), methacrylated poly(N-(2-hydroxypropyl)
methacrylamide mono-dilactate-poly(ethylene glycol) triblock copolymer/methacrylated
hyaluronic acid (MP/HA), thiol functionalized HA/allyl functionalized poly(glycidol)
(P(AGE/G)-HA-SH), were tested cell free and chondrocyte loaded (20 mio/ml) as implant
in 4 mm cartilage defects to investigate cartilage regeneration. Reproducible chondral
defects, 8 mm in diameter and 1 mm in height, were generated with an artificial tissue
cutter (ARTcut®) to investigate effect of defect depth on defect regeneration in part III.
In all approaches OCE were analyzed by Safranin-O staining to visualize proteoglycans
in cartilage and/or hydrogels. Immuno-histological and -fluorescent stainings (aggrecan,
collagen II, VI and X, proCollagen I, SOX9, RUNX2), gene expression analysis (aggrecan,
collagen II and X, SOX9, RUNX2) of chondrocyte loaded hydrogels (part II) and proteoglycan
and DNA content (Part I & II) were performed for detailed analysis of cartilage
regeneration.
Part I: The development of custom made static culture device, consisting of inserts in which OCE is fixed and deep well plate, allowed tissue specific media supply without
supplementation of TGF . Critical size diameter was defined to be 4 mm.
Part II: Biomaterials revealed differences in cartilage regeneration. Collagen I and fibrin
glue showed presence of cells migrated from OCE into cell free hydrogels with indication
of fibrous tissue formation by presence of proCollagen I. In chondrocyte loaded study
cartilage matrix proteins aggrecan, collagen II and VI and transcription factor SOX9 were
detected after ex vivo culture throughout the two natural hydrogels collagen I and fibrin
glue whereas markers were localized in pericellular matrix in starPEGh. Weak stainings resulted
for MP/HA and P(AGE/G)-HA-SH in some cell clusters. Gene expression data and
proteoglycan quantification supported histological findings with tendency of hypertrophy
indicated by upregulation of collagen X and RunX2 in MP/HA and P(AGE/G)-HA-SH.
Part III: In life-dead stainings recruitment of cells from OCE into empty or cell free
collagen I treated chondral defects was seen.
Separated and tissue specific media supply is critical to maintain ECM composition in
cartilage. Presence of OCE stimulates cartilage matrix synthesis in chondrocyte loaded
collagen I hydrogel and reduces hypertrophy compared to free swelling conditions and
pellet cultures. Differences in cartilage repair tissue formation resulted in preference of
natural derived polymers compared to synthetic based materials. The ex vivo cartilage
defect model represents a platform for testing novel hydrogels as cartilage materials, but
also to investigate the effect of cell seeding densities, cell gradients, cell co-cultures on
defect regeneration dependent on defect depth. The separated media compartments allow
for systematic analysis of pharmaceutics, media components or inflammatory cytokines on
bone and cartilage metabolism and matrix stability.
There is a great need for valuable ex vivo models that allow for assessment of cartilage repair strategies to reduce the high number of animal experiments. In this paper we present three studies with our novel ex vivo osteochondral culture platform. It consists of two separated media compartments for cartilage and bone, which better represents the in vivo situation and enables supply of factors pecific to the different needs of bone and cartilage. We investigated whether separation of the cartilage and bone compartments and/or culture media results in the maintenance of viability, structural and functional properties of cartilage tissue. Next, we valuated for how long we can preserve cartilage matrix stability of osteochondral explants during long-term culture over 84 days. Finally, we determined the optimal defect size that does not show spontaneous self-healing in this culture system. It was demonstrated that separated compartments for cartilage and bone in combination with tissue-specific medium allow for long-term culture of osteochondral explants while maintaining cartilage viability, atrix tissue content, structure and mechanical properties for at least 56 days. Furthermore, we could create critical size cartilage defects of different sizes in the model. The osteochondral model represents a valuable preclinical ex vivo tool for studying clinically relevant cartilage therapies, such as cartilage biomaterials, for their regenerative potential, for evaluation of drug and cell therapies, or to study mechanisms of cartilage regeneration. It will undoubtedly reduce the number of animals needed for in vivotesting.
