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This paper discusses complementation strategies in Spanish, focusing on a specific construction most speakers are not aware of: the complementation clause preceded by the verb conocer. Not being a typical complement-taking verb, conocer surprises with a stable and persistent presence throughout the centuries, from Old Spanish to Modern Spanish. After giving an introduction into the field of complementation clauses and one of its main focus of study, grammatical mood, this study uses empirical data from the corpus programs CORDE, CREA and CORPES XXI to show the usage and prevalence of the construction in question. In doing so, this analysis gives a quantitative insight, exemplifying the results with several examples from all ages.
Purpose:
The aim of the study was to evaluate the mucosal immune function and circadian variation of salivary cortisol, Immunoglobin-A (sIgA) secretion rate and mood during a period of high-intensity interval training (HIIT) compared to long-slow distance training (LSD).
Methods:
Recreational male runners (n = 28) completed nine sessions of either HIIT or LSD within 3 weeks. The HIIT involved 4 × 4 min of running at 90–95% of maximum heart rate interspersed with 3 min of active recovery while the LSD comprised of continuous running at 70–75% of maximum heart rate for 60–80 min. The psycho-immunological stress-response was investigated with a full daily profile of salivary cortisol and immunoglobin-A (sIgA) secretion rate along with the mood state on a baseline day, the first and last day of training and at follow-up 4 days after the last day of training. Before and after the training period, each athlete's running performance and peak oxygen uptake (V·O\(_{2peak}\)) was determined with an incremental exercise test.
Results:
The HIIT resulted in a longer time-to-exhaustion (P = 0.02) and increased V·O\(_{2peak}\) compared to LSD (P = 0.01). The circadian variation of sIgA secretion rate showed highest values in the morning immediately after waking up followed by a decrease throughout the day in both groups (P < 0.05). With HIIT, the wake-up response of sIgA secretion rate was higher on the last day of training (P < 0.01) as well as the area under the curve (AUC\(_{G}\)) higher on the first and last day of training and follow-up compared to the LSD (P = 0.01). Also the AUC\(_{G}\) for the sIgA secretion rate correlated with the increase in V·O\(_{2peak}\) and running performance. The AUC\(_{G}\) for cortisol remained unaffected on the first and last day of training but increased on the follow-up day with both, HIIT and LSD (P < 0.01).
Conclusion:
The increased sIgA secretion rate with the HIIT indicates no compromised mucosal immune function compared to LSD and shows the functional adaptation of the mucosal immune system in response to the increased stress and training load of nine sessions of HIIT.
The aim of the study was to evaluate the reliability and validity of cardiorespiratory and metabolic variables, that is, peak oxygen uptake (V'O\(_{2peak}\)) and heart rate (HR\(_{peak}\)), obtained from an agility‐like incremental exercise test for team sport athletes. To investigate the test–retest reliability, 25 team sport athletes (age: 22 ± 3 years, body mass: 75 ± 7 kg, height: 182 ± 6 cm) performed an agility‐like incremental exercise test on the SpeedCourt (SC) system incorporating multidirectional change‐of‐direction (COD) movements twice. For each step of the incremental SC test, the athletes covered a 40‐m distance interspersed with a 10‐sec rest period. Each 40 m distance was split into short sprints (2.25–6.36 m) separated by multidirectional COD movements (0°–180°), which were performed in response to an external visual stimulus. All performance and physiological data were validated with variables obtained from a ramp‐like treadmill and Yo‐Yo intermittent recovery level 2 test (Yo‐Yo IR2). The incremental SC test revealed high test–retest reliability for the time to exhaustion (ICC = 0.85, typical error [TE] = 0.44, and CV% = 3.88), V'O\(_{2peak}\), HR\(_{peak}\), ventilation, and breathing frequency (ICC = 0.84, 0.72, 0.89, 0.77, respectively). The time to exhaustion (r = 0.50, 0.74) of the incremental SC test as well as the peak values for V'O\(_{2}\) (r = 0.59, 0.52), HR (r = 0.75, 0.78), ventilation (r = 0.57, 0.57), and breathing frequency (r = 0.68, 0.68) were significantly correlated (P ≤ 0.01) with the ramp‐like treadmill test and the Yo‐Yo IR2, respectively. The incremental SC test represents a reliable and valid method to assess peak values for V'O\(_{2}\) and HR with respect to the specific demand of team sport match play by incorporating multidirectional COD movements, decision making, and cognitive components.
Neoplasms of the skin represent the most frequent tumors worldwide; fortunately, most of them are benign or semi-malignant and well treatable. However, the two most aggressive and deadly forms of malignant skin-neoplasms are melanoma and Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC), being responsible for more than 90% of skin-cancer related deaths. The last decade has yielded enormous progress in melanoma therapy with the advent of targeted therapies, like BRAF or MEK inhibitors, and immune-stimulating therapies, using checkpoint antibodies targeting CTLA- 4, PD-1 or PD-L1. Very recent studies suggest that also MCC patients benefit from a treatment with checkpoint antibodies. Nevertheless, in an advanced metastatic stage, a cure for both of these aggressive malignancies is still hard to achieve: while only a subset of patients experience durable benefit from the immune-based therapies, the widely applicable targeted therapies struggle with development of resistances that inevitably occur in most patients, and finally lead to their death. The four articles included in this thesis addressed current questions concerning therapy and carcinogenesis of melanoma and MCC. Moreover, they are discussed in the light of the up-to-date research regarding targeted and immune-based therapies. In article I we demonstrated that besides apoptosis, MAPK pathway inhibition in BRAF-mutated melanoma cells also induces senescence, a permanent cell cycle arrest. These cells may provide a source for relapse, as even permanently arrested cancer cells can contribute to a pro-tumorigenic milieu. To identify molecular factors determining the differential response, we established M14 melanoma cell line derived single cell clones that either undergo cell death or arrest when treated with BRAF/MEK inhibitors. Using these single cell clones, we demonstrated in article IV that downregulation of the pro-apoptotic BH3-only protein BIK via epigenetic silencing is involved in apoptosis deficiency, which can be overcome by HDAC inhibitors. These observations provide a possible explanation for the lack of a complete and durable response to MAPK inhibitor treatment in melanoma patients, and suggest the application of HDAC inhibitors as a complimentary therapy to MAPK pathway inhibition. Concerning MCC, we scrutinized the interactions between the Merkel cell polyomavirus’ (MCV) T antigens (TA) and the tumor suppressors p53 and Rb in article II and III, respectively. In article III, we demonstrated that the cell cycle master regulator Rb is the crucial target of MCV large T (LT), while it - in contrast to other polyomavirus LTs - exhibits much lower affinity to the related proteins p107 and p130. Knockdown of MCV LT led to proliferation arrest in MCC cells, which can be rescued by knockdown of Rb, but not by knockdown of p107 and p130. Contrary to Rb, restriction of p53 in MCC seems to be independent of the MCV TAs, as we demonstrated in article II. In conclusion, the presented thesis has revealed new molecular details, regarding the response of melanoma cells towards an important treatment modality and the mechanisms of viral carcinogenesis in MCC.
A Good Practice is a practice that works well, produces good results, and is recommended as a model. MACVIA-ARIA Sentinel Network (MASK), the new Allergic Rhinitis and its Impact on Asthma (ARIA) initiative, is an example of a Good Practice focusing on the implementation of multi-sectoral care pathways using emerging technologies with real life data in rhinitis and asthma multi-morbidity. The European Union Joint Action on Chronic Diseases and Promoting Healthy Ageing across the Life Cycle (JA-CHRODIS) has developed a checklist of 28 items for the evaluation of Good Practices. SUNFRAIL (Reference Sites Network for Prevention and Care of Frailty and Chronic Conditions in community dwelling persons of EU Countries), a European Union project, assessed whether MASK is in line with the 28 items of JA-CHRODIS. A short summary was proposed for each item and 18 experts, all members of ARIA and SUNFRAIL from 12 countries, assessed the 28 items using a Survey Monkey-based questionnaire. A visual analogue scale (VAS) from 0 (strongly disagree) to 100 (strongly agree) was used. Agreement equal or over 75% was observed for 14 items (50%). MASK is following the JA-CHRODIS recommendations for the evaluation of Good Practices.
Purpose:
Investigation of a reduced source to target distance to improve organ at risk sparing during stereotactic irradiation (STX).
Methods:
The authors present a planning study with perfectly target-volume adapted collimator compared with multi-leaf collimator (MLC) at reduced source to virtual isocentre distance (SVID) in contrast to normal source to isocentre distance (SID) for stereotactic applications. The role of MLC leaf width and 20–80% penumbra was examined concerning the healthy tissue sparing. Several prescription schemes and target diameters are considered.
Results:
Paddick’s gradient index (GI) as well as comparison of the mean doses to spherical shells at several distances to the target is evaluated. Both emphasize the same results: the healthy tissue sparing in the high dose area around the planning target volume (PTV) is improved at reduced SVID ≤ 70 cm. The effect can be attributed more to steeper penumbra than to finer leaf resolution. Comparing circular collimators at different SVID just as MLC-shaped collimators, always the GI was reduced. Even MLC-shaped collimator at SVID 70 cm had better healthy tissue sparing than an optimal shaped circular collimator at SID 100 cm.
Regarding penumbra changes due to varying SVID, the results of the planning study are underlined by film dosimetry measurements with Agility™ MLC.
Conclusion:
Penumbra requires more attention in comparing studies, especially studies using different planning systems. Reduced SVID probably allows usage of conventional MLC for STX-like irradiations.
Dihalodiboranes(4) react with an N-heterocyclic silylene (NHSi) to generate NHSi-adducts of 1-aryl-2-silyl-1,2-diboraindanes as confirmed by X-ray crystallography, featuring the functionalization of both B–X (X = halogen) bonds and a C–H bond under mild conditions. Coordination of a third NHSi to the proposed 1,1-diaryl- 2,2-disilyldiborane(4) intermediates, generated by a two-fold B–X insertion, may be crucial for the C–H borylation that leads to the final products. Notably, our results demonstrate the first C–H borylation with a strong B–F bond activated by silylene insertion.
It was the scope of this work to gain a deeper understanding of the correlation between Interface energetics of molecular semiconductors in planar organic solar cells and the corresponding optoelectronic characteristics. For this aim, different approaches were followed. At first, a direct variation of donor/acceptor (D/A) interface energetics of bilayer cells was achieved by utilizing systematically modified donor compounds. This change could be correlated to the macroscopic device performance. At second, the impact of interface energetics was illustrated, employing a more extended device architecture. By introducing a thin interlayer between a planar D/A heterojunction, an energetic staircase was established. Exciton dissociation in such devices could be linked to the cascade energy level alignment of the photo-active materials. Finally, two different fullerene molecules C60 and C70 were employed in co-evaporated acceptor phases. The expected discrepancy in their electronic structure was related to the transport properties of the corresponding organic photovoltaic cells (OPVCs). The fullerenes are created simultaneously in common synthesis procedures. Next to the photo-physical relevance, the study was carried-out to judge on the necessity of separating the components from each other by purification which constitutes the cost-determining step in the total production costs.
Der vorliegende Text ist das Transkript der ersten deutschen Gesamtübersetzung von Suetons Kaiserviten, die 1536 bei dem Straßburger Drucker Jakob Cammerlander erschien und die in der Dissertation „Sueton in Straßburg. Die Übersetzung der Kaiserviten durch Jakob Vielfeld (1536)“ (Spolia Berolinensia; Verlag Olms, Hildesheim 2017) umfassend untersucht worden ist.
