570 Biowissenschaften; Biologie
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Neisseria meningitidis ist ein humaner Infektionserreger, der Meningitis und Sepsis hervorruft. Das asymptomatische Trägertum im Nasenrachenraum ist entscheidend für die Übertragung des Bakteriums und dessen Interaktion mit dem menschlichen Wirt. Frühere Beobachtungen legen die Annahme nahe, dass Meningo¬kokken im Tonsillengewebe in einem biofilmähnlichen Stadium vorliegen. Daher werden in vitro Biofilme als Modell für das Trägertum verwendet. Expressionsunterschiede zwischen Biofilmen und planktonisch gewachsenen pathogenen Neisserien wurden in wenigen Transkriptomanalysen untersucht, während bisher keine Proteomanalysen durchgeführt wurden. Kartierungen des Proteoms und des Immunoproteoms von Meningokokken liegen allerdings vor. In dieser Studie wurde das Biofilmproteom des unbekapselten N. meningitidis Stammes WUE3671 im Vergleich zum Proteom der planktonisch gewachsenen Bakterien untersucht. Dazu wurde ein auf Silikonschläuchen basierendes Biofilmmodell mit kontinuierlichem Fluss etabliert. Es erfolgte eine Anreicherung bakterieller Biomasse über 48 h, wobei die kolonie-bildenden Einheiten bei 24 h ein Plateau erreichten. Licht- und Elektronen¬mikroskopie belegten die deutliche Zunahme der Biomasse über 48 h und zeigten zudem eine Struktur-ierung des 48 h Biofilms in eine apikale Region mit überwiegend vitalen Meningokokken und eine basale Region mit einer verstärkten Anzahl von Bakterien mit avitalem Erscheinungs-bild. Das Proteom von N. meningitidis Biofilmen, die 24 beziehungsweise 48 h gewachsen waren, wurde mit dem einer exponentiell gewachsenen planktonischen Kultur mit 2D-Gelelektro¬phorese verglichen. Unterschiedlich exprimierte Proteine wurden mit Massen-spektrometrie identifiziert und die Ergebnisse mit Spectral Counting und, wenn möglich, mit spezifischen Antikörpern abgesichert. Die Expression von ungefähr 2 % aller Proteinspots im Biofilm unterschied sich von der in planktonischen Zellen wenigstens um das 2-fache. Es wurden Veränderungen beobachtet, die mit einem Nährstoff- und Sauerstoffmangel sowie einer Zunahme von reaktiven Sauerstoffspezies (reactive oxygen species, ROS) in Verbindung gebracht werden können. Die Expression der Proteine SodC und MntC war im Biofilm deutlich erhöht, was mutmaßlich auf ROS im Biofilm zurückzuführen ist. In dieser Arbeit konnte gezeigt werden, dass MntC in der Tat essentiell für Biofilmwachstum, nicht aber für planktonisches Wachstum ist. Die Daten zu SodC und MntC legen die Hypothese nahe, dass Meningokokken im Biofilm trainiert werden mit Mediatoren des Immunsystems, wie ROS, umzugehen. Zudem wird NMB0573, ein Lrp-Homolog, als wesentlicher globaler Regulator für metabolische Anpassungen im Biofilm postuliert. Es konnte über die Proteomanalyse hinaus gezeigt werden, dass die Adhäsine Opc und Opa, die unter der Kontrolle von NMB0573 stehen, im Biofilm vermindert exprimiert werden.
Foraging behavior is a particularly fascinating topic within the studies of social insects. Decisions made by individuals have effects not only on the individual level, but on the colony level as well. Social information available through foraging in a group modulates individual preferences and shapes the foraging pattern of a colony. Identifying parameters influencing foraging behavior in leaf-cutting ants is especially intriguing because they do not harvest for themselves, but for their symbiotic fungus which in turn influences their plant preferences after the incorporation of the substrate. To learn about the substrates’ unsuitability for the fungus, ants need to be able to identify the incorporated substrate and associate it with detrimental effects on the fungus. Odor is an important plant characteristic known to be used as recognition key outside the nest in the context of foraging. Chapter 1 shows that foragers are able to recall information about the unsuitability of a substrate through odor alone and consequently reject the substrate, which leads to the conclusion that inside the nest, odor might be enough to indentify incorporated substrate. Identification of plant species is a key factor in the foraging success of leaf-cutting ants as they harvest a multitude of different plant species in a diverse environment and host plant availability and suitability changes throughout the year. Fixed plant preferences of individuals through innate tendencies are therefore only one factor influencing foraging decisions. On the individual as well as the colony level, foraging patterns are flexible and a result of an intricate interplay between the different members involved in the harvesting process: foragers, gardeners and the symbiotic fungus. In chapter 2 I identified several conditions necessary for naïve foragers to learn about the unsuitability of substrate inside the nest. In order to exchange of information about the unsuitability of a substrate, the plant in question must be present in the fungus garden. Foragers can learn without own foraging experience and even without experiencing the effects of the substrate on the fungus, solely through the presence of experienced gardeners. The presence of experienced foragers alone on the other hand is not enough to lower the acceptance of substrate by naïve foragers in the presence of naïve gardeners, even if experienced foragers make up the majority of the workforce inside the nest. Experienced foragers are also able to reverse their previous negative experience and start accepting the substrate again. The individual behavior of foragers and gardeners with different experiential backgrounds in the presence of suitable or unsuitable substrate inside the fungus chamber was investigated in chapter 3 to shed some light on possible mechanisms involved in the flow of information about substrate suitability from the fungus to the ants. Gardeners as well as foragers are involved in the leaf processing and treatment of the applied leaf patches on the fungus. If the plant material is unsuitable, significantly more ants treat the plant patches, but foragers are less active overall. Contacts between workers initiated by either gardeners or foragers occur significantly more frequent and last longer if the substrate is unsuitable. Even though experienced gardeners increase naïve foragers’ contact rates and duration with other workers in the presence of suitable plant patches, naïve foragers show no differences in the handling of the plant patches. This suggests that foragers gain information about plant suitability not only indirectly through the gardening workers, but might also be able to directly evaluate the effects of the substrate on the fungus themselves. Outside the nest, foragers influence each other the trail (chapter 4). Foraging in a group and the presence of social information is a decisive factor in the substrate choice of the individual and leads to a distinct and consentaneous colony response when encountering unfamiliar or unsuitable substrates. As leaf-cutting ants harvest different plant species simultaneously on several trails, foragers gain individual experiences concerning potential host plants. Preferences might vary among individuals of the same colony to the degree that foragers on the same trail perceive a certain substrate as either suitable or unsuitable. If the majority of foragers on the trail perceives one of the currently harvested substrates as unsuitable, naïve foragers lower their acceptance within 4 hours. In the absence of a cue in the fungus, naïve foragers harvesting by themselves still eventually (within 6 hours) reject the substrate as they encounter experienced gardeners during visits to the nest within foraging bouts. As foraging trails can be up to 100 m long and foragers spend a considerable amount of time away from the nest, learning indirectly from experienced foragers on the trail accelerates the distribution of information about substrate suitability. The level of rejection of a formerly unsuitable substrate after eight hours of foraging by naïve foragers correlates with the average percentage of unladen experienced foragers active on the trail. This suggests that unladen experienced foragers might actively contact laden naïve workers transmitting information about the unsuitability of the load they carry. Results from experiments were I observed individual laden foragers on their way back to the nest backed up this assumption as individuals were antennated and received bites into the leaf disk they carried. Individuals were contacted significantly more often by nestmates that perceived the carried leaf disk as unsuitable due to previous experience than by nestmates without this experience (chapter 6). Leaf-cutting ants constantly evaluate, learn and re-evaluate the suitability of harvested substrate and adjust their foraging activity accordingly. The importance of the different sources of information within the colony and their effect on the foraging pattern of the colony depend on the presence or absence of each of them as e.g. experienced foragers have a bigger influence on the plant preferences of naïve foragers in the absence of a cue in the fungus garden.