„Joseph Willibald Michl – Ein Komponist von vielem Kopfe“, so schrieb einst Christian Friedrich Daniel Schubart über den wohl bedeutendsten Spross einer Musikerfamilie, die über mindestens vier Generationen das Musikgeschehen der Oberpfalz, Bayerns und darüber hinaus mitgestaltete. Neben dem deutschen Dichter, Organisten, Komponisten und Journalisten Schubart, sprechen sich auch andere Zeitgenossen wie der englische Musikforscher Charles Burney oder der Historiker und Schriftsteller Lorenz von Westenrieder sprechen sich lobend über den „Churfürstlichen Kammer-Compositeur“ von Maximilian III. Joseph aus. Diese Studie untersucht die Genealogie, die Biographie und das Werk von Joseph Willibald Michl anhand neuer Quellen und schließt darüber hinaus Lücken in seinem Curriculum Vitae. Erstmals wird ein systematisch-thematisches Werkverzeichnis des Komponisten vorgelegt, um das heute noch greifbare musikalische Œuvre zu erfassen bzw. zur Klärung fraglicher oder offensichtlicher Falschzuweisungen beizutragen. In einer Analyse repräsentativ ausgewählter Werke der von Michl verwenden musikalischen Gattungen wird die Kompositionsart und Musiksprache Michls näher betrachtet
Multilingualism is part of our everyday lives and has recently entered the medium of film. Based on the linguistic diversity of Spanish-speaking countries, the present paper explores multilingualism as a key competence of foreign language learning. Since film provides students with audiovisual access to multilingual situations, a selection of educational videos that form parts of German textbooks will be critically explored concerning the presentation of multilingual phenomena. The results will be discussed in order to contribute to the systematic acquisition of multilingual skills in the sense of language and cultural awareness during classroom learning.
Becker naevus syndrome is a rare epidermal naevus syndrome defined by the co-occurrence of a Becker naevus with various cutaneous, muscular and skeletal anomalies. In the majority of cases, abnormalities exclusively consist of ipsilateral hypoplasia of the breast, areola and/or nipple in addition to the naevus. Here, we report on a 42-year-old woman with an extensive Becker naevus reaching from the left buttock to the left calf verified on histological examination. In addition, there was marked hypoplasia of the fatty tissue of the left thigh confirmed by magnetic resonance imaging in contrast to hyperplasia of the fatty tissue of the left gluteal area. Underlying muscles and bones were not affected. There was no difference in leg lengths. In addition, we review and discuss the features of Becker naevus syndrome with emphasis on 10 reported cases with involvement of the lower body.
Functional selectivity of G-protein-coupled receptors is believed to originate from ligand-specific conformations that activate only subsets of signaling effectors. In this study, to identify molecular motifs playing important roles in transducing ligand binding into distinct signaling responses, we combined in silico evolutionary lineage analysis and structure-guided site-directed mutagenesis with large-scale functional signaling characterization and non-negative matrix factorization clustering of signaling profiles. Clustering based on the signaling profiles of 28 variants of the β\(_2\)-adrenergic receptor reveals three clearly distinct phenotypical clusters, showing selective impairments of either the Gi or βarrestin/endocytosis pathways with no effect on Gs activation. Robustness of the results is confirmed using simulation-based error propagation. The structural changes resulting from functionally biasing mutations centered around the DRY, NPxxY, and PIF motifs, selectively linking these micro-switches to unique signaling profiles. Our data identify different receptor regions that are important for the stabilization of distinct conformations underlying functional selectivity.
Multiple myeloma (MM) represents a haematological cancer characterized by the pathological hyper proliferation of antibody-producing B-lymphocytes. Patients typically suffer from kidney malfunction and skeletal disorders. In the context of MM, the transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) member Activin A was recently identified as a promoter of both accompanying symptoms. Because studies have shown that bone morphogenetic protein (BMP)-2-mediated activities are counteracted by Activin A, we analysed whether BMP2, which also binds to the Activin A receptors ActRII and ActRIIB but activates the alternative SMAD-1/5/8 pathway, can be used to antagonize Activin A activities, such as in the context of MM. Therefore three BMP2 derivatives were generated with modified binding activities for the type II (ActRIIB) and/or type I receptor (BMPRIA) showing either increased or decreased BMP2 activity. In the context of MM these BMP2 muteins show two functionalities since they act as a) an anti-proliferative/apoptotic agent against neoplastic B-cells, b) as a bone-formation promoting growth factor. The molecular basis of both activities was shown in two different cellular models to clearly rely on the properties of the investigated BMP2 muteins to compete for the binding of Activin A to the Activin type II receptors. The experimental outcome suggests new therapeutic strategies using BMP2 variants in the treatment of MM-related pathologies.
Animal circadian clocks consist of central and peripheral pacemakers, which are coordinated to produce daily rhythms in physiology and behaviour. Despite its importance for optimal performance and health, the mechanism of clock coordination is poorly understood. Here we dissect the pathway through which the circadian clock of Drosophila imposes daily rhythmicity to the pattern of adult emergence. Rhythmicity depends on the coupling between the brain clock and a peripheral clock in the prothoracic gland (PG), which produces the steroid hormone, ecdysone. Time information from the central clock is transmitted via the neuropeptide, sNPF, to non-clock neurons that produce the neuropeptide, PTTH. These secretory neurons then forward time information to the PG clock. We also show that the central clock exerts a dominant role on the peripheral clock. This use of two coupled clocks could serve as a paradigm to understand how daily steroid hormone rhythms are generated in animals.