Das Transkript präsentiert diese Übersetzung, obwohl Digitalisate des Cammerlanderdruckes existieren. Dem liegt zugrunde, dass das Transkript im Zuge der erwähnten Dissertation entstand, deren Zentrum der direkte und detaillierte Textvergleich bildet; der Nachvollzug dieses Textvergleichs sollte mithilfe des entsprechend aufbereiteten Transkripts erleichtert werden. Außerdem war es das Ziel, neben den Detailuntersuchungen auch den bisher wenig beachteten deutschen Sueton als ganzen stärker zur Geltung zu bringen.
Aber auch ohne die Konsultation der Studie kann das Transkript Grundlage für den bequemen Vergleich der Übersetzung mit dem lateinischen Text in der Referenzausgabe von Maximilian Ihm (editio maior, 1907) sein. Gegenüber dem digitalisierten Druck sind die deutschen Kaiserviten besonders durch zwei Eingriffe für moderne Leser aufbereitet worden: Zum einen enthält der frühneuzeitliche Druck keine Abschnittszählung, sodass es umständlicher ist, frühneuhochdeutsche Textstellen den entsprechenden Passagen in der Ausgabe Ihms zuzuordnen, und so ist das Transkript durchgängig mit Abschnittsziffern ausgestattet, die sich an der lateinischen Edition orientieren. Zum anderen kommen bei der Wiedergabe der deutschen Übersetzung – auch dies in Analogie zu Ihms Ausgabe – konsequent moderne Interpunktionsregeln zum Einsatz, wodurch sich die gedanklichen Strukturen des Textes leichter überblicken lassen und dieser insgesamt flüssiger zu lesen ist.
Background
Arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy is an inherited heart muscle disorder leading to ventricular arrhythmias and heart failure, mainly as a result of mutations in cardiac desmosomal genes. Desmosomes are cell-cell junctions mediating adhesion of cardiomyocytes; however, the molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying the disease remain widely unknown. Desmocollin-2 is a desmosomal cadherin serving as an anchor molecule required to reconstitute homeostatic intercellular adhesion with desmoglein-2. Cardiac specific lack of desmoglein-2 leads to severe cardiomyopathy, whereas overexpression does not. In contrast, the corresponding data for desmocollin-2 are incomplete, in particular from the view of protein overexpression. Therefore, we developed a mouse model overexpressing desmocollin-2 to determine its potential contribution to cardiomyopathy and intercellular adhesion pathology.
Methods and results
We generated transgenic mice overexpressing DSC2 in cardiac myocytes. Transgenic mice developed a severe cardiac dysfunction over 5 to 13 weeks as indicated by 2D-echocardiography measurements. Corresponding histology and immunohistochemistry demonstrated fibrosis, necrosis and calcification which were mainly localized in patches near the epi- and endocardium of both ventricles. Expressions of endogenous desmosomal proteins were markedly reduced in fibrotic areas but appear to be unchanged in non-fibrotic areas. Furthermore, gene expression data indicate an early up-regulation of inflammatory and fibrotic remodeling pathways between 2 to 3.5 weeks of age.
Conclusion
Cardiac specific overexpression of desmocollin-2 induces necrosis, acute inflammation and patchy cardiac fibrotic remodeling leading to fulminant biventricular cardiomyopathy.
Objective: To investigate the association between levodopa‐induced dyskinesias and striatal cholinergic activity in patients with Parkinson's disease.
Methods: This study included 13 Parkinson's disease patients with peak‐of‐dose levodopa‐induced dyskinesias, 12 nondyskinetic patients, and 12 healthy controls. Participants underwent 5‐[\(^{123}\)I]iodo‐3‐[2(S)‐2‐azetidinylmethoxy]pyridine single‐photon emission computed tomography, a marker of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, [\(^{123}\)I]N‐ω‐fluoropropyl‐2β‐carbomethoxy‐3β‐(4‐iodophenyl)nortropane single‐photon emission computed tomography, to measure dopamine reuptake transporter density and 2‐[\(^{18}\)F]fluoro‐2‐deoxyglucose positron emission tomography to assess regional cerebral metabolic activity. Striatal binding potentials, uptake values at basal ganglia structures, and correlations with clinical variables were analyzed.
Results: Density of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in the caudate nucleus of dyskinetic subjects was similar to that of healthy controls and significantly higher to that of nondyskinetic patients, in particular, contralaterally to the clinically most affected side.
Interpretation: Our findings support the hypothesis that the expression of dyskinesia may be related to cholinergic neuronal excitability in a dopaminergic‐depleted striatum. Cholinergic signaling would play a role in maintaining striatal dopaminergic responsiveness, possibly defining disease phenotype and progression.
Der Morbus Fabry ist eine X-chromosomal rezessive, lysosomale
Speicherkrankheit, die durch eine Mutation im α - Galactosidase A Gen
verursacht wird. Dadurch werden unter anderem Bestandteile der
Plasmamembran (Globotriaosylceramide) nicht mehr degradiert und sie
akkumulieren intrazellulär. Daraus resultiert, vom anfänglichen
Einzelzellschäden, letzten Endes ein oftmals schwerer Organschaden mit
Funktionsausfällen. Die einzige kausale Therapie besteht in der Substituierung
des betroffenen Enzyms.
Der Morbus Fabry äußert sich klinisch als eine Multisystemerkrankung mit
hauptsächlich renaler, nervaler, sowie kardialer Beteiligung. Vor allem letztere
ist maßgeblich für die verkürzte Lebenserwartung verantwortlich. Die Patienten
entwickeln mit Progression der Erkrankung häufig eine linksventrikuläre
Hypertrophie, eine Herzinsuffizienz und durch die zunehmende Akkumulation
der Globotriaosylceramide entsteht im Verlauf ein fibrotischer Umbau im
Myokard. Dies ist möglicherweise auch der Entstehungsort für maligne
Rhythmusstörungen. Wissenschaftlich erforscht ist, dass supraventikuläre
sowie ventrikuläre Tachykardien bzw. Bradykardien bis hin zu Asystolie/Pausen
bei diesen Patienten auftreten können. Ebenso weiß man, dass man mit Hilfe
von so genannten Event Recordern, die kontinuierlich die elektrische
Herzaktivität überwachen und die Daten via Telemetrie an ein Zentrum senden,
die Detektionsrate von Rhythmusstörungen erhöhen kann.
Aber ob solch ein Event Recorder auch bei Patienten mit fortgeschrittener
Fabry - Kardiomyopathie einen Nutzen hat und sie bei diesen Patienten zur
Detektion von malignen Rhythmusstörungen beitragen ist bisher unklar und
Thema dieser Studie.
Insgesamt implantierte man 16 Patienten (12 Männer / 4 Frauen), mit einem
gesicherten Morbus Fabry, einen Event Recorder. Sie erhielten 7,4 ± 4,5
Jahren die Enzymersatztherapie, wurden über einen Zeitraum von 0,3 - 2
Jahren beobachtet und übertrugen ihre Daten durchschnittlich 14 ± 11 mal pro
Monat. Dabei konnten insgesamt 8547 klinisch relevante Übertragungen aufgezeichnet werden, die entsprechend der Studieneinteilung in Asystolie,
Bradykardie, Vorhofflimmern, und ventrikuläre Tachykardie eingeteilt worden
sind.
Asystolie Episoden, mit elektrischen Pausen von 3,3 bis 4,4 Sekunden, wurden
insgesamt 66-mal bei 4 Patienten mit dem Event Recorder aufgezeichnet.
Über 8000 Bradykardien konnten bei 6 Männern und 1 Frau dokumentiert
werden, darunter ein AV-Block II° Typ Mobitz mit ei ner 2:1 Überleitung.
Fast 370-mal konnte ein intermittierendes Vorhofflimmern bzw. Vorhofflattern,
mit Flimmerzeiten von 10 Sekunden bis maximal 86400 Sekunden, dargestellt
werden. Bei insgesamt 5 Patienten konnten 10 ventrikuläre Tachykardie –
Episoden, mit einer maximalen Herzfrequenz 206 Schlägen / min, durch den
Event Recorder aufgezeichnet werden.
So konnten selbst bei dieser kleinen Kohorte, mit dem Event Recorder, viele
klinisch relevante Herzrhythmusstörungen detektiert werden. Auf Grundlage
dieser Daten sprach man im Verlauf bei den entsprechenden Patienten eine
Empfehlung zur Therapieänderungen aus um klinische Komplikationen zu
verhindern.
Dies führte letzten Endes zu der Schlussfolgerung, dass der Einsatz von Event
Recordern sicherlich ein sehr nützliches diagnostisches Instrument zur
Detektion von malignen Rhythmusstörungen bei Patienten mit einer
fortgeschrittenen Fabry-Kardiomyopathie ist.
Es sollte nun weiter geprüft werden, ob der Event Recorder bereits in früheren
Stadien des Morbus Fabry zum Einsatz kommen sollte.
Describing the light-to-energy conversion in OSCs requires a multiscale understanding of the involved optoelectronic processes, i.e., an understanding from the molecular, intermolecular, and aggregate perspective. This thesis presents such a multiscale description to provide insight into the processes in the vicinity of the organic::organic interface, which are crucial for the overall performance of OSCs. Light absorption, exciton diffusion, photoinduced charge transfer at the donor-acceptor interface, and charge separation are included. In order to establish structure-property relationships, a variety of different molecular p-type semiconductors are combined at the organic donor-acceptor heterojunction with fullerene C60, one of the most common acceptors in OSCs. Starting with a comprehensive analysis of the accuracy of diverse ab initio, DFT, and semiempiric methods for the properties of the individual molecules, the intermolecular, and aggregate/device stage are subsequently addressed. At all stages, both methodological concepts and physical aspects in OSCs are discussed to extend the microscopic understanding of the charge generation processes.
Nowadays, more than half of the biotherapeutics are produced in mammalian cell lines as a result of correct protein folding and assembly as well as their faculty to bring about a variety of post-translational modifications. The widespread progression of biosimilars has moved the focus in mammalian cell-culture process development. Thereby, the modulation of quality attributes of recombinant therapeutic proteins has increasingly gained importance from early process development stages. Protein quality directly shapes the clinical efficacy and safety in vivo, and therefore, the control of the complex post-translational modifications, such as glycosylation (e.g. high mannose, fucosylation, galactosylation and sialylation), charge variants, aggregates and low-molecular-weight species formation, is pivotal for efficient receptor binding and for triggering the desired immune responses in patients. In the frame of biosimilar development, product quality modulation methods using the potential of the host cell line are particularly sought after to match the quality profile of the targeted reference medicinal product (RMP) as closely as possible. The environment the cell is dwelling in directly influences its metabolism and the resulting quality profile of the expressed protein. Thereby the cell culture medium plays a central role in upstream manufacturing. In this work, concentration adjustment of selected media components and supplementation with a variety of compounds was performed to alter various metabolic pathways, enzyme activities and in some cases the gene expression levels of Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) cells in culture. The supplementation of cell culture medium with the trisaccharide raffinose in fed-batch cultures entailed an increase of the abundance of high mannose glycans in two different CHO cell lines. Raffinose especially favored mannose 5 glycans. At the same time, it impaired cell culture performance, induced changes on the intracellular nucleotide levels and even varied the expression levels of glycosylation-related genes. Supplementation with a number of galactosyltransferase inhibiting compounds, in particular fluorinated galactose analogs (alpha- and beta-2F-peracetyl-galactose), consistently decreased the production of galactosylated monoclonal antibodies (mAb). By means of targeted addition during the culture rather than at the beginning, the inhibition was further increased, while limiting detrimental effects on both growth and productivity. High-throughput screening in 96-deepwell plates showed that spermine and L-ornithine also reduced the level of galactosylation. On the other hand, exploratory screening of a variety of potentially disulfide-bridge-reducing agents highlighted that the inherent low-molecular-species level of the proprietary platform cell culture process was likely due to favored reduction. This hypothesis was reinforced by the observation that supplementation of cysteine and N-acetylcysteine promoted fragmentation. Additionally, fragmentation decreased with higher protein expression.
