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There is multiple evidence that emotionally arousing events are preferentially processed, and better remembered than neutral events. In the present dissertation I investigated whether those strong emotional memories are affected by acute and chronic stress. Moreover, I was interested in whether already established emotional memories can be changed by behavioral intervention. According to the modulation hypothesis, emotionally arousing events promote attention and memory processes via noradrenergic and glucocorticoid actions. Recent models suggest that stress hormones differentially impact mnemonic processing, namely encoding, (re-) consolidation and memory retrieval, depending on timing and duration of the stressor relative to the learning experience. Acute stress around the time of encoding has been found to enhance memory, whereas chronic stress has been associated with memory impairments. Furthermore, consolidated memories are not resistant to modifications. Following reactivation, memories can turn into an unstable state and undergo a process called reconsolidated in order to persist. During this vulnerable state, memories are prone to modification, for instance by pharmacological blockade or interference learning. Here, the modulation of newly formed emotional and neutral memories as well as existing emotional and neutral memories was investigated in a well-established picture viewing and recognition memory paradigm using behavioral and neurophysiological measures (event-related potential, ERPs). More elaborative processing of emotional, relative to neutral stimuli has been related to the late positive potential (LPP). During encoding of emotional and neutral pictures, enhanced LPPs (starting at about 400 ms after stimulus onset) are usually observed for emotionally arousing relative to neutral pictures, indicating preferential attention allocation and processing. During recognition, correctly recognized old items evoke larger ERP amplitudes than correctly identified new items. This difference, the ERP old/new effect, was used to measure mnemonic processing during retrieval. The ERP old/new effect over centro-parietal sensor sites (400-800 ms) has been associated with recollection processes, and is enhanced for emotional, compared to neutral materials. Three studies are presented, that investigated 1) the influence of acute stress prior to encoding on long-term memory and its neural correlates, 2) the impact of chronic stress on encoding and memory, and 3) the influence of interference on already established memories (reconsolidation), always contrasting emotionally arousing and neutral scenes. Study 1 investigated subsequent recognition memory after encoding following acute stress using a socially evaluated cold pressure test, while study 2 tested the influence of chronic stress investigating breast cancer survivors about two years after cancer treatment. In study 3, one day after encoding, reconsolidation of the reactivated picture memory was targeted with an interfering learning task. In all three studies, recognition memory was tested one week later. High-density electroencephalograms (EEGs; 257 electrodes) were recorded to measure brain potentials. The results showed, in line with previous research, that emotionally arousing scenes were preferentially processed, as indicated by larger LPPs, and were better remembered than neutral scenes, as indicated by enhanced memory performance and larger ERP old/new differences. Experiencing acute stress prior to encoding enhanced the centro-parietal ERP old/new effect for emotionally arousing pictures at recognition, corroborating that acute stress facilitates memory for emotional scenes (Study 1). In contrast, attenuated LPPs for unpleasant pictures and impaired memory performance for arousing pictures were observed in breast cancer survivors (Study 2), indicating altered attention to emotion and subsequent emotional memory storage in chronically stressed individuals. When memory reactivation was followed by an interfering learning task, recognition memory and ERP old/new differences were attenuated for emotionally arousing scenes, selectively, showing the possibility that emotional memories might be modulated by behavioral interventions (Study 3). The results of all three studies are discussed and integrated into a model of memory modulation by stress and interference. The results highlight the importance of understanding the role of emotional arousal in the processes of memory formation, retrieval and reconsolidation. Moreover, shedding light on the differential effects of acute and chronic stress, interference and their possible interactions might help to prevent and even modify impairing memories that are one of the major concerns in stress- and fear-related mental disorders.
