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Due to the global aging society and the enormous global incidence and prevalence rates that will result in the coming years, Alzheimer's Dementia (AD) represents a growing challenge for the health care system. The pathogenesis, which is unclear in parts, the chronic progression of AD, which often lasts for years, as well as insufficient diagnostic and therapeutic options complicate an adequate psychotherapeutic and medical approach to the disease. To date, AD is also considered an incurable disease.
Therefore, it is essential to gain deeper insights into the early detection or even prevention of AD. Consideration of prodromal syndromes such as Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) can provide significant evidence about high-risk groups for AD progression and differentiate cognitively "normal" aging individuals from those with pathological cognitive decline. Thus, for example, functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS) imaging helps identify early neurodegenerative processes. In contrast, potential risk factors and predictors of later-onset clinical symptoms of MCI and AD can most often be revealed and quantified via the use of neuropsychiatric test batteries.
The present thesis consists of four studies and aimed to assess and describe the pathological cognitive decline in a sample of elderly study participants (age: ≥ 70 years; N = 604 at baseline) of the longitudinal, observational, and prospective "Vogel Study" from Würzburg, Germany, who were primarily healthy at baseline, over two measurement time points approximately 3 years apart, to differentiate between healthy and diseased study participants and to define predictors of MCI/AD and longitudinal study dropout.
Studies 1 and 2 differentiated healthy study participants from MCI patients based on the baseline hemodynamic response of the parietal cortex recorded by fNIRS during the processing of a paradigm (here: Angle Discrimination Task [ADT]) for visual-spatial processing performance. Neuronal hypoactivity was found in the MCI patients, with both healthy study participants and MCI patients showing higher superior and right hemispheric activation. MCI patients had more difficulty resolving the paradigm. Thus, no evidence of possible compensatory mechanisms was uncovered in the MCI patients.
Study 3 first defined the four latent factors declarative memory, working memory, attention, and visual-spatial processing based on structural equation model (SEM) calculations of the sample using adequate measurement (in-)variant confirmatory factor models from the baseline assessment to the first of a total of two follow-up assessments after approximately 3 years. This allowed a dimensional assessment of pathological cognitive decline versus classificatory-categorical assignment (healthy/diseased) of the sample. In addition, the superiority of the latent factor approach over a composite approach was demonstrated. Next, using a mixed-model approach, predictive analyses were calculated for the prediction of latent factors at first follow-up by baseline risk factors. The sex of study participants proved to be the best predictor of cognitive change in all the cognitive domains, with females performing better than men in the memory domains. Specifically, for declarative memory, older age predicted lower performance regardless of sex. Additional predictive evidence emerged for low serum levels of Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF) on lower attention performance and higher depression symptoms on lower visual-spatial processing performance.
Study 4 further reported baseline predictors of study dropout at first follow-up. Cognitive performance, as defined in Study 3 using the four latent cognitive factors, was a predictor of study dropout for cognitive decline in the domains of declarative memory, attention, and visual-spatial processing. Conspicuous dementia screening on the Mini-Mental Status Examination (MMSE) also predicted dropout.
Overall, both the use of fNIRS imaging to detect visual-spatial processing performance in the parietal cortex during applying ADT and the dimensional perspective of the neuropsychiatric test battery in the context of prediction and dropout analyses were found to be suitable for early detection research of MCI and AD. Finally, the results will be interpreted in the overall context and implications, limitations, and perspectives will be discussed.
PRC1 serves as a microtubule-bundling protein and is a potential therapeutic target for lung cancer
(2023)
Protein regulator of cytokinesis 1 (PRC1) is a microtubule-associated protein with essential roles in mitosis and cytokinesis. Furthermore, the protein is highly expressed in several cancer types which is correlated with aneuploidy and worse patient outcome. In this study it was investigated, whether PRC1 is a potential target for lung cancer as well as its possible nuclear role.
Elevated PRC1 expression was cell cycle-dependent with increasing levels from S-phase to G2/M-phase of the cell cycle. Thereby, PRC1 localized at the nucleus during interphase and at the central spindle and midbody during mitosis and cytokinesis. Genome-wide expression profiling by RNA sequencing of ectopically expressed PRC1 resulted in activation of the p53 pathway. A mutant version of PRC1, that is unable to enter the nucleus, induced the same gene sets as wildtype PRC1, suggesting that PRC1 has no nuclear-specific functions in lung cancer cells. Finally, PRC1 overexpression leads to proliferation defects, multi-nucleation, and enlargement of cells which was directly linked to microtubule-bundling within the cytoplasm.
For analysis of the requirement of PRC1 in lung cancer, different inducible cell lines were generated to deplete the protein by RNA interference (RNAi) in vitro. PRC1 depletion caused proliferation defects and cytokinesis failures with increased numbers of bi- and multi-nucleated cells compared to non-induced lung cancer cells. Importantly, effects in control cells were less severe as in lung cancer cells. Finally, p53 wildtype lung cancer cells became senescent, whereas p53 mutant cells became apoptotic upon PRC1 depletion. PRC1 is also required for tumorigenesis in vivo, which was shown by using a mouse model for non-small cell lung cancer driven by oncogenic K-RAS and loss of p53. Here, lung tumor area, tumor number, and high-grade tumors were significantly reduced in PRC1 depleted conditions by RNAi.
In this study, it is shown that PRC1 serves as a microtubule-bundling protein with essential roles in mitosis and cytokinesis. Expression of the protein needs to be tightly regulated to allow unperturbed proliferation of lung cancer cells. It is suggested that besides phosphorylation of PRC1, the nuclear localization might be a protective mechanism for the cells to prevent perinuclear microtubule-bundling. In conclusion, PRC1 could be a potential target of lung cancer as mono therapy or in combination with a chemotherapeutic agent, like cisplatin, which enhanced the negative effects on proliferation of lung cancer cells in vitro.
This thesis identifies how the printing conditions for a high-resolution additive manufacturing technique, melt electrowriting (MEW), needs to be adjusted to process electroactive polymers (EAPs) into microfibers. Using EAPs based on poly(vinylidene difluoride) (PVDF), their ability to be MEW-processed is studied and expands the list of processable materials for this technology.
The anaerobe Fusobacterium nucleatum (F. nucleatum) is an important member of the oral microbiome but can also colonize different tissues of the human body. In particular, its association with multiple human cancers has drawn much attention.
This association has prompted growing interest into the interaction of F. nucleatum with cancer, with studies focusing primarily on the host cells. At the same time, F. nucleatum itself remains poorly understood, which includes its transcriptomic architecture but also gene regulation such as global stress responses that typically enable survival of bacteria in new environments. An important aspect of such regulatory networks is the post-transcriptional regulation, which is entirely unknown in F. nucleatum. This paucity extents to any knowledge on small regulatory RNAs (sRNAs), despite their important role as post-transcriptional regulators of the bacterial physiology.
Investigating the above stated aspects is further complicated by the fact that F. nucleatum is phylogenetically distant from all other bacteria, displays very limited genetic tractability and lacks genetic tools for dissecting gene function.
This leaves many open questions on basic gene regulation in F. nucleatum, such as if the bacterium combines transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulation in its adaptation to a changing environment.
To begin answering this question, this works elucidated the transcriptomic landscape of F. nucleatum by performing differential RNA-seq (dRNA-seq). Conducted for five representative strains of all F. nucleatum subspecies and the closely related F. periodonticum, the analysis globally uncovered transcriptional start sites (TSS), 5'untranslated regions (UTRs) and improved the existing annotation. Importantly, the dRNA-seq analysis also identified a conserved suite of sRNAs specific to Fusobacterium.
The development of five genetic tools enabled further investigations of gene functions in F. nucleatum. These include vectors that enable the expression of different fluorescent proteins, inducible gene expression and scarless gene deletion in addition to transcriptional and translational reporter systems.
These tools enabled the dissection of a Sigma E response and uncovered several commonalities with its counterpart in the phylogenetically distant Proteobacteria. The similarities include the upregulation of genes involved in membrane homeostasis but also a Simga E-dependent regulatory sRNA. Surprisingly, oxygen was found to activated Sigma E in F. nucleatum contrasting the typical role of the factor in envelope stress.
The non-coding Sigma E-dependent sRNA, named FoxI, was shown to repress the translation of several envelope proteins which represented yet another parallel to the envelope stress response in Proteobacteria.
Overall, this work sheds light on the RNA landscape of the cancer-associated bacterium leading to the discovery of a conserved global stress response consisting of a coding and a non-coding arm. The development of new genetic tools not only aided the latter discovery but also provides the means for further dissecting the molecular and infection biology of this enigmatic bacterium.
Platelets play an important role in the body, since they are part of the hemostasis
system, preventing and stopping blood loss. Nevertheless, when platelet or
coagulation system function are impaired, uncontrolled bleedings but also irreversible
vessel occlusion followed by ischemic tissue damage can occur. Therefore,
understanding platelet function and activation, mechanisms which are controlled by a
variety of platelet membrane receptors and other factors is important to advance out
knowledge of hemostasis and platelet malfunction. For a complete picture of platelet
function and their modulating behavior it is desired to be able to quantify receptor
distributions and interactions of these densely packed molecular ensembles in the
membrane. This challenges scientists for several reasons. Most importantly, platelets
are microscopically small objects, challenging the spatial resolution of conventional
light microscopy. Moreover, platelet receptors are highly abundant on the membrane
so even super-resolution microscopy struggles with quantitative receptor imaging on
platelets.