The thesis focuses on Quality of Experience (QoE) of HTTP adaptive video streaming (HAS) and traffic management in access networks to improve the QoE of HAS. First, the QoE impact of adaptation parameters and time on layer was investigated with subjective crowdsourcing studies. The results were used to compute a QoE-optimal adaptation strategy for given video and network conditions. This allows video service providers to develop and benchmark improved adaptation logics for HAS. Furthermore, the thesis investigated concepts to monitor video QoE on application and network layer, which can be used by network providers in the QoE-aware traffic management cycle. Moreover, an analytic and simulative performance evaluation of QoE-aware traffic management on a bottleneck link was conducted. Finally, the thesis investigated socially-aware traffic management for HAS via Wi-Fi offloading of mobile HAS flows. A model for the distribution of public Wi-Fi hotspots and a platform for socially-aware traffic management on private home routers was presented. A simulative performance evaluation investigated the impact of Wi-Fi offloading on the QoE and energy consumption of mobile HAS.
Marine sponges are known as a rich source for novel bioactive compounds with valuable pharmacological potential. One of the most predominant sponge genera is Hyrtios, reported to have various species such as Hyrtios erectus, Hyrtios reticulatus, Hyrtios gumminae, Hyrtios communis, and Hyrtios tubulatus and a number of undescribed species. Members of the genus Hyrtios are a rich source of natural products with diverse and valuable biological activities, represented by different chemical classes including alkaloids, sesterterpenes and sesquiterpenes. This review covers the literature until June 2016, providing a complete survey of all compounds isolated from the genus Hyrtios with their corresponding biological activities whenever applicable.
We report quantum transport measurements on two dimensional (2D) Si:P and Ge:P δ-layers and compare the inelastic scattering rates relevant for weak localization (WL) and universal conductance fluctuations (UCF) for devices of various doping densities (0.3–2.5 × 10\(^{18}\)m\(^{−2}\)) at low temperatures (0.3–4.2 K). The phase breaking rate extracted experimentally from measurements of WL correction to conductivity and UCF agree well with each other within the entire temperature range. This establishes that WL and UCF, being the outcome of quantum interference phenomena, are governed by the same dephasing rate.
This thesis investigates the impact of the country-of-origin effect on Chinese luxury brands which intend to enter the German luxury goods market. By means of a questionnaire and a quantitative analysis, possible threats to Chinese newcomers that derive from an unfavorable country image are illustrated. In fact, the Chinese origin of luxury goods has an impact on German consumers' perception.
RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) have been extensively studied in eukaryotes, where they post-transcriptionally regulate many cellular events including RNA transport, translation, and stability. Experimental techniques, such as cross-linking and co-purification followed by either mass spectrometry or RNA sequencing has enabled the identification and characterization of RBPs, their conserved RNA-binding domains (RBDs), and the regulatory roles of these proteins on a genome-wide scale. These developments in quantitative, high-resolution, and high-throughput screening techniques have greatly expanded our understanding of RBPs in human and yeast cells. In contrast, our knowledge of number and potential diversity of RBPs in bacteria is comparatively poor, in part due to the technical challenges associated with existing global screening approaches developed in eukaryotes.
Genome- and proteome-wide screening approaches performed in silico may circumvent these technical issues to obtain a broad picture of the RNA interactome of bacteria and identify strong RBP candidates for more detailed experimental study. Here, I report APRICOT (“Analyzing Protein RNA Interaction by Combined Output Technique”), a computational pipeline for the sequence-based identification and characterization of candidate RNA-binding proteins encoded in the genomes of all domains of life using RBDs known from experimental studies. The pipeline identifies functional motifs in protein sequences of an input proteome using position-specific scoring matrices and hidden Markov models of all conserved domains available in the databases and then statistically score them based on a series of sequence-based features. Subsequently, APRICOT identifies putative RBPs and characterizes them according to functionally relevant structural properties. APRICOT performed better than other existing tools for the sequence-based prediction on the known RBP data sets. The applications and adaptability of the software was demonstrated on several large bacterial RBP data sets including the complete proteome of Salmonella Typhimurium strain SL1344. APRICOT reported 1068 Salmonella proteins as RBP candidates, which were subsequently categorized using the RBDs that have been reported in both eukaryotic and bacterial proteins. A set of 131 strong RBP candidates was selected for experimental confirmation and characterization of RNA-binding activity using RNA co-immunoprecipitation followed by high-throughput sequencing (RIP-Seq) experiments. Based on the relative abundance of transcripts across the RIP-Seq libraries, a catalogue of enriched genes was established for each candidate, which shows the RNA-binding potential of 90% of these proteins. Furthermore, the direct targets of few of these putative RBPs were validated by means of cross-linking and co-immunoprecipitation (CLIP) experiments.
This thesis presents the computational pipeline APRICOT for the global screening of protein primary sequences for potential RBPs in bacteria using RBD information from all kingdoms of life. Furthermore, it provides the first bio-computational resource of putative RBPs in Salmonella, which could now be further studied for their biological and regulatory roles. The command line tool and its documentation are available at https://malvikasharan.github.io/APRICOT/.
RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) have been established as core components of several post-transcriptional gene regulation mechanisms. Experimental techniques such as cross-linking and co-immunoprecipitation have enabled the identification of RBPs, RNA-binding domains (RBDs) and their regulatory roles in the eukaryotic species such as human and yeast in large-scale. In contrast, our knowledge of the number and potential diversity of RBPs in bacteria is poorer due to the technical challenges associated with the existing global screening approaches. We introduce APRICOT, a computational pipeline for the sequence-based identification and characterization of proteins using RBDs known from experimental studies. The pipeline identifies functional motifs in protein sequences using position-specific scoring matrices and Hidden Markov Models of the functional domains and statistically scores them based on a series of sequence-based features. Subsequently, APRICOT identifies putative RBPs and characterizes them by several biological properties. Here we demonstrate the application and adaptability of the pipeline on large-scale protein sets, including the bacterial proteome of Escherichia coli. APRICOT showed better performance on various datasets compared to other existing tools for the sequence-based prediction of RBPs by achieving an average sensitivity and specificity of 0.90 and 0.91 respectively. The command-line tool and its documentation are available at https://pypi.python.org/pypi/bio-apricot.
The Old Babylonian Ištar ritual from Mari (FM 3, no. 2) has been the focus of much discussion since its primary edition in 1938 by G. Dossin. This article offers a new analysis of the passage mentioning the balaĝ-deity Ninigizibara, which leads to identifying this balaĝ as a huge upright lyre as tall as a human played by two persons from both sides. Similar musical instruments are known from Anatolia and Egypt. Especially the Egyptian examples, which are attested only for the time of Echnaton, show striking parallels to the musical performance described in the Old Babylonian Ištar ritual. After discussing the possible background of cultural exchange, this article closes with a revaluation and new interpretation of the term balaĝ.
Background: Although there is solid evidence for the efficacy of in vivo and virtual reality (VR) exposure therapy for a specific phobia, there is a significant debate over whether techniques promoting distraction or relaxation have impairing or enhancing effects on treatment outcome. In the present pilot study, we investigated the effect of diaphragmatic breathing (DB) as a relaxation technique during VR exposure treatment.
Method: Twenty-nine patients with aviophobia were randomly assigned to VR exposure treatment either with or without diaphragmatic breathing (six cycles per minute). Subjective fear ratings, heart rate and skin conductance were assessed as indicators of fear during both the exposure and the test session one week later.
Results: The group that experienced VR exposure combined with diaphragmatic breathing showed a higher tendency to effectively overcome the fear of flying. Psychophysiological measures of fear decreased and self-efficacy increased in both groups with no significant difference between the groups.
Conclusions: Our findings indicate that diaphragmatic breathing during VR exposure does not interfere with the treatment outcome and may even enhance treatment effects of VR exposure therapy for aviophobic patients.
The purpose of this study was to develop and implement an in silico model of indigoid-based single-electron transistor (SET) nanodevices, which consist of indigoid molecules from natural dye weakly coupled to gold electrodes that function in a Coulomb blockade regime. The electronic properties of the indigoid molecules were investigated using the optimized density-functional theory (DFT) with a continuum model. Higher electron transport characteristics were determined for Tyrian purple, consistent with experimentally derived data. Overall, these results can be used to correctly predict and emphasize the electron transport functions of organic SETs, demonstrating their potential for sustainable nanoelectronics comprising the biodegradable and biocompatible materials.
Immature or semi-mature dendritic cells (DCs) represent tolerogenic maturation stages that can convert naive T cells into Foxp3\(^{+}\) induced regulatory T cells (iTreg). Here we found that murine bone marrow-derived DCs (BM-DCs) treated with cholera toxin (CT) matured by up-regulating MHC-II and costimulatory molecules using either high or low doses of CT (CT\(^{hi}\), CT\(^{lo}\)) or with cAMP, a known mediator CT signals. However, all three conditions also induced mRNA of both isoforms of the tolerogenic molecule cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen 2 (CTLA-2α and CTLA-2β). Only DCs matured under CT\(^{hi}\) conditions secreted IL-1β, IL-6 and IL-23 leading to the instruction of Th17 cell polarization. In contrast, CT\(^{lo}\)- or cAMP-DCs resembled semi-mature DCs and enhanced TGF-β-dependent Foxp3\(^{+}\) iTreg conversion. iTreg conversion could be reduced using siRNA blocking of CTLA-2 and reversely, addition of recombinant CTLA-2α increased iTreg conversion in vitro. Injection of CT\(^{lo}\)- or cAMP-DCs exerted MOG peptide-specific protective effects in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) by inducing Foxp3\(^{+}\) Tregs and reducing Th17 responses. Together, we identified CTLA-2 production by DCs as a novel tolerogenic mediator of TGF-β-mediated iTreg induction in vitro and in vivo. The CT-induced and cAMP-mediated up-regulation of CTLA-2 also may point to a novel immune evasion mechanism of Vibrio cholerae.