Applying microarray‐based techniques to study gene expression patterns: a bio‐computational approach
(2010)
The regulation and maintenance of iron homeostasis is critical to human health. As a constituent of hemoglobin, iron is essential for oxygen transport and significant iron deficiency leads to anemia. Eukaryotic cells require iron for survival and proliferation. Iron is part of hemoproteins, iron-sulfur (Fe-S) proteins, and other proteins with functional groups that require iron as a cofactor. At the cellular level, iron uptake, utilization, storage, and export are regulated at different molecular levels (transcriptional, mRNA stability, translational, and posttranslational). Iron regulatory proteins (IRPs) 1 and 2 post-transcriptionally control mammalian iron homeostasis by binding to iron-responsive elements (IREs), conserved RNA stem-loop structures located in the 5’- or 3‘- untranslated regions of genes involved in iron metabolism (e.g. FTH1, FTL, and TFRC). To identify novel IRE-containing mRNAs, we integrated biochemical, biocomputational, and microarray-based experimental approaches. Gene expression studies greatly contribute to our understanding of complex relationships in gene regulatory networks. However, the complexity of array design, production and manipulations are limiting factors, affecting data quality. The use of customized DNA microarrays improves overall data quality in many situations, however, only if for these specifically designed microarrays analysis tools are available. Methods In this project response to the iron treatment was examined under different conditions using bioinformatical methods. This would improve our understanding of an iron regulatory network. For these purposes we used microarray gene expression data. To identify novel IRE-containing mRNAs biochemical, biocomputational, and microarray-based experimental approaches were integrated. IRP/IRE messenger ribonucleoproteins were immunoselected and their mRNA composition was analysed using an IronChip microarray enriched for genes predicted computationally to contain IRE-like motifs. Analysis of IronChip microarray data requires specialized tool which can use all advantages of a customized microarray platform. Novel decision-tree based algorithm was implemented using Perl in IronChip Evaluation Package (ICEP). Results IRE-like motifs were identified from genomic nucleic acid databases by an algorithm combining primary nucleic acid sequence and RNA structural criteria. Depending on the choice of constraining criteria, such computational screens tend to generate a large number of false positives. To refine the search and reduce the number of false positive hits, additional constraints were introduced. The refined screen yielded 15 IRE-like motifs. A second approach made use of a reported list of 230 IRE-like sequences obtained from screening UTR databases. We selected 6 out of these 230 entries based on the ability of the lower IRE stem to form at least 6 out of 7 bp. Corresponding ESTs were spotted onto the human or mouse versions of the IronChip and the results were analysed using ICEP. Our data show that the immunoselection/microarray strategy is a feasible approach for screening bioinformatically predicted IRE genes and the detection of novel IRE-containing mRNAs. In addition, we identified a novel IRE-containing gene CDC14A (Sanchez M, et al. 2006). The IronChip Evaluation Package (ICEP) is a collection of Perl utilities and an easy to use data evaluation pipeline for the analysis of microarray data with a focus on data quality of custom-designed microarrays. The package has been developed for the statistical and bioinformatical analysis of the custom cDNA microarray IronChip, but can be easily adapted for other cDNA or oligonucleotide-based designed microarray platforms. ICEP uses decision tree-based algorithms to assign quality flags and performs robust analysis based on chip design properties regarding multiple repetitions, ratio cut-off, background and negative controls (Vainshtein Y, et al., 2010).
Fish of the genus Xiphophorus belong to the oldest animal models in cancer research. The oncogene responsible for the generation of spontaneous aggressive melanoma encodes for a mutated epidermal growth factor receptor (Egfr) and is called xmrk for Xiphophorus melanoma receptor kinase. Xmrk constitutive activation mechanisms and subsequent signaling pathways have already been investigated and charaterized but it is still unknown if Egfr ligands may also play a role in Xmrk-driven melanoma formation. To investigate the potential role of Egfr ligands in Xmrk-driven melanoma, I firstly analyzed the evolution of teleost and tetrapod Egfr/Egfr ligand systems. I especially focused on the analysis on the medaka fish, a closely related species to Xiphophorus, for which the whole genome has been sequenced. I could identify all seven Egfr ligands in medaka and could show that the two teleost-specific Egfr copies of medaka display dissimilar expression patterns in adult tissues together with differential expression of Egfr ligand subsets, arguing for subfunctionalization of receptor functions in this fish. Our phylogenetic and synteny analyses supported the hypothesis that only one gene in the chordate ancestor gave rise to the diversity of Egfr ligands found in vertebrate genomes today. I also could show that the Egfr extracellular subdomains implicated in ligand binding are not evolutionary conserved between tetrapods and teleosts, making the use of heterologous ligands in experiments with fish cells debatable. Despite its well understood and straight-forward process, Xmrk-driven melanomagenesis in Xiphophorus is problematic to further investigate in vivo. Our laboratory recently established a new melanoma animal model by generating transgenic mitf::xmrk medaka fishes, a Xiphophorus closely related species offering many more advantages. These fishes express xmrk under the control of the pigment-cell specific Mitf promoter. During my PhD thesis, I participated in the molecular analysis of the stably transgenic medaka and could show that the Xmrk-induced signaling pathways are similar when comparing Xiphophorus with transgenic mitf::xmrk medaka. These data together with additional RNA expression, protein, and histology analyses showed that Xmrk expression under the control of a pigment cell-specific promoter is sufficient to induce melanoma in the transgenic medaka, which develop very stereotyped tumors, including uveal and extracutaneous melanoma, with early onset during larval stages. To further investigate the potential role of Egfr ligands in Xmrk-driven melanoma, I made use of two model systems. One of them was the above mentioned mitf::xmrk medaka, the other was an in-vitro cell culture system, where the EGF-inducible Xmrk chimera HERmrk is stably expressed in murine melanocytes. Here I could show that HERmrk activation strongly induced expression of amphiregulin (Areg) and heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor (Hbegf) in melanocytes. This regulation was dependent on the MAPK and SRC signaling pathways. Moreover, upregulation of Adam10 and Adam17, the two major sheddases of Egfr ligands, was observed. I also could demonstrate the functionality of the growth factors by invitro analyses. Using the mitf::xmrk medaka model I could also show the upregulation of a subset of ligand genes, namely egf, areg, betacellulin (btc) and epigen (epgn) as well as upregulation of medaka egfrb in tumors from fish with metastatic melanoma. All these results converge to support an Xmrk-induced autocrine Egfr ligand loop. Interestingly, my in-vitro experiments with conditioned supernatant from medaka Egf- and Hbegf-producing cells revealed that not only Xiphophorus Egfrb, but also the pre-activated Xmrk could be further stimulated by the ligands. Altogether, I could show with in-vitro and in-vivo experiments that Xmrk is capable of inducing a functional autocrine Egfr ligand loop. These data confirm the importance of autocrine loops in receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK)-dependent cancer development and show the possibility for a constitutively active RTK to strengthen its oncogenic signaling by ligand binding.
