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A cytoplasmically inherited chlorophyll-deficient mutant of barley (Hordeum vulgare) termed cytoplasmic line 3 (CL3), displaying a viridis (homogeneously light-green colored) phenotype, has been previously shown to be affected by elevated temperatures. In this article, biochemical, biophysical, and molecular approaches were used to study the CL3 mutant under different temperature and light conditions. The results lead to the conclusion that an impaired assembly of photosystem I (PSI) under higher temperatures and certain light conditions is the primary cause of the CL3 phenotype. Compromised splicing of ycf3 transcripts, particularly at elevated temperature, resulting from a mutation in a noncoding region (intron 1) in the mutant ycf3 gene results in a defective synthesis of Ycf3, which is a chaperone involved in PSI assembly. The defective PSI assembly causes severe photoinhibition and degradation of PSII.
Motivation: Full-length DNA and protein sequences that span the entire length of a gene are ideally used for multiple sequence alignments (MSAs) and the subsequent inference of their relationships. Frequently, however, MSAs contain a substantial amount of missing data. For example, expressed sequence tags (ESTs), which are partial sequences of expressed genes, are the predominant source of sequence data for many organisms. The patterns of missing data typical for EST-derived alignments greatly compromise the accuracy of estimated phylogenies. Results: We present a statistical method for inferring phylogenetic trees from EST-based incomplete MSA data. We propose a class of hierarchical models for modeling pairwise distances between the sequences, and develop a fully Bayesian approach for estimation of the model parameters. Once the distance matrix is estimated, the phylogenetic tree may be constructed by applying neighbor-joining (or any other algorithm of choice). We also show that maximizing the marginal likelihood from the Bayesian approach yields similar results to a pro. le likelihood estimation. The proposed methods are illustrated using simulated protein families, for which the true phylogeny is known, and one real protein family.
A macro-tidal freshwater ecosystem recovering from hypereutrophication : the Schelde lease study
(2009)
We report a 40 year record of eutrophication and hypoxia on an estuarine ecosystem and its recovery from hypereutrophication. After decades of high inorganic nutrient concentrations and recurring anoxia and hypoxia, we observe a paradoxical increase in chlorophyll-a concentrations with decreasing nutrient inputs. We hypothesise that algal growth was inhibited due to hypereutrophication, either by elevated ammonium concentrations, severe hypoxia or the production of harmful substances in such a reduced environment. We study the dynamics of a simple but realistic mathematical model, incorporating the assumption of algal growth inhibition. It shows a high algal biomass, net oxygen production equilibrium with low ammonia inputs, and a low algal biomass, net oxygen consumption equilibrium with high ammonia inputs. At intermediate ammonia inputs it displays two alternative stable states. Although not intentional, the numerical output of this model corresponds to observations, giving extra support for assumption of algal growth inhibition. Due to potential algal growth inhibition, the recovery of hypereutrophied systems towards a classical eutrophied state, will need reduction of waste loads below certain thresholds and will be accompanied by large fluctuations in oxygen concentrations. We conclude that also flow-through systems, heavily influenced by external forcings which partly mask internal system dynamics, can display multiple stable states.
For the elucidation of the dynamics of signal transduction processes that are induced by cellular interactions, defined events along the signal transduction cascade and subsequent activation steps have to be analyzed and then also correlated with each other. This cannot be achieved by ensemble measurements because averaging biological data ignores the variability in timing and response patterns of individual cells and leads to highly blurred results. Instead, only a multi-parameter analysis at a single-cell level is able to exploit the information that is crucially needed for deducing the signaling pathways involved. The aim of this work was to develop a process line that allows the initiation of cell-cell or cell-particle interactions while at the same time the induced cellular reactions can be analyzed at various stages along the signal transduction cascade and correlated with each other. As this approach requires the gentle management of individually addressable cells, a dielectrophoresis (DEP)-based microfluidic system was employed that provides the manipulation of microscale objects with very high spatiotemporal precision and without the need of contacting the cell membrane. The system offers a high potential for automation and parallelization. This is essential for achieving a high level of robustness and reproducibility, which are key requirements in order to qualify this approach for a biomedical application. As an example process for intercellular communication, T cell activation has been chosen. The activation of the single T cells was triggered by contacting them individually with microbeads that were coated with antibodies directed against specific cell surface proteins, like the T cell receptor-associated kinase CD3 and the costimulatory molecule CD28 (CD; cluster of differentiation). The stimulation of the cells with the functionalized beads led to a rapid rise of their cytosolic Ca2+ concentration which was analyzed by a dual-wavelength ratiometric fluorescence measurement of the Ca2+-sensitive dye Fura-2. After Ca2+ imaging, the cells were isolated individually from the microfluidic system and cultivated further. Cell division and expression of the marker molecule CD69 as a late activation event of great significance were analyzed the following day and correlated with the previously recorded Ca2+ traces for each individual cell. It turned out such that the temporal profile of the Ca2+ traces between both activated and non-activated cells as well as dividing and non-dividing cells differed significantly. This shows that the pattern of Ca2+ signals in T cells can provide early information about a later reaction of the cell. As isolated cells are highly delicate objects, a precondition for these experiments was the successful adaptation of the system to maintain the vitality of single cells during and after manipulation. In this context, the influences of the microfluidic environment as well as the applied electric fields on the vitality of the cells and the cytosolic Ca2+ concentration as crucially important physiological parameters were thoroughly investigated. While a short-term DEP manipulation did not affect the vitality of the cells, they showed irregular Ca2+ transients upon exposure to the DEP field only. The rate and the strength of these Ca2+ signals depended on exposure time, electric field strength and field frequency. By minimizing their occurrence rate, experimental conditions were identified that caused the least interference with the physiology of the cell. The possibility to precisely control the exact time point of stimulus application, to simultaneously analyze short-term reactions and to correlate them with later events of the signal transduction cascade on the level of individual cells makes this approach unique among previously described applications and offers new possibilities to unravel the mechanisms underlying intercellular communication.
Using degenerate primers, we were able to identify seven Hox genes for the myzostomid Myzostoma cirriferum. The recovered fragments belong to anterior class (Mci_lab, Mci_pb), central class (Mci_Dfd, Mci_Lox5, Mci_Antp, Mci_Lox4), and posterior class (Mci_Post2) paralog groups. Orthology assignment was verified by phylogenetic analyses and presence of diagnostic regions in the homeodomain as well as flanking regions. The presence of Lox5, Lox4, and Post2 supports the inclusion of Myzostomida within Lophotrochozoa. We found signature residues within flanking regions of Lox5, which are also found in annelids, but not in Platyhelminthes. As such the available Hox genes data of myzostomids support an annelid relationship.
Three DNA regions carrying genes encoding putative homologs of xanthine dehydrogenases were identified in Escherichia coli, named xdhABC, xdhD, and yagTSRQ. Here, we describe the purification and characterization of gene products of the yagTSRQ operon, a molybdenum-containing iron-sulfur flavoprotein from E. coli, which is located in the periplasm. The 135 kDa enzyme comprised a noncovalent (alpha beta gamma) heterotrimer with a large (78.1 kDa) molybdenum cofactor (Moco)-containing YagR subunit, a medium (33.9 kDa) FAD-containing YagS subunit, and a small (21.0 kDa) 2 x [2Fe2S]-containing YagT subunit. YagQ is not a subunit of the mature enzyme, and the protein is expected to be involved in Moco modification and insertion into YagTSR. Analysis of the form of Moco present in YagTSR revealed the presence of the molybdopterin cytosine dinucleotide cofactor. Two different [2Fe2S] clusters, typical for this class of enzyme, were identified by EPR. YagTSR represents the first example of a molybdopterin cytosine dinucleotide-containing protein in E. coli. Kinetic characterization of the enzyme revealed that YagTSR converts a broad spectrum of aldehydes, with a preference for aromatic aldehydes. Ferredoxin instead of NAD(+) or molecular oxygen was used as terminal electron acceptor. Complete growth inhibition of E. coli cells devoid of genes from the yagTSRQ operon was observed by the addition of cinnamaldehyde to a low-pH medium. This finding shows that YagTSR might have a role in the detoxification of aromatic aldehydes for E. coli under certain growth conditions.
A test for conspecific cueing in two sympatric species of pupfish (Cyprinodon beltrani, C. simus)
(2009)
In many fishes, individuals prefer to associate with phenotypically similar or conspecific individuals (conspecific cueing). Such phenotypic segregation can be an important evolutionary driver, for example, in intralacustric sympatric speciation processes. I examined conspecific cueing in two species of sympatric pupfish from Laguna Chichancanab in southern Mexico: the little shoaling and highly territorial Cyprinodon beltrani and the highly shoaling but non-territorial C. simus. Females were tested for shoal species preferences in two testing scenarios: (1) a sequential choice test where shoals of four conspecific or four heterospecific (Cyprinodon sp. or Poecilia reticulata) females were presented in succession, and (2) a simultaneous choice test where female shoals of both Cyprindon species were presented concurrently. Overall, higher shoaling in C. simus was corroborated in this study. In the sequential test, no effect of the type of stimulus shoal (con- or heterospecific) on shoaling behavior was detected. In the simultaneous tests, C. beltrani, but not C. simus females showed a preference for the conspecific shoal. It seems possible that C. simus females did not evolve species recognition mechanisms because no other Cyprinodon species in the Laguna Chichancanab shows equally high shoaling, which automatically leads to the formation of single-species (i.e., C. simus-) shoals. C. simus males do not establish long-term territories, but rather spawn within shoals, whereas C. beltrani females approach males in their breeding territories to spawn. I discuss that this behavioral difference still provides a powerful reproductive isolation mechanism even in the absence of conspecific cueing in C. simus.
We have previously shown that the membrane conductance of mIMCD-3 cells at a holding potential of 0 mV is dominated by a Ca2+-dependent Cl- current (I-CLCA). Here we report that I-CLCA activity is also voltage dependent and that this dependence on voltage is linked to the opening of a novel Al3+-sensitive, voltage-dependent, Ca2+ influx pathway. Using whole-cell patch-clamp recordings at a physiological holding potential (-60 mV), I-CLCA was found to be inactive and resting currents were predominantly K+ selective. However, membrane depolarization to 0 mV resulted in a slow, sigmoidal, activation of I-CLCA (T (0.5) similar to 500 s), while repolarization in turn resulted in a monoexponential decay in I-CLCA (T (0.5) similar to 100 s). The activation of I-CLCA by depolarization was reduced by lowering extracellular Ca2+ and completely inhibited by buffering cytosolic Ca2+ with EGTA, suggesting a role for Ca2+ influx in the activation of I-CLCA. However, raising bulk cytosolic Ca2+ at -60 mV did not produce sustained I-CLCA activity. Therefore I-CLCA is dependent on both an increase in intracellular Ca2+ and depolarization to be active. We further show that membrane depolarization is coupled to opening of a Ca2+ influx pathway that displays equal permeability to Ca2+ and Ba2+ ions and that is blocked by extracellular Al3+ and La3+. Furthermore, Al3+ completely and reversibly inhibited depolarization-induced activation of I-CLCA, thereby directly linking Ca2+ influx to activation of I-CLCA. We speculate that during sustained membrane depolarization, calcium influx activates I-CLCA which functions to modulate NaCl transport across the apical membrane of IMCD cells.
It has been suggested that all species of spiral-horned antelopes (Tragelaphini) lack territoriality. Furthermore, some authors suggested that bushbuck (Tragelpahus scriptus) males form dominance hierarchies. In this study, we investigated the dominance relationships in two groups of free-ranging bushbuck males in Queen Elizabeth National Park, Uganda. Adult males dominated young-adult bachelors and subadult males, but no distinct dominance relationships were found among adult males. Landau's index of linearity revealed no linear dominance hierarchy in the study populations. Our results support the idea that adult males are territorial, and overt aggression is directed almost exclusively towards bachelors that challenge territory holders.
Evolutionary processes play an important role in shaping the dynamics of range expansions, and selection on dispersal propensity has been demonstrated to accelerate rates of advance. Previous theory has considered only the evolution of unconditional dispersal rates, but dispersal is often more complex. For example, many species emigrate in response to crowding. Here, we use an individual-based model to investigate the evolution of density dependent dispersal into empty habitat, such as during an invasion. The landscape is represented as a lattice and dispersal between Populations follows a stepping-stone pattern. Individuals carry three 'genes' that determine their dispersal strategy when experiencing different population densities. For a stationary range we obtain results consistent with previous theoretical studies: few individuals emigrate from patches that are below equilibrium density. However, during the range expansion of a previously stationary population, we observe evolution towards dispersal strategies where considerable emigration occurs well below equilibrium density. This is true even for moderate costs to dispersal, and always results in accelerating rates of range expansion. Importantly, the evolution we observe at an expanding front depends upon fitness integrated over several generations and cannot be predicted by a consideration of lifetime reproductive success alone. We argue that a better understanding of the role of density dependent dispersal, and its evolution, in driving population dynamics is required especially within the context of range expansions.
Activated carbon has become a widely used tool to investigate root-mediated allelopathy of plants, especially in plant invasion biology, because it adsorbs and thereby neutralizes root exudates. Allelopathy has been a controversially debated phenomenon for years, which revived in plant invasion biology as one possible reason for the success of invasive plants. Noxious plant exudates may harm other plants and provide an advantage to the allelopathic plant. However, root exudates are not always toxic, but may stimulate the microbial community and change nutrient availability in the rhizosphere. In a greenhouse experiment, we investigated the interacting effects of activated carbon, arbuscular mycorrhiza and plant competition between the invasive Senecio inaequidens and the native Artemisia vulgaris. Furthermore, we tested whether activated carbon showed any undesired effects by directly affecting mycorrhiza or soil chemistry. Contrary to the expectation, S. inaequidens was a weak competitor and we could not support the idea that allelopathy was involved in the competition. Activated carbon led to a considerable increase in the aboveground biomass production and reduced the infection with arbuscular mycorrhiza of both plant species. We expected that arbuscular mycorrhiza promotes plant growth by increasing nutrient availability, but we found the contrary when activated carbon was added. Chemical analyses of the substrate showed, that adding activated carbon resulted in a strong increase in plant available phosphate and in a decrease of the C-organic/N-total ration both of which suggest stimulated microbial activity. Thus, activated carbon not only reduced potential allelopathic effects, but substantially changed the chemistry of the substrate. These results show that activated carbon should be handled with great care in ecological experiments on allelopathy because of possible confounding effects on the soil community.
Rhodococcus fascians is a Gram-positive phytopathogen that induces shooty hyperplasia on its hosts through the secretion of cytokinins. Global transcriptomics using microarrays combined with profiling of primary metabolites on infected Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants revealed that this actinomycete modulated pathways to convert its host into a niche. The transcript data demonstrated that R. fascians leaves a very characteristic mark on Arabidopsis with a pronounced cytokinin response illustrated by the activation of cytokinin perception, signal transduction, and homeostasis. The microarray data further suggested active suppression of an oxidative burst during the R. fascians pathology, and comparison with publicly available transcript data sets implied a central role for auxin in the prevention of plant defense activation. Gene Ontology categorization of the differentially expressed genes hinted at a significant impact of infection on the primary metabolism of the host, which was confirmed by subsequent metabolite profiling. The much higher levels of sugars and amino acids in infected plants are presumably accessed by the bacteria as carbon and nitrogen sources to support epiphytic and endophytic colonization. Hexoses, accumulating from a significantly increased invertase activity, possibly inhibited the expression of photosynthesis genes and photosynthetic activity in infected leaves. Altogether, these changes are indicative of sink development in symptomatic tissues. The metabolomics data furthermore point to the possible occurrence of secondary signaling during the interaction, which might contribute to symptom development. These data are placed in the context of regulation of bacterial virulence gene expression, suppression of defense, infection phenotype, and niche establishment.
