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In classical Drude theory the conductivity is determined by the mass of the propagating particles and the mean free path between two scattering events. For a quantum particle this simple picture of diffusive transport loses relevance if strong correlations dominate the particle motion. We study a situation where the propagation of a fermionic particle is possible only through creation and annihilation of local bosonic excitations. This correlated quantum transport process is outside the Drude picture, since one cannot distinguish between free propagation and intermittent scattering. The characterization of transport is possible using the Drude weight obtained from the f-sum rule, although its interpretation in terms of free mass and mean free path breaks down. For the situation studied we calculate the Green's function and Drude weight using a Green's functions expansion technique, and discuss their physical meaning.
Based on distributions of local Green's functions we present a stochastic approach to disordered systems. specifically we address Anderson localisation and cluster effects in binary alloys. Taking Anderson localisation of Holstein polarons as an example we discuss how this stochastic approach can be used for the investigation of interacting disordered systems.
We discuss a numerical method to study electron transport in mesoscopic devices out of equilibrium. The method is based on the solution of operator equations of motion, using efficient Chebyshev time propagation techniques. Its peculiar feature is the propagation of operators backwards in time. In this way the resource consumption scales linearly with the number of states used to represent the system. This allows us to calculate the current for non-interacting electrons in large one-, two- and three-dimensional lead-device configurations with time-dependent voltages or potentials. We discuss the technical aspects of the method and present results for an electron pump device and a disordered system, where we find transient behaviour that exists for a very long time and may be accessible to experiments.
Abstract
The known Schiff base compound, (E)1‐benzyl‐3‐((4‐methoxyphenyl)imino)‐5‐methylindolin‐2‐one, was prepared as before by reacting 1‐benzyl‐5‐methylindoline‐2,3‐dione with 4‐methoxyaniline. The product was unambiguously characterized using elemental analysis, 1H and 13C‐NMR spectroscopy, and its new single‐crystal X‐ray structural analysis. Molecular orbital calculations were conducted in order to investigate the structures and relative stabilities of the (E) and (Z) isomers of 1‐benzyl‐3‐([4 methoxyphenyl]‐imino)‐5‐methylindolin‐2‐one. Specific attention was paid to the (E) isomer. The available crystallographic experimental data for the latter ensured also validation of the model structures computationally derived at the theoretical B3LYP/6‐31G(d,p) level.
The geometric arena here is a smooth manifold of dimension n equipped with a Riemannian or pseudo-Riemannian metric and an affine connection. Field theories following from a variational principle are considered on this basis. In this context, all invariants which are quadratic in the curvature are determined. The work derives several manifestly covariant formulas for the Euler-Lagrange derivatives or the field equations. Some of these field theories can be interpreted as gravitational theories alternatively to Einstein´s general relativity theory. The work also touches the difficult problem to define and to calculate energy and momentum of a gravitational field.
Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococci) are lancet-shaped, Gram-positive, alpha-hemolytic, facultative anaerobic human specific commensals of the upper and lower respiratory tract. Pneumococci may convert to pathogenic bacteria and spread to the lungs and blood. In different population groups, such as children, the elderly and immunocompromised individuals, pneumococci can cause local infections such as bronchitis, rhinitis, acute sinusitis, and otitis media as well as life-threatening invasive diseases such as community-acquired pneumonia, sepsis and meningitis. Pneumococci are surrounded by a rigid and complex exoskeleton, the peptidoglycan, also referred to as murein sacculus. The peptidoglycan (PNG) protects the cells from rupture by osmotic pressure and maintains their characteristic shape. The PNG is a heteropolymer made up of glycan strands that are cross-linked by short peptides and during growth the existing murein is continuously hydrolyzed by specific lytic enzymes to enable the insertion of new peptidoglycan. Bacterial cell-wall hydrolases are essential for peptidoglycan turnover and crucial to preserve cell shape. The D,D-carboxypeptidase DacA and L,D-carboxypeptidase DacB of Streptococcus pneumoniae function in a sequential manner. This study determined the crystal structure of the surface-exposed lipoprotein DacB, which differs considerably from the DacA structure. DacB contains a Zn2+ ion in its catalytic center located in the middle of a fully exposed, large groove. Two different conformations with differently arranged active site topology were identified. In addition the critical residues for catalysis and substrate specificity were identified. Deficiency in DacA or DacB resulted in a modified peptidoglycan peptide composition and led to an altered cell shape of the dac-mutants. In contrast, lgt-mutant lacking lipoprotein diacylglyceryl transferase activity required for proper lipoprotein maturation retained L,D-carboxypeptidase activity and showed an intact murein sacculus. Furthermore, this study demonstrated the pathophysiological effects of disordered DacA or DacB activities. Real-time bioimaging of intranasally infected mice indicated a substantially attenuated virulence of dacB- and dacAdacB-mutants pneumococci, while loss of function of DacA had no significant effect. In addition, uptake of these mutants by professional phagocytes was enhanced, while their adherence to lung epithelial cells was decreased. The second part of this study focused on the functional and structure determination of the soluble dimeric pneumococcal lipoprotein PccL. Because of its calycin fold and structural homology with the lipocalin YxeF from Bacillus subtilis, PccL was introduced as the first member of the lipocalin protein family in pneumococci and named “PccL” (Pneumococcal calycin fold containing Lipoprotein). Similar to other lipocalins, the distinct beta-barrel, which is open at one end, is significantly conserved in PccL. Moreover, the application of the in vivo acute pneumonia mouse infection model and the in vitro phagocytosis as well as adherence invasion studies revealed considerable differences in colonization and invasive infection between the wild-type D39 and the pccL-mutant. In conclusion, this study characterized the crucial role of pneumococcal carboxypeptidases DacA and DacB for PGN architecture, bacterial shape and pathogenesis. By applying in vivo and in vitro approaches, a close relationship between PGN metabolism and pathophysiological effects was discovered. In addition, the high resolution structure of DacB has been solved and analyzed and a structure model with a resolution of 2.0 Å is provided. Furthermore, analysis of the PGN composition was applied to indicate the impact of an impaired lipoprotein biogenesis pathway on localization and activity of DacB. The major impact of carboxypeptidases on cell shape and virulence proposes DacB as a promising target for the development of novel drugs or due to its surface exposition also as a promising vaccine candidate. PccL is the first pneumococcal lipocalin-like protein and this study indicated its contribution to pneumococcal virulence. However, the mechanism and the mode of action of PccL are still unknown and have to be deciphered in further studies.
Humans are exposed to a plethora of microorganisms that reside on outer and inner body surfaces. These are collectively referred to as the human microbiome. The evolutionary relationship between humans and their microbiome is very complex. It is now widely accepted that these microorganisms are not just passive spectators but play an important role in health. The presence or absence of certain microbes is also linked to various diseases, including inflammatory bowel disease, cardiovascular disease, obesity, cancer, and allergies.
Allergies are several conditions caused by a misguided immune response to foreign antigens that are typically harmless. Common allergic diseases include atopic dermatitis (AD), allergic asthma, hay fever, and anaphylaxis. The incidences of allergic diseases are continuously rising, with up to 40% of the human population thought to be sensitised to environmental antigens. This increased incidence is not simply the result of societies becoming more aware and better at diagnosing these diseases. It is believed that the increases in allergies and sensitisation have environmental causes and are related to Western lifestyles. It is known that the rate of allergies is less frequent in developing countries. They are also more likely to occur in urban than rural areas. The prevailing view of the involvement of bacteria in allergies is described by the hygiene hypothesis. The hypothesis claims that decreased exposure to diverse microbial communities early in life increases the risk of developing allergic diseases. There are numerous examples to support this claim. For example, children born and raised in close contact to farm animals or in the presence of pets, and who are thus in direct and constant contact with a complex microbial environment, are protected from allergic diseases. On the other hand, colonisation or infection with certain bacteria increases allergic disease risks. This seems to contradict the hygiene hypothesis.
It appears that the members of the microbiome have different effects on allergy, and the hygiene hypothesis may not apply to every player in the complex microbial diversity that humans are in contact with. Therefore, a better understanding of the host bacterial interaction is required on the level of bacterial species.
This work studies the interplay between bacteria and the immune system to identify and characterise bacterial components with allergenic properties. In this quest, Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) and Staphylococcus epidermidis (S. epidermidis) were investigated for their allergenic properties and involvement in different allergic diseases. In the case of S. aureus, evidence is presented on allergic implications for two different components; serine protease-like proteins (Spls) and superantigens (SAg). Furthermore, experimental support is provided on the allergenic properties of the extracellular serine protease (Esp) from S. epidermidis. We argue that stimulating allergic reactions by staphylococci is an immune evasion mechanism that increases the survival chances of the bacteria within the host.
In chapter 1, an introduction is given to both S. aureus and S. epidermidis and their interactions with the immune system. Also, the bacterial components with allergenic properties and allergic diseases with known bacterial involvement are presented. Finally, the question of why bacteria cause allergy is discussed.
Chapter 2 describes allergic reactions to the Spls of S. aureus in a cohort of cystic fibrosis patients. Chapter 3 focuses on the SAgs of S. aureus. SAgs were discovered more than 30 years ago, but their physiological function is still under discussion. In this chapter, the allergenic properties of SAgs and their possible immunological mechanisms are reviewed, and a possible link between SAgs and allergic diseases is discussed. In chapter 4, the focus shifts to S. epidermidis and its involvement in AD. The human immune response to the Esp from S. epidermidis is characterised in healthy and AD individuals. The allergenic properties of Esp imply a detrimental role of S. epidermidis in AD. Finally, chapter 5 summarises and discusses the results of this thesis. In this section, the pieces are put together, and attention is brought back to the question of why bacteria cause allergies.
Staphylococcus aureussuperantigens (SAgs) are among the most potent T cell mitogensknown.They stimulate large fractions of T cells by cross-linking their T cell receptor withmajor histocompatibility complex class-II molecules on antigen presenting cells, resulting in Tcell proliferation and massive cytokine release. To date, 26 different SAgs have been described in thespeciesS. aureus; they comprise the toxic shock syndrome toxin (TSST-1), as well as 25 staphylococcalenterotoxins (SEs) or enterotoxin-like proteins (SEls). SAgs can cause staphylococcal food poisoningand toxic shock syndrome and contribute to the clinical symptoms of staphylococcal infection. Inaddition, there is growing evidence that SAgs are involved in allergic diseases. This review providesan overview on recent epidemiological data on the involvement ofS. aureusSAgs and anti-SAg-IgEin allergy, demonstrating that being sensitized to SEs—in contrast to inhalant allergens—is associatedwith a severe disease course in patients with chronic airway inflammation. The mechanisms by whichSAgs trigger or amplify allergic immune responses, however, are not yet fully understood. Here, wediscuss known and hypothetical pathways by which SAgs can drive an atopic disease
Oral administration of drugs is the most common, convenient, safest and economical route of drug administration. There is lack of established tools to study the function of transporters in the intestinal absorption of drugs. Because of its favorable physico-chemical, pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic characteristics, trospium could be potentially used as a probe substrate to study the function of drug transporters. Therefore, this study was conducted to examine the suitability of trospium chloride as a probe drug to study the function of multidrug transporters in the human body. To this end, two randomized, controlled, four-period, cross-over pharmacokinetic drug interaction studies of oral and intravenous trospium with co-medication of oral clarithromycin or ranitidine were performed in 24 healthy subjects to mechanistically characterize the role of P-gp, OATP1A2, OCT1, OCT2, MATE1 and MATE2-K in the absorption and disposition of trospium. The contribution of the drug transporters in the absorption and disposition of trospium were examined in isolated systems using in vitro uptake and inhibition assays in transporter transfected human cell lines.
OCT1 (Vmax = 0.8 ± 0.1 nmol/min × mg) is a high capacity transporter of trospium compared to OCT2 (Vmax = 0.04 ± 0.01 nmol/min × mg). But the OCT2 (Km = 0.5 ± 0.1 µM) transporter demonstrated a high affinity in the transport of trospium compared to OCT1 (Km = 17.4 ± 2.1 µM). OCT1 genetic alleles *2, *3, *4 and *7 resulted in significant loss of activity and the alleles *5 and *6 caused complete loss of uptake of trospium. The common OCT2 genetic allele Ser270 caused slight but significant increase in activity of OCT2.
Ranitidine inhibits OCT1 (IC50 = 186 ± 25 µM), MATE1 (IC50 = 134 ± 37 µM) and MATE2-K (IC50 = 35 ± 11 µM)-mediated uptake of trospium in vitro. But it is a weak inhibitor of OCT2 transporter (IC50 = 482 ± 105 µM). Using FDA and EMA in vitro to in vivo extrapolation models, ranitidine was predicted to have a potential inhibition effect on intestinal OCT1 ([I]2/IC50 ~40), renal MATE1 ([I]1/IC50 ~0.02) and MATE2-K ([I]1/IC50 ~0.1) transporters in vivo. Clarithromycin was predicted to cause DDI by inhibiting P-gp-mediated efflux of trospium at the intestine ([I]2/IC50 of ~310) and hepatocytes ([I]3/IC50 ~1). Therefore, co-medication of oral clarithromycin was expected to result in an increase in oral absorption and hepatic clearance of trospium but not changes in distribution volume.
In healthy subjects, oral trospium is slowly (MAT ~10 h) and poorly (F ~10 %) absorbed from the jejunum and cecum/ascending colon, widely distributed into the body (Vss = 5 - 6 l/kg) and slowly eliminated (t1/2 = 9 - 10 h) majorly via renal glomerular filtration and tubular secretion (CLR ~500 ml/min). After co-medication of clarithromycin (inhibitor of P-gp), on the contrary to our IVIVE prediction, we found a non-expected but significant expansion of the shallow and deep distribution spaces for trospium by ~27 %. A single dose administration of trospium with co-medication of ranitidine (inhibitor of OCT1) resulted in no effect on the intestinal absorption of trospium. But the renal clearance of trospium decreased slightly (15 %) but significantly.
Intravenously administered trospium (2 mg TC) might be a suitable probe drug to evaluate the effects of a P-gp inhibitor on distribution of a drug. Oral trospium chloride can be selected for DDI studies with new chemical entities (NCE) with predicted inhibitory potential on OCT1 and P-gp and which are available after oral absorption along the small intestine and in the cecum/ascending colon. Another kind of application of trospium chloride might be pharmacogenomics studies in subjects with functionally relevant polymorphisms of P-gp and OCT1 or in patients with suspected transport failure due to intestinal diseases. The function of the efflux transporters MATE1 and MATE2-K in the PTC of the kidneys can be well assessed with the probe drug trospium by measuring its renal clearance.
Neuroblastoma is the most common extracranial, malignant, solid tumor found in children. In more than one-third of cases, the tumor is in an advanced stage, with limited resectability. The treatment options include resection, with or without (neo-/) adjuvant therapy, and conservative therapy, the latter even with curative intent. Contrast-enhanced MRI is used for staging and therapy monitoring. Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) is often included. DWI allows for a calculation of the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) for quantitative assessment. Histological tumor characteristics can be derived from ADC maps. Monitoring the response to treatment is possible using ADC maps, with an increase in ADC values in cases of a response to therapy. Changes in the ADC value precede volume reduction. The usual criteria for determining the response to therapy can therefore be supplemented by ADC values. While these changes have been observed in neuroblastoma, early changes in the ADC value in response to therapy are less well described. In this study, we evaluated whether there is an early change in the ADC values in neuroblastoma under therapy; if this change depends on the form of therapy; and whether this change may serve as a prognostic marker. We retrospectively evaluated neuroblastoma cases treated in our institution between June 2007 and August 2014. The examinations were grouped as ‘prestaging’; ‘intermediate staging’; ‘final staging’; and ‘follow-up’. A classification of “progress”, “stable disease”, or “regress” was made. For the determination of ADC values, regions of interest were drawn along the borders of all tumor manifestations. To calculate ADC changes (∆ADC), the respective MRI of the prestaging was used as a reference point or, in the case of therapies that took place directly after previous therapies, the associated previous staging. In the follow-up examinations, the previous examination was used as a reference point. The ∆ADC were grouped into ∆ADCregress for regressive disease, ∆ADCstable for stable disease, and ∆ADC for progressive disease. In addition, examinations at 60 to 120 days from the baseline were grouped as er∆ADCregress, er∆ADCstable, and er∆ADCprogress. Any differences were tested for significance using the Mann–Whitney test (level of significance: p < 0.05). In total, 34 patients with 40 evaluable tumor manifestations and 121 diffusion-weighted MRI examinations were finally included. Twenty-seven patients had INSS stage IV neuroblastoma, and seven had INSS stage III neuroblastoma. A positive N-Myc expression was found in 11 tumor diseases, and 17 patients tested negative for N-Myc (with six cases having no information). 26 patients were assigned to the high-risk group according to INRG and eight patients to the intermediate-risk group. There was a significant difference in mean ADC values from the high-risk group compared to those from the intermediate-risk group, according to INRG. The differences between the mean ∆ADC values (absolute and percentage) according to the course of the disease were significant: between ∆ADCregress and ∆ADCstable, between ∆ADCprogress and ∆ADCstable, as well as between ∆ADCregress and ∆ADCprogress. The differences between the mean er∆ADC values (absolute and percentage) according to the course of the disease were significant: between er∆ADCregress and er∆ADCstable, as well as between er∆ADCregress and er∆ADCprogress. Forms of therapy, N-Myc status, and risk groups showed no further significant differences in mean ADC values and ∆ADC/er∆ADC. A clear connection between the ADC changes and the response to therapy could be demonstrated. This held true even within the first 120 days after the start of therapy: an increase in the ADC value corresponds to a probable response to therapy, while a decrease predicts progression. Minimal or no changes were seen in cases of stable disease.
Introduction: Antiseptics are used for the prophylaxis of infections of acute wounds and for the treatment of critically colonized chronic wounds as well as localized infections of acute and chronic wounds. If an antiseptic with too much tissue toxicity and/or too little efficacy is used, the wound healing can be delayed.
Objective: The aim was to compare the irritation potency of frequently used wound antiseptics by using the hen's egg test on the chorioallantoic membrane (HET-CAM). Additionally, the influence of antiphlogistic active additives which might increase the tolerability was examined. To allow a more extensive comparison, antiseptics classified as obsolete such as hydrogen peroxide, creams on PVP- iodine base, silver sulfadiazine, chlorhexidine and nitrofural as well as the non-antiseptic wound treatment agents dexpanthenol and hemoglobin spray were also examined.
Method: The HET-CAM was used as a semi-in-vivo method to test the tolerability of wound antiseptics to tissues by observing the reactions that occur in the blood vessels of the highly vascularized CAM such as hemorrhage, lysis and coagulation. The irritation score (IS) was calculated and differentiated in 4 ranges according to Spielmann (1991).
Results: The vascular injuries of the CAM were considered as an indirect indicator of the tolerability. It is accepted that agents with no or low irritation potential on the CAM are to be preferred in the clinical practice if they are clinically effective.
Severe CAM reaction was observed after short-term application of octenidine based wound gel (active ingredient octenidine 0.05%) (IS: 10.3) and chlorhexidine digluconate 0.5% solution (IS: 9.5). Moderate reaction was observed for the combination of octenidine 0.05% in aqueous solution with panthenol 1.34% and allantoin 0.2% (IS: 8.7), hydrogen peroxide 1.5% in aqueous solution (IS: 6.1) and hydrogen peroxide 0.5% solution (IS: 5.5). Slight reaction was observed for hydrogen peroxide 1.5% solution in combination with sodium thiocyanate 0.698% (IS: 2.6), sodium thiocyanate 0.698% solution (IS: 2.1) and Dermacyn® (active ingredient NaOCl/HOCl each 0.004) (IS: 1.2). Polihexanide 0.04% in Ringer solution (IS: 0.9), Polihexanide 0.05% in Lipofundin, Granulox® (active agent hemoglobin 10%) (IS: 0) and dexpanthenol 5% solution (IS: 0) showed no reaction. In the long-term observation (24 hours after application), Dermacyn® showed the best results (59% of irritation remained alive after 24 hours). The addition of dexpanthenol and allantoin reduced the irritability only slightly, whereas the decrease of IS of hydrogen peroxide by addition of sodium thiocyanate was almost significant (p 0.0596).
Conclusion: It is suggested that agents with no or low irritation potential on the CAM are to be preferred in the clinical practice if they are clinically effective. It is suggested that further in vivo and in vitro studies are to be undertaken with these agents.
Solely regarding local tolerability, polihexanide and hypochlorite are the antiseptic agents of choice of the tested preparations. The wound oxygenizer hemoglobin spray is tolerated without irritation as well as the negative control 0.9% NaCl solution. Because of their other disadvantages in conjunction with their irritability, the outdated cream formulations on basis of silver sulfadiazine, PVP- iodine, chlorhexidine and nitrofural cannot be recommended for wound antisepsis.
Background: Stroke patients are at risk of acquiring secondary infections due to stroke-induced immune suppression (SIIS). Immunosuppressive cells comprise myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) and immunosuppressive interleukin 10 (IL-10)-producing monocytes. MDSCs represent a small but heterogeneous population of monocytic, polymorphonuclear (or granulocytic), and early progenitor cells (“early” MDSC), which can expand extensively in pathophysiological conditions. MDSCs have been shown to exert strong immune-suppressive effects. The role of IL-10-producing immunosuppressive monocytes after stroke has not been investigated, but monocytes are impaired in oxidative burst and downregulate human leukocyte antigen—DR isotype (HLA-DR) on the cell surface.
Objectives: The objective of this work was to investigate the regulation and function of MDSCs as well as the immunosuppressive IL-10-producing monocytes in experimental and human stroke.
