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Testing Pollen of Single and Stacked Insect-Resistant Bt-Maize on In vitro Reared Honey Bee Larvae
(2011)
The ecologically and economic important honey bee (Apis mellifera) is a key non-target arthropod species in environmental risk assessment (ERA) of genetically modified (GM) crops. Honey bee larvae are directly exposed to transgenic products by the consumption of GM pollen. But most ERA studies only consider responses of adult bees, although Bt-proteins primarily affect the larval phases of target organisms. We adopted an in vitro larvae rearing system, to assess lethal and sublethal effects of Bt-pollen consumption in a standardized eco-toxicological bioassay. The effects of pollen from two Bt-maize cultivars, one expressing a single and the other a total of three Bt-proteins, on the survival and prepupae weight of honey bee larvae were analyzed. The control treatments included pollen from three non-transgenic maize varieties and of Heliconia rostrata. Three days old larvae were fed the realistic exposure dose of 2 mg pollen within the semi-artificial diet. The larvae were monitored over 120 h, until the prepupal stage, where larvae terminate feeding and growing. Neither single nor stacked Bt-maize pollen showed an adverse effect on larval survival and the prepupal weight. In contrast, feeding of H. rostrata pollen caused significant toxic effects. The results of this study indicate that pollen of the tested Bt-varieties does not harm the development of in vitro reared A. mellifera larvae. To sustain the ecosystem service of pollination, Bt-impact on A. mellifera should always be a crucial part of regulatory biosafety assessments. We suggest that our approach of feeding GM pollen on in vitro reared honey bee larvae is well suited of becoming a standard bioassay in regulatory risk assessments schemes of GM crops.
Background:
The use of DNA based methods for assessing biodiversity has become increasingly common during the last years. Especially in speciose biomes as tropical rain forests and/or in hyperdiverse or understudied taxa they may efficiently complement morphological approaches. The most successful molecular approach in this field is DNA barcoding based on cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) marker, but other markers are used as well. Whereas most studies aim at identifying or describing species, there are only few attempts to use DNA markers for inventorying all animal species found in environmental samples to describe variations of biodiversity patterns.
Methodology/Principal Findings:
In this study, an analysis of the nuclear D3 region of the 28S rRNA gene to delimit species-like units is compared to results based on distinction of morphospecies. Data derived from both approaches are used to assess diversity and composition of staphylinid beetle communities of a Guineo-Congolian rain forest in Kenya. Beetles were collected with a standardized sampling design across six transects in primary and secondary forests using pitfall traps. Sequences could be obtained of 99% of all individuals. In total, 76 molecular operational taxonomic units (MOTUs) were found in contrast to 70 discernible morphospecies. Despite this difference both approaches revealed highly similar biodiversity patterns, with species richness being equal in primary and secondary forests, but with divergent species communities in different habitats. The D3-MOTU approach proved to be an efficient tool for biodiversity analyses.
Conclusions/Significance:
Our data illustrate that the use of MOTUs as a proxy for species can provide an alternative to morphospecies identification for the analysis of changes in community structure of hyperdiverse insect taxa. The efficient amplification of the D3-marker and the ability of the D3-MOTUs to reveal similar biodiversity patterns as analyses of morphospecies recommend its use in future molecular studies on biodiversity.
