Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (80)
- Article (51)
Language
- English (131) (remove)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (131)
Keywords
- - (37)
- proteomics (13)
- Staphylococcus aureus (10)
- Virologie (9)
- Proteomics (5)
- metaproteomics (5)
- Bacillus subtilis (4)
- Massenspektrometrie (4)
- Proteomanalyse (4)
- biofilm (4)
Institute
- Abteilung für Mikrobiologie und Molekularbiologie (131) (remove)
Publisher
- MDPI (20)
- Frontiers Media S.A. (18)
- Nature Publishing Group (3)
- S. Karger AG (3)
- Wiley (3)
- American Society for Microbiology (ASM) (1)
- BioMed Central (BMC) (1)
- Elsevier (1)
- Springer Nature (1)
Until today, more than 100 years after its first description in Italy, the highly pathogenic avian influenza virus (HPAIV) has not lost its fearsome character for wild birds, poultry and humans. On the contrary, the number of outbreaks with high casualty rates in wild birds and poultry has multiplied in recent years and cases of zoonotic infections are also increasingly reported from HPAI endemic areas. The epidemiology of these infections is complex and also involves surface water and possibly sediments of shallow standing waters, which could play a role as a vector medium and/or virus reservoir. The goal of this project was to expand current knowledge of the influence of water on the spread of AIV. As part of this project, we were able to ...
1. ...improve AIV detection methods using real time RT-PCR in terms of sensitivity and breadth of viruses detected. In addition, we succeeded in economizing the procedure so that fewer resources are required and results are obtained faster (publication I: [173]).
2. ...develop an ultrafiltration-based enrichment method for AIV from surface water and evaluate it with field samples from HPAI outbreak areas in wild bird habitats (Wadden Sea coast of Schleswig-Holstein) and previously unaffected regions (Antarctic Weddell Sea) (publication II: [174]). Furthermore, protocols for testing different environmental sample matrices for AIV screening were tested and compared to results of passive monitoring by dabbing diseased or dead wild birds. AIV was detected in more than half (61%) of 44 water samples. We received additional sediment samples from 36 of the 44 water samples. In 18 of 36 of the sediments tested, as well as in 4.16% of 1705 fecal samples tested AIV was detected. However, the studies of the environmental samples mostly yielded only generic AIV detections, with viral loads in the range of the detection limit. This massively hampered further investigations for sub- and pathotyping. In contrast, 79.41% of 68 samples from passive monitoring showed high to very high HPAIV viral loads which also allowed sub- and pathotyping.
3. ...demonstrate in animal experiments that even very low titers (0.1 TCID50 ml-1) of HPAI viral infectivity in water can induce productive infection in susceptible but clinically largely resistant mallard ducks (publication III: [175]). Furthermore, we were able to develop evidence that there is a difference in virus spread that depends on the type of (contaminated) water source. This means that infections on poultry farms with inverted or nipple drinkers may follow a different course than infections in the wild, which are mediated via larger surface waters.
Overall, the results of this project highlight the important role of surface and drinking water, as well as aquatic sediments, in the spread of AIV. The methods developed here for AIV detection extend the possibilities for surveillance of AIV infections; however, passive remains superior to active surveillance of HPAIV infections in several aspects. Examination of various environmental samples did not yield a significant advantage in terms of an early warning system that would indicate the presence or spread of HPAIV in wild bird habitats prior to the occurrence of lethal infections in wild birds.
Bacillus subtilis has been extensively used as a microbial cell factory for industrial enzymes due to its excellent capacities for protein secretion and large-scale fermentation. This bacterium is also an attractive host for biopharmaceutical production. However, the secretion potential of this organism is not fully utilized yet, mostly due to a limited understanding of critical rearrangements in the membrane proteome upon high-level protein secretion. Recently, it was shown that bottlenecks in heterologous protein secretion can be resolved by genome minimization. Here, we present for the first time absolute membrane protein concentrations of a genome-reduced B. subtilis strain (“midiBacillus”) expressing the immunodominant Staphylococcus aureus antigen A (IsaA). We quantitatively characterize the membrane proteome adaptation of midiBacillus during production stress on the level of molecules per cell for more than 400 membrane proteins, including determination of protein concentrations for ∼61% of the predicted transporters. We demonstrate that ∼30% of proteins with unknown functions display a significant increase in abundance, confirming the crucial role of membrane proteins in vital biological processes. In addition, our results show an increase of proteins dedicated to translational processes in response to IsaA induction. For the first time reported, we provide accumulation rates of a heterologous protein, demonstrating that midiBacillus secretes 2.41 molecules of IsaA per minute. Despite the successful secretion of this protein, it was found that there is still some IsaA accumulation occurring in the cytosol and membrane fraction, leading to a severe secretion stress response, and a clear adjustment of the cell’s array of transporters. This quantitative dataset offers unprecedented insights into bioproduction stress responses in a synthetic microbial cell.
Orthohantaviruses are rodent-borne pathogens distributed all over the world, which do not cause visible disease in their reservoir host. Puumala orthohantavirus (PUUV) causes most human hantavirus disease cases in Europe and is transmitted by the bank vole (Clethrionomys glareolus). Hantaviruses have a tri-segmented genome consisting of the large (L) segment, coding for the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRP), the medium (M) segment, encoding the glycoproteins, and the small (S) segment. The S-segment contains two major overlapping open reading frames (ORF) coding for the nucleocapsid (N) protein and a non-structural (NSs) protein, a putative type I interferon (IFN-I) antagonist. To date, pathogenesis and reservoir host adaptation of hantaviruses are poorly understood due to missing adequate cell culture and animal models.
In contrast to previous studies, in this work, data from spring and summer 2019 indicated a high vole abundance, a high PUUV prevalence in voles and high human incidence for some endemic regions in Germany, but elsewhere values were low to moderate. Regional and local human health institutions need to be aware about the heterogeneous distribution of human PUUV infection risk.
For a better understanding of virus-host associations, two novel cell lines from bank voles and common voles each were generated and their susceptibility and replication capacities for a variety of zoonotic and non-zoonotic viruses were analyzed. The PUUV strain Vranica/Hällnäs showed efficient replication in a new bank vole kidney cell line, but not in four other cell lines of bank and common voles. Vice versa, Tula orthohantavirus (TULV) replicated in the kidney cell line of common voles, but was hampered in its replication in other cell lines. Several viruses, such as Cowpox virus, Vaccinia virus, Rift Valley fever virus, and Encephalomyocarditis virus 1 replicated in all four cell lines. West Nile virus, Usutu virus, Sindbis virus and Tick-borne encephalitis virus replicated only in a part of the cell lines. These results indicate a tissue or species specific tropism for many of the tested viruses and the potential value of vole cell lines to address such questions in detail.
Using one of these new cell lines, the first German PUUV strains were isolated from bank voles caught in the highly endemic region around Osnabrück. Complete genomes were determined by target-enrichment-mediated high-throughput sequencing from original lung tissue, after isolation and after additional passaging in VeroE6 cells and a bank vole-derived kidney cell line. Different single amino acid substitutions were observed in the RdRP of the two stable PUUV isolates. The PUUV strain isolated on VeroE6 cells showed a lower titer when propagated on bank vole cells compared to VeroE6 cells. Additionally, glycoprotein precursor (GPC)-derived virus-like particles of a German PUUV strain from the same region allowed the generation of monoclonal antibodies that reacted with the isolated PUUV strains.
To investigate the role of PUUV and other vole-borne hantavirus NSs proteins, the evolution of the NSs and N encoding sequences was investigated by a field study in bank voles and the NSs sequences were characterized in vitro for their inhibitory effect on the human interferon-β promoter. Analysis of blood and lung samples of 851 bank voles trapped during 2010-2014 in Baden-Wuerttemberg and North Rhine-Westphalia resulted in detection of 27.8% PUUV-specific antibody positive bank voles, whereas in 22.3% PUUV-specific RNA was detected. In the hantavirus outbreak years 2010 and 2012 PUUV prevalence in bank voles was higher compared to 2011, 2013 and 2014. Sequences of the S segment of all positive bank voles showed amino acid and nucleotide sequence types of the NSs-ORF with temporal and/or local variation, whereas the N-ORF was highly conserved. One sequence type persisted over the whole observation period in both regions. The NSs coding sequence was highly divergent among regional bank vole populations in the outbreak year 2012.
Transfection experiments resulted in the detection of different products of the NSs-ORF of PUUV, TULV, Prospect Hill and Khabarovsk orthohantaviruses, due to translation initiation at different methionine codons along the coding sequence. Using luciferase reporter assays, the NSs proteins of PUUV, TULV, Prospect Hill and Khabarovsk orthohantaviruses showed inhibition of IFN-I induction of up to 70%, whereas Sin Nombre and Andes orthohantavirus NSs proteins showed a reduced effect compared to the other NSs proteins. The first 20 amino acids of the N-terminal region of PUUV NSs were found to be crucial for IFN-I promoter inhibition.
In conclusion, the newly established cell lines, antibodies, reporter assays and PUUV isolates are highly valuable tools for future hantavirus research. The activity of PUUV NSs protein in human cells contributes to our understanding of virus-host interactions and highlights the importance of corresponding future reservoir host studies. Hantavirus surveillance studies showed the necessity for timely information of the potential human PUUV infection risk to public health institutions in endemic areas to initiate appropriate actions.
LPAIV H9N2 and HPAIV H5N8 clade 2.3.4.4 viruses have been frequently isolated from domestic and wild birds in Germany and they are endemic in poultry worldwide. H9N2 is known to donate gene segments to other AIV with high case fatality rate in humans (e.g. H5N1, H7N9). Similarly, H5N8 devastated poultry worldwide since 2014 and has been recently isolated from humans. Therefore, it is important to understand the genetic predisposition for adaptation of H9N2 and H5N8 AIV in poultry and mammals. In the first publication, we focused on the variable hemagglutinin cleavage site (HACS) of European and Non-European H9N2 viruses, since the HACS is a main virulence determinant of AIV in birds. We found a preferential substitution of non-basic amino acids (G, A, N, S, D, K) in the HACS at position 319 of European H9N2 viruses compared to non-European H9N2 viruses. Recombinant viruses carrying different non-basic amino acids in the HACS modulated replication in vitro. While these non-basic amino acids did not affect virulence or transmission in chickens, they modulated virulence and replication in turkeys. Moreover, H9N2 viruses with non-basic amino acids in the HACS were able to replicate in mammalian brain cells for multiple cycles even without trypsin. In the second publication, we addressed the question whether reassortment between two recent German H9N2 and H5N8 clade 2.3.4.4. B viruses is possible and analysed the impact on virus fitness in mammals and birds. We found that H9N2 PB1 and NP segments were not compatible to generate infectious H5N8 viruses and this incompatibility was due to mutations outside the packaging region. However, H9N2 NS alone or in combination with PB2 and PA significantly increased replication of H5N8 in human cells. Moreover, H9N2 PB2, PA and/or NS segments increased virulence of H5N8 in mice. Interestingly, in chickens, reassortment with H9N2 gene segments, particularly NS, partially or fully impaired chicken-to-chicken transmission. These results indicate that the evolution of H9N2/H5N8 reassortants showing high virulence for mammals is unlikely to occur in chickens. In the third publication, we focused on the NS1 protein of different HPAIV H5N8 clade 2.3.4.4 viruses from 2013 to 2019 and studied the impact of its C-terminus (CTE) variation on virus fitness in chickens and ducks. Our findings revealed a preferential selection for a certain NS1 CTE length in 2.3.4.4. H5N8 clade A (237 aa) and B (217 aa) viruses over the common length of 230 aa. Indeed, the NS1 CTE can affect virus virulence and pathogenesis in a species and virus clade dependent manner. In chickens, although there was no impact on virulence, NS1 CTE of H5N8-A and H5N8-B, regardless of the length, have evolved towards higher efficiency to block the IFN response. In ducks, NS1 CTE contributed to efficient transmission, replication and high virulence of H5N8-B. In the fourth publication, we assessed the impact of variable length of NS1 on H5N8 virus replication in human cells and virulence in mice. We showed that NS1 of H5N8-B virus unlike the vast majority of NS1 of AIV, shared preferences for short NS1 similar to human and zoonotic influenza viruses. This virus (i) was able to efficiently block IFN and apoptosis induction which might be the first steps for efficient adaptation to human cells and (ii) without prior adaptation replicated at higher levels and was more virulent in mice than H5N8-A. The virulence of the latter virus increased after shortening the NS1 similar to H5N8-B virus. Therefore, it is conceivable that truncation in NS1 is a determinant for adaptation of H5N8 in mammals irrespective of its impact on virus fitness in poultry. Findings in this dissertation indicated that HA mutations in the European H9N2 and NS1 variations in H5N8 viruses play a role in virus fitness in poultry and/or mammals. These results improve our current understanding for AIV adaptation and are useful to assess the potential of these viruses to infect mammals.
Responses of bovine and human neutrophils to members of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex
(2023)
PMN are one of the most important cells of the innate immune system and are responsible for fast clearance of invading pathogens in most circumstances. The role of human PMN during mycobacterial infection have been widely studied. Nevertheless, there are contradicting results regarding their role in protection or pathology during TB. Similar studies focusing on bovine PMN and their role in M. bovis infection remain understudied. Also, not much is known about attenuation of M. tb in cattle and responses of PMN to this MTBC member.
The major aims of this study were to i) gain insights into bovine PMN biology and the cellular processes triggered by challenge with virulent mycobacteria and to ii) find out whether interspecies differences result in different outcomes upon in vitro challenge. In the first part of the work, a new isolation method for bovine PMN from whole blood was developed. Human and bovine PMN have different buoyant properties and hence need to be isolated using different procedures. The magnetic isolation method developed within this thesis is robust and results in very good yields of highly pure, viable bovine PMN populations. This is extremely advantageous and indispensable for downstream functional assays that are required to be performed on a single day.
The second goal of this study was to compare and contrast the functional differences between bovine and human PMN upon BCG infection. The findings reveal for the first time that human PMN phagocytose more BCG in comparison to bovine counterparts. Non-opsonized bacteria were internalized via the lectin-like C-domain, require cholesterol and an active cytoskeleton in human PMN, whereas opsonized bacteria entered cells via the CR3 and, in particular, CD11b. It remains unresolved why bovine PMN reacted differently, notably phagocytosis remained unaltered, to various treatments, including blocking monoclonal antibodies to CD11b and chemical inhibitors altering the cell membrane. Nonetheless, the increased uptake of BCG by human PMN correlates to more potent response of these cells in functional assays in comparison to bovine PMN. No PMN intrinsic differences were found in the basal cholesterol content. Comparative assays with the virulent strains would be essential in order to generalize these observations.
The third aim was to investigate the responses of bovine PMN to BCG, M. tb and M. bovis. While there was no difference in uptake between BCG and M. tb, serum opsonized BCG was taken up at a higher amount. This finding suggests differential binding of bacterial epitopes to host cell receptors which modulates mycobacteria uptake. However, between the virulent strains M. tb and M. bovis, the human-adapted bacillus was phagocytosed at a higher rate which hints towards the possibility of rapid recognition and clearance of M. tb in bovine host thereby possibly preventing pathology. The release of selective cytokines by PMN post infection with the virulent strains offers baseline information relevant for processes that probably occur in vivo. This work for the first time provides insights into responses of bovine PMN to mycobacteria in a two-tier approach: by cross-species analysis of PMN responses to selected mycobacterium and by head-to-head analysis of bovine PMN to animal-adapted and human-adapted mycobacteria.
As a prospect for future research in bovine PMN biology in the context of mycobacterial infection, it would be highly advantageous to compare the subcellular localization of M. tb and M. bovis in bovine PMN using confocal and/or electron microscopy. This analysis would confer proof on attachment or internalization of mycobacteria by PMN and identify the features of the mycobacteria-containing compartments. Also, in-depth investigations of additional entry pathways for the pathogen in bovine cells would be informative for unlocking downstream cell signaling events. In addition, PMN viability studies will be meaningful particularly in bovine PMN challenged with M. bovis and M. tb, given the impact of death patterns on tissue pathology. Current results and follow up studies will contribute to the understanding of the roles of PMN in controlling elimination or growth of M. bovis and M. tb in cattle.
Coding constraints imposed by the very small genome sizes of negative-strand RNA viruses (NSVs) have led to the development of numerous strategies that increase viral protein diversity, enabling the virus to both establish a productive viral replication cycle and effectively control the host antiviral response. Arenaviruses are no exception to this, and previous findings have demonstrated that the nucleoprotein (NP) of the highly pathogenic Junín virus (JUNV) exists as three additional N-terminally truncated isoforms of 53 kD (NP53kD), 47 kD (NP47kD), and 40 kD (NP40kD). The two smaller isoforms (i.e. NP47kD and NP40kD) have been characterized as products of caspase cleavage, which appears to serve a decoy function to inhibit apoptosis induction. However, whether they have additional functions in the viral replication cycle remains unknown. Further, the origin and function of NP53kD has not yet been described.
In order to first identify the mechanism responsible for production of the NP53kD variant, a possible role of additional caspase cleavage sites was first excluded using a site mutagenesis approach. Subsequently, alanine mutagenesis was then used to identify a region responsible for NP53kD production. As a result, three methionine residues were identified within the characterized sequence segment of NP, linking the production of NP53kD to an alternative in-frame translation initiation. Further site-directed mutagenesis of the previously identified putative in-frame methionine codons (i.e. M78, M80 and M100) finally led to the identification of translation initiation at M80 as being predominantly responsible for the production of NP53kD. Once the identity of all three NP isoforms was known, it was then of further interest to more deeply characterize their functional roles. Consistent with the N-terminal domain containing RNA binding and homotrimerization motifs that are relevant for the viral RNA synthesis process, it could be demonstrated that all three truncated NP isoforms lost the ability to support viral RNA synthesis in a minigenome assay. However, they also did not interfere with viral RNA synthesis by full-length NP, nor did they affect the ability of the matrix protein Z to inhibit viral RNA synthesis. Moreover, it was observed that loss of the oligomerization motifs in the N-terminus also affected the subcellular localization of all three NP isoforms, which were no longer localized in discrete perinuclear inclusion bodies, but rather showed a diffuse distribution throughout the cytoplasm, with the smallest isoform NP40kD also being able to enter the nucleus. Surprisingly, the 3'-5' exonuclease function of NP, which is associated with the C-terminal domain and plays a role in inhibiting interferon induction by digestion of double-stranded RNAs, was found to be retained only by the NP40kD isoform, despite that all three isoforms retained the associated domain. Finally, previous studies using transfected NP and chemical induction of apoptosis have suggested that cleavage of NP at the caspase motifs responsible for generating NP47kD and NP40kD plays a role in controlling activation of the apoptosis pathway. Therefore, to further characterize the connection between the generation of NP isoforms and the regulation of apoptosis in a viral context, recombinant JUNVs deficient in the respective isoforms were generated. Unlike infections with wild-type JUNV, mutations of the caspase cleavage sites resulted in the induction of caspases activation. Surprisingly, however, this was also the case for mutation of the alternate start codon responsible for NP53kD generation.
Taken together, the data from this study suggest a model whereby JUNV generates a pool of smaller NP isoforms with a predominantly cytoplasmic distribution. As a result of this altered localization, NP53kD appears to be able to serve as the substrate for further generation of NP47kD and NP40kD by caspase cleavage. Not only does this cleavage inhibit apoptosis induction during JUNV infection, it also results in a cytoplasmic isoform of NP that retains strong 3'-5' exonuclease activity (i.e. NP40kD) and thus may play an important role in preventing viral double-stranded RNA accumulation in the cytoplasm, where it can lead to activation of IFN signaling. Overall, such results emphasize the relevance of alternative protein isoforms in virus biology, and particularly in regulation of the host response to infection.