Methods: This longitudinal, monocentric, non-interventional prospective explorative study used multicolor flow cytometry to identify MDSC subpopulations and IL-10 expression in monocytes in the peripheral blood of 19 healthy controls and 27 patients on days 1, 3, and 5 post-stroke. Quantification of intracellular STAT3p and Arginase-1 by geometric mean fluorescence intensity was used to assess the functionality of MDSCs. In experimental stroke induced by electrocoagulation in middle-aged mice, monocytic (CD11b+Ly6G−Ly6Chigh) and polymorphonuclear (CD11b+Ly6G+Ly6Clow) MDSCs in the spleen were analyzed by flow cytometry.
Results: Compared to the controls, stroke patients showed a relative increase in monocytic MDSCs (percentage of CD11b+ cells) in whole blood without evidence for an altered function. The other MDSC subgroups did not differ from the control. Also, in experimental stroke, monocytic, and in addition, polymorphonuclear MDSCs were increased. The numbers of IL-10-positive monocytes did not differ between the patients and controls. However, we provide a new insight into monocytic function post-stroke since we can report that a differential regulation of HLA-DR and PD-L1 was found depending on the IL-10 production of monocytes. IL-10-positive monocytes are more activated post-stroke, as indicated by their increased HLA-DR expression.
Conclusions: MDSC and IL-10+ monocytes can induce immunosuppression within days after stroke.
AbstractThe 2022 Roadmap is the next update in the series of Plasma Roadmaps published by Journal of Physics D with the intent to identify important outstanding challenges in the field of low-temperature plasma (LTP) physics and technology. The format of the Roadmap is the same as the previous Roadmaps representing the visions of 41 leading experts representing 21 countries and five continents in the various sub-fields of LTP science and technology. In recognition of the evolution in the field, several new topics have been introduced or given more prominence. These new topics and emphasis highlight increased interests in plasma-enabled additive manufacturing, soft materials, electrification of chemical conversions, plasma propulsion, extreme plasma regimes, plasmas in hypersonics, data-driven plasma science and technology and the contribution of LTP to combat COVID-19. In the last few decades, LTP science and technology has made a tremendously positive impact on our society. It is our hope that this roadmap will help continue this excellent track record over the next 5–10 years.
Population-based studies of Staphylococcus aureus contribute to understanding the epidemiology of S. aureus infection. We enrolled surgical inpatients admitted to an African tertiary-care hospital in order to prospectively analyze the nosocomial impact of S. aureus. Data collection included an active sampling of the anterior nares and infectious foci within 48 h after admission and subsequently when clinically indicated. All S. aureus isolates were spa and agr genotyped. Possession of Panton-Valentine leukocidin (PVL) and other toxin genes was determined. We analyzed antibiotic susceptibility profiles by VITEK 2 systems and verified methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) by mecA/C PCR. Among 325 patients, 15.4% carried methicillin-susceptible S. aureus (MSSA) at admission, while 3.7% carried MRSA. The incidence densities of nosocomial infections due to MSSA and MRSA were 35.4 and 6.2 infections per 10,000 patient-days, respectively. Among all 47 nosocomial infections, skin and soft-tissue (40.4%) and bones or joints’ (25.5%) infections predominated. Six (12.7%) infection-related S. aureus isolates harbored PVL genes including two (4.2%) MRSA: overall, seventeen (36.2%) isolates carried pyrogenic toxin superantigens or other toxin genes. This study illustrates the considerable nosocomial impact of S. aureus in a Nigerian University hospital. Furthermore, they indicate a need for effective approaches to curtail nosocomial acquisition of multidrug-resistant S. aureus.
Global change is one of the major challenges our society faces in recent times and is becoming increasingly noticeable in all aspects of our lives. In the last ten years, reports about droughts in Europe increased, contrary to expected natural climate variations and are attributed as indicators of climate change. Droughts resulted in a severe decrease in water levels of lakes, rivers and reservoirs, posing socio-economic and environmental challenges. Climate scenarios by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) project increasing temperatures, more frequent, longer and/or more intense heat waves and warm spells, and an increase in aridity with short-term droughts in the upcoming decades for Western and Central Europe. Some areas – such as Northeast Germany – are already affected by negative water balances and the lowering of lake and groundwater levels. Additionally to possible challenges in water availability, excess nutrients and heavy metals from industrial emissions, agricultural fertilisers and land use changes lead to declining water quality. In the past century, extensive eutrophication and environmental pollution have become major water quality issues in many freshwater bodies.
Nonetheless, water and its availability in a sufficient quantity and quality are prerequisites for life and must be prioritised in future development. The European Union aims for a good status in all surface and groundwater bodies by 2027 regarding their ecological, chemical and quantitative status. However, a profound understanding of eutrophication, pollution sources, and water bodies' reference conditions – referring to pre-anthropogenic conditions – should be available for each system to apply integrated restoration strategies. Moreover, an in-depth understanding of long-term climate variability and its dynamics is indispensable to approach these climate change challenges and reliably predict water availability.
During the past decades, numerous paleoenvironmental studies have been carried out on Northern German sediment archives, using mainly lacustrine sediments to reconstruct hydroclimatic variability, often inferring lake-level variations as key indicators. However, most studies were carried out in areas affected by more maritime or continental climate. Studies from the transition zone are rare. Only few existing studies offer high-resolution records and/or robust chronologies, which limits the understanding of past environmental changes significantly. Besides, the Northern German lowlands have been anthropogenically affected since at least the Neolithic (~5.6 ka cal BP) and, in particular, forest composition and density have recently been shown to have at least partially an impact on lake-level variations. However, a reliable distinction between climatic impacts and anthropogenic interferences is widely missing, which is a problem because many studies were conducted on rather small lacustrine systems in which expected anthropogenic signals are higher, and single events may overprint the climatic signals. These biases lead to an incoherent picture of the past hydroclimatic variability in Northern Germany during the Holocene. To overcome this situation, it is inevitable to identify a suitable sedimentary archive from the transition zone – preferably a large lacustrine system in which natural (supra-)regional paleoenvironmental signals are expected to be not overprinted by single events. Moreover, it is necessary to establish robust chronologies and apply high-resolution methods to infer past environmental changes in a high temporal resolution. Taken together, this could contribute to an enhanced understanding of past environmental and climatic changes in Northern Germany.
This thesis consolidates the evidence for Schweriner See to act as a suitable sedimentary archive in Northern Germany for (supra-)regional climate reconstructions. Schweriner See is a large lowland lake in Northern Germany located within the transition zone from maritime to continental climate. In the first step, (paleo)lacustrine landforms, i.e. beach ridges, subaerial nearshore bar, and a silting-up sequence, are investigated along the north-eastern shoreline using a combined approach of sedimentology (e.g. grain size variations) and the relatively novel method of luminescence profiling offering relative age determinations to understand depositional processes and their chronological framework. Absolute age information is mainly inferred by OSL dating. Secondly, an important prerequisite to interpreting information obtained from lacustrine sediment archives is a thorough understanding of processes controlling sedimentation. Schweriner See is characterized by a complex morphometry, which influences in-lake processes, i.e. i) in-lake productivity, ii) carbonate precipitation and iii) wind- and wave-induced processes, resulting in a distinct spatial heterogeneity. This thesis shows that it is crucial first to understand sedimentary depositional processes and controlling mechanisms to i) select suitable coring location(s) and ii) reconstruct paleoenvironmental and hydroclimatic variations reliably.
Based on bathymetric considerations and inferred in-lake processes, two main coring locations were identified to infer i) the anthropogenic impacts and ii) hydroclimatic variations. Short sediment records from the shallow water areas (< 15 m water depth) cover the most recent environmental history of Schweriner See. A well-dated sedimentary record (210Pb/137Cs and 14C dating) links distinct sedimentary and geochemical changes with historical events. Schweriner See was extensively affected by lake-wide eutrophication and contamination, closely related to sewage and population dynamics within the catchment. The water quality only improved after the German Reunification in 1990 CE when sewage was precluded from Schweriner See. Contamination trends at Schweriner See showed similar trends to different archives along the southern Baltic Sea, implying a common regional driving mechanism, e.g. environmental legalisation.
A well-dated sediment record from the profundal zone (52 m water depth) allowed the reconstruction of large-scale atmospheric conditions during the past 3 ka cal BP by inferring winter temperature variability, the moisture source region and/or evaporative lake water enrichment, which resemble variations in the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). The NAO greatly influences the Central European climate, affecting, for example, surface air temperature, precipitation or storm tracks. During 3-2.8 ka and 2.1-0.8 ka cal BP, predominantly positive NAO conditions are reconstructed, which are characterized by warmer winter temperatures, moisture conditions bringing isotopically enriched precipitation from the southern/central North Atlantic to Northern Central Europe and/or warmer temperatures that may result in a higher evaporative isotopic lake water enrichment as a result of northwards displaced westerlies. Conversely, during 2.8-2.1 ka and 0.8-0.1 ka cal BP, results correspond to predominantly negative NAO phases influenced by southwards displaced westerlies. Frequent atmospheric blocking allows for the intrusion of northerly or easterly winds, resulting in colder winter temperatures, isotopically depleted precipitation from the Northern Atlantic and Arctic region and/or a lower evaporative lake water enrichment. In addition to these long-term changes in atmospheric conditions, short-term hydroclimatic variations have been reconstructed, mainly reflecting lake-level variations in conjunction with precipitation variability, with the proxy signal being additionally amplified by wind speed and wave motion. Comparisons with other archives support these results.
So far, the paleoenvironmental reconstruction is limited to the Late Holocene, but initial dating results imply possible interferences until the Late Pleistocene. Therefore, future studies should focus on extending the profundal record from Schweriner See further back in time, providing a high-resolution record covering both the Holocene and possibly the Late Pleistocene.
Abstract
We investigated four subaerial (paleo)lacustrine landforms at the north‐eastern shoreline of Schweriner See, north‐eastern Germany. These included two beach ridges, one subaerial nearshore bar and a silting up sequence located close to a fossil cliff, which marks the former maximum extent of Schweriner See. We used luminescence profiling with a SUERC portable OSL device (POSL) on all four sediment sequences in combination with sedimentological investigations such as grain size, loss‐on‐ignition and magnetic susceptibility to provide information on the various formations in a lacustrine depositional environment. The POSL reader was used on pre‐treated polymineral samples to gain an insight into luminescence distribution within the individual sediment sequences, but also among the four sequences. POSL proved valuable to understand depositional processes, which were not visible in lithology or sedimentological parameters. With somewhat larger uncertainty this method provides relative chronologies of the sediment sequences. Additionally, we carried out radiocarbon dating and full optical stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating to establish a chronological framework. OSL ages proved to be more reliable to date beach ridges in this setting than radiocarbon samples, which were severely influenced by sediment reworking. This combined approach of sedimentological analyses, luminescence profiling and absolute age determinations revealed details in depositional processes at Schweriner See which otherwise would have remained undetected. Furthermore, it helped to set these subaerial (paleo)lacustrine landforms in a chronological framework.
Many intrastate conflicts see more than one mediation effort. As the sequencing of mediation efforts in intrastate conflicts is neglected in existing research, this project addresses the question how and why previous mediation outcomes have an impact on subsequent mediation onset and subsequent mediation success. Drawing on bargaining theory, it is argued that governments and rebel groups engaged in intrastate conflicts account for previous mediation outcomes in their cost-benefit calculations on subsequent mediation onset, and, should subsequent talks set on, their behaviour during subsequent mediation efforts, which influences subsequent mediation success.
If mediation did not produce an agreement, the persistence of the private information problem is noted by the conflict parties. Yet, no new costs of mediation are uncovered, and hence the conflict parties will agree to subsequent mediation onset. Being aware of the necessity to overcome the private information and the commitment problem, the mediator will seek to account for the concerns of the conflict parties, and thereby work towards subsequent mediation success. If mediation produced a partial agreement, the benefits of mediation are underlined. The private information and the commitment problem seem solved with the assistance of the mediator. Subsequent mediation onset and eventually subsequent mediation success are observed. If a mediated agreement was reneged on by the rebel group, the government will refrain from further talks, pointing out the rebel group’s illegitimacy. If the government reneged on the agreement itself, it will also decide against subsequent mediation, as the previous mediation effort produced an agreement which did not mirror the power distribution in the dyad. Costs of mediation, which outweigh the benefits of it, were highlighted. Rebel groups will opt for mediation regardless which side reneged on an agreement. As both governments and rebel groups have to agree to subsequent mediation for talks to set on, subsequent mediation onset is unlikely if a mediated agreement was reneged on. Given the onset of subsequent mediation after a mediated agreement was reneged on, subsequent mediation success is unlikely to be observed, due to the previously underlined hazards of sharing private information and the persistence of the commitment problem.
The theoretical argument is tested with a mixed-methods approach. The quantitative analysis accounts for mediation efforts in African intrastate conflicts between 1993 and 2007. The qualitative analysis scrutinises the mediation efforts between the Government of Uganda and the Lord’s Resistance Army. The results of both parts of analysis largely go hand-in-hand, and show that partial mediation success and mediation which did not produce an agreement have a positive impact on subsequent mediation onset in particular, but also on subsequent mediation success. Reneged on mediated agreements have a severe negative impact on subsequent mediation onset and subsequent mediation success though.
By addressing the question which impact previous mediation outcomes have on subsequent mediation efforts, this research shows that mediation which does not produce an agreement is not the mediation outcome which needs to be feared by the international community. Instead, the deteriorating impact of short-lived agreements, a mediation outcome which is unaccounted for in existing research as an explanatory variable, becomes apparent. This research has important policy implications, especially for mediators, as it suggests that accepting mediation efforts to end without an agreement is more conducive for subsequent mediation efforts. Moreover, this research points towards the necessity of including reneged on agreements in mediation research as an explanatory variable more extensively, thereby shedding more light onto the dynamics at play in consecutive mediation efforts.
A novel method for time-resolved tuned diode laser absorption spectroscopy has been developed. In this paper, we describe in detail developed electronic module that controls time-resolution of laser absorption spectroscopy system. The TTL signal triggering plasma pulse is used for generation of two signals: the first one triggers the fine tuning of laser wavelength and second one controls time-defined signal sampling from absorption detector. The described method and electronic system enable us to investigate temporal evolution of sputtered particles in technological low-temperature plasma systems. The pulsed DC planar magnetron sputtering system has been used to verify this method. The 2" in diameter titanium target was sputtered in pure argon atmosphere. The working pressure was held at 2 Pa. All the experiments were carried out for pulse ON time fixed at 100 (is. When changing OFF time the discharge has operated between High Power Impulse Magnetron Sputtering regime and pulsed DC magnetron regime. The effect of duty cycle variation results in decrease of titanium atom density during ON time while length of OFF time elongates. We believe that observed effect is connected with higher degree of ionization of sputtered particles. As previously reported by Bohlmark et al., the measured optical emission spectra in HiPIMS systems were dominated by emission from titanium ions [1].
Background and Aims: Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) are rare malignancies but the most common mesenchymal tumors of the digestive tract. Recent advances in diagnostic imaging and an increasing incidence will confront us more frequently with stromal tumors. This single center study aimed to characterize GIST patients in terms of tumor location, clinical presentation, metastasis formation, as well as associated secondary malignancies. Methods: In a retrospective study, 104 patients with a histologically confirmed diagnosis of GIST, collected between 1993 and 2011, were characterized for several clinical features. Results: The most common GIST location was the stomach (67.6%) followed by the small intestine (16.2%). Gastrointestinal bleeding (55.8%) and abdominal pain (38.5%) were the most frequently reported symptoms whereas about one-third of patients remained clinically asymptomatic (31.6%); 14.4% of patients had either synchronous or metachronous metastases and there was a significant prevalence also in the low risk group. The proportion of secondary malignant associated neoplasms was 31% in our GIST cohort, among which gastrointestinal, genitourinary tumors, and breast cancer were the most prevalent. Conclusion: There was a considerable risk for metastasis formation and the development of secondary neoplasias that should encourage discussion about the appropriate surveillance strategy after surgery for GIST.
Abstract
Introduction
Transabdominal ultrasound (US) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are commonly used for the examination of the pancreas in clinical routine. We therefore were interested in the concordance of these two imaging methods for the size measurement of the pancreas and how age, gender, and body mass index (BMI) affect the organ size.
Methods
A total of 342 participants from the Study of Health in Pomerania underwent whole‐body MRI and transabdominal US on the same day, and the diameter of the pancreatic head, body, and tail were measured. The agreement between US and MRI measurements was assessed by Bland and Altman plots. Intraclass correlation coefficients were used to compare observers. A multivariable regression model was applied using the independent variables age, gender, and body mass index.
Results
Compared to MRI, abdominal US returned smaller values for each segment of the pancreas, with a high level of inconsistency between these two methods. The mean difference was 0.39, 0.18, and 0.54 cm for the head, body, and tail, respectively. A high interobserver variability was detected for US. Multivariable analysis showed that pancreatic size in all three segments increased with BMI in both genders whereas pancreatic head and tail size decreased with age, an effect more marked in women.
Conclusions
Agreement of pancreatic size measurements is poor between US and MRI. These limitations should be considered when evaluating morphologic features for pathologic conditions or setting limits of normal size. Adjustments for BMI, gender, and age may also be warranted.
Homoarginine (hArg) is a non-essential cationic amino acid which inhibits hepatic alkaline phosphatases to exert inhibitory effects on bile secretion by targeting intrahepatic biliary epithelium. We analyzed (1) the relationship between hArg and liver biomarkers in two large population-based studies and (2) the impact of hArg supplementation on liver biomarkers. We assessed the relationship between alanine transaminase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), γ-glutamyltransferase (GGT), alkaline phosphatases (AP), albumin, total bilirubin, cholinesterase, Quick’s value, liver fat, and Model for End-stage Liver Disease (MELD) and hArg in appropriately adjusted linear regression models. We analyzed the effect of L-hArg supplemention (125 mg L-hArg daily for 4 weeks) on these liver biomarkers. We included 7638 individuals (men: 3705; premenopausal women: 1866, postmenopausal women: 2067). We found positive associations for hArg and ALT (β 0.38 µkatal/L 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.29; 0.48), AST (β 0.29 µkatal/L 95% CI 0.17; 0.41), GGT (β 0.033 µkatal/L 95% CI 0.014; 0.053), Fib-4 score (β 0.08 95% CI 0.03; 0.13), liver fat content (β 0.016% 95% CI 0.006; 0.026), albumin (β 0.030 g/L 95% CI 0.019; 0.040), and cholinesterase (β 0.003 µkatal/L 95% CI 0.002; 0.004) in males. In premenopausal women hArg was positively related with liver fat content (β 0.047% 95%CI 0.013; 0.080) and inversely with albumin (β − 0.057 g/L 95% CI − 0.073; − 0.041). In postmenopausal women hARG was positively associated with AST (β 0.26 µkatal/L 95% CI 0.11; 0.42). hArg supplementation did not affect liver biomarkers. We summarize that hArg may be a marker of liver dysfunction and should be explored further.
Tuberculosis (TB) has tremendous public health relevance. It most frequently affects the lung and is characterized by the development of unique tissue lesions, termed granulomas. These lesions encompass various immune populations, with macrophages being most extensively investigated. Myeloid derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) have been recently identified in TB patients, both in the circulation and at the site of infection, however their interactions with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) and their impact on granulomas remain undefined. We generated human monocytic MDSCs and observed that their suppressive capacities are retained upon Mtb infection. We employed an in vitro granuloma model, which mimics human TB lesions to some extent, with the aim of analyzing the roles of MDSCs within granulomas. MDSCs altered the structure of and affected bacterial containment within granuloma-like structures. These effects were partly controlled through highly abundant secreted IL-10. Compared to macrophages, MDSCs activated primarily the NF-κB and MAPK pathways and the latter largely contributed to the release of IL-10 and replication of bacteria within in vitro generated granulomas. Moreover, MDSCs upregulated PD-L1 and suppressed proliferation of lymphocytes, albeit with negligible effects on Mtb replication. Further comprehensive characterization of MDSCs in TB will contribute to a better understanding of disease pathogenesis and facilitate the design of novel immune-based interventions for this deadly infection.
Molybdenum dependent enzymes are involved in essential metabolic transformations in bacteria, plants, and human beings. The extreme instability of the molybdenum cofactor (Moco) prevents its use as an effective treatment for patients with a Moco deficiency. Therefore, the design, develop and execute the artificial molybdenum cofactor models are essential.
In the present thesis, the asymmetric molybdopterin (mpt) model precursors with oxygen functionality and various electronic structures and their Moco model complexes mimicking the natural cofactor have been synthesized and comprehensively investigated through multi-nuclear NMR, MS, IR, resonance Raman, X-ray crystallography, UV-Vis, and electrochemical methods. Notably, the asymmetrically substituted dithiolenes in this thesis are confirmed through a significant push-pull effect, which is tuning its electronic structure. The redox behavior of Moco model complexes was investigated by temperature-dependent cyclic voltammetry. Electronic and vibrational spectral studies were investigated in detail to understand substituents effect on the electronic structure of model complexes and to elucidate roles of mpt in catalysis. Since the model complexes can be considered as structural models for the Moco dependent oxidoreductases, catalytic oxygen atom transfer (OAT) reactions in DMSO/PPh3 were investigated.
The main focus of the present thesis was achieved through the development of various synthetic routes that address phosphonate bearing dithiolene ligands, inspiring the natural mpt. Simultaneously the Minisci protocol was applied for the synthesis of new pterin ketophosphonates, taking into consideration the essential aspects of the natural molybdopterin, including the phosphate anchor group. Even though some aspects of this protocol require further optimizations, but the mentioned synthetic route has exceptional potential and flexibility.