Desert ants of the genus Cataglyphis have become model systems for the study of insect navigation. An age-related polyethism subdivides their colonies into interior workers and short-lived light-exposed foragers. While foraging in featureless and cluttered terrain over distances up to several hundred meters, the ants are able to precisely return back to their often inconspicuous nest entrance. They accomplish this enormous navigational performance by using a path integration system - including a polarization compass and an odometer - as their main navigational means in addition to landmark-dependent orientation and olfactory cues. C. fortis, being the focus of the present thesis, is endemic to the salt flats of western North Africa, which are completely avoided by other Cataglyphis species. The fact that Cataglyphis ants undergo a behavioral transition associated with drastically changing sensory demands makes these ants particularly interesting for studying synaptic plasticity in visual and olfactory brain centers. This thesis focuses on plastic changes in the mushroom bodies (MBs) - sensory integration centers supposed to be involved in learning and memory presumably including landmark learning - and in synaptic complexes belonging to the lateral accessory lobe (LAL) known to be a relay station in the polarization processing pathway. To investigate structural synaptic plasticity in the MBs of C. fortis, synaptic complexes (microglomeruli, MG) in the visual (collar) and olfactory (lip) input regions of the MB calyx were immunolabeled and their pre- and postsynaptic profiles were quantified. The results show that a volume increase of the MB calyx during behavioral transition is associated with a decrease of MG number - an effect called pruning - in the collar and, less pronounced, in the lip that goes along with dendritic expansion in MB intrinsic Kenyon cells. Light-exposure of dark-reared ants of different age classes revealed similar effects and dark-reared ants age-matched to foragers had MG numbers comparable to those of interior workers. The results indicate that the enormous structural synaptic plasticity of the MB calyx collar is primarily driven by visual experience rather than by an internal program. Ants aged artificially for up to one year expressed a similar plasticity indicating that the system remains flexible over the entire life-span. To investigate whether light-induced synaptic reorganization is reversible, experienced foragers were transferred back to darkness with the result that their MBs exhibit only some reverse-type characteristics, in particular differences in presynaptic synapsin expression. To investigate the structure of large synaptic complexes in the LAL of C. fortis and to detect potential structural changes, pre- and postsynaptic profiles in interior workers and foragers were immunolabeled and quantified by using confocal imaging and 3D-reconstruction. The results show that these complexes consist of postsynaptic processes located in a central region that is surrounded by a cup-like presynaptic profile. Tracer injections identified input and output tracts of the LAL: projection neurons from the anterior optic tubercle build connections with neurons projecting to the central complex. The behavioral transition is associated with an increase by ~13% of synaptic complexes suggesting that the polarization pathway may undergo some sort of calibration process. The structural features of these synaptic contacts indicate that they may serve a fast and reliable signal transmission in the polarization vision pathway. Behavioral analyses of C. fortis in the field revealed that the ants perform exploration runs including pirouette-like turns very close to the nest entrance for a period of up to two days, before they actually start their foraging activity. During these orientation runs the ants gather visual experience and might associate the nest entrance with specific landmarks or get entrained to other visual information like the polarization pattern, and, concomitantly adapt their neuronal circuitries to the upcoming challenges. Moreover, the pirouettes may serve to stimulate and calibrate the neuronal networks involved in the polarization compass pathway. Video recordings and analyses demonstrate that light experience enhanced the ants’ locomotor activity after three days of exposure. The fact that both the light-induced behavioral and neuronal changes in visual brain centers occur in the same time frame suggests that there may be a link between structural synaptic plasticity and the behavioral transition from interior tasks to outdoor foraging. Desert ants of the genus Cataglyphis possess remarkable visual navigation capabilities, but also employ olfactory cues for detecting nest and food sites. Using confocal imaging and 3D-reconstruction, potential adaptations in primary olfactory brain centers were analyzed by comparing the number, size and spatial arrangement of olfactory glomeruli in the antennal lobe of C. fortis, C. albicans, C. bicolor, C. rubra, and C. noda. Workers of all Cataglyphis species have smaller numbers of glomeruli compared to those of more olfactory-guided Formica species - a genus closely related to Cataglyphis - and to those previously found in other olfactory-guided ant species. C. fortis has the lowest number of glomeruli compared to all other species, but possesses a conspicuously enlarged glomerulus that is located close to the antennal nerve entrance. Males of C. fortis have a significantly smaller number of glomeruli compared to female workers and queens and a prominent male-specific macroglomerulus likely to be involved in sex pheromone communication. The behavioral significance of the enlarged glomerulus in female workers remains elusive. The fact that C. fortis inhabits microhabitats that are avoided by all other Cataglyphis species suggests that extreme ecological conditions may not only have resulted in adaptations of visual capabilities, but also in specializations of the olfactory system. The present thesis demonstrates that Cataglyphis is an excellent candidate for studying the neuronal mechanisms underlying navigational features and for studying neuronal plasticity associated with the ant’s lifelong flexibility of individual behavioral repertoires.
