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The epitope imprinting approach applies exposed peptides as templates to synthesize Molecularly Imprinted Polymers (MIPs) for the recognition of the parent protein. While generally the template protein binding to such MIPs is considered to occur via the epitope-shaped cavities, unspecific interactions of the analyte with non-imprinted polymer as well as the detection method used may add to the complexity and interpretation of the target rebinding. To get new insights on the effects governing the rebinding of analytes, we electrosynthesized two epitope-imprinted polymers using the N-terminal pentapeptide VHLTP-amide of human hemoglobin (HbA) as the template. MIPs were prepared either by single-step electrosynthesis of scopoletin/pentapeptide mixtures or electropolymerization was performed after chemisorption of the cysteine extended VHLTP peptide. Rebinding of the target peptide and the parent HbA protein to the MIP nanofilms was quantified by square wave voltammetry using a redox probe gating, surface enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy, and atomic force microscopy. While binding of the pentapeptide shows large influence of the amino acid sequence, all three methods revealed strong non-specific binding of HbA to both polyscopoletin-based MIPs with even higher affinities than the target peptides.
Exendin-4 is a pharmaceutical peptide used in the control of insulin secretion. Structural information on exendin-4 and related peptides especially on the level of quaternary structure is scarce. We present the first published association equilibria of exendin-4 directly measured by static and dynamic light scattering. We show that exendin-4 oligomerization is pH dependent and that these oligomers are of low compactness. We relate our experimental results to a structural hypothesis to describe molecular details of exendin-4 oligomers. Discussion of the validity of this hypothesis is based on NMR, circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy, and light scattering data on exendin-4 and a set of exendin-4 derived peptides. The essential forces driving oligomerization of exendin-4 are helix–helix interactions and interactions of a conserved hydrophobic moiety. Our structural hypothesis suggests that key interactions of exendin-4 monomers in the experimentally supported trimer take place between a defined helical segment and a hydrophobic triangle constituted by the Phe22 residues of the three monomeric subunits. Our data rationalize that Val19 might function as an anchor in the N-terminus of the interacting helix-region and that Trp25 is partially shielded in the oligomer by C-terminal amino acids of the same monomer. Our structural hypothesis suggests that the Trp25 residues do not interact with each other, but with C-terminal Pro residues of their own monomers.
Exendin-4 is a pharmaceutical peptide used in the control of insulin secretion. Structural information on exendin-4 and related peptides especially on the level of quaternary structure is scarce. We present the first published association equilibria of exendin-4 directly measured by static and dynamic light scattering. We show that exendin-4 oligomerization is pH dependent and that these oligomers are of low compactness. We relate our experimental results to a structural hypothesis to describe molecular details of exendin-4 oligomers. Discussion of the validity of this hypothesis is based on NMR, circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy, and light scattering data on exendin-4 and a set of exendin-4 derived peptides. The essential forces driving oligomerization of exendin-4 are helix–helix interactions and interactions of a conserved hydrophobic moiety. Our structural hypothesis suggests that key interactions of exendin-4 monomers in the experimentally supported trimer take place between a defined helical segment and a hydrophobic triangle constituted by the Phe22 residues of the three monomeric subunits. Our data rationalize that Val19 might function as an anchor in the N-terminus of the interacting helix-region and that Trp25 is partially shielded in the oligomer by C-terminal amino acids of the same monomer. Our structural hypothesis suggests that the Trp25 residues do not interact with each other, but with C-terminal Pro residues of their own monomers.
A drop of immunity
(2021)
A matter of concern
(2021)
Neurons are post-mitotic cells in the brain and their integrity is of central importance to avoid neurodegeneration. Yet, the inability of self-replenishment of post-mitotic cells results in the need to withstand challenges from numerous stressors during life. Neurons are exposed to oxidative stress due to high oxygen consumption during metabolic activity in the brain. Accordingly, DNA damage can occur and accumulate, resulting in genome instability. In this context, imbalances in brain trace element homeostasis are a matter of concern, especially regarding iron, copper, manganese, zinc, and selenium. Although trace elements are essential for brain physiology, excess and deficient conditions are considered to impair neuronal maintenance. Besides increasing oxidative stress, DNA damage response and repair of oxidative DNA damage are affected by trace elements. Hence, a balanced trace element homeostasis is of particular importance to safeguard neuronal genome integrity and prevent neuronal loss. This review summarises the current state of knowledge on the impact of deficient, as well as excessive iron, copper, manganese, zinc, and selenium levels on neuronal genome stability
Almost one third of global drylands are open forests and savannas, which are typically shaped by frequent natural disturbances such as wildfire and herbivory. Studies on ecosystem functions and services of woody vegetation require robust estimates of aboveground biomass (AGB). However, most methods have been developed for comparatively undisturbed forest ecosystems. As they are not tailored to accurately quantify AGB of small and irregular growth forms, their application on these growth forms may lead to unreliable or even biased AGB estimates in disturbance-prone dryland ecosystems. Moreover, these methods cannot quantify AGB losses caused by disturbance agents. Here we propose a methodology to estimate individual-and stand-level woody AGB in disturbance-prone ecosystems. It consists of flexible field sampling routines and estimation workflows for six growth classes, delineated by size and damage criteria. It also comprises a detailed damage assessment, harnessing the ecological archive of woody growth for past disturbances.
Based on large inventories collected along steep gradients of elephant disturbances in African dryland ecosystems, we compared the AGB estimates generated with our proposed method against estimates from a less adapted forest inventory method. We evaluated the necessary stepwise procedures of method adaptation and analyzed each step's effect on stand-level AGB estimation. We further explored additional advantages of our proposed method with regard to disturbance impact quantification. Results indicate that a majority of growth forms and individuals in savanna vegetation could only be assessed if methods of AGB estimation were adapted to the conditions of a disturbance-prone ecosystem. Furthermore, our damage assessment demonstrated that one third to half of all woody AGB was lost to disturbances. Consequently, less adapted methods may be insufficient and are likely to render inaccurate AGB estimations.
Our proposed method has the potential to accurately quantify woody AGB in disturbance-prone ecosystems, as well as AGB losses. Our method is more time consuming than conventional allometric approaches, yet it can cover sufficient areas within reasonable timespans, and can also be easily adapted to alternative sampling schemes.
Monoclonal antibodies are used worldwide as highly potent and efficient detection reagents for research and diagnostic applications. Nevertheless, the specific targeting of complex antigens such as whole microorganisms remains a challenge. To provide a comprehensive workflow, we combined bioinformatic analyses with novel immunization and selection tools to design monoclonal antibodies for the detection of whole microorganisms. In our initial study, we used the human pathogenic strain E. coli O157:H7 as a model target and identified 53 potential protein candidates by using reverse vaccinology methodology. Five different peptide epitopes were selected for immunization using epitope-engineered viral proteins. The identification of antibody-producing hybridomas was performed by using a novel screening technology based on transgenic fusion cell lines. Using an artificial cell surface receptor expressed by all hybridomas, the desired antigen-specific cells can be sorted fast and efficiently out of the fusion cell pool. Selected antibody candidates were characterized and showed strong binding to the target strain E. coli O157:H7 with minor or no cross-reactivity to other relevant microorganisms such as Legionella pneumophila and Bacillus ssp. This approach could be useful as a highly efficient workflow for the generation of antibodies against microorganisms.
Monoclonal antibodies are used worldwide as highly potent and efficient detection reagents for research and diagnostic applications. Nevertheless, the specific targeting of complex antigens such as whole microorganisms remains a challenge. To provide a comprehensive workflow, we combined bioinformatic analyses with novel immunization and selection tools to design monoclonal antibodies for the detection of whole microorganisms. In our initial study, we used the human pathogenic strain E. coli O157:H7 as a model target and identified 53 potential protein candidates by using reverse vaccinology methodology. Five different peptide epitopes were selected for immunization using epitope-engineered viral proteins. The identification of antibody-producing hybridomas was performed by using a novel screening technology based on transgenic fusion cell lines. Using an artificial cell surface receptor expressed by all hybridomas, the desired antigen-specific cells can be sorted fast and efficiently out of the fusion cell pool. Selected antibody candidates were characterized and showed strong binding to the target strain E. coli O157:H7 with minor or no cross-reactivity to other relevant microorganisms such as Legionella pneumophila and Bacillus ssp. This approach could be useful as a highly efficient workflow for the generation of antibodies against microorganisms.
Objective
The Caribbean is an important global biodiversity hotspot. Adaptive radiations there lead to many speciation events within a limited period and hence are particularly prominent biodiversity generators. A prime example are freshwater fish of the genus Limia, endemic to the Greater Antilles. Within Hispaniola, nine species have been described from a single isolated site, Lake Miragoâne, pointing towards extraordinary sympatric speciation. This study examines the evolutionary history of the Limia species in Lake Miragoâne, relative to their congeners throughout the Caribbean.
Results
For 12 Limia species, we obtained almost complete sequences of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene, a well-established marker for lower-level taxonomic relationships. We included sequences of six further Limia species from GenBank (total N = 18 species). Our phylogenies are in concordance with other published phylogenies of Limia. There is strong support that the species found in Lake Miragoâne in Haiti are monophyletic, confirming a recent local radiation. Within Lake Miragoâne, speciation is likely extremely recent, leading to incomplete lineage sorting in the mtDNA. Future studies using multiple unlinked genetic markers are needed to disentangle the relationships within the Lake Miragoâne clade.
Objective
The Caribbean is an important global biodiversity hotspot. Adaptive radiations there lead to many speciation events within a limited period and hence are particularly prominent biodiversity generators. A prime example are freshwater fish of the genus Limia, endemic to the Greater Antilles. Within Hispaniola, nine species have been described from a single isolated site, Lake Miragoâne, pointing towards extraordinary sympatric speciation. This study examines the evolutionary history of the Limia species in Lake Miragoâne, relative to their congeners throughout the Caribbean.
Results
For 12 Limia species, we obtained almost complete sequences of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene, a well-established marker for lower-level taxonomic relationships. We included sequences of six further Limia species from GenBank (total N = 18 species). Our phylogenies are in concordance with other published phylogenies of Limia. There is strong support that the species found in Lake Miragoâne in Haiti are monophyletic, confirming a recent local radiation. Within Lake Miragoâne, speciation is likely extremely recent, leading to incomplete lineage sorting in the mtDNA. Future studies using multiple unlinked genetic markers are needed to disentangle the relationships within the Lake Miragoâne clade.
AAA+ proteins (ATPases associated with various cellular activities) catalyze the energy-dependent movement or rearrangement of macromolecules. A new study addresses the important question of how to design a selective chemical inhibitor for specific proteins in this diverse superfamily. The powerful chemical genetics approach adds to a growing toolbox of applications that allow dissection of the functions of distinct AAA+ proteins in vivo, facilitating the first steps toward effective drug development.
Human size changes over time with worldwide secular trends in height, weight, and body mass index (BMI). There is general agreement to relate the state of nutrition to height and weight, and to ratios of weight-to-height. The BMI is a ratio. It is commonly used to classify underweight, overweight and obesity in adults. Yet, the BMI is inappropriate to provide any immediate information on body composition.
It is accepted that the BMI is “a simple index to classify underweight, overweight and obesity in adults”. It is stated that “policies, programmes and investments need to be “nutrition-sensitive”, which means they must have positive impacts on nutrition”. It is also stated that “a need for policies that address all forms of malnutrition by making healthy foods accessible and affordable, while restricting unhealthy foods through fiscal and regulatory restrictions“. But these statements are neither warranted by arithmetic considerations, nor by historic evidence.
Measuring the BMI is an appropriate screening tool for detecting an unusual weight-to-height ratio, but the BMI is an inappropriate tool for estimating body composition, or suggesting medical and health policy decisions.
Large-scale biochemical models are of increasing sizes due to the consideration of interacting organisms and tissues. Model reduction approaches that preserve the flux phenotypes can simplify the analysis and predictions of steady-state metabolic phenotypes. However, existing approaches either restrict functionality of reduced models or do not lead to significant decreases in the number of modelled metabolites. Here, we introduce an approach for model reduction based on the structural property of balancing of complexes that preserves the steady-state fluxes supported by the network and can be efficiently determined at genome scale. Using two large-scale mass-action kinetic models of Escherichia coli, we show that our approach results in a substantial reduction of 99% of metabolites. Applications to genome-scale metabolic models across kingdoms of life result in up to 55% and 85% reduction in the number of metabolites when arbitrary and mass-action kinetics is assumed, respectively. We also show that predictions of the specific growth rate from the reduced models match those based on the original models. Since steady-state flux phenotypes from the original model are preserved in the reduced, the approach paves the way for analysing other metabolic phenotypes in large-scale biochemical networks.
Purpose of review
The zebrafish embryo has emerged as a powerful model organism to investigate the mechanisms by which biophysical forces regulate vascular and cardiac cell biology during development and disease. A versatile arsenal of methods and tools is available to manipulate and analyze biomechanical signaling. This review aims to provide an overview of the experimental strategies and tools that have been utilized to study biomechanical signaling in cardiovascular developmental processes and different vascular disease models in the zebrafish embryo. Within the scope of this review, we focus on work published during the last two years.
Recent findings
Genetic and pharmacological tools for the manipulation of cardiac function allow alterations of hemodynamic flow patterns in the zebrafish embryo and various types of transgenic lines are available to report endothelial cell responses to biophysical forces. These tools have not only revealed the impact of biophysical forces on cardiovascular development but also helped to establish more accurate models for cardiovascular diseases including cerebral cavernous malformations, hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasias, arteriovenous malformations, and lymphangiopathies.
Summary
The zebrafish embryo is a valuable vertebrate model in which in-vivo manipulations of biophysical forces due to cardiac contractility and blood flow can be performed. These analyses give important insights into biomechanical signaling pathways that control endothelial and endocardial cell behaviors. The technical advances using this vertebrate model will advance our understanding of the impact of biophysical forces in cardiovascular pathologies.
Iron-sulfur clusters are essential enzyme cofactors. The most common and stable clusters are [2Fe-2S] and [4Fe-4S] that are found in nature. They are involved in crucial biological processes like respiration, gene regulation, protein translation, replication and DNA repair in prokaryotes and eukaryotes. In Escherichia coli, Fe-S clusters are essential for molybdenum cofactor (Moco) biosynthesis, which is a ubiquitous and highly conserved pathway. The first step of Moco biosynthesis is catalyzed by the MoaA protein to produce cyclic pyranopterin monophosphate (cPMP) from 5’GTP. MoaA is a [4Fe-4S] cluster containing radical S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM) enzyme. The focus of this study was to investigate Fe-S cluster insertion into MoaA under nitrate and TMAO respiratory conditions using E. coli as a model organism. Nitrate and TMAO respiration usually occur under anaerobic conditions, where oxygen is depleted. Under these conditions, E. coli uses nitrate and TMAO as terminal electron. Previous studies revealed that Fe-S cluster insertion is performed by Fe-S cluster carrier proteins. In E. coli, these proteins are known as A-type carrier proteins (ATC) by phylogenomic and genetic studies. So far, three of them have been characterized in detail in E. coli, namely IscA, SufA, and ErpA. This study shows that ErpA and IscA are involved in Fe-S cluster insertion into MoaA under nitrate and TMAO respiratory conditions. ErpA and IscA can partially replace each other in their role to provide [4Fe-4S] clusters for MoaA. SufA is not able to replace the functions of IscA or ErpA under nitrate respiratory conditions.
Nitrate reductase is a molybdoenzyme that coordinates Moco and Fe-S clusters. Under nitrate respiratory conditions, the expression of nitrate reductase is significantly increased in E. coli. Nitrate reductase is encoded in narGHJI genes, the expression of which is regulated by the transcriptional regulator, fumarate and nitrate reduction (FNR). The activation of FNR under conditions of nitrate respiration requires one [4Fe-4S] cluster. In this part of the study, we analyzed the insertion of Fe-S cluster into FNR for the expression of narGHJI genes in E. coli. The results indicate that ErpA is essential for the FNR-dependent expression of the narGHJI genes, a role that can be replaced partially by IscA and SufA when they are produced sufficiently under the conditions tested. This observation suggests that ErpA is indirectly regulating nitrate reductase expression via inserting Fe-S clusters into FNR.
Most molybdoenzymes are complex multi-subunit and multi-cofactor-containing enzymes that coordinate Fe-S clusters, which are functioning as electron transfer chains for catalysis. In E. coli, periplasmic aldehyde oxidoreductase (PaoAC) is a heterotrimeric molybdoenzyme that
consists of flavin, two [2Fe-2S], one [4Fe-4S] cluster and Moco. In the last part of this study, we investigated the insertion of Fe-S clusters into E. coli periplasmic aldehyde oxidoreductase (PaoAC). The results show that SufA and ErpA are involved in inserting [4Fe-4S] and [2Fe-2S] clusters into PaoABC, respectively under aerobic respiratory conditions.
Iron sulfur (Fe-S) clusters are important biological cofactors present in proteins with crucial biological functions, from photosynthesis to DNA repair, gene expression, and bioenergetic processes. For the insertion of Fe-S clusters into proteins, A-type carrier proteins have been identified. So far, three of them have been characterized in detail in Escherichia coli, namely, IscA, SufA, and ErpA, which were shown to partially replace each other in their roles in [4Fe-4S] cluster insertion into specific target proteins. To further expand the knowledge of [4Fe-4S] cluster insertion into proteins, we analyzed the complex Fe-S cluster-dependent network for the synthesis of the molybdenum cofactor (Moco) and the expression of genes encoding nitrate reductase in E. coli. Our studies include the identification of the A-type carrier proteins ErpA and IscA, involved in [4Fe-4S] cluster insertion into the radical Sadenosyl-methionine (SAM) enzyme MoaA. We show that ErpA and IscA can partially replace each other in their role to provide [4Fe-4S] clusters for MoaA. Since most genes expressing molybdoenzymes are regulated by the transcriptional regulator for fumarate and nitrate reduction (FNR) under anaerobic conditions, we also identified the proteins that are crucial to obtain an active FNR under conditions of nitrate respiration. We show that ErpA is essential for the FNR-dependent expression of the narGHJI operon, a role that cannot be compensated by IscA under the growth conditions tested. SufA does not appear to have a role in Fe-S cluster insertion into MoaA or FNR under anaerobic growth employing nitrate respiration, based on the low level of gene expression. <br /> IMPORTANCE Understanding the assembly of iron-sulfur (Fe-S) proteins is relevant to many fields, including nitrogen fixation, photosynthesis, bioenergetics, and gene regulation. Remaining critical gaps in our knowledge include how Fe-S clusters are transferred to their target proteins and how the specificity in this process is achieved, since different forms of Fe-S clusters need to be delivered to structurally highly diverse target proteins. Numerous Fe-S carrier proteins have been identified in prokaryotes like Escherichia coli, including ErpA, IscA, SufA, and NfuA. In addition, the diverse Fe-S cluster delivery proteins and their target proteins underlie a complex regulatory network of expression, to ensure that both proteins are synthesized under particular growth conditions.