In our analysis I was interested in the gene duplications, with focus on in-paralogs. In-paralogs are gene duplicates which arose after species split. Here I analysed the in-paralogs quantitatively, as well as qualitatively. For quantitative analysis genomes of 21 species were taken. Most of them have vastly different lifestyles with maximum evolutionary distance between them 1100 million years. Species included mammals, fish, insects and worm, plus some other chordates. All the species were pairwised analysed by the Inparanoid software, and in-paralogs matrix were built representing number of in-paralogs in all vs. all manner. Based on the in-paralogs matrix I tried to reconstruct the evolutionary tree using in-paralog numbers as evolutionary distance. If all 21 species were used the resulting tree was very far from real one: a lot of species were misplaced. However if the number was reduced to 12, all of the species were placed correctly with only difference being wrong insect and fish clusters switched. Then to in-paralogs matrix the neighbour-net algorithm was applied. The resulting "net" tree showed the species with fast or slow duplications rates compared to the others. We could identify species with very high or very low duplications frequencies and it correlates with known occurrences of the whole genome duplications. As the next step I built the graphs for every single species showing the correlation between their in-paralogs number and evolutionary distance. As we have 21 species, graph for every species is built using 20 points. Coordinates of the points are set using the evolutionary distance to that particular species and in-paralogs number. In mammals with increasing the distance from speciation the in-paralogs number also increased, however not in linear fashion. In fish and insects the graph close to zero is just the same in mammals' case. However, after reaching the evolutionary distances more than 800 million years the number of inparalogs is beginning to decrease. We also made a simulation of gene duplications for all 21 species and all the splits according to the fossil and molecular clock data from literature. In our simulation duplication frequency was minimal closer to the past and maximum in the near-present time. Resulting curves had the same shape the experimental data ones. In case of fish and insect for simulation the duplication rate coefficient even had to be set negative in order to repeat experimental curve shape. To the duplication rate coefficient in our simulation contribute 2 criteria: gene duplications and gene losses. As gene duplication is stochastical process it should always be a constant. So the changing in the coefficient should be solely explained by the increasing gene loss of old genes. The processes are explained by the evolution model with high gene duplication and loss ratio. The drop in number of in-paralogs is probably due to the BLAST algorithm. It is observed in comparing highly divergent species and BLAST cannot find the orthologs so precisely anymore. In the second part of my work I concentrated more on the specific function of inparalogs. Because such analysis is time-consuming it could be done on the limited number species. Here I used three insects: Drosophila melanogaster (fruit y), Anopheles gambiae (mosquito) and Apis mellifera (honeybee). After Inparnoid analyses and I listed the cluster of orthologs. Functional analyses of all listed genes were done using GO annotations and also KEGG PATHWAY database. We found, that the gene duplication pattern is unique for each species and that this uniqueness is rejected through the differences in functional classes of duplicated genes. The preferences for some classes reject the evolutionary trends of the last 350 million years and allow assumptions on the role of those genes duplications in the lifestyle of species. Furthermore, the observed gene duplications allowed me to find connections between genomic changes and their phenotypic manifestations. For example I found duplications within carbohydrate metabolism rejecting feed pattern adaptation, within photo- and olfactory-receptors indicating sensing adaptation and within troponin indicating adaptations in the development. Despite these species specific differences, found high correlations between the independently duplicated genes between the species. This might hint for a "pool" of genes preferentially duplicated. Taken together, the observed duplication patterns reject the adaptational process and provide us another link to the field of genomic zoology.
Das ANP/GC-A-System spielt durch die Produktion des sekundären Botenstoffs cGMP eine wichtige Rolle bei der Regulation des Blutdruckes und des Blutvolumens. Bei Patienten mit Herzhypertrophie oder Herzinsuffizienz sind die ANP-Plasmakonzentrationen erhöht, aber die GC-A-vermittelten Effekte stark reduziert, was auf einen Defekt des Signalsystems hinweist. Studien an metabolisch markierten GC-A-überexprimierenden HEK 293-Zellen zeigten, dass der GC-A-Rezeptor im basalen Zustand stark phosphoryliert und die homologe bzw. heterologe Desensitisierung wahrscheinlich mit einer Dephosphorylierung verbunden ist. Die Desensitisierung stellt einen Mechanismus dar, der in vivo zu einem Funktionsverlust des Rezeptors beitragen könnte. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit konnten mittels Massenspektrometrie sieben Phosphorylierungsstellen in der Kinasehomologen Domäne aus FLAG-GC-A exprimierenden HEK 293-Zellen detektiert werden: Ser487, Ser497, Thr500, Ser502, Ser506, Ser510 und Thr513. Die massenspektrometrische relative Quantifizierung basierend auf der Multiple-Reaction-Monitoring (MRM)-Methode zeigte bei ANP-induzierter, homologer Desensitisierung eine Dephosphorylierung der Phosphorylierungsstellen Ser497, Thr500, Ser502, Ser506, Ser510 und Thr513, was mit bereits publizierten Daten übereinstimmt, und einen starken Anstieg der Phosphorylierung an Ser487. Nach Inkubation mit Angiotensin II, welches eine heterologe Desensitisierung hervorruft, wurde eine Reduzierung aller Phosphorylierungen verzeichnet, die zudem stärker ausgeprägt war als bei der ANP-abhängigen Desensitisierung. Die Funktion der neu identifizierten Phosphorylierung an Ser487 wurde mittels Mutagenese analysiert. Die Substitution des Serins durch Alanin, welche den unphosphorylierten Zustand nachstellt, resultierte in einer Rezeptoraktivität und desensitisierung vergleichbar zum GC-A Wildtyp-Rezeptor. Wurde hingegen Serin gegen Glutamat getauscht, um den phosphorylierten Zustand zu imitieren, konnte der Rezeptor weder aktiviert noch desensitisiert werden. Diese Ergebnisse bestätigen vorherige Studien, dass die GC-A-Rezeptorantwort auf ANP durch die Phosphorylierungen reguliert wird. Allerdings scheint bei der homologen Desensitisierung die Phosphorylierung an der Position Ser487 eine Rolle zu spielen, da sie die Aktivität des Rezeptors inhibiert. Die Identifizierung und Charakterisierung dieser Phosphorylierungsstelle trägt zum Verständnis des Mechanismus der homologen Desensitierung bei. Zusätzlich konnten einige der beschriebenen Phosphorylierungen in Zellsystemen detektiert werden, die die GC-A endogen exprimieren. Dadurch sind unter physiologischen Bedingungen Analysen der Mechanismen möglich, die bei der Aktivierung und Deaktivierung der GC-A involviert sind und somit wichtige pathophysiologische Konsequenzen haben können.
