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A chemotaxonomic evaluation using hplc profiling was undertaken to resolve the infrageneric and intergeneric affinities of over 150 strains of Xylariaceae. Daldinia placentiformis, Hypoxylon nicaraguense, H. polyporus, and Phylacia sagrana were found to contain 8-methoxy-1-naphthol, which is apparently absent in Annulohypoxylon, Hypoxylon, and related genera with bipartite stromata. D. placentiformis and other species of Daldinia and Entonaema produced this naphthol, 5-hydroxy-2-methylchromone, isosclerone derivatives, and 'AB-5046' phytotoxins. Phylacia sagrana differed from most Daldinia spp., except for D. caldariorum, by producing eutypine derivatives in addition to the above compounds. indolylquinones were observed in H. nicaraguense and H. polyporus. Isosclerones were also identified in the A. multiforme complex, but Hypoxylon and other Annulohypoxylon and most Hypoxylon spp. studied Annulohypoxylon spp. contained S-methylmellein as the major metabolite of their cultures. Based on the occurrence of the above metabolites, further mellein-type dihydroisocoumarins, teleomorphic and anamorphic Xylariaceae with Nodulisporium-like anamorphs ('Hypoxyloideae') were divided into various chemotypes. A comparison of their 5.8S/ ITS nuc-rDNA sequences agreed in some important aspects with the above results: H. nicaraguense and H. polyporus appeared basal to a clade comprising Daldinia, Entonaema, and Ph. sagrana. The latter species appeared allied to D. caldariorum, but was distantly related to Pyrenomyxa morganii and Hypoxylon s. str. (C) 2007 The British Mycological Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Sf6 belongs to the Podoviridae family of temperate bacteriophages that infect gram-negative bacteria by insertion of their double-stranded DNA. They attach to their hosts specifically via their tailspike proteins. The 1.25 Å crystal structure of Shigella phage Sf6 tailspike protein (Sf6 TSP) reveals a conserved architecture with a central, right-handed ; helix. In the trimer of Sf6 TSP, the parallel ; helices form a left-handed, coiled;; coil with a pitch of 340 Å. The C-terminal domain consists of a ; sandwich reminiscent of viral capsid proteins. Further crystallographic and biochemical analyses show a Shigella cell wall O-antigen fragment to bind to an endorhamnosidase active site located between two ;-helix subunits each anchoring one catalytic carboxylate. The functionally and structurally related bacteriophage, P22 TSP, lacks sequence identity with Sf6 TSP and has its active sites on single subunits. Sf6 TSP may serve as an example for the evolution of different host specificities on a similar general architecture.
Annual plants under cyclic disturbance regime : better understanding through model aggregation
(2008)
In their application for conservation ecology, 'classical' analytical models and individual-based simulation models (IBMs) both entail their specific strengths and weaknesses, either in providing a detailed and realistic representation of processes or in regard to a comprehensive model analysis. This well-known dilemma may be resolved by the combination of both approaches when tackling certain problems of conservation ecology. Following this idea, we present the complementary use of both an IBM and a matrix population model in a case study on grassland conservation management. First, we develop a spatially explicit IBM to simulate the long-term response of the annual plant Thlaspi perfoliatum (Brassicaceae), claspleaf pennycress, to different management schemes (annual mowing vs. infrequent rototilling) based on field experiments. In order to complement the simulation results by further analyses, we aggregate the IBM to a spatially nonexplicit deterministic matrix population model. Within the periodic environment created by management regimes, population dynamics are described by periodic products of annual transition matrices. Such periodic matrix products provide a very conclusive framework to study the responses of species to different management return intervals. Thus, using tools of matrix model analysis (e.g., loop analysis), we can both identify dormancy within the age-structured seed bank as the pivotal strategy for persistence under cyclic disturbance regimes and reveal crucial thresholds in some less certain parameters. Results of matrix model analyses are therefore successfully tested by comparing their results to the respective IBM simulations. Their implications for an enhanced scientific basis for management decisions are discussed as well as some general benefits and limitations of the use of aggregating modeling approaches in conservation.
The uptake of nutrients and their subsequent chemical conversion by reactions which provide energy and building blocks for growth and propagation is a fundamental property of life. This property is termed metabolism. In the course of evolution life has been dependent on chemical reactions which generate molecules that are common and indispensable to all life forms. These molecules are the so-called primary metabolites. In addition, life has evolved highly diverse biochemical reactions. These reactions allow organisms to produce unique molecules, the so-called secondary metabolites, which provide a competitive advantage for survival. The sum of all metabolites produced by the complex network of reactions within an organism has since 1998 been called the metabolome. The size of the metabolome can only be estimated and may range from less than 1,000 metabolites in unicellular organisms to approximately 200,000 in the whole plant kingdom. In current biology, three additional types of molecules are thought to be important to the understanding of the phenomena of life: (1) the proteins, in other words the proteome, including enzymes which perform the metabolic reactions, (2) the ribonucleic acids (RNAs) which constitute the so-called transcriptome, and (3) all genes of the genome which are encoded within the double strands of desoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). Investigations of each of these molecular levels of life require analytical technologies which should best enable the comprehensive analysis of all proteins, RNAs, et cetera. At the beginning of this thesis such analytical technologies were available for DNA, RNA and proteins, but not for metabolites. Therefore, this thesis was dedicated to the implementation of the gas chromatography – mass spectrometry technology, in short GC-MS, for the in-parallel analysis of as many metabolites as possible. Today GC-MS is one of the most widely applied technologies and indispensable for the efficient profiling of primary metabolites. The main achievements and research topics of this work can be divided into technological advances and novel insights into the metabolic mechanisms which allow plants to cope with environmental stresses. Firstly, the GC-MS profiling technology has been highly automated and standardized. The major technological achievements were (1) substantial contributions to the development of automated and, within the limits of GC-MS, comprehensive chemical analysis, (2) contributions to the implementation of time of flight mass spectrometry for GC-MS based metabolite profiling, (3) the creation of a software platform for reproducible GC-MS data processing, named TagFinder, and (4) the establishment of an internationally coordinated library of mass spectra which allows the identification of metabolites in diverse and complex biological samples. In addition, the Golm Metabolome Database (GMD) has been initiated to harbor this library and to cope with the increasing amount of generated profiling data. This database makes publicly available all chemical information essential for GC-MS profiling and has been extended to a global resource of GC-MS based metabolite profiles. Querying the concentration changes of hundreds of known and yet non-identified metabolites has recently been enabled by uploading standardized, TagFinder-processed data. Long-term technological aims have been pursued with the central aims (1) to enhance the precision of absolute and relative quantification and (2) to enable the combined analysis of metabolite concentrations and metabolic flux. In contrast to concentrations which provide information on metabolite amounts, flux analysis provides information on the speed of biochemical reactions or reaction sequences, for example on the rate of CO2 conversion into metabolites. This conversion is an essential function of plants which is the basis of life on earth. Secondly, GC-MS based metabolite profiling technology has been continuously applied to advance plant stress physiology. These efforts have yielded a detailed description of and new functional insights into metabolic changes in response to high and low temperatures as well as common and divergent responses to salt stress among higher plants, such as Arabidopsis thaliana, Lotus japonicus and rice (Oryza sativa). Time course analysis after temperature stress and investigations into salt dosage responses indicated that metabolism changed in a gradual manner rather than by stepwise transitions between fixed states. In agreement with these observations, metabolite profiles of the model plant Lotus japonicus, when exposed to increased soil salinity, were demonstrated to have a highly predictive power for both NaCl accumulation and plant biomass. Thus, it may be possible to use GC-MS based metabolite profiling as a breeding tool to support the selection of individual plants that cope best with salt stress or other environmental challenges.