Populations adapt to novel environmental conditions by genetic changes or phenotypic plasticity. Plastic responses are generally faster and can buffer fitness losses under variable conditions. Plasticity is typically modeled as random noise and linear reaction norms that assume simple one-to- one genotype–phenotype maps and no limits to the phenotypic response. Most studies on plasticity have focused on its effect on population viability. However, it is not clear, whether the advantage of plasticity depends solely on environmental fluctuations or also on the genetic and demographic properties (life histories) of populations. Here we present an individual-based model and study the relative importance of adaptive and nonadaptive plasticity for populations of sexual species with different life histories experiencing directional stochastic climate change. Environmental fluctuations were simulated using differentially autocorrelated climatic stochasticity or noise color, and scenarios of directiona
climate change. Nonadaptive plasticity was simulated as a random environmental effect on trait development, while adaptive plasticity as a linear, saturating, or sinusoidal reaction norm. The last two imposed limits to the plastic response and emphasized flexible interactions of the genotype with the environment. Interestingly, this assumption led to (a) smaller phenotypic than genotypic variance in the population (many-to- one genotype–phenotype map) and the coexistence of polymorphisms, and (b) the maintenance of higher genetic variation—compared to linear reaction norms and genetic determinism—even when the population was exposed to a constant environment for several generations. Limits to plasticity led to genetic accommodation, when costs were negligible, and to the appearance of cryptic variation when limits were exceeded. We found that adaptive plasticity promoted population persistence under red environmental noise and was particularly important for life histories with low fecundity. Populations produing more offspring could cope with environmental fluctuations solely by genetic changes or random plasticity, unless environmental change was too fast.
Populations adapt to novel environmental conditions by genetic changes or phenotypic plasticity. Plastic responses are generally faster and can buffer fitness losses under variable conditions. Plasticity is typically modeled as random noise and linear reaction norms that assume simple one-to- one genotype–phenotype maps and no limits to the phenotypic response. Most studies on plasticity have focused on its effect on population viability. However, it is not clear, whether the advantage of plasticity depends solely on environmental fluctuations or also on the genetic and demographic properties (life histories) of populations. Here we present an individual-based model and study the relative importance of adaptive and nonadaptive plasticity for populations of sexual species with different life histories experiencing directional stochastic climate change. Environmental fluctuations were simulated using differentially autocorrelated climatic stochasticity or noise color, and scenarios of directiona
climate change. Nonadaptive plasticity was simulated as a random environmental effect on trait development, while adaptive plasticity as a linear, saturating, or sinusoidal reaction norm. The last two imposed limits to the plastic response and emphasized flexible interactions of the genotype with the environment. Interestingly, this assumption led to (a) smaller phenotypic than genotypic variance in the population (many-to- one genotype–phenotype map) and the coexistence of polymorphisms, and (b) the maintenance of higher genetic variation—compared to linear reaction norms and genetic determinism—even when the population was exposed to a constant environment for several generations. Limits to plasticity led to genetic accommodation, when costs were negligible, and to the appearance of cryptic variation when limits were exceeded. We found that adaptive plasticity promoted population persistence under red environmental noise and was particularly important for life histories with low fecundity. Populations produing more offspring could cope with environmental fluctuations solely by genetic changes or random plasticity, unless environmental change was too fast.
Background
Nicotine consumption during pregnancy and advanced maternal age are well known independent risk factors for poor pregnancy outcome and therefore serious public health problems.
Objectives
Considering the ongoing trend of delaying childbirth in our society, this study investigates potential additive effects of nicotine consumption during pregnancy and advanced maternal age on foetal growth.
Sample and Methods
In a medical record-based study, we analysed the impact of maternal age and smoking behaviour before and during pregnancy on newborn size among 4142 singleton births that took place in Vienna, Austria between 1990 and 1995.
Results
Birth weight (H=82.176, p<0.001), birth length (H=91.525, p<0.001) and head circumference (H=42.097, p<0.001) differed significantly according to maternal smoking behaviour. For birth weight, the adjusted mean differences between smokers and non-smokers increased from 101.8g for the < 18-year-old mothers to 254.8g for >35 year olds, with the respective values for birth length being 0.6 cm to 0.7cm, for head circumference from 0.3 cm to 0.6 cm.
Conclusion
Increasing maternal age amplified the negative effects of smoking during pregnancy on newborn parameters. Our findings identify older smoking mothers as a high-risk group which should be of special interest for public health systems.
Averting today's loss of biodiversity and ecosystem services can be achieved through conservation efforts, especially of keystone species. Giraffes (Giraffa camelopardalis) play an important role in sustaining Africa's ecosystems, but are 'vulnerable' according to the IUCN Red List since 2016. Monitoring an animal's behavior in the wild helps to develop and assess their conservation management. One mechanism for remote tracking of wildlife behavior is to attach accelerometers to animals to record their body movement. We tested two different commercially available high-resolution accelerometers, e-obs and Africa Wildlife Tracking (AWT), attached to the top of the heads of three captive giraffes and analyzed the accuracy of automatic behavior classifications, focused on the Random Forests algorithm. For both accelerometers, behaviors of lower variety in head and neck movements could be better predicted (i.e., feeding above eye level, mean prediction accuracy e-obs/AWT: 97.6%/99.7%; drinking: 96.7%/97.0%) than those with a higher variety of body postures (such as standing: 90.7-91.0%/75.2-76.7%; rumination: 89.6-91.6%/53.5-86.5%). Nonetheless both devices come with limitations and especially the AWT needs technological adaptations before applying it on animals in the wild. Nevertheless, looking at the prediction results, both are promising accelerometers for behavioral classification of giraffes. Therefore, these devices when applied to free-ranging animals, in combination with GPS tracking, can contribute greatly to the conservation of giraffes.
The presented study investigated the influence of microbial and biogeochemical processes on the physical transport related properties and the fate of microplastics in freshwater reservoirs. The overarching goal was to elucidate the mechanisms leading to sedimentation and deposition of microplastics in such environments. This is of importance, as large amounts of initially buoyant microplastics are found in reservoir sediments worldwide. However, the transport processes which lead to microplastics accumulation in sediments, were up to now understudied.
The impact of biofilm formation on the density and subsequent sedimentation of microplastics was investigated in the eutrophic Bautzen reservoirs (Chapter 2). Biofilms are complex microbial communities fixed to submerged surfaces through a slimy organic film. The mineral calcite was detected in the biofilms, which led to the
sinking of the overgrown microplastic particles. The calcite was of biogenic origin, most likely precipitated by sessile cyanobacteria within the biofilms.
Biofilm formation was also studied in the mesotrophic Malter reservoir. Unlike in Bautzen reservoir, biofilm formation did not govern the sedimentation of different microplastics in Malter reservoir (Chapter 3). Instead autumnal lake mixing led to
the formation of sinking aggregates of microplastics and iron colloids. Such colloids form when anoxic, iron-rich water from the hypolimnion mixes with the oxygenated epilimnetic waters. The colloids bind organic material from the lake water, which leads to the formation of large and sinking iron-organo flocs.
Hence, iron-organo floc formation and their influence on the buoyancy or burial of microplastics into sediments of Bautzen reservoir was studied in laboratory experiments (Chapter 4). Microplastics of different shapes (fiber, fragment, sphere) and sizes were readily incorporated into sinking iron-organo flocs. By this initially buoyant polyethylene microplastics were transported on top of sediments from Bautzen reservoir. Shortly after deposition, the microplastic bearing flocs started to subside and transported the pollutants into deeper sediment layers. The microplastics were not released from the sediments within two months of laboratory incubation.
The stability of floc microplastic deposition was further investigated employing experiments with the iron reducing model organism Shewanella oneidensis (Chapter 5). It was shown, that reduction or re-mineralization of the iron minerals did not affect the integrity of the iron-organo flocs. The organic matrix was stable under iron reducing conditions. Hence, no incorporated microplastics were released from the flocs. As similar processes are likely to take place in natural sediments, this might explain the previous described low microplastic release from the sediments.
This thesis introduced different mechanisms leading to the sedimentation of initially buoyant microplastics and to their subsequent deposition in freshwater reservoirs. Novel processes such as the aggregation with iron-organo flocs were identified and the understudied issue of biofilm densification through biogenic mineral formation was further investigated. The findings might have implications for the fate of microplastics within the river-reservoir system and outline the role of freshwater reservoirs as important accumulation zone for microplastics. Microplastics deposited in the sediments of reservoirs might not be transported further by through flowing river. Hence the study might contribute to better risk assessment and transport balances of these anthropogenic contaminants.
Pathogens and animal pests (P&A) are a major threat to global food security as they directly affect the quantity and quality of food. The Southern Amazon, Brazil's largest domestic region for soybean, maize and cotton production, is particularly vulnerable to the outbreak of P&A due to its (sub)tropical climate and intensive farming systems. However, little is known about the spatial distribution of P&A and the related yield losses. Machine learning approaches for the automated recognition of plant diseases can help to overcome this research gap. The main objectives of this study are to (1) evaluate the performance of Convolutional Neural Networks (ConvNets) in classifying P&A, (2) map the spatial distribution of P&A in the Southern Amazon, and (3) quantify perceived yield and economic losses for the main soybean and maize P&A. The objectives were addressed by making use of data collected with the smartphone application Plantix. The core of the app's functioning is the automated recognition of plant diseases via ConvNets. Data on expected yield losses were gathered through a short survey included in an "expert" version of the application, which was distributed among agronomists. Between 2016 and 2020, Plantix users collected approximately 78,000 georeferenced P&A images in the Southern Amazon. The study results indicate a high performance of the trained ConvNets in classifying 420 different crop-disease combinations. Spatial distribution maps and expert-based yield loss estimates indicate that maize rust, bacterial stalk rot and the fall armyworm are among the most severe maize P&A, whereas soybean is mainly affected by P&A like anthracnose, downy mildew, frogeye leaf spot, stink bugs and brown spot. Perceived soybean and maize yield losses amount to 12 and 16%, respectively, resulting in annual yield losses of approximately 3.75 million tonnes for each crop and economic losses of US$2 billion for both crops together. The high level of accuracy of the trained ConvNets, when paired with widespread use from following a citizen-science approach, results in a data source that will shed new light on yield loss estimates, e.g., for the analysis of yield gaps and the development of measures to minimise them.
Boon and bane
(2021)
Semi-natural habitats (SNHs) in agricultural landscapes represent important refugia for biodiversity including organisms providing ecosystem services. Their spill-over into agricultural fields may lead to the provision of regulating ecosystem services such as biological pest control ultimately affecting agricultural yield. Still, it remains largely unexplored, how different habitat types and their distributions in the surrounding landscape shape this provision of ecosystem services within arable fields. Hence, in this thesis I investigated the effect of SNHs on biodiversity-driven ecosystem services and disservices affecting wheat production with an emphasis on the role and interplay of habitat type, distance to the habitat and landscape complexity.
I established transects from the field border into the wheat field, starting either from a field-to-field border, a hedgerow, or a kettle hole, and assessed beneficial and detrimental organisms and their ecosystem functions as well as wheat yield at several in-field distances. Using this study design, I conducted three studies where I aimed to relate the impacts of SNHs at the field and at the landscape scale on ecosystem service providers to crop production.
In the first study, I observed yield losses close to SNHs for all transect types. Woody habitats, such as hedgerows, reduced yields stronger than kettle holes, most likely due to shading from the tall vegetation structure. In order to find the biotic drivers of these yield losses close to SNHs, I measured pest infestation by selected wheat pests as potential ecosystem disservices to crop production in the second study. Besides relating their damage rates to wheat yield of experimental plots, I studied the effect of SNHs on these pest rates at the field and at the landscape scale. Only weed cover could be associated to yield losses, having their strongest impact on wheat yield close to the SNH. While fungal seed infection rates did not respond to SNHs, fungal leaf infection and herbivory rates of cereal leaf beetle larvae were positively influenced by kettle holes. The latter even increased at kettle holes with increasing landscape complexity suggesting a release of natural enemies at isolated habitats within the field interior.
In the third study, I found that also ecosystem service providers benefit from the presence of kettle holes. The distance to a SNH decreased species richness of ecosystem service providers, whereby the spatial range depended on species mobility, i.e. arable weeds diminished rapidly while carabids were less affected by the distance to a SNH. Contrarily, weed seed predation increased with distance suggesting that a higher food availability at field borders might have diluted the predation on experimental seeds. Intriguingly, responses to landscape complexity were rather mixed: While weed species richness was generally elevated with increasing landscape complexity, carabids followed a hump-shaped curve with highest species numbers and activity-density in simple landscapes. The latter might give a hint that carabids profit from a minimum endowment of SNHs, while a further increase impedes their mobility. Weed seed predation was affected differently by landscape complexity depending on weed species displayed. However, in habitat-rich landscapes seed predation of the different weed species converged to similar rates, emphasising that landscape complexity can stabilize the provision of ecosystem services. Lastly, I could relate a higher weed seed predation to an increase in wheat yield even though seed predation did not diminish weed cover. The exact mechanisms of the provision of weed control to crop production remain to be investigated in future studies.
In conclusion, I found habitat-specific responses of ecosystem (dis)service providers and their functions emphasizing the need to evaluate the effect of different habitat types on the provision of ecosystem services not only at the field scale, but also at the landscape scale. My findings confirm that besides identifying species richness of ecosystem (dis)service providers the assessment of their functions is indispensable to relate the actual delivery of ecosystem (dis)services to crop production.
Cellulose is the most abundant biopolymer on Earth and cell wall (CW) synthesis is one of the major carbon consumers in the plant cell. Structure and several interaction partners of plasma membrane (PM)-bound cellulose synthase (CESA) complexes, CSCs, have been studied extensively, but much less is understood about the signals that activate and translocate CESAs to the PM and how exactly cellulose synthesis is being regulated during the diel cycle. The literature describes CSC regulation possibilities through interactions with accessory proteins upon stress conditions (e.g. CC1), post-translational modifications that regulate CSC speed and their possible anchoring in the PM (e.g. with phosphorylation and S-acylation, respectively). In this thesis, 13CO2 labeling and imaging techniques were employed in the same Arabidopsis seedling growth system to elucidate how and when new carbon is incorporated into cell wall (CW) sugars and UDP-glucose, and to follow CSC behavior during the diel cycle. Additionally, an ubiquitination analysis was performed to investigate a possible mechanism to affect CSC trafficking to and/or from the PM. Carbon is being incorporated into CW glucose at a 3-fold higher rate during the light period in comparison to the night in wild-type seedlings. Furthermore, CSC density at the PM, as an indication of active cellulose synthesizing machinery, is increasing in the light and falling during the night, showing that CW biosynthesis is more active in the light. Therefore, CW synthesis might be regulated by the carbon status of the cell. This regulation is broken in the starchless pgm mutant where light and dark carbon incorporation rates into CW glucose are similar, possibly due to the high soluble sugar content in pgm during the first part of the night. Strikingly, pgm CSC abundance at the PM is constantly low during the whole diel cycle, indicating little or no cellulose synthesis, but can be restored with exogenous sucrose or a longer photoperiod. Ubiquitination was explored as a possible regulating mechanism for translocation of primary CW CSCs from the PM and several potential ubiquitination sites have been identified.. The approach in this thesis enabled to study cellulose/CW synthesis from different angles but in the same growth system, allowing direct comparison of those methodologies, which could help understand the relationship between the amount of available carbon in a plant cell and the cells capacity to synthesize cellulose/CW. Understanding which factors contribute to cellulose synthesis regulation and addressing those fundamental questions can provide essential knowledge to manage the need for increased crop production.
Objective:
Stunting (height-for-age < −2 SD) is one of the forms of undernutrition and is frequent among children of low- and middle-income countries. But stunting perSe is not a synonym of undernutrition. We investigated association between body height and indicators of energetic undernutrition at three critical thresholds for thinness used in public health: (1) BMI SDS < −2; (2) mid-upper arm circumference divided by height (MUAC (mm) × 10/height (cm) < 1·36) and (3) mean skinfold thickness (SF) < 7 mm and to question the reliability of thresholds as indicators of undernutrition.
Design:
Cross-sectional study; breakpoint analysis.
Setting:
Rural and urban regions of Indonesia and Guatemala – different socio-economic status (SES).
Participants:
1716 Indonesian children (6·0–13·2 years) and 3838 Guatemalan children (4·0–18·9 years) with up to 50 % stunted children.
Results:
When separating the regression of BMI, MUAC or SF, on height into distinguishable segments (breakpoint analysis), we failed to detect relevant associations between height, and BMI, MUAC or SF, even in the thinnest and shortest children. For BMI and SF, the breakpoint analysis either failed to reach statistical significance or distinguished at breakpoints above critical thresholds. For MUAC, the breakpoint analysis yielded negative associations between MUAC/h and height in thin individuals. Only in high SES Guatemalan children, SF and height appeared mildly associated with R2 = 0·017.
Conclusions:
Currently used lower thresholds of height-for-age (stunting) do not show relevant associations with anthropometric indicators of energetic undernutrition. We recommend using the catch-up growth spurt during early re-feeding instead as immediate and sensitive indicator of past undernourishment. We discuss the primacy of education and social-economic-political-emotional circumstances as responsible factors for stunting.
Cep192, a novel missing link between the centrosomal core and corona in Dictyostelium amoebae
(2021)
The Dictyostelium centrosome is a nucleus-associated body with a diameter of approx. 500 nm. It contains no centrioles but consists of a cylindrical layered core structure surrounded by a microtubule-nucleating corona. At the onset of mitosis, the corona disassembles and the core structure duplicates through growth, splitting, and reorganization of the outer core layers. During the last decades our research group has characterized the majority of the 42 known centrosomal proteins. In this work we focus on the conserved, previously uncharacterized Cep192 protein. We use superresolution expansion microscopy (ExM) to show that Cep192 is a component of the outer core layers. Furthermore, ExM with centrosomal marker proteins nicely mirrored all ultrastructurally known centrosomal substructures. Furthermore, we improved the proximity-dependent biotin identification assay (BioID) by adapting the biotinylase BioID2 for expression in Dictyostelium and applying a knock-in strategy for the expression of BioID2-tagged centrosomal fusion proteins. Thus, we were able to identify various centrosomal Cep192 interaction partners, including CDK5RAP2, which was previously allocated to the inner corona structure, and several core components. Studies employing overexpression of GFP-Cep192 as well as depletion of endogenous Cep192 revealed that Cep192 is a key protein for the recruitment of corona components during centrosome biogenesis and is required to maintain a stable corona structure.
Genome-scale metabolic networks for model plants and crops in combination with approaches from the constraint-based modelling framework have been used to predict metabolic traits and design metabolic engineering strategies for their manipulation. With the advances in technologies to generate large-scale genotyping data from natural diversity panels and other populations, genome-wide association and genomic selection have emerged as statistical approaches to determine genetic variants associated with and predictive of traits. Here, we review recent advances in constraint-based approaches that integrate genetic variants in genome-scale metabolic models to characterize their effects on reaction fluxes. Since some of these approaches have been applied in organisms other than plants, we provide a critical assessment of their applicability particularly in crops. In addition, we further dissect the inferred effects of genetic variants with respect to reaction rate constants, abundances of enzymes, and concentrations of metabolites, as main determinants of reaction fluxes and relate them with their combined effects on complex traits, like growth. Through this systematic review, we also provide a roadmap for future research to increase the predictive power of statistical approaches by coupling them with mechanistic models of metabolism.
