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Both specific stimulus valence and unspecific processing dynamics can influence evaluative responses. Eight experiments investigated their respective influence on evaluative judgments in the domain of stereotyping. Valence of stereotypic information and consistency-driven fluency were manipulated in an impression formation paradigm. When information about the to-be-evaluated target person was strongly valenced, no effects of consistency-driven fluency were observed. Higher cognitive processes, valence of inconsistent attributes, processing priority of category information, and impression formation instructions were ruled out as possible factors responsible for the non-occurrence of fluency effects. However, consistency-driven fluency did influence the evaluative judgment, if the information about a target person was not strongly valenced. It is therefore concluded that both stimulus valence and consistency-driven processing fluency play a role in evaluative judgments in the domain of stereotyping. The respective impact of stimulus valence is much stronger than the impact of unspecific processing dynamics, however. Implications for fluency research and the applied field of stereotype change are discussed.
Background: Recently, contradictory results on foamy virus protease activity were published. While our own results indicated that protease activity is regulated by the viral RNA, others suggested that the integrase is involved in the regulation of the protease. Results: To solve this discrepancy we performed additional experiments showing that the protease-reverse transcriptase (PR-RT) exhibits protease activity in vitro and in vivo, which is independent of the integrase domain. In contrast, Pol incorporation, and therefore PR activity in the viral context, is dependent on the integrase domain. To further analyse the regulation of the protease, we incorporated Pol in viruses by expressing a GagPol fusion protein, which supported near wild-type like infectivity. A GagPR-RT fusion, lacking the integrase domain, also resulted in wild-type like Gag processing, indicating that the integrase is dispensable for viral Gag maturation. Furthermore, we demonstrate with a trans-complementation assays that the PR in the context of the PR-RT protein supports in trans both, viral maturation and infectivity. Conclusion: We provide evidence that the FV integrase is required for Pol encapsidation and that the FV PR activity is integrase independent. We show that an active PR can be encapsidated in trans as a GagPR-RT fusion protein.
The proteasome of malaria parasites: A multi-stage drug target for chemotherapeutic intervention?
(2012)
The ubiquitin/proteasome system serves as a regulated protein degradation pathway in eukaryotes, and is involved in many cellular processes featuring high protein turnover rates, such as cell cycle control, stress response and signal transduction. In malaria parasites, protein quality control is potentially important because of the high replication rate and the rapid transformations of the parasite during life cycle progression. The proteasome is the core of the degradation pathway, and is a major proteolytic complex responsible for the degradation and recycling of non-functional ubiquitinated proteins. Annotation of the genome for Plasmodium falciparum, the causative agent of malaria tropica, revealed proteins with similarity to human 26S proteasome subunits. In addition, a bacterial ClpQ/hslV threonine peptidase-like protein was identified. In recent years several independent studies indicated an essential function of the parasite proteasome for the liver, blood and transmission stages. In this review, we compile evidence for protein recycling in Plasmodium parasites and discuss the role of the 26S proteasome as a prospective multi-stage target for antimalarial drug discovery programs.
In this thesis the Drosophila mutant loechrig (loe), that shows progressive degeneration of the nervous system, is further described. Loe is missing a neuronal isoform of the protein kinase AMPK γ subunit (AMP-activated protein kinase- also known as SNF4Aγ) The heterotrimeric AMPK controls the energy level of the cell, which requires constant monitoring of the ATP/AMP levels. It is activated by low energy levels and metabolic insults like oxygen starvation and regulates multiple important signal pathways that control cell metabolism. Still, its role in neuronal survival is unclear. One of AMPK’s downstream targets is HMGR (hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA- reductase), a key enzyme in cholesterol and isoprenoid synthesis. It has been shown that manipulating the levels of HMGR affects the severity of the neurodegenerative phenotype in loe. Whereas the regulatory role of AMPK on HMGR is conserved in Drosophila, insects cannot synthesize cholesterol de novo. However, the synthesis of isoprenoids is a pathway that is evolutionarily conserved between vertebrates and insects. Isoprenylation of target proteins like small G-proteins provides a hydrophobic anchor that allows the association of these proteins with membranes and following activation. This thesis shows that the loe mutation interferes with the prenylation of Rho1 and the regulation of the LIM kinase pathway, which plays an important role in actin turnover and axonal outgrowth. The results suggest that the mutation in LOE, causes hyperactivity of the isoprenoid synthesis pathway, which leads to increased farnesylation of RHO1 and therefore higher levels of phospho-cofilin. A mutation in Rho1 improves the neurodegenerative phenotype and life span. The increased inactive cofilin amount in loe leads to an up regulation of filamentous actin. Actin is involved in neuronal outgrowth and experiments analyzing loe neurons gave valuable insights into a possible role of AMPK and accordingly actin on neurite growth and stability. It was demonstrated that neurons derived from loe mutants exhibit reduces axonal transport suggesting that changes in the cytoskeletal network caused by the effect of loe on the Rho1 pathway lead to disruptions in axonal transport and subsequent neuronal death. It also shows that actin is not only involved in neuronal outgrowth, its also important in maintenance of neurons, suggesting that interference with actin dynamics leads to progressive degeneration of neurons. Together, these results further support the importance of AMPK in neuronal function and survival and provide a novel functional mechanisms how alterations in AMPK can cause neuronal degeneration
The ITS2 Database
(2012)
The internal transcribed spacer 2 (ITS2) has been used as a phylogenetic marker for more than two decades. As ITS2 research mainly focused on the very variable ITS2 sequence, it confined this marker to low-level phylogenetics only. However, the combination of the ITS2 sequence and its highly conserved secondary structure improves the phylogenetic resolution1 and allows phylogenetic inference at multiple taxonomic ranks, including species delimitation.
The ITS2 Database presents an exhaustive dataset of internal transcribed spacer 2 sequences from NCBI GenBank accurately reannotated. Following an annotation by profile Hidden Markov Models (HMMs), the secondary structure of each sequence is predicted. First, it is tested whether a minimum energy based fold (direct fold) results in a correct, four helix conformation. If this is not the case, the structure is predicted by homology modeling. In homology modeling, an already known secondary structure is transferred to another ITS2 sequence, whose secondary structure was not able to fold correctly in a direct fold.
The ITS2 Database is not only a database for storage and retrieval of ITS2 sequence-structures. It also provides several tools to process your own ITS2 sequences, including annotation, structural prediction, motif detection and BLAST search on the combined sequence-structure information. Moreover, it integrates trimmed versions of 4SALE and ProfDistS for multiple sequence-structure alignment calculation and Neighbor Joining tree reconstruction. Together they form a coherent analysis pipeline from an initial set of sequences to a phylogeny based on sequence and secondary structure.
In a nutshell, this workbench simplifies first phylogenetic analyses to only a few mouse-clicks, while additionally providing tools and data for comprehensive large-scale analyses.
To determine the role of striatal dopaminergic innervation on upper limb synergies during walking, we measured arm kinematics in 13 subjects with Parkinson disease. Patients were recruited according to several inclusion criteria to represent the best possible in vivo model of dopaminergic denervation. Of relevance, we included only subjects with normal spatio-temporal parameters of the stride and gait speed to avoid an impairment of upper limbs locomotor synergies as a consequence of gait impairment per se. Dopaminergic innervation of the striatum was measured by FP-CIT and SPECT. All patients showed a reduction of gait-associated arms movement. No linear correlation was found between arm ROM reduction and contralateral dopaminergic putaminal innervation loss. Still, a partition analysis revealed a 80% chance of reduced arm ROM when putaminal dopamine content loss was >47%. A significant correlation was described between the asymmetry indices of the swinging of the two arms and dopaminergic striatal innervation. When arm ROM was reduced, we found a positive correlation between upper-lower limb phase shift modulation ( at different gait velocities) and striatal dopaminergic innervation. These findings are preliminary evidence that dopaminergic striatal tone plays a modulatory role in upper-limb locomotor synergies and upper-lower limb coupling while walking at different velocities.
The Influence of Anticipation and Warnings on Collision Avoidance Behavior of Attentive Drivers
(2012)
This thesis deals with collision avoidance. Focus is on the question of under which conditions collision avoidance works well for humans and if drivers can be supported by a Forward Collision Warning (FCW) System when they do not react appropriately. Forward Collision Warning systems work in a way that tries to focus the driver's attention in the direction of the hazard and evoke an avoidance reaction by some sort of alert (e.g., tone or light). Research on these warning systems generally focuses on inattention and distraction as the cause for crashes. If the driver is inattentive, the results of a crash are thought to be worse as the driver‘s reaction is belated or might not mitigate the crash at all. To ensure effectiveness in the worst case, most of the experiments studying FCW systems have been conducted with visually distracted drivers. Research on the cause and possible countermeasures for crashes of attentive drivers are hardly available, although crash databases and field operational test data show that 40-60% of the drivers look at the forward scene shortly before they crash. Hence, only a few studies elaborated on ideas about the reasons for crashes with attentive drivers. On the basis of the literature, it is worked out that one reason for delayed avoidance behavior can be an incorrect allocation of attention. It is further elaborated that high level attention processes are strongly influenced by interpretation of the situation and the anticipation of future status. Therefore, it is hypothesized that alert drivers react later when they can not foresee a potential threat or even when they misinterpret the situation. If the lack of threat anticipation or incorrect anticipation is a reason for crashes, a FCW system could be a great help, when the FCW is easily comprehensible. It is hypothesized that a FCW can compensate for missing threat anticipation in the driver. The results of the experiments show that the level of threat anticipation has the largest influence on driver behavior in an imminent crash situation. The results further suggest that FCW systems - especially warnings of audible or haptic modality - can help attentive drivers who do not anticipate a threat or misinterpret a situation. The negative influence of missing or mislead threat anticipation on objective measures was small when the threat appeared suddenly. This is thought to be due to the visual appearance of the introduced threat. It is assumed that this type of stimulus triggers a lower level attentional process, as opposed to a top-down attention process controlled by an anticipatory process. In the other scenario types such a lower level process may not be triggered. An important result of the second study is that (Forward) Collision Warnings have to be learned. Participants with warnings reacted slower than participants without any FCW in the first critical event. Participants with a visual warning reacted particularly slow. Later in the experiment, the probands with warnings were constantly faster than their counterparts without them. Hence, the results of this study suggest that a haptic or audible modality should be used as a primary warning to the driver. The characteristic of visual warnings to draw the visual attention is both a blessing and a curse. It is suggested to use the visual warning component for only a short period of time to attract the driver's attention to the forward scene, but then end the display to not further distract him. Car manufacturers try to avoid as many unnecessary alarms as possible. If driver monitoring would be available, it is often planned to suppress warnings when the driver is looking through the windshield. The results suggest not to do so. If a driver reaches a critical situation represented by a low Time-to-collision (TTC) or a high need to decelerate, he should always get a warning, unless he is already braking or steering. The most important arguments for this are: - Looking at the street does not mean that the driver has the correct situational awareness. - The driver has to learn the meaning of the warning. - The driver will not be annoyed by a warning when the situation is considered critical.
BACKGROUND: Climate change will probably alter the spread and transmission intensity of malaria in Africa. OBJECTIVES: In this study, we assessed potential changes in the malaria transmission via an integrated weather disease model.
METHODS: We simulated mosquito biting rates using the Liverpool Malaria Model (LMM). The input data for the LMM were bias-corrected temperature and precipitation data from the regional model (REMO) on a 0.5 degrees latitude longitude grid. A Plasmodium falciparum infection model expands the LMM simulations to incorporate information on the infection rate among children. Malaria projections were carried out with this integrated weather disease model for 2001 to 2050 according to two climate scenarios that include the effect of anthropogenic land-use and land-cover changes on climate.
RESULTS: Model-based estimates for the present climate (1960 to 2000) are consistent with observed data for the spread of malaria in Africa. In the model domain, the regions where malaria is epidemic are located in the Sahel as well as in various highland territories. A decreased spread of malaria over most parts of tropical Africa is projected because of simulated increased surface temperatures and a significant reduction in annual rainfall. However, the likelihood of malaria epidemics is projected to increase in the southern part of the Sahel. In most of East Africa, the intensity of malaria transmission is expected to increase. Projections indicate that highland areas that were formerly unsuitable for malaria will become epidemic, whereas in the lower-altitude regions of the East African highlands, epidemic risk will decrease.
CONCLUSIONS: We project that climate changes driven by greenhouse-gas and land-use changes will significantly affect the spread of malaria in tropical Africa well before 2050. The geographic distribution of areas where malaria is epidemic might have to be significantly altered in the coming decades.
