@phdthesis{Lohmann2012, author = {Lohmann, Dirk}, title = {Sustainable management of semi-arid African savannas under environmental and political change}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-65069}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Drylands cover about 40\% of the earth's land surface and provide the basis for the livelihoods of 38\% of the global human population. Worldwide, these ecosystems are prone to heavy degradation. Increasing levels of dryland degradation result a strong decline of ecosystem services. In addition, in highly variable semi-arid environments changing future environmental conditions will potentially have severe consequences for productivity and ecosystem dynamics. Hence, global efforts have to be made to understand the particular causes and consequences of dryland degradation and to promote sustainable management options for semi-arid and arid ecosystems in a changing world. Here I particularly address the problem of semi-arid savanna degradation, which mostly occurs in form of woody plant encroachment. At this, I aim at finding viable sustainable management strategies and improving the general understanding of semi-arid savanna vegetation dynamics under conditions of extensive livestock production. Moreover, the influence of external forces, i.e. environmental change and land reform, on the use of savanna vegetation and on the ecosystem response to this land use is assessed. Based on this I identify conditions and strategies that facilitate a sustainable use of semi-arid savanna rangelands in a changing world. I extended an eco-hydrological model to simulate rangeland vegetation dynamics for a typical semi-arid savanna in eastern Namibia. In particular, I identified the response of semi-arid savanna vegetation to different land use strategies (including fire management) also with regard to different predicted precipitation, temperature and CO2 regimes. Not only environmental but also economic and political constraints like e.g. land reform programmes are shaping rangeland management strategies. Hence, I aimed at understanding the effects of the ongoing process of land reform in southern Africa on land use and the semi-arid savanna vegetation. Therefore, I developed and implemented an agent-based ecological-economic modelling tool for interactive role plays with land users. This tool was applied in an interdisciplinary empirical study to identify general patterns of management decisions and the between-farm cooperation of land reform beneficiaries in eastern Namibia. The eco-hydrological simulations revealed that the future dynamics of semi-arid savanna vegetation strongly depend on the respective climate change scenario. In particular, I found that the capacity of the system to sustain domestic livestock production will strongly depend on changes in the amount and temporal distribution of precipitation. In addition, my simulations revealed that shrub encroachment will become less likely under future climatic conditions although positive effects of CO2 on woody plant growth and transpiration have been considered. While earlier studies predicted a further increase in shrub encroachment due to increased levels of atmospheric CO2, my contrary finding is based on the negative impacts of temperature increase on the drought sensitive seedling germination and establishment of woody plant species. Further simulation experiments revealed that prescribed fires are an efficient tool for semi-arid rangeland management, since they suppress woody plant seedling establishment. The strategies tested have increased the long term productivity of the savanna in terms of livestock production and decreased the risk for shrub encroachment (i.e. savanna degradation). This finding refutes the views promoted by existing studies, which state that fires are of minor importance for the vegetation dynamics of semi-arid and arid savannas. Again, the difference in predictions is related to the bottleneck at the seedling establishment stage of woody plants, which has not been sufficiently considered in earlier studies. The ecological-economic role plays with Namibian land reform beneficiaries showed that the farmers made their decisions with regard to herd size adjustments according to economic but not according to environmental variables. Hence, they do not manage opportunistically by tracking grass biomass availability but rather apply conservative management strategies with low stocking rates. This implies that under the given circumstances the management of these farmers will not per se cause (or further worsen) the problem of savanna degradation and shrub encroachment due to overgrazing. However, as my results indicate that this management strategy is rather based on high financial pressure, it is not an indicator for successful rangeland management. Rather, farmers struggle hard to make any positive revenue from their farming business and the success of the Namibian land reform is currently disputable. The role-plays also revealed that cooperation between farmers is difficult even though obligatory due to the often small farm sizes. I thus propose that cooperation needs to be facilitated to improve the success of land reform beneficiaries.