In the present work, the energetic structure and coherence properties of the silicon vacancy point defect in the technologically important material silicon carbide are extensively studied by the optically detected magnetic resonance (ODMR) technique in order to verify its high potential for various quantum applications. In the spin vacancy, unique attributes are arising from the C3v symmetry and the spin-3/2 state, which are not fully described by the standard Hamiltonian of the uniaxial model. Therefore, an advanced Hamiltonian, describing well the appearing phenomena is established and the relevant parameters are experimentally determined. Utilizing these new accomplishments, several quantum metrology techniques are proposed.
First, a vector magnetometry scheme, utilizing the appearance of four ODMR lines, allows for simultaneous detection of the magnetic field strength and the tilting angle of the magnetic field from the symmetry axis of the crystal.
The second magnetometry protocol utilizes the appearance of energetic level anticrossings (LAC) in the ground state (GS) energy levels. Relying only on the change in photoluminescence in the vicinity of this GSLACs, this all-optical method does not require any radio waves and hence provides a much easier operation with less error sources as for the common magnetometry schemes utilizing quantum points.
A similar all-optical method is applied for temperature sensing, utilizing the thermal shift of the zero field splitting and consequently the anticrossing in the excited state (ES). Since the GSLACs show no dependence on temperature, the all-optical magnetometry and thermometry (utilizing the ESLACs) can be conducted subsequently on the same defect.
In order to quantify the achievable sensitivity of quantum metrology, as well as to prove the potential of the Si-vacancy in SiC for quantum processing, the coherence properties are investigated by the pulsed ODMR technique. The spin-lattice relaxation time T1 and the spin-spin relaxation time T2 are thoroughly analyzed for their dependence on the external magnetic field and temperature.
For actual sensing implementations, it is crucial to obtain the best signal-to-noise ratio without loss in coherence time. Therefore, the irradiation process, by which the defects are created in the crystal, plays a decisive role in the device performance. In the present work, samples irradiated with electrons or neutrons with different fluences and energies, producing different defect densities, are analyzed in regard to their T1 and T2 times at room temperature.
Last but not least, a scheme to substantially prolong the T2 coherence time by locking the spin polarization with the dynamic decoupling Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill (CPMG) pulse sequence is applied.
Exciton-polaritons in semiconductor microcavities form a highly nonlinear platform to study a variety of effects interfacing optical, condensed matter, quantum and statistical physics. We show that the complex polariton patterns generated by picosecond pulses in microcavity wire waveguides can be understood as the Cherenkov radiation emitted by bright polariton solitons, which is enabled by the unique microcavity polariton dispersion, which has momentum intervals with positive and negative group velocities. Unlike in optical fibres and semiconductor waveguides, we observe that the microcavity wire Cherenkov radiation is predominantly emitted with negative group velocity and therefore propagates backwards relative to the propagation direction of the emitting soliton. We have developed a theory of the microcavity wire polariton solitons and of their Cherenkov radiation and conducted a series of experiments, where we have measured polariton-soliton pulse compression, pulse breaking and emission of the backward Cherenkov radiation.
Sponges (phylum Porifera) are evolutionary ancient, sessile filter-feeders that harbor a largely diverse microbial community within their internal mesohyl matrix. Throughout this thesis project, I aimed at exploring the adaptations of these symbionts to life within their sponge host by sequencing and analyzing the genomes of a variety of bacteria from the microbiome of the Mediterranean sponge Aplysina aerophoba. Employed methods were fluorescence-activated cell sorting with subsequent multiple displacement amplification and single-cell / ‘mini-metagenome’ sequencing, and metagenomic sequencing followed by differential coverage binning. These two main approaches both aimed at obtaining genome sequences of bacterial symbionts of A. aerophoba, that were then compared to each other and to references from other environments, to gain information on adaptations to the host sponge environment and on possible interactions with the host and within the microbial community.
Cyanobacteria are frequent members of the sponge microbial community. My ‘mini-metagenome’ sequencing project delivered three draft genomes of “Candidatus Synechococcus spongiarum,” the cyanobacterial symbiont of A. aerophoba and many more sponges inhabiting the photic zone. The most complete of these genomes was compared to other clades of this symbiont and to closely related free-living cyanobacterial references in a collaborative project published in Burgsdorf I*, Slaby BM* et al. (2015; *shared first authorship). Although the four clades of “Ca. Synechococcus spongiarum” from the four sponge species A. aerophoba, Ircinia variabilis, Theonella swinhoei, and Carteriospongia foliascens were approximately 99% identical on the level of 16S rRNA gene sequences, they greatly differed on the genomic level. Not only the genome sizes were different from clade to clade, but also the gene content and a number of features including proteins containing the eukaryotic-type domains leucine-rich repeats or tetratricopeptide repeats. On the other hand, the four clades shared a number of features such as ankyrin repeat domain-containing proteins that seemed to be conserved also among other microbial phyla in different sponge hosts and from different geographic locations. A possible novel mechanism for host phagocytosis evasion and phage resistance by means of an altered O antigen of the lipopolysaccharide was identified.
