TY - JOUR A1 - Schlägel, Ulrike E. A1 - Lewis, Mark A. T1 - A framework for analyzing the robustness of movement models to variable step discretization JF - Journal of mathematical biology N2 - When sampling animal movement paths, the frequency at which location measurements are attempted is a critical feature for data analysis. Important quantities derived from raw data, e.g. travel distance or sinuosity, can differ largely based on the temporal resolution of the data. Likewise, when movement models are fitted to data, parameter estimates have been demonstrated to vary with sampling rate. Thus, biological statements derived from such analyses can only be made with respect to the resolution of the underlying data, limiting extrapolation of results and comparison between studies. To address this problem, we investigate whether there are models that are robust against changes in temporal resolution. First, we propose a mathematically rigorous framework, in which we formally define robustness as a model property. We then use the framework for a thorough assessment of a range of basic random walk models, in which we also show how robustness relates to other probabilistic concepts. While we found robustness to be a strong condition met by few models only, we suggest a new method to extend models so as to make them robust. Our framework provides a new systematic, mathematically founded approach to the question if, and how, sampling rate of movement paths affects statistical inference. KW - Animal movement KW - Random walk KW - Sampling rate KW - Discretization KW - GPS data KW - Parameter estimation Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00285-016-0969-5 SN - 0303-6812 SN - 1432-1416 VL - 73 SP - 815 EP - 845 PB - Springer CY - Heidelberg ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mao, Hailiang A1 - Nakamura, Moritaka A1 - Viotti, Corrado A1 - Grebe, Markus T1 - A Framework for Lateral Membrane Trafficking and Polar Tethering of the PEN3 ATP-Binding Cassette Transporter JF - Plant physiology : an international journal devoted to physiology, biochemistry, cellular and molecular biology, biophysics and environmental biology of plants N2 - The outermost cell layer of plants, the epidermis, and its outer (lateral) membrane domain facing the environment are continuously challenged by biotic and abiotic stresses. Therefore, the epidermis and the outer membrane domain provide important selective and protective barriers. However, only a small number of specifically outer membrane-localized proteins are known. Similarly, molecular mechanisms underlying the trafficking and the polar placement of outer membrane domain proteins require further exploration. Here, we demonstrate that ACTIN7 (ACT7) mediates trafficking of the PENETRATION3 (PEN3) outer membrane protein from the trans-Golgi network (TGN) to the plasma membrane in the root epidermis of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and that actin function contributes to PEN3 endocytic recycling. In contrast to such generic ACT7-dependent trafficking from the TGN, the EXOCYST84b (EXO84b) tethering factor mediates PEN3 outer-membrane polarity. Moreover, precise EXO84b placement at the outer membrane domain itself requires ACT7 function. Hence, our results uncover spatially and mechanistically distinct requirements for ACT7 function during outer lateral membrane cargo trafficking and polarity establishment. They further identify an exocyst tethering complex mediator of outer lateral membrane cargo polarity. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.16.01252 SN - 0032-0889 SN - 1532-2548 VL - 172 SP - 2245 EP - 2260 PB - American Society of Plant Physiologists CY - Rockville ER - TY - GEN A1 - Liaimer, Anton A1 - Jensen, John B. A1 - Dittmann-Thünemann, Elke T1 - A genetic and chemical perspective on symbiotic recruitment of cyanobacteria of the genus Nostoc into the host plant Blasia pusilla L. T2 - Frontiers in microbiology N2 - Liverwort Blasia pusilla L. recruits soil nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria of genus Nostoc as symbiotic partners. In this work we compared Nostoc community composition inside the plants and in the soil around them from two distant locations in Northern Norway. STRR fingerprinting and 16S rDNA phylogeny reconstruction showed a remarkable local diversity among isolates assigned to several Nostoc clades. An extensive web of negative allelopathic interactions was recorded at an agricultural site, but not at the undisturbed natural site. The cell extracts of the cyanobacteria did not show antimicrobial activities, but four isolates were shown to be cytotoxic to human cells. The secondary metabolite profiles of the isolates were mapped by MALDI-TOF MS, and the most prominent ions were further analyzed by Q-TOF for MS/MS aided identification. Symbiotic isolates produced a great variety of small peptide-like substances, most of which lack any record in the databases. Among identified compounds we found microcystin and nodularin variants toxic to eukaryotic cells. Microcystin producing chemotypes were dominating as symbiotic recruits but not in the free-living community. In addition, we were able to identify several novel aeruginosins and banyaside-like compounds, as well as nostocyclopeptides and nosperin. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 434 KW - cyanobacteria KW - secondary metabolites KW - symbiosis KW - Blasia KW - Nostoc KW - allelopathy Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-407179 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Liaimer, Anton A1 - Jensen, John B. A1 - Dittmann, Elke T1 - A Genetic and Chemical Perspective on Symbiotic Recruitment of Cyanobacteria of the Genus Nostoc into the Host Plant Blasia pusilla L. JF - Frontiers in microbiology N2 - Liverwort Blasia pusilla L. recruits soil nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria of genus Nostoc as symbiotic partners. In this work we compared Nostoc community composition inside the plants and in the soil around them from two distant locations in Northern Norway. STRR fingerprinting and 16S rDNA phylogeny reconstruction showed a remarkable local diversity among isolates assigned to several Nostoc clades. An extensive web of negative allelopathic interactions was recorded at an agricultural site, but not at the undisturbed natural site. The cell extracts of the cyanobacteria did not show antimicrobial activities, but four isolates were shown to be cytotoxic to human cells. The secondary metabolite profiles of the isolates were mapped by MALDI-TOF MS, and the most prominent ions were further analyzed by Q-TOF for MS/MS aided identification. Symbiotic isolates produced a great variety of small peptide-like substances, most of which lack any record in the databases. Among identified compounds we found microcystin and nodularin variants toxic to eukaryotic cells. Microcystin producing chemotypes were dominating as symbiotic recruits but not in the free-living community. In addition, we were able to identify several novel aeruginosins and banyaside-like compounds, as well as nostocyclopeptides and nosperin. KW - Cyanobacteria KW - secondary metabolites KW - symbiosis KW - Blasia KW - Nostoc KW - allelopathy Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2016.01693 SN - 1664-302X VL - 7 SP - 449 EP - 474 PB - Frontiers Research Foundation CY - Lausanne ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Lämke, Jörn A1 - Brzezinka, Krzysztof A1 - Altmann, Simone A1 - Bäurle, Isabel T1 - A hit-and-run heat shock factor governs sustained histone methylation and transcriptional stress memory JF - The EMBO journal N2 - In nature, plants often encounter chronic or recurring stressful conditions. Recent results indicate that plants can remember a past exposure to stress to be better prepared for a future stress incident. However, the molecular basis of this is poorly understood. Here, we report the involvement of chromatin modifications in the maintenance of acquired thermotolerance (heat stress [HS] memory). HS memory is associated with the accumulation of histone H3 lysine 4 di- and trimethylation at memory-related loci. This accumulation outlasts their transcriptional activity and marks them as recently transcriptionally active. High accumulation of H3K4 methylation is associated with hyper-induction of gene expression upon a recurring HS. This transcriptional memory and the sustained accumulation of H3K4 methylation depend on HSFA2, a transcription factor that is required for HS memory, but not initial heat responses. Interestingly, HSFA2 associates with memory-related loci transiently during the early stages following HS. In summary, we show that transcriptional memory after HS is associated with sustained H3K4 hyper-methylation and depends on a hit-and-run transcription factor, thus providing a molecular framework for HS memory. KW - chromatin KW - H3K4 methylation KW - heat shock transcription factor KW - priming KW - transcriptional memory Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.15252/embj.201592593 SN - 0261-4189 SN - 1460-2075 VL - 35 SP - 162 EP - 175 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kabelitz, Tina A1 - Brzezinka, Krzysztof A1 - Friedrich, Thomas A1 - Gorka, Michal A1 - Graf, Alexander A1 - Kappel, Christian A1 - Bäurle, Isabel T1 - A JUMONJI Protein with E3 Ligase and Histone H3 Binding Activities Affects Transposon Silencing in Arabidopsis JF - Plant physiology : an international journal devoted to physiology, biochemistry, cellular and molecular biology, biophysics and environmental biology of plants N2 - Transposable elements (TEs) make up a large proportion of eukaryotic genomes. As their mobilization creates genetic variation that threatens genome integrity, TEs are epigenetically silenced through several pathways, and this may spread to neighboring sequences. JUMONJI (JMJ) proteins can function as antisilencing factors and prevent silencing of genes next to TEs. Whether TE silencing is counterbalanced by the activity of antisilencing factors is still unclear. Here, we characterize JMJ24 as a regulator of TE silencing. We show that loss of JMJ24 results in increased silencing of the DNA transposon AtMu1c, while overexpression of JMJ24 reduces silencing. JMJ24 has a JumonjiC (JmjC) domain and two RING domains. JMJ24 autoubiquitinates in vitro, demonstrating E3 ligase activity of the RING domain(s). JMJ24-JmjC binds the N-terminal tail of histone H3, and full-length JMJ24 binds histone H3 in vivo. JMJ24 activity is anticorrelated with histone H3 Lys 9 dimethylation (H3K9me2) levels at AtMu1c. Double mutant analyses with epigenetic silencing mutants suggest that JMJ24 antagonizes histone H3K9me2 and requires H3K9 methyltransferases for its activity on AtMu1c. Genome-wide transcriptome analysis indicates that JMJ24 affects silencing at additional TEs. Our results suggest that the JmjC domain of JMJ24 has lost demethylase activity but has been retained as a binding domain for histone H3. This is in line with phylogenetic analyses indicating that JMJ24 (with the mutated JmjC domain) is widely conserved in angiosperms. Taken together, this study assigns a role in TE silencing to a conserved JmjC-domain protein with E3 ligase activity, but no demethylase activity. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.15.01688 SN - 0032-0889 SN - 1532-2548 VL - 171 SP - 344 EP - 358 PB - American Society of Plant Physiologists CY - Rockville ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gorochowski, Thomas E. A1 - Aycilar-Kucukgoze, Irem A1 - Bovenberg, Roel A. L. A1 - Roubos, Johannes A. A1 - Ignatova, Zoya T1 - A Minimal Model of Ribosome Allocation Dynamics Captures Trade-offs in Expression between Endogenous and Synthetic Genes JF - ACS synthetic biology N2 - Cells contain a finite set of resources that must be distributed across many processes to ensure survival. Among them, the largest proportion of cellular resources is dedicated to protein translation. Synthetic biology often exploits these resources in executing orthogonal genetic circuits, yet the burden this places on the cell is rarely considered. Here, we develop a minimal model of ribosome allocation dynamics capturing the demands on translation when expressing a synthetic construct together with endogenous genes required for the maintenance of cell physiology. Critically, it contains three key variables related to design parameters of the synthetic construct covering transcript abundance, translation initiation rate, and elongation time. We show that model-predicted changes in ribosome allocation closely match experimental shifts in synthetic protein expression rate and cellular growth. Intriguingly, the model is also able to accurately infer transcript levels and translation times after further exposure to additional ambient stress. Our results demonstrate that a simple model of resource allocation faithfully captures the redistribution of protein synthesis resources when faced with the burden of synthetic gene expression and environmental stress. The tractable nature of the model makes it a versatile tool for exploring the guiding principles of efficient heterologous expression and the indirect interactions that can arise between synthetic circuits and their host chassis because of competition for shared translational resources. KW - protein biosynthesis KW - translation KW - synthetic biology KW - systems biology Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1021/acssynbio.6b00040 SN - 2161-5063 VL - 5 SP - 710 EP - 720 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - GEN A1 - Krupinski, Pawel A1 - Bozorg, Behruz A1 - Larsson, André A1 - Pietra, Stefano A1 - Grebe, Markus A1 - Jönsson, Henrik T1 - A model analysis of mechanisms for radial microtubular patterns at root hair initiation sites T2 - Frontiers in plant science N2 - Plant cells have two main modes of growth generating anisotropic structures. Diffuse growth where whole cell walls extend in specific directions, guided by anisotropically positioned cellulose fibers, and tip growth, with inhomogeneous addition of new cell wall material at the tip of the structure. Cells are known to regulate these processes via molecular signals and the cytoskeleton. Mechanical stress has been proposed to provide an input to the positioning of the cellulose fibers via cortical microtubules in diffuse growth. In particular, a stress feedback model predicts a circumferential pattern of fibers surrounding apical tissues and growing primordia, guided by the anisotropic curvature in such tissues. In contrast, during the initiation of tip growing root hairs, a star-like radial pattern has recently been observed. Here, we use detailed finite element models to analyze how a change in mechanical properties at the root hair initiation site can lead to star-like stress patterns in order to understand whether a stress-based feedback model can also explain the microtubule patterns seen during root hair initiation. We show that two independent mechanisms, individually or combined, can be sufficient to generate radial patterns. In the first, new material is added locally at the position of the root hair. In the second, increased tension in the initiation area provides a mechanism. Finally, we describe how a molecular model of Rho-of-plant (ROP) GTPases activation driven by auxin can position a patch of activated ROP protein basally along a 2D root epidermal cell plasma membrane, paving the way for models where mechanical and molecular mechanisms cooperate in the initial placement and outgrowth of root hairs. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 435 KW - plant cell wall KW - finite element modeling KW - computational morphodynamics KW - root hair initiation KW - microtubules KW - cellulose fibers KW - composite material Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-407181 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Krupinski, Pawel A1 - Bozorg, Behruz A1 - Larsson, Andre A1 - Pietra, Stefano A1 - Grebe, Markus A1 - Jönsson, Henrik T1 - A Model Analysis of Mechanisms for Radial Microtubular Patterns at Root Hair Initiation Sites JF - Frontiers in plant science N2 - Plant cells have two main modes of growth generating anisotropic structures. Diffuse growth where whole cell walls extend in specific directions, guided by anisotropically positioned cellulose fibers, and tip growth, with inhomogeneous addition of new cell wall material at the tip of the structure. Cells are known to regulate these processes via molecular signals and the cytoskeleton. Mechanical stress has been proposed to provide an input to the positioning of the cellulose fibers via cortical microtubules in diffuse growth. In particular, a stress feedback model predicts a circumferential pattern of fibers surrounding apical tissues and growing primordia, guided by the anisotropic curvature in such tissues. In contrast, during the initiation of tip growing root hairs, a star-like radial pattern has recently been observed. Here, we use detailed finite element models to analyze how a change in mechanical properties at the root hair initiation site can lead to star-like stress patterns in order to understand whether a stress-based feedback model can also explain the microtubule patterns seen during root hair initiation. We show that two independent mechanisms, individually or combined, can be sufficient to generate radial patterns. In the first, new material is added locally at the position of the root hair. In the second, increased tension in the initiation area provides a mechanism. Finally, we describe how a molecular model of Rho-of-plant (ROP) GTPases activation driven by auxin can position a patch of activated ROP protein basally along a 2D root epidermal cell plasma membrane, paving the way for models where mechanical and molecular mechanisms cooperate in the initial placement and outgrowth of root hairs. KW - plant cell wall KW - finite element modeling KW - computational morphodynamics KW - root hair initiation KW - microtubules KW - cellulose fibers KW - composite material Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2016.01560 SN - 1664-462X VL - 7 PB - Frontiers Research Foundation CY - Lausanne ER - TY - THES A1 - Pellizzer, Tommaso T1 - A novel approach to identify plastidic factors for plastome genome incompatibility and evidence for the central involvement of the chloroplast in leaf shaping Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Reinecke, J. A1 - Wulf, M. A1 - Baeten, Lander A1 - Brunet, J. A1 - Decocq, G. A1 - De Frenne, G. A1 - Diekmann, M. A1 - Graae, B. J. A1 - Heinken, Thilo A1 - Hermy, M. A1 - Jamoneau, A. A1 - Lenoir, J. A1 - Plue, J. A1 - Orczewska, A. A1 - Van Calster, H. A1 - Verheyen, Kris A1 - Naaf, T. T1 - Acido- and neutrophilic temperate forest plants display distinct shifts in ecological pH niche across north-western Europe JF - Ecography : pattern and diversity in ecology ; research papers forum N2 - Ecological niches of organisms vary across geographical space, but niche shift patterns between regions and the underlying mechanisms remain largely unexplored. We studied shifts in the pH niche of 42 temperate forest plant species across a latitudinal gradient from northern France to boreo-nemoral Sweden. We asked 1) whether species restrict their niches with increasing latitude as they reach their northern range margin (environmental constraints); 2) whether species expand their niches with increasing latitude as regional plant species richness decreases (competitive release); and 3) whether species shift their niche position toward more acidic sites with increasing latitude as the relative proportion of acidic soils increases (local adaptation). Based on 1458 vegetation plots and corresponding soil pH values, we modelled species response curves using Huisman-Olff-Fresco models. Four niche measures (width, position, left and right border) were compared among regions by randomization tests. We found that with increasing latitude, neutrophilic species tended to retreat from acidic sites, indicating that these species retreat to more favorable sites when approaching their range margin. Alternatively, these species might benefit from enhanced nitrogen deposition on formerly nutrient-poor, acidic sites in southern regions or lag behind in post-glacial recolonization of potential habitats in northern regions. Most acidophilic species extended their niche toward more base-rich sites with increasing latitude, indicating competitive release from neutrophilic species. Alternatively, acidophilic species might benefit from optimal climatic conditions in the north where some have their core distribution area. Shifts in the niche position suggested that local adaptation is of minor importance. We conclude that shifts in the pH niche of temperate forest plants are the rule, but the directions of the niche shifts and possible explanations vary. Our study demonstrates that differentiating between acidophilic and neutrophilic species is crucial to identify general patterns and underlying mechanisms. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/ecog.02051 SN - 0906-7590 SN - 1600-0587 VL - 39 SP - 1164 EP - 1175 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - THES A1 - Geyer, Juliane T1 - Adapting biodiversity conservation management to climate change Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Woodhouse, Jason Nicholas A1 - Makower, A. Katharina A1 - Yeung, Anna C. Y. A1 - Ongley, Sarah E. A1 - Micallef, Melinda L. A1 - Moffitt, Michelle C. A1 - Neilan, Brett A. T1 - Advances in genomics, transcriptomics and proteomics of toxin-producing cyanobacteria JF - Environmental microbiology reports N2 - A common misconception persists that the genomes of toxic and non-toxic cyanobacterial strains are largely conserved with the exception of the presence or absence of the genes responsible for toxin production. Implementation of -omics era technologies has challenged this paradigm, with comparative analyses providing increased insight into the differences between strains of the same species. The implementation of genomic, transcriptomic and proteomic approaches has revealed distinct profiles between toxin-producing and non-toxic strains. Further, metagenomics and metaproteomics highlight the genomic potential and functional state of toxic bloom events over time. In this review, we highlight how these technologies have shaped our understanding of the complex relationship between these molecules, their producers and the environment at large within which they persist. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/1758-2229.12366 SN - 1758-2229 VL - 8 SP - 3 EP - 13 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mayer, Magnus C. A1 - Schauenburg, Linda A1 - Thompson-Steckel, Greta A1 - Dunsing, Valentin A1 - Kaden, Daniela A1 - Voigt, Philipp A1 - Schaefer, Michael A1 - Chiantia, Salvatore A1 - Kennedy, Timothy E. A1 - Multhaup, Gerhard T1 - Amyloid precursor-like protein 1 (APLP1) exhibits stronger zinc-dependent neuronal adhesion than amyloid precursor protein and APLP2 JF - Journal of neurochemistry N2 - The amyloid precursor protein (APP) and its paralogs, amyloid precursor-like protein 1 (APLP1) and APLP2, are metalloproteins with a putative role both in synaptogenesis and in maintaining synapse structure. Here, we studied the effect of zinc on membrane localization, adhesion, and secretase cleavage of APP, APLP1, and APLP2 in cell culture and rat neurons. For this, we employed live-cell microscopy techniques, a microcontact printing adhesion assay and ELISA for protein detection in cell culture supernatants. We report that zinc induces the multimerization of proteins of the amyloid precursor protein family and enriches them at cellular adhesion sites. Thus, zinc facilitates the formation of de novo APP and APLP1 containing adhesion complexes, whereas it does not have such influence on APLP2. Furthermore, zinc-binding prevented cleavage of APP and APLPs by extracellular secretases. In conclusion, the complexation of zinc modulates neuronal functions of APP and APLPs by (i) regulating formation of adhesion complexes, most prominently for APLP1, and (ii) by reducing the concentrations of neurotrophic soluble APP/APLP ectodomains. KW - amyloid precursor protein KW - amyloid precursor-like protein KW - neuronal adhesion KW - number and brightness KW - zinc Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/jnc.13540 SN - 0022-3042 SN - 1471-4159 VL - 137 SP - 266 EP - 276 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - THES A1 - Shikangalah, Rosemary Ndawapeka T1 - An ecohydrological impact assessment in urban areas BT - urban water erosion in Windhoek, Namibia N2 - Over the last decades, the world’s population has been growing at a faster rate, resulting in increased urbanisation, especially in developing countries. More than half of the global population currently lives in urbanised areas with an increasing tendency. The growth of cities results in a significant loss of vegetation cover, soil compaction and sealing of the soil surface which in turn results in high surface runoff during high-intensity storms and causes the problem of accelerated soil water erosion on streets and building grounds. Accelerated soil water erosion is a serious environmental problem in cities as it gives rise to the contamination of aquatic bodies, reduction of ground water recharge and increase in land degradation, and also results in damages to urban infrastructures, including drainage systems, houses and roads. Understanding the problem of water erosion in urban settings is essential for the sustainable planning and management of cities prone to water erosion. However, in spite of the vast existence of scientific literature on water erosion in rural regions, a concrete understanding of the underlying dynamics of urban erosion still remains inadequate for the urban dryland environments. This study aimed at assessing water erosion and the associated socio-environmental determinants in a typical dryland urban area and used the city of Windhoek, Namibia, as a case study. The study used a multidisciplinary approach to assess the problem of water erosion. This included an in depth literature review on current research approaches and challenges of urban erosion, a field survey method for the quantification of the spatial extent of urban erosion in the dryland city of Windhoek, and face to face interviews by using semi-structured questionnaires to analyse the perceptions of stakeholders on urban erosion. The review revealed that around 64% of the literatures reviewed were conducted in the developed world, and very few researches were carried out in regions with extreme climate, including dryland regions. Furthermore, the applied methods for erosion quantification and monitoring are not inclusive of urban typical features and they are not specific for urban areas. The reviewed literature also lacked aspects aimed at addressing the issues of climate change and policies regarding erosion in cities. In a field study, the spatial extent and severity of an urban dryland city, Windhoek, was quantified and the results show that nearly 56% of the city is affected by water erosion showing signs of accelerated erosion in the form of rills and gullies, which occurred mainly in the underdeveloped, informal and semi-formal areas of the city. Factors influencing the extent of erosion in Windhoek included vegetation cover and type, socio-urban factors and to a lesser extent slope estimates. A comparison of an interpolated field survey erosion map with a conventional erosion assessment tool (the Universal Soil Loss Equation) depicted a large deviation in spatial patterns, which underlines the inappropriateness of traditional non-urban erosion tools to urban settings and emphasises the need to develop new erosion assessment and management methods for urban environments. It was concluded that measures for controlling water erosion in the city need to be site-specific as the extent of erosion varied largely across the city. The study also analysed the perceptions and understanding of stakeholders of urban water erosion in Windhoek, by interviewing 41 stakeholders using semi-structured questionnaires. The analysis addressed their understanding of water erosion dynamics, their perceptions with regards to the causes and the seriousness of erosion damages, and their attitudes towards the responsibilities for urban erosion. The results indicated that there is less awareness of the process as a phenomenon, instead there is more awareness of erosion damages and the factors contributing to the damages. About 69% of the stakeholders considered erosion damages to be ranging from moderate to very serious. However, there were notable disparities between the private householders and public authority groups. The study further found that the stakeholders have no clear understanding of their responsibilities towards the management of the control measures and payment for the damages. The private householders and local authority sectors pointed fingers at each other for the responsibilities for erosion damage payments and for putting up prevention measures. The reluctance to take responsibility could create a predicament for areas affected, specifically in the informal settlements where land management is not carried out by the local authority and land is not owned by the occupants. The study concluded that in order to combat urban erosion, it is crucial to understand diverse dynamics aggravating the process of urbanisation from different scales. Accordingly, the study suggests that there is an urgent need for the development of urban-specific approaches that aim at: (a) incorporating the diverse socio-economic-environmental aspects influencing erosion, (b) scientifically improving natural cycles that influence water storages and nutrients for plants in urbanised dryland areas in order to increase the amount of vegetation cover, (c) making use of high resolution satellite images to improve the adopted methods for assessing urban erosion, (d) developing water erosion policies, and (e) continuously monitoring the impact of erosion and the influencing processes from local, national and international levels. N2 - In den letzten Jahrzehnten ist die Erdbevölkerung mit großer Geschwindigkeit gewachsen. Das hatte eine verstärkte Urbanisierung zur Folge, insbesondere in den Entwicklungsländern. Zurzeit lebt über die Hälfte der globalen Bevölkerung in Stadtgebieten, mit steigender Tendenz. Städtewachstum geht mit einem signifikanten Verlust von Vegetationsbedeckung, sowie mit Bodenverdichtung und -versiegelung einher. Diese Faktoren führen bei Starkregenereignissen zu einem hohen Oberflächenabfluss, und zu Problemen durch beschleunigte wasserbedingte Bodenerosion in Straßen und auf Baugelände. In Städten ist eine beschleunigte wasserbedingte Bodenerosion ist ein ernstzunehmendes Umweltproblem, denn sie verursacht eine Verschmutzung der Gewässer, eine verminderte Grundwasserneubildung und erhöhte Landdegradierung. Darüber hinaus kommt es zu erosionsbedingten Schäden in der städtischen Infrastruktur, inklusive der Entwässerungssysteme, sowie an Häusern und Straßen. Für ein nachhaltiges Planen und Management von erosionsanfälligen Städten ist es von essentieller Bedeutung, die Probleme der Wassererosion in städtischen Gebieten zu verstehen. Trotz der großen Anzahl wissenschaftlicher Studien über Wassererosion in ländlichen Gegenden bleibt unser Verständnis der zu Grunde liegenden Erosionsdynamiken in urbanen Trockengebieten unzureichend. Diese Studie zielt darauf ab, Wassererosion, sowie die dazu beitragenden sozio-ökologischen Faktoren, in einem typischen urbanen Trockengebiet zu erfassen. Hierzu wurde ein fachübergreifender Ansatz am Fallbeispiel der Stadt Windhoek, Namibia, gewählt. Die Arbeit umfasst eine detaillierte Literaturanalyse der aktuellen Forschungsansätze zur urbanen Wassererosion und den damit verbundenen Herausforderungen. Außerdem wurde eine feldstudienbasierte Methode entwickelt, mit der das Ausmaß der Wassererosion in der Stadt Windhoek quantifiziert und räumlich erfasst wurde. Schließlich wurden persönliche Befragungen mit halbstrukturierten Fragebögen durchgeführt, um die Wahrnehmung der verschiedenen Interessenvertreter zum Thema Erosion in Stadtgebieten zu analysieren. Die Literaturanalyse hat gezeigt, dass 64% der untersuchten Studien in der entwickelten Welt durchgeführt wurden und nur sehr wenige Regionen mit extremen Klimabedingungen, einschließlich Trockengebieten, untersucht wurden. Hinzu kommt, dass die verwendeten Methoden zur Erosionsquantifizierung und -beobachtung die für urbane Gebiete typischen Merkmale nicht beinhalten und dafür auch nicht ausgerichtet sind. Des Weiteren mangelt es der untersuchten Literatur an Ansätzen, die den Einfluss des Klimawandels und politische Aspekte in Bezug auf Erosion in Stadtgebieten thematisieren. In einer Feldstudie wurde das Ausmaß von Wassererosion in der trocken gelegenen Stadt Windhoek quantifiziert und räumlich erfasst. Beinahe 56% der Stadt waren von Wassererosion betroffen und wiesen Anzeichen beschleunigter Erosion in Form von Rinnen und Rillen auf. Letztere traten vor allem in den unterentwickelten, informellen und semi-formellen Stadtgebieten auf. Das Ausmaß der Erosion in Windhoek wurde unter anderem von der Vegetationsbedeckung und dem Vegetationstyp, von sozial-urbanen Faktoren, und zu einem geringeren Grad von dem geschätzten Gefälle bestimmt. Der Vergleich einer interpolierten feldstudienbasierten Erosionskarte mit Ergebnissen, die auf einer konventionellen Methode zur Erosionserfassung (der Allgemeinen Bodenabtragsgleichung (ABAG)) basieren, ergab eine starke Abweichung in den räumlichen Mustern. Das verdeutlicht die Unzulänglichkeit einer direkten Übertragung von traditionellen nicht-urbanen Methoden zur Erosionserfassung auf ein urbanes Umfeld und betont die Notwendigkeit, neue Methoden sowohl zur Erfassung als auch zum Management von Erosion für urbane Gebiete zu entwickeln. Aus der großen Variabilität des Erosionsausmaßes innerhalb der Stadt lässt sich folgern, dass Methoden zur Kontrolle von Wassererosion in Städten standortspezifisch sein sollten. Anhand von halbstrukturierten Fragebögen wurde in einem weiteren Teil der Arbeit die Wahrnehmung und das Verständnis der unterschiedlichen Interessenvertreter zum Thema urbane Wassererosion in Windhoek untersucht. Insgesamt wurden 41 Interessenvertreter zu ihrem Verständnis der Wassererosionsdynamiken, zu ihrer Wahrnehmung in Bezug auf mögliche Ursachen und zum Ausmaß der Erosionsschäden, sowie zu ihrer Einstellung zur Verantwortlichkeit für die Erosion in der Stadt befragt. Die Ergebnisse deuten darauf hin, dass es eine geringe Wahrnehmung für das Phänomen der Erosion als Prozess gibt, dafür aber eine im Vergleich erhöhte Wahrnehmung der Erosionsschäden und der Faktoren, die zu den Schäden beitragen. Ungefähr 69% der Interessenvertreter stuften die Erosionsschäden als moderat bis sehr ernsthaft ein. Dabei gab es erkennbare Differenzen zwischen der Gruppe der privaten Haushalte und der der öffentlichen Behörden. Des Weiteren hat die Untersuchung ergeben, dass die Interessenvertreter kein klares Verständnis ihrer Verantwortung in Bezug auf das Management der Kontrollmaßnahmen, sowie ihrer finanziellen Verantwortung für die Schäden haben. Die privaten Haushalte und die örtlichen Behörden wiesen sich gegenseitig die Zahlungsverantwortung für die Erosionsschäden und für vorbeugende Maßnahmen zu. Der Unwille der einzelnen Akteure, Verantwortung zu übernehmen, könnte eine Zwickmühle für die betroffenen Gebiete werden. Dies gilt insbesondere für die informellen Siedlungen, in denen von den örtlichen Behörden kein Landmanagement durchgeführt wird, das Land aber auch nicht Eigentum der Bewohnern ist. Abschließend hat die Studie ergeben, dass es für eine effektive Erosionsbekämpfung in der Stadt von ausschlaggebender Bedeutung ist, die verschiedenen, den Prozess der Urbanisierung auf negative Weise verstärkenden Dynamiken, auf ihren unterschiedlichen Skalen zu verstehen. Auf Grundlage der hier präsentierten Ergebnisse wird eine Entwicklung speziell auf Stadtgebiete ausgerichteter Ansätze mit folgenden Zielen dringend nahegelegt: (a) Einer Integration von diversen sozio-ökonomisch-ökologischen Aspekten, die sich auf Erosion auswirken; (b) Einer wissenschaftlich begründeten Verbesserung der natürlichen Kreisläufe, die sich positiv auf die Wasserspeicherung im Boden und die Nährstoffverfügbarkeit für Pflanzen auswirken, um dadurch einen höheren Vegetationsbedeckungsgrad zu erreichen; (c) Der Nutzung hoch aufgelöster Satellitendaten, um die Methoden zur Erosionserfassung für urbane Gebiete zu verbessern; (d) Der Entwicklung politischer Maßnahmen zur Bekämpfung von Wassererosion. KW - urban soil erosion KW - water erosion KW - risk mapping KW - urbane Bodenerosion KW - Wassererosion KW - Risikoabbildung Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-102356 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Saffert, Paul A1 - Adamla, Frauke A1 - Schieweck, Rico A1 - Atkins, John F. A1 - Ignatova, Zoya T1 - An Expanded CAG Repeat in Huntingtin Causes+1 Frameshifting JF - The journal of biological chemistry N2 - Maintenance of triplet decoding is crucial for the expression of functional protein because deviations either into the -1 or +1 reading frames are often non-functional. We report here that expression of huntingtin (Htt) exon 1 with expanded CAG repeats, implicated in Huntington pathology, undergoes a sporadic +1 frameshift to generate from the CAG repeat a trans-frame AGC repeat-encoded product. This +1 recoding is exclusively detected in pathological Htt variants, i.e. those with expanded repeats with more than 35 consecutive CAG codons. An atypical +1 shift site, UUC C at the 5 end of CAG repeats, which has some resemblance to the influenza A virus shift site, triggers the +1 frameshifting and is enhanced by the increased propensity of the expanded CAG repeats to form a stem-loop structure. The +1 trans-frame-encoded product can directly influence the aggregation of the parental Htt exon 1. KW - aggregation KW - Huntington disease KW - translation KW - translation regulation KW - trinucleotide repeat disease KW - frameshifting KW - seeding Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M116.744326 SN - 0021-9258 SN - 1083-351X VL - 291 SP - 18505 EP - 18513 PB - American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology CY - Bethesda ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rajasundaram, Dhivyaa A1 - Selbig, Joachim T1 - analysis JF - Current opinion in plant biology N2 - The development of ‘omics’ technologies has progressed to address complex biological questions that underlie various plant functions thereby producing copious amounts of data. The need to assimilate large amounts of data into biologically meaningful interpretations has necessitated the development of statistical methods to integrate multidimensional information. Throughout this review, we provide examples of recent outcomes of ‘omics’ data integration together with an overview of available statistical methods and tools. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pbi.2015.12.010 SN - 1369-5266 SN - 1879-0356 VL - 30 SP - 57 EP - 61 PB - Elsevier CY - London ER - TY - THES A1 - Bartholomäus, Alexander T1 - Analyzing Transcriptional and Translational Control in E. coli using Deep-Seq Data Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Almathen, Faisal A1 - Charruau, Pauline A1 - Mohandesan, Elmira A1 - Mwacharo, Joram M. A1 - Orozco-terWengel, Pablo A1 - Pitt, Daniel A1 - Abdussamad, Abdussamad M. A1 - Uerpmann, Margarethe A1 - Uerpmann, Hans-Peter A1 - De Cupere, Bea A1 - Magee, Peter A1 - Alnaqeeb, Majed A. A1 - Salim, Bashir A1 - Raziq, Abdul A1 - Dessie, Tadelle A1 - Abdelhadi, Omer M. A1 - Banabazi, Mohammad H. A1 - Al-Eknah, Marzook A1 - Walzer, Chris A1 - Fayer, Bernard A1 - Hofreiter, Michael A1 - Peters, Joris A1 - Hanotte, Olivier A1 - Burger, Pamela A. T1 - Ancient and modern DNA reveal dynamics of domestication and cross-continental dispersal of the dromedary JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America N2 - Dromedaries have been fundamental to the development of human societies in arid landscapes and for long-distance trade across hostile hot terrains for 3,000 y. Today they continue to be an important livestock resource in marginal agro-ecological zones. However, the history of dromedary domestication and the influence of ancient trading networks on their genetic structure have remained elusive. We combined ancient DNA sequences of wild and early-domesticated dromedary samples from arid regions with nuclear microsatellite and mitochondrial genotype information from 1,083 extant animals collected across the species’ range. We observe little phylogeographic signal in the modern population, indicative of extensive gene flow and virtually affecting all regions except East Africa, where dromedary populations have remained relatively isolated. In agreement with archaeological findings, we identify wild dromedaries from the southeast Arabian Peninsula among the founders of the domestic dromedary gene pool. Approximate Bayesian computations further support the “restocking from the wild” hypothesis, with an initial domestication followed by introgression from individuals from wild, now-extinct populations. Compared with other livestock, which show a long history of gene flow with their wild ancestors, we find a high initial diversity relative to the native distribution of the wild ancestor on the Arabian Peninsula and to the brief coexistence of early-domesticated and wild individuals. This study also demonstrates the potential to retrieve ancient DNA sequences from osseous remains excavated in hot and dry desert environments. KW - anthropogenic admixture KW - Camelus dromedarius KW - demographic history KW - paleogenetics KW - wild dromedary Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1519508113 SN - 0027-8424 VL - 113 SP - 6707 EP - 6712 PB - National Acad. of Sciences CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - González-Fortes, Gloria M. A1 - Kolbe, Ben A1 - Fernandes, Daniel A1 - Meleg, Ioana N. A1 - Garcia-Vazquez, Ana A1 - Pinto-Llona, Ana C. A1 - Constantin, Silviu A1 - de Torres, Trino J. A1 - Ortiz, Jose E. A1 - Frischauf, Christine A1 - Rabeder, Gernot A1 - Hofreiter, Michael A1 - Barlow, Axel T1 - Ancient DNA reveals differences in behaviour and sociality between brown bears and extinct cave bears JF - Molecular ecology N2 - Ancient DNA studies have revolutionized the study of extinct species and populations, providing insights on phylogeny, phylogeography, admixture and demographic history. However, inferences on behaviour and sociality have been far less frequent. Here, we investigate the complete mitochondrial genomes of extinct Late Pleistocene cave bears and middle Holocene brown bears that each inhabited multiple geographically proximate caves in northern Spain. In cave bears, we find that, although most caves were occupied simultaneously, each cave almost exclusively contains a unique lineage of closely related haplotypes. This remarkable pattern suggests extreme fidelity to their birth site in cave bears, best described as homing behaviour, and that cave bears formed stable maternal social groups at least for hibernation. In contrast, brown bears do not show any strong association of mitochondrial lineage and cave, suggesting that these two closely related species differed in aspects of their behaviour and sociality. This difference is likely to have contributed to cave bear extinction, which occurred at a time in which competition for caves between bears and humans was likely intense and the ability to rapidly colonize new hibernation sites would have been crucial for the survival of a species so dependent on caves for hibernation as cave bears. Our study demonstrates the potential of ancient DNA to uncover patterns of behaviour and sociality in ancient species and populations, even those that went extinct many tens of thousands of years ago. KW - ancient DNA KW - extinction KW - homing KW - sociality KW - Ursus arctos KW - Ursus spelaeus Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.13800 SN - 0962-1083 SN - 1365-294X VL - 25 SP - 4907 EP - 4918 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schneider, Florian D. A1 - Brose, Ulrich A1 - Rall, Björn C. A1 - Guill, Christian T1 - Animal diversity and ecosystem functioning in dynamic food webs JF - Nature Communications N2 - Species diversity is changing globally and locally, but the complexity of ecological communities hampers a general understanding of the consequences of animal species loss on ecosystem functioning. High animal diversity increases complementarity of herbivores but also increases feeding rates within the consumer guild. Depending on the balance of these counteracting mechanisms, species-rich animal communities may put plants under top-down control or may release them from grazing pressure. Using a dynamic food-web model with body-mass constraints, we simulate ecosystem functions of 20,000 communities of varying animal diversity. We show that diverse animal communities accumulate more biomass and are more exploitative on plants, despite their higher rates of intra-guild predation. However, they do not reduce plant biomass because the communities are composed of larger, and thus energetically more efficient, plant and animal species. This plasticity of community body-size structure reconciles the debate on the consequences of animal species loss for primary productivity. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms12718 SN - 2041-1723 VL - 7 SP - 3129 EP - 3138 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Czesnick, Hjördis A1 - Lenhard, Michael T1 - Antagonistic control of flowering time by functionally specialized poly(A) polymerases in Arabidopsis thaliana JF - The plant journal N2 - Polyadenylation is a critical 3-end processing step during maturation of pre-mRNAs, and the length of the poly(A) tail affects mRNA stability, nuclear export and translation efficiency. The Arabidopsis thaliana genome encodes three canonical nuclear poly(A) polymerase (PAPS) isoforms fulfilling specialized functions, as reflected by their different mutant phenotypes. While PAPS1 affects several processes, such as the immune response, organ growth and male gametophyte development, the roles of PAPS2 and PAPS4 are largely unknown. Here we demonstrate that PAPS2 and PAPS4 promote flowering in a partially redundant manner. The enzymes act antagonistically to PAPS1, which delays the transition to flowering. The opposite flowering-time phenotypes in paps1 and paps2 paps4 mutants are at least partly due to decreased or increased FLC activity, respectively. In contrast to paps2 paps4 mutants, plants with increased PAPS4 activity flower earlier than the wild-type, concomitant with reduced FLC expression. Double mutant analyses suggest that PAPS2 and PAPS4 act independently of the autonomous pathway components FCA, FY and CstF64. The direct polyadenylation targets of the three PAPS isoforms that mediate their effects on flowering time do not include FLC sense mRNA and remain to be identified. Thus, our results uncover a role for canonical PAPS isoforms in flowering-time control, raising the possibility that modulating the balance of the isoform activities could be used to fine tune the transition to flowering. Significance Statement The length of the poly(A) tail affects mRNA stability, nuclear export and translation efficiency. Arabidopsis has three isoforms of nuclear poly(A) polymerase (PAPS): PAPS1 plays a major role in organ growth and plant defence. Here we show that PAPS2 and PAPS4 redundantly promote flowering and act antagonistically to PAPS1, which delays flowering. We suggest that modulating the activity of these isoforms fine-tunes the transition to flowering. KW - polyadenylation KW - 3-end processing KW - poly(A) polymerase KW - flowering time KW - autonomous pathway KW - Arabidopsis thaliana Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/tpj.13280 SN - 0960-7412 SN - 1365-313X VL - 88 SP - 570 EP - 583 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Memczak, Henry A1 - Lauster, Daniel A1 - Kar, Parimal A1 - Di Lella, Santiago A1 - Volkmer, Rudolf A1 - Knecht, Volker A1 - Herrmann, Andreas A1 - Ehrentreich-Foerster, Eva A1 - Bier, Frank Fabian A1 - Stoecklein, Walter F. M. T1 - Anti-Hemagglutinin Antibody Derived Lead Peptides for Inhibitors of Influenza Virus Binding JF - PLoS one N2 - Antibodies against spike proteins of influenza are used as a tool for characterization of viruses and therapeutic approaches. However, development, production and quality control of antibodies is expensive and time consuming. To circumvent these difficulties, three peptides were derived from complementarity determining regions of an antibody heavy chain against influenza A spike glycoprotein. Their binding properties were studied experimentally, and by molecular dynamics simulations. Two peptide candidates showed binding to influenza A/Aichi/2/68 H3N2. One of them, termed PeB, with the highest affinity prevented binding to and infection of target cells in the micromolar region without any cytotoxic effect. PeB matches best the conserved receptor binding site of hemagglutinin. PeB bound also to other medical relevant influenza strains, such as human-pathogenic A/California/7/2009 H1N1, and avian-pathogenic A/MuteSwan/Rostock/R901/2006 H7N1. Strategies to improve the affinity and to adapt specificity are discussed and exemplified by a double amino acid substituted peptide, obtained by substitutional analysis. The peptides and their derivatives are of great potential for drug development as well as biosensing. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159074 SN - 1932-6203 VL - 11 SP - 82 EP - 90 PB - PLoS CY - San Fransisco ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Roggenbuck, Dirk A1 - Borghi, Maria Orietta A1 - Somma, Valentina A1 - Buettner, Thomas A1 - Schierack, Peter A1 - Hanack, Katja A1 - Grossi, Claudia A1 - Bodio, Caterina A1 - Macor, Paolo A1 - von Landenberg, Philipp A1 - Boccellato, Francesco A1 - Mahler, Michael A1 - Meroni, Pier Luigi T1 - Antiphospholipid antibodies detected by line immunoassay differentiate among patients with antiphospholipid syndrome, with infections and asymptomatic carriers JF - IEEE transactions on geoscience and remote sensing N2 - Background: Antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL) can be detected in asymptomatic carriers and infectious patients. The aim was to investigate whether a novel line immunoassay (LIA) differentiates between antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) and asymptomatic aPL+ carriers or patients with infectious diseases (infectious diseases controls (IDC)). Methods: Sixty-one patients with APS (56 primary, 22/56 with obstetric events only, and 5 secondary), 146 controls including 24 aPL+ asymptomatic carriers and 73 IDC were tested on a novel hydrophobic solid phase coated with cardiolipin (CL), phosphatic acid, phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylinositol, phosphatidylserine, beta2-glycoprotein I (beta 2GPI), prothrombin, and annexin V. Samples were also tested by anti-CL and anti-beta 2GPI ELISAs and for lupus anticoagulant activity. Human monoclonal antibodies (humoAbs) against human beta 2GPI or PL alone were tested on the same LIA substrates in the absence or presence of human serum, purified human beta 2GPI or after CL-micelle absorption. Results: Comparison of LIA with the aPL-classification assays revealed good agreement for IgG/IgM a beta 2GPI and aCL. Anti-CL and anti-beta 2GPI IgG/IgM reactivity assessed by LIA was significantly higher in patients with APS versus healthy controls and IDCs, as detected by ELISA. IgG binding to CL and beta 2GPI in the LIA was significantly lower in aPL+ carriers and Venereal Disease Research Laboratory test (VDRL) + samples than in patients with APS. HumoAb against domain 1 recognized beta 2GPI bound to the LIA-matrix and in anionic phospholipid (PL) complexes. Absorption with CL micelles abolished the reactivity of a PL-specific humoAb but did not affect the binding of anti-beta 2GPI humoAbs. Conclusions: The LIA and ELISA have good agreement in detecting aPL in APS, but the LIA differentiates patients with APS from infectious patients and asymptomatic carriers, likely through the exposure of domain 1. KW - Antiphospholipid syndrome KW - Antiphospholipid antibody KW - Phospholipid binding proteins KW - Beta2-glycoprotein I KW - Line immunoassay Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1186/s13075-016-1018-x SN - 1478-6354 SN - 1478-6362 VL - 18 PB - BioMed Central CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Roggenbuck, Dirk A1 - Borghi, Maria Orietta A1 - Somma, Valentina A1 - Büttner, Thomas A1 - Schierack, Peter A1 - Hanack, Katja A1 - Grossi, Claudia A1 - Bodio, Caterina A1 - Macor, Paolo A1 - von Landenberg, Philipp A1 - Boccellato, Francesco A1 - Mahler, Michael A1 - Meroni, Pier Luigi T1 - Antiphospholipid antibodies detected by line immunoassay differentiate among patients with antiphospholipid syndrome, with infections and asymptomatic carriers T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - Background Antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL) can be detected in asymptomatic carriers and infectious patients. The aim was to investigate whether a novel line immunoassay (LIA) differentiates between antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) and asymptomatic aPL+ carriers or patients with infectious diseases (infectious diseases controls (IDC)). Methods Sixty-one patients with APS (56 primary, 22/56 with obstetric events only, and 5 secondary), 146 controls including 24 aPL+ asymptomatic carriers and 73 IDC were tested on a novel hydrophobic solid phase coated with cardiolipin (CL), phosphatic acid, phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylinositol, phosphatidylserine, beta2-glycoprotein I (β2GPI), prothrombin, and annexin V. Samples were also tested by anti-CL and anti-β2GPI ELISAs and for lupus anticoagulant activity. Human monoclonal antibodies (humoAbs) against human β2GPI or PL alone were tested on the same LIA substrates in the absence or presence of human serum, purified human β2GPI or after CL-micelle absorption. Results Comparison of LIA with the aPL-classification assays revealed good agreement for IgG/IgM aß2GPI and aCL. Anti-CL and anti-ß2GPI IgG/IgM reactivity assessed by LIA was significantly higher in patients with APS versus healthy controls and IDCs, as detected by ELISA. IgG binding to CL and ß2GPI in the LIA was significantly lower in aPL+ carriers and Venereal Disease Research Laboratory test (VDRL) + samples than in patients with APS. HumoAb against domain 1 recognized β2GPI bound to the LIA-matrix and in anionic phospholipid (PL) complexes. Absorption with CL micelles abolished the reactivity of a PL-specific humoAb but did not affect the binding of anti-β2GPI humoAbs. Conclusions The LIA and ELISA have good agreement in detecting aPL in APS, but the LIA differentiates patients with APS from infectious patients and asymptomatic carriers, likely through the exposure of domain 1. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 436 KW - Antiphospholipid syndrome KW - Antiphospholipid antibody KW - Phospholipid binding proteins KW - Beta2 - glycoprotein I KW - Line immunoassay Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-407211 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 436 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Grossart, Hans-Peter A1 - Rojas-Jimenez, Keilor T1 - Aquatic fungi: targeting the forgotten in microbial ecology JF - Current opinion in microbiology N2 - Fungi constitute important and conspicuous components of aquatic microbial communities, but their diversity and functional roles remain poorly characterized. New methods and conceptual frameworks are required to accurately describe their ecological roles, involvement in global cycling processes, and utility for human activities, considering both cultivation independent techniques as well as experiments in laboratory and in natural ecosystems. Here we highlight recent developments and extant knowledge gaps in aquatic mycology, and provide a conceptual model to expose the importance of fungi in aquatic food webs and related biogeochemical processes. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mib.2016.03.016 SN - 1369-5274 SN - 1879-0364 VL - 31 SP - 140 EP - 145 PB - Elsevier CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Brzezinka, Krzysztof A1 - Altmann, Simone A1 - Czesnick, Hjördis A1 - Nicolas, Philippe A1 - Gorka, Michal A1 - Benke, Eileen A1 - Kabelitz, Tina A1 - Jähne, Felix A1 - Graf, Alexander A1 - Kappel, Christian A1 - Bäurle, Isabel T1 - Arabidopsis FORGETTER1 mediates stress-induced chromatin memory through nucleosome remodeling JF - eLife N2 - Plants as sessile organisms can adapt to environmental stress to mitigate its adverse effects. As part of such adaptation they maintain an active memory of heat stress for several days that promotes a more efficient response to recurring stress. We show that this heat stress memory requires the activity of the FORGETTER1 (FGT1) locus, with fgt1 mutants displaying reduced maintenance of heat-induced gene expression. FGT1 encodes the Arabidopsis thaliana orthologue of Strawberry notch (Sno), and the protein globally associates with the promoter regions of actively expressed genes in a heat-dependent fashion. FGT1 interacts with chromatin remodelers of the SWI/ SNF and ISWI families, which also display reduced heat stress memory. Genomic targets of the BRM remodeler overlap significantly with FGT1 targets. Accordingly, nucleosome dynamics at loci with altered maintenance of heat-induced expression are affected in fgt1. Together, our results suggest that by modulating nucleosome occupancy, FGT1 mediates stress-induced chromatin memory. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.17061 SN - 2050-084X VL - 5 PB - eLife Sciences Publications CY - Cambridge ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hanke-Gogokhia, Christin A1 - Wu, Zhijian A1 - Gerstner, Cecilia D. A1 - Frederick, Jeanne M. A1 - Zhang, Houbin A1 - Baehr, Wolfgang T1 - Arf-like Protein 3 (ARL3) Regulates Protein Trafficking and Ciliogenesis in Mouse Photoreceptors JF - The journal of biological chemistry N2 - Arf-like protein 3 (ARL3) is a ubiquitous small GTPase expressed in ciliated cells of plants and animals. Germline deletion of Arl3 in mice causes multiorgan ciliopathy reminiscent of Bardet-Biedl or Joubert syndromes. As photoreceptors are elegantly compartmentalized and have cilia, we probed the function of ARL3 (ADP-ribosylation factor (Arf)-like 3 protein) by generating rod photoreceptor-specific (prefix (rod)) and retina-specific (prefix (ret)) Arl3 deletions. In predegenerate (rod)Arl3(-/-) mice, lipidated phototransduction proteins showed trafficking deficiencies, consistent with the role of ARL3 as a cargo displacement factor for lipid-binding proteins. By contrast, (ret)Arl3(-/-) rods and cones expressing Cre recombinase during embryonic development formed neither connecting cilia nor outer segments and degenerated rapidly. Absence of cilia infers participation of ARL3 in ciliogenesis and axoneme formation. Ciliogenesis was rescued, and degeneration was reversed in part by subretinal injection of adeno-associated virus particles expressing ARL3-EGFP. The conditional knock-out phenotypes permitted identification of two ARL3 functions, both in the GTP-bound form as follows: one as a regulator of intraflagellar transport participating in photoreceptor ciliogenesis and the other as a cargo displacement factor transporting lipidated protein to the outer segment. Surprisingly, a farnesylated inositol polyphosphate phosphatase only trafficked from the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi, thereby excluding it from a role in photoreceptor cilia physiology. KW - animal model KW - gene knock-out KW - lipid-binding protein KW - photoreceptor KW - protein trafficking (Golgi) KW - retinal degeneration Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M115.710954 SN - 0021-9258 SN - 1083-351X VL - 291 SP - 7142 EP - 7155 PB - American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology CY - Bethesda ER - TY - THES A1 - Maier, Natalia T1 - Aufbau eines Testsystems zum Nachweis von Ethylglucuronid (EtG) in Haaren Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Marce, Rafael A1 - George, Glen A1 - Buscarinu, Paola A1 - Deidda, Melania A1 - Dunalska, Julita A1 - de Eyto, Elvira A1 - Flaim, Giovanna A1 - Grossart, Hans-Peter A1 - Istvanovics, Vera A1 - Lenhardt, Mirjana A1 - Moreno-Ostos, Enrique A1 - Obrador, Biel A1 - Ostrovsky, Ilia A1 - Pierson, Donald C. A1 - Potuzak, Jan A1 - Poikane, Sandra A1 - Rinke, Karsten A1 - Rodriguez-Mozaz, Sara A1 - Staehr, Peter A. A1 - Sumberova, Katerina A1 - Waajen, Guido A1 - Weyhenmeyer, Gesa A. A1 - Weathers, Kathleen C. A1 - Zion, Mark A1 - Ibelings, Bas W. A1 - Jennings, Eleanor T1 - Automatic High Frequency Monitoring for Improved Lake and Reservoir Management JF - Frontiers in plant science N2 - Recent technological developments have increased the number of variables being monitored in lakes and reservoirs using automatic high frequency monitoring (AHFM). However, design of AHFM systems and posterior data handling and interpretation are currently being developed on a site-by-site and issue-by-issue basis with minimal standardization of protocols or knowledge sharing. As a result, many deployments become short-lived or underutilized, and many new scientific developments that are potentially useful for water management and environmental legislation remain underexplored. This Critical Review bridges scientific uses of AHFM with their applications by providing an overview of the current AHFM capabilities, together with examples of successful applications. We review the use of AHFM for maximizing the provision of ecosystem services supplied, by lakes and reservoirs (consumptive and non consumptive uses, food production, and recreation), and for reporting lake status in the EU Water Framework Directive. We also highlight critical issues to enhance the application of AHFM, and suggest the establishment of appropriate networks to facilitate knowledge sharing and technological transfer between potential users. Finally, we give advice on how modern sensor technology can successfully be applied on a larger scale to the management of lakes and reservoirs and maximize the ecosystem services they provide. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.6b01604 SN - 0013-936X SN - 1520-5851 VL - 50 SP - 10780 EP - 10794 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Bartholomäus, Alexander A1 - Fedyunin, Ivan A1 - Feist, Peter A1 - Sin, Celine A1 - Zhang, Gong A1 - Valleriani, Angelo A1 - Ignatova, Zoya T1 - Bacteria differently regulate mRNA abundance to specifically respond to various stresses JF - Geology N2 - Environmental stress is detrimental to cell viability and requires an adequate reprogramming of cellular activities to maximize cell survival. We present a global analysis of the response of Escherichia coli to acute heat and osmotic stress. We combine deep sequencing of total mRNA and ribosome-protected fragments to provide a genome-wide map of the stress response at transcriptional and translational levels. For each type of stress, we observe a unique subset of genes that shape the stress-specific response. Upon temperature upshift, mRNAs with reduced folding stability up-and downstream of the start codon, and thus with more accessible initiation regions, are translationally favoured. Conversely, osmotic upshift causes a global reduction of highly translated transcripts with high copy numbers, allowing reallocation of translation resources to not degraded and newly synthesized mRNAs. KW - transcription KW - translation KW - deep sequencing KW - Escherichia coli KW - copy numbers Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1098/rsta.2015.0069 SN - 1364-503X SN - 1471-2962 VL - 374 PB - Royal Society CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Leimkühler, Silke A1 - Iobbi-Nivol, Chantal T1 - Bacterial molybdoenzymes: old enzymes for new purposes JF - FEMS microbiology reviews N2 - Molybdoenzymes are widespread in eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms where they play crucial functions in detoxification reactions in the metabolism of humans and bacteria, in nitrate assimilation in plants and in anaerobic respiration in bacteria. To be fully active, these enzymes require complex molybdenum-containing cofactors, which are inserted into the apoenzymes after folding. For almost all the bacterial molybdoenzymes, molybdenum cofactor insertion requires the involvement of specific chaperones. In this review, an overview on the molybdenum cofactor biosynthetic pathway is given together with the role of specific chaperones dedicated for molybdenum cofactor insertion and maturation. Many bacteria are involved in geochemical cycles on earth and therefore have an environmental impact. The roles of molybdoenzymes in bioremediation and for environmental applications are presented.This review gives an overview of the diverse mechanisms leading to the insertion of the different forms of the molybdenum cofactor into the respective target enzymes and summarizes the roles of different molybdoenzymes in the environment.This review gives an overview of the diverse mechanisms leading to the insertion of the different forms of the molybdenum cofactor into the respective target enzymes and summarizes the roles of different molybdoenzymes in the environment. KW - molybdenum cofactor KW - specific chaperons KW - TorD family KW - XdhC KW - molybdoenzyme maturation KW - bioremediation Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/femsre/fuv043 SN - 0168-6445 SN - 1574-6976 VL - 40 SP - 1 EP - 18 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schmidt, Andreas A1 - Rabsch, Wolfgang A1 - Broeker, Nina K. A1 - Barbirz, Stefanie T1 - Bacteriophage tailspike protein based assay to monitor phase variable glucosylations in Salmonella O-antigens JF - BMC microbiology N2 - Background Non-typhoid Salmonella Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) accounts for a high number of registered salmonellosis cases, and O-serotyping is one important tool for monitoring epidemiology and spread of the disease. Moreover, variations in glucosylated O-antigens are related to immunogenicity and spread in the host. However, classical autoagglutination tests combined with the analysis of specific genetic markers cannot always reliably register phase variable glucose modifications expressed on Salmonella O-antigens and additional tools to monitor O-antigen glucosylation phenotypes of S. Typhimurium would be desirable. Results We developed a test for the phase variable O-antigen glucosylation state of S. Typhimurium using the tailspike proteins (TSP) of Salmonella phages 9NA and P22. We used this ELISA like tailspike adsorption (ELITA) assay to analyze a library of 44 Salmonella strains. ELITA was successful in discriminating strains that carried glucose 1-6 linked to the galactose of O-polysaccharide backbone (serotype O1) from non-glucosylated strains. This was shown by O-antigen compositional analyses of the respective strains with mass spectrometry and capillary electrophoresis. The ELITA test worked rapidly in a microtiter plate format and was highly O-antigen specific. Moreover, TSP as probes could also detect glucosylated strains in flow cytometry and distinguish multiphasic cultures differing in their glucosylation state. Conclusions Tailspike proteins contain large binding sites with precisely defined specificities and are therefore promising tools to be included in serotyping procedures as rapid serotyping agents in addition to antibodies. In this study, 9NA and P22TSP as probes could specifically distinguish glucosylation phenotypes of Salmonella on microtiter plate assays and in flow cytometry. This opens the possibility for flow sorting of cell populations for subsequent genetic analyses or for monitoring phase variations during large scale O-antigen preparations necessary for vaccine production. KW - Salmonella Typhimurium KW - O-antigen KW - Tailspike protein KW - Bacteriophage KW - Phase variation KW - O-serotyping KW - Flow cytometry Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1186/s12866-016-0826-0 SN - 1471-2180 VL - 16 PB - BioMed Central CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schmidt, Andreas A1 - Rabsch, Wolfgang A1 - Bröker, Nina Kristin A1 - Barbirz, Stefanie T1 - Bacteriophage tailspike protein based assay to monitor phase variable glucosylations in Salmonella O-antigens JF - BMC microbiology N2 - Background: Non-typhoid Salmonella Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) accounts for a high number of registered salmonellosis cases, and O-serotyping is one important tool for monitoring epidemiology and spread of the disease. Moreover, variations in glucosylated O-antigens are related to immunogenicity and spread in the host. However, classical autoagglutination tests combined with the analysis of specific genetic markers cannot always reliably register phase variable glucose modifications expressed on Salmonella O-antigens and additional tools to monitor O-antigen glucosylation phenotypes of S. Typhimurium would be desirable. Results: We developed a test for the phase variable O-antigen