With Expansion microscopy (ExM), a new super-resolution technique was introduced,
allowing resolutions to achieve super-resolution without using a super-resolution
microscope, but by combining a conventional confocal microscopy with a highly
processed sample that has been expanded physically. In this doctoral thesis, I
evaluated the potential of this technique for super-resolution platelet imaging by
optimizing the sample preparation process and establishing an imaging and image
processing pipeline for dual-color 3D images of different membrane receptors. The
analysis of receptor colocalization using ExM demonstrated a clear superiority
compared to conventional microscopy. Furthermore, I identified a library of
fluorescently labeled antibodies against different platelet receptors compatible with
ExM and showed the possibility of staining membrane receptors and parts of the
cytoskeleton at the same time.
The original habitat of native European honey bees (\(Apis\) \(mellifera\)) is forest, but currently there is a lack of data about the occurrence of wild honey bee populations in Europe. Prior to being kept by humans in hives, honey bees nested as wild species in hollow trees in temperate forests. However, in the 20th century, intensification of silviculture and agriculture with accompanying losses of nesting sites and depletion of food resources caused population declines in Europe. When the varroa mite (Varroa destructor), an invasive ectoparasite from Asia, was introduced in the late 1970s, wild honey bees were thought to be eradicated in Europe. Nevertheless, sporadic, mostly anecdotal, reports from ornithologists or forest ecologists indicated that honey bee colonies still occupy European forest areas. In my thesis I hypothesize that near-natural deciduous forests may provide sufficient large networks of nesting sites representing refugia for wild-living honey bees. Using two special search techniques, i.e. the tracking of flight routes of honey bee foragers (the “beelining” method) and the inspection of known cavity trees, I collected for the first time data on the occurrence and density of wild-living honey bees in forest areas in Germany (CHAPTER 3). I found wild-living honey bee colonies in the Hainich national park at low densities in two succeeding years. In another forest region, I checked known habitat trees containing black woodpecker cavities for occupation by wild-living honey bee colonies. It turned out that honey bees regularly use these cavities and occur in similar densities in both studied forest regions, independent of the applied detection method. Extrapolating these densities to all German forest areas, I estimate several thousand wild-living colonies in Germany that potentially interact in different ways with the forest environment. I conclude that honey bees regularly colonize forest areas in Germany and that networks of mapped woodpecker cavities offer unique possibilities to study the ecology of wild-living honey bees over several years.
While their population status is ambiguous and the density of colonies low, the fact that honey bees can still be found in forests poses questions about food supply in forest environments. Consequently, I investigated the suitability of woodlands as a honey bee foraging habitat (CHAPTER 4). As their native habitat, forests are assumed to provide important pollen and nectar sources for honey bee colonies. However, resource supply might be spatially and temporally restricted and landscape-scale studies in European forest regions are lacking. Therefore, I set up twelve honey bee colonies in observation hives at locations with varying degree of forest cover. Capitalizing on the unique communication behaviour, the waggle dance, I examined the foraging distances and habitat preferences of honey bees over almost an entire foraging season. Moreover, by connecting this decoded dance information with colony weight recordings, I could draw conclusions about the contribution of the different habitat types to honey yield. Foraging distances generally increased with the amount of forest in the surrounding landscape. Yet, forest cover did not have an effect on colony weight. Compared to expectations based on the proportions of different habitats in the surroundings, colonies foraged more frequently in cropland and grasslands than in deciduous and coniferous forests, especially in late summer when pollen foraging in the forest is most difficult. In contrast, colonies used forests for nectar/honeydew foraging in early summer during times of colony weight gain emphasizing forests as a temporarily significant source of carbohydrates. Importantly, my study shows that the ecological and economic value of managed forest as habitat for honey bees and other wild pollinators can be significantly increased by the continuous provision of floral resources, especially for pollen foraging.
The density of these wild-living honey bee colonies and their survival is driven by several factors that vary locally, making it crucial to compare results in different regions. Therefore, I investigated a wild-living honey bee population in Galicia in north-western Spain, where colonies were observed to reside in hollow electric poles (CHAPTER 5). The observed colony density only in these poles was almost twice as high as in German forest areas, suggesting generally more suitable resource conditions for the bees in Galicia. Based on morphometric analyses of their wing venation patterns, I assigned the colonies to the native evolutionary lineage (M-lineage) where the particularly threatened subspecies \(Apis\) \(mellifera\) \(iberiensis\) also belongs to. Averaged over two consecutive years, almost half of the colonies survived winter (23 out of 52). Interestingly, semi-natural areas both increased abundance and subsequent colony survival. Colonies surrounded by more semi-natural habitat (and therefore less intensive cropland) had an elevated overwintering probability, indicating that colonies need a certain amount of semi-natural habitat in the landscape to survive. Due to their ease of access these power poles in Galicia are, ideally suited to assess the population demography of wild-living Galician honey bee colonies through a long-term monitoring.
In a nutshell, my thesis indicates that honey bees in Europe always existed in the wild. I performed the first survey of wild-living bee density yet done in Germany and Spain. My thesis identifies the landscape as a major factor that compromises winter survival and reports the first data on overwintering rates of wild-living honey bees in Europe. Besides, I established methods to efficiently detect wild-living honey bees in different habitat. While colonies can be found all over Europe, their survival and viability depend on unpolluted, flower rich habitats. The protection of near-natural habitat and of nesting sites is of paramount importance for the conservation of wild-living honey bees in Europe.
Cancer is one of the leading causes of death worldwide. The underlying tumorigenesis is driven by the accumulation of alterations in the genome, eventually disabling tumor suppressors and activating proto-oncogenes.
The MYC family of proto-oncogenes shows a strong deregulation in the majority of tumor entities. However, the exact mechanisms that contribute to MYC-driven oncogenesis remain largely unknown. Over the past decades, the influence of the MYC protein on transcription became increasingly apparent and was thoroughly investigated. Additionally, in recent years several publications provided evidence for so far unreported functions of MYC that are independent of a mere regulation of target genes. These findings suggest an additional role of MYC in the maintenance of genomic stability and this role is strengthened by key findings presented in this thesis.
In the first part, I present data revealing a pathway that allows MYC to couple transcription elongation and DNA double-strand break repair, preventing genomic instability of MYC-driven tumor cells. This pathway is driven by a rapid transfer of the PAF1 complex from MYC onto RNAPII, a process that is mediated by HUWE1. The transfer controls MYC-dependent transcription elongation and, simultaneously, the remodeling of chromatin structure by ubiquitylation of histone H2B. These regions of open chromatin favor not only elongation but also DNA double-strand break repair.
In the second part, I analyze the ability of MYC proteins to form multimeric structures in response to perturbation of transcription and replication. The process of multimerization is also referred to as phase transition. The observed multimeric structures are located proximal to stalled replication forks and recruit factors of the DNA-damage response and transcription termination machinery. Further, I identified the HUWE1-dependent ubiquitylation of MYC as an essential step in this phase transition. Cells lacking the ability to form multimers display genomic instability and ultimately undergo apoptosis in response to replication stress.
Both mechanisms present MYC as a stress resilience factor under conditions that are characterized by a high level of transcriptional and replicational stress. This increased resilience ensures oncogenic proliferation.
Therefore, targeting MYC’s ability to limit genomic instability by uncoupling transcription elongation and DNA repair or disrupting its ability to multimerize presents a therapeutic window in MYC-dependent tumors.
Empathy, the act of sharing another person’s affective state, is a ubiquitous driver for helping others and feeling close to them. These experiences are integral parts of human behavior and society. The studies presented in this dissertation aimed to investigate the sustainability and stability of social closeness and prosocial decision-making driven by empathy and other social motives. In this vein, four studies were conducted in which behavioral and neural indicators of empathy sustainability were identified using model-based functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).
Applying reinforcement learning, drift-diffusion modelling (DDM), and fMRI, the first two studies were designed to investigate the formation and sustainability of empathy-related social closeness (study 1) and examined how sustainably empathy led to prosocial behavior (study 2). Using DDM and fMRI, the last two studies investigated how empathy combined with reciprocity, the social norm to return a favor, on the one hand and empathy combined with the motive of outcome maximization on the other hand altered the behavioral and neural social decision process.
The results showed that empathy-related social closeness and prosocial decision tendencies persisted even if empathy was rarely reinforced. The sustainability of these empathy effects was related to recalibration of the empathy-related social closeness learning signal (study 1) and the maintenance of a prosocial decision bias (study 2). The findings of study 3 showed that empathy boosted the processing of reciprocity-based social decisions, but not vice versa. Study 4 revealed that empathy-related decisions were modulated by the motive of outcome maximization, depending on individual differences in state empathy.
Together, the studies strongly support the concept of empathy as a sustainable driver of social closeness and prosocial behavior.
Interleukin 6 (IL-6) bewirkt als Entzündungsmediator eine autokrine Makrophagen (MΦ) -Stimulation. Zur Verhinderung pathologischer Entzündungsaktivität sind IL-6-Signale stark reguliert, unter anderem durch die Dileucin-vermittelte Endozytose des Signaltransduktors gp130. Klassisches IL-6-Signaling ist abhängig von der Expression von IL-6Rα und gp130 auf der Zelloberfläche, während IL-6-trans-Signaling durch löslichen IL-6Rα nur von der gp130-Expression abhängt. Die Bedeutung des Dileucin-Internalisierungsmotivs für IL-6-vermittelte Signale in MΦ ist jedoch unklar.
Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit war eine Charakterisierung muriner GM-CSF- und M-CSF-ausgereifter Knochenmarks (KM) -MΦ hinsichtlich der Relevanz des gp130-Internalisierungsmotivs für IL-6-vermittelte-Signale. Hierzu wurde die gp130LLAA-Mauslinie als knock in-Modell zur Suppression der gp130-Endozytose verwendet.
KM-MΦ entwickeln durch die Ausreifung mittels GM-CSF oder M-CSF einen distinkten Phänotyp: M-CSF-ausgereifte KM-MΦ exprimieren mehr gp130 und IL-6Rα auf der Zelloberfläche als GM-CSF-ausgereifte KM-MΦ. Dies limitiert sowohl klassisches als auch IL-6-trans-Signaling in GM-CSF-ausgereiften KM-MΦ: IL-6 induziert in diesen eine geringere STAT1-Aktivierung, das IL-6/IL-6Ra-Fusionsprotein hyper-IL-6 eine geringere STAT1- und STAT3-Aktivierung.
KM-MΦ aus gp130LLAA-Mäusen exprimieren mehr gp130 als KM-MΦ aus WT-Mäusen bei ähnlichen Mengen IL-6Rα. Dabei ist die Rezeptorexpression auf gp130LLAA-KM-MΦ unabhängig vom Ausreifungsfaktor GM-CSF oder M-CSF. Durch die erhöhte gp130-Expression induziert IL-6-trans-Signaling in gp130LLAA-KM-MΦ eine stärkere STAT1-Aktivierung als in WT-KM-MΦ, dies gilt insbesondere bei Ausreifung mit GM-CSF. Dagegen sind die STAT3-Aktivierung durch IL-6-trans-Signaling und die STAT1- und STAT3-Aktivierung durch klassisches IL-6-Signaling unabhängig von der Expression des Dileucin-Internalisierungsmotivs.
Unklar bleibt, warum IL6-vermittelte Signale in GM-CSF-ausgereiften KM-MΦ stärker durch Dileucin-abhängige gp130-Endozytose reguliert werden als in M-CSF-ausgereifte KM-MΦ. Weitere Untersuchungen sind nötig.
Since the advent of high-throughput sequencing technologies in the mid-2010s, RNA se-
quencing (RNA-seq) has been established as the method of choice for studying gene
expression. In comparison to microarray-based methods, which have mainly been used to
study gene expression before the rise of RNA-seq, RNA-seq is able to profile the entire
transcriptome of an organism without the need to predefine genes of interest. Today,
a wide variety of RNA-seq methods and protocols exist, including dual RNA sequenc-
ing (dual RNA-seq) and multi RNA sequencing (multi RNA-seq). Dual RNA-seq and
multi RNA-seq simultaneously investigate the transcriptomes of two or more species, re-
spectively. Therefore, the total RNA of all interacting species is sequenced together and
only separated in silico. Compared to conventional RNA-seq, which can only investi-
gate one species at a time, dual RNA-seq and multi RNA-seq analyses can connect the
transcriptome changes of the species being investigated and thus give a clearer picture of
the interspecies interactions. Dual RNA-seq and multi RNA-seq have been applied to a
variety of host-pathogen, mutualistic and commensal interaction systems.
We applied dual RNA-seq to a host-pathogen system of human mast cells and Staphylo-
coccus aureus (S. aureus). S. aureus, a commensal gram-positive bacterium, can become
an opportunistic pathogen and infect skin lesions of atopic dermatitis (AD) patients.
Among the first immune cells S. aureus encounters are mast cells, which have previously
been shown to be able to kill the bacteria by discharging antimicrobial products and re-
leasing extracellular traps made of protein and deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). However,
S. aureus is known to evade the host’s immune response by internalizing within mast
cells. Our dual RNA-seq analysis of different infection settings revealed that mast cells
and S. aureus need physical contact to influence each other’s gene expression. We could
show that S. aureus cells internalizing within mast cells undergo profound transcriptome
changes to adjust their metabolism to survive in the intracellular niche. On the host side,
we found out that infected mast cells elicit a type-I interferon (IFN-I) response in an
autocrine manner and in a paracrine manner to non-infected bystander-cells. Our study
provides the first evidence that mast cells are capable to produce IFN-I upon infection
with a bacterial pathogen.
Plexus injury often occurs after motor vehicle accidents and results in lifelong disability with severe neuropathic pain. Surgical treatment can partially restore motor functions, but sensory loss and neuropathic pain persist. Regenerative medicine concepts, such as cell replacement therapies for restoring dorsal root ganglia (DRG) function, set high expectations. However, up to now, it is unclear which DRG cell types are affected by nerve injury and can be targeted in regenerative medicine approaches.
This study followed the hypothesis that satellite glial cells (SGCs) might be a suitable endogenous cell source for regenerative medicine concepts in the DRG. SGCs originate from the same neural crest-derived cell lineage as sensory neurons, making them attractive for neural repair strategies in the peripheral nervous system. Our hypothesis was investigated on three levels of experimentation. First, we asked whether adult SGCs have the potential of sensory neuron precursors and can be reprogrammed into sensory neurons in vitro. We found that adult mouse DRG harbor SGC-like cells that can still dedifferentiate into progenitor-like cells. Surprisingly, expression of the early developmental transcription factors Neurog1 and Neurog2 was sufficient to induce neuronal and glial cell phenotypes. In the presence of nerve growth factor, induced neurons developed a nociceptor-like phenotype expressing functional nociceptor markers, such as the ion channels TrpA1, TrpV1 and NaV1.9. In a second set of experiments, we used a rat model for peripheral nerve injury to look for changes in the DRG cell composition. Using an unbiased deep learning-based approach for cell analysis, we found that cellular plasticity responses after nerve injury activate SGCs in the whole DRG. However, neither injury-induced neuronal death nor gliosis was observed. Finally, we asked whether a severe nerve injury changed the cell composition in the human DRG. For this, a cohort of 13 patients with brachial plexus injury was investigated. Surprisingly, in about half of all patients, the injury-affected DRG showed no characteristic DRG tissue. The complete entity of neurons, satellite cells, and axons was lost and fully replaced by mesodermal/connective tissue. In the other half of the patients, the basic cellular entity of the DRG was well preserved. Objective deep learning-based analysis of large-scale bioimages of the “intact” DRG showed no loss of neurons and no signs of gliosis.
This study suggests that concepts for regenerative medicine for restoring DRG function need at least two translational research directions: reafferentation of existing DRG units or full replacement of the entire multicellular DRG structure. For DRG replacement, SGCs of the adult DRG are an attractive endogenous cell source, as the multicellular DRG units could possibly be rebuilt by transdifferentiating neural crest-derived sensory progenitor cells into peripheral sensory neurons and glial cells using Neurog1 and Neurog2.
In dieser Arbeit wurde die Krankheitsprogression im Parkinson-Mausmodell hm2α-SYN-39 mit zunehmendem Alter charakterisiert. Die Mäuse wurden in 4 Altersgruppen (2-3, 7-8, 11-12, 16-17 Monate) mit motorischen Verhaltenstests auf einen Parkinson-Phänotyp untersucht. Zudem erfolgten Untersuchungen des dopaminergen Systems zur Detektion von neurochemischen Veränderungen und einer Neurodegeneration im nigrostriatalen Trakt. Weiterhin wurden neuroinflammatorische Prozesse des adaptiven und angeborenen IS in der SN und im Striatum mittels immunhistochemischer Färbungen beurteilt.
Ein Parkinson-Phänotyp in diesem Mausmodell zeigte sich nur leicht ausgeprägt, sodass der Rotarod- und Zylinder-Test lediglich den Hinweis auf eine nicht-signifikante Einschränkung der Motorik erbrachte. Dennoch ergab die stereologische Quantifizierung TH- und Nissl-positiver Zellen in der SNpc der hm2α-SYN-39 Mäuse eine altersabhängige, signifikant-progrediente Reduktion der dopaminergen Neurone mit zunehmendem Alter. Eine signifikant niedrigere TH-positive Zellzahl dieser tg Mäuse zeigte sich ab einem Alter von 16-17 Monaten verglichen zu gleichaltrigen wt Tieren. Dagegen war die Neurodegeneration im Striatum etwas weniger ausgeprägt. Die tg Mäuse präsentierten im Alter von 16-17 Monaten eine nicht-signifikante Erniedrigung der dopaminergen Terminalen verglichen zu gleichaltrigen wt Tieren. Ein DA-Mangel im Striatum der tg Mäuse konnte mittels HPLC bestätigt werden. Bis zum Alter von 16-17 Monaten wurde eine signifikante Reduktion der DA-Level von 23,2 % verglichen zu gleichaltrigen wt Mäusen gezeigt. Außerdem erniedrigt waren die striatalen Level von NA und 5-HAT bei tg Mäusen, passend zu den bisherigen Ergebnissen bei Parkinson-Patienten.
Immunhistochemische Untersuchungen einer Neuroinflammation im nigrostriatalen Trakt ergaben eine tendenziell erhöhte Infiltration von CD4- und CD8-positiven T-Zellen bei hm2α-SYN-39 Mäusen mit zunehmendem Alter, wobei die Infiltration CD8-positiver Zellen ausgeprägter war als bei CD4-positiven Zellen. Eine noch deutlichere neuroinflammatorische Reaktion zeigte das angeborene IS. Hierbei ergab die immunhistologische Quantifizierung CD11b-positiver mikroglialer Zellen einen hochsignifikanten Anstieg im nigrostriatalen Trakt bei hm2α-SYN-39 Mäusen schon im jungen Alter.