A large portion of the earth's surface is covered with various vegetation classes (i.e. grassland, wetland and agricultural area, forest) of many diverse species and canopy configurations. The ability to assess and to monitor canopy parameters, such as biomass, leaf area index, and vegetation water content, is of vital importance to the study of different agronomic processes. Remote sensing techniques provide a unique capability towards probing different vegetation types and canopy by operating at different bands, observation angle etc. Over the past decades, significant progress has been made in remote sensing techniques of land processes specially vegetation characteristics through development of advanced ground-based, airborne and space-borne microwave sensors, methods and approaches such as theoretical, semi-empirical and empirical models, needed for analyzing the data. These activities have sharply increased in recent years since the launch of different active and passive satellites and sensors. Remote Sensing (RS) science and techniques combined with ground truth data can provide new tools for advanced agricultural crop applications. It has been demonstrated that RS has the ability to estimate biophysical parameters of agricultural crops over time at local, regional, and global scales. In this study, RS images in visible/near infrared (VIS/NIR) domain as well as microwave domain combined with ground truth data were used to assess biophysical parameters of agricultural crop during their whole growing season at Durable Environmental Multidisciplinary Monitoring Information Network (DEMMIN) test site in North East Germany. Ground truth studies were carried out for 31 weeks during 17th April – 13th November 2013 over three crop lands including winter wheat, barley and canola. Landsat 8 OLI, Landsat 7 ETM+ were used for the VIS/NIR studies and TerraSAR-X synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images were used to study biophysical parameters of agricultural crops in microwave part of electromagnetic spectrum. The analysis was conducted by calculating different vegetation indices (VIs) to estimate the biomass (fresh and dry), LAI, and vegetation water content (VWC) of three crops using Landsat 8 OLI and Landsat 7 ETM+ combined with ground truth data. A new concept of Soil Line retrieval from Landsat 8 image was also developed to estimate plant biophysical parameters using soil line related vegetation indices in optical domain of electromagnetic spectrum. Different approaches including univariate, multivariate stepwise regression and semi-empirical water cloud model was also used to estimate the biophysical parameters of agricultural crop using TerraSAR-X data in microwave domain of electromagnetic spectrum. Perhaps the most important conclusion of this study is that the RS approach can provide useful information about estimating agricultural crop parameters over time and local scale, which can therefore provide valuable information to aid the agronomy community.
Until today, more than 100 years after its first description in Italy, the highly pathogenic avian influenza virus (HPAIV) has not lost its fearsome character for wild birds, poultry and humans. On the contrary, the number of outbreaks with high casualty rates in wild birds and poultry has multiplied in recent years and cases of zoonotic infections are also increasingly reported from HPAI endemic areas. The epidemiology of these infections is complex and also involves surface water and possibly sediments of shallow standing waters, which could play a role as a vector medium and/or virus reservoir. The goal of this project was to expand current knowledge of the influence of water on the spread of AIV. As part of this project, we were able to ...
1. ...improve AIV detection methods using real time RT-PCR in terms of sensitivity and breadth of viruses detected. In addition, we succeeded in economizing the procedure so that fewer resources are required and results are obtained faster (publication I: [173]).
2. ...develop an ultrafiltration-based enrichment method for AIV from surface water and evaluate it with field samples from HPAI outbreak areas in wild bird habitats (Wadden Sea coast of Schleswig-Holstein) and previously unaffected regions (Antarctic Weddell Sea) (publication II: [174]). Furthermore, protocols for testing different environmental sample matrices for AIV screening were tested and compared to results of passive monitoring by dabbing diseased or dead wild birds. AIV was detected in more than half (61%) of 44 water samples. We received additional sediment samples from 36 of the 44 water samples. In 18 of 36 of the sediments tested, as well as in 4.16% of 1705 fecal samples tested AIV was detected. However, the studies of the environmental samples mostly yielded only generic AIV detections, with viral loads in the range of the detection limit. This massively hampered further investigations for sub- and pathotyping. In contrast, 79.41% of 68 samples from passive monitoring showed high to very high HPAIV viral loads which also allowed sub- and pathotyping.
3. ...demonstrate in animal experiments that even very low titers (0.1 TCID50 ml-1) of HPAI viral infectivity in water can induce productive infection in susceptible but clinically largely resistant mallard ducks (publication III: [175]). Furthermore, we were able to develop evidence that there is a difference in virus spread that depends on the type of (contaminated) water source. This means that infections on poultry farms with inverted or nipple drinkers may follow a different course than infections in the wild, which are mediated via larger surface waters.
Overall, the results of this project highlight the important role of surface and drinking water, as well as aquatic sediments, in the spread of AIV. The methods developed here for AIV detection extend the possibilities for surveillance of AIV infections; however, passive remains superior to active surveillance of HPAIV infections in several aspects. Examination of various environmental samples did not yield a significant advantage in terms of an early warning system that would indicate the presence or spread of HPAIV in wild bird habitats prior to the occurrence of lethal infections in wild birds.
Abstract
River estuaries are characterized by mixing processes between freshwater discharge and marine water masses. Since the first are depleted in heavier stable isotopes compared with the marine realm, estuaries often show a linear correlation between salinity and water stable isotopes (δ18O and δ2H values). In this study, we evaluated spatial and seasonal isotope dynamics along three estuarine lagoon transects, located at the northern German Baltic Sea coast. The data show strong seasonality of isotope values, even at locations located furthest from the river mouths. They further reveal a positive and linear salinity‐isotope correlation in spring, but ‐in two of the three studied transects‐ hyperbolic and partially reverse correlations in summers. We conclude that additional hydrological processes partially overprint the two‐phase mixing correlation during summers: aside from the isotope seasonality of the riverine inflows, the shallow inner lagoons in the studied estuaries are influenced by evaporation processes. In contrast the estuarine outflow regions are under impact of significant salinity and isotope fluctuations of the Baltic Sea. Deciphering those processes is crucial for the understanding of water isotope and salinity dynamics. This is also of relevance in context of ecological studies, for example, when interpreting oxygen and hydrogen isotope data in aquatic organisms that depend on ambient estuarine waters.
The aim of the study was to develop and evaluate the reliability and agreement of new computer planimetric method for measurement and assessment of plaque on all types of removable dental prostheses RPDs. The instrument (new method) was tested by evaluating the efficacy of the rotating needles device in cleaning specific parts of RPD. From a database containing 780 images, which were taken in a standardized method for 65 RDPs for 49 participants, 55 images were selected randomly for image analysis. Adobe Photoshop software was used according to a standard operating procedure (SOP) by a main examiner two times in different sessions, and 1 time by 3 other examiners. In order to estimate the intra- and inter-examiner reliability, intraclass correlation coefficients ICC(2,1) was used. Three parameters were used to estimate agreement: standard error of measurement (SEM), smallest detectable change at 95% confidence level (SDC95%), and limits of agreement (LoA) according to Bland¨CAltman method. In the database, only 34 subjects were found with double crown retained removable denture and veneer over the secondary crown. 49x2 (before x after) images for 34 RDPs went under image analyses to calculate POP before and after cleaning the RDPs with the rotating needle device. Data were analysed using Wilcoxon signed-rank test. In all steps of image analysis, both intra-examiner and inter- examiner reliability were excellent with ICC(2,1) values > 0.85 at 95% confidence level. Intra- and inter-examiner values for both, SEM and SDC95% were ¡Ü 6% and ¡Ü17% respectively. The Bland¨CAltman analysis revealed a satisfactory level of agreement. POP is significantly more on the veneer than on the base(B-O), P <0.05. The rotating needles device is effective in cleaning the veneer and base(B-O), P <0.05 with absolute effect size 0.62. No statistical significance was detected in the effectiveness of the rotating needles device between base(B-O) and veneer. This study showed an excellent inter- and intra-examiner reproducibility, satisfactory level of examiners agreement, and acceptable measurement error of the new computer planimetric method . Furthermore, the method can be used with all types of RDPs. The rotating needles device can significantly reduce plaque on the double crown retained removable denture. The Computerized Planimetric Method (CPM) is more suitable for clinical researches because of its objectivity, reliability, high level of standardization, and the ability to detect and quantify small changes in plaque. Extra attention should be given to the veneer over the secondary crown as they are a potential part for RDP plaque accumulation.
Background: COVID-19 lead to the adoption of containment measures including temporary closure of dental clinics. Despite the risk of infection transmission, dental emergencies have not ceased during this pandemic and had to be managed also in the lockdown period.
Aim: To analyze the profiles and offered management options of pediatric patients presenting with dental emergencies during a COVID-19 lockdown.
Design: Retrospective analysis of patient records of children seeking emergency dental treatment during a 7-week lockdown period in 2020 in a university pedodontics clinic in Germany, compared to a similar cohort from 2019. Data on patient level, tooth level, and session level were collected. An analysis of the digital records after 6 months follow-up was performed for the patients who received Non-Aerosol Generating Procedures (NAGP) as management for dental emergency in the lockdown period in 2020.
Results: The 2020 cohort consisted of 83 patients, while the 2019 cohort included 46 patients showing 45% higher necessity for emergency treatment in 2020. Most common chief complaint was oral mucosal conditions in 2020 (26.4%), and irreversible pulpitis in 2019 (25.5%). Dental caries (without spontaneous pain) was the second most chief complaint in both cohorts (20.7% and 23.4% respectively). Most interventions in 2020 were Minimally Invasive Treatments such as the hall technique and silver diammine fluoride (20.3%), which were in 2019 not considered, followed by pharmacological treatment (16.9%), which were in 2019 also highly used (35.9%). The 6 months follow up for the NAGP revealed benefit in management of the acute dental problem, by either direct treatment or by postponing the treatment need to a later time period.
Conclusion: The COVID-19 pandemic led to increase in emergency pediatric dental visits and shifted treatment options towards less invasive procedures.
In challenging situations, where aerosols increase the risk of infection transmission, NAPD are a viable option in the management of dental emergencies, especially in pediatric dentistry.
Purpose
The significance of the underlying literature in clinical guidelines can be weakened by the risk of bias, which could negatively affect the recommendations. Especially in controversial matters, such as fluoride use for caries prevention in children, biased results may be not reliable and lead to incorrect conclusions. This study was performed to detect bias in underlying literature of the German guideline for caries prevention using fluoride in children, where no consensus was reached between paediatricians and paediatric dentists.
Methods
Three tools used for risk of bias assessments of different study designs were RoB 2 for RCTs, ROBINS-I for non-randomized studies, and ROBIS for systematic reviews. For each study cited in the guideline two independent risk of bias assessments were performed. Disagreements were resolved by consensus.
Results
Out of 58 papers, 48.3% (n = 28) showed high risk of bias, with the majority in sections regarding fluoride tablets, fluoridated toothpaste, and paediatricians’ recommendations. 9 out of 20 recommendations and statements were based on studies with high risk of bias, all of which were in these three controversial sections. 13 out of 29 RCTs showed high risk of bias (44.8%), as all 13 non-randomized trials did, while only 2 of 16 (12.5%) systematic reviews had high risk of bias.
Conclusion
Considering risk of bias of cited studies in clinical guidelines may result in substantial changes in its recommendations and aid in reaching consensus. Efforts should be made to assess risk of bias of underlying literature in future clinical guidelines.
Background
Microvascular decompression (MVD) success rates exceed 90% in hemifacial spasm (HFS). However, postoperative recovery patterns and durations are variable.
Objective
We aim to study factors that might influence the postoperative patterns and duration needed until final recovery.
Method
Only patients following de-novo MVD with a minimum follow-up of 6 months were included. Overall trend of recovery was modeled. Patients were grouped according to recognizable clinical recovery patterns. Uni- and multivariable analyses were used to identify the factors affecting allocation to the identified patterns and time needed to final recovery.
Results
A total of 323 (92.6%) patients had > 90% symptom improvement, and 269 (77.1%) patients had complete resolution at the last follow-up. The overall trend of recovery showed steep remission within the first 6 months, followed by relapse peaking around 8 months with a second remission ~ 16 months. Five main recovery patterns were identified.
Pattern analysis showed that evident proximal indentation of the facial nerve at root exit zone (REZ), males and facial palsy are associated with earlier recovery at multivariable and univariable levels. anterior inferior cerebellar artery (AICA), AICA/vertebral artery compressions and shorter disease durations are related to immediate resolution of the symptoms only on the univariable level. Time analysis showed that proximal indentation (vs. distal indentation), males and facial palsy witnessed significantly earlier recoveries.
Conclusion
Our main finding is that in contrast to peripheral indentation, proximal indentation of the facial nerve at REZ is associated with earlier recovery. Postoperative facial palsy and AICA compressions are associated with earlier recoveries. We recommend a minimum of 1 year before evaluating the final outcome of MVD for HFS.
Purpose
Despite being rarely reported, ischemic insults resulting from compromising small brainstem perforators following microvascular decompression (MVD) remain a potential devastating complication. To avoid this complication, we have been using indocyanine green (ICG) angiography intraoperatively to check the flow within the small brainstem perforators. We aim to evaluate the safety and usefulness of ICG videoangiography in MVD.
Methods
We extracted retrospective data of patients who received ICG videoangiography from our prospectively maintained database for microvascular decompression. We noted relevant data including demographics, offending vessels, operative technique, outcome, and complications.
Results
Out of the 438 patients, 15 patients with a mean age (SD) of 53 ± 10.5 years underwent intraoperative ICG angiography. Male:female was 1:1.14. The mean disease duration prior to surgery was 7.7 ± 5.3 years. The mean follow-up (SD) was 50.7 ± 42.0 months. In 14 patients, the offending vessel was an artery, and in one patient, a vein. Intraoperative readjustment of the Teflon pledget or sling was required in 20% (3/15) of the cases. No patient had any sort of brainstem ischemia. Eighty percent of the patients (12/15) experienced complete resolution of the spasms. 86.7% (13/15) of the patients reported a satisfactory outcome with marked improvement of the spasms. Three patients experienced slight hearing affection after surgery, which improved in two patients later. There was no facial or lower cranial nerve affection.
Conclusion
Intraoperative ICG is a safe tool for evaluating the flow within the brain stem perforators and avoiding brainstem ischemia in MVD for hemifacial spasm.
Abstract
Background: Behavior management techniques (BMT) are essential in order to
achieve a successful dental treatment with a minimum amount of stress in paediatric
dentistry, but parents are not equally accepting different advanced BMT.
Purpose: To investigate the differences in parental acceptance of advanced
behavior management techniques between University of Greifswald/Germany and
Jordan University/Jordan.
Methods: Parents of the children treated in the pedodontic departments at the
University of Greifswald/Germany and Jordan University/Jordan rated their
acceptance level of four advanced behavior management techniques (passive
restraint, active restraint, nitrous oxide sedation and general anesthesia) for normal
treatment, and for urgent treatment using a five points Likert scale. 200 parents (100
in each university) completed the questionnaire forms for analysis.
Results: Nitrous oxide sedation was rated the most accepted technique in
Greifswald and Jordan (mean 3.78±1.34; 3.22±1.50, respectively). The least
acceptable technique in Greifswald was passive restraint (2.05±1.18) and in Jordan
general anesthesia (2.11±1.30). The parents in Greifswald are significantly more
accepting nitrous oxide sedation than parents in Jordan (p=0.010), while parents in
Jordan are significantly more willing to accept passive restraint (p=0.001). The
acceptance of all advanced behavior management techniques increased significantly
in both groups when the treatment is urgent (p≤0.05),
Conclusions: Parental culture and the urgency of the treatment affect the
acceptance to different behavior management techniques. Moreover, the parental
attitude to the pharmacological technique has changed, as nitrous oxide sedation
generally appears to be the most preferred advanced technique in both groups.
National oral health survey on refugees in Germany 2016/2017: caries and subsequent complications
(2020)
Objectives To assess oral health, caries prevalence, and subsequent complications among recently arrived refugees in Germany and to ompare these findings with the German resident population. Methods This multicenter cross-sectional study recruited 544 refugees aged 3–75+ years; they were examined at ten registration institutions in four federal states in Germany by two calibrated dentists. The refugees were screened for caries (dmft/DMFT) and its complications pufa/PUFA); this data was compared to the resident population via the presentative national oral health surveys). Results The deciduous dentition of the 3-year-old refugees had a mean dmft value of 2.62 ± 3.6 compared with 0.48 dmft in the German resident population, and caries increased to 5.22 ± 3.4 for 6–7-year-olds (Germany: 1.73 dmft). Few refugee children had naturally healthy teeth (7% in 6–7-year-olds, Germany: 56%). In the permanent dentition, the gap in caries prevalence between refugees and the German population decreased with age (35–44-year-olds: 10.55 ± 7.1 DMFT; Germany: 11.2), but refugees exhibited more caries defects (35–44-year-olds DT = 3.13 ± 3.0; Germany: 0.5). German residents had more restorations (35–44-year-olds FT = 4.21 ± 4.6). Regarding complications, the 6–7-year-olds exhibited the highest pufa index (0.86 ± 1.4) which decreased in adolescence (13–17-year-olds, 0.18 ± 0.6) and increased in adults (45–64-year-olds, 0.45 ± 0.8). Conclusion The refugees had high caries experience, often untreated caries teeth and more complications compared with the German resident population, especially in children. Closing this gap by extending preventive systems to the refugees would decrease future treatment needs. Clinical relevance European countries should be prepared for the higher dental treatment needs in recent refugees, especially in
children.
Background: This study aims to assess the role of ductoscopy for detecting intraductal anomalies in patients with nipple discharge in comparison to conventional tests and to find an effective combination of both approaches. Materials and Methods: Prior to duct excision, ductoscopy was performed in 97 women. Histologic and all other diagnostic results were compared. Sensitivity, specificity, and efficiency were calculated for all methods. These parameters were also calculated for all possible test combinations in 12 patients who had completed all tests. Results: Breast sonography reached the highest sensitivity (64.1%) and efficiency (64%); mammography had the highest specificity (100%). The sensitivity of ductoscopy was 53.2%, its specificity 60%, and its efficiency 55.1%. Among combinations of all methods, the combination ductoscopy + galactography was the most sensitive (80%). Mammography, magnetic resonance imaging, and ductoscopy were each 100% specific. Ductoscopy was the most efficient (75%) single method. Conclusion: Ductoscopy is a valuable test for diagnosing intraductal lesions in patients with nipple discharge. It is more efficient than conventional tests in patients undergoing all tests.
Sealing ability of ProRoot MTA when placed as an apical barrier using three different techniques
(2013)
A one-visit apexification protocol with Mineral Trioxide Aggregate (MTA) can be seen as an alternative to the traditional treatment practices with calcium hydroxide. The aim of this study was to investigate the sealing ability of ProRoot MTA when placed as an apical barrier using three different techniques. Sixty freshly extracted single-rooted human teeth were decoronated and standardized to a root length of 15mm. The root segments were prepared with Gates Glidden burs (size 1-6) to simulate the clinical situation of an open apex and randomly assigned into 3 experimental groups of 20 samples each. 5mm MTA was placed by pluggers (Group 1) paper points (Group 2) or ultrasonic tips (Group 3). Radiographs were taken to verify the placement of the apical barriers. After obturation of all samples with warm gutta-percha (Obtura) and AH26 sealer, the coronal portion of all samples was sealed with Cavit. The root segments were then double coated with nail varnish except for the open apex and were exposed to methylene blue dye for 48 hours at room temperature. Afterwards, the samples were sectioned longitudinally and the extent of dye penetration was measured with a stereomicroscope. The mean depth of dye leakage for Group 1 was 1.34mm (±0.5 SD) Group 2 1.25mm (±0.4 SD) and Group 3 1.14mm (± 0.4 SD). Statistical analysis showed that there were no significant differences among the 3 experimental groups (0.178<p<0.552). In conclusion, ProRoot MTA has a similar sealing ability when placed as an apical barrier with pluggers, paper points or ultrasonic tips.
Background: Restorative treatment for children’s teeth is still an important aspect of dentistry. In the light of an only moderate caries decline in the primary dentition and a persistently low care index in Germany during the past years [DAJ 2010], there is still a demand for further work on recent patterns and outcomes of restorative treatments in primary teeth placed in everyday practices under the Germany National Health System. Objectives: The present study aimed firstly to describe the prevalence of caries and restorations in the primary teeth in Berlin and Germany from the representative Germany surveys [DAJ 2010], secondly, to describe the frequency and distribution of restorative treatment in primary teeth performed in everyday dental practice in Berlin including children age groups from 1- to 13-years of age, thirdly, to evaluate the outcomes of restorative treatment performed in everyday dental practices in these children and finally to compare results of the present study with data from the German National Health System [KZBV 2011] and randomized community data on the longevity of restorations in primary teeth in Denmark [Qvist et al. 2010a]. Material and Methodology: In the first part of present study data from representative German surveys [DAJ 2010] were interpreted to describe and compare the prevalence of caries and restorations in the primary teeth in Berlin and Germany. For the second and third parts data generated from German National Health System in Berlin (KZV-Berlin) on fillings done in everyday practices in primary teeth of 1- to 13-year-olds during 2010/2011 were collected. This data included: distribution of children with dental treatment regardless of the type of intervention provided, of children who received restorative treatments in primary teeth during dental care visits including total number of fillings per child, the number of filled tooth surfaces, retreatment with another filling, stainless steel crowns, pulp involvement and extractions after prior filling therapy. Information on the age of the original fillings at the time of retreatment was also included. The collected data then were entered into a data base for descriptive and analytical analysis. The results were compared with equivalent data from the German National Health System [KZBV 2011] and randomized community data from Denmark [Qvist et al. 2010a]. Results: Result showed a high similarity in patterns of caries and restorative treatment in primary teeth in Berlin and all of Germany as reported in the representative German surveys [DAJ 2010]. About of 84% of 1-13-year-olds insured in the German National Health System in Berlin received dental care during 2010/2011, with considerably lower rates in very young children. Fillings in primary teeth were performed in 31.17% of all children attending the dentist. Most restorations were placed in 5-8-year-olds. In 1-13-year-olds mostly just one filling was placed, more than five fillings were per child were recorded on average for very young age groups (1-4-year-olds). 55.60% of all fillings in primary teeth were two-surface restorations, whereas more than three-surface restorations comprised 6.17% of all fillings and they were performed most frequently in young children of 1-4-years of age. Retreatment to fillings in primary teeth was 7.66% of fillings placed in 1-13-year-olds. Most retreatments took place from 5 to 9 years of age with a peak in 6-year-olds. In 1-3-year-old children fillings showed shorter mean age at the time of retreatment compared to 7-year-olds and above. Retreatment of fillings in primary teeth by stainless steel crowns was very limited with only 5.16% of all retreatments and it was preferred in children from 3 to 7 years of age. The retreatment with pulp involvement was 11.27% of all retreatments. Extractions were almost as often as retreatment as another filling (ratio 4:5), but they were preferred in older children due to the course of exfoliation. Conclusions: Under the conditions of this retrospective study, the restorative treatment with fillings performed within the National Health System in primary teeth in Berlin was very successful with low rates of retreatment and the fillings shows comparable results to data on the longevity of restorations in primary teeth in Denmark. The study highlighted the need to a structured program for prevention in primary teeth, especially for very young children with high caries activity and possibly also different treatment structures with specialized dentists in this field who can perform oral rehabilitations with pulpotomies and stainless steel crowns.