The energy required to drive photochemical reactions is derived from charge separation across the thylakoid membrane. As the consequence of difference in proton concentration between chloroplasts stroma and thylakoid lumen, a proton motive force (pmf) is generated. The pmf is composed out of the proton gradient (ΔpH) and membrane potential (ΔΨ), and together they drive the ATP synthesis. In nature, the amount of energy fueling photosynthesis varies due to frequent changes in the light intensity. Thylakoid ion transport can adapt the energy flow through a photosynthetic apparatus to the light availability by adjusting the pmf composition. Dissipation of ΔΨ reduces the charge recombination at the photosystem II, allowing for an increase in ΔpH component to trigger a feedback downregulation of photosynthesis. K+ Exchange Antiporter 3 (KEA3) driven K+/H+ antiport reduces the ΔpH fraction of pmf, thereby dampening a non-photochemical quenching (NPQ). As a result, it increases the photosynthesis efficiency during the transition to lower light intensity. This thesis aimed to find the answers for questions concerning KEA3 activity regulation and its role in plant development. Presented data shows that in plants lacking chloroplast ATP synthase assembly factor CGL160 with decreased ATP synthase activity, KEA3 has a pivotal role in photosynthesis regulation and plant growth during steady-state conditions. Lack of KEA3 in cgl160 mutant results in a strong growth impairment, as photosynthesis is limited due to increased pH-dependent NPQ and decreased electron flow through cytochrome b6f complex. Overexpression of KEA3 in cgl160 mutant increases charge recombination at photosystem II, promoting photosynthesis. Thus, during periods of low ATP synthase activity, plants benefit from KEA3 activity. The KEA3 undergoes dimerization via its regulatory C-terminus (RCT). The RCT responds to changes in light intensity as the plants expressing KEA3 without this domain show reduced photo-protective mechanism in light intensity transients. However, those plants fix more carbon during the photosynthesis induction phase as a trade-off for a long-term photoprotection, showing KEA3 regulatory role in plant development. The KEA3 RCT is facing thylakoid stroma, thus its regulation depends on light-induced changes in the stromal environment. KEA3 activity regulation overlaps with the stromal pH changes occurring during light fluctuations. The ATP and ADP has shown to have an affinity towards heterologously expressed KEA3 RCT. Such interaction causes conformational changes in RCT structure. The fold change of RCT-ligand interaction depends on the environmental pH value. With a combination of bioinformatics and in vitro approach, the ATP binding site at RCT was located. Introduction of binding site point mutation in planta KEA3 RCT resulted in antiporter activity deregulation during transition to low light. Together, the data presented in this thesis allowed us to assess more broadly a KEA3 role in photosynthesis adjustment and propose the models of KEA3 activity regulation throughout transition in light intensity.
City mice and country mice
(2021)
The ability to produce innovative behaviour is a key determinant in the successful coping with environmental challenges and changes. The expansion of human-altered environments presents wildlife with multiple novel situations in which innovativeness could be beneficial. A better understanding of the drivers of within-species variation in innovation propensity and its consequences will provide insights into the traits enabling animals to thrive in the face of human-induced rapid environmental change. We compared problem-solving performance of 31 striped field mice, Apodemus agrarius, originating from rural or urban environments in a battery of eight foraging extraction tasks. We tested whether differences in problem-solving performance were mediated by the extent and duration of the animal's exploration of the experimental set-ups, the time required to solve the tasks, and their persistence. In addition, we tested the influence of the diversity of motor responses, as well as of behavioural traits boldness and activity on problem-solving performance. Urban individuals were better problem solvers despite rural individuals approaching faster and interacting longer with the test set-ups. Participation rates and time required to solve a task did not differ between rural and urban individuals. However, in case of failure to solve a task, rural mice were more persistent. The best predictors of solving success, aside from the area of origin, were the time spent exploring the set-ups and boldness, while activity and diversity of motor responses did not explain it. Problem-solving ability could thus be a contributing factor to the successful coping with the rapid and recent expansion of human-altered environments.
Coherent network partitions
(2021)
We continue to study coherent partitions of graphs whereby the vertex set is partitioned into subsets that induce biclique spanned subgraphs. The problem of identifying the minimum number of edges to obtain biclique spanned connected components (CNP), called the coherence number, is NP-hard even on bipartite graphs. Here, we propose a graph transformation geared towards obtaining an O (log n)-approximation algorithm for the CNP on a bipartite graph with n vertices. The transformation is inspired by a new characterization of biclique spanned subgraphs. In addition, we study coherent partitions on prime graphs, and show that finding coherent partitions reduces to the problem of finding coherent partitions in a prime graph. Therefore, these results provide future directions for approximation algorithms for the coherence number of a given graph.
Nature conservation and restoration in terrestrial ecosystems is often focused on increasing the numbers of megafauna, expecting them to have positive impacts on ecological self-regulation processes and biodiversity. In sub-Saharan Africa, conservation efforts also aspire to protect and enhance biodiversity with particular focus on elephants. However, elephant browsing carries the risk of woody biomass losses. In this context, little is known about how increasing elephant numbers affects carbon stocks in soils, including the subsoils. We hypothesized that (1) increasing numbers of elephants reduce tree biomass, and thus the amount of C stored therein, resulting (2) in a loss of soil organic carbon (SOC). If true, a negative carbon footprint could limit the sustainability of elephant conservation from a global carbon perspective. To test these hypotheses, we selected plots of low, medium, and high elephant densities in two national parks and adjacent conservancies in the Namibian component of the Kavango Zambezi Transfrontier Area (KAZA), and quantified carbon storage in both woody vegetation and soils (1 m). Analyses were supplemented by the assessment of soil carbon isotopic composition. We found that increasing elephant densities resulted in a loss of tree carbon storage by 6.4 t ha(-1). However, and in contrast to our second hypothesis, SOC stocks increased by 4.7 t ha(-1) with increasing elephant densities. These higher SOC stocks were mainly found in the topsoil (0-30 cm) and were largely due to the formation of SOC from woody biomass. A second carbon input source into the soils was megaherbivore dung, which contributed with 0.02-0.323 t C ha(-1) year(-1) to ecosystem carbon storage in the low and high elephant density plots, respectively. Consequently, increasing elephant density does not necessarily lead to a negative C footprint, as soil carbon sequestration and transient C storage in dung almost compensate for losses in tree biomass.
There has been a growing awareness that graphing is an essential part of the science curriculum. While much research has focused on student conceptions and abilities regarding graphical representations, only few studies have investigated what teachers think about them and how they use graphs in science class. The purpose of this study is to explore educational beliefs, motivation, and teaching practices of German secondary biology teachers regarding graph construction. Via questionnaire surveys, 71 teachers from different regions in Germany rated their beliefs and motivation as well as the frequency of different graph construction activities in biology class. The teachers surveyed in this study were quite motivated in their teaching of graph construction. Furthermore, they tended to believe that graph construction should be practiced explicitly in biology class and that students should learn clear strategies for constructing graphs. We found that teaching subjects and own research experience make a difference in teachers' beliefs and motivation regarding graph construction in biology class. The self-report on classroom practices revealed that participants may provide limited opportunities for students to experience graphing as a social and iterative practice. Implications are drawn for teacher education and professional development as well as for further research in teacher education contexts.
Glyco-assemblies derived from amphiphilic sugar-decorated block copolymers (ASBCs) have emerged prominently due to their wide application, for example, in biomedicine and as drug carriers. However, to efficiently construct these glyco-assemblies is still a challenge. Herein, we report an efficient technology for the synthesis of glyco-inside nano-assemblies by utilizing RAFT polymerization of a galactose-decorated methacrylate for polymerization-induced self-assembly (PISA). Using this approach, a series of highly ordered glyco-inside nano-assemblies containing intermediate morphologies were fabricated by adjusting the length of the hydrophobic glycoblock and the polymerization solids content. A specific morphology of complex vesicles was captured during the PISA process and the formation mechanism is explained by the morphology of its precursor and intermediate. Thus, this method establishes a powerful route to fabricate glyco-assemblies with tunable morphologies and variable sizes, which is significant to enable the large-scale fabrication and wide application of glyco-assemblies.
Simple Summary:& nbsp;High alpine meadows are home to numerous endemic butterfly species. A combination of climate change and changes in agricultural practices has led to a severe decline in many species. A seemingly unaffected representative of this habitat is Erebia pronoe. We studied the behaviour, resource use and population structure of this species to explain its resilience and estimate its future survival potential. This species shows pronounced protandry in combination with serial eclosion. Males were significantly more active and mobile and were also caught significantly more often than females, resulting in a pronounced shift in sex ratio in the predicted population structure. The adults use a wide range of nectar plants and establish homeranges in areas of high habitat quality. Thus, Erebia pronoe adults use a wide array of resources combined with a slight specialisation to avoid niche overlap with closely related species. The resulting ecological flexibility seems to be an adaptation to unpredictable environmental conditions, which should be the result of a long-lasting adaptation process. Moreover, the combination of opportunism and modest specialisation should also be a good basis for coping with future changes caused by climate and land-use change.</p> <br /> <br></p> <br /> A mark-recapture study of the nominotypical Erebia pronoe in the Alps was conducted to survey its ecological demands and characteristics. Population structure analysis revealed a combination of protandry (one-week earlier eclosion of males) and serial eclosion. Significant differences between both sexes were found in population density (males: 580/ha & PLUSMN; 37 SE; females: 241/ha & PLUSMN; 66 SE), sex-ratio (2.4) and behaviour (57.7 vs. 11.9% flying). Both sexes used a wide range of nectar plants (Asteraceae, 77.3%; Dipsacaceae, 12.3%; Gentianaceae, 9.7%). The use of nectar plants shows a non-specific spectrum, which, however, completely avoids overlap with the locally co-occurring species Erebia nivalis. Movement patterns show the establishment of homeranges, which significantly limits the migration potential. Due to its broad ecological niche, E. pronoe will probably be able to react plastically to the consequences of climate change. The formation of high population densities, the unconcerned endangerment status, the unspecific resource spectrum and the sedentary character of the species make E. pronoe a potential indicator of the quality and general resource occurrence of alpine rupicolous grasslands.
The Anthropocene is the era of urbanization. The accelerating expansion of cities occurs at the expense of natural reservoirs of biodiversity and presents animals with challenges for which their evolutionary past might not have prepared them. Cognitive and behavioral adjustments to novelty could promote animals’ persistence under these altered conditions. We investigated the structure of, and covariance between, different aspects of responses to novelty in rural and urban small mammals of two non-commensal rodent species. We ran replicated experiments testing responses to three novelty types (object, food, or space) of 47 individual common voles (Microtus arvalis) and 41 individual striped field mice (Apodemus agrarius). We found partial support for the hypothesis that responses to novelty are structured, clustering (i) speed of responses, (ii) intensity of responses, and (iii) responses to food into separate dimensions. Rural and urban small mammals did not differ in most responses to novelty, suggesting that urban habitats do not reduce neophobia in these species. Further studies investigating whether comparable response patters are found throughout different stages of colonization, and along synurbanization processes of different duration, will help illuminate the dynamics of animals’ cognitive adjustments to urban life.
The Anthropocene is the era of urbanization. The accelerating expansion of cities occurs at the expense of natural reservoirs of biodiversity and presents animals with challenges for which their evolutionary past might not have prepared them. Cognitive and behavioral adjustments to novelty could promote animals’ persistence under these altered conditions. We investigated the structure of, and covariance between, different aspects of responses to novelty in rural and urban small mammals of two non-commensal rodent species. We ran replicated experiments testing responses to three novelty types (object, food, or space) of 47 individual common voles (Microtus arvalis) and 41 individual striped field mice (Apodemus agrarius). We found partial support for the hypothesis that responses to novelty are structured, clustering (i) speed of responses, (ii) intensity of responses, and (iii) responses to food into separate dimensions. Rural and urban small mammals did not differ in most responses to novelty, suggesting that urban habitats do not reduce neophobia in these species. Further studies investigating whether comparable response patters are found throughout different stages of colonization, and along synurbanization processes of different duration, will help illuminate the dynamics of animals’ cognitive adjustments to urban life.
Das Fachwissen von Lehrkräften weist für die Ausprägung fachdidaktischer Expertise eine hohe Bedeutung auf. Welche Merkmale universitäre Lehrveranstaltungen aufweisen sollten, um Lehramtsstudierenden ein berufsspezifisches Fachwissen zu vermitteln, ist jedoch überwiegend noch unklar.
Innerhalb des Projekts PSI-Potsdam wurde auf theoretischer Grundlage das fachübergreifende Modell des erweiterten Fachwissens für den schulischen Kontext entwickelt. Als Ansatz zur Verbesserung des Biologie-Lehramtsstudiums diente dieses Modell als Konzeptionsgrundlage für eine additive Lehrveranstaltung. Hierbei werden Lerngelegenheiten geboten, um das universitär erworbene Fachwissen über zellbiologische Inhalte auf schulische Kontexte anzuwenden, z.B. durch die Dekonstruktion und anschließende Rekonstruktion von schulischen Lerntexten. Die Wirkung des Seminars wurde in mehreren Zyklen im Forschungsformat der Fachdidaktischen Entwicklungsforschung beforscht. Eine der zentralen Forschungsfragen lautet dabei: Wie kann eine Lerngelegenheit für Lehramtsstudierende der Biologie gestaltet sein, um ein erweitertes Fachwissen für den schulischen Kontext für den zellbiologischen Themenbereich „Struktur und Funktion der Biomembran“ zu fördern?
Anhand fallübergreifender Analysen (n = 29) wird im empirischen Teil aufgezeigt, welche Einstellungen zum Lehramtsstudium in der Stichprobe bestehen. Als ein wichtiges Ergebnis kann hierbei herausgestellt werden, dass sich das Fachinteresse hinsichtlich schulisch und universitär vermittelter Inhalte bei den untersuchten Studierenden auffallend unterscheidet, wobei dem Schulwissen ein deutlich höheres Interesse entgegengebracht wird. Die Berufsrelevanz fachlicher Inhalte wird seitens der Studierenden häufig am Schulwissen festgemacht.
Innerhalb konkreter Einzelfallanalysen (n = 6) wird anhand von Lernpfaden dargestellt, wie sich über mehrere Design-Experimente hinweg fachliche Konzepte entwickelt haben. Bei der Beschreibung wird vor allem auf Schlüsselstellen und Hürden im Lernprozess fokussiert. Aus diesen Ergebnissen folgend werden vorgenommene Iterationen für die einzelnen Zyklen beschrieben, die ebenfalls anhand der iterativen Entwicklung der Design-Prinzipien dargelegt werden.
Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Schlüsselstellen sehr individuell aufgrund der subjektiv fokussierten Inhalte zu Tage treten. Meist treten sie jedoch im Zusammenhang mit der Verknüpfung verschiedener fachlicher Konzepte oder durch kooperative Aufschlüsselungen von Konzepten auf. Fachliche Hürden konnten hingegen in Form von fachlich unangemessenen Vorstellungen fallübergreifend identifiziert werden. Dies betrifft unter anderem die Vorstellung der Biomembran als Wand, die mit den Vorstellungen einer Schutzfunktion und einer formgebenden Funktion der Biomembran einhergeht.
Weiterhin wird beleuchtet, wie das erweiterte Fachwissen für den schulischen Kontext zur Bearbeitung der Lernaufgaben angewendet wurde. Es hat sich gezeigt, dass sich bestimmte Lerngelegenheiten eigenen, um bestimmte Facetten des erweiterten Fachwissens zu fördern.
Insgesamt scheint das Modell des erweiterten Fachwissens für den schulischen Kontext äußerst geeignet zu sein, um anhand der Facetten und deren Beschreibungen Lerngelegenheiten oder Gestaltungsprinzipien für diese zu konzipieren. Für das untersuchte Lehr-Lernarrangement haben sich kleinere Adaptationen des Modells als sinnvoll erwiesen. Hinsichtlich der Methodologie konnten Ableitungen für die Anwendung der fachdidaktischen Entwicklungsforschung für additive fachliche Lehrveranstaltungen dieser Art herausgestellt werden.
Um den Professionsbezug der fachwissenschaftlichen Anteile im Lehramtsstudium zu verbessern, ist der weitere Einbezug des erweiterten Fachwissens für den schulischen Kontext in die fachwissenschaftlichen Studienanteile überaus wünschenswert.
Deconstructing the Gestalt
(2021)
Snakes-a subset of lizards-have traditionally been divided into two major groups based on feeding mechanics: "macrostomy," involving the ingestion of proportionally large prey items; and "microstomy," the lack of this ability. "Microstomy"-considered present in scolecophidian and early-diverging alethinophidian snakes-is generally viewed as a symplesiomorphy shared with non-snake lizards. However, this perspective of "microstomy" as plesiomorphic and morphologically homogenous fails to recognize the complexity of this condition and its evolution across "microstomatan" squamates. To challenge this problematic paradigm, we formalize a new framework for conceptualizing and testing the homology of overall character complexes, or "morphotypes," which underlies our re-assessment of "microstomy." Using micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) scans, we analyze the morphology of the jaws and suspensorium across purported "microstomatan" squamates (scolecophidians, early-diverging alethinophidians, and non-snake lizards) and demonstrate that key components of the jaw complex are not homologous at the level of primary character state identity across these taxa. Therefore, rather than treating "microstomy" as a uniform condition, we instead propose that non-snake lizards, early-diverging alethinophidians, anomalepidids, leptotyphlopids, and typhlopoids each exhibit a unique and nonhomologous jaw morphotype: "minimal-kinesis microstomy," "snout-shifting," "axle-brace maxillary raking," "mandibular raking," and "single-axle maxillary raking," respectively. The lack of synapomorphy among scolecophidians is inconsistent with the notion of scolecophidians representing an ancestral snake condition, and instead reflects a hypothesis of the independent evolution of fossoriality, miniaturization, and "microstomy" in each scolecophidian lineage. We ultimately emphasize that a rigorous approach to comparative anatomy is necessary in constructing evolutionary hypotheses that accurately reflect biological reality.
Microcystis is the most commonly found toxic cyanobacterial genus around the world and has a negative impact on the ecosystem. As a predominant producer of the potent hepatotoxin microcystin (MC), the genus causes outbreaks in freshwaters worldwide. Standard analytical methods that are used for the detection of microcystin variants can only measure the free form of microcystin in cells. Since microcystin was found as free and proteinbound forms in the cells, a significant proportion of microcystin is underestimated with analytical methods. The aim of the study was to measure protein-bound microcystins and determine the environmental factors that affect the binding of microcystin to proteins. Samples were taken at depths of surface, 1 m, 5 m, 10 m, 15 m, and 18 m in Kucukcekmece Lagoon to analyze depth profiles of two different microcystin forms from June to September 2012 at regular monthly intervals. Our findings suggest that the most important parameter affecting proteinbound microcystin at surface water is high light. Due to favorable environmental conditions such as temperature, light, and physicochemical parameters, the higher microcystin contents, both free and protein-bound MCs, were found in summer periods.
