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Cardiovascular diseases are the most common cause of death in industrial nations. The basis of these diseases is a dysfunction in the interaction between the cells the heart is composed of. The main types of cells making up the human heart are cardiomyocytes that build the myocardium and provide the contraction properties, endothelial cells that delimit the blood flowing through the inner chambers and coronary arteries from the myocardial tissue, and fibroblasts, which build the connective tissue. A common process in the development of cardiovascular diseases is the formation of fibrosis due to injury of the endothelium and subsequent infiltration of the cardiac tissue by immune cells, and inflammatory agents like cytokines. Cytokines exert different functions in cardiac cells. Tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα) is an inducer of apoptosis. Transforming growth factor ß (TGFß) is known for activation of proliferation. Other cytokines like C-X-C motif chemokine 11 (CXCL11), interleukin-6 (IL-6), or brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) have not yet been investigated or their impact on such cells is unknown. Eventually, however, fibrotic scar tissue arises from the transition from fibroblasts to myofibroblasts leading to a stiffening of the cardiac muscle and impaired pump function. In order to prevent the occurrence of these events the balance of proliferation, migration, and differentiation of cardiac cells needs to be controlled very delicately.
The mechanisms controlling these interactions are still not well understood, which is why this work aimed at the elucidation of molecular mechanisms within the three main cell types that might play a role in the regulation of cardiac function. A proteomic approach using mass spectrometry was used to identify alterations in protein levels that could provide hints about the involved pathways and find new players as candidates for more detailed investigation. Initially, the proteomic composition of HL-1 cardiomyocytes, L929 fibroblasts, and human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) that were cultivated in standard growth conditions without stress was investigated. Half of the total protein intensity was made up by only 42 to 53 proteins, depending on the cell type. More than a third of all proteins were identified in all three cell types, which may be proteins performing common cell functions. Indeed, the proteins displaying the highest abundance seem to be predominantly involved in such common cellular functions as the regulation of glucose metabolism or the cytoskeleton. More specific functions like heart development and muscle contraction were found enriched in cardiomyocytes as were mitochondrial proteins. The proportion of proteins with extracellular localization and function was higher in fibroblasts and endothelial cells.
Secondly, the impact of cytokines on the proliferative behavior and the proteomic composition of cardiomyocytes and fibroblasts was analyzed. HL-1 cardiomyocytes and L929 fibroblasts were treated with different concentrations of cytokines with a cytotoxic, proliferative, or yet unknown effect on these cells. While HL-1 cells exhibited no macroscopic reaction to any of the cytokines used, cytotoxic/growth inhibitory (TNFα, CXCL11) and proliferative (TGFß, IL6, BDNF) effects were observed for L929 cells. The latter also showed CXCL11-induced upregulated EIF2 signaling, pointing to a higher need of protein synthesis.
The third aim was the examination of proteome adaptations in endothelial cells due to different kinds of stress, as these cells are the first line of defense against inflammatory agents or injury and therefore prone to wounding. The role of the growth factors vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) in wounding and starvation was another object of this study as they are known for their angiogenic and cell survival supporting properties. Additionally, the impact of the cellular sex on the response to stress and growth factors was examined, because a person’s sex plays an important role in susceptibility, risk factors, and outcome of cardiovascular diseases. This has mainly been attributed to the different hormone levels, especially the higher levels of estrogen in premenopausal women, which exerts cardioprotective properties, but also genetic background was reported to play an important role. Only few studies that examined the molecular properties of HUVECs considered the cellular sex and if so, the genetic bias of unrelated samples was not taken into account. This is why Lorenz and colleagues at the Charité in Berlin collected HUVECs from newborn twins of opposite sex, cultivated them without stress in standard growth medium, exposed them to wounding and serum starvation, and investigated the impact of the growth factors and the sex on migrational behavior and metabolic issues. The current work focused on the alterations of not only the intra- but also the extracellular proteome, because paracrine signaling is crucial for intercellular communication in order to cope with stress. General differences between male and female cells were observed for proteins encoded on the X chromosome with higher levels in females (DDX3X, UBA1, EIF1AX, RPS4X, HDHD1), except for one protein with higher levels in male cells (G6PD). A Y-chromosomal protein was, for the first time, identified in endothelial cells (DDX3Y). Wounding, starvation, and growth factor treatment led to alterations and sex-specific different levels in an unexpectedly high number of proteins, with VEGF showing a stronger impact than bFGF. Many proteins with alterations observed without taking the sex into account, were actually only changed in male or female cells. Some proteins were regulated in opposite directions, or growth factors inhibited their secretion in a sex-specific way by unknown mechanisms. Tissue factor pathway inhibitor 2 (TFPI2) should be emphasized as a protein with sex-specific differences, especially in the extracellular space and with increased levels after starvation and VEGF treatment. These observations suggest a temporal lack in TFPI2 synthesis and secretion in male cells, which might explain the enhanced adaptation of females to wounding.