At that point, aiming to improve the efficiency in process development, a rational experimental design method was developed to identify and to define the optimal concentration range of quality modulating compounds by calling on a combination of high throughput fed-batch testing and multivariate data analysis. Seventeen medium supplements were tested in five parallel 96-deepwell plate experiments. The selection process of promising modulators for the follow-up experiment in shake tubes consisted in a three-step procedure, including principal component analysis, quantitative evaluation of their performance with respect to the specifications for biosimilarity and selection following a hierarchical order of decisions using a decision tree. The method resulted in a substantial improvement of the targeted glycosylation profile in only two experimental rounds. Subsequent development stages, namely validation and transfer to industrial-scale facilities require tight control of product quality. Accordingly, further mechanistic understanding of the underlying processes was acquired by non-targeted metabolomic profiling of a CHO cell line expressing a mAb cultured in four distinct process formats. Univariate analysis of intra- and extracellular metabolite and temporal glycosylation profiles provided insights in various pathways. The numerous of parameters were the main driver to carry out principal component analysis, and then, using the methodology of partial-least-square (PLS) projection on latent structures, a multivariate model was built to correlate the extracellular data with the distinct glycosylation profiles. The PLS observation model proved to be reliable and showed its great benefit for glycan pattern control in routine manufacturing, especially at large scale. Rather than relying on post-production interpretation of glycosylation results, glycosylation can be predicted in real-time based on the extracellular metabolite levels in the bioreactor.
Finally, for the bioactivity assessment of the glycan differences between the biosimilar and the reference medicinal product (RMP), the health agencies may ask for in the drug registration process, extended ranges of glycan variants need to be generated so that the in vitro assays pick up the changes. The developed glycosylation modulator library enabled the generation of extreme glycosylation variants, including high mannose, afucosylated, galactosylated as well as sialic acid species of both a mAb and an antibody fusion molecule with three N-glycosylation sites. Moreover, to create increased variety, enzymatic glycoengineering was explored for galactosylation and sialylation. The glyco variants induced significant responses in the respective in vitro biological activity assays. The data of this work highlight the immense potential of cell culture medium optimization to adjust product quality. Medium and feed supplementation of a variety of compounds resulted in reproducible and important changes of the product quality profile of both mAbs and a fusion antibody. In addition to the intermediate modulation ranges that largely met the requirements for new-biological-entity and biosimilar development, medium supplementation even enabled quick and straightforward generation of extreme glycan variants suitable for biological activity testing.
Sustained anticipatory anxiety is central to Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD). During anticipatory anxiety, phasic threat responding appears to be mediated by the amygdala, while sustained threat responding seems related to the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST). Although sustained anticipatory anxiety in GAD patients was proposed to be associated with BNST activity alterations, firm evidence is lacking. We aimed to explore temporal characteristics of BNST and amygdala activity during threat anticipation in GAD patients. Nineteen GAD patients and nineteen healthy controls (HC) underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during a temporally unpredictable threat anticipation paradigm. We defined phasic and a systematic variation of sustained response models for blood oxygen level-dependent responses during threat anticipation, to disentangle temporally dissociable involvement of the BNST and the amygdala. GAD patients relative to HC responded with increased phasic amygdala activity to onset of threat anticipation and with elevated sustained BNST activity that was delayed relative to the onset of threat anticipation. Both the amygdala and the BNST displayed altered responses during threat anticipation in GAD patients, albeit with different time courses. The results for the BNST activation hint towards its role in sustained threat responding, and contribute to a deeper understanding of pathological sustained anticipatory anxiety in GAD.
Content Delivery Networks (CDNs) are networks that distribute content in the Internet. CDNs are increasingly responsible for the largest share of traffic in the Internet. CDNs distribute popular content to caches in many geographical areas to save bandwidth by avoiding unnecessary multihop retransmission. By bringing the content geographically closer to the user, CDNs also reduce the latency of the services.
Besides end users and content providers, which require high availability of high quality content, CDN providers and Internet Service Providers (ISPs) are interested in an efficient operation of CDNs. In order to ensure an efficient replication of the content, CDN providers have a network of (globally) distributed interconnected datacenters at different points of presence (PoPs). ISPs aim to provide reliable and high speed Internet access. They try to keep the load on the network low and to reduce cost for connectivity with other ISPs.
The increasing number of mobile devices such as smart phones and tablets, high definition video content and high resolution displays result in a continuous growth in mobile traffic. This growth in mobile traffic is further accelerated by newly emerging services, such as mobile live streaming and broadcasting services. The steep increase in mobile traffic is expected to reach by 2018 roughly 60% of total network traffic, the majority of which will be video. To handle the growth in mobile networks, the next generation of 5G mobile networks is designed to have higher access rates and an increased densification of the network infrastructure. With the explosion of access rates and number of base stations the backhaul of wireless networks will become congested.
To reduce the load on the backhaul, the research community suggests installing local caches in gateway routers between the wireless network and the Internet, in base stations of different sizes, and in end-user devices. The local deployment of caches allows keeping the traffic within the ISPs network. The caches are organized in a hierarchy, where caches in the lowest tier are requested first. The request is forwarded to the next tier, if the requested object is not found. Appropriate evaluation methods are required to optimally dimension the caches dependent on the traffic characteristics and the available resources. Additionally methods are necessary that allow performance evaluation of backhaul bandwidth aggregation systems, which further reduce the load on the backhaul.
This thesis analyses CDNs utilizing locally available resources and develops the following evaluations and optimization approaches: Characterization of CDNs and distribution of resources in the Internet, analysis and optimization of hierarchical caching systems with bandwidth constraints and performance evaluation of bandwidth aggregation systems.
Schutzgebiete und insbesondere Nationalparke haben nach den Richtlinien der IUCN ein Doppelmandat bzw. eine doppelte Funktion: Sie sollen zum einen Räume für Natur- und Artenschutz und zum anderen für Erholung, Umweltbildung und Tourismus bieten und durch letztgenanntes zur Stärkung der Regionalökonomie beitragen. Um diesen Spagat zu meistern, sollten sich Schutzgebiete bzw. deren Verwaltungen und kooperierende Destinationsmarketingorganisationen darüber im Klaren sein, welche Besuchersegmente bzw. Tourismusprodukte im Schutzgebiet anzutreffen sind, bzw. angeboten werden und welchen Einfluss diese auf die Erfüllung des Doppelmandates haben. Die deduktiv entworfene Product-based Typology for Nature-based Tourism von ARNEGGER et al. (2010) bietet hierfür einen zweidimensionalen Analyserahmen, der die Angebots- und Nachfrageperspektive auf den Tourismus und dessen Produkte vereint und bisher noch nicht empirisch angewendet wurde, was das vorrangige Ziel dieser Studie ist.
Hierfür wurde von Theorien und empirischen Studien aus dem Kontext von Natur- und Ökotourismus eine Operationalisierung der Typologie abgeleitet, die am Beispiel des Nationalparks Berchtesgaden eingesetzt wurde. Dabei wurden zwei Ansätze verfolgt, eine angebotsseitige und eine nachfrageseitige Abgrenzung von Tourismusprodukten. Zur empirischen Erfassung von Tourismusprodukten wurde eine umfassende Besucherbefragung in der Sommersaison 2014 durchgeführt, bei der Informationen von rund 1.400 Besuchern des Nationalparks gesammelt werden konnten.
Aus Sicht der Nachfrager wurden sechs Produkt-Cluster identifiziert, die sich bezüglich Reiseaktivitäten und Motiven unterscheiden. Das mit der höchsten Naturaffinität ist das Produkt-Cluster der „Naturbildungsurlauber“ bzw. der „Ökotouristen“. Auf der anderen Seite des Spektrums stehen die „Passiven Erholungsurlauber“ mit einer geringen Nationalparkaffinität. Des Weiteren wurden spezifische Tourismusprodukte aus der Angebotsperspektive, wie Exkursionen der Nationalparkverwaltung oder mehrtägige geführte Wanderungen von spezialisierten Nischenreiseveranstaltern, identifiziert.
Nach der empirischen Abgrenzung der Produkte wurden diese dahingehend überprüft, ob sie sich bezüglich ökonomischer und ökologischer Indikatoren unterscheiden, um zu eruieren, inwieweit die Segmente aus Sicht einer nachhaltigen Regionalentwicklung bzw. aus Sicht des Doppelmandats zu beurteilen sind. Auch hier schneiden etwa die Naturbildungsurlauber relativ gut ab, da sie Muster von structured ecotourism aufweisen und sich durch eine hohe Naturaffinität, positive Einstellungen zu nachhaltigem Tourismus und relativ hohe Reiseausgaben auszeichnen. Bei drei Clustern zeigt sich ein gewisser trade-off: Während die Bergsteiger aus ökologischer jedoch nicht aus ökonomischer Perspektive interessant sind, ist dies bei den allgemeinen Vergnügungs- und Naturerlebnisurlaubern und den passiven Erholungsurlaubern genau umgekehrt.
Basierend auf den Ergebnissen werden mögliche Adaptionen der Typologie diskutiert und darauf aufbauend ein Analyserahmen für eine „Typologie für Nachhaltige Park-Tourismus Produkte“ erarbeitet. Zudem werden theoretische und erste praktische Implikationen für das Management von Schutzgebiets-Destinationen diskutiert, um unter Berücksichtigung der trade-offs das Produktportfolio weiterzuentwickeln, das eine Destination auf den Pfad des sogenannten enlightened mass tourism bringen kann.
Einsatz biokompatibler Polymermembranen zur Therapie kongenitaler Bauchwanddefekte im Rattenmodell
(2017)
Kongenitale Bauchwanddefekte sind dramatische Fehlbildungen der vorderen Bauchwand. Zu den Defekten gehören neben der Nabelhernie und dem Blasenextrophie-Komplex im engeren Sinne die Gastroschisis und die Omphalozele. Die Therapie stellt die behandelnden Kinderchirurgen und Neonatologen vor eine große Herausforderung. Methode der Wahl ist der primär operative Bauchdeckenverschluss. Falls aufgrund der Größe des abdominellen Defekts oder der viszeroabdominellen Diskrepanz ein primärer Verschluss nicht möglich ist, wird eine Schusterplastik angelegt oder ein Patch implantiert. Bei den Implantaten unterscheidet man nicht-resorbierbare Materialien wie Polypropylen und Polytetrafluorethylene (GoreTex®) von resorbierbaren Patchs wie zum Beispiel humane Dura, porkine Dünndarmsubmukosa, oder azellularisiertes Rinderperikard (Lyoplant®). Die Ansprüche an ein solches Implantat sind hoch und das perfekte Material wurde bis heute noch nicht gefunden. Ideale Eigenschaften sind eine gute Handhabung und Nähbarkeit, Resorbierbarkeit, Anti-Adhäsivität zum Intestinum, Stabilität und Elastizität sowie die Transplantatakzeptanz.