Modelling and empirical studies have shown that input from the regional seed pool is essential to maintain local species diversity. However, most of these studies have concentrated on simplified, if not neutral, model systems, and focus on a limited subset of species or on aggregated measures of diversity only (e.g., species richness or Shannon diversity). Thus they ignore more complex species interactions and important differences between species. To gain a better understanding of how seed immigration affects community structure at the local scale in real communities we conducted computer simulation experiments based on plant functional types (PFTs) for a species-rich, fire-prone Mediterranean-type shrubland in Western Australia. We developed a spatially explicit simulation model to explore the community dynamics of 38 PFTs, defined by seven traits - regeneration mode, seed production, seed size, maximum crown diameter, drought tolerance, dispersal mode and seed bank type - representing 78 woody species. Model parameterisation is based on published and unpublished data on the population dynamics of shrub species collected over 18 years. Simulation experiments are based on two contrasting seed immigration scenarios: (1) the 'equal seed input number' scenario, where the number of immigrant seeds is the same for all PFTs, and (2) the 'equal seed input mass' scenario, where the cumulative mass of migrating seeds is the same for all PFTs. Both scenarios were systematically tested and compared for different overall seed input values. Without immigration the local community drifts towards a state with only 13 coexisting PFTs. With increasing immigration rates in terms of overall mass of seeds the simulated number of coexisting PFTs and Shannon diversity quickly approaches values observed in the field. The equal seed mass scenario resulted in a more diverse community than did the seed number scenario. The model successfully approximates the frequency distributions (relative densities) of all individual plant traits except seed size for scenarios associated with equal seed input mass and high immigration rate. However, no scenario satisfactorily approximated the frequency distribution for all traits in combination. Our results show that regional seed input can explain the more aggregated measures of local community structure, and some, but not all, aspects of community composition. This points to the possible importance of other (untested) processes and traits (e.g., dispersal vectors) operating at the local scale. Our modelling framework can readily allow new factors to be systematically investigated, which is a major advantage compared to previous simulation studies, as it allows us to find structurally realistic models, which can address questions pertinent to ecological theory and to conservation management.
Assessing the risk of gene flow from genetically modified trees carrying mitigation transgenes
(2008)
Die ubiquitär verbreitete Molybdänkofaktorbiosynthese ist in Escherichia coli (E. coli) bisher am umfassendsten untersucht. Bislang war jedoch nicht bekannt, welche physiologische Schwefelquelle im zweiten Schritt dieses Syntheseweges zur Bildung der charakteristischen Dithiolengruppe genutzt wird. Erste Untersuchungen deuteten auf eine der Cysteindesulfurasen E. colis hin, welche in Verbindung mit einem rhodaneseähnlichen Protein den Schwefel in Form eines Persulfids übertragen. Ähnliche Mechanismen wurden bereits in der humanen Moco-Biosynthese und der Thiaminbiosynthese identifiziert. In dieser Arbeit wurde das E. coli Protein YnjE näher charakterisiert. Es handelt sich bei YnjE um ein rhodaneseähnliches Protein aus drei Rhodanesedomänen. Durch Proteinkristallisation und anschliessender Röntgenstrukturanalyse wurde die Tertiärstruktur des YnjE-Proteins analysiert. Die hergestellten Kristalle konnten zur Gewinnung von Strukturdaten vermessen und eine Proteinkristallstruktur für YnjE berechnet werden. Desweiteren besitzt YnjE ein N-terminales Typ I Sekretionssystem abhängiges Sipnalpeptid. Durch Lokalisieungsexperimente wurde die Bedeutung des Signalpeptids für das YnjE-Protein untersucht. Dabei wurde festgestellt, dass endogenes YnjE sowohl im peri- als auch im cytoplasmatischen Raum lokalisiert ist. Auf Grund von vorhergehenden Studien, wurde eine Funktion des YnjE-Proteins innerhalb der Molybdänkofaktorbiosynthese in der Schwefelübertragung auf das Protein MoaD in E. coli vermutet und deshalb in dieser Arbeit näher untersucht. Es wurde eine Interaktion des YnjE-Proteins mit dem MoeB-Protein, welches für die Thiocarboxylierung des MoaD-Proteins essentiell ist, durch Tandem-Affinitätsreinigung und Antikörper-basierte Affinitätsreinigung nachgewiesen und ein signifikanter positiver Einfluss YnjEs auf die Bildung von Molybdopterin, einer Vorstufe des Molybdänkofaktors, bestätigt. Dabei wurde sowohl der Sulfurierungsgrad des MoaD-Proteins in YnjE und Cysteindesulfurase-knock-out Mutanten untersucht, als auch die Bildung von Molybdopterin in einem in vitro Ansatz in Abhängigkeit von steigenden YnjE-Konzentrationen analysiert. Im Ergebnis kann man daraus schließen, dass der Mechanismus der Schwefelübertragung ähnlich der Thiaminbiosynthese, über eine der drei Cysteindesulfurasen CsdA, SufS oder IscS geschieht, welche Schwefel in Form eines Persulfids auf YnjE übertragen können. Thiosulfat und Mercaptopyruvat, die Substrate für die beiden Familien der rhodaneseähnlichen Proteine, Thiosulfat-Sulfurtransferasen und Mercaptopyruvat-Sulfurtransferasen, dienen nicht als Substrate für eine Persulfurierung YnjEs. Durch eine Austauschmutante des Cysteinrestes der aktiven Schleife von YnjE konnte nicht bestätigt werden, dass dieser Aminosäurerest und damit die Bildung eines YnjE-gebundenen Persulfids für die positive Beeinflussung der MPT-Synthese essentiell ist. Vielmehr kann durch diese Arbeit von einer Vermittlung der Interaktionen zwischen MoeB, IscS und der MPT-Synthase durch YnjE ausgegangen werden wobei die Cysteindesulfurase IscS den Schwefel für die Thiocarboxylierung des MoaD-Proteins liefert.
