TY - JOUR A1 - Hermanussen, Michael A1 - Scheffler, Christiane T1 - Stature signals status: The association of stature, status and perceived dominance - a thought experiment JF - Journal of biological and clinical anthropology : Anthropologischer Anzeiger ; Mitteilungsorgan der Gesellschaft für Anthropologie N2 - Background: There is a common perception that tall stature results in social dominance. Evidence in meerkats suggests that social dominance itself may be a strong stimulus for growth. Relative size serves as the signal for individuals to induce strategic growth adjustments. Aim: We construct a thought experiment to explore the potential consequences of the question: is stature a social signal also in humans? We hypothesize that (1) upward trends in height in the lower social strata are perceived as social challenges yielding similar though attenuated upward trends in the dominant strata, and that (2) democratization, but also periods of political turmoil that facilitate upward mobility of the lower strata, are accompanied by upward trends in height. Material and methods: We reanalyzed large sets of height data of European conscripts born between 1856-1860 and 1976-1980; and annual data of German military conscripts, born between 1965 and 1985, with information on height and school education. Results: Taller stature is associated with higher socioeconomic status. Historic populations show larger height differences between social strata that tend to diminish in the more recent populations. German height data suggest that both democratization, and periods of political turmoil facilitating upward mobility of the lower social strata are accompanied by a general upward height spiral that captures the whole population. Discussion: We consider stature as a signal. Nutrition, health, general living conditions and care giving are essential prerequisites for growth, yet not to maximize stature, but to allow for its function as a lifelong social signal. Considering stature as a social signal provides an elegant explanation of the rapid height adjustments observed in migrants, of the hitherto unexplained clustering of body height in modern and historic cohorts of military conscripts, and of the parallelism between changes in political conditions, and secular trends in adult human height since the 19th century. KW - community effect on height KW - secular trend KW - body height KW - social signals KW - strategic growth adjustment Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1127/anthranz/2016/0698 SN - 0003-5548 VL - 73 SP - 265 EP - 274 PB - Schweizerbart CY - Stuttgart 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 - 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 - JOUR A1 - ´Cwiek-Kupczynska, Hanna A1 - Altmann, Thomas A1 - Arend, Daniel A1 - Arnaud, Elizabeth A1 - Chen, Dijun A1 - Cornut, Guillaume A1 - Fiorani, Fabio A1 - Frohmberg, Wojciech A1 - Junker, Astrid A1 - Klukas, Christian A1 - Lange, Matthias A1 - Mazurek, Cezary A1 - Nafissi, Anahita A1 - Neveu, Pascal A1 - van Oeveren, Jan A1 - Pommier, Cyril A1 - Poorter, Hendrik A1 - Rocca-Serra, Philippe A1 - Sansone, Susanna-Assunta A1 - Scholz, Uwe A1 - van Schriek, Marco A1 - Seren, Ümit A1 - Usadel, Bjorn A1 - Weise, Stephan A1 - Kersey, Paul A1 - Krajewski, Pawel T1 - Measures for interoperability of phenotypic data: minimum information requirements and formatting JF - Plant Methods N2 - Background: Plant phenotypic data shrouds a wealth of information which, when accurately analysed and linked to other data types, brings to light the knowledge about the mechanisms of life. As phenotyping is a field of research comprising manifold, diverse and time-consuming experiments, the findings can be fostered by reusing and combining existing datasets. Their correct interpretation, and thus replicability, comparability and interoperability, is possible provided that the collected observations are equipped with an adequate set of metadata. So far there have been no common standards governing phenotypic data description, which hampered data exchange and reuse. Results: In this paper we propose the guidelines for proper handling of the information about plant phenotyping experiments, in terms of both the recommended content of the description and its formatting. We provide a document called "Minimum Information About a Plant Phenotyping Experiment", which specifies what information about each experiment should be given, and a Phenotyping Configuration for the ISA-Tab format, which allows to practically organise this information within a dataset. We provide examples of ISA-Tab-formatted phenotypic data, and a general description of a few systems where the recommendations have been implemented. Conclusions: Acceptance of the rules described in this paper by the plant phenotyping community will help to achieve findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable data. KW - Data standardisation and formatting KW - Experimental metadata KW - Minimum information recommendations KW - Plant phenotyping KW - Experiment description Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1186/s13007-016-0144-4 SN - 1746-4811 VL - 12 PB - BioMed Central CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Cazelles, R. A1 - Lalaoui, N. A1 - Hartmann, Tobias A1 - Leimkühler, Silke A1 - Wollenberger, Ursula A1 - Antonietti, Markus A1 - Cosnier, S. T1 - Ready to use bioinformatics analysis as a tool to predict immobilisation strategies for protein direct electron transfer (DET) JF - Polymer : the international journal for the science and technology of polymers KW - Bioinformatic KW - Bioelectrocatalysis KW - Electron transfer KW - Dehydrogenase KW - Nicotinamide Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bios.2016.04.078 SN - 0956-5663 SN - 1873-4235 VL - 85 SP - 90 EP - 95 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sicard, Adrien A1 - Kappel, Christian A1 - Lee, Young Wha A1 - Wozniak, Natalia Joanna A1 - Marona, Cindy A1 - Stinchcombe, John R. A1 - Wright, Stephen I. A1 - Lenhard, Michael T1 - Standing genetic variation in a tissue-specific enhancer underlies selfing-syndrome evolution in Capsella JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America N2 - Mating system shifts recurrently drive specific changes in organ dimensions. The shift in mating system from out-breeding to selfing is one of the most frequent evolutionary transitions in flowering plants and is often associated with an organ-specific reduction in flower size. However, the evolutionary paths along which polygenic traits, such as size, evolve are poorly understood. In particular, it is unclear how natural selection can specifically modulate the size of one organ despite the pleiotropic action of most known growth regulators. Here, we demonstrate that allelic variation in the intron of a general growth regulator contributed to the specific reduction of petal size after the transition to selfing in the genus Capsella. Variation within this intron affects an organ-specific enhancer that regulates the level of STERILE APETALA (SAP) protein in the developing petals. The resulting decrease in SAP activity leads to a shortening of the cell proliferation period and reduced number of petal cells. The absence of private polymorphisms at the causal region in the selfing species suggests that the small-petal allele was captured from standing genetic variation in the ancestral out-crossing population. Petal-size variation in the current out-crossing population indicates that several small-effect mutations have contributed to reduce petal-size. These data demonstrate how tissue-specific regulatory elements in pleiotropic genes contribute to organ-specific evolution. In addition, they provide a plausible evolutionary explanation for the rapid evolution of flower size after the out-breeding-to-selfing transition based on additive effects of segregating alleles. KW - morphological evolution KW - growth control KW - standing variation; organ-specific evolution KW - intronic cis-regulatory element Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1613394113 SN - 0027-8424 VL - 113 SP - 13911 EP - 13916 PB - National Acad. of Sciences CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schlägel, Ulrike E. A1 - Lewis, Mark A. T1 - Robustness of movement models: can models bridge the gap between temporal scales of data sets and behavioural processes? JF - Journal of mathematical biology KW - Animal movement KW - Sampling rate KW - Resource selection KW - GPS data KW - Parameter estimation KW - Markov model Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00285-016-1005-5 SN - 0303-6812 SN - 1432-1416 VL - 73 SP - 1691 EP - 1726 PB - Springer CY - Heidelberg 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 - 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 - 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 - 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 - 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 - 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 - Cepakova, Zuzana A1 - Hrouzek, Pavel A1 - Ziskova, Eva A1 - Nuyanzina-Boldareva, Ekaterina A1 - Sorf, Michal A1 - Kozlikova-Zapomelova, Eliska A1 - Salka, Ivette A1 - Grossart, Hans-Peter A1 - Koblizek, Michal T1 - High turnover rates of aerobic anoxygenic phototrophs in European freshwater lakes JF - Environmental microbiology N2 - Aerobic Anoxygenic Phototrophic (AAP) bacteria are bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) a -containing organisms which use light energy to supplement their predominantly heterotrophic metabolism. Here, we investigated mortality and growth rates of AAP bacteria in three different freshwater lakes in Central Europe: the mountain lake Plesne, the oligo-mesotrophic Lake Stechlin and the forest pond Huntov. The mortality of AAP bacteria was estimated from diel changes of BChl a fluorescence. Net and gross growth rates were calculated from the increases in AAP cell numbers. The gross growth rates of AAP bacteria ranged from 0.38 to 5.6 d(-1), with the highest values observed during summer months. Simultaneously, the rapidly growing AAP cells have to cope with an intense grazing pressure by both zooplankton and protists. The presented results document that during the day, gross growth usually surpased mortality. Our results indicate that AAP bacteria utilize light energy under natural conditions to maintain rapid growth rates, which are balanced by a generally intense grazing pressure. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.13475 SN - 1462-2912 SN - 1462-2920 VL - 18 SP - 5063 EP - 5071 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wutke, Saskia A1 - Benecke, Norbert A1 - Sandoval-Castellanos, Edson A1 - Döhle, Hans-Jürgen A1 - Friederich, Susanne A1 - Gonzalez Soto, Javier Esteban A1 - Hallsson, Jon Hallsteinn A1 - Hofreiter, Michael A1 - Lougas, Lembi A1 - Magnell, Ola A1 - Morales-Muniz, Arturo A1 - Orlando, Ludovic A1 - Palsdottir, Albina Hulda A1 - Reissmann, Monika A1 - Ruttkay, Matej A1 - Trinks, Alexandra A1 - Ludwig, Arne T1 - Spotted phenotypes in horses lost attractiveness in the Middle Ages JF - Scientific reports N2 - Horses have been valued for their diversity of coat colour since prehistoric times; this is especially the case since their domestication in the Caspian steppe in similar to 3,500 BC. Although we can assume that human preferences were not constant, we have only anecdotal information about how domestic horses were influenced by humans. Our results from genotype analyses show a significant increase in spotted coats in early domestic horses (Copper Age to Iron Age). In contrast, medieval horses carried significantly fewer alleles for these phenotypes, whereas solid phenotypes (i.e., chestnut) became dominant. This shift may have been supported because of (i) pleiotropic disadvantages, (ii) a reduced need to separate domestic horses from their wild counterparts, (iii) a lower religious prestige, or (iv) novel developments in weaponry. These scenarios may have acted alone or in combination. However, the dominance of chestnut is a remarkable feature of the medieval horse population. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/srep38548 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 - Gossner, Martin M. A1 - Lewinsohn, Thomas M. A1 - Kahl, Tiemo A1 - Grassein, Fabrice A1 - Boch, Steffen A1 - Prati, Daniel A1 - Birkhofer, Klaus A1 - Renner, Swen C. A1 - Sikorski, Johannes A1 - Wubet, Tesfaye A1 - Arndt, Hartmut A1 - Baumgartner, Vanessa A1 - Blaser, Stefan A1 - Blüthgen, Nico A1 - Börschig, Carmen A1 - Buscot, Francois A1 - Diekötter, Tim A1 - Jorge, Leonardo Re A1 - Jung, Kirsten A1 - Keyel, Alexander C. A1 - Klein, Alexandra-Maria A1 - Klemmer, Sandra A1 - Krauss, Jochen A1 - Lange, Markus A1 - Müller, Jörg A1 - Overmann, Jörg A1 - Pasalic, Esther A1 - Penone, Caterina A1 - Perovic, David J. A1 - Purschke, Oliver A1 - Schall, Peter A1 - Socher, Stephanie A. A1 - Sonnemann, Ilja A1 - Tschapka, Marco A1 - Tscharntke, Teja A1 - Türke, Manfred A1 - Venter, Paul Christiaan A1 - Weiner, Christiane N. A1 - Werner, Michael A1 - Wolters, Volkmar A1 - Wurst, Susanne A1 - Westphal, Catrin A1 - Fischer, Markus A1 - Weisser, Wolfgang W. A1 - Allan, Eric T1 - Land-use intensification causes multitrophic homogenization of grassland communities JF - Nature : the international weekly journal of science N2 - Land-use intensification is a major driver of biodiversity loss(1,2). Alongside reductions in local species diversity, biotic homogenization at larger spatial scales is of great concern for conservation. Biotic homogenization means a decrease in beta-diversity (the compositional dissimilarity between sites). Most studies have investigated losses in local (alpha)-diversity(1,3) and neglected biodiversity loss at larger spatial scales. Studies addressing beta-diversity have focused on single or a few organism groups (for example, ref. 4), and it is thus unknown whether land-use intensification homogenizes communities at different trophic levels, above-and belowground. Here we show that even moderate increases in local land-use intensity (LUI) cause biotic homogenization across microbial, plant and animal groups, both above- and belowground, and that this is largely independent of changes in alpha-diversity. We analysed a unique grassland biodiversity dataset, with abundances of more than 4,000 species belonging to 12 trophic groups. LUI, and, in particular, high mowing intensity, had consistent effects on beta-diversity across groups, causing a homogenization of soil microbial, fungal pathogen, plant and arthropod communities. These effects were nonlinear and the strongest declines in beta-diversity occurred in the transition from extensively managed to intermediate intensity grassland. LUI tended to reduce local alpha-diversity in aboveground groups, whereas the alpha-diversity increased in belowground groups. Correlations between the alpha-diversity of different groups, particularly between plants and their consumers, became weaker at high LUI. This suggests a loss of specialist species and is further evidence for biotic homogenization. The consistently negative effects of LUI on landscape-scale biodiversity underscore the high value of extensively managed grasslands for conserving multitrophic biodiversity and ecosystem service provision. Indeed, biotic homogenization rather than local diversity loss could prove to be the most substantial consequence of land-use intensification. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/nature20575 SN - 0028-0836 SN - 1476-4687 VL - 540 SP - 266 EP - + PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sas, Claudia A1 - Mueller, Frank A1 - Kappel, Christian A1 - Kent, Tyler V. A1 - Wright, Stephen I. A1 - Hilker, Monika A1 - Lenhard, Michael T1 - Repeated Inactivation of the First Committed Enzyme Underlies the Loss of Benzaldehyde Emission after the Selfing Transition in Capsella JF - Current biology N2 - The enormous species richness of flowering plants is at least partly due to floral diversification driven by interactions between plants and their animal pollinators [1, 2]. Specific pollinator attraction relies on visual and olfactory floral cues [3-5]; floral scent can not only attract pollinators but also attract or repel herbivorous insects [6-8]. However, despite its central role for plant-animal interactions, the genetic control of floral scent production and its evolutionary modification remain incompletely understood [9-13]. Benzenoids are an important class of floral scent compounds that are generated from phenylalanine via several enzymatic pathways [14-17]. Here we address the genetic basis of the loss of floral scent associated with the transition from outbreeding to selfing in the genus Capsella. While the outbreeding C. grandiflora emits benzaldehyde as a major constituent of its floral scent, this has been lost in the selfing C. rubella. We identify the Capsella CNL1 gene encoding cinnamate: CoA ligase as responsible for this variation. Population genetic analysis indicates that CNL1 has been inactivated twice independently in C. rubella via different novel mutations to its coding sequence. Together with a recent study in Petunia [18], this identifies cinnamate: CoA ligase as an evolutionary hotspot for mutations causing the loss of benzenoid scent compounds in association with a shift in the reproductive strategy of Capsella from pollination by insects to self-fertilization. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2016.10.026 SN - 0960-9822 SN - 1879-0445 VL - 26 SP - 3313 EP - 3319 PB - Cell Press CY - Cambridge ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Spijkerman, Elly A1 - Stojkovic, Slobodanka A1 - Holland, Daryl A1 - Lachmann, Sabrina C. A1 - Beardall, John T1 - Nutrient induced fluorescence transients (NIFTs) provide a rapid measure of P and C (co-)limitation in a green alga JF - European journal of phycology N2 - Nutrient Induced Fluorescence Transients (NIFTs) have been shown to be a possible way of testing for the limiting nutrient in algal populations. In this study we tested the hypothesis that NIFTs can be used to detect a (co-)limitation for inorganic phosphorus (Pi) and CO2 in the green alga Chlamydomonas acidophila and that the magnitude of the NIFTs can be related to cellular P:C ratios. We show a co-limitation response for Pi and CO2 via traditional nutrient enrichment experiments in natural phytoplankton populations dominated by C. acidophila. We measured NIFT responses after a Pi- or a CO2-spike in C. acidophila batch cultures at various stages of Pi and inorganic C limitation. Significant NIFTs were observed in response to spikes in both nutrients. The NIFT response to a Pi-spike showed a strong negative correlation with cellular P:C ratio that was pronounced below 3 mmol P: mol C (equivalent to 0.2 pg P cell(-1)). Both cellular P and C content influenced