Hantaviruses are emerging pathogens that occasionally cause deadly outbreaks in the human population. While the structure of the viral envelope has been characterized with high precision, protein-protein interactions leading to the formation of new virions in infected cells are not fully understood. We used quantitative fluorescence microscopy (i.e., number and brightness analysis and fluorescence fluctuation spectroscopy) to monitor the interactions that lead to oligomeric spike complex formation in the physiological context of living cells. To this aim, we quantified protein-protein interactions for the glycoproteins Gn and Gc from Puumala and Hantaan orthohantaviruses in several cellular models. The oligomerization of each protein was analyzed in relation to subcellular localization, concentration, and the concentration of its interaction partner. Our results indicate that, when expressed separately, Gn and Gc form, respectively, homo-tetrameric and homo-dimeric complexes, in a concentration-dependent manner. Site-directed mutations or deletion mutants showed the specificity of their homotypic interactions. When both glycoproteins were coexpressed, we observed in the Golgi apparatus clear indication of GnGc interactions and the formation of Gn-Gc multimeric protein complexes of different sizes, while using various labeling schemes to minimize the influence of the fluorescent tags. Such large glycoprotein multimers may be identified as multiple Gn viral spikes interconnected via Gc-Gc contacts. This observation provides the possible first evidence for the initial assembly steps of the viral envelope within this organelle, and does so directly in living cells. <br /> IMPORTANCE In this work, we investigate protein-protein interactions that drive the assembly of the hantavirus envelope. These emerging pathogens have the potential to cause deadly outbreaks in the human population. Therefore, it is important to improve our quantitative understanding of the viral assembly process in infected cells, from a molecular point of view. By applying advanced fluorescence microscopy methods, we monitored the formation of viral spike complexes in different cell types. Our data support a model for hantavirus assembly according to which viral spikes are formed via the clustering of hetero-dimers of the two viral glycoproteins Gn and Gc. Furthermore, the observation of large Gn-Gc hetero-multimers provide the possible first evidence for the initial assembly steps of the viral envelope, directly in the Golgi apparatus of living cells.
Metabolites influence flowering time, and thus are among the major determinants of yield. Despite the reported role of trehalose 6-phosphate and nitrate signaling on the transition from the vegetative to the reproductive phase, little is known about other metabolites contributing and responding to developmental phase changes. To increase our understanding which metabolic traits change throughout development in Arabidopsis thaliana and to identify metabolic markers for the vegetative and reproductive phases, especially among individual amino acids (AA), we profiled metabolites of plants grown in optimal (ON) and limited nitrogen (N) (LN) conditions, the latter providing a mild but consistent limitation of N. We found that although LN plants adapt their growth to a decreased level of N, their metabolite profiles are strongly distinct from ON plant profiles, with N as the driving factor for the observed differences. We demonstrate that the vegetative and the reproductive phase are not only marked by growth parameters such as biomass and rosette area, but also by specific metabolite signatures including specific single AA. In summary, we identified N-dependent and -independent indicators manifesting developmental stages, indicating that the plant's metabolic status also reports on the developmental phases.
The ubiquitous freshwater cyanobacterium Microcystis is remarkably successful, showing a high tolerance against fluctuations in environmental conditions. It frequently forms dense blooms which can accumulate significant amounts of the hepatotoxin microcystin, which plays an extracellular role as an infochemical but also acts intracellularly by interacting with proteins of the carbon metabolism, notably with the CO2 fixing enzyme RubisCO. Here we demonstrate a direct link between external microcystin and its intracellular targets. Monitoring liquid cultures of Microcystis in a diel experiment revealed fluctuations in the extracellular microcystin content that correlate with an increase in the binding of microcystin to intracellular proteins. Concomitantly, reversible relocation of RubisCO from the cytoplasm to the cell’s periphery was observed. These variations in RubisCO localization were especially pronounced with cultures grown at higher cell densities. We replicated these effects by adding microcystin externally to cultures grown under continuous light. Thus, we propose that microcystin may be part of a fast response to conditions of high light and low carbon that contribute to the metabolic flexibility and the success of Microcystis in the field.
The ubiquitous freshwater cyanobacterium Microcystis is remarkably successful, showing a high tolerance against fluctuations in environmental conditions. It frequently forms dense blooms which can accumulate significant amounts of the hepatotoxin microcystin, which plays an extracellular role as an infochemical but also acts intracellularly by interacting with proteins of the carbon metabolism, notably with the CO2 fixing enzyme RubisCO. Here we demonstrate a direct link between external microcystin and its intracellular targets. Monitoring liquid cultures of Microcystis in a diel experiment revealed fluctuations in the extracellular microcystin content that correlate with an increase in the binding of microcystin to intracellular proteins. Concomitantly, reversible relocation of RubisCO from the cytoplasm to the cell’s periphery was observed. These variations in RubisCO localization were especially pronounced with cultures grown at higher cell densities. We replicated these effects by adding microcystin externally to cultures grown under continuous light. Thus, we propose that microcystin may be part of a fast response to conditions of high light and low carbon that contribute to the metabolic flexibility and the success of Microcystis in the field.
Dissecting the tree of life
(2021)
There is a general consensus that diverse ecological communities are better equipped to adapt to changes in their environment, but our understanding of the mechanisms by which they do so remains incomplete. Accurately predicting how the global biodiversity crisis affects the functioning of ecosystems, and the services they provide, requires extensive knowledge about these mechanisms.
Mathematical models of food webs have been successful in uncovering many aspects of the link between diversity and ecosystem functioning in small food web modules, containing at most two adaptive trophic levels. Meaningful extrapolation of this understanding to the functioning of natural food webs remains difficult, due to the presence of complex interactions that are not always accurately captured by bitrophic descriptions of food webs. In this dissertation, we expand this approach to tritrophic food web models by including the third trophic level. Using a functional trait approach, coexistence of all species is ensured using fitness-balancing trade-offs. For example, the defense-growth trade-off implies that species may be defended against predation, but this defense comes at the cost of a lower maximal growth rate. In these food webs, the functional diversity on a given trophic level can be varied by modifying the trait differences between the species on that level.
In the first project, we find that functional diversity promotes high biomass on the top level, which, in turn, leads to a reduction in the temporal variability due to compensatory dynamical patterns governed by the top level. Next, these results are generalized by investigating the average behavior of tritrophic food webs, for wide intervals of all parameters describing species interactions in the food web. We find that the diversity on the top level is most important for determining the biomass and temporal variability of all other trophic levels, and show how biomass is only transferred efficiently to the top level when diversity is high everywhere in the food web. In the third project, we compare the response of a simple food chain against a nutrient pulse perturbation, to that of a food web with diversity on every trophic level. By joint consideration of the resistance, resilience, and elasticity, we uncover that the response is efficiently buffered when biomass on the top level is high, which is facilitated by functional diversity on every trophic level in the food web. Finally, in the fourth project, we show that even in a simple consumer-resource model without any diversity, top-down control on the intermediate level frequently causes the phase difference between the intermediate and basal level to deviate from the quarter-cycle lag rule. By adding a top predator, we show that these deviations become even more likely, and anti-phase cycles are often observed.
The combined results of these projects show how the properties of the top trophic level, including its functional diversity, have a decisive influence on the functioning of tritrophic food webs from a mechanistic perspective. Because top species are often among the most vulnerable to extinction, our results emphasize the importance of their conservation in ecosystem management and restoration strategies.
Elaeidobius kamerunicus Faust. (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) is an essential insect pollinator in oil palm plantations. Recently, researches have been undertaken to improve pollination efficiency using this species. A fundamental understanding of the genes related to this pollinator behavior is necessary to achieve this goal. Here, we present the draft genome sequence, annotation, and simple sequence repeat (SSR) marker data for this pollinator. In total, 34.97 Gb of sequence data from one male individual (monoisolate) were obtained using Illumina short-read platform NextSeq 500. The draft genome assembly was found to be 269.79 Mb and about 59.9% of completeness based on Benchmarking Universal Single-Copy Orthologs (BUSCO) assessment. Functional gene annotation predicted about 26.566 genes. Also, a total of 281.668 putative SSR markers were identified. This draft genome sequence is a valuable resource for understanding the population genetics, phylogenetics, dispersal patterns, and behavior of this species.
Plants are often challenged by an array of unfavorable environmental conditions. During cold exposure, many changes occur that include, for example, the stabilization of cell membranes, alterations in gene expression and enzyme activities, as well as the accumulation of metabolites. In the presented study, the carbohydrate metabolism was analyzed in the very early response of plants to a low temperature (2 degrees C) in the leaves of 5-week-old potato plants of the Russet Burbank cultivar during the first 12 h of cold treatment (2 h dark and 10 h light). First, some plant stress indicators were examined and it was shown that short-term cold exposure did not significantly affect the relative water content and chlorophyll content (only after 12 h), but caused an increase in malondialdehyde concentration and a decrease in the expression of NDA1, a homolog of the NADH dehydrogenase gene. In addition, it was shown that the content of transitory starch increased transiently in the very early phase of the plant response (3-6 h) to cold treatment, and then its decrease was observed after 12 h. In contrast, soluble sugars such as glucose and fructose were significantly increased only at the end of the light period, where a decrease in sucrose content was observed. The availability of the monosaccharides at constitutively high levels, regardless of the temperature, may delay the response to cold, involving amylolytic starch degradation in chloroplasts. The decrease in starch content, observed in leaves after 12 h of cold exposure, was preceded by a dramatic increase in the transcript levels of the key enzymes of starch degradation initiation, the alpha-glucan, water dikinase (GWD-EC 2.7.9.4) and the phosphoglucan, water dikinase (PWD-EC 2.7.9.5). The gene expression of both dikinases peaked at 9 h of cold exposure, as analyzed by real-time PCR. Moreover, enhanced activities of the acid invertase as well as of both glucan phosphorylases during exposure to a chilling temperature were observed. However, it was also noticed that during the light phase, there was a general increase in glucan phosphorylase activities for both control and cold-stressed plants irrespective of the temperature. In conclusion, a short-term cold treatment alters the carbohydrate metabolism in the leaves of potato, which leads to an increase in the content of soluble sugars.
Identification of protein complexes from protein-protein interaction (PPI) networks is a key problem in PPI mining, solved by parameter-dependent approaches that suffer from small recall rates. Here we introduce GCC-v, a family of efficient, parameter-free algorithms to accurately predict protein complexes using the (weighted) clustering coefficient of proteins in PPI networks. Through comparative analyses with gold standards and PPI networks from Escherichia coli, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and Homo sapiens, we demonstrate that GCC-v outperforms twelve state-of-the-art approaches for identification of protein complexes with respect to twelve performance measures in at least 85.71% of scenarios. We also show that GCC-v results in the exact recovery of similar to 35% of protein complexes in a pan-plant PPI network and discover 144 new protein complexes in Arabidopsis thaliana, with high support from GO semantic similarity. Our results indicate that findings from GCC-v are robust to network perturbations, which has direct implications to assess the impact of the PPI network quality on the predicted protein complexes. (C) 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of Research Network of Computational and Structural Biotechnology.
An amperometric trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) biosensor is reported, where TMAO reductase (TorA) and glucose oxidase (GOD) and catalase (Cat) were immobilized on the electrode surface, enabling measurements of mediated enzymatic TMAO reduction at low potential under ambient air conditions. The oxygen anti-interference membrane composed of GOD, Cat and polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) hydrogel, together with glucose concentration, was optimized until the O-2 reduction current of a Clark-type electrode was completely suppressed for at least 3 h. For the preparation of the TMAO biosensor, Escherichia coli TorA was purified under anaerobic conditions and immobilized on the surface of a carbon electrode and covered by the optimized O-2 scavenging membrane. The TMAO sensor operates at a potential of -0.8 V vs. Ag/AgCl (1 M KCl), where the reduction of methylviologen (MV) is recorded. The sensor signal depends linearly on TMAO concentrations between 2 mu M and 15 mM, with a sensitivity of 2.75 +/- 1.7 mu A/mM. The developed biosensor is characterized by a response time of about 33 s and an operational stability over 3 weeks. Furthermore, measurements of TMAO concentration were performed in 10% human serum, where the lowest detectable concentration is of 10 mu M TMAO.
Elucidating the molecular basis of enhanced growth in the Arabidopsis thaliana accession Bur-0
(2021)
The life cycle of flowering plants is a dynamic process that involves successful passing through several developmental phases and tremendous progress has been made to reveal cellular and molecular regulatory mechanisms underlying these phases, morphogenesis, and growth. Although several key regulators of plant growth or developmental phase transitions have been identified in Arabidopsis, little is known about factors that become active during embryogenesis, seed development and also during further postembryonic growth. Much less is known about accession-specific factors that determine plant architecture and organ size. Bur-0 has been reported as a natural Arabidopsis thaliana accession with exceptionally big seeds and a large rosette; its phenotype makes it an interesting candidate to study growth and developmental aspects in plants, however, the molecular basis underlying this big phenotype remains to be elucidated. Thus, the general aim of this PhD project was to investigate and unravel the molecular mechanisms underlying the big phenotype in Bur-0.
Several natural Arabidopsis accessions and late flowering mutant lines were analysed in this study, including Bur-0. Phenotypes were characterized by determining rosette size, seed size, flowering time, SAM size and growth in different photoperiods, during embryonic and postembryonic development. Our results demonstrate that Bur-0 stands out as an interesting accession with simultaneously larger rosettes, larger SAM, later flowering phenotype and larger seeds, but also larger embryos. Interestingly, inter-accession crosses (F1) resulted in bigger seeds than the parental self-crossed accessions, particularly when Bur-0 was used as the female parental genotype, suggesting parental effects on seed size that might be maternally controlled. Furthermore, developmental stage-based comparisons revealed that the large embryo size of Bur-0 is achieved during late embryogenesis and the large rosette size is achieved during late postembryonic growth. Interestingly, developmental phase progression analyses revealed that from germination onwards, the length of developmental phases during postembryonic growth is delayed in Bur-0, suggesting that in general, the mechanisms that regulate developmental phase progression are shared across developmental phases.
On the other hand, a detailed physiological characterization in different tissues at different developmental stages revealed accession-specific physiological and metabolic traits that underlie accession-specific phenotypes and in particular, more carbon resources during embryonic and postembryonic development were found in Bur-0, suggesting an important role of carbohydrates in determination of the bigger Bur-0 phenotype. Additionally, differences in the cellular organization, nuclei DNA content, as well as ploidy level were analyzed in different tissues/cell types and we found that the large organ size in Bur-0 can be mainly attributed to its larger cells and also to higher cell proliferation in the SAM, but not to a different ploidy level.
Furthermore, RNA-seq analysis of embryos at torpedo and mature stage, as well as SAMs at vegetative and floral transition stage from Bur-0 and Col-0 was conducted to identify accession-specific genetic determinants of plant phenotypes, shared across tissues and developmental stages during embryonic and postembryonic growth. Potential candidate genes were identified and further validation of transcriptome data by expression analyses of candidate genes as well as known key regulators of organ size and growth during embryonic and postembryonic development confirmed that the high confidence transcriptome datasets generated in this study are reliable for elucidation of molecular mechanisms regulating plant growth and accession-specific phenotypes in Arabidopsis.
Taken together, this PhD project contributes to the plant development research field providing a detailed analysis of mechanisms underlying plant growth and development at different levels of biological organization, focusing on Arabidopsis accessions with remarkable phenotypical differences. For this, the natural accession Bur-0 was an ideal outlier candidate and different mechanisms at organ and tissue level, cell level, metabolism, transcript and gene expression level were identified, providing a better understanding of different factors involved in plant growth regulation and mechanisms underlying different growth patterns in nature.
As sessile organisms, plants have evolved sophisticated ways to constantly gauge and adapt to changing environmental conditions including extremes that may be harmful to their growth and development and are thus perceived as stress. In nature, stressful events are often chronic or recurring and thus an initial stress may prime a plant to respond more efficiently to a subsequent stress event. An epigenetic basis of such stress memory was long postulated and in recent years it has been shown that this is indeed the case. High temperature stress has proven an excellent system to unpick the molecular basis of somatic stress memory, which includes histone modifications and nucleosome occupancy. This review discusses recent findings and pinpoints open questions in the field.
Background
Over the last 20 years, a decreasing trend in external skeletal robusticity and an increasing trend in overweight and obesity was observed worldwide in adults and children as modern lifestyles in nutritional and activity behavior have changed. However, body mass index (BMI) as a measure for overweight is not an ideal predictor of % body fat (%BF) either in children and adolescents or in adults. On the contrary, it disguises a phenomenon called “hidden obesity”.
Objectives
We aim to approximate %BF by combining skeletal robusticity and BMI and develop an estimation-based tool to identify normal weight obese children and adolescents.
Sample and Methods
We analyzed cross-sectional data on height, weight, elbow breadth, and skinfold thickness (triceps and subscapular) of German children aged 6 to 18 years (N=15,034). We used modified Hattori charts and multiple linear regression to develop a tool, the “%BF estimator”, to estimate %BF by using BMI and skeletal robusticity measured as Frame Index.
Results
Independent of sex and age an increase in BMI is associated with an increase in %BF, an increase in Frame Index is associated with a decrease in %BF. The developed tool “%BF estimator” allows the estimation of %BF per sex and age group after calculation of BMI and Frame Index.
Conclusion
The “%BF estimator” is an easily applicable tool for the estimation of %BF in respect of body composition for clinical practice, screening, and public health research. It is non-invasive and has high accuracy. Further, it allows the identification of normal weight obese children and adolescents.
Monoklonale Antikörper sind essenzielle Werkzeuge in der modernen Laboranalytik sowie in der medizinischen Therapie und Diagnostik. Die Herstellung monoklonaler Antikörper ist ein zeit- und arbeitsintensiver Prozess. Herkömmliche Methoden beruhen auf der Immunisierung von Labortieren, die mitunter mehrere Monate in Anspruch nimmt. Anschließend werden die Antikörper-produzierenden B-Lymphozyten bzw. deren Antikörpergene isoliert und in Screening-Verfahren untersucht, um geeignete Binder zu identifizieren.
Der Transfer der humoralen Immunantwort in eine in vitro Umgebung erlaubt eine Verkürzung des Prozesses und umgeht die Notwendigkeit der in vivo Immunisierung. Das komplexe Zusammenspiel aller involvierten Immunzellen in vitro abzubilden, stellt sich allerdings als schwierig dar. Der Schwerpunkt dieser Arbeit war deshalb die Realisierung einer vereinfachten In vitro Immunisierung, die sich auf die Protagonisten der Antikörper-Produktion konzentriert: die B-Lymphozyten. Darüber hinaus sollte eine permanente Zelllinie etabliert werden, die zur Antikörper-Herstellung eingesetzt werden und die Verwendung von Primärzellen ersetzen würde.
Im ersten Teil der Arbeit wurde ein Protokoll zur In vitro Immunisierung muriner BLymphozyten etabliert. In Vorversuchen wurden die optimalen Konditionen für die Antigenspezifische Aktivierung gereinigter Milz-B-Lymphozyten aus nicht-immunisierten Mäusen
determiniert. Dazu wurde der Einfluss verschiedener Stimuli auf die Produktion unspezifischer und spezifischer Antikörper untersucht. Eine Kombination aus dem Modellantigen VP1 (Hamster Polyomavirus Hüllprotein 1), einem Anti-CD40-Antikörper, Interleukin 4 (IL 4) und Lipopolysaccharid (LPS) oder IL 7 induzierte nachweislich eine Antigen-spezifische Antikörper-Antwort in vitro. Als Indikatoren einer erfolgreichen Aktivierung der B-Lymphozyten infolge der in vitro Stimulation wurden die rapide Proliferation und die Expression charakteristischer Aktivierungsmarker auf der Zelloberfläche nachgewiesen. In einer Zeitreihe über zehn Tage wurde am zehnten Tag der In vitro Immunisierung die verhältnismäßig höchste Konzentration Antigen-spezifischer IgG-Antikörper im Kulturüberstand der stimulierten Zellen nachgewiesen.