Chiral amines represent high-value fine chemicals serving as key intermediate products in pharmaceutical, chemical and agrochemical industries. In the past decades, application of amine transaminases (ATAs) for stereoselective amination of prochiral ketones emerged to an environmentally benign and economically attractive alternative to transition metal-catalyzed asymmetric synthesis to afford optically pure amines at industrial scale. However, the restricted substrate scope of wild-type transaminases prohibited the conversion of particularly sterically demanding substrates, making protein engineering indispensable. The following thesis covers elaboration of a novel assay for transaminases (Article I) and identification and development of transaminase variants in order to achieve biocatalytic preparation of a set of pharmaceutically relevant model amines, ideally in optically pure form for both stereoisomers, preferentially using asymmetric synthesis and most preferably using isopropylamine as cost-efficient amine donor co-substrate (Article II-IV). The aforementioned target amines and the corresponding precursor ketones (see Scheme 4.1) were conceived and provided by the company F. Hoffmann-La Roche to attain suitable biocatalysts for a variety of potential intermediates for active pharmaceutical ingredients. Protein engineering of the transaminase scaffolds investigated in this thesis comprised: Initial screening for suitable starting enzyme scaffolds, structure-guided rational design of these scaffolds to enable bulky planar substrate acceptance, elaboration of a sequence motif, verification of the motif and preparative-scale asymmetric synthesis reactions (Article II). For non-planar and structurally different target substrates, namely spatially bulky or bi-cyclic bridged substrates, the transaminase variants were specifically refined and a different evolutionary route had to be pursued (Article III and Article IV). These results (Article II) represent not only the first successful endeavor to engineer a PLP-fold type I amine transaminase (commonly denoted as (S)-selective) for the conversion of highly sterically demanding substrates, but also generally expanded the scope of available fold type I amine transaminases by enzymes having a novel and exceptionally broad substrate spectrum. Aside from structure-guided rational protein engineering, as well non-rational methods, such as site-specific saturation mutagenesis or directed evolution, were applied for protein-engineering. In order to do so for all of the target compounds, a novel high-throughput solid phase activity assay for transaminases that was actually developed during the master thesis, was refined and published (Article I). In the context of this thesis, the same assay principle was as well adapted for quantification of specific activities in liquid phase (Article III). A comparison of different methodologies for developing agar plate assays and a detailed step by step protocol of our transaminase assay are illustrated in a book chapter.
This thesis highlights the impact of surface charges and negative ions on the pre-ionization, breakdown mechanism, and lateral structure of dielectric barrier discharges operated in binary mixtures of helium with nitrogen or electronegative oxygen. Sophisticated diagnostic methods, e.g., non-invasive optical emission spectroscopy and the electro-optic Pockels effect as well as invasive laser photodetachment and laser photodesorption, were applied at one plane-parallel discharge configuration to investigate both relevant volume and surface processes. Moreover, the experimental findings were supported by numerical fluid simulations of the discharge. For the first time, the memory effect of the measured surface charge distribution was quantified and its impact on the local self-stabilization of discharge filaments was pointed out. As well, it turned out that a few additional seed electrons, either desorbed from the charged dielectric surface or detached from negative ions in the volume, significantly contribute to the pre-ionization resulting in a reduced voltage necessary for discharge breakdown. Finally, effective secondary electron emission coefficients of different dielectrics were estimated from the measured breakdown voltage using an analytical model.
Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) is the leading cause of serious diseases in human both from hospital and community associated infections. Some clinical manifestations of S. aureus infections are infective endocarditis (IE), osteoarticular infections, skin and soft tissue, pleuropulmonary, and device-related infections. In Germany, S. aureus is the second most common cause of hospital-acquired (HA) infections. About 16.7% of these nosocomial infections are caused by HA-MRSA clinical isolates. It has been a huge threat for the clinicians/scientists to control the emergence of such infections caused by S. aureus. S. aureus exhibits increasing virulence and resistance to various antibiotics, complicating prevention and treatment of infections. Eventually, active and passive vaccines might