SYCE3, ein neues Synaptonemalkomplexprotein: Expression, funktionelle Analyse und Bindungspartner
(2011)
Der Synaptonemalkomplex ist eine evolutionär hoch konservierte Struktur. Er wird spezifisch während der Prophase I der Meiose ausgebildet und ist essentiell für die Segregation der homologen Chromosomen während der Meiose und auch für die Entstehung genetischer Vielfalt. Der Synaptonemalkomplex ist eine proteinöse Struktur, deren Aufbau dem einer Leiter ähnelt. Dabei werden die Leiterholme als Lateralelemente bezeichnet. Sie bestehen unter anderem aus den Proteinen SYCP2 und SYCP3 und assoziieren mit dem Chromatin der homologen Chromosomen. Die Stufen der Leiter bestehen hingegen aus Transversalfilamenten, deren Hauptkomponente parallele Homodimere des meiosespezifische Proteins SYCP1 sind. Dabei wird ein SYCP1 Dimer mit seinem C-Terminus in den Lateralelementen verankert und kann über seine N-terminale Domäne eine schwache Interaktion mit der N-terminalen Domäne eines gegenüberliegenden SYCP1 Dimers eingehen. Um diese Bindung zu stabilisieren werden Proteine des Zentralelements des Synaptonemalkomplexes benötigt: Während SYCE1 durch seine Interaktion mit SYCP1 die N-terminale Assoziation zweier gegenüberliegender SYCP1 Dimere stabilisiert, verknüpfen die zwei anderen zentralelementspezifischen Proteine SYCE2 und Tex12 lateral benachbarte SYCP1 Filamente und breiten so das SYCP1 Netzwerk entlang der chromosomalen Achsen aus. Dieser Prozess wird als Synapse bezeichnet und stellt eines der Schlüsselereignisse der Meiose dar. Fehler während dieses Prozesses führen meist zu Aneuploidie der entstehenden Gameten oder zum Abbruch der Meiose und somit zu Infertilität des betroffenen Organismus. In dieser Arbeit wurde mit SYCE3 ein neues Protein des murinen Synaptonemalkomplexes charakterisiert. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass SYCE3 meiosespezifisch in Männchen und Weibchen exprimiert wird und Bestandteil des Zentralelements des Synaptonemalkomplexes ist. Hierbei zeigt es dasselbe Verteilungsmuster wie SYCP1 und SYCE1 und kann mit beiden Proteinen interagieren. Eine zusätzliche Interaktion konnte zwischen SYCE3 und SYCE2 nachgewiesen werden. Durch Untersuchungen an entsprechenden Knockout Mausmodellen konnte in dieser Arbeit außerdem gezeigt werden, dass SYCE3 in Abwesenheit von SYCP1 nicht an die chromosomalen Achsen rekrutiert werden kann. Die Ausbildung der Lateralelemente und auch die Anwesenheit der anderen zentralelementspezifischen Proteine SYCE1 und SYCE2 sind hingegen für die Anlagerung von SYCE3 an die chromosomalen Achsen nicht essentiell. Somit steht SYCE3 hinsichtlich seiner Bedeutung für die Paarung und die Synapse der homologen Chromosomen hierarchisch offenbar über den bisher beschriebenen Zentralelementproteinen SYCE1, SYCE2 und Tex12. Die funktionelle Bedeutung von SYCE3 für die Synapse der homologen Chromosomen und für den korrekten Ablauf der homologen Rekombination wurde im Rahmen dieser Arbeit durch die Herstellung und die Charakterisierung einer Syce3-/- Maus detailliert untersucht: Dabei führte der Knockout von SYCE3 zur Infertilität in beiden Geschlechtern, die gleichzeitig mit einer signifikanten Reduktion der Größe der entsprechenden Hoden und Ovarien im Vergleich zum Wildtyp einherging. Weitere Untersuchungen ergaben zudem, dass es in Syce3 defizienten Tieren zu einem Abbruch der Meiose kommt. Dabei hatte das Fehlen von SYCE3 keinen Einfluss auf die Ausbildung der Axialelemente. Die Initiation der Synapse hingegen war sowohl in Oocyten als auch in Spermatocyten in Abwesenheit von SYCE3 stark gestört. Darüber hinaus konnte in der vorliegenden Arbeit nachgewiesen werden, dass das Fehlen von SYCE3 Einfluss auf die homologe Rekombination nimmt: Zwar können sich frühe (DNA Doppelstrangbrüche) und intermediäre (Transitionsknoten) Rekombinationsereignisse in der Abwesenheit von SYCE3 ausbilden, die Prozessierung zu späten Rekombinationsstrukturen (Rekombinationsknoten) und die damit einhergehende Ausbildung von Crossing-over Strukturen fand jedoch nicht statt. Zusammengefasst wurde in dieser Arbeit gezeigt, dass das neue Synaptonemalkomplexprotein SYCE3 essentiell für die Fertilität von Mäusen ist. Durch den Knockout von Syce3 kann die Synapse zwischen den Homoligen nicht initiiert werden und es findet kein Crossing-over statt. Im Assembly Prozess des Synaptonemalkomplexes agiert SYCE3 oberhalb der anderen zentralelementspezifischen Proteine und unterhalb von SYCP1.