glucosylation state of S. Typhimurium using the tailspike proteins (TSP) of Salmonella phages 9NA and P22. We used this ELISA like tailspike adsorption (ELITA) assay to analyze a library of 44 Salmonella strains. ELITA was successful in discriminating strains that carried glucose 1-6 linked to the galactose of O-polysaccharide backbone (serotype O1) from non-glucosylated strains. This was shown by O-antigen compositional analyses of the respective strains with mass spectrometry and capillary electrophoresis. The ELITA test worked rapidly in a microtiter plate format and was highly O-antigen specific. Moreover, TSP as probes could also detect glucosylated strains in flow cytometry and distinguish multiphasic cultures differing in their glucosylation state. Conclusions: Tailspike proteins contain large binding sites with precisely defined specificities and are therefore promising tools to be included in serotyping procedures as rapid serotyping agents in addition to antibodies. In this study, 9NA and P22TSP as probes could specifically distinguish glucosylation phenotypes of Salmonella on microtiter plate assays and in flow cytometry. This opens the possibility for flow sorting of cell populations for subsequent genetic analyses or for monitoring phase variations during large scale O-antigen preparations necessary for vaccine production. KW - Salmonella Typhimurium KW - O-antigen KW - Tailspike protein KW - Bacteriophage KW - Phase variation KW - O-serotyping KW - Flow cytometry Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1186/s12866-016-0826-0 SN - 1471-2180 VL - 16 SP - 2214 EP - 2226 PB - BioMed Central CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kang, Yu A1 - Gohlke, Ulrich A1 - Engström, Olof A1 - Hamark, Christoffer A1 - Scheidt, Tom A1 - Kunstmann, Ruth Sonja A1 - Heinemann, Udo A1 - Widmalm, Göran A1 - Santer, Mark A1 - Barbirz, Stefanie T1 - Bacteriophage Tailspikes and Bacterial O-Antigens as a Model System to Study Weak-Affinity Protein-Polysaccharide Interactions JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society N2 - Understanding interactions of bacterial surface polysaccharides with receptor protein scaffolds is important for the development of antibiotic therapies. The corresponding protein recognition domains frequently form low-affinity complexes with polysaccharides that are difficult to address with experimental techniques due to the conformational flexibility of the polysaccharide. In this work, we studied the tailspike protein (TSP) of the bacteriophage Sf6. Sf6TSP binds and hydrolyzes the high-rhamnose, serotype Y O-antigen polysaccharide of the Gram-negative bacterium Shigella flexneri (S. flexneri) as a first step of bacteriophage infection. Spectroscopic analyses and enzymatic cleavage assays confirmed that Sf6TSP binds long stretches of this polysaccharide. Crystal structure analysis and saturation transfer difference (STD) NMR spectroscopy using an enhanced method to interpret the data permitted the detailed description of affinity contributions and flexibility in an Sf6TSP-octasaccharide complex. Dodecasaccharide fragments corresponding to three repeating units of the O-antigen in complex with Sf6TSP were studied computationally by molecular dynamics simulations. They showed that distortion away from the low-energy solution conformation found in the octasaccharide complex is necessary for ligand binding. This is in agreement with a weak-affinity functional polysaccharide protein contact that facilitates correct placement and thus hydrolysis of the polysaccharide close to the catalytic residues. Our simulations stress that the flexibility of glycan epitopes together with a small number of specific protein contacts provide the driving force for Sf6TSP-polysaccharide complex formation in an overall weak-affinity interaction system. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.6b00240 SN - 0002-7863 VL - 138 SP - 9109 EP - 9118 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Speller, Camilla A1 - van den Hurk, Youri A1 - Charpentier, Anne A1 - Rodrigues, Ana A1 - Gardeisen, Armelle A1 - Wilkens, Barbara A1 - McGrath, Krista A1 - Rowsell, Keri A1 - Spindler, Luke A1 - Collins, Matthew J. A1 - Hofreiter, Michael T1 - Barcoding the largest animals on Earth: ongoing challenges and molecular solutions in the taxonomic identification of ancient cetaceans JF - Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London : B, Biological sciences KW - ancient DNA KW - archaeozoology KW - cetaceans KW - collagen peptide mass fingerprinting KW - species identification KW - zooarchaeology by mass spectrometry Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2015.0332 SN - 0962-8436 SN - 1471-2970 VL - 371 PB - Royal Society CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sander, Martha Maria A1 - Scheffler, Christiane T1 - Bilateral asymmetry in left handers increased concerning morphological laterality in a recent sample of young adults JF - Journal of biological and clinical anthropology : Anthropologischer Anzeiger ; Mitteilungsorgan der Gesellschaft für Anthropologie KW - anthropometry KW - handedness KW - laterality KW - bilateral asymmetry KW - left handers KW - upper extremity KW - reskilling KW - elbow breadth Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1127/anthranz/2016/0663 SN - 0003-5548 VL - 73 SP - 335 EP - 342 PB - Schweizerbart CY - Stuttgart ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Coutinho, Renato Mendes A1 - Klauschies, Toni A1 - Gaedke, Ursula T1 - Bimodal trait distributions with large variances question the reliability of trait-based aggregate models JF - Theoretical ecology N2 - Functionally diverse communities can adjust their species composition to altered environmental conditions, which may influence food web dynamics. Trait-based aggregate models cope with this complexity by ignoring details about species identities and focusing on their functional characteristics (traits). They describe the temporal changes of the aggregate properties of entire communities, including their total biomasses, mean trait values, and trait variances. The applicability of aggregate models depends on the validity of their underlying assumptions that trait distributions are normal and exhibit small variances. We investigated to what extent this can be expected to work by comparing an innovative model that accounts for the full trait distributions of predator and prey communities to a corresponding aggregate model. We used a food web structure with well-established trade-offs among traits promoting mutual adjustments between prey edibility and predator selectivity in response to selection. We altered the shape of the trade-offs to compare the outcome of the two models under different selection regimes, leading to trait distributions increasingly deviating from normality. Their biomass and trait dynamics agreed very well for stabilizing selection and reasonably well for directional selection, under which different trait values are favored at different times. However, for disruptive selection, the results of the aggregate model strongly deviated from the full trait distribution model that showed bimodal trait distributions with large variances. Hence, the outcome of aggregate models is reliable under ideal conditions but has to be questioned when confronted with more complex selection regimes and trait distributions, which are commonly observed in nature. KW - Fitness gradient KW - Communities as complex adaptive systems KW - Moment closure for trait-based aggregate model approaches KW - Multimodal trait distributions KW - Lumpiness in pattern formation and self-organization KW - Shape of trade-offs and stabilizing and disruptive selection Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s12080-016-0297-9 SN - 1874-1738 SN - 1874-1746 VL - 9 SP - 389 EP - 408 PB - Springer CY - Heidelberg ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Prokopovic, Vladimir Z. A1 - Vikulina, Anna S. A1 - Sustr, David A1 - Duschl, Claus A1 - Volodkin, Dmitry T1 - Biodegradation-Resistant Multilayers Coated with Gold Nanoparticles. Toward a Tailor-made Artificial Extracellular Matrix JF - Journal of colloid and interface science N2 - Polymer multicomponent coatings such as multilayers mimic an extracellular, matrix (ECM) that attracts significant attention for the use of the multilayers as functional supports for advanced cell culture and tissue engineering. Herein, biodegradation and molecular transport in hyaluronan/polylysine multilayers coated with gold nanoparticles were described. Nanoparticle coating acts as a semipermeable barrier that governs molecular transport into/from the multilayers, and makes them biodegradation-resistant. Model protein lysozyme (mimics of ECM-soluble signals) diffuses into the multilayers as fast- and, slow-diffusing populations existing in an equilibrium,. Such a. composite system may have high potential to be exploited as degradation-resistant drug-delivery platforms suitable for cell-based applications. KW - hyaluronic acid KW - polylysine KW - diffusion KW - semipermeable KW - fluorescence recovery after photobleaching KW - layer-by-layer KW - enzymatic degradation KW - cell adhesion Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.6b10095 SN - 1944-8244 VL - 8 SP - 24345 EP - 24349 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Soliveres, Santiago A1 - van der Plas, Fons A1 - Manning, Peter A1 - Prati, Daniel A1 - Gossner, Martin M. A1 - Renner, Swen C. A1 - Alt, Fabian A1 - Arndt, Hartmut A1 - Baumgartner, Vanessa A1 - Binkenstein, Julia A1 - Birkhofer, Klaus A1 - Blaser, Stefan A1 - Blüthgen, Nico A1 - Boch, Steffen A1 - Böhm, Stefan A1 - Börschig, Carmen A1 - Buscot, Francois A1 - Diekötter, Tim A1 - Heinze, Johannes A1 - Hölzel, Norbert A1 - Jung, Kirsten A1 - Klaus, Valentin H. A1 - Kleinebecker, Till A1 - Klemmer, Sandra A1 - Krauss, Jochen A1 - Lange, Markus A1 - Morris, E. Kathryn A1 - Müller, Jörg A1 - Oelmann, Yvonne A1 - Overmann, Jörg A1 - Pasalic, Esther A1 - Rillig, Matthias C. A1 - Schaefer, H. Martin A1 - Schloter, Michael A1 - Schmitt, Barbara A1 - Schöning, Ingo A1 - Schrumpf, Marion A1 - Sikorski, Johannes A1 - Socher, Stephanie A. A1 - Solly, Emily F. A1 - Sonnemann, Ilja A1 - Sorkau, Elisabeth A1 - Steckel, Juliane A1 - Steffan-Dewenter, Ingolf A1 - Stempfhuber, Barbara A1 - Tschapka, Marco A1 - Türke, Manfred A1 - Venter, Paul C. A1 - Weiner, Christiane N. A1 - Weisser, Wolfgang W. A1 - Werner, Michael A1 - Westphal, Catrin A1 - Wilcke, Wolfgang A1 - Wolters, Volkmar A1 - Wubet, Tesfaye A1 - Wurst, Susanne A1 - Fischer, Markus A1 - Allan, Eric T1 - Biodiversity at multiple trophic levels is needed for ecosystem multifunctionality JF - Nature : the international weekly journal of science Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/nature19092 SN - 0028-0836 SN - 1476-4687 VL - 536 SP - 456 EP - + PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - THES A1 - Reichel, Victoria Eleonore T1 - Biomedical applications and multifunctional nanostructures based on magnetite nanoparticles synthesized in presence of biological additives Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - de Vinuesa, Amaya Garcia A1 - Abdelilah-Seyfried, Salim A1 - Knaus, Petra A1 - Zwijsen, An A1 - Bailly, Sabine T1 - BMP signaling in vascular biology and dysfunction JF - New journal of physics : the open-access journal for physics N2 - The vascular system is critical for developmental growth, tissue homeostasis and repair but also for tumor development. Bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling has recently emerged as a fundamental pathway of the endothelium by regulating cardiovascular and lymphatic development and by being causative for several vascular dysfunctions. Two vascular disorders have been directly linked to impaired BMP signaling: pulmonary arterial hypertension and hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia. Endothelial BMP signaling critically depends on the cellular context, which includes among others vascular heterogeneity, exposure to flow, and the intertwining with other signaling cascades (Notch, WNT, Hippo and hypoxia). The purpose of this review is to highlight the most recent findings illustrating the clear need for reconsidering the role of BMPs in vascular biology. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. KW - Bone morphogenetic proteins (BMP) KW - Signaling KW - Vasculature KW - Development KW - Disease Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cytogfr.2015.12.005 SN - 1359-6101 SN - 1879-0305 VL - 27 SP - 65 EP - 79 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sperfeld, Erik A1 - Raubenheimer, David A1 - Wacker, Alexander T1 - Bridging factorial and gradient concepts of resource co-limitation: towards a general framework applied to consumers JF - Ecology letters N2 - Organism growth can be limited either by a single resource or by multiple resources simultaneously (co-limitation). Efforts to characterise co-limitation have generated two influential approaches. One approach uses limitation scenarios of factorial growth assays to distinguish specific types of co-limitation; the other uses growth responses spanned over a continuous, multi-dimensional resource space to characterise different types of response surfaces. Both approaches have been useful in investigating particular aspects of co-limitation, but a synthesis is needed to stimulate development of this recent research area. We address this gap by integrating the two approaches, thereby presenting a more general framework of co-limitation. We found that various factorial (co-)limitation scenarios can emerge in different response surface types based on continuous availabilities of essential or substitutable resources. We tested our conceptual co-limitation framework on data sets of published and unpublished studies examining the limitation of two herbivorous consumers in a two-dimensional resource space. The experimental data corroborate the predictions, suggesting a general applicability of our co-limitation framework to generalist consumers and potentially also to other organisms. The presented framework might give insight into mechanisms that underlie co-limitation responses and thus can be a seminal starting point for evaluating co-limitation patterns in experiments and nature. KW - Consumer KW - essential nutrient KW - factorial design KW - food quality KW - growth rate KW - multi-nutrient limitation KW - nutritional ecology KW - performance landscape KW - substitutable resource KW - synergistic effect Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.12554 SN - 1461-023X SN - 1461-0248 VL - 19 SP - 201 EP - 215 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - THES A1 - Jöst, Jan Moritz Michael T1 - Broad leaves, narrow leaves or no leaves at all - a genetic and phenotypic dissection of barley leaf size mutants Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - THES A1 - Sviben, Sanja T1 - Calcite biomineralization in coccolithophores BT - new insights from ultrastructural and proteomic studies of Emiliania huxleyi Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - GEN A1 - Hanack, Katja A1 - Schloer, Anja A1 - Holzloehner, Pamela A1 - Listek, Martin A1 - Bauer, Cindy A1 - Butze, Monique A1 - Micheel, Burkhard A1 - Hentschel, Christian A1 - Sowa, Mandy A1 - Roggenbuck, Dirk A1 - Schierack, Peter A1 - Fuener, Jonas A1 - Schliebs, Erik A1 - Goihl, Alexander A1 - Reinhold, Dirk T1 - Camelid nanobodies specific to human pancreatic glycoprotein 2 T2 - The journal of immunology N2 - Pancreatic secretory zymogen-granule membrane glycoprotein 2 (GP2) has been identified to be a major autoantigenic target in Crohn’s disease patients. It was discussed recently that a long and a short isoform of GP2 exists whereas the short isoform is often detected by GP2-specific autoantibodies. In the outcome of inflammatory bowel diseases, these GP2-specific autoantibodies are discussed as new serological markers for diagnosis and therapeutic monitoring. To investigate this further, camelid nanobodies were generated by phage display and selected against the short isoform of GP2 in order to isolate specific tools for the discrimination of both isoforms. Nanobodies are single domain antibodies derived from camelid heavy chain only antibodies and characterized by a high stability and solubility. The selected candidates were expressed, purified and validated regarding their binding properties in different enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays formats, immunofluorescence, immunohistochemistry and surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy. Four different nanobodies could be selected whereof three recognize the short isoform of GP2 very specifically and one nanobody showed a high binding capacity for both isoforms. The KD values measured for all nanobodies were between 1.3 nM and 2.3 pM indicating highly specific binders suitable for the application as diagnostic tool in inflammatory bowel disease. Y1 - 2016 SN - 0022-1767 SN - 1550-6606 VL - 196 SP - 313 EP - 328 PB - American Assoc. of Immunologists CY - Bethesda ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Reverey, Florian A1 - Grossart, Hans-Peter A1 - Premke, Katrin A1 - Lischeid, Gunnar T1 - Carbon and nutrient cycling in kettle hole sediments depending on hydrological dynamics: a review JF - Hydrobiologia : acta hydrobiologica, hydrographica, limnologica et protistologica N2 - Kettle holes as a specific group of isolated, small lentic freshwater systems (LFS) often are (i) hot spots of biogeochemical cycling and (ii) exposed to frequent sediment desiccation and rewetting. Their ecological functioning is greatly determined by immanent carbon and nutrient transformations. The objective of this review is to elucidate effects of a changing hydrological regime (i.e., dry-wet cycles) on carbon and nutrient cycling in kettle hole sediments. Generally, dry-wet cycles have the potential to increase C and N losses as well as P availability. However, their duration and frequency are important controlling factors regarding direction and intensity of biogeochemical and microbiological responses. To evaluate drought impacts on sediment carbon and nutrient cycling in detail requires the context of the LFS hydrological history. For example, frequent drought events induce physiological adaptation of exposed microbial communities and thus flatten metabolic responses, whereas rare events provoke unbalanced, strong microbial responses. Different potential of microbial resilience to drought stress can irretrievably change microbial communities and functional guilds, gearing cascades of functional responses. Hence, dry-wet events can shift the biogeochemical cycling of organic matter and nutrients to a new equilibrium, thus affecting the dynamic balance between carbon burial and mineralization in kettle holes. KW - Drought KW - Rewetting KW - Temporary pond KW - Kettle hole KW - Organic matter KW - Nitrogen KW - Phosphorus Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s10750-016-2715-9 SN - 0018-8158 SN - 1573-5117 VL - 775 SP - 1 EP - 20 PB - Springer CY - Dordrecht ER - TY - THES A1 - Ruiz-Martinez, Maria T1 - Characterisation and engineering of lignocellulolytic enzymes from the soil bacterium Sorangium cellulosum Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - THES A1 - Beine-Golovchuk, Olga T1 - Characterization and functional complementation of the arabidopsis ribosomal Reil1 - 1Reil2-1 double mutant Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - GEN A1 - Maier, Natalia A1 - Holzlöhner, Pamela A1 - Hoenow, Anja A1 - Scheunemann, Astrid A1 - Weschke, Daniel A1 - Hanack, Katja T1 - Characterization of monoclonal antibodies generated by in vitro immunization T2 - The journal of immunology N2 - Monoclonal antibodies are highly valuable tools in biomedicine but the generation by hybridoma technology is very time-consuming and elaborate. In order to circumvent the consisting drawbacks an in vitro immunization approach was established by which murine as well as human monoclonal antibodies against a viral coat protein could be developed. The in vitro immunization process was performed by isolation of murine hematopoietic stem cells or human monocytes and an in vitro differentiation into immature dendritic cells. After antigen loading the cells were co-cultivated with naive T and B lymphocytes for three days in order to obtain antigen-specific B lymphocytes in culture, followed by fusion with murine myeloma cells or human/murine heteromyeloma cells. Antigen-specific hybridomas were selected and the generated antibodies were purified and characterized in this study by ELISA, western blot, gene sequencing, affinity measurements. Further the characteristics were compared to a monoclonal antibody against the same target generated by conventional hybridoma technology. Isotype detection revealed a murine IgM and a human IgG4 antibody in comparison to an IgG1 for the conventionally generated antibody. The antibodies derived from in vitro immunization showed indeed a lower affinity for the antigen as compared to the conventionally generated one, which is probably based on the significantly shorter B cell maturation (3 days) during the immunization process. Nevertheless, they were suitable for building up a sandwich based detection system. Therefore, the in vitro immunization approach seems to be a good and particularly fast alternative to conventional hybridoma technology. Y1 - 2016 SN - 0022-1767 SN - 1550-6606 VL - 196 PB - American Assoc. of Immunologists CY - Bethesda ER - TY - THES A1 - Beltran, Juan Camilo Moreno T1 - Characterization of the Clp protease complex and identification of putative substrates in N. tabacum Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Messerschmidt, Katrin A1 - Hochrein, Lena A1 - Dehm, Daniel A1 - Schulz, Karina A1 - Mueller-Roeber, Bernd T1 - Characterizing seamless ligation cloning extract for synthetic biological applications JF - Analytical biochemistry : methods in the biological sciences N2 - Synthetic biology aims at designing and engineering organisms. The engineering process typically requires the establishment of suitable DNA constructs generated through fusion of multiple protein coding and regulatory sequences. Conventional cloning techniques, including those involving restriction enzymes and ligases, are often of limited scope, in particular when many DNA fragments must be joined or scar-free fusions are mandatory. Overlap-based-cloning methods have the potential to overcome such limitations. One such method uses seamless ligation cloning extract (SLiCE) prepared from Escherichia coli cells for straightforward and efficient in vitro fusion of DNA fragments. Here, we systematically characterized extracts prepared from the unmodified E. coli strain DH10B for SLiCE-mediated cloning and determined DNA sequence-associated parameters that affect cloning efficiency. Our data revealed the virtual absence of length restrictions for vector backbone (up to 13.5 kbp) and insert (90 bp to 1.6 kbp). Furthermore, differences in GC content in homology regions are easily tolerated and the deletion of unwanted vector sequences concomitant with targeted fragment insertion is