Wadi Wurayah area is located in the north of Fujairah Emirates between the towns of Khor Bidiyah Fakkan and Oman on the Gulf Coast Line in Fujairah Emirates, United Arab Emirates. It lies within a priority World Wide Fund for Nature ( WWF) Global 200 Ecoregions ( ecoregion 127, Arabian Highland Woodlands and Shrublands ), a rich diversity of sheltering rare and endangered mountainous and freshwater habitats and species , and providing opportunities for the revival and sustenance of local livelihoods. However, as most of the United Arab Emirates and the region , the area is undergoing dramatic changes linked to economic diversification and promotion of tourism. The United Arab Emirates in 1999 approved the programmed of work from the UN convention of Biological Diversity ( CBD). This momentum must be used wants it or disappear. In a first move , the United Arab Emirates established the federal Environment Agency ( FEA) that produced the Environmental Law of 1999 with the role to encourage each to Emirates assess its land and coastal / marine resources, formulate plans for establishing protected areas , upgrade those that may already exist , and help implement the environment law. In early 2006, UAE created its first Ministry of Environment and Water ( MEW ), which was before the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries. Environmental issues and a greater role of the civil society are now higher on the agenda of the United Arab Emirates government , partner of the Emirates Wildlife Society ( EWS ), the World Wide Fund for Nature ( WWF) - UAE Project Office is the only international conservation NGOs operating in the UAE that plays a pioneering role in partnering with local- governmental institutions to establish win- win solutions. The United Arab Emirates is making tremendous efforts in diversification is the development of tourism. Too often tourism mass , With all of its negative environmental consequences is privileged. However, the more traditional Emirates are seeking alternatives that would preserve their environment and respect the traditional lifestyles of the local communities. This study aims to help a sustainable biosphere reserve integrating oneself local traditional and lifestyle with the conservation of biodiversity and habitat inimitable by providing a model of economical incentives unique to the region . In order to further the implementation of the Wadi Wurayah Biosphere Reserve, this study will: • Implement a set of carefully - targeted actions in Wadi Wurayah and its hinterland and therefore Fujairah Emirates. • Work to demonstrate the feasibility and viability of combining environmental protection in a sensitive area with the preservation of traditional activities. • Support the capacity building of key national and local authorities and selected partners in the Emirates of Fujairah and the UAE So that they have the awareness and skills to fully realize the aims of the study . To set out and develop options for sustainable natural resource management in the proposed Wurayah Biosphere Reserve , one of the UAE as examples of marginal dry lands , building on environmental information system was the best choice using Geographic information systems (GIS ) as a tool. This has been classified to there steps of work: Field Survey and Analysis Lab Office work. As a first step, this study used to survey this area in the light of the work done by the EWSWWF and the Fujairah Municipality, to evaluate the potential and the feasibility of the creation of a Biosphere Reserve. The traditional field survey has been carried out in three batches between January 2007 and January , 2009 for sample collection using specially tailored database forms that suit the properties and nature of the variables measured, and the database . Design The information obtained from field survey included the Landscape and their local classification and distribution , local habitats , water catchments areas , local rangeland systems and indigenous agro -ecological zones. This information in addition to the laboratory analysis has then be transformed into GIS format, and overlaid with the base maps of the study area in order to produce a georeferenced maps. Various types of maps required according the selected works related to area of study have been used as an input data for the GIS system An integrated management methodology / approach has been proposed associated with the plan of work throughout the forthcoming years. The plan of work is designed to be as consistent as possible with that of the concept of the UNESCO 's Man and Biosphere Program.
Streptococcus pneumoniae has evolved versatile strategies to colonize the nasopharynx of humans. Colonization is facilitated by direct interactions with host cell receptors or via binding to components of the extracellular matrix. In addition, pneumococci hijack host-derived extracellular proteases such as the serine protease plasmin(ogen) for ECM and mucus degradation as well as colonization. S. pneumoniae expresses strain-dependent up to four serine proteases. In this study, we assessed the role of secreted or cell-bound serine proteases HtrA, PrtA, SFP, and CbpG, in adherence assays and in a mouse colonization model. We hypothesized that the redundancy of serine proteases compensates for the deficiency of a single enzyme. Therefore, double and triple mutants were generated in serotype 19F strain EF3030 and serotype 4 strain TIGR4. Strain EF3030 produces only three serine proteases and lacks the SFP encoding gene. In adherence studies using Detroit-562 epithelial cells, we demonstrated that both TIGR4Δcps and 19F mutants without serine proteases or expressing only CbpG, HtrA, or PrtA have a reduced ability to adhere to Detroit-562 cells. Consistent with these results, we show that the mutants of strain 19F, which preferentially colonizes mice, abrogate nasopharyngeal colonization in CD-1 mice after intranasal infection. The bacterial load in the nasopharynx was monitored for 14 days. Importantly, mutants showed significantly lower bacterial numbers in the nasopharynx two days after infection. Similarly, we detected a significantly reduced pneumococcal colonization on days 3, 7, and 14 post-inoculations. To assess the impact of pneumococcal serine proteases on acute infection, we infected mice intranasally with bioluminescent and invasive TIGR4 or isogenic triple mutants expressing only CbpG, HtrA, PrtA, or SFP. We imaged the acute lung infection in real-time and determined the survival of the mice. The TIGR4lux mutant expressing only PrtA showed a significant attenuation and was less virulent in the acute pneumonia model. In conclusion, our results showed that pneumococcal serine proteases contributed significantly to pneumococcal colonization but played only a minor role in pneumonia and invasive diseases. Because colonization is a prerequisite for invasive diseases and transmission, these enzymes could be promising candidates for the development of antimicrobials to reduce pneumococcal transmission.
The pathobiont Streptococcus pneumoniae causes life-threatening diseases, including pneumonia, sepsis, meningitis, or non-invasive infections such as otitis media. Serine proteases are enzymes that have been emerged during evolution as one of the most abundant and functionally diverse group of proteins in eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms. S. pneumoniae expresses up to four extracellular serine proteases belonging to the category of trypsin-like or subtilisin-like family proteins: HtrA, SFP, PrtA, and CbpG. These serine proteases have recently received increasing attention because of their immunogenicity and pivotal role in the interaction with host proteins. This review is summarizing and focusing on the molecular and functional analysis of pneumococcal serine proteases, thereby discussing their contribution to pathogenesis.
Streptococcus pneumoniae (the pneumococcus) is an opportunistic human pathogen that causes life-threatening diseases including pneumonia, sepsis, meningitis but also non-invasive local infections such as otitis media. Pneumococci have evolved versatile strategies to colonize the upper respiratory tract (URT) of humans. Binding to epithelial surfaces is thereby mediated through direct interactions with host cell receptors or indirectly via binding to components of the extracellular matrix (ECM). However, successful colonization and subsequent infection require S. pneumoniae to cross tissue barriers protected by the immune system of the host. Pneumococci have therefore evolved a wide range of mechanisms to circumvent the antibacterial activity of the immune system such as the acquisition or expression of serine protease activity. Serine protease enzymes have emerged during evolution as one of the most abundant and functionally diverse groups of proteins in eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms. However, the epithelial barriers, integrins, and other cell surface receptors are often initially inaccessible for pneumococci colonizing the nasopharyngeal cavity. Therefore, pneumococci recruit host-derived extracellular serine proteases such as plasmin(ogen) for extracellular matrix and mucus degradation, which results in enhanced binding to epithelial and endothelial cells. S. pneumoniae expresses four surface-anchored or surface-associated serine proteases depending on the serotype: HtrA, SFP, PrtA, and CbpG. These enzymes belong to the category of trypsin-like or subtilisin-like family proteins, which are characterized by the presence of three-conserved amino acid residues, Ser-His-Asp. The catalytic triads are critical for the cleavage of peptide bonds. Studies focusing on the deletion of single pneumococcal serine proteases are difficult to interpret due to the compensatory effects of the other serine proteases.
Initially, a comprehensive in silico analysis of the distribution and genes organization of pneumococcal serine proteases was carried out in this study. Interestingly, the genes encoding PrtA, HtrA, and CbpG were highly conserved among the 11 analyzed strains. Surprisingly, the gene encoding the subtilisin-like protein SFP was not present in some of the strains and seems to be strain-dependent. Therefore, pneumococci have at least three serine proteases as shown e.g., for serotype 19F_EF3030 strain. Computer-assisted analyses of the structure of pneumococcal serine proteases showed high similarities in the catalytic domains between HtrA and CbpG or between PrtA and SFP in 3D structural models.
The focus of this study lies on the impact of single extracellular pneumococcal serine proteases on pneumococcal pathogenesis during adherence, colonization, virulence and biofilm formation. Therefore, double and triple deletion mutants were generated in the colonizing S. pneumoniae serotype 19F strain EF3030 and the more invasive serotype 4 strain TIGR4, respectively. In adherence studies with human Detroit-562 epithelial cells, we demonstrated that both TIGR4Δcps and 19F_EF3030 mutants without serine proteases or expressing only CbpG, HtrA, or PrtA have a reduced ability to adhere to Detroit-562 cells. In a mouse colonization model, the inactivation of serine proteases in strain 19F_EF3030 strongly reduced nasopharyngeal colonization in CD-1 mice. The bacterial load in the nasopharynx was thereby monitored for a period of 14 days. Mutant strains showed significantly lower bacterial numbers in the nasopharynx on days 2, 3, 7, and 14 post-inoculations.
Following up on pneumococcal pathogenesis, an in vivo acute pneumonia mouse infection model and in vitro phagocytosis was used to analyze the impact of single serine proteases during infection and phagocytosis. Mice were intranasally infected with the bioluminescent TIGR4lux wild-type or isogenic triple mutants expressing only CbpG, HtrA, PrtA, or SFP. The acute lung infection was monitored in real-time by using an IVIS®-Spectrum in vivo imaging system. The TIGR4lux mutant expressing only PrtA showed a significant attenuation and was less virulent in the acute pneumonia model. Phagocytosis assays were conducted using murine J77A.1 macrophages. The number of triple serine protease mutants internalized by macrophages were significantly reduced in comparison to the isogenic wild-type.
Finally, two different experimental biofilm models were used to study the influence of serine proteases on biofilm formation grown on an abiotic surface (glass) and a biological surface. Biofilm development on living epithelial cells was stronger after 48 and 72h than on the glass surface. On epithelial substratum, the serine protease mutant with only CbpG+ showed higher and denser biofilm development after 48h and 72h of incubation compared to the parental strains and other serine protease mutants. Moreover, the bacterial dispersal from biofilms was significantly more in the mutant strains lacking serine proteases than in the wild type.
In conclusion, nasopharyngeal colonization is a prerequisite for invasive diseases and transmission. Pneumococcal serine proteases are indispensable for nasopharyngeal colonization and facilitate access to eukaryotic cell-surface receptors by the cleavage of ECM proteins. Thus, serine proteases could be promising candidates for developing antimicrobials to reduce pneumococcal colonization and transmission.
Interoceptive sensations, that means, perceptions of the physiological body state, play an important role in the generation and expression of emotion. The focus of the research presented here is on respiratory sensations as specific interoceptive signals. Such respiratory sensations (like the feeling of dyspnea) play an important role in symptom perception in somatic (e.g., asthma) as well as in mental disorders (e.g., anxiety disorders). There are several different ways to manipulate respiratory sensations in an experimental environment, but many of them did not equal sensations in daily life. Here, stimuli (inspiratory resistive loads, caffeine) were used that trigger nearly naturally occurring interoceptive sensations. Taking into account that the elicited interoceptive experience also induces an unpleasant feeling state it is most likely that individuals show defensive physiological responding to such cues and try to avoid them. According to a bidirectional motivational system defensive behaviors are regulated by a defensive motivational system that is activated by threatening cues. From research with exteroceptive stimuli it is known that defensive responding is typically characterized by heightened autonomic arousal, increased respiration, and a potentiated startle eyeblink response. In contrast, only a few studies using interoceptive stimuli have incorporated the measurement of physiological data in their experimental designs. If included, studies show also heightened autonomic responding, whilst a heterogeneous respiratory as well as startle eyeblink responding is observed. Thus, the studies presented here were designed to clarify the factors that mediate defensive responding to interoceptive sensations. Study 1 investigated the influence of anxiety on the subjective, respiratory, and autonomic response to an individually determined inspiratory resistive load, while study 2 focuses on the effect of attentional modulation of the startle eyeblink response to a mild respiratory threat. In study 3 the modulation of subjective, respiratory and autonomic reactions by arousal expectations was examined. Therefore, caffeine, a respiratory stimulant, or a placebo were administered without the participants’ knowledge. The fourth study examined the influence of the process of worrying, a strategy to deal with unpleasant body symptoms, on defensive responding. Depending on the study design subjective, respiratory and autonomic (skin conductance level, heart rate) parameters were assessed as marker for defensive mobilization. In study 2 and 4 the startle eyeblink response was measured as further index of defensive activation. Besides that in study 2 also the P3 component of the event-related potential, as an index for attentional allocation, was recorded. The main findings of the presented dissertation are the following: Study 1 revealed that 1) only high anxiety sensitive individuals reporting also high suffocation fear respond to lower stimulus intensities with stronger defensive responding, and 2) that this group demonstrated a maladaptive compensatory breathing pattern. Additionally, study 2 exhibited that 1) the startle eyeblink response is relatively inhibited during a mild interoceptive threat, and 2) this inhibition corresponds to an attention allocation towards breathing as indicated by a reduced P3 amplitude to the startle noise as well as subjective report. Furthermore, highly anxiety sensitive individuals showed a more pronounced defensive responding if the interoceptive sensations were unexpected (study 3). Recently, study 4 demonstrated that worry led to an increased defensive response mobilization. All studies are discussed in the context of the theoretical background of the defensive response modulation to exteroceptive and interoceptive sensations with respect to mediating factors. Showing exaggerated defensive responding and maladaptive adaptation processes in high anxious individuals the results point towards the important role of interoceptive sensations in the etiology, maintenance and therapy of mental disorders, especially the anxiety disorders.
Therapeutic Sealing of Proximal Tooth Surfaces: Two-Year Clinical and Radiographic Evaluation
(2009)
The diagnosis, prevention and treatment of proximal carious lesions comprise a constant problem in clinical dentistry. The purpose of this investigation was to test the safety and clinical effect of a new treatment for proximal caries. In 50 patients with two proximal initial lesions (D1-3 without cavitation, bitewing X-ray), orthodontic rubber rings were applied to gain access to the interproximal space. One of the lesions was sealed with a thin polyurethane-dimethacrylate foil using a bonding agent (Heliobond®, Vivadent, Schaan/Liechtenstein); the other lesion received oral home-care with dental floss and fluoridated toothpaste and was left as control. In clinical follow-ups after 6 and 12 months and X-ray evaluation after two years, clinical retention of proximal tape and the underlying sealant, marginal adaptation, discoloration, tooth vitality, proximal plaque and gingivitis were checked. In addition, caries was assessed clinically and radiographically. The sealants showed good retention, marginal adaptation and colour. After two years, vitality of all teeth was still positive and no relevant differences in plaque accumulation or gingival status were found between sealed and control teeth. Two sealed surface had to be filled due to caries progression (D3 with cavitation). 9 sealed lesions showed caries regression. In contrast, only 4 control lesions regressed and also two showed progression. The loss of tape had no significant influence on the lesion progression indicating the effect of the underlying bond. All other sealants and control lesions were stable indicating an arrest of the lesion. In conclusion, sealing initial proximal lesions showed no clinical problems and mostly arrest of initial carious lesions on bitewing X-rays.
Objectives: Performing proper toothbrushing is a complicated process for children. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the effect of a smartphone app for improving manual toothbrushing via a gravitation sensor. Methods: In this prospective, controlled, single-blinded, randomized clinical trial, 49 children (mean age 5.1 ± 0.6 years, 27 female) were randomly assigned to test (n = 26) and control (n = 23) groups. All children were provided with manual toothbrushes with an integrated gravitation sensor and they received oral health instructions. Only the children of the test group got an additional smartphone app to visualize and reward proper brushing in form and time. At baseline and recalls after 6 and 12 weeks, plaque and gingival indices (QHI, PBI) were recorded for analysis between the two groups. Results: At baseline, there were no significant differences between the test and control group regarding plaque and gingival indices (QHI: 2.36 ± 0.7 and 2.42 ± 0.8; p = 0.94; PBI: 0.42 ± 0.2 and 0.47 ± 0.3; p = 0.59). At the 6- and 12-week recalls, the test group showed statistically significantly better oral health indices than the controls (6-week recall, QHI: 0.8 ±0.5 and 1.88 ± 0.9; p < 0.001; PBI: 0.08 ± 0.1 and 0.26 ± 0.2; p < 0.001; 12-week recall, QHI: 0.44 ± 0.5 and 1.49 ± 0.7; p < 0.001; PBI: 0.05 ± 0.18 and 0.21 ± 0.1; p < 0.001). Conclusion: The results highlight the enormous possibilities of a toothbrushing application via the smartphone, at least for medium-term oral hygiene improvement in preschool children and even after excluding the app. The long-term effect should also be investigated to exclude the expected novelty effect.
Colonic atresia (CA) is a rare disease with an incidence range between one of 20 000 and one of 66 000 live births. Most CA are located within the proximal colon; distal CA are even rarer. Because of its rarity, another case shall be described herewith. A 37th week of pregnancy born child was noticed occurring multiple vomiting, a distended abdomen and additional whitish-bloody stool shortly thereafter. In the first operation, a double-barrel stoma was created. After sufficient weight gain and alignment of the stoma ends, a secondary anastomosis was created in the child after 2 months. The diagnosis can be made reliably on the basis of an X-ray and leads to a good outcome with prompt surgical intervention. However, accompanying malformations should always be considered.
In fixed orthodontic treatments debonding of brackets during treatment is an unpleasant occurrence for the clinician and the patients and resultes in an increase in treatment costs and duration. For Damon Q brackets recycling would considered as an economic saving option which could be done with using of in office methods such as the sandblasting.
A sample of sixty sound bovine first upper central incisers, were collected, cleaned, and mounted in acrylic blocks for shear bond strength testing.
The total sample was equally divided into two main groups. Each group had 30 teeth and 30 brackets.
The first group had 30 teeth bonded with metal Damon Q brackets, the second group had 30 teeth bonded with metal Mini-Mono® brackets.The study included bonding and rebonding experiments. Therefore the same brackets with their same teeth were used in bonding and in the rebonding experiments. The bonding and the rebonding procedures were done with using 3M Unitek etching, Grengloo adhasive, and Ortho solo bonding. In addition the rebonding procedure was done after cleaning the teeth and recycling their brackets with sandblasting. All specimens were recycled 5000 times for the bonding and rebonding experiments.
The first and second debonding forces were done in Newton using a Zwick Roell machine.
After that SBS and SRS were computed in MPa. Furthermore all the teeth, after each debonding, were examined under a digital scanning microscope VHX-5000, 50X magnifying, to performe the ARA and ARI.
The collected data was statistically analyzed for descriptive statistics as well as significance of differences among the different bracket types, and their ARI scores, in the bonding and rebonding experiments.
The results showed that SRS was significantly higher than SBS of both types of the brackets, and Damon Q brackets had higher SBS, and SRS than Mini-Mono® brackets, and there was no correlation between SBS, SRS and their ARI, ARA.
Background:
Microvascular decompression (MVD) success rates exceed 90% in hemifacial spasm (HFS).
However, postoperative recovery patterns and durations are variable.
Objective:
We aim to study factors that might influence the postoperative patterns and duration needed until
final recovery.
Method:
Only patients following de-novo MVD with a minimum follow-up of 6 months were included.
Overall trend of recovery was modeled. Patients were grouped according to recognizable clinical
recovery patterns. Uni- and multivariable analyses were used to identify the factors affecting
allocation to the identified patterns and time needed to final recovery.
Results:
323(92.6%) patients had >90% symptom improvement and 269(77.1%) patients had complete
resolution at the last follow–up. The overall trend of recovery showed steep remission within the
first 6 months, followed by relapse peaking around 8 months with a second remission ~16
months. Five main recovery patterns were identified.