Switches in trypanosome differentiation: ALBA proteins acting on post-transcriptional mRNA control
(2011)
Trypanosoma brucei is a digenetic eukaryotic parasite that develops in different tissues of a mammalian host and a tsetse fly. It is responsible for sleeping sickness in sub-saharan Africa. The parasite cycle involves more than nine developmental stages that can be clearly distinguished by their general morphology, their metabolism and the relative positioning of their DNA-containing organelles. During their development, trypanosomes remain exclusively extracellular and encounter changing environments with different physico-chemical properties (nutritional availability, viscosity, temperature, etc.). It has been proposed that trypanosomes use their flagellum as a sensing organelle, in agreement with the established role of structurally-related cilia in metazoa and ciliates. Recognition of environmental triggers is presumed to be at the initiation of differentiation events, leading to the parasite stage that is the best suited to the new environment. These changes are achieved by the modification of gene expression programmes, mostly underlying post-transcriptional control of mRNA transcripts. We first demonstrate that the RNA-binding proteins ALBA3/4 are involved in specific differentiation processes during the parasite development in the fly. They are cytosolic and expressed throughout the parasite cycle with the exception of the stages found in the tsetse fly proventriculus, as shown by both immunofluorescence and live cell analysis upon endogenous tagging with YFP. Knock-down of both proteins in the developmental stage preceding these forms leads to striking modifications: cell elongation, cell cycle arrest and relocalization of the nucleus in a posterior position, all typical of processes acting in parasites found in the proventriculus region. When ALBA3 is over-expressed from an exogenous copy during infection, it interferes with the relocalization of the nucleus in proventricular parasites. This is not observed for ALBA4 over-expression that does not visibly impede differentiation. Both ALBA3/4 proteins react to starvation conditions by accumulating in cytoplasmic stress granules together with DHH1, a recognized RNA-binding protein. ALBA3/4 proteins also partially colocalize with granules formed by polyA+ RNA in these conditions. We propose that ALBA are involved in trypanosome differentiation processes where they control a subset of developmentally regulated transcripts. These processes involving ALBA3/4 are likely to result from the specific activation of sensing pathways. In the second part of the thesis, we identify novel flagellar proteins that could act in sensing mechanisms. Several protein candidates were selected from a proteomic analysis of intact flagella performed in the host laboratory. This work validates their flagellar localization with high success (85% of the proteins examined) and defines multiple different patterns of protein distribution in the flagellum. Two proteins are analyzed during development, one of them showing down-regulation in proventricular stages. The functional analysis of one novel flagellar membrane protein reveals its rapid dynamics within the flagellum but does not yield a visible phenotype in culture. This is coherent with sensory function that might not be needed in stable culture conditions, but could be required in natural conditions during development. In conclusion, this work adds new pieces to the puzzle of identifying molecular switches involved in developmental mRNA control and environmental sensing in trypanosome stages in the tsetse fly.