straightforward. Thus, SLiCE represents a highly versatile DNA fusion method suitable for cloning projects in virtually all molecular. and synthetic biology projects. (C) 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. KW - SLiCE KW - Seamless ligation cloning KW - Homologous recombination KW - Synthetic biology Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ab.2016.05.029 SN - 0003-2697 SN - 1096-0309 VL - 509 SP - 24 EP - 32 PB - Elsevier CY - San Diego ER - TY - THES A1 - Brzezinka, Krzysztof T1 - Chromatin dynamics during heat stress memory in plants Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ronquillo, Cecinio C. A1 - Hanke-Gogokhia, Christin A1 - Revelo, Monica P. A1 - Frederick, Jeanne M. A1 - Jiang, Li A1 - Baehr, Wolfgang T1 - Ciliopathy-associated IQCB1/NPHP5 protein is required for mouse photoreceptor outer segment formation JF - The FASEB journal : the official journal of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology N2 - Null mutations in the human IQCB1/NPHP5 (nephrocystin-5) gene that encodes NPHP5 are the most frequent cause of Senior-LOken syndrome, a ciliopathy that is characterized by Leber congenital amaurosis and nephronophthisis. We generated germline Nphp5-knockout mice by placing a -Geo gene trap in intron 4, thereby truncating NPHP5 at Leu87 and removing all known functional domains. At eye opening, Nphp5(-/-) mice exhibited absence of scotopic and photopic electroretinogram responses, a phenotype that resembles Leber congenital amaurosis. Outer segment transmembrane protein accumulation in Nphp5(-/-) endoplasmic reticulum was evident as early as postnatal day (P)6. EGFP-CETN2, a centrosome and transition zone marker, identified basal bodies in Nphp5(-/-) photoreceptors, but without fully developed transition zones. Ultrastructure of P6 and 10 Nphp5(-/-) photoreceptors revealed aberrant transition zones of reduced diameter. Nphp5(-/-) photoreceptor degeneration was complete at 1 mo of age but was delayed significantly in Nphp5(-/-);Nrl(-/-) (cone only) retina. Nphp5(-/-) mouse embryonic fibroblast developed normal cilia, and Nphp5(-/-) kidney histology at 1 yr of age showed no significant pathology. Results establish that nephrocystin-5 is essential for photoreceptor outer segment formation but is dispensable for kidney and mouse embryonic fibroblast ciliary formation. KW - Senior-LOken syndrome KW - nephronophthisis KW - Leber congenital amaurosis KW - nephrocystins Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1096/fj.201600511R SN - 0892-6638 SN - 1530-6860 VL - 30 SP - 3400 EP - 3412 PB - Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology CY - Bethesda ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Bilton, Mark C. A1 - Metz, Johannes A1 - Tielboerger, Katja T1 - Climatic niche groups: A novel application of a common assumption predicting plant community response to climate change JF - Perspectives in plant ecology, evolution and systematics N2 - Defining species by their climatic niche is the simple and intuitive principle underlying Bioclimatic Envelope Model (BEM) predictions for climate change effects. However, these correlative models are often criticised for neglecting many ecological processes. Here, we apply the same niche principle to entire communities within a medium/long-term climate manipulation study, where ecological processes are inherently included. In a nine generation study in Israel, we manipulated rainfall (Drought -30%; Irrigation +30%; Control natural rainfall) at two sites which differ chiefly in rainfall quantity and variability. We analysed community responses to the manipulations by grouping species based on their climatic rainfall niche. These responses were compared to analyses based on single species, total densities, and commonly used taxonomic groupings. Climate Niche Groups yielded clear and consistent results: within communities, those species distributed in drier regions performed relatively better in the drought treatment, and those from wetter climates performed better when irrigated. In contrast, analyses based on other principles revealed little insight into community dynamics. Notably, most relationships were weaker at the drier, more variable site, suggesting that enhanced adaptation to variability may buffer climate change impacts. We provide robust experimental evidence that using climatic niches commonly applied in BEMs is a valid approach for eliciting community changes in response to climate change. However, we also argue that additional empirical information needs to be gathered using experiments in situ to correctly assess community vulnerability. Climatic Niche Groups used in this way, may therefore provide a powerful tool and directional testing framework to generalise and compare climate change impacts across habitats. (C) 2016 The Authors. Published by Elsevier GmbH. KW - Annual plant communities KW - Bioclimatic envelope modelling KW - Climate change manipulations KW - Experimental evidence KW - Plant functional groups KW - Rainfall niche Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ppees.2016.02.006 SN - 1433-8319 VL - 19 SP - 61 EP - 69 PB - Elsevier CY - Jena ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Cui, Pin A1 - Löber, Ulrike A1 - Alquezar-Planas, David E. A1 - Ishida, Yasuko A1 - Courtiol, Alexandre A1 - Timms, Peter A1 - Johnson, Rebecca N. A1 - Lenz, Dorina A1 - Helgen, Kristofer M. A1 - Roca, Alfred L. A1 - Hartman, Stefanie A1 - Greenwood, Alex D. T1 - Comprehensive profiling of retroviral integration sites using target enrichment methods from historical koala samples without an assembled reference genome JF - PeerJ N2 - Background. Retroviral integration into the host germline results in permanent viral colonization of vertebrate genomes. The koala retrovirus (KoRV) is currently invading the germline of the koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) and provides a unique opportunity for studying retroviral endogenization. Previous analysis of KoRV integration patterns in modern koalas demonstrate that they share integration sites primarily if they are related, indicating that the process is currently driven by vertical transmission rather than infection. However, due to methodological challenges, KoRV integrations have not been comprehensively characterized. Results. To overcome these challenges, we applied and compared three target enrichment techniques coupled with next generation sequencing (NGS) and a newly customized sequence-clustering based computational pipeline to determine the integration sites for 10 museum Queensland and New South Wales (NSW) koala samples collected between the 1870s and late 1980s. A secondary aim of this study sought to identify common integration sites across modern and historical specimens by comparing our dataset to previously published studies. Several million sequences were processed, and the KoRV integration sites in each koala were characterized. Conclusions. Although the three enrichment methods each exhibited bias in integration site retrieval, a combination of two methods, Primer Extension Capture and hybridization capture is recommended for future studies on historical samples. Moreover, identification of integration sites shows that the proportion of integration sites shared between any two koalas is quite small. KW - Integration sites KW - Retroviral endogenization KW - KoRV KW - Target enrichment KW - Clustering Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.1847 SN - 2167-8359 VL - 4 PB - PeerJ Inc. CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Falk, Thomas A1 - Lohmann, Dirk A1 - Azebaze, Nadege T1 - Congruence of appropriation and provision in collective water provision in Central Namibia JF - International journal of the commons N2 - Achieving cooperation in natural resource management is always a challenge when incentives exist for an individual to maximise her short term benefits at the cost of a group. We study a public good social dilemma in water infrastructure provision on land reform farms in Namibia. In the context of the Namibian land reform, arbitrarily mixed groups of livestock farmers have to share the operation and maintenance of water infrastructure. Typically, water is mainly used for livestock production, and livestock numbers are subject to high fluctuations due to the given environmental conditions. Our paper assesses how alternative payment systems with differing congruence of provision and appropriation support the cooperation in the group given the ever-changing equilibria. In a first step, we conducted an exploratory overview of the social-ecological system of central Namibian land reform projects. The Social Ecological System (SES) Framework served as a guideline for this assessment (Ostrom 2009). Taking the complexity of the cooperation situation into account, in the second step we designed a role-play that is based on a social-ecological simulation model. The role-play simulates the real-life decision situations of land reform beneficiaries wherein equilibria are permanently changing. This approach helped us to not only better understand the cooperation challenges of Namibian land reform beneficiaries, but also supported stakeholders in their decision making and institution building. Our study provides evidence to support that land reform beneficiaries increase their contributions as they own more livestock and as other group members increase their payments. Nevertheless, only groups with relatively homogeneous livestock endowments manage to agree on payment rules. Interestingly, the dominant rule is an "equal payment per farmer" and not a "payment per head of livestock", though the latter would imply a higher congruence of provision and appropriation. KW - Land reform KW - Namibia KW - participatory ecological-economic modelling KW - public good KW - role play KW - savanna rangeland Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.18352/ijc.583 SN - 1875-0281 VL - 10 SP - 71 EP - 118 PB - Brill CY - Urtrecht ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Borgia, Alessandro A1 - Zheng, Wenwei A1 - Buholzer, Karin A1 - Borgia, Madeleine B. A1 - Schüler, Anja A1 - Hofmann, Hagen A1 - Soranno, Andrea A1 - Nettels, Daniel A1 - Gast, Klaus A1 - Grishaev, Alexander A1 - Best, Robert B. A1 - Schuler, Benjamin T1 - Consistent View of Polypeptide Chain Expansion in Chemical Denaturants from Multiple Experimental Methods JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society N2 - There has been a long-standing controversy regarding the effect of chemical denaturants on the dimensions of unfolded and intrinsically disordered proteins: A wide range of experimental techniques suggest that polypeptide chains expand with increasing denaturant concentration, but several studies using small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) have reported no: such increase of the radius of gyration (R-g). This inconsistency challenges our current understanding of the mechanism of chemical denaturants, which are widely employed to investigate protein folding and stability. Here, we use a combination Of single-molecule Forster resonance energy transfer (FRET), SAXS, dynamic light scattering (DLS), and two-focus fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (2f-FCS) to characterize the denaturant dependence of the unfolded state of the spectrin domain R17 and the intrinsically disordered protein ACTR in two different denaturants. Standard analysis of the primary data clearly indicates an expansion of the unfolded state with increasing denaturant concentration irrespective of the protein, denaturant, or experimental method used. This is the first case in which SAXS and FRET have yielded even qualitatively consistent results regarding expansion in denaturant when applied to the same proteins. To more directly illustrate this self-consistency, we used both SAXS and FRET data in a Bayesian procedure to refine structural ensembles representative of the observed unfolded state. This analysis demonstrates that both of these experimental probes are compatible with a common ensemble of protein configurations for each denaturant concentration. Furthermore, the resulting ensembles reproduce the trend of increasing hydrodynamic radius, with denaturant concentration obtained by 2f-FCS,and DLS. We were thus able to reconcile the results from all four experimental techniques quantitatively, to obtain a comprehensive structural picture of denaturant;induced unfolded state expansion, and to identify the Most likely sources of earlier discrepancies. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.6b05917 SN - 0002-7863 VL - 138 SP - 11714 EP - 11726 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schmiedel, Ute A1 - Araya, Yoseph A1 - Bortolotto, Maria Ieda A1 - Boeckenhoff, Linda A1 - Hallwachs, Winnie A1 - Janzen, Daniel A1 - Kolipaka, Shekhar S. A1 - Novotny, Vojtech A1 - Palm, Matilda A1 - Parfondry, Marc A1 - Smanis, Athanasios A1 - Toko, Pagi T1 - Contributions of paraecologists and parataxonomists to research, conservation, and social development JF - Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology N2 - Citizen science has been gaining momentum in the United States and Europe, where citizens are literate and often interested in science. However, in developing countries, which have a dire need for environmental data, such programs are slow to emerge, despite the large and untapped human resources in close proximity to areas of high biodiversity and poorly known floras and faunas. Thus, we propose that the parataxonomist and paraecologist approach, which originates from citizen-based science, is well suited to rural areas in developing countries. Being a paraecologist or a parataxonomist is a vocation and entails full-time employment underpinned by extensive training, whereas citizen science involves the temporary engagement of volunteers. Both approaches have their merits depending on the context and objectives of the research. We examined 4 ongoing paraecologist or parataxonomist programs in Costa Rica, India, Papua New Guinea, and southern Africa and compared their origins, long-term objectives, implementation strategies, activities, key challenges, achievements, and implications for resident communities. The programs supported ongoing research on biodiversity assessment, monitoring, and management, and participants engaged in non-academic capacity development in these fields. The programs in Southern Africa related to specific projects, whereas the programs in Costa Rica, India, and Papua New Guinea were designed for the long term, provided sufficient funding was available. The main focus of the paraecologists’ and parataxonomists’ activities ranged from collection and processing of specimens (Costa Rica and Papua New Guinea) or of socioeconomic and natural science data (India and Southern Africa) to communication between scientists and residents (India and Southern Africa). As members of both the local land user and research communities, paraecologists and parataxonomists can greatly improve the flow of biodiversity information to all users, from local stakeholders to international academia. KW - biodiversity assessment KW - development cooperation KW - natural resource management KW - non-academic capacity development KW - participatory research KW - wildland conservation Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/cobi.12661 SN - 0888-8892 SN - 1523-1739 VL - 30 SP - 506 EP - 519 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Feoktistova, Natalia A1 - Rose, Jürgen A1 - Prokopovic, Vladimir Z. A1 - Vikulina, Anna S. A1 - Skirtach, Andre A1 - Volodkin, Dmitry T1 - Controlling the Vaterite CaCO3 Crystal Pores. Design of Tailor-Made Polymer Based Microcapsules by Hard Templating JF - Langmuir N2 - The spherical vaterite CaCO3 microcrystals are nowadays widely used as sacrificial templates for fabrication of various microcarriers made of biopolymers (e.g., proteins, nucleic acids, enzymes) due to porous structure and mild template elimination conditions. Here, we demonstrated for the first time that polymer microcarriers with tuned internal nanoarchitecture can be designed by employing the CaCO3 crystals of controlled porosity. The layer-by-layer deposition has been utilized to assemble shell-like (hollow) and matrix-like (filled) polymer capsules due to restricted and free polymer diffusion through the crystal pores, respectively. The crystal pore size in the range of few tens of nanometers can be adjusted without any additives by variation of the crystal preparation temperature in the range 745 degrees C. The temperature-mediated growth mechanism is explained by the Ostwald ripening of nanocrystallites forming the crystal secondary structure. Various techniques including SEM, AFM, CLSM, Raman microscopy, nitrogen adsorptiondesorption, and XRD have been employed for crystal and microcapsule analysis. A three-dimensional model is introduced to describe the crystal internal structure and predict the pore cutoff and available surface for the pore diffusing molecules. Inherent biocompatibility of CaCO3 and a possibility to scale the porosity in the size range of typical biomacromolecules make the CaCO3 crystals extremely attractive tools for template assisted designing tailor-made biopolymer-based architectures in 2D to 3D targeted at drug delivery and other bioapplications. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.6b00717 SN - 0743-7463 VL - 32 SP - 4229 EP - 4238 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Pfestorf, Hans A1 - Körner, Katrin A1 - Sonnemann, Ilja A1 - Wurst, Susanne A1 - Jeltsch, Florian T1 - Coupling experimental data with individual-based modelling reveals differential effects of root herbivory on grassland plant co-existence along a resource gradient JF - Journal of vegetation science N2 - QuestionThe empirical evidence of root herbivory effects on plant community composition and co-existence is contradictory. This originates from difficulties connected to below-ground research and confinement of experimental studies to a small range of environmental conditions. Here we suggest coupling experimental data with an individual-based model to overcome the limitations inherent in either approach. To demonstrate this, we investigated the consequences of root herbivory, as experimentally observed on individual plants, on plant competition and co-existence in a population and community context under different root herbivory intensities (RHI), fluctuating and constant root herbivore activity and grazing along a resource gradient. LocationBerlin, Germany, glasshouse; Potsdam, Germany, high performance cluster computer. MethodsThe well-established community model IBC-Grass was adapted to allow for a flexible species parameterization and to include annual species. Experimentally observed root herbivory effects on performance of eight common grassland plant species were incorporated into the model by altering plant growth rates. We then determined root herbivore effects on plant populations, competitive hierarchy and consequences for co-existence and community diversity. ResultsRoot herbivory reduced individual biomass, but temporal fluctuation allowed for compensation of herbivore effects. Reducing resource availability strongly shifted competitive hierarchies, with, however, more similar hierarchies along the gradient under root herbivory, pointing to reduced ecological species differences. Consequently, negative effects on co-existence and diversity prevailed, with the exception of a few positive effects on co-existence of selected species pairs. Temporal fluctuation alleviated but did not remove negative root herbivore effects, despite of the stronger influence of intra- compared to interspecific competition. Grazing in general augmented co-existence. Most interestingly, grazing interacted with RHI and resource availability by promoting positive effects of root herbivory. ConclusionsThrough integrating experimental data on the scale of individual plants with a simulation model we verified that root herbivory could affect plant competition with consequences for species co-existence. Our approach demonstrates the benefit that accrues when empirical and modelling approaches are brought more closely together, and that gathering data on distinct processes and under specific conditions, combined with appropriate models, can be used to answer challenging research questions in a more general way. KW - Above-/below-ground interactions KW - Below-ground resources KW - Competitive hierarchies KW - Grassland KW - Greenhouse experiment KW - Simulation experiment KW - Species co-existence KW - Wireworms Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/jvs.12357 SN - 1100-9233 SN - 1654-1103 VL - 27 SP - 269 EP - 282 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Koussoroplis, Apostolos-Manuel A1 - Wacker, Alexander T1 - Covariance modulates the effect of joint temperature and food variance on ectotherm life-history traits JF - Ecology letters N2 - Understanding animal performance in heterogeneous or variable environments is a central question in ecology. We combine modelling and experiments to test how temperature and food availability variance jointly affect life-history traits of ectotherms. The model predicts that as mean temperatures move away from the ectotherm's thermal optimum, the effect size of joint thermal and food variance should become increasingly sensitive to their covariance. Below the thermal optimum, performance should be positively correlated with food–temperature covariance and the opposite is predicted above it. At lower temperatures, covariance should determine whether food and temperature variance increases or decreases performance compared to constant conditions. Somewhat stronger than predicted, the covariance effect below the thermal optimum was confirmed experimentally on an aquatic ectotherm (Daphnia magna) exposed to diurnal food and temperature variance with different amounts of covariance. Our findings have important implications for understanding ectotherm responses to climate-driven alterations of thermal mean and variance. KW - Biotic interactions KW - co-limitation KW - Daphnia KW - environmental fluctuations KW - heterogeneity KW - variability KW - vertical migration KW - zooplankton Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.12546 SN - 1461-023X SN - 1461-0248 VL - 19 SP - 143 EP - 152 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Putzler, Sascha A1 - Meyer, Irene A1 - Gräf, Ralph T1 - CP91 is a component of the Dictyostelium centrosome involved in centrosome biogenesis JF - European journal of cell biology N2 - The Dictyostelium centrosome is a model for acentriolar centrosomes and it consists of a three-layered core structure surrounded by a corona harboring microtubule nucleation complexes. Its core structure duplicates once per cell cycle at the G2/M transition. Through proteomic analysis of isolated centrosomes we have identified CP91, a 91-kDa coiled coil protein that was localized at the centrosomal core structure. While GFP-CP91 showed almost no mobility in FRAP experiments during interphase, both GFP-CP91 and endogenous CP91 dissociated during mitosis and were absent from spindle poles from late