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Approaches to the Analysis of Proteomics and Transcriptomics Data based on Statistical Methodology
(2014)
Recent developments in genomics and molecular biology led to the generation of an enormous amount of complex data of different origin. This is demonstrated by a number of published results from microarray experiments in Gene Expression Omnibus. The number was growing in exponential pace over the last decade. The challenge of interpreting these vast amounts of data from different technologies led to the development of new methods in the fields of computational biology and bioinformatics. Researchers often want to represent biological phenomena in the most detailed and comprehensive way. However, due to the technological limitations and other factors like limited resources this is not always possible. On one hand, more detailed and comprehensive research generates data of high complexity that is very often difficult to approach analytically, however, giving bioinformatics a chance to draw more precise and deeper conclusions. On the other hand, for low-complexity tasks the data distribution is known and we can fit a mathematical model. Then, to infer from this mathematical model, researchers can use well-known and standard methodologies. In return for using standard methodologies, the biological questions we are answering might not be unveiling the whole complexity of the biological meaning. Nowadays it is a standard that a biological study involves generation of large amounts of data that needs to be analyzed with a statistical inference. Sometimes data challenge researchers with low complexity task that can be performed with standard and popular methodologies as in Proteomic analysis of mouse oocytes reveals 28 candidate factors of the "reprogrammome". There, we established a protocol for proteomics data that involves preprocessing of the raw data and conducting Gene Ontology overrepresentation analysis utilizing hypergeometric distribution. In cases, where the data complexity is high and there are no published frameworks a researcher could follow, randomization can be an approach to exploit. In two studies by The mouse oocyte proteome escapes maternal aging and CellFateScout - a bioinformatics tool for elucidating small molecule signaling pathways that drive cells in a specific direction we showed how randomization can be performed for distinct complex tasks. In The mouse oocyte proteome escapes maternal aging we constructed a random sample of semantic similarity score between oocyte transcriptome and random transcriptome subset of oocyte proteome size. Therefore, we could calculate whether the proteome is representative of the trancriptome. Further, we established a novel framework for Gene Ontology overrepresentation that involves randomization testing. Every Gene Ontology term is tested whether randomly reassigning all gene labels of belonging to or not belonging to this term will decrease the overall expression level in this term. In CellFateScout - a bioinformatics tool for elucidating small molecule signaling pathways that drive cells in a specific direction we validated CellFateScout against other well-known bioinformatics tools. We stated the question whether our plugin is able to predict small molecule effects better in terms of expression signatures. For this, we constructed a protocol that uses randomization testing. We assess here if the small molecule effect described as a (set of) active signaling pathways, as detected by our plugin or other bioinformatics tools, is significantly closer to known small molecule targets than a random path.
Purines of exogenous and endogenous sources are degraded to uric acid in human beings. Concentrations >6.8 mg uric acid/dl serum cause hyperuricemia and its symptoms. Pharmaceuticals and the reduction of the intake of purine-rich food are used to control uric acid levels. A novel approach to the latter proposition is the enzymatic reduction of the purine content of food by purine-degrading enzymes. Here we describe the production of recombinant guanine deaminase by the yeast Arxula adeninivorans LS3 and its application in food. In media supplemented with nitrogen sources hypoxanthine or adenine, guanine deaminase (AGDA) gene expression is induced and intracellular accumulation of guanine deaminase (Agdap) protein occurs. The characteristics of the guanine deaminase isolated from wild-type strain LS3 and a transgenic strain expressing the AGDA gene under control of the strong constitutive TEF1 promoter were determined and compared. Both enzymes were dimeric and had temperature optima of 55°C with high substrate specificity for guanine and localisation in both the cytoplasm and vacuole of yeast. The enzyme was demonstrated to reduce levels of guanine in food. A mixture of guanine deaminase and other purine degradation enzymes will allow the reduction of purines in purine-rich foods.
The dentate gyrus (DG) of the hippocampus is one of the stem cell housing niches in the adult mammalian brain. Canonical Wingless-type (Wnt) signals provided by the microenvironment are one of the major niche factors that regulate the differentiation of adult neural stem cells (aNSCs) towards the neuronal lineage. Wnts are part of a complex and diverse set of signaling pathways with a wide range of possible interactions. It remains unknown whether different canonical and non-canonical Wnt signals act in a stage-specific manner to regulate distinctive steps of adult hippocampal neurogenesis. Using in vitro assays on adult hippocampal NSCs, we identified an attenuation of canonical Wnt/ß-Catenin signaling responsiveness in the course of neuronal differentiation, while non-canonical Wnt/Planar Cell Polarity (PCP) signaling events progressively increased. Single-cell genetic manipulations were performed by using retroviral vectors to target dividing progenitor cells in the murine hippocampus. Retrovirus-mediated knockdown of ATP6AP2, a recently discovered core protein involved in both Wnt signaling pathways, revealed that the dual role of this adaptor protein is dependent on the signaling context that is present. We were able to confirm its dual role in neurogenic Wnt signaling in cultured adult hippocampal progenitors (AHPs) for both canonical Wnt signaling in proliferating AHPs and non-canonical Wnt signaling in differentiating AHPs. Specific knockdown of ATP6AP2 in neural progenitor cells in vivo resulted in a decreased induction of neuronal cell fate and severe morphological defects of newborn neurons, likely via altering both canonical and non-canonical Wnt signaling. Furthermore, in vivo knockdown of PCP core proteins CELSR1-3 and FZD3 mimicked the maturational defects of ATP6AP2-deficient neuroblasts but did not affect granule cell fate. In summary, the data presented here characterize a transition of Wnt signaling responsiveness from Wnt/ß-Catenin signaling to non-canonical Wnt/PCP signaling in the course of granule cell fate that was confirmed in a human pluripotent stem cell (hPSC)-based model of dentate granule neurogenesis. Our findings suggest that these pathways show stage-dependent activities and regulate distinct steps of adult dentate granule cell neurogenesis. Conclusively, we provide evidence for a stage-specific regulation of fate determination through the Wnt/ß-Catenin pathway and granule cell morphogenesis through the Wnt/PCP signaling pathway, including the FZD3-CELSR1-3 system. Additionally, the Wnt adaptor protein ATP6AP2 is involved in earlier and later stages of adult neurogenesis and its knockdown in vivo resembles all phenotypic features of both canonical and Wnt/PCP signaling mutants.
Background: Alcohol dependence is among the most severely stigmatized mental disorders. We examine whether negative stereotypes and illness beliefs related to alcohol dependence have changed between 1990 and 2011. Methods: We used data from two population surveys with identical methodology that were conducted among German citizens aged ≥18 years, living in the ‘old' German states. They were conducted in 1990 and 2011, respectively. In random subsamples (1990: n = 1,022, and 2011: n = 1,167), identical questions elicited agreement with statements regarding alcohol dependence, particularly with regard to the illness definition of alcohol dependence and blame. Results: Overall, agreement with negative stereotypes did not change in the course of 2 decades. About 55% of the respondents agreed that alcohol dependence is an illness like any other, >40% stated that it was a weakness of character and 30% endorsed that those affected are themselves to blame for their problems. Conclusions: It is apparent that promoting an illness concept of alcohol dependence has not been an easy solution to the problem of stigma. We discuss how the normative functions of alcohol dependence stigma might have prevented a reduction of negative stereotypes.
During pregnancy, the maternal immune system faces a double dilemma: tolerate the growing semi-allogeneic fetus and at the same time protect the mother and the progeny against pathogens. This requires a fine and extremely regulated equilibrium between immune activation and tolerance. As professional antigen presenting cells, B cells and in particular B-1a B cells, can activate or tolerize T cells and thus participate in the generation or regulation of the immune response. B-1a B cells were involved in the humoral immune response leading to pre-eclampsia, one of the main medical complications during pregnancy. Here we demonstrated that B-1a B cells are additionally involved in cellular immune mechanisms associated with pregnancy complications. Using a mouse model of pregnancy disturbances, we showed that B-1a B cells from animals suffering pregnancy disturbances but not from those developing normal pregnancies induce the differentiation of naïve T cells into Th17 and Th1 cells. This differential role of B-1a B cells during pregnancy seems to be associated with the co-stimulatory molecule CD86 as normal pregnant mice showed lower percentages of CD86 expressing B-1a B cells as compared to pregnant mice developing pregnancy disturbances or to non-pregnant animals. Our data bring to light a new and not explored role of B-1a B cells in the context of pregnancy.
Heparin is an anticoagulant drug. It is important in the treatment of deep vein thrombosis,pulmonary embolism and during surgeries. Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) is a severe adverse reaction caused by the formation of ultralarge complexes of platelet factor 4 (PF4) with unfractionated heparin (UFH). It can lead to limb loss or fatal events like stroke, myocardial infarction or pulmonary embolism. HIT has an incidence of about 3% in patients receiving anticoagulative heparin treatment. PF4 is a tetrameric protein, released from the α-granules of platelets upon activation. PF4 is known to form antigenic complexes with UFH accompanied by structural changes of PF4. In this thesis, the size and size distribution of PF4 and PF4/heparin complexes were analyzed using asymmetrical flow field-flow-fractionation (AF4), photon correlation spectroscopy (PCS) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). PF4 tends to form auto-aggregates and to adsorb to different surfaces, including regenerated cellulose, polyethersulfone, quartz and glass. The aggregates are less pronounced in solutions at isotonic NaCl concentration. Arginine and Tween 20 were identified as possible ingredients to hinder the auto-aggregation of PF4. Also, it is shown by combining circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy (AFM) and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) with UFH and defined chain length (16-, 8-, 6-, 5-mer) heparins that structural changes (i.e., increase in β-sheets) alone are not sufficient to induce antigenicity. While UFH, 16-, 8-, and 6-mer heparins all induced an increase in the antiparallel β-sheet content to > 30% (as determined by CD spectroscopy), complex antigenicity as measured by anti-PF4/heparin antibody binding in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (EIA) was only induced by UFH and 16-mer heparin. Fondaparinux (5-mer heparin), which forms in vitro non-antigenic complexes with PF4, did not induce structural changes of PF4. Interestingly, the structural changes induced by antigenic UFH and 16-mer heparin but not by non-antigenic shorter heparins were reversible at higher heparin concentrations. Furthermore, the complexes formed by PF4 with longer heparins were larger than those formed with shorter heparins as shown by atomic force microscopy (AFM). UFH, HO16 and HO08 are able to form ultralarge multimolecular complexes with PF4. ITC data indicated strong electrostatic interactions and energetically unfavorable conformational changes of PF4 with longer heparins, while for the short heparins, favorable conformational changes in the structure of PF4 are induced. This explains the reversibility of the structural changes seen for UFH and HO16 upon addition of an over-saturating amount of heparin. Finally, using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) the thermal stability of PF4 and PF4/heparin complexes was assessed. Despite its tendency to form auto-aggregates, PF4 is a heat-stable protein. This stability is, length dependently, even increased in complex with heparins. This work shows important differences in the binding between PF4 and heparins of different chain length and might be relevant for the understanding of other biological functions of heparins (e.g., involvement in allergic and inflammatory reactions).
Chemistry and biology of Phenolics isolated from Myricaria germanica (L.) Desv. (Tamaricaceae)
(2014)
In accordance with the recent worldwide interest in plant phenolics, which emerges from their broad range of biological activities, particular emphasis has been focused, in the present thesis, on the constitutive phenolics of the extract of Myricaria germanica (L.) Desv. (Tamaricaceae). During the current thesis twenty phenolics (1 – 20) were isolated and identified from the aqueous/ethanol extract of the whole Myricaria germanica plant. The isolates include four hitherto unknown natural phenolics (2, 10, 12 and 20). Also, the cytotoxic activities of M. germanica extract, column fractions, and one new natural isolate against three different solid tumor cell lines, namely, breast cancer (MCF-7), prostate (PC-3), and liver (Huh-7) cancer cell using SRB viability assay have been investigated and first insights into mode of action have been obtained.
Congenital hyperinsulinism (CHI) causes hypoglycemia due to irregular insulin secretion. In infants, a rapid diagnosis and appropriate management to avoid severe hypoglycemia is mandatory. CHI is a heterogeneous condition at the clinical and genetic level, and disease-causing genes have been identified in about half of the patients. The majority of mutations have been identified in the ABCC8 and KCNJ11 genes encoding subunits of the K<sub>ATP</sub> channel responsible for two distinct histological forms. The diffuse form is caused by autosomal recessive or dominant inherited mutations, whereas the focal form is caused by a paternally transmitted recessive mutation and a second somatic event. We report on an unselected cohort of 136 unrelated patients from the German CHI registry. Mutations in either the ABCC8 or KCNJ11 gene were identified in 61 of these patients (45%). In total, 64 different mutations including 38 novel ones were detected in this cohort. We observed biparental (recessive) inheritance in 34% of mutation-positive patients, dominant inheritance in 11% and paternal transmission of a mutation associated with a focal CHI type in 38%. In addition, we observed inheritance patterns that do not exactly follow the classical recessive or dominant mode, further adding to the genetic complexity of this disease.
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.
Staphylococcus aureus is a human pathogen that can cause a wide range of diseases. Although formerly regarded as extracellular pathogen, it has been shown that S. aureus can also be internalized by host cells and persist within these cells. In the present study, we comparatively analyzed survival and physiological adaptation of S. aureus HG001 after internalization by two human lung epithelial cell lines (S9 and A549), and human embryonic kidney cells (HEK 293). Combining enrichment of bacteria from host-pathogen assays by cell sorting and quantitation of the pathogen's proteome by mass spectrometry we characterized S. aureus adaptation during the initial phase between 2.5 h and 6.5 h post-infection. Starting with about 2 × 106 bacteria, roughly 1450 S. aureus proteins, including virulence factors and metabolic enzymes were identified by spectral comparison and classical database searches. Most of the bacterial adaptation reactions, such as decreased levels of ribosomal proteins and metabolic enzymes or increased amounts of proteins involved in arginine and lysine biosynthesis, enzymes coding for terminal oxidases and stress responsive proteins or activation of the sigma factor SigB were observed after internalization into any of the three cell lines studied. However, differences were noted in central carbon metabolism including regulation of fermentation and threonine degradation. Since these differences coincided with different intracellular growth behavior, complementary profiling of the metabolome of the different non-infected host cell types was performed. This revealed similar levels of intracellular glucose but host cell specific differences in the amounts of amino acids such as glycine, threonine or glutamate. With this comparative study we provide an impression of the common and specific features of the adaptation of S. aureus HG001 to specific host cell environments as a starting point for follow-up studies with different strain isolates and regulatory mutants.
This study validates a newly-developed scale of consumer culture at individual-level in purchase-consumption context. Following unipolar approach in measurement, the applicable-reliable scale for consumer culture analyzes plausible effects of the seven cultural dimensions on three selected consumer-behaviors; anticipated regret, and two further purchase behaviors of variety-seeking and Quality-consciousness, comparing both Hedonic and Utilitarian aspect of consumer decisions. The interaction among the three behavioral variables are also studied. Feeling the necessity of cultural investigations in rather-unknown countries, Iran and Germany are focused.Iran is among the culturally undiscovered markets with an ever increasing demand; also German consumers have several unknown aspects in their purchase behaviors. Finally, the role of contextual elements — nationality, demographic profile and task— in consumer purchase behaviors are separately analyzed.
Magnetic reconnection is a ubiquitous phenomenon observed in a wide range of magnetized plasmas from magnetic confinement fusion devices to space plasmas in the magnetotail. The process enables the release of accumulated magnetic energy by rapid changes in magnetic topology, heating the plasma in the vicinity of the reconnection site, generating fast particles and allowing a wealth of instabilities to grow. This thesis reports on the results from a newly constructed linear, cylindrical and modular guide field reconnection experiment with highly reproducible events, VINETA.II. A detailed analysis of the reconnecting current sheet properties on a macroscopic and microscopic scale in time and space is presented. In the experiment, four parallel axial wires create a figure-eight in-plane magnetic field with an X-line along the central axis, as well as an axial inductive field that drives magnetic reconnection. Particle-in-cell simulations show that the axial current is limited by sheaths at the boundaries and that electrostatic fields along the device axis always set up in response to the induced electric field. Current sheet formation requires an additional electron current source, realized as a plasma gun, which discharges into a homogeneous background plasma created by a rf antenna. The evolution of the plasma current is found to be dominantly set by its electrical circuit. The current response to the applied electric field is mainly inductive, which in turn strongly influences the reconnection rate. The three-dimensional distribution of the current sheet is determined by the magnetic mapping of the plasma gun along the sheared magnetic field lines, as well as by radial cross-field expansion. This expansion is due to a lack of equilibrium in the in-plane force balance. Resistive diffusion of the magnetic field by E=η j is found to be by far insufficient to account for the high reconnection rate E=-dΨ/dt at the X-line, indicating the presence of large electrostatic fields which do not contribute to dissipative reconnection. High-frequency magnetic fluctuations are observed throughout the current sheet which are compared to qualitatively similar observations in the Magnetic Reconnection Experiment (MRX, Princeton). The turbulent fluctuation spectra in both experiments display a spectral kink near the lower hybrid frequency, indicating the presence of lower hybrid type instabilities. In contrast to the expected perpendicular propagation of mainly electrostatic waves, an electromagnetic wave is found in VINETA.II that propagates along the guide field and matches the whistler wave dispersion. Good correlation is observed between the local axial current density and the fluctuation amplitude across the azimuthal plane. Instabilities driven by parallel drifts can be excluded due to the large required drift velocities or low resulting phase velocities that are not observed. It is instead suggested that a perpendicular, electrostatic lower hybrid mode indeed exists that resonantly excites a parallel, electromagnetic whistler wave through linear mode conversion. The resulting fluctuations are found to be intrinsic to the localized current sheet and are independent of the slower reconnection dynamics. Their amplitude is small compared to the in-plane fields, and have a negligible contribution to anomalous resistivity through momentum transport in the present parameter regime.