Ebolaviruses are zoonotic pathogens causing severe hemorrhagic fevers in humans
and non-human primates with high case fatality rates. In recent years, the number and
scope of outbreaks has increased, highlighting the importance of better understanding
the molecular aspects of ebolaviral infection and host cell interactions in order to be able to better control this virus.
To facilitate virus genome replication, transcription and protein expression,
ebolaviruses recruit and interact with specific host factors. These interactions play a key role in viral infection and influence virus survival and disease outcome. Based on a genome-wide siRNA screen, the three host factors CAD, NXF1 and UAP56 were
recently identified to be involved in ebolavirus genome replication and/or transcription
and/or mRNA-translation. However, mechanistical details of how these host factors
affect the ebolavirus lifecycle remained elusive.
In this thesis I analyzed the functional interactions between EBOV and these newly
identified host proteins in order to better understand the virus-host interface. To this
end I used siRNA knockdown as well as overexpression of these host proteins in
combination with different reverse-genetics based lifecycle modelling assays to
investigate the influence of CAD, NXF1 and UAP56 on individual aspects of the EBOV
lifecycle. Using these systems in relation with a host factor knockdown I was able to
show that the provision of pyrimidines by CAD plays an important role for both EBOV
genome replication and transcription, whereas NXF1 is predominantly required for
mRNA transport. I furthermore used immunofluorescence analysis to examine whether
these host factors are recruited by one or more EBOV proteins to inclusion bodies,
which represent physical sites of ebolavirus genome replication. During these
experiments, I was able to show that CAD and NXF1, and possibly also UAP56, are
recruited to EBOV inclusion bodies in order to fulfill their individual function for EBOV RNA synthesis or later steps in protein expression. Additionally, I was able to show that the uptake of NXF1 into NP-induced inclusion bodies is most likely mediated via the C-terminal domain of NP, and that the FG-repeat interaction domains of NXF1 are sufficient for recruitment. Further, my data indicate that RNA interaction of both NXF1 and NP is not required for this process, but rather important for exit of NXF1 from inclusion bodies. I therefore suggest that the viral mRNA is transferred in inclusionbodies from NP to NXF1, which leads to a rapid export of the NXF1 packed viral mRNA into the cytosol for mRNA translation.
The exact mechanism of how these host factors are recruited into inclusion bodies and whether they have similar functions in the lifecycle of other negative-sense RNA viruses still needs to be investigated. Nevertheless, this study increases our understanding of virus-host interaction of ebolaviruses, and thus helps to identify targets for the development of novel therapeutics against these viruses.
Abstract
DNA extraction and preservation bias is a recurring topic in DNA sequencing‐based microbial ecology. The different methodologies can lead to distinct outcomes, which has been demonstrated especially in studies investigating prokaryotic community composition. Eukaryotic microbes are ubiquitous, diverse, and increasingly a subject of investigation in addition to bacteria and archaea. However, little is known about how the choice of DNA preservation and extraction methodology impacts perceived eukaryotic community composition. In this study, we compared the effect of two DNA preservation methods and six DNA extraction methods on the community profiles of both eukaryotes and prokaryotes in phototrophic biofilms on seagrass (Zostera marina) leaves from the Baltic Sea. We found that, whereas both DNA preservation and extraction method caused significant bias in perceived community composition for both eukaryotes and prokaryotes, extraction bias was more pronounced for eukaryotes than for prokaryotes. In particular, soft‐bodied and hard‐shelled eukaryotes like nematodes and diatoms, respectively, were differentially abundant depending on the extraction method. We conclude that careful consideration of DNA preservation and extraction methodology is crucial to achieving representative community profiles of eukaryotes in marine biofilms and likely all other habitats containing diverse eukaryotic microbial communities.
Clostridioides difficile is the leading cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhea referring to infections of the gastrointestinal tract in the course of (broad-spectrum)antibiotic therapy. While antibiotic therapy, preferentially with fidaxomicin or vancomycin, often stops the acute infection, recurrence events due to remaining spores and biofilm-associated cells are observed in up to 20% of cases. Therefore, new antibiotics, which spare the intestinal microbiota and eventually clear infections with C. difficile are urgently required. In this light, the presented work aimed at the evaluation and characterization of three natural product classes, namely chlorotonils, myxopyronins and chelocardins, with respect to their antimicrobial activity spectrum under anaerobic conditions and their potential for the therapy of C. difficile infections. Briefly, compounds of all three classes were screened for their activity against a panel of anaerobic bacteria. Subsequently, the systemic effects of selected derivatives of each compound class were analyzed in C. difficile using a proteomics approach. Finally, appropriate downstream experiments were performed to follow up on hypotheses drawn from the proteomics datasets. Thereby, all three compound classes demonstrated significant activity against C. difficile. However, chelocardins similarly inhibited the growth of other anaerobes excluding chelocardins as antibiotic candidates for C. difficile infection therapy. In contrast, chlorotonils demonstrated significantly higher in vitro activity against C. difficile and close relatives compared to a small panel of other anaerobes. In addition, it could be shown that chlorotonils affect intracellular metal homeostasis as demonstrated in a multi-omics approach. The data led to speculate that chlorotonils eventually affect cobalt and selenate availability in particular. Moreover, a metaproteomics approach verified that oral chlorotonil treatment only marginally affected the intestinal microbiota of piglets on taxonomic and functional level. Furthermore, the proteome stress response of C. difficile 630 to myxopyronin B, which similarly showed elevated activity against C. difficile compared to a few other anaerobes, indicated that the antibiotic inhibited early toxin synthesis comparatively to fidaxomicin. Finally, evidence is provided that C. difficile 630 responds to dissipation of its membrane potential by production and accumulation of aromatic metabolites.
The anaerobic, gastrointestinal pathogen Clostridioides difficile can cause severe forms of enterocolitis which is mainly mediated by the toxins it produces. The RNA polymerase inhibitor Fidaxomicin is the current gold standard for the therapy of C. difficile infections due to several beneficial features including its ability to suppress toxin synthesis in C. difficile. In contrast to the Rifamycins, Fidaxomicin binds to the RNA polymerase switch region, which is also the binding site for Myxopyronin B. Here, serial broth dilution assays were performed to test the susceptibility of C. difficile and other anaerobes to Myxopyronin B, proving that the natural product is considerably active against C. difficile and that there is no cross-resistance between Fidaxomicin and Myxopyronin B in a Fidaxomicin-resistant C. difficile strain. Moreover, mass spectrometry analysis indicated that Myxopyronin B is able to suppress early phase toxin synthesis in C. difficile to the same degree as Fidaxomicin. Conclusively, Myxopyronin B is proposed as a new lead structure for the design of novel antibiotics for the therapy of C. difficile infections.
The anaerobic pathogen Clostridioides difficile is perfectly equipped to survive and persist inside the mammalian intestine. When facing unfavorable conditions C. difficile is able to form highly resistant endospores. Likewise, biofilms are currently discussed as form of persistence. Here a comprehensive proteomics approach was applied to investigate the molecular processes of C. difficile strain 630Δerm underlying biofilm formation. The comparison of the proteome from two different forms of biofilm-like growth, namely aggregate biofilms and colonies on agar plates, revealed major differences in the formation of cell surface proteins, as well as enzymes of its energy and stress metabolism. For instance, while the obtained data suggest that aggregate biofilm cells express both flagella, type IV pili and enzymes required for biosynthesis of cell-surface polysaccharides, the S-layer protein SlpA and most cell wall proteins (CWPs) encoded adjacent to SlpA were detected in significantly lower amounts in aggregate biofilm cells than in colony biofilms. Moreover, the obtained data suggested that aggregate biofilm cells are rather actively growing cells while colony biofilm cells most likely severely suffer from a lack of reductive equivalents what requires induction of the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway and C. difficile’s V-type ATPase to maintain cell homeostasis. In agreement with this, aggregate biofilm cells, in contrast to colony biofilm cells, neither induced toxin nor spore production. Finally, the data revealed that the sigma factor SigL/RpoN and its dependent regulators are noticeably induced in aggregate biofilms suggesting an important role of SigL/RpoN in aggregate biofilm formation.
Mussel farming, compared to marine finfish aquaculture, represents an environmentally friendly alternative for a high quality protein source and can at the same time be a measure to remove excess nutrients in eutrophic areas. As such, it is considered as a promising “blue growth” potential and promoted within the European Union. To expand mussel aquaculture, new regions have to be considered because there are multiple marine usages, and spatial limitations occur in coastal areas. The brackish Baltic Sea might be considered for expansion of mussel aquaculture. This study focusses on estimated production potential, economic profitability and nutrient remediation potential of mussel farming at different salinities. Four experimental mussel farms were set up along the German Baltic coast at salinities ranging from 7 to 17 psu. Collected growth data was used to calibrate and validate a Dynamic Energy Budget model and to predict the potential mussel production at 12 sites along the German coast. The estimated production and nutrient removal was used to assess economic profitability, assuming two usages of the harvest: human consumption and mussel meal production. Measured mussel specific growth rates increased with salinity from 0.05 mm d–1 in Greifswald Bay to 0.11 mm d–1 in Kiel Fjord. Within 6 months, a 1-ha farm could produce from 1 t (Darss-Zingst-Bodden-Chain) to 51 t (Flensburg) fresh mussels and remove 1.1 to 27.7 kg P and 24.7 to 612.7 kg N, respectively. Mussel farms at sites west of Rostock at salinities >10 psu could produce 5 cm mussels within 18 months, but only farms at Flensburg, Eckernförde and Kiel Fjord became profitable at a farm size of 4 ha (160,000 m3) at current market prices of 2.2 € kg–1. Regardless of the farm size, none of the farm sites could operate profitable if fresh mussels were sold for animal feeding at sales price of 0.06 € kg–1. Yearly nutrient removal costs at a small-scale farm (1 ha) ranged between 162 € (Flensburg) and 4,018 € (Darss-Zingst-Bodden-Chain) kg–1 nitrogen, and 3,580 € and 88,750 € kg–1 phosphorus, respectively.
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) can damage all cellular macromolecules and also produce secondary reactive intermediates, like reactive electrophilic species (RES) that include quinones or aldehydes. Low molecular weight (LMW) thiols are small thiol-containing compounds that play essential roles in the defense against ROS and RES in all organisms. The best studied LMW thiol is the tripeptide glutathione (GSH). Firmicutes bacteria including Bacillus und Staphylococcus species have been recently discovered to utilize the redox buffer bacillithiol (BSH). LMW thiols function as redox buffers to maintain the reduced state of the cytoplasm. Under conditions of oxidative stress, LMW thiols also react with protein thiols to form mixed LMW thiol – protein disulfides, termed S-thiolations, as major protection mechanism. Investigating the role of BSH in oxidative stress response and ROS-induced S-thiolations in Firmicutes bacteria was one subject of this PhD thesis. Specifically, the regulatory mechanisms and post-translational thiol-modifications in response to NaOCl stress were studied in the model bacterium for low-GC Gram-positive bacteria Bacillus subtilis. The transcriptome profile after NaOCl stress was indicative of disulfide stress and overlapped strongly with the response to diamide. NaOCl stress caused induction of the thiol- and oxidative stress-specific Spx, CtsR, PerR and OhrR regulons. Thiol redox proteomics identified only few NaOCl-sensitive proteins with reversible thiol-oxidations. Using mass spectrometry, eleven proteins were identified that were oxidized to mixed BSH protein disulfides (S-bacillithiolated) in B. subtilis cells after NaOCl-exposure. Methionine synthase MetE is the most abundant S-bacillithiolated protein in B. subtilis and other Bacillus species after NaOCl exposure. S-bacillithiolation of OhrR repressor leads to upregulation of the OhrA peroxiredoxin that confers together with BSH specific protection against NaOCl. S-bacillithiolation of MetE, YxjG, PpaC, and SerA causes hypochlorite-induced methionine starvation as supported by the induction of the S-box regulon. To further assess the conservation of targets for S-bacillithiolations in other Firmicutes bacteria, we studied the S-bacillithiolomes of Bacillus megaterium, Bacillus pumilus, Bacillus amyloliquefaciens, and Staphylococcus carnosus under NaOCl stress conditions. In total, 54 S-bacillithiolated proteins were identified, including 29 unique proteins and 8 conserved proteins involved in amino acid and cofactor biosynthesis, nucleotide metabolism, translation, protein quality control, redox and antioxidant functions. Together our data support a major role of BSH redox buffer in redox control and thiol protection of conserved and essential proteins against irreversible oxidation by S-bacillithiolations in Firmicutes bacteria. In response to ROS and RES, bacteria also activate the expression of antioxidant and detoxification enzymes, such as catalases, peroxidases, thiol-dependent peroxiredoxins and other specific oxidoreductases to detoxify ROS and RES. These defense mechanisms are often controlled by redox-sensitive transcription factors. B. subtilis encodes redox-sensing MarR-type regulators belonging to the OhrR and DUF24-families that are conserved among bacteria. Hence, we were further interested in this PhD thesis to study at the molecular and structural level the redox-sensing mechanisms of novel redox-sensing MarR/DUF24-type regulators in B. subtilis. We have characterized the regulatory mechanisms of HypR, YodB and CatR that sense and respond to hypochlorite, diamide and quinones stress. HypR is the first DUF24-family regulator whose crystal structure was resolved. HypR senses specifically disulfide stress and controls positively expression of the flavin oxidoreductase HypO after NaOCl and diamide stress. HypR resembles a 2-Cys-type regulator with a reactive nucleophilic N-terminal Cys14 and a second C-terminal Cys49. Besides HypR, B. subtilis encodes further MarR/DUF24-family members including the paralogous YodB and CatR repressors that sense quinones and diamide. YodB controls the azoreductase AzoR1, the nitroreductase YodC, and the Spx regulator. YodB resembles a 2-Cys-type MarR/DUF24-family regulator with three Cys residues (Cys6, Cys101, and Cys108) that form intermolecular disulfides in vivo under oxidative stress. YodB and its paralog CatR were further identified as repressors of the catDE operon encoding a catechol-2,3-dioxygenase that also contributes to quinone resistance. Although CatR is a 1-Cys-type regulator, our data showed that CatR also forms intermolecular disulfide in response to diamide and quinones in vitro. Thus, HypR, YodB and CatR are controlled by 2-Cys-type thiol-disulfide redox switches to sense disulfide and RES stress conditions, and to control specific RES detoxification enzymes.
This work focuses the glycoprotein H of PrV which was analysed by structure-based functional analyses by targeted site-directed mutagenesis. Disulfid bridges were introduced at specific sites and the effects on the fusion mechanism investigated. A revertant was obtained and characterised during the studies, as well as chimeric glycoprotein H proteins were constructed, combining the different domains of the glycoproteins Hs of PrV and HSV1.
Lyssaviruses, the causative agents of rabies, are a long-known threat for animals and humans. To date, terrestrial rabies still accounts for tens of thousands of human deaths annually, notwithstanding ambitious vaccination campaigns targeting susceptible dog and wildlife populations that act as reservoirs for the prototypic rabies virus. Moreover, the continuing discovery of newly emerging virus species in hitherto unconcerned chiropteran hosts and geographic regions drive the expansion of the Lyssavirus genus by unveiling its actual variety, host range and distribution.In this work, the genetic diversity of three distinct lyssaviruses, namely EBLV-1, KBLV and RABV, was elucidated by in-depth genomic analyses to provide further insight into lyssavirus evolution. The generation of full-genome sequences from primarily bat-associated Danish EBLV-1 samples significantly increased the number of available Danish EBLV-1 genome sequences while phylogenetic and phylogeographic analysis revealed a stronger phylogeographic structure for the cluster A1 of the sublineage EBLV-1a than it was postulated in previous studies. In addition, the acquisition of a nearly complete genome sequence for the Kotalahti bat lyssavirus provided the basis for the classification of this putative new lyssavirus species as a recognized member of the genus. Furthermore, phylogenetic analysis revealed the affiliation of KBLV to a group of Myotis-associated lyssaviruses giving a deeper insight into the shared evolutionary history of lyssaviruses co-evolving with particular bat species. Moreover, a deep-sequencing approach was utilized to assess the high genetic diversity of vaccine virus populations, uncovering three independent patterns of single nucleotide variants (SNVs) that became selected in ERA-related vaccine-induced cases. However, no apparent influence of the genetic diversity of vaccine viruses on microevolutionary processes like a potential reversion to virulence or a species-specific adaptation of the vaccine virus strains could be detected, leaving the question for the cause of rabies induction in the affected animals unanswered. Lastly, the successful implementation of a hybridization capturing system for the generation of full-genome sequences and deep-sequencing variant analyses of RABV and KBLV samples was demonstrated for a diagnostic bait set, highlighting the versatility and consistency of this approach to assess the genetic spectrum of known and novel lyssavirus species while setting the basis for its application and optimization in upcoming projects.In conclusion, as shown by the studies in this work, the investigation of lyssavirus genomes at the sub-consensus, full-genome and population level remains crucial to assess the complexity of lyssavirus evolution, as it provides an indispensable source of information to cover the diversity of the genus and understand evolutionary dynamics on a long-term and microevolutionary scale.
The following work is describing the development of two innovative biosensors for the detection of biologically relevant molecules in the field of ecology and medical diagnostics. Biosensors have the particularity to possess a biological partner which recognizes the target molecule and a physical detection method responsible for the transformation of this biological interaction into measurable information. In the present case, both biosensors are designed following the same strategy and use a recombinant produced human receptor as biological partner and the surface plasmon resonance (SPR) technique to transform the biological interaction in quantitative information. The progesterone biosensor is aimed to detect and quantify substances with affinity to the human progesterone receptor. The recent discoveries that some chemicals present in low quantities in the ecosystem called endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) have a negative impact on the aquatic life fitness raised concerns about the effects of these same molecules to the human health. In order to assess the effects of these EDCs, the use of classical analytical detection methods like high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) or gas chromatography (GC) is not sufficient as these techniques only quantify a defined molecule without giving information about its biological activity. By integrating a recombinant human progesterone receptor, the progesterone biosensor can determine the biological activity of an unknown molecule or of a mixture of molecules in a real sample. In this work, two different yeasts – one methylotrophic (Hansenula polymorpha) and one non-methylotrophic (Arxula adeninivorans) - were selected as host for the recombinant protein production and their performances were compared. Different purification strategies were assayed and the binding activity of the purified progesterone receptor was then confirmed by enzyme like receptor assay (ELRA) and SPR. This led to the design of a first version of the biosensor with the immobilization of a progesterone-BSA ligand to the surface of a SPR chip and the use of a progesterone receptor mixed with the target molecule as sample. This competitive assay format was successfully utilized with a commercial progesterone-BSA ligand as target molecule and the next step will be the adaptation of this biosensor for real samples measurements. The HER-2 biosensor was developed as an answer for one of the most critical issue in the field of breast cancer diagnostics. In approximately 30 % of cancer cases, the transmembrane protein HER-2 can be found in large amount at the surface of the carcinoma cells and these cases are known to be particularly aggressive. Based on the amount of HER-2 protein at the surface of the cells, the pathologists established a scale with four levels to adapt the treatment to each patient. Although effective therapies have been developed to treat the HER-2 positive breast cancer, one of the major challenges remains the classification of breast sample in this scale as the only accepted determination methods are immunohistochemistry (IHC) and fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) which are only qualitative. In this work, a biosensor has been designed to quantify the amount of the HER-2 protein in a crude cell extract from a breast cancer tissue sample. To achieve this, the strategy is to utilize an antibody specifically targeted against the HER-2 protein and bound to a SPR chip. As the development of this biosensor necessitated the use of large amount of purified HER-2 protein, it was decided to produce recombinant full-length HER-2 in two different yeasts and to purify it by chromatography. This recombinant protein production required particular attention due to the membrane localization of HER-2. The structural integrity of the recombinant protein was confirmed by Western Blot and ELISA and different antibodies were bound to SPR chips in order to detect the HER-2 protein. After finding the conditions giving an optimal SPR signal, a protocol was developed to extract native HER-2 from breast tissue sample and the biosensor was assayed with this crude cell extract.
Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is emerging worldwide as a zoonotic pathogen that has remained largely undetected for decades, if not centuries. Its enormous success can be attributed to the wide range of host species, which can transmit the virus to humans, depending on the viral genotype. As a result, HEV is likely to remain a challenge even when the remaining hepatitis viruses (HAV, HBV, HCV), which are transmitted exclusively between humans, are under control. Although millions of HEV infections occur each year, little is known about this puzzling pathogen. One major issue in HEV research is the lack of reliable model systems. Established animal models are inefficient, expensive, or simply not representative of human HEV. On the other hand, cell culture systems are limited by the slow growth of the virus and inefficient replication and infection. The aim of this work is to with deepen the understanding of zoonotic HEV in animal hosts in Germany. For this purpose, a molecular and phylogenetic characterization of HEV sequences from rabbits and swine was conducted. A novel subtype of the zoonotic genotype HEV-3 was identified in a rabbit sample, further emphasizing the role of rabbits as HEV host species and possible reservoir of zoonotic HEV infections in Germany. On the other hand, a molecular biological screening of pigs and wild boars in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania indicates a wide range of HEV-3 subtypes circulating in swine in north-east Germany. Furthermore, an optimized replicon system was established in order to enable characterization of various HEV sequences by reverse genetics. As a proof of concept, two rabbit HEV derived replicons were compared with two established, cell culture adapted HEV strains. The influence of different regions of the nonstructural protein on HEV replication was determined and quantified. In particular, a system was established, to reproducibly compare different strains and genotypes. This refined replicon system will enable the characterization of further HEV sequences and thus expand the knowledge on the determinants of the viral life cycle.
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is gaining in importance and is linked to obesity.
Especially, the development of fibrosis and portal hypertension in NAFLD patients requires treatment.
Transgenic TGR(mREN2)27 rats overexpressing mouse renin spontaneously develop NAFLD with
portal hypertension but without obesity. This study investigated the additional role of obesity in this
model on the development of portal hypertension and fibrosis. Obesity was induced in twelve-week
old TGR(mREN2)27 rats after receiving Western diet (WD) for two or four weeks. Liver fibrosis
was assessed using standard techniques. Hepatic expression of transforming growth factor-β1
(TGF-β1), collagen type Iα1, α-smooth muscle actin, and the macrophage markers Emr1, as well as
the chemoattractant Ccl2, interleukin-1β (IL1β) and tumor necrosis factor-α (TNFα) were analyzed.
Assessment of portal and systemic hemodynamics was performed using the colored microsphere
technique. As expected, WD induced obesity and liver fibrosis as confirmed by Sirius Red and Oil Red
O staining. The expression of the monocyte-macrophage markers, Emr1, Ccl2, IL1β and TNFα were
increased during feeding of WD, indicating infiltration of macrophages into the liver, even though this
increase was statistically not significant for the EGF module-containing mucin-like receptor (Emr1)
mRNA expression levels. Of note, portal pressure increased with the duration of WD compared
to animals that received a normal chow. Besides obesity, WD feeding increased systemic vascular
resistance reflecting systemic endothelial and splanchnic vascular dysfunction. We conclude that
transgenic TGR(mREN2)27 rats are a suitable model to investigate NAFLD development with liver
fibrosis and portal hypertension. Tendency towards elevated expression of Emr1 is associated with
macrophage activity point to a significant role of macrophages in NAFLD pathogenesis, probably
due to a shift of the renin–angiotensin system towards a higher activation of the classical pathway.The hepatic injury induced by WD in TGR(mREN2)27 rats is suitable to evaluate different stages of
fibrosis and portal hypertension in NAFLD with obesity
In temperate regions, climate warming alters temperature and precipitation regimes. During winter, a decline in insulating snow cover changes the soil environment, where especially frost exposure can have severe implications for soil microorganisms and subsequently for soil nutrient dynamics. Here, we investigated winter climate change responses in European beech forests soil microbiome. Nine study sites with each three treatments (snow exclusion, insolation, and ambient) were investigated. Long-term adaptation to average climate was explored by comparing across sites. Triplicated treatment plots were used to evaluate short-term (one single winter) responses. Community profiles of bacteria, archaea and fungi were created using amplicon sequencing. Correlations between the microbiome, vegetation and soil physicochemical properties were found. We identify core members of the forest-microbiome and link them to key processes, for example, mycorrhizal symbiont and specialized beech wood degraders (fungi) and nitrogen cycling (bacteria, archaea). For bacteria, the shift of the microbiome composition due to short-term soil temperature manipulations in winter was similar to the community differences observed between long-term relatively cold to warm conditions. The results suggest a strong link between the changes in the microbiomes and changes in environmental processes, for example, nitrogen dynamics, driven by variations in winter climate.
The role of cell-penetrating peptides in the induction of T cell responses by virus-like particles
(2023)
Many viral structural proteins can self-assemble into virus-like particles (VLPs). VLPs can serve as an effective vaccine or be used as a vaccine platform. One of these structural proteins is the hepatitis B virus core antigen (HBcAg), which appears to be suitable as an antigen carrier due to its high immunogenicity. HBcAg has a major immunodominant region (MIR) that is presented on the surface of the VLPs after self-assembly. Foreign antigens can be inserted into this region. Since HBcAg VLPs, unlike the Hepatitis B virus (HBV), do not have an envelope, they are not able to penetrate cell membranes efficiently. As an extracellular antigen, HBcAg VLPs primarily induce a strong humoral immune response.
In the present study, we investigated the extent to which HBcAg can be modified to also elicit an enhanced cellular, particularly a cytotoxic, immune response. A cytotoxic CD8+ T cell response is predominantly induced by intracellular antigens. Therefore, our goal was to increase the cell penetration capacity of VLPs. We aimed to achieve this by fusing cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) to HBcAg. CPPs can spontaneously penetrate cell membranes to enter the cytoplasm of cells. To guarantee that the CCPs were localized to the surface of the VLPs, we fused CPPs to the N-terminus of HBcAg. The CCPs were followed by a tag to allow the purification of VLPs. The T cell epitopes, against which the induced CTL should be directed, were derived from the Large T antigen and inserted into the MIR of HBcAg. Finally, we fused fluorescent proteins to the C-terminus of HBcAg to track the entry of VLPs into cells.
Modifications of HBcAg may lead to reduced stability or altered structure of VLPs. To analyze the stability of VLPs, we used nanoscale differential scanning fluorimetry (nanoDSF) analysis. This revealed that the N-terminal fusion of CPPs or the tag to HBcAg does not reduce VLP stability. However, some peptides incorporated into the MIR had a significant effect on the structure and stability of the VLPs. While the incorporation of a Flag-tag or a peptide from ovalbumin had no negative effect on VLP stability, the incorporation of peptides representing T cell epitopes of Large T antigen interfered with VLP formation. Denaturation and reassembly of the aggregates significantly improved the homogeneity of the VLPs, and the C-terminal addition of arginine-rich domains enhanced stability.
Using live cell imaging and flow cytometry, we demonstrated that HBcAg VLPs functionalized with CPP exhibited up to 40% more efficient penetration into professional antigen-presenting cells (JAWS II) than HBcAg VLPs without CPP. This resulted in the increased presentation of integrated T cell epitopes by dendritic cells. In vivo, we detected significantly increased induction of SV40 Large T antigen-specific CTL in mice immunized with CPP-conjugated VLPs compared to unconjugated VLPs.
In this study, we demonstrated that a stronger cellular immune response can be induced by CPP-functionalized HBcAg VLPs than with the unmodified HBcAg VLPs in vitro as well as in vivo. This discovery may have positive implications for future vaccine development where an enhanced cellular component of the immune response is desirable.
Foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) is a positive-sense RNA virus of the family Picornaviridae that comprises of seven serotypes and is distinguished by a high contagiosity with the ability of rapid spread. Strategies for abatement and control are based on an early detection, quick initiation of retaliatory actions and mass vaccinations. Therefore, aim of the study was the development of a fast and easy method for genome sequencing as well as an investigation into the causes, why some cell lines that are mainly used for vaccine production, are resistant towards FMDV infection. Finally, adaptive sequence changes in different cell culture systems and associated effects on particle stability and immunogenicity were examined.
In case of an outbreak it is of major importance to detect and rapidly characterize the circulating virus isolate to choose an appropriate vaccine to minimize the viral spread. In addition, comprehensive genome analysis of the outbreak strain provides information about the origin of the virus and allows molecular epidemiology. A universal primer set, covering most parts of the open reading frame of the viral genome, was developed to perform quick sequence analyses, independently of the viral serotype (Paper I). Especially in endemic regions, vaccination of susceptible animal species is the main action to combat foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) in an acute outbreak situation as well as a preventive measure. Reasons, why some baby hamster kidney (BHK) cell lines are resistant towards an infection with FMDV, were examined in a second study that narrowed down the cause for this phenomenon to an impaired attachment of the virus to the cell surface. Furthermore, an alternative approach could be developed to successfully adapt the virus to the resistant vaccine-production cell line by using a FMDV-sensitive “wet-nurse” cell line (Paper II). Adaptive changes in the capsid-coding region of the viral genome caused through cultivation and passaging of the virus in different BHK cell systems were the topics of the third study. It was shown that capsid alterations are rather serotype-specific and dependent on the cell line used than influenced by the cell media. Viral titers and neutralization profiles of the adapted isolates were not affected compared to the original viruses (Paper III).
Overall, this work expanded our knowledge on the control and eradication of FMD and will support the global effort to combat the disease.
Hantaviruses are enveloped viruses with a single-stranded RNA genome of negative polarity. The genome consists of three segments: small (S), medium (M) and large (L). As zoonotic pathogen, hantaviruses are worldwide responsible for 150,000 to 200,000 human disease cases per year. Two forms of human disease are currently distinguished: In the Americas the hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome (HCPS) and in Europe and Asia the hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS). Since the introduction of the German Protection against Infection Act in 2001 until now a total of 10,082 disease cases have been reported. As a result, hantavirus infections currently rank as the fifth frequent notifiable disease in Germany. More than 80% of these infections were caused by the hantavirus species Puumala virus (PUUV), transmitted by the bank vole Myodes glareolus. Besides temporal oscillations, an unequal geographical distribution of human PUUV cases was noticed in Germany and in other countries of Central Europe. This is reflected in the presence of endemic and non-endemic regions as well as of so-called outbreak years. Therefore, the overall objective of this study was to find out possible reasons for the inhomogeneous distribution of PUUV in Central Europe, in particular in Poland, Germany and certain districts of Baden-Wuerttemberg. The basic working hypothesis was that PUUV spread in Central Europe after the last glaciation with different evolutionary lineages of the bank vole and that the current emergence of PUUV in bank vole populations is determined by local geographical and ecological factors. Very little was known about the presence of PUUV in Poland. Earlier studies were based exclusively on serological detection of PUUV, but a molecular detection with subsequent phylogenetic investigation was missing so far. Therefore, 45 bank voles from the northeastern part of Poland were investigated by serological and molecular assays. In three animals from a forest region close to the city of Miko³ajki PUUV-reactive antibodies and/or PUUV RNA were detected. Phylogenetic analysis indicated the presence of a Latvian (LAT) PUUV strain. Viral RNA was detected in one bank vole of the Eastern evolutionary lineage and two animals of the Carpathian lineage. Thereby it could be demonstrated for the first time that the distribution of the LAT PUUV lineage ranges from Latvia south-west to the northeastern part of Poland. An inhomogeneous spatial distribution of human disease cases has been observed even for Baden-Wuerttemberg, a long time known endemic federal state of Germany. Therefore 660 bank voles were trapped during the outbreak and non-outbreak years 2012 and 2013 in four districts with high incidences (H) and in four districts with low incidences or lacking PUUV cases (L). During the outbreak year 2012 PUUV-positive bank voles were detected by serological and molecular investigations in seven of eight districts. In contrast, in the following year only in one district PUUV infected bank voles were detected. Furthermore, it was demonstrated that after a beech mast, i.e., a massive fructification of beech trees, in H districts with a higher percentage of beech forest coverage a higher number of human cases was notified, but not in L districts with a lower percentage of beech forest coverage. For the future development of early warning modules it is therefore necessary to have a long-term bank vole monitoring established that incorporates beech mast data and information on beech forest coverage. High endemic regions for PUUV are mainly located in the southern and western parts of Germany, whereas in the eastern and northern parts only low numbers or even no human cases are recorded. To find out possible reasons for this inhomogeneous distribution, 1,774 bank voles from different regions of Germany were investigated for PUUV infections and in parallel for the corresponding bank vole evolutionary lineage (Western, Eastern, Carpathian). The PUUV investigations indicated positive voles in the known endemic regions with an easternmost and northernmost occurrence in western Saxony-Anhalt, western Thuringia and in Osnabrück. In the northern and eastern part of Germany none of the 1,210 investigated bank voles showed a PUUV infection. In the southern and western parts of Germany only the Western bank vole lineage was identified, whereas the Eastern lineage was exclusively found in the eastern and northern part and the Carpathian lineage in the South-East and North-East of Germany. PUUV infections were found almost exclusively in bank voles of the Western lineage. Individuals of the other two vole lineages were found to be PUUV infected only in regions with sympatric occurrence of the Western lineage. The previously described contact zone of the different bank vole phylogroups ranges from Poland to the entire northern part of Germany. In conclusion, the results of this investigation indicate two potential major reasons for the inhomogeneous distribution of PUUV in Germany: First, PUUV of the CE lineage seems to be associated with the Western bank vole lineage. The current geographical distribution of virus and host might be explained by a post-glacial northern expansion of the bank vole starting at the western refuge. Second, the missing detection of PUUV in bank voles of the Western lineage in areas close to high endemic regions might be explained by the extinction of the virus due to a limited winter survival of infected animals during long and harsh winters. The virus stability outside the host or ecological barriers, such as isolated forest areas or broad rivers, might also influence the distribution of PUUV in bank vole populations.
The presented study was dedicated to outstanding issues in regard to the safety and efficacy of the LAV “CP7_E2alf”, during the final licensing process and towards its putative implementation in outbreak scenarios as emergency vaccine. (I) For application of a genetically engineered virus under field conditions, knowledge about its genetic stability is mandatory. Therefore, the genetic stability of “CP7_E2alf” needed to be assessed in vivo and in vitro. Mutation rates were compared to the parental pestivirus strains (BVDV-1 “CP7” and CSFV “Alfort/187”), and BVDV or CSFV field-strains. There was no indication that “CP7_E2alf” could be more prone to mutational events than its parental viruses or representative field-strains. Moreover, no recombination events were observed in in vitro experiments. In conclusion, the data obtained in this study confirm a strong genetic stability of “CP7_E2alf” as an important safety component. (II) Since vaccination of breeding animals is often discussed, this study was conducted to assess the safety of “CP7_E2alf” vaccination of breeding male pigs. The study with “CP7_E2alf” vaccinated boar demonstrated that the new CSFV marker vaccine is suitable for application in reproductive boar. Neither in organs of the uro-genital tract related to sperm production nor in urine or feces, vaccine virus genome was detectable. Dissemination of “CP7_E2alf” through semen, and shedding with urine and feces, is therefore highly unlikely. (III) In order to investigate the influence of pre-existing pestivirus antibodies of the efficacy of “CP7_E2alf”, a vaccination-challenge-trial was conducted with “CP7_E2alf” (Suvaxyn® CSF Marker) and the “gold-standard” of live-modified CSFV vaccines, the C-strain (RIEMSER® Schweinepestvakzine). Pre-existing antibodies against BVDV-1 were provoked through intramuscular inoculation of a recent field isolate from Germany. Seven days after the vaccination, all animals were challenged with highly virulent CSFV strain “Koslov”. It was demonstrated that pre-existing anti- BVDV-1 antibodies do not impact the efficacy of both live attenuated vaccines against CSFV. Both C-strain “Riems” and marker vaccine “CP7_E2alf” were able to confer full protection against the highly virulent challenge. However, slight interference was seen with serological DIVA diagnostics accompanying “CP7_E2alf”. Amended sample preparation and combination of test systems was able to resolve most cases of false positive reactions. However, in such a coinfection scenario, optimization and embedding in a well-defined surveillance strategy is clearly needed for marker vaccination scenarios. (IV) To supplement the data about the kinetic of maternally derived antibodies in piglets from sows vaccinated during outbreaks, a single “emergency-type” vaccination of two pregnant sows was done. Focus was laid on the kinetics of maternally derived antibodies (MDA) in the screening assays of their offspring with screening assays that would be used in case of CSFV outbreaks, i.e. CSFV E2 and Erns antibody ELISA. Upon vaccination with “CP7_E2alf” 21 days before farrowing, MDAs were measurable in all piglets born to vaccinated sows. The E2- ELISA reactivities showed an almost linear decrease over ten weeks after which all piglets were tested negative in the ELISA. Future studies should investigate, if MDA are able to protect offspring of vaccinated sows or whether the piglets should also be vaccinated.
Over thirty years have passed since the first description of ubiquitin-positive structures in the brain of patients suffering from Alzheimer’s disease. Meanwhile, the intracellular accumulation of ubiquitin-modified insoluble protein aggregates has become an indisputable hallmark of neurodegeneration. However, the role of ubiquitin and a fortiori the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) in the pathogenesis of neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD) is much less described. In this article, we review all reported monogenic forms of NDD caused by lesions in genes coding for any component of the UPS including ubiquitin-activating (E1), -conjugating (E2) enzymes, ubiquitin ligases (E3), ubiquitin hydrolases, and ubiquitin-like modifiers as well as proteasome subunits. Strikingly, our analysis revealed that a vast majority of these proteins have a described function in the negative regulation of the innate immune response. In this work, we hypothesize a possible involvement of autoinflammation in NDD pathogenesis. Herein, we discuss the parallels between immune dysregulation and neurodevelopment with the aim at improving our understanding the biology of NDD and providing knowledge required for the design of novel therapeutic strategies.