the extent of the Pi-NIFT response. The NIFT response to a CO2-spike correlated to low CO2 culturing conditions and also had a negative correlation with cellular P content. A secondary response within the Pi-NIFT response was related to the CO2 concentration and potentially reflected co-limitation. In conclusion, NIFTs provided a quick and reliable method to detect the growth-limiting nutrient in an extremophile green alga, under Pi-, CO2- and Pi/CO2 (co-)limited growth conditions. KW - acidophile KW - Chlamydomonas KW - CO2 concentrating mechanism KW - CO2 limitation KW - extremophile KW - nutrient limitation KW - photosynthesis response KW - phytoplankton KW - stoichiometry Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1080/09670262.2015.1095355 SN - 0967-0262 SN - 1469-4433 VL - 51 SP - 47 EP - 58 PB - Hindawi CY - Abingdon ER - TY - GEN A1 - Ćwiek-Kupczyńska, Hanna A1 - Altmann, Thomas A1 - Arend, Daniel A1 - Arnaud, Elizabeth A1 - Chen, Dijun A1 - Cornut, Guillaume A1 - Fiorani, Fabio A1 - Frohmberg, Wojciech A1 - Junker, Astrid A1 - Klukas, Christian A1 - Lange, Matthias A1 - Mazurek, Cezary A1 - Nafissi, Anahita A1 - Neveu, Pascal A1 - van Oeveren, Jan A1 - Pommier, Cyril A1 - Poorter, Hendrik A1 - Rocca-Serra, Philippe A1 - Sansone, Susanna-Assunta A1 - Scholz, Uwe A1 - van Schriek, Marco A1 - Seren, Ümit A1 - Usadel, Björn A1 - Weise, Stephan A1 - Kersey, Paul A1 - Krajewski, Paweł T1 - Measures for interoperability of phenotypic data BT - minimum information requirements and formatting T2 - Plant methods N2 - Background: Plant phenotypic data shrouds a wealth of information which, when accurately analysed and linked to other data types, brings to light the knowledge about the mechanisms of life. As phenotyping is a field of research comprising manifold, diverse and time ‑consuming experiments, the findings can be fostered by reusing and combin‑ ing existing datasets. Their correct interpretation, and thus replicability, comparability and interoperability, is possible provided that the collected observations are equipped with an adequate set of metadata. So far there have been no common standards governing phenotypic data description, which hampered data exchange and reuse. Results: In this paper we propose the guidelines for proper handling of the information about plant phenotyping experiments, in terms of both the recommended content of the description and its formatting. We provide a docu‑ ment called “Minimum Information About a Plant Phenotyping Experiment”, which specifies what information about each experiment should be given, and a Phenotyping Configuration for the ISA ‑Tab format, which allows to practically organise this information within a dataset. We provide examples of ISA ‑Tab ‑formatted phenotypic data, and a general description of a few systems where the recommendations have been implemented. Conclusions: Acceptance of the rules described in this paper by the plant phenotyping community will help to achieve findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable data. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 450 KW - data standardisation and formatting KW - experimental metadata KW - minimum information recommendations KW - plant phenotyping KW - experiment description Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-407299 ER - TY - GEN A1 - Zancolli, Giulia A1 - Baker, Timothy G. A1 - Barlow, Axel A1 - Bradley, Rebecca K. A1 - Calvete, Juan J. A1 - Carter, Kimberley C. A1 - de Jager, Kaylah A1 - Owens, John Benjamin A1 - Price, Jenny Forrester A1 - Sanz, Libia A1 - Scholes-Higham, Amy A1 - Shier, Liam A1 - Wood, Liam A1 - Wüster, Catharine E. A1 - Wüster, Wolfgang T1 - Is hybridization a source of adaptive venom variation in rattlesnakes? BT - a test, using a crotalus scutulatus × viridis hybrid zone in southwestern New Mexico T2 - Toxins N2 - Venomous snakes often display extensive variation in venom composition both between and within species. However, the mechanisms underlying the distribution of different toxins and venom types among populations and taxa remain insufficiently known. Rattlesnakes (Crotalus, Sistrurus) display extreme inter-and intraspecific variation in venom composition, centered particularly on the presence or absence of presynaptically neurotoxic phospholipases A2 such as Mojave toxin (MTX). Interspecific hybridization has been invoked as a mechanism to explain the distribution of these toxins across rattlesnakes, with the implicit assumption that they are adaptively advantageous. Here, we test the potential of adaptive hybridization as a mechanism for venom evolution by assessing the distribution of genes encoding the acidic and basic subunits of Mojave toxin across a hybrid zone between MTX-positive Crotalus scutulatus and MTX-negative C. viridis in southwestern New Mexico, USA. Analyses of morphology, mitochondrial and single copy-nuclear genes document extensive admixture within a narrow hybrid zone. The genes encoding the two MTX subunits are strictly linked, and found in most hybrids and backcrossed individuals, but not in C. viridis away from the hybrid zone. Presence of the genes is invariably associated with presence of the corresponding toxin in the venom. We conclude that introgression of highly lethal neurotoxins through hybridization is not necessarily favored by natural selection in rattlesnakes, and that even extensive hybridization may not lead to introgression of these genes into another species. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 443 KW - adaptation KW - Crotalus KW - evolution KW - hybridization KW - introgression KW - Mojave toxin KW - molecular evolution KW - venom Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-407595 ER - TY - GEN A1 - Rainford, James L. A1 - Hofreiter, Michael A1 - Mayhew, Peter J. T1 - Phylogenetic analyses suggest that diversification and body size evolution are independent in insects T2 - BMC evolutionary biology N2 - Background: Skewed body size distributions and the high relative richness of small-bodied taxa are a fundamental property of a wide range of animal clades. The evolutionary processes responsible for generating these distributions are well described in vertebrate model systems but have yet to be explored in detail for other major terrestrial clades. In this study, we explore the macro-evolutionary patterns of body size variation across families of Hexapoda (insects and their close relatives), using recent advances in phylogenetic understanding, with an aim to investigate the link between size and diversity within this ancient and highly diverse lineage. Results: The maximum, minimum and mean-log body lengths of hexapod families are all approximately log-normally distributed, consistent with previous studies at lower taxonomic levels, and contrasting with skewed distributions typical of vertebrate groups. After taking phylogeny and within-tip variation into account, we find no evidence for a negative relationship between diversification rate and body size, suggesting decoupling of the forces controlling these two traits. Likelihood-based modeling of the log-mean body size identifies distinct processes operating within Holometabola and Diptera compared with other hexapod groups, consistent with accelerating rates of size evolution within these clades, while as a whole, hexapod body size evolution is found to be dominated by neutral processes including significant phylogenetic conservatism. Conclusions: Based on our findings we suggest that the use of models derived from well-studied but atypical clades, such as vertebrates may lead to misleading conclusions when applied to other major terrestrial lineages. Our results indicate that within hexapods, and within the limits of current systematic and phylogenetic knowledge, insect diversification is generally unfettered by size-biased macro-evolutionary processes, and that these processes over large timescales tend to converge on apparently neutral evolutionary processes. We also identify limitations on available data within the clade and modeling approaches for the resolution of trees of higher taxa, the resolution of which may collectively enhance our understanding of this key component of terrestrial ecosystems. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 441 KW - body size KW - diversification KW - hexapoda KW - insects KW - phylogeny Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-407328 ER - TY - GEN A1 - Lukoszek, Radoslaw A1 - Feist, Peter A1 - Ignatova, Zoya T1 - Insights into the adaptive response of Arabidopsis thaliana to prolonged thermal stress by ribosomal profiling and RNA-Seq T2 - BMC plant biology N2 - Background: Environmental stress puts organisms at risk and requires specific stress-tailored responses to maximize survival. Long-term exposure to stress necessitates a global reprogramming of the cellular activities at different levels of gene expression. Results: Here, we use ribosome profiling and RNA sequencing to globally profile the adaptive response of Arabidopsis thaliana to prolonged heat stress. To adapt to long heat exposure, the expression of many genes is modulated in a coordinated manner at a transcriptional and translational level. However, a significant group of genes opposes this trend and shows mainly translational regulation. Different secondary structure elements are likely candidates to play a role in regulating translation of those genes. Conclusions: Our data also uncover on how the subunit stoichiometry of multimeric protein complexes in plastids is maintained upon heat exposure. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 438 KW - translation KW - ribosome profiling KW - transcription KW - RNA-Seq KW - secondary structure KW - G-quadruplexes, KW - heat stress response Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-407262 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 - 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 - 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 - THES A1 - Matzk, Sören T1 - Predictive analysis of metabolic and preventive patient data T1 - Prädiktive Analyse metabolischer und präventiver Patienten Daten N2 - Every day huge amounts of medical records are stored by means of hospitals’ and medical offices’ software. These data are generally unconsidered in research. In this work anonymized everyday medical records ascertained in a physician’s office, cov- ering holistic internal medicine in combination with orthomolecular medicine, are analyzed. Due to the lack of cooperation by the provider of the medical practice software a selection of diagnoses and anthropometric parameters was extracted manually. Information about patients’ treatment are not available in this study. Nevertheless, data mining approaches in- cluding machine learning techniques are used to enable research, prevention and monitoring of patients’ course of treatment. The potential of these everyday medical data is demonstrated by investigating co-morbidity and pyroluria which is a metabolic dysfunction indicated by increased levels of hydroxy- hemopyrrolin-2-one (HPL). It points out that the metabolic syndrome forms a cluster of its components and cancer, as well as mental disorders are grouped with thyroid diseases including autoimmune thyroid diseases. In contrast to prevailing assumptions in which it was estimated that approximately 10 % of the population show increased levels of HPL, in this analysis 84.9 % of the tested patients have an increased concentration of HPL. Prevention is illustrated by using decision tree models to predict diseases. Evaluation of the obtained model for Hashimoto’s disease yield an accuracy of 87.5 %. The model generated for hypothyroidism (accuracy of 60.9 %) reveals shortcomings due to missing information about the treatment. Dynamics in the biomolecular status of 20 patients who have visited the medical office at least one time a year between 2010 and 2014 for laboratory tests are visualized by STATIS, a consensus analysis based on an extension to principal component analysis. Thereby, one can obtain patterns which are predestinated for specific diseases as hypertension. This study demonstrates that these often overlooked everyday data are challenging due to its sparsity and heterogeneity but its analysis is a great possibility to do research on disease profiles of real patients. N2 - Jeden Tag werden unzählige Mengen an medizinischen Patientendaten in Krankenhäusern und Arztpraxen digital gespeichert. Für Forschungszwecke werden diese Daten bisher größtenteils nicht verwendet. Ziel dieser Arbeit ist es täglich anfallende anonymisierte Patientendaten, die aus einer Praxis für ganzheitliche Innere Medizin stammen, zu analysieren. Aufgrund mangelnder Kooperation seitens des Anbieters der Praxissoftware konnten die Patientendaten nicht automatisch extrahiert werden. Daher wurde eine Auswahl an Diagnosen und anthropometrischen Parametern manuell in eine Datenbank übertragen. Informationen über die Behandlung wurden dabei nicht berücksichtigt. Data-Mining Verfahren ermöglichen die Forschung auf der Grundlage von alltäglichen Patientendaten. Durch die Anwendung maschinellen Lernens kann Präventionsmedizin und die Überwachung von Behandlungsverläufen unterstützt werden. Das Potenzial der Analyse dieser sonst weitgehend ungenutzten Daten wird anhand von Untersuchungen zur Komorbidität verdeutlicht. Dabei zeigt sich, dass einerseits das Metabolische Syndrom und dessen Komponenten zusammen mit Krebserkrankungen ein Cluster bilden und andererseits psychosomatische Störungen vermehrt mit Autoimmunerkrankungen der Schilddrüse auftreten. Außerdem wird eine noch nicht schulmedizinisch anerkannte Stoffwechselerkrankung, die Hämopyrrollaktamurie (HPU) untersucht. Diese lässt sich durch eine vermehrte Ausscheidung von Pyrrolen im Urin nachweisen. Bezüglich der Patienten bei denen ein HPU-Test vorliegt, weisen 84 % einen erhöhten Titer auf. Diese Beobachtung steht im Widerspruch zur vorherigen Annahme, dass in etwa 10 % der Bevölkerung von HPU betroffen sind. Präventives Handeln ermöglicht es Gesundheit zu erhalten. Zu diesem Zweck ist es notwen- dig Krankheiten möglichst früh zu erkennen. In dieser Studie können Entscheidungsbaum-Modelle die Hashimoto Thyreoiditis mit einer Genauigkeit von 87.5 % bei einem Patienten diagnostizieren. Defizite durch die fehlenden Informationen über die medikamentöse Behandlung werden anhand des Modells zur Vorhersage von Hypothyreoiditis (Genauigkeit von 60.9 %) aufgezeigt. Mit Hilfe von STATIS, das auf einer Erweiterung der Hauptkomponentenanalyse basiert, die es ermöglicht mehrere Tabellen simultan zu vergleichen, wurde der Behandlungsverlauf von 20 Patienten über einen Zeitraum von fünf Jahren überwacht. Anhand von Hypertonie wird gezeigt, dass sich sich die Patenten bezüglich Ihrer Laborwerte voneinander unterscheiden und sich Muster für Krankheiten erkennen lassen. Diese Arbeit demonstriert den Nutzen, der durch die vermehrte Analyse alltäglicher hochdimensionaler und heterogener Daten erbracht werden kann. KW - predictive analysis KW - database KW - personalised medicine KW - prädiktive Analyse KW - Datenbank KW - personalisierte Medizin Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-406103 ER - TY - THES A1 - Brzezinka, Krzysztof T1 - Chromatin dynamics during heat stress memory in plants Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - THES A1 - Mengin, Virginie T1 - Role of the clock in the regulation of growth and metabolism in stable and fluctuating environmental conditions Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - THES A1 - Xu, Ke T1 - Functional characterization of two MYB transcription factors, MYB95 and MYB47, in Arabidopsis thaliana Y1 - 2016 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 - THES A1 - Heinle, Karolin T1 - Identifizierung von Kohlenhydratbindungsstellen in β-Helix-Proteinen 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 - THES A1 - Barahimipour, Rouhollah T1 - Optimization of transgene expression in the nuclear genome of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and characterization of Chlamydomonas expression strains Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - THES A1 - Rottstock, Tanja T1 - Effects of plant community diversity and composition on fungal pathogens in experimental grasslands Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - THES A1 - Brzezinka, Magdalena T1 - Investigation of novel proteins and polysaccharides associated with coccoliths of Emiliania huxleyi Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - THES A1 - Synodinos, Alexios D. T1 - Savanna dynamics under extreme conditions T1 - Savannendynamik unter extremen Bedingungen BT - insights from a mathematical model N2 - Savannas cover a broad geographical range across continents and are a biome best described by a mix of herbaceous and woody plants. The former create a more or less continuous layer while the latter should be sparse enough to leave an open canopy. What has long intrigued ecologists is how these two competing plant life forms of vegetation coexist. Initially attributed to resource competition, coexistence was considered the stable outcome of a root niche differentiation between trees and grasses. The importance of environmental factors became evident later, when data from moister environments demonstrated that tree cover was often lower than what the rainfall conditions would allow for. Our current understanding relies on the interaction of competition and disturbances in space and time. Hence, the influence of grazing and fire and the corresponding feedbacks they generate have been keenly investigated. Grazing removes grass cover, initiating a self-reinforcing process propagating tree cover expansion. This is known as the encroachment phenomenon. Fire, on the other hand, imposes a bottleneck on the tree population by halting the recruitment of young trees into adulthood. Since grasses fuel fires, a feedback linking grazing, grass cover, fire, and tree cover is created. In African savannas, which are the focus of this dissertation, these feedbacks play a major role in the dynamics. The importance of these feedbacks came into sharp focus when the notion of alternative states began to be applied to savannas. Alternative states in ecology arise when different states of an ecosystem can occur under the same conditions. According to this an open savanna and a tree-dominated savanna can be classified as alternative states, since they can both occur under the same climatic conditions. The aforementioned feedbacks are critical in the creation of alternative states. The grass-fire feedback can preserve an open canopy as long as fire intensity and frequency remain above a certain threshold. Conversely, crossing a grazing threshold can force an open savanna to shift to a tree-dominated state. Critically, transitions between such alternative states can produce hysteresis, where