The results of this work lay the basis for future investigation by providing a database of intra- and extracellular proteome changes due to different environmental circumstances. It strongly suggests the investigation of male and female HUVECs, and other cells, separately to avoid the impact of the sex observed in this work. Essentially, the observations suggest a number of candidate proteins for more detailed investigations of endothelial and cardiovascular diseases.
Myxomycetes (Amoebozoa, plasmodial slime molds) are one of the last larger groups of organisms where the biodiversity is not yet investigated by molecular methods, except for a very few cultivable model species. Based on the first phylogenies for the group produced in 2012 and 2013, this thesis work explores the genetic diversity of wild populations of myxomycetes, addressing two questions: 1. Does diversity and phylogenetic trees found with barcode markers fit the current morphological species concept, and do barcode markers reveal a lower or higher diversity than found by morphological characters? In the first case, morphological characters seen as decisive for species differentiation would be plastic (shaped by the environment), in the second case we must assume the existence of cryptic species. 2. Can genetic markers be used to see if natural populations of myxomycetes reproduce mainly sexual or asexual? Sexuality is proven to occur in the Amoebozoa, but asexual reproduction should be advantageous for habitat colonization. Experiments with cultivable species have shown that both reproductive modes occur in the myxomycetes. Two species complexes were chosen for an in-depth investigation. The first species is the common wood-inhabiting myxomycete Trichia varia (Pers. ex J.F. Gmel.) Pers., one of the first myxomycetes to be described and always seen as a variable, yet single, species. The second example involves a snowbank species so far known as Lamproderma atrosporum Meyl., which was recently transferred to a genus on its own, Meriderma Mar. Mey. & Poulain, and a morphological species concept, including several taxa, was proposed. Trichia varia belongs to the bright-spored myxomycetes. Partial sequences of three independent markers (nuclear small-subunit ribosomal RNA gene, SSU, extrachromosomal; protein elongation factor 1 alpha gene, EF1A, chromosomal; cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 gene, COI, mitochondrial) from 198 specimens resulted in a three-gene phylogeny containing three groups, within each group combinations of the single-marker genotypes occurred exclusively. Complete SSU sequences were generated for 66 specimens, which revealed six positions that can carry group I introns and putatively functional or degenerated homing endonuclease genes in two groups. All observations (genotypic combinations of the three markers, signs of recombination, intron patterns) fit well into a pattern of three cryptic biological species that reproduce predominantly sexual but are reproductively isolated. The pattern of group I introns and inserted homing endonuclease genes mounts evidence that the Goddard-Burt intron life cycle model applies to naturally occurring myxomycete populations. A total of 89 specimens of the dark-spored myxomycete genus Meriderma from five European mountain ranges were sequenced for partial genes of SSU and EF1A. The latter gene includes an extremely variable spliceosomal intron. Three clades, the two morphologically recognizable taxa M. fuscatum, M. aggregatum, and the morphologically complicated complex species M. atrosporum agg., were recovered. The EF1A-based phylogeny of the 81 specimens of M. atrosporum agg. resulted in seven