be the alternative strategy to deal with S. aureus related diseases. An effective S. aureus vaccine would provide great potential security and many societal benefits. However, so far vaccine trials have failed often due to limited number of available antigen candidates (monovalent/single antigen) in the clinical trials. Efforts to develop not only S. aureus vaccine but also prognosis or diagnosis tools are challenging tasks. That was the motivation point for the current thesis to identify potential antigen candidates for the aid of vaccine development using immunoproteomics approaches. From the earlier studies, passive immunisation with CP5, CP8, PNAG, ClfA, SdrG, alpha-hemolysin and active immunisation with IsdB, SEB, ClfA, CP5, CP8 were examined during preclinical trials and found to be the best examples for potential vaccine candidates. The antibody responses against S. aureus infections are heterogenous, still it is possible to identify the antibody signatures to a number of corresponding S. aureus antigens, whose abundance and presence could correlate to the disease state and may predict treatment outcome. To support this hypothesis, goals were set to develop and validate serological assay by indirect detection using suspension array technology (SAT). During the study, an antigen library of 140 recombinant S. aureus antigens was generated. Further serological assay were developed and validated to monitor the insights of antibody mediated humoral responses during S. aureus infection from various episodes of S. aureus infection. As an outcome, potential immunogenic antigen candidates were identified which may be used as candidates in active/passive vaccination and to stratify the patient. In total, three studies were carried out using serum and plasma samples from S. aureus nasal colonised healthy individuals (carriers and non-carriers) and bacteraemia patients (control, complicated and uncomplicated sepsis). Bead-based assays were performed and subsequent statistical analyses were done to identify immunogenic antigens that might discriminate between the different clinical status and outcome. Screening of healthy individuals (study-1) have shown significantly higher IgG responses against 14 antigens in S. aureus nasal carriers compared to non-carriers. Furthermore, the clonal complex 30 group of healthy carriers has shown significantly higher IgG responses against toxic shock syndrome toxin-1 (Tsst1) in comparison to non-clonal complex 30 healthy carriers. Study-2 have shown extensively higher IgG responses against 67 antigens in control samples compared to sepsis patients. 50% of the antigens eliciting different immune responses belonged to the extracellular components of S. aureus. The IgG responses against MSCRAMM proteins such as FnbA, FnbB, Efb-1 have been shown to be significantly higher in complicated sepsis. Study-3 have shown notably higher IgG responses against 8 antigens (Plc, SspB, IsaA, SEM, GlpQ, HlgC, SACOL0444, SACOL0985) at baseline in uncomplicated sepsis patients compared to patients subsequently developing complicated sepsis. In summary, the group of immunogenic antigens that have been identified in these studies using immunoproteomics approach could be a starting point for the development of S. aureus vaccines. Moreover, the suspension array technology approach facilitated the identification of new S. aureus antigen candidates in addition to earlier reports. The current results of this study support the hypothesis that it is possible to identify a serological response to potential S. aureus antigens that correlate to progression of S. aureus infections.
The present doctoral dissertation comprises new studies on the fossil vertebrate assemblage recovered from the late Early Jurassic marine “Green Series” clay deposits of Grimmen and Dobbertin in north-eastern Germany that contribute to fill the gap of knowledge regarding its faunal composition and its relevance for understanding Early Jurassic vertebrate life. The investigations led to the recognition of wide range of vertebrate taxa, including basal gravisaurian sauropods, secondarily marine reptiles, a diverse fauna of leptolepid fishes, and a new genus and species of pycnodontiform fishes. In addition, a taxonomic revision of the Early Jurassic saurichthyid fish Saurorhynchus was performed, leading to the identification of two new, previously unnamed species. The results provide new insights into the taxonomic, systematic, and ecological diversity of Early Jurassic vertebrates, and hence add significant new data to our knowledge on Lower Jurassic vertebrate palaeobiodiversity patterns.
Psychological health is a result of the effective interplay between explicit and implicit attempts to regulate ones’ emotions (Koole & Rothermund, 2011). Emotion regulation refers to processes that influence the intensity, the duration and the type of emotion experienced (Gross & Thompson, 2007). While explicit emotion regulation comprises effortful mental processes, implicit emotion regulation refers to processes that require no monitoring and terminate automatically (Gyurak, Gross, & Etkin, 2011).