Patterns analysis showed that evident proximal indentation of the facial nerve at REZ, males and
facial palsy are associated with earlier recovery at multivariable and univariable levels. AICA,
AICA/VA compressions and shorter disease durations are related to immediate resolution of the
symptoms only on the univariable level. Time analysis showed that proximal indentation (vs.
distal indentation), males and facial palsy witnessed significantly earlier recoveries.
Conclusion:
Our main finding is that in contrast to peripheral indentation, proximal indentation of the facial
nerve at REZ is associated with earlier recovery. Postoperative facial palsy and AICA
compressions are associated with earlier recoveries. We recommend a minimum of 1 year before
evaluating the final outcome of MVD for HFS.
The aim of the present dissertation was to investigate the biological and chemical potential of two European mushroom species: Fomitopsis betulina and Calvatia gigantea. For this purpose, different extracts of both fungi were tested for: antimicrobial, antifungal, cytotoxic, in vitro wound healing, and anti-adhesive properties. Bioassay-guided fractionation led to the isolation of bioactive compounds, altogether 20 compounds were isolated and identified. The compounds were obtained from the ethyl acetate extracts, they included triterpenes, sterols and aromatic compounds. The separated substances from both fungi were proved for biological activities, some of them showed antimicrobial and cytotoxic activities.
Eight hundred and fifty two students with an age range 9-13 years (mean 10.34, SD±0.56, 48% females) were recruited from the fifth grade students of different 19 primary schools in Greifswald and East Pomerania. In conjunction with the compulsory dental community examination, additional data were collected with two questionnaires for the children and their parents. Newly generated items were taken from the children’s questionnaire to form short scales for oral health-related knowledge, behaviour, attitudes. Parents’ questionnaire contains questions on socio-economic status (SES) and child’s health. The response rate was 93.2%; 78.8% for children; parents, respectively. Results: The distribution of DMFT values was highly polarized with most of the children (71%) exhibiting no carious defects, fillings or missing teeth in the permanent dentition with a mean of 0.6 ±1.2. There was a significant correlation between DMFT and social class levels (rs=-0.19, p=0.001) with mean DMFT values of 0.9 ± 1.3, 0.6 ±1.1 and 0.4 ± 0.9 for the low, medium and higher social strata, respectively. There was a clear correlation between the dental attitude and dental behaviour (rs=0.32, p=0.003). However, correlations between knowledge vs. attitude and knowledge vs. behaviour were loose. A statistically significant correlation between DMFT and dental behaviour was found (rs=-0.15, p=0.003). It should be noted that children with higher self-esteem were found to have significantly higher dental awareness scores (rs=0.19, p=0.001). General health was a significant predictor for caries incidence (rs=0.08, p=0.01). The frequency of drinking lemonade or ice tea and eating salty snacks (chips, nuts) showed clear correlations with the DMFT (rs=0.17 and 0.13, p<0.01). Prolonged daily TV watching was associated directly with DMFT values (rs=0.13, p=0.001). A significant correlation was found between caries and smoking, even after adjusting for age (rs=0.1, p=0.002). Smoking children had a significantly higher DMFT rate than children who were not smokers with a mean DMFT of 0.9 ±1.5 vs 0.6 ±1.2 (p=0.004). Interestingly, each of prolonged TV watching, more lemonade drinking and smoking were correlated directly with the low socioeconomic status (Spearman correlation coefficient of 0.13, 0.2 and 0.17, respectively, p<0.05). Regarding malocclusion, 64% the subjects had at least one type of anomaly. Crowding and maxillary overjet represented the major proportion 28% and 23%, respectively. Males exhibited significantly higher increased overbite scores than females p=0.04. Whereas the prevalence of crowding was more common in females than males (p=0.05). Amazingly, more malocclusion was registered in children with caries-free primary teeth when compared to children with carious primary teeth (p=0.05). No significant differences in the mean of dmft or DMFT value were found between normal and non normal occlusion (p>0.05). Undergoing to orthodontic treatment was associated with significantly higher dental awareness scores (p=0.003). No correlation between socio-economic status and malocclusion was registered. Conclusion: This thesis confirms the decline and polarisation of dental caries. Dental behaviour was mostly independent of dental knowledge, but depended on dental attitude. Higher scores in dental behaviour resulted in lower DMFT scores; possibly, oral health promotion should strengthen attitude and actual behaviour instead of knowledge. Higher scores in self-esteem and general health connected with lower caries incidence and higher score in dental awareness. Social inequalities was strongly linked with health inequalities with more prevalence of caries, smoking, prolonged TV watching, wrong diet habits and less sealants application among children of low SES. Hence, oral health-related interventions in children sample should be directed at the social structures with more incorporating of oral health promotion programs into other general health promotion programs. This thesis suggests that; the establishment of healthy behaviours such as a regular teeth brushing at school could be one of the most successful ways to involve all children especially children of low SES in dental care. Malocclusion traits were very common in this sample. This underlines the need for more orthodontic preventive programs among children, in order to reducing the risk factors of malocclusion. The association between prevalence of malocclusion and socio economic status could not be established. No generalised conclusion could be drawn about the relationship between caries and malocclusion.
Until now proximal caries is still a significant problem in the clinical dentistry in spite of the caries decline recently. As resin infiltration offers a new micro-invasive treatment to arrest the progression of proximal initial carious lesions, this study aimed to evaluate its clinical applicability, safety and effect. In the study population of 50 children, adolescents and young adults (mean age 17.9 years ± 6.8), ten dentists at University of Greifswald applied the infiltration material ICON® (DMG, Germany) on non-cavitated proximal lesions in permanent and primary teeth as described in the manual instructions from the producer. The results showed good patient satisfaction with the procedure. The time for the infiltration (24.3 min ± 7.4), which included rubber dam application (7.7 min ± 4), and the effort were perceived as comparable to a composite filling by the dentist or as even easier. In three patients (6%), it was not possible to gain sufficient proximal space for the application of an infiltration. The location of the infiltrated tooth, separation problems as well as the routine of the dentists with the infiltration technique had an effect on the duration of the infiltration. A clear learning curve with a reduction of treatment time for subsequent treatments was observed (P < 0.001). Within the follow-up interval of 12 months, vitality of all infiltrated teeth was still positive and no relevant differences in plaque accumulation or gingival status were recorded. In addition, the infiltrated surfaces showed smooth margins and considerable decrease in the discoloration. In the radiographic evaluation after one year, only two lesions (4.7%) have progressed. Thus, caries infiltration is an applicable method for the treatment of initial non-cavitated proximal lesions without prior temporary tooth separation. Even without special training it can be applied easily by dentist and they experience a clear learning curve within the first 5-10 applications. In addition, the infiltration technique shows a high acceptance by the patients. Furthermore, caries infiltration lead to very good results regarding safety and preventing the lesion progression of non-cavitated proximal caries lesions located in the enamel or in the outer third of dentin.
To a large extent health-related quality of life (HRQoL) is a product of life-course experiences. Therefore, we examined employment, marital, and reproductive life-course typologies as predictors of HRQoL in women and men. To determine life course clusters, sequence and cluster analysis were performed on the annual (waves 1990–2019) employment, marital, and children in household states of the German Socio-Economic Panel data (N = 8,998; age = 53.57, 52.52% female); separately for men and women. Using hierarchical linear regression analyses, and Tukey HSD post-hoc tests, associations between clusters and change in life satisfaction, subjective mental, and physical health were examined. Five life-course clusters were identified in the female and six in the male sample. Life courses differed greatly across gender regarding employment aspects (e.g., men generally work full-time vs. women underwent frequent transitions). The family aspects appeared similar – e.g., ‘starting a family’ or ‘marital separation’ clusters – but still differed in the particulars. Life course typologies were related to distinct patterns of HRQoL. For instance, both for men and women the ‘separated’ clusters, as well as the male ‘entering non-employment’ cluster were associated with a steeper decline in HRQoL. However, change in subjective mental health showed few associations. Distinct types of life courses and differential associations with sociodemographic background and HRQoL emerged for women and men. The analyses reveal a burden on individuals who experienced marital separation, and non-employment and thus present important target groups for health prevention, e.g., for physical health problems.
Background
Self-reported time-use in relation to health-related quality of life (HRQoL) has been widely studied, yet less is known about the directionality of the association and how it compares across genders when controlling for sociodemographic confounders.
Methods
This study focused on the working population of the most recent waves (2013–2018) of the Core-Study of the German Socio-Economic Panel (N = 30,518, 46.70% female, M = 39.24 years). It examined the relationship between three time-use categories (contracted, committed, & leisure time) and HRQoL (self-rated health & life satisfaction) in men and women via multigroup fixed effects cross-lagged panel models. The models controlled for sociodemographic background (age, household income, number of children living in household, employment status, education, & marital status), which was associated with time-use and psychosocial health in previous research.
Results
Contracted time showed consistent positive relationships with HRQoL across genders while associations with the other types of time use differed significantly between men and women and across indicators of HRQoL.
Conclusions
The way we spend our time directly predicts our health perceptions, but in the same vein our health also predicts how we can spend our time. Contracted time in particular was associated with positive HRQoL, across genders, and beyond sociodemographic predictors, highlighting the important role of employment in health, for men and women alike. The impact of commitments beyond contracted time-use—like household chores and childcare—however, continues to affect mainly women, which ultimately reflects in poorer health outcomes.
This study explored the evidence of validity of internal structure of the 12-item Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy—Spiritual Wellbeing Scale (FACIT-Sp-12) in Brazilian adolescents with chronic health conditions. The study involved 301 Brazilian adolescents with cancer, type 1 diabetes mellitus, or cystic fibrosis. Exploratory Factor Analysis (EFA), Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA), and Item Response Theory (IRT) were used to test the internal structure. Reliability was determined with Cronbach’s Alpha and McDonald’s Omega. The EFA suggested a one-dimensional scale structure in contrast to the original 2-factor model or the 3-factor model which were not reproduced in the current CFA. All quality indicators for the EFA one-factor exceeded the required criteria (FDI = 0.97, EAP = 0.97, SR = 3.96 and EPTD = 0.96, latent GH = 0.90. and the observed GH = 0.85). The FACIT-Sp-12 for adolescents yielded strong evidence for a 1-factor model and with good reliability.
The aim of this retrospective observational study is to describe and discuss various complications that can arise after insertion of alloplastic materials in the field of urogynecology that require further surgical interventions in order to manage them or to at least improve the quality of life in those women. We were able to collect data on 77 patients who fulfilled the criteria. Medical history, data of clinical findings, and outcomes were collected and analyzed. The most common complication seen as an indication for resecting slings or meshes was de novo overactive bladder syndrome (40%). Other indications seen were lower urinary tract obstruction or obstructive voiding symptoms (21%), chronic pain (21%), and de novo dyspareunia (13%). 36% of the patients had recurrent symptoms (failure) after insertion of alloplastic materials in the form of urinary incontinence or prolapse, 32% presented with vaginal erosions, 2 women had severe signs of infection with abscess formation, another 3 women had urogenital fistulae. Other rare complications after mesh or sling insertion are perforations of the urinary bladder or urethra. Proper case selection is the key factor. The use of meshes and slings seems justified only in patients with known connective tissue weakness and recurrences after native tissue repair. Otherwise, patients will be exposed to unnecessary risk without any expectable improvement to their quality of life. Most of the complications are mainly caused by wrong and inadequate surgical techniques, wrong indications, or missed diagnosis of the underlying problem. In addition, lack of long-term follow-up is usually the cause behind the negligence towards many complications. Therefore, only experienced physicians should be allowed to perform such procedures, and long-term postoperative follow-up is strongly recommended. As slings and meshes are used for procedures of choice as means to improve quality of life, and not for life threatening situations, there is a need for intensive informed consent. All possible alternatives have to be discussed, as do the pros and cons of selected procedures, even the rare complications. Mesh or sling resection is considered to be an effective solution for the management of such complications. It has shown a high success rate in comparison to conservative treatment, and the majority of patients were satisfied and experienced a big improvement in their quality of life. The most common complication after resection is the recurrence of primary symptoms, either urinary incontinence or prolapse. Major or serious intra- or postoperative complications are very rare. All complications were classified and given a code according to the classification system of the international urogynecological association and the international continence society (IUGA/ICS) on 2011. The applicability and practicability of this code were evaluated, looking for ways to possibly improve it or to identify missing parameters. Many patients had more than one code, a problem that entirely torpedoed the idea of “simple” classification. Some complications are not covered individually in the classification, such as failure and recurrence or overactive bladder syndrome. These complications should be included. Many cases began with the same code, despite having different complications. Further sub-classifications should be considered to enable the reader to easily recognize the complication at hand. Patients who came with complications more than one year after mesh or sling insertion were categorized as (T4), regardless of whether the complication arose after 1 year of after 10. Therefore, sub-classifications in the (T4) category are recommended. The “site” category was not applicable in many cases. Furthermore, it is necessary that the severity of a complication is discernible, and should be mentioned in the code. We did not find any correlation between the code given and patient satisfaction. After re-modification and completion, the IUGA/ICS code could be more practical for clinical use, which would allow for the comparison of complications and make the assessment of adverse effects easier for research purposes.
In this study we investigated the synergistic antimicrobial effect of a dual protocol combining cold atmospheric pressure plasma (CAP) and antimicrobial photodynamic therapy (aPDT) against different planktonic bacterial and yeast species including methicillin-sensitive and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, extended-spectrum β-lactamase-positive Escherichia coli and Candida albicans. A DBD plasma device was used for CAP treatment while for aPDT, toluidine blue O (TBO) was the photosensitizer (PS) of choice and a radiator emitting visible and water-filtered-Infrared A light (VIS-wIRA) was used as irradiation source.
Microbial suspensions were either exposed to CAP treatment alone, aPDT treatment alone or aPDT followed by CAP exposure in a dual treatment protocol. Aliquots from each suspension were plated on agar plates and the number of colonies surviving after each treatment was counted. Under the experimental conditions conducted in this study, combining sub-lethal exposure doses of CAP and aPDT treatment showed significantly higher antimicrobial efficacy (P<0.0001) compared to single treatments against all tested microorganisms suggesting a synergistic effect which yielded at least 3.3 log microbial reduction corresponding to 99.6 % microbial death. In the dual CAP-aPDT approach, aPDT did not interfere with CAP-induced acidification of solution, a crucial feature for CAP antimicrobial efficiency, which further confirms the promising clinical potential of this combination regime.
We believe that the CAP-aPDT dual approach described in this study holds great potential as a successful novel antimicrobial and healing-supporting strategy especially when directed for the management of acute and chronic wounds and possibly other skin and soft tissue infections. The use of a VIS-wIRA light source in treating skin infections is preferential, due to the additional therapeutic effects of wIRA in wound healing. Furthermore, the enhanced antimicrobial effects of aPDT when combined with CAP as shown in this study may grant for a reduction in treatment times and costs as well as improving patient compliance.
Objectives:
This study investigates the effectiveness of the Cold AP on the alteration of the enamel surface
without using acid etchant by using Conventional photo-activated resin bond to bond the
orthodontic brackets.
Materials and Methods:
One hundred and twenty-five Enamel specimens are prepared from disinfected bovine
mandibular incisors are divided into five groups. Group I: brackets are attached on the enamel
surface with the standard adhesive technique (etch + primer +bond). Group II: the brackets are
attached with the Standard Orthodontic adhesive technique without etching. Group III: the
enamel surface is conditioned with pure Argon Cold atmospheric plasma before the application
of the primer without using an acid etchant. Group IV: the enamel surface is conditioned with
the admixture of Argon Cold atmospheric plasma with 0.5 % Oxygen before the application of
the primer without using acid etchant Group V: after the application of Argon Cold atmospheric
plasma with 0.5 % Oxygen the surface is rewetted by deionized water before the application
of the primer and adhesive. After that, the samples are exposed to thermal cycling. The shear
bond strength of the samples is tested by the universal testing machine which measured the
maximum force at which the brackets are deboned from the tooth surface at a speed of
1mm/minute is measured.
Results:
Significant intergroup differences were found. Group V showed the highest shear bond
strength followed by Group I, VI, III, II respectively. There isn’t a statistical difference in the
values of The Shear bond strength values between Group III and IV.
Conclusions:
this study implies that Cold Atmospheric Plasma is a safe method to change the chemical
surface characteristics of the enamel surface.in addition to the significant importance of plasma
treatment followed by water rewetting, which could enhance adhesion between the orthodontic
attachments and the enamel layer
Infections with Helicobacter pylori are a global challenge that affects both developed and developing countries. This infection is currently treated using multiple antimicrobials that are mostly absorbed after oral administration and subsequently secreted into the gastric lumen. The eradication rates from the different therapeutic regimens, however, are declining nowadays, primarily due to high antibiotic resistance and possibly the mode of drug delivery. H. pylori is commonly found adhering to epithelial cells, and therefore, intragastric drug delivery may be a more direct treatment option. In this work, we developed a new strategy for the local eradication of H. pylori within the stomach.
Initial in vitro experiments revealed that penicillin G shows promising antibiotic activity against resistant strains of H. pylori with MIC values of 0.125 µg/mL. To provide luminal concentrations above the MIC for an extended time, we decided to follow two different formulation strategies: effervescent granules and HPMC-based hydrogel matrix tablets. Among the granule formulations, only one batch was stable and demonstrated excellent performance with respect to drug content, effervescent action, and drug release. It was therefore selected for further in vitro studies. All matrix tablets showed the desired tablet quality requirements and drug release was scalable in vitro by the HPMC concentration.
In order to quantify PGS in various formulations and media, an HPLC method was developed and validated. Due to the stability concerns, the degradation behavior of PGS was studied at different pH. PGS was found to be unstable at acidic pH values, but its stability was higher at more neutral pH values. Sufficient stability was exhibited at pH values above pH 4.5. Due to the instability of PGS in acidic media, alkalizers were added to the matrix tablets to prevent the degradation of the drug within the tablet. Among the alkalizers tested, NaHCO3 showed the most promising results as it significantly enhanced the stability within the matrix and also the concentration of PGS in the dissolution media. The stabilizing effect was caused mainly by the modulation of the microenvironmental pH rather than a pH change in the dissolution media. As a result, these matrix tablets were selected for further in vitro characterization.
In order to guide formulation development, a flow-through model (FTM), which was able to simulate various physiological conditions of the gastric environment, was developed and applied. In contrast to compendial dissolution methods, the FTM allowed studying the effect of gastric secretion, mixing and emptying on the gastric concentration of the drug in vitro. It could be shown that the granules generated a high initial concentration, which decreased over time. On the contrary, the matrix tablets did not provide such a profile due to the absence of pressure events in the model. Further investigations of the matrix tablets in a dissolution stress test device revealed faster drug release if pressure events of physiological relevance are simulated.
In the last part of this thesis, the two formulation concepts were compared in vivo by using the salivary tracer technique. For this purpose, caffeine was used as a model drug. The in vivo investigations suggested that granules administered in a fed state demonstrated longer gastric retention than in a fasted state. In a fed state, effervescent granules provided longer gastric retention of caffeine in comparison to the matrix tablets. Interestingly, the administration of the granules together with 240 mL of tap water provided an even better gastric retention of caffeine than the smaller volume (20 mL). Additional MRI investigations after 4 h of tablets’ intake revealed that the matrix tablets were already disintegrated in vivo.
In conclusion, effervescent granules dosed after food are expected to better maintain intragastric drug concentration over an extended period compared to matrix tablets. Moreover, the carbon dioxide generated after disintegration supports the mixing of the drug with the chyme and thus, provides a uniform distribution of the drug. By this, bacterial sanctuary sites within the stomach can be avoided. The major challenge could be the stability of PGS in acidic media. This problem could be addressed via concomitant administration of PPIs. H2 blockers could also be recommended to address nocturnal acid-breakthrough during the mid-night. In combination with an acid-reducing agent, PGS granule formulations alone or part of the treatment regimens could enable the local eradication of H. pylori directly within the stomach.
Human-driven peatland drainage has occurred in Europe for centuries, causing habitat degradation and leading to the emission of greenhouse gases. As such, in the last decades, there has been an increase in policies aiming at restoring these habitats through rewetting. Alder (Alnus glutinosa L.) is a widespread species in temperate forest peatlands with a seemingly high waterlogging tolerance. Yet, little is known about its specific response in growth and wood traits relevant for tree functioning when dealing with changing water table levels. In this study, we investigated the effects of rewetting and extreme flooding on alder growth and wood traits in a peatland forest in northern Germany. We took increment cores from several trees at a drained and a rewetted stand and analyzed changes in ring width, wood density, and xylem anatomical traits related to the hydraulic functioning, growth, and mechanical support for the period 1994–2018. This period included both the rewetting action and an extreme flooding event. We additionally used climate-growth and climate-density correlations to identify the stand-specific responses to climatic conditions. Our results showed that alder growth declined after an extreme flooding in the rewetted stand, whereas the opposite occurred in the drained stand. These changes were accompanied by changes in wood traits related to growth (i.e., number of vessels), but not in wood density and hydraulic-related traits. We found poor climate-growth and climate-density correlations, indicating that water table fluctuations have a stronger effect than climate on alder growth. Our results show detrimental effects on the growth of sudden water table changes leading to permanent waterlogging, but little implications for its wood density and hydraulic architecture. Rewetting actions should thus account for the loss of carbon allocation into wood and ensure suitable conditions for alder growth in temperate peatland forests.
Abstract
Aims
Pinus uncinata is the major treeline‐forming species in the Pyrenees. Yet, the role of its reproduction and dispersal as drivers of treeline dynamics remains unknown. Here we quantify seed production, dispersal and germination changes along the elevation gradient to assess whether they may constrain the foreseen treeline advance in the Pyrenees.
Location
Central Pyrenees, Catalonia, NE Spain.