Chloroplasts as bioreactors : high-yield production of active bacteriolytic protein antibiotics
(2008)
Plants, more precisely their chloroplasts with their bacterial-like expression machinery inherited from their cyanobacterial ancestors, can potentially offer a cheap expression system for proteinaceous pharmaceuticals. This system would be easily scalable and provides appropriate safety due to chloroplasts maternal inheritance. In this work, it was shown that three phage lytic enzymes (Pal, Cpl-1 and PlyGBS) could be successfully expressed at very high levels and with high stability in tobacco chloroplasts. PlyGBS expression reached an amount of foreign protein accumulation (> 70% TSP) that has never been obtained before. Although the high expression levels of PlyGBS caused a pale green phenotype with retarded growth, presumably due to exhaustion of plastid protein synthesis capacity, development and seed production were not impaired under greenhouse conditions. Since Pal and Cpl-1 showed toxic effects when expressed in E. coli, a special plastid transformation vector (pTox) was constructed to allow DNA amplification in bacteria. The construction of the pTox transformation vector allowing a recombinase-mediated deletion of an E. coli transcription block in the chloroplast, leading to an increase of foreign protein accumulation to up to 40% of TSP for Pal and 20% of TSP for Cpl-1. High dose-dependent bactericidal efficiency was shown for all three plant-derived lytic enzymes using their pathogenic target bacteria S. pyogenes and S. pneumoniae. Confirmation of specificity was obtained for the endotoxic proteins Pal and Cpl-1 by application to E. coli cultures. These results establish tobacco chloroplasts as a new cost-efficient and convenient production platform for phage lytic enzymes and address the greatest obstacle for clinical application. The present study is the first report of lysin production in a non-bacterial system. The properties of chloroplast-produced lysins described in this work, their stability, high accumulation rate and biological activity make them highly attractive candidates for future antibiotics.
Questions: 1. Are there differences among species in their preference for coniferous vs. deciduous forest? 2. Are tree and shrub species better colonizers of recent forest stands than herbaceous species? 3. Do colonization patterns of plant species groups depend on tree species composition? Location: Three deciduous and one coniferous recent forest areas in Brandenburg, NE Germany. Methods: In 34 and 21 transects in coniferous and deciduous stands, respectively, we studied the occurrence and percentage cover of vascular plants in a total of 150 plots in ancient stands, 315 in recent stands and 55 at the ecotone. Habitat preference, diaspore weight, generative dispersal potential and clonal extension were used to explain mechanisms of local migration. Regression analysis was conducted to test whether migration distance was related to species’ life-history traits. Results: 25 species were significantly associated with ancient stands and ten species were significantly more frequent in recent stands. Tree and shrub species were good colonizers of recent coniferous and deciduous stands. In the coniferous stands, all herbaceous species showed a strong dispersal limitation during colonization, whereas in the deciduous stands generalist species may have survived in the grasslands which were present prior to afforestation. Conclusions: The fast colonization of recent stands by trees and shrubs can be explained by their effective dispersal via wind and animals. This, and the comparably efficient migration of herbaceous forest specialists into recent coniferous stands, implies that the conversion of coniferous into deciduous stands adjacent to ancient deciduous forests is promising even without planting of trees.
The study of biological interaction networks is a central theme in systems biology. Here, we investigate common as well as differentiating principles of molecular interaction networks associated with different levels of molecular organization. They include metabolic pathway maps, protein-protein interaction networks as well as kinase interaction networks. First, we present an integrated analysis of metabolic pathway maps and protein-protein interaction networks (PIN). It has long been established that successive enzymatic steps are often catalyzed by physically interacting proteins forming permanent or transient multi-enzyme complexes. Inspecting high-throughput PIN data, it has been shown recently that, indeed, enzymes involved in successive reactions are generally more likely to interact than other protein pairs. In this study, we expanded this line of research to include comparisons of the respective underlying network topologies as well as to investigate whether the spatial organization of enzyme interactions correlates with metabolic efficiency. Analyzing yeast data, we detected long-range correlations between shortest paths between proteins in both network types suggesting a mutual correspondence of both network architectures. We discovered that the organizing principles of physical interactions between metabolic enzymes differ from the general PIN of all proteins. While physical interactions between proteins are generally dissortative, enzyme interactions were observed to be assortative. Thus, enzymes frequently interact with other enzymes of similar rather than different degree. Enzymes carrying high flux loads are more likely to physically interact than enzymes with lower metabolic throughput. In particular, enzymes associated with catabolic pathways as well as enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of complex molecules were found to exhibit high degrees of physical clustering. Single proteins were identified that connect major components of the cellular metabolism and hence might be essential for the structural integrity of several biosynthetic systems. Besides metabolic aspects of PINs, we investigated the characteristic topological properties of protein interactions involved in signaling and regulatory functions mediated by kinase interactions. Characteristic topological differences between PINs associated with metabolism, and those describing phosphorylation networks were revealed and shown to reflect the different modes of biological operation of both network types. The construction of phosphorylation networks is based on the identification of specific kinase-target relations including the determination of the actual phosphorylation sites (P-sites). The computational prediction of P-sites as well as the identification of involved kinases still suffers from insufficient accuracies and specificities of the underlying prediction algorithms, and the experimental identification in a genome-scale manner is not (yet) doable. Computational prediction methods have focused primarily on extracting predictive features from the local, one-dimensional sequence information surrounding P-sites. However the recognition of such motifs by the respective kinases is a spatial event. Therefore, we characterized the spatial distributions of amino acid residue types around P-sites and extracted signature 3D-profiles. We then tested the added value of spatial information on the prediction performance. When compared to sequence-only based predictors, a consistent performance gain was obtained. The availability of reliable training data of experimentally determined P-sites is critical for the development of computational prediction methods. As part of this thesis, we provide an assessment of false-positive rates of phosphoproteomic data.