subclades, with the two EF1A-haplotypes of a sequence sharing always one subclade for each of the 50 heterozygous specimens, a pattern consistent with the existence of several independent but sexually reproducing biospecies. Identical EF1A genotypes occurred more often within a regional population than in between. A simulation assuming panmixis within a biospecies but not in between, and isolation between mountain ranges suggested that similar numbers of shared genotypes can be created by chance through sexual reproduction alone. Numbers of haplotypes shared between mountain ranges correlate with geographical distance, suggesting occasional long-distance dispersal by spores. An enlarged data set containing 227 partial SSU sequences of Meriderma spp. identified 53 ribotypes, with a ribotype accumulation curve indicating 68.4±14.5 ribotypes to expect according to the Chao2 estimator. The topology of the SSU phylogeny generally confirms results from the partial SSU and EF1A data set of 89 specimens, where several putative biospecies could be recognized. A novel method for automated analyses of SEM images allows to derive quantitative descriptors for spore ornamentation, which were subjected to multivariate analyses. Spore ornamentation provided traits with the highest explanatory power in a multivariate statistics, whereas spore size and stalk length were much less significant. For some but not all putative biospecies a unique combination of morphological characters was found, which is in accordance with the hypothesis of instant sympatric 8 speciation via mutations creating incompatible strains splitting from existing biospecies. The morphologically recognizable taxa of the genus are described and a key for the genus Meriderma is given. To compare morphological and molecular diversity in lignicolous myxomycetes, all specimens found in a study covering the late-autumn aspect were sequenced, using partial SSU gene as a barcode marker. A total of 161 logs in the old-growth forest Eldena, northeastern Germany, was surveyed, resulting in 530 collections representing 27 taxa from 14 genera. Bright-spores species were far more abundant than dark-spored taxa. A phylogeny based on partial SSU sequences for bright-spored myxomycetes revealed morphospecies to be largely consistent with phylogenetic groups. Most but not all morphospecies may contain multiple ribotypes that cannot be differentiated by light microscopy. This first study backing up a traditional morphology-based survey by a full molecular component demonstrates that partial SSU sequences can function as reliable barcode markers for myxomycetes, but reveals as well a significant, yet not infinite, amount of hidden diversity. The main conclusions of this work, set up in the frame of a project funded by the German Research Council (DFG), are the following: 1. Sexual reproduction seems to be an important, if not the dominating mode (apart from clonal myxamoebal populations built up by binary fission) of reproduction in naturally occurring populations of myxomycetes. 2. From the two investigated species complexes we can expect many, if not most, morphopecies to be composed of reproductively isolated, sexually reproducing, biospecies. 3. Partial SSU sequences, as most widely used in this study, seem to represent suitable barcode markers for the group and can be used to distinguish the (usually cryptic) biospecies, although they alone do not allow any conclusions about reproductive isolation and speciation processes. 4. We have to expect a significant amount of hidden diversity in myxomycetes, which will increase the number of taxa from ca. 1000 recognized morphologically by a factor between two and ten.