Methods
We established four plots along an elevation gradient from the closed subalpine forest to the krummholz zone at five study sites. In each plot, we collected cones from five to six trees, measured their length, and triggered their opening in the laboratory to count the number of empty seeds and the number and weight of full seeds. We used the collected seeds in a germination experiment under controlled conditions in growth chambers. Additionally, we installed seed traps along the forest–alpine grassland transition to measure seed rain for three consecutive years in three of the study sites.
Results
The number of full seeds per cone decreased along the elevation gradient and was correlated with cone length. However, the proportion of full seeds per cone and their weight did not differ between elevation positions. Seed rain decreased drastically with elevation and no seeds arrived into the alpine grassland traps consistently across study years. Although germination success did not significantly differ between elevation provenances (i.e., elevation position of origin), we found significant differences in germination dynamics between study sites and between elevation provenances within sites.
Conclusions
Our results indicate that whereas the viability of Pinus uncinata seeds is not limited by elevation, seed production and dispersal are constraining the ongoing rates of treeline advance in the Pyrenees.
Growth, ageing and atherosclerotic plaque development alter the biomechanical forces acting on the vessel wall. However, monitoring the detailed local changes in wall shear stress (WSS) at distinct sites of the murine aortic arch over time has been challenging. Here, we studied the temporal and spatial changes in flow, WSS, oscillatory shear index (OSI) and elastic properties of healthy wildtype (WT, n = 5) and atherosclerotic apolipoprotein E-deficient (Apoe−/−, n = 6) mice during ageing and atherosclerosis using high-resolution 4D flow magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Spatially resolved 2D projection maps of WSS and OSI of the complete aortic arch were generated, allowing the pixel-wise statistical analysis of inter- and intragroup hemodynamic changes over time and local correlations between WSS, pulse wave velocity (PWV), plaque and vessel wall characteristics. The study revealed converse differences of local hemodynamic profiles in healthy WT and atherosclerotic Apoe−/− mice, and we identified the circumferential WSS as potential marker of plaque size and composition in advanced atherosclerosis and the radial strain as a potential marker for vascular elasticity. Two-dimensional (2D) projection maps of WSS and OSI, including statistical analysis provide a powerful tool to monitor local aortic hemodynamics during ageing and atherosclerosis. The correlation of spatially resolved hemodynamics and plaque characteristics could significantly improve our understanding of the impact of hemodynamics on atherosclerosis, which may be key to understand plaque progression towards vulnerability.
Effectiveness of Varenicline as an Aid to Smoking Cessation in Primary Care: An Observational Study
(2012)
Aims: Although varenicline is commonly prescribed in primary care, information on smoking-related comorbidities and the effectiveness of varenicline in this context in Germany is scarce. This study assessed the efficacy and safety of varenicline in a large sample of patients seeking smoking cessation treatment through their general practitioners. The frequency of comorbidities was also evaluated. Methods: This was a 12-week, prospective, observational, non-comparative phase IV trial conducted in Germany. Abstinence rates at week 12 were evaluated by verbal reporting using the nicotine use inventory. Results: Overall, 1,391 subjects were enrolled; 1,177 received study medication and were evaluated for effectiveness and safety. At the end of the study, 71.1% (95% confidence interval 68.5–73.7) of subjects were abstinent. There were a total of 205 all-causality adverse events; 2.2% were classified as serious or severe. There were no fatal adverse events. At inclusion, 66.7% of participants had at least 1 concurrent comorbidity, with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (35.5%), hypertension (29.6%) and depression (10.4%) being the most commonly reported. Conclusion: These real-world data indicate that varenicline is an effective and well-tolerated smoking cessation treatment when used in the primary care setting including patients with smoking-related comorbidities.
Herein, we report the synthesis of a series of push–pull imines by considering cyclic diamino substituent at the C‐centre and fluoroaryl substituent at the N‐centre. This has been achieved by a selective aromatic nucleophilic substitution of different fluoroarenes by N‐H‐substituted N‐heterocyclic imines (NHIs) at ambient conditions without any additional reagent. Solid‐state molecular structure analysis reveals the elongation of the central C–N bond of the imine functionality, which is consistent with the push–pull nature of these imines. The push–pull nature of these imines is further validated by computational studies.
Abstract
Purpose
This study aims to assess the implementation of published research, contraindications, and warnings on the prescription of dual renin‐angiotensin‐hormone system (RAS) blockade in ambulatory care in Germany.
Methods
Cohort study based on health claims data of 6.7 million subjects from 2008 to 2015. Yearly prevalence and incidence for dual RAS blockade with (a) angiotensin‐converting enzyme inhibitors and angiotensin‐receptor blockers (ACEI + ARB) and (b) aliskiren and ACEI or ARB (aliskiren + ACEI/ARB) were calculated. We assessed prescriber specialty and associations between discontinuing dual RAS blockade with specialist (internal medicine, cardiology, nephrology) visits and hospital discharge in the previous year.
Results
A total of 2 984 517 patients were included (age 51.4 ± SD 18.4 y, 48.5% male). Prescription rates for ACEI + ARB decreased from 0.6% (n = 17 907) to 0.4% (n = 12 237) and for aliskiren + ACEI/ARB from 0.23% (n = 6634) to 0.03% (n = 818). Incident prescriptions decreased from 0.23% (n = 6705) to 0.19% (n = 5055) (ACE + ARB) and from 0.1% (n = 2796) to 0.005% (n = 142) (aliskiren + ACE/ARB); 59% of ACEI + ARB and 48% of aliskiren + ACE/ARB combinations were prescribed only by one physician. Of those, 73% (ACEI + ARB) and 58% (aliskiren + ACE/ARB) were primary care providers (PCPs). Discontinuing dual RAS blockade was associated with specialist care and hospital discharge in the previous year (specialist care: RR 1.4, 95% CI, 1.3‐1.6; hospital visit: RR 1.5, 95% CI, 1.3‐1.6).
Conclusions
Our results suggest a delayed uptake of treatment recommendation for ACEI + ARB and a higher impact of Dear Doctor letters addressing PCPs directly compared with published research, contraindications, and warnings. Targeted continuous medical education, practice software alerts, and stronger involvement of pharmacists might improve the implementation of medication safety recommendations in ambulatory care.
Objective: The study aimed to test the reliability of a semi-structured telephone interview for the classification of headache disorders according to the ICHD-3.
Background: Questionnaire-based screening tools are often optimized for single primary headache diagnoses [e.g., migraine (MIG) and tension headache (TTH)] and therefore insufficiently represent the diagnostic precision of the ICHD-3, which limits epidemiological research of rare headache disorders. Brief semi-structured telephone interviews could be an effective alternative to improve classification.
Methods: A patient population representative of different primary and secondary headache disorders (n = 60) was recruited from the outpatient clinic (HSA) of a tertiary care headache center. These patients completed an established population-based questionnaire for the classification of MIG, TTH, or trigeminal autonomic cephalalgia (TAC). In addition, they received a semi-structured telephone interview call from three blinded headache specialists individually. The agreement of diagnoses made either using the questionnaires or interviews with the HSA diagnoses was evaluated.
Results: Of the 59 patients (n = 1 dropout), 24% had a second-order and 5% had a third-order headache disorder. The main diagnoses were as follows: frequent primary headaches with 61% MIG, 10% TAC, 9% TTH, and 5% rare primary and 16% secondary headaches. Second-order diagnosis was chronic migraine throughout, and third-order diagnoses were medication overuse headache and TTH. Agreement between main headaches from the HSA was significantly better for the telephone interview than for the questionnaire (questionnaire: κ = 0.330; interview: κ = 0.822; p < 0.001). Second-order diagnoses were not adequately captured by questionnaires, while there was a trend for good agreement with the telephone interview (κ = 0.433; p = 0.074). Headache frequency and psychiatric comorbidities were independent predictors of HSA and telephone interview agreement. Male sex, headache frequency, severity, and depressive disorders were independently predictive for agreement between the questionnaire and HSA. The telephone interview showed high sensitivity (≥71%) and specificity (≥92%) for all primary headache disorders, whereas the questionnaire was below 50% in either sensitivity or specificity.
Conclusion: The semi-structured telephone interview appears to be a more reliable tool for accurate diagnosis of headache disorders than self-report questionnaires. This offers the potential to improve epidemiological headache research and care even in underserved areas.
Significance of Hyperbaric Oxygenation in the Treatment of Fournier’s Gangrene: A Comparative Study
(2018)
Introduction: Hyperbaric oxygenation (HBO), in addition to anti-infective and surgical therapy, seems to be a key treatment point for Fournier’s gangrene. The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of HBO therapy on the outcome and prognosis of Fournier’s gangrene. Patients and Methods: In the present multicenter, retrospective observational study, we evaluated the data of approximately 62 patients diagnosed with Fournier’s gangrene between 2007 and 2017. For comparison, 2 groups were distinguished: patients without HBO therapy (group A, n = 45) and patients with HBO therapy (group B, n = 17). The analysis included sex, age, comorbidities, clinical symptoms, laboratory and microbiological data, debridement frequency, wound dressing, antibiotic use, outcome and prognosis. The statistical analysis was performed with GraphPad Prism 7® (GraphPad Software, Inc., La Jolla, USA). Results: Demographic data showed no significant differences. The laboratory parameters C-reactive protein and urea were significantly higher in group B (group B: 301.7 vs. 140.6 mg/dL; group A: 124.8 vs. 54.7 mg/dL). Sepsis criteria were fulfilled in 77.8 and 100% of the patients in groups A and B respectively. Treatment in the intensive care unit (ICU) was therefore indicated in 69% of the patients in group A and 100% of the patients in group B. The mean ICU stay was 9 and 32 days for patients in groups A and B respectively. The wound debridement frequency and hospitalization stay were significantly greater in group B (13 vs. 5 debridement and 40 vs. 22 days). Initial antibiosis was test validated in 80% of the patients in group A and 76.5% of the patients in group B. Mortality was 0% in group B and 4.4% in the group A. Conclusion: The positive influence of HBO on the treatment of Fournier’s gangrene can be estimated only from the available data. Despite poorer baseline findings with comparable risk factors, mortality was 0% in the HBO group. The analysis of a larger patient cohort is desirable to increase the significance of the results.
Significance of Hyperbaric Oxygenation in the Treatment of Fournier’s Gangrene: A Comparative Study
(2018)
Introduction: Hyperbaric oxygenation (HBO), in addition to anti-infective and surgical therapy, seems to be a key treatment point for Fournier’s gangrene. The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of HBO therapy on the outcome and prognosis of Fournier’s gangrene. Patients and Methods: In the present multicenter, retrospective observational study, we evaluated the data of approximately 62 patients diagnosed with Fournier’s gangrene between 2007 and 2017. For comparison, 2 groups were distinguished: patients without HBO therapy (group A, n = 45) and patients with HBO therapy (group B, n = 17). The analysis included sex, age, comorbidities, clinical symptoms, laboratory and microbiological data, debridement frequency, wound dressing, antibiotic use, outcome and prognosis. The statistical analysis was performed with GraphPad Prism 7® (GraphPad Software, Inc., La Jolla, USA). Results: Demographic data showed no significant differences. The laboratory parameters C-reactive protein and urea were significantly higher in group B (group B: 301.7 vs. 140.6 mg/dL; group A: 124.8 vs. 54.7 mg/dL). Sepsis criteria were fulfilled in 77.8 and 100% of the patients in groups A and B respectively. Treatment in the intensive care unit (ICU) was therefore indicated in 69% of the patients in group A and 100% of the patients in group B. The mean ICU stay was 9 and 32 days for patients in groups A and B respectively. The wound debridement frequency and hospitalization stay were significantly greater in group B (13 vs. 5 debridement and 40 vs. 22 days). Initial antibiosis was test validated in 80% of the patients in group A and 76.5% of the patients in group B. Mortality was 0% in group B and 4.4% in the group A. Conclusion: The positive influence of HBO on the treatment of Fournier’s gangrene can be estimated only from the available data. Despite poorer baseline findings with comparable risk factors, mortality was 0% in the HBO group. The analysis of a larger patient cohort is desirable to increase the significance of the results.
Microbial cell factories have been largely exploited for the controlled production of recombinant proteins, including industrial enzymes and biopharmaceuticals. The advent of high-throughput ‘-omics’ techniques have boosted the design of these production systems due to their valuable contribution to the field of systems metabolic engineering, a discipline integrating metabolic engineering with systems and synthetic biology. In order to thrive, the field of systems metabolic engineering needs absolute proteomics data to be generated, as proteins are the central players in the complex metabolic and adaptational networks. Due to advent of mass spectrometry-based proteomics, a substantial amount of absolute proteomic data became available in the past decade. However, membrane proteins remained inaccessible to these efforts.
Nonetheless, comparative studies targeting the membrane proteome have been quite successful in characterizing physiological processes. Hence, label-free proteomics was used in a study (Quesada-Ganuza et al, 2019 – Article I) to identify and optimize PrsA in Bacillus subtilis, for improved yield of amylase. Amylase is one of the most relevant enzymes in the biotechnological sector. By employing a label-free mass spectrometry approach targeting the membrane proteome of this bacterium, relative changes in heterologous and native levels of PrsA could be quantified. The results of this study evidenced that each PrsA shows different relative abundancies, but with no relevant impact in the yield of amylase.
Even though relative protein quantification can already provide a good visualization of the physiological changes occurring between different conditions, they are not sufficient to understand how resources are allocated in the cell under certain physiological conditions. Therefore, a global method for absolute membrane protein quantification remains the biggest requirement for systems metabolic engineering.
Hence, with this work, we successfully developed a mass spectrometry-based approach enabling the absolute quantification of membrane proteins (Antelo-Varela et al, 2019 – Article II). This study was also performed in the Gram-positive model organism Bacillus subtilis, regarded as a prolific microbial cell factory. The method developed in this work combines the comprehensiveness of shotgun proteomics with the sensitivity and accuracy of targeted mass spectrometry. Fundamental to the method is that it relies on the application of a correction and an enrichment factor to calibrate absolute membrane protein abundances derived from shotgun mass spectrometry. This has permitted, for the first time reported, the calculation of absolute membrane protein abundances in a living organism.
The newly developed approach enabled to accurately quantify ~40% of the predicted proteome of this bacterium, offering a clear visualization of the physiological rearrangements occurring upon the onset of osmotic stress. In addition, this work also provides evidence for new membrane protein stoichiometries.
Overall, this study enabled the development of a straightforward methodology long-needed in the scientific and biotechnological community and, for the first time reported, providing absolute abundances of one of the most puzzling fractions of the cell – the membrane proteome.
The next step of the work summarized here was to implement the afore described method to a biotechnological relevant strain, as absolute membrane protein abundances are essential to understand the fundamental principles of protein secretion and production stress. Hence, this work was applied in a genome-reduced B. subtilis strain, ‘midiBacillus’, expressing the major staphylococcal antigen IsaA (Antelo-Varela et al, submitted – Article III). The employed absolute membrane protein quantification methodology enabled the analysis of physiological rearrangements occurring upon the induction of heterologous protein production. This work showed that, even though IsaA was successfully secreted into the growth medium, one of the main requirements for the biotechnological sector, it was still partly accumulated in the cell membrane of this bacterium. This led to an exacerbated physiological response where membrane proteins involved in the management of secretion stress were activated. In addition, this study also showed that a rearrangement of the cell’s translocation machinery occurs upon induction of production, where a ‘game’ of in- and decrease of transporters takes place.
Anticipating the impact of genetic and environmental insults, such as the ones caused by production stress, is essential for the field of systems metabolic engineering. Thus, the highly accurate and comprehensive dataset generated during this work can be implemented in predictive mathematical models, thereby contributing in the rational design of next-generation secretion systems.
Bacillus subtilis has been extensively used as a microbial cell factory for industrial enzymes due to its excellent capacities for protein secretion and large-scale fermentation. This bacterium is also an attractive host for biopharmaceutical production. However, the secretion potential of this organism is not fully utilized yet, mostly due to a limited understanding of critical rearrangements in the membrane proteome upon high-level protein secretion. Recently, it was shown that bottlenecks in heterologous protein secretion can be resolved by genome minimization. Here, we present for the first time absolute membrane protein concentrations of a genome-reduced B. subtilis strain (“midiBacillus”) expressing the immunodominant Staphylococcus aureus antigen A (IsaA). We quantitatively characterize the membrane proteome adaptation of midiBacillus during production stress on the level of molecules per cell for more than 400 membrane proteins, including determination of protein concentrations for ∼61% of the predicted transporters. We demonstrate that ∼30% of proteins with unknown functions display a significant increase in abundance, confirming the crucial role of membrane proteins in vital biological processes. In addition, our results show an increase of proteins dedicated to translational processes in response to IsaA induction. For the first time reported, we provide accumulation rates of a heterologous protein, demonstrating that midiBacillus secretes 2.41 molecules of IsaA per minute. Despite the successful secretion of this protein, it was found that there is still some IsaA accumulation occurring in the cytosol and membrane fraction, leading to a severe secretion stress response, and a clear adjustment of the cell’s array of transporters. This quantitative dataset offers unprecedented insights into bioproduction stress responses in a synthetic microbial cell.
The combination of repeated behavioral training with transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) holds promise to exert beneficial effects on brain function beyond the trained task. However, little is known about the underlying mechanisms. We performed a monocenter, single-blind randomized, placebo-controlled trial comparing cognitive training to concurrent anodal tDCS (target intervention) with cognitive training to concurrent sham tDCS (control intervention), registered at ClinicalTrial.gov (Identifier NCT03838211). The primary outcome (performance in trained task) and secondary behavioral outcomes (performance on transfer tasks) were reported elsewhere. Here, underlying mechanisms were addressed by pre-specified analyses of multimodal magnetic resonance imaging before and after a three-week executive function training with prefrontal anodal tDCS in 48 older adults. Results demonstrate that training combined with active tDCS modulated prefrontal white matter microstructure which predicted individual transfer task performance gain. Training-plus-tDCS also resulted in microstructural grey matter alterations at the stimulation site, and increased prefrontal functional connectivity. We provide insight into the mechanisms underlying neuromodulatory interventions, suggesting tDCS-induced changes in fiber organization and myelin formation, glia-related and synaptic processes in the target region, and synchronization within targeted functional networks. These findings advance the mechanistic understanding of neural tDCS effects, thereby contributing to more targeted neural network modulation in future experimental and translation tDCS applications.
Introduction
Given rapid global population aging, developing interventions against age-associated cognitive decline is an important medical and societal goal. We evaluated a cognitive training protocol combined with transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) on trained and non-trained functions in non-demented older adults.
Methods
Fifty-six older adults (65–80 years) were randomly assigned to one of two interventional groups, using age and baseline performance as strata. Both groups performed a nine-session cognitive training over 3 weeks with either concurrent anodal tDCS (atDCS, 1 mA, 20 minutes) over the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (target intervention) or sham stimulation (control intervention). Primary outcome was performance on the trained letter updating task immediately after training. Secondary outcomes included performance on other executive and memory (near and far transfer) tasks. All tasks were administered at baseline, post-intervention, and at 1- and 7-month follow-up assessments. Prespecified analyses to investigate treatment effects were conducted using mixed-model analyses.
Results
No between-group differences emerged in the trained letter updating and Markov decision-making tasks at post-intervention and at follow-up timepoints. Secondary analyses revealed group differences in one near-transfer task: Superior n-back task performance was observed in the tDCS group at post-intervention and at follow-up. No such effects were observed for the other transfer tasks. Improvements in working memory were associated with individually induced electric field strengths.
Discussion
Cognitive training with atDCS did not lead to superior improvement in trained task performance compared to cognitive training with sham stimulation. Thus, our results do not support the immediate benefit of tDCS-assisted multi-session cognitive training on the trained function. As the intervention enhanced performance in a near-transfer working memory task, we provide exploratory evidence for effects on non-trained working memory functions in non-demented older adults that persist over a period of 1 month.
Protein engineering is essential for altering the substrate scope, catalytic activity and selectivity of enzymes for applications in biocatalysis. However, traditional approaches, such as directed evolution and rational design, encounter the challenge in dealing with the experimental screening process of a large protein mutation space. Machine learning methods allow the approximation of protein fitness landscapes and the identification of catalytic patterns using limited experimental data, thus providing a new avenue to guide protein engineering campaigns. In this concept article, we review machine learning models that have been developed to assess enzyme-substrate-catalysis performance relationships aiming to improve enzymes through data-driven protein engineering. Furthermore, we prospect the future development of this field to provide additional strategies and tools for achieving desired activities and selectivities.
Amine transaminases (ATAs) are powerful biocatalysts for the stereoselective synthesis of chiral amines. Machine learning provides a promising approach for protein engineering, but activity prediction models for ATAs remain elusive due to the difficulty of obtaining high-quality training data. Thus, we first created variants of the ATA from Ruegeria sp. (3FCR) with improved catalytic activity (up to 2000-fold) as well as reversed stereoselectivity by a structure-dependent rational design and collected a high-quality dataset in this process. Subsequently, we designed a modified one-hot code to describe steric and electronic effects of substrates and residues within ATAs. Finally, we built a gradient boosting regression tree predictor for catalytic activity and stereoselectivity, and applied this for the data-driven design of optimized variants which then showed improved activity (up to 3-fold compared to the best variants previously identified). We also demonstrated that the model can predict the catalytic activity for ATA variants of another origin by retraining with a small set of additional data.