Competition is a key process in plant populations and communities. We thus need, if we are to predict the responses of ecological systems to environmental change, a comprehensive and mechanistic understanding of plant competition. Considering competition, however, only at the population level is not sufficient because plant individuals usually are different, interact locally, and can adapt their behaviour to the current state of themselves and of their biotic and abiotic environment. Therefore, simulation models that are individual-based and spatially explicit are increasingly used for studying competition in plant systems. Many different individual-based modelling approaches exist to represent competition, but it is not clear how good they are in reflecting essential aspects of plant competition. We therefore first summarize current concepts and theories addressing plant competition. Then, we review individual-based approaches for modelling competition among plants. We distinguish between approaches that are used for more than 10 years and more recent ones. We identify three major gaps that need to be addressed more in the future: the effects of plants on their local environment, adaptive behaviour, and below-ground competition. To fill these gaps, the representation of plants and their interactions have to be more mechanistic than most existing approaches. Developing such new approaches is a challenge because they are likely to be more complex and to require more detailed knowledge and data on individual-level processes underlying competition. We thus need a more integrated research strategy for the future, where empirical and theoretical ecologists as well as computer scientists work together on formulating, implementing, parameterization, testing, comparing, and selecting the new approaches. (c) 2008 Rubel Foundation, ETH Zurich. Published by Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.
Bacteriophage HK620 infects Escherichia coli H and is closely related to Shigella phage Sf6 and Salmonella phage P22. All three Podoviridae recognize and cleave their respective host cell receptor polysaccharide by homotrimeric tailspike proteins. The three proteins exhibit high sequence identity in the 110 residues of their N-terminal particle- binding domains, but no apparent sequence similarity in their major, receptor-binding parts. We have biochemically characterized the receptor-binding part of HK620 tailspike and determined its crystal structure to 1.38 Å resolution. Its major domain is a right-handed parallel ;-helix, as in Sf6 and P22 tailspikes. HK620 tailspike has endo-N- acetylglucosaminidase activity and produces hexasaccharides of an O18A1-type O-antigen. As indicated by the structure of a hexasaccharide complex determined at 1.6 Å resolution, the endoglycosidase-active sites are located intramolecularly, as in P22, and not between subunits, as in Sf6 tailspike. In contrast, the extreme C-terminal domain of HK620 tailspike forms a ;-sandwich, as in Sf6 and unlike P22 tailspike. Despite the different folds, structure-based sequence alignments of the C-termini reveal motifs conserved between the three proteins. We propose that the tailspike genes of P22, Sf6 and HK620 have a common precursor and are not mosaics of unrelated gene fragments.
Natürliche Standorte der Waldkiefer gibt es in Deutschland nur kleinflächig. Während Kiefernforste anstelle natürlicher Laubwälder heute oft landschaftsprägend sind, bildet die konkurrenzschwache und lichtbedürftige Kiefer ausschließlich auf extrem trockenen oder nassen, nährstoffarmen Standorten naturnahe Schlusswaldgesellschaften. Regionale Schwerpunkte liegen in subkontinentalen Regionen wie dem nordostdeutschen Tiefland und Bayern, ein „natürliches Kiefernareal" lässt sich aber kaum abgrenzen. An der Trockengrenze des Waldes finden sich auf Kalk- und Dolomitgesteinen artenreiche Karbonat-Trockenkiefernwälder mit Elementen der alpinen Rasen und Kalkmagerrasen in der Bodenvegetation. Diese Wälder besiedeln steile, südexponierte Felsen und morphodynamisch aktive Bereiche wie Rutschhänge und FlussSchotterböden im Umkreis der Alpen, kommen aber auch in den Mittelgebirgen vor. Ihr Gegenstück auf sauren Standorten sind die Sand- und Silikat-Kiefernwälder der Quarzsande und Sandstein-Verwitterungsböden, deren Bodenvegetation durch Zwergsträucher, Moose und Strauchflechten geprägt ist. Hier siedelt die Kiefer in den Tieflagen besonders auf Binnendünen und Sandern, aber auch auf Küstendünen der Ostsee, in den Mittelgebirgen z. B. auf den Sandsteinriffen der Sächsischen Schweiz. Der dritte Wuchsbereich natürlicher Kiefernwälder sind saure, nährstoffarme Moore, die ganz überwiegend von Regenwasser gespeist werden. Auch die Kiefern-Moorwälder sind in Nordostdeutschland und Bayern am häufigsten. Von diesen Standorten ausgehend, wo ihr Platz kaum von anderen Baumarten streitig gemacht wird, tritt die Waldkiefer immer wieder als Pionier auf weniger extremen Standorten auf. In der Naturlandschaft kam dies etwa nach Waldbränden oder Stürmen vor, doch der Mensch förderte die Kiefer durch Auflichtung der Wälder, Waldweide und Streunutzung stark. Auch die damit verbundene Nährstoffverarmung macht eine exakte Abgrenzung natürlicher Kiefernstandorte unmöglich. Die schlechtwüchsigen und forstwirtschaftlich nicht interessanten, ästhetisch aber sehr ansprechenden natürlichen Kiefernbestände sind heute vor allem durch Stickstoff-Immissionen gefährdet. Trotz ihrer oft kargen Erscheinung besitzen sie einen hohen Wert für die Biodiversität und den Artenschutz. Neben bodenbewohnenden Flechten und regionalen Relikt-Endemiten ist vor allem die in den letzten Jahrzehnten zunehmend gefährdete Vielfalt an Mykorrhiza-Pilzen hervorzuheben, die der Kiefer das Leben auf extrem nährstoffarmen Standorten überhaupt ermöglichen. Abschließend werden mögliche Schutz- bzw. Regenerationsmaßnahmen wie das Abplaggen flechtenreicher Kiefernstandorte vorgestellt.