Bees are subject to permanent threat from predators such as ants. Their nests with large quantities of brood, pollen and honey represent lucrative targets for attacks whereas foragers have to face rivalry at food sources. This thesis focused on the role of stingless bees as third party interactor on ant-aphid-associations as well as on the predatory potential represented by ants and defense mechanisms against this threat. Regular observations of an aphid infested Podocarpus for approaching stingless bees yielded no results. Another aim of this thesis was the observation of foraging habits of four native and one introduced ant species for assessment of their predatory potential to stingless bees. All species turned out to be dietary balanced generalists with one mostly carnivorous species and four species predominantly collecting nectar roughly according to optimal foraging theory. Two of the species monitored, Rhytidoponera metallica and Iridomyrmex rufoniger were considered potential nest robbers. As the name implies, stingless bees lack the powerful weapon of their distant relatives; hence they specialized on other defense strategies. Resin is an important, multipurpose resource for stingless bees that is used as material for nest construction, antibiotic and for defensive means. For the latter purpose highly viscous resin is either directly used to stick down aggressors or its terpenic compounds are included in the bees cuticular surface. In a feeding choice experiment, three ant species were confronted with the choice between two native bee species - Tetragonula carbonaria and Austroplebeia australis - with different cuticular profiles and resin collection habits. Two of the ant species, especially the introduced Tetramorium bicarinatum did not show any preferences. The carnivorous R. metallica predominantly took the less resinous A. australis as prey. The reluctance towards T. carbonaria disappeared when the resinous compounds on its cuticle had been washed off with hexane. To test whether the repulsive reactions were related to the stickiness of the resinous surface or to chemical substances, hexane extracts of bees’ cuticles, propolis and three natural tree resins were prepared. In the following assay responses of ants towards extract treated surfaces were observed. Except for one of the resin extracts, all tested substances had repellent effects to the ants. Efficacy varied with the type of extract and species. Especially to the introduced T. bicarinatum the cuticular extract had no effect. GCMS-analyses showed that some of the resinous compounds were also found in the cuticular profile of T. carbonaria which featured reasonable analogies to the resin of Corymbia torelliana that is highly attractive for stingless bees. The results showed that repellent effects were only partially related to the sticky quality of resin but were rather caused by chemical substances, presumably sesqui- and diterpenes. Despite its efficacy this defense strategy only provides short time repellent effects sufficient for escape and warning of nest mates to initiate further preventive measures.
Retinoic acid pathway activity in Wilms tumors and characterization of biological responses in vitro
(2011)
Background: Wilms tumor (WT) is one of the most common malignancies in childhood. With current therapy protocols up to 90% of patients can be cured, but there is still a need to improve therapy for patients with aggressive WT and to reduce treatment intensity where possible. Prior data suggested a deregulation of the retinoic acid (RA) signaling pathway in high-risk WT, but its mode of action remained unclear. Results: The association of retinoid signaling and clinical parameters could be validated in a large independent tumor set, but its relevance in primary nephrectomy tumors from very young children may be different. Reduced RA pathway activity and MYCN overexpression were found in high risk tumors as opposed to tumors with low/ intermediate risk, suggesting a beneficial impact of RA especially on advanced WT. To search for possible modes of action of retinoids as novel therapeutic options, primary tumor cell cultures were treated in vitro with all-trans-RA (ATRA), 9cis-RA, fenretinide and combinations of retinoids and a histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor. Genes deregulated in high risk tumors showed opposite changes upon treatment suggesting a positive effect of retinoids. 6/7 primary cultures tested reduced proliferation, irrespective of prior RA signaling levels. The only variant culture was derived from mesoblastic nephroma, a distinct childhood kidney neoplasm. Retinoid/HDAC inhibitor combinations provided no synergistic effect. ATRA and 9cis-RA induced morphological changes suggestive of differentiation, while fenretinide induced apoptosis in several cultures tested. Microarray analysis of ATRA treated WT cells revealed differential expression of many genes involved in extracellular matrix formation and osteogenic, neuronal or muscle differentiation. The effects documented appear to be reversible upon drug withdrawal, however. Conclusions: Altered retinoic acid signaling has been validated especially in high risk Wilms tumors. In vitro testing of primary tumor cultures provided clear evidence of a potential utility of retinoids in Wilms tumor treatment based on the analysis of gene expression, proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis.