In the search for new antifungal agents, this study dealt with the antimicrobial screening, extraction, isolation, structural elucidation as well as selective biological investigations of the isolated compounds. In addition, the impact of the culture conditions on growth and on biosynthesis of bioactive compounds was also studied. Besides, selective cyanobacteria were axenized and the taxonomy as well as the genetic relationship of axenic cyanobacteria that produced bioactive compounds with some other cyanobacteria was identified basing on the 16S rRNA gene sequences. 22 Vietnamese and 6 German cyanobacterial strains were screened for their antifungal activity using the agar diffusion assay. Among them, the MeOH/water extract from the biomass obtained from a laboratory culture of strain Bio 33, isolated from the Baltic Sea near Rügen Island, exhibited a specific antifungal activity against Candida maltosa and others human pathogenous fungi such as Candida albicans, Candida krusei, Aspergillus fumigatus, Microsporum gypseum, Trichophyton rubrum and Mucor sp. Besides, it was very impressed that extracts of strain Bio 33 showed no antibacterial activity against Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Bacillus subtilis, and Staphylococcus aureus. The taxonomy basing on 16S rRNA gene sequence of the axenic Bio 33 identified this strain as Anabaena cylindrica species. As a result of the bioassay-guided fractionation of the crude MeOH/water extract, four new lipopeptides, named balticidins A – D, were isolated. These lipopeptides represent a new structural type with the co-occurrence of a glycosylated cyclic peptide, a fatty acid containing chlorine and a disaccharide moiety. The main active fraction isolated from the MeOH/water extract of the biomass of Bio 33 which contains the four lipopeptides exhibited only marginal cytotoxic activity against the human bladder carcinoma cell line 5637 (IC50 = 93 μg/ml). The weak cytotoxic activity and the absence of antibacterial effects in the used in vitro test systems opens a promising future for further investigations to clarify the antifungal mechanism and for in vivo applications of the new lipopeptides. Different media, temperature, light intensity and period of irradiance, the depletion of nitrate and the trace element cobalt were investigated to figure out conditions at which Bio 33 produces maximum of balticidins under laboratory conditions. Temperature was the most apparent factor influencing the growth of Bio 33 and the production of balticidins. Bio 33 grew best in BG 11 medium plus 0.5% NaCl at 26°C, under white fluorescent continuous light and a light intensity of 20 μmol photons m-2 s-1. Nevertheless, under the same conditions, 22.5°C was the best temperature for the production of balticidins. Besides, harvesting of Bio 33 during the logarithmic growth phase, particularly at 20th day, should supply approximately maximum quantity of balticidins. At 22.5°C and 20 μmol photons m-2 s-1 under 24 h continuous irradiance, the depletion of nitrate had no negative effect on the growth and concentration of balticidin A but increased balticidin B and decreased balticidin C; the absence of cobalt slightly decreased the growth but had no clear effect on the production of balticidins. On the other hand, extracts of the culture medium of the Vietnamese cyanobacterium TVN40, exhibited antifungal activity against Candida maltosa and weak antibacterial activity. Extraction of the culture medium with XAD-16 and elution of the XAD-bounded compounds by different solvents resulted in five fractions (water, 80% MeOH, 100% MeOH, acetone, dichloromethan). Four compounds have been isolated from the 80% MeOH fraction and one was identified as a dioxindole derivative. Structural elucidation of the other three compounds is still in progress. TVN40 was formerly identified as an Anabaena sp. according to the morphological properties, but the 16S rRNA gene sequence confirms that the strain belongs to the genus Nostoc. Microscopic examination of TVN40 revealed that the filamentous strain was not a unialgal but a mixed culture with strange round cells (SRCs) - a unicellular cyanobacterium belonging to the order Chroococcales. Laboratory cultures of the pure filamentous strain TVN40, the isolated SRCs and the mixed culture of both strains were established. Both TVN40 and SRC culture media were responsible for the antibacterial activity against B. subtilis, S. aureus and E. coli. However, only the extract of the culture medium of TVN40 was active against C. maltosa. The supplement of cobalt enhanced the antimicrobial activity of the culture medium. Pure strains showed higher activity in comparison to the mixed culture of TVN40 and SRC.
Oral drug delivery is the preferred route of administration for the majority of drugs. Solid dosage forms arewell-accepted because of ease of administration, accurate dosing and high degree of patient compliance. The orodispersible technology platform has attracted increasing interest. Fast disintegrating in the mouth before swallowing, orodispersible dosage forms like orodispersible tablets (ODTs) address the need for patient-compliant medicines. ODTs represent a convenient alternative to conventional tablets or capsules. ODTs are an interesting approach when a rapid onset of therapeutic action is important. So far, ODTs have often been considered as an innovative variant of conventional oral solid dosage forms. Still, the development of ODT formulations is typically assisted by compendial in vitro test methods. However, the techniques described in international pharmacopoeias are non-specific for ODTs. After administration, the dispersion of an ODT in the mouth may provide effects which might influence the absorption of the drug. The performance of ODTs is more comparable to solutions/suspensions than to traditional tablets. To better guide the development of a new ODT formulation, this lack needs to be addressed. It is the aim of this work to design more specific in vitro test methods helping to improve understanding ODT formulations. To reflect the physiological conditions experienced by an ODT after administration, particular attention was given to the mouth where the ODT disperses and releases the drug before swallowing. In vitro biorelevant test setups simulating in vivo conditions were designed. An electronic tongue system was used to assess taste properties of ODTs. These test methods were applied in different stages of the ODT formulation development. Diclofenac being a poorly soluble and weakly acidic NSAID which is a standard medication for acute painful inflammatory conditions was used as a drug model. Three forms, i.e. the free acid and its sodium/potassium salt, were investigated for the formulation of palatable and fast acting ODTs. In Chapter 1, the development of biorelevant test setup reflecting the physiological conditions experienced by ODTs is described in detail. The newly-designed in vitro models successfully discriminated the different diclofenac forms in successive in vitro compartments simulating the mouth, the stomach and the small intestine. It was possible to identify peculiar dissolution profiles with diclofenac salts. Characterizing in-depth the diclofenac free acid and salt particles provided a better understanding of the peculiar dissolution profiles. Critical behaviors of diclofenac salts on their way from the mouth to the stomach and passing different pH conditions were extensively evaluated. Reasons for pH-dependent API precipitation and particle agglomeration were studied in detail. In pre-formulation studies, the proposed biorelevant test setups succeeded in helping to early identify critical pharmaceutical properties for diclofenac salts and to select diclofenac free acid as the most appropriate drug form providing the most stable in vitro performance. In Chapter 2, the electronic tongue method as an in vitro taste assessment tool for ODTs is proposed. Using the TS-5000Z taste sensing system (Insent Inc., Japan), the method was able to differentiate between the taste/aftertaste qualities and intensities of the three diclofenac candidates. The electronic tongue was also successfully used to differentiate different ODT formulations. The results obtained proved that valuable information can be gained. By this means, the taste perception of the diclofenac drug candidates were classified and rank against each other. For manufacturing taste-masked ODTs, diclofenac free acid, could be selected easily. The electronic tongue found out to be a precious tool in assisting the development of a new ODT product and finding the most appropriate multi-component formulation. Both proposed methods successfully showed their discriminative ability and also their utility in pre-formulation studies of ODTs. In the previous chapters, it was indeed possible to early select diclofenac free acid as the most suitable drug candidate for the targeted product profile. In Chapter 3, said methods were further used to guide the development of the taste masked diclofenac ODT formulation. This study highlights the importance of considering in vitro the physiological aspects which may have an impact on the in vivo performance of ODT dosage forms. The contact of ODTs with the mouth should be simulated in vitro for a better understanding of the in vivo behavior. With feasible biorelevant in vitro dissolution methods, an optimized correlation of in vitro and in vivo results may be achieved. The proposed in vitro test methods may provide data of predictive value and may support the rational development of ODT formulations.
Within this thesis the protein engineering, immobilization and application of enzymes in organic synthesis were studied in order to enhance the productivity of diverse biotransformations. Article I is a review about Baeyer-Villiger monooxygenases (BVMO) and provides a detailed overview of the most recent advantages in the application of that enzyme class in biocatalysis. Protein engineering of a former uncharacterized polyol-dehydrogenase (PDH) identified in the mesothermophilic bacterium Deinococcus geothermalis 11300 is described in Article II. Article III covers the combination of one PDH mutant with a BVMO in a closed-loop cascade reaction, thus enabling direct oxidation of cyclohexanol to ε-caprolactone with an internal cofactor recycling of NADP(H). Article IV and Article V report a process optimization for transamination reactions due to a newly developed immobilization protocol for five (S)- and (R)-selective aminotransferases (ATA) on chitosan support. Furthermore, the immobilized ATAs were applied in asymmetric amine synthesis. In Article VI, an ATA immobilized on chitosan, an encapsulated BVMO whole cell catalyst and a commercially available immobilized lipase were applied in a traditional fixed-bed (FBR) or stirred-tank reactor (STR), and were compared to a novel reactor design (SpinChem, SCR) for heterogeneous biocatalysis.
SummaryBackground: According to the literature, ductoscopy is gaining increasing importance in the diagnosis of intraductal anomalies in cases of pathologic nipple discharge. In a multicenter study, the impact of this method was assessed in comparison with that of standard diagnostics. Patients and Methods: Between 09/2006 and 05/2009, a total of 214 patients from 7 German breast centers were included. All patients underwent elective ductoscopy and subsequent ductal excision because of pathologic nipple discharge. Ductoscopy was compared with the following standard diagnostics: breast sonography, mammography, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), galactography, cytologic nipple swab, and ductal lavage cytology. The histological and imaging results were compared and contrasted to the results obtained from the nipple swab and cytologic assessment. Results: Sonography had the highest (82.9%) sensitivity, followed by MRI (82.5%), galactography (81.3%), ductoscopy (71.2%), lavage cytology (57.8%), mammography (57.1%), and nipple swab (22.8%). Nipple swabs had the highest (85.5%) specificity, followed by lavage cytology (85.2%), ductoscopy (49.4%), galactography (44.4%), mammography (33.3%), sonography (17.9%), and MRI (11.8%). Conclusion: Currently, ductoscopy provides a direct intraoperative visualization of intraductal lesions. Sensitivity and specificity are similar to those of standard diagnostics. The technique supports selective duct excision, in contrast to the unselective technique according to Urban. Therefore, ductoscopy extends the interventional/diagnostic armamentarium.
The present thesis deals with dynamic structures that form during the expansion of plasma into an environment of much lower plasma density. The electron expansion, driven by their pressure, occurs on a much faster time scale than the ion expansion, owed to their mobility. The high inertia of the ions causes the generation of an ambipolar electric field that decelerates the escaping electrons while accelerating the ions. The ambipolar boundary propagates outwards and forms a plasma density front. For a small density differences, the propagation of the front can be described with the linear ansatz for ion acoustic waves. For a large density differences, experiments have shown that the propagation velocity of such a front is still related to the ion sound velocity. However, the reported proportionality factors are scattered over a wide range of values, depending on the considered initial and boundary conditions. In this thesis, the dynamics during plasma expansion are studied with the use of experiments and a versatile particle-in-cell simulation. The experimental investigations are performed in the linear helicon device Piglet. The experiment features a fast valve, which is used to shape the neutral gas density profile. During the pulsed rf-discharges, plasma is generated in the source region and expands collisionless into the expansion chamber. The computer simulation is tailored very close to the experiment and provides a deeper insight in the particle kinetics. The experimental results show the existence of a propagating ion front. Its velocity is typically supersonic and depends on the density ratio of the two plasmas. The ion front features a strong electric field. The front can have similar properties to a double layer is not necessarily a double layer by definition. The computer simulation reveals that the propagating electric field repels the downstream ambient ions. These ions form a stream with velocities up to twice as high as the front velocity. The observed ion density peak is due to the accumulation of the repelled ions and is located at their turning point. The ion front formation depends strongly on the initial ion density profile and is part of a wave-breaking phenomenon. The observed front is followed by a plateau of little plasma density variation. This could be confirmed for the expansion experiment by a comparison with virtual diagnostics in the computer simulation. The plateau has a plasma density determined by the ratio between the high and low plasma density. It consists of streaming ions that have been accelerated in the edge of the main plasma. The presented results confirm and extend findings obtained by independent numerical models and simulations.
The laser-matter interaction is a topic of current research. In this context, the interaction of intensive laser radiation with atomic clusters is of special interest. Du to the small cluster size, the laser field can penetrate the whole cluster volume, which leads to a high absorption of energy in the cluster. As a result, plasmas with high density and high temperature are produced. In the early phase of the laser-cluster interaction, free electrons are initially created in the cluster due to tunnel ionization or photoionization. Via collisions of these electrons with the cluster atoms, the ionization is increased and thus a dense nanoplasma is produced, which is heated by the laser. If free electrons leave the cluster during the laser-cluster interaction (outer ionization), a positive charge buildup is created. The associated charge repulsion finally can lead to the fragmentation of the cluster due to Coulomb explosion. Experimentally, interesting phenomena emerging from laser-excited clusters are observed, e.g., the creation of fast electrons, the production of highly charged ions, and X-ray emission. In this dissertation, the interaction of Gaussian laser pulses in the infrared regime with argon and xenon clusters is simulated by means of a nanoplasma model. Considering laser intensities in the non-relativistic regime, the relevant processes such as ionization, heating and expansion are theoretically described in this model with a set of coupled rate equations and hydrodynamic equations. One focus of the thesis is on the heating of the nanoplasma via inverse bremsstrahlung (IB), which is due to the absorption of laser photons in electron-ion collisions. In particular, the important question is investigated whether the consideration of the ionic structure – that means, the nuclear charge and the bound electrons – modifies the electron-ion collisions and thus the IB heating rate. Starting from a quantum statistical description, effective electron-ion potentials are used which account for both the screening due to the dense plasma and the inner ionic structure. Within the quantum mechanical first Born approximation, the consideration of the ionic structure leads to a drastic increase of the IB heating rate, in particular for high nuclear charges and low ionic charge states. However, for the parameters relevant in experiments, the applicability of the first Born approximation is questionable. Therefore, quantum mechanical calculations going beyond the first-order perturbation theory are performed. In addition, the IB heating rate is investigated with different classical methods. These are based either on transport cross sections for elastic electron-ion scattering or on classical simulations of inelastic scattering processes. Also within the classical approaches, the consideration of the ionic structure leads to an increase of the heating rate. However, this increase is shown to be only moderate. In a further part, the thesis focuses on the question how the dynamics of the laser-cluster interaction is influenced by the consideration of excited states. This is explored exemplarily for argon clusters excited by single or double laser pulses. The consideration of excitation processes in the nanoplasma leads to a decrease of the electron temperature and to an increase of the density of free electrons. Moreover, it is shown that the consideration of excitation processes results in an essential acceleration of the ionization dynamics. As a consequence, the mean ionic charge state in the plasma as well as the number of highly charged ions is significantly increased. For the population of ground states and excited states within an ionic charge state Z, collisional deexcitation processes play an important role. By means of an analytical relation between excitation and deexcitation cross sections, the rates for the respective processes in the presence of the laser field are calculated. The role of deexcitation processes is studied in detail, showing that the inclusion of these processes is essential for the correct theoretical description of the photon emission from laser-excited clusters. Based on these results, the photon yield is calculated for selected radiative transitions resulting from highly charged argon ions in the UV and X-ray regime.
Non-healing wounds pose a major burden to patients and health care systems alike. These wounds are chronically stuck in the inflammatory phase of the healing process without transitioning to the proliferative phase. They are also characterized by the excessive presence of leukocytes which are assumed to provoke the persistent inflammation observed in pathological wound healing. Recent studies suggested a beneficial role of cold physical plasma in the treatment of chronic wounds. Hence, it was the central question, whether exposure to cold physical plasma would affect the viability and/or function of human leukocytes. Cold plasma displays various properties of which the generation of reactive molecules, such as reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (ROS/RNS), where found to be central in mediating redox changes in leukocytes. Oxidative stress was present especially in lymphocytes that readily underwent apoptosis after exposure to plasma. This was largely a direct consequence of plasma-generated hydrogen peroxide but not superoxide or RNS. Amount of apoptosis was comparable among several lymphocyte subpopulations, with the wound healing-relevant γδ T cells being least affected. Lymphocyte apoptosis was accompanied by mitochondrial membrane depolarization, caspase 3 activation, DNA fragmentation, and phosphatidylserine exposure. These results are in line with previous characterizations of the intrinsic apoptotic pathway in redox biology, and suggest that plasma-induced apoptosis was not mediated by alternative molecular mechanisms. An important immune response mechanism, the proliferation of lymphocytes, was not interrupted in plasma-treated but non-apoptotic cells. In wounds, a central role of leukocytes is to orchestrate the healing response via the release of small communication molecules called cytokines. Non-healing wounds are associated with elevated amounts of pro-inflammatory IL-1β, IL-6, and TNFα, and plasma-treatment of leukocytes strongly decreased their concentrations. At the same time, the expression of anti inflammatory cytokines (IL-10, TGFβ) was markedly increased. The pro inflammatory chemokine IL-8 was the only molecule to be significantly increased in supernatants of plasma-treated cells. IL-8 is the major chemo-attractant for neutrophil granulocytes. Neutrophils are frequently associated with non-healing wounds. These professional phagocytes are the first to migrate to the site of injury where they inactivate invading pathogens by various mechanisms. Importantly, highly relevant effector functions remained mostly unaffected by plasma treatment: the phagocytosis of bacteria, the oxidative burst, and the intracellular killing of microbes. Of note, plasma induced a strong induction of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). Decorated with antimicrobial proteins, NETs are web-like chromatin extrusions that entrap pathogens. These results have several implications for wound healing. Plasma-treated neutrophils were still capable of eradicating bacteria, which are frequently associated with non-healing wounds. In addition, plasma-induced NETs could aid in wound healing by providing an antibacterial scaffold to safeguard against further dissemination of microorganisms. Chronic wounds display a state of sustained inflammation and plasma induced apoptosis but not necrosis in lymphocytes. This was an important finding as necrosis, the involuntary cell death, is associated with the release of intracellular content, enhancing inflammation. By contrast, apoptosis dampens it as dead cells are cleared by macrophages inducing anti inflammatory responses. Further, the cytokine signature of plasma-treated leukocytes was largely non inflammatory, which could further decrease inflammation in wounds. Altogether, this work provided first insight with regard to effects and mechanisms of cold physical plasma treatment of wound-relevant leukocytes. Generally, these cells were affected by a plasma mediated modulation of their redox state. Future studies should include the possibility of redox modulation into their experimental approach to further elucidate the role of ROS/RNS in inflammation and possibly to improve existing wound healing therapies.
In summary, the transcriptome data demonstrated that acute RAP for 7h induces significant changes in the expression of several left atrial genes, including those reflecting ANG II-mediated oxidative stress, tissue remodeling, and energy depletion. Furthermore, the results from the dronedarone study demonstrated that this drug is capable of attenuating most of RAP-induced changes in oxidative stress-related gene expression. Accordingly, the haemodynamic parameters also showed that dronedarone reduced RAP-induced microvascular flow abnormalities. This view is supported by the observation that in the used porcine model of acute AF, dronedarone decreased RAP-dependent PKC phosphorylation, NADPH isoform expression, F2-isoprostane release and IκBα phosphorylation. Additionally, the results of the irbesartan study indicate that ET-1 contributes to AF-dependent atrial fibrosis by synergistic activity with ANG-II to stimulate SGK1 expression and enhance phosphorylation of the SGK1 protein which, in turn, induces CTGF. The latter has been consistently associated with tissue fibrosis. In support of this view, in vitro analyses using HL-1 cells verified CTGF induction after short episodes of RAP and additionally in response to exogenous addition of ET-1. Accordingly, irbesartan was shown to attenuate most of the RAP-dependent changes in atrial or ventricular gene expression.