Als nächster Schritt sollte eine permanente Zelllinie hergestellt werden, die statt primärer BLymphozyten für die zuvor etablierte In vitro Immunisierung eingesetzt werden könnte. Zu diesem Zweck wurden retrovirale Vektoren hergestellt, die durch den Transfer verschiedener Onkogene in murine B-Lymphozyten bzw. deren Vorläuferzellen das Proliferationsverhalten der Zellen manipulieren sollen. Es wurden Retroviren mit Doxycyclin-induzierbaren Expressionskassetten mit den Onkogenen cmyc, Bcl2, BclxL und dem Fusionsgen NUP98HOXB4 generiert. Eine Testzelllinie wurde erfolgreich mit den hergestellten Retroviren transduziert und die Funktionalität der hergestellten Viren anhand verschiedener Assays belegt. Die transferierten Gene konnten in der Testzelllinie auf DNAEbene nachgewiesen oder die Überexpression der entsprechenden Proteine im Western Blot detektiert werden. Es wurden schließlich B-Lymphozyten bzw. unreife Vorläuferzellen derselben mit den generierten Retroviren transduziert und mit Knochenmark-ähnlichen Stromazellen co-kultiviert. Aus keinem der transduzierten Ansätze konnte bisher eine Zelllinie oder eine Langzeit-Kultur etabliert werden.
Im letzten Teil der Arbeit wurde die Effektivität und Übertragbarkeit des zuvor etablierten Protokolls zur In vitro Immunisierung muriner B-Lymphozyten anhand verschiedener Antigene gezeigt. Es konnten in vitro spezifische IgG-Antworten gegen VP1, Legionella pneumophila und das Protein Mip, von dem ein Peptid in das zur Immunisierung eingesetzte VP1 integriert wurde, induziert werden. Die stimulierten B-Lymphozyten wurden durch Fusion mit Myelomzellen in permanente Antikörper-produzierende Zelllinien transformiert.
Dabei konnten mehrere Hybridomzelllinien generiert werden, die spezifische IgGAntikörper gegen VP1 oder Mip produzieren. Die generierten Antikörper konnten sowohl im Western Blot als auch im ELISA (Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay) das entsprechende Antigen spezifisch binden.
Die hier etablierte In vitro Immunisierung bietet eine effektive Alternative zu bisherigen Verfahren zur Herstellung spezifischer Antikörper. Sie ersetzt die Immunisierung von Versuchstieren und reduziert den Zeitaufwand erheblich. In Kombination mit der Hybridomtechnologie können die in vitro immunisierten Zellen, wie hier demonstriert, zur Generation von Hybridomzelllinien und zur Herstellung monoklonaler Antikörper genutzt werden. Um die Verwendung von Versuchstieren in dieser Methode durch eine adäquate permanente Zelllinie zu ersetzen, muss die genetische Veränderung von B-Lymphozyten und unreifen hämatopoetischen Zellen optimiert werden. Die Ergebnisse bieten eine Basis für eine universelle, Spezies-unabhängige Methodik zur Antikörperherstellung und für die
Etablierung einer idealen, tierfreien In vitro Immunisierung.
Since the beginning of the Anthropocene, lacustrine biodiversity has been influenced by climate change and human activities. These factors advance the spread of harmful cyanobacteria in lakes around the world, which affects water quality and impairs the aquatic food chain. In this study, we assessed changes in cyanobacterial community dynamics via sedimentary DNA (sedaDNA) from well-dated lake sediments of Lake Tiefer See, which is part of the Klocksin Lake Chain spanning the last 350 years. Our diversity and community analysis revealed that cyanobacterial communities form clusters according to the presence or absence of varves. Based on distance-based redundancy and variation partitioning analyses (dbRDA and VPA) we identified that intensified lake circulation inferred from vegetation openness reconstructions, delta C-13 data (a proxy for varve preservation) and total nitrogen content were abiotic factors that significantly explained the variation in the reconstructed cyanobacterial community from Lake Tiefer See sediments. Operational taxonomic units (OTUs) assigned to Microcystis sp. and Aphanizomenon sp. were identified as potential eutrophication-driven taxa of growing importance since circa common era (ca. CE) 1920 till present. This result is corroborated by a cyanobacteria lipid biomarker analysis. Furthermore, we suggest that stronger lake circulation as indicated by non-varved sediments favoured the deposition of the non-photosynthetic cyanobacteria sister clade Sericytochromatia, whereas lake bottom anoxia as indicated by subrecent- and recent varves favoured the Melainabacteria in sediments. Our findings highlight the potential of high-resolution amplicon sequencing in investigating the dynamics of past cyanobacterial communities in lake sediments and show that lake circulation, anoxic conditions, and human-induced eutrophication are main factors explaining variations in the cyanobacteria community in Lake Tiefer See during the last 350 years.
The two important mechanisms influencing the response of phytoplankton communities to alterations of abiotic factors in their environment are difficult to distinguish: species sorting resulting from a change in interspecific competitive pressure, and phenotypic plasticity (here explicitly physiological plasticity i.e. species-specific physiological adjustment). A shift in species composition as well as physiological adjustments in species can lead to changes in fatty acid composition that determine the food quality for zooplankton consumers. We used phytoplankton communities consisting of five species and exposed them to two different light intensities, two light conditions (constant and variable), and two levels of phosphorus supply. Changes in fatty acid and species composition were analyzed. We compared community pairs differing in one factor by calculating the Bray-Curtis similarity index for the composition of both variables. Comparing the Bray-Curtis similarity index of the species composition with the index of the fatty acid composition was used to estimate the effects of species sorting and physiological plasticity. Changes in nutrient supply influenced fatty acid responses based on species sorting and physiological plasticity the most. On one hand, the relevance of physiological plasticity was highest at cultivation in different nutrient supplies but the same light environment. Conversely with low nutrients species sorting appeared to dominate the response to changes in light, while at high nutrients physiological plasticity appeared to influence the response. Overall, under low phosphorus supply the communities showed a lower total fatty acid content per carbon and had increased proportions of saturated and monounsaturated fatty acids. Instead, communities in low light produced more of eicosapentaenoic acid. Our results suggest that the relevance of species sorting and physiological plasticity in shaping the community response highly depends on the environmental factors that influence the system. Nutrient supply had the largest effect, while light had more limited conditional effects. However, all of these factors are important in shaping the food quality of the phytoplankton community for higher trophic levels.
Due to global climate change providing food security for an increasing world population is a big challenge. Especially abiotic stressors have a strong negative effect on crop yield. To develop climate-adapted crops a comprehensive understanding of molecular alterations in the response of varying levels of environmental stresses is required. High throughput or ‘omics’ technologies can help to identify key-regulators and pathways of abiotic stress responses. In addition to obtain omics data also tools and statistical analyses need to be designed and evaluated to get reliable biological results.
To address these issues, I have conducted three different studies covering two omics technologies. In the first study, I used transcriptomic data from the two polymorphic Arabidopsis thaliana accessions, namely Col-0 and N14, to evaluate seven computational tools for their ability to map and quantify Illumina single-end reads. Between 92% and 99% of the reads were mapped against the reference sequence. The raw count distributions obtained from the different tools were highly correlated. Performing a differential gene expression analysis between plants exposed to 20 °C or 4°C (cold acclimation), a large pairwise overlap between the mappers was obtained. In the second study, I obtained transcript data from ten different Oryza sativa (rice) cultivars by PacBio Isoform sequencing that can capture full-length transcripts. De novo reference transcriptomes were reconstructed resulting in 38,900 to 54,500 high-quality isoforms per cultivar. Isoforms were collapsed to reduce sequence redundancy and evaluated, e.g. for protein completeness level (BUSCO), transcript length, and number of unique transcripts per gene loci. For the heat and drought tolerant aus cultivar N22, I identified around 650 unique and novel transcripts of which 56 were significantly differentially expressed in developing seeds during combined drought and heat stress. In the last study, I measured and analyzed the changes in metabolite profiles of eight rice cultivars exposed to high night temperature (HNT) stress and grown during the dry and wet season on the field in the Philippines. Season-specific changes in metabolite levels, as well as for agronomic parameters, were identified and metabolic pathways causing a yield decline at HNT conditions suggested.
In conclusion, the comparison of mapper performances can help plant scientists to decide on the right tool for their data. The de novo reconstruction of rice cultivars without a genome sequence provides a targeted, cost-efficient approach to identify novel genes responding to stress conditions for any organism. With the metabolomics approach for HNT stress in rice, I identified stress and season-specific metabolites which might be used as molecular markers for crop improvement in the future.
Evidence of female preference for odor of distant over local males in a bat with female dispersal
(2021)
Geographic variation of sexually selected male traits is common in animals. Female choice also varies geographically and several studies found female preference for local males, which is assumed to lead to local adaptation and, therefore, increases fitness. As females are the nondispersing sex in most mammalian taxa, this preference for local males might be explained by the learning of male characteristics. Studies on the preference of females in female-dispersing species are lacking so far. To find out whether such females would also show preferences for local males, we conducted a study on greater sac-winged bats (Saccopteryx bilineata), a species where females disperse and males stay in their natal colony. Male greater sac-winged bats possess a wing pouch that is filled with odoriferous secretion and fanned toward females during courtship display. In a combination of chemical analysis and behavioral preference tests, we analyzed whether the composition of wing sac secretion varies between two geographically distinct populations (300 km), and whether females show a preference for local or distant male scent. Using gas chromatography, we found significant differences in the composition of the wing sac odors between the two geographically distinct populations. In addition, the behavioral preference experiments revealed that females of both populations preferred the scent of geographically distant males over local males. The wing sac odor might thus be used to guarantee optimal outbreeding when dispersing to a new colony. This is-to our knowledge-the first study on odor preference of females of a species with female-biased dispersal.
In C3 plants, CO2 diffuses into the leaf and is assimilated by the Calvin-Benson cycle in the mesophyll cells. It leaves Rubisco open to its side reaction with O2, resulting in a wasteful cycle known as photorespiration. A sharp fall in atmospheric CO2 levels about 30 million years ago have further increased the side reaction with O2. The pressure to reduce photorespiration led, in over 60 plant genera, to the evolution of a CO2-concentrating mechanism called C4 photosynthesis; in this mode, CO2 is initially incorporated into 4-carbon organic acids, which diffuse to the bundle sheath and are decarboxylated to provide CO2 to Rubisco. Some genera, like Flaveria, contain several species that represent different steps in this complex evolutionary process. However, the majority of terrestrial plant species did not evolve a CO2-concentrating mechanism and perform C3 photosynthesis.
This thesis compares photosynthetic metabolism in several species with C3, C4 and intermediate modes of photosynthesis. Metabolite profiling and stable isotope labelling were performed to detect inter-specific differences changes in metabolite profile and, hence, how a pathway operates. The results obtained were subjected to integrative data analyses like hierarchical clustering and principal component analysis, and were deepened by correlation analyses to uncover specific metabolic features and reaction steps that were conserved or differed between species.
The main findings are that Calvin-Benson cycle metabolite profiles differ between C3 and C4 species and between different C3 species, including a very different response to rising irradiance in Arabidopsis and rice. These findings confirm Calvin-Benson cycle operation diverged between C3 and C4 species and, most unexpectedly, even between different C3 species. Moreover, primary metabolic profiles supported the current C4 evolutionary model in the genus Flaveria and also provided new insights and opened up new questions. Metabolite profiles also point toward a progressive adjustment of the Calvin-Benson cycle during the evolution of C4 photosynthesis. Overall, this thesis point out the importance of a metabolite-centric approach to uncover underlying differences in species apparently sharing the same photosynthetic routes and as a valid method to investigate evolutionary transition between C3 and C4 photosynthesis.
Social organisation in species with fluctuating population sizes can change with density. Therefore, information on (future) density obtained during early life stages may be associated with social behaviour. Olfactory cues may carry important social information. We investigated whether early life experience of different experimental densities was subsequently associated with differences in attraction to adult conspecific odours. We used common voles (Microtus arvalis), a rodent species undergoing extreme density fluctuations. We found that individuals originating from high experimental density populations kept in large outdoor enclosures invested more time in inspecting conspecific olfactory cues than individuals from low-density populations. Generally, voles from both treatments spent more time with the olfactory cues than expected by chance and did not differ in their latency to approach the odour samples. Our findings indicate either that early experience affects odour sensitivity or that animals evaluate the social information contained in conspecific odours differently, depending on their early life experience of conspecific density.
Eastern Africa has been a prime target for scientific drilling because it is rich in key paleoanthropological sites as well as in paleolakes, containing valuable paleoclimatic information on evolutionary time scales. The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project (HSPDP) explores these paleolakes with the aim of reconstructing environmental conditions around critical episodes of hominin evolution. Identification of biological taxa based on their sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA) traces can contribute to understand past ecological and climatological conditions of the living environment of our ancestors. However, sedaDNA recovery from tropical environments is challenging because high temperatures, UV irradiation, and desiccation result in highly degraded DNA. Consequently, most of the DNA fragments in tropical sediments are too short for PCR amplification. We analyzed sedaDNA in the upper 70 m of the composite sediment core of the HSPDP drill site at Chew Bahir for eukaryotic remnants. We first tested shotgun high throughput sequencing which leads to metagenomes dominated by bacterial DNA of the deep biosphere, while only a small fraction was derived from eukaryotic, and thus probably ancient, DNA. Subsequently, we performed cross-species hybridization capture of sedaDNA to enrich ancient DNA (aDNA) from eukaryotic remnants for paleoenvironmental analysis, using established barcoding genes (cox1 and rbcL for animals and plants, respectively) from 199 species that may have had relatives in the past biosphere at Chew Bahir. Metagenomes yielded after hybridization capture are richer in reads with similarity to cox1 and rbcL in comparison to metagenomes without prior hybridization capture. Taxonomic assignments of the reads from these hybridization capture metagenomes also yielded larger fractions of the eukaryotic domain. For reads assigned to cox1, inferred wet periods were associated with high inferred relative abundances of putative limnic organisms (gastropods, green algae), while inferred dry periods showed increased relative abundances for insects. These findings indicate that cross-species hybridization capture can be an effective approach to enhance the information content of sedaDNA in order to explore biosphere changes associated with past environmental conditions, enabling such analyses even under tropical conditions.
Eastern Africa has been a prime target for scientific drilling because it is rich in key paleoanthropological sites as well as in paleolakes, containing valuable paleoclimatic information on evolutionary time scales. The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project (HSPDP) explores these paleolakes with the aim of reconstructing environmental conditions around critical episodes of hominin evolution. Identification of biological taxa based on their sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA) traces can contribute to understand past ecological and climatological conditions of the living environment of our ancestors. However, sedaDNA recovery from tropical environments is challenging because high temperatures, UV irradiation, and desiccation result in highly degraded DNA. Consequently, most of the DNA fragments in tropical sediments are too short for PCR amplification. We analyzed sedaDNA in the upper 70 m of the composite sediment core of the HSPDP drill site at Chew Bahir for eukaryotic remnants. We first tested shotgun high throughput sequencing which leads to metagenomes dominated by bacterial DNA of the deep biosphere, while only a small fraction was derived from eukaryotic, and thus probably ancient, DNA. Subsequently, we performed cross-species hybridization capture of sedaDNA to enrich ancient DNA (aDNA) from eukaryotic remnants for paleoenvironmental analysis, using established barcoding genes (cox1 and rbcL for animals and plants, respectively) from 199 species that may have had relatives in the past biosphere at Chew Bahir. Metagenomes yielded after hybridization capture are richer in reads with similarity to cox1 and rbcL in comparison to metagenomes without prior hybridization capture. Taxonomic assignments of the reads from these hybridization capture metagenomes also yielded larger fractions of the eukaryotic domain. For reads assigned to cox1, inferred wet periods were associated with high inferred relative abundances of putative limnic organisms (gastropods, green algae), while inferred dry periods showed increased relative abundances for insects. These findings indicate that cross-species hybridization capture can be an effective approach to enhance the information content of sedaDNA in order to explore biosphere changes associated with past environmental conditions, enabling such analyses even under tropical conditions.
Fatty acids are widely used to study trophic interactions in food web assemblages. Generally, it is assumed that there is a very small modification of fatty acids from one trophic step to another, making them suitable as trophic biomarkers. However, recent literature provides evidence that many fishes possess genes encoding enzymes with a role in bioconversion, thus the capability for bioconversion might be more widespread than previously assumed. Nonetheless, empirical evidence for biosynthesis occurring in natural populations remains scarce. In this study, we investigated different feeding types of perch (Perca fluviatilis) that are specialized on specific resources with different levels of highly unsaturated fatty acids (HUFAs), and analyzed the change between HUFA proportions in perch muscle tissue compared to their resources. Perch showed matching levels to their resources for EPA, but ARA and especially DHA were accumulated. Compound-specific stable isotope analyses helped us to identify the origin of HUFA carbon. Our results suggest that perch obtain a substantial amount of DHA via bioconversion when feeding on DHA-poor benthic resources. Thus, our data indicate the capability of bioconversion of HUFAs in a natural freshwater fish population.
Floral volatiles and reward traits are major drivers for the behavior of mutualistic as well as antagonistic flower visitors, i.e., pollinators and florivores. These floral traits differ tremendously between species, but intraspecific differences and their consequences on organism interactions remain largely unknown. Floral volatile compounds, such as terpenoids, function as cues to advertise rewards to pollinators, but should at the same time also repel florivores. The reward composition, e.g., protein and lipid contents in pollen, differs between individuals of distinct plant families. Whether the nutritional value of rewards within the same plant species is linked to their chemotypes, which differ in their pattern of specialized metabolites, has yet not been investigated. In the present study, we compared Tanacetum vulgare plants of five terpenoid chemotypes with regard to flower production, floral headspace volatiles, pollen macronutrient and terpenoid content, and floral attractiveness to florivorous beetles. Our analyses revealed remarkable differences between the chemotypes in the amount and diameter of flower heads, duration of bloom period, and pollen nutritional quality. The floral headspace composition of pollen-producing mature flowers, but not of premature flowers, was correlated to that of pollen and leaves in the same plant individual. For two chemotypes, florivorous beetles discriminated between the scent of mature and premature flower heads and preferred the latter. In semi-field experiments, the abundance of florivorous beetles and flower tissue miners differed between T. vulgare chemotypes. Moreover, the scent environment affected the choice and beetles were more abundant in homogenous plots composed of one single chemotype than in plots with different neighboring chemotypes. In conclusion, flower production, floral metabolic composition and pollen quality varied to a remarkable extend within the species T. vulgare, and the attractiveness of floral scent differed also intra-individually with floral ontogeny. We found evidence for a trade-off between pollen lipid content and pollen amount on a per-plant-level. Our study highlights that chemotypes which are more susceptible to florivory are less attacked when they grow in the neighborhood of other chemotypes and thus gain a benefit from high overall chemodiversity.