Ovarian cancer currently causes ~6,000 deaths per year in Germany alone. Since only palliative treatment is available for ovarian carcinomas that have developed resistance against platinum-based chemotherapy and paclitaxel, there is a pressing medical need for the development of new therapeutic approaches. As survival is strongly influenced by immunological parameters, immunotherapeutic strategies appear promising. The research of our group thus aims at overcoming tumour immune escape by counteracting immunosuppressive mechanisms in the tumour microenvironment. In this context, we found that tumour-infiltrating myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSC) or tumour associated macrophages (TAM) which are abundant in ovarian cancer express high levels of the enzyme 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase1 (11-HSD1). This oxido-reductase enzyme is essential for the conversion of biologically inactive cortisone into active cortisol. In line with this observation, high endogenous cortisol levels could be detected in serum, ascitic fluid and tumour exudates from ovarian cancer patients. Considering that cortisol exerts strong anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive effects on immune cells, it appears likely that high endogenous cortisol levels contribute to immune escape in ovarian cancer. We thus hypothesised that local activation of endogenous glucocorticoids could suppress beneficial immune responses in the tumour microenvironment and thereby prevent a successful immunotherapy. To investigate the in vivo relevance of this postulated immune escape mechanism, irradiated PTENloxP/loxP loxP-Stop-loxP-krasG12D mice were reconstituted with hematopoietic stem cells from either glucocorticoid receptor (GR) expressing mice (GRloxP/loxP) or from mice with a T cell-specific glucocorticoid receptor knock-out (lck-Cre GRloxP/loxP) mice. In the host mice, the combination of a conditional PTEN knock-out with a latent oncogenic kras leads to tumour development when a Cre-encoding adenovirus is injected into the ovarian bursa. Using this model, mice that had been reconstituted with GC-insensitive T cells showed better intratumoural T cell infiltration than control mice that had received functionally unaltered GRloxP/loxP cells via adoptive transfer. However, tumour-infiltrating T cells mostly assumed a Foxp3+ (regulatory) phenotype and survival was even shortened in mice with cortisol-insensitive T cells. Thus, endogenous cortisol seems to inhibit immune cell infiltration in ovarian cancer, but productive anti-tumour immune responses might still be prevented by further factors from the tumour microenvironment. Thus, our data did not provide a sufficiently strong rationale to further pursue the antagonisation of glucocorticoid signalling in ovarian cancer patients, Moreover, glucocorticoids are frequently administered to cancer patients to reduce inflammation and swelling and to prevent chemotherapy-related toxic side effects like nausea or hypersensitivity reactions associated with paclitaxel therapy. Thus, we decided to address the question whether specific signalling pathways in innate immune cells, preferentially in NK cells, could still be activated even in the presence of GC. A careful investigation of the various activating NK cell receptors (i.e. NKp30, NKp44, NKp46), DNAM-1 and NKG2D) was thus performed which revealed that NKp30, NKp44 and NKG2D are all down-regulated by cortisol whereas NKp46 is actually induced by cortisol. Interestingly, NKp46 is the only known receptor that is strictly confined to NK cells. Its activation via crosslinking leads to cytokine release and activation of cytotoxic activity. Stimulation of NK cells via NKp46 may contribute to immune-mediated tumour destruction by triggering the lysis of tumour cells and by altering the cytokine pattern in the tumour microenvironment, thereby generating more favourable conditions for the recruitment of antigen-specific immune cells. Accordingly, our observation that even cortisol-treated NK cells can still be activated via NKp46 and CD2 might become valuable for the design of immunotherapies that can still be applied in the presence of endogenous or therapeutically administered glucocorticoids.
The GTPase ARFRP1 controls the lipidation of chylomicrons in the Golgi of the intestinal epithelium
(2012)
The uptake and processing of dietary lipids by the small intestine is a multistep process that involves several steps including vesicular and protein transport. The GTPase ADP-ribosylation factor-related protein 1 (ARFRP1) controls the ARF-like 1 (ARL1)-mediated Golgi recruitment of GRIP domain proteins which in turn bind several Rab-GTPases. Here, we describe the essential role of ARFRP1 and its interaction with Rab2 in the assembly and lipidation of chylomicrons in the intestinal epithelium. Mice lacking Arfrp1 specifically in the intestine \((Arfrp1^{vil−/−})\) exhibit an early post-natal growth retardation with reduced plasma triacylglycerol and free fatty acid concentrations. \(Arfrp1^{vil−/−}\) enterocytes as well as Arfrp1 mRNA depleted Caco-2 cells absorbed fatty acids normally but secreted chylomicrons with a markedly reduced triacylglycerol content. In addition, the release of apolipoprotein A-I (ApoA-I) was dramatically decreased, and ApoA-I accumulated in the \(Arfrp1^{vil−/−}\) epithelium, where it predominantly co-localized with Rab2. The release of chylomicrons from Caco-2 was markedly reduced after the suppression of Rab2, ARL1 and Golgin-245. Thus, the GTPase ARFRP1 and its downstream proteins are required for the lipidation of chylomicrons and the assembly of ApoA-I to these particles in the Golgi of intestinal epithelial cells.
The adult form of attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (aADHD) has a prevalence of up to 5% and is the most severe long-term outcome of this common neurodevelopmental disorder. Family studies in clinical samples suggest an increased familial liability for aADHD compared with childhood ADHD (cADHD), whereas twin studies based on self-rated symptoms in adult population samples show moderate heritability estimates of 30–40%. However, using multiple sources of information, the heritability of clinically diagnosed aADHD and cADHD is very similar. Results of candidate gene as well as genome-wide molecular genetic studies in aADHD samples implicate some of the same genes involved in ADHD in children, although in some cases different alleles and different genes may be responsible for adult versus childhood ADHD. Linkage studies have been successful in identifying loci for aADHD and led to the identification of LPHN3 and CDH13 as novel genes associated with ADHD across the lifespan. In addition, studies of rare genetic variants have identified probable causative mutations for aADHD. Use of endophenotypes based on neuropsychology and neuroimaging, as well as next-generation genome analysis and improved statistical and bioinformatic analysis methods hold the promise of identifying additional genetic variants involved in disease etiology. Large, international collaborations have paved the way for well-powered studies. Progress in identifying aADHD risk genes may provide us with tools for the prediction of disease progression in the clinic and better treatment, and ultimately may help to prevent persistence of ADHD into adulthood.
During the past years, the internal transcribed spacer 2 (ITS2) was established as a commonly used molecular phylogenetic marker for the eukaryotes. Its fast evolving sequence is predestinated for the use in low-level phylogenetics. However, the ITS2 also consists of a very conserved secondary structure. This enables the discrimination between more distantly related species. The combination of both in a sequence-structure based analysis increases the resolution of the marker and enables even more robust tree reconstructions on a broader taxonomic range. But, performing such an analysis required the application of different programs and databases making the use of the ITS2 non trivial for the typical biologist. To overcome this hindrance, I have developed the ITS2 Workbench, a completely web-based tool for automated phylogenetic sequence-structure analyses using the ITS2 (http://its2.bioapps.biozentrum.uni-wuerzburg.de). The development started with an optimization of length modelling topologies for Hidden Markov Models (HMMs), which were successfully applied on a secondary structure prediction model of the ITS2 marker. Here, structure is predicted by considering the sequences' composition in combination with the length distribution of different helical regions. Next, I integrated HMMs into the sequence-structure generation process for the delineation of the ITS2 within a given sequence. This re-implemented pipeline could more than double the number of structure predictions and reduce the runtime to a few days. Together with further optimizations of the homology modelling process I can now exhaustively predict secondary structures in several iterations. These modifications currently provide 380,000 annotated sequences including 288,000 structure predictions. To include these structures in the calculation of alignments and phylogenetic trees, I developed the R-package "treeforge". It generates sequence-structure alignments on up to four different coding alphabets. For the first time also structural bonds were considered in alignments, which required the estimation of new scoring matrices. Now, the reconstruction of Maximum Parsimony, Maximum Likelihood as well as Neighbour Joining trees on all four alphabets requires just a few lines of code. The package was used to resolve the controversial chlorophyceaen dataset and could be integrated into future versions of the ITS2 workbench. The platform is based on a modern, feature-rich Web 2.0 user interface equipped with the latest AJAX and Web-service technologies. It performs HMM-based sequence annotation, structure prediction by energy minimization or homology modelling, alignment calculation and tree reconstruction on a flexible data pool that repeats calculations according to data changes. Further, it provides sequence motif detection to control annotation and structure prediction and a sequence-structure based BLAST search, which facilitates the taxon sampling process. All features and the usage of the ITS2 workbench are explained in a video tutorial. However, the workbench bears some limitations regarding the size of datasets. This is caused mainly due to the immense computational power needed for such extensive calculations. To demonstrate the validity of the approach also for large-scale analyses, a fully automated reconstruction of the Chlorophyta (Green Algal) Tree of Life was performed. The successful application of the marker even on large datasets underlines the capabilities of ITS2 sequence-structure analysis and suggests its utilization on further datasets. The ITS2 workbench provides an excellent starting point for such endeavours.
Based on genetic association and functional imaging studies, reduced function of tryptophan hydroxylase-2 (TPH2) has been shown to be critically involved in the pathophysiology of anxiety-disorders and depression. In order to elucidate the impact of a complete neuronal 5-HT deficiency, mice with a targeted inactivation of the gene encoding Tph2 were generated. Interestingly, survival of Tph2-/- mice, the formation of serotonergic neurons and the pathfinding of their projections was not impaired. Within this thesis, I investigated the influence of 5-HT deficiency on the γ-amino butyric acid (GABA) system. The GABAergic system is implicated in the pathophysiology of anxiety disorders. Therefore, measurement of GABA concentrations in different limbic brain regions was carried out. These measurements were combined with immunohistochemical estimation of GABAergic cell subpopulations in the dorsal hippocampus and amygdala. In Tph2-/- mice GABA concentrations were increased exclusively in the dorsal hippocampus. In heterozygous Tph2+/- mice concentrations of GABA were increased in the amygdala compared to Tph2-/- and wt control mice, while the reverse was found in the prefrontal cortex. The changes in GABA concentrations were accompanied by altered cell density of GABAergic neurons within the basolateral complex of the amygdala and parvalbumin (PV) neurons of the dorsal hippocampus and by adaptational changes of 5-HT receptors. Thus, adaptive changes during the development on the GABA system may reflect altered anxiety-like and depressive-like behavior in adulthood. Moreover, chronic mild stress (CMS) rescues the depressive-like effects induced by 5-HT deficiency. In contrast, 5-HT is important in mediating an increased innate anxiety-like behavior under CMS conditions. This is in line with a proposed dual role of 5-HT acting through different mechanisms on anxiety and depressive-like behavior, which is influenced by gene-environment interaction effects. Further research is needed to disentangle these complex networks in the future.
Background: One of the most common types of brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) is called a P300 BCI, since it relies on the P300 and other event-related potentials (ERPs). In the canonical P300 BCI approach, items on a monitor flash briefly to elicit the necessary ERPs. Very recent work has shown that this approach may yield lower performance than alternate paradigms in which the items do not flash but instead change in other ways, such as moving, changing colour or changing to characters overlaid with faces.
Methodology/Principal Findings: The present study sought to extend this research direction by parametrically comparing different ways to change items in a P300 BCI. Healthy subjects used a P300 BCI across six different conditions. Three conditions were similar to our prior work, providing the first direct comparison of characters flashing, moving, and changing to faces. Three new conditions also explored facial motion and emotional expression. The six conditions were compared across objective measures such as classification accuracy and bit rate as well as subjective measures such as perceived difficulty. In line with recent studies, our results indicated that the character flash condition resulted in the lowest accuracy and bit rate. All four face conditions (mean accuracy >91%) yielded significantly better performance than the flash condition (mean accuracy = 75%).
Conclusions/Significance: Objective results reaffirmed that the face paradigm is superior to the canonical flash approach that has dominated P300 BCIs for over 20 years. The subjective reports indicated that the conditions that yielded better performance were not considered especially burdensome. Therefore, although further work is needed to identify which face paradigm is best, it is clear that the canonical flash approach should be replaced with a face paradigm when aiming at increasing bit rate. However, the face paradigm has to be further explored with practical applications particularly with locked-in patients.