Because of its antimicrobial properties, nonthermal plasma could serve as an alternative to chemical antisepsis in wound treatment. Therefore, this study investigated the inactivation of biofilm-embedded Pseudomonas aeruginosa SG81 by a surface barrier-discharged (SBD) plasma for 30, 60, 150 and 300 s. In order to optimize the efficacy of the plasma, different carrier gases (argon, argon admixed with 1% oxygen, and argon with increased humidity up to approx. 80%) were tested and compared against 0.1% chlorhexidine digluconate (CHG) exposure for 600 s. The antimicrobial efficacy was determined by calculating the difference between the numbers of colony-forming units (CFU) of treated and untreated biofilms. Living bacteria were distinguished from dead by fluorescent staining and confocal laser scanning microscopy. Both SBD plasmas and CHG showed significant antimicrobial effects compared to the untreated control. However, plasma treatment led to a higher antimicrobial reduction (argon plasma 4.9 log<sub>10</sub> CFU/cm<sup>2</sup>, argon with admixed oxygen 3 log<sub>10</sub> CFU/cm<sup>2</sup>, and with increased gas humidity 2.7 log<sub>10</sub> CFU/cm<sup>2</sup> after 300 s) compared to CHG. In conclusion, SBD plasma is suitable as an alternative to CHG for inactivation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa embedded in biofilm. Further development of SBD plasma sources and research on the role of carrier gases and humidity may allow their clinical application for wound management in the future.
In this thesis we have revisited the formation of the excitonic insulator (EI), which realizes an exciton condensate. In contrast to optically created exciton condensates, the EI forms in thermal equilibrium and is solely driven by the Coulomb attraction between electrons and holes. The EI phase is anticipated to occur near the semimetal-semiconductor (SM-SC) transition at low temperatures. Depending from which side the EI is approached, it forms due to a BCS-type condensation of electron-hole pairs or a Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) of excitons. The extended Falicov-Kimball model (EFKM) is the minimal model the EI can be described with. This model describes spinless fermions in two dispersive bands (f band and c band), that interact via a local Coulomb repulsion. The EFKM is also used to describe electronic ferroelectricity (EFE). Both phases, the EI and EFE-type ordering, are characterized by a spontaneous f-c hybridization in the EFKM. We have presented the EI phase, the EFE phase, and the orderings they compete with. Moreover, we have determined the ground-state phase diagram of the EFKM. We have focused particularly on the anticipated BCS-BEC crossover within the EI and have analyzed the formation scenarios. The exciton spectrum and the exciton density in the normal phase close to the critical temperature give information about relevant particles and therefore the nature of the transition. We have demonstrated that the whole EI is surrounded by a halo", that is, a phase composed of electrons, holes and excitons. However, on the SM side, only excitons with a finite momentum exist. These excitons appear only in a small number and barely influence the SM-EI transition. This phase transition is driven by critical electron-hole fluctuations, generated by electrons and holes at the Fermi surface. On the SC side, excitons with arbitrary momenta exist. Most notably, we have found the number of zero-momentum excitons to diverge at the SC-EI transition, signaling the BEC of these particles. Within the EI phase, there is a smooth crossover from the BCS regime to the BEC regime. One of the promising candidates to observe the EI experimentally, is the transition-metal dichalcogenide 1T-TiSe2. Strong evidences were found favoring an EI scenario of the charge-density-wave (CDW) formation in this material. However, some aspects point to a lattice instability to drive the CDW transition. We have addressed this issue by analyzing the recently discovered chiral property of the CDW in 1T-TiSe2. We have found that the EI scenario is insufficient to explain a stable, long range chiral charge ordering. Lattice degrees of freedom must be taken into account. In particular, nonlinear electron-phonon coupling and phonon-phonon interaction are crucial. By estimating appropriate model parameters for 1T-TiSe2, we have suggested a combination of excitonic and lattice instability to drive the CDW transition in this material. Experiments in 1T-TiSe2 and other materials suggest that the coupling to the lattice is non-negligible. We have extended therefore the model by an explicit exciton-phonon interaction, and have analyzed crucial effects of this interaction. While the single-particle spectrum is not modified qualitatively, the electron-hole pair spectrum changes significantly. The inclusion of the phonons lead to a massive collective mode in the ordered ground state in contrast to the case for vanishing exciton-phonon coupling, where the mode is acoustic. We have suggested that a gapless collective mode leads to off-diagonal long range order. This questions that the ground state for finite exciton-phonon coupling represents a condensate.
The region surrounding the excitonic insulator phase is a three-component plasma composed of electrons, holes, and excitons. Due to the extended nature of the excitons, their presence influences the surrounding electrons and holes. We analyze this correlation. To this end, we calculate the density of bound electrons, the density of electrons in the correlated state, the momentum-resolved exciton density, and the momentum-resolved density of electron-hole pairs that are correlated but unbound. We find qualitative differences in the electron-hole correlations between the weak-coupling and the strong-coupling regime.
During the past decade, various physical properties of the Yukawa ball, like structure and energy states, were unraveled using experiments. However, the dynamical features served further attention. Therefore, the main aim of my thesis was to investigate and understand how a finite system-represented by Yukawa clusters-evolves from a solid, crystalline structure to a liquid-like system, how it behaves in this phase and in what manner the reordering back into the solid state can be described. As a method of choice to reach this goal, laser heating has been proven successful. Moreover, the special importance of wakefields for dust clusters confined at low neutral gas pressure was addressed. Melting of finite dust clouds can be induced in two ways, either by altering the properties of the ambient plasma or by laser heating. The latter was shown to be a generic melting scenario, allowing to estimate a critical coupling parameter at the melting point. Moreover, the melting transition of finite 3D dust systems was found to be a two-step process where angular order is lost before the radial order starts to diminish at higher energies. Next, the mode dynamics of finite 3D dust ensembles in the solid and the liquid phase was studied. Crystal and fluid modes revealed the main spectral properties of the system. The normal modes are mainly suited to describe crystalline states. Fluid modes were excited naturally and via laser heating, with excitation frequencies almost independent of the coupling parameter in the solid and the liquid-like regime. Tuning the plasma parameters can be used to vary the particle-particle interaction via the ion focus. Both methods, even though assuming equilibrium situations, allowed to hint at these wakefields. The corresponding peaks in the fluid and normal mode spectra were no eigenmodes, confirming the nonequilibrium character of the ion focusing effect. First steps to extend the normal mode theory to achieve the dynamics of wake-affected nonequilibrium dust clusters were presented. Statistical quantities were obtained evaluating long-run experiments and transport coeffcients for finite dust systems were calculated via the instantaneous normal mode technique. Diffusion was found considerably higher for 3D than for 2D dust clusters. Using the configurational entropy, we have shown that in 2D and 3D disorder increases with increasing size of the system, in agreement with simulations. The temperature dependence of the configurational entropy differs for 2D and 3D dust clouds, with a threshold behavior found for finite 2D ensembles only. Finally, using instantaneous normal modes to reveal the total fraction of unstable modes, the predictive connection of Keyes (Phys Rev E 62, p7905, 2000), between transport and disorder was tested and verified for 2D, but not for 3D clusters. The reason for this has to be left open. Finally, laser-mediated recrystallization processes of finite 3D dust clouds were investigated. First, the temporal evolution of the Coulomb coupling parameter was traced during heating and recrystallization. A cooling rate has been determined from the initial phase of recrystallization. This cooling rate is lower than damping by the neutral gas, in agreement with simulations. We have observed a large fraction of metastable states for the final cluster configurations. Further, we have revealed that the time scale for the correlation buildup in the finite 3D ensemble was on even slower scales than cooling. Thus, different time scales can be attributed to the fast emergence of the shells and to the slower individual ordering within the shells.
The central aim of this thesis was the investigation of protein/polyanion interaction using circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy, enzyme immune assay (EIA), isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and flow cytometry (FC). A further aim was to understand why an endogenous protein becomes immuno-genic when forming a complex. The focus was on the protein platelet factor (PF4), which gained wide interest in the clinical field, due to its role in the life-threatening, immune-driven, adverse drug effect heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT). PF4 is a small homotetrameric chemokine with several basic amino acids on its surface, forming a positively charged ring. The antibodies that are formed during HIT recognize an epitope exposed on PF4, when it is in a complex with heparin at a certain molar ratio at which, PF4 tetramers are aligned on the heparin and forced into close approximation. The main results and conclusions of the thesis are summarized below: 5.1 Evolutionary Conservation of PF4 (Paper I – PF4/Evolution) By carrying out an amino acid sequence survey we found that the positively charged amino acids contributing to the heparin binding site on the surface of PF4 and related proteins are highly conserved in all vertebrates, including fish species. PF4 interacts with the phospholipid lipid A, the innermost part of the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of Gram negative bacteria. We showed that the shorter the sugar chain of the O antigen, outer and inner core of the LPS were the more PF4 was binding. The interaction of PF4 with lipid A is inhibited by heparin, suggesting that the amino acids known to contribute to heparin binding are also involved in binding to lipid A. 5.2 PF4 Interaction with Polyanions (PA) of varying Length and Degree of Sulfation (Paper II – PF4/PA) CD spectroscopy was found to be a powerful technique to monitor structural changes of PF4 caused by binding to various clinically relevant polyanions. Therefore PF4 was titrated with different PA to investigate the dependencies: i. impact of the PF4:PA molar ratio, ii. degree of polymerization of the PA and iii. degree of sulfation of the PA. In all cases, exposure of HIT-relevant epitope(s) was only observed for PA that also induced changes in secondary structure of PF4. A comparison of results of an immune ¬assay with CD spectroscopic data showed that the extent of complex anti¬genicity correlates well with the magnitude of changes in PF4 secondary structure, and that the structural changes of PF4 have to exceed a certain threshold to achieve PF4/PA complex antigenicity. These findings allowed us to calculate expectation intervals for complex antigenicity solely using CD spectroscopic data. To our knowledge, this was the first demonstration that the capability of drugs to induce antigenicity of PF4 can be assessed without the necessity of in vivo studies or the use of antibodies obtained from immunized patients specific for the antigens. The antigenicity of PF4 in complex is not restricted to negative charges originating from sulfate groups, PA with phosphate groups are also capable (binding to phospholipids). We investigated inorganic polyphosphates (polyP) with a chain length of 75 Pi and showed that the induced secondary structural changes are even higher compared to the changes induced by the different heparins and that the PF4/P75 complexes are antigenic as well. 5.3 PF4 Interaction with defined oligomeric Heparins (Paper III – PF4/defined Heparins) We tested highly purified, monodisperse heparins. In contrast to the clinically relevant but relatively undefined (high polydispersity index) glycosamino glycans reported in paper II (PF4/PA). The defined heparins induced higher secondary structural changes. Here we showed for the first time that strong conformational changes during PF4/PA complex formation are necessary but not sufficient for to the expression of the anti-PF4/heparin antibody binding site. Also, the size of the complexes is not the only prerequisite for anti-PF4/heparin antibody binding (tested by atomic force microscopy). By ITC we found that antigenicity is only induced if the PF4/PA complex has a high binding enthalpy and the complex formation leads to a negative change in entropy. 5.4 PF4/Polyphosphates (polyP) Complex Antigenicity and Interaction with Escherichia coli (E. coli, Paper IV – PF4/polyP) PolyP with chain lengths of 45 Pi and 75 Pi induced remarkable secondary structural changes in the PF4 molecule, thereby exposing the epitope recognized by anti-PF4/heparin antibodies. The induced conformational changes were similar to the changes induced by the defined heparins. Again a high binding enthalpy was observed but here in connection with a positive change in entropy. Further we showed that polyP (≥45 Pi) enhance PF4 binding to the surface of Gram negative E. coli at intermediate concentration and disrupt the binding at elevated polyP concentrations. The increased amounts of PF4 on the bacterial surface also improved the binding of anti-PF4/heparin antibodies and thereby the phagocytosis of the bacteria by poly¬morpho¬nuclear leucocytes. 5.5 Nucleic acid based Aptamers induce structural Changes in the PF4 Molecule (Paper V – PF4/Aptamer) Nucleic acids are another class of molecules containing phosphate groups. Especially after cell damage their extra¬cellular concentration can be locally quite high (>2 mg/ml). We found that certain aptamers form complexes with PF4 and thereby inducing anti-PF4/aptamer antibodies which cross-react with PF4/heparin complexes. Moreover by CD spectroscopy we showed that the protein C-aptamer caused similar secondary structural changes of PF4 like heparin, but already at much lower concentration. The maximally induced changes by the protein-C aptamer were even higher and persisted over a broader concentration range. 5.6 Protamine Interaction with Heparin (Paper VI – PS/Heparin) After the intensive investigation of the complex formation between PF4 and many different classes of PA we assessed another protein for structural changes upon complex formation with heparin. Protamine (PS) a protein in routinely used in post-cardiac surgery to reverse the anticoagulant effects of heparin was found to unfold but not to refold with increasing concentration of PA in solution. 5.7 Conclusion and Outlook When starting this thesis, it was believed that repetitive structures formed by PF4 on a heparin chain mold the epitope recognized by antibodies inducing HIT. These repetitive structures might exhibit similarities with viral capsids and are therefore recognized by the immune system of some patients. We found that induced by the close approximation PF4 changes its conformation, thereby exposing a neoepitope. The conserved positively charged amino acids of the heparin binding site and the involvement of these amino acids in the binding to lipid A confirm our hypothesis of PF4 as part of an ancient immune-mediated host defense mechanism. As possible consequence of the “primitive mechanism of defense” the highly variable O-antigens of LPS might have significantly contributed to an efficient escape mechanism by hiding the structures that made the bacteria vulnerable. In turn polyP might be an adaption of the host improve pathogen recognition by PF4 and further by antibodies inducing phagocytosis of the PF4-marked objects. Although shown only for PF4 and PS, our findings might be applicable to other proteins that also express epitopes upon changes in their secondary structure. Our physicochemical methods may further be applied: i. to drug development for the prediction of antigenicity induced by polyanionic drugs, ii. to guide the development of synthetic heparins and other polyanion based drugs, e.g. aptamers, that do not lead to HIT and iii. to provide relevant aspects for other biological functions of heparins.
The extraction of raw materials in mining, as for example copper, generally requires a separation of the natural resources quarried. In most cases complex ores, mixtures of different minerals and gangue have to be separated in order to enable an economic processing. In particular for the extraction of sulfides, oxides, carbonates, phosphates, but also of coal, froth flotation is mainly used for this purpose, therefore it is considered as the most important separation process in raw material industries. Several billion tons of ores are processed annually. The principle of flotation is based on the surface properties of the mixtures components and the separation efficiency, which decisively determines the required amount of water and various chemicals, if nothing else, is an important criterion in mineral exploration and it also significantly influences the environmental impact of mineral processing. The aim of, this work was to investigate the influence, of, low-temperature plasmas on the mineral surface and, based on the acquired knowledge, to develop and verify strategies that would increase the efficiency of flotation processes through plasma pre-treatment of mineral mixtures. Since these studies are unprecedented, the results presented can be classified as a contribution to application-oriented basic research. Powder of the sulfide minerals, pyrite (FeS2), chalcopyrite (CuFeS2), chalcocite (Cu2S) and molybdenum sulfide (MoS2), were treated with plasmas of a radiofrequency and a microwave discharge and the resulting surface modifications were investigated by structure analysis such as X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and X-ray diffraction (XRD). During the plasma process, the argon/oxygen and argon/hydrogen process gas mixtures used were analyzed by mass spectrometry (MS), taking into account the quantity of gaseous reaction products released, in order to estimate the rate at which chemical reactions occur. Furthermore, Langmuir and thermal probes, as well as different methods of optical emission spectrometry (OES) were utilized, which enabled a characterization of the discharges used with regard to different plasma parameters. It has been shown that sulfur dioxide (SO2) in Ar/O2 plasmas and hydrogen sulfide (H2S) in Ar/H2 plasmas are the only reaction products which can be detected by MS during the mineral treatments. Thus, the resulting sulfur rate loss could be time-resolved determined by means of additional calibrations with calibrating gases. Especially at Ar/O2-MW plasma treatments two fundamental mechanisms of mineral modification could be separated by time. Pure plasma-surface interactions at the beginning and, additionally, thermally induced reactions in during the evolution of the treatments. Comparisons regarding the relative sulfur loss during plasma-surface interactions between the investigated minerals have shown a strong influence of the process parameters whereas, under identical conditions, CuFeS2 reacted up to eight and nineteen times faster reacted than FeS2 or Cu2S. This result represents the basis of the strategy to optimize the flotation of the minerals investigated: The selective generation of oxides on the surface of one component in a mixture of sulphide minerals. In particular, at the separation of CuFeS2/FeS2 mixtures by using the oxide collectors Flotinor Fs-2 in a micro flotation cell, a high selectivity could be achieved. The recovery of CuFeS2 amounted to 100 % while less than 10 % of FeS2 was recovered and no other modifying reagents were used. XPS and XRD analyses indicate the possibility that metal oxide are created upon the CuFeS2 surface, while the formation of iron sulfates upon the FeS2 surface prevented the oxide collector adsorption. An increased intensity of the plasma treatment leads to an increased sulphate formation also on CuFeS2, whereas the recovery, and thus the selectivity of the flotation, was reduced again. It could be shown that this effect can be utilized for the separation of, CuFeS2/MoS2 mixtures by using both, oxide and sulfide collectors, because sulfates are not formed on molybdenum sulfide during Ar/O2 plasmas treatments. By means of the plasma diagnostics used the energy input onto the substrate, the gas temperature and the degree of dissociation of molecular gases were estimated and correlations regarding the surface modification have been worked out. Thereby, the region investigated within the parameter space could be enlarged due to the use of different excitation frequencies, 13.56 MHz and 2.45 GHz, and additional insights have been provided. Further studies, beyond the scope of this work, are, nevertheless, required in order to generate a more comprehensive picture of plasma-mineral interactions and to enable an optimal application of the obtained results.