Conformational changes associated with the assembly of recombinant ;2-microglobulin in vitro under acidic conditions were investigated using infrared spectroscopy and static and dynamic light scattering. In parallel, the morphology of the different aggregated species obtained under defined conditions was characterized by electron microscopy. The initial salt-induced aggregate form of ;2-microglobulin, composed of small oligomers (dimers to tetramers), revealed the presence of ;-strands organized in an intramolecular-like fashion. Further particle growth was accompanied by the formation of intermolecular ;-sheet structure and led to short curved forms. An increase in temperature by only 25 °C was able to disaggregate these assemblies, followed by the formation of longer filamentous structures. In contrast, a rise in temperature up to 100 °C was associated with a reorganization of the short curved forms at the level of secondary structure and the state of assembly, leading to a species with a characteristic infrared spectrum different from those of all the other aggregates observed before, suggesting a unique overall structure. The infrared spectral features of this species were nearly identical to those of ;2-microglobulin assemblies formed at low ionic strength with agitation, indicating the presence of fibrils, which was confirmed by electron microscopy. The observed spectroscopic changes suggest that the heat-triggered conversion of the short curved assemblies into fibrils involves a reorganization of the ;-strands from an antiparallel arrangement to a parallel arrangement, with the latter being characteristic of amyloid fibrils of ;2-microglobulin.
Background To improve the understanding of consequences of climate change for annual plant communities, I used a detailed, grid-based model that simulates the effect of daily rainfall variability on individual plants in five climatic regions on a gradient from 100 to 800 mm mean annual precipitation (MAP). The model explicitly considers moisture storage in the soil. I manipulated daily rainfall variability by changing the daily mean rain (DMR, rain volume on rainy days averaged across years for each day of the year) by ± 20%. At the same time I adjusted intervals appropriately between rainy days for keeping the mean annual volume constant. In factorial combination with changing DMR I also changed MAP by ± 20%. Results Increasing MAP generally increased water availability, establishment, and peak shoot biomass. Increasing DMR increased the time that water was continuously available to plants in the upper 15 to 30 cm of the soil (longest wet period, LWP). The effect of DMR diminished with increasing humidity of the climate. An interaction between water availability and density-dependent germination increased the establishment of seedlings in the arid region, but in the more humid regions the establishment of seedlings decreased with increasing DMR. As plants matured, competition among individuals and their productivity increased, but the size of these effects decreased with the humidity of the regions. Therefore, peak shoot biomass generally increased with increasing DMR but the effect size diminished from the semiarid to the mesic Mediterranean region. Increasing DMR reduced via LWP the annual variability of biomass in the semiarid and dry Mediterranean regions. Conclusion More rainstorms (greater DMR) increased the recharge of soil water reservoirs in more arid sites with consequences for germination, establishment, productivity, and population persistence. The order of magnitudes of DMR and MAP overlapped partially so that their combined effect is important for projections of climate change effects on annual vegetation.
Background: To improve the understanding of consequences of climate change for annual plant communities, I used a detailed, grid-based model that simulates the effect of daily rainfall variability on individual plants in five climatic regions on a gradient from 100 to 800 mm mean annual precipitation (MAP). The model explicitly considers moisture storage in the soil. I manipulated daily rainfall variability by changing the daily mean rain (DMR, rain volume on rainy days averaged across years for each day of the year) by ± 20%. At the same time I adjusted intervals appropriately between rainy days for keeping the mean annual volume constant. In factorial combination with changing DMR I also changed MAP by ± 20%. Results: Increasing MAP generally increased water availability, establishment, and peak shoot biomass. Increasing DMR increased the time that water was continuously available to plants in the upper 15 to 30 cm of the soil (longest wet period, LWP). The effect of DMR diminished with increasing humidity of the climate. An interaction between water availability and density-dependent germination increased the establishment of seedlings in the arid region, but in the more humid regions the establishment of seedlings decreased with increasing DMR. As plants matured, competition among individuals and their productivity increased, but the size of these effects decreased with the humidity of the regions. Therefore, peak shoot biomass generally increased with increasing DMR but the effect size diminished from the semiarid to the mesic Mediterranean region. Increasing DMR reduced via LWP the annual variability of biomass in the semiarid and dry Mediterranean regions. Conclusion: More rainstorms (greater DMR) increased the recharge of soil water reservoirs in more arid sites with consequences for germination, establishment, productivity, and population persistence. The order of magnitudes of DMR and MAP overlapped partially so that their combined effect is important for projections of climate change effects on annual vegetation.
In dieser Arbeit wird die Entwicklung eines bifunktionellen Biosensors nach dem Vorbild eines Baukastensystems beschrieben. Das Ziel wird durch die Kombination verschiedenster molekularer Erkennungselemente erreicht. Solche molekularen Erkennungselemente im verwendeten System sind: • Propidium und die periphere anionische Bindungsstelle der Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) • Organophosphate und das aktive Zentrum der AChE • ein an die AChE gekoppeltes Hapten und das Epitop eines Antikörpers • ein an die AChE gekoppeltes Hapten, das als Ligand ein weiteres Enzym bindet Neben dem molekularen Erkennungselement wird ein Biosensor ebenso durch die Art des Transducers charakterisiert. Hier werden Quarzplättchen mit Goldelektroden zur Signalumwandlung eingesetzt. Die Verwendung solcher Sensoren mit einem EQCM-Gerät (electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance) ermöglicht es zwei Messsignale gleichzeitig aufzunehmen: die piezoelektrische Bestimmung einer Massebeladung und die amperometrische Detektion von