Zusammenfassend präsentierte dieses Parkinson-Mausmodell eine langsam-progrediente Parkinson-Pathologie mit begleitender Neuroinflammation im nigrostriatalen Trakt während des Alterns, wobei die Immunantwort der mikroglialen Zellen zu einem früheren Zeitpunkt einsetzte als die T-Zellinfiltration und Neurodegeneration. Dieses Mausmodell bietet zahlreiche Möglichkeiten zur zukünftigen Erforschung der Pathophysiologie beim MP. Generell weist diese Arbeit auf eine bedeutende Rolle neuroinflammatorischer Prozesse in der Krankheitsprogression der Parkinsonerkrankung hin und soll dazu ermutigen Neuroinflammation durchaus intensiver in tg Tiermodellen zu untersuchen.
Various types of cancer involve aberrant cell cycle regulation. Among the pathways responsible for tumor growth, the YAP oncogene, a key downstream effector of the Hippo pathway, is responsible for oncogenic processes including cell proliferation, and metastasis by controlling the expression of cell cycle genes. In turn, the MMB multiprotein complex (which is formed when B-MYB binds to the MuvB core) is a master regulator of mitotic gene expression, which has also been associated with cancer. Previously, our laboratory identified a novel crosstalk between the MMB-complex and YAP. By binding to enhancers of MMB target genes and promoting B-MYB binding to promoters, YAP and MMB co-regulate a set of mitotic and cytokinetic target genes which promote cell proliferation. This doctoral thesis addresses the mechanisms of YAP and MMB mediated transcription, and it characterizes the role of YAP regulated enhancers in transcription of cell cycle genes.
The results reported in this thesis indicate that expression of constitutively active, oncogenic YAP5SA leads to widespread changes in chromatin accessibility in untransformed human MCF10A cells. ATAC-seq identified that newly accessible and active regions include YAP-bound enhancers, while the MMB-bound promoters were found to be already accessible and remain open during YAP induction. By means of CRISPR-interference (CRISPRi) and chromatin immuniprecipitation (ChIP), we identified a role of YAP-bound enhancers in recruitment of CDK7 to MMB-regulated promoters and in RNA Pol II driven transcriptional initiation and elongation of G2/M genes. Moreover, by interfering with the YAP-B-MYB protein interaction, we can show that binding of YAP to B-MYB is also critical for the initiation of transcription at MMB-regulated genes. Unexpectedly, overexpression of YAP5SA also leads to less accessible chromatin regions or chromatin closing. Motif analysis revealed that the newly closed regions contain binding motifs for the p53 family of transcription factors. Interestingly, chromatin closing by YAP is linked to the reduced expression and loss of chromatin-binding of the p53 family member Np63. Furthermore, I demonstrate that downregulation of Np63 following expression of YAP is a key step in driving cellular migration.
Together, the findings of this thesis provide insights into the role of YAP in the chromatin changes that contribute to the oncogenic activities of YAP. The overexpression of YAP5SA not only leads to the opening of chromatin at YAP-bound enhancers which together with the MMB complex stimulate the expression of G2/M genes, but also promotes the closing of chromatin at ∆Np63 -bound regions in order to lead to cell migration.
Fear and anxiety disorders – interaction of AVP and OXT brain systems with the serotonergic system
(2023)
Anxiety disorders pose a great burden onto society and economy and can have devastating consequences for affected individuals. Treatment options are still limited to psychopharmacotherapy originally developed for the treatment of depression and behavioral therapy. A combination of genetic traits together with aversive events is most likely the cause of these diseases. Gene x environment studies are trying to find a link between genetic traits and specific negative circumstances. In a first study, we focused on social anxiety disorder (SAD), which is the second most-common anxiety disorder after specific phobias. We used a social fear conditioning (SFC) paradigm, which is able to mimic the disease in a mouse model. We wanted to investigate protein levels, as well as mRNA expression of immediate early genes (IEGs), to determine brain areas affected by the paradigm. We also included genes of the vasopressin (AVP)-, oxytocin (OXT)-, neuropeptide Y (NPY)-, and the serotonin system, to investigate the effects of SFC on neurotransmitter gene expression levels in brain regions related to social as well as fear-related behavior. AVP and OXT regulate a lot of different social and anxiety-related behaviors, both positive and negative. Finding a link between different neurotransmitter systems in the development of anxiety disorders could help to identify potential targets for new treatment approaches, which are desperately needed, because the rate of patients not responding to available treatment is very high.
We were able to show altered gene expression of the IEGs cFos and Fosl2, as well as a change in number and density of cFOS-positive cells in the dorsal hippocampus, indicating an influence of SFC on neuronal activity. Our results reveal a possible involvement of anterior dentate gyrus (DG), as well as cornu ammonis area 1 (CA1) and CA3 in the dorsal hippocampus during the expression of social fear. Contrary to our hypothesis, we were not able to see changes in neuronal activity through expression changes of IEGs in the amygdala. Significant higher IEG immunoreactivity and gene expression in the dorsal hippocampus of animals without fear conditioning (SFC-), compared to animals with fear conditioning (SFC+), indicate an involvement of different hippocampal regions in two possible scenarios. Either as elevated gene expression in SFC- animals compared to SFC+ animals or as reduction in SFC+ animals compared to SFC- animals. However, this question cannot be answered without an additional control of basal IEG-activity without social interaction. The NPY system in general and the neuropeptide y receptor type 2 in particular seem to be involved in regulating the response to social fear, mostly through the septum region. In addition to that, a possible role for the induction of social fear response could be identified in the serotonergic system and especially the serotonin receptor 2a of the PVN.
In a second study we focused on changes in the serotonergic system. A polymorphism in the human serotonin transporter (5-HTT) gene is associated with higher risks for the development of anxiety disorders. This makes the 5-HTT a widely used target to study possible causes and the development of anxiety disorders. In mice, a genetically induced knockout of the 5-Htt gene is associated with increased anxiety-like behavior. High amounts of stress during pregnancy, also known as prenatal stress, significantly increase the risk to develop psychiatric disorders for the unborn child. We utilized a prenatal stress paradigm in mice heterozygous for the 5-Htt gene. Some of the animals which had been subjected to prenatal stress showed noticeably “unsocial” interaction behavior towards conspecifics. Again, we were searching for links between the serotonergic system and AVP- and OXT systems. Through quantitative gene expression analysis, we were able to show that both AVP and OXT neuromodulator systems are affected through prenatal stress in female mice, but not in male mice. The 5-Htt genotype seems to be only slightly influential to AVP, OXT or any other neurotransmitter system investigated. Gene expression of AVP and OXT brain systems is highly influenced through the estrous cycle stages of female mice. Additionally, we analyzed the AVP and OXT neuropeptide levels of mice with different 5-Htt genotypes and in both sexes, in order to see whether the production of AVP and OXT is influenced by 5-Htt genotype. On neuropeptide level, we were able to identify a sex difference for vasopressin-immunoreactive (ir) cells in the PVN, with male mice harboring significantly more positive cells than female mice.
In Nervensystemen bedürfen Informationsweitergabe und Gedächtnisformation eines präzisen Zusammenspiels von Synapsen in Zeit und Raum. Synaptische Transmission basiert strukturell auf mesoskopischen cytosolischen Kompartimenten an der präsynaptischen Membran, sogenannten Aktiven Zonen (AZ). Ihre Cytomatrix, bestehend aus zentralen Gerüstproteinen wie Rab3 interacting molecule (RIM), ermöglicht eine schnelle Freisetzung synaptischer Vesikel. Die Defizienz der lokal häufigsten Isoform RIM1α resultiert an einer komplexen zentralen Säugersynapse, die des hippocampalen Moosfaserboutons (MFB) zu im Cornu ammonis (CA)3 befindlichen Pyramidalzellen, in einer dezimierten Langzeitplastizität. Auf Verhaltensebene zeigen diese Mäuse eine reduzierte Lernfähigkeit.
Die vorliegende Dissertation widmet sich grundlegend der bisher unbekannten dreidimensionalen (3D) AZ-Ultrastruktur des MFB in akuten Hippocampusschnitten der adulten Wildtyp- und RIM1α-Knock-Out-Maus (RIM1α\(^{-/-}\)). In einer methodischen Entwicklungsphase wurde ein neuartiges, anspruchsvolles Protokoll der nahezu artefaktfreien (near to native) Synapsenpräparation am MFB mittels Hochdruckgefrierung und Gefriersubstitution sowie der 3D-Modellierung mittels Elektronentomographie etabliert. In einer zweiten Experimentier- und Analysephase ermöglichte die hochwertige synaptische Gewebeerhaltung in beiden Genotypen eine standardisierte, auf Programmierskripten basierte Quantifizierung der AZ-Ultrastruktur bis auf die Ebene eines individuell gedockten synaptischen Vesikels.
Dieser Dissertation gelingt der Nachweis, dass eine Defizienz von RIM1α zu einer multidimensionalen ultrastrukturellen Veränderung der AZ und ihres Vesikelpools am MFB führt. Neben einer Reduktion, Dezentralisierung und strukturellen Veränderung (eng) gedockter Vesikel – der ultrastrukturellen Messgrößen von unmittelbar freisetzungsfähigen Vesikeln – verdichtet sich der distaler lokalisierte Vesikelpool auf zugleich größeren, heterogenen AZ-Flächen mit erweitertem synaptischem Spalt. Vorliegende Untersuchungen tragen zum Verständnisgewinn über eine zentrale Rolle von RIM1α für das Docking und die Organisation von Vesikeln der AZ im MFB bei. Darüber hinaus stellen die präzisen ultrastrukturellen Analysen eine morphologische Grundlage für weiterführende Studien mit Hilfe modernster Techniken dar, beispielsweise über die Auswirkungen der geänderten RIM1α\(^{-/-}\) AZ-Ultrastruktur auf die präsynaptische Plastizität sowie in Korrelation zum Gedächtnis und Lernen der Tiere.