The systemic renin-angiotensin system (RAS) is an endocrine system that is mainly known to regulate blood pressure, fluid and electrolyte balance as well as volume homeostasis in the body through different active metabolites, the angiotensin (Ang) peptides. In addition, local renin-angiotensin systems have been discovered in various tissues, including the islet of Langerhans. Starting with angiotensinogen, the precursor of all angiotensin peptides which is cleaved into the decapeptide Ang I by renin, the RAS is divided into three axes. The main classical RAS axis is composed of angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE), angiotensin (Ang) II, and the Ang II type 1 receptor (AT1R), whereas the two alternative RAS axes comprise either ACE2, Ang-(1-7) and the receptor Mas or the aminopeptidase N (APN), Ang IV and the insulin-regulated aminopeptidase (IRAP). The activation of the main ACE/Ang II/AT1R RAS axis has been associated with metabolic syndrome, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and islet dysfunction. The detrimental effects resulting from the pathological activation of this axis have been shown to be attenuated or even abolished by the pharmacological inhibition of components of the main RAS axis. However, the impact of the two alternative ACE2/Ang-(1-7)/Mas and APN/Ang IV/IRAP RAS axes on islet function is less well understood. Previous studies mainly focused on the possible protective actions of Ang-(1-7) via the receptor Mas in insulin-sensitive tissues and on well known risk factors of metabolic syndrome (insulin resistance, hyperglycemia, obesity, hypertension and dyslipidemia). Thus, the impact of this axis on β-cell function and, in particular, insulin production and release was examined in the present study. Glucose and fatty acids have been subjects of diabetic research because they are established pathophysiologically relevant features of the metabolic syndrome and are known to harm β cells, phenomena which are referred to as gluco- or lipotoxicity, respectively. The pathophysiologically relevant factors glucose, saturated fatty acid (FA) palmitic acid (PA), and the methyl ester of the omega-3 fatty acid docosahexaenoic acid (DHA-ME) were used in the present study to characterize the local β-cell RAS as well as β-cell function under pathophysiological conditions. Results of the present work demonstrate the expression of selected components of the RAS in isolated murine islets of Langerhans and the rat insulinoma cell line BRIN-BD11 under basal conditions. The alternative ACE2/Ang-(1-7)/Mas and APN/Ang IV/IRAP RAS axes were activated by high glucose in BRIN-BD11 cells after 24 h. Coincidently with these findings insulin production was found to be increased. In contrast, the expression of components of the main ACE/Ang II/AT1R RAS axis and the Ang II type 2 receptor (AT2R) were not affected under the same conditions (Härdtner et al., 2013). Both FAs, PA and DHA-ME were shown to alter the expression of components of the renin-angiotensin system in BRIN-BD11 cells. PA increased the expression of AT1R, the receptor of the main RAS axis, and of AT2R, whereas that of the receptor of the alternative ACE2/Ang-(1-7)/Mas RAS axis, Mas, appeared to be down-regulated at basal low glucose concentrations (5.5 mM). These effects were accompanied by a dose-dependent reduction of the insulin production and secretion. In contrast, DHA-ME augmented the expression of components of the ACE2/Ang-(1-7)/Mas axis and IRAP at low glucose concentrations, an effect which could be partially enhanced under high glucose conditions (25 mM). At basal glucose concentrations DHA-ME reduced the insulin secretion, whereas it was increased under high glucose conditions. However, the insulin mRNA amount remained unaffected by DHA-ME. Additionally, in contrast to glucose and palmitic acid, DHA-ME significantly increased the production of reactive oxygen species, at least hydrogen peroxide after 30 min. Expression alterations of components of the alternative ACE2/Ang-(1-7)/Mas RAS axis by glucose and PA correlated strongly with the corresponding insulin secretion and production. Therefore, an involvement of the ACE2/Ang-(1-7)/Mas RAS axis in the regulation of insulin secretion and production was hypothesized and validated in primary islets of Langerhans of both Mas-deficient and wild-type mice. Islets were exposed to the preferred natural ligand for Mas, Ang-(1-7), or to its pharmacological agonists or antagonists, respectively....
Objective: Epithelioid sarcoma (ES) presents unique clinical features in comparison to other sarcoma subtypes. Data regarding the benefits of chemotherapy are very limited. Combination regimens using gemcitabine and docetaxel (Gem/Doce) have proven to be effective, especially in uterine and nonuterine leiomyosarcoma. Yet, there is no available data on the efficacy of Gem/Doce in ES. Methods: A retrospective analysis of the three participating institutions was performed. Twenty-eight patients with an ES diagnosis presented at one of the participating institutions between 1989 and 2012. Of this group, 17 patients received chemotherapy. Results: Patients' median overall survival (OS) after the beginning of palliative chemotherapy was 21 months, and the 1-year OS was 87%. Twelve patients received Gem/Doce with a clinical benefit rate of 83%. The median progression-free survival (PFS) was 8 months for all patients receiving Gem/Doce. The best response was complete remission in 1 patient and partial remission in 6 patients. All 6 patients receiving Gem/Doce as a first-line treatment showed measurable responses with a median PFS of 9 months. Conclusions: In this retrospective study, Gem/Doce was an effective chemotherapeutic regimen for ES. Prospective studies are needed to better assess the effects of this combination drug therapy.
Magnetic reconnection is a fundamental plasma process where a change in field line connectivity occurs in a current sheet at the boundary between regions of opposing magnetic fields. In this process, energy stored in the magnetic field is converted into kinetic and thermal energy, which provides a source of plasma heating and energetic particles. Magnetic reconnection plays a key role in many space and laboratory plasma phenomena, e.g. solar flares, Earth’s magnetopause dynamics and instabilities in tokamaks. A new linear device (VINETAII) has been designed for the study of the fundamental physical processes involved in magnetic reconnection. The plasma parameters are such that magnetic reconnection occurs in a collision-dominated regime. A plasma gun creates a localized current sheet, and magnetic reconnection is driven by modulating the plasma current and the magnetic field structure. The plasma current is shown to flow in response to a combination of an externally induced electric field and electrostatic fields in the plasma, and is highly affected by axial sheath boundary conditions. Further, the current is changed by an additional axial magnetic field (guide field), and the current sheet geometry was demonstrated to be set by a combination of magnetic mapping and cross-field plasma diffusion. With increasing distance from the plasma gun, magnetic mapping results in an increase of the current sheet length and a decrease of the width. The control parameter is the ratio of the guide field to the reconnection magnetic field strength. Cross-field plasma diffusion leads to a radial expansion of the current sheet at low guide fields. Plasma currents are also observed in the azimuthal plane and were found to originate from a combination of the field-aligned current component and the diamagnetic current generated by steep in-plane pressure gradients in combination with the guide field. The reconnection rate, defined via the inductive electric field, is shown to be directly linked to the time-derivative of the plasma current. The reconnection rate decreases with increasing ratio of the guide field to the reconnection magnetic field strength, which is attributed to the plasma current dependency on axial boundary conditions and the plasma gun discharge. The above outlined results offer insights into the complex interaction between magnetic fields, electric fields, and the localized current flows during reconnection.
Governance and Management of Tourism in two Biosphere Reserves in Ecuador: Galapagos and Sumaco
(2014)
Tourism is multi-faceted phenomenon and various stakeholders, levels of government, and sectors are closely interlinked. Governmental and non-governmental institutions, local communities, diverse professionals, and different sectors and tourists do show various perspectives about the management of tourism. In this dissertation, a comprehensive analysis on the current situation of tourism in two biosphere reserves (Galapagos and Sumaco) in Ecuador is presented. Tourism is considered as one of the key strategies to promote environmental conservation and socio-economic development of local communities living in these places. UNESCO biosphere reserves are protected areas of extraordinary natural and cultural value, conceived as places for reconciliation between conservation and development. The concept of sustainable tourism can be seen as an umbrella that unites various forms of tourism in these protected areas (e.g. ecotourism, community-based tourism). The primary objective was to evaluate the main factors of success and failure in the management of tourism and its contribution to biodiversity conservation. Thus, a detailed review of the legal, political, and institutional framework of the country and a description of the two biosphere reserves (physical, biogeographic, demographic, socio-economic, institutional and legal elements) was given. Data collection for the case studies (Galapagos and Sumaco) was performed by the combination of qualitative and quantitative methods. As for qualitative tools, in-depth semi-structured interviews with the main stakeholders in both biosphere reserves were applied. Experts and specialists in the management of protected areas, as well as representatives of different sectors directly and indirectly associated with tourism were interviewed. Moreover, surveys were applied to two different target groups. Tourists were surveyed in order to establish their socio-demographic profile, travel preferences, and degree of knowledge about sustainable tourism, as well as their perception of the sustainability of tourism in the destinations visited. Furthermore, residents in both reserves were surveyed in order to find out about their socio-demographic characteristics, their main economic activities for supporting themselves and their attitude towards tourism, their level of knowledge about biosphere reserves, and their perception about advantages or disadvantages of living in a biosphere reserve. In general, although tourism is a concept that could be developed in accordance with the environment in these natural areas, in the case of Galapagos it is one of the main risk factors for the conservation of biodiversity in the archipelago due to the increasing number of tourists. In contrast, in Sumaco tourism could be an important sustainable alternative to mining, oil extraction and hydroelectric projects, which are the current threats to the conservation of the area. From the environmental point of view, there are serious problems in both reserves, mainly linked to the contamination of water resources. Such pollution imposes risks to the health to both, residents and tourists. The lack of freshwater is particularly critical in Galapagos, given its insular habitat. The invasion of exotic species in Galapagos is one of the most serious threats to the conservation, while deforestation in combination with illegal logging and mining activities is the greatest danger in Sumaco. In terms of sociocultural factors, migration processes undoubtedly shape the attitudes and values of the current population in both reserves. In Galapagos most residents are immigrants, whereas in Sumaco a significant portion are Kichwa people who belong to the area’s native population. In general, the inhabitants in both areas have not yet developed a true environmental awareness. The distribution of human population groups is also associated with the different types of tourism. In both reserves, tourist services offered by local communities have low quality standards and are targeted on a market segment consisting of tourists with a low budget. Thus, the community revenues obtained from tourism are generally only a small percentage of the total tourism market. This situation is much more noticeable in Galapagos where large companies that operate luxury cruises and hotels gain most of their revenues from tourism. Many of them have their headquarters in the main cities of Ecuador and abroad, which means that they pay their taxes in those cities and not in the places where they operate. Inequality in the distribution of the economic benefits of tourism leads to a situation of frustration and discontentment among the residents of the regions involved. Despite this situation, tourism is still a profitable business and residents try to make the most of it, no matter the cost impacts. Temporary and illegal tourism activities is often the normal state of the things: unregistered houses that offer rooms for tourists, taxi drivers who offer tours without being in possession of permits, tourist boat owners, tour guides and even large tourist companies that operate without legal licenses. This situation inevitably leads to a decrease of the quality of services, an uncontrolled increase of business, a consequent dumping of prices and the overall decline of the destination. Ultimately, this means fewer tourists, more environmental degradation and less economic benefits for residents. In this context, there is a serious conflict between the local community and large foreign companies. Governance and management of tourism are essential elements to ensure its development in a sustainable way. The country has a large number of laws, rules, regulations, and plans that regulate the development of sustainable tourism legally and institutionally, especially in protected areas. However, monitoring and law enforcement are major constraints for achieving proper management of tourism. This problem is particularly noticeable in small communities such as Galapagos and Sumaco where interpersonal relationships of kinship and friendship are close, which complicates control and regulation. There are some serious limitations regarding the technical and logistical capacity of the institutions responsible for controlling and managing the tourist activity; they consist mainly in the lack of staff and funding. Galapagos, given its special status, has increased the number of funding managers and staff members for controlling and management, but in many cases, these people are not fully qualified for their positions. Sumaco has only few tourism experts who can help to develop the tourism. The coordination and planning among all stakeholders involved in tourism is still a work in progress to ensure proper management of the tourist destinations. In any case, local communities are developing important initiatives in both biosphere reserves. After all, sometimes planning, coordination and local activities do not necessarily coincide with the national agenda. In general, in both biosphere reserves it is necessary to ensure higher standards of education, both formal and informal. Also it is urgent that the government as a regulating entity ensures the equitable participation of local communities in tourism benefits, control, monitoring, and law enforcement. Moreover, there is the need to encourage and ensure integrated planning of tourism in the different levels of government: local, regional, and national. Sustainable tourism means that the protection of cultural heritage and natural resources is granted at least the same level of importance as the involved economic interests. The unique nature that currently attracts tourists to Galapagos and Sumaco should be preserved not only for ensuring the continuity of the tourism activity itself, but also in order to safeguard biodiversity and natural resources for the coming generations. Responsible tourism practices which care about their social and environmental impacts are not necessarily opposed to economic interests. On the contrary, they need each other for a long-term development.
In the PhD-thesis a conditional random field approach and its implementation is presented to predict the interaction sites of protein homo- and heterodimers using the spatial structure of one protein partner from a complex. The method includes a substantially simple edge feature model. A novel node feature class is introduced that is called -change in free energy-. The Online Large-Margin algorithm is adapted in order to train the model parameters given a classified reference set of proteins. A significantly higher prediction accuracy is achieved by combining our new node feature class with the standard node feature class relative accessible surface area. The quality of the predictions is measured by computing the area under the receiver operating characteristic.
Non-thermal atmospheric pressure plasma has drawn more and more attention to the field of wound healing research during the last two decades. It is characterized by a unique composition, which includes amongst others free radicals, ions and electrons. Furthermore, non-thermal plasma exhibits temperatures that are below those inducing thermal cell damage. Next to its well-established anti-bacterial properties, plasma can have lethal as well as stimulating effects on mammalian cells. Therefore, the medical application of non-thermal plasma on chronic wounds seems to be a promising tool to enable healing processes. However, less is known about the plasma-mediated induction of intracellular signaling pathways in human immune cells, which play a leading part in the process of wound recovery and removal of pathogens. Therefore, this thesis examined the cellular effects of a non-thermal atmospheric pressure plasma treatment on human immune cells using the argon plasma jet kinpen 09. Here, the CD4+ T helper cell line Jurkat, the monocyte cell line THP-1 as well as the corresponding primary cells were investigated. First, cell survival and apoptosis induction was assessed in response to non-thermal plasma treatment by growth curves and flow cytometric assays. On the one hand it could be shown that primary cells are more susceptible to plasma treatment than the respective cell lines. On the other hand, monocytes responded less sensitive to plasma exposure than lymphocytes. Furthermore, this thesis outlined the impact of non-thermal plasma treatment on the gene expression level of immune cells. Therefore, DNA microarray analysis was performed with the cell lines Jurkat and THP-1. It became obvious that plasma exposure modulated the expression of several genes in both cell types. Differential expression of distinct target genes was further validated by quantitative PCR in the immune cell lines. Here, elevated gene expression levels of JUN and FOS in Jurkat cells and increased transcription of JUND in THP-1 cells in response to plasma treatment were made visible. JUN, FOS and JUND are components of the transcription factor AP-1, which is involved amongst others in gene expression of IL-8 and HMOX-1. Consequently, transcriptional induction of the inflammatory cytokine IL-8 as well as the enzymes HMOX-1 and GSR was detected in plasma-treated THP-1 cells. In addition, alterations in the protein activation levels were analyzed in plasma-treated Jurkat, THP-1 cells and primary monocytes. Since some of the identified target genes are known to be associated with the MAPK pathways, the regulation of these cascades was further investigated by western blot analysis. In all investigated cell types the pro-proliferative signaling molecules ERK 1/2 and MEK 1/2 as well as the pro-apoptotic signaling proteins p38 MAPK and JNK 1/2 were activated in a plasma treatment time dependent manner. In contrast to Jurkat and primary monocytes, the anti-apoptotic HSP27 was only induced in THP-1 cells in response to plasma exposure. Moreover, modulation of cytokine production and secretion was examined in the different immune cell types and co-cultured THP-1 and HaCaT keratinocytes by ELISA or flow cytometry. While Jurkat cells showed no plasma-mediated regulation of cytokine expression, THP-1 cells revealed an increased IL-8 secretion after long plasma time duration (360 s). Additionally, the intracellular expression levels of IL-6 and IL-8 were modulated in primary monocytes by plasma exposure. While short plasma treatment caused no alteration of the number of cells expressing IL-8 an up-regulation of the intracellular IL-6 level occurred after 30 s of plasma treatment. Long plasma treatment times resulted in a significant decrease of the intracellular IL-8 and IL-6 production levels. Furthermore, co-cultured THP-1 and HaCaT cells as well as mono-cultured THP-1 and HaCaT cells were examined regarding their cytokine secretion profile. Here, cells treated with plasma (180 s) as well as LPS and plasma (180 s and LPS) were compared with untreated cells. IL-6, IL-8 and GM-CSF secretion was induced by both plasma and plasma combined with LPS treatment in mono-cultivated HaCaT cells and co-cultured cells. Though, the highest cytokine secretion levels were reached in the plasma and LPS exposed co-culture. In contrast, mono-cultivated THP-1 cells only showed an increased secretion of IL-6, IL-8 and TNFa after incubation with plasma together with LPS exposed medium. In conclusion, this study revealed for the first time the non-thermal plasma-modulated expression of numerous genes and cytokines and the activation state of various signaling cascades in human immune cells. Thus, it contributes to gain a better understanding of the immune-modulatory impacts of plasma that might promote the wound healing process.
The impact of inbreeding under different environmental conditions and of artificial selection on cold tolerance was investigated in laboratory populations of the tropical butterfly Bicyclus anynana. The investigation focused on (1) the effects of inbreeding on several fitness-related traits and whether inbred individuals are more susceptible to stress, (2) interactions between inbreeding, genetic adaptation to cold stress and environmental conditions, (3) the effects of artificial selection and inbreeding in the adult stage in other developmental stages, and (4) the effect of inbreeding depression on the heat shock response. Environmental conditions are not constant over time; consequently organisms have to deal with environmental changes. Besides naturally fluctuating conditions, human-induced climate change may increase temperature changes as well as the severity of heat or cold waves. Temperature-stress resistance describes an organism’s ability to cope with stressful temperatures. Enhanced resistance to temperature stress can be reached by phenotypic plasticity or genetic adaptation. Plastic organisms are able to react fast to changing environmental conditions, whereas genetic adaptation is more important for long-term adaptation. Natural habitats may also be affected by human impact, causing habitat loss or fragmentation and changes in population structure. A decrease in the population size may result in inbreeding and inbreeding depression (ID). Consequences of inbreeding are well documented, and inbred individuals are predicted to be more sensitive to environmental stress than outbred individuals. The long term persistence of species and populations depends on their ability to adapt to novel conditions which in turn depends on genetic diversity. Therefore, studies of temperature resistance and its evolution in relation to inbreeding are very important. First a higher susceptibility of inbred individuals to environmental stress was determined in different populations of B. anynana. Inbreeding depression was revealed for several fitness-related traits, but not for immunity traits or heat tolerance. Temperature affected most traits, revealing the importance of temperature on ectotherms; just two hours of thermal stress affected important reproductive, life-history and immunity traits already. Importantly though, no evidence were found that inbred individuals are more susceptible to stressful temperatures than outbred individuals. Genetic adaptation and phenotypic plasticity can interact with one another, resulting in genotype-environmental interactions (G x E). The hypotheses tested here were that some genotypes are more plastic than others and that lines with increased cold stress resistance are less plastic with regard to cold resistance than control lines. To induce plastic responses the exposed lines differed in cold tolerance and inbreeding to different temperatures as well as different feeding regimes and measured fitness-related traits. Several interactions were detected in which a selection regime was involved, but these interactions did not show a clear overall pattern. In summary though, findings were that marginal impacts of directional selection and inbreeding on plastic responses and suggest that, at least for my study organism, the genetic architecture of fitness-related traits is not connected with the architecture of plastic responses. The next investigation concerned with the manifestation of genetic adaptation to produce one specific phenotype across development stages and possible trade-offs. The assumption tested was that there is a genetic link between different developmental stages to produce one definite phenotype by imposing selection in the adult stage only. Lines selected for increased cold resistance in the adult stage were used and increased cold resistance throughout all developmental stages was expected. However, higher cold resistance was found only in the adult stage and not in developmental stages. This could be either the result of a resource allocation trade-off between different stages or that there is no cold resistance phenotype. Thus, if selection takes place in the adult stage it does not affect the others. In the last experiment investigation was directed to determine whether there are negative inbreeding effects on the heat shock protein (HSP) response. Under stressful conditions, organisms produce the HSPs and they act as chaperons required for refolding and repairing of stress degraded proteins. Testing was oriented to find if inbreeding as a genetic stressor´ provokes a higher HSP expression and if there is evidence for higher temperature stress susceptibility on inbred individuals. Findings indeed showed a stronger HSP up-regulation in control compared to inbred lines with a negative inbreeding impact occurrence, which may causally underlie inbreeding depression.