Enzymaktivität auf der Sensoroberfläche. Für die Analytik stehen somit zwei verschiedene Assay-Varianten zur Verfügung: die Bestimmung der Inhibition der ACHE-Aktivität und ein Bindungstest über das Hapten. Die Basis beider Tests ist die Modifizierung der piezoelektrischen Kristalle mit Propidium – einem reversiblen Inhibitor der Acetylcholinesterase. Dies ermöglicht die Beladung des Sensors mit AChE über die Wechselwirkung mit der peripheren anionischen Bindungsstelle des Enzyms. Die Aktivität der so immobilisierten AChE und die Inhibition durch Organophosphate (Pestizide) werden amperometrisch bestimmt. Durch die chemische Kopplung eines Hapten an die Cholinesterase wird ein weiteres Erkennungselement eingeführt. Das eröffnet die Möglichkeit, an die auf dem Propidium-modifizierten Sensor immobilisierte, haptenisierte Cholinesterase einen Antikörper zu binden. Als Voraussetzung für elektrochemische Bestimmung der AChE-Aktivität wurde zunächst die Optimierung der amperometrischen Messmethode vorgenommen. Die Oxidatationspotentiale für die Detektion von Thiocholin wurden im Bereich von 150 mV bis 300 mV variiert. Dabei wurde für die nachfolgenden Untersuchungen eine Arbeitspotential von 200 mV (vs. Ag/AgCl) festgelegt, da hier das beste Verhältnis von gemessenem Oxidationsstrom und Langzeitstabilität der Propidium-modifizierten Sensoren erzielt wurde. Dieses Potential war deutlich geringer als die bisher publizierten Mediator-freien AChE-Biosensoren. Es wurde ein Vergleich verschiedener Organophosphate über ihre Inhibitionskonstanten durchgeführt, um diejenigen herauszufinden, die möglichst schnell mit dem aktiven Zentrum der Acetylcholinesterase reagieren. Das verwendete Messsystem beruht nicht auf der Vorinkubation der AChE und damit einer Einstellung des Inhibitionsgleichgewichts. Stattdessen wurde die Inhibition der AChE direkt im Fließsystem verfolgt. Daher war eine schnelle Inhibitionskinetik für einen empfindlichen Organophosphat-Nachweis erforderlich. Da einige Inhibitoren nur als Phosphothionat vorlagen, wurde die Überführung dieser Substanzen in die entsprechenden Oxo-Formen mittels N-Bromsuccinimid untersucht. Die NBS-Aktivierung wurde erfolgreich durchgeführt, die erwartete Inhibitionsstärke konnte jedoch aufgrund hydrolytischer Vorgänge nicht erreicht werden. Untersuchungen mit Diisopropylfluorophosphat (DFP) und Chlorpyriphos-oxon (CPO) konnten die Voruntersuchungen über die Inhibitionskinetik in Bezug auf die erreichten Nachweisgrenzen von 2E-06 M für DFP und 5E-08 M für CPO bestätigen. Für die chemische Modifizierung der Acetylcholinesterase wurde zunächst 2,4-Dichlorphenoxyessigsäure (2,4-D) als Hapten ausgewählt. 2,4-D wird als Herbizid eingesetzt und in der EU über die Gewässerschutzrichtlinie reguliert. 2,4-D konnte in unterschiedlichen molaren Verhältnissen von 2,6 : 1 bis 260 : 1 (2,4-D : AChE) nach Aktivierung mit einem Norbornendicarboximido-Derivat an die AChE gekoppelt werden. Dabei konnte die spezifische Aktivität der Acetylcholinesterase erhalten und die Bindung eines anti-2,4-D-Antikörpers ermöglicht werden. Zur Verstärkung des piezolelektrischen Signals der Antikörperbindung wurden die Immunoglobuline zunächst an Goldnanopartikel gekoppelt. Damit konnte eine Verstärkung um den Faktor 10 erreicht werden. Allerdings waren die Antikörper-modifizierten Goldnanopartikel nicht langzeitstabil. Daher wurden auch Silica-Nanopartikel als Matrix für die Antikörperkopplung getestet. Mit diesem System konnte eine Verstärkung um den Faktor von 5 bis 13 je nach Grad der Beladung den Nanopartikel mit Antikörper bestimmt werden. Die hohe unspezifische Bindung der Antikörper-Nanopartikel-Konjugate an den Propidium-modifizierten QCM-Sensor konnte keinen empfindlichen 2,4-D-Nachweis ermöglichen. Als Alternative wurde Kokain (Benzoylecgonin, BZE) als Hapten an die Aceytlcholinesterase gekoppelt. Da Kokain selbst auch als Inhibitor im aktiven Zentrum der AChE binden kann, wurden zwei verschiedene Strategien zur Konjugatsynthese verfolgt. Durch Zugabe von Kokain während der Kopplung sollte die kovalente Fixierung des Kokain-Derivats BZE-DADOO im aktiven Zentrum verhindert werden (Konjugat B). In der Tat konnten mit dieser Synthesestrategie 67% der spezifischen Cholinesterase-Aktivität erhalten werden, während im Kokain-freien Ansatz (Konjugat A) nur 2% der Ausgangsaktivität wiedergefunden wurden. Das BZE-AChE-Konjugat ermöglichte auch die Untersuchung der Bindungskinetik der anti-BZE-Antikörper. Dabei konnte eine Assoziationsgeschwindigkeitskonstante ka von 12911 l/(mol•s) berechnet werden. Dieser Wert ist trotz der vergleichsweise geringen Oberflächenbeladung vergleichbar mit den in der Literatur angegebenen Werten. Die Dissoziationsgeschwindigkeitskonstante ist mit 2,89E−3 1/s um den Faktor 30 höher als der Literaturwert. Diese Abweichung ist auf Unterschiede im Bindungsmodell zurückzuführen. Mit beiden BZE-AChE-Konjugaten konnte ein kompetetiver Immunoassay mit Kokain im Fließsystem durchgeführt werden. Dabei zeigte sich für beide Konjugate ein ähnlicher Testmittelpunkt: IC50 = 4,40E−8 mol/l für Konjugat A bzw. IC50 = 1,77E−8 mol/l für Konjugat B. Diese Werte sind vergleichbar zu bereits publizierten Kokainassays im Fließsystem. Wie vorstehend beschrieben, bindet Kokain als Inhibitor auch im aktiven Zentrum von Cholinesterasen. Diese Eigenschaft wurde genutzt, um ein zweites Enzym – Butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) – an die BZE-AChE zu binden. Die Spezifität dieser Bindung konnte durch die Abwesenheit einer Affinität der BChE zum Propidium und durch die Blockierbarkeit der Bindung von BChE und BZE-AChE durch Kokain nachgewiesen werden. Damit konnte erfolgreich die Kombination mehrere molekularer Erkennungselemente demonstriert werden. Die Propidium-Plattform ermöglicht den Aufbau einer Architektur aus verschiedenen Cholinesterasen, die über unterschiedliche Bindungsstellen wechselwirken. Sowohl freie als auch BZE-modifizierte AChE können über die Affinität zum Propidium auf dem EQCM-Sensor immobilisiert werden. Mit Kokain als Substrat der Butyrylcholinesterase kann Benzoylecgonin nicht nur als Epitop für die Bindung eines Antikörpers, sondern auch als Erkennungselement für die BChE genutzt werden. Auf der anderen Seite erschwert die geringe Affinität der BChE im Gegensatz zum anti-BZE-Antikörper den Einsatz dieses Systems für analytische Zwecke. Durch die Verwendung anderer Ligand-Enzym-Kombinationen läßt sich das in dieser Arbeit vorgestellte Konzept noch weiter ausbauen und ermöglicht damit eine Entwicklung ausgehend von „einfachen“ molekularen Erkennungselementen (MRE) hin zu „multifunktionellen“ Erkennungselementsystemen. In dieser Arbeit konnte demonstriert werden, dass der Aufbau solch komplexe Systeme möglich ist, ohne Abstriche in Bezug auf die Empfindlichkeit der einzelnen Assays hinzunehmen.