Genome-scale metabolic networks which have been automatically derived through sequence comparison techniques are necessarily incomplete. We propose a strategy that incorporates genomic sequence data and metabolite profiles into modeling approaches to arrive at improved gene annotations and more complete genome-scale metabolic networks. The core of our strategy is an algorithm that computes minimal sets of reactions by which a draft network has to be extended in order to be consistent with experimental observations. A particular strength of our approach is that alternative possibilities are suggested and thus experimentally testable hypotheses are produced. We carefully evaluate our strategy on the well-studied metabolic network of Escherichia coli, demonstrating how the predictions can be improved by incorporating sequence data. Subsequently, we apply our method to the recently sequenced green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. We suggest specific genes in the genome of Chlamydomonas which are the strongest candidates for coding the responsible enzymes.
Exceeding weight gain in childhood is a prevailing issue in industrialised countries, such as in Germany. The aim of this study was to detect a critical age for exceeding weight gain. It is assumed that especially in the early years of life, the years of nursery school age, the individual development of weight is fundamental for the prediction of obesity. The data of 638 children (324 boys and 314 girls) and the data of additional 1390 children of a preceding longitudinal study were analysed. The results show that overweight newborns are not at higher risk of becoming overweight children later, in the first place. But the results identify a high risk of becoming overweight for children 4.5 years old through a BMI rebound. In addition, this comparably earlier BMI rebound is linked with an increasing percentage of body fat. This leads to the assumption, that a comparably early BMI rebound is remarkably atypical for healthy child development. The results are also interrelated with the test person's sex. Endangered girls are of pyknomorphic body type. In contrast, the boys' results are independent of the body type. Obesity of boys therefore is strongly assumed to be caused by environmental factors.
Analysis of phosphorylation dynamics under nitrogen limitation and nitrate or ammonium resupply
(2009)
Males often face strong mating competition by neighboring males in their social environment. A recent study by Plath et al. (Anim Behav 75:21-29, 2008a) has demonstrated that the visual presence of a male competitor (i.e., an audience male) affects the expression of male mating preferences in a poeciliid fish (Poecilia mexicana) with a weaker expression of mating preferences when an audience male observed the focal male. This may be a tactic to reduce sperm competition, since surrounding males likely share intrinsic preferences for female traits or copy mate choice decisions. Here, we examined the hypothesis that a same-sex audience would affect female mate preferences less than male mating preferences. Our hypothesis was based on the assumptions that (1) competition for mates in a fashion that would be comparable in strength to sperm competition or overt male-male aggression is absent among Poecilia females, and (2) P. mexicana females typically form female-biased shoals, such that almost any female mate choice in nature occurs in front of a female audience. Poecilia females (P. mexicana, surface and cave form, and the closely related gynogenetic Poecilia formosa) were given a choice between a large and a small male, and the tests were repeated while a conspecific, a heterospecific, or no audience female (control) was presented. Females spent more time in the neutral zone and, thus, less time near the males during the second part of a trial when an audience was presented, but-consistent with predictions-females showed only slightly weaker expression of mate preferences during the second part of the tests. This decline was not specific to the treatment involving an audience and was significantly weaker than the effect seen in the male sex.
Background: Multidirectional interactions in social networks can have a profound effect on mate choice behavior; e.g., Poecilia mexicana males show weaker expression of mating preferences when being observed by a rival. This may be an adaptation to reduce sperm competition risk, which arises because commonly preferred female phenotypes will receive attention also from surrounding males, and/or because other males can copy the focal male's mate choice. Do P. mexicana males indeed respond to perceived sperm competition risk? We gave males a choice between two females and repeated the tests under one of the following conditions: (1) an empty transparent cylinder was presented (control); (2) another ("audience") male inside the cylinder observed the focal male throughout the 2nd part, or (3) the audience male was presented only before the tests, but could not eavesdrop during the actual choice tests (non-specific sperm competition risk treatments); (4) the focal male could see a rival male interact sexually with the previously preferred, or (5) with the non-preferred female before the 2nd part of the tests (specific sperm competition risk treatments). Results: The strength of individual male preferences declined slightly also during the control treatment (1). However, this decrease was more than two-fold stronger in audience treatment (2), i.e., with non-specific sperm competition risk including the possibility for visual eavesdropping by the audience male. No audience effect was found in treatments (3) and (5), but a weak effect was also observed when the focal male had seen the previously preferred female sexually interact with a rival male (treatment 4; specific sperm competition risk). Conclusion: When comparing the two 'non-specific sperm competition risk' treatments, a very strong effect was found only when the audience male could actually observe the focal male during mate choice [treatment (2)]. This suggests that focal males indeed attempt to conceal their mating preferences so as to prevent surrounding males from copying their mate choice. When there is no potential for eavesdropping [treatment (3)], non-specific specific sperm competition risk seems to play a minor or no role. Our results also show that P. mexicana males tend to share their mating effort more equally among females when the resource value of their previously preferred mate decreases after mating with a rival male (perceived specific sperm competition risk), but this effect is comparatively weak.
Das homotrimere Tailspikeadhäsin des Bakteriophagen P22 ist ein etabliertes Modellsystem, dessen Faltung, Assemblierung und Stabilität in vivo und in vitro umfassend charakterisiert ist. Das zentrale Strukturmotiv des Proteins ist eine parallele beta-Helix mit 13 Windungen, die von einer N‑terminalen Kapsidbindedomäne und einer C‑terminalen Trimerisierungsdomäne flankiert wird. Jede Windung beinhaltet drei kurze beta-Stränge, die durch turns und loops unterschiedlicher Länge verbunden sind. Durch den sich strukturell wiederholenden, spulenförmigen Aufbau formen beta-Stränge benachbarter Windungen elongierte beta-Faltblätter. Das Lumen der beta-Helix beinhaltet größtenteils hydrophobe Seitenketten, welche linear und sehr regelmäßig entlang der Längsachse gestapelt sind. Eine hoch repetitive Struktur, ausgedehnte beta-Faltblätter und die regelmäßige Anordnung von ähnlichen oder identischen Seitenketten entlang der beta-Faltblattachse sind ebenfalls typische Kennzeichen von Amyloidfibrillen, die bei Proteinfaltungskrankheiten wie Alzheimer, der Creutzfeld-Jakob-Krankheit, Chorea Huntington und Typ-II-Diabetes gebildet werden. Es wird vermutet, dass die hohe Stabilität des Tailspikeproteins und auch die der Amyloidfibrille durch Seitenkettenstapelung, einem geordneten Netzwerk von Wasserstoffbrückenbindungen und den rigiden, oligomeren Verbund bedingt ist. Um den Einfluss der Seitenkettenstapelung auf die Stabilität, Faltung und Struktur des P22 Tailspikeproteins zu untersuchen, wurden sieben Valine in einem im Lumen der beta-Helix begrabenen Seitenkettenstapel gegen das kleinere und weniger hydrophobe Alanin und das voluminösere Leucin substituiert. Der Einfluss der Mutationen wurde anhand zweier Tailspikevarianten, dem trimeren, N‑terminal verkürzten TSPdeltaN‑Konstrukt und der monomeren, isolierten beta-Helix Domäne analysiert. Generell wurde in den Experimenten deutlich, dass Mutationen zu Alanin stärkere Effekte auslösen als Mutationen zu Leucin. Die dichte und hydrophobe Packung im Kern der beta-Helix bildet somit die Basis für Stabilität und Faltung des Proteins. Anhand hoch aufgelöster Kristallstrukturen jeweils zweier Alanin‑ und Leucin‑Mutanten konnte verdeutlicht werden, dass das Strukturmotiv der parallelen beta-Helix stark formbar ist und mutationsbedingte Änderungen des Seitenkettenvolumens durch kleine und lokale Verschiebung der Haupt‑ und Seitenketten ausgeglichen werden, sodass mögliche Kavitäten gefüllt und sterische Spannung abgebaut werden können. Viele Mutanten zeigten in vivo und in vitro einen temperatursensitiven Faltungsphänotyp (temperature sensitive for folding, tsf), d.h. bei Temperaturerhöhung waren die Ausbeuten des N‑terminal verkürzten Trimers im Vergleich zum Wildtyp deutlich verringert. Weiterführende Experimente zeigten, dass der tsf‑Phänotyp durch die Beeinflussung unterschiedlicher Stadien des Reifungsprozesses oder auch durch die Verminderung der kinetischen Stabilität des nativen Trimers ausgelöst wurde. Durch Untersuchungen am vollständigen und am N‑terminal verkürzten Wildtypprotein wurde gezeigt, dass die Entfaltungsreaktion des Tailspiketrimers komplex ist. Die Verläufe der Kinetiken folgen zwar einem apparenten Zweizustandsverhalten, jedoch sind bei Darstellung der Entfaltungsäste im Chevronplot die Abhängigkeiten der Geschwindigkeitskonstanten vom Denaturierungsmittel nicht linear, sondern in unterschiedliche Richtungen gewölbt. Dieses Verhalten könnte durch ein hoch energetisches Entfaltungsintermediat, einen breiten Übergangsbereich oder parallele Entfaltungswege hervorgerufen sein. Mit Hilfe der monomeren, isolierten beta-Helix Domäne, bei der die N‑terminale Capsidbindedomäne und die C‑terminale Trimerisierungsdomäne deletiert sind und welche als unabhängige Faltungseinheit fungiert, wurde gezeigt, dass alle Mutanten im Harnstoff‑induzierten Gleichgewicht analog zum Wildtypprotein einem Zweizustandsverhalten mit vergleichbaren Kooperativitäten folgen. Die konformationellen Stabilitäten von in der beta-Helix zentral gelegenen Alanin‑ und Leucin‑Mutanten sind stark vermindert, während Mutationen in äußeren Bereichen der Domäne keinen Einfluss auf die Stabilität der beta-Helix haben. Bei Verlängerung der Inkubationszeiten der Gleichgewichtsexperimente konnte die langsame Bildung von Aggregaten im Übergangsbereich der destabilisierten Mutanten detektiert werden. Die in der Arbeit erlangten Erkenntnisse lassen vermuten, dass die isolierte beta-Helix einem für die Reifung des Tailspikeproteins entscheidenden thermolabilen Faltungsintermediat auf Monomerebene sehr ähnlich ist. Im Intermediat ist ein zentraler Kern, der die Windungen 4 bis 7 und die „Rückenflosse“ beinhaltet, stabilitätsbestimmend. Dieser Kern könnte als Faltungsnukleus dienen, an den sich sequenziell weitere Helixwindungen anlagern und im Zuge der „Monomerreifung“ kompaktieren.
We studied the effects of overgrazing on the foraging behaviour of the lizard Pedioplanis l. lineoocellata (Spotted Sand Lizard), a sit-and-wait forager, in habitats of differing vegetation states to determine the effects of habitat degradation on this species. At high grazing intensity where vegetation cover and diversity is low, the lizard P. lineoocellata moves more frequently, spends more time moving and covers larger distances than in habitats where vegetation cover and diversity is high. These behavioural changes in movement patterns can be explained by less abundant prey in habitats with low vegetation cover and diversity. Although morphology, phylogeny and physiology of P. lineoocellata should constrain the change in foraging behaviour, the species has modified its foraging strategy from sit- and-wait to actively foraging. We assume that this behavioural flexibility of P. lineoocellata is a buffer mechanism enabling the species to use and survive in degraded (unfavourable) habitats.
To date, positive relationships between diversity and community biomass have been mainly found, especially in terrestrial ecosystems due to the complementarity and/or dominance effect. In this thesis, the effect of diversity on the performance of terrestrial plant and phytoplankton communities was investigated to get a better understanding of the underlying mechanisms in the biodiversity-ecosystem functioning context. In a large grassland biodiversity experiment, the Jena Experiment, the effect of community diversity on the individual plant performance was investigated for all species. The species pool consisted of 60 plant species belonging to 4 functional groups (grasses, small herbs, tall herbs, legumes). The experiment included 82 large plots which differed in species richness (1-60), functional richness (1-4), and community composition. Individual plant height increased with increasing species richness suggesting stronger competition for light in more diverse communities. The aboveground biomass of the individual plants decreased with increasing species richness indicating stronger competition in more species-rich communities. Moreover, in more species-rich communities plant individuals were less likely to flower out and had fewer inflorescences which may be resulting from a trade-off between resource allocation to vegetative height growth and to reproduction. Responses to changing species richness differed strongly between functional groups and between species of similar functional groups. To conclude, individual plant performance can largely depend on the diversity of the surrounding community. Positive diversity effects on biomass have been mainly found for substrate-bound plant communities. Therefore, the effect of diversity on the community biomass of phytoplankton was studied using microcosms. The communities consisted of 8 algal species belonging to 4 functional groups (green algae, diatoms, cyanobacteria, phytoflagellates) and were grown at different functional richness levels (1-4). Functional richness and community biomass were negatively correlated and all community biomasses were lower than their average monoculture biomasses of the component species, revealing community underyielding. This was mainly caused by the dominance of a fast-growing species which built up low biomasses in monoculture and mixture. A trade-off between biomass and growth rate in monoculture was found for all species, and thus fast-growing species built up low biomasses and slow-growing species reached high biomasses in monoculture. As the fast-growing, low-productive species monopolised nutrients in the mixtures, they became the dominant species resulting in the observed community underyielding. These findings suggest community overyielding when biomasses of the component species are positively correlated with their growth rates in monocultures. Aquatic microcosm experiments with an extensive design were performed to get a broad range of community responses. The phytoplankton communities differed in species diversity (1, 2, 4, 8, and 12), functional diversity (1, 2, 3, and 4) and community composition. The species/functional diversity positively affected community biomass, revealing overyielding in most of the communities. This was mainly caused by a positive complementarity effect which can be attributed to resource use complementarity and/or facilitative interaction among the species. Overyielding of more diverse communities occurred when the biomass of the component species was correlated positively with their growth rates in monoculture and thus, fast-growing and high-productive species were dominant in mixtures. This and the study mentioned above generated an emergent pattern for community overyielding and underyielding from the relationship between biomass and growth rate in monoculture as long as the initial community structure prevailed. Invasive species can largely affect ecosystem processes, whereas invasion is also influenced by diversity. To date, studies revealed negative and positive diversity effects on the invasibility (susceptibility of a community to the invasion by new species). The effect of productivity (nutrient concentration ranging from 10 to 640 µg P L-1), herbivory (presence/absence of the generalist feeder) and diversity (3, 4, 6 species were randomly chosen from the resident species pool) on the invasibility of phytoplankton communities consisting of 10 resident species was investigated using semi-continuous microcosms. Two functionally diverse invaders were chosen: the filamentous and less-edible cynaobacterium C. raciborskii and the unicellular and well-edible phytoflagellate Cryptomonas sp. The phytoflagellate indirectly benefited from grazing pressure of herbivores whereas C. raciborskii suffered more from it. Diversity did not affect the invasibility of the phytoplankton communities. Rather, it was strongly influenced by the functional traits of the resident and invasive species.