Background
Squalius alburnoides is an Iberian cyprinid fish resulting from an interspecific hybridisation between Squalius pyrenaicus females (P genome) and males of an unknown Anaecypris hispanica- like species (A genome). S. alburnoides is an allopolyploid hybridogenetic complex, which makes it a likely candidate for ploidy mosaicism occurrence, and is also an interesting model to address questions about gene expression regulation and genomic interactions. Indeed, it was previously suggested that in S. alburnoides triploids (PAA composition) silencing of one of the three alleles (mainly of the P allele) occurs. However, not a whole haplome is inactivated but a more or less random inactivation of alleles varying between individuals and even between organs of the same fish was seen.
In this work we intended to correlate expression differences between individuals and/or between organs to the occurrence of mosaicism, evaluating if mosaics could explain previous observations and its impact on the assessment of gene expression patterns.
Results
To achieve our goal, we developed flow cytometry and cell sorting protocols for this system generating more homogenous cellular and transcriptional samples. With this set-up we detected 10% ploidy mosaicism within the S. alburnoides complex, and determined the allelic expression profiles of ubiquitously expressed genes (rpl8; gapdh and β-actin) in cells from liver and kidney of mosaic and non-mosaic individuals coming from different rivers over a wide geographic range.
Conclusions
Ploidy mosaicism occurs sporadically within the S. alburnoides complex, but in a frequency significantly higher than reported for other organisms. Moreover, we could exclude the influence of this phenomenon on the detection of variable allelic expression profiles of ubiquitously expressed genes (rpl8; gapdh and β-actin) in cells from liver and kidney of triploid individuals. Finally, we determined that the expression patterns previously detected only in a narrow geographic range is not a local restricted phenomenon but is pervasive in rivers where S. pyrenaicus is sympatric with S. alburnoides.
We discuss mechanisms that could lead to the formation of mosaic S. alburnoides and hypothesise about a relaxation of the mechanisms that impose a tight control over mitosis and ploidy control in mixoploids."
HMGA1 Proteine sind kleine, basische, Nicht-Histon Proteine, die in Lösung keine Struktur aufweisen, durch drei AT-Haken, als DNA-Bindungsmotive, gekennzeichnet sind und präferentiell an die kleine Furche der DNA binden. Als differenziell exprimierte Architekturelemente des Chromatins erfüllen sie wichtige Funktionen bei der Regulation DNA abhängiger Prozesse in Zellen und während Entwicklungsprozessen. Aberrante Expressionen führen zu Entwicklungsdefekten und Krebs. In dieser Arbeit wurde der Einfluss von HMGA1 Proteinen auf die Organisation des Chromatins untersucht. Als Modell diente dabei zunächst die Differenzierung von C2C12 Muskelvorläuferzellen. Wie in einer früheren Arbeit gezeigt wurde, ist die Herunterregulation von HMGA1a essentiell für den Eintritt von C2C12 Zellen in die Myogenese. Eine konstante Überexpression von HMGA1a-eGFP hingegen verhindert die Muskeldifferenzierung durch Beeinflussung der Expression myogenesespezifischer Gene und Etablierung einer stabilen Chromatinstruktur. Wie in der vorliegenden Arbeit herausgefunden wurde, nimmt die differenzielle HMGA1a Expression nicht nur Einfluss auf die Expression muskelspezifischer Gene, sondern auch auf die globale Zusammensetzung des Chromatins durch eine reduzierte Expression von H1 Histonen und einer aberranten Expression von HMGB1, HMGN1 und HP1 Proteinen. HMGA1a wurde zusammen mit ORC Proteinen eine Funktion bei der Definition von Replikationsursprüngen in eukaryotischen Zellen zugesprochen. ORC Proteine wurden auch als Komponenten des Heterochromatins und als Interaktionspartner von HP1α