Because Moringa is rich in secondary metabolites and phenolics, we faced a challenge in extracting a pure DNA required for AFLP (the first proposed genotyping method). Later, different DNA isolation methods were tested to overcome the obstacles caused by phenolics and sugars, an AFLP protocol that worked well with the cultivated seedlings at the botanical garden in Greifswald. The markers for the Internal Transcribed Spacer (ITS) were as well tested that showed a monomorphic structure between all samples. Finally, SSR (microsatellite) markers were established. To optimize DNA extraction, the method of Doyle and Doyle was modified and optimized. This is an ideal method for obtaining a non-fragmented DNA that could be used for AFLP. In addition, two other DNA extraction methods; (KingFisher Flex robot using Omega M1130 extraction Kits, and spin columns and 96-plates using Stratec kits). Although we achieved similar results for both Robot kits (Omega) and Stratec kits, the amplification for most of the samples extracted with Robot did not work, therefore the Stratec kit was the method of choice as it has also a lower cost, combined with a high quality of DNA. For ITS, no polymorphism was found for 28 samples of M. peregrina from Sinai (sequences submitted to GenBank). However, since microsatellite markers of M. peregrina were not known, it was a challenge to try a cross amplification from other species with well-known microsatellite primers. Cross-amplification of 16 primers known from the related species M. oleifera was tested, and three multiplex PCR reactions were established after testing different annealing temperatures and different primers concentrations. This included 13 primers out of the 16 investigated markers which gave a reliable band. All methods used for genetic assessments for the different Moringa species are compiled in a comparative review to look for connections between the different Moringa species. For Moringaceae, M. oleifera and M. peregrina are closely related to each other. Both species have slender trunks, with thick, tough bark and tough roots and bilaterally symmetrical flowers with a short hypanthium. All but one SSR markers used in this study are highly informative However, the degree of polymorphy varied considerably within the 13 markers used. The Probability of Identity (PI) for all loci was 2.6 x 10-9 with high resolution. The percentage of polymorphic loci for all populations was 88.5±2.2; figures for single populations were 92.3%, 84.6%, 84.6%, and 92.3% for the wadis WM, WA, WF, and WZ, respectively. The genotype accumulation curve as well demonstrated that 7–8 markers were necessary to discriminate between 100% of the multilocus genotypes. Significant departures from HWE were detected for eight loci (P < 0.001), probably due a high degree of inbreeding within population. The observed (HO) and expected (HE) heterozygosities ranged from 0 to 0.86 and from 0 to 0.81, respectively. However, for the pooled population, excluding the monomorphic locus MO41, HO and HE ranged from 0.069 to 0.742 and from 0.126 to 0.73 with averages of 0.423 and 0.469, respectively. The mean of FST was 0.133, indicating that, due to the long generation time of M. peregrina, there is still relatively little differentiation between the four remaining populations. An analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) revealed that the old populations of M. peregrina are still genetically diverse where 75% of variance was recorded within individuals and 83% within populations. An analysis with STRUCTURE, varying the parameter K between 1 and 7, revealed the most pronounced genetic structure for K=3, thus uniting the populations from two neighboured wadis (W. Agala and W. Feiran). The three groups seem to be now genetically isolated. (They may be remainders of a formerly contiguous population, especially when considering the change towards a drier climate in Northern Africa within the last 6000 years). Six clones of each two individuals collected from the same wadi were found, pointing to vegetative dispersal via broken twigs, which may have rooted after flash floods. It may be an alternative mode of reproduction under harsh conditions. Our data reveal a low gene flow between three of the four wadis, suggesting that the trees are relictual populations. In general, conservation of populations from the three genetically most diverse wadis and cross-breeding of trees within a reforestation program is recommended as an effective strategy to ensure the survival of M. peregrina at Sinai, Egypt.