Bats are ancient mammals that evolved more than 50 million years ago. There are 1,240 different species (> 20% of mammalian species) described so far, which represent one of the most abundant, diverse and widely distributed mammalian groups. Bats are the only mammals which actively fly and therefore can migrate to different areas of the world. It has been increasingly recognized that bats are reservoirs for more than 100 virus species, and several are associated with animal and human epidemics. As natural hosts of rabies virus (RABV) and related lyssaviruses, bats have become a focus of research not only in South America and Africa, but also in Europe and North America. Bats are also considered to be unique in their potential to host emerging and re-emerging zoonotic viruses. To evaluate and reduce the potential risk of rabies transmission to humans or carnivore hosts (like fox, raccoon and dog etc.), active and passive surveillance studies of bat have been performed. Using these approaches diverse lyssaviruses have been detected in bats. However, these studies did not explain the rarely discovered epidemics and the underlying resistance or immune mechanisms in bats as natural hosts for lyssaviruses. Probably, bats are more resistant to lyssavirus infections than other animals. This hypothesis is introducing the research questions of the present thesis: (1) How do the innate immune responses protect bats from fatal outcome of lyssavirus infections? Interferon (IFN) responses which can be induced by the recognition of viruses by pattern recognition receptors act as the first line of defense against lyssavirus infections. Therefore, type I and type III IFNs from European bats were cloned and functionally characterized in this thesis (Chapter 2 and 4). (2) How do the lyssaviruses adapt to escape the host defenses by counteracting the IFN-mediated immune responses? And how do the bats control the viral replication via the IFN responses? To explore the complicated interactions and understand how European bats (Eptesicus serotinus, Myotis myotis and Nyctalus noctula) interact with European bat lyssaviruses (EBLV-1 and 2), a natural host related model for investigations of the bat´s immune system and the virus-host interactions has to be established. Since all of 52 identified European bats species are endangered and strictly protected, stable cell lines from different tissues of M. myotis for in vitro studies were developed and used for molecular and functional studies (Chapter 3 and 4). The data obtained from this thesis revealed that: (a) European bat IFNs do have similar but also distinct molecular characteristics compared with other mammalian IFNs (Chapter 2 and 4); (b) Both investigated bat type I IFNs, IFN-Kappa; and IFN-Omega; present potent anti-lyssaviral activities and display a pathogen associated pattern in the tested cell line (Chapter 2); (c) The established immortalized M. myotis cell lines are differently susceptible to lyssaviruses and contain a functional IFN-mediated signaling cascade (Chapter 3); (d) Bat type III IFN-Lambda;s display cell-type specific functions due to the distinct expression of the IFN-Lambda; receptor (Chapter 4); (e) In bat cell lines a possible evasive strategy of lyssavirus is based on the counteraction of IFN production and/or IFN-mediated defensive pathways (Chapter 3); (f) The higher resistance of brain derived cell line MmBr compared to other cell lines to lyssavirus infection indicates the natural ability of bat´s central nervous system to control the growth of neurotropic virus, which might be an essential reason for the nonclinical outcome (Chapter 3). Overall, the present thesis provides first insights into IFN-mediated innate immune responses against RABV and EBLVs infection in their natural reservoir hosts and an useful toolbox for comparative analysis of virus-host interactions.
High-throughput expression data have become the norm in molecular biology research. However, the analysis of expression data is statistically and computationally challenging and has not kept up with their generation. This has resulted in large amounts of unexplored data in public repositories. After pre-processing and quality control, the typical gene expression analysis workflow follows two main steps. First, the complexity of the data is reduced by removing the genes that are redundant or irrelevant for the biological question that motivated the experiment, using a feature selection method. Second, relevant genes are investigated to extract biological information that could aid in the interpretation of the results. Different methods, such as functional annotation, clustering, network analysis, and/or combinations thereof are useful for the latter purpose. Here, I investigated and presented solutions to three problems encountered in the expression data analysis workflow. First, I worked on reducing complexity of high-throughput expression data by selecting relevant genes in the context of the sample classification problem. The sample classification problem aims to assign unknown samples into one of the known classes, such as healthy and diseased. For this purpose, I developed the relative signal-to-noise ratio (rSNR), a novel feature selection method which was shown to perform significantly better than other methods with similar objectives. Second, to better understand complex phenotypes using high-throughput expression data, I developed a pipeline to identify the underlying biological units, as well as their interactions. These biological units were assumed to be represented by groups of genes working in synchronization to perform a given function or participate in common biological processes or pathways. Thus, to identify biological units, those genes that had been identified as relevant to the phenotype under consideration through feature selection methods were clustered based on both their functional annotations and expression profiles. Relationships between the associated biological functions, processes, and/or pathways were investigated by means of a co-expression network. The developed pipeline provides a new perspective to the analysis of high-throughput expression data by investigating interactions between biological units. Finally, I contributed to a project where a network describing pluripotency in mouse was used to infer the corresponding network in human. Biological networks are context-specific. Combining network information with high-throughput expression data can explain the control mechanisms underlying changes and maintenance of complex phenotypes. The human network was constructed on the basis of orthology between mouse and human genes and proteins. It was validated with available data in the literature. The methods and strategies proposed here were mainly trained and tested on microarray expression data. However, they can be easily adapted to next-generation sequencing and proteomics data.
Accelerated drug release tests are essential for quality control (QC) of long acting (non-oral) controlled release formulations. Real-time release experiments are usually required for product development, to understand the mechanism of release and to establish a correlation with in vivo release. Ideally, the accelerated test should maintain the biorelevant aspect of the in vitro method and the mechanism of release should not change under accelerated test conditions. At the same time adequate discriminatory ability is a prerequisite as the accelerated test should be able to discriminate between batches with respect to manufacturing variables that can impact on bioavailability. The objective of this thesis was to develop accelerated drug release tests for intravaginal rings (IVRs) and to gain a mechanistic understanding of the principles that facilitate in vitro drug release under accelerated test conditions. A detailed evaluation of the in vitro release characteristics of the formulations under real-time test conditions was considered as a prerequisite for developing predictive accelerated tests. Two formulations were subject of this study, in which the mechanism of release is primarily governed by drug diffusion. One formulation was the commercially available Nuvaring®, a combined hormonal contraceptive IVR that releases etonogestrel and ethinylestradiol with a constant rate over a duration of 3 weeks. The second formulation was a prototype of an investigational IVR that is supposed to be bioequivalent to the marketed formulation. The Nuvaring® provides an example of a reservoir system in which a membrane mediates diffusion, resulting in release rates that are almost constant with time, whereas the investigational IVR is a matrix-type IVR. In these devices drug release is driven by Fickian diffusion through a homogeneous matrix and decays with time. Both IVRs are based on different grades of polyethylene vinyl acetate (PEVA). Accelerated drug release tests were performed at elevated temperature and in hydro-organic solvents since these two parameters were expected to increase drug diffusion through the semicrystalline EVA copolymer. Release experiments with IVRs or endcapped segments were performed in an incubator shaker. The devices were placed in stoppered flasks containing an adequate release medium that was continuously shaken and completely replaced at predetermined time points. Release experiments with endcapped segments were also performed in a small volume version of UPS apparatus 7 (the Reciprocating Holder). Results from release experiments in these two setups were in general comparable when the release from segments was standardized to release per ring with respect to the mass ratio (segment/IVR). Real-time drug release in an aqueous release medium at a temperature of 37 °C from the Nuvaring® was slightly affected by variations in the in vitro test conditions, i.e. media volume and composition (addition of solubility enhancing agents). These variations, however, did not affect the release kinetics that continued to be zero-order with exception of the initial burst. In contrast, real-time drug release from the matrix IVR was affected by the steroid solubility in the release medium, increased with increasing media volume and reached a maximum in release media containing solubility enhancing agents, resulting in distinct release kinetics. Interestingly the steroid solubility had a distinct influence on the release rate under conditions that are commonly assumed to provide sink conditions. Even under experimental conditions that provided minimum drug solubility, the concentration of ethinylestradiol in the receptor medium never exceeded 3 % of the saturation solubility. Accelerated drug release from both IVRs could be observed after exposure to elevated temperature and/or hydro-organic release media. Overall, increased drug release in different hydro-organic media correlated with polymer swelling. The higher swelling capacity of the investigational IVR, when compared with the Nuvaring®, was accounted for a stronger degree of acceleration in different hydro-organic release media. These observations were in agreement with literature sources that report that swelling as well as diffusivity in EVA copolymers increases with increasing VA content, which is lower in the rate-controlling membrane of the Nuvaring®. For the investigational IVR a good correlation between accelerated and real-time release profiles could be obtained if changes in steroid solubility under accelerated conditions were taken into consideration. For example, a good correlation could be observed between accelerated release profiles in hydro-organic media and real-time release profiles in media containing surfactants that provide maximum drug solubility and thus eliminate boundary layer effects. This observation appears reasonable since hydro-alcoholic release media also enhance steroid solubility in the receptor compartment. In case of the Nuvaring® variations in the in vitro test parameters under real-time test conditions did not affect the release kinetics. For this IVR, the mechanism of release was maintained in hydro-organic release media and at elevated temperature. The quantitative relationship between the zero-order release constants and the test temperature could be described by the Arrhenius equation, indicating that accelerated release is governed by an increase in drug diffusion. Validation of the accelerated method with a prototype of the investigational IVR with a different drug load demonstrated that the accelerated methods were able to detect formulation changes with similar discriminatory ability as the real-time test. However, the temperature-controlled accelerated method was less sensitive to detect changes in the release characteristics of a Nuvaring® that have been induced by preliminary heat-treatment, indicating that the accelerated method may be less sensitive to detect changes in IVRs that are a result of physical aging. When the aim is to develop an accelerated method for batch release it is therefore crucial to validate the accelerated method with appropriate samples from non-conforming batches that are out of specification under real-time test conditions and have been obtained by small but deliberate variations in the critical process parameters. In both formulations the degree of acceleration could be further increased by combining the effect of hydro-organic release media with an increase in temperature. Under these test conditions the ability to differentiate between the different prototypes of the investigational IVR was maintained. Moreover, in both IVRs the mechanism of release was not affected by an additional increase in temperature when compared with release profiles in hydro-organic solvents. In conclusion, the results of this study indicate that both temperature and hydro-organic release media are valid parameters to accelerate drug release from delivery systems in which the mechanism of release is primarily governed by diffusion through dense (inert) polymer matrices (i.e. inserts, implants). A correlation between real time and accelerated release will be facilitated if drug release under real-time test conditions is independent of the test parameters. To assure the outcome of the test with respect to quality and safety it is crucial to validate the accelerated method with appropriate batches.
In this thesis several methods of protein engineering were applied to explore and increase enantioselectivity and thermostability of certain carboxylesterases and to better understand the relationship between sequence, structure and function. For example, we were able to confirm the observed conservation of motifs like GX/GGGX and GXSXG, which was reported earlier. Yet, even more details were revealed and some were designated in numbers. However, the numbers may vary when even more sequences will be available, but the trend should remain the same. The power of the ABHDB lies in the information available throughout the very diverse and quite large superfamily. Structural equal positions can be easily compared and analysed regarding mutations, correlated mutations, prevalence etc., and visualization is simplified through direct output with YASARA software. The ABHDB was the first structural alignment of such a large number of known enzymes of the alpha/beta-hydrolase fold superfamily. With methods of rational protein engineering we were able to show that there is little flexibility of the GGG(A)X motif for the eukaryotic enzyme PLE 1 and the natural motif appears to be a good solution for high activity and enantioselectivity of PLE 1 in the conversion of tertiary alcohol esters. In a focused directed evolution approach, we were able to identify variants of BsteE with moderate, but significantly increased enantioselectivity in the kinetic resolution of tetrahydrofuran-3-yl acetate, and hence, were able to proof that the concept of ‘small but smart’ libraries is an efficient way to find improved mutants, while the screening effort was reduced. Moreover, we were able to show that the domain exchange enhanced the thermostability of BsubE, while expression level and activity were maintained or increased, respectively. Despite the great achievements and possibilities at present, we are not yet in the position to directly modify the gene to alter the structure in a complete predictable fashion to improve functional properties as imagined by Ulmer (1983). Nevertheless, substantial changes can be targeted and as demonstrated in this work, several broadly applicable methods are at hand. Furthermore, bioinformatics tools play an essential role in planning of experiments, analysis and interpretation.
Late Quaternary evolution and carbon cycling of tropical peatlands in equatorial Southeast Asia
(2014)
Peatlands are an important component in the global carbon cycle as they act as both long-term sinks for carbon dioxide and significant sources for methane. Over the Holocene period (the past 11,700 years) continuous CO2 uptake by peat accumulation exceeded methane emissions in northern peatlands and resulted in a net-radiative cooling effect on the global climate.Although 11% of the global peatland area is located in the tropics, the role of tropical peatlands in the global carbon cycle and in influencing the Earth’s radiative budget has not been resolved. Climate-carbon cycle models have thus far not included tropical peatlands because reliable data on their past rates of carbon uptake and release are not available. In this thesis this problem has been approached by reconstructing peatland expansion and rates of carbon storage and release over the Late Quaternary (Latest Pleistocene and Holocene) for the largest tropical peatland area, which is located in equatorial SoutheastAsia (i.e. Sumatra, Borneo, Peninsular Malaysia). Peat accumulation in the tropics remains an enigmatic phenomenon, because the constantly high temperatures of 26-27°C should theoretically drive rapid soil carbon turnover and thus not enable the accumulation of peat. Therefore this thesis also explores the mechanisms that cause peat formation in the SoutheastAsian tropics as well as the drivers behind changing rates of carbon accumulation. Carbon dynamics were analyzed at the regional scale (103–105 km2) of SoutheastAsia over millennial timescales (paper, I, II) and at the local scale (101–102 m2) of a peatland site on annual to centennial timescales (paper III, IV). Paper I presents the first systematic classification of the nearly 160,000 km2 SoutheastAsian lowland peatlands (below 70 m a.s.l.) into geographic peatland types. The peatlands were divided into 1) coastal peatlands of PeninsularMalaysia, Sumatra, and Borneo (~130,000 km2) and into inland peatlands (~30,000 km2) of 2) Central Kalimantan (southern Borneo), 3) the Kutai basin (eastern Borneo), and 4) the Upper Kapuas basin (western Borneo). Coastal peatlands formed by primary mire formation directly on freshly exposed marine or mangrove soils with the lowering of the sea level during the Late Holocene. In contrast, inland peatlands formed via paludification on either terrestrial sand soils (Central Kalimantan) or by both paludification and terrestrialization (Kutai basin, Upper Kapuas basin). The sequence of peatland initiation was established by applying the common cumulative basal date frequency approach (paper I). This method revealed clear differences in the timing of peatland initiation: 1) the Upper Kapuas peatlands are the oldest postglacial peat formations and date from 20,000-13,000 cal BP (calendar years before present), 2) inland Central Kalimantan peatlands date from 14,500-9000 cal BP, 3) the Kutai peatlands date from 8300-4900 cal BP, and 4) and the coastal peatlands date from 7700-200 cal BP. Coastal peatlands have a Holocene average carbon accumulation rate of 77 g C m-2 yr-1, being recognized as the globally most effective terrestrial ecosystems in terms of long-term carbon sequestration. Except for the Kutai peatlands, the Holocene average carbon accumulation rates of inland peatlands are significantly lower (20-30 g C m-2 yr-1) and very similar to the average long-term rates of northern peatlands. Fluctuations in past rates of carbon accumulation of SoutheastAsian peatlands could for the first time be linked to paleoclimatic changes, primarily variations in moisture availability (paper I, II). Hydroclimatic influences on carbon accumulation rates were related to shifts in the mean position of the Intertropical Convergence Zone, changes in the intensity of theAustral-Asian monsoon system, and variations in the frequency of the El Niño- Southern Oscillation. In contrast, peatland initiation and expansion was driven by sea-level change (paper I, II). The deglacial rise in sea-level is identified as the primary driver for inland peatland formation in Borneo, because the rising sea-level 1) lowered the hydrological gradients in the SoutheastAsian island archipelago inducing rising ground and surface water levels on these islands, and 2) led to higher atmospheric moisture availability due to the associated expansion of marine water masses on the shelf floor. Paper II shows that inland peatland initiation and expansion was most extensive during deglacial meltwater pulses, when the rate of sea-level rise exceeded 10 mm yr-1. Only when the rate of sea-level rise had slowed down to a threshold of 2.4 mm yr-1 by ~7000 cal BP could peat accumulation along the coasts keep up with the sea-level rise and coastal peatlands could form. Hydro-isostatic adjustment of the Sunda Shelf led to a sea-level lowering by ca. 5 m over the past 4500 years. Falling sea levels exposed extensive marine areas that were rapidly colonized by peat swamp forests.Anewly 140 developed method for the reconstruction of past peatland area based on transfer functions (paper II) reveals that 70%of the peatlands of Sumatra and Kalimantan only formed during the past 4000 years.Moreover, this new transfer function approach shows that the common basal dates approach overestimated the extent of peatlands in the past. This method, in general, leads to higher rates of reconstructed cumulative peat carbon uptake for the past. By combining reconstructed peatland areas and mean rates of carbon accumulation over millennial timescales from each peatland type the carbon uptake of all peatlands from Sumatra and Kalimantan could be quantified for the past 15,000 years (paper II). Carbon uptake remained below 1 Teragram (Tg) C yr-1 from 15,000-5000 cal BP because the total area of peatlands was less than 30,000 km2. Rapid peatland expansion driven by the lowering of sea-level over the past 5000 years increased carbon uptake on Sumatra and Kalimantan to over 7 Tg C yr-1 and resulted in an exponential growth of the regional peat-carbon reservoir to a size of over 20 Pg C. SoutheastAsian peatlands therefore had no significant role in the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene global carbon cycle. However, because of their rapid expansion after 5000 cal BP by over 100,000 km2 the peatlands of SoutheastAsia became a globally important carbon sink during the Late Holocene and likely caused an atmospheric CO2 drawdown of 1-2 ppm (paper II). This previously unrecognized biospheric carbon sink partly compensated for contemporaneous terrestrial carbon losses associated with the desertification of Northern Africa. The mechanisms that enable high rates of carbon accumulation of coastal peatlands were explored in a peat core study presented in paper III. Here the use of a new coring technique for the tropics and the application of noninvasive geophysical measurements were employed to derive a high-resolution record of carbon accumulation rates. This study provides the first description of peatland pools for SoutheastAsia, which form as tip-up pools from falling trees such as Shorea albida. Based on a pollen and macrofossil record a fossil tip-up pool could be identified in the core and an associated carbon accumulation rate of 100 to over 900 g C m-2 yr-1 determined. Thus tip-up pools function as local hot spots for carbon accumulation, fundamentally different from northern hemisphere peatland pools, which act as net-carbon sources. From a time-series of aerial photographs the rate of tree fall and thus pool formation was determined at 0.4 tree ha-1 yr-1 (paper III).Asimulation model indicates that up to 60%of the peat deposited in peat domes of Borneo is derived from filled up fossil pools – changing the paradigm that Southeast Asian peatlands mainly form from belowground biomass and providing an explanation for the rapid carbon accumulation of these ecosystems. The climate impact of peatlands is, however, not only related to their capacity to rapidly store carbon, because peatlands also release the strong greenhouse gas methane – a by-product of anaerobic decomposition.Ametaanalysis of methane emission data from SoutheastAsian peatlands (paper IV) shows that their average annual methane release of 3 g CH4 m-2 yr-1 is lower than the average annual release of ~9 g CH4 m-2 yr-1 from northern peatlands, although the higher tropical soil temperatures should lead to significantly higher emissions. The limited degree of anaerobic decay is explained by the recalcitrance of the deposited biomass, which contains high amounts of lignin and tannin, providing another explanation for rapid carbon accumulation. Low anaerobic decomposition together with high rates of carbon accumulation imply that limits to vertical peat bog growth in SoutheastAsia are not set by cumulative anaerobic decay as in northern raised bogs. Instead peat bog growth is limited by aerobic decomposition related to water-table lowering as shown by a derived linear relationship between the amount of released CO2 from aerobic peat decomposition and the mean annual depth of the peatland water-table (paper IV). The climatic effect of Southeast Asian peatlands was determined by the global warming potential (GWP) method, which compares carbon uptake with methane emissions in terms of CO2-equivalents. The low methane emissions and high carbon accumulation rates of coastal peatlands result in a net annual uptake of 1340 kg CO2- equiv. ha-1 yr-1 over a 100 year GWP time-horizon. Under natural conditions coastal Southeast peatlands exert a significant net cooling effect on the global climate in contrast to northern peatlands, which have a warming effect or act climatic neutral on this time frame. It can be concluded that the tropical peatlands of SoutheastAsia are the strongest carbon sinks among all peatlands globally with a notable influence on the Earth’s radiative budget. However, today an estimated 90,000 km2 of peatlands in SoutheastAsia is drained for agriculture (e.g. oil palm plantations) and deforestation. These drained peatlands release annually over 140 Tg C yr-1 from aerobic peat 141 decomposition. Drainage also facilitates the regular spread of peat fires in this region, which on average release around 75 Tg C yr-1. Ongoing total carbon losses (~220 Tg C yr-1) exceed the natural carbon uptake by a factor of 25 and demonstrate that the entire SoutheastAsian peatland region has recently switched from a globally important carbon sink to a globally significant source of atmospheric CO2 (paper II, IV).