In the present thesis, explicit and implicit strategies to regulate emotions were investigated. In Study 1, a well-established paradigm (Gross & Levenson, 1993) was adapted to examine the up- and down-regulation of positive and negative emotions using two different explicit emotion regulation strategies. To infer on the neurobiological correlates, blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) brain activity was recorded using functional magnetic resonance tomography. Furthermore, as a trait marker for the individual ability to regulate emotions, heart rate variability (HRV) was acquired during rest. In Study 2, implicit emotion regulation was examined. Therefore, a well-established fear extinction paradigm was compared to a novel approach based on the integration of new information during reconsolidation (Schiller et al., 2010). Autonomic arousal was measured via the skin conductance response during fear acquisition, fear extinction and after fear reinstatement. In Study 3, two dysfunctional emotion regulation strategies —worrying and rumination— were investigated. Excessive worrying and rumination are pathogenic characteristics of psychological disorders. Behavioral, autonomic and BOLD activity was recorded during worried and ruminative thinking as well as during neutral thinking.
The results showed that explicit emotion regulation was associated with modulated BOLD activity in the amygdala according to the regulation direction independent of the applied strategy and the valence of the emotion. In addition, increased dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) activity was observed during regulation compared to passively viewing emotional pictures. The findings are in line with previous research (Eippert etal., 2007; Kim &Hamann, 2007; Ochsner etal., 2004) and support the key role of the dlPFC during the explicit regulation of emotions. Similarly, implicit emotion regulation was associated with a decreased autonomic fear response, which was sustained after fear extinction during reconsolidation. The findings underscore the notion, that this novel technique might alter the initial fear memory resulting in a permanently diminished fear response (Nader, Schafe, & LeDoux, 2000; Schiller et al., 2010). Dysfunctional emotion regulation was associated with increased autonomic activity and fear potentiated startle (during worry) as well as increased BOLD activity in the insula (during worry and rumination) and increased BOLD activity in the amygdala (during rumination). In addition, neural activity in brain areas associated with the default mode network was observed. These findings stress the preserved negative emotional activity and the self-referential nature of the examined dysfunctional strategies. The results of all three studies are integrated into a neuro-biological model of emotion regulation focusing on the interplay between subcortical and prefrontal brain areas.
Investigation on the primary and secondary metabolism of marine and terrestrial endosymbionts
(2017)
Ph.D. thesis describes the metabolism of marine fungus and isolation of natural product for human use in part I and also describes earthworm endosymbiosis mechanism in part II. From the marine fungus project, three new producers have been identified for the previously reported bioactive secondary metabolites. And, from the Earthworm endosymbiosis project, the role of primary metabolites in the host fitness has been partially studied. the results outcome will be a partial contribution to microbial symbiosis.
Background: Early childhood caries remains an unsolved problem in children under three worldwide. Midwives are important health care persons around birth and can shape behavior. They possibly can play a positive role in preventing early childhood caries in young children. Objective: to assess how involved midwives are in early childhood caries prevention, what preventive measures they recommend and what knowledge they have about early childhood caries, as well as to study the potential differences between the various federal states or due to their work experience. Materials and Methods: An online survey targeted midwives in Germany regarding their knowledge about early childhood caries as well as the preventive measures they recommended. Participants were members of the German Association of Midwives (DHV). The survey invitation was published with the monthly newsletter and in the association journal of the DHV. Data was collected anonymously. Results: 191 midwives nationwide responded to the questionnaire. Most midwives were aware about ECC prevalence, consequences, causes and the teeth mainly affected. Midwives gave excellent recommendations regarding diet, oral hygiene and avoiding prolonged bottle feeding. However, only 40.8% of midwives recommended the first dental visit with the eruption of the first tooth. 71.7% recommended a fluoride tooth paste with the eruption of the first tooth. The rest advised a later use or non-fluoridated toothpaste. Regional differences were minimal. Conclusion: Midwives have good oral health knowledge, but there is some variability in recommendations on the first dental visit and the use of fluoride toothpaste which reflects an inconsistency of professional recommendations delivered by different health care institutions in Germany.