Biodiversity decline causes a loss of functional diversity, which threatens ecosystems through a dangerous feedback loop: This loss may hamper ecosystems’ ability to buffer environmental changes, leading to further biodiversity losses. In this context, the increasing frequency of human-induced excessive loading of nutrients causes major problems in aquatic systems. Previous studies investigating how functional diversity influences the response of food webs to disturbances have mainly considered systems with at most two functionally diverse trophic levels. We investigated the effects of functional diversity on the robustness, that is, resistance, resilience, and elasticity, using a tritrophic—and thus more realistic—plankton food web model. We compared a non-adaptive food chain with no diversity within the individual trophic levels to a more diverse food web with three adaptive trophic levels. The species fitness differences were balanced through trade-offs between defense/growth rate for prey and selectivity/half-saturation constant for predators. We showed that the resistance, resilience, and elasticity of tritrophic food webs decreased with larger perturbation sizes and depended on the state of the system when the perturbation occurred. Importantly, we found that a more diverse food web was generally more resistant and resilient but its elasticity was context-dependent. Particularly, functional diversity reduced the probability of a regime shift toward a non-desirable alternative state. The basal-intermediate interaction consistently determined the robustness against a nutrient pulse despite the complex influence of the shape and type of the dynamical attractors. This relationship was strongly influenced by the diversity present and the third trophic level. Overall, using a food web model of realistic complexity, this study confirms the destructive potential of the positive feedback loop between biodiversity loss and robustness, by uncovering mechanisms leading to a decrease in resistance, resilience, and potentially elasticity as functional diversity declines.
Biodiversity decline causes a loss of functional diversity, which threatens ecosystems through a dangerous feedback loop: This loss may hamper ecosystems’ ability to buffer environmental changes, leading to further biodiversity losses. In this context, the increasing frequency of human-induced excessive loading of nutrients causes major problems in aquatic systems. Previous studies investigating how functional diversity influences the response of food webs to disturbances have mainly considered systems with at most two functionally diverse trophic levels. We investigated the effects of functional diversity on the robustness, that is, resistance, resilience, and elasticity, using a tritrophic—and thus more realistic—plankton food web model. We compared a non-adaptive food chain with no diversity within the individual trophic levels to a more diverse food web with three adaptive trophic levels. The species fitness differences were balanced through trade-offs between defense/growth rate for prey and selectivity/half-saturation constant for predators. We showed that the resistance, resilience, and elasticity of tritrophic food webs decreased with larger perturbation sizes and depended on the state of the system when the perturbation occurred. Importantly, we found that a more diverse food web was generally more resistant and resilient but its elasticity was context-dependent. Particularly, functional diversity reduced the probability of a regime shift toward a non-desirable alternative state. The basal-intermediate interaction consistently determined the robustness against a nutrient pulse despite the complex influence of the shape and type of the dynamical attractors. This relationship was strongly influenced by the diversity present and the third trophic level. Overall, using a food web model of realistic complexity, this study confirms the destructive potential of the positive feedback loop between biodiversity loss and robustness, by uncovering mechanisms leading to a decrease in resistance, resilience, and potentially elasticity as functional diversity declines.
Angepasste Pathogene besitzen eine Reihe von Virulenzmechanismen, um pflanzliche Immunantworten unterhalb eines Schwellenwerts der effektiven Resistenz zu unterdrücken. Dadurch sind sie in der Lage sich zu vermehren und Krankheiten auf einem bestimmten Wirt zu verursachen. Eine essentielle Virulenzstrategie Gram-negativer Bakterien ist die Translokation von sogenannten Typ-III Effektorproteinen (T3Es) direkt in die Wirtszelle. Dort stören diese die Immunantwort des Wirts oder fördern die Etablierung einer für das Pathogen günstigen Umgebung. Eine kritische Komponente der Pflanzenimmunität gegen eindringende Pathogene ist die schnelle transkriptionelle Umprogrammierung der angegriffenen Zelle. Viele adaptierte bakterielle Pflanzenpathogene verwenden T3Es, um die Induktion Abwehr-assoziierter Gene zu stören. Die Aufklärung von Effektor-Funktionen, sowie die Identifikation ihrer pflanzlichen Zielproteine sind für das Verständnis der bakteriellen Pathogenese essentiell. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit sollte das Typ-III Effektorprotein XopS aus Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria (Xcv) funktionell charakterisiert werden. Zudem lag hier ein besonderer Fokus auf der Untersuchung der Wechselwirkung zwischen XopS und seinem in Vorarbeiten identifizierten pflanzlichen Interaktionspartner WRKY40, einem transkriptionellen Regulator der Abwehr-assoziierten Genexpression. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass XopS ein essentieller Virulenzfaktor des Phytopathogens Xcv während der präinvasiven Immunantwort ist. So zeigten xopS-defiziente Xcv Bakterien bei einer Inokulation der Blattoberfläche suszeptibler Paprika Pflanzen eine deutlich reduzierte Virulenz im Vergleich zum Xcv Wildtyp. Die Translokation von XopS durch Xcv, sowie die ektopische Expression von XopS in Arabidopsis oder N. benthamiana verhinderte das Schließen von Stomata als Reaktion auf Bakterien bzw. einem Pathogen-assoziierten Stimulus, wobei zudem gezeigt werden konnte, dass dies in einer WRKY40-abhängigen Weise geschieht. Weiter konnte gezeigt werden, dass XopS in der Lage ist, die Expression Abwehr-assoziierter Gene zu manipulieren. Dies deutet darauf hin, dass XopS sowohl in die prä-als auch in die postinvasive, apoplastische Abwehr eingreift. Phytohormon-Signalnetzwerke spielen während des Aufbaus einer effizienten pflanzlichen Immunantwort eine wichtige Rolle. Hier konnte gezeigt werden, dass XopS mit genau diesen Signalnetzwerken zu interferieren scheint. Eine ektopische Expression des Effektors in Arabidopsis führte beispielsweise zu einer signifikanten Induktion des Phytohormons Jasmonsäure (JA), während eine Infektion von suszeptiblen Paprika Pflanzen mit einem xopS-defizienten Xcv Stamm zu einer ebenfalls signifikanten Akkumulation des Salicylsäure (SA)-Gehalts führte.
So kann zu diesem Zeitpunkt vermutet werden, dass XopS die Virulenz von Xcv fördert, indem JA-abhängige Signalwege induziert werden und es gleichzeitig zur Unterdrückung SA-abhängiger Signalwege kommt. Die Virus-induzierte Genstilllegung des XopS Interaktionspartners WRKY40a in Paprika erhöhte die Toleranz der Pflanze gegenüber einer Xcv Infektion, was darauf hindeutet, dass es sich bei diesem Protein um einen transkriptionellen Repressor pflanzlicher Immunantworten handelt. Die Hypothese, dass WRKY40 die Abwehr-assoziierte Genexpression reprimiert, konnte hier über verschiedene experimentelle Ansätze bekräftigt werden. So wurde beispielsweise gezeigt, dass die Expression von verschiedenen Abwehrgenen einschließlich des SA-abhängigen Gens PR1 und die des Negativregulators des JA-Signalwegs JAZ8 von WRKY40 gehemmt wird. Um bei einem Pathogenangriff die Abwehr-assoziierte Genexpression zu gewährleisten, muss WRKY40 als Negativregulator abgebaut werden. Vorarbeiten zeigten, dass WRKY40 über das 26S Proteasom abgebaut wird. In der hier vorliegenden Studie konnte weiter bestätigt, dass der T3E XopS zu einer Stabilisierung des WRKY40 Proteins führt, indem er auf bislang ungeklärte Weise dessen Abbau über das 26S Proteasom verhindert. Die Ergebnisse aus der hier vorliegenden Arbeit lassen die Vermutung zu, dass die Stabilisierung des Negativregulators der Immunantwort WRKY40 seitens XopS dazu führt, dass eine darüber vermittelte Manipulation der Abwehr-assoziierten Genexpression, sowie eine Umsteuerung phytohormoneller Wechselwirkungen die Ausbreitung von Xcv auf suszeptiblen Paprikapflanzen fördert. Ein weiteres Ziel dieser Arbeit war es, weitere potentielle in planta Interaktionspartner von XopS zu identifizieren die für seine Interaktion mit WRKY40 bzw. für die Aufschlüsselung seines Wirkmechanismus relevant sein könnten. So konnte die Deubiquitinase UBP12 als weiterer pflanzlicher Interaktionspartner sowohl von XopS als auch von WRKY40 gefunden werden. Dieses Enzym ist in der Lage, die Ubiquitinierung von Substratproteinen zu modifizieren und seine Funktion könnte somit ein Bindeglied zwischen XopS und dessen Interferenz mit dem proteasomalen Abbau von WRKY40 sein. Während einer kompatiblen Xcv-Wirtsinteraktion führte die Virus-induzierte Genstilllegung von UBP12 zu einer reduzierten Resistenz der Pflanze gegenüber des Pathogens Xcv, was auf dessen positiv-regulatorische Wirkung während der Immunantwort hindeutet. Zudem zeigten Western Blot Analysen, dass das Protein WRKY40 bei einer Herunterregulierung von UBP12 akkumuliert und dass diese Akkumulation von der Anwesenheit des T3Es XopS zusätzlich verstärkt wird. Weiterführende Analysen zur biochemischen Charakterisierung der XopS/WRKY40/UBP12 Interaktion sollten in Zukunft durchgeführt werden, um den genauen Wirkmechanismus des XopS T3Es weiter aufzuschlüsseln.
Due to their isolated and often fragmented nature, range margin populations are especially vulnerable to rapid environmental change. To maintain genetic diversity and adaptive potential, gene flow from disjunct populations might therefore be crucial to their survival. Translocations are often proposed as a mitigation strategy to increase genetic diversity in threatened populations. However, this also includes the risk of losing locally adapted alleles through genetic swamping. Human-mediated translocations of southern lineage specimens into northern German populations of the endangered European fire-bellied toad (Bombina bombina) provide an unexpected experimental set-up to test the genetic consequences of an intraspecific introgression from central population individuals into populations at the species range margin. Here, we utilize complete mitochondrial genomes and transcriptome nuclear data to reveal the full genetic extent of this translocation and the consequences it may have for these populations. We uncover signs of introgression in four out of the five northern populations investigated, including a number of introgressed alleles ubiquitous in all recipient populations, suggesting a possible adaptive advantage. Introgressed alleles dominate at the MTCH2 locus, associated with obesity/fat tissue in humans, and the DSP locus, essential for the proper development of epidermal skin in amphibians. Furthermore, we found loci where local alleles were retained in the introgressed populations, suggesting their relevance for local adaptation. Finally, comparisons of genetic diversity between introgressed and nonintrogressed northern German populations revealed an increase in genetic diversity in all German individuals belonging to introgressed populations, supporting the idea of a beneficial transfer of genetic variation from Austria into North Germany.
Due to their isolated and often fragmented nature, range margin populations are especially vulnerable to rapid environmental change. To maintain genetic diversity and adaptive potential, gene flow from disjunct populations might therefore be crucial to their survival. Translocations are often proposed as a mitigation strategy to increase genetic diversity in threatened populations. However, this also includes the risk of losing locally adapted alleles through genetic swamping. Human-mediated translocations of southern lineage specimens into northern German populations of the endangered European fire-bellied toad (Bombina bombina) provide an unexpected experimental set-up to test the genetic consequences of an intraspecific introgression from central population individuals into populations at the species range margin. Here, we utilize complete mitochondrial genomes and transcriptome nuclear data to reveal the full genetic extent of this translocation and the consequences it may have for these populations. We uncover signs of introgression in four out of the five northern populations investigated, including a number of introgressed alleles ubiquitous in all recipient populations, suggesting a possible adaptive advantage. Introgressed alleles dominate at the MTCH2 locus, associated with obesity/fat tissue in humans, and the DSP locus, essential for the proper development of epidermal skin in amphibians. Furthermore, we found loci where local alleles were retained in the introgressed populations, suggesting their relevance for local adaptation. Finally, comparisons of genetic diversity between introgressed and nonintrogressed northern German populations revealed an increase in genetic diversity in all German individuals belonging to introgressed populations, supporting the idea of a beneficial transfer of genetic variation from Austria into North Germany.
Groundwater arsenic contamination in the Bengal Delta Plain is an important public health issue
(2021)
There is a close association between human biology, epidemiology and public health. Exposure to toxic elements is one area of such associations and global concerns. The Bengal Delta Plain (BDP) is a region where contamination of ground water by arsenic has assumed epidemic proportions. Apart from dermatological manifestations, chronic exposure to arsenic causes a heavy toll through several carcinogenic and non-carcinogenic disorders. This article provides a global overview of groundwater arsenic contamination in the BDP region, especially the sources, speciation, and mobility of arsenic, and critically reviews the effects of arsenic on human health. The present review also provides a summary of comprehensive knowledge on various measures required for mitigation and social consequences of the problem of arsenic contaminated groundwater in the BDP region.
Twenty-one scientists met for this year’s virtual conference on Auxology held at the University Potsdam, Germany, to discuss child and adolescent growth during times of fear and emotional stress. Growth within the broad range of normal for age and sex is considered a sign of good general health whereas fear and emotional stress can lead to growth faltering. Stunting is a sign of social disadvantage and poor parental education. Adverse childhood experiences affect child development, particularly in families with low parental education and low socioeconomic status. Negative effects were also shown in Indian children exposed prenatally and in early postnatal life to the cyclone Aila in 2009. Distrust, fears and fake news regarding the current Corona pandemic received particular attention though the effects generally appeared weak. Mean birth weight was higher; rates of low, very and extremely low birth weight were lower. Other topics discussed by the participants, were the influences of economic crises on birth weight, the measurement of self-confidence and its impact on growth, the associations between obesity, peer relationship, and behavior among Turkish adolescents, height trends in Indonesia, physiological neonatal weight loss, methods for assessing biological maturation in sportsmen, and a new method for skeletal age determination. The participants also discussed the association between acute myocardial infarction and somatotype in Estonia, rural-urban growth differences in Mongolian children, socio-environmental conditions and sexual dimorphism, biological mortality bias, and new statistical techniques for describing inhomogeneity in the association of bivariate variables, and for detecting and visualizing extensive interactions among variables.
Twenty-three scientists met at Krobielowice, Poland to discuss the role of growth, nutrition and economy on body size. Contrasting prevailing concepts, re-analyses of studies in Indonesian and Guatemalan school children with high prevalence of stunting failed to provide evidence for an association between nutritional status and body height. Direct effects of parental education on growth that were not transmitted via nutrition were shown in Indian datasets using network analysis and novel statistical methods (St. Nicolas House Analysis) that translate correlation matrices into network graphs. Data on Polish children suggest significant impact of socioeconomic sensitivity on child growth, with no effect of maternal money satisfaction. Height and maturation tempo affect the position of a child among its peers. Correlations also exist between mood disorders and height. Secular changes in height and weight varied across decades independent of population size. Historic and recent Russian data showed that height of persons whose fathers performed manual work were on average four cm shorter than persons whose fathers were high-degree specialists. Body height, menarcheal age, and body proportions are sensitive to socioeconomic variables. Additional topics included delayed motherhood and its associations with newborn size; geographic and socioeconomic indicators related to low birth weight, prematurity and stillbirth rate; data on anthropometric history of Brazil, 1850-1950; the impact of central nervous system stimulants on the growth of children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder; and pituitary development and growth hormone secretion. Final discussions debated on reverse causality interfering between social position, and adolescent growth and developmental tempo.
Heteromeric HSFA2/HSFA3 complexes drive transcriptional memory after heat stress in Arabidopsis
(2021)
Adaptive plasticity in stress responses is a key element of plant survival strategies. For instance, moderate heat stress (HS) primes a plant to acquire thermotolerance, which allows subsequent survival of more severe HS conditions. Acquired thermotolerance is actively maintained over several days (HS memory) and involves the sustained induction of memory-related genes. Here we show that FORGETTER3/ HEAT SHOCK TRANSCRIPTION FACTOR A3 (FGT3/HSFA3) is specifically required for physiological HS memory and maintaining high memory-gene expression during the days following a HS exposure. HSFA3 mediates HS memory by direct transcriptional activation of memory-related genes after return to normal growth temperatures. HSFA3 binds HSFA2, and in vivo both proteins form heteromeric complexes with additional HSFs. Our results indicate that only complexes containing both HSFA2 and HSFA3 efficiently promote transcriptional memory by positively influencing histone H3 lysine 4 (H3K4) hyper-methylation. In summary, our work defines the major HSF complex controlling transcriptional memory and elucidates the in vivo dynamics of HSF complexes during somatic stress memory. Moderate heat stress primes plants to acquire tolerance to subsequent, more severe heat stress. Here the authors show that the HSFA3 transcription factor forms a heteromeric complex with HSFA2 to sustain activated transcription of genes required for acquired thermotolerance by promoting H3K4 hyper-methylation.
Seed dispersal plays an important role in population dynamics in agricultural ecosystems, but the effects of surrounding vegetation height on seed dispersal and population connectivity on the landscape scale have rarely been studied. Understanding the effects of surrounding vegetation height on seed dispersal will provide important information for land-use management in agricultural landscapes to prevent the spread of undesired weeds or enhance functional connectivity. We used two model species, Phragmites australis and Typha latifolia, growing in small natural ponds known as kettle holes, in an agricultural landscape to evaluate the effects of surrounding vegetation height on wind dispersal and population connectivity between kettle holes. Seed dispersal distance and the probability of long-distance dispersal (LDD) were simulated with the mechanistic WALD model under three scenarios of "low", "dynamic" and "high" surrounding vegetation height. Connectivity between the origin and target kettle holes was quantified with a connectivity index adapted from Hanski and Thomas (1994). Our results show that mean seed dispersal distance decreases with the height of surrounding matrix vegetation, but the probability of long-distance dispersal (LDD) increases with vegetation height. This indicates an important vegetation-based trade-off between mean dispersal distance and LDD, which has an impact on connectivity. Matrix vegetation height has a negative effect on mean seed dispersal distance but a positive effect on the probability of LDD. This positive effect and its impact on connectivity provide novel insights into landscape level (meta-)population and community dynamics - a change in matrix vegetation height by land-use or climatic changes could strongly affect the spread and connectivity of wind-dispersed plants. The opposite effect of vegetation height on mean seed dispersal distance and the probability of LDD should therefore be considered in management and analyses of future land-use and climate change effects.
Identification of chemical mediators that regulate the specialized metabolism in Nostoc punctiforme
(2021)
Specialized metabolites, so-called natural products, are produced by a variety of different organisms, including bacteria and fungi. Due to their wide range of different biological activities, including pharmaceutical relevant properties, microbial natural products are an important source for drug development. They are encoded by biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs), which are a group of locally clustered genes. By screening genomic data for genes encoding typical core biosynthetic enzymes, modern bioinformatical approaches are able to predict a wide range of BGCs. To date, only a small fraction of the predicted BGCs have their associated products identified.
The phylum of the cyanobacteria has been shown to be a prolific, but largely untapped source for natural products. Especially multicellular cyanobacterial genera, like Nostoc, harbor a high amount of BGCs in their genomes.