Die Xanthin-Dehydrogenase aus Rhodobacter capsulatus ist ein cytoplasmatisches Enzym, welches ein (αβ)₂ Heterotetramer mit einer Größe von 275 kDa bildet. Die drei Kofaktoren (Moco, 2[2Fe2S], FAD) sind auf zwei unterschiedlichen Polypeptidketten gebunden. So sind die beiden spektroskopisch unterscheidbaren Eisen-Schwefel-Zentren und das FAD in der XdhA-Untereinheit und der Moco in der XdhB-Untereinheit gebunden. Im ersten Teil dieser Arbeit sollte untersucht werden, warum die R. capsulatus XDH ein Dimer bildet und ob ein intramolekularer Elektronentransfer existiert. Dafür wurde eine chimäre XDH-Variante [(α)₂(β₁wt/β₂E730A)] erzeugt, welche eine aktive und eine inaktive XdhB-Untereinheit trägt. Mit Hilfe von Reduktionsspektren sowie mit der Bestimmung der kinetischen Parameter für die Substrate Xanthin und NAD+ konnte gezeigt werden, dass die chimäre XDH-Variante katalytisch halb so aktiv war, wie der auf gleiche Weise gereinigte XDH-Wildtyp. Dies verdeutlicht, dass die noch aktive Untereinheit der Chimären selbstständig und unabhängig Substrat binden und hydroxylieren kann und ein intramolekularer Elektronentransfer zwischen den beiden XdhB-Untereinheiten nicht stattfindet. Ein weiteres Ziel war die funktionelle Charakterisierung der Mus musculus AOX1 sowie der humanen AOX1 hinsichtlich ihrer Substratspezifitäten und ihrer biophysikalischen Eigenschaften sowie der Charakterisierung der konservierten Aminosäuren im aktiven Zentrum der mAOX1. Da bislang noch kein heterologes Expressionssystem für ein aktives und stabiles rekombinantes AO-Protein existierte, wurde ein E. coli Expressionssystem mit der gleichzeitigen Expression der entsprechenden Mocosulfurase für mAOX1 und hAOX1 in dieser Arbeit etabliert. Mit Hilfe dieser Koexpression konnte die Aktivität der rekombinanten mAOX1 um 50 % gesteigert werden, wenn gleich auch der sulfurierte Moco-Anteil nur 20 % betrug. Um die konservierten Aminosäuren im aktiven Zentrum hinsichtlich ihrer Funktion der Substratbindung zu charakterisieren, wurden folgende Varianten erzeugt: V806E, M884R, V806/M884R sowie E1265Q. Mit Hilfe von kinetischen Substratuntersuchungen konnte gezeigt werden, dass die beiden Aminosäuren Val806 und Met884 für die Erkennung und die Stabilisierung von Aldehyden und N-Heterozyklen essentiell sind. Ein Austausch dieser beiden gegen Glutamat bzw. Arginin (wie bei R. capsulatus XDH) zeigte jedoch keine Xanthin- oder Hypoxanthinumsetzung. Für das Glu1265 wurde ebenfalls die Rolle als die Katalyse initiierende Aminosäure belegt.
This paper describes the principle of a homogeneous indirect fluorescence quenching immunoassay that uses monoclonal antibodies. It is a carrier-free assay system that is performed completely in solution. The assay system was established for the determination of a low molecular weight substance (hapten), the herbicide diuron, used as a model analyte. A fluorescein-monuron conjugate together with a fluorescence-quenching monoclonal anti-fluorescein antibody and an anti-analyte antibody (here an anti-diuron/monuron monoclonal antibody) were used as central components of the assay. The fluorescein-monuron conjugate can be bound either by the anti-fluorescein monoclonal antibody or by the anti-diuron/ monuron monoclonal antibody. Due to steric hindrance, binding of both antibodies to the conjugate was not possible at the same time. By selecting the antibody concentrations appropriately, a dynamic equilibrium can be established that permits the preferential binding of the anti-diuron/monuron antibody to the conjugate, which allows the fluorescein in the conjugate to fluoresce. This equilibrium can be easily altered by adding free analyte (diuron), which competes with the conjugate to bind to the anti-diuron/monuron antibody. A reduction of anti-diuron/monuron antibody binding to the conjugate results in an increase in the binding of the anti-fluorescein antibody, which leads to a decrease in the fluorescence of the conjugate. The fluorescence is therefore a direct indicator of the state of equilibrium of the system and thus also the presence of free unconjugated analyte. The determination of an analyte based on this test principle does not require any washing steps. After the test components are mixed, the dynamic equilibrium is rapidly reached and the results can be obtained in less than 5 min by measuring the fluorescence of the fluorescein. We used this test principle for the determination of diuron, which was demonstrated for concentrations of approximately 5 nM.
The vacuolar H+-ATPase (V-ATPase) in the apical membrane of blowfly (Calliphora vicina) salivary gland cells energizes the secretion of a KCl-rich saliva in response to the neurohormone serotonin (5-HT). We have shown previously that exposure to 5-HT induces a cAMP-mediated reversible assembly of V-0 and V-1 subcomplexes to V-ATPase holoenzymes and increases V-ATPase-driven proton transport. Here, we analyze whether the effect of cAMP on V-ATPase is mediated by protein kinase A (PKA) or exchange protein directly activated by cAMP (Epac), the cAMP target proteins that are present within the salivary glands. Immunofluorescence microscopy shows that PKA activators, but not Epac activators, induce the translocation of V1 components from the cytoplasm to the apical membrane, indicative of an assembly of V-ATPase holoenzymes. Measurements of transepithelial voltage changes and microfluorometric pH measurements at the luminal surface of cells in isolated glands demonstrate further that PKA-activating cAMP analogs increase cation transport to the gland lumen and induce a V-ATPase-dependent luminal acidification, whereas activators of Epac do not. Inhibitors of PKA block the 5-HT-induced V-1 translocation to the apical membrane and the increase in proton transport. We conclude that cAMP exerts its effects on V-ATPase via PKA.