Type I interferonopathies cover a phenotypically heterogeneous group of rare genetic diseases including the recently described proteasome-associated autoinflammatory syndromes (PRAAS). By definition, PRAAS are caused by inherited and/or de novo loss-of-function mutations in genes encoding proteasome subunits such as PSMB8, PSMB9, PSMB7, PSMA3, or proteasome assembly factors including POMP and PSMG2, respectively. Disruption of any of these subunits results in perturbed intracellular protein homeostasis including accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins which is accompanied by a type I interferon (IFN) signature. The observation that, similarly to pathogens, proteasome dysfunctions are potent type I IFN inducers is quite unexpected and, up to now, the underlying molecular mechanisms of this process remain largely unknown. One promising candidate for triggering type I IFN under sterile conditions is the unfolded protein response (UPR) which is typically initiated in response to an accumulation of unfolded and/or misfolded proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (also referred to as ER stress). The recent observation that the UPR is engaged in subjects carrying POMP mutations strongly suggests its possible implication in the cause-and-effect relationship between proteasome impairment and interferonopathy onset. The purpose of this present review is therefore to discuss the possible role of the UPR in the pathogenesis of PRAAS. We will particularly focus on pathways initiated by the four ER-membrane proteins ATF6, PERK, IRE1-α, and TCF11/Nrf1 which undergo activation under proteasome inhibition. An overview of the current understanding of the mechanisms and potential cross-talk between the UPR and inflammatory signaling casacades is provided to convey a more integrated picture of the pathophysiology of PRAAS and shed light on potential biomarkers and therapeutic targets.
Protein quality control systems are essential for the viability and growth of all living organisms. They protect the cell from irreversible protein aggregation. Because the frequency of protein misfolding, which ultimately results in protein aggregation, varies with the environmental conditions, the amount and activity of protein quality systems have to be accurately adapted to the rate of protein misfolding. The main goal of this thesis was to gain detailed molecular insights into the transcriptional and post-translational regulation of these protein quality control networks in the ecologically, medically and industrially important phylum of low GC, Gram-positive bacteria. In these bacteria the core protein quality control systems are under the transcriptional control of the global repressor CtsR. In a first study it was demonstrated that the arginine kinase McsB is not responsible for the regulation of CtsR activity during heat stress, as was concluded by others on the basis of previous in vitro data. Rather, it was demonstrated that CtsR acts as an intrinsic thermosensor that adapts its activity to the surrounding temperature. CtsR displays a decreased DNA binding at higher temperatures, which leads to induction of transcription of the protein quality control systems under these conditions. This CtsR feature is conserved in all low GC, Gram-positive bacteria. However, the CtsR proteins of various low GC, Gram-positive species do not have the same temperature optima. CtsR responds to heat in a species-specific manner according to their corresponding growth temperature. Detailed analysis revealed that a highly conserved tetra-glycine loop within the winged helix-turn-helix domain of CtsR is responsible for thermosensing. Dual control of CtsR activity during different stresses was demonstrated for the first time in this work. In addition to heat-dependent de-repression, CtsR is inactivated by thiol-specific stress conditions. This latter de-repression depends on a molecular redox-switch that is independent of CtsR auto-regulation. In Bacillus subtilis and its closest relatives the McsA/McsB stress-sensing complex is responsible for CtsR de-repression during redox stress conditions. McsA is able to sense the redox state of the cell via its highly conserved cysteine residues. When these cysteines are reduced, McsA is able to bind and inhibit McsB. But when these cysteine residues are oxidized, McsB is released from McsA. Thereby, McsB is activated and removes CtsR from the DNA. However, the McsA/McsB complex is not present in all low GC, Gram-positive bacteria. In the species lacking this complex, ClpE is able to act as a redox-sensor probably via its highly conserved N-terminal zinc finger domain. When these cysteine residues are oxidized, ClpE is activated which results in CtsR de-repression. In addition to the transcriptional regulation of CtsR low GC, Gram-positive protein quality control systems are regulated post-transcriptionally. The expression of the McsA/McsB adaptor pair is regulated by CtsR. However, McsB activity is also tightly regulated by three different regulatory proteins (McsA/ClpC/YwlE). McsB is needed to target specific substrates to ClpC, either for refolding or degradation by the ClpCP protease. It was demonstrated that only the auto- phosphorylated form of McsB is able to bind to its substrates. This McsB function is inhibited in non-stressed cells by a direct interaction with ClpC. Consequently, McsB is activated by a release from ClpC during protein stress. In addition, McsB activation depends on the presence of its activator McsA. Accordingly, McsB cannot be activated as an adaptor protein during thiol-specific stress because McsA is no longer able to bind to McsB under these conditions. However, also active McsB is subject to post-translational control. Activated McsB is either de-phosphorylated by McaP or degraded by ClpCP ensuring an appropriate shut-down of the McsB adaptor. Both McaP and ClpC inhibit McsB activity with different intensities. ClpC possesses a stronger impact on McsB activity than McaP but both proteins are needed for an adequate silencing of McsB activity. In addition, it was shown for the first time that B. subtilis McsB is a global adaptor that influences the stability of multiple proteins. The B. subtilis ClpC protein is unlike most members of the Hsp100 family because it not only requires several adaptor proteins for substrate recognition but also for its general ATP- dependent activity. Biochemical analysis revealed how ClpC is activated by distinct adaptor proteins. McsB modulates ClpC activity by regulatory phosphorylation of arginine residues. Moreover, McaP (formerly YwlE) was identified as an arginine phosphatase that modulates the McsB mediated ClpC activity. MecA, another known adaptor protein for ClpC, activates ClpC independently of these arginine phosphorylations, which demonstrates the existence of multiple pathways for ClpC activation.
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.
African swine fever virus (ASFV) is one of the most threatening animal viruses which has dramatically expanded its distribution range within the last years. ASFV was first described and is endemic in sub-Saharan Africa where it is transmitted in a sylvatic cycle between indigenous suids and Ornithodoros soft ticks. Therefore, ASFV is the only known DNA-arbovirus and, in addition to that, the only member of the genus Asfivirus within the family Asfarviridae. Being highly infectious to domestic pigs and wild boar, the virus was introduced into Georgia in 2007 and has subsequently spread throughout eastern Europe reaching the European Union in 2014. Despite almost 100 years of intensive research and the occurrence of African swine fever (ASF) on four continents including Europe, many aspects of its epidemiology, vector dynamics and virus evolution are unknown. In our study, first evidence is presented on endogenous ASFV-like (EASFL)- elements which are integrated into the genome of ASFV natural vectors, O. moubata soft ticks. Through a series of experiments including next-generation sequencing, infection experiments, phylogenetic and BEAST analyses as well as PCR-screening, evidence is provided that these elements belong to an ancestral ASFV strain that might have existed 50,000 to 30,000 years BCE. Further results suggest that the EASFL-elements are involved in protecting ticks against ASFV infection and might belong to a generalised tick defence mechanism. In order to evaluate factors influencing ASFV epidemiology in eastern Europe, experiments were conducted on possible indigenous vector species and circulating virus isolates. In the absence of the natural tick vector, blow fly larvae were considered as possible mechanical vectors involved in ASFV transmission and persistence. Results are presented that even after feeding on highly infectious wild boar tissue, fly larvae and pupae showed no contamination with infectious virus. On the contrary, the maggots appeared to have inactivated the virus in the organ tissue through their salivary secretions. Further experiments conducted on an ASFV-strain isolated from northeastern Estonia resulted in the first report of an ASFV-strain with attenuated phenotype isolated in Eastern Europe. Results from NGS-analyses provided evidence for a major genome reorganisation in that strain that included a large deletion and a duplication of multiple ASFV genes.
Taken together, this study provides novel insights into the epidemiology of ASF and evolution of ASFV one of the major threats to animal health worldwide and therefore does not only contribute significantly to basic research but possibly also to specific knowledge necessary for future disease management.
The advances in high-throughput sequencing technologies have revolutionized the possibilities for pathogen identification in cases of unknown disease origin. Diagnostic metagenomics allows the unbiased and simultaneous detection of almost all nucleic acids in a clinical sample, with the potential to provide pivotal insights into otherwise undeterminable causes of human or animal disease.
In this thesis, possibilities, pitfalls and the suitability of Ion Torrent and Illumina sequencing platforms for comprehensive use in diagnostic metagenomics were assessed and optimized procedures developed. Clinical field samples, undiagnosable by standard diagnostics, were taken as real-life examples for the investigations. The results show that cross-contamination due to index swapping and run-to-run-carryover constitute a major issue on Illumina platforms, severely compromising the correct interpretation of results for clinical specimens. In contrast, Ion Torrent platforms did not display any form of cross-contamination, however, the commercial library preparation method is less efficient. Combining the advantages of both platforms, customized Y adapters, facilitating highly efficient library preparation, were developed for Ion Torrent sequencing and applied in further experiments. The obstacles of strongly degraded RNA in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded samples were identified and the workflow adapted to meet the requirements of smaller fragments. Additionally, it was shown that adequate sampling is a very important step, if not the most important step, in the workflow, as well as subsequent validation of the obtained results in terms of causation. The achievements in this study allow other researchers the application of a sensitive and optimized diagnostic metagenomics workflow.
Furthermore, the investigations on the clinical samples resulted in the discovery of a novel respirovirus with putative zoonotic potential, the first description of Borna disease virus 1 in human organ transplant recipients, and the discovery of a very distantly related novel ovine picornavirus. These discoveries build a basis for further research and expand the knowledge regarding new and emerging viruses.
The order of bats (Chiroptera) account for ~20% of all mammalian species and attracted immense global attention due to their identification as important viral reservoir. Bats can harbour a plethora of high-impact zoonotic viruses, such as filoviruses, lyssaviruses, and coronaviruses without displaying clinical signs of disease themselves. Given this striking diversity of the bat virome, their ability of self-powered flight, and global distribution, understanding chiropteran immunity is essential to facilitate assessment of future spillover events and risks.
However, scarcity of bat-specific or cross-reactive tools and standardized model systems impede progress until today. Furthermore, the richness of species led to generation of isolated datasets, hampering data interpretation and identification of general immune mechanisms, applicable for various chiropteran suborders/families. The key to unlocking bat immunity are coordinated research approaches that comprehensively define immunity in several species. In this work, an in-depth study of innate and adaptive immune mechanisms in the fructivorous Egyptian Rousette bat (Rousettus aegyptiacus, ERB) is presented.
Detailed stability analyses identified EEF1A1 as superior reference gene to ACTB, and GAPDH, which rendered unstable upon temperature increase or presence of type-I-IFN. Since the body core temperatures of pteropid bats reach from 35°C to 41°C and it has been postulated that bats display constitutive expression of IFNs, a suitable reference gene has to be stable under these physiologically relevant conditions. To study cellular innate immunity in detail, cell lines from the nasal epithelium, the olfactory compartment and the cerebrum were generated. To include immune responses of epithelia cells, essential for immunity at sites of primary viral infection, primary epithelia cells from the nasal epithelium, trachea, lung and small intestine were generated. Cellular identities were determined by comprehensive analyses of transcripts and proteins expressed by each cell line. The capacity of each cell line to produce type-I- and III-IFNs was assessed at 37°C and 40°C upon stimulation with viral mimetics. This revealed cell type-dependent differences is the capability to express IFNs upon stimulation. Furthermore, the constitutive expression of type-I- and III-IFNs was significantly elevated in higher temperatures and quantified at mRNA copy levels. To characterize ERB innate immunity upon infection with high-impact zoonotic viruses, cells from the nasal epithelium, the olfactory system, and the brain were infected with several lyssaviruses. This revealed striking differences in susceptibility: cells from the nasal epithelium rendered least whereas cells from the olfactory epithelium rendered most susceptible to viral infection and replication. Additionally, due to a lack of IFN expression in infected cells, it could be shown that LBV possibly possesses advanced strategies to ensure successful replication in ERB cells. Since the current SARS-CoV-2 pandemic put bats even further in the focus of zoonotic research, primary epithelial cells and animals were infected with this virus to monitor ERB-specific immune transcripts in cells and tissues. These studies revealed a notably early IFNG expression in the respiratory tract of infected individuals.
To understand immunomaturation in bats, the immune cell landscape in periphery and various tissue in adult and juvenile ERB was analyzed by flow cytometry and scRNA-seq, revealing intriguing, age-dependent variations in the abundance of granulocytes and lymphocytes. Flow cytometry revealed a significantly higher number of granulocytes in adults, as well as higher numbers of B cells in juveniles. scRNA-seq allowed detailed identification of different leukocyte subsets, uncovering the presence of highly-abundant NKT-like cells and a unique PLAC8 expressing B cell population. A functional characterization of phagocytic cells and lymphocytes derived from adult and juvenile ERB revealed no significant differences in cellular functionality.
In conclusion, the presented work demonstrated suitability of all established ERB cell lines to study bat immunity in vitro, which led to striking findings regarding IFN expression at steady state, or upon stimulation or viral infection. In addition, established qRT-PCR protocols allowed definition of constitutive and temperature-dependent elevation of IFN expression magnitudes, as well as insights into expression of immune-related transcripts in SARS-CoV-2 infected ERB. Finally, based on optimized scRNA-seq technologies and flow cytometry, frequencies and absolute cell counts could be determined in ERB of different ages, revealing e.g. age-dependent variations in leukocyte profile compositions.
The spatio-temporal reduction and oxidation of protein thiols is an essential mechanism in signal transduction inall kingdoms of life. Thioredoxin (Trx) family proteins efficiently catalyze thiol-disulfide exchange reactions andthe proteins are widely recognized for their importance in the operation of thiol switches. Trx family proteinshave a broad and at the same time very distinct substrate specificity–a prerequisite for redox switching. Despiteof multiple efforts, the true nature for this specificity is still under debate. Here, we comprehensively compare theclassification/clustering of various redoxins from all domains of life based on their similarity in amino acidsequence, tertiary structure, and their electrostatic properties. We correlate these similarities to the existence ofcommon interaction partners, identified in various previous studies and suggested by proteomic screenings. Theseanalyses confirm that primary and tertiary structure similarity, and thereby all common classification systems, donot correlate to the target specificity of the proteins as thiol-disulfide oxidoreductases. Instead, a number ofexamples clearly demonstrate the importance of electrostatic similarity for their target specificity, independent oftheir belonging to the Trx or glutaredoxin subfamilies
Swine are regarded as promising biomedical models, but the dynamics of theirgastrointestinal microbiome have been much less investigated than that of humans or mice. The aimof this study was to establish an integrated multi-omics protocol to investigate the fecal microbiomeof healthy swine. To this end, a preparation and analysis protocol including integrated samplepreparation for meta-omics analyses of deep-frozen feces was developed. Subsequent data integrationlinked microbiome composition with function, and metabolic activity with protein inventories, i.e.,16S rRNA data and expressed proteins, and identified proteins with corresponding metabolites.16S rRNA gene amplicon and metaproteomics analyses revealed a fecal microbiome dominated byPrevotellaceae,Lactobacillaceae,Lachnospiraceae,RuminococcaceaeandClostridiaceae.Similar microbiomecompositions in feces and colon, but not ileum samples, were observed, showing that feces can serveas minimal-invasive proxy for porcine colon microbiomes. Longitudinal dynamics in composition,e.g., temporal decreased abundance ofLactobacillaceaeandStreptococcaceaeduring the experiment,were not reflected in microbiome function. Instead, metaproteomics and metabolomics showed arather stable functional state, as evident from short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) profiles and associatedmetaproteome functions, pointing towards functional redundancy among microbiome constituents.In conclusion, our pipeline generates congruent data from different omics approaches on the taxonomyand functionality of the intestinal microbiome of swine.
Avian influenza viruses (AIVs) have their natural reservoir in wild aquatic birds but occasionally
spread to terrestrial poultry. While AIVs of subtypes H5 and H7 are well known to evolve highly
pathogenic avian influenza viruses (HPAIVs) during circulation in domestic birds, non-H5/H7
subtypes exhibit only a low to moderate pathogenicity. Furthermore, spillover events to a broad
range of mammalian hosts, including humans, with self-limiting to severe illness or even fatal
outcomes, were reported for non-H5/H7 AIVs and pose a pandemic risk. The evolution of high
virulent phenotypes in poultry and the adaptation of AIVs to mammalian hosts are predominantly
linked to genetic determinants in the hemagglutinin (HA). The acquisition of a polybasic cleavage
site (pCS) is a prerequisite for the evolution of HPAIVs in poultry, while changes in the receptor
binding preference and virus stability are essential for adaptation of AIVs to mammals.
In August 2012, an H4N2 virus with the pCS motif 322PEKRRTR/G329 but preserved trypsin
dependend replication and low pathogenicity in chickens was isolated on a quail farm in California.
In the first two publications, we followed different approaches to investigate virulence factors and
the potential risk for the transition of H4N2 to high virulence in chickens. The loss of N-terminal
glycosylations in the vicinity of the pCS resulted in decreased binding to avian-like receptors and
dramatically decreased virus stability. On the other hand, one deglycosylation increased virus
replication and tissue tropism in chicken embryos but did not alter virulence or excretion in
chickens. Furthermore, additional basic amino acids in the natural pCS motif improved the trypsin-independent
cleavage of HA and caused slightly increased tissue tropism in chickens. However,
the engineered motifs alone did not affect virulence in chickens. Intriguingly, they even had a
detrimental effect on virus fitness, which was restored after reassortment with segments of HPAIV
H5N1. Together, the results show the importance of HA glycosylations on the stability of H4N2 and
reveal the important role of non-HA segments in the transition of this virus to high virulence in
poultry.
The transmission of another non-H5/H7 AIV of subtype H10N7 from birds to seals resulted in mass
deaths in harbor seals in 2014 in northern Europe. The third publication describes nine mutations
in the HA1 subunit of seal isolates compared to avian H10Nx viruses. We found that some of these
mutations conferred a dual specificity for avian and mammalian receptors and altered
thermostability. Nevertheless, the H10N7seal remained more adapted to avian host cells, despite
of the alteration in the receptor binding specificity.
Altogether, this thesis demonstrates that naturally evolved AIVs beside H5 and H7 subtypes
support a highly pathogenic phenotype in the appropriate viral background and alter virulence and
host receptor specificity by few amino acid substitutions in the HA. These findings improve our
knowledge of the potential of non-H5/H7 AIVs to shift to high virulence in birds and the adaptation
in mammals.
For many years now, Bacillus megaterium serves as a microbial workhorse for the high-level production of recombinant proteins in the g/L-scale. However, efficient and stable production processes require the knowledge of the molecular adaptation strategies of the host organism to establish optimal environmental conditions. Here, we interrogated the osmotic stress response of B. megaterium using transcriptome, proteome, metabolome, and fluxome analyses. An initial transient adaptation consisted of potassium import and glutamate counterion synthesis. The massive synthesis of the compatible solute proline constituted the second longterm adaptation process. Several stress response enzymes involved in iron scavenging and reactive oxygen species (ROS) fighting proteins showed higher levels under prolonged osmotic stress induced by 1.8 M NaCl. At the same time, the downregulation of the expression of genes of the upper part of glycolysis resulted in the activation of the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP), generating an oversupply of NADPH. The increased production of lactate accompanied by the reduction of acetate secretion partially compensate for the unbalanced (NADH/NAD+) ratio. Besides, the tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA) mainly supplies the produced NADH, as indicated by the higher mRNA and protein levels of involved enzymes, and further confirmed by 13C flux analyses. As a consequence of the metabolic flux toward acetyl-CoA and the generation of an excess of NADPH, B. megaterium redirected the produced acetyl-CoA toward the polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) biosynthetic pathway accumulating around 30% of the cell dry weight (CDW) as PHB. This direct relation between osmotic stress and intracellular PHB content has been evidenced for the first time, thus opening new avenues for synthesizing this valuable biopolymer using varying salt concentrations under non-limiting nutrient conditions.