a return to pre-transition conditions will not suffice to restore the ecosystem to its original state. In the chapters that follow, I will cover aspects relating to the coexistence mechanisms and the role of feedbacks in tree-grass interactions. Coming back to the coexistence question, due to the overwhelming focus on competition and disturbance another important ecological process was neglected: facilitation. Therefore, in the first study within this dissertation I examine how facilitation can expand the tree-grass coexistence range into drier conditions. For the second study I focus on another aspect of savanna dynamics which remains underrepresented in the literature: the impacts of inter-annual rainfall variability upon savanna trees and the resilience of the savanna state. In the third and final study within this dissertation I approach the well-researched encroachment phenomenon from a new perspective: I search for an early warning indicator of the process to be used as a prevention tool for savanna conservation. In order to perform all this work I developed a mathematical ecohydrological model of Ordinary Differential Equations (ODEs) with three variables: soil moisture content, grass cover and tree cover. Facilitation: Results showed that the removal of grass cover through grazing was detrimental to trees under arid conditions, contrary to expectation based on resource competition. The reason was that grasses preserved moisture in the soil through infiltration and shading, thus ameliorating the harsh conditions for trees in accordance with the Stress Gradient Hypothesis. The exclusion of grasses from the model further demonstrated this: tree cover was lower in the absence of grasses, indicating that the benefits of grass facilitation outweighed the costs of grass competition for trees. Thus, facilitation expanded the climatic range where savannas persisted into drier conditions. Rainfall variability: By adjusting the model to current rainfall patterns in East Africa, I simulated conditions of increasing inter-annual rainfall variability for two distinct mean rainfall scenarios: semi-arid and mesic. Alternative states of tree-less grassland and tree-dominated savanna emerged in both cases. Increasing variability reduced semi-arid savanna tree cover to the point that at high variability the savanna state was eliminated, because variability intensified resource competition and strengthened the fire disturbance during high rainfall years. Mesic savannas, on the other hand, became more resilient along the variability gradient: increasing rainfall variability created more opportunities for the rapid growth of trees to overcome the fire disturbance, boosting the chances of savannas persisting and thus increasing mesic savanna resilience. Preventing encroachment: The breakdown in the grass-fire feedback caused by heavy grazing promoted the expansion of woody cover. This could be irreversible due to the presence of alternative states of encroached and open savanna, which I found along a simulated grazing gradient. When I simulated different short term heavy grazing treatments followed by a reduction to the original grazing conditions, certain cases converged to the encroached state. Utilising woody cover changes only during the heavy grazing treatment, I developed an early warning indicator which identified these cases with a high risk of such hysteresis and successfully distinguished them from those with a low risk. Furthermore, after validating the indicator on encroachment data, I demonstrated that it appeared early enough for encroachment to be prevented through realistic grazing-reduction treatments. Though this dissertation is rooted in the theory of savanna dynamics, its results can have significant applications in savanna conservation. Facilitation has only recently become a topic of interest within savanna literature. Given the threat of increasing droughts and a general anticipation of drier conditions in parts of Africa, insights stemming from this research may provide clues for preserving arid savannas. The impacts of rainfall variability on savannas have not yet been thoroughly studied, either. Conflicting results appear as a result of the lack of a robust theoretical understanding of plant interactions under variable conditions. . My work and other recent studies argue that such conditions may increase the importance of fast resource acquisition creating a ‘temporal niche’. Woody encroachment has been extensively studied as phenomenon, though not from the perspective of its early identification and prevention. The development of an encroachment forecasting tool, as the one presented in this work, could protect both the savanna biome and societies dependent upon it for (economic) survival. All studies which follow are bound by the attempt to broaden the horizons of savanna-related research in order to deal with extreme conditions and phenomena; be it through the enhancement of the coexistence debate or the study of an imminent external threat or the development of a management-oriented tool for the conservation of savannas. N2 - Savannen sind gekennzeichnet durch die Koexistenz von Gräsern und Bäumen. Sie bedecken circa 20% der globalen Landfläche und Millionen Menschen hängen von ihrer Intaktheit ab. Allerdings bedrohen sowohl der Klimawandel als auch Landnutzung dieses Biom. In dieser Studie werden die Existenz von Savannen unter sehr trockenen Bedingungen, ihre Reaktionen auf steigende Fluktuationen des Niederschlags und die Quantifizierung ihrer Resilienz untersucht. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass unter extrem trockenen Bedingungen der positive Einfluss von Gräsern auf Bäume eine wichtige Rolle für das Überleben der Bäume spielt. Kommt es hingegen zu einer Erhöhung der Niederschlagsvariabilität, wird dadurch eine starke Konkurrenz zwischen den beiden Lebensformen verursacht. Die Resilienz der Savannen und ihre Veränderungen lassen sich quantifizieren und mit dem im letzten Teil dieser Dissertation präsentierten Werkzeug erkennen. Meine Arbeit demonstriert, dass sich der Fokus der aktuellen Savannenforschung weiten muss, um die Reaktionen von Savannen auf sich ändernde Umweltbedingungen vorherzusagen. Um Savannen langfristig zu erhalten, müssen jedoch die bereits vorhandenen Grundlagen in einem soliden Framework zusammen gebracht werden. KW - Savanna ecology KW - mathematical modelling KW - coexistence mechanisms KW - Savanna resilience KW - woody encroachment KW - early warning signals KW - mathematische Modelierung KW - Koexistenz Mechanismen KW - Savannen Resilienz KW - Verbuschung Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-395000 ER - TY - THES A1 - Putzler, Sascha T1 - Molekulare Charakterisierung des Centrosom-assoziierten Proteins CP91 in Dictyostelium discoideum T1 - Molecular characterization of the centrosome-associated protein CP91 in Dictyostelium discoideum N2 - Das Dictyostelium-Centrosom ist ein Modell für acentrioläre Centrosomen. Es besteht aus einer dreischichtigen Kernstruktur und ist von einer Corona umgeben, welche Nukleationskomplexe für Mikrotubuli beinhaltet. Die Verdoppelung der Kernstruktur wird einmal pro Zellzyklus am Übergang der G2 zur M-Phase gestartet. Durch eine Proteomanalyse isolierter Centrosomen konnte CP91 identifiziert werden, ein 91 kDa großes Coiled-Coil Protein, das in der centrosomalen Kernstruktur lokalisiert. GFP-CP91 zeigte fast keine Mobilität in FRAP-Experimenten während der Interphase, was darauf hindeutet, dass es sich bei CP91 um eine Strukturkomponente des Centrosoms handelt. In der Mitose hingegen dissoziieren das GFP-CP91 als auch das endogene CP91 ab und fehlen an den Spindelpolen von der späten Prophase bis zur Anaphase. Dieses Verhalten korreliert mit dem Verschwinden der zentralen Schicht der Kernstruktur zu Beginn der Centrosomenverdopplung. Somit ist CP91 mit großer Wahrscheinlichkeit ein Bestandteil dieser Schicht. CP91-Fragmente der N-terminalen bzw. C-terminalen Domäne (GFP-CP91 N-Terminus, GFP-CP91 C-Terminus) lokalisieren als GFP-Fusionsproteine exprimiert auch am Centrosom, zeigen aber nicht die gleiche mitotische Verteilung des Volllängenproteins. Das CP91-Fragment der zentralen Coiled-Coil Domäne (GFP-CP91cc) lokalisiert als GFP-Fusionsprotein exprimiert, als ein diffuser cytosolische Cluster, in der Nähe des Centrosoms. Es zeigt eine partiell ähnliche mitotische Verteilung wie das Volllängenprotein. Dies lässt eine regulatorische Domäne innerhalb der Coiled-Coil Domäne vermuten. Die Expression der GFP-Fusionsproteine unterdrückt die Expression des endogenen CP91 und bringt überzählige Centrosomen hervor. Dies war auch eine markante Eigenschaft nach der Unterexpression von CP91 durch RNAi. Zusätzlich zeigte sich in CP91-RNAi Zellen eine stark erhöhte Ploidie verursacht durch schwere Defekte in der Chromosomensegregation verbunden mit einer erhöhten Zellgröße und Defekten im Abschnürungsprozess während der Cytokinese. Die Unterexpression von CP91 durch RNAi hatte auch einen direkten Einfluss auf die Menge an den centrosomalen Proteinen CP39, CP55 und CEP192 und dem Centromerprotein Cenp68 in der Interphase. Die Ergebnisse deuten darauf hin, dass CP91 eine zentrale centrosomale Kernkomponente ist und für den Zusammenhalt der beiden äußeren Schichten der Kernstruktur benötigt wird. Zudem spielt CP91 eine wichtige Rolle für eine ordnungsgemäße Centrosomenbiogenese und, unabhängig davon, bei dem Abschnürungsprozess der Tochterzellen während der Cytokinese. 