Humans consume snail flesh as part of their diet. To assess its nutritional value and toxicity, chemical analyses were conducted to confirm the presence of protein, total and reduced carbohydrates, fat, fatty acid composition and mineral components. Furthermore, an acute toxicity study was carried out to determine the safety of Helix aspersa Müller snail flesh. H. aspersa Müller snail flesh exhibits a high nutritional content, a good ω3/ω6 ratio and higher levels of unsaturated fatty acids. Various minerals have been found in the flesh of H. aspersa Müller. Around 76.91 kcal, or 3.84% of the energy of a daily meal of 2000 kcal, are present in 100 g of this flesh. The evaluation of the antioxidant capacity indicated that the flesh’s extracts contained a large quantity of antioxidant biomolecules. Administration of the aqueous extract of H. aspersa Müller flesh didn’t cause death in laboratory rats, indicating that the lethal dose 50 is greater than 2000 mg·kg−1 body weight. The consumption of the flesh of H. aspersa Müller is highly recommended for human consumption due to its high concentration of nutrients and essential elements, as well as unsaturated fats, and due to its safety.
Analysis and Reduction of Cellular Heterogeneity in Strain Optimization of Bacillus licheniformis
(2021)
Bacillus species invest substantial resources in inherent cellular processes for pre-adaptation to environmental changes, many of which are dispensable in the controlled environment of industrial bioprocesses. The underlying physiological mechanisms are well characterized in B. subtilis, but only little is known about these processes in the closely related B. licheniformis. Moreover, experimental conditions in previous studies differ from industrial settings in most parameters, foremost in batch cultures or plate-based analysis over fed-batch processes. In this thesis, cellular heterogeneity was analyzed in B. licheniformis in optimized, nutrient-rich media in batch and fed-batch cultivations. Systematic inactivation of genes involved in biofilm formation and synthesis of the flagellar apparatus or global regulators thereof resulted in higher protein production and provided new insights into biofilm formation and cellular heterogeneity in this strain.
Species of the genus Wolffia are traditionally used as human food in some of the Asian countries. Therefore, all 11 species of this genus, identified by molecular barcoding, were investigated for ingredients relevant to human nutrition. The total protein content varied between 20 and 30% of the freeze-dry weight, the starch content between 10 and 20%, the fat content between 1 and 5%, and the fiber content was ~25%. The essential amino acid content was higher or close to the requirements of preschool-aged children according to standards of the World Health Organization. The fat content was low, but the fraction of polyunsaturated fatty acids was above 60% of total fat and the content of n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids was higher than that of n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids in most species. The content of macro- and microelements (minerals) not only depended on the cultivation conditions but also on the genetic background of the species. This holds true also for the content of tocopherols, several carotenoids and phytosterols in different species and even intraspecific, clonal differences were detected in Wolffia globosa and Wolffia arrhiza. Thus, the selection of suitable clones for further applications is important. Due to the very fast growth and the highest yield in most of the nutrients, Wolffia microscopica has a high potential for practical applications in human nutrition.
Peatlands contribute to a wide range of ecosystem services. They play an important role as carbon sinks in their natural state, but when they are drained, they cause carbon emissions. Rewetting drained peatlands is required to reduce carbon emissions and create new carbon sinks. However, drained peatlands are commonly used as grassland or croplands; therefore, alternative agriculture schemes are required following rewetting. Paludiculture, i.e., agriculture on wet and rewetted peatlands, is an option in these areas after rewetting to produce biomass sustainably. Monitoring of peatland management is challenging, yet needed to ensure a successful rewetting and plantation of, e.g., Phragmites australis and Typha spp., two plants which are commonly used in paludiculture. Remote sensing is an excellent tool for monitoring the vegetation composition of vast rewetted peatland regions. However, because many peatland species have similar spectral characteristics, such monitoring is ideally based on high-spatial, high-temporal hyperspectral images. Data that complies with all these requirements does not exist on a regular basis. Therefore, we assessed the potential for mapping peatland vegetation communities in the Peene and Trebel river basins of the federal state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Germany, using multi-date hyperspectral (PRISMA) data. We used regression-based unmixing to map fractions of different peatland vegetation classes. Results were analyzed with regard to the contribution of multi-date observations and, in comparison, to multispectral datasets (Landsat-8/Sentinel-2). Our results showed that different classes are best mapped at different observation dates. The multi-date hyperspectral datasets produced less Mean Absolute Error (MAE = 16.4%) than the single-date hyperspectral images (ΔMAE + 1%), with high accuracies for all classes of interest. Compared to the results obtained with multispectral data from similar acquisition dates and annual spectral-temporal metrics (STM), the results from hyperspectral data were always clearly superior (ΔMAE + 4%). Besides the superior performance during comparisons, our results also indicate that information that can be derived from the hyperspectral data with the regression-based unmixing goes clearly beyond that of discrete classification. With more hyperspectral sensors coming up and an expected higher availability of multi-data hyperspectral imagery, these data can be expected to play a bigger role in the future monitoring of peatlands.
In agricultural grasslands, management practice highly determines reproductive success for ground-nesting bird species. The most effective conservation measure is the delay of first mowing dates until broods fledge or bird friendly mowing. Late mowing often implies economical losses for farmers and may increase land use abandonment, which will, in turn, cause habitat deterioration. Thus, grassland bird conservation involves the challenge to protect broods against land use and to promote an appropriate management to sustain habitat quality at the same time. Because of their late and extended breeding season Corncrakes Crex crex are in particular vulnerable to frequent mowing which increases nest destruction, chick mortality and habitat loss.
This thesis aims to gain knowledge on favourable habitat characteristics and brood protection in relation with grassland management to derive implications for the conservation of Corncrake breeding sites in floodplain meadows. Study area is the Lower Oder Valley National Park in northeastern Germany that holds a Corncrake population of 50 to 250 calling males. The study covered two study periods, before (1998-2000) and after (2012-2015) the implementation of new Corncrake conservation measures allowing inferences on the effects of different timing and intensity of mowing for brood protection and habitat conservation.
Breeding was only confirmed on meadows with high forb cover, low sedge cover, low litter heights and a close location to ditches. Radio-tracked females preferred areas with high cover of forbs (> 30%) and a distinct relief heterogeneity, which was associated with increased vegetation diversity. Vegetation characteristics on sites with day calling activity of males showed more similarity with breeding sites than with sites only used for nocturnal calling, supporting the assumption that diurnal calling indicates the occurrence of females. Favoured vegetation structure was best provided by mowing in the preceding year. Low-intensity grazing was less effective in reducing litter and sedge cover, especially when conducted late in the season. In the absence of management, meadows rapidly overgrow and dense litter accumulates from dead plant material in eutrophic floodplains, which increases walking resistance for Corncrakes and may impede prey accessibility. Plant species richness and forb cover declined after land use cessation. Male Corncrakes abandoned calling sites on meadows unmanaged for longer periods.
Besides the availability of suitable nesting sites, food supply and nest predation risk are also related to vegetation structure and may indirectly influence the habitat quality. Faecal samples of Corncrakes consisted mainly of beetles and their larvae, followed by snails, spiders and earthworms. Invertebrate biomass, sampled with pitfall-traps, was twice as high, the numbers of large ground beetles even five times higher on previously unmanaged than on managed meadows. Invertebrate abundance was highest in the first and second years after land use abandonment, but strongly decreased afterwards to a similar level like under annual management. Therefore, unmown refuge strips for Corncrake protection and alternating mowing also enhance invertebrate prey resources in floodplain meadows.
Mammals caused the majority of all observed artificial ground nest predations. Nest predation risk was higher on previously unmanaged than on managed sites. Unmanaged meadows probably attract mammalian predators, because they provide a more favourable vegetation structure for foraging and harbour high numbers of small rodents, increasing also the risk of incidental nest predations. These findings suggest that an annual removal of vegetation, if conducted late in the season to protect grassland birds may reduce predation risk of ground nests in the subsequent year.
Whereas during 1998-2000 half of the study area was managed by the end of July, land use was delayed on meadows occupied by Corncrakes until at least 15 July or 15 August during 2012-2015. On meadows mown between 15 July and 15 August refuge strips were applied. The majority of Corncrake broods were started in the second half of May and mowing postponement until 15 August allows 80% of chicks to fledge without disturbance in the study area. In 65% of broods chicks reach independence (> 14 days old) until 15 July and can be protected by Corncrake friendly mowing because then they are large enough to successfully escape during mowing. Both adults and chicks survived in 10 m wide refuge strips. Because most birds tried to leave the unmown block for the first time when it was up to 30 m wide and only 15 to 30 m wide strips served as temporary habitat for unfledged chicks from mowing to departure, 10 m should be considered as the absolute minimum width for refuge strips.
The strong reduction of land use especially during July should have allowed more chicks to survive until fledging in 2012-2015 than 1998-2000. Besides the protection of nests and higher chick survival, the decline of mowing intensity increased the extent of habitat available for second breeding attempts. In 2012-2015, broods were initiated until late July in the study area. Male Corncrakes showed continuous arrival and departure during the breeding season. Similar departure rates were estimated by a multi-state occupancy model and for radio-tracked males in the same study area and periods, which both left their home ranges spontaneous and due to the impact of mowing. Compared to 1998-2000, total departure of males during June and July was reduced by 50% in 2012-2015, when more calling sites were protected from mowing. Although male Corncrakes show high intra-seasonal dispersal due to their sequential polygamous breeding system, postponed land use should have increased mating opportunities and re-nesting at first breeding sites.
Therefore, future directions of Corncrake conservation in eutrophic floodplains should address the increase of annual late mowing to protect broods and maintain favourable habitat conditions by creating a more flexible mowing regime adjusted to actual occurrence of Corncrakes. This requires expert advice to farmers based on an intense monitoring of calling Corncrakes. Repeated nocturnal surveys during May and June are highly recommended because low detection probability in combination with constant departure substantially underestimated the number of males present. Additionally, diurnal calling activity could improve the identification of breeding sites and timing could be used to estimate chick age in July to select sites for Corncrake friendly mowing. Because currently late mowing dates are unattractive for farmers conservation actions should along with financial compensations for mowing after 15 August promote the utilization of late-cut grass with poor nutrient quality for combustion. Energy production could provide an alternative income for farmers operating in conservation areas with delayed land use dates and will increase their acceptance of Corncrake protection measures.
Transcriptional repression of regulated structural genes in eukaryotes often depends on pleiotropic corepressor complexes. A well-known corepressor conserved from yeast to mammalian systems is Sin3. In addition to Sin3, yeast Cyc8/Tup1 corepressor complex also regulates a diverse set of genes. Both corepressors can be recruited to target genes via interaction with specific DNA-binding proteins, leading to down-regulation of a large number of unrelated structural genes by associated histone deacetylases (HDACs). In vitro interaction studies performed in this work by GST pull-down assays showed that various repressor proteins (such as Whi5, Stb1, Gal80, Rfx1, Ure2, Rdr1, Xbp1, Yhp1, Rox1, Yox1, Dal80 and Mot3) are indeed able to bind pleiotropic corepressors Sin3 and/or Cyc8/Tup1. All repressors interacting with Sin3 contact its paired amphipathic helix domains PAH1 and/or PAH2. Mapping experiments allowed the characterization of minimum repressor domains and to derive a sequence pattern which may be important for repressor interaction with Cyc8 or Sin3. Interactions for some pathway-specific repressors such as Cti6 and Fkh1 have been studied comprehensively; minimal domains of Cti6 and Fkh1 required for interaction with Sin3 have been mapped and subsequently investigated by mutational analysis. In vitro interaction studies could show that amino acids 350-506 of Cti6 bind PAH2 of Sin3. To analyze this Cti6-Sin3 interaction domain (CSID) in more detail, selected amino acids within CSID were replaced by alanine. It turned out that hydrophobic amino acids V467, L481 and L491 L492 L493 are important for Cti6-Sin3 binding. The results of this work also suggest that repression is not executed entirely via Sin3, but rather CSID is also important for contacting pleiotropic corepressor Cyc8. In addition to PAH2 of Sin3, CSID also binds to tetratricopeptide repeats (TPR) of Cyc8. Furthermore, in vitro mapping studies revealed that Fkh1 also binds PAH2 of corepressor Sin3 via its N-terminal domain (aa 51-125). Binding studies with mutagenized Fkh1-Sin3 interaction domain (FSID) showed that Fkh151-125 variants L74A and I78A were unable to bind PAH2 of Sin3. Confirming in vitro studies, Cti6350-506 and Fkh151-125 also displayed in vivo interaction with PAH2 of Sin3 by using the “yeast two -hybrid” system. Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) analyses have demonstrated Cti6 recruitment to promoters of genes such as RNR3 and SMF3 containing iron responsive elements (IRE). Importantly, Sin3 was also recruited to these promoters but only in the presence of functional Cti6. Similarly, recruitment of Fkh1 and Sin3 to promoters of cell-cycle regulated genes CLB2 and SWI5 was shown. Recruitment of Sin3 was completely Fkh1-dependent. Additional findings of this work shed light on the fact that not only repressor proteins may contact Sin3 but also activator proteins not yet considered for interaction, e. g. specific activators such as Pho4 and Ino2. These findings indicate that Sin3 may fulfill functions beyond acting as a corepressor. In vitro studies on Sin3-Pho4 interaction showed that aa 156-208 of Pho4 are able to bind both PAH1 and PAH2 of Sin3, while an internal region of Ino2 comprising amino acids 119-212 binds to both Sin3 and Cyc8.
The Syilx Okanagan environmental ethic is a philosophy expressed in the practice of Indigeneity as a social (cultural) paradigm and is identified by an inter-reliant experience in the land, as demonstrated in land-use practice which is shaped by the land’s realities as observed, learned and communicated to succeeding generations. Syilx Okanagan Indigeneity reflects an epistemology that optimum human wellbeing cannot be achieved through a human centered ethic but must focus on the optimum ability for the environment to regenerate itself. Syilx Okanagan stories convey the social experience and act as a records system to preserve, maintain and transfer the knowledge of the land. On one level, captikwl contain essential specific environmental knowledge as an oral documentation method, while on another level, as literature, captikwl reconstructs the ethos of interdependency specific to the ecology of the Syilx Okanagan territory through reenactment of nature’s interactions. captikwl in the Nsyilxcen language mimics the dynamic aspects of nature’s required regenerative principles to each succeeding generation, and acts as a feed-back loop reconstructing the social paradigm as an environmental ethic. captikwl might be seen as a distinctly Indigenous human adaptive response scheme within a natural system as it constructs the Syilx Okanagan world and results in behavior with sustainable outcome in the environment. captikwl is a distinct oral artistry that must be read through a literary framework cognizant of oral memory device, structure and Syilx Okanagan context. Okanagan author Morning Dove’s collection of Okanagan stories, as well as, the Mattina and DeSautel bilingual collections and other original version captikwl were consulted. Captikwl demonstrates the concept of tmixw which better translates as a life-force. The word for land is tmxwulaxw, which translates better as a life-force-place, rather than land as location or ecology type. Syilx society demonstrates an “ecological conscience” as the common text through captikwl which is enacted in their social institutions in the manner theorized by respected American conservationist Aldo Leopold, as desirable to achieve within society. The Syilx environmental ethic, rather than a sustainable human ethic of utility, is a willingness to live within a strict imperative to continuously sustain a unity of existence through societal knowledge and reverent practice of respect toward all life-forms. The Syilx environmental ethic diverges from ecocentrism, as articulated by Callicott, in recognizing a fundamental distinction between non-life forms and life forms, in their ability for self-regeneration through inter-reliance, as the focus for delineating moral considerability. The Syilx environmental ethic differs from biocentrism, as articulated by Taylor, in recognizing moral considerability as resting with the on-going life form which is capable of regeneration within its ecology, rather than the singular biological unit. The Syilx environmental ethic also differs from the concept of the ethics of place, as articulated by Berthold-Bond and characterized as an ethical bioregional human utility of a location. Tmixw is the life-force which makes up the tmxwulaxw or life-force-place and the humans are only “placed” as a life-force themselves through Indigeneity as a social paradigm within a criteria of full reciprocity in the regeneration of all life forms of a place. The Syilx environmental ethic also differs from the ethic of sustainability proposed by Daly as a steady state economic model of human utilitarianism, in the positioning of nature treated as capital, to be prudently developed in a way that off-sets depletions of renewable and non-renewable resources in meeting human requirements. The Syilx Okanagan view of economy, while structurally a sustainability model, does not construct value based on human utility as a defining line in decision-making as to which life forms are to be devalued and displaced. Syilx Indigeneity is guided through a societal dialogue practice of Enowkinwixw, a process of decision-making structured to include living within the requirements of the land to fully regenerate. Syilx Okanagan Indigeneity frames an environmental ethic from a tmixwcentric position and offers a model proposing an ethic of re-indigenization as a path to sustainability. The thesis proposes a common text for human society in the form of such literatures, since literature is widely accessible, which demonstrate, imbed and advocate a regenerative land ethic towards the re-indigenization of place.
AbstractFluctuations of electron cyclotron emission (ECE) signals are analyzed for differently heated Wendelstein 7-X plasmas. The fluctuations appear to travel predominantly on flux surfaces and are used as ‘tracers’ in multivariate time series. Different statistical techniques are assessed to reveal the coupling and information entropy-based coupling analysis are conducted. All these techniques provide evidence that the fluctuation analysis allows one to check the consistency of magneto-hydrodynamic (MHD) equilibrium calculations. Expanding the suite of techniques applied in fusion data analysis, partial mutual information (PMI) analysis is introduced. PMI generalizes traditional partial correlation (Frenzel and Pompe Phys. Rev. Lett.
99 204101) and also Schreiber’s transfer entropy (Schreiber 2000 Phys. Rev. Lett.
85 461). The main additional capability of PMI is to allow one to discount for specific spurious data. Since PMI analysis allows one to study the effect of common drivers, the influence of the electron cyclotron resonance heating on the mutual dependencies of simultaneous ECE measurements was assessed. Additionally, MHD mode activity was found to be coupled in a limited volume in the plasma core for different plasmas. The study reveals an experimental test for equilibrium calculations and ECE radiation transport.
In this thesis, it was the subject to build a setup to study the interaction of clusters with intense laser light. A magnetron sputter cluster ion source was built to create metal clusters for the planned investigations. Furthermore, a linear Paul trap setup was built in order to allow the investigation of the mentioned interaction at one specific cluster size. The whole apparatus was characterized and first experiments were performed.
Recent experimental campaigns in the Wendelstein 7-X stellarator, a
plasma-confining device designed to investigate the Magnetic Confinement Fusion
(MCF) approach to generating electrical power, have shown that the injection of
fuelling pellets had an unexpected and considerable impact on the performance of
the plasma. Rather than simply refuelling the device and `diluting' the plasma
energy, pellet injection is followed by a significant increase in the ratio of
the ion temperature to the electron temperature. It has been suggested that this
is not merely due to the improved confinement following the reduction of
turbulent transport after the pellet material has homogenised with the bulk
plasma, but also due to a direct transfer of energy from electrons to ions. The
proposed mechanism for this energy transfer is the ambipolar expansion of the
pellet plasmoid, the localised plasma structure produced by the
ionisation of ablated pellet material, along magnetic field lines.
Early work on pellet plasmoid expansion predicted that half the heating power
deposited in plasmoid electrons by collisions with hot ambient electrons is
transferred to plasmoid ions in the form of flow velocity as the plasmoid
expands. The complicated nature of the system of the pellet plasmoid embedded in
the ambient plasma, particularly the behaviour of electrons, which experience
many collisional and collisionless phenomena on multiple disparate timescales,
means that early models of the expansion were not wholly self-consistent, but
rather made use of strong approximations that apply in some regions of the
plasmoid but not in others. For example, only electrons and ions associated with
the plasmoid were rigorously treated, meaning that the framework was one of
`expansion into vacuum'. Combined with the assumption of Maxwellian electrons,
this led to an electric potential that was unbounded at infinity. Naturally, the
validity of the conclusions of such a model are called into question because the
approximations lose their validity far from the plasmoid and as time advances,
yet predictions about the final state of the plasma are desired. A deeper
investigation is required: careful consideration of the phenomena in question
and the timescales (and lengthscales) on which they act must be made in order to
rigorously construct a model that is valid throughout the entire expansion.
The first two papers presented in this thesis iterate on the model established
in the paper that first predicted the electron-to-ion energy transfer; their aim
was to find out how the character of the expansion changes with a more
sophisticated and accurate description of various phenomena, while remaining
within the existing framework of expansion into vacuum. Ultimately, we find that
the qualitative character is unchanged, and that approximately half the heating
power deposited in plasmoid electrons is transferred to ions.
Two other papers in this thesis address the limitations of the original model.
This is achieved by properly considering the electron kinetic problem in a
plasmoid. One paper considers the electron kinetic problem when electrons are
highly isotropised. In this case the kinetic equation can be integrated to
remove all but two independent variables, which is the maximum possible
reduction considering it is a time-dependent problem. The full nonlinear
integro-differential Landau self-collision operator is integrated exactly and
few approximations are made, leading to a rather general kinetic equation.
However, for fuelling pellets some anisotropy in the electron distribution is
expected. Another paper considers the electron kinetic problem (and the entire
plasmoid expansion) allowing for electron anisotropy. Careful consideration of
the ordering of timescales of electron phenomena in a pellet plasmoid leads to a
steady-state kinetic problem that we call collisional quasi-equilibrium (QE). QE
appears in many ways similar to the collisional steady-state characterising a
true thermal equilibrium. It was found that the time-dependent kinetic problem
of the earlier paper, with isotropic electrons, produces the QE distribution
function, corroborating the existence of the QE state. We then take moments of
the electron kinetic equation that is valid on the expansion timescale, assuming
that the electron distribution is that given as the solution to the QE kinetic
problem. This is completely analogous to what is done to obtain the Braginskii
equations or any Chapman-Enskog theory. The result is a set of equations for the
long-term evolution of the macroscopic quantities that describe the distribution
function existing in a quasi-steady-state at each point in time. It is from this
point that one may feasibly describe the plasmoid expansion with an accurate
picture of the electron kinetics and finally obtain the electron-to-ion energy
transfer so desired in a rigorous model of the expansion.