Background: Invasion of intestinal epithelial cells by Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) requires expression of the extracellular virulence gene expression programme (STEX), activation of which is dependent on the signalling molecule guanosine tetraphosphate (ppGpp). Recently, next-generation transcriptomics (RNA-seq) has revealed the unexpected complexity of bacterial transcriptomes and in this report we use differential RNA sequencing (dRNA-seq) to define the high-resolution transcriptomic architecture of wildtype S. Typhimurium and a ppGpp null strain under growth conditions which model STEX. In doing so we show that ppGpp plays a much wider role in regulating the S. Typhimurium STEX primary transcriptome than previously recognised.
Results: Here we report the precise mapping of transcriptional start sites (TSSs) for 78% of the S. Typhimurium open reading frames (ORFs). The TSS mapping enabled a genome-wide promoter analysis resulting in the prediction of 169 alternative sigma factor binding sites, and the prediction of the structure of 625 operons. We also report the discovery of 55 new candidate small RNAs (sRNAs) and 302 candidate antisense RNAs (asRNAs). We discovered 32 ppGpp-dependent alternative TSSs and determined the extent and level of ppGpp-dependent coding and non-coding transcription. We found that 34% and 20% of coding and non-coding RNA transcription respectively was ppGpp-dependent under these growth conditions, adding a further dimension to the role of this remarkable small regulatory molecule in enabling rapid adaptation to the infective environment.
Conclusions: The transcriptional architecture of S. Typhimurium and finer definition of the key role ppGpp plays in regulating Salmonella coding and non-coding transcription should promote the understanding of gene regulation in this important food borne pathogen and act as a resource for future research.
In this thesis, the electronic transport properties of mesoscopic condensed matter systems based on graphene are investigated by means of numerical as well as analytical methods. In particular, it is analyzed how the concepts of quantum interference and disorder, which are essential to mesoscopic devices in general, are affected by the unique electronic and transport properties of the graphene material system. We consider the famous Aharonov–Bohm effect in ring-shaped transport geometries, and, besides providing an overview over the recent developments on the subject, we study the signatures of fundamental phenomena such as Klein tunneling and specular Andreev reflection, which are specific to graphene, in the magnetoconductance oscillations. To this end, we introduce and utilize a variant of the well-known recursive Green’s function technique, which is an efficient numerical method for the calculation of transport observables in effectively non-interacting open quantum systems in the framework of a tight binding model. This technique is also applied to study the effects of a specific kind of disorder, namely short-range resonant scatterers, such as strongly bound adatoms or molecules, that can be modeled as vacancies in the graphene lattice. This numerical analysis of the conductance in the presence of resonant scatterers in graphene leads to a non-trivial classification of impurity sites in the graphene lattice and is further substantiated by an independent analytical treatment in the framework of the Dirac equation. The present thesis further contains a formal introduction to the topic of non-equilibrium quantum transport as appropriate for the development of the numerical technique mentioned above, a general introduction to the physics of graphene with a focus on the particular phenomena investigated in this work, and a conclusion where the obtained results are summarized and open questions as well as potential future developments are highlighted.
Background: CEACAM3 is a granulocyte receptor mediating the opsonin-independent recognition and phagocytosis of human-restricted CEACAM-binding bacteria. CEACAM3 function depends on an intracellular immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif (ITAM)-like sequence that is tyrosine phosphorylated by Src family kinases upon receptor engagement. The phosphorylated ITAM-like sequence triggers GTP-loading of Rac by directly associating with the guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) Vav. Rac stimulation in turn is critical for actin cytoskeleton rearrangements that generate lamellipodial protrusions and lead to bacterial uptake.
Principal Findings: In our present study we provide biochemical and microscopic evidence that the adaptor proteins Nck1 and Nck2, but not CrkL, Grb2 or SLP-76, bind to tyrosine phosphorylated CEACAM3. The association is phosphorylation-dependent and requires the Nck SH2 domain. Overexpression of the isolated Nck1 SH2 domain, RNAi-mediated knock-down of Nck1, or genetic deletion of Nck1 and Nck2 interfere with CEACAM3-mediated bacterial internalization and with the formation of lamellipodial protrusions. Nck is constitutively associated with WAVE2 and directs the actin nucleation promoting WAVE complex to tyrosine phosphorylated CEACAM3. In turn, dominant-negative WAVE2 as well as shRNA-mediated knock-down of WAVE2 or the WAVE-complex component Nap1 reduce internalization of bacteria.
Conclusions: Our results provide novel mechanistic insight into CEACAM3-initiated phagocytosis. We suggest that the CEACAM3 ITAM-like sequence is optimized to co-ordinate a minimal set of cellular factors needed to efficiently trigger actin-based lamellipodial protrusions and rapid pathogen engulfment.
The 2007 flood in the Sahel: causes, characteristics and its presentation in the media and FEWS NET
(2012)
During the rainy season in 2007, reports about exceptional rains and floodings in the Sahel were published in the media, especially in August and September. Institutions and organizations like the World Food Programme (WFP) and FEWS NET put the events on the agenda and released alerts and requested help. The partly controversial picture was that most of the Sahel faced a crisis caused by widespread floodings. Our study shows that the rainy season in 2007 was exceptional with regard to rainfall amount and return periods. In many areas the event had a return period between 1 and 50 yr with high spatial heterogeneity, with the exception of the Upper Volta basin, which yielded return periods of up to 1200 yr. Despite the strong rainfall, the interpretation of satellite images show that the floods were mainly confined to lakes and river beds. However, the study also proves the difficulties in assessing the meteorological processes and the demarcation of flooded areas in satellite images without ground truthing. These facts and the somewhat vague and controversial reports in the media and FEWS NET demonstrate that it is crucial to thoroughly analyze such events at a regional and local scale involving the local population.
As recently reviewed, 1026 neuroprotective drug candidates in stroke research have all failed on their road towards validation and clinical translation, reasons being quality issues in preclinical research and publication bias. Quality control guidelines for preclinical stroke studies have now been established. However, sufficient understanding of the underlying mechanisms of neuronal death after stroke that could be possibly translated into new therapies is lacking. One exception is the hypothesis that cellular death is mediated by oxidative stress. Oxidative stress is defined as an excess of reactive oxygen species (ROS) derived from different possible enzymatic sources. Among these, NADPH oxidases (NOX1-5) stand out as they represent the only known enzyme family that has no other function than to produce ROS. Based on data from different NOX knockout mouse models in ischemic stroke, the most relevant isoform appears to be NOX4. Here we discuss the state-of-the-art of this target with respect to stroke and open questions that need to be addressed on the path towards clinical translation.
Background The levels and clinical relevance of Th17 cells and other interleukin-17-producing cells have not been analyzed in chronic lymphocytic leukemia. The objective of this study was to quantify blood and tissue levels of Th17 and other interleukin-17-producing cells in patients with this disease and correlate blood levels with clinical outcome.
Design and Methods: Intracellular interleukin-17A was assessed in blood and splenic mononuclear cells from patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia and healthy subjects using flow cytometry. Interleukin-17A-producing cells were analyzed in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded spleen and lymph node sections using immunohistochemistry and immunofluorescence.
Results: The absolute numbers of Th17 cells in peripheral blood mononuclear cells and the percentages of Th17 cells in spleen cell suspensions were higher in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia than in healthy subjects; in six out of eight paired chronic lymphocytic leukemia blood and spleen sample comparisons, Th17 cells were enriched in spleen suspensions. Circulating Th17 levels correlated with better prognostic markers and longer overall survival of the patients. Two "non-Th17" interleukin-17-expressing cells were identified in chronic lymphocytic leukemia spleens: proliferating cells of the granulocytic lineage and mature mast cells. Granulocytes and mast cells in normal spleens did not express interleukin-17. Conversely, both chronic lymphocytic leukemia and healthy lymph nodes contained similar numbers of interleukin-17+ mast cells as well as Th17 cells.
Conclusions: Th17 cells are elevated in chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients with better prognostic markers and correlate with longer survival. Furthermore, non-Th17 interleukin-17A-expressing cells exist in chronic lymphocytic leukemia spleens as maturing granulocytes and mature mast cells, suggesting that the microenvironmental milieu in leukemic spleens promotes the recruitment and/or expansion of Th17 and other IL-17-expressing cells. The pathophysiology of Th17 and non-Th17-interleukin-producing cells in chronic lymphocytic leukemia and their distributions and roles in this disease merit further study.
This paper seeks to unify two major theories of moral judgment: Kohlberg's stage theory and Anderson's moral information integration theory. Subjects were told about thoughts of actors in Kohlberg's classic altruistic Heinz dilemma and in a new egoistical dilemma. These actors's thoughts represented Kohlberg's stages I (Personal Risk) and IV (Societal Risk) and had three levels, High, Medium, and Low. They were presented singly and in a 3 x 3 integration design. Subjects judged how many months of prison the actor deserved. The data supported the averaging model of moral integration theory, whereas Kohlberg's theory has no way to handle the integration problem. Following this, subjects ranked statements related to Kohlberg's first four stages in a procedure similar to that of Rest (1975). Higher score went with larger effect of Societal Risk as predicted by Kohlberg's theory. But contrary to Kohlberg's theory, no age trends were found. Also strongly contrary to Kohlberg's theory, effects of Personal Risk (Stage I) and Societal Risk (Stage IV) correlated positively.
Terahertz electromagnetic fields are non-ionizing electromagnetic fields in the frequency range from 0.1 to 10 THz. Potential applications of these electromagnetic fields include the whole body scanners, which currently apply millimeter waves just below the terahertz range, but future scanners will use higher frequencies in the terahertz range. These and other applications will bring along human exposure to these fields. Up to now, only a limited number of investigations on biological effects of terahertz electromagnetic fields have been performed. Therefore, research is strongly needed to enable reliable risk assessment. Cells were exposed for 2 h, 8 h, and 24 h with different power intensities ranging from 0.04 mW/cm2 to 2 mW/cm2, representing levels below, at, and above current safety limits. Genomic damage on the chromosomal level was measured as micronucleus formation. DNA strand breaks and alkali-labile sites were quantified with the comet assay. No DNA strand breaks or alkali-labile sites were observed as a consequence of exposure to terahertz electromagnetic fields in the comet assay. The fields did not cause chromosomal damage in the form of micronucleus induction.
The second-order correlation function g\(^2\)(\(\tau\) = 0), input-output curves and pulse duration of the emission from a microcavity exciton-polariton system subsequent to picosecond-pulsed excitation are measured for different temperatures. At low temperatures a two-threshold behaviour emerges, which has been attributed to the onset of polariton lasing and conventional lasing at the first and the second threshold, respectively. We observe that polariton lasing is stable up to temperatures comparable with the exciton binding energy. At higher temperatures a single threshold displays the direct transition from thermal emission to photon lasing.