For many years now, Bacillus megaterium serves as a microbial workhorse for the high-level production of recombinant proteins in the g/L-scale. However, efficient and stable production processes require the knowledge of the molecular adaptation strategies of the host organism to establish optimal environmental conditions. Here, we interrogated the osmotic stress response of B. megaterium using transcriptome, proteome, metabolome, and fluxome analyses. An initial transient adaptation consisted of potassium import and glutamate counterion synthesis. The massive synthesis of the compatible solute proline constituted the second longterm adaptation process. Several stress response enzymes involved in iron scavenging and reactive oxygen species (ROS) fighting proteins showed higher levels under prolonged osmotic stress induced by 1.8 M NaCl. At the same time, the downregulation of the expression of genes of the upper part of glycolysis resulted in the activation of the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP), generating an oversupply of NADPH. The increased production of lactate accompanied by the reduction of acetate secretion partially compensate for the unbalanced (NADH/NAD+) ratio. Besides, the tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA) mainly supplies the produced NADH, as indicated by the higher mRNA and protein levels of involved enzymes, and further confirmed by 13C flux analyses. As a consequence of the metabolic flux toward acetyl-CoA and the generation of an excess of NADPH, B. megaterium redirected the produced acetyl-CoA toward the polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) biosynthetic pathway accumulating around 30% of the cell dry weight (CDW) as PHB. This direct relation between osmotic stress and intracellular PHB content has been evidenced for the first time, thus opening new avenues for synthesizing this valuable biopolymer using varying salt concentrations under non-limiting nutrient conditions.
For many years now, Bacillus megaterium serves as a microbial workhorse for the high-level production of recombinant proteins in the g/L-scale. However, efficient and stable production processes require the knowledge of the molecular adaptation strategies of the host organism to establish optimal environmental conditions. Here, we interrogated the osmotic stress response of B. megaterium using transcriptome, proteome, metabolome, and fluxome analyses. An initial transient adaptation consisted of potassium import and glutamate counterion synthesis. The massive synthesis of the compatible solute proline constituted the second longterm adaptation process. Several stress response enzymes involved in iron scavenging and reactive oxygen species (ROS) fighting proteins showed higher levels under prolonged osmotic stress induced by 1.8 M NaCl. At the same time, the downregulation of the expression of genes of the upper part of glycolysis resulted in the activation of the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP), generating an oversupply of NADPH. The increased production of lactate accompanied by the reduction of acetate secretion partially compensate for the unbalanced (NADH/NAD+) ratio. Besides, the tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA) mainly supplies the produced NADH, as indicated by the higher mRNA and protein levels of involved enzymes, and further confirmed by 13C flux analyses. As a consequence of the metabolic flux toward acetyl-CoA and the generation of an excess of NADPH, B. megaterium redirected the produced acetyl-CoA toward the polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) biosynthetic pathway accumulating around 30% of the cell dry weight (CDW) as PHB. This direct relation between osmotic stress and intracellular PHB content has been evidenced for the first time, thus opening new avenues for synthesizing this valuable biopolymer using varying salt concentrations under non-limiting nutrient conditions.
In vitro and in vivo analyses of mono- and mixed-species biofilms formed by microbial pathogens
(2022)
Microbial biofilms can be defined as multicellular clusters of microorganisms embedded in a self-produced extracellular matrix (ECM), which is primarily composed of polymeric biomolecules. Biofilms represent one of the most severe burdens in both industry and healthcare worldwide, causing billions of dollars of treatment costs annually because biofilms are inherently difficult to prevent, treat, and eradicate. In health care settings, patients suffering from cystic fibrosis, or patients with medical implants are highly susceptible to biofilm infections. Once a biofilm is formed, it is almost impossible to quantitatively eradicate it by mechanical, enzymatical, chemical, or antimicrobial treatment. Often the only remaining option to fully eradicate the biofilm is removing of the infected implant or body part. The primary reasons for the inherent resistance of biofilms against all forms of antimicrobial treatment are (I) a reduced metabolic activity of biofilm-embedded cells climaxing in the presence of metabolic inactive persister cells, as well as (II) the protective nature of the biofilm matrix acting as a (diffusion) barrier against antimicrobials and the host immune system. Consequently, there is an urgent need to better understand microbial biofilms from a structural and (patho-) physiological point of view in order to be able to develop new treatment strategies.
Therefore, the aims of this study were to investigate fundamental physiological properties of different clinically relevant single and multi-species biofilms, both in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, the effectiveness of a novel treatment strategy using cold atmospheric pressure plasma was evaluated in vitro to treat biofilms of the pathogenic fungus C. albicans.
In article I, the intracellular and ECM protein inventory of Staphylococcus aureus during in vitro biofilm growth in a flow reactor was analyzed by liquid-chromatography coupled to tandem mass-spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) analysis combined with metabolic footprint analysis. This analysis showed that anaerobiosis within biofilms releases organic acids lowering the ECM pH. This, in turn, leads to protonation of alkaline proteins – mostly ribosomal proteins originating from cell lysis as well as actively secreted virulence factors – resulting in a positive net charge of these proteins. As a consequence, these proteins accumulate within the ECM and form an electrostatic network with negatively charged cell surfaces, eDNA, and metabolites contributing to the overall biofilm stability.
In article II, the in vivo metaproteome of the multi-species biofilm community in cystic fibrosis sputum was investigated. To this end, an innovative protocol was developed allowing the enrichment of microbial cells, the extraction of proteins from a small amount of cystic fibrosis sputum, and subsequent metaproteome analysis. This protocol also allows 16S sequencing, metabolic footprint analysis, and microscopy of the same sample to complement the metaproteome data. Applying this protocol, we were able to significantly enhance microbial protein coverage providing first insights into important physiological pathways during CF lung infection. A key finding was that the arginine deaminase pathway as well as microbial proteases play a so far underappreciated role in CF pathophysiology.
In articles III and IV, a novel treatment strategy for biofilms formed by the important fungal pathogen Candida albicans was evaluated in vitro. Biofilms were treated with two different sources of nonthermal plasma (with the Nonthermal Plasma Jet “kINPen09” as well as with the Microwave-induced plasma torch “MiniMIP”) and the effect on growth, survival, and viability was assessed by counting colony-forming units (CFU), by cell proliferation assays, as well as by live/dead staining combined with fluorescence microscopy, confocal laser scanning microscopy, (CLSM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). These tests revealed that biofilms were effectively inactivated mostly on the bottom side of biofilms, indicating a great potential of these two plasma sources to fight biofilms.
An Innovative Protocol for Metaproteomic Analyses of Microbial Pathogens in Cystic Fibrosis Sputum
(2021)
Hallmarks of cystic fibrosis (CF) are increased viscosity of mucus and impaired mucociliary clearance within the airways due to mutations of the cystic fibrosis conductance regulator gene. This facilitates the colonization of the lung by microbial pathogens and the concomitant establishment of chronic infections leading to tissue damage, reduced lung function, and decreased life expectancy. Although the interplay between key CF pathogens plays a major role during disease progression, the pathophysiology of the microbial community in CF lungs remains poorly understood. Particular challenges in the analysis of the microbial population present in CF sputum is (I) the inhomogeneous, viscous, and slimy consistence of CF sputum, and (II) the high number of human proteins masking comparably low abundant microbial proteins. To address these challenges, we used 21 CF sputum samples to develop a reliable, reproducible and widely applicable protocol for sputum processing, microbial enrichment, cell disruption, protein extraction and subsequent metaproteomic analyses. As a proof of concept, we selected three sputum samples for detailed metaproteome analyses and complemented and validated metaproteome data by 16S sequencing, metabolomic as well as microscopic analyses. Applying our protocol, the number of bacterial proteins/protein groups increased from 199-425 to 392-868 in enriched samples compared to nonenriched controls. These early microbial metaproteome data suggest that the arginine deiminase pathway and multiple proteases and peptidases identified from various bacterial genera could so far be underappreciated in their contribution to the CF pathophysiology. By providing a standardized and effective protocol for sputum processing and microbial enrichment, our study represents an important basis for future studies investigating the physiology of microbial pathogens in CF in vivo – an important prerequisite for the development of novel antimicrobial therapies to combat chronic recurrent airway infection in CF.
Lipoproteins of Staphylococcus aureus represent a major class of surface proteins, which are anchored to the outer leaflet of the cell membrane. Although they play a key role in the immune response and virulence, the majority of lipoproteins in this organism is still of unknown function. The aim of our study was to investigate the function of so far poorly or uncharacterized lipoproteins in S. aureus strain Newman. To this end, an integrated bioinformatical approach was applied to define the pan-lipoproteome of 123 completely sequenced S. aureus strains. In total, this analysis predicted 192 different potential lipoproteins, with a core lipoproteome of 39 and a variable lipoproteome of 153 lipoproteins. Out of those 192 lipoproteins, 141 are so far functionally uncharacterized. Primarily focusing on members of the core-lipoproteome with unknown or poorly characterized function, 24 lipoproteins or co-encoded neighbor proteins were selected for further characterization. Of those 24 proteins, 20 S. aureus markerless deletion mutants were constructed (S. aureus delta l01 - delta l20) and screened for an altered growth behavior under various conditions. Here, three mutants showed a temperature-sensitive phenotype, two mutants formed aggregates in the TSB of the manufacturer Merck (TSBMerck), and four mutants showed reduced growth under osmotic stress with 8% NaCl. An altered aggregation behavior was observed for four mutants in the presence of Triton X-100 and for eleven mutants in the presence of SDS. Furthermore, ten mutants revealed an impaired biofilm formation capacity as well as reduced hemolytic activity. Interestingly, S. aureus deletion mutants delta l14 (delta NWMN_1435) and delta l16 (delta NWMN_0646) showed an altered phenotype under nearly all tested growth and stress conditions. Most strikingly, both deletion mutants demonstrated dramatic defects in cell morphology and cell division during the transient growth phase in TSBMerck and were therefore selected for further detailed characterization. Electron microscopy imaging of the two mutants revealed an irregular cell shape, increased cell size, multiple displaced division septa, and incomplete separation of daughter cells resulting in the formation of cell aggregates in TSBMerck. Complementarily, microarray-based transcriptome analysis and whole-genome sequencing of S. aureus delta l14 and delta l16 suppressor mutants strongly point to a functional association of both lipoproteins with cell envelope- or cell division-related processes. Specifically, multiple hints suggest a functional connection of both lipoproteins with lipo- or wall teichoic acids. Of note, the phenotypes of S. aureus delta l14 and delta l16 are conditional and appear under some, but not all growth conditions. Thus, it is conceivable that the function of L14 and L16 is modulated by metabolic processes, or that the proteins might be part of a “backup system” becoming important only under certain conditions. Collectively, we propose that L14 and L16 fulfill a basic role in cell envelope- or cell division-related processes under specific growth conditions. Particularly, the activity of L14 and L16 might be necessary for the function or localization of lipo- or wall teichoic acids, and thus, might be linked to the regulation of autolysins. In conclusion, this study reveals important insights into the function of two so far uncharacterized but highly conserved lipoproteins in S. aureus.
Out of Control: The Role of the Ubiquitin Proteasome System in Skeletal Muscle during Inflammation
(2021)
The majority of critically ill intensive care unit (ICU) patients with severe sepsis develop ICU-acquired weakness (ICUAW) characterized by loss of muscle mass, reduction in myofiber size and decreased muscle strength leading to persisting physical impairment. This phenotype results from a dysregulated protein homeostasis with increased protein degradation and decreased protein synthesis, eventually causing a decrease in muscle structural proteins. The ubiquitin proteasome system (UPS) is the predominant protein-degrading system in muscle that is activated during diverse muscle atrophy conditions, e.g., inflammation. The specificity of UPS-mediated protein degradation is assured by E3 ubiquitin ligases, such as atrogin-1 and MuRF1, which target structural and contractile proteins, proteins involved in energy metabolism and transcription factors for UPS-dependent degradation. Although the regulation of activity and function of E3 ubiquitin ligases in inflammation-induced muscle atrophy is well perceived, the contribution of the proteasome to muscle atrophy during inflammation is still elusive. During inflammation, a shift from standard- to immunoproteasome was described; however, to which extent this contributes to muscle wasting and whether this changes targeting of specific muscular proteins is not well described. This review summarizes the function of the main proinflammatory cytokines and acute phase response proteins and their signaling pathways in inflammation-induced muscle atrophy with a focus on UPS-mediated protein degradation in muscle during sepsis. The regulation and target-specificity of the main E3 ubiquitin ligases in muscle atrophy and their mode of action on myofibrillar proteins will be reported. The function of the standard- and immunoproteasome in inflammation-induced muscle atrophy will be described and the effects of proteasome-inhibitors as treatment strategies will be discussed.
As the animal-to-human interface becomes increasingly narrow, transmission events of zoonotic pathogens between animals and humans become more and more probable. While SARS-CoV-2 already accomplished a spillover infection to humans and is responsible for the current pandemic, the bat H9N2 IAV with so far unknown zoonotic potential was only recently discovered. In order to identify I) the role and potential of a newly discovered, potentially pre-pandemic virus, such as the bat H9N2, or II) possible future prevailing virus mutant variants of an already known pandemic virus, such as SARS-CoV-2, it is important to characterize these emerging viruses in vivo as soon and as good as possible.
The first objective in this dissertation (Publications I and II) therefore deals with the characterization of bat H9N2 and the estimation of its zoonotic or even pandemic potential.
In Publication I, a general susceptibility of directly inoculated Egyptian fruit bats to bat H9N2 was confirmed by successful seroconversion, although exhibiting only moderate viral shedding. All three contact animals remained seronegative, though one contact bat showed slight lesions in the histopathological analysis.
Publication II further addressed the question of the zoonotic potential of this virus. Inoculation of day-old turkey hatchlings demonstrated moderate susceptibility to bat H9N2 infection with a measurable seroconversion, while day-old chicken hatchlings were not susceptible to bat H9N2. Ferrets proved to be highly susceptible to bat H9N2 with high viral shedding, a transmission efficiency rate of 100% to direct contact animals at 2 days post contact, but with only minimal clinical signs. Importantly, the virus demonstrated the ability to evade the MxA-restriction factor and to replicate efficiently in human lung tissue explants. Furthermore, seasonal IAV- and standard IAV-vaccines showed no cross reactivity against the bat-N2 protein in humans. Therefore, further research on such viruses is urgently needed in order to prevent a renewed pandemic situation in the future as caused by SARS-CoV-2.
The second objective in this dissertation dealt with the identification and characterization of emerging SARS-CoV-2 Variants of Concern (VOCs).
Therefore, in Publication III, competitive infection experiments were performed using the Syrian golden hamster, the ferret, and transgenic mouse models (K18-hACE2 and hACE2-KI). These studies revealed replicative and transmissive predominance of Alpha VOC over Beta VOC, but not over SARS-CoV-2 WT in the hamster model, although Beta VOC substantially replicated in the lungs of donor animals. In contrast, the Alpha VOC had an unambiguous replication and transmission advantage over WT SARS-CoV-2 in the ferret and both mouse models. A recombinant SARS-CoV-2 WT-SAlpha virus helped to assign the fitness advantage of this variant particularly to the spike protein-associated mutations.
In Publication IV, in vitro results inferred an early replicative fitness advantage of Omicron BA.1 over Delta VOC, although the opposite was observed in competitively inoculated hamsters, ferrets and naive hACE2-KI mice. In addition, Publication IV demonstrated a disadvantage in transmission for the VOC Omicron BA.1 over the Delta VOC and a lack of susceptibility of ferrets after a single infection with the VOC Omicron BA.1. An mRNA vaccination of K18-hACE2 mice caused a drastic reduction of infectious virus particles in organ material following an infection with a recombinant SARS-CoV-2 WT-SDelta, but not when challenged with the SARS-CoV-2 SOmicron BA.1 clone.
This dissertation includes numerous, comprehensive experimental studies that are generally important for the characterization of emerging, potentially pre-pandemic viruses and may provide crucial information about the future dominance of certain virus variants in an ongoing pandemic. Here, the need for the use of a variety of animal models becomes apparent. By characterizing and classifying potentially zoonotic strains, these methods will help to better prepare for potentially upcoming pandemics and, in the case of a zoonotic or even pandemic event, to better detect and understand the circulating strains and their evolution.
The here presented dissertation investigated the molecular mechanisms, by which the food industry model bacteria Pseudomonas fluorescens and Listeria monocytogenes, grown either as planktonic cultures, were inhibited by plasma treated water (PTW) produced by a microwave-induced plasma source (MidiPLexc). As a starting point, optimal operating parameters were determined with 5 standard liters per minutes(slm)compressed air during the treatment of 10 ml deionized water within a treatment time of up to 15 min (pre-treatment time). Treatment times of 1, 3 and 5 min were selected (post-treatment time). In addition to physical parameters, i.e. temperature measurements at different spots at the plasma source during the production of the PTW, the chemical composition of PTW was determined by pH measurements, chronoamperometry (determination of the H2O2 concentration), ion chromatography (determination of the NO2-, NO3- and ONOO- concentrations) and mass spectrometry (qualitative determination of the molecules). In addition, concentration changes of reactive species over a period of 3 h indicated a decrease of the NO2- concentration as well as an increase of the NO3- and ONOO- concentration in the PTW. Microbiological assays, i.e. quantification of colony-forming units (CFU), fluorescence and XTT assays, revealed a significant reduction of the proliferation ability of the cells, membrane damages and metabolic activity have been demonstrated for planktonic cultures as well as mono- and multispecies biofilms. PTW effects on biofilm structures were investigated using microscopic methods such as fluorescence microscopy, confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM), atomic force microscopy (AFM), and scanning electron microscopy (SEM), as well as physical methods such as contact angle measurements. Significant changes in the biofilm structure have been shown, which indicate an ablation of the biofilm mass from top to bottom by approximately 2/3 of the biofilm mass and a destruction of the extracellular matrix (ECM) by the reactive species within the PTW. Subsequently, fresh-cut lettuce has been treated with PTW produced by up-scaled plasma sources. Apart from qualitative parameters of the lettuce after PTW treatment such as texture and color, the concentration of PTW reactive species have been determined. These experiments showed that the composition of the reactive species were slightly different from that of the laboratory-scaled plasma source MidiPLexc. Notably, the PTW treatment did not cause significant changes in texture and color of the fresh-cut lettuce. Finally, a synergistic effect of PTW treatment followed by plasma-processed air (PPA) drying was demonstrated application-specific.
Summary
The susceptibility of Candida albicans biofilms to a non‐thermal plasma treatment has been investigated in terms of growth, survival and cell viability by a series of in vitro experiments. For different time periods, the C. albicans strain SC5314 was treated with a microwave‐induced plasma torch (MiniMIP). The MiniMIP treatment had a strong effect (reduction factor (RF) = 2.97 after 50 s treatment) at a distance of 3 cm between the nozzle and the superior regions of the biofilms. In addition, a viability reduction of 77% after a 20 s plasma treatment and a metabolism reduction of 90% after a 40 s plasma treatment time were observed for C. albicans. After such a treatment, the biofilms revealed an altered morphology of their cells by atomic force microscopy (AFM). Additionally, fluorescence microscopy and confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) analyses of plasma‐treated biofilms showed that an inactivation of cells mainly appeared on the bottom side of the biofilms. Thus, the plasma inactivation of the overgrown surface reveals a new possibility to combat biofilms.