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 N-terminal and C-terminal domain (GFP-CP91N, and GFP-CP91C respectively) also localized to the centrosome but did not show the mitotic redistribution of the full length protein. The CP91 fragment corresponding to the central coiled coil domain (GFP-CP91cc) localized as a diffuse cluster close to the centrosome and did show a partially similar mitotic redistribution of the full length protein suggesting a regulatory role of the coiled coil 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. 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. Additionally, depletion of CP91 by RNAi had an immediate impact on the amount of the centrosomal core components CP39, CP55 and CEP192 and the centromere protein Cenp68 in interphase cells. Our results indicate that CP91 is a central centrosomal core component required for centrosomal integrity, proper centrosome biogenesis and, independently, for abscission during cytokinesis. KW - Centrosom KW - Dictyostelium KW - Mikrotubuli KW - Mitose KW - Zellkern KW - centrosome KW - dictyostelium KW - microtubules KW - mitosis KW - nucleus Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-394689 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 - Navarro-Retamal, Carlos A1 - Bremer, Anne A1 - Alzate-Morales, Jans H. A1 - Caballero, Julio A1 - Hincha, Dirk K. A1 - González, Wendy A1 - Thalhammer, Anja T1 - Molecular dynamics simulations and CD spectroscopy reveal hydration-induced unfolding of the intrinsically disordered LEA proteins COR15A and COR15B from Arabidopsis thaliana N2 - The LEA (late embryogenesis abundant) proteins COR15A and COR15B from Arabidopsis thaliana are intrinsically disordered under fully hydrated conditions, but obtain α-helical structure during dehydration, which is reversible upon rehydration. To understand this unusual structural transition, both proteins were investigated by circular dichroism (CD) and molecular dynamics (MD) approaches. MD simulations showed unfolding of the proteins in water, in agreement with CD data obtained with both HIS-tagged and untagged recombinant proteins. Mainly intramolecular hydrogen bonds (H-bonds) formed by the protein backbone were replaced by H-bonds with water molecules. As COR15 proteins function in vivo as protectants in leaves partially dehydrated by freezing, unfolding was further assessed under crowded conditions. Glycerol reduced (40%) or prevented (100%) unfolding during MD simulations, in agreement with CD spectroscopy results. H-bonding analysis indicated that preferential exclusion of glycerol from the protein backbone increased stability of the folded state. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 321 Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-394503 SP - 25806 EP - 25816 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 - THES A1 - Ruiz-Martinez, Maria T1 - Characterisation and engineering of lignocellulolytic enzymes from the soil bacterium Sorangium cellulosum Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - THES A1 - Geyer, Juliane T1 - Adapting biodiversity conservation management to climate change Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - THES A1 - Connor, Daniel Oliver T1 - Identifikation und Charakterisierung neuer immunogener Proteine und anschließende Generierung rekombinanter Antikörper mittels Phage Display T1 - Identification and characterisation of novel immunogenic proteins and subsequent generation of recombinant antibodies by phage display N2 - Seit der Einführung von Antibiotika in die medizinische Behandlung von bakteriellen Infektionskrankheiten existiert ein Wettlauf zwischen der Evolution von Bakterienresistenzen und der Entwicklung wirksamer Antibiotika. Während bis in die 80er Jahre verstärkt an neuen Antibiotika geforscht wurde, gewinnen multiresistente Keime heute zunehmend die Oberhand. Um einzelne Pathogene erfolgreich nachzuweisen und zu bekämpfen, ist ein grundlegendes Wissen über den Erreger unumgänglich. Bakterielle Proteine, die bei einer Infektion vorrangig vom Immunsystem prozessiert und präsentiert werden, könnten für die Entwicklung von Impfstoffen oder gezielten Therapeutika nützlich sein. Auch für die Diagnostik wären diese immundominanten Proteine interessant. Allerdings herrscht ein Mangel an Wissen über spezifische Antigene vieler pathogener Bakterien, die eine eindeutige Diagnostik eines einzelnen Erregers erlauben würden. Daher wurden in dieser Arbeit vier verschiedene Humanpathogene mittels Phage Display untersucht: Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Neisseria meningitidis, Borrelia burgdorferi und Clostridium difficile. Hierfür wurden aus der genomischen DNA der vier Erreger Bibliotheken konstruiert und durch wiederholte Selektion und Amplifikation, dem sogenannten Panning, immunogene Proteine isoliert. Für alle Erreger bis auf C. difficile wurden immunogene Proteine aus den jeweiligen Bibliotheken isoliert. Die identifizierten Proteine von N. meningitidis und B. burgdorferi waren größtenteils bekannt, konnten aber in dieser Arbeit durch Phage Display verifiziert werden. Für N. gonorrhoeae wurden 21 potentiell immunogene Oligopeptide isoliert, von denen sechs Proteine als neue zuvor unbeschriebene Proteine mit immunogenem Charakter identifiziert wurden. Von den Phagen-präsentierten Oligopeptide der 21 immunogenen Proteine wurden Epitopmappings mit verschiedenen polyklonalen Antikörpern durchgeführt, um immunogene Bereiche näher zu identifizieren und zu charakterisieren. Bei zehn Proteinen wurden lineare Epitope eindeutig mit drei polyklonalen Antikörpern identifiziert, von fünf weiteren Proteinen waren Epitope mit mindestens einem Antikörper detektierbar. Für eine weitere Charakterisierung der ermittelten Epitope wurden Alaninscans durchgeführt, die eine detaillierte Auskunft über kritische Aminosäuren für die Bindung des Antikörpers an das Epitop geben. Ausgehend von dem neu identifizierten Protein mit immunogenem Charakter NGO1634 wurden 26 weitere Proteine aufgrund ihrer funktionellen Ähnlichkeit ausgewählt und mithilfe bioinformatischer Analysen auf ihre Eignung zur Entwicklung einer diagnostischen Anwendung analysiert. Durch Ausschluss der meisten Proteine aufgrund ihrer Lokalisation, Membrantopologie oder unspezifischen Proteinsequenz wurden scFv-Antikörper gegen acht Proteine mittels Phage Display generiert und anschließend als scFv-Fc-Fusionsantikörper produziert und charakterisiert. Die hier identifizierten Proteine und linearen Epitope könnten einen Ansatzpunkt für die Entwicklung einer diagnostischen oder therapeutischen Anwendung bieten. Lineare Epitopsequenzen werden häufig für die Impfstoffentwicklung eingesetzt, sodass vor allem die in dieser Arbeit bestimmten Epitope von Membranproteinen interessante Kandidaten für weitere Untersuchungen in diese Richtung sind. Durch weitere Untersuchungen könnten möglicherweise unbekannte Virulenzfaktoren entdeckt werden, deren Inhibierung einen entscheidenden Einfluss auf Infektionen haben könnten. N2 - Since the advent of antibiotics into the field of medical therapy of bacterial infections, there has been a battle of effective antibiotics and the everlasting evolution of bacterial resistances. Until the 1980s many antibiotics were developed after invention of the first applied antibiotic penicillin in 1946. Since then, antibiotic research has been largely neglected resulting in the evolution of numerous strains from different bacteria with multiple resistances to available antibiotics. Therefore, extensive knowledge of a pathogen is crucial to detect and fight a particular disease. Hence, proteins that are processed and presented preferentially by the immune system during an infection could be beneficial for the development of vaccines and targeted therapeutic agents. Furthermore, immunodominant proteins could be interesting for the development of a diagnostic tool. However, many potential antigen targets of most pathogenic bacteria are still unknown. On this account, four human pathogens were examined in this work utilising phage display: Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Neisseria meningitidis, Borrelia burgdorferi und Clostridium difficile. Phage libraries were constructed from genomic DNA of the four pathogens. These libraries were used to isolate immunogenic proteins by panning through repetitive rounds of selection and amplification. Immunogenic proteins were successfully isolated for all pathogens except C. difficile. The identified proteins from N. meningitidis and B. burgdorferi had mostly been described before. However, they were verified by phage display in this work. Twenty-one potentially immunogenic oligopeptides were isolated from the N. gonorrhoeae library. Six of those were identified as novel proteins with an immunogenic character and validated also as full length proteins. Epitope mappings were conducted for all of the 21 phage presented oligopeptides with different polyclonal antibodies to identify and characterise the immunogenic regions. Linear epitopes were found unambiguously for ten proteins with the three applied antibodies. In addition, epitopes for five proteins were identified with at least one antibody. The determined epitopes were then further characterized by alanine scans to investigate the impact of each individual amino acid on the binding of the antibody to the antigen’s epitope. Based on the novel identified