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Bringmann2012, author = {Bringmann, Martin}, title = {Identification of novel components that connect cellulose synthases to the cytoskeleton}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-61478}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Cellulose is the most abundant biopolymer on earth and the main load-bearing structure in plant cell walls. Cellulose microfibrils are laid down in a tight parallel array, surrounding plant cells like a corset. Orientation of microfibrils determines the direction of growth by directing turgor pressure to points of expansion (Somerville et al., 2004). Hence, cellulose deficient mutants usually show cell and organ swelling due to disturbed anisotropic cell expansion (reviewed in Endler and Persson, 2011). How do cellulose microfibrils gain their parallel orientation? First experiments in the 1960s suggested, that cortical microtubules aid the cellulose synthases on their way around the cell (Green, 1962; Ledbetter and Porter, 1963). This was proofed in 2006 through life cell imaging (Paredez et al., 2006). However, how this guidance was facilitated, remained unknown. Through a combinatory approach, including forward and reverse genetics together with advanced co-expression analysis, we identified pom2 as a cellulose deficient mutant. Map- based cloning revealed that the gene locus of POM2 corresponded to CELLULOSE SYNTHASE INTERACTING 1 (CSI1). Intriguingly, we previously found the CSI1 protein to interact with the putative cytosolic part of the primary cellulose synthases in a yeast-two-hybrid screen (Gu et al., 2010). Exhaustive cell biological analysis of the POM2/CSI1 protein allowed to determine its cellular function. Using spinning disc confocal microscopy, we could show that in the absence of POM2/CSI1, cellulose synthase complexes lose their microtubule-dependent trajectories in the plasma membrane. The loss of POM2/CSI1, however does not influence microtubule- dependent delivery of cellulose synthases (Bringmann et al., 2012). Consequently, POM2/CSI1 acts as a bridging protein between active cellulose synthases and cortical microtubules. This thesis summarizes three publications of the author, regarding the identification of proteins that connect cellulose synthases to the cytoskeleton. This involves the development of bioinformatics tools allowing candidate gene prediction through co-expression studies (Mutwil et al., 2009), identification of candidate genes through interaction studies (Gu et al., 2010), and determination of the cellular function of the candidate gene (Bringmann et al., 2012).}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Axtner2012, author = {Axtner, Jan}, title = {Immune gene expression and diversity in relation to gastrointestinal parasite burden in small mammals}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-65639}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, year = {2012}, abstract = {MHC genes encode proteins that are responsible for the recognition of foreign antigens and the triggering of a subsequent, adequate immune response of the organism. Thus they hold a key position in the immune system of vertebrates. It is believed that the extraordinary genetic diversity of MHC genes is shaped by adaptive selectional processes in response to the reoccurring adaptations of parasites and pathogens. A large number of MHC studies were performed in a wide range of wildlife species aiming to understand the role of immune gene diversity in parasite resistance under natural selection conditions. Methodically, most of this work with very few exceptions has focussed only upon the structural, i.e. sequence diversity of regions responsible for antigen binding and presentation. Most of these studies found evidence that MHC gene variation did indeed underlie adaptive processes and that an