Ziel dieser Arbeit war die Etablierung bipolarer Polymermembranen zur sicheren und effektiven Therapie kongenitaler Bauchwanddfekten im Rattenmodell. Bei den Polymermembranen handelt es sich um zweischichtige Implantate, welche aus einem Film und einem aufgesponnen Vlies bestehen. Der Film besteht aus dem Resomer LR708, dem linearen PEG-PLA und dem Polyurethan CW1681. Der mittels Electrospinning auf den Film aufgebrachte Vlies ist aus reinem PLA. Die Implantate sind zwischen 20 und 67 µm dick. Als Vergleich diente das bereits im Klein- und Großtiermodell von Meyer et al. etablierte Kollagen-Mesh Lyoplant®.
Als Versuchstiere des Experiments dienten n=34 männliche Wistar Furth Ratten, denen intraoperativ ein 2 x 2 cm großer Bauchwanddefekt zugeführt wurde, der anschließend mit einem gleich großen Patch verschlossen wurde. N=25 Tiere erhielten eine bipolare Polymermebran, n=2 Tiere Lyoplant und n=7 Ratten dienten zur Kontrolle. Nach 21 Tagen fand ein erneuter Eingriff statt. Hierbei wurde das Implantat samt umliegendem Gewebe explantiert und histologisch ausgewertet. Neben der Gewichtszunahme wurden die Ratten auf die Bildung von Hernien und intraabdominellen Adhäsionen sowie auf histologische Veränderungen untersucht. Von n=34 Ratten verstarben n=9 aus unterschiedlichen Gründen. Alle explantierten Wistar Furth Ratten (n=25) zeigten im dreiwöchigen postoperativen Verlauf (Δt=3 Wochen) physiologische Gewichtskurven. Alle Ratten mit Polymer-Implantat entwickelten im dreiwöchigen Verlauf eine abdominelle Hernie sowie Adhäsionen. Eine Zellinfiltration und Gefäßeinsprossung im Sinne einer Neovaskularisation konnte nicht nachgewiesen werden. Die histologische Auswertung ergab eine bindegewebige Veränderung im angren-zenden Gewebe, die zusammen mit der immunhistochemisch gesicherten hohen Anzahl an CD68 positiven Zellen (Makrophagen) einer Immunreaktion über den TH1-Pathway entspricht. Bei fehlender Integration in das Gewebe, kommt dies einer Implantatabstoßung gleich. In den Tieren mit Lyoplant® konnten wir die Ergebnisse von Meyer et al. bestätigen.
Zusammenfassend ist zu sagen, dass die bipolaren Polymermembranen viele Eigenschaften eines idealen biokompatiblen Materials erfüllen, jedoch aufgrund der fehlenden mechanischen Stabilität nicht zur Therapie von kongenitalen Bauchwanddefekten geeignet sind. Lyoplant® hingegen erwies sich in Bezug auf fehlende Hernienbildung und Adhäsionen, Gefäßeinsprossung und Trans-plantatakzeptanz im Vergleich zu den Polymeren als äußerst gut geeignetes Material. Um das operative Ergebnis weiter zu perfektionieren, könnte die Besiedelung des Kollagen-Meshs mit Stammzellen experimentell getestet werden. Inwieweit Lyoplant® dann für die Therapie der kongenitalen Bauchwanddefekte geeignet ist, müssen weitere klinische Studien zeigen.
The yeast form of the fungus Candida albicans promotes persistence in the gut of gnotobiotic mice
(2017)
Many microorganisms that cause systemic, life-threatening infections in humans reside as harmless commensals in our digestive tract. Yet little is known about the biology of these microbes in the gut. Here, we visualize the interface between the human commensal and pathogenic fungus Candida albicans and the intestine of mice, a surrogate host. Because the indigenous mouse microbiota restricts C. albicans settlement, we compared the patterns of colonization in the gut of germ free and antibiotic-treated conventionally raised mice. In contrast to the heterogeneous morphologies found in the latter, we establish that in germ free animals the fungus almost uniformly adopts the yeast cell form, a proxy of its commensal state. By screening a collection of C. albicans transcription regulator deletion mutants in gnotobiotic mice, we identify several genes previously unknown to contribute to in vivo fitness. We investigate three of these regulators—ZCF8, ZFU2 and TRY4—and show that indeed they favor the yeast form over other morphologies. Consistent with this finding, we demonstrate that genetically inducing non-yeast cell morphologies is detrimental to the fitness of C. albicans in the gut. Furthermore, the identified regulators promote adherence of the fungus to a surface covered with mucin and to mucus-producing intestinal epithelial cells. In agreement with this result, histology sections indicate that C. albicans dwells in the murine gut in close proximity to the mucus layer. Thus, our findings reveal a set of regulators that endows C. albicans with the ability to endure in the intestine through multiple mechanisms.
Es lässt sich feststellen, dass in der vorliegenden Untersuchung eine nichtchirurgische systemische Parodontaltherapie mit und ohne adjuvante Antibiose die beobachteten Keimzahlen der parodontitisassoziierten Keime Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans, Porphyromonas gingivalis und Tannerella forsythia signifikant reduzieren konnte. Es konnte jedoch kein direkter Zusammenhang zwischen der beobachteten Keimreduktion des subgingivalen Mikrobioms und der Veränderung der erfassten Parameter der arteriellen Gefäßsteifigkeit festgestellt werden.
Weitere Interventionsstudien mit höheren Patientenzahlen und einer hierdurch möglichen differenzierteren Subanalyse des Patientenguts bezüglich Risikofaktoren wie Tabakkonsum, Medikation oder Lebensalter, sowie der Unterscheidung zwischen aggressiver und chronischer Parodontitis sind erforderlich, um die mögliche Existenz eines kausalen Zusammenhangs beider Erkrankungen definitiv abklären zu können.
Adipocytes play a central role in maintaining metabolic homeostasis in the body. Differentiation of adipocyte precursor cells requires the transcriptional activity of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ (Pparγ) and CCAAT/enhancer binding proteins (C/Ebps). Transcriptional activity is regulated by signaling modules activated by a plethora of hormones and nutrients. Mechanistic target of rapamacin complexes (mTORC) 1 and 2 are central for the coordination of hormonal and nutritional inputs in cells and are essential for adipogenesis. Serum glucocorticoid kinase 1 (Sgk1)-dependent phosphorylation of N-Myc downstream-regulated gene 1 (Ndrg1) is a hallmark of mTORC2 activation in cells. Moreover, Pparγ activation promotes Ndrg1 expression. However, the impact of Ndrg1 on adipocyte differentiation and function has not yet been defined. Here, we show that Ndrg1 expression and its Sgk1-dependent phosphorylation are induced during adipogenesis. Consistently, we demonstrate that Ndrg1 promotes adipocyte differentiation and function by inducing Pparγ expression. Additionally, our results indicate that Ndrg1 is required for C/Ebpα phosphorylation. Moreover, we found that Ndrg1 phosphorylation by Sgk1 promotes adipocyte formation. Taken together, we show that induction of Ndrg1 expression by Pparγ and its phosphorylation by Sgk1 kinase are required for the acquisition of adipocyte characteristics by precursor cells.
The focus of the work concerned the development of a series of MRI techniques that were specifically designed and optimized to obtain quantitative and spatially resolved information about characteristic parameters of the lung. Three image acquisition techniques were developed. Each of them allows to quantify a different parameter of relevant diagnostic interest for the lung, as further described below:
1) The blood volume fraction, which represents the amount of lung water in the intravascular compartment expressed as a fraction of the total lung water. This parameter is related to lung perfusion.
2) The magnetization relaxation time T\(_2\) und T*\(_2\)
, which represents the component of T\(_2\) associated with the diffusion of water molecules through the internal magnetic field gradients of the lung. Because the amplitude of these internal gradients is related to the alveolar size, T\(_2\) und T*\(_2\) can be used to obtain information about the microstructure of the lung.
3) The broadening of the NMR spectral line of the lung. This parameter depends on lung inflation and on the concentration of oxygen in the alveoli. For this reason, the spectral line broadening can be regarded as a fingerprint for lung inflation; furthermore, in combination with oxygen enhancement, it provides a measure for lung ventilation.
We consider a scenario inspired by natural supersymmetry, where neutrino data is explained within a low-scale seesaw scenario. We extend the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model by adding light right-handed neutrinos and their superpartners, the R-sneutrinos, and consider the lightest neutralinos to be higgsino-like. We consider the possibilities of having either an R-sneutrino or a higgsino as lightest supersymmetric particle. Assuming that squarks and gauginos are heavy, we systematically evaluate the bounds on slepton masses due to existing LHC data.
A fundamental problem in deciding between mutually exclusive options is that the decision needs to be categorical although the properties of the options often differ but in grade. We developed an experimental handle to study this aspect of behavior organization. Larval Drosophila were trained such that in one set of animals odor A was rewarded, but odor B was not (A+/B), whereas a second set of animals was trained reciprocally (A/B+). We then measured the preference of the larvae either for A, or for B, or for “morphed” mixtures of A and B, that is for mixtures differing in the ratio of the two components. As expected, the larvae showed higher preference when only the previously rewarded odor was presented than when only the previously unrewarded odor was presented. For mixtures of A and B that differed in the ratio of the two components, the major component dominated preference behavior—but it dominated less than expected from a linear relationship between mixture ratio and preference behavior. This suggests that a minor component can have an enhanced impact in a mixture, relative to such a linear expectation. The current paradigm may prove useful in understanding how nervous systems generate discrete outputs in the face of inputs that differ only gradually.
Marine sponge-associated actinomycetes are considered as promising source for the discovery of novel biologically active compounds. Metabolomics coupled multivariate analysis can efficiently reduce the chemical redundancy of re-isolating known compounds at the very early stage of natural product discovery. This Ph.D. project aimed to isolate biologically active secondary metabolites from actinomycetes associated with different Mediterranean sponges with the assistance of metabolomics tools to implement a rapid dereplication and chemically distinct candidate targeting for further up-scaling compounds isolation.
This study first focused on the recovery of actinomycetes from marine sponges by various cultivation efforts. Twelve different media and two separate pre-treatments of each bacterial extract were designed and applied to facilitate actinomycete diversity and richness. A total of 64 actinomycetes were isolated from 12 different marine sponge species. The isolates were affiliated to 23 genera representing 8 different suborders based on nearly full-length 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Four putatively novel species belonging to the genera Geodermatophilus, Microlunatus, Rhodococcus, and Actinomycetospora were identified based on a sequence similarity <98.5% to validly described 16S rRNA gene sequences. 20% of the isolated actinomycetes was shown to exhibit diverse biological properties, including antioxidant, anti-Bacillus sp., anti-Aspergillus sp., and antitrypanosomal activities.
The metabolomics approaches combined with the bioassay results identified two candidate strains Streptomyces sp. SBT348 and Streptomyces sp. SBT345 for further up-scaling cultivation and compounds isolation. Four compounds were isolated from Streptomyces sp. SBT348. Three of these compounds including the new cyclic dipeptide petrocidin A were previously highlighted in the metabolomics analyses, corroborating the feasibility of metabolomics approaches in novel compounds discovery. These four compounds were also tested against two pathogen microorganisms since the same activities were shown in their crude extract in the preliminary bioassay screening, however none of them displayed the expected activities, which may ascribe to the insufficient amount obtained. Streptomyces sp. SBT345 yielded 5 secondary metabolites, three of which were identified as new natural products, namely strepthonium A, ageloline A and strepoxazine A. Strepthonium A inhibited the production of Shiga toxin produced by enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli at a concentration of 80 μM, without interfering with the bacterial growth. Ageloline A exhibited antioxidant activity and inhibited the inclusion of Chlamydia trachomatis with an IC50 value of 9.54 ± 0.36 μM. Strepoxazine A displayed antiproliferative property towards human promyelocytic HL-60 cells with an IC50 value of 16 μg/ml.