immunogenic protein NGO1634, 26 additional proteins were selected due to their functional resemblance. These proteins were analysed with bioinformatic tools and amongst others checked for their localisation, membrane topology and conservation of their protein sequence. Finally, scFv antibody fragments were isolated from a phage display library (HAL9/10) against eight proteins. The best antibodies were then produced as scFv-Fc fusion antibodies and their binding behaviour was further characterised. The identified proteins and linear epitopes could serve as a starting point for the development of diagnostic or therapeutic tools. Further studies could unveil unknown virulence factors. Inhibition of those virulence factors could possibly have a vital impact on countering infections. Furthermore, linear epitopes are commonly used for vaccine development. Novel epitopes of membrane proteins could be interesting candidates for further immunization studies. KW - Immunogene Proteine KW - Phage Display KW - Rekombinante Antikörper KW - Neisseria gonorrhoeae KW - Neisseria meningitidis KW - Clostridium difficile KW - Borrelia burgdorferi KW - Epitopmapping KW - Immunogenic Proteins KW - Recombinant Antibodies KW - Epitope mapping KW - Phage Display KW - Neisseria gonorrhoeae KW - Neisseria meningitidis KW - Clostridium difficile KW - Borrelia burgdorferi Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-104120 ER - TY - THES A1 - Heinze, Johannes T1 - The impact of soil microbiota on plant species performance and diversity in semi-natural grasslands Y1 - 2016 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 - THES A1 - Onana Eloundou Epse Mbebi, Jeanne Marie T1 - Robustness and plasticity in chemical reaction networks Y1 - 2016 ER - TY - THES A1 - Fiedler, Dorothea T1 - Impact of Dissolved Organic Nitrogen on Freshwater Phytoplankton N2 - In freshwater sciences, nitrogen gained increasing attention in the past as an important resource potentially influencing phytoplankton growth and thus eutrophication. Most studies and all management approaches, however, are still restricted to dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN = nitrate + nitrite + ammonium) since dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) was considered to be refractory for most of the photoautotrophs. In the meantime this assumption has been disproved for all aquatic systems. While research on DON in marine ecosystems substantially increased, in freshwater a surprisingly small number of investigations has been carried out on DON utilization by phytoplankton or even the occurrence and seasonal development of total DON or its compounds in lakes. Therefore, our present knowledge on DON utilization by phytoplankton is often based on single species experiments using a sole, usually low molecular weight DON component, often in unnaturally high amounts mainly carried out with marine phytoplankton species. Thus, we know that some phytoplankton species can take up different DON fractions if they are available in high concentrations and as sole nitrogen source. This does not necessarily imply that phytoplankton would perform likewise in natural environments. In addition, it will be difficult to draw conclusions on the behavior of freshwater phytoplankton from experiments with marine phytoplankton since the nutrient regime in marine environments differs from that of freshwater. In the light of the parallel availability of inorganic and organic nitrogen species in natural freshwater ecosystems, several questions must be raised: "If inorganic nitrogen is available, would phytoplankton really rely on an organic nitrogen source? Could a connection be detected between the seasonal development of DON and changes in the phytoplankton community composition as found for inorganic nitrogen? And if we reduce the input of inorganic nitrogen in lakes and rivers would the importance of DON as nitrogen source for phytoplankton increase, counteracting all management efforts or even leading to undesired effects due to changes in phytoplankton physiology and biodiversity?" I experimentally addressed the questions whether those DON compounds differentially influence growth, physiology and composition of phytoplankton both as sole available nitrogen source and in combination with other nitrogen compounds. I hypothesized that all offered DON - compounds (urea, natural organic matter (NOM), dissolved free and combined amino acids (DFAA, DCAA)) could be utilized by phytoplankton at natural concentrations. However, I assumed that the availability would decrease with increasing compound complexity. I furthermore hypothesized that the occurrence of low DIN concentrations would not affect the utilization of DON negatively. The nitrogen source, whatsoever, would have an impact on phytoplankton physiology as well as community composition. To investigate these questions and assumptions I conducted bioassays with algae monocultures as well as phytoplankton communities testing the utilization of various DON compounds by several freshwater phytoplankton species. Especially the potential utilization of NOM, a complex DON compound mainly consisting of humic substances is of interest, since it is usually regarded to be refractory. In order to be able to use natural concentrations of DON - compounds for my experiments the concentration of total DON and some DON - compounds (urea, humic substances, heigh molecular weight substances) was assessed in Lake Müggelsee. All compounds were able to support algae growth in the low natural concentrations supplied. However, I found that the offered DON compounds differ in their availability to various algae species, both, as sole nitrogen source or in combination with low DIN concentrations. As expected, the availability decreased with increasing complexity of the nitrogen compound. Furthermore, I could show that changes in algal physiology (nitrogen storage, metabolism) occur depending on the utilized nitrogen source. Especially the secondary photosynthetic pigment composition, heterocyst frequency and C:N - ratio of the algae were affected. The uptake and usage of certain nitrogen compounds might be more costly, potentially resulting in those physiology changes. Whereas laboratory experiments with single species revealed strong effects of DON, algal responses to DON in a multi-species situation remain unclear. Experiments with phytoplankton communities from Lake Müggelsee revealed that the nitrogen pool composition does influence the phytoplankton community structure. The findings furthermore show that several species combined might utilize the supplied nitrogen completely different than monocultures in the laboratory. Thus, besides the actual ability of algae to use the offered nitrogen sources other factors, such as interspecific competition, may be of importance. I further investigated, if the results of the laboratory experiments, can be verified in the field. Here, I surveyed the seasonal development of several dissolved organic matter (DOM) components (urea, high molecular weight substances (HMWS), humic substances (HS)) and associated parameters (Specific UV-absorption (SUVA), C:N - ratio) in Lake Müggelsee between 2011 and 2013. Furthermore, data from the long term measurements series of Lake Müggelsee such as physical (temperature, light, pH, O2) and chemical parameters (nitrogen, phosphorous, silica, inorganic carbon), zooplankton and phytoplankton data were used to investigate how much of the variability of the phytoplankton composition in Lake Müggelsee can be explained by DON/DOM concentration and composition, relative to the other groups of explanatory variables. The results show that DON mainly consists of rather complex compounds such as humic substances and biopolymers (80 %) and that only slight seasonal trends are detectable. Using variance partitioning I could show, that the usually investigated nutrients (DIN, silica, inorganic carbon, phosphorous) and abiotic factors together explain most of the algae composition as was to be expected (57.1 % of modeled variance). However, DOM and the associated parameters uniquely explain 10.3 % of the variance and thus slightly more than zooplankton with 9.3 %. I could therefore prove, that the composition of DOM (nitrogen and carbon) is connected to the algae composition in an eutrophic lake such as Lake Müggelsee. DON - compounds such as urea, however, could not be correlated with the occurrence of specific phytoplankton species. Overall, the results of this study imply that DON can be a valuable nitrogen source for freshwater phytoplankton. DON is used by various species even when DIN is available in low concentrations. Through the reduction of DIN in lakes and rivers, the DON:DIN ratio might be changed, resulting even in an increased importance of DON as phytoplankton nitrogen source. My work suggests that not only N2-fixation but also DON utilization might compensate for reduced N - input. Changes from DIN to DON as main nitrogen source might also promote certain, potentially undesired algae species and influence the biodiversity of a limnic ecosystem through changes in the phytoplankton community structure. Thus, DON, especially urea, should be included in calculations concerning total available nitrogen and when determining nitrogen threshold values. Furthermore, the input-reduction of DON, for example from waste-water treatment plants should also be evaluated and the results of my thesis should