prophase to anaphase. Since this behavior correlates with the disappearance of the central layer upon centrosome duplication, CP91 is a putative component of this layer. When expressed as GFP-fusions, CP91 fragments corresponding to the central coiled coil domain and the preceding N-terminal part (GFP-CP91cc and GFP-CP91N, respectively) also localized to the centrosome but did not show the mitotic redistribution of the full length protein suggesting a regulatory role of the C-terminal domain. Expression of all GFP-fusion proteins suppressed expression of endogenous CP91 and elicited supernumerary centrosomes. This was also very prominent upon depletion of CP91 by RNAi. Additionally, CP91-RNAi cells exhibited heavily increased ploidy due to severe defects in chromosome segregation along with increased cell size and defects in the abscission process during cytokinesis. Our results indicate that CP91 is a central centrosomal core component required for centrosomal integrity, proper centrosome biogenesis and, independently, for abscission during cytokinesis. (c) 2016 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved. KW - Dictyostelium KW - Mitosis KW - Microtubules KW - Centrosome KW - Nucleus Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejcb.2016.03.001 SN - 0171-9335 SN - 1618-1298 VL - 95 SP - 124 EP - 135 PB - Royal Society CY - Jena ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Jargosch, M. A1 - Kroeger, S. A1 - Gralinska, E. A1 - Klotz, Ulrike A1 - Fang, Z. A1 - Chen, W. A1 - Leser, U. A1 - Selbig, Joachim A1 - Groth, Detlef A1 - Baumgrass, Ria T1 - Data integration for identification of important transcription factors of STAT6-mediated cell fate decisions JF - Genetics and molecular research N2 - Data integration has become a useful strategy for uncovering new insights into complex biological networks. We studied whether this approach can help to delineate the signal transducer and activator of transcription 6 (STAT6)-mediated transcriptional network driving T helper (Th) 2 cell fate decisions. To this end, we performed an integrative analysis of publicly available RNA-seq data of Stat6-knockout mouse studies together with STAT6 ChIP-seq data and our own gene expression time series data during Th2 cell differentiation. We focused on transcription factors (TFs), cytokines, and cytokine receptors and delineated 59 positively and 41 negatively STAT6-regulated genes, which were used to construct a transcriptional network around STAT6. The network illustrates that important and well-known TFs for Th2 cell differentiation are positively regulated by STAT6 and act either as activators for Th2 cells (e.g., Gata3, Atf3, Satb1, Nfil3, Maf, and Pparg) or as suppressors for other Th cell subpopulations such as Th1 (e.g., Ar), Th17 (e.g., Etv6), or iTreg (e.g., Stat3 and Hifla) cells. Moreover, our approach reveals 11 TFs (e.g., Atf5, Creb3l2, and Asb2) with unknown functions in Th cell differentiation. This fact together with the observed enrichment of asthma risk genes among those regulated by STAT6 underlines the potential value of the data integration strategy used here. Thus, our results clearly support the opinion that data integration is a useful tool to delineate complex physiological processes. KW - Data integration KW - Th2 cells KW - Gene regulatory network KW - STAT6 KW - Transcription factors Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.4238/gmr.15028493 SN - 1676-5680 VL - 15 PB - FUNPEC CY - Ribeirao Preto ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Srivastava, Abhishek A1 - McMahon, Katherine D. A1 - Stepanauskas, Ramunas A1 - Grossart, Hans-Peter T1 - De novo synthesis and functional analysis of the phosphatase-encoding gene acI-B of uncultured Actinobacteria from Lake Stechlin (NE Germany) JF - International microbiology : official journal of the Spanish Society for Microbiology N2 - The National Center for Biotechnology Information [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih. gov/guide/taxonomy/] database enlists more than 15,500 bacterial species. But this also includes a plethora of uncultured bacterial representations. Owing to their metabolism, they directly influence biogeochemical cycles, which underscores the the important status of bacteria on our planet. To study the function of a gene from an uncultured bacterium, we have undertaken a de novo gene synthesis approach. Actinobacteria of the acI-B subcluster are important but yet uncultured members of the bacterioplankton in temperate lakes of the northern hemisphere such as oligotrophic Lake Stechlin (NE Germany). This lake is relatively poor in phosphate (P) and harbors on average similar to 1.3 x 10(6) bacterial cells/ml, whereby Actinobacteria of the ac-I lineage can contribute to almost half of the entire bacterial community depending on seasonal variability. Single cell genome analysis of Actinobacterium SCGC AB141-P03, a member of the acI-B tribe in Lake Stechlin has revealed several phosphate-metabolizing genes. The genome of acI-B Actinobacteria indicates potential to degrade polyphosphate compound. To test for this genetic potential, we targeted the exoP-annotated gene potentially encoding polyphosphatase and synthesized it artificially to examine its biochemical role. Heterologous overexpression of the gene in Escherichia coli and protein purification revealed phosphatase activity. Comparative genome analysis suggested that homologs of this gene should be also present in other Actinobacteria of the acI lineages. This strategic retention of specialized genes in their genome provides a metabolic advantage over other members of the aquatic food web in a P-limited ecosystem. KW - acI-B in Actinobacteria KW - phosphatases KW - single cell genomics KW - phosphate limitation KW - Lake Stechlin KW - NE Germany Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.2436/20.1501.01.262 SN - 1139-6709 SN - 1618-1905 VL - 19 SP - 39 EP - 47 PB - Institut d'Estudis Catalans CY - Barcelona ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Bader, Denise A1 - Klier, Dennis Tobias A1 - Hettrich, C. A1 - Bier, Frank Fabian A1 - Wessig, Pablo T1 - Detecting carbohydrate-lectin interactions using a fluorescent probe based on DBD dyes JF - Analytical methods : advancing methods and applications N2 - Herein we present an efficient synthesis of a biomimetic probe with modular construction that can be specifically bound by the mannose binding FimH protein - a surface adhesion protein of E. coli bacteria. The synthesis combines the new and interesting DBD dye with the carbohydrate ligand mannose via a Click reaction. We demonstrate the binding to E. coli bacteria over a large concentration range and also present some special characteristics of those molecules that are of particular interest for the application as a biosensor. In particular, the mix-and-measure ability and the very good photo-stability should be highlighted here. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1039/c5ay02991k SN - 1759-9660 SN - 1759-9679 VL - 8 SP - 1235 EP - 1238 PB - Royal Society of Chemistry CY - Cambridge ER - TY - GEN A1 - Wessig, Pablo A1 - Bader, Denise A1 - Klier, Dennis Tobias A1 - Hettrich, Cornelia A1 - Bier, Frank Fabian T1 - Detecting carbohydrate–lectin interactions using a fluorescent probe based on DBD dyes N2 - Herein we present an efficient synthesis of a biomimetic probe with modular construction that can be specifically bound by the mannose binding FimH protein – a surface adhesion protein of E. coli bacteria. The synthesis combines the new and interesting DBD dye with the carbohydrate ligand mannose via a Click reaction. We demonstrate the binding to E. coli bacteria over a large concentration range and also present some special characteristics of those molecules that are of particular interest for the application as a biosensor. In particular, the mix-and-measure ability and the very good photo-stability should be highlighted here. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 314 KW - conformational-changes KW - green-i KW - protein KW - binding KW - assay Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-394382 SP - 1235 EP - 1238 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Nowak-Szczepanska, Natalia A1 - Gomula, A. A1 - Ipsen, Marie Josephin A1 - Koziel, Slawomir T1 - Different effects of living conditions on the variation in BMI and height in children before the onset of puberty JF - European journal of clinical nutrition N2 - SUBJECTS/METHODS: The study included 5597 boys and 5479 girls aged 7-8 years of age. Socioeconomic status (SES) was defined in three categories: high, medium and low. RESULTS: Between 1966 and 2012, the mean values for height and BMI significantly increased in both sexes (P<0.001). The variation of these two parameters, however, showed a different pattern. Whereas the variation in Z-values for height remained unchanged in both sexes, the variation in BMI increased in boys (P<0.01) but not in girls. SES affected the variation in Z-BMI in 1978 in both sexes (P<0.001), whereas variation in Z-height between SES categories remained unchanged across all years of surveys in boys. Before the political transformation, significant regional differences were observed in the variances of Z-BMI (P<0.05) but not of Z-height. This pattern changed after the political transformation, when regional differences in variances of Z-BMI disappeared. CONCLUSIONS: It is concluded that the mean values and the variation of BMI are affected by a changing quality of life, whereas the variation in height is usually independent of living conditions. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/ejcn.2016.30 SN - 0954-3007 SN - 1476-5640 VL - 70 SP - 662 EP - 666 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Luft, Laura A1 - Neumann, C. A1 - Itzerott, S. A1 - Lausch, A. A1 - Doktor, D. A1 - Freude, M. A1 - Blaum, Niels A1 - Jeltsch, Florian T1 - Digital and real-habitat modeling of Hipparchia statilinus based on hyper spectral remote sensing data JF - International journal of environmental science and technology N2 - The abandonment of military areas leads to succession processes affecting valuable open-land habitats and is considered to be a major threat for European butterflies. We assessed the ability of hyper spectral remote sensing data to spatially predict the occurrence of one of the most endangered butterfly species (Hipparchia statilinus) in Brandenburg (Germany) on the basis of habitat characteristics at a former military training area. Presence-absence data were sampled on a total area of 36 km(2), and N = 65 adult individuals of Hipparchia statilinus could be detected. The floristic composition within the study area was modeled in a three-dimensional ordination space. Occurrence probabilities for the target species were predicted as niches between ordinated floristic gradients by using Regression Kriging of Indicators. Habitat variance could be explained by up to 81 % with spectral variables at a spatial resolution of 2 x 2 m by transferring PLSR models to imagery. Ordinated ecological niche of Hipparchia statilinus was tested against environmental predictor variables. N = 6 variables could be detected to be significantly correlated with habitat preferences of Hipparchia statilinus. They show that Hipparchia statilinus can serve as a valuable indicator for the evaluation of the conservation status of Natura 2000 habitat type 2330 (inland dunes with open Corynephorus and Agrostis grasslands) protected by the Habitat Directive (Council Directive 92/43/EEC). The authors of this approach, conducted in August 2013 at Doberitzer Heide Germany, aim to increase the value of remote sensing as an important tool for questions of biodiversity research and conservation. KW - Habitat gradients KW - Military areas KW - Natura 2000 KW - hyper spectral KW - Vegetation continuum KW - Kriging Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s13762-015-0859-1 SN - 1735-1472 SN - 1735-2630 VL - 13 SP - 187 EP - 200 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Avcilar-Kucukgoze, Irem A1 - Bartholomäus, Alexander A1 - Varela, Juan A. Cordero A1 - Kaml, Robert Franz-Xaver A1 - Neubauer, Peter A1 - Budisa, Nediljko A1 - Ignatova, Zoya T1 - Discharging tRNAs: a tug of war between translation and detoxification in Escherichia coli JF - Nucleic acids research N2 - Translation is a central cellular process and is optimized for speed and fidelity. The speed of translation of a single codon depends on the concentration of aminoacyl-tRNAs. Here, we used microarray-based approaches to analyze the charging levels of tRNAs in Escherichia coli growing at different growth rates. Strikingly, we observed a non-uniform aminoacylation of tRNAs in complex media. In contrast, in minimal medium, the level of aminoacyl-tRNAs is more uniform and rises to approximately 60%. Particularly, the charging level of tRNA(Ser), tRNA(Cys), tRNA(Thr) and tRNA(His) is below 50% in complex medium and their aminoacylation levels mirror the degree that amino acids inhibit growth when individually added to minimal medium. Serine is among the most toxic amino acids for bacteria and tRNAs(Ser) exhibit the lowest charging levels, below 10%, at high growth rate although intracellular serine concentration is plentiful. As a result some serine codons are among the most slowly translated codons. A large fraction of the serine is most likely degraded by L-serine-deaminase, which competes with the seryl-tRNA-synthetase that charges the tRNAs(Ser). These results indicate that the level of aminoacylation in complex media might be a competition between charging for translation and degradation of amino acids that inhibit growth. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkw697 SN - 0305-1048 SN - 1362-4962 VL - 44 SP - 8324 EP - 8334 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Grossart, Hans-Peter A1 - Wurzbacher, Christian A1 - James, Timothy Y. A1 - Kagami, Maiko T1 - Discovery of dark matter fungi in aquatic ecosystems demands a reappraisal of the phylogeny and ecology of zoosporic fungi JF - Fungal ecology N2 - Our knowledge of zoosporic fungal phylogeny, physiology, and ecological functions, in particular their role in aquatic food web dynamics and biogeochemistry, is limited. The recent discovery of numerous dark matter fungi (DMF), i.e., uncultured and poorly known taxa belonging to early diverging branches of the fungal tree (namely the Rozellomycota and Chytridiomycota) calls for reconsideration of the phylogeny and ecology of zoosporic fungi. In this opinion paper, we summarize the exploration of new, recently discovered lineages of DMF and their implications for the ecology, evolution, and biogeography of the rapidly growing fungal tree. We also discuss possible ecological roles of zoosporic fungi in relation to recent methodological developments including single cell genomics and cultivation efforts. Finally, we suggest linking explorative with experimental research to gain deeper insights into the physiology and ecological functioning of zoosporic fungi DMF in aquatic habitats. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd and The British Mycological Society. All rights reserved. KW - Dark matter fungi KW - Zoosporic fungi KW - Fungal tree KW - Chytridiomycota KW - Rozellomycota KW - Fungal physiology and ecology KW - Aquatic habitats Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.funeco.2015.06.004 SN - 1754-5048 SN - 1878-0083 VL - 19 SP - 28 EP - 38 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Procter, Duncan S. A1 - Cottrell, Joan E. A1 - Watts, Kevin A1 - Hofreiter, Michael A1 - Robinson, Elva J. H. T1 - Does cooperation mean kinship between spatially discrete ant nests? JF - Ecology and evolution N2 - Eusociality is one of the most complex forms of social organization, characterized by cooperative and reproductive units termed colonies. Altruistic behavior of workers within colonies is explained by inclusive fitness, with indirect fitness benefits accrued by helping kin. Members of a social insect colony are expected to be more closely related to one another than they are to other conspecifics. In many social insects, the colony can extend to multiple socially connected but spatially separate nests (polydomy). Social connections, such as trails between nests, promote cooperation and resource exchange, and we predict that workers from socially connected nests will have higher internest relatedness than those from socially unconnected, and noncooperating, nests. We measure social connections, resource exchange, and internest genetic relatedness in the polydomous wood ant Formica lugubris to test whether (1) socially connected but spatially separate nests cooperate, and (2) high internest relatedness is the underlying driver of this cooperation. Our results show that socially connected nests exhibit movement of workers and resources, which suggests they do cooperate, whereas unconnected nests do not. However, we find no difference in internest genetic relatedness between socially connected and unconnected nest pairs, both show high kinship. Our results suggest that neighboring pairs of connected nests show a social and cooperative distinction, but no genetic distinction. We hypothesize that the loss of a social connection may initiate ecological divergence within colonies. Genetic divergence between neighboring nests may build up only later, as a consequence rather than a cause of colony separation. KW - colony organization KW - eusociality KW - Formica lugubris KW - kin selection KW - polydomy KW - social organization Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2590 SN - 2045-7758 VL - 6 SP - 8846 EP - 8856 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Stein, F. A1 - Doering-Arjes, P. A1 - Fladung, Erik A1 - Brämick, Uwe A1 - Bendall, B. A1 - Schroeder, B. T1 - Downstream Migration of the European Eel (Anguilla Anguilla) in the Elbe River, Germany: Movement Patterns and the Potential Impact of Environmental Factors JF - River Research and Applications N2 - Recruitment of European eels (Anguilla anguilla) has declined to the extent that they have been added to the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Therefore, it is critical to ensure that eels complete their outward river migration in order to contribute to the available spawning stock. We conducted a 4-year (2007-2011) telemetry study to understand the migratory behaviour and potential impact of environmental factors on the eel during this critical life stage. Out of 399 female eels tagged with acoustic transmitters, only 28% demonstrated clear downstream migratory behaviour. Fifty-five percent were detected exhibiting no downstream migration behaviour and 17% were not detected at any monitoring station. Movement patterns of downstream-migrating (silver) eels were characterized by nocturnal activity and seasonal migration, with distinct peaks in autumn and spring. Migration was often discontinuous and exhibited phases of active locomotion and expanded stopovers. The most important determinants of movement activity were water temperature, cumulative precipitation and moonlight, although the significance varied by season and location in the river basin. Our results evidence a discontinuous, stepwise migration over an extended period. Furthermore, our findings indicate that migration success depends on holding duration prior to tagging and environmental predictors with varying importance depending on the season, as well as the locations of capture, tagging and release. Copyright (c) 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. KW - acoustic telemetry KW - fish migration KW - environmental trigger KW - generalized linear model KW - handling effect KW - discontinuous migration KW - Anguilla anguilla KW - seasonal migration Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/rra.2881 SN - 1535-1459 SN - 1535-1467 VL - 32 SP - 666 EP - 676 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Frickel, Jens A1 - Sieber, Michael A1 - Becks, Lutz T1 - Eco-evolutionary dynamics in a coevolving host-virus system JF - Ecology letters N2 - Eco-evolutionary dynamics have been shown to be important for understanding population and community stability and their adaptive potential. However, coevolution in the framework of eco-evolutionary theory has not been addressed directly. Combining experiments with an algal host and its viral parasite, and mathematical model analyses we show eco-evolutionary dynamics in antagonistic coevolving populations. The interaction between antagonists initially resulted in arms race dynamics (ARD) with selective sweeps, causing oscillating host-virus population dynamics. However, ARD ended and populations stabilised after the evolution of a general resistant host, whereas a trade-off between host resistance and growth then maintained host diversity over time (trade-off driven dynamics). Most importantly, our study shows that the interaction between ecology and evolution had important consequences for the predictability of the mode and tempo of adaptive change and for the stability and adaptive potential of populations. KW - Algae-virus KW - arms race KW - coevolution KW - eco-evolutionary dynamics KW - fluctuating selection KW - host-virus KW - infectivity KW - resistance KW - trade-off Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.12580 SN - 1461-023X SN - 1461-0248 VL - 19 SP - 450 EP - 459 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Lachmann, Sabrina C. A1 - Maberly, Stephen C. A1 - Spijkerman, Elly T1 - ECOPHYSIOLOGY MATTERS: LINKING INORGANIC CARBON ACQUISITION TO ECOLOGICAL PREFERENCE IN FOUR SPECIES OF MICROALGAE (CHLOROPHYCEAE) JF - Journal of phycology N2 - The effect of CO2 supply is likely to play an important role in algal ecology. Since inorganic carbon (C-i) acquisition strategies are very diverse among microalgae and C-i availability varies greatly within and among habitats, we hypothesized that C-i acquisition depends on the pH of their preferred natural environment (adaptation) and that the efficiency of C-i uptake is affected by CO2 availability (acclimation). To test this, four species of green algae originating from different habitats were studied. The pH-drift and C-i uptake kinetic experiments were used to characterize C-i acquisition strategies and their ability to acclimate to high and low CO2 conditions and high and low pH was evaluated. Results from pH drift experiments revealed that the acidophile and acidotolerant Chlamydomonas species were mainly restricted to CO2, whereas the two neutrophiles were efficient bicarbonate users. CO2 compensation points in low CO2-acclimated cultures ranged between 0.6 and 1.4 mu M CO2 and acclimation to different culture pH and CO2 conditions suggested that CO2 concentrating mechanisms were present in most species. High CO2 acclimated cultures adapted rapidly to low CO2 condition during pH-drifts. C-i uptake kinetics at different pH values showed that the affinity for C-i was largely influenced by external pH, being highest under conditions where CO2 dominated the C-i pool. In conclusion, C-i acquisition was highly variable among four species of green algae and linked to growth pH preference, suggesting that there is a connection