Leaf-inhabiting fungi are a hyperdiverse group of microbiota found in all terrestrial habitats. Comparative studies targeting the drivers of endophytic fungal biodiversity are rare and identified multiple effectors, such as plant chemistry, climate and seasonal attributes. Our project aimed to study the pattern of the leaf-associated mycobiome of European beech (Fagus sylvatica) at altitudinally distinct sites to reveal diversity, composition and seasonal dynamics of fungal endophytes by a combination of metabarcoding, cultivation and subsequent ecological analyses. This thesis also intended to study the fungal relationship with biotic and abiotic factors: elevation, local site conditions, leaf biochemistry and leaf status. Metabarcoding and cultivation were applied for same leaf samples to trace both environmental drivers and method-dependent signals of the detected fungi. An experimental field site consisting of 100 (2-years old beech) trees was established called ‘beech phytometer’ system at two altitudes (517 and 975 m a.s.l.) in a German mountain forest. Beech trees were randomly selected from both sites as well as from neighboring beech trees. Ten trees from each site were chosen and 10 leaves per tree were sampled. Climatic and leaf biochemistry (Chlorophyll, flavonoid and nitrogen) data were seasonally (Autumn, Spring and Summer) investigated for two continuous years (Oct 2013 to Oct 2015) at these two elevations. In the first year (autumn, 2013) of the project (chapter 3.1), the leaf-inhabiting fungi of natural beech trees were investigated by using high-throughput sequencing (metabarcoding) at three altitudinally distinct sites (with timberline at 1381 m a.s.l.) in the German Alps. This paper focuses on a detailed description and evaluation of metabarcoding amplicon library preparation and a subsequent analytical workflow. Fungal diversity and community composition were compared as a function of different elevated sites and leaf status (i.e., vital or senescent). However, three investigation sites resulted in 969 OTUs (operational taxonomic units) from 820441 sequences. Taxonomic compositions (order) of beech fungi differed strongly among the three sites but were less distinct between the vital and the senescence leaves. Fungal community composition at valley site clearly differed from those of mountain and timberline where differences between mountain and timberline were less prominent. Vital and senescence leaf differed in fungal community structures indicating a strong dynamics of leaf fungi in autumn. Elevation and leaf status were found to be the main explaining factors, which affected the fungal richness and compositions. Another survey (Chapter 3.2) was conducted just after the establishment of the ‘beech phytometer’ trees in the same period (autumn 2013) where leaf mycobiome of the phytometer trees (trees originally came from Northern Germany and grown in nursery) were compared with the fungi of surrounding natural beech habitat at valley (517 m a.s.l.) and mountain site (975 m a.s.l.) in the same location “Untersberg”. Fungal diversity was lowest in the managed habitat in the nursery and was highest in natural habitat. Fungal diversity and compositions significantly associated the origin of the trees. Under natural conditions, the fungi were more diverse at lower altitudes than at higher altitudes. Additionally, leaf chlorophyll and flavonoid contents showed negative correlations with fungal richness in natural stands. In the second year (autumn 2014), another survey (chapter 3.3) was conducted on leaf endophytes of phytometer trees with metabarcoding and cultivation approaches to trace the environmental drivers and method-dependent indications. Metabarcoding resulted in 597 OTUs from 170480 curated ITS1 reads and cultivation revealed 70 OTUs from 438 culture-based Sanger sequences. Both approaches resulted in non-overlapping community compositions and pronounced differences in taxonomic classification and trophic stages. However, both methods revealed similar correlations of the fungal communities with local environmental conditions. Our results indicate undisputable advantages of metabarcoding over cultivation in terms of representation of the major functional guilds, rare taxa and diversity signals of leaf-inhabiting fungi. This stressed out the importance of cultivation for complementing sequence databases with good quality reference data and encouraged the use of both approaches in future microbial biodiversity assessment studies. Phytometer and natural trees were intensively investigated in this study (chapter 3.4) to assess the influence of site characteristics (altitudes, local microclimate), seasonality, leaf biochemistry and leaf age on fungal diversity and composition. In total, our analytical Illumina workflow resulted in 15703599 demultiplexed and ITS1 reads from 165 samples. Clustering at 97% similarity resulted in 1199 OTUs. Climatic parameters were significantly differed between valley and mountain on daily basis but were insignificantly differed on monthly basis. The compositional difference between phytometer and natural mycobiome was significant for combined data as well as for the seasonal data (Oct 2013-Oct 2014). We observed a strong seasonal turnover in phyllosphere fungi in both habitats over the two years of investigation, suggesting that the plant-fungal system not only responds to cyclic climatic conditions but depends as well on various parameters, e.g., geographic position, substrates age and surrounding vegetation. A side (chapter 3.5) study was done to see the connection between the foliar endophytes and foliar phenolic compounds of European aspen (Populus tremula) in the presence and absence of specialist beetles (Chrysomela tremula). A distinct pattern of the leaf endophytes was found to be associated with aspen genotype and chemotype, but this specificity disappeared in the presence of herbivorous beetles. This suggested that leaf endophytes responded to the herbivory in aspen. In general, the altitudinal difference is the most important explaining factor for fungal community differences, which shapes many dependent abiotic and biotic habitat factors. Regarding cost and time per sequence, metabarcoding is superior to cultivation approaches and offers surprisingly profound insights by yielding much more data, allowing to test at once multiple hypotheses in fungal ecology.