This decade saw the development of new high-end light microscopy approaches. These technologies are increasingly used to expand our understanding of cellular function and the molecular mechanisms of life and disease. The precision of state-of-the-art super resolution microscopy is limited by the properties of the applied fluorescent label. Here I describe the synthesis and evaluation of new functional fluorescent probes that specifically stain gephyrin, universal marker of the neuronal inhibitory post-synapse. Selected probe precursor peptides were synthesised using solid phase peptide synthesis and conjugated with selected super resolution capable fluorescent dyes. Identity and purity were defined using chromatography and mass spectrometric methods. To probe the target specificity of the resulting probe variants in cellular context, a high-throughput assay was established. The established semi-automated and parallel workflow was used for the evaluation of three selected probes by defining their co-localization with the expressed fluorescent target protein. My work provided NN1Dc and established the probe as a visualisation tool for essentially background-free visualisation of the synaptic marker protein gephyrin in a cellular context. Furthermore, NN1DA became part of a toolbox for studying the inhibitory synapse ultrastructure and brain connectivity and turned out useful for the development of a label-free, high-throughput protein interaction quantification assay.
This work deals with the acceleration of cardiovascular MRI for the assessment
of functional information in steady-state contrast and for viability assessment
during the inversion recovery of the magnetization. Two approaches
are introduced and discussed in detail. MOCO-MAP uses an exponential
model to recover dynamic image data, IR-CRISPI, with its low-rank plus
sparse reconstruction, is related to compressed sensing.
MOCO-MAP is a successor to model-based acceleration of parametermapping
(MAP) for the application in the myocardial region. To this end, it
was augmented with a motion correction (MOCO) step to allow exponential
fitting the signal of a still object in temporal direction. Iteratively, this
introduction of prior physical knowledge together with the enforcement of
consistency with the measured data can be used to reconstruct an image
series from distinctly shorter sampling time than the standard exam (< 3 s
opposed to about 10 s). Results show feasibility of the method as well as
detectability of delayed enhancement in the myocardium, but also significant
discrepancies when imaging cardiac function and artifacts caused already by
minor inaccuracy of the motion correction.
IR-CRISPI was developed from CRISPI, which is a real-time protocol
specifically designed for functional evaluation of image data in steady-state
contrast. With a reconstruction based on the separate calculation of low-rank
and sparse part, it employs a softer constraint than the strict exponential
model, which was possible due to sufficient temporal sampling density via
spiral acquisition. The low-rank plus sparse reconstruction is fit for the use on
dynamic and on inversion recovery data. Thus, motion correction is rendered
unnecessary with it.
IR-CRISPI was equipped with noise suppression via spatial wavelet filtering.
A study comprising 10 patients with cardiac disease show medical
applicability. A comparison with performed traditional reference exams offer
insight into diagnostic benefits. Especially regarding patients with difficulty
to hold their breath, the real-time manner of the IR-CRISPI acquisition provides
a valuable alternative and an increase in robustness.
In conclusion, especially with IR-CRISPI in free breathing, a major acceleration
of the cardiovascular MR exam could be realized. In an acquisition
of less than 100 s, it not only includes the information of two traditional
protocols (cine and LGE), which take up more than 9.6 min, but also allows
adjustment of TI in retrospect and yields lower artifact level with similar
image quality.
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is the most prevalent neurodevelopmental disorder described in psychiatry today. ADHD arises during early childhood and is characterized by an age-inappropriate level of inattention, hyperactivity, impulsivity, and partially emotional dysregulation. Besides, substantial psychiatric comorbidity further broadens the symptomatic spectrum. Despite advances in ADHD research by genetic- and imaging studies, the etiopathogenesis of ADHD remains largely unclear. Twin studies suggest a heritability of 70-80 % that, based on genome-wide investigations, is assumed to be polygenic and a mixed composite of small and large, common and rare genetic variants. In recent years the number of genetic risk candidates is continuously increased. However, for most, a biological link to neuropathology and symptomatology of the patient is still missing. Uncovering this link is vital for a better understanding of the disorder, the identification of new treatment targets, and therefore the development of a more targeted and possibly personalized therapy.
The present thesis addresses the issue for the ADHD risk candidates GRM8, FOXP2, and GAD1. By establishing loss of function zebrafish models, using CRISPR/Cas9 derived mutagenesis and antisense oligonucleotides, and studying them for morphological, functional, and behavioral alterations, it provides novel insights into the candidate's contribution to neuropathology and ADHD associated phenotypes. Using locomotor activity as behavioral read-out, the present work identified a genetic and functional implication of Grm8a, Grm8b, Foxp2, and Gad1b in ADHD associated hyperactivity. Further, it provides substantial evidence that the function of Grm8a, Grm8b, Foxp2, and Gad1b in activity regulation involves GABAergic signaling. Preliminary indications suggest that the three candidates interfere with GABAergic signaling in the ventral forebrain/striatum. However, according to present and previous data, via different biological mechanisms such as GABA synthesis, transmitter release regulation, synapse formation and/or transcriptional regulation of synaptic components. Intriguingly, this work further demonstrates that the activity regulating circuit, affected upon Foxp2 and Gad1b loss of function, is involved in the therapeutic effect mechanism of methylphenidate. Altogether, the present thesis identified altered GABAergic signaling in activity regulating circuits in, presumably, the ventral forebrain as neuropathological underpinning of ADHD associated hyperactivity. Further, it demonstrates altered GABAergic signaling as mechanistic link between the genetic disruption of Grm8a, Grm8b, Foxp2, and Gad1b and ADHD symptomatology like hyperactivity. Thus, this thesis highlights GABAergic signaling in activity regulating circuits and, in this context, Grm8a, Grm8b, Foxp2, and Gad1b as exciting targets for future investigations on ADHD etiopathogenesis and the development of novel therapeutic interventions for ADHD related hyperactivity. Additionally, thigmotaxis measurements suggest Grm8a, Grm8b, and Gad1b as interesting candidates for prospective studies on comorbid anxiety in ADHD. Furthermore, expression analysis in foxp2 mutants demonstrates Foxp2 as regulator of ADHD associated gene sets and neurodevelopmental disorder (NDD) overarching genetic and functional networks with possible implications for ADHD polygenicity and comorbidity. Finally, with the characterization of gene expression patterns and the generation and validation of genetic zebrafish models for Grm8a, Grm8b, Foxp2, and Gad1b, the present thesis laid the groundwork for future research efforts, for instance, the identification of the functional circuit(s) and biological mechanism(s) by which Grm8a, Grm8b, Foxp2, and Gad1b loss of function interfere with GABAergic signaling and ultimately induce hyperactivity.
Schädel-Hirn Trauma ist die führende Ursache von Tod und Behinderung unter jungen Erwachsenen in den USA und Europa. Darüber hinaus steigert Schädel-Hirn Trauma das Risiko eine Demenzerkrankung oder andere neurodegenerative Erkrankung zu erleiden. Aus diesem Grund stellt eine bessere Erkenntnis der subakuten und chronischen pathophysiologischen Prozesse eine wichtige Grundlage für eine mögliche zukünftige neuroprotektive Therapie dar. Ziel dieser Arbeit war es daher eine Übersicht von funktionellen Einschränkungen und zellulären Veränderungen in der subakuten Phase innerhalb der ersten drei Monate darzustellen. Dazu wurden Verhaltensexperimente zu kognitiven Leistungen wie räumliches Lernen, kognitive Plastizität, episodisches Gedächtnis, Angstverhalten und allgemeine Lokomotion durchgeführt. Dabei konnten funktionale Einschränkungen der Tiere im Bereich der kognitiven Flexibilität, dem räumlichen Lernen, dem belohnungsmotivierten Verhalten, sowie Hyperaktivität beobachtet werden. Weiterführend erfolgten histologische und immunhistologische Untersuchungen an den Mäusegehirnen. So konnten in unserem Tiermodell sowohl lokale neuroinflammatorische Veränderungen nachgewiesen werden, also auch generalisierte Veränderungen, welche sich auf Isocortex und Hippocampus erstreckten und beide Hemisphären gleichermaßen betrafen. Ebenso konnten demyelinisierende Prozesse im Bereich der Läsion beobachtet werden. Im Bereich des Cortex zeigte sich außerdem eine axonale Schädigung mit begleitender Neuroinflammation, sowie eine Infiltration von B-Zellen. Anschließend wurde eruiert, ob eine Korrelation von funktionalem Outcome und histologischen Veränderungen besteht. Dabei zeigte sich eine signifikante Korrelation neuroinflammatorischer Prozesse mit Einschränkungen im räumlichen Lernen und Umlernen, sowie Auffälligkeiten im Bereich des belohnungsmotivierten Verhaltens. Damit ordnet sich diese Arbeit in die bestehenden Erkenntnisse zur Pathophysiologie des SHTs ein und ergänzt diese weiter.