Members of the species Bacillus pumilus get more and more in focus of the biotechnological industry as potential new production strains. Based on secretome analysis, Bacillus pumilus strain Jo2, possessing high secretion capability, was chosen for an omics based investigation. The physiology of Bacillus pumilus cells growing either in minimal or complex medium was analyzed by a combination of proteomic and metabolomic methods. Master gels of the cytosolic and the secreted proteome covering major parts of the main metabolic pathways were created by means of 2D gel electrophoresis. Quantification of 2D gels allowed displaying the most abundant proteins in these sub-proteomes. Application of the GeLC-MS/MS technique tripled the number of identified proteins and enabled detection of many intrinsic membrane proteins. In total, 1542 proteins were identified in growing B. pumilus cells, among them 1182 cytosolic proteins, 297 membrane and lipoproteins and 63 secreted proteins. This accounts for about 43 % of the 3616 proteins encoded in the B. pumilus Jo2 genome sequence. By using GC-MS, IP-LC/MS and H-NMR methods numerous metabolites were analyzed and assigned to the reconstructed metabolic pathways. Our data indicate that applying a combination of proteomic and metabolomic techniques a comprehensive view of the physiology of growing B. pumilus cells can be gained. In addition, selected production-relevant genome features such as the restriction modification system, NRPS clusters and the secretory system of B. pumilus Jo2 are discussed. In their natural habitat, the soil, B. pumilus cells are often exposed to growth limiting conditions due to the lack of sufficient amounts of nutrients. Such limitations can also occur during fermentation conditions and will negatively influence the efficiency of the process. Glucose is the main carbon and energy source of B. pumilus. Thus, a deficiency of glucose has an enormous impact on cell growth. A 1D LC-MS/MS approach was performed to quantify the proteins using an N14/N15 labeling and to analyze the changes in the protein equipment when B. pumilus cells stop their exponential growth and become stationary due to limitation of glucose. 1033 proteins in the cytosolic fraction of B. pumilus cells were quantified and 272 of them appeared to be upregulated when the cells experience glucose starvation. 2D-PAGE was used to analyze the exoproteome of those cells. Glucose starving B. pumilus cells seemed to focus on usage of proteins and peptides as alternative carbon and energy sources instead of other carbohydrates. Especially the exoproteome of glucose starving cells is dominated by proteases and peptidases. Furthermore, cells used fatty acids as carbon source indicated by upregulation of enzymes involved in β-oxidation and the methylcitrate pathway. Bacillus pumilus is characterized by a higher oxidative stress resistance than other comparable industrially relevant Bacilli such as B. subtilis or B. licheniformis. In this study the response of B. pumilus to oxidative stress was investigated during a treatment with high concentrations of hydrogen peroxide at the proteome, transcriptome and metabolome level. Genes/proteins belonging to regulons, which are known to have important functions in the oxidative stress response of other organisms, were found to be upregulated, such as the Fur, Spx, SOS or CtsR regulon. Strikingly, parts of the fundamental PerR regulon responding to peroxide stress in B. subtilis are not encoded in the B. pumilus genome. Thus, B. pumilus misses the catalase KatA, the DNA-protection protein MrgA or the alkyl hydroperoxide reductase AhpCF. Data of this study suggests that the catalase KatX2 takes over the function of the missing KatA in the oxidative stress response of B. pumilus. The genome-wide expression analysis revealed an induction of bacillithiol (Cys-GlcN-malate, BSH) relevant genes. An analysis of the intracellular metabolites detected high intracellular levels of this protective metabolite, which indicates the importance of bacillithiol in the peroxide stress resistance of B. pumilus. Using the physiological knowledge gained during our studies, we analyzed samples taken during an industrial fermentation process. Five samples were taken during the processes using a protease overexpressing B. pumilus strain and a non-overexpressing B. pumilus reference strain. 2D-PAGE was employed to analyze the samples. 448 proteins could be identified in the samples from the protease overexpressing stain as well as 453 proteins in the reference strain. The proteins were quantified relatively comparing the different growth phases of each strain as well as comparing the strains to each other. The physiological knowledge gained from the shake flask studies enabled us to interpret the findings. Both strains showed an induction of proteins involved in acquisition of alternative carbon sources and of proteins involved in degradation and usage of fatty acids, e.g. the methylcitrate pathway, when they stop exponential growth. This is comparable to the results gained from the analysis of B. pumilus cells under glucose limitation, indicating similar conditions during the processes. Especially in the late phases of the fermentation processes the cells were obviously exposed to severe stress conditions. Our results demonstrated that overexpressing cells showed a significantly stronger oxidative stress response at the end of the fermentation process compared to non-overexpressing cells, which indicated that not only the high cell densities but also the overproduction of the target protein might be responsible for these conditions.
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.
Primary producers, alongside heterotrophic bacteria and viruses, modulate the essential global carbon cycle. About half of the Earth’s net primary production originates in the marine environment. By effecting these systems and the burial of carbon, bacteria play a significant role in the world’s climate, especially with regard to rising temperatures and increasing anthropogenic carbon dioxide production.
Particles present substrate-rich niches for particle-associated bacteria, but are rare in the marine system. Particle-associated bacteria, comprising of chemotactic motile free-living and particle-attached bacteria, were shown to have higher respiration rates, were larger in cell and genome size and showed a higher hydrolytic activity of extracellular enzymes compared to the free-living fraction.
Understanding the contribution of particle-associated bacteria to the degradation of algal biomass is essential to understand the marine carbon cycle. However, the identification of this group is difficult and required refinement.
Sequential filtration, the most commonly used technique for the separation of bacterial fractions, provides only access to a part of the particle-associated microbiome, and includes with large and clustered bacteria undesired false-positives. To overcome these limitations, separation by gravity in Imhoff sedimentation cones was explored in this thesis to access, identify and define particle-associated microbiomes, in comparison and conjunction with the established separation techniques like sequential filtration and centrifugation.
The cultivability on agar plates was assessed, aiming at the question which portion of the colony-forming bacteria belong to free-living non-motile or motile bacteria or to particle-attached bacteria. As continuous cultivation on plates often involves loss of cultures, colonies of the original plate were used to obtain partial 16S rRNA sequences of individual colonies and of plate microbiomes.
For future studies on particle-associated bacteria, a representative strain collection was established from particle-attached bacteria retained on 3 μm filters and from particle-associated bacteria collected together with settled algae in sedimentation cones.
To understand the contribution of top-down selection to a yearly recurring bacterioplankton bloom at our sampling site Helgoland, particle-associated strains were included in isolation experiments for flavophages, since Flavobacteriia are among the most important responder to the yearly observed blooms.
Overall, this thesis provides new insights into the isolation and cultivation of particle-associated bacteria – an important, but currently not fully understood fraction of organisms within the marine system.
This thesis will discuss the different fields of application of the two soft ionization techniques ESI and MALDI in microbial proteomics and their importance for a better understanding of bacteria physiology. The general development in the past 25 years coming from 2D-gel analysis and protein identification by peptide mass fingerprint analysis via MALDI-TOF to genome wide quantitative LC-ESI-MS experiments with fast and sensitive ESI instruments is exemplary shown for the Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis in article I. Even though 2D-PAGE in conjunction with MALDI-MS is still an important tool in proteomic research, the more recently established global quantitative LC-ESI-MS workflows gain more and more relevance as they overcome 2D-PAGE based protein restrictions and enable the acquisition of higher accurate protein quantities. In article II such a workflow was used to analyze the physiological adaptation of Staphylococcus aureus to vancomycin treatment on a global-scale. Also post-translational modifications of proteins, that are important for regulation of their activity and allow rapid adaption to changed environmental conditions, could be analyzed by LC-ESI-MS workflows using special enrichment strategies (article III and IV). Despite the mentioned discrimination and less accurate quantification of proteins, 2D-PAGE analyses are still advantageous when analyzing large-scale time series experiments. To gain highly time resolved data but also very accurate relative quantities on a global-scale, 2D-PAGE-MALDI-MS and LC-ESI-MS techniques have been combined to investigate dynamic proteome adaptations of B. subtilis during nutrition shift as part of a global systems biology approach (article V). Also absolute quantities of proteins are of high interest for systems biology, but are still challenging to obtain on large-scale as well as with sufficient accuracy. In article VI a method that again combined 2D-PAGE-MALDI-MS and LC-ESI-MS was introduced to gain absolute protein quantities on global-scale. Utilizing the complementarity of 2D-PAGE and LC-ESI-MS this new workflow enabled fast and cost efficient data acquisition on absolute scale. In article VII we described for the first time a global quantitative LC-MALDI-MS workflow. Cross validation with an LTQ Orbitrap proofed that LC-MALDI-MS is able to process complex samples and obtain highly reliable quantities. The comparative analysis of data gained with both instrument types revealed biases for certain biochemical properties of MALDI as well as ESI instruments, resulting in a general complementarity of both ionization techniques. Article I Becher, D., Büttner, K., Moche, M., Hessling, B., Hecker, M., 2011. From the genome sequence to the protein inventory of Bacillus subtilis. Proteomics 11, 2971–2980. Article II Hessling,B., Bonn,F., Herbst,F.-A., Rappen,G.-M., Bernhardt,J., Hecker,M. and Becher,D. Global proteome analysis of vancomycin stress in Staphylococcus aureus. Submitted to Mol. Cell Proteomics. Article III Elsholz, A.K.W., Turgay, K., Michalik, S., Hessling, B., Gronau, K., Oertel, D., Mäder, U., Bernhardt, J., Becher, D., Hecker, M., Gerth, U., 2012. Global impact of protein arginine phosphorylation on the physiology of Bacillus subtilis. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 109, 7451–7456. Article IV Chi, B.K., Gronau, K., Mäder, U., Hessling, B., Becher, D., Antelmann, H., 2011. S-bacillithiolation protects against hypochlorite stress in Bacillus subtilis as revealed by transcriptomics and redox proteomics. Mol. Cell Proteomics 10, M111.009506. Article V Buescher,J.M., Liebermeister,W., Jules,M., Uhr,M., Muntel,J., Botella,E., Hessling,B., Kleijn,R.J., Le Chat,L., Lecointe,F., et al. (2012) Global network reorganization during dynamic adaptations of Bacillus subtilis metabolism. Science, 335, 1099–1103. Article VI Maass, S., Sievers, S., Zühlke, D., Kuzinski, J., Sappa, P.K., Muntel, J., Hessling, B., Bernhardt, J., Sietmann, R., Völker, U., Hecker, M., Becher, D., 2011. Efficient, global-scale quantification of absolute protein amounts by integration of targeted mass spectrometry and two-dimensional gel-based proteomics. Anal. Chem. 83, 2677–2684. Article VII Hessling,B., Büttner,K., Hecker,M. and Becher,D. Global relative quantification with LC-MALDI – cross-validation with LTQ-Orbitrap proves reliability and reveals complementary ionization preferences. Submitted to Mol. Cell Proteomics.
Submerged macrophytes play a key role in north temperate shallow lakes by stabilizing clear-water conditions. Eutrophication has resulted in macrophyte loss and shifts to turbid conditions in many lakes. Considerable efforts have been devoted to shallow lake restoration in many countries, but long-term success depends on a stable recovery of submerged macrophytes. However, recovery patterns vary widely and remain to be fully understood. We hypothesize that reduced external nutrient loading leads to an intermediate recovery state with clear spring and turbid summer conditions similar to the pattern described for eutrophication. In contrast, lake internal restoration measures can result in transient clear-water conditions both in spring and summer and reversals to turbid conditions. Furthermore, we hypothesize that these contrasting restoration measures result in different macrophyte species composition, with added implications for seasonal dynamics due to differences in plant traits. To test these hypotheses, we analyzed data on water quality and submerged macrophytes from 49 north temperate shallow lakes that were in a turbid state and subjected to restoration measures. To study the dynamics of macrophytes during nutrient load reduction, we adapted the ecosystem model PCLake. Our survey and model simulations revealed the existence of an intermediate recovery state upon reduced external nutrient loading, characterized by spring clear-water phases and turbid summers, whereas internal lake restoration measures often resulted in clear-water conditions in spring and summer with returns to turbid conditions after some years. External and internal lake restoration measures resulted in different macrophyte communities. The intermediate recovery state following reduced nutrient loading is characterized by a few macrophyte species (mainly pondweeds) that can resist wave action allowing survival in shallow areas, germinate early in spring, have energy-rich vegetative propagules facilitating rapid initial growth and that can complete their life cycle by early summer. Later in the growing season these plants are, according to our simulations, outcompeted by periphyton, leading to late-summer phytoplankton blooms. Internal lake restoration measures often coincide with a rapid but transient colonization by hornworts, waterweeds or charophytes. Stable clear-water conditions and a diverse macrophyte flora only occurred decades after external nutrient load reduction or when measures were combined.
The deep-sea tubeworm Riftia pachyptila lacks a digestive system but completely relies on bacterial endosymbionts for nutrition. Although the symbiont has been studied in detail on the molecular level, such analyses were unavailable for the animal host, because sequence information was lacking. To identify host-symbiont interaction mechanisms, we therefore sequenced the Riftia transcriptome, which served as a basis for comparative metaproteomic analyses of symbiont-containing versus symbiont-free tissues, both under energy-rich and energy-limited conditions. Our results suggest that metabolic interactions include nutrient allocation from symbiont to host by symbiont digestion and substrate transfer to the symbiont by abundant host proteins. We furthermore propose that Riftia maintains its symbiont by protecting the bacteria from oxidative damage while also exerting symbiont population control. Eukaryote-like symbiont proteins might facilitate intracellular symbiont persistence. Energy limitation apparently leads to reduced symbiont biomass and increased symbiont digestion. Our study provides unprecedented insights into host-microbe interactions that shape this highly efficient symbiosis.
Streptococcus pneumoniae is a commensal of the human upper respiratory tract and moreover, the
causative agent of several life-threatening diseases including pneumonia, sepsis, otitis media, and
meningitis. Due to the worldwide rise of resistance to antibiotics in pneumococci the understanding
of its physiology is of increasing importance. In this context, the analysis of the pneumococcal
proteome is helpful as comprehensive data on protein abundances in S. pneumoniae may provide
an extensive source of information to facilitate the development of new vaccines and drug
treatments.
It is known that protein phosphorylation on serine, threonine and tyrosine residues is a major
regulatory post-translational modification in pathogenic bacteria. This reversible post-translational
modification enables the translation of extracellular signals into cellular responses and therewith
adaptation to a steadily changing environment. Consequently, it is of particular interest to gather
precise information about the phosphoproteome of pneumococci. S. pneumoniae encodes a single
Serine/Threonine kinase-phosphatase couple known as StkP-PhpP.
To address the global impact and physiological importance of StkP and PhpP which are closely
linked to the regulation of cell morphology, growth and cell division in S. pneumoniae, proteomics
with an emphasis on phosphorylation and dephosphorylation events on Ser and Thr residues was
applied. Thus, the non-encapsulated pneumococcal D39Δcps strain (WT), a kinase (ΔstkP) and
phosphatase mutant (ΔphpP) were analyzed in in a mass spectrometry based label-free
quantification experiment. The global proteome analysis of the mutants deficient for stkP or phpP
already proved the essential role of StkP-PhpP in the protein regulation of the pneumococcus.
Proteins with significantly altered abundances were detected in diverse functional groups in both
mutants. Noticeable changes in the proteome of the stkP deletion mutant were observed in
metabolic processes such as “Amino acid metabolism” and also in pathways regulating genetic
and environmental information processing like “Transcription” and “Signal transduction”.
Prominent changes in the metabolism of DNA, nucleotides, carbohydrates, cofactors and vitamins
as well as in the categories “Transport and binding proteins” and “Glycan biosynthesis and
metabolism” have been additionally detected in the proteome of the phosphatase mutant. Still, the
quantitative comparison of WT and mutants revealed more significantly altered proteins in ΔphpP
than in ΔstkP. Moreover, the results indicated that the loss of function of PhpP causes an increased
abundance of proteins in the pneumococcal phosphate uptake system Pst. Furthermore, the
obtained quantitative proteomic data revealed an influence of StkP and PhpP on the twocomponent
systems ComDE, LiaRS, CiaRH, and VicRK.
Recent studies of the pneumococcal StkP/PhpP couple demonstrated that both proteins play an
essential role in cell growth, cell division and separation. Growth analyses and the phenotypic
characterization of the mutants by electron-microscopy performed within this work pointed out
that ΔphpP and ΔstkP had different growth characteristics and abnormal cell division and cell
separation. Nevertheless, the morphological effects could not be explained by changes in protein
abundances on a global scale. So, the in-depth analysis of the phosphoproteome was mandatory
to deliver further information of PhpP and StkP and their influence in cell division and
peptidoglycan synthesis by modulating proteins involved in this mechanisms.
For more detailed insights into the activity, targets and target sites of PhpP and StkP the advantages
of phosphopeptide enrichment using titanium dioxide and spectral library based data evaluation
were combined. Indeed, the application of an adapted workflow for phosphoproteome analyses
and the use of a recently constructed broad spectral library, including a large number of
phosphopeptides (504) highly enhanced the reliable and reproducible identification of
phosphorylated proteins in this work.
Finally, already known targets and target sites of StkP and PhpP, detected and described in other
studies using different experimental procedures, have been identified as a proof of principle
applying the mass spectrometry based phosphoproteome approach presented in this work.
Referring to the role of StkP in cell division and cell separation a number of proteins participating
in cell wall synthesis and cell division that are apparently phosphorylated by StkP was identified.
In comparison to StkP, the physiological function and role of the co-expressed phosphatase PhpP
is poorly understood. But, especially the list of previously unknown putative target substrates of
PhpP has been extended remarkably in this work. Among others, five proteins with direct
involvement in cell division (DivIVA, GpsB) and peptidoglycan biosynthesis (MltG, MreC, MacP)
can be found under the new putative targets of PhpP.
All in all, this work provides a complex and comprehensive protein repository of high proteome
coverage of S. pneumoniae D39 including identification of yet unknown serine/threonine/tyrosine
phosphorylation, which might contribute to support various research interests within the scientific
community and will facilitate further investigations of this important human pathogen.
Like eukaryotes, different bacterial species express one or more Ser/Thr kinases and phosphatases that operate in various signaling networks by catalyzing phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of proteins that can immediately regulate biochemical pathways by altering protein function. The human pathogen Streptococcus pneumoniae encodes a single Ser/Thr kinase-phosphatase couple known as StkP-PhpP, which has shown to be crucial in the regulation of cell wall synthesis and cell division. In this study, we applied proteomics to further understand the physiological role of pneumococcal PhpP and StkP with an emphasis on phosphorylation events on Ser and Thr residues. Therefore, the proteome of the non-encapsulated D39 strain (WT), a kinase (ΔstkP), and phosphatase mutant (ΔphpP) were compared in a mass spectrometry based label-free quantification experiment. Results show that a loss of function of PhpP causes an increased abundance of proteins in the phosphate uptake system Pst. Quantitative proteomic data demonstrated an effect of StkP and PhpP on the two-component systems ComDE, LiaRS, CiaRH, and VicRK. To obtain further information on the function, targets and target sites of PhpP and StkP we combined the advantages of phosphopeptide enrichment using titanium dioxide and spectral library based data evaluation for sensitive detection of changes in the phosphoproteome of the wild type and the mutant strains. According to the role of StkP in cell division we identified several proteins involved in cell wall synthesis and cell division that are apparently phosphorylated by StkP. Unlike StkP, the physiological function of the co-expressed PhpP is poorly understood. For the first time we were able to provide a list of previously unknown putative targets of PhpP. Under these new putative targets of PhpP are, among others, five proteins with direct involvement in cell division (DivIVA, GpsB) and peptidoglycan biosynthesis (MltG, MreC, MacP).