Diese Arbeit befasste sich mit der Analyse geschlechtsspezifischer Besonder-heiten des Metabolismus von Proteaseinhibitoren. Insbesondere wurde auf die Pharmakokinetik des ATV und LPV eingegangen, außerdem wurden die Dosierungen der Medikamente, die Wirksamkeit und die Nebenwirkungen untersucht. Hierzu waren n=152 HIV-positive Patienten eingeschlossen, wovon n=96 Patienten mit LPV therapiert wurden; n=56 nahmen ATV ein. Insgesamt waren n=127 Probanden (83,55%) männlich und n=25 (16,45%) weiblich. Die Studie wurde im Sinne einer retrospektiven Längsschnittuntersuchung durchgeführt. Es ließen sich bei beiden PIs keine Unterschiede der Plasmaspiegel der Männer und Frauen ausmachen. Ebenfalls waren im Langzeitverlauf keine signifikanten Schwankungen der Spiegel beider Geschlechter zu beobachten. Die interindividuelle Schwankung betrug bei der ATV-Beobachtung 22,1% (Männer) und 51,4% (Frauen) und bei der LPV-Studie 13,2% (Männer) und 30,1% (Frauen). Die intraindividuelle Schwankung war höher und ergab beim ATV-Kollektiv 57,7% (Männern) und 39,7% (Frauen) und beim LPV-Arm 42,8% (Männer) und 41,4% (Frauen). Im Vergleich der Geschlechter ließ sich sowohl im ATV- als auch im LPV-Kollektiv bei beiden Geschlechtern die mittlere Dosis pro Kilogramm Körperge-wicht nicht signifikant mit den Plasmaspiegeln korrelieren. In der ATV-Beobachtung erhalten die Frauen signifikant niedrigere Dosierungen (p=0,000*), im Gegensatz zu der LPV-Beobachtung, in der die Frauen signifikant höhere Dosierung (p=0,000*) bekommen. Die Wirksamkeit wurde zum einen durch den Abfall der Viruslast bestimmt. Hier ließ sich ein wesentlicher (p=0,000*) Abfall nach einem Monat bei ATV und LPV beobachten. Zum anderen war der Anstieg der CD4-Zellen im ATV-Kollektiv bei den Männern zu beobachten (p=0,000*). Im LPV-Kollektiv stiegen sie innerhalb eines Monats bei beiden Geschlechtern signifikant (p=0,000*) an. Das Bilirubin stieg bei der ATV-Beobachtung innerhalb eines Monats signifikant (p=0,000*) an und wies bei beiden Geschlechtern eine wesentliche Korrelation mit den Plasmaspiegeln auf, mit einem p-Wert von 0,017* für die Männer und einem p-Wert von 0,000* für die Frauen. Die GOT- und GPT-Studie zeigte hinsichtlich der Langzeitbeobachtung und der Korrelation mit den Spiegeln bei keinem Medikament eine Auffälligkeit. Die Beobachtung der gGT-Werte ergab einen signifikanten Abfall der Werte nach sechs Monaten beim ATV-Kollektiv (0,025*). Das HDL stieg nach drei Monaten bei der ATV-Gruppe signifikant an (p=0,000*), sowie bei der LPV-Gruppe nach einem Monat (p=0,000*). Beim LDL verhielt sich der Anstieg ähnlich, hier gab es beim ATV nach drei Monaten einen p-Wert von 0,008* und beim LPV nach einem Monat einen von 0,033*. Außerdem verhielt sich bei der LPV-Beobachtung die Korrelation der LDL-Werte der Frauen mit den LPV-Spiegeln signifikant (p=0,012*). Ebenfalls ließen sich beim TRG wesentliche Anstiege verzeichnen, so war die-ses Ergebnis beim ATV nach sechs Monaten mit einem p-Wert von 0,030* und beim LPV nach einem Monat mit einem p-Wert von 0,000* zu beweisen. Das Cholesterin stieg bei der LPV-Beobachtung innerhalb eines Monats signifi-kant an (p=0,000) und war auch bei den Frauen wesentlich mit den Plas-maspiegeln zu korrelieren (p=0,013*). Insgesamt waren nur bei drei der oben genannten Kategorien Unterschiede zwischen den Geschlechtern zu beobachten. Dies waren zum einen die CD4-Zellen, denn hier ergab sich bei den Männern eine signifikant höhere Anzahl (p=0,038*). Weiterhin war der Bilirubinwert der Männer höher als der der Frau-en (p=0,000*). Zuletzt wiesen die Männer auch einen höheren TRG-Wert auf (p=0,009*). Schlussfolgernd ist die Aussage möglich, dass sich in dieser Langzeitbeobach-tung geschlechtsspezifische Unterschiede zwischen Männern und Frauen bezüglich der ATV- und LPV-Plasmaspiegel ausschließen lassen. Weiterhin ist auch im Langzeitverlauf kein signifikanter Unterschied zwischen Männern und Frauen im Ansprechen auf die Therapie oder in der Häufigkeit von unerwünschten Ereignissen während der Therapie zu beobachten.
HEY bHLH transcription factors have been shown to regulate multiple key steps in cardiovascular development. They can be induced by activated NOTCH receptors, but other upstream stimuli mediated by TGFß and BMP receptors may elicit a similar response. While the basic and helix-loop-helix domains exhibit strong similarity, large parts of the proteins are still unique and may serve divergent functions. The striking overlap of cardiac defects in HEY2 and combined HEY1/HEYL knockout mice suggested that all three HEY genes fulfill overlapping function in target cells. We therefore sought to identify target genes for HEY proteins by microarray expression and ChIPseq analyses in HEK293 cells, cardiomyocytes, and murine hearts. HEY proteins were found to modulate expression of their target gene to a rather limited extent, but with striking functional interchangeability between HEY factors. Chromatin immunoprecipitation revealed a much greater number of potential binding sites that again largely overlap between HEY factors. Binding sites are clustered in the proximal promoter region especially of transcriptional regulators or developmental control genes. Multiple lines of evidence suggest that HEY proteins primarily act as direct transcriptional repressors, while gene activation seems to be due to secondary or indirect effects. Mutagenesis of putative DNA binding residues supports the notion of direct DNA binding. While class B E-box sequences (CACGYG) clearly represent preferred target sequences, there must be additional and more loosely defined modes of DNA binding since many of the target promoters that are efficiently bound by HEY proteins do not contain an Ebox motif. These data clearly establish the three HEY bHLH factors as highly redundant transcriptional repressors in vitro and in vivo, which explains the combinatorial action observed in different tissues with overlapping expression.
Recent development of proteomic approaches and generation of large-scale proteomic datasets calls for new methods for biological interpretation of the obtained results. Systems biological approaches such as integrated network analysis and functional module search have become an essential part of proteomic investigation. Proteomics is especially applied in anucleate cells such as platelets. The underlying molecular mechanisms of platelet activation and their pharmacological modulation are of immense importance for clinical research. Advances in platelet proteomics have provided a large amount of proteomic data, which has not yet been comprehensively investigated in a systems biological perspective. To this end, I assembled platelet specific data from proteomic and transcriptomic studies by detailed manual curation and worked on the generation of a comprehensive human platelet repository for systems biological analysis of platelets in the functional context of integrated networks (PlateletWeb) (http:/PlateletWeb.bioapps.biozentrum.uni-wuerzburg.de). I also added platelet-specific experimentally validated phosphorylation data and generated kinase predictions for 80% of the newly identified platelet phosphosites. The combination of drug, disease and pathway information with phosphorylation and interaction data makes this database the first integrative platelet platform available for platelet research. PlateletWeb contains more than 5000 platelet proteins, which can also be analyzed and visualized in a network context, allowing identification of all major signaling modules involved in platelet activation and inhibition. Using the wealth of integrated data I performed a series of platelet-specific analyses regarding the platelet proteome, pathways, drug targets and novel platelet phosphorylation events involved in crucial signaling events. I analyzed the statistical enrichment of known pathways for platelet proteins and identified endocytosis as a highly represented pathway in platelets. Further results revealed that highly connected platelet proteins are more often targeted by drugs. Using integrated network analysis offered by PlateletWeb, I analyzed the crucial activation signaling pathway of adenosine diphosphate (ADP), visualizing how the signal flow from receptors to effectors is maintained. My work on integrin inside-out signaling was also based on the integrated network approach and examined new platelet-specific phosphorylation sites and their regulation using kinase predictions. I generated hypothesis on integrin signaling, by investigating the regulation of Ser269 phosphorylation site on the docking protein 1 (DOK1). This phosphorylation site may influence the inhibiting effect of DOK1 on integrin a2bb3. Extending the integrated network approach to further cell lines, I used the assembled human interactome information for the analysis of functional modules in cellular networks. The investigation was performed with a previously developed module detection algorithm, which finds maximum-scoring subgraphs in transcriptomic datasets by using assigned values to the network nodes. We extended the algorithm to qualitative proteomic datasets and enhanced the module search by adding functional information to the network edges to concentrate the solution onto modules with high functional similarity. I performed a series of analyses to validate its performance in small-sized (virus-infected gastric cells) and medium-sized networks (human lymphocytes). In both cases the algorithm extracted characteristic modules of sample proteins with high functional similarity. The functional module search is especially useful in site-specific phosphoproteomic datasets, where kinase regulation of the detected sites is often sparse or lacking. Therefore, I used the module detection algorithm in quantitative phosphoproteomic datasets. In a platelet phosphorylation dataset, I presented a pipeline for network analysis of detected phosphorylation sites. In a second approach, the functional module detecting algorithm was used on a phosphoproteome network of human embryonic stem cells, in which nodes represented the maximally changing phosphorylation sites in the experiment. Additional kinases from the human phosphoproteome in PlateletWeb were included to the network to investigate the regulation of the signal flow. Results indicated important phosphorylation sites and their upstream kinases and explained changes observed in embryonic stem cells during differentiation. This work presents novel approaches for integrated network analysis in cells and introduces for the first time a systematic biological investigation of the human platelet proteome based on the platelet-specific knowledge base PlateletWeb. The extended methods for optimized functional module detection offer an invaluable tool for exploring proteomic datasets and covering gaps in complex large-scale data analysis. By combining exact module detection approaches with functional information data between interacting proteins, characteristic functional modules with high functional resemblance can be extracted from complex datasets, thereby focusing on important changes in the observed networks.
Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) ist eine vererbte Form der Erblindung, die durch eine progressive Degeneration von Photorezeptorzellen in der Retina verursacht wird. Neben „klassischen“ RP-Krankheitsgenen, die direkt oder indirekt mit dem Sehprozess und der Aufrechterhaltung der Photorezeptoren in Verbindung stehen, können auch Mutationen in Genen für konstitutive Spleißfaktoren zur Photorezeptordegeneration führen. RP kann daher als Paradebeispiel einer Erkrankung mit paradoxer Gewebespezifität angesehen werden: Defekte in essentiellen und ubiquitär exprimierten Genen führen zu einem Phänotyp, der nur wenige Zelltypen betrifft. Um Einblicke in diesen außergewöhnlichen Pathomechanismus zu erhalten, wurde im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit ein Tiermodell für Spleißfaktor-vermittelte RP im Zebrafisch Danio rerio etabliert. Zunächst wurde gezeigt, dass eine RP verursachende Punktmutation des Spleißfaktors Prpf31 auch in dessen Zebrafisch-Homolog zu einem Verlust der physiologischen Aktivität führt. Als Modell für die Prpf31-Mangelsituation diente dann die durch ein Antisense-Morpholino induzierte partielle Reduktion der Prpf31-Expression in Zebrafischlarven. Konsistent mit einem RP-Phänotyp zeigte sich in diesen Larven eine starke Beeinträchtigung des Sehvermögens. Sie wurde – ebenfalls analog zu RP – durch defekte Photorezeptoren verursacht, die bei ansonsten normal entwickelter Retina eine deutlich veränderte Morphologie aufwiesen. Daraufhin konnten in einer genomweiten Transkriptomanalyse der Augen von Prpf31-defizienten Larven erstmals in vivo photorezeptorspezifische Gene identifiziert werden, deren Expression durch den Mangel an Prpf31 beeinträchtigt war. Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit wurde untersucht, ob es neben den bereits bekannten RP-Krankheitsgenen weitere Spleißfaktoren gibt, deren Defekt die Degeneration von Photorezeptoren auslösen kann. Dazu wurde in Zebrafischlarven ein Mangel an Prpf4 erzeugt, einem Spleißfaktor, der bislang nicht mit RP in Verbindung gebracht worden war. Der Phänotyp dieser Fische war nicht von dem des Prpf31 RP-Modells zu unterscheiden. Dies lieferte einen Hinweis darauf, dass auch Defekte in Prpf4 in der Lage sein könnten, RP auszulösen. Tatsächlich konnte durch genetisches Screening ein RP-Patient mit einer Punktmutation in Prpf4 identifiziert werden (Kollaboration mit Hanno Bolz, Universität Köln). Die biochemische Analyse dieser Mutation zeigte, dass sie zu einem Defekt der Integration von Prpf4 in spleißosomale Untereinheiten und zu dessen Funktionsverlust in vivo führt. Mit dem in dieser Arbeit etablierten Tiermodell konnte zum ersten Mal in vivo ein von Spleißfaktor-Mutationen verursachter Pathomechanismus von Retinitis pigmentosa nachvollzogen werden. Die vom Prpf31-Mangel betroffenen Photorezeptortranskripte stellen vielversprechende Kandidaten für die Vermittlung der Gewebespezifität dar und unterstützen die Hypothese, dass ihre ineffiziente Prozessierung den RP-Phänotyp auslöst. Die Entdeckung eines weiteren Spleißfaktors, dessen Defizienz ebenfalls zu defekten Photorezeptoren führt, zeigt, dass offenbar der Funktionsverlust des Spleißosoms generell in der Lage ist, die Degeneration dieser Zellen zu verursachen. Dies ist nicht zuletzt auch von klinischer Relevanz, da vermutet werden kann, dass sich unter den vielen bisher nicht identifizierten RP-Krankheitsgenen weitere Spleißfaktoren befinden.