In highly polarized neurons, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) forms a dynamic and continuous network in axons that plays important roles in lipid synthesis, Ca2+ homeostasis and the maintenance of synapses. However, the mechanisms underlying the regulation of axonal ER dynamics and its function in regulation of local translation still remain elusive. In the course of my thesis, I investigated the fast dynamic movements of ER and ribosomes in the growth cone of wildtype motoneurons as well as motoneurons from a mouse model of Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA), in response to Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) stimulation. Live cell imaging data show that ER extends into axonal growth cone filopodia along actin filaments and disruption of actin cytoskeleton by cytochalasin D treatment impairs the dynamic movement of ER in the axonal filopodia. In contrast to filopodia, ER movements in the growth cone core seem to depend on coordinated actions of the actin and microtubule cytoskeleton. Myosin VI is especially required for ER movements into filopodia and drebrin A mediates actin/microtubule coordinated ER dynamics. Furthermore, we found that BDNF/TrkB signaling induces assembly of 80S ribosomes in growth cones on a time scale of seconds. Activated ribosomes relocate to the presynaptic ER and undergo local translation. These findings describe the dynamic interaction between ER and ribosomes during local translation and identify a novel potential function for the presynaptic ER in intra-axonal synthesis of transmembrane proteins such as the α-1β subunit of N-type Ca2+ channels in motoneurons. In addition, we demonstrate that in Smn-deficient motoneurons, ER dynamic movements are impaired in axonal growth cones that seems to be due to impaired actin cytoskeleton. Interestingly, ribosomes fail to undergo rapid structural changes in Smn-deficient growth cones and do not associate to ER in response to BDNF. Thus, aberrant ER dynamics and ribosome response to extracellular stimuli could affect axonal growth and presynaptic function and maintenance, thereby contributing to the pathology of SMA.
Cardiovascular disease and the acute consequence of myocardial infarc- tion remain one of the most important causes of morbidity and mortality in all western societies. While much progress has been made in mitigating the acute, life-threatening ischemia caused by infarction, heart failure of the damaged my- ocardium remains prevalent. There is mounting evidence for the role of T cells in the healing process after myocardial infarction, but relevant autoantigens, which might trigger and regulate adaptive immune involvement have not been discov- ered in patients.
In this work, we discovered an autoantigenic epitope in the adrenergic receptor beta 1, which is highly expressed in the heart. This autoantigenic epitope causes a pro-inflammatory immune reaction in T cells isolated from pa- tients after myocardial infarction (MI) but not in control patients. This immune reaction was only observed in a subset of MI patients, which carry at least one allele of the HLA-DRB1*13 family. Interestingly, HLA-DRB1*13 was more com- monly expressed in patients in the MI group than in the control group.
Taken together, our data suggests antigen-specific priming of T cells in MI patients, which leads to a pro-inflammatory phenotype. The primed T cells react to a cardiac derived autoantigen ex vivo and are likely to exhibit a similar phenotype in vivo. This immune phenotype was only observed in a certain sub- set of patients sharing a common HLA-allele, which was more commonly ex- pressed in MI patients, suggesting a possible role as a risk factor for cardiovas- cular disease.
While our results are observational and do not have enough power to show strong clinical associations, our discoveries provide an essential tool to further our understanding of involvement of the immune system in cardiovascu- lar disease. We describe the first cardiac autoantigen in the clinical context of MI and provide an important basis for further translational and clinical research in cardiac autoimmunity.
Sepsis ist eine dysregulierte Reaktion des Organismus auf eine Infektion. Bei Sepsis werden oft Blutungs- und Thromboseereignisse beobachtet, welche in einer Disseminierten Intravasalen Gerinnung (DIG) gipfeln können. Thrombozyten sind die Schlüsselzellen von Thrombose und Hämostase. Bei Sepsis und DIG kommt es häufig zu einem Abfall der Thrombozytenzahl, doch Blutungs- und Thromboseereignisse können unabhängig von der Thrombozytenzahl auftreten, was zusätzlich eine Veränderung der Thrombozytenfunktion nahelegt.
In dieser Arbeit wurde deshalb die Thrombozytenfunktion bei 15 Patienten mit Sepsis zu drei Zeitpunkten im Krankheitsverlauf untersucht. Es konnte bei unauffälliger Rezeptorexpression keine Voraktivierung der Thrombozyten mittels Durchflusszytometrie festgestellt werden. Jedoch war die Aktivierung nach Stimulation mit multiplen Agonisten signifikant reduziert. Besonders ausgeprägt war die Hyporeaktivität bei Stimulation des Kollagen-Rezeptors GPVI mit dem Agonisten CRP-XL. Es wurde gezeigt, dass nach GPVI-Stimulation eine reduzierte Phosphorylierung der nachgeschalteten Proteine Syk und LAT im Vergleich zum Gesundspender induziert wird. In Kreuzinkubationsexperimenten hatte die (Co )Inkubation von Thrombozyten in Plasma von Sepsispatienten oder mit Bakterienisolaten aus Sepsis-Blutkulturen keinen Effekt auf die Thrombozytenreaktivität. Allerdings konnte durch Sepsis-Vollblut eine signifikante GPVI-Hyporeaktivität in Thrombozyten von gesunden Probanden induziert werden, was einen zellulären Mediator als Ursache des Defekts nahelegt. In dieser Arbeit wurde gezeigt, dass insbesondere die GPVI-Signalkaskade bei Sepsis massiv beeinträchtigt ist. Der Immunorezeptor GPVI ist ein vielversprechendes Zielmolekül, um die Pathogenese der Sepsis, des Capillary Leak und die immunregulatorische Rolle von Thrombozyten besser zu verstehen. Die GPVI-Hyporeaktivität könnte als zukünftiger Biomarker für die Sepsis-Frühdiagnose genutzt werden.
Mammalian phoshoglycolate phosphatase (PGP, also known as AUM) belongs to the ubiquitous HAD superfamily of phosphatases. As several other members of HAD phosphatases, the Mg2+-dependent dephosphorylation is conducted via a nucleophilic attack from a conserved aspartate residue in the catalytic cleft. The protein structure of PGP could not yet be solved entirely. Only a hybrid consisting of the PGP cap and the PDXP core (pyridoxal phosphatase, closest enzyme paralog) was crystallizable so far. PGP is able to efficiently dephosphorylate 2-phosphoglycolate, 2-phospho-L-lactate, 4-phospho-D-erythronate, and glycerol-3-phosphate in vitro which makes them likely physiological substrates. The first three substrates can be derived from metabolic side reactions (during glycolysis) and inhibit key enzymes in glycolysis and pentose phosphate pathway, the latter is situated at the intersection between glycolysis and lipogenesis. 2-phosphoglycolate can also be released in the context of repair of oxidative DNA damage. The activity of purified PGP can be reversibly inhibited by oxidation - physiologically likely in association with epidermal growth factor (EGF) signal transduction. In fact, an association between persistently lacking PGP activity (via downregulation) and the presence of hyperphosphorylated proteins after EGF stimulation has been identified. Reversible oxidation and transient inactivation of PGP may be particularly important for short-term and feedback regulatory mechanisms (as part of the EGF signaling). Furthermore, cellular proliferation in PGP downregulated cells is constantly reduced. Whole-body PGP inactivation in mice is embryonically lethal. Despite the many well-known features and functions, the knowledge about PGP is still incomplete.
In the present work the influence of reactive oxygen species (ROS) on PGP activity in cells und a possible connection between oxidative stress and the proliferation deficit of PGP downregulated cells was investigated. For the experiments, a spermatogonial cell line was used (due to the high PGP expression in testis). PGP activity can be reversibly inhibited in cellular lysates by H2O2 (as a ROS representative). Reversible oxidation could thus indeed be physiologically important. More oxidative DNA damage (by bleomycin) showed no PGP-dependent effects here. EGF stimulation (as an inducer of transient and well-controlled ROS production), low concentrations of menadione (as an oxidant) and N-acetylcysteine (as an antioxidant) were able to approximate the proliferation rate in PGP downregulated cells to that of control cells. The redox regulation of PGP could thus have an influence on cellular proliferation as a feedback mechanism - a mechanism that could not take place in PGP downregulated cells. However, the connections are probably even more complex and cannot be elucidated by a sole examination of the proliferation rate. The present results can thus only be regarded as preliminary experiments.
For a better understanding of the features and functions of PGP, this work then focused on specific regulation of enzyme activity by pharmacologically applicable small molecules. Four potent inhibitors had previously been identified in a screening campaign. In this work, three of these four inhibiting compounds could be further characterized in experiments with highly purified, recombinant murine and human PGP. Compounds #2 and #9 showed competitive inhibition properties with a markedly rising KM value with little or no change in vmax. The results were consistent for all tested protein variants: the murine and the human PGP as well as a PGP/PDXP hybrid protein. Compound #1 was the most potent and interesting PGP-inhibitory molecule: less change in KM and a constant decrease in vmax as well as a lower impact on the PGP/PDXP hybrid hint at a mixed mode of inhibition as a combination of competitive and non-competitive inhibition. The characterization of the potential inhibitors can serve as a basis for further structural analysis and studies on the complex physiological role of PGP.
Emotional-associative learning processes such as fear conditioning and extinction are highly relevant to not only the development and maintenance of anxiety disorders (ADs), but also to their treatment. Extinction, as the laboratory analogue to behavioral exposure, is assumed a core process underlying the treatment of ADs. Although exposure-based treatments are highly effective for the average patient suffering from an AD, there remains a gap in treatment efficacy with over one third of patients failing to achieve clinically significant symptom relief. There is ergo a pressing need for intensified research regarding the underlying neural mechanisms of aberrant emotional-associative learning processes and the neurobiological moderators of treatment (non-)response in ADs.