The metabolomic approach is one part of the "-omics" cascade further comprising genomic, transcriptomic, and proteomic investigations. Since information about the metabolome of the important human pathogenic bacterium Staphylococcus aureus is scarce, the aim of this thesis is the characterization of the exo- and endometabolome of this bacterium on a most global scale. For this, the metabolomic platform consisting of the analytical instruments used for 1H-NMR spectroscopy, HPLC-MS, and GC-MS analysis was applied. First, the requirements for an accurate sampling procedure for the analysis of intracellular metabolites are presented, explaining important pitfalls during the sampling and the subsequent metabolome analysis via HPLC-MS and GC-MS (book chapter I). The challenging task of the metabolite identification is demonstrated, as well as the requirements for absolute quantification of intracellular metabolites. In order to enhance the knowledge about the staphylococcal physiology and the biochemical network, the impact of different stresses and varying cultivation media on the bacterial metabolite pool was investigated in several studies. In article I, a first description of the primary metabolism of growing S. aureus COL cells cultivated aerobically in CDM is provided. This study also monitored the adaptation to glucose starvation on the level of metabolites and proteins. The uptake of all amino acids and the secretion and reuse of overflow metabolites were analyzed in a time-dependent manner. During the switch to a non-growing state, a drastic rearrangement of the amino acid pool in the bacterial cells was detected, and intracellular amounts of glycolytic intermediates were found to decrease in parallel to extracellular glucose exhaustion. During infection processes, S. aureus has to cope with varying levels of oxygen supply, including anaerobic conditions. A global metabolomic approach investigated the adaptation of S. aureus COL to strict anaerobic conditions using CDM as the culture medium. Thereby only linear growth was possible despite the higher uptake rate of glucose compared to aerobically, logarithmically growing cells. In an anoxic environment, S. aureus mainly switched on the less reliable lactic acid fermentation. Only serine and threonine but no alanine were significantly taken up. Subsequent glucose limitation led to energy starvation indicated by a drop in the adenylate energy charge. This was accompanied with an arrest of the fermentative metabolism and declining numbers of colony-forming units without taking advantage of the energy supplying arginine deiminase pathway. Compared to the established CDM, the eukaryotic cell culture medium RPMI 1640 provides more in vivo-like growth conditions. In article II, the growth behavior and the metabolic footprint of the S. aureus strains COL and HG001 were investigated during the aerobic cultivation in RPMI 1640 medium. Both strains are commonly used in laboratory research. The observed uptake and secretion pattern of extracellular metabolites provides important information for infection studies in which this medium is used for the precultivation of S. aureus. The extracellular accumulation of the noncanonical D-amino acid D-isoleucine was an interesting outcome. The strain specific metabolic footprint points to noteworthy differences in the biochemical system of both strains. Moreover, this study demonstrates the impact of the cultivation medium on the metabolic status of bacterial cells. Due to increasing resistance against a large number of antibiotics, community- and hospital- acquired infections with S. aureus are of major concern in medical therapy. Thus, greater knowledge about adaptive mechanisms after antibiotic treatment is required. In article III, the response of S. aureus HG001 to antibiotics with varying target sides, such as ciprofloxacin, erythromycin, fosfomycin, vancomycin, and ampicillin, was investigated on the metabolite level. Thereby, the abundances of 176 intracellular metabolites were observed in a time-dependent manner, thus providing the most comprehensive experimental metabolite dataset so far available for S. aureus. None of the antibiotic compounds led to alterations of single metabolite amounts, but mostly entire metabolic pathways were affected. The intermediates of the cell wall biosynthesis were affected by each antibiotic, confirming this pathway as the most potential target for new antibacterial compounds. The metabolite composition of human nasal secretions and human sweat was analyzed, since such secretions present natural habitats of S. aureus during the colonization of typical host sides. The results confirm that the bacteria has to cope with low concentrations of most of the amino acids but large amounts of urea and lactate during host colonization. Considering the supply of amino acids, the results support the usage of the RPMI 1640 medium as a step to more in vivo-like cultivation experiments. Moreover, essential information for future studies about the adaptation of S. aureus to more in vivo growth conditions is provided. Altogether, the metabolomic approach was proven to be an important tool for helping unravel the complex bacterial metabolism and the environmental factors that also play a role in the virulence of Staphylococcus aureus.
In this study the potential of molecular RT-PCR based methods for diagnostic or epidemiological investigations concerning negative-sense RNA viruses should be demonstrated exemplary for orthobunyaviruses (segmented genome) and lyssaviruses (non segmented genome). The recent discovery of a novel orthobunyavirus from the Simbu serogroup, Schmallenberg virus (SBV), via next generation sequencing and metagenome analysis led to the development of novel molecular detection methods. Due to the potential emergence of further orthobunyaviruses from the Simbu serogroup, a generic pan-Simbu real-time RT-PCR system was developed. This system was able to detect all tested Simbu serogroup viruses. As additional feature a species classification via sequencing is possible. Moreover, the novel pan-Simbu real-time RT-PCR system seems to offer a broad detection spectrum for orthobunyaviruses in general. Hence, this protocol allows a broad screening of samples predominantly for Simbu serogroup virus genomes but also might allow the identification of some related orthobunyaviruses in mammalian or insect samples. A comparison of the pan-Simbu real-time RT-PCR system with diagnostic real-time RT-PCRs revealed an overall higher sensitivity of the diagnostic assays for SBV detection. The diagnostic SBV-S3 assay convinced with the highest sensitivity and reliability for SBV detection. Additionally, the SBV-M1 assay turned out as highly specific for SBV and therefore is a valuable tool for a precise diagnosis in geographical regions where multiple orthobunyaviruses are endemic. Furthermore, the SBV genome diversity in Germany was investigated using a molecular epidemiological approach. Genome variability was extremely high in the N-terminal region of the putative envelope glycoprotein Gc which might have an impact on immunogenicity or host-cell infection. Phylogenetic analyses indicated that sequence variation is independent of host species and geographical distribution. In contrast to SBV as a novel pathogen, rabies encephalitis (caused by the prototype lyssavirus Rabies virus) is known for more than 4000 years. Thus numerous molecular techniques have been developed for lyssavirus detection, considering the diversity of this genus they all have certain limitations as regards their diagnostic range. Results of a lyssavirus ring trial among European laboratories indicate that RT-PCR could be a highly reliable diagnostic tool if at least two independent tests with broad diagnostic range are applied. Another approach suggested that a change from two-step to one-step PCR strategy or a variation of the RT-chemistry may have a remarkable influence on assay performance. However, no ultimate approach or strategy has been found yet, that would facilitate rabies routine diagnosis or epidemiological surveys on molecular grounds. Thus, there is a need for a potent, reliable and practical system for lyssavirus diagnosis and characterization, suitable as a second diagnostic line next to classical techniques like the fluorescent antibody test. For this purpose a diagnostic two level cascade protocol was developed with emphasis on the most relevant European lyssaviruses. On a first level two independent generic pan-lyssavirus screening assays, targeting different genomic regions, were applied. On a second level two probe-based species-specific multiplex PCR systems for the rapid classification of European lyssaviruses were used. All applied assays displayed an overall highly sensitive and specific detection with an excellent reproducibility and repeatability. Moreover, the diagnostic cascade protocol combines all known advantages of the real-time PCR technology including speed and reduced risk of cross-contamination with improved safety of molecular testing based on a double-check strategy for the screening as well as the confirmatory assays. In the frame of the second Bokeloh bat lyssavirus case in a German bat, the capability of real-time PCR for the quantification of viral loads was demonstrated. Another convenient example for the potential of molecular RT-PCR based methods is the epidemiological investigation of the rabies epizootic in Namibian kudu antelopes. Phylogenetic analyses of a 602 bp fragment of the nucleoprotein gene indicated a separate grouping of the Rabies virus (RABV) isolates from kudu apart from RABV isolates from jackals. Full genome sequencing revealed unique mutations in the glycoprotein gene of RABV isolates from kudu, suggesting an independent rabies cycle in Namibian kudu antelopes. All given examples were used to illustrate the application spectrum of molecular RT-PCR based methods for diagnostic or epidemiological purposes. The advantages of molecular techniques were emphasized and in particular real-time RT-PCR systems proved their fitness for purpose and appear to represent standard techniques for the next decade.
The soil bacterium Bacillus subtilis is capable of surviving most of the ensuing environmental stress conditions. The dynamic nature of the soil habitat is manifested with varying amounts of nutrients, frequent flooding, drying and variation of other growth parameters like temperature, acidity, aeration etc. In order to survive in these conditions, B. subtilis has evolved to employ very complex adaptational responses. These adaptational responses are often multi-faceted; hence comprehensive understanding of the adaptational responses requires generation and integration of data on multi-omics level. Hence, multi-omics based detailed analysis was performed for the molecules involved in the central carbon metabolism (CCM) and proline biosynthesis pathway. In the current study two major stress conditions were extensively investigated: 1) energy limitation/starvation which is achieved by limiting glucose in the growth medium, 2) osmostress resulting from frequent drying out of soil which is simulated by adding 1.2 M NaCl to the growth medium. In addition to osmostress, the naturally available osmoprotectant glycine betaine (GB) was supplemented to understand the simultaneous influence of osmostress and osmoprotection on cellular physiology. To measure absolute protein abundances by mass spectrometry, a targeted approach (SRM –single reaction monitoring) using stable heavy isotope labeled artificial standard proteins known as QconCATs was optimized and implemented in the current study. The SRM technique in combination with QconCAT provided absolute quantitative data with high dynamic range for the 45 targeted CCM proteins. Transcriptome data was obtained from microarray analysis. The resulting data were integrated with the other omics data sets obtained by metabolome and flux analysis. As part of a joint study conducted by the BaCell-SysMO and BaSysBio consortia which aimed for the genome wide mapping of transcription units and previously unannotated RNAs of B. subtilis by means of tiling array hybridizations, mRNA samples from growth at high and low temperatures (51°C and 16°C) and in the presence of 1.2 M NaCl, shake flask experiments during transition from exponential growth to the stationary phase, and high density batch fermentation. Time course analysis of B. subtilis transitioning from exponential to stationary phase was investigated by high cell density fed-batch fermentation (glucose limitation) and batch fermentation (glucose exhaustion) with glucose as a limiting factor. A multi-omics analysis of the CCM for the batch fermentation was performed and the time course data was integrated and visualized. In conclusion, pathway based multi-omics data were generated, integrated and visualized as a prerequisite for systems biology approaches and for a better understanding of the complex adaptational responses of B. subtilis.
Energetic ions are made to collide with atmospheric molecules. Positively charged ions of argon (Ar^+), helium (He^+), hydrogen (H_2^+ ), and protons (H^+) with energies of 50 keV to 350 keV are used as the bombarding ion. The ion beam of desired energy is produced using a linear ion accelerator at the University of Greifswald. The mass and energy distribution of sputtered particles were analysed using an Electrostatic Quadrupole SIMS (EQS) analyser. The target gases used are oxygen (O_2), sulfur hexafluoride (SF_6), and nitrogen (N_2). The ionized and fragmented particles due to collisions have been investigated. We have discovered a new process for negative ion formation in energetic ion collision with O_2 and SF_6 molecules. The process is a two body reaction between the projectile and the molecule without the need for a third particle (such as an external electron). It requires a direct charge transfer from the projectile to the molecule leaving it intact as O_2^- or SF_6^- . The process is experimentally confirmed by using a proton as projectile which does not have an electron to transfer. In comparison with positive ion fractions (O_2^+ , SF_5^+ ), the negative ions fraction is smaller by 2 orders of magnitude. This shows that the two body charge exchange process is weak due to the larger energy transfer required compared to the positive ion forming mechanisms. The two body charge exchange mechanism is not observed for ion collisions with N_2 molecule. No stable negative ion exist for N_2 molecule. The collision cross section for the ion formation during energetic ion – O_2 collision has been determined within the investigated impact energy. For SF_6 molecule the partial ion fraction of the secondary ions are determined for different projectiles involved. This kind of investigation is of great importance mainly in atmospheric physics. Energetic ions are constantly emitted from mass of the energy sources in the universe (e.g. sun). They interact with planetary objects or atmosphere on their way. A deep knowledge about the interaction processes is necessary to understand the ionospheric physics and space exploration. As second part of my thesis, a GaAs(100) surface is bombarded with 150 keV Ar^+ ion beam. From etching the surface to thin film coating, ion bombardment on solid surface found great role in the fabrication process of modern electronic and optical devices. In order to increase the knowledge on sputtering materials and because of profound importance in modern electronics, we choose GaAs(100) as our target. Among the sputtered atoms and ions, small sized cluster ions having more than 6 atoms have been identified. GaAs is a heteroatomic semiconductor containing gallium and arsenic in equal ratio. A preferential phenomenon of ’abundant sputtering’ of gallium compared to little arsenic (GaAs) has been investigated from their mass intensity. The experimental ion counts are compared with theoretically predicted relative abundance. This phenomenon of preferential sputtering is known for atomic species of sputtered GaAs but not for the sputtered cluster ions. The main reasons for this abundant sputtering of one element is attributed to the difference in ion formation energies and surface compositional change taking place during the sputtering process. Another notable characteristics is the preference in charge state among the sputtered ions. For instance, among sputtered atomic ions the ion counts of Ga^+ is 3 orders larger than As^+ ion and As^- is 2 orders larger than Ga^- ion. To get a clue for this behavior, we have investigated the energy distribution of both negatively and positively charged clusters. Different ion formation mechanisms were discussed. The energy distribution of atomic ion is partially explained by using a modified theory given by M. W. Thompson.
Neural characteristics of verbal creativity as assessed by word generation tasks have been recently identified, but differences in resting-state functional connectivity (rFC) between experts and non-experts in creative writing have not been reported yet. Previous electroencephalography (EEG) coherence measures during rest demonstrated a decreased cooperation between brain areas in association with creative thinking ability. Here, we used resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging to compare 20 experts in creative writing and 23 age-matched non-experts with respect to rFC strengths within a brain network previously found to be associated with creative writing. Decreased rFC for experts was found between areas 44 of both hemispheres. Increased rFC for experts was observed between right hemispheric caudate and intraparietal sulcus. Correlation analysis of verbal creativity indices (VCIs) with rFC values in the expert group revealed predominantly negative associations, particularly of rFC between left area 44 and left temporal pole. Overall, our data support previous findings of reduced connectivity between interhemispheric areas and increased right-hemispheric connectivity during rest in highly verbally creative individuals.
People smile in various emotional contexts, for example, when they are amused or angry or simply being polite. We investigated whether younger and older adults differ in how well they are able to identify the emotional experiences accompanying smile expressions, and whether the age of the smiling person plays a role in this respect. With this aim, we produced 80 video episodes of three types of smile expressions: positive-affect smiles had been spontaneously displayed by target persons as they were watching amusing film clips and cartoons. Negative-affect smiles had been displayed spontaneously by target persons during an interaction in which they were being unfairly accused. Affectively neutral smiles were posed upon request. Differences in the accompanying emotional experiences were validated by target persons' self-reports. These smile videos served as experimental stimuli in two studies with younger and older adult participants. In Study 1, older participants were less likely to attribute positive emotions to smiles, and more likely to assume that a smile was posed. Furthermore, younger participants were more accurate than older adults at identifying emotional experiences accompanying smiles. In Study 2, both younger and older participants attributed positive emotions more frequently to smiles shown by older as compared to younger target persons, but older participants did so less frequently than younger participants. Again, younger participants were more accurate than older participants in identifying emotional experiences accompanying smiles, but this effect was attenuated for older target persons. Older participants could better identify the emotional state accompanying smiles shown by older than by younger target persons. Taken together, these findings indicate that there is an age-related decline in the ability to decipher the emotional meaning of smiles presented without context, which, however, is attenuated when the smiling person is also an older adult.
The constructions of Lévy processes from convolution semigroups and of product systems from subproduct systems respectively, are formally quite similar. Since there are many more comparable situations in quantum stochastics, we formulate a general categorial concept (comonoidal systems), construct corresponding inductive systems and show under suitable assumptions general properties of the corresponding inductive limits. Comonoidal systems in different tensor categories play a role in all chapters of the thesis. Additive deformations are certain comonoidal systems of algebras. These are obtained by deformation of the algebra structure of a bialgebra. If the bialgebra is even a Hopf algebra, then compatibility with the antipode automatically follows. This remains true also in the case of braided Hopf algebras. Subproduct systems are comonoidal systems of Hilbert spaces. In the thesis we deal with the question, what are the possible dimensions of finite-dimensional subproduct systems. In discrete time, this can be reduced to the combinatorial problem of determining the complexities of factorial languages. We also discuss the rational and continuous time case. A further source for comonoidal systems are universal products, which are used in quantum probability to model independence. For the (r,s)-products, which were recently introduced by S. Lachs, we determine the corresponding product of representations by use of a generalized GNS-construction.
The Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) has become an important tool for probing the mechanical properties of cells and microparticles by force-indentation experiments. In this thesis optimized AFM approaches for these experiments are developed and applied to three types of living human cells in order to answer biologically relevant questions about their mechanics. These microscopic investigations are then interpreted with respect to nanoscopic and macroscopic biologic parameters, such as the function of cell surface receptors or the size of human heart ventricles. This thesis comprises two physical/technical chapters and three medical/biological chapters. The physical/technical chapters discuss the measurement process itself, aiming for its improvement with respect to a proper data analysis and contact model (for spherical cells). The medical/biological chapters investigate the elasticity of cells by the use of optimized AFM approaches, with respect to the used data analysis.
Inflammation is part of the body's immune response in order to remove harmful stimuli—like pathogens, irritants or damaged cells—and start the healing process. Recurrent or chronic inflammation on the other side seems a predisposing factor for carcinogenesis and has been found associated with cancer development. In chronic pancreatitis mutations of the cationic trypsinogen (PRSS1) gene have been identified as risk factors of the disease. Hereditary pancreatitis (HP) is a rare cause of chronic pancreatic inflammation with an early onset, mostly during childhood. HP often starts with recurrent episodes of acute pancreatitis and the clinical phenotype is not very much different from other etiologies of the disease. The long-lasting inflammation however generates a tumor promoting environment and represents a major risk factor for tumor development This review will reflect our knowledge concerning the specific risk of HP patients to develop pancreatic cancer.
Abstract
Experimental studies on dusty plasmas containing systems of (super-)paramagnetic dust particles are presented. In our experiments, external (homogeneous as well as inhomogeneous) magnetic fields in the mT range are applied to study the effect on single particles or few-particle systems that are trapped inside the sheath region. The behavior of the paramagnetic dust particles is considerably different than that of dielectric plastic particles, which are widely used in dusty plasmas. It is revealed that especially non-magnetic contributions play an important role in the interaction between superparamagnetic particles.
Abstract
The presented experimental system is a barrier discharge system with plane parallel electrodes. The lateral surface charge distribution being deposited on the dielectric layer during each breakdown is observed optically using the well known electro-optic effect (Pockels effect). The temporal resolution of the surface charge measurement has been increased to 200 ns, and so for the first time it is possible to resolve the charge transfer to the dielectric surface in a single breakdown. In the present measurements, a patterned glow-like barrier discharge is investigated. It is found that the charge reversal in a single discharge spot (microdischarge) starts in the centre and then grows outwards. These experimental findings verify previously unconfirmed predictions from earlier numerical calculations and thereby contribute to a better understanding of the interaction between the plasma and the electrical charge on the electrodes.
Prostate volume estimation in MR images for epidemiological and clinical studies – new methods
(2014)
Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) is one of the most widespread diseases among men older than 50 years. The literature provides various cut-off values for pathological enlargement of the prostate. Prostate volume (PV) measurement in large population-based studies would allow deriving more objective reference values and a more valid early BPH diagnosis. A fully automated method is therefore required. In the clinical context, the measurement of the PV is important for treatment response monitoring in the clinical applications for BPH management research, and an accurate method for PV is essential. Magnetic Resonance Imaging was used for PV estimation. Two methods based on the Support Vector Machines (SVM) were developed: the binary Support Vector Machines (C SVM)-based method for epidemiological studies and the single-class Support Vector Machines (S SVM)-based method for clinical studies. The second method was additionally compared to the ellipsoid formula for PV estimation, which is widespread in the clinic. The comparison between volume measurement of the C SVM-based method and manual delineation of observers A and B yielded a strong correlation (Spearmans rank correlation coefficients ñ of 0.936 [p < 0.001] and 0.859 [p < 0.001], respectively). Comparing the C SVM-based method and the two manual delineations by observers A and B shows an agreement with a mean difference of 3.0 ml (95% confidence interval of -3.1 to +9.2 ml) and 1.9 ml (95% confidence interval of −7.1 to +10.8 ml), respectively. The S SVM-based method and the reference PV (manual delineation of observer A) show excellent correlation (Spearmans rank correlation coefficient ñ = 0.965, p < 0.001), while the ellipsoid formula is less well correlated with the reference PV (Spearmans rank correlation coefficient ñ = 0.873, p < 0.001). The mean difference between S SVM and the reference PV was −0.05 ml (95% confidence interval of −3.8 to +3.7 ml); on the other hand, the mean difference between the ellipsoid formula and the reference PV was much greater, with 8.6 ml (95% confidence interval of +1 to +16.2 ml). The C SVM-based method has considerable potential for integration in epidemiological studies. The prostate volumes obtained by the S SVM-based method agreed excellently with the reference and would be clinically useful for urologists in prostate volumetric analysis.
Staphylococcus aureus is a commensal that colonizes the skin and mucosa of 20-30% of the human population without leading to symptoms of diseases. However, it is also the most important cause of nosocomial infections. Those range from minor skin infections to life-threatening diseases such as pneumonia, endocarditis or septicaemia. Development of strains with resistance against many antibiotics complicates the situation further. The variety of strains with their various properties is one reason why no successful vaccine has been introduced to the market, yet. Therefore, efficient strategies for prevention and therapy of these dangerous infections are urgently needed. To accomplish these goals, the understanding of molecular interactions between host and pathogen is indispensable. Within this dissertation, several internalization experiments were performed aiming to investigate the interaction of S. aureus HG001 and human cell lines upon infection on the protein level. In order to obtain sufficient amounts of proteins for comprehensive physiological interpretations, it is necessary to enrich bacteria, secreted bacterial proteins or infected host cells upon internalization. In the framework of this thesis, bacteria which continuously produce green fluorescent protein (GFP) were employed. With that it was possible to sort bacteria from lysed host cells by flow cytometry or to separate host cells carrying bacteria after contact from those which did not. Subsequently, the proteins were proteolytically digested and peptides were analyzed by mass spectrometry in a gel-free proteomics approach. To allow such analyses also for staphylococci which do not produce GFP, such as clinical isolates, an additional protocol was developed. Prior to the infection, bacteria were labeled with fluorescent or para-magnetic nanoparticles. Afterwards bacteria could be separated from host cell debris by fluorescence-based cell sorting or with the help of a strong magnet. In order to cover also important secreted virulence factors of S. aureus HG001, phagosomes and engulfed bacteria and secreted proteins were isolated from infected host cells. Further steps of protocol optimization included improved bacterial cell counting by fluorescence-based flow cytometry, enhanced data analysis by combination of different search algorithms, and comprehensive functional annotation of proteins of the applied strain by sequence comparison with other strains and organisms. First, the proteome adaptation of internalized S. aureus HG001 and the infected A549 host cells was investigated during the first hours of infection. It became clear, that the bacteria replicate inside the host during the first 6.5 h. After internalization the levels of bacterial enzymes involved in protein biosynthesis decreased. Furthermore, bacteria adapted their proteome to the harsh intracellular conditions such as oxygen limitation, cell wall stress, host defense in terms of oxidative stress, and nutrient limitation. After contact to S. aureus HG001, A549 cells produced increased amounts of cytokines (e.g. IL-8, IFN-γ) in comparison to non-treated A549 cells. In addition, activation of the immunoproteasome and hints of early apoptosis activity were observed. Afterwards, the response of S. aureus HG001 to internalization by A549, S9 or HEK 293 cells was compared on the proteome level. It was obvious, that the adaptation to stress and the reduced protein synthesis are conserved mechanisms. Host dependent differences were detected especially in the energy metabolism and the synthesis of some amino acids. Additionally, bacteria showed different intracellular replication patterns depending on the host cell line. A higher percentage of extracellular bacterial proteins was found in isolated phagosomes compared to the sorted samples. Selected low abundant virulence factors could be quantified at two points in time after infection with the help of the sensitive single reaction monitoring (SRM) method. Further, a heterogeneous mixture of several phagosomal maturation steps was present during the first 6.5 h after infection. Finally, the gel-free proteome analyses could be applied to investigate Bordetella pertussis, the cause of whooping cough, during iron limitation and after internalization, and the results were compared to the S. aureus HG001 data.
Modern cavity QED and cavity optomechanical systems realize the interaction of light with mesoscopic devices, which exhibit discrete (atom-like) energy spectra or perform micromechanical motion. In this thesis we have studied the crossover from the quantum regime to the classical limit of two prototypical models, the Dicke model and the generic optomechanical model. The physical problems considered in this approach range from a ground state phase transition, its dynamical response to general nonequilibrium dynamics including Hamiltonian and driven dissipative chaotic motion. The classical limit of these models follows from the classical limit of at least one of its subsystems. The classical equations of motion result from the respective quantum equations through the application of the semiclassical approximation, i.e., the neglect of quantum correlations. The approach of the results from quantum mechanics to the prediction of the classical equations can be obtained by subsequently decreasing the respective scaling parameter. In order to obtain exact results we have utilized advanced numerical methods, e.g., the Lanczos diagonalization method for ground state calculations, the Kernel Polynomial Method for dynamical response functions, Chebyshev recursion for time propagation, and quantum state diffusion for open system dynamics. We have studied the quantum phase transition of the Dicke model in the classical oscillator limit. Our work shows that in this limit the transition occurs already for finite spin length but with the same critical behavior as in the classical spin limit. We have derived an effective model for the oscillator degrees of freedom and have discussed the differences of both classical limits with respect to quantum fluctuations around the mean-field ground state and spin-oscillator entanglement. In this thesis we have proposed a variational ansatz for the Dicke model which extends the mean-field description through the inclusion of spin-oscillator correlations. The ansatz becomes correct in the limit of large oscillator frequency and in the limit of a large spin. For the latter it captures the leading quantum corrections to the classical limit exactly including the spin-oscillator entanglement entropy. We have studied the dynamics of spin and oscillator coherent states in the nonresonant Dicke model at weak coupling. In this regime periodic collapses and revivals of Rabi oscillations occur, which are accompanied by the buildup and decay of atom-field entanglement. The spin-oscillator wave function evolves into a superposition of multiple field coherent states that are correlated with the spin configuration. In our work we provide a description of the underlying dynamical mechanism based on perturbation theory. Our analysis shows that collapse and revival at nonresonance is distinguished from the resonant case treated within the rotating wave approximation by the appearance of two time scales instead of one. We have extended our study of the Dicke dynamics to the case of increasing spin length, as the system approaches the classical spin limit. We described the emergence of collective excitations above the ground state that converge to the coupled spin-oscillator oscillations observed in the classical limit. With increased spin length the corresponding Green functions thus reveal quantum dynamical signatures of the quantum phase transition. For the dynamics at larger coupling and energy, classical phase space drift and quantum diffusion hinders the direct comparison of quantum and classical observables. As we show in our work, signatures of classical quasiperiodic orbits can be identified in the Husimi phase-space functions of the propagated wave function and individual eigenstates with energies close to that of the quasiperiodic orbits. The analysis of the generic optomechanical system complements our study of cavity QED systems by a quantum dissipative system. In this thesis we have shown for the first time, how the route to chaos in the classical optomechanical system takes place, given as a sequence of consecutive period doubling bifurcations of self-induced cantilever oscillations. In addition to the semiclassical dynamics we have analyzed the possibility of chaotic motion in the quantum regime. Our results showed that quantum mechanics protects the optomechanical system against irregular dynamics. In sufficient distance to the semiclassical limit simple periodic orbits reappear and replace the classically chaotic motion. In this way direct observation of the dynamical properties of an optomechanical system makes it possible to pin down the crossover from quantum to classical mechanics.
Type 2 diabetes mellitus is one of the most challenging health problems for the next decades. The impact of type 2 diabetes mellitus on health care systems is largely driven by the increasing prevalence, the management of the disease and subsequent comorbidities, even in people with prediabetes or undiagnosed type 2 diabetes mellitus. An early detection of high risk groups is necessary to identify and modify risk factors such as obesity, physical inactivity or cigarette smoking which showed regional disparities in their distribution within a country. This leads to the assumption that there might be regional disparities regarding the prevalence and incidence of type 2 diabetes mellitus as well. For Germany as for other countries, comparable data on possible regional disparities in the prevalence and incidence of type 2 diabetes mellitus are missing. The aim of the present dissertation is to estimate the prevalence and incidence of type 2 diabetes mellitus on regional level within Germany, and to estimate the smoking prevalence as a modifiable risk factor in individuals with type 2 diabetes mellitus using data from the Diabetes Collaborative Research of Epidemiologic Studies consortium (DIAB CORE) within the Competence Net Diabetes in Germany. Well comparable data of five regional studies and one nationwide reference study are included: the Study of Health in Pomerania (SHIP); the Cardiovascular Disease, Living and Ageing in Halle Study (CARLA); the Dortmund Health Study (DHS); the Heinz Nixdorf Recall Study (HNR); the Cooperative Health Research in the Region of Augsburg Study (KORA); and the German National Health Interview and Examination Survey 1998 (GNHIES 98). First, the prevalence of type 2 diabetes mellitus was estimated. Data from five regional population-based studies and one nationwide study conducted between 1997 and 2006 with participants aged 45 to 74 years were analyzed. Type 2 diabetes mellitus prevalence estimates based on self-reports (standardized to the German population for the regional studies, reference date 2007/12/31) were compared. Of 11,688 participants of the regional studies, 1,008 had a known type 2 diabetes mellitus, corresponding to a prevalence of 8.6% (95% confidence interval [CI] 8.1% 9.1%). The standardized prevalence was highest in the East with 12.0% (95% CI 10.3% 13.7%) and lowest in the South of Germany with 5.8% (95% CI 4.9% 6.7%).Second, the incidence of type 2 diabetes mellitus was estimated. Data from participants (baseline age 45 to 74 years) from five regional population-based studies were included. The incidence rates per 1,000 person-years (95% CI) and the cumulative incidence (95% CI) from regional studies were directly standardized to the German population (reference date 2007/12/31) and weighted by inverse probability weights for losses to follow-up. Of 8,787 participants, 521 (5.9%) developed type 2 diabetes mellitus corresponding to an incidence rate of 11.8 per 1,000 person-years (95% CI 10.8 12.9). The incidence of known type 2 diabetes mellitus showed regional disparities within Germany. The incidence was highest in the East and lowest in the South of Germany with 16.9 (95% CI 13.3 21.8) vs. 9.0 (95% CI 7.4 11.1) per 1,000 person-years, respectively. Third, the smoking prevalence in participants aged 20 to 79 years with type 2 diabetes mellitus in the regional SHIP and the nationwide GNHIES 98 was estimated. Prevalence estimates of cigarette smoking were calculated using weights reflecting the European adult population (reference date 2005/12/31). The overall prevalence of current smoking was lower among participants with type 2 diabetes mellitus than among participants without type 2 diabetes mellitus (17.3% vs. 38.0% in SHIP and 24.7% vs. 32.1% in GNHIES 98). In both studies, the prevalence of current smoking was highest in men aged 20 to 39 years, in particular among men with type 2 diabetes mellitus. To conclude, considerable disparities in prevalence and incidence of type 2 diabetes mellitus indicate the need for interventions on the regional level within Germany. Former smoking was more prevalent among both men and women with type 2 diabetes mellitus in comparison to current and non-smoking. This finding probably reflects behavioural changes secondary to the disease onset and medical counselling. The finding that men aged 20 to 39 years with type 2 diabetes mellitus were more often current smokers than men without type 2 diabetes mellitus underpins the importance of smoking as one of the main modifiable risk factors for type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Simulations of Short Model Peptides and Practically Relevant Modeled Titanium Implant Surfaces
(2014)
One of the aims of this work was to generate a non restrained force field model including carbon contamination to make the adsorption simulations more realistic and comparable with experimental data. Another purpose was to find out how the special recognition of small linker proteins on titanium dioxide is working. During this work a fixed and a non restrained rutile (100) model was used and critical properties were observed which are not only related to the surface. The rigid water layers on top of the oxide are very important for the protein and peptide adsorption. Therefore the first discussing object were the properties of the water layers and how they can be influenced. The charge distribution on the surface was found to have a big effect on them. Depending on the charges of the surface atoms or the functional groups, resulting out of the hydroxylation equilibrium, precisely the first water layer gets more rigid or smother. This has a big effect on biomolecule adsorption. The peptides need to penetrate these water layers to generate direct interaction points. The correct description of the surface in molecular dynamic simulations therefore has a high influence on the results. The better the model is the better the findings are comparable with experimental ones. Additionally carbon contamination was mimicked by using a monolayer of pentanol molecules. This fits very good with experimental data (e.g. contact angle) and make the oxide model more hydrophobic. Interaction of proteins and peptides in experiments or in medical use are often observed under normal air conditions, which means that the scaffold is i) hydroxylated by water and ii) carbon contaminated in a short period of time. Therefore investigations were done to find out how the contamination influences the adsorption of a formally know good or bad binding peptide (TiOBP1; TiOBP2). It was found that the TiOBP1 is able to bind the different surface modifications very well which coincides with observations made in experiments. The way of adsorption (direct or indirect) depends on the water layers properties. The first layer on high charged surface models is that rigid, that the peptide is not able to adsorb in a direct way. On the carbon contaminated oxide model the adsorption is possible by reducing the flexibility of the secondary structure motive. In the case of TiOBP2 adsorption on the clean surface model results in only weak binding or even in no interaction. Whereas on the carbon contaminated dioxide the once know bad binder is able to interact with the Pentanol monolayer. No direct adsorption is observed but the hydrophobic side chains have the possibility to orient themselves according to the hydrophobic layer without changing significantly in the secondary structure motive. An additional test peptide (minTBP) adsorbs without being affected by the contamination. This raises the question if the distribution of hydrophobic to hydrophilic amino acids has influence on the adsorption ability according to clean and contaminated surface. For experimental application it could be of interest to generated peptides (GEPI´s) which bind both surface types without changing the secondary structure motives then as we know functionality is based on these structures. In the case of the PHMB polymer adsorption was observed depending on the hydroxylation ratio and therefore on the charge density of the rutile (100) surface. After analysis of the simulations takeaways from experiments could be substantiated. The PHMB interacts with the negative charged surface via the first water layer as a film. So the new force field model describing the rutile (100) titanium dioxide surface with additional carbon contamination model of one monolayer pentanol fits the experimental data very well. The adsorption studied on this surfaces indicates that the contamination as expected makes the surface more hydrophobic and influences the adsorption behavior of the tested peptides especially the secondary structure of TiOBP1. This indeed enhances experimental investigations. Peptides which e.g. link organic and inorganic parts should be good adsorbing on clean and contaminated surfaces by keeping their functionality. Furthermore experimental data can be substantiated by using atomistic simulations like in the case of PHMB adsorption.