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These results highlighted marine sponges as a rich source for novel actinomycetes and further exhibited the significance of marine sponge-associated actinomycetes as promising producers of novel biologically active compounds. The chemometrics coupled metabolomics approach also demonstrated its feasibility and efficacy in natural product discovery.
A new cyclic dipeptide, petrocidin A (\(\textbf{1}\)), along with three known compounds—2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid (\(\textbf{2}\)), 2,3-dihydroxybenzamide (\(\textbf{3}\)), and maltol (\(\textbf{4}\))—were isolated from the solid culture of \(Streptomyces\) sp. SBT348. The strain \(Streptomyces\) sp. SBT348 had been prioritized in a strain collection of 64 sponge-associated actinomycetes based on its distinct metabolomic profile using liquid chromatography/high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). The absolute configuration of all α-amino acids was determined by HPLC analysis after derivatization with Marfey’s reagent and comparison with commercially available reference amino acids. Structure elucidation was pursued in the presented study by mass spectrometry and NMR spectral data. Petrocidin A (\(\textbf{1}\)) and 2,3-dihydroxybenzamide (\(\textbf{3}\)) exhibited significant cytotoxicity towards the human promyelocytic HL-60 and the human colon adenocarcinoma HT-29 cell lines. These results demonstrated the potential of sponge-associated actinomycetes for the discovery of novel and pharmacologically active natural products.
Summary
Platelet activation and aggregation at sites of vascular injury is critical to prevent excessive blood loss, but may also lead to life-threatening ischemic disease states, such as myocardial infarction and stroke. Glycoprotein (GP) VI and C type lectin-like receptor 2 (CLEC-2) are essential platelet activating receptors in hemostasis and thrombo-inflammatory disease which signal through a (hem)immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif (ITAM)-dependent pathway. The adapter molecules Src-like adapter protein (SLAP) and SLAP2 are involved in the regulation of immune cell receptor surface expression and signaling, but their function in platelets is unknown. As revealed in this thesis, single deficiency of SLAP or SLAP2 in mice had only moderate effects on platelet function, while SLAP/SLAP2 double deficiency resulted in markedly increased signal transduction, integrin activation, granule release, aggregation, procoagulant activity and thrombin generation following (hem)ITAM-coupled, but not G protein-coupled receptor activation. Slap-/-/Slap2-/- mice displayed accelerated occlusive arterial thrombus formation and a dramatically worsened outcome after focal cerebral ischemia. These results establish SLAP and SLAP2 as critical inhibitors of platelet (hem)ITAM signaling in the setting of arterial thrombosis and ischemic stroke.
GPVI has emerged as a promising novel pharmacological target for treatment of thrombotic and inflammatory disease states, but the exact mechanisms of its immunodepletion in vivo are incompletely understood. It was hypothesized that SLAP and SLAP2 may be involved in the control of GPVI down-regulation because of their role in the internalization of immune cell receptors. As demonstrated in the second part of the thesis, SLAP and SLAP2 were dispensable for antibody-induced GPVI down-regulation, but anti-GPVI treatment resulted in prolonged strong thrombocytopenia in Slap-/-/Slap2-/- mice. The profound thrombocytopenia likely resulted from the powerful platelet activation which the anti-GPVI antibody induced in Slap-/-/Slap2-/- platelets, but importantly, not in wild-type platelets. These data indicate that the expression and activation state of key modulators of the GPVI signaling cascade may have important implications for the safety profile and efficacy of anti-GPVI agents.
Small GTPases of the Rho family, such as RhoA and Cdc42, are critically involved in the regulation of cytoskeletal rearrangements during platelet activation, but little is known about the specific roles and functional redundancy of both proteins in platelet biogenesis. As shown in the final part of the thesis, combined deficiency of RhoA and Cdc42 led to marked alterations in megakaryocyte morphology and the generation of platelets of heterogeneous size and granule content. Despite severe hemostatic defects and profound thrombo¬cytopenia, circulating RhoA-/-/Cdc42-/- platelets were still capable of granule secretion and the formation of occlusive thrombi. These results implicate the existence of both distinct and overlapping roles of RhoA and Cdc42 in platelet production and function.
We calculate the next-to-leading order electroweak corrections to the production of a photon pair in association with zero, one and two jets at the LHC. We use GoSam and Sherpa to obtain the results in a fully automated way. For a typical set of fiducial cuts the electroweak corrections lead to a modification of the total cross section of up to 3%, depending on the jet multiplicity. We find substantial contributions in differential distributions, leading to tens of per cent corrections for phase space regions within the reach of the LHC. Furthermore we investigate the importance of photon induced processes as well as subleading contributions. Photon induced processes are found to be negligible, subleading contributions can have a sizeable impact however they can be removed by appropriate phase space cuts.
Work is seen by many thinkers as the fundamental dimension of man`s existence on earth. Through work, he provides his basic necessities on earth and co-operate with God in the work of creation.
He received this mandate to work from the very beginning of creation by God. In carrying out this mandate, man every human being reflects the very action of the creator of the Universe.
God worked and intended that man who is created in His image and likeness continues the work of creation by working.
Even though Man suffers and sweats through work and yet, in spite of all this toil-perhaps in a sense because of it – work is a good thing for man. It is not only good in the sense that it is useful or something to enjoy; it is also good as being something worthy, that is to say something that corresponds to man's dignity that expresses this dignity and increases it.
This project examines man as a creature called to work and born into work. It is true that through work, man provides himself and his family with the basic necessities of life and everyday needs for the reason he charges wages for his sweat. Work goes beyond and should exceed the boundaries of the material benefit that comes out of it to the satisfaction and fulfilment for the very purpose we should work. The modern society has attached so much importance to money and material possession, the question then is how do we go along working in the spirit of improvement and renewal of the earth? The modern man understands work only as a means of making his daily bread. For this reason, he engages himself in an occupation that he has little or no interest in. He ends up quarrelling everyday with the people that he or she is supposed to serve through work. The result is low work output and waste of talents and the society loses an opportunity for improvement as every creature is supposed to contribute uniquely.
A good example is Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation with a population estimate of about over 170,000,000 people and the sixth Oil producing Nation.
Endogenous clocks help animals to anticipate the daily environmental changes. These
internal clocks rely on environmental cues, called Zeitgeber, for synchronization. The
molecular clock consists of transcription-translation feedback loops and is located in
about 150 neurons (Helfrich-Förster and Homberg, 1993; Helfrich-Förster, 2005). The
core clock has the proteins Clock (CLK) and Cycle (CYC) that together act as a
transcription activator for period (per) and timeless (tim) which then, via PER and TIM
block their own transcription by inhibiting CLK/CYC activity (Darlington et al., 1998;
Hardin, 2005; Dubruille and Emery, 2008). Light signals trigger the degradation of TIM
through a blue-light sensing protein Cryptochrome (CRY) and thus, allows CLK/CYC to
resume per and tim transcription (Emery et al., 1998; Stanewsky et al., 1998).
Therefore, light acts as an important Zeitgeber for the clock entrainment. The
mammalian clock consists of similarly intertwined feedback loops.
Endogenous clocks facilitate appropriate alterations in a variety of behaviors
according to the time of day. Also, these clocks can provide the phase information to the
memory centers of the brain to form the time of day related associations (TOD). TOD
memories promote appropriate usage of resources and concurrently better the survival
success of an animal. For instance, animals can form time-place associations related to
the availability of a biologically significant stimulus like food or mate. Such memories will
help the animal to obtain resources at different locations at the appropriate time of day.
The significance of these memories is supported by the fact that many organisms
including bees, ants, rats and mice demonstrate time-place learning (Biebach et al.
1991; Mistlberger et al. 1997; Van der Zee et al. 2008; Wenger et al. 1991). Previous
studies have shown that TOD related memories rely on an internal clock, but the identity
of the clock and the underlying mechanism remain less well understood. The present
study demonstrates that flies can also form TOD associated odor memories and further
seeks to identify the appropriate mechanism.
Hungry flies were trained in the morning to associate odor A with the sucrose
reward and subsequently were exposed to odor B without reward. The same flies were
exposed in the afternoon to odor B with and odor A without reward. Two cycles of the
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reversal training on two subsequent days resulted in the significant retrieval of specific
odor memories in the morning and afternoon tests. Therefore, flies were able to
modulate their odor preference according to the time of day. In contrast, flies trained in
a non-reversal manner were unable to form TOD related memories. The study also
demonstrates that flies are only able to form time-odor memories when the two
reciprocal training cycles occur at a minimum 6 h interval.
This work also highlights the role of the internal state of flies in establishing timeodor
memories. Prolonged starvation motivates flies to appropriate their search for the
food. It increases the cost associated with a wrong choice in the T-maze test as it
precludes the food discovery. Accordingly, an extended starvation promotes the TOD
related changes in the odor preference in flies already with a single cycle of reversal
training. Intriguingly, prolonged starvation is required for the time-odor memory
acquisition but is dispensable during the memory retrieval.
Endogenous oscillators promote time-odor associations in flies. Flies in constant
darkness have functional rhythms and can form time-odor memories. In contrast, flies
kept in constant light become arrhythmic and demonstrated no change in their odor
preference through the day. Also, clock mutant flies per01 and clkAR, show compromised
performance compared to CS flies when trained in the time-odor conditioning assay.
These results suggest that flies need a per and clk dependent oscillator for establishing
TOD related memories. Also, the clock governed rhythms are necessary for the timeodor
memory acquisition but not for the retrieval.
Pigment-Dispersing Factor (PDF) neuropeptide is a clock output factor (Park and
Hall, 1998; Park et al., 2000; Helfrich-Förster, 2009). pdf01 mutant flies are unable to
form significant time-odor memories. PDF is released by 8 neurons per hemisphere in
the fly brain. This cluster includes the small (s-LNvs) and large (l-LNvs) ventral lateral
neurons. Restoring PDF in these 16 neurons in the pdf01 mutant background rescues
the time-odor learning defect. The PDF neuropeptide activates a seven transmembrane
G-protein coupled receptor (PDFR) which is broadly expressed in the fly brain (Hyun et
al., 2005). The present study shows that the expression of PDFR in about 10 dorsal
neurons (DN1p) is sufficient for robust time-odor associations in flies.
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In conclusion, flies use distinct endogenous oscillators to acquire and retrieve
time-odor memories. The first oscillator is light dependent and likely signals through the
PDF neuropeptide to promote the usage of the time as an associative cue during
appetitive conditioning. In contrast, the second clock is light independent and
specifically signals the time information for the memory retrieval. The identity of this
clock and the underlying mechanism are open to investigation.