A main goal of this study was to develop new concepts for the discovery of natural products in cyanobacteria. Due to its diverse setup of orphan BGCs and its amenability to genetic manipulation, Nostoc punctiforme PCC 73102 (N. punctiforme) appeared to be a promising candidate to be established as a model organism for natural product discovery in cyanobacteria. By utilizing a combination of genome-mining, bioactivity-screening, variations of culture conditions, as well as metabolic engineering, not only two new polyketides were discovered, but also first-time insights into the regulation of the specialized metabolism in N. punctiforme were gained during this study.
The cultivation of N. punctiforme to very high densities by utilizing increasing light intensities and CO2 levels, led to an enhanced metabolite production, causing rather complex metabolite extracts. By utilizing a library of CFP reporter mutant strains, each strain reporting for one of the predicted BGCs, it was shown that eight out of 15 BGCs were upregulated under high density (HD) cultivation conditions. Furthermore, it could be demonstrated that the supernatant of an HD culture can increase the expression of four of the influenced BGCs, even under conventional cultivation conditions. This led to the hypothesis that a chemical mediator encoded by one of the affected BGCs is accumulating in the HD supernatant and is able to increase the expression of other BGCs as part of a cell-density dependent regulatory circuit. To identify which of the BGCs could be a main trigger of the presumed regulatory circuit, it was tried to activate four BGCs (pks1, pks2, ripp3, ripp4) selectively by overexpression of putative pathway-specific regulatory genes that were found inside the gene clusters. Transcriptional analysis of the mutants revealed that only the mutant strain targeting the pks1 BGC, called AraC_PKS1, was able to upregulate the expression of its associated BGC. From an RNA sequencing study of the AraC_PKS1 mutant strain, it was discovered that beside pks1, the orphan BGCs ripp3 and ripp4 were also upregulated in the mutant strain. Furthermore, it was observed that secondary metabolite production in the AraC_PKS1 mutant strain is further enhanced under high-light and high-CO2 cultivation conditions. The increased production of the pks1 regulator NvlA also had an impact on other regulatory factors, including sigma factors and the RNA chaperone Hfq. Analysis of the AraC_PKS1 cell and supernatant extracts led to the discovery of two novel polyketides, nostoclide and nostovalerolactone, both encoded by the pks1 BGC. Addition of the polyketides to N. punctiforme WT demonstrated that the pks1-derived compounds are able to partly reproduce the effects on secondary metabolite production found in the AraC_PKS1 mutant strain. This indicates that both compounds are acting as extracellular signaling factors as part of a regulatory network. Since not all transcriptional effects that were found in the AraC_PKS1 mutant strain could be reproduced by the pks1 products, it can be assumed that the regulator NvlA has a global effect and is not exclusively specific to the pks1 pathway.
This study was the first to use a putative pathway specific regulator for the specific activation of BGC expression in cyanobacteria. This strategy did not only lead to the detection of two novel polyketides, it also gave first-time insights into the regulatory mechanism of the specialized metabolism in N. punctiforme. This study illustrates that understanding regulatory pathways can aid in the discovery of novel natural products. The findings of this study can guide the design of new screening strategies for bioactive compounds in cyanobacteria and help to develop high-titer production platforms for cyanobacterial natural products.
Trade-offs are inherent to biochemical networks governing diverse cellular functions, from gene expression to metabolism. Yet, trade-offs between fluxes of biochemical reactions in a metabolic network have not been formally studied. Here, we introduce the concept of absolute flux trade-offs and devise a constraint-based approach, termed FluTO, to identify and enumerate flux trade-offs in a given genome-scale metabolic network. By employing the metabolic networks of Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we demonstrate that the flux trade-offs are specific to carbon sources provided but that reactions involved in the cofactor and prosthetic group biosynthesis are present in trade-offs across all carbon sources supporting growth. We also show that absolute flux trade-offs depend on the biomass reaction used to model the growth of Arabidopsis thaliana under different carbon and nitrogen conditions. The identified flux trade-offs reflect the tight coupling between nitrogen, carbon, and sulphur metabolisms in leaves of C-3 plants. Altogether, FluTO provides the means to explore the space of alternative metabolic routes reflecting the constraints imposed by inherent flux trade-offs in large-scale metabolic networks.
The life cycle of higher plants is based on recurring phases of growth and development based on repetitive sequences of cell division, cell expansion and cell differentiation. This dissertation deals with two projects, each of them investigating two different topics that are related to cell expansion. The first project is examining an Arabidopsis thaliana mutant exhibiting overall cell enlargement and the second project is analysing two naturally occurring floral morphs of Amsinckia spectabilis (Boraginaceae) differing (amongst others) in style length and anther heights due to differences in longitudinal cell elongation. The EMS-mutant eop1 was shown to exhibit a petal size increase of 26% caused by cell enlargement. Further phenotypes were detected, such as cotyledon size increase (based on larger cells) as well as increased carpel, sepal, leaf and pollen sizes. Plant height was shown to be increased and more highly branched trichomes explained the hairy eop1 phenotype. Fine mapping revealed the causal SNP to be a C to T transition at the last nucleotide of intron 7 of the INCURVATA11 (ICU11) gene, a 2-oxoglutarate /Fe(II)-dependant dioxygenase, and thus causing missplicing of the mRNA. Two T-DNA insertion lines (icu11-2 & icu11-4) confirmed ICU11 as causal gene by exhibiting increased petal size. A comparison of three icu11 alleles, which possessed different mutation-related changes, either overexpressing ICU11 or modified mRNAs, was the base for investigating the molecular mechanism that underlies the observed phenotype. Different approaches revealed contradictory results regarding ICU11 protein functionality in the icu11 mutants. A complementation assay proved the three mutants to be exchangeable and ICU11 overexpression in the wild-type led to an icu11-like phenotype, arguing for all three icu11 mutants to be GOF mutants. Contradicting this conclusion, the icu11-4 line could be rescued by a genomic ICU11 transgene. A model, based on the assumption that an overexpression of ICU11 is inhibiting the function of the protein, and thus causing the same effect as a LOF protein was proposed. Further, icu11-3 (eop1) mutants were shown to have an increased resistance towards paclobutrazol, a gibberellin (GA) inhibitor and an upregulation of AtGA20ox2, a main GA biosynthesis gene. Additionally, ICU11 subcellular localization was discovered to be cytoplasmic, supporting the assumption, that ICU11 affects GA biosynthesis and overall GA level, possibly explaining the observed (GA-overdose) phenotype.
The second project aimed to identify the genetic base of the S-locus in Amsinckia spectabilis, as the Amsinckia genus represents untypical characteristics for a heterostylous species, such as no obvious self-incompatibility (SI) and the repeated transition towards homostylous and fully selfing variants. The work was based on three Amsinckia spectabilis forms: a heterostylous form, consisting of two floral morphs with reciprocal positioning of sexual organs (S-morph: high anthers and a short style and L-morph: low anthers and a long style), and two homostylous forms, one large-flowered and partially selfing and the other small-flowered and fully selfing. The maintenance of the two floral morphs is genetically based on the S-locus region, containing genes that encode for the morph-specific traits, which are marked by a tight linkage due to suppressed recombination. Natural populations are found to possess a 1:1 S:L morph ratio, that can be explained by predominant disassortative mating of the two morphs, causing the occurrence of the dominant S-allele only in the heterozygous state (heterozygous (Ss) for the S-morph and homozygous recessive (ss) for the L-morph). Investigation of morph-specific phenotypes detected 56% elongated L-morph styles and 58% higher positioned S-morph anthers. Approximately 50% of the observed size differences were explained by an increase in cell elongation. Moreover, additional phenotypes were found, such as 21% enlarged S-morph pollen and no obvious SI, confirmed by hand pollinated seed counts, in vivo pollen tube growth and the development of homozygous dominant SS individuals via selfing. The Amsinckia spec. S-locus was assumed to at least consist of the G- (style length), the A- (anther height) and the P- (pollen size) locus. Comparative Transcriptomics of the two morphs revealed 22 differentially expressed markers that were found to be located within two contigs of a SS individual PacBio genome assembly, allowing the localization of the S-locus to be delimited to a region of approximately 23 Mb. Contradictory to revealed S-loci within the plant kingdom, no strong argument for a present hemizygous region was found to be causal for the suppressed recombination of the S-locus, so that an inversion was assumed to be the causal mechanism.
Cyanobacteria are an abundant bacterial group and are found in a variety of ecological niches all around the globe. They can serve as a real threat for fish or mammals and can restrict the use of lakes or rivers for recreational purposes or as a source of drinking water, when they form blooms. One of the most abundant bloom-forming cyanobacteria is Microcystis aeruginosa.
In the first part of the study, the role and possible dynamics of RubisCO in M. aeruginosa during high-light irradiation were examined. Its response was analyzed on the protein and peptide level via immunoblotting, immunofluorescence microscopy and with high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). It was revealed that large amounts of RubisCO were located outside of carboxysomes under the applied high light stress. RubisCO aggregated mainly underneath the cytoplasmic membrane. There it forms a putative Calvin-Benson-Bassham (CBB) super complex together with other enzymes of photosynthesis. This complex could be part of an alternative carbon-concentrating mechanism (CCM) in M. aeruginosa, which enables a faster, and energy saving adaptation to high light stress of the whole bloom.
Furthermore, the re-localization of RubisCO was delayed in the microcystin-deficient mutant ΔmcyB and RubisCO was more evenly distributed over the cell in comparison to the wild type. Since ΔmcyB is not harmed in its growth, possibly other produced cyanopeptides as aeruginosin or cyanopeptolin also play a role in the stabilization of RubisCO and the putative CBB complex, especially in the microcystin-free mutant.
In the second part of this work, the possible role of microcystin as an extracellular signaling peptide during the diurnal cycle was studied. HPLC analysis showed a strong increase of extracellular microcystin in the wild type when the population entered nighttime and it resumed into the next day as well. Together with the increase of extracellular microcystin, a strong decrease of protein-bound intracellular microcystin was observed via immunoblot analysis. Interestingly, the signal of the large subunit of RubisCO (RbcL) also diminished when high amounts of microcystin were present in the surrounding medium. Microcystin addition experiments to M. aeruginosa WT and ΔmcyB cultures support this observation, since the immunoblot signal of both subunits of RubisCO and CcmK, a shell protein of carboxysomes, diminished after the addition of microcystin. In addition, the fluctuation of cyanopeptolin during the diurnal cycle indicates a more prominent role of other cyanopeptides besides microcystin as a signaling peptide, intracellularly as well as extracellularly.
Anthropogenic activities such as continuous landscape changes threaten biodiversity at both local and regional scales. Metacommunity models attempt to combine these two scales and continuously contribute to a better mechanistic understanding of how spatial processes and constraints, such as fragmentation, affect biodiversity. There is a strong consensus that such structural changes of the landscape tend to negatively effect the stability of metacommunities. However, in particular the interplay of complex trophic communities and landscape structure is not yet fully understood.
In this present dissertation, a metacommunity approach is used based on a dynamic and spatially explicit model that integrates population dynamics at the local scale and dispersal dynamics at the regional scale. This approach allows the assessment of complex spatial landscape components such as habitat clustering on complex species communities, as well as the analysis of population dynamics of a single species. In addition to the impact of a fixed landscape structure, periodic environmental disturbances are also considered, where a periodical change of habitat availability, temporally alters landscape structure, such as the seasonal drying of a water body.
On the local scale, the model results suggest that large-bodied animal species, such as predator species at high trophic positions, are more prone to extinction in a state of large patch isolation than smaller species at lower trophic levels.
Increased metabolic losses for species with a lower body mass lead to increased energy limitation for species on higher trophic levels and serves as an explanation for a predominant loss of these species. This effect is particularly pronounced for food webs, where species are more sensitive to increased metabolic losses through dispersal and a change in landscape structure.
In addition to the impact of species composition in a food web for diversity, the strength of local foraging interactions likewise affect the synchronization of population dynamics. A reduced predation pressure leads to more asynchronous population dynamics, beneficial for the stability of population dynamics as it reduces the risk of correlated extinction events among habitats. On the regional scale, two landscape aspects, which are the mean patch isolation and the formation of local clusters of two patches, promote an increase in $\beta$-diversity. Yet, the individual composition and robustness of the local species community equally explain a large proportion of the observed diversity patterns.
A combination of periodic environmental disturbance and patch isolation has a particular impact on population dynamics of a species. While the periodic disturbance has a synchronizing effect, it can even superimpose emerging asynchronous dynamics in a state of large patch isolation and unifies trends in synchronization between different species communities.
In summary, the findings underline a large local impact of species composition and interactions on local diversity patterns of a metacommunity. In comparison, landscape structures such as fragmentation have a negligible effect on local diversity patterns, but increase their impact for regional diversity patterns. In contrast, at the level of population dynamics, regional characteristics such as periodic environmental disturbance and patch isolation have a particularly strong impact and contribute substantially to the understanding of the stability of population dynamics in a metacommunity. These studies demonstrate once again the complexity of our ecosystems and the need for further analysis for a better understanding of our surrounding environment and more targeted conservation of biodiversity.
Generating a monoclonal antibody to date is a time intense process that requires immunization of laboratory animals. The transfer of the humoral immune response into in vitro settings enables a shortening of this process and circumvents the necessity of in vivo immunization. However, to orchestrate the complex interplay of dendritic cells, T and B lymphocytes in vitro is very challenging. We therefore aimed for a simplified approach focusing on the protagonist of antibody production: the B lymphocyte. We activated purified murine B lymphocytes alone in vitro by using combinations of antigen and stimuli. We were able to induce a specific antibody response within ten days of culture against a viral coat protein as model antigen. Antibodies were of both IgM and IgG subclass. The stimulated B lymphocytes were transformed into permanently antibody-producing hybridomas by cell fusion technology. We furthermore used this method to induce a specific antibody response against L. pneumophila in vitro. We thus established a useful and effective in vitro protocol to generate monoclonal antibodies. By overcoming the necessity of in vivo immunization this protocol may be the first step towards a universal strategy to generate antibodies from various species.
The prevalence of diseases associated with misfolded proteins increases with age. When cellular defense mechanisms become limited, misfolded proteins form aggregates and may also develop more stable cross-β structures ultimately forming amyloid aggregates. Amyloid aggregates are associated with neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease and Huntington’s disease. The formation of amyloid deposits, their toxicity and cellular defense mechanisms have been intensively studied. However, surprisingly little is known about the effects of protein aggregates on cellular signal transduction. It is also not understood whether the presence of aggregation-prone, but still soluble proteins affect signal transduction.
In this study, the still soluble aggregation-prone HttExon1Q74 and its amyloid aggregates were used to analyze the effect of amyloid aggregates on internalization and receptor activation of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), the largest protein family of mammalian cell surface receptors involved in signal transduction. The aggregated HttExon1Q74, but not its soluble form, could inhibit ligand-induced clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME) of various GPCRs. Most likely this inhibitory effect is based on a terminal sequestration of the HSC70 chaperone to the aggregates which is necessary for CME. Using the vasopressinV1a receptor (V1aR) and the corticotropin-releasing factor receptor 1 (CRF1R) as a model, it could be shown that the presence of HttExon1Q74 aggregates and the inhibition of ligand-induced CME leads to an accumulation of desensitized receptors at the plasma membrane. In turn, this disrupts Gq-mediated Ca2+ signaling and Gs-mediated cAMP signaling of the V1aR and the CRF1R respectively. In contrast to HttExon1Q74 amyloid aggregates, soluble HttExon1Q74 as well as amorphous aggregates did not inhibit GPCR internalization and signaling demonstrating that cellular signal transduction mechanisms are specifically impaired in response to the formation of amyloid aggregates.
In addition, preliminary experiments could show that HttExon1Q74 aggregates provoke an increase in membrane expression of a protein from a structurally and functionally unrelated membrane protein family, namely the serotonin transporter SERT. As SERT is the main pharmacological target to treat depression this could shed light on this commonly occurring comorbidity in neurodegenerative diseases, in particular in early disease states.
Artificial light at night (ALAN), one form of human-induced rapid environmental change, is continuously spreading in space and time and increasing in intensity as part of the ongoing urbanization. A vast range of animals is known to be affected by ALAN as, among other things, it can mask natural light cues and change both the perceived as well as the actual predation risk. Since ALAN per se is restricted to the night, the majority of studies so far have focused on nocturnal species or behavioral changes during the night. How polyphasic species respond to ALAN has been largely overlooked, although they can possibly carry over effects of nighttime illumination into the day. Additionally, individuals within a species are known to consistently differ in their personality which includes risk-taking behavior. While this implies that ALAN can lead to varying anti-predatory responses in animals within a population, knowledge on this topic is still very limited. This thesis aims at investigating what initial behavioral reaction is caused by ALAN in polyphasic small mammals while also incorporating an animal’s personality. Nighttime and daytime activity, movement and foraging behavior of the bank vole (Myodes glareolus) were investigated in regards to effects of different light intensities and partial illumination in the laboratory. Additionally, changes in intra- and interspecific interactions of bank voles and striped field mice (Apodemus agrarius) subjected to ALAN were studied in experimental populations in semi-natural outdoor enclosures. Chapter I explores whether behavioral responses to ALAN of varying intensity are related to animal personality. Results showed that bank voles reduced movement and foraging already under dim light and that bold animals generally moved and foraged more than shy animals. Exclusively under bright illumination did bold animals exploit the food patches more than shy animals. The results demonstrate that bank voles are affected by light intensities prevalent in urban habitats. Additionally, certain light scenarios might lead to an advantage of and a shift towards certain personality types. Chapter II focusses on the effects of partial ALAN on foraging behavior of animals with varying animal personalities while extending the view towards possible carry-over effects of ALAN into the daytime. While bank voles reduced foraging behavior in illuminated areas at night, they increased foraging behavior in those areas at the subsequent day. Bold individuals generally had lower giving-up densities than shy individuals but this difference was especially pronounced during daytime at formerly illuminated food patches. Thus, ALAN can have carry-over effects into the daytime in polyphasic animals and thus has the potential to affect daytime intra- and interspecific interactions. Chapter III broadens the view from the individual to the population level. Experimental populations consisting of bank voles and striped field mice were established in large outdoor enclosures successively experienced natural and artificial light conditions at night. VHF telemetry data revealed that animals were predominantly active during the day under natural conditions. This difference between day and night vanished under ALAN. Additionally, conspecifics reduced home range overlap, proximity and activity synchrony while boldness was not associated with behavioral changed due to ALAN. The results suggest that ALAN has the potential to alter intraspecific interactions and thus can have fitness consequences on the population level. Overall, the present thesis shows that ALAN can affect nighttime and daytime behavior as well as intraspecific interactions of polyphasic small mammals. Differences in risk- taking behavior of individuals may vary in importance depending on other environmental variables. Thus, this thesis hopefully triggers broadening the view regarding the role of an animal’s personality in coping with ALAN and the effects on daytime behavior and diurnal species.