individual's allelic diversity explains parasite and pathogen resistance to a large extent. Nevertheless, our understanding of the effective mechanisms is incomplete. A neglected, but potentially highly relevant component concerns the transcriptional differences of MHC alleles. Indeed, differences in the expression levels MHC alleles and their potential functional importance have remained unstudied. The idea that also transcriptional differences might play an important role relies on the fact that lower MHC gene expression is tantamount with reduced induction of CD4+ T helper cells and thus with a reduced immune response. Hence, I studied the expression of MHC genes and of immune regulative cytokines as additional factors to reveal the functional importance of MHC diversity in two free-ranging rodent species (Delomys sublineatus, Apodemus flavicollis) in association with their gastrointestinal helminths under natural selection conditions. I established the method of relative quantification of mRNA on liver and spleen samples of both species in our laboratory. As there was no available information on nucleic sequences of potential reference genes in both species, PCR primer systems that were established in laboratory mice have to be tested and adapted for both non-model organisms. In the due course, sets of stable reference genes for both species were found and thus the preconditions for reliable measurements of mRNA levels established. For D. sublineatus it could be demonstrated that helminth infection elicits aspects of a typical Th2 immune response. Whereas mRNA levels of the cytokine interleukin Il4 increased with infection intensity by strongyle nematodes neither MHC nor cytokine expression played a significant role in D. sublineatus. For A. flavicollis I found a negative association between the parasitic nematode Heligmosomoides polygyrus and hepatic MHC mRNA levels. As a lower MHC expression entails a lower immune response, this could be evidence for an immune evasive strategy of the nematode, as it has been suggested for many micro-parasites. This implies that H. polygyrus is capable to interfere actively with the MHC transcription. Indeed, this parasite species has long been suspected to be immunosuppressive, e.g. by induction of regulatory T-helper cells that respond with a higher interleukin Il10 and tumor necrosis factor Tgfb production. Both cytokines in turn cause an abated MHC expression. By disabling recognition by the MHC molecule H. polygyrus might be able to prevent an activation of the immune system. Indeed, I found a strong tendency in animals carrying the allele Apfl-DRB*23 to have an increased infection intensity with H. polygyrus. Furthermore, I found positive and negative associations between specific MHC alleles and other helminth species, as well as typical signs of positive selection acting on the nucleic sequences of the MHC. The latter was evident by an elevated rate of non-synonymous to synonymous substitutions in the MHC sequences of exon 2 encoding the functionally important antigen binding sites whereas the first and third exons of the MHC DRB gene were highly conserved. In conclusion, the studies in this thesis demonstrate that valid procedures to quantify expression of immune relevant genes are also feasible in non-model wildlife organisms. In addition to structural MHC diversity, also MHC gene expression should be considered to obtain a more complete picture on host-pathogen coevolutionary selection processes. This is especially true if parasites are able to interfere with systemic MHC expression. In this case advantageous or disadvantageous effects of allelic binding motifs are abated. The studies could not define the role of MHC gene expression in antagonistic coevolution as such but the results suggest that it depends strongly on the specific parasite species that is involved.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Kuhnert2012, author = {Kuhnert, Oliver}, title = {Charakterisierung der neuen centrosomalen Proteine CP148 und CP55 in Dictyostelium discoideum}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-59949}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Das im Cytosol liegende Dictyostelium Centrosom ist aus einer geschichteten Core-Region aufgebaut, die von einer Mikrotubuli-nukleierenden Corona umgeben ist. Zudem ist es {\"u}ber eine spezifische Verbindung eng an den Kern gekn{\"u}pft und durch die Kernmembran hindurch mit den geclusterten Centromeren verbunden. Beim G2/M {\"U}bergang dissoziiert die Corona vom Centrosom und der