find consideration when planning to reduce the nitrogen input in freshwater. N2 - Das Interesse an Stickstoff als potentielle Einflußgröße auf das Phytoplanktonwachstum und damit auch als Eutrophierungsfaktor hat in der Vergangenheit in der Limnologie stark zugenommen. Bisher ging man davon aus, das gelöster organischer Stickstoff (DON) für photoautotrophe Organismen refraktär, also nicht nutzbar ist. Dies führte dazu, dass der Großteil an Studien und Managementmaÿnahmen nur gelösten inorganischen Stickstoff (DIN = Nitrat + Nitrit + Ammonium) einbezieht. Mittlerweile wurde allerdings für alle aquatischen Systeme nachgewiesen, dass DON durchaus für Organismen verfügbar sein kann. Während die Forschung im marinen Bereich stark zugenommen hat, wurden in Binnengewässern nur sehr wenige Untersuchungen zur DON - Nutzung durch Phytoplankton oder auch nur das Vorkommen und die saisonale Entwicklung von DON oder seiner Komponenten durchgeführt. Dies resultiert darin, dass sich unser heutiges Wissen zur DON - Nutzung durch Pytoplankton hauptsächlich auf Experimente stützt, die mit einzelnen, überwiegend marinen Phytoplanktonarten und einer, üblicherweise niedermolekularen DON - Komponente in meist unnatürlich hohen Konzentrationen durchgeführt wurden. Demzufolge wissen wir nur, dass es einige Phytoplanktonarten gibt, die verschiedene DON - Fraktionen aufnehmen können, wenn sie in hohen Konzentrationen und als alleinige Stickstoffquelle vorliegen. Diese Ergebnisse spiegeln nicht das tatsächliche Verhalten von Phytoplankton in seiner natürlichen Umgebung wieder. Zudem ist es schwierig, von Experimenten mit marinen Phytoplanktonarten auf das Verhalten limnischer Phytoplankter zu schließen, da sich der Nährstoffhaushalt in marinen Systemen von dem in Binnengewässern stark unterscheidet. Im Hinblick auf die parallele Verfügbarkeit von inorganischem und organischem Stickstoff in natürlichen Binnengewässern stellen sich eine Vielzahl von Fragen: "Wie stark DON als Stickstoffquelle durch Phytoplankton genutzt wird, wenn auch inorganischer Stickstoff zur Verfügung steht. Gibt es eventuell eine Verbindung zwischen der saisonalen Entwicklung von DON und Änderungen in der Zusammensetzung der Phytoplanktongemeinschaft wie man es auch für inorganischen Stickstoff sowie andere biotische und abiotische Faktoren findet? Es ist bisher auch ungeklärt, ob durch eine Reduktion des Eintrags von inorganischem Stickstoff die Bedeutung von DON als Stickstoffquelle für Phytoplankton zunimmt. Würde so eventuell den Managmentmaßnahmen entgegengewirkt oder käme es zu ungewünschten Effekten durch Änderungen in Phytoplanktonphysiologie und Biodiversität?" Im Verlauf meiner Doktorarbeit habe ich mich mit einem Teil dieser offenen Fragen auseinandergesetzt. Meine Experimente dienten dazu herauszufinden, inwieweit sich verschiedene DON -Komponenten auf Wachstum, Physiologie und die Phytoplanktonzusammensetzung auswirken, wenn sie als einzige verfügbare Stickstoffquelle aber auch in Kombination mit anderen Stickstoffkomponenten zur Verfügung stehen. Hierbei stehen folgende Hypothesen und Annahmen im Vordergrund: a) alle angebotenen DON - Komponenten (Harnstoff, gelöste freie Aminosäuren (DFAA), gelöste gebundene Aminosäuren (DCAA) und natürliches organisches Material (NOM)) können in natürlicher Konzentration von Phytoplankton genutzt werden, b) die Verfügbarkeit nimmt mit zunehmender Komplexität des DON ab, c) geringe DIN - Konzentrationen haben keinen negativen Einfluss auf die Nutzung von DON durch das Phytoplankton, d) die Stickstoffquelle beeinflusst Phytoplanktonphysiologie sowie die Zusammensetzung der Phytoplanktongemeinschaft. Um mehr Informationen zur DON - Verfügbarkeit für Süßwasserphytoplankton zu erhalten, wurde zunächst die Nutzung verschiedener DON - Komponenten durch verschiedene Phytoplanktonspezies aus Binnengewässern sowie Phytoplanktongemeinschaften untersucht. Besonders die mögliche Nutzung von NOM, einer komplexen, hauptsächlich aus Huminstoffen bestehenden DON - Komponente war von Interesse, da sie überwiegend als refraktär eingeschätzt wird. Um die Verfügbarkeit diverser DON - Komponenten in natürlicher Konzentration zu testen, wurde zunächst die Konzentration von Gesamt - DON sowie einiger DON -Komponenten (Harnstoff, Huminstoffe, hochmolekulare Substanzen) im Müggelsee ermittelt. Alle DON - Komponenten ermöglichten ein Algenwachstum in der niedrigen natürlichen Konzentration, in der sie zur Verfügung gestellt wurden. Es konnte festgestellt werden, dass sich die unterschiedlichen DON - Komponenten in ihrer Verfügbarkeit für verschiedene Algenarten unterschieden, unabhängig davon, ob sie als alleinige Stickstoffquelle vorlagen oder in Kombination mit DIN in niedriger Konzentration. Wie erwartet nahm die Algenverfügbarkeit mit zunehmender Komplexität der Stickstoffkomponenten ab. Desweiteren konnte gezeigt werden, dass die verwendete Stickstoffquelle zu Änderungen in der Algenphysiologie (Metabolismus, Stickstoffspeicherung) führen kann. Vor allem die Zusammensetzung sekundärer Photosynthesepigmente, die Heterocystenhäufigkeit sowie das C:N - Verhältnis des Phytoplankton wurden beeinflusst. Auch wenn alle untersuchten Stickstoffquellen das Phytoplanktonwachstum ermöglichen, ist die Nutzung einiger Komponenten gegebenenfalls mit höheren Kosten z.B. für Transport, Aufschluß etc. verbunden, was wiederum in einer Änderungen der Phytoplanktonphysiologie resultieren kann. Während Experimente mit einzelnen Phytoplanktonarten im Labor starke Effekte von DON erkennen lassen, sind die Ergebnisse der Multi-Spezies-Versuche weniger eindeutig interpretierbar. Versuche mit Phytoplanktongemeinschaften aus dem Müggelsee zeigten, dass die Zusammensetzung des Stickstoffpools Auswirkungen auf die Struktur der Phytoplanktongemenschaft hat. Zudem nutzen verschiedene Arten zusammen den zur Verfügung gestellten Stickstoff anders, als Monokulturen im Labor. Demzufolge spielen neben der eigentlichen Fähigkeit der Algen, verschiedene Stickstoffkomponenten nutzen zu können noch andere Faktoren wie z.B. interspezifische Konkurrenz eine Rolle für die tatsächliche Nutzung im Gewässer. Im weiteren Teil meiner Doktorarbeit habe ich untersucht, inwieweit die Ergebnisse der Laborversuche im Feld verifiziert werden können. Dafür wurde die saisonale Entwicklung verschiedenen gelösten organischen Materials (DOM) (Harnstoff, hochmolekulare Substanzen (HMWS), Huminstoffe (HS)) und weitere assoziierte Parameter (spezifische UV-Absorption (SUVA), C:N - Verhältnis) im Müggelsee von 2011-2013 bestimmt. Desweiteren wurden Daten aus der Langzeitmessung vom Müggelsee verwendet, um herauszufinden, wieviel der Variabilität in der Phytoplanktonzusammensetzung im Müggelsee durch die DON / DOM Konzentration und Zusammensetzung erklärt werden, im Verhältnis zu den anderen potentiellen Einflussfaktoren. Hierzu zählen physikalische (Temperatur, Licht, pH, O2) und chemische Parameter (Stickstoff, Phosphor, Silikat, inorganischer Kohlenstoff), Zooplankton- und Phytoplanktondaten. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass sich DON hauptächlich aus komplexen Komponenten wie Huminstoffen und Biopolymeren (80 %) zusammensetzt und das nur ein geringer saisonaler Trend in der DON-Entwicklung festzustellen ist. Mittels Varianzpartitionierung konnte gezeigt werden, dass die üblicherweise untersuchten Nährstoffe (DIN, Silikat, inorganischer Kohlenstoff, Phosphor) und abiotische Faktoren zusammen den Großteil der Algenzusammensetzung erklären, wie zu erwarten war (57.1 %). DOM und die damit assoziierten Parameter konnten allein 10.3% der Varianz erklären und damit etwas mehr als Zooplankton, eine anerkannte Einflußgröße, mit 9.3%. Damit konnte gezeigt werden, dass auch die DOM - Zusammensetzung (Stickstoff und Kohlenstoff) als Einflussgröße der Algenzusammensetzung in einem eutrophen See wie dem Müggelsee berücksichtigt werden sollte. Zusammenfassend zeigen die Ergebnisse dieser Doktorarbeit, dass DON eine wichtige Stickstoffquelle für Phytoplankton aus Binnengewässern sein kann und von zahlreichen Arten genutzt wird, auch wenn DIN, zumindest in niedrigen Konzentrationen, verfügbar ist. Durch die Reduktion von DIN in Seen und Flüssen könnte es zu einer Änderung des DON / DIN - Verhältnisses kommen, was zu einer noch stärkeren Bedeutung von DON als Stickstoffquelle für Phytoplankton führen kann. Meine Arbeit legt nahe, dass nicht nur die N2 - Fixierung, sondern auch die Nutzung von DON eine Reduktion des Stickstoffeintrags kompensieren könnte. Ein Wechsel von DIN zu DON als Hauptstickstoffquelle für Phytoplankton fördert möglicherweise auch bestimmte unerwünschte Algenarten und beeinflusst die Biodiversität der Binnengewässer durch Änderungen in der Phytoplanktongemeinschaft. Aus diesen Gründen sollte DON, vor allem Harnstoff in Kalkulationen des gesamtverfögbaren Stickstoffs sowie bei der Ermittlung von Stickstoffgrenzwerten einbezogen werden. Bei der Planung von Maßnahmen zur Reduktion des Stickstoffeintrages in Binnengewässer zur Verbesserung der Wasserqualtät sollten die Ergebnisse dieser Doktorarbeit demzufolge in Betracht gezogen und auch eine Reduktion des DON - Eintrages, z. B. aus Klärwerken, erwogen werden. KW - DON KW - phytoplankton KW - natural organic matter KW - LC-OCD-OND Y1 - 2016 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 - THES A1 - Kersten, Birgit T1 - Proteom-weite Studien zur Phosphorylierung pflanzlicher Proteine mittels Proteinmikroarrays und Bioinformatik Y1 - 2016 ER -