identifiziert. Hier konnte mit Hilfe von Co-Immunpräzipitationen, Pull-down Assays und Verdrängungsexperimenten gezeigt werden, dass HMGA1 ein weiterer, direkter Interaktionspartner von ORC Proteinen im Heterochromatin ist und zusammen mit HP1α kooperiert. Pull-down-, Verdrängungs- und siRNA-Experimente zeigten zudem, dass HMGA1 zwar nicht direkt mit HP1α interagiert, die Kooperation der Proteine über ORC aber dennoch wichtig für die Aufrechterhaltung der Heterochromatinsstruktur ist. Damit erweisen sich HMGA1 Proteine als wichtige Stabilisierungsfaktoren des Heterochromatins. Bislang ging man davon aus, dass HMGA1 Moleküle linear, also eindimensional, an ein DNA Molekül binden. Das Vorhandensein von drei DNA-Bindungsmotiven und die eher struktur- als sequenzabhängige Bindung an die DNA lassen vermuten, dass HMGA1 Proteine auch gleichzeitig an benachbarte DNA-Stränge, also auch dreidimensional, binden könnten. Bekräftigt wurde diese Vermutung durch die Bildung von Chromatinaggregaten in Zellen die HMGA1a-eGFP überexprimierten. Dies wurde mittels konfokaler und hochauflösender Mikroskopie (dSTORM) analysiert. Um das Potential einer DNA-Quervernetzung durch HMGA1 Proteine nachzuweisen, wurde eine neue Methode entwickelt. Mit Hilfe eines neuartigen DNA Cross-linking Assays wurde nachgewiesen, dass HMGA1 Proteine in der Lage sind, zwei individuelle DNA Stränge zu vernetzen. Zudem wurde eine neue Domäne in HMGA1 entdeckt die maßgeblich zum Cross-linking beiträgt. Elektronenmikroskopische Analysen bestätigten, dass HMGA1 Proteine in der Lage sind Kreuzungen und Schleifen in DNA Molekülen zu erzeugen. Diese Ergebnisse unterstützen die Vermutung, dass HMGA1 Proteine im Zellkern ein DNA Gerüst bilden können, das Einfluss auf die zelltypische Chromatinorganisation nimmt und dadurch DNA abhängige Prozesse beeinflusst. In wie weit eine HMGA1 induzierte DNA Quervernetzung in vivo zum Beispiel in Chromozentren von C2C12 Zellen oder in Krebszellen, in denen HMGA1 Proteine stark überexprimiert sind, eine Rolle spielen, müssen künftige Untersuchungen zeigen. In dieser Arbeit konnte also gezeigt werden, dass HMGA1 Proteine die Chromatinstruktur auf drei Ebenen organisieren können: Durch Beeinflussung der Chromatinzusammensetzung durch Veränderung der Expression von Chromatinproteinen, durch Interaktion mit anderen Architekturelementen des Chromatins und durch Organisation eines potentiellen DNA Gerüsts.
Non-target effects of a multiple insect resistant Bt-maize on the honey bee (Apis mellifera L.)
(2011)
Honey bee pollination is an ecologically and economically important ecosystem service. New methodological developments are needed to research the underlying factors of globally observed bee losses. The honey bee (Apis mellifera) is a key non-target arthropod species for environmental risk assessment of genetically modified (GM) crops. For GM-crop risk assessments, mainly methods for monitoring adult honey bees under laboratory conditions are documented. However, protocols with robust methods for standardized colonies or in vitro reared honey bee larvae are currently lacking. Within the research, presented in this this dissertation, multiple methodological developments are achieved; a mortality trap (Chapter II), a ‘full life cycle test’ (III), a novel in vitro rearing methodology (IV), a standardized in vitro test for Bt-pollen (V), a mixed toxicity test for purified transgenic proteins (VI), and a bacterial flora test with pollen digestion rate monitoring (VII). Overall, the studies did not indicate a detrimental effect caused by Bt-maize pollen, or by purified Bt-proteins at worst case exposure levels. Considering the risk for honey bees and larvae, we conclude that the tested Bt-maize Mon89034xMon88017 is not likely to cause harm to honey bee colonies. The study methods presented are highly recommended for future environmental risk assessment studies testing GM-crop biosafety on honey bees.