Breakdown of sphingomyelin as catalyzed by the activity of sphingomyelinases profoundly affects biophysical properties of cellular membranes which is particularly important with regard to compartmentalization of surface receptors and their signaling relay. As it is activated both upon TCR ligation and co-stimulation in a spatiotemporally controlled manner, the neutral sphingomyelinase (NSM) has proven to be important in T cell activation, where it appears to play a particularly important role in cytoskeletal reorganization and cell polarization. Because these are important parameters in directional T cell migration and motility in tissues, we analyzed the role of the NSM in these processes. Pharmacological inhibition of NSM interfered with early lymph node homing of T cells in vivo indicating that the enzyme impacts on endothelial adhesion, transendothelial migration, sensing of chemokine gradients or, at a cellular level, acquisition of a polarized phenotype. NSM inhibition reduced adhesion of T cells to TNF-α/IFN-γ activated, but not resting endothelial cells, most likely via inhibiting high-affinity LFA-1 clustering. NSM activity proved to be highly important in directional T cell motility in response to SDF1-α, indicating that their ability to sense and translate chemokine gradients might be NSM dependent. In fact, pharmacological or genetic NSM ablation interfered with T cell polarization both at an overall morphological level and redistribution of CXCR4 and pERM proteins on endothelial cells or fibronectin, as well as with F-actin polymerization in response to SDF1-α stimulation, indicating that efficient directional perception and signaling relay depend on NSM activity. Altogether, these data support a central role of the NSM in T cell recruitment and migration both under homeostatic and inflamed conditions by regulating polarized redistribution of receptors and their coupling to the cytoskeleton.
Sex determination (SD) is a complex and diverse developmental process that leads to the decision whether the bipotential gonad anlage will become a testis or an ovary. This mechanism is regulated by gene cascades, networks and/or chromosomal systems, and can be influenced by fluctuations of extrinsic factors like temperature, exposure to hormones and pollution. Within vertebrates, the group of fish show the widest variety of sex determination mechanism. This whole diversity of processes and mechanisms converges to the formation of two different gametes, the eggs and the sperm, the first bigger and static, and the second smaller and motile. Meiosis is crucial for the formation of both types of gametes, and the timing of meiosis entry is one of the first recognizable differences between male and female in vertebrates. The germ cells go into meiosis first in female than in male, and in mammals, this event has been shown to be regulated by retinoic acid (RA). This small polar molecule induces in the germ cells the expression of the pre-meiotic marker Stra8 (stimulated by retinoic acid gene 8), which is necessary for meiosis initiation. Interestingly, genome analyzes have shown that the majority of fish (including medaka) lack the stra8 gene, adding a question mark to the role of RA in meiosis induction in this group. Since a role of RA in entry of meiosis and sexual development of fish is still far from being understood, I investigated in medaka (Oryzias latipes) a possible signaling function of RA during the SD period in embryos and in reproductively active gonads of adults. I generated a transgenic medaka line that reports responsiveness to RA in vivo. With this tool, I compared RA responsiveness with the expression of the main gene involved in the synthesis of RA. My results show that there is a de-correlation between the action of RA with its source. In adults, expression of the RA metabolizing enzymes show sexually dimorphic RA levels, with aldh1a2 levels being higher in testis, and cyp26a1 stronger in female gonad. In ovary, the responsiveness is restricted to the early meiotic oocytes. In testis, RA is acting directly in the pre-meiotic cells, but also in Sertoli and Leydig cells. Treatment experiments on testis organ culture showed that RA pathway activation leads to a decrease in meiosis markers expression levels. During the development, RA responsiveness in the germ cells was observed in both sexes much earlier than the first female meiosis entry. Treatments with RA-synthesis inhibitor show a decrease in meiosis markers expression levels only after the sex differentiation period in female. Expression analyzes of embryos treated with exogenous RA showed induction of dmrt1a at the gonad levels and an increase of amh levels. Both genes are not only involved in male formation, but also in the regulation of germ cell proliferation and differentiation. RA is important in meiosis induction and gametogenesis in adult medaka. However, there is no evidence for a similar role of RA in initiating the first meiosis in female germ cells at the SD stage. Moreover, contrary to common expectation, RA seems to induce sex related genes that are involved indirectly in meiosis inhibition. In this thesis, I showed for the first time that RA can be involved in both induction and inhibition of meiosis entry, depending on the sex and the developmental stage in a stra8-independent model organism.
Population genomics of prokaryotes has been studied in depth in only a small number of primarily pathogenic bacteria, as genome sequences of isolates of diverse origin are lacking for most species. Here, we conducted a large‐scale survey of population structure in prevalent human gut microbial species, sampled from their natural environment, with a culture‐independent metagenomic approach. We examined the variation landscape of 71 species in 2,144 human fecal metagenomes and found that in 44 of these, accounting for 72% of the total assigned microbial abundance, single‐nucleotide variation clearly indicates the existence of sub‐populations (here termed subspecies). A single subspecies (per species) usually dominates within each host, as expected from ecological theory. At the global scale, geographic distributions of subspecies differ between phyla, with Firmicutes subspecies being significantly more geographically restricted. To investigate the functional significance of the delineated subspecies, we identified genes that consistently distinguish them in a manner that is independent of reference genomes. We further associated these subspecies‐specific genes with properties of the microbial community and the host. For example, two of the three Eubacterium rectale subspecies consistently harbor an accessory pro‐inflammatory flagellum operon that is associated with lower gut community diversity, higher host BMI, and higher blood fasting insulin levels. Using an additional 676 human oral samples, we further demonstrate the existence of niche specialized subspecies in the different parts of the oral cavity. Taken together, we provide evidence for subspecies in the majority of abundant gut prokaryotes, leading to a better functional and ecological understanding of the human gut microbiome in conjunction with its host.
Natural enemies have been shown to be effective agents for controlling insect pests in crops. However, it remains unclear how different natural enemy guilds contribute to the regulation of pests and how this might be modulated by landscape context. In a field exclusion experiment in oilseed rape (OSR), we found that parasitoids and ground-dwelling predators acted in a complementary way to suppress pollen beetles, suggesting that pest control by multiple enemies attacking a pest during different periods of its occurrence in the field improves biological control efficacy. The density of pollen beetle significantly decreased with an increased proportion of non-crop habitats in the landscape. Parasitism had a strong effect on pollen beetle numbers in landscapes with a low or intermediate proportion of non-crop habitats, but not in complex landscapes. Our results underline the importance of different natural enemy guilds to pest regulation in crops, and demonstrate how biological control can be strengthened by complementarity among natural enemies. The optimization of natural pest control by adoption of specific management practices at local and landscape scales, such as establishing non-crop areas, low-impact tillage, and temporal crop rotation, could significantly reduce dependence on pesticides and foster yield stability through ecological intensification in agriculture.
1. Today honey bee colonies face a wide range of challenges in modern agricultural landscapes which entails the need for a comprehensive investigation of honey bees in a landscape context and the assessment of environmental risks. Within this dissertation the pollen foraging of honey bee colonies is studied in different agricultural landscapes to gain insight into the use of pollen resources and the influence of landscape structure across the season. General suggestions for landscape management to support honey bees and other pollinators are derived.
2. Decoding of waggle dances and a subsequent spatial foraging analysis are used as methods in Chapters 4 and 5 to study honey bee colonies in agricultural landscapes. The recently developed metabarcoding of mixed pollen samples was applied for the first time in honey bee foraging ecology and allowed for a detailed analysis of pollen, that was trapped from honey bees in front hive entrances (Chapter 6).
3. Pollen identification through molecular sequencing and DNA barcoding has been proposed as an alternative approach to light microscopy, which still is a tedious and error-prone task. In this study we assessed mixed pollen probes through next-generation sequencing and developed a bioinformatic workflow to analyse these high-throughput data with a newly created reference database. To evaluate the feasibility, we compared results from classical identification based on light microscopy from the same samples with our sequencing results. Abundance estimations from sequencing data were significantly correlated with counted abundances through light microscopy. Next-generation sequencing thus presents a useful and efficient workflow to identify pollen at the genus and species level without requiring specialized palynological expert knowledge.
4. During maize flowering, four observation hives were placed in and rotated between 11 landscapes covering a gradient in maize acreage. A higher foraging frequency on maize fields compared to other landuse types showed that maize is an intensively used pollen resource for honey bee colonies. Mean foraging distances were significantly shorter for maize pollen than for other pollen origins, indicating that effort is put into collecting a diverse pollen diet. The percentage of maize pollen foragers did not increase with maize acreage in the landscape and was not reduced by grassland area as an alternative pollen resource. Our findings allow estimating the distance-related exposure risk of honey bee colonies to pollen from surrounding maize fields treated with systemic insecticides.
5. It is unknown how an increasing area of mass-flowering crops like oilseed rape (OSR) or a decrease of semi-natural habitats (SNH) change the temporal and spatial availability of pollen resources for honey bee colonies, and thus foraging distances and frequency in different habitat types. Sixteen observation hives were placed in and rotated between 16 agricultural landscapes with independent gradients of OSR and SNH area within 2 km to analyze foraging distances and frequencies. SNH and OSR reduced foraging distance at different spatial scales and depending on season, with possible benefits for the performance of honey bee colonies. Frequency of pollen foragers per habitat type was equally high for SNH, grassland and OSR fields, but lower for other crops and forest. In landscapes with a small proportion of SNH a significantly higher density of pollen foragers on SNH was observed, indicating the limitation of pollen resources in simple agricultural landscapes and the importance of SNH.
6. Quantity and diversity of collected pollen can influence the growth and health of honey bee colonies, but little is known about the influence of landscape structure on pollen diet. In a field experiment we rotated 16 honey bee colonies across 16 agricultural landscapes (see also Chapter 5), used traps to get samples of collected pollen and observed the intra-colonial dance communication to gain information about foraging distances. Neither the amount of collected pollen nor pollen diversity were related to landscape diversity. The revealed increase of foraging distances with decreasing landscape diversity suggests that honey bees compensate for a lower landscape diversity by increasing their pollen foraging range in order to maintain pollen amount and diversity.
7. Our results show the importance of diverse pollen resources for honey bee colonies in agricultural landscapes. Beside the risk of exposure to pesticides honey bees face the risk of nutritional deficiency with implications for their health. By modifying landscape composition and therefore availability of resources we are able to contribute to the wellbeing of honey bees. Agri-environmental schemes aiming to support pollinators should focus on possible spatial and temporal gaps in pollen availability and diversity in agricultural landscapes.
The availability of pollen in agricultural landscapes is essential for the successful growth and reproduction of honey bee colonies (Apis mellifera L.). The quantity and diversity of collected pollen can influence the growth and health of honey bee colonies, but little is known about the influence of landscape structure on pollen diet. In a field experiment, we rotated 16 honey bee colonies across 16 agricultural landscapes, used traps to collect samples of collected pollen and observed intra-colonial dance communication to gain information about foraging distances. DNA metabarcoding was applied to analyze mixed pollen samples. Neither the amount of collected pollen nor pollen diversity was related to landscape diversity. However, we found a strong seasonal variation in the amount and diversity of collected pollen in all sites independent of landscape diversity. The observed increase in foraging distances with decreasing landscape diversity suggests that honey bees compensated for lower landscape diversity by increasing their pollen foraging range in order to maintain pollen amount and diversity. Our results underscore the importance of a diverse pollen diet for honey bee colonies. Agri-environmental schemes aiming to support pollinators should focus on possible spatial and temporal gaps in pollen availability and diversity in agricultural landscapes.
Frequency analysis of the rf emission of oscillating Josephson supercurrent is a powerful passive way of probing properties of topological Josephson junctions. In particular, measurements of the Josephson emission enable the detection of topological gapless Andreev bound states that give rise to emission at half the Josephson frequency f\(_{J}\) rather than conventional emission at f\(_{J}\). Here, we report direct measurement of rf emission spectra on Josephson junctions made of HgTe-based gate-tunable topological weak links. The emission spectra exhibit a clear signal at half the Josephson frequency f\(_{J}\)/2. The linewidths of emission lines indicate a coherence time of 0.3–4 ns for the f\(_{J}\)/2 line, much shorter than for the f\(_{J}\) line (3–4 ns). These observations strongly point towards the presence of topological gapless Andreev bound states and pave the way for a future HgTe-based platform for topological quantum computation.