between C-i acquisition and ecological distribution. KW - acidophile KW - carbon acquisition KW - CCM KW - Chlamydomonas KW - Chlorella KW - CO2 supply KW - extremophile KW - inorganic carbon uptake kinetics KW - pH-drift KW - Scenedesmus Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/jpy.12462 SN - 0022-3646 SN - 1529-8817 VL - 52 SP - 1051 EP - 1063 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - THES A1 - Avcilar-Kucukgoze, Irem T1 - Effect of tRNA Aminoacylation and Cellular Resources Allocation on the Dynamics of Translation in Escherichia coli Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Meyer, Sebastian T. A1 - Ebeling, Anne A1 - Eisenhauer, Nico A1 - Hertzog, Lionel A1 - Hillebrand, Helmut A1 - Milcu, Alexandru A1 - Pompe, Sven A1 - Abbas, Maike A1 - Bessler, Holger A1 - Buchmann, Nina A1 - De Luca, Enrica A1 - Engels, Christof A1 - Fischer, Markus A1 - Gleixner, Gerd A1 - Hudewenz, Anika A1 - Klein, Alexandra-Maria A1 - de Kroon, Hans A1 - Leimer, Sophia A1 - Loranger, Hannah A1 - Mommer, Liesje A1 - Oelmann, Yvonne A1 - Ravenek, Janneke M. A1 - Roscher, Christiane A1 - Rottstock, Tanja A1 - Scherber, Christoph A1 - Scherer-Lorenzen, Michael A1 - Scheu, Stefan A1 - Schmid, Bernhard A1 - Schulze, Ernst-Detlef A1 - Staudler, Andrea A1 - Strecker, Tanja A1 - Temperton, Vicky A1 - Tscharntke, Teja A1 - Vogel, Anja A1 - Voigt, Winfried A1 - Weigelt, Alexandra A1 - Wilcke, Wolfgang A1 - Weisser, Wolfgang W. T1 - Effects of biodiversity strengthen over time as ecosystem functioning declines at low and increases at high biodiversity JF - Ecosphere : the magazine of the International Ecology University KW - biodiversity ecosystem functioning (BEF) KW - ecosystem processes KW - grassland KW - mechanism KW - plant productivity KW - plant species richness KW - temporal effects KW - trophic interactions Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.1619 SN - 2150-8925 VL - 7 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Nausch, Monika A1 - Bach, Lennart Thomas A1 - Czerny, Jan A1 - Goldstein, Josephine A1 - Grossart, Hans-Peter A1 - Hellemann, Dana A1 - Hornick, Thomas A1 - Achterberg, Eric Pieter A1 - Schulz, Kai-Georg A1 - Riebesell, Ulf T1 - Effects of CO2 perturbation on phosphorus pool sizes and uptake in a mesocosm experiment during a low productive summer season in the northern Baltic Sea JF - Biogeosciences N2 - Studies investigating the effect of increasing CO2 levels on the phosphorus cycle in natural waters are lacking although phosphorus often controls phytoplankton development in many aquatic systems. The aim of our study was to analyse effects of elevated CO2 levels on phosphorus pool sizes and uptake. The phosphorus dynamic was followed in a CO2-manipulation mesocosm experiment in the Storfjarden (western Gulf of Finland, Baltic Sea) in summer 2012 and was also studied in the surrounding fjord water. In all mesocosms as well as in surface waters of Storfjarden, dissolved organic phosphorus (DOP) concentrations of 0.26aEuro-+/- aEuro-0.03 and 0.23aEuro-+/- aEuro-0.04aEuro-A mu molaEuro-L-1, respectively, formed the main fraction of the total P-pool (TP), whereas phosphate (PO4) constituted the lowest fraction with mean concentration of 0.15aEuro-A +/- aEuro-0.02 in the mesocosms and 0.17aEuro-A +/- aEuro-0.07aEuro-A mu molaEuro-L-1 in the fjord. Transformation of PO4 into DOP appeared to be the main pathway of PO4 turnover. About 82aEuro-% of PO4 was converted into DOP whereby only 18aEuro-% of PO4 was transformed into particulate phosphorus (PP). PO4 uptake rates measured in the mesocosms ranged between 0.6 and 3.9aEuro-nmolaEuro-L(-1)aEuro-h(-1). About 86aEuro-% of them was realized by the size fraction < aEuro-3aEuro-A mu m. Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) uptake revealed that additional P was supplied from organic compounds accounting for 25-27aEuro-% of P provided by PO4 only. CO2 additions did not cause significant changes in phosphorus (P) pool sizes, DOP composition, and uptake of PO4 and ATP when the whole study period was taken into account. However, significant short-term effects were observed for PO4 and PP pool sizes in CO2 treatments > aEuro-1000aEuro-A mu atm during periods when phytoplankton biomass increased. In addition, we found significant relationships (e.g., between PP and Chl a) in the untreated mesocosms which were not observed under high fCO(2) conditions. Consequently, it can be hypothesized that the relationship between PP formation and phytoplankton growth changed with CO2 elevation. It can be deduced from the results, that visible effects of CO2 on P pools are coupled to phytoplankton growth when the transformation of PO4 into POP was stimulated. The transformation of PO4 into DOP on the other hand does not seem to be affected. Additionally, there were some indications that cellular mechanisms of P regulation might be modified under CO2 elevation changing the relationship between cellular constituents. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-13-3035-2016 SN - 1726-4170 SN - 1726-4189 VL - 13 SP - 3035 EP - 3050 PB - Copernicus CY - Göttingen ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Spilling, Kristian A1 - Schulz, Kai G. A1 - Paul, Allanah J. A1 - Boxhammer, Tim A1 - Achterberg, Eric Pieter A1 - Hornick, Thomas A1 - Lischka, Silke A1 - Stuhr, Annegret A1 - Bermudez, Rafael A1 - Czerny, Jan A1 - Crawfurd, Kate A1 - Brussaard, Corina P. D. A1 - Grossart, Hans-Peter A1 - Riebesell, Ulf T1 - Effects of ocean acidification on pelagic carbon fluxes in a mesocosm experiment JF - Biogeosciences N2 - About a quarter of anthropogenic CO2 emissions are currently taken up by the oceans, decreasing seawater pH. We performed a mesocosm experiment in the Baltic Sea in order to investigate the consequences of increasing CO2 levels on pelagic carbon fluxes. A gradient of different CO2 scenarios, ranging from ambient (similar to 370 mu atm) to high (similar to 1200 mu atm), were set up in mesocosm bags (similar to 55m(3)). We determined standing stocks and temporal changes of total particulate carbon (TPC), dissolved organic carbon (DOC), dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), and particulate organic carbon (POC) of specific plankton groups. We also measured carbon flux via CO2 exchange with the atmosphere and sedimentation (export), and biological rate measurements of primary production, bacterial production, and total respiration. The experiment lasted for 44 days and was divided into three different phases (I: t0-t16; II: t17-t30; III: t31-t43). Pools of TPC, DOC, and DIC were approximately 420, 7200, and 25 200 mmol Cm-2 at the start of the experiment, and the initial CO2 additions increased the DIC pool by similar to 7% in the highest CO2 treatment. Overall, there was a decrease in TPC and increase of DOC over the course of the experiment. The decrease in TPC was lower, and increase in DOC higher, in treatments with added CO2. During phase I the estimated gross primary production (GPP) was similar to 100 mmol C m(-2) day(-1), from which 75-95% was respired, similar to 1% ended up in the TPC (including export), and 5-25% was added to the DOC pool. During phase II, the respiration loss increased to similar to 100% of GPP at the ambient CO2 concentration, whereas respiration was lower (85-95% of GPP) in the highest CO2 treatment. Bacterial production was similar to 30% lower, on average, at the highest CO2 concentration than in the controls during phases II and III. This resulted in a higher accumulation of DOC and lower reduction in the TPC pool in the elevated CO2 treatments at the end of phase II extending throughout phase III. The "extra" organic carbon at high CO2 remained fixed in an increasing biomass of small-sized plankton and in the DOC pool, and did not transfer into large, sinking aggregates. Our results revealed a clear effect of increasing CO2 on the carbon budget and mineralization, in particular under nutrient limited conditions. Lower carbon loss processes (respiration and bacterial remineralization) at elevated CO2 levels resulted in higher TPC and DOC pools than ambient CO2 concentration. These results highlight the importance of addressing not only net changes in carbon standing stocks but also carbon fluxes and budgets to better disentangle the effects of ocean acidification. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-13-6081-2016 SN - 1726-4170 SN - 1726-4189 VL - 13 SP - 6081 EP - 6093 PB - Copernicus CY - Göttingen ER - TY - THES A1 - Rottstock, Tanja T1 - Effects of plant community diversity and composition on fungal pathogens in experimental grasslands Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Yan, Wenhao A1 - Chen, Dijun A1 - Kaufmann, Kerstin T1 - Efficient multiplex mutagenesis by RNA-guided Cas9 and its use in the characterization of regulatory elements in the AGAMOUS gene JF - Plant methods N2 - Background The efficiency of multiplex editing in plants by the RNA-guided Cas9 system is limited by efficient introduction of its components into the genome and by their activity. The possibility of introducing large fragment deletions by RNA-guided Cas9 tool provides the potential to study the function of any DNA region of interest in its ‘endogenous’ environment. Results Here, an RNA-guided Cas9 system was optimized to enable efficient multiplex editing in Arabidopsis thaliana. We demonstrate the flexibility of our system for knockout of multiple genes, and to generate heritable large-fragment deletions in the genome. As a proof of concept, the function of part of the second intron of the flower development gene AGAMOUS in Arabidopsis was studied by generating a Cas9-free mutant plant line in which part of this intron was removed from the genome. Further analysis revealed that deletion of this intron fragment results 40 % decrease of AGAMOUS gene expression without changing the splicing of the gene which indicates that this regulatory region functions as an activator of AGAMOUS gene expression. Conclusions Our modified RNA-guided Cas9 system offers a versatile tool for the functional dissection of coding and non-coding DNA sequences in plants. KW - RNA-guided Cas9 KW - Multiplex mutagenesis KW - Large fragment deletion KW - Germline transmission Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1186/s13007-016-0125-7 SN - 1746-4811 VL - 12 SP - 1 EP - 9 PB - BioMed Central CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Yan, Wenhao A1 - Chen, Dijun A1 - Kaufmann, Kerstin T1 - Efficient multiplex mutagenesis by RNA-guided Cas9 and its use in the characterization of regulatory elements in the AGAMOUS gene JF - Plant Methods N2 - Results: Here, an RNA-guided Cas9 system was optimized to enable efficient multiplex editing in Arabidopsis thaliana. We demonstrate the flexibility of our system for knockout of multiple genes, and to generate heritable large-fragment deletions in the genome. As a proof of concept, the function of part of the second intron of the flower development gene AGAMOUS in Arabidopsis was studied by generating a Cas9-free mutant plant line in which part of this intron was removed from the genome. Further analysis revealed that deletion of this intron fragment results 40 % decrease of AGAMOUS gene expression without changing the splicing of the gene which indicates that this regulatory region functions as an activator of AGAMOUS gene expression. Conclusions: Our modified RNA-guided Cas9 system offers a versatile tool for the functional dissection of coding and non-coding DNA sequences in plants. KW - RNA-guided Cas9 KW - Multiplex mutagenesis KW - Large fragment deletion KW - Germline transmission Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1186/s13007-016-0125-7 SN - 1746-4811 VL - 12 SP - 2381 EP - 2389 PB - BioMed Central CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Yan, Wenhao A1 - Chen, Dijun A1 - Kaufmann, Kerstin T1 - Efficient multiplex mutagenesis by RNA‑guided Cas9 and its use in the characterization of regulatory elements in the AGAMOUS gene N2 - Background: The efficiency of multiplex editing in plants by the RNA-guided Cas9 system is limited by efficient introduction of its components into the genome and by their activity. The possibility of introducing large fragment deletions by RNA-guided Cas9 tool provides the potential to study the function of any DNA region of interest in its ‘endogenous’ environment. Results: Here, an RNA-guided Cas9 system was optimized to enable efficient multiplex editing in Arabidopsis thaliana. We demonstrate the flexibility of our system for knockout of multiple genes, and to generate heritable largefragment deletions in the genome. As a proof of concept, the function of part of the second intron of the flower development gene AGAMOUS in Arabidopsis was studied by generating a Cas9-free mutant plant line in which part of this intron was removed from the genome. Further analysis revealed that deletion of this intron fragment results 40 % decrease of AGAMOUS gene expression without changing the splicing of the gene which indicates that this regulatory region functions as an activator of AGAMOUS gene expression. Conclusions: Our modified RNA-guided Cas9 system offers a versatile tool for the functional dissection of coding and non-coding DNA sequences in plants. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 224 KW - RNA-guided Cas9 KW - Multiplex mutagenesis KW - Large fragment deletion KW - Germline transmission Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-90895 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ud-Din, Aziz A1 - Rauf, Mamoona A1 - Ghafoor, S. A1 - Khattak, M. N. K. A1 - Hameed, M. W. A1 - Shah, H. A1 - Jan, S. A1 - Muhammad, K. A1 - Rehman, A. A1 - Inamullah, T1 - Efficient use of artificial micro-RNA to downregulate the expression of genes at the post-transcriptional level in Arabidopsis thaliana JF - Genetics and molecular research N2 - Micro-RNAs are cellular components regulating gene expression at the post-transcription level. In the present study, artificial micro-RNAs were used to decrease the transcript level of two genes, AtExpA8 (encoding an expansin) and AHL25 (encoding an AT-hook motif nuclear localized protein) in Arabidopsis thaliana. The backbone of the Arabidopsis endogenous MIR319a micro-RNA was used in a site-directed mutagenesis approach for the generation of artificial micro-RNAs targeting two genes. The recombinant cassettes were expressed under the control of the CaMV 35S promoter in individual A. thaliana plants. Transgenic lines of the third generation were tested by isolating total RNA and by subsequent cDNA synthesis using oligo-dT18 primers and mRNAs as templates. The expression of the two target genes was checked through quantitative realtime polymerase chain reaction to confirm reduced transcript levels for AtExpA8 and AHL25. Downregulation of AtExpA8 resulted in the formation of short hypocotyls compared with those of the wild-type control in response to low pH and high salt concentration. This technology could be used to prevent the expression of exogenous and invading genes posing a threat to the normal cellular physiology of the host plant. KW - Artificial micro-RNA KW - Arabidopsis thaliana KW - qRT-PCR KW - AtExpA8 KW - AHL25 Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.4238/gmr.15027439 SN - 1676-5680 VL - 15 PB - FUNPEC CY - Ribeirao Preto ER - TY - THES A1 - Laux, Eva-Maria T1 - Electric field-assisted immobilization and alignment of biomolecules T1 - Immobilisierung und Ausrichtung von Biomolekülen mit elektrischen Wechselfeldern N2 - In this dissertation, an electric field-assisted method was developed and applied to achieve immobilization and alignment of biomolecules on metal electrodes in a simple one-step experiment. Neither modifications of the biomolecule nor of the electrodes were needed. The two major electrokinetic effects that lead to molecule motion in the chosen electrode configurations used were identified as dielectrophoresis and AC electroosmotic flow. To minimize AC electroosmotic flow, a new 3D electrode configuration was designed. Thus, the influence of experimental parameters on the dielectrophoretic force and the associated molecule movement could be studied. Permanent immobilization of proteins was examined and quantified absolutely using an atomic force microscope. By measuring the volumes of the immobilized protein deposits, a maximal number of proteins contained therein was calculated. This was possible since the proteins adhered to the tungsten electrodes even after switching off the electric field. The permanent immobilization of functional proteins on surfaces or electrodes is one crucial prerequisite for the fabrication of biosensors. Furthermore, the biofunctionality of the proteins must be retained after immobilization. Due to the chemical or physical modifications on the proteins caused by immobilization, their biofunctionality is sometimes hampered. The activity of dielectrophoretically immobilized proteins, however, was proven here for an enzyme for the first time. The enzyme horseradish peroxidase was used exemplarily, and its activity was demonstrated with the oxidation of dihydrorhodamine 123, a non-fluorescent precursor of the fluorescence dye rhodamine 123. Molecular alignment and immobilization - reversible and permanent - was achieved under the influence of inhomogeneous AC electric fields. For orientational investigations, a fluorescence microscope setup, a reliable experimental procedure and an evaluation protocol were developed and validated using self-made control samples of aligned acridine orange molecules in a liquid crystal. Lambda-DNA strands were stretched and aligned temporarily between adjacent interdigitated electrodes, and the orientation of PicoGreen molecules, which intercalate into the DNA strands, was determined. Similarly, the aligned immobilization of enhanced Green Fluorescent Protein was demonstrated exploiting the protein's fluorescence and structural properties. For this protein, the angle of the chromophore with respect to the protein's geometrical axis was determined in good agreement with X-ray crystallographic data. Permanent immobilization with simultaneous alignment of the proteins was achieved along the edges, tips and on the surface of interdigitated electrodes. This was the first demonstration of aligned immobilization of proteins by electric fields. Thus, the presented electric field-assisted immobilization method is promising with regard to enhanced antibody binding capacities and enzymatic activities, which is a requirement for industrial biosensor production, as well as for general interaction studies of proteins. N2 - In dieser Doktorarbeit wurde eine Methode entwickelt, mit der Biomoleküle unter dem Einfluss von elektrischen Feldern auf Metallelektroden immobilisiert und ausgerichtet werden können. Für die Immobilisierung wurden weder Modifikationen an den Biomolekülen noch an den Elektroden benötigt. Zwei elektrokinetische Effekte, die Dielektrophorese und der AC-elektroosmotische Fluss, wurden als verantwortliche Effekte für die Molekülbewegung identifiziert. Mit einer neuen 3D Elektrodenkonfiguration wurde der AC-elektroosmotische Fluss minimiert. Damit konnte der Einfluss der experimentellen Parameter auf die Dielektrophoresekraft und deren Auswirkungen auf die Moleküle untersucht werden: Die permanente Immobilisierung von Proteinen wurde mit einem Rasterkraftmikroskop quantifiziert, indem die Volumina der immobilisierten Proteinablagerungen gemessen wurden, und daraus die maximal darin enthaltene Anzahl an Proteinen berechnet wurde. Diese Art der absoluten Quantifizierung war nur möglich, da die Proteine auch nach Abschalten des elektrischen Feldes auf den Wolframelektroden hafteten. Eine solche permanente Immobilisierung funktioneller Proteine auf Elektroden oder Oberflächen im Allgemeinen ist eine wichtige Voraussetzung für die Herstellung von Biosensoren. Des Weiteren muss die Biofunktion der Proteine nach der Immobilisierung erhalten bleiben. Da die Proteine durch die Immobilisierung chemisch oder physikalisch verändert werden, ist auch ihre Biofunktion häufig eingeschränkt. In dieser Arbeit wurde erstmals der Erhalt der Aktivität dielektrophoretisch immobilisierter Enzyme gezeigt. Hierfür wurde das Enzym Meerrettichperoxidase exemplarisch verwendet, dessen Aktivität über die Oxidation von Dihydrorhodamin 123, einem nicht-fluoreszentem Vorläufer des Fluoreszenzfarbstoffes Rhodamin 123, nachgewiesen wurde. Molekulare Ausrichtung und Immobilisierung – sowohl reversibel als auch permanent – wurde unter dem Einfluss inhomogener elektrischer Wechselfelder erreicht. Für die Bestimmung der Molekülausrichtung wurde mit ein Messaufbau entwickelt, der auf einem Fluoreszenzmikroskop basiert. Der Aufbau, das Messprotokoll und die Auswertungsmethode wurden mit einer selbst hergestellten Kontrollprobe, die aus ausgerichteten Acridinorangemolekülen in einem Flüssigkristall bestand, validiert. Lambda-DNA Doppelstränge wurden zwischen benachbarten Interdigitalelektroden gestreckt und temporär ausgerichtet. Die Ausrichtung von interkalierten PicoGreen-Molekülen im rechten Winkel zur Längsachse der Doppelstränge konnte hier gezeigt werden. Zudem konnte die ausgerichtete Immobilisierung des enhanced Green Fluorescent Protein nachgewiesen werden, indem die Fluoreszenz des Proteins und seine Struktureigenschaften ausgenutzt wurden. Aus den Messungen konnte der Winkel des Chromophors relativ zur Proteinlängsachse mit guter Übereinstimmung mit Röntgenkristallstrukturdaten bestimmt werden. Eine permanente Immobilisierung mit gleichzeitiger Ausrichtung der Proteine wurde entlang der Kanten, an den Spitzen und auf der Oberfläche von Interdigitalelektroden erzielt. Damit wurde zum ersten Mal eine ausgerichtete Immobilisierung von Proteinen mit elektrischen Wechselfeldern gezeigt. Diese Methode ist vielversprechend für die Immobilisierung von Antikörpern oder Enzymen mit einheitlicher Ausrichtung und dadurch verbessertem Zugang zu den aktiven Zentren, was nicht nur für die industrielle Biosensorherstellung von Interesse ist, sondern genauso für allgemeine Wechselwirkungsstudien von Proteinen. KW - dielectrophoresis KW - electrokinetics KW - proteins KW - immobilization KW - alignment KW - Dielektrophorese KW - elektrokinetische Effekte KW - Proteine KW - Immobilisierung KW - Ausrichtung Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-90271 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dongmo, Saustin A1 - Leyk, Janina A1 - Dosche, Carsten A1 - Richter-Landsberg, Christiane A1 - Wollenberger, Ursula A1 - Wittstock, Gunther T1 - Electrogeneration of O-2(center dot-) and H2O2 Using Polymer-modified Microelectrodes in the Environment of Living Cells JF - Electroanalysis : an international journal devoted to fundamental and practical aspects of electroanalysis N2 - Microelectrodes modified with electropolymerized plumbagin (PLG) were used for the generation of superoxide radical (O-2(center dot-)) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) during oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) in an aqueous medium, specifically in serum-free cell culture media. This is enabled by the specific design of a polymer film on the microelectrode. The generation and diffusion of O-2(center dot-) during electrocatalytic ORR at a positionable PLG polymer-modified microelectrode was followed by fluorescence microscopy with the selective dye 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (NBD-Cl) and by amperometric detection using a cytochrome c-modified electrode at + 0.13 V. H2O2 production, either by direct oxygen reduction or as product of O-2(center dot-) disproportionation, was monitored by the reaction with Amplex UltraRed. The PLG polymer-modified microelectrodes were used to expose mammalian B6-RPE07 retinal cells to defined local fluxes of reactive oxygen species (ROS), and cellular responses and morphological alterations were observed. The use of a controllable source of ROS opens many possibilities to study how living cells respond to the presence of a certain flux of specific ROS. KW - reactive oxygen species KW - microelectrode KW - scanning electrochemical microscopy KW - biosensor KW - polymer-modified electrode KW - oxygen reduction reaction Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/elan.201600267 SN - 1040-0397 SN - 1521-4109 VL - 28 SP - 2400 EP - 2407 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Erdossy, Julia A1 - Horvath, Viola A1 - Yarman, Aysu A1 - Scheller, Frieder W. A1 - Gyurcsanyi, Robert E. T1 - Electrosynthesized molecularly imprinted polymers for protein recognition JF - Trends in Analytical Chemistry N2 - Molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs) for the recognition of proteins are expected to possess high affinity through the establishment of multiple interactions between the polymer matrix and the large number of functional groups of the target. However, while highly affine recognition sites need building blocks rich in complementary functionalities to their target, such units are likely to generate high levels of nonspecific binding. This paradox, that nature solved by evolution for biological receptors, needs to be addressed by the implementation of new concepts in molecular imprinting of proteins. Additionally, the structural variability, large size and incompatibility with a range of monomers made the development of protein MIPs to take a slow start. While the majority of MIP preparation methods are variants of chemical polymerization, the polymerization of electroactive functional monomers emerged as a particularly advantageous approach for chemical sensing application. Electropolymerization can be performed from aqueous solutions to preserve the natural conformation of the protein templates, with high spatial resolution and electrochemical control of the polymerization process. This review compiles the latest results, identifying major trends and providing an outlook on the perspectives of electrosynthesised protein-imprinted MIPs for chemical sensing. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - Molecularly imprinted polymers KW - Proteins KW - Surface imprinting KW - Electropolymerization KW - Nanostructuring KW - Hybrid nanofilms Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.trac.2015.12.018 SN - 0165-9936 SN - 1879-3142 VL - 79 SP - 179 EP - 190 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Reil, Daniela A1 - Imholt, Christian A1 - Drewes, Stephan A1 - Ulrich, Rainer Günter A1 - Eccard, Jana A1 - Jacob, Jens T1 - Environmental conditions in favour of a hantavirus outbreak in 2015 in Germany? JF - Zoonoses and Public Health N2 - Bank voles can harbour Puumala virus (PUUV) and vole populations usually peak in years after beech mast. A beech mast occurred in 2014 and a predictive model indicates high vole abundance in 2015. This pattern is similar to the years 2009/2011 when beech mast occurred, bank voles multiplied and human PUUV infections increased a year later. Given similar environmental conditions in 2014/2015, increased risk of human PUUV infections in 2015 is likely. Risk management measures are recommended. KW - Beech fructification KW - Puumala virus KW - bank vole KW - outbreak KW - nephropathia epidemica KW - Germany Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/zph.12217 SN - 1863-1959 SN - 1863-2378 VL - 63 SP - 83 EP - 88 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Tanski, George A1 - Couture, Nicole A1 - Lantuit, Hugues A1 - Eulenburg, Antje A1 - Fritz, Michael T1 - Eroding permafrost coasts release low amounts of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) from ground ice into the nearshore zone of the Arctic Ocean JF - Global biogeochemical cycles N2 - Ice-rich permafrost coasts in the Arctic are highly sensitive to climate warming and erode at a pace that exceeds the global average. Permafrost coasts deliver vast amounts of organic carbon into the nearshore zone of the Arctic Ocean. Numbers on flux exist for particulate organic carbon (POC) and total or soil organic carbon (TOC, SOC). However, they do not exist for dissolved organic carbon (DOC), which is known to be highly bioavailable. This study aims to estimate DOC stocks in coastal permafrost as well as the annual flux into the ocean. DOC concentrations in ground ice were analyzed along the ice-rich Yukon coast (YC) in the western Canadian Arctic. The annual DOC flux was estimated using available numbers for coast length, cliff height, annual erosion rate, and volumetric ice content in different stratigraphic horizons. Our results showed that DOC concentrations in ground ice range between 0.3 and 347.0mgL(-1) with an estimated stock of 13.63.0gm(-3) along the YC. An annual DOC flux of 54.90.9Mgyr(-1) was computed. These DOC fluxes are low compared to POC and SOC fluxes from coastal erosion or POC and DOC fluxes from Arctic rivers. We conclude that DOC fluxes from permafrost coasts play a secondary role in the Arctic carbon budget. However, this DOC is assumed to be highly bioavailable. We hypothesize that DOC from coastal erosion is important for ecosystems in the Arctic nearshore zones, particularly in summer when river discharge is low, and in areas where rivers are absent. KW - Arctic KW - permafrost KW - coastal erosion KW - biogeochemistry KW - carbon cycle Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/2015GB005337 SN - 0886-6236 SN - 1944-9224 VL - 30 SP - 1054 EP - 1068 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Cambridge ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Paul, Christiane A1 - Kirschbaum, Frank A1 - Mamonekene, Victor A1 - Tiedemann, Ralph T1 - Evidence for Non-neutral Evolution in a Sodium Channel Gene in African Weakly Electric Fish (Campylomormyrus, Mormyridae) JF - Journal of molecular evolution N2 - Voltage-gated sodium channels, Nav1, play a crucial role in the generation and propagation of action potentials and substantially contribute to the shape of their rising phase. The electric organ discharge (EOD) of African weakly electric fish (Mormyroidea) is the sum of action potentials fired from all electrocytes of the electric organ at the same time and hence voltage-gated sodium channels are one factor—together with the electrocyte’s morphology and innervation pattern—that determines the properties of these EODs. Due to the fish-specific genome duplication, teleost fish possess eight copies of sodium channel genes (SCN), which encode for Nav1 channels. In mormyroids, SCN4aa is solely expressed in the electrocytes of the adult electric organ. In this study, we compared entire SCN4aa sequences of six species of the genus Campylomormyrus and identified nonsynonymous substitutions among them. SCN4aa in Campylomormyrus exhibits a much higher evolutionary rate compared to its paralog SCN4ab, whose expression is not restricted to the electric organ. We also found evidence for strong positive selection on the SCN4aa gene within Mormyridae and along the lineage ancestral to the Mormyridae. We have identified sites at which all nonelectric teleosts are monomorphic in their amino acid, but mormyrids have different amino acids. Our findings confirm the crucial role of SCN4aa in EOD evolution among mormyrid weakly electric fish. The inferred positive selection within Mormyridae makes this gene a prime candidate for further investigation of the divergent evolution of pulse-type EODs among closely related species. KW - Mormyridae KW - Mormyroidea KW - Campylomormyrus KW - SCN4aa KW - Voltage-gated sodium channel KW - Positive selection Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00239-016-9754-8 SN - 0022-2844 SN - 1432-1432 VL - 83 SP - 61 EP - 77 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schuster, Andrea C. A1 - Herde, Antje A1 - Mazzoni, Camila J. A1 - Eccard, Jana A1 - Sommer, Simone T1 - Evidence for selection maintaining MHC diversity in a rodent species despite strong density fluctuations JF - Immunogenetics N2 - Strong spatiotemporal variation in population size often leads to reduced genetic diversity limiting the adaptive potential of individual populations. Key genes of adaptive variation are encoded by the immune genes of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) playing an essential role in parasite resistance. How MHC variation persists in rodent populations that regularly experience population bottlenecks remains an important topic in evolutionary genetics. We analysed the consequences of strong population fluctuations on MHC class II DRB exon 2 diversity in two distant common vole (Microtus arvalis) populations in three consecutive years using a high-throughput sequencing approach. In 143 individuals, we detected 25 nucleotide alleles translating into 14 unique amino acid MHC alleles belonging to at least three loci. Thus, the overall allelic diversity and amino acid distance among the remaining MHC alleles, used as a surrogate for the range of pathogenic antigens that can be presented to T-cells, are still remarkably high. Both study populations did not show significant population differentiation between years, but significant differences were found between sites. We concluded that selection processes seem to be strong enough to maintain moderate levels of MHC diversity in our study populations outcompeting genetic drift, as the same MHC alleles were conserved between years. Differences in allele frequencies between populations might be the outcome of different local parasite pressures and/or genetic drift. Further understanding of how pathogens vary across space and time will be crucial to further elucidate the mechanisms maintaining MHC diversity in cyclic populations. KW - MHC diversity KW - Selection KW - High-throughput next-generation sequencing KW - Population cycle KW - Common vole KW - Microtus arvalis Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00251-016-0916-z SN - 0093-7711 SN - 1432-1211 VL - 68 SP - 429 EP - 437 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Muino, Jose M. A1 - de Bruijn, Suzanne A1 - Pajoro, Alice A1 - Geuten, Koen A1 - Vingron, Martin A1 - Angenent, Gerco C. A1 - Kaufmann, Kerstin T1 - Evolution of DNA-Binding Sites of a Floral Master Regulatory Transcription Factor JF - Molecular biology and evolution N2 - Flower development is controlled by the action of key regulatory transcription factors of the MADS-domain family. The function of these factors appears to be highly conserved among species based on mutant phenotypes. However, the conservation of their downstream processes is much less well understood, mostly because the evolutionary turnover and variation of their DNA-binding sites (BSs) among plant species have not yet been experimentally determined. Here, we performed comparative ChIP (chromatin immunoprecipitation)-seq experiments of the MADS-domain transcription factor SEPALLATA3 (SEP3) in two closely related Arabidopsis species: Arabidopsis thaliana and A. lyrata which have very similar floral organ morphology. We found that BS conservation is associated with DNA sequence conservation, the presence of the CArG-box BS motif and on the relative position of the BS to its potential target gene. Differences in genome size and structure can explain that SEP3 BSs in A. lyrata can be located more distantly to their potential target genes than their counterparts in A. thaliana. In A. lyrata, we identified transposition as a mechanism to generate novel SEP3 binding locations in the genome. Comparative gene expression analysis shows that the loss/gain of BSs is associated with a change in gene expression. In summary, this study investigates the evolutionary dynamics of DNA BSs of a floral key-regulatory transcription factor and explores factors affecting this phenomenon. KW - MADS-domain transcription factor KW - cis-regulatory evolution KW - plant development Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msv210 SN - 0737-4038 SN - 1537-1719 VL - 33 SP - 185 EP - 200 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - THES A1 - Sas, Claudia T1 - Evolution of the selfing syndrome in the genus capsella BT - an investigation into floral UV absorption and scent emission Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wilting, A. A1 - Patel, R. A1 - Pfestorf, Hans A1 - Kern, C. A1 - Sultan, K. A1 - Ario, A. A1 - Penaloza, F. A1 - Kramer-Schadt, S. A1 - Radchuk, Viktoriia A1 - Foerster, D. W. A1 - Fickel, Jörns T1 - Evolutionary history and conservation significance of the Javan leopard Panthera pardus melas JF - Journal of zoology : proceedings of the Zoological Society of London N2 - The leopard Panthera pardus is widely distributed across Africa and Asia; however, there is a gap in its natural distribution in Southeast Asia, where it occurs on the mainland and on Java but not on the interjacent island of Sumatra. Several scenarios have been proposed to explain this distribution gap. Here, we complemented an existing dataset of 68 leopard mtDNA sequences from Africa and Asia with mtDNA sequences (NADH5+ ctrl, 724bp) from 19 Javan leopards, and hindcasted leopard distribution to the Pleistocene to gain further insights into the evolutionary history of the Javan leopard. Our data confirmed that Javan leopards are evolutionarily distinct from other Asian leopards, and that they have been present on Java since the Middle Pleistocene. Species distribution projections suggest that Java was likely colonized via a Malaya-Java land bridge that by-passed Sumatra, as suitable conditions for leopards during Pleistocene glacial periods were restricted to northern and western Sumatra. As fossil evidence supports the presence of leopards on Sumatra at the beginning of the Late Pleistocene, our projections are consistent with a scenario involving the extinction of leopards on Sumatra as a consequence of the Toba super volcanic eruption (similar to 74kya). The impact of this eruption was minor on Java, suggesting that leopards managed to survive here. Currently, only a few hundred leopards still live in the wild and only about 50 are managed in captivity. Therefore, this unique and distinctive subspecies requires urgent, concerted conservation efforts, integrating insitu and ex situ conservation management activities in a One Plan Approach to species conservation management. KW - biogeography KW - evolutionary history KW - Felidae KW - Southeast Asia KW - Toba eruption KW - One Plan Approach KW - Pleistocene KW - Javan leopard Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/jzo.12348 SN - 0952-8369 SN - 1469-7998 VL - 299 SP - 239 EP - 250 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Turjeman, Sondra Feldman A1 - Centeno-Cuadros, Alejandro A1 - Eggers, Ute A1 - Rotics, Shay A1 - Blas, Julio A1 - Fiedler, Wolfgang A1 - Kaatz, Michael A1 - Jeltsch, Florian A1 - Wikelski, Martin A1 - Nathan, Ran T1 - Extra-pair paternity in the socially monogamous white stork (Ciconia ciconia) is fairly common and independent of local density JF - Scientific reports N2 - Although many birds are socially monogamous, most (>75%) studied species are not strictly genetically monogamous, especially under high breeding density. We used molecular tools to reevaluate the reproductive strategy of the socially monogamous white stork (Ciconia ciconia) and examined local density effects. DNA samples of nestlings (Germany, Spain) were genotyped and assigned relationships using a two-program maximum likelihood classification. Relationships were successfully classified in 79.2% of German (n = 120) and 84.8% of Spanish (n = 59) nests. For each population respectively, 76.8% (n = 73) and 66.0% (n = 33) of nests contained only full-siblings, 10.5% (n = 10) and 18.0% (n = 9) had half-siblings (at least one nestling with a different parent), 3.2% (n = 3) and 10.0% (n = 5) had unrelated nestlings (at least two nestlings, each with different parents), and 9.5% (n = 9) and 6.0% (n = 3) had “not full-siblings” (could not differentiate between latter two cases). These deviations from strict monogamy place the white stork in the 59th percentile for extra-pair paternity among studied bird species. Although high breeding density generally increases extra-pair paternity, we found no significant association with this species’ mating strategies. Thus although genetic monogamy is indeed prominent in the white stork, extra-pair paternity is fairly common compared to other bird species and cannot be explained by breeding density. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/srep27976 SN - 2045-2322 VL - 6 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Westbury, Michael V. A1 - Prost, Stefan A1 - Seelenfreund, Andrea A1 - Ramirez, Jose-Miguel A1 - Matisoo-Smith, Elizabeth A. A1 - Knapp, Michael T1 - First complete mitochondrial genome data from ancient South American camelids - The mystery of the chilihueques from Isla Mocha (Chile) JF - Scientific reports Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/srep38708 SN - 2045-2322 VL - 6 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kocyan, Alexander A1 - Wiland-Szymanska, Justyna T1 - Friedmannia: a new genus from the Seychelles and the beginning of a generic realignment of Curculigo (Hypoxidaceae) JF - Phytotaxa : a rapid international journal for accelerating the publication of botanical taxonomy N2 - Recent molecular phylogenetic reconstruction of the monocot Hypoxidaceae implies that the genus Curculigo is non-monophyletic. Curculigo seychellensis occurs on the Seychelles islands and is part of an isolated though geographically well-defined clade. However, Curculigo seychellensis differs in a wide range of character-states from other species of Curculigo and from the genus Hypoxidia, representing the sister clade of C. seychellensis. Therefore, we here propose a new-though monotypic-genus, endemic to the Seychelles: Friedmannia. A detailed reasoning combined with a whole set of new data is presented. A neotype for the genus and the species is designated here. KW - Curculigo KW - Asparagales KW - neotypification KW - taxonomy Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.283.1.3 SN - 1179-3155 SN - 1179-3163 VL - 283 SP - 54 EP - 64 PB - Magnolia Press CY - Auckland ER - TY - THES A1 - Armarego-Marriott, Tegan T1 - From dark to light BT - an overexpression and systems biology approach to investigate the development of functional thylakoid membranes Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Eldridge, Tilly A1 - Langowski, Lukasz A1 - Stacey, Nicola A1 - Jantzen, Friederike A1 - Moubayidin, Laila A1 - Sicard, Adrien A1 - Southam, Paul A1 - Kennaway, Richard A1 - Lenhard, Michael A1 - Coen, Enrico S. A1 - Ostergaard, Lars T1 - Fruit shape diversity in the Brassicaceae is generated by varying patterns of anisotropy JF - Development : Company of Biologists N2 - Fruits exhibit a vast array of different 3D shapes, from simple spheres and cylinders to more complex curved forms; however, the mechanism by which growth is oriented and coordinated to generate this diversity of forms is unclear. Here, we compare the growth patterns and orientations for two very different fruit shapes in the Brassicaceae: the heart-shaped Capsella rubella silicle and the near-cylindrical Arabidopsis thaliana silique. We show, through a combination of clonal and morphological analyses, that the different shapes involve different patterns of anisotropic growth during three phases. These experimental data can be accounted for by a tissue level model in which specified growth rates vary in space and time and are oriented by a proximodistal polarity field. The resulting tissue conflicts lead to deformation of the tissue as it grows. The model allows us to identify tissue-specific and temporally specific activities required to obtain the individual shapes. One such activity may be provided by the valve-identity gene FRUITFULL, which we show through comparative mutant analysis to modulate fruit shape during post-fertilisation growth of both species. Simple modulations of the model presented here can also broadly account for the variety of shapes in other Brassicaceae species, thus providing a simplified framework for fruit development and shape diversity. KW - Brassicaceae KW - Capsella KW - Arabidopsis KW - Fruit shape KW - Modelling KW - Anisotropic growth Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1242/dev.135327 SN - 0950-1991 SN - 1477-9129 VL - 143 SP - 3394 EP - 3406 PB - Company of Biologists Limited CY - Cambridge ER - TY - GEN A1 - Eldridge, Tilly A1 - Łangowski, Łukasz A1 - Stacey, Nicola A1 - Jantzen, Friederike A1 - Moubayidin, Laila A1 - Sicard, Adrien A1 - Southam, Paul A1 - Kennaway, Richard A1 - Lenhard, Michael A1 - Coen, Enrico S. A1 - Østergaard, Lars T1 - Fruit shape diversity in the Brassicaceae is generated by varying patterns of anisotropy T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - Fruits exhibit a vast array of different 3D shapes, from simple spheres and cylinders to more complex curved forms; however, the mechanism by which growth is oriented and coordinated to generate this diversity of forms is unclear. Here, we compare the growth patterns and orientations for two very different fruit shapes in the Brassicaceae: the heart-shaped Capsella rubella silicle and the near-cylindrical Arabidopsis thaliana silique. We show, through a combination of clonal and morphological analyses, that the different shapes involve different patterns of anisotropic growth during three phases. These experimental data can be accounted for by a tissue level model in which specified growth rates vary in space and time and are oriented by a proximodistal polarity field. The resulting tissue conflicts lead to deformation of the tissue as it grows. The model allows us to identify tissue-specific and temporally specific activities required to obtain the individual shapes. One such activity may be provided by the valve-identity gene FRUITFULL, which we show through comparative mutant analysis to modulate fruit shape during post-fertilisation growth of both species. Simple modulations of the model presented here can also broadly account for the variety of shapes in other Brassicaceae species, thus providing a simplified framework for fruit development and shape diversity. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 986 KW - Brassicaceae KW - Capsella KW - arabidopsis KW - fruit shape KW - modelling KW - anisotropic growth Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-438041 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 986 SP - 3394 EP - 3406 ER -