Die spontane Ausbreitung nicht-einheimischer oder exotischer Arten, unabsichtlich eingeschleppt bzw. absichtlich eingefuehrt, ist heute ein weltweit zu beobachtendes Phaenomen. Arten werden in grossem Umfang zwischen Kontinenten ausgetauscht und innerhalb der Kontinente verfrachtet; in erster Linie eine Folge des weltweiten Handels und Reiseverkehrs. Einige (aber nicht alle) dieser verwilderten Exoten breiten sich rasant aus und ihr Massenvorkommen zieht nachteilige Auswirkungen auf Mensch und Umwelt nach sich. Solche invasive Arten sind heutzutage ein zentrales Thema im internationalen Naturschutz und in der oekologischen Forschung. Die Ausbreitung invasiver Organismen, als biologische Invasionen bezeichnet, gilt mittlerweile neben Lebensraumzerstoerung als die zweitwichtigste Ursache des weltweiten Artenrueckganges. Die Mechanismen, die zu einer biologischen Invasion fuehren koennen, sind sehr vielfaeltig und beruhen auf Eigenschaften der Arten sowie des betreffenden neuen Lebensraumes. Offene Habitate mit geringem Konkurrenzdruck anderer Arten und ohne spezialisierte Frassfeinde und Pathogene zeigen sich als besonders anfaellig fuer die Besiedlung invasiver Arten. Unter invasive Arten fallen auch solche, die in der Land- und Forstwirtschaft Schaeden verursachen oder die Gesundheit des Menschen gefaehrden. In der Schweiz sind ueber 800 exotische Pflanzen-, Tier-, und Pilz-Arten etabliert, von diesen gelten 107 Arten als invasiv. Welche Massnahmen ergriffen werden sollen, richtet sich nach der Haeufigkeit der Art, aber auch nach der Zielsetzung. Die kostenguenstigsten Massnahmen sind praeventive Massnahmen. Die Gruende, wie es zu biologischen Invasionen kommen kann, welche Eigenschaften invasive Arten aufweisen, ob und wie schnell sich verschleppte Arten im neuen Verbreitungsgebiet evolutiv veraendern koennen, und welches die beste Strategie im Umgang mit invasiven Arten ist, ist Gegenstand dieser Schrift.
Preschool age is a biological stage of intensive longitudinal growth with high plasticity of the growing body and of body postures. It is the period where children learn to persist in a sitting posture for a longer time and to use furniture like chairs or other body supporting systems. The growing body shows a special sensitivity for the manifestation of inappropriate postures. In this study the development of body measurements and sitting behaviour of preschool age children is investigated as a precondition for an optimal adjustment of seats and desks to the growing body. Accordingly to the instructions of Knußmann (1988) and Jürgens (1988) 6 body measurements were taken from 122 German children aged 3 to 7 years from Potsdam, Province Brandenburg. Additionally, every child was videotaped for 10 minutes while crayoning in a sitting position of its own choice using a chair and a desk. To analyse the tapes, the software Noldus Observer was used and examined, picture by picture, to define the different types of sitting postures as well as the duration of persistence in a posture and the number of changes of postures. The used chairs and desks were also measured. Furthermore, the data of the furniture guideline DIN ISO 5970 (DIN, 1981), which regulates the dimensions of furniture for sitting in educational institutions, were compared with the results of the body measurements and with the dimensions of the furniture used by the children.
Der Streifenkiwi (Apteryx mantelli) kommt im Freiland nur auf der Nordinsel Neuseelands vor. Aufgrund des gefährdeten Bestands ist eine sich selbst erhaltene Zoopopulation wichtig. Kenntnisse des Verhaltens helfen, die Ansprüche der Tiere zu verstehen. Zudem können sie darüber Auskunft geben, inwiefern das Wohlbefinden eines Tieres gegeben ist. Durch die Untersuchung der Brutaktivität sollte ein Überblick über den allgemeinen Verlauf der Brut gegeben und Aktivitätsmuster für den Berliner Hahn erarbeitet werden, um den Verlauf zukünftiger Bruten einschätzen und eventuell positiv beeinflussen zu können. Dazu kamen die Untersuchung der täglichen Aktivität einer Henne sowie Beobachtungen des Verhaltens der Tiere. Diese dienten der Bestandsaufnahme der gezeigten Verhaltensweisen und sollten zusammen mit der Aktivität die Grundlage zur Einschätzung bilden, ob die Ansprüche der Kiwis im Zoo Berlin erfüllt werden, und Hinweise zur Verbesserung der Haltung geben. Die Brutaktivität des Hahnes konnte über drei Brutperioden hinweg detailliert dargestellt werden und zeigte, dass nicht nur innerhalb der Art sondern bei einem einzigen Tier unter ähnlichen Bedingungen die Variabilität so groß sein kann, dass sie für Vorhersagen über den Erfolg einer Brut nicht geeignet ist. Im Zusammenhang mit der Aktivität der Henne ließen sich keine Auffälligkeiten erkennen, die auf eine allgemeine Störung der Tiere schließen lassen oder für eine Beeinträchtigung der Brut verantwortlich gemacht werden könnten. Soweit aus den Beobachtungen im Freiland geschlossen werden kann, scheinen die Kiwis im Zoo ein weitgehend natürliches Verhalten zu zeigen. Die Haltungsbedingungen scheinen den Ansprüchen der Tiere zu entsprechen. Es ließen sich nur bedingt Strategien entwickeln, um die Bedingungen für die Brut und damit für die Nachzucht zu verbessern, da sich die Aktivität des Hahnes während der Brut von Jahr zu Jahr als unerwartet variabel erwies. Für ein weiteres Verständnis des Brutverhaltens und eine mögliche Verbesserung der Bedingungen wäre eine Untersuchung zum Einfluss verschiedener Umweltfaktoren auf die Brutaktivität des Hahnes wünschenswert.
Carbon assimilation mode in mixotrophs and the fatty acid composition of their rotifer consumers
(2009)
P>1. We examined an important ecophysiological link between the mixotrophic flagellate Chlamydomonas acidophila and its consumers, the rotifers Elosa worallii, Cephalodella sp. and Brachionus sericus, by comparing their fatty acid profiles. 2. The mixotrophic flagellate was grown under either exclusively autotrophic conditions in the light, under exclusively heterotrophic conditions in the dark with an organic carbon source (glucose), or in the light plus the organic carbon sources (=mixotrophic). 3. Under heterotrophic growth conditions, C. acidophila strongly reduced its content of the n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) alpha-linolenic acid (ALA, C18:3n-3) compared with auto- and mixotrophic growth conditions. Although PUFAs with more than 18 carbon atoms were not detected in C. acidophila, significant amounts of eicosatetraenoic (ETA, 20:4n-3) and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA, 20:5n-3) were found in three rotifer consumers. 4. Species-specific differences in the fatty acid profiles with respect to ETA, EPA and the precursor ALA were found in the rotifers: Brachionus and Cephalodella fed on the heterotrophic diets synthesised less EPA. In Elosa, smaller amounts of ALA were detected but were converted efficiently to a constant content of EPA and to an exceptionally high content of ETA. 5. Since in nature the mode of carbon assimilation among mixotrophic organisms differs, and their fatty acid composition varies depending on their mode of carbon assimilation, the availability of ALA might be critical for their consumers. An insufficient dietary supply of this precursor for the synthesis of ETA and EPA can prevent consumers from regulating their content of ETA and EPA. Therefore, observed differences in values of the latter might underly species-specific differences in the competitive capability of consumers.
Of the four chloroplast beta-amylase (BAM) proteins identified in Arabidopsis, BAM3 and BAM4 were previously shown to play the major roles in leaf starch breakdown, although BAM4 apparently lacks key active site residues and beta- amylase activity. Here we tested multiple BAM4 proteins with different N-terminal sequences with a range of glucan substrates and assay methods, but detected no alpha-1,4-glucan hydrolase activity. BAM4 did not affect BAM1, BAM2 or BAM3 activity even when added in 10-fold excess, nor the BAM3-catalysed release of maltose from isolated starch granules in the presence of glucan water dikinase. However, BAM4 binds to amylopectin and to amylose-Sepharose whereas BAM2 has very low beta-amylase activity and poor glucan binding. The low activity of BAM2 may be explained by poor glucan binding but absence of BAM4 activity is not. These results suggest that BAM4 facilitates starch breakdown by a mechanism involving direct interaction with starch or other alpha-1,4-glucan.
Cell cycle-dependent localization of novel centrosomal and centromeric proteins in Dictyostelium
(2009)
Shrub encroachment linked to heavy grazing has dramatically changed savanna landscapes, and is a major form of rangeland degradation. Our understanding of how shrub encroachment affects arthropod communities is poor, however. Here, we investigate the effects of shrub encroachment on abundance and diversity of ground-dwelling (wingless) arthropods at varying levels of shrub cover in the southern Kalahari. We also ascertain if invertebrate assemblage composition changes with habitat structure and identify which aspects of habitat structure (e.g., grass cover, herbaceous plant cover, shrub density) correlate most strongly with these changes. Ant, scorpion and dung beetle abundance increased with shrub cover, whereas grasshoppers and solifuges declined. Spider and beetle abundance exhibited hump-shaped relationships with shrub cover. RTU richness within orders either mirrored abundances, or exhibited no trend. Shrub density was the habitat component most correlated with similarities between invertebrate assemblages. Ground-dwelling arthropods showed clear shifts in species assemblage composition at a similarity level of 65% according to shrub density. Changes in indicator species showed that within the Tenebrionidae (darkling beetles), certain species respond positively to shrub thickening, replacing other species within the Family. Small-bodied, wingless Scarabaeidae (dung beetles) tended to increase with increased shrub density and three species emerged as significant indicators of more thickened habitats, although this might be a response to greater dung availability, rather than habitat structure itself. We conclude that because ground- dwelling invertebrates showed such clear responses in species assemblage composition, they present excellent candidates for use as indicator species in further studies into bush encroachment.
Das serotonerge System besitzt sowohl bei Invertebraten als auch bei Vertebraten eine große Bedeutung für die Kontrolle und Modulation vieler physiologischer Prozesse und Verhaltensleistungen. Bei der Honigbiene Apis mellifera spielt Serotonin (5-Hydroxytryptamin, 5-HT) eine wichtige Rolle bei der Arbeitsteilung und dem Lernen. Die 5-HT-Rezeptoren, die überwiegend zur Familie der G-Protein gekoppelten Rezeptoren (GPCRs) gehören, besitzen eine Schlüsselstellung für das Verständnis der molekularen Mechanismen der serotonergen Signalweiterleitung. Ziel dieser Arbeit war es, 5-HT-Rezeptoren der Honigbiene zu charakterisieren. Dazu zählt die Identifizierung der molekularen Struktur, die Ermittlung der intrazellulären Signalwege, die Erstellung von pharmakologischen Profilen, die Ermittlung der Expressionsmuster und die Ermittlung der physiologischen Funktionen der Rezeptoren. Mit Hilfe der Informationen aus dem Honey Bee Genome Project, konnten drei RezeptorcDNAs kloniert werden. Vergleiche der abgeleiteten Aminosäuresequenzen mit den Aminosäuresequenzen bereits charakterisierter Rezeptoren legten nahe, dass es sich dabei um einen 5-HT1- (Am5-HT1) und zwei 5-HT2-Rezeptoren (Am5-HT2α und Am5-HT2β) handelt. Die strukturelle Analyse der abgeleiteten Aminosäuresequenz dieser Rezeptoren postuliert das Vorhandensein der charakteristischen heptahelikalen Architektur von GPCRs und zeigt starkkonservierte Motive, die bedeutend für die Ligandenbindung, die Rezeptoraktivierung und die Kopplung an G-Proteine sind. Für die beiden 5 HT2-Rezeptoren konnte zudem alternatives Spleißen nachgewiesen werden. Mit den cDNAs des Am5-HT1- und des Am5-HT2α-Rezeptors wurden HEK293-Zellen stabil transfiziert und anschließend die Rezeptoren funktionell und pharmakologisch analysiert. Am5-HT1 hemmt bei Aktivierung abhängig von der 5-HT-Konzentration die cAMPProduktion.Die Substanzen 5-Methoxytryptamin (5-MT) und 5-Carboxamidotryptamin konnten als Agonisten identifiziert werden. Methiothepin dagegen blockiert die 5-HTWirkung vollständig. Prazosin und WAY100635 stellen partielle Antagonisten des Am5-HT1-Rezeptors dar. Der Am5-HT2_-Rezeptor stimuliert bei Aktivierung die Synthese des sekundären Botenstoffs Inositoltrisphosphat, was wiederum zu einer messbaren Erhöhung der intrazellulären Ca2+-Konzentration führt. 5-MT und 8-OH-DPAT zeigen eine deutliche agonistische Wirkung auf Am5-HT2α. Dagegen besitzen Clozapin, Methiothepin, Mianserin und Cyproheptadin die Fähigkeit, die 5-HT-Wirkung um 51-64 % zu vermindern. Die bereits erwähnte alternative Spleißvariante von Am5-HT2α wurde ebenfalls in HEK293-Zellen exprimiert und analysiert, scheint jedoch eigenständig nicht funktionell zu sein. Gegen die dritte cytoplasmatische Schleife (CPL3) wurde ein polyklonales Antiserum generiert. Dieses erkennt in Western-Blot-Analysen ein Protein mit einer Masse von ca. 50 kDa. Durch immunhistochemische Analysen am Bienengehirn wurde die Verteilung des Rezeptors genauer untersucht. Dabei zeigten die optischen Neuropile, besonders die Lamina und die Ocellarnerven, stets eine starke Markierung. Außerdem wird der Rezeptor in den α- und β-Loben sowie der Lippe, dem Basalring und dem Pedunculus der Pilzkörper exprimiert. Doppelmarkierungen zeigen stets eine enge Nachbarschaft von serotonergen Fasern und dem Am5-HT1-Rezeptor. Weiterhin konnte gezeigt werden, dass der Am5-HT1-Rezeptor sehr wahrscheinlich an der Regulation des phototaktischen Verhalten der Honigbiene beteiligt ist. Verfütterung von 5-HT hat eine deutlich negative Wirkung auf das phototaktischen Verhalten. Diese kann durch den Am5-HT1-Rezeptor-Agonisten 5-CT imitiert werden. Schließlich konnte gezeigt werden, dass der Am5-HT1-Antagonist Prazosin die 5-HT-Wirkung deutlich vermindern kann.
ChlamyCyc : an integrative systems biology database and web-portal for Chlamydomonas reinhardtii
(2009)
Background: The unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is an important eukaryotic model organism for the study of photosynthesis and plant growth. In the era of modern highthroughput technologies there is an imperative need to integrate large-scale data sets from highthroughput experimental techniques using computational methods and database resources to provide comprehensive information about the molecular and cellular organization of a single organism. Results: In the framework of the German Systems Biology initiative GoFORSYS, a pathway database and web-portal for Chlamydomonas (ChlamyCyc) was established, which currently features about 250 metabolic pathways with associated genes, enzymes, and compound information. ChlamyCyc was assembled using an integrative approach combining the recently published genome sequence, bioinformatics methods, and experimental data from metabolomics and proteomics experiments. We analyzed and integrated a combination of primary and secondary database resources, such as existing genome annotations from JGI, EST collections, orthology information, and MapMan classification. Conclusion: ChlamyCyc provides a curated and integrated systems biology repository that will enable and assist in systematic studies of fundamental cellular processes in Chlamydomonas. The ChlamyCyc database and web-portal is freely available under http://chlamycyc.mpimp-golm.mpg.de.