Theory predicts that males and females should often join the mating pool at different times (sexual dimorphism in timing of emergence [SDT]) as the degree of SDT affects female mating success. We utilize an analytical model to explore (1) how important SDT is for female mating success, (2) how mating success might change if either sex's mortality (abruptly) increases, and (3) to what degree evolutionary responses in SDT may be able to mitigate the consequences of such mortality increase. Increasing male pre‐mating mortality has a non‐linear effect on the fraction of females mated: The effect is initially weak, but at some critical level a further increase in male mortality has a stronger effect than a similar increase in female mortality. Such a change is expected to impose selection for reduced SDT. Increasing mortality during the mating season has always a stronger effect on female mating success if the mortality affects the sex that emerges first. This bias results from the fact that enhancing mortality of the earlier emerging sex reduces female–male encounter rates. However, an evolutionary response in SDT may effectively mitigate such consequences. Further, if considered independently for females and males, the predicted evolutionary response in SDT could be quite dissimilar. The difference between female and male evolutionary response in SDT leads to marked differences in the fraction of fertilized females under certain conditions. Our model may provide general guidelines for improving harvesting of populations, conservation management of rare species under altered environmental conditions, or maintaining long‐term efficiency of pest‐control measures.
Die vorliegende Arbeit quantifiziert die Korrelationen zwischen blutrheologischen Parametern und Erythrozyten-Indizes an einem repräsentativen und gut definierten Kollektiv gesunder Frauen im Vorfeld eines elektiven gynäkologischen Eingriffes.
Gemäß der erhobenen Resultate besteht bei 286 gesunden Frauen mittleren Alters zwischen der Verformbarkeit, dem MCV und dem MCH der Erythrozyten eine statistisch signifikante Korrelation, die in Gegenwart hoher Scherkräfte an Ausprägung zunimmt. Gleichzeitig vermindert sich mit zunehmender MCHC die Erythrozytenverformbarkeit stetig und statistisch signifikant, wobei dieser Effekt am deutlichsten in Gegenwart hoher Scherkräfte, wie diese beispielsweise in den Kapillaren der Endstrombahn anzunehmen sind, nachweisbar ist.
Higgs production in association with off-shell top-antitop pairs at NLO EW and QCD at the LHC
(2017)
We present NLO electroweak corrections to Higgs production in association with off-shell top-antitop quark pairs. The full process pp → e +νeµ −ν¯µbb¯H is considered, and hence all interference, off-shell, and non-resonant contributions are taken into account.
The electroweak corrections turn out to be below one per cent for the integrated cross section but can exceed 10% in certain phase-space regions. In addition to its phenomenological relevance, the computation constitutes a major technical achievement as the full NLO virtual corrections involving up to 9-point functions have been computed exactly. The results of the full computation are supported by two calculations in the double-pole approximation. These also allow to infer the effect of off-shell contributions and emphasise their importance especially for the run II of the LHC. Finally, we present combined predictions featuring both NLO electroweak and QCD corrections in a common set-up that will help the experimental collaborations in their quest of precisely measuring the aforementioned process.
We present the computer code RECOLA2 along with the first NLO electroweak corrections to Higgs production in vector-boson fusion and updated results for Higgs strahlung in the Two-Higgs-Doublet Model and Higgs-Singlet extension of the Standard Model. A fully automated procedure for the generation of tree-level and one-loop matrix elements in general models, including renormalization, is presented. We discuss the application of the Background-Field Method to the extended models. Numerical results for NLO electroweak cross sections are presented for different renormalization schemes in the Two-Higgs-Doublet Model and the Higgs-Singlet extension of the Standard Model. Finally, we present distributions for the production of a heavy Higgs boson.
Platelets are small anucleate cell fragments derived from bone marrow megakaryocytes (MKs) and are important players in hemostasis and thrombosis. Platelet granules store factors which are released upon activation. There are three major types of platelet granules: alpha-granules, dense granules and lysosomes. While dense granules contain non-proteinacious factors which support platelet aggregation and adhesion, platelet alpha-granules contain more than 300 different proteins involved in various functions such as inflammation, wound healing and the maintenanceof vascular integrity, however, their functional significance in vivo remains unknown. This thesis summarizes analyses using three mouse models generated to investigate the role of platelet granules in thrombosis, hemostasis, stroke and inflammation.
Unc13d-/- mice displayed defective platelet dense granule secretion, which resulted in abrogated thrombosis and hemostasis. Remarkably, Munc13-4-deficient mice were profoundly protected from infarct progression following transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (tMCAO) and this was not associated with increased intracranial bleeding indicating an essential involvementof dense granule secretion in infarct progression but not intracranial hemostasis during acute stroke with obvious therapeutic implications.
In the second part of this thesis, the role of platelet alpha-granules was investigated using the Nbeal2-/- mouse. Mutations in NBEAL2 have been linked to the gray platelet syndrome (GPS), a rare inherited bleeding disorder. Nbeal2-/- mice displayed the characteristics of human GPS, with defective alpha-granule biogenesis in MKs and their absence from platelets. Nbeal2-deficiency did not affect MK differentiation and proplatelet formation in vitro or platelet life span in vivo. Nbeal2-/- platelets displayed impaired adhesion, aggregation, and coagulant activity ex vivo that translated into defective arterial thrombus formation and protection from thrombo-inflammatory brain infarction in vivo. In a model of skin wound repair, Nbeal2-/- mice exhibited impaired development of functional granulation tissue due to severely reduced differentiation of myofibroblasts.
In the third part, the effects of combined deficiency of alpha- and dense granule secretion were analyzed using Unc13d-/-/Nbeal2-/- mice. Platelets of these mice showed impaired aggregation and adhesion to collagen under flow ex vivo, which translated into infinite tail bleeding times and severely defective arterial thrombus formation in vivo. When subjected to in vivo models of skin or lung inflammation, the double mutant mice showed no signs of hemorrhage. In contrast, lack of platelet granule release resulted in impaired vascular integrity in the ischemic brain following tMCAO leading to increased mortality. This indicates that while defective dense granule secretion or the paucity of alpha-granules alone have no effect on vascular integrity after stroke, the combination of both impairs vascular integrity and causes an increase in mortality.
"China im Wandel" ist das Schlagwort, wenn es um das "Reich der Mitte" geht. Primär war damit das rapide wirtschaftliche Wachstum über die letzten Jahrzehnte gemeint, aber auch zunehmend die Veränderungen in politischen und sozialen Bereichen. Der ökonomische Transformationsprozess hat auch einen anhaltenden institutionellen Wandel in Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft hervorgerufen. Für diese wirtschaftliche Transformation werden in China vor allem mehr qualifizierte Fachkräfte benötigt, nach denen die ausländischen wie inländischen Unternehmen auf dem chinesischen Arbeitsmarkt oft vergeblich suchen. Rekrutierung und Mitarbeiterbindung sowie die steigenden Lohnkosten stellen seit Jahren die größten Herausforderungen auf dem chinesischen Arbeitsmarkt dar. Das Mismatch-Problem ist augenscheinlich. Um die Gründe für diese Verzerrungen zu eruieren, setzt die vorliegende Studie dort an, wo Bildungsmarkt und Arbeitsmarkt aufeinandertreffen, und zwar dem Human Resource Management (HRM) von Unternehmen in China. Ziel dieser Studie ist es, einen Beitrag zur Diskussion über das Voranschreiten meritokratischer Verteilungsprozesse im Übergang von einer Plan- zur Marktwirtschaft in China zu leisten. Die Neue Institutionenökonomik (NIÖ) liefert mit der Signal- und Screeningtheorie (SST) Erklärungsansätze für solche personalökonomischen Probleme zwischen AG und AN. Mit Hilfe dieses auf China angewandten Ansatzes konnten die relevanten "Signale" beider Parteien im Rekrutierungsprozess sowie die Problemfelder Chinas Hotellerie identifiziert und analysiert werden. Somit richtet sich diese Studie nicht nur an Sinologen, sondern ebenso an Wirtschaftswissenschaftler und Praktiker mit Chinabezug.
Within this thesis, synthetic strategies for self-assembled organic cage compounds have been developed that allow for both stimuli-responsive control over assembly/disassembly processes and spatial control over functionalization. To purposefully operate the reversible assembly of organic cages, boron-nitrogen dative bonds have been exploited for the formation of a well-defined, discrete bipyramidal organic assembly in solution. Thermodynamic association equilibria for cage formation have been investigated by Isothermal Titration Calorimetry (ITC). Temperature-dependent NMR studies revealed a reversible cage opening upon heating and quantitative reassembly upon cooling. For the spatial functionalization of organic cages, two divergent molecular building units have been designed and synthesized, namely tribenzotriquinacene derivatives possessing a terminal alkyne moiety at the apical position and a meta-diboronic acid having a pyridyl group at the 2-position. Facile access to a variety of apically functionalized tribenzotriquinacenes has been illustrated by post-synthetic modifications at the terminal alkyne group by Sonogashira cross-coupling and azide-alkyne click reactions. Finally, these apically functionalized tribenzotriquinacene building blocks have been implemented into boronate ester-based organic cage compounds showing modular exohedral functionalities.
Introduction.
Tropheryma whipplei is the causative agent of Whipple’s disease. Gastrointestinal and lymphatic tissues are affected in the majority of cases, resulting in diarrhoea, malabsorption and fever. Here, we report a rare case of ocular manifestation in a patient lacking the typical Whipple symptoms.
Case presentation.
A 74-year-old Caucasian female presented with blurred vision in the right eye over a period of 1–2 months, accompanied by stinging pain and conjunctival hyperaemia for the last 2 days. Upon admission, visual acuity was hand motion in the affected eye. Ophthalmological examination showed typical signs of intraocular inflammation. Diagnostic and therapeutic pars plana vitrectomy including vitreous biopsy and intravitreal instillation of vancomycin and amikacin was performed within hours of initial presentation. Both microscopic analysis and microbial cultures of the vitreous biopsy remained negative for bacteria and fungi. The postoperative antibiotic regime included intravenous administration of ceftriaxone in combination with topical tobramycin and ofloxacin. Due to the empirical therapy the inflammation ceased and the patient was discharged after 5 days with cefpodoxime orally and local antibiotic and steroidal therapy. Meanwhile, the vitreous body had undergone testing by PCR for the eubacterial 16S rRNA gene, which was found to be positive. Analysis of the PCR product revealed a specific sequence of T. whipplei.
Conclusion.
In our patient, endophthalmitis was the first and only symptom of Morbus Whipple, while most patients with Whipple’s disease suffer from severe gastrointestinal symptoms. 16S rDNA PCR should be considered for any intraocular infection when microscopy and standard culture methods remain negative.
Die vorliegende Dissertation untersucht den Zusammenhang zwischen der Ausprägung physischer Aktivität und der Prävalenz kardiovaskulärer Risikofaktoren und Komorbiditäten bei Patienten mit milder bis moderater chronischer Niereninsuffizienz (CKD). Ziel ist die Identifikation kardiovaskulärer Risikofaktoren und Komorbiditäten, die durch physische Aktivität bei diesem Patientenkollektiv positiv beeinflusst werden können.