Core verdoppelt sich so dass zwei Spindelpole entstehen. CP55 und CP148 wurden in einer Proteom-Analyse des Centrosoms identifiziert. CP148 ist ein neues coiled-coil Protein der centrosomalen Corona. Es zeigt eine zellzyklusabh{\"a}ngige An- und Abwesenheit am Centrosom, die mit der Dissoziation der Corona in der Prophase und ihrer Neubildung in der Telophase korreliert. W{\"a}hrend der Telophase erschienen in GFP-CP148 exprimierenden Zellen viele, kleine GFP-CP148-Foci im Cytoplasma, die zum Teil miteinander fusionierten und zum Centrosom wanderten. Daraus resultierte eine hypertrophe Corona in Zellen mit starker GFP-CP148 {\"U}berexpression. Ein Knockdown von CP148 durch RNAi f{\"u}hrte zu einem Verlust der Corona und einem ungeordneten Interphase Mikrotubuli-Cytoskelett. Die Bildung der mitotischen Spindel und der astralen Mikrotubuli blieb davon unbeeinflusst. Das bedeutet, dass die Mikrotubuli-Nukleationskomplexe w{\"a}hrend der Interphase und Mitose {\"u}ber verschiedene Wege mit dem Core assoziiert sind. Des Weiteren bewirkte der Knockdown eine Dispersion der Centromere sowie eine ver{\"a}nderte Sun1 Lokalisation in der Kernh{\"u}lle. Somit spielt CP148 ebenso eine Rolle in der Centrosomen-Centromer-Verbindung. Zusammengefasst ist CP148 ein essentielles Protein f{\"u}r die Bildung und Organisation der Corona, welche wiederum f{\"u}r die Centrosom/Centromer Verbindung ben{\"o}tigt wird. CP55 wurde als Protein der Core-Region identifiziert und verbleibt w{\"a}hrend des Zellzyklus am Centrosom. Dort besitzt es strukturelle Aufgaben, da die Mehrheit der GFP-CP55 Molek{\"u}le in der Interphase keine Mobilit{\"a}t zeigten. Die GFP-CP55 {\"U}berexpression f{\"u}hrte zur Bildung von {\"u}berz{\"a}hligen Centrosomen mit der {\"u}blichen Ausstattung an Markerproteinen der Corona und des Cores. CP55 Knockout-Zellen waren durch eine erh{\"o}hte Ploidie, eine weniger strukturierte und leicht vergr{\"o}ßerte Corona sowie zus{\"a}tzliche cytosolische Mikrotubuli-organisierende Zentren charakterisiert. Letztere entstanden in der Telophase und enthielten nur Corona- aber keine Core-Proteine. In CP55 k/o Zellen erfolgte die Rekrutierung des Corona-Organisators CP148 an den Spindelpol bereits in der fr{\"u}hen Metaphase anstatt, wie {\"u}blich, erst in der Telophase. Außerdem zeigten die Knockout-Zellen Wachstumsdefekte, deren Grund vermutlich Schwierigkeiten bei der Centrosomenverdopplung in der Prophase durch das Fehlen von CP55 waren. Dar{\"u}ber hinaus konnten die Knockout-Zellen phagozytiertes Material nicht verwerten, obwohl der Vorgang der Phagozytose nicht beeintr{\"a}chtigt war. Dieser Defekt kann dem im CP55 k/o auftretenden dispergierten Golgi-Apparat zugeschrieben werden.}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Trescher2012, author = {Trescher, Karoline}, title = {Cokulturtestsystem f{\"u}r die Untersuchung des Einflusses physikochemischer Eigenschaften von Copolymeren auf das Verhalten von Keratinozyten und Fibroblasten}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-62915}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Chemische und physikalische Eigenschaften von Polymeren k{\"o}nnen verschiedene Zelltypen unterschiedlich, z. B. hinsichtlich Adh{\"a}renz oder Funktionalit{\"a}t, beeinflussen. Die Elastizit{\"a}t eines Polymers beeinflusst vor allem, welche Zugkr{\"a}fte eine Zelle gegen{\"u}ber ihrem Substrat entwickeln kann. Das Zellverhalten wird dann {\"u}ber intrazellul{\"a}re R{\"u}ckkopplungsmechanismen reguliert. Die Oberfl{\"a}chenladung und/oder Hydrophilie eines Polymers beeinflusst zun{\"a}chst die Adsorption von Ionen, Proteinen und anderen Molek{\"u}len. Vor allem {\"u}ber die Zusammensetzung, Dichte und Konformation der adsorbierten Komponenten werden anschließend die Wechselwirkungen mit den Zellen vermittelt. Des Weiteren k{\"o}nnen verschiedene Zelltypen unterschiedliche membranassoziierte Proteine, Zucker und Lipide aufweisen, so dass Polymereigenschaften zellspezifische Effekte bewirken k{\"o}nnen. F{\"u}r biotechnologische Anwendungen und f{\"u}r den Einsatz in der regenerativen Medizin gewinnen Polymere, die spezifische Zellreaktionen regulieren k{\"o}nnen, immer weiter an Bedeutung. Die Isolierung und Kultur von prim{\"a}ren Keratinozyten ist noch immer anspruchsvoll und die ad{\"a}quate Heilung von Hautwunden stellt eine fortw{\"a}hrende medizinische Herausforderung dar. Ein Polymer, das eine bevorzugte Adh{\"a}renz von Keratinozyten bei gleichzeitig verminderter Anheftung dermaler Fibroblasten erm{\"o}glicht, w{\"u}rde erhebliche Vorteile f{\"u}r