Empirical data providing evidence for a colimitation of an herbivore by two or more essential nutrients are scarce, particularly in regard to biochemical resources. Here, a graphical model is presented, which describes the growth of an herbivore in a system with two potentially limiting resources. To verify this model, life-history experiments were conducted with the herbivore Daphnia magna feeding on the picocyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus, which was supplemented with increasing amounts of cholesterol either in the presence or the absence of saturating amounts of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA). For comparison, D. magna was raised on diets containing different proportions of S. elongatus and the cholesterol- and EPA-rich eukaryotic alga Nannochloropsis limnetica. Somatic and population growth of D. magna on a sterol- and EPA-deficient diet was initially constrained by the absence of sterols. With increased sterol availability, a colimitation by EPA became apparent and when the sterol requirements were met, the growth- limiting factor was shifted from a limitation by sterols to a limitation by EPA. These data imply that herbivores are frequently limited by two or more essential nutrients simultaneously. Hence, the concept of colimitation has to be incorporated into models assessing nutrient-limited growth kinetics of herbivores to accurately predict demographic changes and population dynamics.
Crosses between plants from different populations may result in heterosis or outbreeding depression. However, despite its importance for conservation, little is known about the spatial scale over which these effects may arise. To investigate the consequences of between-population crosses at two distinct spatial scales, we conducted reciprocal crosses between four populations from two regions in the rare perennial herb Aster amellus. We assessed seed set and offspring fitness in a common garden experiment. Overall, between-population crosses within regions (10 km) resulted in 8% lower seed set than within-population crosses, while between-region crosses (70 km) resulted in 17% higher seed set than within-population crosses. Moreover, offspring from between-population crosses produced 18% more flower heads than offspring from within-population crosses. We conclude that hybridisation between A. amellus plants from different populations did not lead to immediate outbreeding depression and, thus, could represent a valid conservation option to increase genetic diversity. Moreover, our results suggest that the distance between populations affects the outputs of between-population crosses and therefore needs to be taken into account when promoting gene flow between populations.
Contrasting signals from multiple markers illuminate population connectivity in a marine fish
(2009)
Recent advances in molecular biology and bioinformatics have helped to unveil striking and previously unrecognized patterns of geographic genetic structure in marine populations. Largely driven by the pressing needs of fisheries management and conservation, studies on marine fish populations have played a pivotal role in testing the efficiency of a range of approaches to explore connectivity and dispersal at sea. Here, we employed nuclear and mitochondrial DNA markers and parasitic infestations to examine the nature and patterns of population structure in a warm-temperate coastal marine teleost across major putative biogeographic barriers in the Mediterranean Sea and Eastern Atlantic Ocean. We detected deep genetic divergence between mitochondrial lineages, likely caused by dramatic climatic and geological transformations before and during the Pleistocene. Such long-diverged lineages later came into secondary contact and can now be found in sympatry. More importantly, microsatellite data revealed that these lineages, after millions of years of independent evolution, now interbreed extensively. By combining genetic and parasite data, we were able to identify at least five independent demographic units. While the different genetic and parasite-based methods produce notably contrasting signals and may complicate the reconstruction of connectivity dynamics, we show that by tailoring the correct interpretation to each of the descriptors used, it is possible to achieve a deeper understanding of the micro-evolutionary process and, consequently, resolve population structure.
Crystal structure of YnjE from Escherichia coli, a sulfurtransferase with three rhodanese domains
(2009)
Rhodaneses/sulfurtransferases are ubiquitous enzymes that catalyze the transfer of sulfane sulfur from a donor molecule to a thiophilic acceptor via an active site cysteine that is modified to a persulfide during the reaction. Here, we present the first crystal structure of a triple-domain rhodanese-like protein, namely YnjE from Escherichia coli, in two states where its active site cysteine is either unmodified or present as a persulfide. Compared to well- characterized tandem domain rhodaneses, which are composed of one inactive and one active domain, YnjE contains an extra N-terminal inactive rhodanese-like domain. Phylogenetic analysis reveals that YnjE triple-domain homologs can be found in a variety of other gamma-proteobacteria, in addition, some single-, tandem-, four and even six-domain variants exist. All YnjE rhodaneses are characterized by a highly conserved active site loop (CGTGWR) and evolved independently from other rhodaneses, thus forming their own subfamily. On the basis of structural comparisons with other rhodaneses and kinetic studies, YnjE, which is more similar to thiosulfate:cyanide sulfurtransferases than to 3- mercaptopyruvate:cyanide sulfurtransferases, has a different substrate specificity that depends not only on the composition of the active site loop with the catalytic cysteine at the first position but also on the surrounding residues. In vitro YnjE can be efficiently persulfurated by the cysteine desulfurase IscS. The catalytic site is located within an elongated cleft, formed by the central and C-terminal domain and is lined by bulky hydrophobic residues with the catalytic active cysteine largely shielded from the solvent.
The effect of introducing positive charges (lysines) in human cytochrome c (cyt c) on the redox properties and reaction rates of cyt c with superoxide radicals was studied. The mutated forms of this electron-transfer protein are used as sensorial recognition elements for the amperometric detection of the reactive oxygen radical. The proteins were prepared by site-directed mutagenesis focusing on amino acids near the heme edge. The 11 mutants of human cyt c expressed in the course of this research have been characterized by UV-vis spectroscopy, circular dichroism, and NMR spectroscopy to verify overall structure integrity as well as axial coordination of the heme iron. The mutants are investigated voltammetrically using promoter-modified gold electrodes with respect to redox activity and formal redox potential. The rate constants for the reaction with superoxide have been determined spectrophotometrically. Four mutants show a higher reaction rate with the radical as compared to the wild type. These mutants are used for the construction of superoxide sensors based on thiol-modified gold electrodes and covalently fixed proteins. We found that the E66K mutant-based electrode has a clearly higher sensitivity in comparison with the wild-type-based sensor while retaining the high selectivity and showing a good storage stability.
In plants several 'starch-related' enzymes exist as plastid- and cytosol-specific isoforms and in some cases the extraplastidial isoforms represent the majority of the enzyme activity. Due to the compartmentation of the plant cells, these extraplastidial isozymes have no access to the plastidial starch granules and, therefore, their in vivo function remained enigmatic. Recently, cytosolic heteroglycans have been identified that possess a complex pattern of the monomer composition and glycosidic bonds. The glycans act both as acceptors and donors for cytosolic glucosyl transferases. In autotrophic tissues the heteroglycans are essential for the nocturnal starch-sucrose conversion. In this review we summarize the current knowledge of these glycans, their interaction with glucosyl transferases and their possible cellular functions. We include data on the heteroglycans in heterotrophic plant tissues and discuss their role in intracellular carbon fluxes that originate from externally supplied carbohydrates.
The present thesis aims to introduce process-based model for species range dynamics that can be fitted to abundance data. For this purpose, the well-studied Proteaceae species of the South African Cape Floristic Region (CFR) offer a great data set to fit process-based models. These species are subject to wildflower harvesting and environmental threats like habitat loss and climate change. The general introduction of this thesis presents shortly the available models for species distribution modelling. Subsequently, it presents the feasibility of process-based modelling. Finally, it introduces the study system as well as the objectives and layout. In Chapter 1, I present the process-based model for range dynamics and a statistical framework to fit it to abundance distribution data. The model has a spatially-explicit demographic submodel (describing dispersal, reproduction, mortality and local extinction) and an observation submodel (describing imperfect detection of individuals). The demographic submodel links species-specific habitat models describing the suitable habitat and process-based demographic models that consider local dynamics and anemochoric seed dispersal between populations. After testing the fitting framework with simulated data, I applied it to eight Proteaceae species with different demographic properties. Moreover, I assess the role of two other demographic mechanisms: positive (Allee effects) and negative density-dependence. Results indicate that Allee effects and overcompensatory local dynamics (including chaotic behaviour) seem to be important for several species. Most parameter estimates quantitatively agreed with independent data. Hence, the presented approach seemed to suit the demand of investigating non-equilibrium scenarios involving wildflower harvesting (Chapter 2) and environmental change (Chapter 3). The Chapter 2 addresses the impacts of wildflower harvesting. The chapter includes a sensitivity analysis over multiple spatial scales and demographic properties (dispersal ability, strength of Allee effects, maximum reproductive rate, adult mortality, local extinction probability and carrying capacity). Subsequently, harvesting effects are investigated on real case study species. Plant response to harvesting showed abrupt threshold behavior. Species with short-distance seed dispersal, strong Allee effects, low maximum reproductive rate, high mortality and high local extinction are most affected by harvesting. Larger spatial scales benefit species response, but the thresholds become sharper. The three case study species supported very low to moderate harvesting rates. Summarizing, demographic knowledge about the study system and careful identification of the spatial scale of interest should guide harvesting assessments and conservation of exploited species. The sensitivity analysis’ results can be used to qualitatively assess harvesting impacts for poorly studied species. I investigated in Chapter 3 the consequences of past habitat loss, future climate change and their interaction on plant response. I use the species-specific estimates of the best model describing local dynamics obtained in Chapter 1. Both habitat loss and climate change had strong negative impacts on species dynamics. Climate change affected mainly range size and range filling due to habitat reductions and shifts combined with low colonization. Habitat loss affected mostly local abundances. The scenario with both habitat loss and climate change was the worst for most species. However, this impact was better than expected by simple summing of separate effects of habitat loss and climate change. This is explained by shifting ranges to areas less affected by humans. Range size response was well predicted by the strength of environmental change, whereas range filling and local abundance responses were better explained by demographic properties. Hence, risk assessments under global change should consider demographic properties. Most surviving populations were restricted to refugia, serving as key conservation focus.The findings obtained for the study system as well as the advantages, limitations and potentials of the model presented here are further discussed in the General Discussion. In summary, the results indicate that 1) process-based demographic models for range dynamics can be fitted to data; 2) demographic processes improve species distribution models; 3) different species are subject to different processes and respond differently to environmental change and exploitation; 4) density regulation type and Allee effects should be considered when investigating range dynamics of species; 5) the consequences of wildflower harvesting, habitat loss and climate change could be disastrous for some species, but impacts vary depending on demographic properties; 6) wildflower harvesting impacts varies over spatial scale; 7) The effects of habitat loss and climate change are not always additive.
Background: Phosphorylation of proteins plays a crucial role in the regulation and activation of metabolic and signaling pathways and constitutes an important target for pharmaceutical intervention. Central to the phosphorylation process is the recognition of specific target sites by protein kinases followed by the covalent attachment of phosphate groups to the amino acids serine, threonine, or tyrosine. The experimental identification as well as computational prediction of phosphorylation sites (P-sites) has proved to be a challenging problem. Computational methods have focused primarily on extracting predictive features from the local, one-dimensional sequence information surrounding phosphorylation sites. Results: We characterized the spatial context of phosphorylation sites and assessed its usability for improved phosphorylation site predictions. We identified 750 non-redundant, experimentally verified sites with three-dimensional (3D) structural information available in the protein data bank (PDB) and grouped them according to their respective kinase family. We studied the spatial distribution of amino acids around phosphorserines, phosphothreonines, and phosphotyrosines to extract signature 3D-profiles. Characteristic spatial distributions of amino acid residue types around phosphorylation sites were indeed discernable, especially when kinase-family-specific target sites were analyzed. To test the added value of using spatial information for the computational prediction of phosphorylation sites, Support Vector Machines were applied using both sequence as well as structural information. When compared to sequence-only based prediction methods, a small but consistent performance improvement was obtained when the prediction was informed by 3D-context information. Conclusion: While local one-dimensional amino acid sequence information was observed to harbor most of the discriminatory power, spatial context information was identified as relevant for the recognition of kinases and their cognate target sites and can be used for an improved prediction of phosphorylation sites. A web-based service (Phos3D) implementing the developed structurebased P-site prediction method has been made available at http://phos3d.mpimp-golm.mpg.de.
The mussel Mytilus edulis can be used as model to study the molecular basis of reproductive isolation because this species maintains its species integrity, despite of hybridizing in zones of contact with the closely related species M. trossulus or M. galloprovincialis. This study uses selective antibody production by means of hybridoma technology to identify molecules which are involved in sperm function of M. edulis. Fragmented sperm were injected into mice and 25 hybridoma cell clones were established to obtain monoclonal antibodies (mAb). Five clones were identified producing mAb targeting molecules putatively involved in sperm function based on enzyme immunoassays, dot and Western blotting as well as immunostaining of tissue sections. Specific localization of these mAb targets on sperm and partly also in somatic tissue suggests that all five antibodies bind to different molecules. The targets of the mAb obtained from clone G26-AG8 were identified using mass spectrometry (nano-LC-ESI-MS/MS) as M6 and M7 lysin. These acrosomal proteins have egg vitelline lyses function and are highly similar (76%) which explains the cross reactivity of mAb G26- AG8. Furthermore, M7 lysin was recently shown to be under strong positive selection suggesting a role in interspecific reproductive isolation. This study shows that M6 and M7 lysin are not only found in the sperm acrosome but also in male somatic tissue of the mantle and the posterior adductor muscle, while being completely absent in females. The monoclonal antibody G26-AG8 described here will allow elucidating M7/M6 lysin function in somatic and gonad tissue of adult and developing animals.
This work describes a cell-based assay that does not depend on radioactivity or laboratory animals for the detection of ligands of angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AT(1)R). The assay makes use of stable transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells (CHO-AT(1)R) expressing the AT(1)R. A sequential saturation assay principle was used in which receptor binding sites of the CHO-AT(1)R cells are blocked by the analyte in a concentration-dependent manner. Afterwards, TAMRA-angiotensin II, a fluorescence-labeled ligand, was added to bind to the remaining free binding sites of the receptor. In consequence, the fluorescence signal determined is inversely proportional to the concentration of the analyte.
Centrins are a family of proteins within the calcium-binding EF-hand superfamily. In addition to their archetypical role at the microtubule organizing center (MTOC), centrins have acquired multiple functionalities throughout the course of evolution. For example, centrins have been linked to different nuclear activities, including mRNA export and DNA repair. Dictyostelium discoideum centrin B is a divergent member of the centrin family. At the amino acid level, DdCenB shows 51% identity with its closest relative and only paralog, DdCenA. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that DdCenB and DdCenA form a well-supported monophyletic and divergent group within the centrin family of proteins. Interestingly, fluorescently tagged versions of DdCenB were not found at the centrosome (in whole cells or in isolated centrosomes). Instead, DdCenB localized to the nuclei of interphase cells. This localization disappeared as the cells entered mitosis, although Dictyostelium cells undergo a closed mitosis in which the nuclear envelope (NE) does not break down. DdCenB knockout cells exhibited aberrant nuclear architecture, characterized by enlarged and deformed nuclei and loss of proper centrosome-nucleus anchoring (observed as NE protrusions). At the centrosome, loss of DdCenB resulted in defects in the organization and morphology of the MTOC and supernumerary centrosomes and centrosome-related bodies. The multiple defects that the loss of DdCenB generated at the centrosome can be explained by its atypical division cycle, transitioning into the NE as it divides at mitosis. On the basis of these findings, we propose that DdCenB is required at interphase to maintain proper nuclear architecture, and before delocalizing from the nucleus, DdCenB is part of the centrosome duplication machinery.