To test previous hypotheses on adaptations of sponge-associated bacteria on a broader spectrum of the microbiome of A. aerophoba while also taking a step forward in methodology, I developed a bioinformatic pipeline to combine metagenomic Illumina short-read sequencing data with PacBio long-read data. At the beginning of this project, no pipelines to combine short-read and long-read data for metagenomics were published, and at time of writing, there are still no projects published with a comparable aim of un-targeted assembly, binning and analysis of a metagenome. I tried a variety of assembly programs and settings on a simulated test dataset reflecting the properties of the real metagenomic data. The developed assembly pipeline improved not only the overall assembly statistics, but also the quality of the binned genomes, which was evaluated by comparison to the originally published genome assemblies.
The microbiome of A. aerophoba was studied from various angles in the recent years, but only genomes of the candidate phylum Poribacteria and the cyanobacterial sequences from my above-described project have been published to date. By applying my newly developed assembly pipeline to a metagenomic dataset of A. aerophoba consisting of a PacBio long-read dataset and six Illumina short-read datasets optimized for subsequent differential coverage binning, I aimed at sequencing a larger number and greater diversity of symbionts. The results of this project are currently in review by The ISME Journal. The complementation of Illumina short-read with PacBio long-read sequencing data for binning of this highly complex metagenome greatly improved the overall assembly statistics and improved the quality of the binned genomes. Thirty-seven genomes from 13 bacterial phyla and candidate phyla were binned representing the most prominent members of the microbiome of A. aerophoba. A statistical comparison revealed an enrichment of genes involved in restriction modification and toxin-antitoxin systems in most symbiont genomes over selected reference genomes. Both are defense features against incoming foreign DNA, which may be important for sponge symbionts due to the sponge’s filtration and phagocytosis activity that exposes the symbionts to high levels of free DNA. Also host colonization and matrix utilization features were significantly enriched. Due to the diversity of the binned symbiont genomes, a within-symbionts genome comparison was possible, that revealed three guilds of symbionts characterized by i) nutritional specialization on the metabolization of carnitine, ii) specialization on sulfated polysaccharides, and iii) apparent nutritional generalism. Both carnitine and sulfated polysaccharides are abundant in the sponge extracellular matrix and therefore available to the sponge symbionts as substrates. In summary, the genomes of the diverse community of symbionts in A. aerophoba were united in their defense features, but specialized regarding their nutritional preferences.
An den Grenzen der Pragmatik
(2017)
Mechanisms of visual memory formation in bees: About immediate early genes and synaptic plasticity
(2017)
Animals form perceptual associations through processes of learning, and retain that information through mechanisms of memory. Honeybees and bumblebees are classic models for insect perception and learning, and despite their small brains with about one million neurons, they are organized in highly social colonies and possess an astonishing rich behavioral repertoire including navigation, communication and cognition. Honeybees are able to harvest hundreds of morphologically divergent flower types in a quick and efficient manner to gain nutrition and, back in the hive, communicate discovered food sources to nest mates. To accomplish such complex tasks, bees must be equipped with diverse sensory organs receptive to stimuli of different modalities and must be able to associatively learn and memorize the acquired information. Particularly color vision plays a prominent role, e.g. in navigation along landmarks and when bees identify inflorescences by their color signals. Once acquired, bees are known to retain visual information for days or even months. Numerous studies on visual perception and color vision have been conducted in the past decades and largely revealed the information processing pathways in the brain. In contrast, there are no data available on how the brain may change in the course of color learning experience and whether pathways differ for coarse and fine color learning. Although long-term memory (LTM) storage is assumed to generally include reorganization of the neuronal network, to date it is unclear where in the bee brain such changes occur in the course of color learning and whether visual memories are stored in one particular site or decentrally distributed over different brain domains. The present dissertation research aimed to dissect the visual memory trace in bees that is beyond mere stimulus processing and therefore two different approaches were elaborated: first, the application of immediate early genes (IEG) as genetic markers for neuronal activation to localize early processes underlying the formation of a stable LTM. Second, the analysis of late consequences of memory formation, including synaptic reorganization in central brain areas and dependencies of color discrimination complexity.
Immediate early genes (IEG) are a group of rapidly and transiently expressed genes that are induced by various types of cellular stimulation. A great number of different IEGs are routinely used as markers for the localization of neuronal activation in vertebrate brains. The present dissertation research was dedicated to establish this approach for application in bees, with focus on the candidate genes Amjra and Amegr, which are orthologous to the two common vertebrate IEGs c-jun and egr-1. First the general requirement of gene transcription for visual LTM formation was proved. Bumblebees were trained in associative proboscis extension response (PER) conditioning to monochromatic light and subsequently injected with an inhibitor of gene transcription. Memory retention tests at different intervals revealed that gene transcription is not required for the formation of a mid-term memory, but for stable LTM. Next, the appliance of the candidate genes was validated. Honeybees were exposed to stimulation with either alarm pheromone or a light pulse, followed by qPCR analysis of gene expression. Both genes differed in their expression response to sensory exposure: Amjra was upregulated in all analyzed brain parts (antennal lobes, optic lobes and mushroom bodies, MB), independent from stimulus modality, suggesting the gene as a genetic marker for unspecific general arousal. In contrast, Amegr was not significantly affected by mere sensory exposure. Therefore, the relevance of associative learning on Amegr expression was assessed. Honeybees were trained in visual PER conditioning followed by a qPCR-based analysis of the expression of all three Amegr isoforms at different intervals after conditioning. No learning-dependent alteration of gene expression was observed. However, the presence of AmEgr protein in virtually all cerebral cell nuclei was validated by immunofluorescence staining. The most prominent immune-reactivity was detected in MB calyx neurons.