Presumably every organism on earth is involved in at least one mutualistic interaction with one or several other species. To interact with each other, the species need traits that provide benefits to the partner species. Surprisingly, the function of traits for the stabilization of mutualisms has rarely been investigated, despite of a general lack of knowledge how mutualisms are maintained. The aim of this work was to find functional traits, which stabilize the mutualism between a bat species and a carnivorous pitcher plant in Northern Borneo. Kerivoula hardwickii is the only bat species known to roost in pitcher-shaped trapping organs of Palaeotropical pitcher plants (Nepenthes). These bats fertilize the pitcher plant Nepenthes hemsleyana with their nutritious nitrogen-rich faeces while roosting inside the pitchers. The plants have outsourced capture and digestion of arthropod prey to the bats on which they strongly rely for nutrient acquisition. The bats in contrast are less dependent on their mutualism partner as they also roost in pitchers of two further Nepenthes species as well as in developing furled leaves of various plant species in the order Zingiberales. In earlier studies, we found that N. hemsleyana outcompetes alternative roosts by providing high-quality roosts for the bats. However, which traits exactly stabilize the mutualism between K. hardwickii and N. hemsleyana was still unclear. I found that both the bats and the pitcher plants show traits, which have the potential to stabilize their interaction. On the level of morphological traits, I found that the pitchers have a low fluid level and a particular shape that provide just enough roosting space for one individual of the solitary K. hardwickii, a mother with juvenile or a mating couple. The bats have enlarged thumb and foot pads that enable them to cling to the smooth surfaces of their roosts without using their claws. This avoids damage to the sensitive N. hemsleyana pitchers. On the level of communicational traits, again N. hemsleyana acquired morphological structures that act as effective ultrasound-reflectors, which guide the echo-orientating bats to the opening of the pitchers and help the bats to identify their mutualism partner. The bats’ calls on the other hand are characterized by extraordinary high starting frequencies and broad bandwidths, which enable K. hardwickii to easily locate pitchers of N. hemsleyana and other Nepenthes species in their dense habitats. Finally, on the level of behavioural traits the bats often but not always prefer their mutualism partner to other roosts when they can select roosts in their natural environment or in behavioural experiments. The reason for this behaviour seems to be a combination of 1) N. hemsleyana’s superior quality compared to alternative roosts and 2) different roosting traditions of the bats. In conclusion, the mutualism between bats and pitcher plants is asymmetric as N. hemsleyana is more dependent on K. hardwickii than vice versa. For the plants bat faeces present their most important nutrient source. In contrast, K. hardwickii can select between alternative roosting plants. This asymmetric dependency is reflected in the specifity and function of the traits that stabilize the mutualism in each of the two involved species. Especially on the morphological level, N. hemsleyana seems to have evolved several traits that perfectly fit to K. hardwickii. In contrast, the bats’ traits more generally facilitate their roosting in funnel-shaped plant structures and their occurrence in cluttered habitats. Thus, they are probably exaptations (i.e. traits that evolved for another reason) that are nevertheless functional and stabilize the mutualism with N. hemsleyana. This plant‘s superior roost quality is likely a consequence of the competition with alternative roosting plants and is a pre-requisite for the bats to prefer N. hemsleyana. Moreover, my study confirms earlier findings that asymmetric dependencies support the stabilization of mutualistic interactions. Finally, my work indicates that the specifity of functional traits can be used as a measure to determine mutual dependencies of mutualistic partners.