Centrosomal attachment to nuclei is crucial for proper mitosis and nuclear positioning in various organisms, and generally involves Sun-family proteins located at the inner nuclear envelope. There is still no common scheme for the outer nuclear membrane proteins interacting with Sun I in centrosome/nucleus attachment. Here we propose a model in which Sun1 mediates a physical link between centrosomes and clustered centromeres through both nuclear membranes in Dictyostelium. For the first time we provide a detailed microscopic analysis of the centrosomal and nuclear envelope localization of endogenous Dictyostelium Sun1 during interphase and mitosis. By immunogold electron microscopy we show that Sun1 is a resident of both nuclear membranes. Disruption of Sun1 function by overexpression of full-length GFP-Sun1 or a GFP-Sun-domain deletion construct revealed not only the established function in centrosome/nucleus attachment and maintenance of ploidy, but also a requirement of Sun1 for the association of the centromere cluster with the centrosome. Live-cell imaging visualized the occurrence of mitotic defects, and demonstrated the requirement of microtubules for dynamic distance changes between centrosomes and nuclei. FRAP analysis revealed at least two populations of Sun1, with an immobile fraction associated with the centrosome, and a mobile fraction in the nuclear envelope.
Zum Erhalt vom Aussterben bedrohter Papageienvögel (Psittaciformes) ist die Nachzucht in Menschenobhut neben dem Erhalt freilebender Populationen von großer Bedeutung, die Reproduktion bestimmter Arten gelingt allerdings nur unzureichend. Als Hauptgrund dafür gilt die Zwangsverpaarung im Rahmen von Zuchtprogrammen (Beispiel: Europäisches Erhaltungszuchtprogramm, EEP), hier werden Brutpaare hauptsächlich nach genetischen Aspekten zusammengestellt. Der reproduktive Erfolg ist bei den meisten Papageienarten, die in dauerhaften Paarbindungen leben (perennial monogamy), eng der Paarbindung korreliert. Eine freie Partnerwahl ist demnach von großer Bedeutung für die Zucht in Menschenobhut, im Rahmen von Erhaltungszuchtprogrammen jedoch nur selten möglich. Das Ziel der Untersuchung war, eine wissenschaftlich begründete Methode zu entwickeln, durch die es möglich sein soll, das Fortpflanzungspotential von Brutpaaren der Gattung Ara anhand der Paarbindung zu bestimmen. Dafür wurde die Bedeutung der Qualität der Paarbindung der Brutpaare für den Lebens-Reproduktionserfolg (Lifetime-reproductive success, LRS) untersucht. Die Datenaufnahme erfolgte in dem Zuchtzentrum 'La Vera' der Loro Parque Fundación auf Teneriffa/ Spanien. Hier wurden in den Jahren 2006 und 2007 21 Brutpaare der Gattung Ara untersucht. Die Paarbindung wurde zum Einen durch typisches Paarbindungsverhalten und zum Anderen durch die physiologische Abstimmung der einzelnen Brutpaare anhand der Ausschüttung des Steroidhormons Testosteron dargestellt. Das Paarbindungsverhalten setzte sich aus der ‚Abstimmung der Tagesaktivität’, dem ‚Kontaktverhalten’ und den ‚sozialen Interaktionen’ zusammen. Zur Abstimmung der Tagesaktivität zählten die Verhaltensweisen Ruhen, Sitzen, Nahrungsaufnahme, Gefiederpflege, Beschäftigung und Lokomotion. Unter Kontaktverhalten wurden das Überschreiten der Individualdistanz bei bestimmten Verhaltensweisen und die Rollenverteilung der Geschlechter untersucht. Unter ‚sozialen Interaktionen’ wurden die Dauer und der Häufigkeit der sozialen Gefiederpflege und der Sozialen Index zusammengefasst. Bei der sozialen Gefiederpflege wurde die Dauer und die Häufigkeit der Phasen erhoben, sowie der jeweilige Initiator dieser Interaktion. Zusätzlich wurde untersucht, welches Geschlecht, wie häufig und mit welcher Dauer aktiv an der sozialen Gefiederpflege beteiligt war. Aus den Beobachtungen wurde der soziale Index berechnet, der angibt, wie das Verhältnis sozio-positiver zu agonistischen Interaktionen für jedes Individuum, sowie das Paar an sich ist. Zur Messung der Testosteron-Ausschüttung der Partnertiere wurden von September bis November 2007 über einen Zeitraum von 9 Wochen jede Woche einmal für jedes Individuum Kotproben gesammelt. Mit der Analyse der Proben wurde das Veterinär-Physiologisch-Chemische-Institut der Universität Leipzig unter der Leitung von Prof. Dr. Almuth Einspanier beauftragt. Zur Ermittlung des Hormongehalts in den gewonnenen Kotproben diente ein kompetitiver Doppelantikörper-Enzymimmunoassay (EIA). Das Fortpflanzungspotential wurde über die Anzahl der Eier, Gelege und Jungtiere, sowie über die Gelegegröße dargestellt. Diese Daten geben, bezogen auf die Dauer der Paarbindung, Auskunft über die Produktivität eines Brutpaares, anhand dessen zusätzlich ein Produktivitäts-Koeffizient berechnet wurde. Des weiteren sollte die Anzahl der von einem Brutpaar selbständig großgezogenen Jungtiere Auskunft über die Fähigkeit zur kooperativen Jungenaufzucht geben. Zur Untersuchung der Bedeutung der Paarbindungsqualität wurden Diskriminanzfunktionsanalysen und Regressionsanalysen durchgeführt, wozu die untersuchten Brutpaare anhand ihres Fortpflanzungspotentials in verschiedene Gruppen eingeteilt wurden. Anhand der Ergebnisse der Studie konnte gezeigt werden, dass das Fortpflanzungspotential von Brutpaaren von verschiedenen Kriterien, die die Paarbindungsqualität charakterisieren, abhängt. Dabei ist zwischen der Produktivität und der Fähigkeit zur kooperativen Jungenaufzucht zu unterscheiden. Die Produktivität eines Paares wurde hinsichtlich der abgestimmten Tagesaktivität positiv vom synchronen Ruhen mit dem Partner beeinflusst, sowie von der Häufigkeit und Dauer der vom Weibchen ausgehenden sozialen Gefiederpflege. Brutpaare mit hoher Produktivität waren zudem über eine hohe ‚intra-Paar Fluktuation’ des Steroidhormons Testosteron gekennzeichnet. Die Brutpaare, die in der Lage sind, ihre Jungtiere in Kooperation großzuziehen, zeigten ebenfalls einen hohen Anteil zeitlich mit dem Partner abgestimmter Ruhephasen, zudem häufiges Ruheverhalten in Körperkontakt zum Partner und ein hohes zeitliches Investment der Männchen bei der Initiierung und Durchführung sozialer Gefiederpflege. Darüber hinaus zeigten Männchen, die einen Beitrag zur kooperativen Jungenaufzucht leisten, eine wesentlich geringere durchschnittliche Testosteron-Konzentration – bezogen auf den Untersuchungszeitraum, als Männchen, die Brutpaaren angehören, die nicht zur selbständigen Jungenaufzucht fähig sind. Dieses Ergebnis spiegelt die Bedeutung von Testosteron bei der elterlichen Fürsorge wider und bietet einen Anhaltspunkt für weitere Untersuchungen. Die Untersuchung konnte zeigen, dass es möglich und sinnvoll ist, das individuelle Verhalten von Tieren in Menschenobhut für den Erhalt bedrohter Tierarten einzusetzen. Weitere, auf dieser Studie aufbauende Untersuchungen sollten zum Ziel haben, zuverlässig die Brutpaare erkennbar zu machen, die über ein gutes Fortpflanzungspotential verfügen. Auf diese Weise kann unzureichender Reproduktionserfolg bedrohter Papageienarten in Menschenobhut infolge von Zwangsverpaarung minimiert werden.
Die acinösen Speicheldrüsen der Schabe Periplaneta americana sind reich durch serotonerge, dopaminerge und GABAerge Fasern innerviert. Die biogenen Amine Serotonin (5-HT) und Dopamin (DA) induzieren die Sekretion eines NaCl-haltigen Primärspeichels. Die physiologische Rolle der GABAergen Innervation des Drüsenkomplexes war bislang unbekannt. Weiterhin wurde vermutet, dass Tyramin (TA) und Octopamin (OA) an der Speichelbildung beteiligt sind. Mittels intrazellulärer Ableitungen von sekretorischen Acinuszellen mit und ohne Stimulierung des Speicheldrüsennervs (SDN) sollte daher die Wirkung von GABA, TA und OA im Speicheldrüsenkomplex untersucht werden. Intrazelluläre Ableitungen aus Acinuszellen zeigten, dass sowohl DA als auch 5 HT biphasische Änderungen des Membranpotentials induzierten. Diese bestanden aus einer initialen Hyperpolarisation und einer darauf folgenden transienten Depolarisation. Stimulierung des SDN mittels einer Saugelektrode verursachte ebenfalls biphasische Änderungen des Membranpotentials der Acinuszellen, die mit den DA- bzw. 5-HT-induzierten Änderungen kinetisch identisch waren. Dieses Ergebnis zeigte, dass die elektrische Stimulierung des SDN im Nerv-Speicheldrüsenpräparat eine verlässliche Methode zur Untersuchung der Wirkungen von Neuromodulatoren auf die dopaminerge und/oder sertotonerge Neurotransmission ist. Die Hyperpolarisation der DA-induzierten Potentialänderungen wurde durch eine intrazelluläre Ca2+-Freisetzung und die Öffnung basolateral lokalisierter Ca2+-gesteuerter K+-Kanäle verur-sacht. Die DA- und 5-HT-induzierte Depolarisation hing kritisch von der Aktivität eines basolateral lokalisierten Na+-K+-2Cl--Symporters ab. GABA, TA und OA potenzierten die elektrischen Antworten der Acinuszellen, wenn diese durch SDN-Stimulierung hervorgerufen wurden. Dabei war OA wirksamer als TA. Dieses Ergebnis zeigte, dass diese Substanzen als im Drüsenkomplex präsynaptisch und erregend als Neuromodulatoren wirken. Pharmakologische Untersuchungen ergaben, dass die erregende Wirkung von GABA durch einen G-Protein-gekoppelten GABAB-Rezeptor vermittelt wurde. Messungen der durch SDN-Stimulierung induzierten Flüssigkeits- und Proteinsekretionsraten zeigten, dass beide Parameter in Anwesenheit von GABA verstärkt waren. Dies ließ auf eine verstärkte serotonerge Neurotransmission schließen, da nur 5-HT die Bildung eines Protein-haltigen Speichels verursacht. Immuncytochemische Untersuchungen zeigten, dass die Drüsen tyraminerge und octopaminerge Innervation empfangen. Weiterhin wurde der erste charakterisierte TA-Rezeptor (PeaTYR1) der Schabe auf einem paarigen, lateral zur Drüse ziehenden Nerv markiert, der auch tyraminerge Fasern enthielt. Die vorliegende Arbeit trug zum Verständnis der komplexen Funktionsweise der Speicheldrüse der Schabe bei und erweiterte das lückenhafte Wissen über die neuronale Kontrolle exokriner Drüsen in Insekten.
In den Chloroplasten von höheren Pflanzen sind die Galaktolipide Monogalaktosyldiacylglycerol (MGDG) und Digalaktosyldiacylglycerol (DGDG) die am weitesten verbreiteten Lipide. In dieser Forschungsarbeit wurde die Funktion der DGDG Synthase DGD1, und insbesondere die Funktion des N-terminalen Bereichs dieses Enzyms in der Modellpflanze Arabidopsis thaliana untersucht. Die Überexpression des N-terminalen Bereichs von DGD1 in WT-Col2 resultierte in einem reduzierten Wachstum, welches sich jedoch von der dgd1-1 Mutante unterschied. Dies legte bereits nahe, dass die Expression von N-DGD1 einen negativen Einfluss auf das Wachstum hat. Durch Studien in einem heterologen E.coli Expressionssystem konnte diese These bestätigt werden. Zellen, die ausschließlich N-DGD1 zusammen mit einer MGD Synthase aus Gurke exprimierten, waren im Wachstum stark beeinträchtigt. Nicht nur der N-terminale Bereich von DGD1, auch der N-terminale Bereich von MGD1 besitzt eine Funktion als Transitpeptid und ist somit ein wichtiger Faktor zur korrekten Lokalisierung des MGD1 Proteins. In dieser Arbeit ist es gelungen, ein Fusionskonstrukt aus N-MGD1 und DGD2 in die dgd1-1 Mutante zu transferieren und damit das reduzierte Wachstum zu komplementieren. Frühere Versuche, ein reduziertes dgd1-1 Wachstum mit DGD2 allein zu komplementieren, scheiterten. Somit gibt dies einen Hinweis darauf, dass N-MGD1 als Transitpeptid fungieren kann. Bindungsstudien zur Interaktion von DGD1 und N-DGD1 Protein zeigten, dass die polaren Lipide MGDG und DGDG in Wechselwirkung mit dem N-terminalen Bereich von DGD1 treten. Bis zum heutigen Zeitpunkt ist nicht erforscht, wie der Transport von DGDG und MGDG zwischen den Hüllmembranen des Chloroplasten erfolgt. Die in dieser Arbeit angefertigen Bindungsstudien konnten Hinweise darauf geben, dass N-DGD1 als eine Art „Antiporter“ fungiert, um MGDG und DGDG zwischen den Hüllmembranen zu transportieren. Weiterhin wurden Bindungsstudien zur Erforschung von Interaktionen der Glykosyltransferasen DGD1, DGD2, MGD1, MGD2 und MGD3 angefertigt. Dabei wurden Wechselwirkungen zwischen den Glykosyltransferasen DGD1, DGD2 und MGD2 detektiert. Interessant ist, dass Hinweise auf eine Dimerbildung bestimmter Enzyme gefunden wurden, so für DGD1 und MGD2. Ein weiterer Ansatz zur Erforschung von Wechselwirkungen von DGD1 Protein mit bis jetzt unbekannten Proteinen war die Expression von DGD1-StrepIITag und DGD1-CTAPTag Fusionsproteinen in dgd1-1 Mutanten. Es wurden für beide Tags transgene Linien generiert, die im Wachstum komplementiert waren und wildtypähnliche Mengen an DGDG akkumulierten. Die Expression der verschiedenen Tags in den Pflanzen war sehr unterschiedlich, wobei der DGD1-CTAP-Tag am stärksten exprimiert war. Mit Pflanzenmaterial dieser Linien kann nun eine Aufreinigung des getaggten Proteins und eventueller Interaktionspartner erfolgen.