This thesis concerns (i) the synthesis and olfactory characterisation of silicon-containing analogues of the musk odourant phantolide, (ii) the synthesis and pharmacological investigation of silicon-containing analogues of retinoids of the EC23 and TTNN type and (iii) the attempted syntheses of silicon-containing analogues of the antipsychotic penfluridol and the antidiarrhoeal agent loperamide. All target compounds and intermediates were characterised by multinuclear NMR studies (1H, 13C, 15N, 19F, 29Si) and elemental analyses or high-resolution mass spectrometry. Additionally, some of these compounds were characterized by single crystal X-ray diffraction studies.
Biomolecules are difficult to investigate in their native environment. The vast complexity of cellular systems and seldom availability of chemical reactions compatible with the physiological milieu make it a challenging task. Bioorthogonal chemical reactions serve as a key to achieve selective ligation, whose components must react rapidly and selectively with each other under physiological conditions in the presence of the plethora of functionalities necessary to sustain life. In this dissertation, we focused on the synthesis of chemical reporters and probe molecules for bioorthogonal labeling through click reaction. Initially, sialic acid derivatives with a linker containing terminal alkyne functionality were synthesized. After the synthesis of azide derivatives of fluorescent dyes as counter partners, they were conjugated with sialic acids through Cu(I) catalyzed alkyne azide cycloaddition (CuAAC). The successful in vitro conjugation of Sia and fluorescent dyes was followed by metabolic tagging of human larynx carcinoma (HEp-2) and the carcinoma of Chinese hamster ovary (CHOK1) with alkynated Sia that were subsequently ligated with fluorescein azide. Finally, the stained cells were subjected to fluorescent microscopy to obtain their images. To enable the click reaction compatible to in vivo applications, the reactivity of cyclooctyne was enhanced by two different approaches. In a first approach, following the Bertozzi’s strategy, two fluorine atoms were introduced adjacent to the alkyne to lower the LUMO. In a second strategy the ring strain of cyclooctyne was attempted to be enhanced by the introduction of an amide group. In addition, glutarimide derivatives with free amino and carboxylic acid functional groups were synthesized by domino-Michael addition-cyclization-reaction.
Synthesis and Investigation of Borylene Complexes: from Borylene Transfer to Borylene Catenation
(2012)
Within the scope of this thesis, the area of borylene transfer has been broadened by including transition-metal alkynyl complexes and metal-carbon double bonds as borylene acceptors. In addition to double salt elimination, halide abstraction and dehydrogenation processes, a novel high-yield synthetic procedure for terminal borylene complexes was established, i.e. salt elimination and subsequent silylhalogenide liberation. Accordingly, it was possible to prepare [(OC)3(Me3P)Fe=BDur] as a rare example of a neutral arylborylene species. Moreover, this compound has been demonstrated to possess great potential for metathesis reactions and the functionalization of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons such as naphthalene. Moreover, it could undergo a phosphine-borylene exchange reaction, yielding the iron bis(borylene) complex [(OC)3Fe(BDur){BN(SiMe3)2}], which has turned out to be applicable for preparation of 1,4-diboracyclohexadiene and unprecedented 1,4-dibora-1,3-butadiene complexes, thus establishing a new type of borylene transfer. Most interestingly, upon transfer of further borylene moieties into the coordination sphere of iron, borylene-catenation was accomplished in a highly controlled manner.
Synthesis and biological activity of molybdenum carbonyl complexes and their peptide conjugates
(2012)
Molybdenum carbonyl complexes with different polypyridyl coligands were prepared and conjugated to peptides by mild bioorthogonal coupling reactions like the oxime ligation and a catalyst-free azide-alkyne click reaction utilized for the first time in such a context. The biological activity of some of the new complexes and conjugates, including their CO release properties, cytotoxicity on human cancer cells, and mode of induction of cell death was studied.
Zusammenfassend lässt sich festhalten, dass die in dieser Abreit vorgestellten Squaraine herausragend gute NIR-Absorptions- und NIR-Emissionseigenschaften aufweisen, die sie für zahlreiche Anwendungen interessant machen. Darüber hinaus konnte gezeigt werden, dass ihre besondere cis-Konfiguration und ihr daraus resultierendes Dipolmoment zu vorteilhaften Anordnungen in dünnen Filmen und in Blends mit PCBM führen. Diese Strukturen zeigen für dipolare Moleküle beeindruckende Exzitonen- und Ladungstransporteigenschaften, die vielversprechende Anwendungen in der organischen Elektronik wie in hier untersuchten lösungsprozessierten BHJ-Solarzellen oder auch in OFETs erwarten lassen.
Synthese von Dextran-umhüllten Eisenoxid-Nanopartikeln als Kontrastmittel für die MR-Tomographie
(2012)
Durch Fällung von Eisen(II)- und Eisen(III)-salzen wurden Dextran-umhüllte Eisenoxid-Nanopartikel (SPIOs) und durch anschließende Umsetzung mit Epichlorhydrin und Ammoniak CLIOs gewonnen. An diesen Kolloiden wurden niedermolekulare Moleküle wie Diamine oder Bernsteinsäureanhydrid als Linker angebracht. Ein weiterer Aspekt dieser Arbeit stellt die Anbindung von Fluoreszenzmarkern und Antikörpern an der Partikeloberfläche sowie deren spektroskopische Untersuchung dar.
Nach der ersten erfolgreichen Synthese eines freien Borols im Jahr 1969 folgte bis auf wenige Ausnahmen eine lange Periode in der der Chemie der freien Borole wenig Beachtung geschenkt wurde. Dies ist nur wenig verständlich, wenn man in Betracht zieht, dass Borole aufgrund ihres 4 Elektronensystems zu den kleinesten Hückel Antiaromaten zählen und zudem als eine der Lewis acidesten Verbindungsklassen angesehen werden. Sie weisen außerdem starke Absorptionen im sichtbaren Bereich auf, welche maßgeblich von den Substituenten am Borzentrum beeinflusst werden. Durch sorgfältige elektronische Abstimmung können nahezu alle Farben des sichtbaren Spektrums eingestellt werden (Abbildung 81). Im Jahr 2008 gelang in der Arbeitsgruppe von H. Braunschweig die erste strukturelle Charakterisierung von Pentaphenylborol (15). Außerdem wurde mit der Synthese des 1 Chlor 2,3,4,5 tetraphenylborols (26) der Grundstein für eine Reihe weitere Borol Derivate gelegt. Des Weiteren konnte das Substitutionsmuster mit der Synthese von [1-Ferrocenyl-2,3,4,5-tetraphenylborol] (25) auf Metallkomplexe ausgeweitet werden. Mit den beiden Bis- und Trisborolen 47 und 49 konnte gezeigt werden, dass Borole über einen konjugierten organischen spacer verknüpft werden können.[39,124,140] Aufbauend auf diesen Ergebnissen wurde in der vorliegenden Arbeit die Synthese neuer Borol Derivate angestrengt. Außerdem konnten Beiträge zu Koordinations- und Reduktionschemie der bereits bekannten und neuartigen Borol-Systeme geleistet werden. Dabei wurde besonderes Augenmerk auf eine mögliche Anwendung von nicht standardmäßigen Analysemethoden wie Cyclovoltammetrie, ESR-Spektroskopie, Raman-Spektroskopie und UV Vis Spektroskopie gelegt. Eine Einstufung der Lewis-Säure Stärke der verschiedenen Borol Derivate erfolgte durch Basenübertragungsreaktionen.
Infektionskrankheiten gehören weltweit immer noch zu den häufigsten Todesursachen, und auch wenn die Gefährdung in den Industriestaaten erheblich reduziert werden konnte, nimmt die Bedeutung von übertragbaren Krankheiten wieder zu. Verursacht wird dies zum einen durch die Fähigkeit der Keime gegen die eingesetzten Arzneistoffe verschiedenartige Resistenzmechanismen zu entwickeln, zum anderen auch dadurch, dass neuartige Infektionskrankheiten entstehen. Aus diesem Grund bleibt die Entwicklung neuer Medikamente ein ständiger Wettlauf mit der Anpassungsfähigkeit der Infektionserreger, und gerade dies spielt eine große Rolle für vernachlässigte und armutsassoziierte Krankheiten wie z.B. Tuberkulose, Malaria und HIV/AIDS, die in den Entwicklungsländern große Krankheitslasten und so auch hohen volkswirtschaftlichen Schaden verursachen. Protozoische Parasiten wie die Erreger der Malaria und der Leishmaniose sind besonders trickreich, denn sie wechseln zwischen Vektor (z.B. Mücke) und Wirt (z.B. Mensch) und durchleben so verschiedene Stadien eines komplexen Entwicklungszyklus, von denen sich jedes einzelne Stadium wie ein 'anderer' Organismus verhält. Hierdurch ist die therapeutische Behandlung erschwert, und für die dauerhafte Eradikation der Parasiten und für die Hemmung ihrer Transmission, um letztlich eine Resistenzentwicklung der Medikamente zu verhindern, müssen Wirkstoffe möglichst gegen alle Stadien ähnlich gut wirken. Die Konzeptionierung solcher Verbindungen, ihr strukturelles Design und schließlich ihre Synthesen waren Ziel der hier vorliegenden Arbeit, um neue aktive Vertreter gegen protozoische und bakterielle Erreger und Toxine bereitzustellen. Die Konzeptionierung und Synthese von Hybridmolekülen aus bewährten Arzneistoffen wurde als innovativer Ansatz zur Behandlung der Malaria verfolgt. Eine strukturell neue Wirkstoffklasse mit sehr guten spezifischen Aktivitäten und interessanten Struktur-Aktivitäts-Beziehungen gegen Promastigoten und gegen Amastigoten von L. major wurde entdeckt. Auf der Suche nach neuen Verbindungen, die binäre Toxine von Bacillus anthracis Anthrax-Toxin), Clostridium perfringens (Iota-Toxin) und Clostridium botulinum C2-Toxin) hemmen können, wurden neben 4-Aminochinolin-Verbindungen neue Aminochinolinium-Salze konzipiert, synthetisiert und in Target-basierten Assays durch Titrationsexperimente und Stromfluktuationsanalysen bzw. in In-vitro-Experimenten auf ihre Wirksamkeit getestet.
Unter Ausnutzung der Reaktivität von Borylanionen wurden neuartige Übergangsmetallboridokomplexe synthetisiert, bei denen ein "nacktes" Boratom als Ligand für bis zu vier Übergangsmetalle vorliegt. Strukturelle und bindungstheoretische Eigenschaften der Boridokomplexe wurden mit gängigen metallorganischen Analysemethoden sowie mit DFT-Methoden untersucht. Dabei zeigte sich, dass die erhaltenen Tetrametalloboridokomplexe eine planare Koordinationsgeometrie um das Borzentrum aufweisen und damit ein Äquivalent zu anti van't Hoff/Le Bel-Verbindungen des Kohlenstoffs darstellen.