Background: Abdominal surgery is frequently followed by immune dysfunction usually lasting for several days. This is especially important in cases with tumour diseases as an intact immune function is essential in this situation. Therefore, we analysed the outcome of tumour-bearing mice in a mouse model of surgically induced immune dysfunction (SID). Methods: In male C57BL/6 mice, a pancreatic tumour was implanted orthotopically. Following tumour implantation, the model of SID was applied. The control groups were either laparotomised or underwent no surgical procedure. The survival rate was determined by observation for >60 days. The tumour growth progress was imaged by a 7-tesla small animal MRI. Results: On day 60 after tumour implantation, the survival rate in SID mice was reduced to 41%. In the laparotomised group, 81% of mice survived, while the control group had a survival rate of 75%. These differences were significant (SID vs. control: p < 0.02, and SID vs. laparotomy: p < 0.002). The tumour volume was not influenced by the degree of surgical trauma. Conclusion: In pancreatic cancer, the SID model is ideally suited to investigate the influence of SID on this tumour entity.
Many ethicists consider the rule of nonmaleficence – Do no harm! – to be the most fundamental ethical rule and key to ethics. This rule is taken as the foundation of the present work. I argue that any entity, that can be harmed, ought to be morally considered. Only those entities can be harmed that are inherently goal-directed or striving – in other words, that possess a telos. The reason is that by constantly acting in ways to preserve their being and to prevent their own not-being, goal-directed entities express that they value their own good. To harm such a goal-directed entity therefore means to act against the values and the good of it. The argument so far supports ethical biocentrism, that is, the view that all living, goal-directed beings are harmable, possess interests, and are, thus, morally considerable, while non-living beings are not. Yet, I digress from classical biocentrism since I conclude, based on analysis of evolutionary and biological findings, that the locus of goal-directedness and potential harm is also, if not foremost, situated in genes. Within many species, individual organisms sacrifice themselves for the betterment of their descendants like in praying mantises where males sacrifice themselves and are eaten by the female during copulation. This shows that it is not necessarily the organism as an individual which follows its own interests and goals. Individual organisms are – to a high degree – “directed” by their genes. Even in highly developed animals, genes play a significant role in the goal-directedness of the individuals. An adult human organism, for example, consists of trillions of individual cells. However, all these cells are derived from a single cell – the fertilized egg. Each of our lives begins with a single cell that contains almost all information to finally form our functioning body. Where do all the instructions, the goal-directedness come from to finally form an adult organism if not from the genes contained in this first cell, the zygote? It is the genes of each zygote that contain a set of information for making the appropriate adult. Organisms are largely programmed to do everything necessary to stay in existence, to survive, and finally to pass on their genes successfully – either by reproducing or by helping close relatives that carry a similar set of genes. The main interests of genes lie in their continued existence. This necessitates reproduction since the gene-carrying organisms will inevitably die. Single genes, though, are difficult to morally consider directly since they perform entirely in and through individual organisms. Without the individual organisms, genes cannot survive. The good news for ethics is that the interests of genes and organism usually converge: individual organisms try to survive – as do their genes. In practice, it thus makes much more sense to give moral attention to entire organisms instead of single genes. An advantage of the gene-centric ethical theory proposed here is that the moral relevance of future generations and species can be “directly” justified: Since genes have an interest in their continued existence (in the form of identical copies), they would be harmed if future generations were doomed to inexistence. Within a species with many individuals, each gene is likely to be represented in many organisms. The smaller the gene pool of a species gets, the less likely is the existence of the same gene and, therefore, the less likely is the fulfillment of its fundamental interests. Hence, saving one of the last individuals of an endangered species would be ethically preferable to saving an individual of a populous species. Unfortunately, moral conflicts are abundant – not only concerning biodiversity conservation. We often have to choose between harming either entity A or entity B – for example in the daily questions of food and eating. In such cases, a strictly egalitarian theory (especially an egalitarian biocentric one) would be no real help and without any guiding power. Therefore, on a second level of morality, we have to include additional criteria that help to minimize the overall harm. For these criteria to be objective, universalizable, and thus moral ones, I apply a number of widely accepted ethical principles like the principle of proportionality, impartiality, self-defense, and universalizability. By recurring to these principles, I identify a set of morally relevant criteria for a fair resolution of moral conflict situations which help to minimize the overall harm done. The identified criteria are: (phylogenetic) nearness, endangerment, r- or K-selected species, evolutionary distinctiveness, ability to regrow and to regenerate, pain-susceptibility, and ecosystematic role. In sum, my gene-centric environmental ethical theory provides numerous reasons and arguments for biodiversity conservation – for protecting genes, organisms, species, and ecosystems alike – without neglecting the needs of humans.
The globally threatened Aquatic Warbler (Acrocephalus paludicola) is the rarest migratory songbird in Europe. Before the population declined dramatically after 1960, the Aquatic Warbler was a common species in European mires and river flood¬plains. Today, the global population is estimated to count 27 600 individuals, of which approx. 90 % are concentrated in only three countries during the breeding season: Belarus, Poland and Ukraine. Despite numerous conservation efforts mainly under¬taken in European countries, the population decline has not been stopped. Although the Aquatic Warbler is considered a “European” bird species because of the location of its breeding grounds, it spends up to six months on migration and on the wintering grounds on the African continent. A comprehensive species conservation strategy must therefore include the preservation of African resting and wintering grounds. This study analyses the ecol¬ogy of Aquatic Warbler in its wintering grounds using the example of the Djoudj National Park area in north-western Senegal. The study aims, first, to close knowledge gaps regarding the behaviour and the habitat requirements of Aquatic Warblers during their stay on the wintering grounds to provide a scientific base for long-term species conservation management; second, to assess the importance of the wintering site in the Djoudj area is in a global perspec¬tive; and third, to identify threats to the Djoudj area as a suitable Aquatic Warbler habitat. In a fourth step, science-based management recommendations are formu¬lated to support the ongoing practical conservation work of the Djoudj National Park administration with regard to the Aquatic Warbler. The main outcomes of the study are the following: (I) We confirmed the presence of Aquatic Warblers in the Djoudj area between mid-December and the end of March. (II) The connection between the wintering ground “Djoudj National Park area” and the breeding ground “Biebrza valley” (eastern Poland) was confirmed by the resighting of a ringed Aquatic Warbler individual. (III) The remiges moult of the species was observed under natural conditions for the first time. We confirmed that the Aquatic Warbler undergoes a complete moult on its wintering grounds, following the typical sequence of passerine moult. (IV) Aquatic Warblers occur in shallowly inundated vegetation with dominant stands of Oryza longistaminata, Eleocharis mutata, Scirpus maritimus, Scirpus litto¬ralis and Sporobulus robustus interspersed with small (1–2 m²) areas of open water. The afore mentioned herbaceous species form a homogenous wetland vegetation of approximately 0.6–1.5 m height, with a coverage of 80 % to 100 %. Wild rice (Oryza longistaminata) may provide the most suitable habitat conditions as suggested by the very high density of Aquatic Warblers at sites dominated by this species. Preferential habitat may include a few solitary trees, but open woodland or scrublands are unsuit-able for Aquatic Warbler. Pure stands of cattail (Typha australis) are avoided. The water level in the habitat areas varies between 0 (humid soil) and 40 cm above the ground. Constant inundation seems to be essential, as Aquatic Warblers were never encountered in dry parts of the study area. All known Aquatic Warbler habitats in the study area are influenced by brackish or salty water. (V) During winter Aquatic Warblers use a home range of 3.9 ha (± 1.9) in aver¬age, which is shared with other individuals and species. No territorial behaviour was observed in the winter quarters. (VI) The vegetation and land cover map prepared distinguishes six classes of her¬baceous vegetation and five general land cover classes. (VII) There are 4 729 ha of potential Aquatic Warbler habitat within the study area. (VIII) We estimate the density of the Aquatic Warbler population in the study area to range between 0 and 2.26 individuals per hectare with a total population size of 776 individuals, or 260–4 057 individuals in a 95 % credibility interval. Hence we conclude that 1.1–3.8 % (0.37–19.8 % within the 95 % credibility interval) of the global Aquatic Warbler wintering population are found in the Djoudj area. (VIII) The Aquatic Warbler habitats in the Djoudj area are affected by the inun¬dation regime, water circulation, changes in salinity, grazing, the spread of cattail (Typha australis), the encrustation of vegetation, the protection status of passerine migrator habitats and the expansion of rice cultivation a. Our management proposals for the preservation of existing and the development of new Aquatic Warbler habitats were formulated and incorporated into the Management Plan of the Djoudj National Park 2014–2018.
This work describes the recent scientific and technical achievements obtained at the high-precision Penning trap mass spectrometer SHIPTRAP. The scientific focus of the SHIPTRAP experiment are mass measurements of short-lived nuclides with proton number larger than 100. The masses of these isotopes are usually determined via extrapolations, systematic trends, predictions based on theoretical models or alpha-decay spectroscopy. In several experiments the masses of the isotopes 252-255No and 255,256Lr have been measured directly. With the obtained results the region of enhanced nuclear stability at the deformed shell closure at the neutron number 152 was investigated. Furthermore, the masses have been used to benchmark theoretical mass models. The measured masses were compared selected mass models which revealed differences between few keV/c² up to several MeV/c² depending on the investigated nuclide and model. In order to perform mass measurements on superheavy nuclei with lower production rates, the efficiency of the SHIPTRAP setup needs to be increased. Currently, the efficiency is 2% and mainly limited by the stopping- and extraction efficiency of the buffer gas cell. The stopping and extraction efficiency of the current buffer gas cell is 12%. To this end, a modified version of the buffer gas cell was developed and characterized with 223Ra ion source. Besides a larger stopping volume and a coaxial injection the new buffer gas cell is operated at a temperature of 40K. The operation at cryogenic temperatures increases the cleanliness of the buffer gas. From extraction measurements and simulations an overall efficiency of 62(3)% was determined which results in an increase by a factor of 5 in comparison to the current buffer gas cell. Aside from high-precision mass measurements of heavy radionuclides the mass differences of metastable isobars was measured to identify candidates for the neutrinoless double-electron capture. Neutrinoless double-electron capture can only occur if the neutrino is its own antiparticle and a physics beyond the standard model exists since the neutrinoless double-electron capture violates the conservation of the lepton number. Due to its expected long half-life this decay has not yet been observed. However, the decay rate is resonantly enhanced if mother and daughter nuclide are degenerate in energy. Suitable candidates for the search of the neutrinoless double-electron capture have been identified with mass difference measurements uncertainties of about 100eV/c². In this work the results of the mass difference measurements of 12 possible candidates are presented.
The Role of Pregnancy-Associated Hormones in the Development and Function of Regulatory B Cells
(2014)
During mammalian pregnancy, highly specialized mechanisms of immune tolerance are triggered in order to allow the semi-allogeneic fetus to grow within the maternal uterus in harmony with the maternal immune system. Among other mechanisms, changes in the endocrine status have been proposed to be at least part of the machinery responsible for the induction of immune tolerance during pregnancy. Indeed, pregnancy-associated hormones, estradiol, progesterone, and human chorionic gonadotropin are known to confer immune suppressive capacity to innate as well as adaptive immune cells. Regulatory B cells, a subpopulation of B lymphocytes with strong immunosuppressive functions, were shown to expand during pregnancy. Furthermore, it is well-known that some women suffering from multiple sclerosis, significantly improve their symptoms during pregnancy and this was attributed to the effect of female sex hormones. Accordingly, estradiol protects mice from developing experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis by triggering the expansion and activation of regulatory B cells. In this review, we discuss different mechanisms associated with the development, activation, and function of regulatory B cells with a special focus on those involving pregnancy-associated hormones.
The UNESCO Man and the Biosphere Programme has been active in South Africa for almost 20 years. The country currently has six designated biosphere reserves with a few sites in various stages of the nomination process. Within the South African context, agencies are using a series of seemingly different instruments to practice landscape-scale management. The UNESCO biosphere reserve concept sometimes finds it difficult to obtain prominence amongst these different landscape initiatives. Biosphere reserves are special sites wherein sustainable development is promoted. For this reason, the biosphere reserve concept has much to offer towards long-term sustainable socialecological land management. In our modern age of population growth, dwindling natural resources and a general disconnectedness of humans from nature due to large scale urbanization, there is an urgent need for innovative ways in which to showcase sustainable living practices. South Africa has limited natural, economic and social resources and therefore needs to prioritize where these resources could best be allocated. This dissertation comprises the history of the MAB Programme in South Africa, as well as a multicase study on five existing biosphere reserves. Results from this study indicated that not all biosphere reserves are equally effective in their implementation of the three functions of biosphere reserves and that all biosphere reserves in South Africa face an uncertain future due to pressing challenges. Collective results of the multicase study as well as literature reviews were used to inform options for the future effective implementation of the MAB Programme in South Africa. Options that could contribute towards effective biosphere reserves include more sustainable funding support, and community-based demonstration projects. In addition a new suite of criteria to inform the selection of future biosphere reserves was developed. Biosphere reserves need to be optimally located in order to secure long-term efficiency and effectiveness. These sites need to be representative of biodiversity, efficiently managed and persistent in the long run. Presently in South Africa, new sites for biosphere reserves are nominated in an ad hoc manner. Should their locations be selected discerningly, they offer many benefits to the South African social and environmental landscape that should be recognized and utilized. The final suite of selection criteria are structured according to four subsections, namely a general section that addresses national matters of general concern to the MAB Programme, and three sections covering the three biosphere reserve functions of conservation, sustainable development and logistic support. This suite of biosphere reserve selection criteria for South Africa is being put forward for deliberation and discussion at local, provincial and national level. It has the potential to be of valuable assistance in selection processes for future effective and efficient biosphere reserves that will proudly earn their place in the South African landscape as “special places for people and nature”.
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: Animal studies and data from a single-center study suggest that tobacco smoke exposure may be a risk factor for precapillary pulmonary hypertension (PH). Objective: We aimed to survey tobacco smoke exposure in a large PH collective and to compare it with epidemiological data from healthy subjects. Methods: This is an international, multicenter, case-control study including patients with pulmonary arterial and chronic thromboembolic PH. All patients were asked specific questions about tobacco smoke exposure. Healthy controls were retrieved from the Swiss Health Survey (n = 18,747). Results: Overall (n = 472), 49% of PH patients were smokers and there was a clear sex difference (women 37%, men 71%). Significantly more PH men were smokers compared with healthy controls, whereas less PH women were ever active smokers. However, 50% of the non-smoking PH women were exposed to secondhand smoke, leading to a significantly higher number of tobacco smoke-exposed individuals compared to healthy controls. PH smokers were significantly younger compared to those not exposed. Conclusion: Active and environmental tobacco smoke exposure is common in PH. The higher prevalence of male PH smokers, the higher exposure to environmental tobacco smoke in PH women compared to healthy controls and the lower age at PH diagnosis in smokers may indicate a pathogenic role of tobacco smoke exposure in PH.
Streptococcus pneumoniae (the pneumococcus) is a harmless resident of the human nasopharyngeal cavity, and, in general, every individual is likely to be colonized asymptomatically at least once during life. However, under certain conditions, the bacterium can spread to other tissues and organs causing local, non-invasive infections but also lifethreatening, invasive diseases. Pneumococcal carriage and infection is a highly regulated interplay between pathogen- and host-specific factors and the intimate contact of S. pneumoniae with the surface of the nasopharynx is the crucial step in pneumococcal pathogenesis. Pneumococcal adherence to the respiratory epithelium is mediated by surface-exposed adhesins. These adhesins engage host cell receptors either directly or indirectly by recognizing glycoproteins of the extracellular matrix (ECM) including structural components, such as collagens, laminins, and fibronectins, as well as plasma-derived ECM modulators, like vitronectin and Factor H. Pneumococcal surface protein C (PspC) is a surface-exposed protein and important virulence factor of S. pneumoniae. The multifunctional PspC protein promotes pneumococcal adherence to host cells by interacting with the secretory component of the human polymeric Immunoglobulin receptor of respiratory cells. In addition, PspC facilitates pneumococcal immune evasion by recruiting the complement inhibitor proteins C4b-binding protein (C4BP) and Factor H. Moreover, Factor H bound to the pneumococcal surface promotes bacterial adhesion to human epithelial and endothelial cells. S. pneumoniae also interacts with the human glycoprotein vitronectin. In plasma, monomeric vitronectin regulates thrombosis, fibrinolysis and the terminal complement cascade, while it additionally mediates cell-matrix interactions, cell adhesion and migration in the ECM. It was shown that multimeric, ECM-associated vitronectin facilitates pneumococcal adherence to respiratory epithelial cells. In addition, the interaction of pneumococci with vitronectin promotes their uptake by mucosal epithelial cells via the engagement of the integrin αvβ3 receptor and activation of intracellular signaling pathways culminating in cytoskeletal rearrangements. This study aims to identify and characterize the surface-exposed protein(s) that mediate binding of pneumococci to vitronectin and to elucidate the impact of vitronectin on pneumococcal pathogenesis beyond its function as molecular bridge between pneumococcus and host. Flow cytometric, immunosorbent and surface plasmon resonance experiments revealed that PspC is a vitronectin-binding protein of S. pneumoniae. The specificity of the interaction with vitronectin was confirmed using recombinant PspC proteins and Lactococcus lactis heterologously expressing PspC on their surface. Factor H did not hinder vitronectinbinding to PspC indicating that vitronectin recognizes the central part of PspC. Secretory IgA inhibited but not completely prevented vitronectin-binding to PspC, strongly suggesting that vitronectin binds near, but not directly to, the SC-binding region within the R domain(s) of PspC. In addition, PspC proteins comprising two R domains bound with higher affinity to vitronectin than PspC containing only one R domain, indicating that two interconnected R domains are required for efficient vitronectin-binding. Despite the sequential and structural differences to classical PspC, the PspC-like protein Hic specifically interacted with vitronectin with similar affinity than PspC containing two linked R domains. Binding studies confirmed that Factor H interacts with the very N-terminal region of Hic showing high sequence homology to classical PspC proteins, while vitronectin recognizes an adjacent region in the N-terminal region of Hic. The studied PspC proteins bound to both soluble and immobilized vitronectin, and the C-terminal heparin-binding domain (HBD3) was identified as PspC-binding motif in soluble vitronectin. However, in its immobilized form, vitronectin likely exposes additional binding sites for PspC since a region N-terminally to the identified HBD3 conferred binding of PspC. Vitronectin inhibits the terminal complement pathway, thereby preventing proinflammatory immune reactions and tissue damage. In general, pneumococci are protected from opsonization and MAC-dependent lysis by their capsule. However, pneumococci in close contact to human cells can become susceptible to complement attack due to reduced amounts of capsule. In addition, they can be severely affected by TCC-induced inflammatory responses. Vitronectin bound to PspC significantly inhibited the formation of terminal complement complexes. Thus, the interaction of PspC with vitronectin might aid in immune evasion of S. pneumoniae by inhibiting complement-mediated lysis and/or suppressing proinflammatory events. In conclusion, the results revealed the multifunctional PspC and Hic as vitronectin-binding proteins and proposed a novel role for the specific interaction of S. pneumoniae with vitronectin in regulating the complement cascade, beside its function as molecular bridge to the respiratory epithelium.