The current thesis focuses on different applications of the fundamental principles of fear conditioning and extinction by using two example cases of ADs from two different multicenter trials. First, we targeted alterations in fear acquisition, extinction, and its recall as a function of psychopathology in panic disorder (PD) patients compared to healthy subjects using fMRI. Second, exposure-based therapy and pre-treatment patient characteristics exerting a moderating influence on this essential learning process later on (i.e. treatment outcome) were examined using multimodal functional and structural neuroimaging in spider phobia.
We observed aberrations in emotional-associative learning processes in PD patients compared to healthy subjects indicated by an accelerated fear acquisition and an attenuated extinction recall. Furthermore, pre-treatment differences related to defensive, regulatory, attentional, and perceptual processes may exert a moderating influence on treatment outcome to behavioral exposure in spider phobia. Although the current results need further replication, on an integrative meta level, results point to a hyperactive defensive network system and deficient emotion regulation processes (including extinction processes) and top-down control in ADs. This speaks in favor of transdiagnostic deficits in important functional domains in ADs.
Deficits in transdiagnostic domains such as emotion regulation processes could be targeted by enhancing extinction learning or by means of promising tools like neurofeedback. The detection of pre-treatment clinical response moderators, for instance via machine learning frameworks, may help in supporting clinical decision making on individually tailored treatment approaches or, respectively, to avoid ineffective treatment and its related financial costs. In the long run, the identification of neurobiological markers which are capable of detecting non-responders a priori represents an ultimate goal.
Despite accounting for only a small proportion of all skin cancers, malignant melanoma
displays a serious health risk with increasing incidence and high mortality rate. Fortunately,
advances in the treatment of malignant melanoma now prolong survival and enhance response
and treatment efficacy. Established biomarkers help evaluate disease progression and
facilitate choosing appropriate and individual treatment options. However, the need for easily
accessible and reliable biomarkers is rising to predict patient-specific clinical outcome.
Eosinophil infiltration into the tumor and high peripheral eosinophil counts prior and during
treatment have been associated with better response in patients for various cancer entities,
including melanoma. An analysis of a heterogeneous study cohort reported high serum ECP
levels in non-responders. Hence, eosinophil frequency and serum ECP as a soluble
eosinophil-secreted mediator were suggested as prognostic biomarkers in melanoma. We
examined whether melanoma patients treated with first-line targeted therapy could also benefit
from the effects of eosinophils. In total, 243 blood and serum samples from patients with
advanced melanoma were prospectively and retrospectively collected before and after drug
initiation. To link eosinophil function to improved clinical outcome, soluble serum markers and
peripheral blood counts were used for correlative studies using a homogeneous study cohort.
In addition, functional and phenotypical characterizations provided insights into the expression
profile and activity of freshly isolated eosinophils, including comparisons between patients and
healthy donors.
Our data showed a significant correlation between high pre-treatment blood eosinophil counts
and improved response to targeted therapy and by trend to combinatorial immunotherapy in
patients with metastatic melanoma. In accordance with previous studies our results links
eosinophil blood counts to better response in melanoma patients. High pre-treatment ECP
serum concentration correlated with response to immunotherapy but not to targeted therapy.
Eosinophils from healthy donors and patients showed functional and phenotypical similarities.
Functional assays revealed a strong cytotoxic potential of blood eosinophils towards
melanoma cells in vitro, inducing apoptosis and necrosis. In addition, in vitro cytotoxicity was
an active process of peripheral eosinophils and melanoma cells with bidirectional features and
required close cell-cell interaction. The extent of cytotoxicity was dose-dependent and showed
susceptibility to changes in physical factors like adherence. Importantly, we provide evidence
of an additive tumoricidal function of eosinophils and combinatorial targeted therapy in vitro. In
summary, we give valuable insights into the complex and treatment-dependent role of
eosinophils in melanoma. As a result, our data support the suggestion of eosinophils and their
secreted mediators as potential prognostic biomarkers. It will take additional studies to
examine the molecular mechanisms that underlie our findings.
Stroke and myocardial infarction are the most prominent and severe consequences of pathological thrombus formation. For prevention and/or treatment of thrombotic events there is a variety of anti-coagulation and antiplatelet medication that all have one side effect in common: the increased risk of bleeding. To design drugs that only intervene in the unwanted aggregation process but do not disturb general hemostasis, it is crucial to decipher the exact clotting pathway which has not been fully understood yet. Platelet membrane receptors play a vital role in the clotting pathway and, thus, the aim of this work is to establish a method to elucidate the interactions, clustering, and reorganization of involved membrane receptors such as GPIIb/IIIa and GPIX as part of the GPIb-IX-V complex. The special challenges regarding visualizing membrane receptor interactions on blood platelets are the high abundancy of the first and the small size of the latter (1—3µm of diameter). The resolution limit of conventional fluorescence microscopy and even super-resolution approaches prevents the successful differentiation of densely packed receptors from one another. Here, this issue is approached with the combination of a recently developed technique called Expansion Microscopy (ExM). The image resolution of a conventional fluorescence microscope is enhanced by simply enlarging the sample physically and thus pulling the receptors apart from each other. This method requires a complex sample preparation and holds lots of obstacles such as variable or anisotropic expansion and low images contrast. To increase ExM accuracy and sensitivity for interrogating blood platelets, it needs optimized sample preparation as well as image analysis pipelines which are the main part of this thesis. The colocalization results show that either fourfold or tenfold expanded, resting platelets allow a clear distinction between dependent, clustered, and independent receptor organizations compared to unexpanded platelets.Combining dual-color Expansion and confocal fluorescence microscopy enables to image in the nanometer range identifying GPIIb/IIIa clustering in resting platelets – a pattern that may play a key role in the clotting pathway
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a genetic pediatric condition that affects lower motoneurons leading to their degeneration and muscle weakness. It is caused by homozygous loss or mutations in the Survival Motor Neuron 1 (SMN1) gene; however, the pathomechanism leading to motoneuron degeneration is not fully resolved. Cultured embryonic SMA motoneurons display axon elongation and differentiation defects accompanied by collapsed growth cones with a disturbed actin cytoskeleton. Intriguingly, motoneurons cultured from mice deficient for the Tropomyosin-kinase receptor B (TrkB), exhibit similar pathological features. Thus, the question arises whether SMA motoneurons suffer from defective Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF)/TrkB signaling and whether there is a link to the disturbed actin cytoskeleton. In the recent years, modifier genes such as Plastin 3 (PLS3) were shown to beneficially interfere with SMA pathology. Nevertheless, the mechanism of how the actin-bundler PLS3 counteracts SMN deficiency is not well understood. In this study, we investigated TrkB localization and its activation in cultured SMA motoneurons and neuromuscular junctions (NMJs). While TrkB levels are only mildly affected locally in axon terminals, BDNF-mediated TrkB phosphorylation was massively disturbed. The activity-dependent TrkB translocation to the cell surface and its activation via BDNF were shown to be Pls3-dependent processes, that can be abolished by knockdown of Pls3. In contrast, PLS3 overexpression in SMA motoneurons rescued the defects on morphological and functional level. In particular, the relocation of TrkB to the cell surface after BDNF-induced internalization is disturbed in SMA, which is based on an actin-dependent TrkB translocation defect from intracellular stores. Lastly, AAV9-mediated PLS3 overexpression in vivo in neonatal SMA mice provided further evidence for the capacity of PLS3 to modulate actin dynamics necessary for accurate BDNF/TrkB signaling. In conclusion, we provide a novel role for PLS3 in mediating proper alignment of transmembrane proteins as prerequisite for their appropriate functioning. Hence, PLS3 is required for a key process indispensable for the development and function of motoneurons even beyond the context of SMA.