Die vorliegende Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit der Synthese und Charakterisierung potenzieller Inhibitoren des Oberflächenproteins Mip von Legionella pneumophila. Der gramnegative Mikroorganismus ist der ursächliche Erreger der Legionellose. Die Erkrankung kann in zwei verschiedenen Formen auftreten, dem Pontiac-Fieber, einer Grippe-ähnlichen Atemwegserkrankung, und der Legionärskrankheit, einer schweren Lungenentzündung mit einer Mortalitätsrate von bis zu 30 %. Natürliche und künstlich geschaffene Süßwassersysteme bilden den biologischen Lebensraum der Bakterien. Aus dieser Umgebung werden sie über technische Vektoren wie Duschen oder Klimaanlagen durch Inhalation kontaminierter Aerosole auf den Menschen übertragen, wo sie alveoläre Makrophagen besiedeln und eine pulmonale Infektion hervorrufen. Um die Zellen in der Lunge zu erreichen, müssen die Mikroorganismen jedoch zuerst die alveoläre Barriere, bestehend aus einer Epithelzellschicht und extrazellulärer Matrix, überwinden. Dafür ist das Oberflächenprotein Mip, der Hauptvirulenzfaktor, verantwortlich. Mip ist ein Homodimer, das sich aus einer C- und einer N-Domäne zusammensetzt. Während der N-Terminus für die Dimerisierung des Proteins verantwortlich ist, weist der C-Terminus die typische Faltung einer Peptidyl-Prolyl-cis/trans-Isomerase (PPIase) auf. Der Vergleich der Aminosäuresequenz der Mip-C-Domäne mit der Domäne verschiedener humaner PPIasen zeigte eine besonders große Homologie zu FKBP12, welches zur Familie der FK506-bindenden Proteine gehört und eine wichtige Rolle innerhalb des menschlichen Immunsystems spielt. Bemerkenswerterweise hemmen bekannte immunsuppressive FKBP12-Inhibitoren wie FK506 und Rapamycin neben der humanen PPIase ebenfalls das bakterielle Mip. Außerdem wurde beobachtet, dass die C-terminale Mip-PPIase an Kollagen IV, den Hauptbestandteil in der menschlichen Lunge, bindet und somit für die Transmigration der Legionellen in die Lunge verantwortlich ist. Mip-Inhibitoren sollten demnach eine Legionellen-Infektion verhindern können. Zur Verifizierung der Hypothese sollten daher im Rahmen dieser Arbeit neue Leitstrukturen für Mip-PPIase-Inhibitoren entwickelt werden. Mit Hilfe von Molecular-Modelling-Untersuchungen basierend auf der NMR-Struktur 2VCD wurde als eine mögliche Leitstruktur N,N-Dimethylphenylsulfonsäureamid identifiziert. Deshalb sollten diese Verbindung sowie Analoga hergestellt werden. Obwohl die Immunsuppressiva FK506 und Rapamycin Mip-Inhibitoren darstellen, können sie auf Grund ihrer immunsuppressiven Eigenschaften nicht in der Legionellosetherapie eingesetzt werden. Die makrozyklischen Immunsuppressiva setzen sich im Gegensatz zu N,N-Dimethylphenylsulfonsäureamid allerdings aus zwei strukturellen Einheiten, einer Binde- sowie einer Effektordomäne, zusammen. Die Bindedomäne mit dem Pipecolinsäure-Grundgerüst ist für die Wechselwirkungen mit Mip und FKBP12 verantwortlich. Die Effektordomäne hingegen ist der aliphatische Teil der Makrozyklen, der erst durch die Bildung eines ternären Komplexes eine Immunsuppression hervorruft. Somit können Verbindungen vom Pipecolinsäure-Typ keine immunsuppressive Wirkung haben und stellen demnach optimale, neue Leitstrukturen für Mip-Inhibitoren dar. Aus diesem Grund wurden die zwei literaturbekannten, nicht-immunsuppressiven FKBP12-Inhibitoren A und B ausgewählt und in verschiedenen Docking-Studien untersucht. Das Molecular-Modelling zeigte, dass nur Verbindung B reproduzierbare Interaktionen mit Mip eingehen kann und demnach ein potenzieller Inhibitor ist. Um dies zu überprüfen, sollten beide Verbindungen A und B sowie eine Mischform hergestellt werden. Neben diesen Verbindungen wurden weiterhin Variationen an der Struktur vorgenommen. Alle Verbindungen wurden in einem In-vitro-Enzymassay gezielt auf ihre Mip-Interaktion untersucht. Die In-vitro-Untersuchungen zeigten, dass nur Pipecolinsäure-Derivate vom Sulfonsäureamid-Typ B die Mip-PPIase inhibieren, die besten Verbindungen sind 22b, 23a und 24a. Neben den enzymatischen In-vitro-Testungen wurden exemplarisch für die Verbindungen 1a, 12a, 22a und 22b HSQC-NMR-Experimente zur Bestimmung der Inhibitor-Proteinbindung durchgeführt. Für Verbindung 22b wurde zusätzlich die In-vivo-Wachstumshemmung der Legionellen mittels Gentamicin-Infektionsstudien ermittelt.
Eine Reihe von Acetylen-verknüpften Perylenbisimid(PBI)-Makrozyklen mit unterschiedlicher Ringgröße wurde durch Palladium-katalysierte Homokupplung synthetisiert und mit Hilfe von Recycling-GPC getrennt. Diese Makrozyklen wurden durch NMR-Spektroskopie und Massenspektrometrie charakterisiert und weiterhin die photophysikalischen Eigenschaften durch UV/Vis-Absorptions- und Fluoreszenzemissions-Messungen untersucht. Die Selbstorganisation dieser PBI-Makrozyklen zu hochgeordneten Nanostrukturen auf HOPG-Oberflächen wurde mittels Rasterkraftmikroskopie untersucht.
Die vorliegende Arbeit befasst sich zum einen mit der Synthese und Reaktivität des zweiwertigen Nickel-Biscarben-Komplexes trans-[Ni(iPr2Im)2Br2], zum anderen mit der Aktivierung von C–F-Bindungen fluorierter Aromaten und dem Einsatz von [Ni2(iPr2Im)4(COD)] in der stöchiometrischen und katalytischen Hydrodefluorierung.
Derivate von Vinylsulfonen (VS), die zur Klasse der Michael-Akzeptoren gehören, haben sich in den letzten Jahren als potente irreversible Inhibitoren von Cystein-Proteasen etabliert. Durch einen nucleophilen Angriff des Cys-Restes im aktiven Zentrum der Protease auf das beta-Kohlenstoffatom der C-C-Doppelbindung wird die Protease irreversibel alkyliert. Ziel dieser Arbeit war es, einfache theoretische und experimentelle Methoden zu entwickeln, um erste Schlussfolgerungen hinsichtlich der Reaktivität unterschiedlicher Vinylsulfone ziehen zu können, die zur vollständigen Aufklärung der Struktur-Wirkungsbeziehung von Vinylsulfonen mit diversen Cystein-Proteasen dienen. Im ersten Teil der Arbeit wurden quantenmechanische Rechnungen an kleinen Vinylsulfon-Bausteinen angestellt, um den Einfluss unterschiedlicher Substitutionsmuster an der Sulfoneinheit auf die Reaktionskinetik von Vinylsulfonen zu untersuchen. Anhand der jeweiligen Potentialflächen ließen sich die charakteristischen Punkte der Reaktion, wie der Reaktionskomplex, der Übergangszustand (transition state, TS) sowie das Produkt mitsamt ihren Energien und Geometrien bestimmen. Die Höhe der Energiebarriere, die zum Erreichen des TS überwunden werden muss, die sogenannte Aktiverungsenergie, hängt über die Arrhenius-Gleichung mit den kinetischen Parametern der Reaktion zusammen. Es lässt sich also durch die Kenntnis der Aktivierungsenergien die Reaktivitätsreihenfolge unterschiedlich substituierter Vinylsulfone VS vorhersagen. Im zweiten Teil dieser Arbeit wurden Vinylsulfonbausteine synthetisiert und an separat hergestellte Peptide gekuppelt, sodass potentielle Inhibitoren erhalten wurden. So konnten u.a. die peptidischen Inhibitoren Mu-D-Phe-L-HomoPhe-VS-Me und MP-D-Phe-L-HomoPhe-VS-Me hergestellt werden. Ein zweites Syntheseprojekt beschäftigte sich mit der Kupplung von Peptiden an neue Derivate der trans-Aziridin-2,3-dicarbonsäure. Die synthetisierten Inhibitoren waren Z-Phe-Ala-Azi, Boc-Leu-Pro-Azi und Z-Pro-Leu-Azi. Hierfür wurden die Peptide des Vinylsulfonsprojekts in umgekehrter Aminosäure-Reihenfolge synthetisiert, um sie an die Aziridinbausteine kuppeln zu können. Der dritte Teil der Doktorarbeit befasste sich mit der experimentellen Untersuchung der synthetisierten Vinylsulfonbausteine sowie den erhaltenen peptidischen VS- und Aziridin-basierten Inhibitoren. Es wurden einerseits Enzym-Assays durchgeführt, um die prozentuale Hemmung verschiedener Cystein-Proteasen durch die synthetisierten Moleküle zu messen. Keine der Verbindungen wies jedoch eine signifikannte Hemmung der Proteasen Rhodesain, Falcipain 2 und Cathepsin B auf. Andererseits wurden Modellsysteme entwickelt, um die Kinetik der Reaktionen der Vinylsulfon- und Aziridinbausteine mit einem geeigneten Thiol als Enzym-Imitat zu verfolgen. Ein zielführendes Modell konnte mit Phenylethanthiol in deuteriertem Methanol realisiert werden. Durch Zusatz von NaOH, KOH oder KOtBu konnte zusätzlich die Reaktion mit dem Thiolat untersucht werden. Die Reaktionen wurden sowohl mit IR- als auch NMR-Spektroskopie verfolgt und es wurden die Geschwindigkeitskonstanten 2. Ordnung bestimmt. Auf den ersten Blick konnte mit dem theoretischen Modell der experimentell gefundene Trend nicht vorhergesagt werden. Die Reihenfolge der Sulfonderivate aber, die an der Sulfongruppe ein weiteres Heteroatom tragen, Sulfonester und Sulfonamid, wurde richtig abgeschätzt. Der Unterschied in der Aktivierungsenergie zwischen den Sulfonestern beläuft sich auf 0.7 kcal pro mol. Über die Arrheniusgleichung, ergibt sich bei Annahme desselben Arrhenius-Faktors bei einer Temperatur von 25°C, dass OPhVS um einen Faktor 3 schneller als OMeVS reagieren sollte. Tatsächlich wurde im Experiment ein Faktor von 2.6 gefunden. Aufgrund der unterschiedlichen Substituenten am Stickstoffatom, ist das Amid nicht vollständig mit seinem H-substituierten theoretischen Pendant vergleichbar. Dass das Sulfonamid langsamer als die Sulfonester reagieren, wurde vom theoretischen Modell ebenfalls richtig vorhergesagt.
Synergistic Effect of Caffeine and Glucocorticoids on Expression of Surfactant Protein B (SP-B) mRNA
(2012)
Administration of glucocorticoids and caffeine is a common therapeutic intervention in the neonatal period, but possible interactions between these substances are still unclear. The present study investigated the effect of caffeine and different glucocorticoids on expression of surfactant protein (SP)-B, crucial for the physiological function of pulmonary surfactant. We measured expression levels of SP-B, various SP-B transcription factors including erythroblastic leukemia viral oncogene homolog 4 (ErbB4) and thyroid transcription factor-1 (TTF-1), as well as the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) after administering different doses of glucocorticoids, caffeine, cAMP, or the phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitor rolipram in the human airway epithelial cell line NCI-H441. Administration of dexamethasone (1 mM) or caffeine (5 mM) stimulated SP-B mRNA expression with a maximal of 38.8611.1-fold and 5.261.4-fold increase, respectively. Synergistic induction was achieved after coadministration of dexamethasone (1 mM) in combination with caffeine (10 mM) (206659.7-fold increase, p,0.0001) or cAMP (1 mM) (2136111-fold increase, p = 0.0108). SP-B mRNA was synergistically induced also by administration of caffeine with hydrocortisone (87.9639.0), prednisolone (154666.8), and betamethasone (12366.4). Rolipram also induced SP-B mRNA (64.9621.0-fold increase). We detected a higher expression of ErbB4 and GR mRNA (7.0- and 1.7-fold increase, respectively), whereas TTF-1, Jun B, c-Jun, SP1, SP3, and HNF-3a mRNA expression was predominantly unchanged. In accordance with mRNA data, mature SP-B was induced significantly by dexamethasone with caffeine (13.869.0-fold increase, p = 0.0134). We found a synergistic upregulation of SP-B mRNA expression induced by co-administration of various glucocorticoids and caffeine, achieved by accumulation of intracellular cAMP. This effect was mediated by a caffeinedependent phosphodiesterase inhibition and by upregulation of both ErbB4 and the GR. These results suggested that caffeine is able to induce the expression of SP-transcription factors and affects the signaling pathways of glucocorticoids, amplifying their effects. Co-administration of caffeine and corticosteroids may therefore be of benefit in surfactant homeostasis.
Die periodische Katatonie ist eine eigenständige Erkrankung im Rahmen der differenzierten Klassifikation nach Kleist und Leonhard. Obwohl die Trennung Leonhards nach monopolaren, bipolaren affektiven und zykloiden Psychosen in moderne Klassifikationssysteme nach ICD 10 und DSM IV Einzug erhalten hat, werden Katatonien nur als Subtyp der Schizophrenie mit geringer Langzeitstabilität betrachtet.
Ziel dieser retrospektiven Studie ist die klinische Eigenständigkeit in einer Verlaufsbeschreibung der Symptome der periodischen Katatonie zu überprüfen. Dabei wurden 262 Patienten, bei denen durch klinisch geübte Untersucher eine periodische Katatonie diagnostiziert wurde, auf Verlaufsparameter und Soziobiographie retrospektiv untersucht.
Das erfasste Durchschnittsalter bei Ersthospitalisation der Patienten korrelierte mit den zuvor beschriebenen Ergebnissen von Leonhard, Männer erkranken mit 24 Jahren früher als Frauen mit 28 Jahren. Eine Erstmanifestation ab 45 ist selten, ab dem 60. Lebensjahr kommt dies ausschließlich bei Frauen vor.