Direct electrochemistry and spectroelectrochemistry of osmium substituted horseradish peroxidase
(2009)
In this contribution the substitution of the central protoporphyrin IX iron complex of horseradish peroxidase by the respective osmium porphyrin complex is described. The direct electrochemical reduction of the Os containing horseradish peroxidase (OsHRP) was achieved at ITO and modified glassy carbon electrodes and in combination with spectroscopy revealed the three redox couples (OsHRP)-H-III/(OsHRP)-H-IV, (OsHRP)-H-IV/(OsHRP)-H-V and (OsHRP)-H-V/ (OsHRP)-H-VI. The midpoint potentials differ dependent on the electrode material used with E-1/2 (Os-III/IV) of -0.4 V (ITO) and -0.25 V (GC), E-1/2 (Os-IV/V) of -0.16 V (ITO) and +0.10 V (GC), and E-1/2 (Os-V/VI)of +018 V (ITO), respectively Moreover, with immobilised OsHRP the direct electrocatalytic reduction of hydrogen peroxide and tert-butyl hydroperoxide was observed. In comparison to electrodes modified with native HRP the sensitivity of the OsHRP-electrode for tert-butyl hydroperoxide is higher.
Distinct roles of the last transmembrane domain in controlling Arabidopsis K+ channel activity
(2009)
The family of voltage-gated potassium channels in plants presumably evolved from a common ancestor and includes both inward-rectifying (K-in) channels that allow plant cells to accumulate K+ and outward-rectifying (K-out) channels that mediate K+ efflux. Despite their close structural similarities, the activity of Kin channels is largely independent of K+ and depends only on the transmembrane voltage, whereas that of K-out channels responds to the membrane voltage and the prevailing extracellular K+ concentration. Gating of potassium channels is achieved by structural rearrangements within the last transmembrane domain (S6). Here we investigated the functional equivalence of the S6 helices of the Kin channel KAT1 and the K-out channel SKOR by domain-swapping and site-directed mutagenesis. Channel mutants and chimeras were analyzed after expression in Xenopus oocytes. We identified two discrete regions that influence gating differently in both channels, demonstrating a lack of functional complementarity between KAT1 and SKOR. Our findings are supported by molecular models of KAT1 and SKOR in the open and closed states. The role of the S6 segment in gating evolved differently during specialization of the two channel subclasses, posing an obstacle for the transfer of the K+-sensor from K-out to K-in channels.
Several recent studies reported on so-called audience effects in male Atlantic mollies (Poecilia mexicana), in which the visual presence of a potential rival affects male sexual activity. We asked whether and how audience effects interact with male sexual harassment. Poecilia mexicana almost constantly attempt to mate, while females are mostly non- responsive to male approaches. Females flee from this sexual harassment and, thus, are more vigilant in the presence of males, so females may have hampered feeding opportunities. Do audience effects lead to altered male sexual harassment? Focal females were given an opportunity to feed in the presence of a male or a female partner and the difference in feeding times was interpreted as an effect caused by male harassment. Tests were conducted without an audience (1), or an audience male was visually presented either directly inside the test tank (2), or further away (in an adjoining compartment (3)). We found that levels of pre-mating behaviour did not vary significantly among treatments, but males exhibited more copulation attempts (thrusting) in treatment (3), suggesting that males respond to increased risk of sperm competition with higher sperm expenditure. Females fed less (and started feeding later) when a harassing partner male was around, and this effect was not dependent on the audience treatment, but, overall, females spent more time feeding (and started feeding earlier) when an audience was presented. Hence, feeding time reductions appear to be independent of audience effects, but perceived 'safety in numbers' may lead to increased foraging in larger groups.
Grouping patterns within the genus Tragelaphus suggest that species inhabiting open areas tend to live in larger groups, while species preferring dense habitats live solitarily or in small family groups. We asked if similar variation would be concealed in the within-species variation of bushbuck (Tragelaphus scriptus). Recent molecular phylogeographic analyses revealed several locally adapted forms of bushbuck in different ecoregions on the African continent. We compared group sizes of south-eastern bushbuck (Tragelaphus sylvaticus) among six different populations ("ecotypes"). To date, most data on the social organization of bushbuck have been collected from only one population in Queen Elizabeth National Park (QENP) in Uganda. This particular population, however, inhabits an unusual-comparatively open-habitat type, while bushbuck otherwise inhabit dense habitats, leaving doubt whether data collected in QENP are representative of the entire species. We, therefore, compared grouping patterns between ecotypes inhabiting rather open habitats (e.g., dianae and haywoodi) and ecotypes occupying rather dense habitats (e.g., massaicus and ornatus). In bachelor groups and in all-female (spinster) groups, single sightings were the most frequent "group type" in all populations examined. We detected no significant difference among ecotypes in relative frequencies of group size categories in the case of bachelor groups. Spinster group sizes were slightly (albeit significantly) smaller in QENP than in all other areas. Moreover, a comparison of two areas inside (low human pursuit) and outside Lake Mburo National Park (high hunting pressure) in Uganda revealed no significant difference in grouping patterns in response to human pursuit (as reported for impala [Aepyceros melampus] inhabiting the same area). Altogether, our results suggest that group sizes in bushbuck are not dependent on the habitat type they inhabit; neither does human nuisance have an impact on grouping patterns. Hence, an "almost solitary" lifestyle appears to be a characteristic of the entire taxon.
The adaptive evolutionary potential of a species or population to cope with omnipresent environmental challenges is based on its genetic variation. Variability at immune genes, such as the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes, is assumed to be a very powerful and effective tool to keep pace with diverse and rapidly evolving pathogens. In my thesis, I studied natural levels of variation at the MHC genes, which have a key role in immune defence, and parasite burden in different small mammal species. I assessed the importance of MHC variation for parasite burden in small mammal populations in their natural environment. To understand the processes shaping different patterns of MHC variation I focused on evidence of selection through pathogens upon the host. Further, I addressed the issue of low MHC diversity in populations or species, which could potentially arise as a result from habitat fragmentation and isolation. Despite their key role in the mammalian evolution the marsupial MHC has been rarely investigated. Studies on primarily captive or laboratory bred individuals indicated very little or even no polymorphism at the marsupial MHC class II genes. However, natural levels of marsupial MHC diversity and selection are unknown to date as studies on wild populations are virtually absent. I investigated MHC II variation in two Neotropical marsupial species endemic to the threatened Brazilian Atlantic Forest (Gracilinanus microtarsus, Marmosops incanus) to test whether the predicted low marsupial MHC class II polymorphism proves to be true under natural conditions. For the first time in marsupials I confirmed characteristics of MHC selection that were so far only known from eutherian mammals, birds, and fish: Positive selection on specific codon sites, recombination, and trans-species polymorphism. Beyond that, the two marsupial species revealed considerable differences in their MHC class II diversity. Diversity was rather low in M. incanus but tenfold higher in G. microtarsus, disproving the predicted general low marsupial MHC class II variation. As pathogens are believed to be very powerful drivers of MHC diversity, I studied parasite burden in both host species to understand the reasons for the remarkable differences in MHC diversity. In both marsupial species specific MHC class II variants were associated to either high or low parasite load highlighting the importance of the marsupial MHC class II in pathogen defence. I developed two alternative scenarios with regard to MHC variation, parasite load, and parasite diversity. In the ‘evolutionary equilibrium’ scenario I assumed the species with low MHC diversity, M. incanus, to be under relaxed pathogenic selection and expected low parasite diversity. Alternatively, low MHC diversity could be the result of a recent loss of genetic variation by means of a genetic bottleneck event. Under this ‘unbalanced situation’ scenario, I assumed a high parasite burden in M. incanus due to a lack of resistance alleles. Parasitological results clearly reject the first scenario and point to the second scenario, as M. incanus is distinctly higher parasitised but parasite diversity is relatively equal compared to G. microtarsus. Hence, I suggest that the parasite load in M. incanus is rather the consequence than the cause for its low MHC diversity. MHC variation and its associations to parasite burden have been typically studied within single populations but MHC variation between populations was rarely taken into account. To gain scientific insight on this issue, I chose a common European rodent species. In the yellow necked mouse (Apodemus flavicollis), I investigated the effects of genetic diversity on parasite load not on the individual but on the population level. I included populations, which possess different levels of variation at the MHC as well as at neutrally evolving genetic markers (microsatellites). I was able to show that mouse populations with a high MHC allele diversity are better armed against high parasite burdens highlighting the significance of adaptive genetic diversity in the field of conservation genetics. An individual itself will not directly benefit from its population’s large MHC allele pool in terms of parasite resistance. But confronted with the multitude of pathogens present in the wild a population with a large MHC allele reservoir is more likely to possess individuals with resistance alleles. These results deepen our understanding of the complex causes and processes of evolutionary adaptations between hosts and pathogens.
The interaction between ecological and hydrological processes is particularly important in arid and semi-arid regions. Often the interaction between these processes is not completely understood and they are studied separately. We developed a grid-based computer model simulating the dynamics of the four most common vegetation types (perennial grass, annuals, dwarf shrubs and shrubs) and related hydrological processes in the region studied. Eco-hydrological interactions gain importance in rangelands with increasing slope, where vegetation cover obstructs run-off and decreases evaporation from the soil. Overgrazing can influence these positive feedback mechanisms. In this study, we first show that model predictions of cover and productivity of the vegetation types are realistic by comparing them with estimates obtained from field surveys. Then, we apply a realistic range in slope angle combined with two land use regimes (light versus heavy grazing intensity). Our simulation results reveal that hydrological processes and associated productivity are strongly affected by slope, whereas the magnitude of this impact depends on overgrazing. Under low stocking rates, undisturbed vegetation is maintained and run-off and evaporation remain low on flat plains and gentle slope. On steep slopes, run-off and evaporation become larger, while water retention potential decreases, which leads to reduced productivity. Overgrazing, however, reduces vegetation cover and biomass production and the landscape"s ability to conserve water decreases even on flat plains and gentle slopes. Generally, the abundance of perennial grasses and shrubs decreases with increasing slope and grazing. Dominance is shifted towards shrubs and annuals. As a management recommendation we suggest that different vegetation growth forms should not only be regarded as forage producers but also as regulators of ecosystem functioning. Particularly on sloping range lands, a high percentage of cover by perennial vegetation insures that water is retained in the system.
Enhanced water temperatures promote the occurrence of cyanobacterial blooms, which may be detrimental to aquatic herbivores. Especially, the often-dominant crustaceans could be negatively affected because cyanobacteria are deficient in phytosterols, which are required by the crustaceans to form the membrane component cholesterol, which in turn plays a role in thermal adaptation. Here, we determined the influence of temperature on growth, reproduction and the allocation of dietary sterol into somatic tissues and eggs of the keystone species Daphnia magna raised along a dietary cholesterol gradient. Mass-specific growth rates of D. magna increased with the increasing availability of dietary cholesterol up to an incipient limiting level, which increased with increasing temperature. This indicates a higher demand for cholesterol for growth at higher temperatures and may explain the consistently smaller clutch sizes of reproducing females at the highest temperature. The cholesterol content of the individuals increased with increasing dietary cholesterol; this increase was enhanced at higher temperatures, indicating a higher demand for cholesterol for tissues and probably specifically for membranes. Surprisingly, the daphnids showed different allocation strategies with regard to temperature and dietary sterol availability. The cholesterol content of eggs was enhanced at higher temperature, which suggested that females allocate more cholesterol to their offspring, presumably to ensure sufficient egg development. When dietary cholesterol was limiting, however, females did not allocate more cholesterol to their eggs. Our data suggest that during cyanobacterial blooms, a potential dietary sterol limitation of Daphnia can be intensified at higher water temperatures, which can occur with global warming.
Der Artikel liefert eine Zusammenstellung der aktuellen Ektoparasitenfauna der Fledermäuse (Flöhe, Fledermausfliegen, Wanzen, Zecken und Milben). Die Beziehung zwischen den Fledermäusen und ihren Ektoparasiten eignet sich in besonderem Maße als Modell ökologischer und evolutionärer Prozesse, wie das Überleben seltener Arten, die Kövolution zwischen Wirten und Parasiten, die Übertragung von Parasiten, die Wirtswahl und die Verbreitung von Krankheiten. Der gegenwärtige Stand der ökologischen Forschung auf diesen Gebieten wird zusammengefaßt und die Notwendigkeit und die Ziele weiterer Forschung werden angegeben.
Die vorliegende Untersuchung liefert neue Daten zur Verbreitung und zum Wirtsspektrum von ektoparasitischen Insekten in Sommerquartieren von Fledermaeusen in Brandenburg. Auf 1098 Fledermaeusen aus 9 Arten waren nur 49 Fledermausfloehe (5 Arten) und 67 Lausfliegen (3 Arten) vorhanden. Mit Nycteribia latreillii auf Myotis myotis wurde eine Lausfliegenart aufgefunden, fuer die es bisher keine Belege aus dem Norden Deutschlands und aus Brandenburg gab. Diese Art wurde bisher nur zweimal aus Deutschland gemeldet, letztmals 1962. Die 16 gefangenen Individuen deuten darauf, dass N. latreillii in dem Quartier eine groeßere Population bildet, die sich fuer weitere Studien eignen koennte. Bei der Untersuchung von Vespertilio murinus im Sommerquartier in Groeden wurden 18 Individuen der Flohart Ischnopsyllus obscurus gefangen. Fuer diese Art gab es bisher nur 3 Funde weniger Individuen in Deutschland. Ein morphologischer Vergleich mit einer Serie von Exemplaren der Art aus der Mongolei zeigte keine wesentlichen Unterschiede in verschiedenen Parametern und bestaetigt die weite Verbreitung von Ischnopsyllus obscurus.
Die in der Umgebung von potsdam untersuchten Nester der Mehlschwalbe (Delichon urbica) enthielten drei spezifische Ektoparasitenarten in unterschiedlicher Dichte. Pro nest fanden sich von der Mehlschwalbenlausfliege (Stenepteryx hirundinis) 0-12 Eier, von der Mehlschwalbenwanze (Oeciacus hirundinis)195-1104 Larven und Imagines und vom Mehlschwalbenfloh (Ceratophyllus hirundinis)9-135 Imagines. Zwischen 1. Oktober und dem 9.-16. mai des folgenden Jahres gab es im Durchschnitt nur einen geringfuegigen Rueckgang der Anzahl der Wanzen, waehrend die Abundanz adulter Floehe deutlich zunahm. Die Parasitendichte schwankte zwischen verschiedenen Fundorten und selbst innerhalb einer Nestreihe erheblich. In den am staerksten mit Parasiten belasteten Nestern ist eine erfolgreiche Aufzucht der Jungtiere durch die Mehlschwalben unwahrscheinlich. Die Hoehe der Parasitenlast koennte die Wahl der Schwalbenzwischen der Nutzung vorjaehriger Nester oder dem Ausbau aelterer nester wesentlich beeinflussen.
Mate choice is mediated by a range of sensory cues, and assortative mating based on these cues can drive reproductive isolation among diverging populations. A specific feature of mormyrid fish, the electric organ discharge (EOD), is used for electrolocation and intraspecific communication. We hypothesized that the EOD also facilitates assortative mating and ultimately promotes prezygotic reproductive isolation in African weakly electric fishes. Our behavioural experiments using live males as well as EOD playback demonstrated that female mate recognition is influenced by EOD signals and that females are attracted to EOD characteristics of conspecific males. The dual function of the EOD for both foraging and social communication (including mate recognition leading to assortative mating) underlines the importance of electric signal differentiation for the divergence of African weakly electric fishes. Thus, the EOD provides an intriguing mechanism promoting trophic divergence and reproductive isolation between two closely related Campylomormyrus species occurring in sympatry in the lower Congo rapids.