Dietary fatty acids serve as objective biomarkers for the estimation of habitual diet mainly because biomarkers are free of memory bias or inaccuracies of food databases. The aim of the present work encompassed the implementation of a gas chromatographical method coupled with a mass spectrometrical and flame-ionization detector for analysis of fatty acid biomarkers in human biospecimens, their analytical determination and statistical evaluation in two different study populations and different biospecimens as well as the elaboration of adverse reactions to food ingredients with special focus on food allergies and food intolerances in the context of a possible implementation into an application for consumer health. The first aim was the identification of potential influence of fatty acid biomarkers on desaturase and elongase indexes (Δ9DI, Δ6DI, Δ5DI and ELOVLI5), which are factors in type 2 diabetes risk, in breast adipose tissue from healthy women. Influence of further variables on respective indexes was also investigated. 40 samples were investigated and potential variables were either collected by questionnaire or determined. Principle component analysis was applied for fatty acid biomarkers (PCdiet1, PCdiet2 and PCdiet3 representative for the dietary intake of vegetable oils/nuts, fish and partially hydrogenated vegetable oils), endogenous estrogens (PCE1) and oxysterols (PCOxy1). Multiple linear regression models were applied. Δ9DI and Δ6DI were influenced non-significantly and significantly negatively by PCdiet2 supporting a putative beneficial effect of vegetable oils and nuts on type 2 diabetes risk factors. ELOVLI5 and Δ5DI were influenced significantly and non-significantly positively by PCdiet1 supporting a putative beneficial effect of fish consumption on type 2 diabetes risk factors. On the other hand, PCdiet1 also significantly and non-significantly positively influenced Δ9DI and Δ6DI supporting a putative adverse effect of fish biomarkers on type 2 diabetes risk factors. The opposing influences of PCdiet1 suggesting an ambivalent role of dietary intake of fish on investigated indexes. Δ6DI was significantly positively influenced by PCdiet3 and number of pregnancies supporting a putative adverse effect of partially hydrogenated vegetable oils and pregnancies on type 2 diabetes risk factors. Lifestyle factors like smoking significantly and non-significantly influenced Δ9DI and Δ6DI putatively adversely. Δ5DI was influenced significantly positively by estrogen active drugs suggesting a putative beneficial effect on type 2 diabetes risk factors. It must be considered that a variation coefficient of up to 0.44 only explained 44% of variance of the respective indexes, suggesting other influencing factors might play a role. The second aim was the implementation of a gas chromatographical method coupled with a mass spectrometrical and flame-ionization detector for analysis of fatty acid biomarkers in human biospecimens. The method was optimized for separation and detection of 40 fatty acids. Mean recovery for tridecanoic acid was x(tridecanoic acid) = 90.51% and for nonadecanoic acid x(nonadecanoic acid) = 96.21%. Thus, there was no significant loss of fatty acids with shorter and longer carbon chains over the extraction process to be expected. Limit of detections were calculated in adipose tissue samples and ranged from 0.007 to 0.077% of the proportion of the respective fatty acid to total fatty acids. The third aim was the investigation if differentiation between breast glandular and adipose tissue had a relevant impact on the analysis of dietary fatty acid biomarkers or if contamination of breast glandular with breast adipose tissue and vice versa was neglectable for the analysis of dietary fatty acid biomarkers. No statistical significant differences were observed for all investigated fatty acid biomarkers (pentadecanoic-, heptadecanoic-, trans palmitoleic-, eicosapentaenoic-, docosahexaenoic-, linoleic and α-linolenic acid) between breast glandular and adipose tissue. Thus, differentiation between breast glandular and adipose tissue seems not to be necessary for the analysis of fatty acids serving as biomarkers for the intake of specific food groups. Potential influence of mixed breast tissue on fatty acid biomarkers analysis seems to be neglectable. The fourth aim was the determination of fatty acid biomarkers in adipose tissue in another study population from healthy participants. 27 adipose tissue samples were analyzed. Milk and ruminant fat biomarkers exhibited proportions of 0.47% for pentadecanoic acid, 0.34% for heptadecanoic acid and 0.25% for trans palmitoleic acid. Fish fatty acid biomarkers revealed proportions of 0.034% for eicosapentaenoic acid and 0.061% for docosahexaenoic acid. The mean proportion of vegetable oils and nuts biomarkers were 9.58% for linoleic acid and 0.48% for α-linolenic acid in all adipose tissues. Principle component analysis was applied for the fatty acid biomarkers to provide objective markers of habitual diet for this study population. PCdiet1 was mainly characterized by pentadecanoic acid, heptadecanoic acid and trans palmitoleic acid and therefore served as a principle component for the dietary intake of milk and ruminant fat. PCdiet2 and PCdiet3 only exhibited pattern for ω3 and ω6 fatty acids but not for dietary intake of specific food groups and could therefore not used as objective marker. PCdiet1, 2 and 3 explained 82.76% of variance. The last aim of this thesis was the elaboration of adverse reactions to food ingredients with special focus on food allergies and food intolerances in the context of a possible implementation into an application for consumer health. Scientific information on adverse reactions to food ingredients and trigger substances was provided in this thesis and possible implementation strategies were evaluated. For food allergens, which have regulatory requirements in the context of labelling, a strategy was elaborated, where it is necessary to provide information on the list of ingredients, the nexus ’contain’ and the respective food allergen as well as information on the name of the product. For food intolerances, which do not have regulatory requirements, limits were shown in the context of the application. If the elaborated food intolerances shall be implemented into the application, a professional dietary concept has to be developed for every food intolerance because of the complexity of the implementation.
Pain conditions and chronic pain disorders are among the leading reasons for seeking medical help and immensely burden patients and the healthcare system. Therefore, research on the underlying mechanisms of pain processing and modulation is necessary and warranted. One crucial part of this pain research includes identifying resilience factors that protect from chronic pain development and enhance its treatment. The ability to use emotion regulation strategies has been suggested to serve as a resilience factor, facilitating pain regulation and management. Acceptance has been discussed as a promising pain regulation strategy, but results in this domain have been mixed so far. Moreover, the allocation of acceptance in Gross’s (1998) process model of emotion regulation has been under debate. Thus, comparing acceptance with the already established strategies of distraction and reappraisal could provide insights into underlying mechanisms. This dissertation project consisted of three successive experimental studies which aimed to investigate these strategies by applying different modalities of individually adjusted pain stimuli of varying durations. In the first study (N = 29), we introduced a within-subjects design where participants were asked to either accept (acceptance condition) or react to the short heat pain stimuli (10 s) without using any pain regulation strategies (control condition). In the second study (N = 36), we extended the design of study 1 by additionally applying brief, electrical pain stimuli (20 ms) and including the new experimental condition distraction, where participants should distract themselves from the pain experience by imagining a neutral situation. In the third study (N = 121), all three strategies, acceptance, distraction, and reappraisal were compared with each other and additionally with a neutral control condition in a mixed design. Participants were randomly assigned to one of three strategy groups, including a control condition and a strategy condition. All participants received short heat pain stimuli of 10 s, alternating with tonic heat pain stimuli of 3 minutes. In the reappraisal condition, participants were instructed to imagine the pain having a positive outcome or valence. The self-reported pain intensity, unpleasantness, and regulation ratings were measured in all studies. We further recorded the autonomic measures heart rate and skin conductance continuously and assessed the habitual emotion regulation styles and pain-related trait factors via questionnaires. Results revealed that the strategies acceptance, distraction, and reappraisal significantly reduced the self-reported electrical and heat pain stimulation with both durations compared to a neutral control condition. Additionally, regulatory efforts with acceptance in study 2 and with all strategies in study 3 were reflected by a decreased skin conductance level compared to the control condition. However, there were no significant differences between the strategies for any of the assessed variables. These findings implicate similar mechanisms underlying all three strategies, which led to the proposition of an extended process model of emotion regulation. We identified another sequence in the emotion-generative process and suggest that acceptance can flexibly affect at least four sequences in the process. Correlation analyses further indicated that the emotion regulation style did not affect regulatory success, suggesting that pain regulation strategies can be learned effectively irrespective of habitual tendencies. Moreover, we found indications that trait factors such as optimism and resilience facilitated pain regulation, especially with acceptance. Conclusively, we propose that acceptance could be flexibly used by adapting to different circumstances. The habitual use of acceptance could therefore be considered a resilience factor. Thus, acceptance appears to be a promising and versatile strategy to prevent the development of and improve the treatment of various chronic pain disorders. Future studies should further examine factors and circumstances that support effective pain regulation with acceptance.
This thesis aimed the development of a correlated device which combines FluidFM® with Fluorescence Microscopy (FL) (FL-FluidFM®) and enables the simultaneous quantification of adhesion forces and fluorescent visualization of mature cells. The implementation of a PIFOC was crucial to achieve a high-resolution as well as a stable but dynamic focus level. The functionality of SCFS after hardware modification was verified by comparing two force-curves, both showing the typical force progression and measured with the optimized and conventional hardware, respectively. Then, the integration of FL was examined by detaching fluorescently labeled REF52 cells. The fluorescence illumination of the cytoskeleton showed the expected characteristic force profile and no evidence of interference effects. Afterwards a corresponding correlative data analysis was addressed including manual force step fitting, the identification of visualized cellular unbinding, and a time-dependent correlation. This procedure revealed a link between the area of cytoskeletal unbinding and force-jumps. This was followed by a comparison of the detachment characteristics of intercellular connected HUVECs and individual REF52 cells. HUVECs showed maximum detachment forces in the same order of magnitude as the ones of single REF52 cells. This contrasted with the expected strong cohesiveness of endothelial cells and indicated a lack of cell-cell contact formation. The latter was confirmed by a comparison of HUVECs, primary HBMVECs, and immortalized EA.hy926 cells fluorescently labeled for two marker proteins of intercellular junctions. This unveiled that both the previous cultivation duration and the cell type have a major impact on the development of intercellular junctions. In summary, the correlative FL FluidFM® represents a powerful novel approach, which enables a truly contemporaneous performance and, thus, has the potential to reveal new insights into the mechanobiological properties of cell adhesion.
As a major component of the articular cartilage extracellular matrix, hyaluronic acid is a widely used biomaterial in regenerative medicine and tissue engineering. According to its well-known interaction with multiple chondrocyte surface receptors which positively affects many cellular pathways, some approaches by combining mesenchymal stem cells and hyaluronic acid-based hydrogels are already driven in the field of cartilage regeneration and fat tissue. Nevertheless, a still remaining major problem is the development of the ideal matrix for this purpose. To generate a hydrogel for the use as a matrix, hyaluronic acid must be chemically modified, either derivatized or crosslinked and the resulting hydrogel is mostly shaped by the mold it is casted in whereas the stem cells are embedded during or after the gelation procedure which does not allow for the generation of zonal hierarchies, cell density or material gradients. This thesis focuses on the synthesis of different hyaluronic acid derivatives and poly(ethylene glycol) crosslinkers and the development of different hydrogel and bioink compositions that allow for adjustment of the printability, integration of growth factors, but also for the material and biological hydrogel, respectively bioink properties.