Pluripotente embryonale Stammzellen (ES Zellen) sind aufgrund ihrer Selbsterneuerung- und ihrer Multiliniendifferenzierungs-Fähigkeiten interessante Zelltypen sowohl für die Grundlagenforschung als auch für die regenerative Medizin. Uniparentale Zygoten mit zwei väterlichen (androgenetisch: AG) oder zwei mütterlichen (gynogenetisch: GG; parthenogenetisch: PG) Genomen sind nicht in der Lage, lebensfähige Nachkommen zu entwickeln. Sie entwickeln sich jedoch erfolgreich bis zu Blastozysten, aus denen pluripotente ES Zellen abgeleitet werden können. Mit uniparentalen ES Zellen können zum Einen parent-of-origin-spezifische Einflüsse auf die Gewebeentwicklung untersucht und zum Anderen histokompatible und somit therapeutisch relevante Zellpopulationen generiert werden. Obwohl viele Aspekte des in vitro und in vivo Differenzierungspotenzials von PG ES Zellen aus mehreren Spezies in den zurückliegenden Jahren untersucht worden sind, ist das volle Differenzierungspotenzial von AG ES Zellen bisher nicht erschöpfend analysiert worden. Zellen der Inneren Zellmasse (ICM) von PG und AG Embryonen zeigten nach Blastozysteninjektion ortsspezifische Kontribution zur Gehirnentwicklung, wobei PG Zellen bevorzugt im Cortex und im Striatum lokalisierten, während sich AG Zellen verstärkt im Hypothalamus nachzuweisen waren. Aus AG und GG ES Zellen konnten zudem in vitro hämatopoetische Stammzellen differenziert werden, die nach Transplantation im Mausmodell tumorfrei das gesamte hämatopoetische System repopulierten. Weiterhin konnte gezeigt werden, dass AG ES Zellen ein mit N ES Zellen vergleichbares in vitro und in vivo Differenzierungspotential in der frühen neuralen Entwicklung besitzen. Das Ziel meiner Arbeit war es zu untersuchen, ob murine AG ES Zellen sich zu verschiedenen neuronalen Subtypen entwickeln können und ob sie tumorfrei neurale Zelltypen nach Transplantation bilden können. In dieser Studie wurden AG ES Zellen im Vergleich zu biparentalen (N) ES Zellen in vitro über Embryoid Bodies (EBs) zunächst zu pan-neuronalen Vorläuferzellen (pNPCs) und weiter zu Neuron- und Glialzell-Marker (ß-III Tubulin (Tuj-1), NeuN, TH und GFAP) positiven Zellen differenziert.. Weiterhin wurde das dopaminerge (DA) Differenzierungspotential von AG ES Zellen näher untersucht, indem sie in einem Ko-Kultursystem mit Stromazellen gerichtet differenziert wurden. Diese DA Neurone wurden durch semiquantitative RT-PCR Analysen und immunhistochemische Färbungen für DA Neuronen-spezifische Marker (TH, PITX3, Nurr1) charakterisiert. Darüber hinaus wurde der Imprinting-Status von neun ausgesuchten Loci in AG und N ES, pNPC und DA Zellkulturen durch real-time RT-PCR Analysen untersucht. Die hier analysierten Gene, die im Gehirn allelspezifisch exprimiert werden, zeigten in pNPCs eine parent-of-origin-spezifische Genexpression mit Ausnahme von Ube3a. Nach Blastozysteninjektion wurde die Bildung von DA Neuronen in AG und N fötalen chimären Gehirnen untersucht. Hier zeigte sich, dass TH- and PITX3-positive AG DA Neurone abgeleitet aus ES Zellen im Mittelhirn von E12.5 und E16.5 Chimären detektiert werden konnten. Diese fötalen chimären Gehirne zeigten eine verbreitete und gleichmäßige Verteilung der AG Donorzellen in den Arealen Cortex, Striatum und Hypothalamus. Stereotaktische Transplantationen von AG und N pNPCs in ein „Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) Model“ zeigten zudem, dass frühe Differenzierungsstufen von AG und N pNPC-Kulturen häufig Teratome generierten. Durch die Transplantation von langzeitdifferenzierten AG oder N pNPC-Kulturen konnte jedoch ein tumorfreies Anwachsen neuronaler und glialer Zellen erreicht werden. Die immunhistochemische Auswertung von Transplantaten bezüglich der Donorzellkontribution im Gehirn erfolgten bis zu drei Monaten nach der Injektion. Die vorliegenden Ergebnisse zeigen, dass AG ES Zellen neurales Differenzierungspotential, speziell zur Bildung von DA Neuronen, besitzen. Darüber hinaus konnte gezeigt werden, dass langzeitdifferenzierte AG und N pNPCs nach Transplantation im traumatisierte Mausgehirnmodell tumorfrei anwachsen und anschließend zu neuralen Zellen differenzieren können. Trotz unbalancierter Genexpression von imprinted Genen lässt sich feststellen, dass AG ES Zellen therapeutisch relevant für zukünftige zelluläre Ersatzstrategien von Nervengewebe sein können.