Die Anzahl der stationären Aufenthalte korrelierte mit vorhandenen Ergebnissen einer älteren Studie und belief sich auf sechs im Durchschnitt.
Der überwiegende Anteil der Patienten (73%) ist zum Zeitpunkt des letzten stationären Aufenthaltes ledig und geht keiner Arbeit nach (50%). Der Anteil der männlichen Patienten mit einer abgeschlossenen Berufsausbildung (73%) ist höher ist als der weiblichen Patienten (48%). Ledige Patienten ohne vorhandene Schul- oder Berufsbildung werden in einem früherem Alter das erste mal stationär behandelt, stabile familiäre Situation und schulische bzw. berufliche Bildung scheinen eine protektive Wirkung auf den Ausbruch der Erkrankung zu haben.
Ein Alkohol- und Drogenkonsum fand sich zu Beginn der Erkrankung bei fast doppelt so vielen männlichen als bei weiblichen Probanden, im Rahmen des Krankheitsverlaufs nahm jedoch der Anteil der Frauen mit Alkohol- und Drogenkonsum zu.
60
Der Verlauf der Symptome von Psychomotorik, Affekt und Antrieb zeigt einen plötzlichen, schubförmigen Beginn der Erkrankung. Neben einem Wechsel zwischen Symptomen des Plus- und Minuspols, kommt es auch zu einem parallelen Auftreten, so dass typische Symptome der Mischform, wie zum Beispiel Stereotypien, Grimassieren und Negativismus entstehen. In der vorliegenden Untersuchung fand sich ausserdem die Entwicklung des von Leonhard beschriebenen Residualzustandes mit vorwiegenden Symptomen des Minuspols, aber wiederkehrenden Impulsvermehrungen im Verlauf.
Zeitlich betrachtet ist eine Abnahme der Dauer der stationären Behandlungszeiten zu vermerken. Diese Tatsache ist auf eine zunehmend gut entwickelte Sozio- und Pharmakotherapie, wie auch suffiziente ambulante, bzw. tagesklinische Weiterbehandlung zurückzuführen.
Die Untersuchung der Familienanamnese ergab einen hohen Anteil an einem psychisch erkrankten Elternteil (78%). Außerdem die Tatsache, dass Patienten mit erkrankten Verwandten ersten Grades in jüngeren Jahren eine Manifestation von ersten Symptomen einer periodischen Katatonie entwickeln, verglichen mit denen ohne familiäre Vorbelastung.
Background
Therapeutic vaccination directed to induce an anti-tumoral T-cell response is a field of extensive investigation in the treatment of melanoma. However, many vaccination trials in melanoma failed to demonstrate a correlation between the vaccine-specific immune response and therapy outcome. This has been mainly attributed to immune escape by antigen loss, rendering us in the need of new vaccination targets.
Patients and methods
This phase-II trial investigated a peptide vaccination against survivin, an oncogenic inhibitor-of-apoptosis protein crucial for the survival of tumor cells, in HLA-A1/-A2/-B35-positive patients with treatment-refractory stage-IV metastatic melanoma. The study endpoints were survivin-specific T-cell reactivity (SSTR), safety, response, and survival (OS).
Results
Sixty-one patients (ITT) received vaccination therapy using three different regimens. 55 patients (PP) were evaluable for response and survival, and 41/55 for SSTR. Patients achieving progression arrest (CR + PR + SD) more often showed SSTRs than patients with disease progression (p = 0.0008). Patients presenting SSTRs revealed a prolonged OS (median 19.6 vs. 8.6 months; p = 0.0077); multivariate analysis demonstrated SSTR as an independent predictor of survival (p = 0.013). The induction of SSTRs was associated with gender (female vs. male; p = 0.014) and disease stage (M1a/b vs. M1c; p = 0.010), but not with patient age, HLA type, performance status, or vaccination regimen.
Conclusion
Survivin-specific T-cell reactivities strongly correlate with tumor response and patient survival, indicating that vaccination with survivin-derived peptides is a promising treatment strategy in melanoma.
Background
Therapeutic vaccination directed to induce an anti-tumoral T-cell response is a field of extensive investigation in the treatment of melanoma. However, many vaccination trials in melanoma failed to demonstrate a correlation between the vaccine-specific immune response and therapy outcome. This has been mainly attributed to immune escape by antigen loss, rendering us in the need of new vaccination targets.
Patients and methods
This phase-II trial investigated a peptide vaccination against survivin, an oncogenic inhibitor-of-apoptosis protein crucial for the survival of tumor cells, in HLA-A1/-A2/-B35-positive patients with treatment-refractory stage-IV metastatic melanoma. The study endpoints were survivin-specific T-cell reactivity (SSTR), safety, response, and survival (OS).
Results
Sixty-one patients (ITT) received vaccination therapy using three different regimens. 55 patients (PP) were evaluable for response and survival, and 41/55 for SSTR. Patients achieving progression arrest (CR + PR + SD) more often showed SSTRs than patients with disease progression (p = 0.0008). Patients presenting SSTRs revealed a prolonged OS (median 19.6 vs. 8.6 months; p = 0.0077); multivariate analysis demonstrated SSTR as an independent predictor of survival (p = 0.013). The induction of SSTRs was associated with gender (female vs. male; p = 0.014) and disease stage (M1a/b vs. M1c; p = 0.010), but not with patient age, HLA type, performance status, or vaccination regimen.
Conclusion
Survivin-specific T-cell reactivities strongly correlate with tumor response and patient survival, indicating that vaccination with survivin-derived peptides is a promising treatment strategy in melanoma.
Objective:
To determine the survival in a population of German patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
Patients and methods:
Information about 94 patients born between 1970 and 1980 was obtained by telephone interviews and questionnaires. In addition to age of death or actual age during the investigation, data concerning clinical course and medical interventions were collected.
Results:
67 patients with molecularly confirmed diagnoses had a median survival of 24.0 years. Patients without molecular confirmation (clinical diagnosis only) had a chance of 67 % to reach that age. Grouping of our patient cohort according to the year of death (before and after 2000), ventilation was recognized as main intervention affecting survival with ventilated reaching a median survival of 27.0 years. For those without ventilation it was 19.0 years.
Conclusion and clinical relevance:
our study provides survival data for a cohort of DMD patients in Germany stratified by year of death. Median survival was 24.0 years in patients confirmed by molecular testing. Ventilated patients had a median survival of 27 years. We consider this piece of information helpful in the medical care of DMD patients.
Autoimmune diseases, unwanted overshooting immune responses against self antigens, are due to an imbalance in immunity and tolerance. Although negatively impacting cancer prognosis, myeloid derived suppressor cells (MDSC), with their potent suppressive capabilities, might be applicable in a more beneficial light when applied in to autoimmunity. As previous shown MDSC have protective roles in Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis (EAE) (Zhu et al., 2007), the established inducible mouse model for the autoimmune disease multiple sclerosis (MS). This decrease in disease severity indicates in vitro generated immature myeloid cells (IMC) from bone marrow (BM) as precursors of MDSC are promising candidates for cellular therapy. Important to any cellular therapy by adoptive transfer, the major questions regarding IMC efficacy was addressed within the thesis. This thesis attempts to elucidate how IMC operate in EAE. This thesis defines the factors within the autoimmune microenvironment that lead to the activation of MDSC, where IMC home once delivered in vivo, and the protective mechanisms BMIMC employ. To emulate BM cells when they first enter circulation through the blood, IMC were injected intravenously (i.v.). IMC are protective with no regard to the various routes delivered (i.v., i.p.). They protect to a lesser extent when pre-activated before injection. IMC suppress by causing a delay and/or by decreasing the severity of the disease via a mechanism yet determined. To understand the migration pattern of IMC after i.v. injection, in vivo kinetics experiments employing bioluminescence imaging were performed. This techinique allows for whole in vivo mouse imaging daily, allowing the tracking of cell migration over days within a single mouse. During steady-state, BMIMC circulate and appear to accumulate in the spleen by day 4 after injection, whereas they alternatively home to inflammatory sites (immunization site), draining lymph nodes, and the spleen within mice with low grade EAE. Visualization of CMDiI-labelled BMIMC by fluorescence microscopy could locate IMC injected cells outside the white pulp, as they were colocalizing in the regions stained with CD169 or outside, but not within the follicles of spleens on day 4. Consistant with these findings, the attempt to analyze the phenotype of these cells by flow cytometry was problematic as these cells seem to adhere strongly to collagen also indicating the cells are located in the collagenous area of the marginal zone and the red pulp.To determine factors influencing MDSC activation, we utilized different stimuli through a high throughput method detecting release of nitric oxide (NO). Extracts from yeast, fungi, and bacteria were observed to activate MDSC to produce nitric oxide. Surprisingly, material mimicking viral DNA (CpG) and RNA (poly I:C), and several self glycolipids, could not activate the MDSC to produce NO. Upon attempts to understand synergistic effects between microbial pathogens and host cytokines, IFNg was determined to boost the signal of pathogen stimuli, whereas IL17, another cytokine which causes pathology during EAE, and IFNb, a drug used in therapy to treat MS, did not cause any additional effects. Activation of MDSC was determined by the microbial pathogens components LPS, curdlan, and zymosan, to induce upregulation of B7H1 on the cell surface. MDSC did not increase any co-stimulatory markers, such as CD40, CD80, CD86, CD70, or the co-inhibitory marker, PDL2. On day 1 after EAE induction, endogenous MDSC populations when stimulated showed an increase in B7H1 expression and a downregulation of CD80. After further analysis, these cells were concluded to be mostly granulocytic cells (Ly6G+). As the B7H1 ligand PD1 is upregulated in chronic diseases and correlates to an exhausted phenotype, the PD1 : B7H1 interaction was a good candidate for the mechanism our cells may employ for their suppressive capacity. To investigate this interaction, fixed BM-IMC deficient in B7H1 were incubated with restimulated memory T cells. IMC deficient in B7H1 resulted in a significant loss of T cell suppression, as compared to the wildtype control BMIMC. To assess this interaction in vivo, we injected wildtype (WT) and B7H1-/- IMC into mice followed by induction of EAE to assess whether B7H1 mediated this suppression. The lack of B7H1 did not alter their suppressive capacity under these conditions, contrary to other findings which have described this interaction to be important in their suppressive capacity when administered post EAE induction (Ioannou et al., 2012). Interestingly, EAE mice pre-treated with IMC had similar amounts of cytokine production in the CNS after restimulation. Spleens from IMC injected mice had increased amounts of Arg-1 suggesting suppression is via oxidation or recruitment by soluble mediators may lead to this protection. We speculate this may inhibit T cell reactivation in the CNS.
Background: Perfusion-cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) is generally accepted as an alternative to SPECT to assess myocardial ischemia non-invasively. However its performance vs gated-SPECT and in sub-populations is not fully established. The goal was to compare in a multicenter setting the diagnostic performance of perfusion-CMR and gated-SPECT for the detection of CAD in various populations using conventional x-ray coronary angiography (CXA) as the standard of reference.
Methods: In 33 centers (in US and Europe) 533 patients, eligible for CXA or SPECT, were enrolled in this multivendor trial. SPECT and CXA were performed within 4 weeks before or after CMR in all patients. Prevalence of CAD in the sample was 49% and 515 patients received MR contrast medium. Drop-out rates for CMR and SPECT were 5.6% and 3.7%, respectively (ns). The study was powered for the primary endpoint of non-inferiority of CMR vs SPECT for both, sensitivity and specificity for the detection of CAD (using a single-threshold reading), the results for the primary endpoint were reported elsewhere. In this article secondary endpoints are presented, i.e. the diagnostic performance of CMR versus SPECT in subpopulations such as multi-vessel disease (MVD), in men, in women, and in patients without prior myocardial infarction (MI). For diagnostic performance assessment the area under the receiver-operator-characteristics-curve (AUC) was calculated. Readers were blinded versus clinical data, CXA, and imaging results.
Results: The diagnostic performance (= area under ROC = AUC) of CMR was superior to SPECT (p = 0.0004, n = 425) and to gated-SPECT (p = 0.018, n = 253). CMR performed better than SPECT in MVD (p = 0.003 vs all SPECT, p = 0.04 vs gated-SPECT), in men (p = 0.004, n = 313) and in women (p = 0.03, n = 112) as well as in the non-infarct patients (p = 0.005, n = 186 in 1-3 vessel disease and p = 0.015, n = 140 in MVD).