An efficient electrocatalytic biosensor for sulfite detection was developed by co-immobilizing sulfite oxidase and cytochrome c with polyaniline sulfonic acid in a layer-by-layer assembly. QCM, UV-Vis spectroscopy and cyclic voltammetry revealed increasing loading of electrochemically active protein with the formation of multilayers. The sensor operates reagentless at low working potential. A catalytic oxidation current was detected in the presence of sulfite at the modified gold electrode, polarized at +0.1 V ( vs. Ag/AgCl 1 M KCl). The stability of the biosensor performance was characterized and optimized. A 17-bilayer electrode has a linear range between 1 and 60 mu M sulfite with a sensitivity of 2.19 mA M-1 sulfite and a response time of 2 min. The electrode retained a stable response for 3 days with a serial reproducibility of 3.8% and lost 20% of sensitivity after 5 days of operation. It is possible to store the sensor in a dry state for more than 2 months. The multilayer electrode was used for determination of sulfite in unspiked and spiked samples of red and white wine. The recovery and the specificity of the signals were evaluated for each sample.
In dieser Arbeit wird die Entwicklung und Charakterisierung neuer „smarter“ Redoxhydrogele mit drei verschiedenen funktionellen Eigenschaften und deren erfolgreicher Einsatz zur elektrochemischen Kontaktierung von Oxidoreduktasen beschrieben. Diese neuen Redoxpolymere 1. tragen kovalent integrierte Redoxzentren umgeben von einer hydrophilen Polymermatrix, 2. reaktive Kopplungsgruppen für den Aufbau selbstassemblierter Polymerschichten auf Elektrodenoberflächen und 3. lassen sich in ihrer Redoxaktivität durch Verwendung „intelligenter“ Polymere über externe Stimuli kontrollieren. Die Redoxhydrogele wurden nach dem Vorbild eines Baukastensystems in einfachen Ein-Stufen-Synthesen synthetisiert. Dazu wurden verschiedene Redoxzentren (Ferrocen, 1,10-Phenanthrolin-5,6-dion und 4-Carboxy-2,5,7-Trinitro-9-fluorenon), reaktive Kopplungsgruppen (Epoxy-, Amino-, Thiol- oder Disulfidfunktionen) und Polymermatrices (Poly-(N-Isopropylacrylamid) (PNIPAM) und Poly(ethylenglykolmethacrylat) (PEGMA)) in unterschiedlichen Zusammensetzungen miteinander copolymerisiert. Die Polymere wurden in Form von dünnen Polymerfilmen über die wiederholenden Funktionalitäten auf Elektrodenoberflächen aufgebracht und physiko- und elektrochemisch charakterisiert. Durch die erstmals gezeigte, derartige Ankopplung der Polymere, entstehen dreidimensionale, hydrophile selbstassemblierte Polymerschichten. Die Elektronentransferwege sind kurz und der Elektronentransfer effizient. Diese Polymer-modifizierten Elektroden wurden für die Kontaktierung von zwei exemplarisch ausgewählten Oxidoreduktasen eingesetzt, die Nicotinsäureamid-adenin-dinucleotid-abhängige Glucosedehydrogenase (NAD-GDH), welche ein freibewegliches Coenzym und die Pyrrolochinolinchinon-abhängige Glucosedehydrogenase (PQQ-GDH), welche ein prosthetisches Coenzym verwenden. Die Redoxaktivitäten des PNIPAMFoxy- und PEGMA-Fc-Polymers ließen sich durch externe Stimuli in Form von Temperatur und Calciumkonzentrationen kontrollieren. Ein Modell für die Komplexierung der Calciumionen durch die PEG-Seitenketten unter Ausbildung Kronenether-ähnlicher Strukturen und der daraus resultierenden Steigerung des Elektronentransfers wurde gezeigt.
In der molekularen Diagnostik besteht ein Bedarf an schnellen und spezifischen Testsystemen, die entweder für die Labordiagnostik oder in Point of Care-Umgebungen eingesetzt werden können. Um dieses Ziel zu erreichen, stehen die Miniaturisierung und Parallelisierung im Mittelpunkt des Forschungsinteresses. Die führende Methode im Bereich der DNA-Analytik ist derzeit die Realtime-PCR. Dieser Technologie sind hinsichtlich der Multiplexfähigkeit technologischen Hürden gesetzt, da derzeit nur eine Analyse von maximal vier Parametern parallel in einem Versuchsansatz erfolgen kann. Microarrays stellen hingegen die benötigten Voraussetzungen zur Verfügung, um als Werkzeuge für die Multiparameteranalyse in verschiedensten Anwendungsbereichen zu dienen. Ein Schwerpunkt dieser Arbeit war es, Multiplex-PCRs und diagnostische Microarrays zu entwickeln, die für analytische Fragestellungen eine schnelle und zuverlässige Multiparameteranalytik ermöglichen, um die bisherigen Einschränkungen aktueller Nachweisverfahren zu vermeiden. Als Anwendungen wurden zum einen ein Nachweissystem für acht relevante Geflügelpathogene zur Überwachung in der Geflügelzucht, zum anderen ein Nachweissystem zur Identifikation potentiell allergener Lebensmittelinhaltstoffe entwickelt. Neben der Entwicklung geeigneter PCR und Multiplex-PCR-Verfahren sowie spezifischer Microarrays für die Detektion der gesuchten Zielsequenzen stand auch die weiterführende Integration von DNA-Amplifikation und Microarray-Technologie im Fokus dieser Arbeit. Die OnChip-Amplifikation stellt eine Möglichkeit dar, um DNA-Analytik und Detektion in einem Reaktionsschritt zu integrieren. Entsprechend wurden die in der Arbeit entwickelten PCR- und Multiplex-PCR-Verfahren zum Nachweis potentieller allergener Lebensmittelinhaltsstoffe für die OnChip-Amplifikation adaptiert und Reaktionsbedingungen getestet, die eine Multiparameteranalyse auf dem Chip ermöglichen. Die entwickelten OnChip-PCR-Verfahren zeigten eine hohe Spezifität sowohl in Single- als auch in der Multiplex-OnChip-PCR. Eine Sensitivität von 10 Kopien bzw. <10ppm konnte in Single-OnChip-PCRs für den Nachweis allergener Lebensmittelinhaltsstoffe gezeigt werden. In Multiplex-OnChip-PCRs konnten 10-100ppm allergene Verunreinigungen spezifisch in unterschiedlichen Lebensmitteln nachgewiesen werden. Ein weiterer Schritt in Richtung einer möglichen Verwendung im Point of Care-Bereich stellt der Einsatz eines isothermalen Amplifikationsverfahrens dar. Vorteil eines solchen Verfahrens ist die Möglichkeit, auf das ansonsten benötigte Thermocycling zu verzichten. Dies vereinfacht eine Integration der OnChip-Amplifikation in mobile Analysegeräte oder Lab on Chip-Systeme und qualifiziert das Verfahren für den Einsatz in Point of Care-Umgebungen. In dieser Arbeit wurde eine noch junge isothermale Amplifikationsmethode, die helikase-abhängige Amplifikation (HDA), hinsichtlich ihrer Eignung für die Integration auf einem Microarray getestet. Hierfür konnte die bislang erste OnChip-HDA für Einzel- und Duplex-Nachweise von Pathogenen entwickelt werden.
Ein genereller Ansatz zur Charakterisierung von biologischen Systemen bietet die Untersuchung des Metaboloms, dessen Analyse als „Metabolomics“ bezeichnet wird. “Omics”- Technologien haben das Ziel, ohne Selektionskriterien möglichst alle Bestandteile einer biologischen Probe zu detektieren (identifizieren und quantifizieren), um daraus Rückschlüsse auf nicht vorhersehbare und somit neuartige Korrelationen in biologischen Systemen zu ziehen. Ein zentrales Dogma in der Biologie besteht in der Kausalität zwischen Gen – Enzym – Metabolite. Perturbationen auf einer Ebene rufen systemische Antworten hervor, die in einem veränderten Phänotyp münden können. Metabolite sind die Endprodukte von zellulären regulatorischen Prozessen, deren Abundanz durch die Resonanz auf genetische Modifikationen oder Umwelteinflüsse zurückzuführen ist. Zudem repräsentieren Metabolite ultimativ den Phänotyp eines Organismus und haben die Fähigkeit als Biomarker zu fungieren. Die integrale Analyse verschiedenster Stoffwechselwegen wie Krebszyklus, Pentosephosphatzyklus oder Calvinzyklus offeriert die Identifikation von metabolischen Mustern. In dieser Arbeit wurden sowohl das targeted Profiling via GC-TOF-MS als auch das untargeted Profiling via GC-TOF-MS und LC-FT-MS als analytische Strategien genutzt, um biologische Systeme anhand ihrer Metabolite zu charakterisieren und um physiologische Muster als Resonanz auf endogene oder exogene Stimuli zu erkennen. Dabei standen die metabolische, phänotypische und genotypische Plastizität von Pflanzen im Fokus der Untersuchungen. Metabolische Varianzen eines Phänotyps reflektieren die genotyp-abhängige Resonanz des Organismus auf umweltbedingte Parameter (abiotischer und biotischer Stress, Entwicklung) und können mit sensitiven Metabolite Profiling Methoden determiniert werden. Diese Anwendungen haben unter anderem auch zum Begriff des „Environmental Metabolomics“ geführt. In Kapitel 2 wurde der Einfluss biotischer Interaktionen von endophytischen Bakterien auf den Metabolismus von Pappelklonen untersucht; Kapitel 3 betrachtet die metabolische Plastizität von Pflanzen im Freiland auf veränderte biotische Interaktionsmuster (Konkurrenz/Diversität/Artenzusammensetzung); Abschließend wurde in Kapitel 4 der Einfluss von spezifischen genetischen Modifikationen an Peroxisomen und den daraus resultierenden veränderten metabolischen Fluss der Photorespiration dargestellt. Aufgrund der sensitiven Analyse- Technik konnten metabolische Phänotypen, die nicht zwingend in einen morphologischen Phänotyp mündeten, in drei biologischen Systemen identifiziert und in einen stoffwechselphysiologischen Kontext gestellt werden. Die drei untersuchten biologischen Systeme – in vitro- Pappeln, Grünland- Arten (Arrhenatherion-Gesellschaft) und der Modellorganismus (Arabidopsis) – belegten anschaulich die Plastizität des Metabolismus der Arten, welche durch endogene oder exogene Faktoren erzeugt wurden.
Savannah areas affected by human activities such as livestock keeping and agriculture are often characterized by shifts in landscape structuring, with a predominance of few(er) habitat types. This is typically accompanied by pronounced changes in the communities of ungulates. The aim of this study was to find out whether shifts in ungulate communities in Lake Mburo National Park (LMNP) are primarily predicted by an alteration in the composition of the preferred habitat types or if more complex interactions between habitat changes and the prevalence of ungulates occur. Monthly road counts were used to establish the number of eleven ungulate species in LMNP and adjacent unprotected Ankole Ranching Scheme. The common duiker (Sylvicapra grimmia campbelliae Gray, 1843) was found in more abundance in disturbed areas, while showing a significant change in habitat use. Common duiker tended to use the vegetation type otherwise used by the bushbuck (Tragelaphus scriptus dama Neumann, 1902). Our results support the claim that the occurrence of ungulates is not only directly affected by the availability of 'suitable' habitats, but behavioural plasticity and competitive exclusion also need to be considered.
Starch is an important plant product widely used as a nutrient, as a source of renewable energy, and for many technological applications. In plants, starch is the almost ubiquitous storage carbohydrate whereas most heterotrophic prokaryotes and eukaryotes rely on glycogen. Despite close similarities in basic chemical features, starch and glycogen differ in both structural and physicochemical properties. Glycogen is a hydrosoluble macromolecule with evenly distributed branching points. Starch exists as a water-insoluble particle having a defined (and evolutionary conserved) internal structure. The biochemistry of starch requires the co-operation of up to 40 distinct (iso)enzymes whilst approximately 10 (iso)enzymes permit glycogen metabolism. The biosynthesis and degradation of native starch include the transition of carbohydrates from the soluble to the solid phase and vice versa. In this review, two novel aspects of the eukaryotic plastidial starch degradation are discussed: Firstly, biochemical reactions that take place at the surface of particulate glucans and mediate the phase transition of carbohydrates. Secondly, processes that occur downstream of the export of starch-derived sugars into the cytosol. Degradation of transitory starch mainly results in the formation of neutral sugars, such as glucose and maltose, that are transported into the cytosol via the respective translocators. The cytosolic metabolism of the neutral sugars includes the action of a hexokinase, a phosphoglucomutase, and a transglucosidase that utilizes high molecular weight glycans as a transient glucosyl acceptor or donor. Data are included on the transglucosidase (disproportionating isozyme 2) in Cyanophora paradoxa that accumulates storage carbohydrates in the cytosol rather than in the plastid.
Leaves are the main photosynthetic organs of vascular plants, and leaf development is dependent on a proper control of gene expression. Transcription factors (TFs) are global regulators of gene expression that play essential roles in almost all biological processes among eukaryotes. This PhD project focused on the characterization of the sink-to-source transition of Arabidopsis leaves and on the analysis of TFs that play a role in early leaf development. The sink-to-source transition occurs when the young emerging leaves (net carbon importers) acquire a positive photosynthetic balance and start exporting photoassimilates. We have established molecular and physiological markers (i.e., CAB1 and CAB2 expression levels, AtSUC2 and AtCHoR expression patterns, chlorophyll and starch levels, and photosynthetic electron transport rates) to identify the starting point of the transition, especially because the sink-to-source is not accompanied by a visual phenotype in contrast to other developmental transitions, such as the mature-to-senescent transition of leaves. The sink-to-source transition can be divided into two different processes: one light dependent, related to photosynthesis and light responses; and one light independent or impaired, related to the changes in the vascular tissue that occur when leaves change from an import to an export mode. Furthermore, starch, but not sucrose, has been identified as one of the potential signalling molecules for this transition. The expression level of 1880 TFs during early leaf development was assessed by qRTPCR, and 153 TFs were found to exhibit differential expression levels of at least 5-fold. GRF, MYB and SRS are TF families, which are overrepresented among the differentially expressed TFs. Additionally, processes like cell identity acquisition, formation of the epidermis and leaf development are overrepresented among the differentially expressed TFs, which helps to validate the results obtained. Two of these TFs were further characterized. bZIP21 is a gene up-regulated during the sink-to-source and mature-to-senescent transitions. Its expression pattern in leaves overlaps with the one observed for AtCHoR, therefore it constitutes a good marker for the sink-to-source transition. Homozygous null mutants of bZIP21 could not be obtained, indicating that the total absence of bZIP21 function may be lethal to the plant. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that bZIP21 is an orthologue of Liguleless2 from maize. In these analyses, we identified that the whole set of bZIPs in plants originated from four founder genes, and that all bZIPs from angiosperms can be classified into 13 groups of homologues and 34 Possible Groups of Orthologues (PoGOs). bHLH64 is a gene highly expressed in early sink leaves, its expression is downregulated during the mature-to-senescent transition. Null mutants of bHLH64 are characterized by delayed bolting when compared to the wild-type; this indicates a possible delay in the sink-to-source transition or the retention of a juvenile identity. A third TF, Dof4, was also characterized. Dof4 is neither differentially expressed during the sink-to-source nor during the senescent-to-mature transition, but a null mutant of Dof4 develops bigger leaves than the wild-type and forms a greater number of siliques. The Dof4 null mutant has proven to be a good background for biomass accumulation analysis. Though not overrepresented during the sink-to-source transition, NAC transcription factors seem to contribute significantly to the mature-to-senescent transition. Twenty two NACs from Arabidopsis and 44 from rice are differentially expressed during late stages of leaf development. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that most of these NACs cluster into three big groups of homologues, indicating functional conservation between eudicots and monocots. To prove functional conservation of orthologues, the expression of ten NAC genes of barley was analysed. Eight of the ten NAC genes were found to be differentially expressed during senescence. The use of evolutionary approaches combined with functional studies is thus expected to support the transfer of current knowledge of gene control gained in model species to crops.