Plants are the primary producers of biomass and thereby the basis of all life. Many varieties are cultivated, mainly to produce food, but to an increasing amount as a source of renewable energy. Because of the limited acreage available, further improvements of cultivated species both with respect to yield and composition are inevitable. One approach to further progress in developing improved plant cultivars is a systems biology oriented approach. This work aimed to investigate the primary metabolism of the model plant A.thaliana and its relation to plant growth using quantitative genetics methods. A special focus was set on the characterization of heterosis, the deviation of hybrids from their parental means for certain traits, on a metabolic level. More than 2000 samples of recombinant inbred lines (RILs) and introgression lines (ILs) developed from the two accessions Col-0 and C24 were analyzed for 181 metabolic traces using gas-chromatography/ mass-spectrometry (GC-MS). The observed variance allowed the detection of 157 metabolic quantitative trait loci (mQTL), genetic regions carrying genes, which are relevant for metabolite abundance. By analyzing several hundred test crosses of RILs and ILs it was further possible to identify 385 heterotic metabolic QTL (hmQTL). Within the scope of this work a robust method for large scale GC-MS analyses was developed. A highly significant canonical correlation between biomass and metabolic profiles (r = 0.73) was found. A comparable analysis of the results of the two independent experiments using RILs and ILs showed a large agreement. The confirmation rate for RIL QTL in ILs was 56 % and 23 % for mQTL and hmQTL respectively. Candidate genes from available databases could be identified for 67 % of the mQTL. To validate some of these candidates, eight genes were re-sequenced and in total 23 polymorphisms could be found. In the hybrids, heterosis is small for most metabolites (< 20%). Heterotic QTL gave rise to less candidate genes and a lower overlap between both populations than was determined for mQTL. This hints that regulatory loci and epistatic effects contribute to metabolite heterosis. The data described in this thesis present a rich source for further investigation and annotation of relevant genes and may pave the way towards a better understanding of plant biology on a system level.
In order to function properly, organisms have a complex control mechanism, in which a given gene is expressed at a particular time and place. One way to achieve this control is to regulate the initiation of transcription. This step requires the assembly of several components, i.e., a basal/general machinery common to all expressed genes, and a specific/regulatory machinery, which differs among genes and is the responsible for proper gene expression in response to environmental or developmental signals. This specific machinery is composed of transcription factors (TFs), which can be grouped into evolutionarily related gene families that possess characteristic protein domains. In this work we have exploited the presence of protein domains to create rules that serve for the identification and classification of TFs. We have modelled such rules as a bipartite graph, where families and protein domains are represented as nodes. Connections between nodes represent that a protein domain should (required rule) or should not (forbidden rule) be present in a protein to be assigned into a TF family. Following this approach we have identified putative complete sets of TFs in plant species, whose genome is completely sequenced: Cyanidioschyzon merolae (red algae), Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (green alga), Ostreococcus tauri (green alga), Physcomitrella patens (moss), Arabidopsis thaliana (thale cress), Populus trichocarpa (black cottonwood) and Oryza sativa (rice). The identification of the complete sets of TFs in the above-mentioned species, as well as additional information and reference literature are available at http://plntfdb.bio.uni-potsdam.de/. The availability of such sets allowed us performing detailed evolutionary studies at different levels, from a single family to all TF families in different organisms in a comparative genomics context. Notably, we uncovered preferential expansions in different lineages, paving the way to discover the specific biological roles of these proteins under different conditions. For the basic leucine zipper (bZIP) family of TFs we were able to infer that in the most recent common ancestor (MRCA) of all green plants there were at least four bZIP genes functionally involved in oxidative stress and unfolded protein responses that are bZIP-mediated processes in all eukaryotes, but also in light-dependent regulations. The four founder genes amplified and diverged significantly, generating traits that benefited the colonization of new environments. Currently, following the approach described above, up to 57 TF and 11 TR families can be identified, which are among the most numerous transcription regulatory families in plants. Three families of putative TFs predate the split between rhodophyta (red algae) and chlorophyta (green algae), i.e., G2-like, PLATZ, and RWPRK, and may have been of particular importance for the evolution of eukaryotic photosynthetic organisms. Nine additional families, i.e., ABI3/VP1, AP2-EREBP, ARR-B, C2C2-CO-like, C2C2-Dof, PBF-2-like/Whirly, Pseudo ARR-B, SBP, and WRKY, predate the split between green algae and streptophytes. The identification of putative complete list of TFs has also allowed the delineation of lineage-specific regulatory families. The families SBP, bHLH, SNF2, MADS, WRKY, HMG, AP2-EREBP and FHA significantly differ in size between algae and land plants. The SBP family of TFs is significantly larger in C. reinhardtii, compared to land plants, and appears to have been lost in the prasinophyte O. tauri. The families bHLH, SNF2, MADS, WRKY, HMG, AP2-EREBP and FHA preferentially expanded with the colonisation of land, and might have played an important role in this great moment in evolution. Later, after the split of bryophytes and tracheophytes, the families MADS, AP2-EREBP, NAC, AUX/IAA, PHD and HRT have significantly larger numbers in the lineage leading to seed plants. We identified 23 families that are restricted to land plants and that might have played an important role in the colonization of this new habitat. Based on the list of TFs in different species we have started to develop high-throughput experimental platforms (in rice and C. reinhardtii) to monitor gene expression changes of TF genes under different genetic, developmental or environmental conditions. In this work we present the monitoring of Arabidopsis thaliana TFs during the onset of senescence, a process that leads to cell and tissue disintegration in order to redistribute nutrients (e.g. nitrogen) from leaves to reproductive organs. We show that the expression of 185 TF genes changes when leaves develop from half to fully expanded leaves and finally enter partial senescence. 76% of these TFs are down-regulated during senescence, the remaining are up-regulated. The identification of TFs in plants in a comparative genomics setup has proven fruitful for the understanding of evolutionary processes and contributes to the elucidation of complex developmental programs.
Zur Detektion neuer IgE- reaktiver Proteine wurde in dieser Arbeit ein zweidimensionales Proteintrennverfahren verwendet. Resultierende Proteinfraktionen wurden mithilfe von 18 tomatensensibiliesierten Patientenseren im Immunoblot getestet. Detektierte Proteine in der SDS-PAGE wurden mittels LC-MS/MS identifiziert. Dadurch konnten 2 Tomatensamenproteine, die im Immunoblot ein IgE- reaktives Signal zeigten eindeutig mittels Massenspektrometrie identifiziert werden. Diese Proteine sind Legumin und Vicilin. Durch Sequenzabgleich und Proteinstrukturmodellierung im Vergleich zu bereits bekannten Allergenen (Erdnuss und Cashewnuss), konnte eine hohe Homologie gezeigt werden.