Myxomycetes are fungus-like protists of the supergroup Amoebozoa found to be abundant in all terrestrial ecosystems. Mainly based on its macroscopically visible fruit bodies, our knowledge on ecology and diversity of myxomycetes is better than for most other protistean groups, but there is still a lacking knowledge about global diversity patterns since tropical regions, especially the old world tropics, are still understudied. In this thesis a combination of classical ecological analyses and modern molecular methods were used to expand the current knowledge on myxomycete diversity and biogeography in the Paleotropics. A number of surveys in the Philippine archipelago are conducted to provide and to add information about the distribution of myxomycetes in the Southeast Asian region. A combination of field collecting and ca. 2500 moist chamber cultures from four unexplored areas in the Philippines, namely, the Bicol Peninsula (746 records, 57 taxa), Puerto Galera (926 records, 42 taxa), Quezon National Park (205 records, 35 taxa), and Negros Province (193 records, 28 taxa), now brings the number of species recorded for Philippines to 150; with one record, Stemonaria fuscoides, noted as new for the Asian Paleotropics. Collecting localities that have more diverse plant communities showed as well higher species diversity of myxomycetes. In congruence with studies from the Neotropical forests, it seems also that anthropogenic disturbances and the type of forest structure affect the occurrence of myxomycetes for the Philippines. Another survey carried out in another paleotropical region, the highlands of Ethiopia, revealed a total of 151 records, with all 39 species found as new for the country. Three records of Diderma cf. miniatum with a strong bright red peridium and one record of Didymium cf. flexuosum with a conspicuous broad reticulation in the spore ornamentation were described and barcoded, since both may represent morphospecies new to science. A number of rarely recorded species, like Didymium saturnus, Metatrichia floripara, Perichaena areolata, and Physarina echinospora showed that resembling to its unique flora, the east African mountain ranges harbor a diverse and distinctive myxomycete assemblage. One incentive of this study was to compile a solid large dataset for the Paleotropical region that is comparable to data obtained from comprehensive studies performed in the Neotropical areas a decade ago. A total of eight surveys (with four comprehensive regional surveys, two from lowland and two from highland, for each region, the Neo- and the Paleotropics) were used, to compare the myxomycete assemblages of both regions. Each survey comes from a region with fairly homogenous vegetation, and includes specimens from both field and moist chamber cultures component. A statistical analysis of species accumulation curves revealed that only between 70 and 95% of all species to be expected have been found. Even for >1000 specimens per survey these figures seem hardly to increase with increasing collection effort, since a high proportion of species is always represented by a single or a few records only. Both ordination and cluster analysis suggests that geographical separation explains differences in species composition of the myxomycete assemblages much better than elevational differences. 5 The molecular component of this thesis is a phylogeographic study of the widely distributed tropical myxomycete Hemitrichia serpula. It is a morphologically distinct species with golden-yellow fructifications forming a reticulum. However, subtle variation in spore ornamentation points to cryptic speciation within this myxomycete. Using two independent molecular markers, 135 partial sequences of the small subunit (SSU) rRNA (a nuclear but extrachromosomal gene) and 30 partial sequences of the elongation factor 1 alpha gene (EF1A) (a nuclear gene), a study of 135 Hemitrichia serpula specimens collected worldwide revealed the existence of four clades that are likely to represent reproductively isolated biospecies, since each clade shows a unique combination of SSU and EF1A genotypes. A Mantel test with the partial SSU sequences indicated geographical differentiation, giving a correlation coefficient of 0.467 between the pairwise computed geographic and genetic distances, compared with the 95% confidence interval from 999 permutations (-0.013 to 0.021). Biogeographical analysis of the 40 SSU ribotypes showed clear intraspecific variation and geographic differentiation demonstrating a limited gene flow among the world population. We argue that the distribution of cryptic species in the different clade can be explained by ongoing, but still incomplete speciation. An event-based ancestral area reconstruction using the software S-DIVA employed in RASP showed that the probable origin of the ribotypes was a global dispersal event in the Neotropics. Additional species distribution models that were implemented for the three most prominent clades show different putative ranges. As such H. serpula supports the moderate endemicity hypothesis for protists. In summary, myxomycete assemblages in the Paleotropics (1) displayed a higher diversity than for Neotropical forests, (2) harbor unique taxa that differentiates those assemblages in spite of the expected similar macroecological all over the Tropics, (3) are affected by geographical barriers that likely causes speciation both at a morphospecies and biospecies level, and (4) follow the ubiquitous model in the sense that gene flow mediated by long-distance dispersal of spores is high enough that a species can fill out its entire putative range, but (5) the gene flow is not high enough to prevent variation in regional gene pools, which may lead to speciation and is better explained by the moderate endemicity model. Our data are still too limited to draw a comprehensive picture of the diversity of tropical myxomycetes, but the baseline information compiled with the aid of both classical ecology and molecular approaches from this study are first major steps towards this goal.