The obligate anaerobe, spore forming bacterium Clostridioides difficile (formerly Clostridium difficile) causes nosocomial and community acquired diarrhea often associated with antibiotic therapy. Major virulence factors of the bacterium are the two large clostridial toxins TcdA and TcdB. The production of both toxins was found strongly connected to the metabolism and the nutritional status of the growth environment. Here, we systematically investigated the changes of the gene regulatory, proteomic and metabolic networks of C. difficile 630Δerm underlying the adaptation to the non-growing state in the stationary phase. Integrated data from time-resolved transcriptome, proteome and metabolome investigations performed under defined growth conditions uncovered multiple adaptation strategies. Overall changes in the cellular processes included the downregulation of ribosome production, lipid metabolism, cold shock proteins, spermine biosynthesis, and glycolysis and in the later stages of riboflavin and coenzyme A (CoA) biosynthesis. In contrast, different chaperones, several fermentation pathways, and cysteine, serine, and pantothenate biosynthesis were found upregulated. Focusing on the Stickland amino acid fermentation and the central carbon metabolism, we discovered the ability of C. difficile to replenish its favored amino acid cysteine by a pathway starting from the glycolytic 3-phosphoglycerate via L-serine as intermediate. Following the growth course, the reductive equivalent pathways used were sequentially shifted from proline via leucine/phenylalanine to the central carbon metabolism first to butanoate fermentation and then further to lactate fermentation. The toxin production was found correlated mainly to fluxes of the central carbon metabolism. Toxin formation in the supernatant was detected when the flux changed from butanoate to lactate synthesis in the late stationary phase. The holistic view derived from the combination of transcriptome, proteome and metabolome data allowed us to uncover the major metabolic strategies that are used by the clostridial cells to maintain its cellular homeostasis and ensure survival under starvation conditions.
Streptococcus pneumoniae is one of the leading human pathogen causing morbidity and mortality worldwide. The pneumococcus can cause a variety of different diseases ranging from mild illnesses like otitis media and sinusitis to life-threatening diseases such as pneumonia, meningitis and sepsis. Mostly affected are infants, elderly and immune-suppressed patients. Although, there are vaccines against pneumococci available, still hundreds of thousands of people got infected each year. These vaccines are targeting the pneumococcal polysaccharide capsule. Because of the high number of different serotypes, it is not possible to generate a vaccine against all present serotypes. In the last years a shift to non-vaccine serotypes was noticed. This strengthens the need for the development of vaccines which do not target polysaccharides. Thus, proteins came into focus as potential new vaccine candidates or targets for drug treatment, because several proteins are highly conserved among different strains or even genera. Proteome analyses can give insights into the protein composition in a certain state of a bacterium. So, targets can be identified, which are especially expressed under infection-relevant conditions. Iron limitation is one of these conditions and the knowledge on iron acquisition in pneumococci is still limited. Iron is an essential trace element and as redox-active catalyst or as cofactor involved in various key metabolic pathway in nearly all living organisms and thus also in bacteria. For instance, iron is necessary during biosynthesis of amino acids and in electron transport as well as in DNA replication. Within the human host iron is extremely limited due to its high insolubility under physiological conditions, which is part of the nutritional immunity of its human host. Hence, bacteria had to evolve mechanism to overcome iron starvation. In this thesis the adaptation process triggered by iron limitation in the S. pneumoniae serotype 2 strain D39 was investigated in a global mass spectrometry-based proteome analysis.
In preceding growth experiments the pneumococcal growth was adapted to the needs of proteomic workflows. In order to investigate the pneumococcal response to iron limitation, the organic iron-chelating agent 2,2’-bipyridine (BIP) was applied. For the quantification of changes in protein abundances comparing stress to control conditions the very reliable and robust metabolic labeling technique Stable Isotope Labeling with Amino Acids in Cell Culture (SILAC) was used. This method requires the bacterial cultivation in a chemically defined medium, for which reason modified RPMI 1640 medium was chosen. A pooled protein extract with heavy labeled amino acids was applied as an internal standard, which included proteins expressed under control and stress condition, to control, BIP and BIP-iron-complex (BIP control experiment) samples. Samples were analyzed by liquid chromatography coupled directly to a tandem mass spectrometer. It is described that under iron-restricted conditions proteins associated to pathogenesis are higher abundant in pathogenic bacteria like Staphylococcus aureus. Hence, similar observations were expected also for the proteomic adaptation of S. pneumoniae, but the first results showed a reduction in protein abundance of virulence factors. In order to explain these results inductively-coupled-plasma mass spectrometry was executed to determine the iron concentration of chemically defined medium (CDM) used in this experiment. The analysis revealed a relatively low iron concentration of approximately 190 µg l-1. Therefore, the iron concentration of the complex medium THY, in which pneumococci are usually grown, was investigated. THY contains four-fold (740 µg l-1) more iron than the CDM. Subsequently, an additional iron limitation approach was carried out in THY. As SILAC is not applicable in complex media like THY, MaxLFQ was applied as quantification method in this case. Because two different media were used, an additional comparative proteome analysis with regard to the two investigated media was executed.
Comparing the protein composition in both cultivation media it became clear that pneumococci exhibit a totally different proteome depending on the medium. Major differences were found in metabolisms of amino acids, vitamins and cofactors as well as in pathogenesis-associated proteins. These differences have to be taken into account during the analyses of both iron limitation approaches. Overall, more proteins were identified and quantified in CDM samples. The pneumococcal adaptation to iron limitation in both media was different; especially, the alterations in protein abundances of virulence factors. In contrast to the iron limitation in CDM, proteins involved in pathogenesis were higher abundant under iron limitation in THY, which was the expected result. Because of proteomic changes of cell division and lipid metabolism involved proteins in iron-limited pneumococci in CDM, electron microscopic pictures were taken in order to proof cell morphology. The pictures showed an impaired cell division in iron-limited CDM, but not in THY medium. However, both datasets have similarities as well. Thus, the iron uptake protein PiuA is strongly increased in iron-restricted conditions and the abundance of the iron storage protein Dpr is significantly decreased in both datasets. Notably, PiuA and Dpr seem to have important roles during the pneumococcal adaptation to iron-restricted environments.
One the basis of these results, it could be shown that the proteomic response of pneumococci to iron limitation is strongly dependent to the initial iron concentration of the environment. Hence, pneumococci will adapt differently to varying niches and thus potential vaccine candidates should be expressed independently of the localization within the human host.
The immune system of all vertebrates primarily is responsible to maintain the organisms homeostasis by either eliminating neoplastic or altered body cells and to protect against foreign invaders (viruses, bacteria, fungi, parasites) (Murphy 2012). It is a highly regulated network of innate and adaptive mechanisms between humoral factors and leukocytes. The successful elimination or protection is crucially based on differentiation of self from non-self. Pathogens and altered body cells are recognized by different receptor complexes on immune cells. Expressed pathogen- or danger-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs or DAMPs, respectively) are bound by pattern recognition receptors (PRR) (Takeuchi and Akira 2010). Missing major histocompatibility (MHC) class I molecules or non-self (e.g. allogeneic or xenogeneic cells) MHC are recognized by natural killer cell receptors (Fischer, Koppang and Nakanishi 2013, Raulet 2006). Foreign non-self peptides are presented through MHC class I (intracellular) or through MHC class II (extracellular) to B- cell or T cell receptor complexes. This initial activation is regulated by humoral factors or cellular interactions (receptor-ligand interactions) resulting in the activation, proliferation and effector function within an immune response. Some of the cellular receptors are permanently expressed on all leukocytes on a high level (MHC class I), whereas others only are expressed during certain developmental or activation stages or on certain leukocyte populations (monocytes, granulocytes, NK cells, lymphocytes) (Murphy 2012, Biosciences 2010). For different mammals (man, mouse, rat, but also swine, cattle, dog), a system of characterized leukocyte surface molecules primarily based on the recognition of these molecules by specific monoclonal antibodies (mabs) was summarized at international workshops as clusters of differentiation (CD) (Cobbold and Metcalfe 1994, Hopkins, Ross and Dutia 1993, Haverson et al. 2001, Mason et al. 2001). Using these mabs, it is not only possible to characterize the developmental and functional stage of different leukocyte subpopulations but also to define the interactions between these populations. For bony fish, such a system does not exist. Only a limited number of mabs against leukocyte surface molecules is available and most of them are strongly specific for species (Köllner et al. 2004, Köllner et al. 2001, Zhang et al. 2010, Ramirez-Gomez et al. 2012, Wen et al. 2011, DeLuca, Wilson and Warr 1983, Toda et al. 2011, Toda et al. 2009, Takizawa et al. 2011a, Hetland et al. 2010, Araki et al. 2008). The goal of this PhD work, therefore, was to develop monoclonal antibodies against surface markers of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) T cell population (chapter 2). The lymphocytes are characterized by the expression of a T cell receptor complex composed of TCR chains (α and β) and CD3 chains (α, β, γ, δ, ε and ζ). Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) binds to MHC class I bound peptide on the infected host cell using their T cell receptor (TCR) and its co-receptor CD8 resulting in specific killing. Th cells recognize peptides through their T cell receptor (TCR) and their co-receptor CD4 after extracellular antigens uptake, processing and presentation via MHC class II by professional antigen presenting cells (macrophages, dendritic cells and B cells). During recent years, genes encoding MHC class I and II, TCR and their co-receptors CD8 and CD4 have been cloned in several fish species and antibodies have been developed to study protein expression in morphological and functional contexts. However, mabs specific for TCR or CD3 have not been established yet. Therefore, using pan-T cell marker specific mabs, the activation and kinetics of T cell subpopulation should be investigated (chapter 2). Moreover, a flow cytometry method was established using different lineage marker specific mabs to measure different leukocyte populations and their involvement in immune mechanisms of trout using a single tube assay (chapter 3). The first line of defense against altered body cells or pathogens is provided by evolutionarily ancient macrophages and natural killer (NK) cells. These innate mechanisms are well developed in bony fish. Two types of NK cell homologues have been described in fish: non-specific cytotoxic cells and NK-like cells (Shen et al. 2002, Shen et al. 2003, Shen et al. 2004, Fischer et al. 2013). Functional assays for innate and adaptive lymphocyte responses have been developed in only a few fish species. However, there are no tools available until now in trout to follow these cells directly in the immune response. The molecular characteristics and the expression on leukocyte subpopulations of CD56 were therefore analyzed. Furthermore, a mab that is specific for a molecule expressed only in NK cells but with uncommon expression kinetics was established (chapter 4). Overall, the established tools and methods allow a more detailed characterization of cellular immune mechanisms against intracellular pathogens in rainbow trout.
Herpesviruses are enveloped DNA viruses which are dependent on two fusion steps for efficient replication in the host cell. First, they have to fuse their envelope with the cellular plasma membrane or with the vesicle membrane after endocytic uptake to enter the host cell and second, they have to export the newly generated nucleocapsids from the site of assembly to the cytoplasm by fusion of the primary virion envelope with the outer nuclear membrane (ONM). The main goal of this project was to provide a better understanding of how herpesvirus capsids exit the nucleus. On the one hand this thesis aimed at finding cellular proteins involved in nuclear egress (Paper I), while on the other the focus was on further characterization of the viral nuclear egress complex (NEC, Paper II) and its interaction with the capsid (Paper III).
It is the hallmark of viruses, including herpesviruses, to hijack host cell proteins for their efficient replication. Some of those interactions are well characterized, while others might not yet have been discovered. In the last step of the nuclear egress, where the primary virion membrane fuses with the ONM, most likely a cellular machinery is involved. The presented work focused on Torsin, the only known AAA+ ATPase localizing in the endoplasmic reticulum and the perinuclear space (PNS). For this, the effect of overexpression of WT and mutant proteins, as well as CRISPR/Cas9 generated knock-out cell lines, on PrV replication was analyzed. Neither single overexpression nor single knockouts of TorA or TorB had any significant effects on virus titers. However, infection of TorA/B double knockout cells revealed reduced viral titers and an accumulation of primary virions in the PNS at early infection times, indicating a delay in nuclear egress.
The process of nuclear egress has been intensively investigated without revealing all its details. To address some of the missing aspects we generated monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against the NEC and its components (pUL31 and pUL34) for a better visualization of the process in transfected as well as infected cells. These mAbs provide a useful tool for future analyses.
The publication of the NEC crystal structure formed the basis for intensive research on the molecular details of the NEC formation and its interaction with the nucleocapsid. Recently, our lab showed that lysine (K) at position 242 in the membrane-distal part of pUL31 is crucial for incorporation of the nucleocapsid into budding vesicles. Replacing K by alanine (A) resulted in accumulations of vesicles in the PNS, while mature capsids were not incorporated. To test whether this is due to electrostatic interference or structural restrictions we substituted K242 by different aa to determine the requirements for nucleocapsid uptake into the nascent primary particles. To analyze whether the defect of pUL31-K242A can be compensated by second-site mutations, PrV-UL31-K242A was passaged and mutations in revertants were analyzed. Different mutations have been identified compensating for the K242A defect. A considerable number of mutations indicates that the NEC is much more flexible than previously thought. Further, we gained information that the K at position 242 is not directly involved in capsid interaction, while it is more likely involved in rearrangements within the NEC coat.
The proteasome is a major part of the ubiquitin-proteasome-system playing an important role in cell homeostasis due to its protein quality control function. Moreover, the proteasome is involved in cell cycle regulation and in the regulation of transcription factors. Upon induction of interferons, or treatment with lipopolysaccharides, an isoform of the standard-proteasome is composed, named immunoproteasome (i-proteasome). The i-proteasome is constitutively expressed in immune cells and deficiency of proteolytic subunits of this multiprotein complex has been associated with a poor outcome during infectious diseases. I-proteasome-deficiency has been shown to result in reduced MHC class I presentation. Using mice which are deficient for all three proteolytic active subunits LMP2, MECL-1 and LMP7, we could demonstrate that i-proteasome-deficiency lead to an altered recruitment of immune cells to the CNS when challenged with the intracellular parasite Toxoplasma gondii, resulting in increased frequencies of neutrophils and other cells of myeloid origin. The shift to reduced frequencies of CD45highCD11blow lymphocytes can be further explained by a decreased migratory capacity of i-proteasome-deficient CD8+ T cells. In contrast to previous studies using other pathogens, effector function of CD8+ as well as CD4+ T cells, measured by frequencies of IFNγ, TNF, IL-2 and granzyme B producing cells, were not impaired in these mice, whereas induction of CD4+ Tregs was strongly reduced. In addition, we found that parasite control was comparable to control mice and that i-proteasome deletion caused an overall pro-inflammatory cytokine milieu within the brain. Our results indicate that i-proteasome-deficiency lead to prolonged tissue inflammation during T. gondii infection which could be an explanation for the more severe course of disease observed in these mice.
The Src homology domain containing phosphatase 2 (SHP2) is a tyrosine phosphatase modulating several signaling pathways and therefore has an influence in cell cycle, differentiation, proliferation and cell activation. However, SHP2 is assumed to play a negative role during T-cell activation as the phosphatase has been shown to inhibit T-cell receptor-induced signaling cascades. Although, various gain-of-function mutations in the SH2 or PTP domain of this phosphatase, such as D61Y, have been associated with myeloproliferative diseases such as juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML), effects of such mutations on T cells have not been addressed in scientific literature so far. Therefore, in the second part of this thesis we could demonstrate that D61Y mutation in the SH2 domain of SHP2 did not cause JMML pathology when only introduced into T cells. Especially in aged mice, T cells of SHP2 mutant mice showed an increased expression of cell adhesion molecule CD44. In accordance with these findings, we observed increased influenza A virus-specific T cells in the bone marrow of SHP2 D61Y mutant mice, indicating a role of the phosphatase in memory formation or maintenance of CD8+ Tem. Although SHP2D61Y mice revealed a comparable viral clearance, IFNγ production of virus experienced CD4+ and CD8+ T cells was diminished compared to control mice, underlining a negative involvement of the phosphatase in the JAK/STAT1 signaling axis as suggested before by studies using mice with SHP2-/- T cells.
Mixotrophic and heterotrophic protists hold a key position in aquatic microbial food webs. Whereas they can account for the bulk of bacterivory in pelagic systems, the potential structuring effect of these consumers on bacterial communities is far from clear. We conducted short-term grazing experiments to test for the overall impact on bacterial community structure and possible prey preferences of phagotrophic protists. The protist taxa selected for this study include three mixotrophic flagellates, comprising two obligate- and one facultative mixotroph, and one phagoheterotrophic flagellate lacking phototrophic capacity. Bacterioplankton from seven different lakes were enriched and used to represent semi-natural prey communities. Our study demonstrated protist strain specific impacts on bacterial community composition linked to grazing. The three mixotrophs had variable impacts on bacterial communities where the two obligate mixotrophs exhibited lower grazing rates, while showing a tendency to promote higher bacterial diversity. The phagoheterotroph displayed the highest grazing rates and structured the bacterial communities via apparent selective grazing. Consistent selectivity trends were observed throughout the experiments, such as the apparent avoidance of all flagellates of Actinobacteria, and high grazing on dominant Burkholderiales taxa. However, there was no consistent “fingerprint” of mixotrophic grazing on prey communities, but the structuring impact rather seemed to depend on the trophic mode of the individual protist taxa, i.e. their dependence on phototrophy vs. phagotrophy. Our findings highlight the differential structuring impact of protist taxa on bacterial communities which may have important ecological implications, for example during periodic dominance of obligate mixotrophic bacterivores in changing lake ecosystems.
Tafazzin—an acyltransferase—is involved in cardiolipin (CL) remodeling. CL is associated with mitochondrial function, structure and more recently with cell proliferation. Various tafazzin isoforms exist in humans. The role of these isoforms in cardiolipin remodeling is unknown. Aim of this study was to investigate if specific isoforms like Δ5 can restore the wild type phenotype with respect to CL composition, cellular proliferation and gene expression profile. In addition, we aimed to determine the molecular mechanism by which tafazzin can modulate gene expression by applying promoter analysis and (Ingenuity Pathway Analyis) IPA to genes regulated by TAZ-deficiency. Expression of Δ5 and rat full length TAZ in C6-TAZ- cells could fully restore CL composition and—as proven for Δ5—this is naturally associated with restoration of mitochondrial respiration. A similar restoration of CL-composition could not be observed after re-expression of an enzymatically dead full-length rat TAZ (H69L; TAZMut). Re-expression of only rat full length TAZ could restore proliferation rate. Surprisingly, the Δ5 variant failed to restore wild-type proliferation. Further, as expected, re-expression of the TAZMut variant completely failed to reverse the gene expression changes, whereas re-expression of the TAZ-FL variant largely did so and the Δ5 variant to somewhat less extent. Very likely TAZ-deficiency provokes substantial long-lasting changes in cellular lipid metabolism which contribute to changes in proliferation and gene expression, and are not or only very slowly reversible.
The present study deals with the spread and population genetics of the invasive Asian bush
mosquito Ae. japonicus in Europe and Germany. Since the first detection of Ae. japonicus
in Europe in 2000, the species spread rapidly through Europe, either actively by flying or
passively by human activities. In 2017, four confirmed populations of Ae. japonicus existed
in Europe. The largest population covered western Germany, parts of France, Switzerland,
Liechtenstein, Austria and Italy. The most northern population around Hanover, Germany,
did not spread since 2013. A very small population existed in Belgium and the second largest
population covered parts of Austria, Italy, Slovenia, Croatia and Hungary. By 2019, Ae.
japonicus had established in 15 European countries.
Most of the monitoring programmes in Europe dealing with the distribution and spread of
Ae. japoncus investigate cemeteries for juvenile stages. However, activities are not
harmonised, e.g. regarding numbers of investigated collection sites and declaration of
negative sites, making data comparison between different studies difficult. Therefore,
suggestions for a standardised Ae. japonicus monitoring method have been developed and
provided.