Analysis of task-dependent neuronal correlates underlying visual long-term memory was conducted in free-flying honeybees confronted with either absolute conditioning to one of two perceptually similar colors or differential conditioning with both colors. Subsequent presentation of the two colors in non-rewarded discrimination tests revealed that only bees trained with differential conditioning preferred the previously learned color. In contrast, bees of the absolute conditioning group chose randomly among color stimuli. To investigate whether the observed difference in memory acquisition is also reflected at the level of synaptic microcircuits, so called microglomeruli (MG), within the visual domains of the MB calyces, MG distribution was quantified by whole-mount immunostaining three days following conditioning. Although learning-dependent differences in neuroarchitecture were absent, a significant correlation between learning performance and MG density was observed.
Taken together, this dissertation research provides fundamental work on the potential use of IEGs as markers for neuronal activation and promotes future research approaches combining behaviorally relevant color learning tests in bees with examination of the neuroarchitecture to pave the way for unraveling the visual memory trace.
The current dissertation addresses the analysis of technology-enhanced learning processes by using Process Mining techniques. For this purpose, students’ coded think-aloud data served as the measurement of the learning process, in order to assess the potential of this analysis method for evaluating the impact of instructional support.
The increasing use of digital media in higher education and further educational sectors enables new potentials. However, it also poses new challenges to students, especially regarding the self-regulation of their learning process. To help students with optimally making progress towards their learning goals, instructional support is provided during learning. Besides the use of questionnaires and tests for the assessment of learning, researchers make use increasingly of process data to evaluate the effects of provided support. The analysis of observed behavioral traces while learning (e.g., log files, eye movements, verbal reports) allows detailed insights into the student’s activities as well as the impact of interventions on the learning process. However, new analytical challenges emerge, especially when going beyond the analysis of pure frequencies of observed events. For example, the question how to deal with temporal dynamics and sequences of learning activities arises. Against this background, the current dissertation concentrates on the application of Process Mining techniques for the detailed analysis of learning processes. In particular, the focus is on the additional value of this approach in comparison to a frequency-based analysis, and therefore on the potential of Process Mining for the evaluation of instructional support.
An extensive laboratory study with 70 university students, which was conducted to investigate the impact of a support measure, served as the basis for pursuing the research agenda of this dissertation. Metacognitive prompts supported students in the experimental group (n = 35) during a 40-minute hypermedia learning session; whereas the control group (n = 35) received no support. Approximately three weeks later, all students participated in another learning session; however, this time all students learned without any help. The participants were instructed to verbalize their learning activities concurrently while learning. In the three analyses of this dissertation, the coded think aloud data were examined in detail by using frequency-based methods as well as Process Mining techniques.
The first analysis addressed the comparison of the learning activities between the experimental and control groups during the first learning session. This study concentrated on the research questions whether metacognitive prompting increases the number of metacognitive learning activities, whether a higher number of these learning activities corresponds with learning outcome (mediation), and which differences regarding the sequential structure of learning activities can be revealed. The second analysis investigated the impact of the individual prompts as well as the conditions of their effectiveness on the micro level. In addition to Process Mining, we used a data mining approach to compare the findings of both analysis methods. More specifically, we classified the prompts by their effectiveness, and we examined the learning activities preceding and following the presentation of instructional support. Finally, the third analysis considered the long-term effects of metacognitive prompting on the learning process during another learning session without support. It was the key objective of this study to examine which fostered learning activities and process patterns remained stable during the second learning session.
Overall, all three analyses indicated the additional value of Process Mining in comparison to a frequency-based analysis. Especially when conceptualizing the learning process as a dynamic sequence of multiple activities, Process Mining allows identifying regulatory loops and crucial routing points of the process. These findings might contribute to optimizing intervention strategies. However, before drawing conclusions for the design of instructional support based on the revealed process patterns, additional analyses need to investigate the generalizability of results. Moreover, the application of Process Mining remains challenging because guidelines for analytical decisions and parameter settings in technology-enhanced learning context are currently missing. Therefore, future studies need to examine further the potential of Process Mining as well as related analysis methods to provide researchers with concrete recommendations for use. Nevertheless, the application of Process Mining techniques can already contribute to advance the understanding of the impact of instructional support through the use of fine-grained process data.