Influenza A virus (IAV) is a respiratory pathogen that causes seasonal epidemics with significant mortality. One of the most abundant proteins in IAV particles is the matrix protein 1 (M1), which is essential for the virus structural stability. M1 organizes virion assembly and budding at the plasma membrane (PM), where it interacts with other viral components. The recruitment of M1 to the PM as well as its interaction with the other viral envelope proteins (hemagglutinin [HA], neuraminidase, matrix protein 2 [M2]) is controversially discussed in previous studies. Therefore, we used fluorescence fluctuation microscopy techniques (i.e., scanning fluorescence cross-correlation spectroscopy and number and brightness) to quantify the oligomeric state of M1 and its interactions with other viral proteins in co-transfected as well as infected cells. Our results indicate that M1 is recruited to the PM by M2, as a consequence of the strong interaction between the two proteins. In contrast, only a weak interaction between M1 and HA was observed. M1-HA interaction occurred only in the event that M1 was already bound to the PM. We therefore conclude that M2 initiates the assembly of IAV by recruiting M1 to the PM, possibly allowing its further interaction with other viral proteins.
Influenza A virus (IAV) is a pathogen responsible for severe seasonal epidemics threatening human and animal populations every year. During the viral assembly process in the infected cells, the plasma membrane (PM) has to bend in localized regions into a vesicle towards the extracellular side. Studies in cellular models have proposed that different viral proteins might be responsible for inducing membrane curvature in this context (including M1), but a clear consensus has not been reached. M1 is the most abundant protein in IAV particles. It plays an important role in virus assembly and budding at the PM. M1 is recruited to the host cell membrane where it associates with lipids and other viral proteins. However, the details of M1 interactions with the cellular PM, as well as M1-mediated membrane bending at the budozone, have not been clarified.
In this work, we used several experimental approaches to analyze M1-lipids and M1-M1 interactions. By performing SPR analysis, we quantified membrane association for full-length M1 and different genetically engineered M1 constructs (i.e., N- and C-terminally truncated constructs and a mutant of the polybasic region). This allowed us to obtain novel information on the protein regions mediating M1 binding to membranes. By using fluorescence microscopy, cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM), and three-dimensional (3D) tomography (cryo-ET), we showed that M1 is indeed able to cause membrane deformation on vesicles containing negatively-charged lipids, in the absence of other viral components. Further, sFCS analysis proved that simple protein binding is not sufficient to induce membrane restructuring. Rather, it appears that stable M1-M1 interactions and multimer formation are required to alter the bilayer three-dimensional structure through the formation of a protein scaffold.
Finally, to mimic the budding mechanism in cells that arise by the lateral organization of the virus membrane components on lipid raft domains, we created vesicles with lipid domains. Our results showed that local binding of M1 to spatial confined acidic lipids within membrane domains of vesicles led to local M1 inward curvature.
Domestic cattle were brought to Spain by early settlers and agricultural societies. Due to missing Neolithic sites in the Spanish region of Galicia, very little is known about this process in this region. We sampled 18 cattle subfossils from different ages and different mountain caves in Galicia, of which 11 were subject to sequencing of the mitochondrial genome and phylogenetic analysis, to provide insight into the introduction of cattle to this region. We detected high similarity between samples from different time periods and were able to compare the time frame of the first domesticated cattle in Galicia to data from the connecting region of Cantabria to show a plausible connection between the Neolithization of these two regions. Our data shows a close relationship of the early domesticated cattle of Galicia and modern cow breeds and gives a general insight into cattle phylogeny. We conclude that settlers migrated to this region of Spain from Europe and introduced common European breeds to Galicia.
Domestic cattle were brought to Spain by early settlers and agricultural societies. Due to missing Neolithic sites in the Spanish region of Galicia, very little is known about this process in this region. We sampled 18 cattle subfossils from different ages and different mountain caves in Galicia, of which 11 were subject to sequencing of the mitochondrial genome and phylogenetic analysis, to provide insight into the introduction of cattle to this region. We detected high similarity between samples from different time periods and were able to compare the time frame of the first domesticated cattle in Galicia to data from the connecting region of Cantabria to show a plausible connection between the Neolithization of these two regions. Our data shows a close relationship of the early domesticated cattle of Galicia and modern cow breeds and gives a general insight into cattle phylogeny. We conclude that settlers migrated to this region of Spain from Europe and introduced common European breeds to Galicia.
Insights in electrosynthesis, target binding, and stability of peptide-imprinted polymer nanofilms
(2021)
Molecularly imprinted polymer (MIP) nanofilms have been successfully implemented for the recognition of different target molecules: however, the underlying mechanistic details remained vague.
This paper provides new insights in the preparation and binding mechanism of electrosynthesized peptide-imprinted polymer nanofilms for selective recognition of the terminal pentapeptides of the beta-chains of human adult hemoglobin, HbA, and its glycated form HbA1c.
To differentiate between peptides differing solely in a glucose adduct MIP nanofilms were prepared by a two-step hierarchical electrosynthesis that involves first the chemisorption of a cysteinyl derivative of the pentapeptide followed by electropolymerization of scopoletin.
This approach was compared with a random single-step electrosynthesis using scopo-letin/pentapeptide mixtures. Electrochemical monitoring of the peptide binding to the MIP nanofilms by means of redox probe gating revealed a superior affinity of the hierarchical approach with a Kd value of 64.6 nM towards the related target.
Changes in the electrosynthesized non-imprinted polymer and MIP nanofilms during chemical, electrochemical template removal and rebinding were substantiated in situ by monitoring the characteristic bands of both target peptides and polymer with surface enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy.
This rational approach led to MIPs with excellent selectivity and provided key mechanistic insights with respect to electrosynthesis, rebinding and stability of the formed MIPs.
Ribosome biogenesis is tightly associated to plant metabolism due to the usage of ribosomes in the synthesis of proteins necessary to drive metabolic pathways. Given the central role of ribosome biogenesis in cell physiology, it is important to characterize the impact of different components involved in this process on plant metabolism. Double mutants of the Arabidopsis thaliana cytosolic 60S maturation factors REIL1 and REIL2 do not resume growth after shift to moderate 10 degrees C chilling conditions. To gain mechanistic insights into the metabolic effects of this ribosome biogenesis defect on metabolism, we developed TC-iReMet2, a constraint-based modelling approach that integrates relative metabolomics and transcriptomics time-course data to predict differential fluxes on a genome-scale level. We employed TC-iReMet2 with metabolomics and transcriptomics data from the Arabidopsis Columbia 0 wild type and the reil1-1 reil2-1 double mutant before and after cold shift. We identified reactions and pathways that are highly altered in a mutant relative to the wild type. These pathways include the Calvin-Benson cycle, photorespiration, gluconeogenesis, and glycolysis. Our findings also indicated differential NAD(P)/NAD(P)H ratios after cold shift. TC-iReMet2 allows for mechanistic hypothesis generation and interpretation of system biology experiments related to metabolic fluxes on a genome-scale level.
Human aldehyde oxidase (hAOX1) is mainly present in the liver and has an emerging role in drug metabolism, since it accepts a wide range of molecules as substrates and inhibitors. Herein, we employed an integrative approach by combining NMR, X-ray crystallography, and enzyme inhibition kinetics to understand the inhibition modes of three hAOX1 inhibitors-thioridazine, benzamidine, and raloxifene. These integrative data indicate that thioridazine is a noncompetitive inhibitor, while benzamidine presents a mixed type of inhibition. Additionally, we describe the first crystal structure of hAOX1 in complex with raloxifene. Raloxifene binds tightly at the entrance of the substrate tunnel, stabilizing the flexible entrance gates and elucidating an unusual substrate-dependent mechanism of inhibition with potential impact on drug-drug interactions. This study can be considered as a proof-of-concept for an efficient experimental screening of prospective substrates and inhibitors of hAOX1 relevant in drug discovery.
Stable isotopes represent a unique approach to provide insights into the ecology of organisms. δ13C and δ15N have specifically been used to obtain information on the trophic ecology and food-web interactions. Trophic discrimination factors (TDF, Δ13C and Δ15N) describe the isotopic fractionation occurring from diet to consumer tissue, and these factors are critical for obtaining precise estimates within any application of δ13C and δ15N values. It is widely acknowledged that metabolism influences TDF, being responsible for different TDF between tissues of variable metabolic activity (e.g., liver vs. muscle tissue) or species body size (small vs. large). However, the connection between the variation of metabolism occurring within a single species during its ontogeny and TDF has rarely been considered. Here, we conducted a 9-month feeding experiment to report Δ13C and Δ15N of muscle and liver tissues for several weight classes of Eurasian perch (Perca fluviatilis), a widespread teleost often studied using stable isotopes, but without established TDF for feeding on a natural diet. In addition, we assessed the relationship between the standard metabolic rate (SMR) and TDF by measuring the oxygen consumption of the individuals. Our results showed a significant negative relationship of SMR with Δ13C, and a significant positive relationship of SMR with Δ15N of muscle tissue, but not with TDF of liver tissue. SMR varies inversely with size, which translated into a significantly different TDF of muscle tissue between size classes. In summary, our results emphasize the role of metabolism in shaping-specific TDF (i.e., Δ13C and Δ15N of muscle tissue) and especially highlight the substantial differences between individuals of different ontogenetic stages within a species. Our findings thus have direct implications for the use of stable isotope data and the applications of stable isotopes in food-web studies.
Stable isotopes represent a unique approach to provide insights into the ecology of organisms. δ13C and δ15N have specifically been used to obtain information on the trophic ecology and food-web interactions. Trophic discrimination factors (TDF, Δ13C and Δ15N) describe the isotopic fractionation occurring from diet to consumer tissue, and these factors are critical for obtaining precise estimates within any application of δ13C and δ15N values. It is widely acknowledged that metabolism influences TDF, being responsible for different TDF between tissues of variable metabolic activity (e.g., liver vs. muscle tissue) or species body size (small vs. large). However, the connection between the variation of metabolism occurring within a single species during its ontogeny and TDF has rarely been considered. Here, we conducted a 9-month feeding experiment to report Δ13C and Δ15N of muscle and liver tissues for several weight classes of Eurasian perch (Perca fluviatilis), a widespread teleost often studied using stable isotopes, but without established TDF for feeding on a natural diet. In addition, we assessed the relationship between the standard metabolic rate (SMR) and TDF by measuring the oxygen consumption of the individuals. Our results showed a significant negative relationship of SMR with Δ13C, and a significant positive relationship of SMR with Δ15N of muscle tissue, but not with TDF of liver tissue. SMR varies inversely with size, which translated into a significantly different TDF of muscle tissue between size classes. In summary, our results emphasize the role of metabolism in shaping-specific TDF (i.e., Δ13C and Δ15N of muscle tissue) and especially highlight the substantial differences between individuals of different ontogenetic stages within a species. Our findings thus have direct implications for the use of stable isotope data and the applications of stable isotopes in food-web studies.
Trait variation among heterospecific and conspecific organisms may substantially affect community and food web dynamics. While the relevance of competition and feeding traits have been widely studied for different consumer species, studies on intraspecific differences are more scarce, partly owing to difficulties in distinguishing different clones of the same species. Here, we investigate how intraspecific trait variation affects the competition between the freshwater ciliates Euplotes octocarinatus and Coleps hirtus in a nitrogen-limited chemostat system. The ciliates competed for the microalgae Cryptomonas sp. (Cry) and Navicula pelliculosa (Nav), and the bacteria present in the cultures over a period of 33 days. We used monoclonal Euplotes and three different Coleps clones (Col 1, Col 2, and Col 3) in the experiment that could be distinguished by a newly developed rDNA-based molecular assay based on the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions. While Euplotes feeds on Cry and on bacteria, the Coleps clones cannot survive on bacteria alone but feed on both Cry and Nav with clone-specific rates. Experimental treatments comprised two-species mixtures of Euplotes and one or all of the three different Coleps clones, respectively. We found intraspecific variation in the traits "selectivity" and "maximum ingestion rate" for the different algae to significantly affect the competitive outcome between the two ciliate species. As Nav quickly escaped top-down control and likely reached a state of low food quality, ciliate competition was strongly determined by the preference of different Coleps clones for Cry as opposed to feeding on Nav. In addition, the ability of Euplotes to use bacteria as an alternative food source strengthened its persistence once Cry was depleted. Hence, trait variation at both trophic levels codetermined the population dynamics and the outcome of species competition.
Plants possess cell wall, a polysaccharide exoskeleton which encompasses all plant cells. Cell wall gives plant cells mechanical support, defines their shape, enables growth and water transport through a plant. It also has important role in communication with the external environment. Regulation of plant cell wall biosynthesis and cell and organ morphogenesis depends on cell’s ability to detect mechanical signals originating both from the external environment and from internal plant tissues. Thanks to the presence of the cell wall, all living plant cells develop constant internal pressure generated by the active water uptake, known as turgor pressure, which enables them to grow. Thus, actively growing cells in the tissue are exerting mechanical stress to each other. In order to properly coordinate cell growth, tissue morphogenesis and maintain cell-to-cell adhesion, plant cell have to detect these mechanical signals. That is performed by a group of still not well enough characterized plant mechanosensitive proteins. Mechanosensors are proteins capable of detecting changes in mechanical stress patterns and translating them into physiological and developmental outputs. One of plant mechanosensitive proteins, DEFECTIVE KERNEL1 (DEK1) has shown to be a very important in proper plant development. DEK1 bears similarity with animal cysteine proteases of Calpain superfamily. DEK1 is very important for plant development since all null alleles are embryo lethal. During the last 20 years of DEK1 studies, this protein has proven to be a very difficult for different molecular and biochemical manipulations. As a consequence, very little is known about its direct target proteins. Wang and co-workers (2003) and Johnson and co-workers (2008) have given a valuable contribution to biochemical understanding of DEK1 by determining that it functions as Cys-protease in similar way as animal calpains. However, a lot of indirect knowledge was gathered about the effects of disruption and modulation of DEK1 activity. DEK1 is important for proper organ development, epidermal specification, and maintenance. However, some studies have inferred that DEK1 affects expression of different cell wall related genes, and it regulates cell-to-cell adhesion in epidermal cells. This led to two extensive studies (Amanda et al., 2016, 2017) which demonstrated importance of DEK1 in regulation leaf epidermal cell walls in A. thaliana mature leaves and inflorescence stems. These studies demonstrated that DEK1 also influences cell wall thickness and cell-to-cell adhesion and that it could potentially regulate cell growth and expansion. Building up on this research, we decided to try to further characterize molecular and biomechanical aspects of DEK1 mediated cell wall regulation, with special emphasis on regulation of cellulose synthesis. We used two mutant lines, with modulated DEK1 activity, a constitutive overexpressor for DEK1 CALPAIN domain and a point mutant in CALPAIN domain, dek1-4. In Chapter 3 we demonstrated that DEK1 regulates dynamics of Cellulose Synthase Complexes (CSCs). Both lines showed decreased crystalline cellulose contents. This led us to investigate if velocity of CSCs in cotyledons, was affected, since it is known that changes in cellulose contents are often caused by defects in CSC. We found that bothDEK1 modulated lines we used have significantly decreased velocity of CSCs. We have also examined plasma membrane turnover rates of CSCs and found out that after photo-bleaching OE CALPAIN has much faster recovery rates compared to Col-0 wild type, while dek1-4 has lower exocytotic rates of CSCs, and much longer life-time of CSCs inserted into the plasma membrane. These results suggested that DEK1 regulates different aspects of CSC dynamics, possibly through interaction with different regulatory proteins. Decrease in cellulose contents we observed in DEK1 modulated lines, prompted us to investigate how this reflects biomechanics and structural properties of epidermal cotyledon cell walls of DEK1 modulated lines, which is described in Chapter 4. To achieve this, we developed a novel microdissection method for isolation and mechanical and structural characterization of native epidermal cell wall monolayers using atomic force microscopy (AFM). AFM force spectroscopy assays showed that both DEK1 modulated lines had stiffer cell walls compared to Col-0. This was awkward since we initially detected decrease in crystalline cellulose which implied decrease in cell wall stiffness. However, subsequent high-resolution AFM imaging has revealed that DEK1 modulate lines cells walls have their cellulose microfibrils organized in thicker bundles than Col-0. Also, polysaccharide composition analysis has revealed that DEK1 modulated lines have increased abundance of pectins, which could also be responsible for the observed increase in cell wall stiffness. Previous work has shown that different dek1 mutants and modulated lines have defects in cell-to-cell adhesion. This implied that DEK1 may be involved in sensing and/or maintaining cell wall integrity (CWI). We performed several growth assays to determine role of DEK1 in CWI, which is described in Chapter 5. We performed cellulose synthesis perturbation assays with cellulose synthesis inhibitor Isoxaben and obtained very interesting results. While OE CALPAIN plants were hypersensitive to Isoxaben, dek1-4 has shown complete insensitivity. Furthermore, a regular CWI maintenance response, reported in A. thaliana as result of compromised CWI, ectopic lignification in seedlings’ roots was absent in both DEK1 modulated lines we examined. We detected interesting growth response of DEK1 lines to NaCl and mannitol treatments as well. Although these findings are pointing out that DEK1 could be part of CWI signalling pathways, more experiments are necessary to fully elucidate possible role of DEK1 in CWI sensing and/or maintenance pathways, especially to check if DEK1 is interacting with Catharanthus roseus Receptor Like Kinase group of CWI sensors. Studies on 4-month old short day grown DEK1 modulated lines, have shown defects in branching, with development of fasciated stem branches in a DEK1 modulated line overexpressing CALPAIN domain (Amanda et al., 2017). This result pointed out to a possibility that DEK1 may regulate organ morphogenesis and patterning at the level of shoot apical meristem (SAM). Work towards elucidating role of DEK1 in SAM maintenance and organ patterning is detailed in Chapter 6. We determined that OE CALPAIN had significantly larger central zone of SAM as well as larger individual SAM cells in central zone, as well as higher distribution of cell sizes, implying possible cell expansion defects. dek1-4 did not exhibited changes in SAM central zone size or individual stem cell size, but it seemed that it had increased number of stem cells in SAM central zone. Both DEK1 lines had perturbation of phyllotaxis on SAM level, with disturbed divergence angles between floral primordia. Disturbed phyllotaxis was also observed between siliques, in mature plants. In addition to this, OE CALPAIN has exhibited occurrence of multiple (up to four) siliques growing from a single stem node. All this is pointing out that DEK1 might participate in hormone-signalling in the SAM.. DEK1 is a highly intriguing protein. However, since it is a unigene, and in addition to that, a regulatory protease, it probably participates in multiple signalling pathways, which makes understanding its function much more complicated.
L-2,L-1-norm regularized multivariate regression model with applications to genomic prediction
(2021)
Motivation:
Genomic selection (GS) is currently deemed the most effective approach to speed up breeding of agricultural varieties. It has been recognized that consideration of multiple traits in GS can improve accuracy of prediction for traits of low heritability. However, since GS forgoes statistical testing with the idea of improving predictions, it does not facilitate mechanistic understanding of the contribution of particular single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP).
Results:
Here, we propose a L-2,L-1-norm regularized multivariate regression model and devise a fast and efficient iterative optimization algorithm, called L-2,L-1-joint, applicable in multi-trait GS. The usage of the L-2,L-1-norm facilitates variable selection in a penalized multivariate regression that considers the relation between individuals, when the number of SNPs is much larger than the number of individuals. The capacity for variable selection allows us to define master regulators that can be used in a multi-trait GS setting to dissect the genetic architecture of the analyzed traits. Our comparative analyses demonstrate that the proposed model is a favorable candidate compared to existing state-of-the-art approaches. Prediction and variable selection with datasets from Brassica napus, wheat and Arabidopsis thaliana diversity panels are conducted to further showcase the performance of the proposed model.
License to flower
(2021)