Ruptures of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) and defects of the rotator cuff represent the most common ligament and tendon injuries in knee and shoulder. Both injuries represent significant implications for the patients. After an injury, the ACL and the rotator cuff both exhibit poor intrinsic healing capacities. In order to prevent further defects such as arthritis of the knee and fatty infiltration of the rotator cuff, surgical interaction is essential. In both cases, the currently used surgical techniques are far from optimal because even after the therapy many patients report problems ranging from pain and reduced mobility to complete dysfunction of the involved joint and muscles. Tissue engineering may be a possible solution. It is a promising field of regenerative medicine and might be an advantageous alternative for the treatment of musculoskeletal injuries and diseases in the near future. In this thesis, different tissue engineering based approaches were investigated. For the reconstruction of damaged or diseased ligaments and tendons, the use of MSCs and gene therapy with growth factors is especially suitable and possesses a great therapeutic potential. Therefore, the first method studied and tested in this thesis was the development of a biomaterial based construct for the repair of a ruptured ACL. The second approach represents a cell based strategy for the treatment of the fatty infiltration in the rotator cuff. The third approach was a combined cell, biomaterial, and growth factor based strategy for ACL ruptures. Biomaterial based ACL construct The implant is currently tested in a preclinical in vivo study in mini pigs. This proof-of-principle study is performed to validate the functional capability of the collagen fiber based implant under load in vivo and its population with fibroblasts which produce a ligamentogenic matrix. Cell based treatment of the fatty infiltration in the rotator cuff Regarding the treatment of the fatty infiltration of the rotator cuff in a rabbit model, the in vivo results are also promising. The group treated with autologous MSCs (+MSC group) showed a lower fat content than the untreated group (–MSC group) 6 weeks after the treatment. Furthermore, the SSP muscle of the MSC-treated animals revealed macroscopically and microscopically only few differences compared to the healthy control group. The exact underlying mechanisms leading to the positive results of the treatment are not yet fully understood and have therefore to be further investigated in the future. Cell, biomaterial, and growth factor based treatment of ACL ruptures Studies described in current literature show that collagen hydrogel scaffolds are not ideal for a complete ligament or tendon reconstruction, because of their insufficient mechanical stability. Introduced as an alternative and superior therapy, the combined strategy used in this thesis proves that the cultivation of BMP-12, -13, and IGF-1 transduced MSCs and ACL fibroblasts in a collagen hydrogel is successful. The results of the performed in vitro study reveal that the cells exhibit a fibroblastic appearance and produce a ligamentogenic matrix after 3 weeks. Furthermore, the adenoviral transduction of MSCs and ACL fibroblasts showed no negative effects on proliferation or viability of the cells nor was apoptosis caused. Therefore, the application of these cells represents a possible future therapy for a partial ligament and tendon rupture where the mechanical stability of the remaining ligament or tendon is sufficient and the healing can be improved substantially by this therapy. In general, prospective randomized clinical trials still have to prove the postulated positive effect of MSCs for the treatment of various musculoskeletal diseases, but the results obtained here are already very promising. Ideally, the treatment with MSCs is superior compared to the standard surgical procedures. Because of current safety issues the use of genetically modified cells cannot be expected to be applied clinically in the near future. In summary, the different tissue engineering approaches for novel therapies for musculoskeletal injuries and diseases invested in this thesis showed very promising results and will be further developed and tested in preclinical and clinical trials.
1. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit konnten neue Erkenntnisse hinsichtlich des angenomme-nen gerichteten Ionentransports zwischen Schließ- und Nebenzellen von Zea mays gewonnen werden: a. Mittels der Patch-Clamp-Technik wurden in beiden Zelltypen S-Typ-ähnliche Anionenkanäle identifiziert. In Nebenzellen konnten sie durch steigende zytosolische Ca2+-Konzentrationen gehemmt und durch ABA und zytosolische Alkalisierung stimuliert werden. Die S-Typ-Anionenkanäle der Schließzellen wurden hingegen durch eine Alkalisierung kaum beeinflusst und durch steigende zytosolische Ca2+-Konzentrationen stimuliert. b. Darüber hinaus konnte an intakten Mais-Pflanzen mit der Einstich-Elektroden-Technik gezeigt werden, dass Nebenzellen eine gegenläufige Polarisation des Membranpotentials während der Licht-/Dunkel-induzierten Stomabewegung aufweisen. Da das Membranpotential der Nebenzellen von Hordeum vulgare ein zu Mais ähnliches Verhalten während der Stomabewegung zeigte und gegenläu-fig zur Membranpolarisation der benachbarten Schließzellen war, ist ein ähnli-ches Verhalten bei Zea mays Schließzellen naheliegend. c. Zudem wurde in intakten Nebenzellen von Zea mays eine zytosolische Alkali-sierung während der Licht-induzierten Stomaöffnung beobachtet, die bei Stomaschluss wieder auf den Ursprungswert zurückkehrte. d. Mit Hilfe rekonstruktierter 3D-Modelle von intakten Mais-Stomakomplexen konnte ein Volumenverhältnis zwischen Schließ- und Nebenzellen von 1:6 bzw. 1:4 bei geöffneten und geschlossenen Stomata ermittelt werden. Unter Einbeziehung der Vorarbeiten unserer Arbeitsgruppe konnten die hier gewon-nenen Erkenntnisse schlüssig in ein Modell zur Beschreibung des Shuttle-Ionentransports zwischen Neben- und Schließzellen während der Licht-induzierten Stomabewegung eingebunden werden. 2. Des Weiteren wurden die S-Typ-Anionenstromantworten von A. thaliana Schließ-zellen in Patch-Clamp-Experimenten näher untersucht. Dabei waren die S-Typ-Anionenströme bei Ca2+- bzw. ABA-Stimulation in CPK23- und OST1-Verlustmutanten im Vergleich zum Wildtyp stark reduziert. Diese in vivo generierten Daten untermauern die in vitro Ergebnisse der Arbeitsgruppe von Prof. R. Hedrich (Universität Würzburg), dass OST1 und CPK23 Interaktionspartner des S-Typ-Anionenkanals SLAC1 in A. thaliana sind. Das SLAC1-homologe Gen SLAH3 ko-diert für einen Nitrat-permeablen S-Typ-Anionenkanal in Schließzellen, der zudem durch externes Nitrat aktiviert wird. Da in slac1-3 Verlustmutanten S-Typ-ähnliche Anionenströme generiert werden konnten, wenn Nitrat das dominierende Anion dar-stellte oder den Chlorid-basierten Lösungen externes Nitrat zugegeben wurde, scheint SLAH3 unter bestimmten Bedingungen einen alternativen Weg für die Ent-lassung von Anionen aus der Schließzelle darzustellen. 3. Die elektrophysiologische Charakterisierung der R-Typ-Anionenkanäle in A. thaliana Schließzellen belegt, dass dieser Kanal ähnliche Grundcharakteristika aufweist, die schon in Vicia faba beschrieben wurden: eine starke Spannungsab¬hängigkeit, sowie schnelle Aktivierungs- und Deaktivierungskinetiken. Im Gegensatz zu Vicia faba wurde die Spannungsabhängigkeit dieses Kanaltyps in A. thaliana nicht durch externes Malat beeinflusst. Jedoch war unter externen Malatbedingungen die Stromantwort einer almt12-Verlustmutante im Vergleich zu Wildtyp-Schließzellen erheblich reduziert, während unter externen Sulfatbe¬dingungen keine Unterschiede zwischen Wildtyp und almt12-Verlustmutante auszu¬machen waren. ALMT12 scheint demnach für den Malat-aktivierten Teil des R-Typ-Anionenkanals verantwortlich zu sein.