den Einsatz in der Keratinozyten-Zellkultur und als Wundauflage bieten. Um den potentiell spezifischen Einfluss bestimmter Polymereigenschaften auf prim{\"a}re humane Keratinozyten und dermale Fibroblasten zu untersuchen, wurde in der vorliegenden Arbeit ein Zellkultursystem f{\"u}r die Mono- und Cokultur beider Zelltypen entwickelt. Das Testsystem wurde als Screening konzipiert, um den Einfluss unterschiedlicher Polymereigenschaften in mehreren Abstufungen auf die Zellen zu untersuchen. Folgende Parameter wurden untersucht: 1. Vitalit{\"a}t und Dichte adh{\"a}renter und nicht-adh{\"a}rierter Zellen, 2. Sch{\"a}digung der Zellmembran, 3. selektive Adh{\"a}renz von Keratinozyten in Cokultur durch die spezifische immunzytochemische F{\"a}rbung von Keratin14 und Vimentin. F{\"u}r die Polymere mit variabler Elastizit{\"a}t wurden zus{\"a}tzlich die Ablagerung extrazellul{\"a}rer Matrixkomponenten und die Sekretion l{\"o}slicher Faktoren durch die Zellen untersucht. Als Modellpolymere f{\"u}r die Variation der Elastizit{\"a}t wurden vernetzte Poly(n-butylacrylate) (cPnBA) verwendet, da deren Elastizit{\"a}t durch den Anteil des Vernetzers eingestellt werden kann. Auf dem weniger elastischen cPnBA zeigte sich in der Cokultur ein doppelt so hohes Verh{\"a}ltnis von Keratinozyten zu Fibroblasten wie auf dem elastischeren cPnBA, so dass ein leichter zellselektiver Effekt angenommen werden kann. Acrylnitril-basierte Copolymere wurden als Modellpolymere f{\"u}r die Variation der Oberfl{\"a}chenladung und Hydrophilie verwendet, da die Eigenschaften durch Art und molaren Anteil des Comonomers eingestellt werden k{\"o}nnen. Durch Variation des molaren Anteils der Comonomere mit positiver bzw. negativer Ladung, Methacryls{\"a}ure-2-aminoethylester-hydrochhlorid (AEMA) und N-3-Aminopropyl-methacrylamid-hydro-chlorid (APMA) bzw. Natriumsalz der 2-Methyl-2-propen-1-sulfons{\"a}ure (NaMAS), wurde der Anteil der positiven bzw. negativen Ladung im Copolymer variiert. Durch die Erh{\"o}hung des molaren Anteils des hydrophilen Comonomers N-Vinylpyrrolidon (NVP) wurde die Hydrophilie des Copolymers gesteigert. Die Erh{\"o}hung des molaren Anteils an positiv geladenem Comonomer AEMA im Copolymer f{\"u}hrte tendenziell zu einer h{\"o}heren Keratinozytendichte, wobei die Fibroblastendichte unver{\"a}ndert blieb. Durch die Erh{\"o}hung des molaren Anteils des positiv geladenen Comonomers APMA ergaben sich keine deutlichen Unterschiede in Dichte, Vitalit{\"a}t oder Selektivit{\"a}t der Zellen. Durch die stufenweise Erh{\"o}hung des molaren Anteils des negativ geladenen Comonomers NaMAS konnte, wie im Falle von AEMA, eine Tendenz zur verbesserten Keratinozytenadh{\"a}renz beobachtet werden. Die Steigerung der Hydrophilie der Copolymere f{\"u}hrte sowohl f{\"u}r Keratinozyten als auch f{\"u}r Fibroblasten zu einer reduzierten Adh{\"a}renz und Vitalit{\"a}t. In der vorliegenden Doktorarbeit wurde ein Testverfahren etabliert, das die Untersuchung von prim{\"a}ren humanen Keratinozyten und prim{\"a}ren humanen Fibroblasten in Monokultur und Cokultur auf verschiedenen Polymeren erm{\"o}glicht. Die bisherigen Ergebnisse zeigen, dass sich durch die gezielte Modifizierung verschiedener Polymereigenschaften die Adh{\"a}renz und Vitalit{\"a}t beider Zelltypen beeinflussen l{\"a}sst. Die Reduktion der Elastizit{\"a}t sowie die Erh{\"o}hung des molaren Anteils geladener Comonomere f{\"u}hrten zu einer Zunahme der Keratinozytenadh{\"a}renz. Da die Fibroblasten unbeeinflusst blieben, zeigte sich f{\"u}r einige der untersuchten Polymere eine leichte Zellselektivit{\"a}t. Diese k{\"o}nnte durch die weitere Erh{\"o}hung der Steifigkeit oder des Anteils geladener Comonomere m{\"o}glicherweise weiter gesteigert werden.}, language = {de} } @misc{KleessenNikoloski2012, author = {Kleessen, Sabrina and Nikoloski, Zoran}, title = {Dynamic regulatory on/off minimization for biological systems under internal temporal perturbations}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, number = {852}, issn = {1866-8372}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-43112}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-431128}, pages = {15}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Background: Flux balance analysis (FBA) together with its extension, dynamic FBA, have proven instrumental for analyzing the robustness and dynamics of metabolic networks by employing only the stoichiometry of the included reactions coupled with adequately chosen objective function. In addition, under the assumption of minimization of metabolic