Conclusion: In this large multicenter, multivendor study the diagnostic performance of perfusion-CMR to detect CAD was superior to perfusion SPECT in the entire population and in sub-groups. Perfusion-CMR can be recommended as an alternative for SPECT imaging.
In cultured motoneurons of a mouse model for the motoneuron disease spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), reduced levels of the protein SMN (survival of motoneurons) cause defects in axonal growth. This correlates with reduced β-actin mRNA and protein in growth cones, indicating that anterograde transport and local translation of β-actin mRNA are crucial for motoneuron function. However, direct evidence that indeed local translation is a physiological phenomenon in growth cones of motoneurons was missing. Here, a lentiviral GFP-based reporter construct was established to monitor local protein synthesis of β-actin mRNA. Time-lapse imaging of fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) in living motoneurons revealed that β-actin is locally translated in the growth cones of embryonic motoneurons. Interestingly, local translation of the β-actin reporter construct was differentially regulated by different laminin isoforms, indicating that laminins provide extracellular cues for the regulation of local translation in growth cones. Notably, local translation of β-actin mRNA was deregulated when motoneurons of a mouse model for type I SMA (Smn-/-; SMN2) were analyzed. In situ hybridization revealed reduced levels of β-actin mRNA in the axons of Smn-/-; SMN2 motoneurons. The distribution of the β-actin mRNA was not modified by different laminin isoforms as revealed by in situ hybridization against the mRNA of the eGFP encoding element of the β-actin reporter. In case of the mRNA of α-actin and γ-actin isoforms, the endogenous mRNA did not localize to the axons and the localization pattern was not affected by the SMN levels expressed in the cell. Taken together our findings suggest that regulation of local translation of β-actin in growth cones of motoneurons critically depends on laminin signaling and the amount of SMN protein. Embryonic stem cell (ESC)-derived motoneurons are an excellent in vitro system to sort out biochemical and cellular pathways which are defective in neurodegenerative diseases like SMA. Here, a protocol for the differentiation and antibody-mediated enrichment of ESC-derived motoneurons is presented, which was optimized during the course of this study. Notably, this study contributes the production and purification of highly active recombinant sonic hedgehog (Shh), which was needed for the efficient differentiation of mouse ESCs to motoneurons. ESC-derived motoneurons will now offer high amounts of cellular material to allow the biochemical identification of disease-relevant molecular components involved in regulated local protein synthesis in axons and growth cones of motoneurons.
Die vorliegende Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit der Frage, inwieweit quantitative Genexpressionsstudien an postmortalen humanen Proben mit erhöhtem Postmortalintervall und somit möglicherweise verminderter RNA-Integrität realisierbar sind und in Zukunft als zusätzliches diagnostisches Werkzeug zur Determinierung der Todesursache im forensischen Kontext herangezogen werden können. Dafür wurden in mehreren Teilstudien Faktoren untersucht, die die Verlässlichkeit quantitativer Genexpressionsdaten beeinflussen können. Es konnte zunächst für postmortales Skelettmuskelgewebe festgestellt werden, dass Verstorbene mit erhöhtem BMI statistisch signifikant niedrigere RIN-Werte aufweisen als normalgewichtige Personen. Zudem wurde eine Korrelation zwischen dem Gewebetyp und der Integrität der daraus extrahierten RNA gefunden. Unter Anwendung der in dieser Arbeit gewählten Extraktionsmethode scheint postmortales Skelettmuskelgewebe für Genexpressionsstudien an Autopsiematerial besonders geeignet. Dagegen wurde im vorliegenden Probengut kein Zusammenhang zwischen verminderter RNA-Integrität und Parametern wie Geschlecht, PMI, Sterbealter, Dauer der Agonie und Todesursache gefunden. In einer weiteren Teilstudie wurde anhand von postmortalem Herzmuskel-, Skelettmuskel- und Gehirngewebe aus einer Auswahl von zehn funktionell verschiedenen endogenen Kontrollgenen HMBS, UBC, SDHA und TBP als die Gene mit der größten postmortalen Transkriptstabilität identifiztiert. Zudem konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Verwendung von vier stabilen endogenen Kontrollen am untersuchten Probenmaterial eine verlässliche Datennormalisierung erlaubt. Die validierten Kontrollgene können auch zukünftig für quantitative Genexpressionsstudien eingesetzt werden, solange die untersuchte Probenzusammensetzung der hier vorgestellten ähnelt. Für die Todesursache sowie für den Body Mass Index des Probenspenders wurde in der vorliegenden Arbeit ein statistisch signifikanter Einfluss auf das Expressionslevel instabiler Gene festgestellt. Diese Parameter sind daher geeignet, die gefundenen Instabilitäten möglicher Kontrollgene zu erklären. Die Ergebnisse der vorliegenden Arbeit lassen des Weiteren darauf schließen, dass das Erstellen von Degradierungslinien aus kommerziell erhältlicher RNA für jedes verwendete qPCR-Assay ein wichtiges Instrument der Qualitätsprüfung ist. Mit der Degradierungslinie kann die Detektionsgrenze des verwendeten qPCR-Assays validiert werden kann. Nur so ist die Festlegung des Bereichs möglich, in dem ein verändertes Expressionslevel tatsächlich mit dem Einfluss eines spezifischen Parameters in Verbindung gebracht werden kann und klar von einer nur scheinbaren Genexpressionsänderung unterscheidbar ist, die durch eine Degradierung der Probe vorgetäuscht wird. Zudem scheint es praktikabel, in zukünftigen Studien nur Proben mit ähnlichen Integritäten miteinander zu vergleichen. Pathologische Prozesse im menschlichen Körper, auch solche, die die Funktion von Organen sowie die Morphologie betreffen, sind hoch komplex und können interindividuell variieren, weshalb die Genexpression im forensischen Kontext ergänzende Hinweise auf die Diagnose liefern könnte. Als erstes anwendungsbezogenes Beispiel wurde in der vorliegenden Arbeit der Einfluss von Hypoxie auf das Transkriptlevel von HIF-1α, VEGF und SLC2A1 untersucht. Bei Normalisierung der Daten gegen vier stabile Kontrollgene ergaben sich anhand der untersuchten Gewebeproben Hinweise auf eine todesursachenbezogene Hochregulierung der drei Zielgene. Die Studie unterstrich die besondere Bedeutung der gewählten Normalisierungsstrategie. Wurden die Daten nur gegen GAPDH als einzelnes, nicht validiertes Kontrollgen normalisiert, deuteten die Ergebnisse eine überraschende Herunterregulierung der Zielgene an. Als mögliche Ursache für diese scheinbare Diskrepanz kommt die im weiteren Verlauf dieser Studie nachgewiesene Instabilität infolge einer Co-Regulation von GAPDH unter hypoxischen Bedingungen in Betracht. Mit dem Fernziel postmortale Genexpressionsstudien als zusätzliches Instrument in der forensischen Todesursachenbestimmung einzusetzen, schafft die vorliegende Arbeit durch die Einführung von validierten Kontrollgenen sowie durch die Analyse weiterer Einfluss nehmender Faktoren eine Basis für die verlässliche Durchführung künftiger Genexpressionsstudien an humanem Autopsiegewebe.
Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) gehört zu den am besten untersuchten und charakterisierten probiotischen Bakterienstämmen. Seit Beginn des letzten Jahrhunderts wird er als Medikament eingesetzt, um verschiedene Darmerkrankungen wie z.B. Diarrhöe, entzündliche Darmerkrankungen und Verstopfung zu behandeln. Die Flagelle des EcN vermittelt Beweglichkeit und kann die Produktion von humanem β-Defensin 2 (hBD2) durch Epithelzellen induzieren. Somit ist dieses Organell direkt in die probiotische Funktion des EcN involviert. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Flagellen anderer Bakterien, wie z.B. dem probiotischen Stamm Bacillus cereus CH oder den pathogenen Stämmen Pseudomonas aeruginosa und Clostridium difficile, die Adhäsion an intestinalen Mucus, welcher von Epithelzellen sekretiert wird, vermitteln. Allerdings blieb unklar, welcher Teil der Flagelle an welche Mucuskomponente bindet. Die Fähigkeit effizient an Wirtgewebe zu adhärieren wird als wichtiges Attribut eines probiotischen Stammes angesehen. Ex vivo Adhäsionsstudien mit Kryoschnitten humaner Darmbiopsien haben gezeigt, dass die Flagelle des EcN in die effiziente Adhäsion an humanes Darmgewebe involviert sein muss. Aus diesem Grund wurde in dieser Arbeit die Funktion der Flagelle des EcN als Adhäsin untersucht. Zunächst wurde die hyperflagellierte Variante EcN ATHF isoliert und durch verschiedene Experimente, z.B. Schwärmagartests und Elektronenmikroskopie, charakterisiert. Weitere ex vivo Adhäsionsstudien mit EcN ATHF zeigten eine höhere Adhäsionseffizienz dieser hyperflagellierten Variante und bestätigten damit die Rolle der Flagelle bei der effizienten Adhäsion von EcN an die Kryoschnitte der humanen Darmbiopsien. Interessanterweise fungierte die Flagelle in in vitro Studien mit den humanen Epithelzellen Caco-2 und T24 nicht als Adhäsin. Diese Unterschiede zwischen den in vitro und ex vivo Studien führten zu der Annahme, dass die Flagelle des EcN in vivo die Adhäsion an Mucus vermittelt, welcher von den Caco-2- und T24-Zellen nicht produziert wird, aber in den Kryoschnitten der Darmbiopsien nachgewiesen wurde. Diese Vermutung wurde durch in vitro Adhäsionsstudien mit der Mucin-produzierenden Epithelzelllinie LS174-T bestätigt, da die Flagellen für eine effektive Adhäsion an diese Zellen essentiell waren. Zudem reduzierte die Präinkubation flagellierter EcN-Stämme mit Mucin2 ihre Adhäsionseffizienz an Kryoschnitte humaner Darmbiopsien. Um die direkte Interaktion zwischen Flagellen des EcN Wildtyps und Mucus zu zeigen, wurde ein ELISA etabliert. Es konnte eine direkte konzentrationsabhängige Interaktion zwischen isolierten Flagellen des EcN Wildtyps und Mucin2, bzw. humanem Mucus (Kolon) beobachtet werden. Interessanterweise konnte keine Interaktion zwischen isolierten Flagellen des EcN Wildtyps und murinem Mucus (Duodenum, Ileum, Caecum, Colon) festgestellt werden. Dies weist darauf hin, dass die Mucuszusammensetzung zwischen verschiedenen Spezies variiert. Verschiedene Kohlenhydrate, welche bekannte Mucusbestandteile sind, wurden auf ihre Interaktion mit der Flagelle von EcN getestet und Gluconat wurde als ein Rezeptor identifiziert. Die Präinkubation isolierter Flagellen mit Gluconat reduzierte ihre Interaktion mit Mucin2, bzw. humanem Mucus signifikant. Zudem wurde die oberflächenexponierte Domäne D3 des Flagellins, der Hauptuntereinheit der Flagelle, als möglicher Interaktionspartner von Mucin2, bzw. humanem Mucus ausgeschlossen. Flagellen, die aus einer Domäne D3 Deletionsmutante isoliert wurden, zeigten sogar eine effizientere Bindung an Mucin2, bzw. humanen Mucus. Weiterhin konnte gezeigt werden, dass Änderungen des pH-Wertes signifikante Effekte auf die Interaktion zwischen Mucus und isolierten Flagellen hatten, vermutlich aufgrund von Konformationsänderungen. Zusammenfassend wurde in dieser Arbeit die Flagelle als neues und scheinbar wichtigstes Adhäsin in vivo für den probiotischen Stamm EcN identifiziert. Hierfür wurden sowohl eine hyperflagellierte Variante, eine ΔfliC Mutante, sowie der dazugehörige komplementierte Stamm verwendet. EcN ist zudem der erste probiotische Stamm für den eine direkte Bindung der Flagellen an humanen Mucus nachgewiesen werden konnte. Die Mucuskomponente Gluconat konnte dabei als wichtiger Rezeptor identifiziert werden. Da einige pathogene Bakterien ihre Flagelle zur Adhäsion an Wirtsgewebe nutzen, könnte dieses Organell EcN dazu befähigen, mit Pathogenen um die erfolgreiche Kolonisierung des Darms zu konkurrieren, was als wichtige Eigenschaft eines Probiotikums betrachtet wird.