Grundlagen: Es besteht eine deutlich gesteigerte kardiovaskuläre Morbidität und Mortalität für Patienten mit CKD. Diese versterben häufig bereits aufgrund kardiovaskulärer Ereignisse bevor sie das Stadium des ESRD erreichen. Besonders den "traditionellen" kardiovaskulären Risikofaktoren, deren Prävalenz bei CKD deutlich gesteigert ist, kommt im Zusammenhang zwischen CKD und CVD eine bedeutende Rolle zu. Im Rahmen dieser Studie wurden unter den "traditionellen" Risikofaktoren diejenigen zusammengefasst, deren Gesamtheit das metabolische Syndrom definiert. Es gilt als belegt, dass physische Aktivität bei gesunden Personen einen präventiven Einfluss auf diese "traditionellen" Risikofaktoren einer CVD besitzt. In wieweit dies auf CKD Patienten mit ihrer vielfältigen weiteren kardiovaskulären Risikofaktoren übertragen werden darf und welchen Einfluss physische Aktivität hier haben kann, ist ungewiss. Es besteht allerdings Evidenz für eine deutliche Reduktion der physischen Aktivität bei Vorliegen einer milden bis moderaten CKD.
Methodik: Die prospektive klinisch-experimentelle Pedometerstudie stellt die erste objektiv erhobene Datensammlungen physischer Aktivität dieser Größe von Patienten mit CKD im Stadium 3 dar. Die 1153 eingeschlossenen Probanden wurden bundesweit aus der multizentrischen GCKD-Studie rekrutiert. Die Schrittzahlerfassung wurde über einen Zeitraum von 13 konsekutiven Tagen durchgeführt. Unter Berücksichtigung standardisiert erhobener Laborwerte und Fragebögen wurde die Assoziation physischer Aktivität mit kardiovaskulären Risikofaktoren und Komorbiditäten ermittelt.
Ergebnisse: Die physische Aktivität der chronisch nierenerkrankten Studienpopulation erweist sich objektiv gemessen als deutlich eingeschränkt. Mit sinkendem Aktivitätsniveau geht eine gesteigerte kardiovaskuläre Morbidität einher. Für die Faktoren HbA1c, Alter und WHR ist eine inverse Korrelation zur Schrittzahl gegeben. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass die mittlere Schrittzahl von Probanden, die an den kardiovaskulären Komorbiditäten pAVK, KHK, Herzinsuffizienz und Schlaganfall leiden oder die Risikofaktoren Diabetes mellitus und Adipositas aufweisen, hochsignifikant geringer ist als diejenige Schrittzahl von Probanden, die diese Faktoren nicht aufweisen. Darüber hinaus zeigt die durchgeführte Regressionsanalyse, dass auch nach Adjustierung für Alter, Geschlecht, Bildungsstatus und Anstellung mit einer höheren Schrittzahl ein signifikant gemindertes Risiko bezüglich des Vorliegens der Variablen pAVK, KHK, Herzinsuffizienz, Diabetes mellitus, Adipositas und Rauchen gegeben ist als in einer weniger aktiven Vergleichsgruppe mit der gleichen Nierenfunktionseinschränkung. Bezüglich der kardiovaskulären Risikofaktoren ist somit festzustellen, dass vor allem die Risikofaktoren Adipositas und Diabetes mellitus eine Beeinflussbarkeit aufgrund des Faktors physische Aktivität zeigen.
Fazit: Eine reduzierte physische Aktivität ist auch bei Patienten mit CKD mit einem höheren kardiovaskulären Risiko verbunden. Bei Patienten mit CKD können durch physische Aktivität vor allem die kardiovaskulären Risikofaktoren Adipositas und Diabetes mellitus positiv beeinflusst werden. Die krankheitsbedingt deutlich beeinflussten Risikofaktoren arterielle Hypertonie und Dyslipidämie unterliegen bei dieser Studienpopulation hingegen keinem messbaren positiven Effekt physischer Aktivität. Daher sollte insbesondere Patienten mit chronischem Nierenleiden, die zudem an einer Adipositas und oder einem Diabetes mellitus leiden, zu physischer Aktivität geraten werden.
Das Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit war die Identifizierung und quantitative Analyse intervallartiger Strukturen in den Melodieverläufen chinesischer Säuglinge der ersten Postnatalwoche. Das ausgewählte Probandenkollektiv bestand aus 55 medizinisch unauffälligen, ein bis sechs Tage alten chinesischen Neugeborenen, deren Mütter einen regelrechten Schwangerschaftsverlauf vorweisen konnten.
Die Lautaufnahmen erfolgten an den beiden größten Kliniken im Zentrum Pekings durch zwei chinesische Studentinnen (Yun Feng; Yufang Ruan). Die Bearbeitung und Auswertung der digitalen Aufnahmen wurde anschließend im Zentrum für vorsprachliche Entwicklung und Entwicklungsstörungen der Poliklinik für Kieferorthopädie des Universitätsklinikums Würzburg durchgeführt. Insgesamt konnten 3641 Neugeborenenlaute (spontane Weinlaute) für die finale Analyse herangezogen werden. Mithilfe des Computerized-Speech-Lab- Systems (CSL©-System; Kay PENTAX/ USA) erfolgte die Erstellung der Frequenzspektrogramme. Anschließend wurden mit dem Programm Praat© die Melodie- und Intensitätsverläufe berechnet. Die weitere Analyse erfolgte mithilfe des Cry-Data-Analysis-Program (CDAP©; pw-project).
Anhand der ermittelten Melodieverläufe konnten neben der Identifizierung von Intervall- und Melodietypstrukturen auch die Untersuchung zeitlicher Strukturen und die Analyse der Grundfrequenz (F0) erfolgen. Dies sind wichtige Kenngrößen in der vorsprachlichen Lautanalyse.
Die Häufigkeitsverteilungen der Intervall- und Melodietypstrukturen erfolgten auf kindbasierter Ebene. Der Gruppenvergleich wurde zwischen männlichen und weiblichen Probanden durchgeführt. Die Untersuchung zeitlicher Strukturen und der Grundfrequenz (F0) innerhalb der Intervallstrukturen erfolgte auf lautbasierter Ebene. Der Gruppenvergleich erfolgte hier zwischen steigenden und fallenden Intervallen.
Der Vergleich der Auftrittshäufigkeit der unterschiedlichen Intervall- und Melodietypstrukturen ergab keine statistisch signifikanten Unterschiede zwischen männlichen und weiblichen Probanden. Aufgrund des Untersuchungszeitraumes, der vor der Mini-Pubertät lag, war dieses Ergebnis zu erwarten. Für alle hier ermittelten Melodieeigenschaften konnten keine für die tonale Sprache spezifischen Phänomene festgestellt werden. Die hier untersuchten intervallartigen Phänomene scheinen regelhaft als Ausdruck der physiologischen laryngealen Regelung zu entstehen. Inwieweit die beobachtete Häufigkeit von Halbtonintervallen tatsächlich im Zusammenhang mit sprachspezifischen Frequenzmodulationsphänomenen stehen könnte, muss in nachfolgenden Studien untersucht werden. Allein die gefundenen sehr niedrigen F0min-Werte könnten typisch für die chinesischen Kinder sein (Dahlem 2008; Wermke et al. 2016). Die Auftrittshäufigkeit der musikalischen Intervalle entspricht den in der Literatur berichteten Ergebnissen. Neugeborene sind bereits in der Lage den Unterschied eines Halbtons zu erkennen. Weiterhin konnten signifikante Unterschiede bezüglich der Tonhöhenverhältnisse zwischen steigenden und fallenden Intervallen gefunden werden.
Es wäre interessant, durch weiterführende Studien zu klären, ob sich im weiteren Verlauf der vorsprachlichen Entwicklung doch noch bestimmte Spezifika abzeichnen. Unter anderem auch mit dem Ziel, eventuell auftretende sprachspezifische Eigenschaften charakterisieren und somit von anderen, die Sprachentwicklung störenden Risikofaktoren, unterscheiden zu können. Für weiterführende Studien sollten sowohl der Umfang der Stichprobe als auch der Untersuchungszeitraum erweitert werden. Außerdem könnte man auch über eine „Verschärfung“ der Messkriterien nachdenken.
Die vorliegende Arbeit hat erstmalig Referenzwerte und Fragestellungen für systematische Untersuchungen auf diesem Gebiet erarbeitet.
Spontaneous Ca\(^{2+}\) transients and actin dynamics in primary motoneurons correspond to cellular differentiation such as axon elongation and growth cone formation. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and its receptor trkB support both motoneuron survival and synaptic differentiation. However, in motoneurons effects of BDNF/trkB signaling on spontaneous Ca\(^{2+}\) influx and actin dynamics at axonal growth cones are not fully unraveled. In our study we addressed the question how neurotrophic factor signaling corresponds to cell autonomous excitability and growth cone formation. Primary motoneurons from mouse embryos were cultured on the synapse specific, β2-chain containing laminin isoform (221) regulating axon elongation through spontaneous Ca\(^{2+}\) transients that are in turn induced by enhanced clustering of N-type specific voltage-gated Ca\(^{2+}\) channels (Ca\(_{v}\)2.2) in axonal growth cones. TrkB-deficient (trkBTK\(^{-/-}\)) mouse motoneurons which express no full-length trkB receptor and wildtype motoneurons cultured without BDNF exhibited reduced spontaneous Ca\(^{2+}\) transients that corresponded to altered axon elongation and defects in growth cone morphology which was accompanied by changes in the local actin cytoskeleton. Vice versa, the acute application of BDNF resulted in the induction of spontaneous Ca\(^{2+}\) transients and Ca\(_{v}\)2.2 clustering in motor growth cones, as well as the activation of trkB downstream signaling cascades which promoted the stabilization of β-actin via the LIM kinase pathway and phosphorylation of profilin at Tyr129. Finally, we identified a mutual regulation of neuronal excitability and actin dynamics in axonal growth cones of embryonic motoneurons cultured on laminin-221/211. Impaired excitability resulted in dysregulated axon extension and local actin cytoskeleton, whereas upon β-actin knockdown Ca\(_{v}\)2.2 clustering was affected. We conclude from our data that in embryonic motoneurons BDNF/trkB signaling contributes to axon elongation and growth cone formation through changes in the local actin cytoskeleton accompanied by increased Ca\(_{v}\)2.2 clustering and local calcium transients. These findings may help to explore cellular mechanisms which might be dysregulated during maturation of embryonic motoneurons leading to motoneuron disease.
Eu\(^{3+}\)-modified carbon dots (C-dots), 3–5 nm in diameter, were prepared, functionalized, and stabilized via a one-pot polyol synthesis. The role of Eu\(^{2+}\)/Eu\(^{3+}\), the influence of O\(_2\) (oxidation) and H\(_2\)O (hydrolysis), as well as the impact of the heating procedure (conventional resistance heating and microwave (MW) heating) were explored. With the reducing conditions of the polyol at the elevated temperature of synthesis (200–230 °C), first of all, Eu\(^{2+}\) was obtained resulting in the blue emission of the C-dots. Subsequent to O\(_2\)-driven oxidation, Eu\(^{3+}\)-modified, red-emitting C-dots were realized. However, the Eu\(^{3+}\) emission is rapidly quenched by water for C-dots prepared via conventional resistance heating. In contrast to the hydroxyl functionalization of conventionally-heated C-dots, MW-heating results in a carboxylate functionalization of the C-dots. Carboxylate-coordinated Eu\(^{3+}\), however, turned out as highly stable even in water. Based on this fundamental understanding of synthesis and material, in sum, a one-pot polyol approach is established that results in H\(_2\)O-dispersable C-dots with intense red Eu\(^{3+}\)-line-type emission.