This work is concerned with the syntheses and photophysical properties of para-xylylene bridged macrocycles nPBI with ring sizes from two to nine PBI units, as well as the complexation of polycyclic aromatic guest compounds.
With a reduced but substantial fluorescence quantum yield of 21% (in CHCl3) the free host 2PBI(4-tBu)4 can be used as a dual fluorescence probe. Upon encapsulation of rather electron-poor guests the fluorescence quenching interactions between the chromophores are prevented, leading to a significant fluorescence enhancement to > 90% (“turn-on”). On the other hand, the addition of electron-rich guest molecules induces an electron transfer from the guest to the electron-poor PBI chromophores and thus quenches the fluorescence entirely (“turn-off”). The photophysical properties of the host-guest complexes were studied by transient absorption spectroscopy. These measurements revealed that the charge transfer between guest and 2PBI(4-tBu)4 occurs in the “normal region” of the Marcus-parabola with the fastest charge separation rate for perylene. In contrast, the charge recombination back to the PBI ground state lies far in the “inverted region” of the Marcus-parabola.
Beside complexation of planar aromatic hydrocarbons into the cavity of the cyclophanes an encapsulation of fullerene into the cyclic trimer 3PBI(4-tBu)4 was observed. 3PBI(4-tBu)4 provides a tube-like structure in which the PBI subunits represent the walls of those tubes. The cavity has the optimal size for hosting fullerenes, with C70 fitting better than C60 and a binding constant that is higher by a factor of 10. TA spectroscopy in toluene that was performed on the C60@3PBI(4-tBu)4 complex revealed two energy transfer processes. The first one comes from the excited PBI to the fullerene, which subsequently populates the triplet state. From the fullerene triplet state a second energy transfer occurs back to the PBI to generate the PBI triplet state.
In all cycles that were studied by TA spectroscopy, symmetry-breaking charge separation (SB-CS) was observed in dichloromethane. This process is fastest within the PBI cyclophane 2PBI(4-tBu)4 and slows down for larger cycles, suggesting that the charge separation takes place through space and not through bonds. The charges then recombine to the PBI triplet state via a radical pair intersystem crossing (RP-ISC) mechanism, which could be used to generate singlet oxygen in yields of ~20%.
By changing the solvent to toluene an intramolecular folding of the even-numbered larger cycles was observed that quenches the fluorescence and increases the 0-1 transition band in the absorption spectra. Force field calculations of 4PBI(4-tBu)4 suggested a folding into pairs of dimers, which explains the remarkable odd-even effect with respect to the number of connected PBI chromophores and the resulting alternation in the absorption and fluorescence properties. Thus, the even-numbered macrocycles can fold in a way that all chromophores are in a paired arrangement, while the odd-numbered cycles have open conformations (3PBI(4-tBu)4, 5PBI(4-tBu)4, 7PBI(4-tBu)4) or at least additional unpaired PBI unit (9PBI(4-tBu)4).
With these experiments we could for the first time give insights in the interactions between cyclic PBI hosts and aromatic guest molecules. Associated with the encapsulation of guest molecules a variety of possible applications can be envisioned, like fluorescence sensing, chiral recognition and photodynamic therapy by singlet oxygen generation. Particularly, these macrocycles provide photophysical relaxation pathways of PBIs, like charge separation and recombination and triplet state formation that are hardly feasible in monomeric PBI dyes. Furthermore, diverse compound specific features were found, like the odd-even effect in the folding process or the transition of superficial nanostructures of the tetrameric cycle influenced by the AFM tip. The comprehensive properties of these macrocycles provide the basis for further oncoming studies and can serve as an inspiration for the synthesis of new macrocyclic compounds.
The aim of this pilot study was to analyze the off-training physical activity (PA) profile in national elite German U23 rowers during 31 days of their preparation period. The hours spent in each PA category (i.e., sedentary: <1.5 metabolic equivalents (MET); light physical activity: 1.5–3 MET; moderate physical activity: 3–6 MET and vigorous intense physical activity: >6 MET) were calculated for every valid day (i.e., >480 min of wear time). The off-training PA during 21 weekdays and 10 weekend days of the final 11-week preparation period was assessed by the wrist-worn multisensory device Microsoft Band II (MSBII). A total of 11 rowers provided valid data (i.e., >480 min/day) for 11.6 week days and 4.8 weekend days during the 31 days observation period. The average sedentary time was 11.63 ± 1.25 h per day during the week and 12.49 ± 1.10 h per day on the weekend, with a tendency to be higher on the weekend compared to weekdays (p = 0.06; d = 0.73). The average time in light, moderate and vigorous PA during the weekdays was 1.27 ± 1.15, 0.76 ± 0.37, 0.51 ± 0.44 h per day, and 0.67 ± 0.43, 0.59 ± 0.37, 0.53 ± 0.32 h per weekend day. Light physical activity was higher during weekdays compared to the weekend (p = 0.04; d = 0.69). Based on our pilot study of 11 national elite rowers we conclude that rowers display a considerable sedentary off-training behavior of more than 11.5 h/day.