It is well established that reproductive isolation often arises from genome incompatibilities and that genes encoding reproductive traits are less prone to introgression. Hybrid zones of Mytilus trossulus and Mytilus edulis provide an intriguing model to assess reproductive isolation. Although gene flow is restricted in North America, introgression is pervasive in the Baltic. This study aimed at analyzing the shape of multilocus clines across the Baltic contact zone between M. edulis and M. trossulus to infer mechanisms of restriction to gene flow. We use maximum likelihood methods to construct the best fitting individual clines for five markers located on biparentally inherited autosomes and paternally and maternally inherited mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). Strong cline shape differences among markers suggest that reproductive isolation arising from genome-wide incompatibilities is weak, and that these discrepancies possibly result from genetic drift, hybrid zone movement or marker-specific selection. However, the finding of a common cline center for M7 lysin (involved in fertilization) and paternally transmitted mtDNA (causing nuclear-mitochondrial incompatibilities in hybrids) suggest that these loci may play a role in incomplete reproductive isolation.
We propose two strategies to characterize organisms with respect to their metabolic capabilities. The first, investigative, strategy describes metabolic networks in terms of their capability to utilize different carbon sources, resulting in the concept of carbon utilization spectra. In the second, predictive, approach minimal nutrient combinations are predicted from the structure of the metabolic networks, resulting in a characteristic nutrient profile. Both strategies allow for a quantification of functional properties of metabolic networks, allowing to identify groups of organisms with similar functions. We investigate whether the functional description reflects the typical environments of the corresponding organisms by dividing all species into disjoint groups based on whether they are aerotolerant and/or photosynthetic. Despite differences in the underlying concepts, both measures display some common features. Closely related organisms often display a similar functional behavior and in both cases the functional measures appear to correlate with the considered classes of environments. Carbon utilization spectra and nutrient profiles are complementary approaches toward a functional classification of organism-wide metabolic networks. Both approaches contain different information and thus yield different clusterings, which are both different from the classical taxonomy of organisms. Our results indicate that a sophisticated combination of our approaches will allow for a quantitative description reflecting the lifestyles of organisms.
The GABI Primary Database, GabiPD (http:// www.gabipd.org/), was established in the frame of the German initiative for Genome Analysis of the Plant Biological System (GABI). The goal of GabiPD is to collect, integrate, analyze and visualize primary information from GABI projects. GabiPD constitutes a repository and analysis platform for a wide array of heterogeneous data from high-throughput experiments in several plant species. Data from different ‘omics’ fronts are incorporated (i.e. genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics and metabolomics), originating from 14 different model or crop species. We have developed the concept of GreenCards for textbased retrieval of all data types in GabiPD (e.g. clones, genes, mutant lines). All data types point to a central Gene GreenCard, where gene information is integrated from genome projects or NCBI UniGene sets. The centralized Gene GreenCard allows visualizing ESTs aligned to annotated transcripts as well as displaying identified protein domains and gene structure. Moreover, GabiPD makes available interactive genetic maps from potato and barley, and protein 2DE gels from Arabidopsis thaliana and Brassica napus. Gene expression and metabolic-profiling data can be visualized through MapManWeb. By the integration of complex data in a framework of existing knowledge, GabiPD provides new insights and allows for new interpretations of the data.
Arabidopsis thaliana HYL1 is a nuclear doublestranded RNA-binding protein involved in the maturation of pri-miRNAs. A quantitative real-time PCR platform for parallel quantification of 176 primiRNAs was used to reveal strong accumulation of 57 miRNA precursors in the hyl1 mutant that completely lacks HYL1 protein. This approach enabled us for the first time to pinpoint particular members of MIRNA family genes that require HYL1 activity for efficient maturation of their precursors. Moreover, the accumulation of miRNA precursors in the hyl1 mutant gave us the opportunity to carry out 3’ and 5’ RACE experiments which revealed that some of these precursors are of unexpected length. The alignment of HYL1- dependent miRNA precursors to A. thaliana genomic sequences indicated the presence of introns in 12 out of 20 genes studied. Some of the characterized intron-containing pri-miRNAs undergo alternative splicing such as exon skipping or usage of alternative 5’ splice sites suggesting that this process plays a role in the regulation of miRNA biogenesis. In the hyl1 mutant intron-containing pri-miRNAs accumulate alongside spliced primiRNAs suggesting the recruitment of HYL1 into the miRNA precursor maturation pathway before their splicing occurs.
Synonymous codon usage and variations in the level of isoaccepting tRNAs exert a powerful selective force on translation fidelity. We have developed an algorithm to evaluate the relative rate of translation which allows large-scale comparisons of the non-uniform translation rate on the protein biogenesis. Using the complete genomes of Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis we show that stretches of codons pairing to minor tRNAs form putative sites to locally attenuate translation; thereby the tendency is to cluster in near proximity whereas long contiguous stretches of slow-translating triplets are avoided. The presence of slow-translating segments positively correlates with the protein length irrespective of the protein abundance. The slow-translating clusters are predominantly located down-stream of the domain boundaries presumably to fine-tune translational accuracy with the folding fidelity of multidomain proteins. Translation attenuation patterns at highly structurally and functionally conserved domains are preserved across the species suggesting a concerted selective pressure on the codon selection and species-specific tRNA abundance in these regions.
Genetic structure and dispersal in a small South African Rodent : is dispersal female-biased?
(2009)
Dispersal greatly determines genetic structure of populations, although it is influenced by landscape heterogeneity, quality of the matrix, resource distribution and local population densities and dynamics. To get insights into some of those processes we analysed the genetic structure of the hairy-footed gerbil Gerbillurus paeba (Rodentia, Murinae, Gerbillinae) in the southern Kalahari (South Africa). Samples were taken from 20 populations covering an area of about 2200 km2. Genetic data were related to landscape characters and population dynamics. We used newly developed microsatellites and found at all loci some indication for the presence of null alleles. However, null alleles seem to have little influence on the general results of our analyses. Altogether we found even nearby populations of G. paeba to be significantly differentiated, although assignment tests revealed 24% of individuals as immigrants. Genetic structure was independent of landscape heterogeneities at all spatial scales. Autocorrelation analyses (range 50-90 km) revealed significant genetic structure within populations on distances <3 km. We found some indication for female-biased dispersal. Our study suggests that dispersing individuals have little influence on the long-term genetic structure and that drift is the major cause of genetic diversity. The observed genetic pattern likely derives from strong population fluctuations of G. paeba. The landscape structure has little influence on the genetic differentiation between populations.
Predictions on displacement of suitable habitats due to climate change suggest that plant species with poor colonization ability may be unable to move fast enough to match forecasted climate-induced changes in habitat distribution. However, studies on early Holocene plant migration show fast migration of many plant species that are poor colonizers today. We hypothesize that warmer temperatures during the early Holocene yielded higher seed quality, contributing to explaining the fast migration. We studied how the 3 seed quality variables, seed mass, germinability, and requirements for break of seed dormancy, vary for seeds of 11 forest herb species with varying colonization capacity collected along a 1400-km latitudinal gradient. Within species, seed mass showed a positive correlation with latitude, whereas germinability was more positively correlated with temperature (growing degree hours obtained at time of seed collection). Only slow-colonizing species increased germinability with temperature, whereas only fast-colonizing species increased germinability with latitude. These interactions were only detectable when analyzing germinability of the seeds, even though this trait and seed mass were correlated. The requirement for dormancy break did not correlate with latitude or temperature. The results indicate that seed development of slow colonizers may be favoured by a warmer climate, which in turn may be important for their migration capacity.
The ability of an organism to survive depends on its capability to adapt to external conditions. In addition to metabolic versatility and efficient replication, reliable signal transduction is essential. As signaling systems are under permanent evolutionary pressure one may assume that their structure reflects certain functional properties. However, despite promising theoretical studies in recent years, the selective forces which shape signaling network topologies in general remain unclear. Here, we propose prevention of autoactivation as one possible evolutionary design principle. A generic framework for continuous kinetic models is used to derive topological implications of demanding a dynamically stable ground state in signaling systems. To this end graph theoretical methods are applied. The index of the underlying digraph is shown to be a key topological property which determines the so-called kinetic ground state (or off-state) robustness. The kinetic robustness depends solely on the composition of the subdigraph with the strongly connected components, which comprise all positive feedbacks in the network. The component with the highest index in the feedback family is shown to dominate the kinetic robustness of the whole network, whereas relative size and girth of these motifs are emphasized as important determinants of the component index. Moreover, depending on topological features, the maintenance of robustness differs when networks are faced with structural perturbations. This structural off-state robustness, defined as the average kinetic robustness of a network’s neighborhood, turns out to be useful since some structural features are neutral towards kinetic robustness, but show up to be supporting against structural perturbations. Among these are a low connectivity, a high divergence and a low path sum. All results are tested against real signaling networks obtained from databases. The analysis suggests that ground state robustness may serve as a rationale for some structural peculiarities found in intracellular signaling networks.
Background: The need for fast, specific and sensitive multiparametric detection methods is an ever growing demand in molecular diagnostics. Here we report on a newly developed method, the helicase dependent Onchip amplification (OnChip-HDA). This approach integrates the analysis and detection in one single reaction thus leading to time and cost savings in multiparametric analysis. Methods: HDA is an isothermal amplification method that is not depending on thermocycling as known from PCR due to the helicases' ability to unwind DNA double-strands. We have combined the HDA with microarray based detection, making it suitable for multiplex detection. As an example we used the Onchip HDA in single and multiplex amplifications for the detection of the two pathogens N. gonorrhoeae and S. aureus directly on surface bound primers. Results: We have successfully shown the OnChip-HDA and applied it for single- and duplex- detection of the pathogens N. gonorrhoeae and S. aureus. Conclusion: We have developed a new method, the OnChip-HDA for the multiplex detection of pathogens. Its simplicity in reaction setup and potential for miniaturization and multiparametric analysis is advantageous for the integration in miniaturized Lab on Chip systems, e.g. needed in point of care diagnostics.
Isothermal amplification technologies are emerging on the horizon that could have the potential to pose as alternatives to PCR in terms of sensitivity and ease of use. One of the most recent isothermal technologies is helicase- dependent amplification (HDA). This technology uses the helicase's capability to disrupt the hydrogen bonds of a Watson-Crick base pair in order to separate dsDNA. A denaturation step, as is used in PCR, is no longer required. This gives rise to new, less expensive and less complicated designs for point-of-care devices and 'Lab on Chip' systems. Helicase-dependent OnChip-amplification (OnChip-HDA) is a further step into this direction as it integrates the HDA technology with microarray technology and its power of multiplexing. This special report will give an overview on the HDA and OnChip-HDA technology, and its potential for point-of-care diagnostics.
The centrosome is the main microtubule-organizing center and constitutes the largest protein complex in a eukaryotic cell. The Dictyostelium centrosome is an established model for acentriolar centrosomes and it consists of a layered core structure Surrounded by a so-called corona, which harbors microtubule nucleation complexes. We have identified 34 new centrosomal candidate proteins through mass spectrometrical analysis of the proteome of isolated Dictyostelium centrosomes. Here we present a characterization of 12 centrosomal candidate proteins all featuring coiled coil regions and low expression levels, which are the most common attributes of centrosomal proteins. We used GFP fusion proteins to localize the candidate proteins in whole cells and on microtubule-free, isolated centrosomes. Thus we were able to identify nine new genuine centrosomal proteins including a putative orthologue of Cep192, an interaction partner of polo-like kinase 4 in human centriole biogenesis. In this respect, centrosomal localization of the only polo-like kinase in Dictyostelium, Pik, is also shown in this work. Using confocal deconvolution microscopy, four components, CP39, CP55, CP75, and CP91 could be clearly assigned to the so far almost uncharacterized centrosomal core structure, while CP148 and Cep192 localized to a zone between that of corona marker and core proteins. Finally, CP103 and CP248 were constituents of the corona. In contrast, NE81 was localized at the nuclear envelope and three others, an orthologue of the spindle checkpoint component Mad1, the novel Cenp68, and the centrosomal CP248 were observed at the centromeres, which are clustered and linked to the centrosome throughout the entire cell cycle. Cell Motil. Cytoskeleton 66: 915-928, 2009.
The study of non-coding RNA genes has received increased attention in recent years fuelled by accumulating evidence that larger portions of genomes than previously acknowledged are transcribed into RNA molecules of mostly unknown function, as well as the discovery of novel non-coding RNA types and functional RNA elements. Here, we demonstrate that specific properties of graphs that represent the predicted RNA secondary structure reflect functional information. We introduce a computational algorithm and an associated web-based tool (GraPPLE) for classifying non-coding RNA molecules as functional and, furthermore, into Rfam families based on their graph properties. Unlike sequence-similarity-based methods and covariance models, GraPPLE is demonstrated to be more robust with regard to increasing sequence divergence, and when combined with existing methods, leads to a significant improvement of prediction accuracy. Furthermore, graph properties identified as most informative are shown to provide an understanding as to what particular structural features render RNA molecules functional. Thus, GraPPLE may offer a valuable computational filtering tool to identify potentially interesting RNA molecules among large candidate datasets.
Background: Hybrids represent a cornerstone in the success story of breeding programs. The fundamental principle underlying this success is the phenomenon of hybrid vigour, or heterosis. It describes an advantage of the offspring as compared to the two parental lines with respect to parameters such as growth and resistance against abiotic or biotic stress. Dominance, overdominance or epistasis based models are commonly used explanations. Conclusion/Significance: The heterosis level is clearly a function of the combination of the parents used for offspring production. This results in a major challenge for plant breeders, as usually several thousand combinations of parents have to be tested for identifying the best combinations. Thus, any approach to reliably predict heterosis levels based on properties of the parental lines would be highly beneficial for plant breeding. Methodology/Principal Findings: Recently, genetic data have been used to predict heterosis. Here we show that a combination of parental genetic and metabolic markers, identified via feature selection and minimum-description-length based regression methods, significantly improves the prediction of biomass heterosis in resulting offspring. These findings will help furthering our understanding of the molecular basis of heterosis, revealing, for instance, the presence of nonlinear genotype-phenotype relationships. In addition, we describe a possible approach for accelerated selection in plant breeding.