Precise control of mitotic progression is vital for the maintenance of genomic integrity. Since the loss of genomic integrity is known to promote tumorigenesis, the identification of knew G2/M regulatory genes attracts great attention. LINC, a human multiprotein complex, is a transcriptional activator of a set of G2/M specific genes. By depleting LIN9 in MEFs, a core subunit of LINC, Gas2l3 was identified as a novel LINC target gene. The so far uncharacterized Gas2l3 gene encodes for a member of the family of growth arrest specific 2 (GAS2) proteins, which share a highly conserved putative actin binding CH and a putative microtubule binding GAS2 domain. In the present study GAS2L3 was identified as a LINC target gene also in human cells. Gene expression analysis revealed that GAS2L3 transcription, in contrast to all other GAS2 family members, is highly regulated during the cell cycle with highest expression in G2/M. The GAS2L3 protein showed a specific localization pattern during the M phase: In metaphase, GAS2L3 localized to the mitotic spindle, relocated to the spindle midzone microtubules in late anaphase and concentrated at the midbody in telophase where it persisted until the end of cytokinesis. Overexpression of a set of different GAS2L3 deletion mutants demonstrated that the localization to the mitotic microtubule network is dependent on the C-terminus, whereas the midbody localization is dependent on full length GAS2L3 protein. Additionally, exclusive overexpression of the CH domain induced the formation of actin stress fibers, suggesting that the CH domain is an actin binding domain. In contrast, the GAS2 domain was neither needed nor sufficient for microtubule binding, indicating that there must be an additional so far unknown microtubule binding domain in the C-terminus. Interestingly, immunoblot analysis also identified the C-terminus as the domain responsible for GAS2L3 protein instability, partially dependent on proteasomal degradation. Consistent with its specific localization pattern, GAS2L3 depletion by RNAi demonstrated its responsibility for proper mitosis and cytokinesis. GAS2L3 depletion in HeLa cells resulted in the accumulation of multinucleated cells, an indicator for chromosome mis-segregation during mitosis. Also the amount of cells in cytokinesis was enriched, indicating failures in completing the last step of cytokinesis, the abscission. Strikingly, treatment with microtubule poisons that lead to the activation of the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) indicated that the SAC was weakened in GAS2L3 depleted cells. Although the exact molecular mechanism is still unknown, fist experiments support the hypothesis that GAS2L3 might be a regulator of the SAC master kinase BUBR1. In conclusion, this study provides first evidence for GAS2L3 as a novel regulator of mitosis and cytokinesis and it might therefore be an important guardian against tumorigenesis.
Protein phosphatases can be classified into at least three major families based on amino acid sequences at their active sites. A newly emerging phosphatase family contains the active site sequence DXDX(T/V), and belongs to the haloacid dehalogenase (HAD) superfamily of hydrolases, a ubiquitous and evolutionarily conserved enzyme family. Although the existence of 58 human HAD enzymes has been predicted by database analysis, our understanding of their biological functions remains rudimentary.By database mining amd phylogenetic analysis of human HAD phosphatases, we have found a marked increase in cell area of spreading cells, as well as accelerated cell spreading onfibronectin. Taken together, we have identified and characterized AUM as a novel member of the emerging family of aspartate-dependent protein tyrosine phosphatases. Our findings implicate AUM as an important regulator of Src-dependent cytoskeletal dynamics during cell adhesion and migration. a previously unidentified enzyme with homology to Chronophin, a cytoskeletal regulatory HAD phosphatase. We have cloned and characterized this novel enzyme and named it AUM,for actin remodeling, ubiquitously expressed, magnesium-dependent HAD phosphatase. By Northern blot, real-time PCR and Western blot analysis, we show that AUM is broadly expressed in all major human and mouse tissues with highest levels found in testis. Using immunohistochemistry, we can show that AUM is specifically expressed in maturing germ cells and that its expression peaks during spermiogenesis. To characterize the substrate preference of AUM, we have conducted an in vitro phosphatase substrate screen with 720 phosphopeptides derived from human phosphorylation sites. AUM exclusively dephosphorylates phosphotyrosine (pTyr)-containing peptides. Furthermore, only 17 pTyr peptides (~2% of all pTyr peptides investigated) acted as AUM substrates, indicating a high degree of substrate specificity. Putative AUM substrates include proteins involved in cytoskeletal dynamics and tyrosine kinase signaling.In accordance with the phosphopeptide screen, phosphatase overlay assays employing whole-cell extracts of pervanadate-treated HeLa cells show that AUM dephosphorylates only a limited number of tyrosyl-phosphorylated proteins.The role of AUM for cellular signaling was investigated in response to epidermal growth factor (EGF) stimulation in a spermatogonial cell line (GC-1 spg). The overexpression of AUM reduces, whereas the RNAi-mediated depletion of endogenous AUM increases EGF inducedtyrosine phosphorylation, including changes in the phosphorylation of the EGF receptor itself. Interestingly, in vitro kinase/phosphatase assays with purified Src and AUM indicate that AUM can activate Src, which in turn phosphorylates and inactivates AUM. Although it is at present unclear how Src and AUM regulate each other, our initial findings suggests that AUM enhances Src kinase activity independently of its phosphatase activity, whereas Src diminishes AUM phosphatase activity in a kinase dependent manner. On a cellular level, AUM-depleted cells are characterized by altered actin cytoskeletal dynamics and adhesion, as indicated by stabilized actin filaments, enlarged focal adhesions,a marked increase in cell area of spreading cells, as well as accelerated cell spreading on fibronectin. Taken together, we have identified and characterized AUM as a novel member of the emerging family of aspartate-dependent protein tyrosine phosphatases. Our findings implicate AUM as an important regulator of Src-dependent cytoskeletal dynamics during cell adhesion and migration.
Biodiversity may be investigated and explored by the means of genetic sequence information and molecular phylogenetics. Yet, with ribosomal genes, information for phylogenetic studies may not only be retained from the primary sequence, but also from the secondary structure. Software that is able to cope with two dimensional data and designed to answer taxonomic questions has been recently developed and published as a new scientific pipeline. This thesis is concerned with expanding this pipeline by a tool that facialiates the annotation of a ribosomal region, namely the ITS2. We were also able to show that this states a crucial step for secondary structure phylogenetics and for data allocation of the ITS2-database. This resulting freely available tool determines high quality annotations. In a further study, the complete phylogenetic pipeline has been evaluated on a theoretical basis in a comprehensive simulation study. We were able to show that both, the accuracy and the robustness of phylogenetic trees are largely improved by the approach. The second major part of this thesis concentrates on case studies that applied this pipeline to resolve questions in taxonomy and ecology. We were able to determine several independent phylogenies within the green algae that further corroborate the idea that secondary structures improve the obtainable phylogenetic signal, but now from a biological perspective. This approach was applicable in studies on the species and genus level, but due to the conservation of the secondary structure also for investigations on the deeper level of taxonomy. An additional case study with blue butterflies indicates that this approach is not restricted to plants, but may also be used for metazoan phylogenies. The importance of high quality phylogenetic trees is indicated by two ecological studies that have been conducted. By integrating secondary structure phylogenetics, we were able to answer questions about the evolution of ant-plant interactions and of communities of bacteria residing on different plant tissues. Finally, we speculate how phylogenetic methods with RNA may be further enhanced by integration of the third dimension. This has been a speculative idea that was supplemented with a small phylogenetic example, however it shows that the great potential of structural phylogenetics has not been fully exploited yet. Altogether, this thesis comprises aspects of several different biological disciplines, which are evolutionary biology and biodiversity research, community and invasion ecology as well as molecular and structural biology. Further, it is complemented by statistical approaches and development of informatical software. All these different research areas are combined by the means of bioinformatics as the central connective link into one comprehensive thesis.