adjustment, dynamic FBA has recently been employed to analyze the transition between metabolic states. Results: Here, we propose a suite of novel methods for analyzing the dynamics of (internally perturbed) metabolic networks and for quantifying their robustness with limited knowledge of kinetic parameters. Following the biochemically meaningful premise that metabolite concentrations exhibit smooth temporal changes, the proposed methods rely on minimizing the significant fluctuations of metabolic profiles to predict the time-resolved metabolic state, characterized by both fluxes and concentrations. By conducting a comparative analysis with a kinetic model of the Calvin-Benson cycle and a model of plant carbohydrate metabolism, we demonstrate that the principle of regulatory on/off minimization coupled with dynamic FBA can accurately predict the changes in metabolic states. Conclusions: Our methods outperform the existing dynamic FBA-based modeling alternatives, and could help in revealing the mechanisms for maintaining robustness of dynamic processes in metabolic networks over time.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Broeker2012, author = {Br{\"o}ker, Nina Kristin}, title = {Die Erkennung komplexer Kohlenhydrate durch das Tailspike Protein aus dem Bakteriophagen HK620}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-60366}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Kohlenhydrate stellen aufgrund der strukturellen Vielfalt und ihrer oft exponierten Lage auf Zelloberfl{\"a}chen wichtige Erkennungsstrukturen dar. Die Wechselwirkungen von Proteinen mit diesen Kohlenhydraten vermitteln einen spezifischen Informationsaustausch. Protein-Kohlenhydrat-Interaktionen und ihre Triebkr{\"a}fte sind bislang nur teilweise verstanden, da nur wenig strukturelle Daten von Proteinen im Komplex mit vorwiegend kleinen Kohlenhydraten erh{\"a}ltlich sind. Mit der vorliegenden Promotionsarbeit soll ein Beitrag zum Verst{\"a}ndnis von Protein-Kohlenhydrat-Wechselwirkungen durch Analysen struktureller Thermodynamik geleistet werden, um zuk{\"u}nftig Vorhersagen mit zuverl{\"a}ssigen Algorithmen zu erlauben. Als Modellsystem zur Erkennung komplexer Kohlenhydrate diente dabei das Tailspike Protein (TSP) aus dem Bakteriophagen HK620. Dieser Phage erkennt spezifisch seinen E. coli-Wirt anhand der Oberfl{\"a}chenzucker, der sogenannten O-Antigene. Dabei binden die TSP des Phagen das O-Antigen des Lipopolysaccharids (LPS) und weisen zudem eine hydrolytische Aktivit{\"a}t gegen{\"u}ber dem Polysaccharid (PS) auf. Anhand von isolierten Oligosacchariden des Antigens (Typ O18A1) wurde die Bindung an HK620TSP und verschiedener Varianten davon systematisch analysiert. Die Bindung der komplexen Kohlenhydrate durch HK620TSP zeichnet sich durch große Interaktionsfl{\"a}chen aus. Durch einzelne Aminos{\"a}ureaustausche im aktiven Zentrum wurden Varianten generiert, die eine tausendfach erh{\"o}hte Affinit{\"a}t (KD ~ 100 nM) im Vergleich zum Wildtyp-Protein (KD ~ 130 μM) aufweisen. Dabei zeichnet sich das System dadurch aus, dass die Bindung bei Raumtemperatur nicht nur enthalpisch, sondern auch entropisch getrieben wird. Ursache f{\"u}r den g{\"u}nstigen Entropiebeitrag ist die große Anzahl an Wassermolek{\"u}len, die bei der Bindung des Hexasaccharids verdr{\"a}ngt werden. R{\"o}ntgenstrukturanalysen zeigten f{\"u}r alle TSP-Komplexe außer f{\"u}r Variante D339N unabh{\"a}ngig von der Hexasaccharid-Affinit{\"a}t analoge Protein- und Kohlenhydrat-Konformationen. Dabei kann die Bindestelle in zwei Regionen unterteilt werden: Zum einen befindet sich am reduzierenden Ende eine hydrophobe Tasche mit geringen Beitr{\"a}gen zur Affinit{\"a}tsgenerierung. Der Zugang zu dieser Tasche kann ohne große Affinit{\"a}tseinbuße durch einen einzelnen Aminos{\"a}ureaustausch (D339N) blockiert werden. In der zweiten Region kann durch den Austausch eines Glutamats durch ein Glutamin (E372Q) eine Bindestelle f{\"u}r ein zus{\"a}tzliches Wassermolek{\"u}l generiert werden. Die Rotation einiger Aminos{\"a}uren bei Kohlenhydratbindung f{\"u}hrt zur Desolvatisierung und zur Ausbildung von zus{\"a}tzlichen Wasserstoffbr{\"u}cken, wodurch ein starker Affinit{\"a}tsgewinn erzielt wird. HK620TSP ist nicht nur spezifisch f{\"u}r das O18A1-Antigen, sondern erkennt zudem das um eine Glucose verk{\"u}rzte Oligosaccharid des Typs O18A und hydrolysiert polymere Strukturen davon. Studien zur Bindung von O18A-Pentasaccharid zeigten, dass sich die Triebkr{\"a}fte der Bindung im Vergleich zu dem zuvor beschriebenen O18A1-Hexasaccharid verschoben