From a broader point of view, the two frameworks provided by these rigorous
investigations of the electron kinetic problem serve as a basis for the future
study of plasmoids. Such a `first-principles' approach to plasmoid dynamics is
novel and interesting in its own right, but it will be demonstrated that such an
approach is essential for pellet plasmoids owing to the fact that they are
poorly described by the `standard tools' of plasma physics.
Using the QE framework it was found that, once more, about half the heating
power experienced by plasmoid electrons is transferred to plasmoid ions. The
incredible robustness of the prediction of such an energy transfer is, in the
author's opinion, the result of the self-similar nature of the expansion found
as a solution to the original model. As a rule, the profiles of self-similar
solutions tend to be attractors for the `real', more complicated, system, and
the qualitative predictions involving no parameters, of which the
electron-to-ion energy transfer is one, tend to be very sturdy.
Aside from fuelling pellets, composed of hydrogen or deuterium, one paper in
this thesis investigates the physics of high-Z pellets that are designed to
terminate the plasma safely in the event of a `disruption', where much of the
magnetic field energy is channelled into a runaway electron beam with
potentially disastrous consequences if the beam encounters a plasma-facing
component. The paper draws on the work carried out in the paper concerning the
kinetic problem of isotropised electrons in a plasmoid.
This thesis is `cumulative'; the vast majority of the work carried out is
described within a set of Papers, labelled A-E, placed at the back of the text.
There is a preceding `wrapper text' (given in numbered Sections) tasked with
introducing the reader to the topic, guiding the reader through the papers, and
expounding some of their main results. Some amount of material not present in
the papers is also provided in the wrapper text. Naturally, the wrapper text
mainly focusses on the results of the papers which are under my first
authorship. In the course of publishing papers over an extended period of time
the nomenclature is bound to vary. Although it is mostly consistent between the
papers, a few difference do arise, and the section `Common symbols and
subscripts' is provided in the frontmatter to alleviate confusion. Particular
care should be taken with the symbols x and z; both can refer to the
coordinate parallel to the magnetic field line, but in papers where z is used
for this purpose x tends to have another definition. In the wrapper text the
choice of symbols is generally chosen to reflect those in the corresponding
paper.
Most children use their fingers when learning to count and calculate. These sensorimotor experiences were argued to underlie reported behavioral associations of finger gnosis and counting with mathematical skills. On the neural level, associations were assumed to originate from overlapping neural representations of fingers and numbers. This study explored whether finger-based training in children would lead to specific neural activation in the sensorimotor cortex, associated with finger movements, as well as the parietal cortex, associated with number processing, during mental arithmetic. Following finger-based training during the first year of school, trained children showed finger-related arithmetic effects accompanied by activation in the sensorimotor cortex potentially associated with implicit finger movements. This indicates embodied finger-based numerical representations after training. Results for differences in neural activation between trained children and a control group in the IPS were less conclusive. This study provides the first evidence for training-induced sensorimotor plasticity in brain development potentially driven by the explicit use of fingers for initial arithmetic, supporting an embodied perspective on the representation of numbers.
Logging and sawing of timber using conventional tools by unskilled workers causes enormous damage to the valuable timber, residual stand, regeneration, and forest soil in Nepal. The purpose of this study was to find out the volume reduction factor and identify major strategies to reduce timber losses in the tree harvesting process in the Terai Shorea robusta forest of Nepal. Field measurements and product flow analysis of 51 felled trees from felling coupes and randomly selected 167 sawed logs were examined to study harvesting losses. Responses from 116 forest experts were analyzed to explore strategies for reducing harvesting and processing losses. The results showed that timber losses in the felling and bucking stage with and without stem rot were 23% and 22%, respectively. Similarly, timber losses in the sawing stage with and without stem rot were 31% and 30%, respectively. Paired t-test at 5% level of significance revealed that there was significant loss in both tree felling and log sawing stages with present harvesting practice. The most leading factor contributing to timber loss in all of the three stages was the use of inappropriate equipment during tree harvesting. Use of synthetic ropes for directional felling and skidding as well as flexible and portable sawing machine with size adjustment options during sawing were mainly recommended as strategies to reduce timber losses. This study serves as a baseline study to identify and quantify timber losses in different stages of tree conversion and also formulate their reduction strategies in Nepal.
Haloalkanes are serious environmental pollutants commonly employed as pesticides, herbicides, and chemical warfare agents. Although haloalkane production is performed mostly in the chemical industry, it also occurs naturally, mostly enzymatically (halide methyltransferases and haloperoxidases). Elimination of toxic haloalkanes is very important and using haloalkane dehalogenases is a promising and environmentally friendly way to achieve this.[53] Therefore, assays are needed for detecting dehalogenase activity either to find new enzymes or to generate laboratory-evolved variants. In this thesis, a new assay for dehalogenase activity was developed based on halide detection. In this assay halides, as dehalogenase products, are oxidized under mild conditions using the vanadium-dependent chloroperoxidase from Curvularia inaequalis, forming hypohalous acids that are detected using aminophenyl fluorescein.[53] This new halide oxidation assay is much more sensitive than previously known assays, with detection limits of 20 nM for bromide and 1 μM for chloride and iodide. Validation of the assay was done by comparison to a well-established GC-MS method in terms of determining the specific activities of two dehalogenases towards five common substrates (Figure 5).
The HOX assay was modified for iodide-specific detection by using two other dyes, o-phenylenediamine (OPD) and 3,3′,5,5′-tetramethylbenzidine (TBM), instead of APF. Also, selective bromide detection in the presence of the common contaminant chloride was achieved by using a bromoperoxidase. Since the assay relies on halide detection, it is possible to use it for other halide-producing enzymes (Section 8.1). For example, the TMB-modified version was used for screening of halide methyltransferase libraries towards various alkyl iodides.[166] Furthermore, the HOX assay was used to identify promiscuous dehalogenase activity of the epoxide hydrolase CorEH from Corynebacterium sp. C12.[105]
Moreover, studies showed that the HOX assay could be used with in-vitro synthesized protein. Selected dehalogenases, DhlA, DhaA, and DmmA, were synthesized in vitro and used in the assay; the product formation was also validated using GC-MS. In conclusion, the HOX assay can be used with purified protein, whole cells, or in vitro synthesized proteins.
The HOX assay application in microfluidic droplets was investigated since an ultra-high-throughput assay for haloalkane dehalogenases is needed. This investigation showed no leakage of reaction components and products in the short term (~24 h), based on tests done on water-in-oil droplets generated by microfluidic chips. Even though 20 μM droplets were not working, 70 μM droplets were successful for assay implementation. Since the Damborsky group in Brno (CZ) and the deMello group in Zürich (CH), have large dehalogenase libraries and more experience in microfluidics, respectively, we collaborated with these groups to finalize implementation of the assay in an ultrahigh-throughput format. Since the studies are ongoing, final results could not yet be shown in this thesis. However, it can be noted that the issue with 20 μm droplets has been sorted out since our collaborators in Brno noticed that the low fluorescence of the droplets is actually caused by excessive accumulation of fluorescein, which is self-quenching, resulting in low fluorescence once the concentration exceeds 1 μM. By lowering the APF concentration they could optimize the maximum amount of fluorescein formed, and a mutant library has now been successfully screened by our collaborators at the ETH. The last topic of the thesis was an investigation of converting an epoxide hydrolase into a haloalkane dehalogenase. These studies focused on increasing the minor dehalogenase activity of two previously identified epoxide hydrolase (Cif) variants. These Cif variants hardly led to soluble proteins, the PROSS algorithm was used to increase soluble expression. New variants of Cif were generated using a 3DM analysis and the PROSS[164] design. The activities of these variants were determined with the newly developed HOX assay in a whole-cell format. Cif23 E153N-H269D and the PROSS D7 E153N-H269D variant, were found being active against 1,2-dibromoethane. Since the determination of enzyme concentration was hard to measure due to the expression/purification problem, specific activities could not be determined. To solve this problem, a HiBiT-tag was added to the selected variants for determining soluble expression. However, the planned studies could not be completed because of a lack of time and will form the basis for a future study.
An Ultrasensitive Fluorescence Assay for the Detection of Halides and Enzymatic Dehalogenation
(2020)
Abstract
Halide assays are important for the study of enzymatic dehalogenation, a topic of great industrial and scientific importance. Here we describe the development of a very sensitive halide assay that can detect less than a picomole of bromide ions, making it very useful for quantifying enzymatic dehalogenation products. Halides are oxidised under mild conditions using the vanadium‐dependent chloroperoxidase from Curvularia inaequalis, forming hypohalous acids that are detected using aminophenyl fluorescein. The assay is up to three orders of magnitude more sensitive than currently available alternatives, with detection limits of 20 nM for bromide and 1 μM for chloride and iodide. We demonstrate that the assay can be used to determine specific activities of dehalogenases and validate this by comparison to a well‐established GC‐MS method. This new assay will facilitate the identification and characterisation of novel dehalogenases and may also be of interest to those studying other halide‐producing enzymes.
Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococci) are Gram-positive cocci and commensals of the human upper respiratory tract. Pneumococcal pathogenesis requires adherence to host cells and dissemination through cellular barriers and to evade host defense mechanisms. The Pneumococcal surface protein C (PspC) is an important virulence factor which has a crucial role in pneumococcal adhesion to host cells and immune evasion by manipulating the host complement system. To elucidate the pneumococcal adherence and uptake mechanism via factor H glycosaminoglycans (dermatan sulfate and heparin) were employed as competitive inhibitors in infection experiments with epithelial cells or human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs). Glycosaminoglycans significantly inhibited the FH mediated pneumococcal adherence and subsequent invasion to host epithelial cells. Furthermore, the short consensus repeats of FH which promotes the adhesion of pneumococci to host cells were identified by blocking experiments with domain mapped antibodies for specific regions of FH. Moreover, this study indicates that FH acts as adhesion molecule via cellular receptors recognized as integrin CR3 on human PMNs. Binding of Factor H loaded pneumococci to integrins CR3 was assessed by flow cytometry. Pneumococci coated with Factor H showed a significantly increased association with PMNs. This interaction was blocked by anti-CR3 antibodies and Pra1. This project further aims to study mechanisms of pneumococcal endocytosis by host cells, their intracellular fate, and the pathogen induced host cell signal transduction cascades including the calcium signaling upon pneumococcal infection of host cells via the PspC-hpIgR interaction. To assess now the role of protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs) during pneumococcal infection via PspC, cell culture infections were performed in presence of pharmacological inhibitors of PTKs and MAPKs or by employing genetic interference techniques. Blocking the function of Src or ER1/2 and JNK and genetic-knock down of Src and FAK reduced significantly internalization of pneumococci. These data indicated the importance of a coordinated signaling between Src PTKs, ERK1/2, and JNK during PspC-pIgR-mediated uptake of pneumococci by host epithelial cells. The impact of host cells intracellular calcium concentrations on pneumococcal PspC-hpIgR mediated internalization was studied. Intracellular calcium measurement of epithelial cells performed in the presence of pneumococci suggested a calcium influx in host epithelial cells and importantly this calcium influx was PspC- hpIgR specific as pspC-deficient pneumococci were unable to mediate calcium mobilization in host cells. The increase in intracellular calcium [Ca2+]i was dependent on phospholipase C as pretreatment of cells with a phospholipase C-specific inhibitor abolished the increase in [Ca2+]i. Furthermore, role of host intracellular calcium concentrations during pneumococcal internalization was demonstrated by employing specific pharmacological inhibitors and calcium chelators in epithelial cell culture infection assays. The results revealed that elevated host cells calcium concentrations diminished pneumococcal internalization while lower calcium concentration in host epithelial cells promoted pneumococcal uptake. This study further demonstrates that dynamin, clathrin and caveolin play a key role during pneumococcal endocytosis into host cells via PspC-hpIgR. The use of specific pharmacological inhibitors or genetic interference approaches against dynamin, clathrin and caveolin in epithelial cell culture infection assays significantly blocked pneumococcal uptake. Furthermore, confocal microscopy revealed that pneumococci co-localize with clathrin. At later stages of the infection the pathogen is sorted to early, late and recycling endosomes as indicated by co-localization of pneumococci with endosomal markers such as Rab5, Rab4, Rab 7, and Lamp1. In order to get further insights into PspC-hpIgR mediated uptake mechanisms, a chimeric PspC was constructed and expressed heterologously on the surface of Lactococcus lactis. Immunofluorescence staining, immunoblot and flow cytometric analysis of L. lactis confirmed the expression of PspC on the bacterial surface. Moreover the ability of recombinant lactococci expressing PspC to adhere to and to invade pIgR-expressing epithelial cells confirmed the functional activity of PspC when exposed on the lactococcal surface. PspC expressing lactococci confirmed the specificity of PspC-hpIgR mediated endocytosis in host epithelial cells as PspC deficient lactococci were not taken up by these host cells. Confocal microscopic analysis demonstrated that only PspC expressing lactococci were sorted to early, late and recycling endosomes, similar to the intracellular fate of S. pneumoniae.
Abstract
Alkali ion beams are among the most intense produced by the ISOLDE facility. These were the first to be studied by the ISOLTRAP mass spectrometer and ever since, new measurements have been regularly reported. Recently the masses of very neutron-rich and short-lived cesium isotopes were determined at ISOLTRAP. The isotope 148Cs was measured directly for the first time by Penning-trap mass spectrometry. Using the new results, the trend of two-neutron separation energies in the cesium isotopic chain is revealed to be smooth and gradually decreasing, similar to the ones of the barium and xenon isotopic chains. Predictions of selected microscopic models are employed for a discussion of the experimental data in the region.
The EyeFlowCell: Development of a 3D-Printed Dissolution Test Setup for Intravitreal Dosage Forms
(2021)
An in vitro dissolution model, the so-called EyeFlowCell (EFC), was developed to test intravitreal dosage forms, simulating parameters such as the gel-like consistency of the vitreous body. The developed model consists of a stereolithography 3D-printed flow-through cell with a polyacrylamide (PAA) gel as its core. This gel needed to be coated with an agarose sheath because of its low viscosity. Drug release from hydroxypropyl methylcellulose-based implants containing either triamcinolone acetonide or fluorescein sodium was studied in the EFC using a schematic eye movement by the EyeMovementSystem (EyeMoS). For comparison, studies were performed in USP apparatus 4 and USP apparatus 7. Significantly slower drug release was observed in the PAA gel for both model drugs compared with the compendial methods. Drug release from fluorescein sodium-containing model implants was completed after 40 min in USP apparatus 4, whereas drug release in the gel-based EFC lasted 72 h. Drug release from triamcinolone acetonide-containing model implants was completed after 35 min in USP apparatus 4 and after 150 min in USP apparatus 7, whereas this was delayed until 96 h in the EFC. These results suggest that compendial release methods may overestimate the drug release rate in the human vitreous body. Using a gel-based in vitro release system such as the EFC may better predict drug release.
Simple Summary
Recent clinical trials suggest that combination therapies that include either gemcitabine or 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) both give significant survival benefits for pancreatic cancer patients. The tumor level of the nucleoside transporter hENT1 is prognostic in patients treated with adjuvant gemcitabine but not adjuvant 5-FU. This work shows for the first time that hENT1 is only predictive of benefit from gemcitabine over 5-FU in patients with low levels of CDA transcript. A choice between adjuvant 5-FU based combination therapies (such as FOLFIRINOX) and gemcitabine-based therapy (e.g., GemCap) could be made based on a combination of hENT1 protein and CDA mRNA measured in a resected tumor.
Abstract
Gemcitabine or 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) based treatments can be selected for pancreatic cancer. Equilibrative nucleoside transporter 1 (hENT1) predicts adjuvant gemcitabine treatment benefit over 5-FU. Cytidine deaminase (CDA), inside or outside of the cancer cell, will deaminate gemcitabine, altering transporter affinity. ESPAC-3(v2) was a pancreatic cancer trial comparing adjuvant gemcitabine and 5-FU. Tissue microarray sections underwent in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry. Analysis of both CDA and hENT1 was possible with 277 patients. The transcript did not correlate with protein levels for either marker. High hENT1 protein was prognostic with gemcitabine; median overall survival was 26.0 v 16.8 months (p = 0.006). Low CDA transcript was prognostic regardless of arm; 24.8 v 21.2 months with gemcitabine (p = 0.02) and 26.4 v 14.6 months with 5-FU (p = 0.02). Patients with low hENT1 protein did better with 5-FU, but only if the CDA transcript was low (median survival of 5-FU v gemcitabine; 29.3 v 18.3 months, compared with 14.2 v 14.6 with high CDA). CDA mRNA is an independent prognostic biomarker. When added to hENT1 protein status, it may also provide treatment-specific predictive information and, within the frame of a personalized treatment strategy, guide to either gemcitabine or 5FU for the individual patient.
Divalent magnesium restores cytoskeletal storage lesions in cold-stored platelet concentrates
(2022)
Cold storage of platelet concentrates (PC) has become attractive due to the reduced risk of bacterial proliferation, but in vivo circulation time of cold-stored platelets is reduced. Ca2+ release from storage organelles and higher activity of Ca2+ pumps at temperatures < 15 °C triggers cytoskeleton changes. This is suppressed by Mg2+ addition, avoiding a shift in Ca2+ hemostasis and cytoskeletal alterations. We report on the impact of 2–10 mM Mg2+ on cytoskeleton alterations of platelets from PC stored at room temperature (RT) or 4 °C in additive solution (PAS), 30% plasma. Deformation of platelets was assessed by real-time deformability cytometry (RT-DC), a method for biomechanical cell characterization. Deformation was strongly affected by storage at 4 °C and preserved by Mg2+ addition ≥ 4 mM Mg2+ (mean ± SD of median deformation 4 °C vs. 4 °C + 10 mM Mg2+ 0.073 ± 0.021 vs. 0.118 ± 0.023, p < 0.01; n = 6, day 7). These results were confirmed by immunofluorescence microscopy, showing that Mg2+ ≥ 4 mM prevents 4 °C storage induced cytoskeletal structure lesion. Standard in vitro platelet function tests showed minor differences between RT and cold-stored platelets. Hypotonic shock response was not significantly different between RT stored (56.38 ± 29.36%) and cold-stored platelets with (55.22 ± 11.16%) or without magnesium (45.65 ± 11.59%; p = 0.042, all n = 6, day 1). CD62P expression and platelet aggregation response were similar between RT and 4 °C stored platelets, with minor changes in the presence of higher Mg2+ concentrations. In conclusion, increasing Mg2+ up to 10 mM in PAS counteracts 4 °C storage lesions in platelets, maintains platelet cytoskeletal integrity and biomechanical properties comparable to RT stored platelets.
In summer 2017, the World Health Organization published 10 facts on asthma, which is known as a major non-communicable disease of high clinical and scientific importance with currently several hundred million people—with many children among them—suffering from air passages inflammation and narrowing. Importantly, the World Health Organization sees asthma as being underdiagnosed and undertreated. Consequently, much more efforts in clinical disease management and research need to be spent on reducing the asthma-related health burden. Particularly, for young approximately 6 months aged patients presenting recurrent bronchitic respiratory symptoms, many parents anxiously ask the doctors for risk prognosis for their children's future life. Therefore, we urgently need to reevaluate if the current diagnostic and treatment measures are in concordance with our yet incomplete knowledge of pathomechanisms on exacerbation. To contribute to this increasing concern worldwide, we established a multicentric pediatric exacerbation study network, still recruiting acute exacerbated asthmatics (children >6 years) and preschool asthmatics/wheezers (children <6 years) since winter 2018 in Germany. The current study that has a currently population comprising 176 study participants aims to discover novel holistic entry points for achieving a better understanding of the poorly understood plasticity of involved molecular pathways and to define biomarkers enabling improved diagnostics and therapeutics. With this study description, we want to present the study design, population, and few ongoing experiments for novel biomarker research.
Clinical Trial Registration: German Clinical Trials Register (Deutsches Register für Klinische Studien, DRKS): DRKS00015738.
Although the nose, as a gateway for organism–environment interactions, may have a key role in asthmatic exacerbation, the rhinobiome of exacerbated children with asthma was widely neglected to date. The aim of this study is to understand the microbiome, the microbial immunology, and the proteome of exacerbated children and adolescents with wheeze and asthma. Considering that a certain proportion of wheezers may show a progression to asthma, the comparison of both groups provides important information regarding clinical and phenotype stratification. Thus, deep nasopharyngeal swab specimens, nasal epithelial spheroid (NAEsp) cultures, and blood samples of acute exacerbated wheezers (WH), asthmatics (AB), and healthy controls (HC) were used for culture (n = 146), 16 S-rRNA gene amplicon sequencing (n = 64), and proteomic and cytokine analyses. Interestingly, Proteobacteria were over-represented in WH, whereas Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes were associated with AB. In contrast, Actinobacteria commonly colonized HCs. Moreover, Staphylococcaceae, Enterobacteriaceae, Burkholderiaceae, Xanthobacteraceae, and Sphingomonadaceae were significantly more abundant in AB compared to WH and HC. The α-diversity analyses demonstrated an increase of bacterial abundance levels in atopic AB and a decrease in WH samples. Microbiome profiles of atopic WH differed significantly from atopic AB, whereby atopic samples of WH were more homogeneous than those of non-atopic subjects. The NAEsp bacterial exposure experiments provided a disrupted epithelial cell integrity, a cytokine release, and cohort-specific proteomic differences especially for Moraxella catarrhalis cultures. This comprehensive dataset contributes to a deeper insight into the poorly understood plasticity of the nasal microbiota, and, in particular, may enforce our understanding in the pathogenesis of asthma exacerbation in childhood.