Background: High mobility group A (HMGA) proteins regulate gene transcription through architectural modulation of chromatin and the formation of multi-protein complexes on promoter/enhancer regions. Differential expression of HMGA variants has been found to be important for distinct differentiation processes and deregulated expression was linked to several disorders. Here we used mouse C2C12 myoblasts and C2C12 cells stably over-expressing HMGA1a-eGFP to study the impact of deregulated HMGA1 expression levels on cellular differentiation. Results: We found that induction of the myogenic or osteogenic program of C2C12 cells caused an immediate down-regulation of HMGA1. In contrast to wild type C2C12 cells, an engineered cell line with stable overexpression of HMGA1a-eGFP failed to differentiate into myotubes. Immunolocalization studies demonstrated that sustained HMGA1a-eGFP expression prevented myotube formation and chromatin reorganization that normally accompanies differentiation. Western Blot analyses showed that elevated HMGA1a-eGFP levels affected chromatin composition through either down-regulation of histone H1 or premature expression of MeCP2. RT-PCR analyses further revealed that sustained HMGA1a expression also affected myogenic gene expression and caused either down-regulation of genes such as MyoD, myogenin, Igf1, Igf2, Igfbp1-3 or up-regulation of the transcriptional repressor Msx1. Interestingly, siRNA experiments demonstrated that knock-down of HMGA1a was required and sufficient to reactivate the myogenic program in induced HMGA1a over-expressing cells. Conclusions: Our data demonstrate that HMGA1 down-regulation after induction is required to initiate the myogenic program in C2C12 cells. Sustained HMGA1a expression after induction prevents expression of key myogenic factors. This may be due to specific gene regulation and/or global effects on chromatin. Our data further corroborate that altered HMGA1 levels influence the expression of other chromatin proteins. Thus, HMGA1 is able to establish a specific chromatin composition. This work contributes to the understanding of how differential HMGA1 expression is involved in chromatin organization during cellular differentiation processes and it may help to comprehend effects of HMGA1 over-expression occurring in malign or benign tumours.
Background: The epidermal growth factor receptor (Egfr) with its numerous ligands has fundamental roles in development, cell differentiation and physiology. Dysfunction of the receptor-ligand system contributes to many human malignancies. Consistent with such various tasks, the Egfr gene family has expanded during vertebrate evolution as a consequence of several rounds of whole genome duplication. Of particular interest is the effect of the fish-specific whole genome duplication (FSGD) on the ligand-receptor system, as it has supplied this largest group of vertebrates with additional opportunities for sub- and/or neofunctionalization in this signaling system. Results: We identified the predicted components of the Egf receptor-ligand signaling system in teleost fishes (medaka, platyfish, stickleback, pufferfishes and zebrafish). We found two duplicated egfr genes, egfra and egfrb, in all available teleost genomes. Surprisingly only one copy for each of the seven Egfr ligands could be identified in most fishes, with zebrafish hbegf being the only exception. Special focus was put on medaka, for which we more closely investigated all Egf receptors and Egfr ligands. The different expression patterns of egfra, egfrb and their ligands in medaka tissues and embryo stages suggest differences in role and function. Preferential co-expression of different subsets of Egfr ligands corroborates the possible subfunctionalization and specialization of the two receptors in adult tissues. Bioinformatic analyses of the ligand-receptor interface between Egfr and its ligands show a very weak evolutionary conservation within this region. Using in vitro analyses of medaka Egfra, we could show that this receptor is only activated by medaka ligands, but not by human EGF. Altogether, our data suggest a lineage-specific Egfr/Egfr ligand co-evolution. Conclusions: Our data indicate that medaka Egfr signaling occurs via its two copies, Egfra and Egfrb, each of them being preferentially coexpressed with different subsets of Egfr ligands. This fish-specific occurrence of Egf receptor specialization offers unique opportunities to study the functions of different Egf receptor-ligand combinations and their biological outputs in vertebrates. Furthermore, our results strongly support the use of homologous ligands in future studies, as sufficient cross-specificity is very unlikely for this ligand/receptor system.
The Enterobacteriaceae comprise a large number of clinically relevant species with several individual subspecies. Overlapping virulence-associated gene pools and the high overall genome plasticity often interferes with correct enterobacterial strain typing and risk assessment. Array technology offers a fast, reproducible and standardisable means for bacterial typing and thus provides many advantages for bacterial diagnostics, risk assessment and surveillance. The development of highly discriminative broad-range microbial diagnostic microarrays remains a challenge, because of marked genome plasticity of many bacterial pathogens. Results: We developed a DNA microarray for strain typing and detection of major antimicrobial resistance genes of clinically relevant enterobacteria. For this purpose, we applied a global genome-wide probe selection strategy on 32 available complete enterobacterial genomes combined with a regression model for pathogen classification. The discriminative power of the probe set was further tested in silico on 15 additional complete enterobacterial genome sequences. DNA microarrays based on the selected probes were used to type 92 clinical enterobacterial isolates. Phenotypic tests confirmed the array-based typing results and corroborate that the selected probes allowed correct typing and prediction of major antibiotic resistances of clinically relevant Enterobacteriaceae, including the subspecies level, e.g. the reliable distinction of different E. coli pathotypes. Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that the global probe selection approach based on longest common factor statistics as well as the design of a DNA microarray with a restricted set of discriminative probes enables robust discrimination of different enterobacterial variants and represents a proof of concept that can be adopted for diagnostics of a wide range of microbial pathogens. Our approach circumvents misclassifications arising from the application of virulence markers, which are highly affected by horizontal gene transfer. Moreover, a broad range of pathogens have been covered by an efficient probe set size enabling the design of high-throughput diagnostics.
Background: LINC complexes are nuclear envelope bridging protein structures formed by interaction of SUN and KASH proteins. They physically connect the nucleus with the peripheral cytoskeleton and are critically involved in a variety of dynamic processes, such as nuclear anchorage, movement and positioning and meiotic chromosome dynamics. Moreover, they are shown to be essential for maintaining nuclear shape. Findings: Based on detailed expression analysis and biochemical approaches, we show here that during mouse sperm development, a terminal cell differentiation process characterized by profound morphogenic restructuring, two novel distinctive LINC complexes are established. They consist either of spermiogenesis-specific Sun3 and Nesprin1 or Sun1g, a novel non-nuclear Sun1 isoform, and Nesprin3. We could find that these two LINC complexes specifically polarize to opposite spermatid poles likely linking to sperm-specific cytoskeletal structures. Although, as shown in co-transfection / immunoprecipitation experiments, SUN proteins appear to arbitrarily interact with various KASH partners, our study demonstrates that they actually are able to confine their binding to form distinct LINC complexes. Conclusions: Formation of the mammalian sperm head involves assembly and different polarization of two novel spermiogenesis-specific LINC complexes. Together, our findings suggest that theses LINC complexes connect the differentiating spermatid nucleus to surrounding cytoskeletal structures to enable its well-directed shaping and elongation, which in turn is a critical parameter for male fertility.