haben. Durch Fehlen der Seitenkettenglucose ist die Bindung im Vergleich zu dem O18A1-Hexasaccharid weniger stark entropisch getrieben (Δ(-TΔS) ~ 10 kJ/mol), w{\"a}hrend der Enthalpiebeitrag zu der Bindung g{\"u}nstiger ist (ΔΔH ~ -10 kJ/mol). Insgesamt gleichen sich diese Effekte aus, wodurch sehr {\"a}hnliche Affinit{\"a}ten der TSP-Varianten zu O18A1-Hexasaccharid und O18A-Pentasaccharid gemessen wurden. Durch die Bindung der Glucose werden aus einer hydrophoben Tasche vier Wassermolek{\"u}le verdr{\"a}ngt, was entropisch stark beg{\"u}nstigt ist. Unter enthalpischen Aspekten ist dies ebenso wie einige Kontakte zwischen der Glucose und einigen Resten in der Tasche eher ung{\"u}nstig. Die Bindung der Glucose in die hydrophobe Tasche an HK620TSP tr{\"a}gt somit nicht zur Affinit{\"a}tsgenerierung bei und es bleibt zu vermuten, dass sich das O18A1-Antigen-bindende HK620TSP aus einem O18A-Antigen-bindenden TSP evolution{\"a}r herleitet. In dem dritten Teilprojekt der Dissertation wurde der Infektionsmechanismus des Phagen HK620 untersucht. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass analog zu dem verwandten Phagen P22 die Ejektion der DNA aus HK620 allein durch das Lipopolysaccharid (LPS) des Wirts in vitro induziert werden kann. Die Morphologie und Kettenl{\"a}nge des LPS sowie die Aktivit{\"a}t von HK620TSP gegen{\"u}ber dem LPS erwiesen sich dabei als essentiell. So konnte die DNA-Ejektion in vitro auch durch LPS aus Bakterien der Serogruppe O18A induziert werden, welches ebenfalls von dem TSP des Phagen gebunden und hydrolysiert wird. Diese Ergebnisse betonen die Rolle von TSP f{\"u}r die Erkennung der LPS-Rezeptoren als wichtigen Schritt f{\"u}r die Infektion durch die Podoviren HK620 und P22.}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Andres2012, author = {Andres, Dorothee}, title = {Biophysical chemistry of lipopolysaccharide specific bacteriophages}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-59261}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Carbohydrate recognition is a ubiquitous principle underlying many fundamental biological processes like fertilization, embryogenesis and viral infections. But how carbohydrate specificity and affinity induce a molecular event is not well understood. One of these examples is bacteriophage P22 that binds and infects three distinct Salmonella enterica (S.) hosts. It recognizes and depolymerizes repetitive carbohydrate structures of O antigen in its host´s outer membrane lipopolysaccharide molecule. This is mediated by tailspikes, mainly β helical appendages on phage P22 short non contractile tail apparatus (podovirus). The O antigen of all three Salmonella enterica hosts is built from tetrasaccharide repeating units consisting of an identical main chain with a distinguished 3,6 dideoxyhexose substituent that is crucial for P22 tailspike recognition: tyvelose in S. Enteritidis, abequose in S. Typhimurium and paratose in S. Paratyphi. In the first study the complexes of P22 tailspike with its host's O antigen octasaccharide were characterized. S. Paratyphi octasaccharide binds less tightly (ΔΔG≈7 kJ/mol) to the tailspike than the other two hosts. Crystal structure analysis of P22 tailspike co crystallized with S. Paratyphi octasaccharides revealed different interactions than those observed before in tailspike complexes with S. Enteritidis and S. Typhimurium octasaccharides. These different interactions occur due to a structural rearrangement in the S. Paratyphi octasaccharide. It results in an unfavorable glycosidic bond Φ/Ψ angle combination that also had occurred when the S. Paratyphi octasaccharide conformation was analyzed in an aprotic environment. Contributions of individual protein surface contacts to binding affinity were analyzed showing that conserved structural waters mediate specific recognition of all three different Salmonella host O antigens. Although different O antigen structures possess distinct binding behavior on the tailspike surface, all are recognized and infected by phage P22. Hence, in a second study, binding measurements revealed that multivalent O antigen was able to bind with high avidity to P22 tailspike. Dissociation rates of the polymer were three times slower than for an octasaccharide fragment pointing towards high affinity for O antigen polysaccharide. Furthermore, when phage P22 was incubated with lipopolysaccharide aggregates before plating on S. Typhimurium cells, P22 infectivity became significantly reduced. Therefore, in a third study, the function of carbohydrate recognition on the