Analysis of the genome sequences of the major human bacterial pathogens has provided a large amount of information concerning their metabolic potential. However, our knowledge of the actual metabolic pathways and metabolite fluxes occurring in these pathogens under infection conditions is still limited. In this study, we analysed the intracellular carbon metabolism of enteroinvasive Escherichia coli (EIEC HN280 and EIEC 4608-58) and Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhimurium (Stm 14028) replicating in epithelial colorectal adenocarcinoma cells (Caco-2). To this aim, we supplied [U-13C6]glucose to Caco-2 cells infected with the bacterial strains or mutants thereof impaired in the uptake of glucose, mannose and/or glucose 6-phosphate. The 13C-isotopologue patterns of protein-derived amino acids from the bacteria and the host cells were then determined by mass spectrometry. The data showed that EIEC HN280 growing in the cytosol of the host cells, as well as Stm 14028 replicating in the Salmonella-containing vacuole (SCV) utilised glucose, but not glucose 6-phosphate, other phosphorylated carbohydrates, gluconate or fatty acids as major carbon substrates. EIEC 4608-58 used C3-compound(s) in addition to glucose as carbon source. The labelling patterns reflected strain-dependent carbon flux via glycolysis and/or the Entner-Doudoroff pathway, the pentose phosphate pathway, the TCA cycle and anapleurotic reactions between PEP and oxaloacetate. Mutants of all three strains impaired in the uptake of glucose switched to C3-substrate(s) accompanied by an increased uptake of amino acids (and possibly also other anabolic monomers) from the host cell. Surprisingly, the metabolism of the host cells, as judged by the efficiency of 13C-incorporation into host cell amino acids, was not significantly affected by the infection with either of these intracellular pathogens.
Prohibitin 1 (PHB1) is a highly conserved protein that together with its homologue prohibitin 2 (PHB2) mainly localizes to the inner mitochondrial membrane. Although it was originally identified by its ability to inhibit G1/S progression in human fibroblasts, its role as tumor suppressor is debated. To determine the function of prohibitins in maintaining cell homeostasis, we generated cancer cell lines expressing prohibitin-directed shRNAs. We show that prohibitin proteins are necessary for the proliferation of cancer cells. Down-regulation of prohibitin expression drastically reduced the rate of cell division. Furthermore, mitochondrial morphology was not affected, but loss of prohibitins did lead to the degradation of the fusion protein OPA1 and, in certain cancer cell lines, to a reduced capability to exhibit anchorage-independent growth. These cancer cells also exhibited reduced adhesion to the extracellular matrix. Taken together, these observations suggest prohibitins play a crucial role in adhesion processes in the cell and thereby sustaining cancer cell propagation and survival.
All animals learn in order to cope with challenges imposed on them by their environment. This is true also for both larval and adult fruit flies as exemplified in pavlovian conditioning. The focus of this Thesis is on various aspects of the fruit flies learning ability. My main project deals with two types of learning which we call punishment-learning and pain-relief learning. Punishment learning happens when fruit flies are exposed to an odour which is followed by electric shock. After such training, flies have learned that that odour signals pain and consequently will avoid it in the future. If the sequence of the two stimuli is reversed such that odour follows shock, flies learn the odour as a signal for relief and will later on approach it. I first report a series of experiments investigating qualitative and parametric features of relief-learning; I find that (i) relief learning does result from true associative conditioning, (ii) it requires a relatively high number of training trials, (iii) context-shock training is ineffective for subsequent shock-odour learning. A further question is whether punishment-learning and pain-relief learning share genetic determinants. In terms of genetics, I test a synapsin mutant strain, which lacks all Synapsin protein, in punishment and relief-learning. Punishment learning is significantly reduced, and relief-learning is abolished. Pan-neuronal RNAi-mediated knock-down of Synapsin results in mutant-like phenotypes, confirming the attribution of the phenotype to lack of Synapsin. Also, a rescue of Synapsin in the mushroom body of syn97 mutants restores both punishment- and relief-learning fully, suggesting the sufficiency of Synapsin in the mushroom body for both these kinds of learning. I also elucidate the relationship between perception and physiology in adult fruit flies. I use odour-shock conditioning experiments to identify degrees of similarity between odours; I find that those similarity measures are consistent across generalization and discrimination tasks of diverse difficulty. Then, as collaborator of T. Völler and A. Fiala, I investigate how such behavioural similarity/dissimilarity is reflected at the physiological level. I combine the behaviour data with calcium imaging data obtained by measuring the activity patterns of those odours in either the sensory neurons or the projection neurons at the antennal lobe. Our interpretation of the results is that the odours perceptual similarity is organized by antennal lobe interneurons. In another project I investigate the effect of gustatory stimuli on reflexive behaviour as well as their role as reinforcer in larval learning. Drosophila larvae greatly alter their behaviour in presence of sodium chloride. Increasing salt concentration modulates choice behaviour from weakly appetitive to strongly aversive. A similar concentration-behaviour function is also found for feeding: larval feeding is slightly enhanced in presence of low salt concentrations, and strongly decreased in the presence of high salt concentrations. Regarding learning, relatively weak salt concentrations function as appetitive reinforcer, whereas high salt concentrations function as aversive reinforcer. Interestingly, the behaviour-concentration curves are shifted towards higher concentrations from reflexive behaviour (choice behaviour, feeding) as compared to associative learning. This dissociation may reflect a different sensitivity in the respective sensory-motor circuitry.
Background: The carpenter ant Camponotus floridanus harbors obligate intracellular mutualistic bacteria (Blochmannia floridanus) in specialized cells, the bacteriocytes, intercalated in their midgut tissue. The diffuse distribution of bacteriocytes over the midgut tissue is in contrast to many other insects carrying endosymbionts in specialized tissues which are often connected to the midgut but form a distinct organ, the bacteriome. C.floridanus is a holometabolous insect which undergoes a complete metamorphosis. During pupal stages a complete restructuring of the inner organs including the digestive tract takes place. So far, nothing was known about maintenance of endosymbionts during this life stage of a holometabolous insect. It was shown previously that the number of Blochmannia increases strongly during metamorphosis. This implicates an important function of Blochmannia in this developmental phase during which the animals are metabolically very active but do not have access to external food resources. Previous experiments have shown a nutritional contribution of the bacteria to host metabolism by production of essential amino acids and urease-mediated nitrogen recycling. In adult hosts the symbiosis appears to degenerate with increasing age of the animals. Results: We investigated the distribution and dynamics of endosymbiotic bacteria and bacteriocytes at different stages during development of the animals from larva to imago by confocal laser scanning microscopy. The number of bacteriocytes in relation to symbiont-free midgut cells varied strongly over different developmental stages. Especially during metamorphosis the relative number of bacteria-filled bacteriocytes increased strongly when the larval midgut epithelium is shed. During this developmental stage the midgut itself became a huge symbiotic organ consisting almost exclusively of cells harboring bacteria. In fact, during this phase some bacteria were also found in midgut cells other than bacteriocytes indicating a cell-invasive capacity of Blochmannia. In adult animals the number of bacteriocytes generally decreased. Conclusions: During the life cycle of the animals the distribution of bacteriocytes and of Blochmannia endosymbionts is remarkably dynamic. Our data show how the endosymbiont is retained within the midgut tissue during metamorphosis thereby ensuring the maintenance of the intracellular endosymbiosis despite a massive reorganization of the midgut tissue. The transformation of the entire midgut into a symbiotic organ during pupal stages underscores the important role of Blochmannia for its host in particular during metamorphosis.