infection process was characterized. It was shown that large S. Typhimurium lipopolysaccharide aggregates triggered DNA release from the phage capsid in vitro. This provides evidence that phage P22 does not use a second receptor on the Salmonella surface for infection. P22 tailspike binding and cleavage activity modulate DNA egress from the phage capsid. DNA release occurred more slowly when the phage possessed mutant tailspikes with less hydrolytic activity and was not induced if lipopolysaccharides contained tailspike shortened O antigen polymer. Furthermore, the onset of DNA release was delayed by tailspikes with reduced binding affinity. The results suggest a model for P22 infection induced by carbohydrate recognition: tailspikes position the phage on Salmonella enterica and their hydrolytic activity forces a central structural protein of the phage assembly, the plug protein, onto the host´s membrane surface. Upon membrane contact, a conformational change has to occur in the assembly to eject DNA and pilot proteins from the phage to establish infection. Earlier studies had investigated DNA ejection in vitro solely for viruses with long non contractile tails (siphovirus) recognizing protein receptors. Podovirus P22 in this work was therefore the first example for a short tailed phage with an LPS recognition organelle that can trigger DNA ejection in vitro. However, O antigen binding and cleaving tailspikes are widely distributed in the phage biosphere, for example in siphovirus 9NA. Crystal structure analysis of 9NA tailspike revealed a complete similar fold to P22 tailspike although they only share 36 \% sequence identity. Moreover, 9NA tailspike possesses similar enzyme activity towards S. Typhimurium O antigen within conserved amino acids. These are responsible for a DNA ejection process from siphovirus 9NA triggered by lipopolysaccharide aggregates. 9NA expelled its DNA 30 times faster than podovirus P22 although the associated conformational change is controlled with a similar high activation barrier. The difference in DNA ejection velocity mirrors different tail morphologies and their efficiency to translate a carbohydrate recognition signal into action.}, language = {en} } @misc{Lenhard2012, author = {Lenhard, Michael}, title = {All's well that ends well}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, number = {906}, issn = {1866-8372}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-43803}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-438035}, pages = {9 -- 11}, year = {2012}, abstract = {The transition from cell proliferation to cell expansion is critical for determining leaf size. Andriankaja et al. (2012) demonstrate that in leaves of dicotyledonous plants, a basal proliferation zone is maintained for several days before abruptly disappearing, and that chloroplast differentiation is required to trigger the onset of cell expansion.}, language = {en} } @misc{PowellLenhard2012, author = {Powell, Anahid E. and Lenhard, Michael}, title = {Control of organ size in plants}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, number = {898}, issn = {1866-8372}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-43802}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-438029}, pages = {10}, year = {2012}, abstract = {The size of plant organs, such as leaves and flowers, is determined by an interaction of genotype and environmental influences. Organ growth occurs through the two successive processes of cell proliferation followed by cell expansion. A number of genes influencing either or both of these processes and thus contributing to the control of final organ size have been identified in the last decade. Although the overall picture of the genetic regulation of organ size remains fragmentary, two transcription factor/microRNA-based genetic pathways are emerging in the control of cell proliferation. However, despite this progress, fundamental questions remain unanswered, such as the problem of how the size of a growing organ could be monitored to determine the appropriate time for terminating growth. While genetic analysis will undoubtedly continue to advance our knowledge about size control in plants, a deeper understanding of this and other basic questions will require including advanced live-imaging and mathematical modeling, as impressively demonstrated by some recent examples. This should ultimately allow the comparison of the mechanisms underlying size control in plants and in animals to extract common principles and lineage-specific solutions.}, language = {en} }