In the present study, 445 individuals of Ae. japonicus originating from five different
European countries were investigated for population genetic analyses by sequencing parts
of the nad4 gene and genotyping seven polymorphic microsatellite loci. In total, 16 different
nad4 haplotypes were identified with haplotype H1 being the most common and widespread
one through all populations.
Within Germany, Ae. japonicus has been spreading immensely over the last decade. Even
though the present results (2017) demonstrate incipient genetic admixture of populations as
compared to previous studies (2012-2015), no complete genetic mixture has taken place yet.
The populations of Ae. japonicus still fall into two genetic clusters, but the genetic diversity
on individual level had increased considerably (from three nad4 haplotypes in 2012 to 12
according to the present thesis). Both additional introductions and mutation are possible
reasons, but determining the origin of the German populations is not possible anymore.
In the years following the invasion of Germany, Ae. japonicus spread to southeastern
Europe. In 2013, it established in Croatia, in 2017 in Bosnia and Herzegovina and in 2018
in Serbia. In the current study, immature stages of Ae. japonicus were found at 19 sites in
Croatia, two sites in Bosnia and Herzegovina and one site in Serbia. The population genetic
analyses indicate at least two independent introductions in that area. Aedes japonicus collected west of Orahovica (Croatia) seemed to be genetically similar to samples previously
investigated from Southeast Germany/Austria and Austria/Slovenia. By contrast, samples
from east of Orahovica, together with those from Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, were
characterised by another genetic make-up, but their origin could not be determined.
In 2021, individuals of Ae. japonicus were detected at two collection sites in the Czech
Republic for the first time: Prachatice close to the Czech-German border and Mikulov on
the Czech-Austrian border. Population genetics and comparison of genetic data showed a
close relationship of the Prachatice samples to a German population, while for Ae. japonicus
from Mikulov close relatives could not be identified.
In the future, the global spread and establishment of invasive mosquitoes through
international trade and travel will increase. Potential vectors, like the Asian bush mosquito
Ae. japonicus, can become a problem in Europe and Germany, especially in the course of
global warming which supports pathogen transmission. Monitoring the known populations
and identifying introduction and migration routes are therefore essential for vector
managing.
Next Generation Sequencing (NGS)-technologies developed very fast in recent years and is used widely in current research areas. The aim of this study was to use NGS (i) for the identification of pathogens in outbreaks and (ii) for the identification of virulence-relevant sequencepolymorphisms when comparing whole genome sequences. Therefore, a previous developed workflow was used to identify a new virus of the family Bornaviridae. The generation of whole genome sequences elucidated the molecular epidemiological connection of infection of variegated squirrels (Sciurus variegatoides) and three human cases of fatal encephalitis. By generating the whole genome sequence of a Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea Virus (PEDV) in Germany it was possible to find difference compared to circulating high virulent strains in the USA. This led to potential virulence marker to distinguish strain in the USA and Germany. Connections between sequence variation and virulence were further investigated for the bovine viral diarrhea virus 2c (BVDV-2c), cowpox viruses (CPXV) and classical swine fever virus (CSFV). Here, for a highly virulent BVDV-2c strain a mixture of different genome structure variants could be found. The majority of these genomes harbors a duplication within the p7/NS2 coding region and might cause a high virulence. For CPXV virus isolated of different hosts were analyzed and a correlation between genome sequence and the A-type inclusion body phenotype could be found. Furthermore, several deletion/insertion events were detected which might influence the virulence of these strains. Finally, the virus population of CSFV strains in pigs was characterized. However, the population of the inoculum as well as of acute-lethal and chronically infected animals gave no indication that the virus itself causes the different types of disease outcome. In conclusion, this thesis shows the great potential of NGS for virus identification and characterization. Furthermore, it makes the identification of potential virulence marker possible which subsequently can be analyzed by reverse genetics.
More than half of the infectious diseases in humans are caused by zoonotic pathogens or pathogens of animal origin that were transmitted to humans a long time ago. Two important rodent-associated zoonotic pathogens are hantaviruses and human-pathogenic Leptospira spp. Both pathogens induce lifelong infection in the rodent hosts that shed the pathogen. Infection with these zoonotic pathogens in humans can cause clinical symptoms. Since some rodents, like the common vole (Microtus arvalis) and the bank vole (Clethrionomys glareolus syn. Myodes glareolus), have cyclic mass reproduction, this can result in years of population outbreaks in an increased number of disease cases in humans. This was found to be the case with the leptospirosis outbreaks in Germany and tularemia outbreaks in Spain, which were traced back to increased common vole density, as well as with the hantavirus disease outbreaks in several European countries, which were associated with bank vole population outbreaks.
The aim of this work was to define the distribution and prevalence of different hantaviruses and leptospires as well as their coinfection in different European rodents, with a focus on voles from the genus Microtus and the identification of factors that affect the pathogen prevalence in rodent hosts. Therefore, common voles, bank voles, striped field mice (Apodemus agrarius) and other rodents were screened by molecular methods for the presence and prevalence of Leptospira spp. and different hantaviruses. Additionally, in selected studies, the presence of anti-hantavirus antibodies was screened by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) using recombinant hantavirus-nucleocapsid proteins. The prevalence of hantavirus, Leptospira spp. and double-infections with both pathogens was analyzed using individual and population-based factors. Small mammals from four different European countries, Spain in the West, Germany and Austria in Central and Lithuania in Northeastern Europe, were included in the studies.
With the molecular screenings, two new hantavirus strains were detected in continental Europe and were named Traemmersee hantavirus (TRAV) and Rusne hantavirus (RUSV) after the trapping locations in Germany and Lithuania, respectively. TRAV was detected in a field vole (Microtus agrestis) from the federal state of Brandenburg, Germany, while RUSV was detected in root voles (Microtus oeconomus) from Lithuania. Phylogenetic analysis of both hantaviruses indicates their close relation to Tatenale hantavirus and Kielder hantavirus, which were discovered in field voles in Great Britain. A pairwise evolutionary distance (PED) analysis showed that all four hantaviruses belong to the same hantavirus species, for which the putative name “Tatenale orthohantavirus” was proposed. Additionally, a recombinant RUSV antigen was generated and used successfully in ELISA for the detection of RUSV-specific antibodies and for the analysis of the cross-reactivity of monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies.
In Germany, Tula orthohantavirus (TULV) was foremost detected in common voles in Thuringia and Brandenburg but was also detected in field voles in Brandenburg. Puumala orthohantavirus (PUUV) was detected in Thuringia at the virus distribution border, but sequences differed strongly from known sequences from another neighboring trapping location. While in Austria Dobrava-Belgrade orthohantavirus (DOBV), genotype Kurkino, was detected for the first time in striped field mice, no hantavirus RNA was detected in common voles from Spain. The cause of this absence in the Iberian common vole population might be its long-term isolation from the common vole populations more to the east. The TULV prevalence in Germany in this study was dependent on the season and on the prior growth of the reservoir population. An individual factor that affected the hantavirus prevalence, was the increasing age of the common vole.
Leptospira spp.-DNA was detected in common voles from Spain and Germany, as well as in one striped field mouse from Austria. Except for the two detections of L. borgpetersenii in Spain, which were probably the result of spillover infections, only the genomospecies L. kirschneri was detected in common voles from Spain and Germany. The high prevalence of Leptospira spp., as well as the detection of only one genomospecies, confirm that L. kirschneri is the genomospecies for which the common vole is the main reservoir. Important factors for the Leptospira spp. prevalence were found to be, in addition to temperature and rainfall, the season and the preceding common vole density. Like the case with hantavirus, the age of the vole was found to be an influencing factor.
In Germany, coinfections of TULV and Leptospira spp. were detected. These were associated with high common vole density and increased with the age of the common vole. Furthermore, the incidence of coinfections seems to be impacted more by the Leptospira spp. than by the hantavirus prevalence.
As part of this thesis, TULV and PUUV were detected in previously untested regions in Germany, DOBV was detected for the first time in Austria and the distribution range of the putative species “Tatenale orthohantavirus” was extended to continental Europe for the first time with detection in two countries. Screenings in Spain indicate that certain common vole populations can be free from TULV infection. Furthermore, leptospires were detected in rodents from Spain, Germany and Austria. It was verified that certain Leptospira genomospecies are host-specific. Factors that influence the prevalence of infection or coinfection by hantaviruses and leptospires were determined.
The origin and hosts associated with the Tatenale orthohantavirus should be clarified in further studies including the field vole and the root vole as well as other members of the genus Microtus in Europe and Asia. The development of a RUSV-antigen-based ELISA will enable future screening in humans and therefore might provide information about the human pathogenicity of this pathogen. For final confirmation of the zoonotic potential, isolation of the virus and development of a focus reduction neutralization test are necessary. The expansion of the striped field mouse to Austria and the detectable carryover of DOBV associated with this implies that further screening studies to more precisely characterize the distribution of DOBV (and other pathogens) are needed. The studies of DOBV spread in Austria as well as PUUV spread in Germany could help to better understand the emergence of zoonotic pathogens in new regions. The here described hantavirus-Leptospira spp. and Neoehrlichia mikurensis-Bartonella spp. coinfections should be further analyzed to characterize the interactions of the pathogens in the context of a microbiome and their influence on epidemiological aspects of the involved pathogens. The here identified individual and population-based impact factors for the TULV and Leptospira spp. prevalence should support the development and optimization of prediction models.
Reversible posttranslational modifications play an important role during the regulation of many central processes in bacterial cells. Protein phosphorylation, in particular, can influence signal transduction processes and thus enables a distinct reaction of the cell to different stress and environmental conditions. In the case of the human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus, protein phosphorylation is involved in the adaptation to changing conditions during colonisation of human hosts. For this reason, the investigation of phosphorylations in S. aureus allows a better understanding of pathophysiology and virulence of this organism. Apart from stable phosphorylations at the amino acids serine, threonine and tyrosine, insights into energy-rich phosphorylations, for instance at arginine residues, gain more and more scientific attention. For this reason, one purpose of this study was the investigation of incidence and physiological relevance of this protein modification at a global scale. Firstly, the analysis of this modification was methodically optimised resulting in the identification of eight arginine phosphorylations in wild type cells of S. aureus COL. Secondly, the deletion mutant ΔptpB missing the gene that codes for an arginine phosphatase, was analysed. The characterisation of PtpB in vitro proved its activity and specificity towards arginine phosphorylations. This enabled the global analysis of the phosphoproteome with a focus on arginine phosphorylations. In addition to the optimisation of the phosphopeptide enrichment as part of the sample preparation, the data analysis process was adapted to the special challenges of energy-rich phosphorylations. Here, classical database search was extended by spectral library based analyses. In addition, synthetic peptides allow the generation of high quality mass spectra and the verification of database based evaluation strategies to ensure the quality of the spectral library. Next, S. aureus COL was cultivated under various conditions and several subcellular fractions were analysed with the aim to cover a broad part of the proteome. The combination of the spectra of synthetic peptides, the spectra of non-phosphorylated peptides from extensive cultivation experiments and the spectra of enriched phosphopeptides rendered the construction of a spectral library possible. This contained 2,270 proteins out of which 392 were found to be phosphorylated. A comparison of the database based analysis with spectral library based analysis showed the advantages of the latter when comparing the reproducibility of biological replicates. Thereby a permanent issue in phosphoproteomics was investigated. Hence, spectral libraries were used for the analysis of the phosphoproteome of S. aureus under control and stress conditions. 215 arginine phosphosites were identified within the mutant under control conditions and 117 under oxidative stress conditions. Oxidative stress was chosen because phenotypic characterisation of the mutant revealed that the most distinct growth changes in comparison with the wild type occurred after oxidative stress. These phenotypic changes were quantitatively approached in the last part of this work. Total proteome quantification of the wild type and mutant under control and stress conditions revealed an influence of the ptpB deletion on amino acid metabolism, oxidative stress response and virulence. The quantification of phosphopeptides by means of a combination of spectral library with Census based analysis finally confirmed the observations made during total proteome quantification.
Phylogeny of the Koi herpesvirus and development of a vaccine against the Koi herpesvirus disease
(2019)
The aim of this presented dissertation was a stable, live attenuated and protective KHV usable as vaccine. Moreover this vaccine should by cost effective and easy to apply. Differentiation of infected and vaccinated animals was preferred by genetic and / or serological means. After achieving an attenuated virus, whole genome sequencing should be done to examine the genetic of the vaccine as one feature of biosafety. Besides biosafety additional knowledge on the virulence of Alloherpesviruses, especially of KHV was anticipated. Additionally the diagnostics of KHV and KHVD should be improved to increase reliability and to gain more insights into the relationship of different KHVs and hopefully to detect the source of an outbreak.
Osmotic changes are common challenges for marine microorganisms. Bacteria have developed numerous ways of dealing with this stress, including reprogramming of global cellular processes. However, specific molecular adaptation mechanisms to osmotic stress have mainly been investigated in terrestrial model bacteria. In this work, we aimed to elucidate the basis of adjustment to prolonged salinity challenges at the proteome level in marine bacteria. The objects of our studies were three representatives of bacteria inhabiting various marine environments, Shewanella baltica, Vibrio harveyi and Aliivibrio fischeri. The proteomic studies were performed with bacteria cultivated in increased and decreased salinity, followed by proteolytic digestion of samples which were then subjected to liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry analysis. We show that bacteria adjust at all levels of their biological processes, from DNA topology through gene expression regulation and proteasome assembly, to transport and cellular metabolism. The finding that many similar adaptation strategies were observed for both low- and high-salinity conditions is particularly striking. The results show that adaptation to salinity challenge involves the accumulation of DNA-binding proteins and increased polyamine uptake. We hypothesize that their function is to coat and protect the nucleoid to counteract adverse changes in DNA topology due to ionic shifts.
Rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) represents the third most produced species of diadromous fish, with the total production of 0,732 million tonnes in 2009. More than one third of this production comes from Europe, where it is dominated by Norway, Italy and France. Germany is the fifth biggest producer in Europe, producing 21 thousand tonnes of rainbow trout in the value of 6,1 million Euro. However, the conditions in the intensive aquaculture often increase the disease susceptibility to many pathogens. One of the highest economic threats for a salmonids aquaculture is the causative agent of furunculosis, Aeromonas salmonicida subsp. salmonicida. Several strategies have been developed to protect the fish, but the traditional methods are either laborious or represent a potential risk for the environment. The selective breeding established more than 35 years ago in the brackish waters of Baltic Sea represent a attractive alternative, delivering a novel strain of rainbow trout better adapted to the brackish environment and exhibiting reduced mortality in the infection with A.salmonicida. Nevertheless, no information was available about the fundaments of this phenomenon. Thus, the aim of presented study was the identification of immune adaptations, which occurred during the 30 years of selection and favoured increased survival of “born” trout to the bacterial diseas es. In the presented work, the peritoneal cavity of rainbow trout has been used as a model for the investigation of disease resistance in fish. In the first chapter, the peritoneal cavity has been described as a unique niche of teleost immune system and the kinetic of peritoneal leukocytes induced by the stimulation has been analysed. Furthermore, a unique set of monoclonal antibodies has been used to evaluate the contribution of distinct cell populations on the inflammation and its resolution. In the second part of the study, the transcriptional changes of peritoneal leukocytes have been evaluated using the GRASP microarray. The following analysis provided unique insights into the local immune response in rainbow trout. The unprecedented combination of both data sets offers an unparalleled description of the local immune response in teleost fish and can be summarized into following facts. In general, the obtained results revealed, that the unstimulated peritoneal cavity is populated predominantly by lymphocytes with IgM+ Bcells being the major cells type. The rapid changes in the composition induced by the stimulation were underlined by the upregulation of major proinflammatory molecules such as IL1β, IL8 and TNFα within 12hpi. Although the initial phase of the reaction was dominated by myeloid cells, the cavity underwent within 72 hours two complete changes in the composition corresponding with the massive changes in the transcriptome. Eventually, the resolution of inflammation was marked by an increasing number of lymphocytes and correlated with the downregulation of pro-inflammatory genes to the initial level and upregulation of anti-inflammatory cytokines IL10 and TGFβ. Besides the general observations common to all treatments and both strains, our experiments revealed also remarkable differences between the antigenic stimulation and reaction towards pathogen. From these differences following conclusions can be drawn; the infection induces comparable reaction pattern as the stimulation, although the intensity of the reaction and number of cells is higher. These observations correlated with the higher expression of inflammatory molecules after the infection. Viable bacteria also prolong the myeloid phase of the reaction and delay the resolution of inflammation. Finally, model of peritoneal inflammation caused by A. salmonicida has been applied also to the second strain of rainbow trout, known for its higher resistance to infection. The comparison of obtained data suggested that resistant trout reacted to the antigenic stimulation and infection with a lower number of cells despite minor differences in the expression level of major pro-inflammatory molecules during early stages of the infection. Eventually, the resolution of inflammation and onset of adaptive immune response occurred in resistant trout almost 24 hours earlier and was correlating with an increased expression of anti-inflammatory cytokines IL10 and TGFβ. Notably, the increased survival of resistant strain correlates with the increased expression of antibacterial proteins such as NRAMP and hepcidin. Taken together, obtained data provided unprecedented insights into the local immune response in teleost fish and identified features conserved during the selection breeding in the brackish water of Baltic Sea. Additionally, combination of cellular and molecular data elucidates the peritoneal inflammation in fish and suggested high conservation of the immune response in the evolution.
We analyzed the proteomic response of the Gram-negative fish pathogen A. salmonicida to iron limitation, an elevated incubation temperature, and the antibiotic florfenicol. Proteins from different subcellular fractions (cytosol, inner membrane, outer membrane, extracellular and outer membrane vesicles) were enriched and analyzed. We identified several iron-regulated proteins that were not reported in the literature for A. salmonicida before. We could also show that hemolysin, an oxidative-stress-resistance chaperone, a putative hemin receptor, an M36 peptidase, and an uncharacterized protein were significantly higher in abundance not only under iron limitation but also with an elevated incubation temperature. This may indicate that these proteins involved in the infection process of A. salmonicida are induced by both factors. The analysis of the outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) with and without applied stresses revealed significant differences in the proteomes. OMVs were smaller and contained more cytoplasmic proteins after antibiotic treatment. After cultivation with low iron availability, several iron-regulated proteins were found in the OMVs, indicating that A. salmonicida OMVs potentially have a function in iron acquisition, as reported for other bacteria. The presence of iron-regulated transporters further indicates that OMVs obtained from ‘stressed’ bacteria might be suitable vaccine candidates that induce a protective anti-virulence immune response.
Staphylococcus aureus is a pathogenic bacterium infecting the human host. It’s multifaced adaptation to various environmental conditions is mediated by a tight regulation of the virulence factors influencing the host’s immune system. In this thesis two regulators of gene expression were analysed: (i) the global influence of the two-component system SaePQRS and (ii) the regulation of superantigen gene expression by the alternative sigma factor σB. At the outset of this thesis, single target genes induced by SaeRS were known (hla, hlb, cap5, fnbA, coa). In order to get a general idea of the Sae-regulon, the influence of SaePQRS on gene-expression was analysed in two strain backgrounds by proteomics and transcriptomics aproaches. Recapitulatory, expression of at least 18 secreted and two covalently cell-wall bound proteins was decreased following inactivation of the Sae-system. Sae-dependently expressed were, amongst others, well decribed virulence factors like the y-hemolysins HlgA, HlgB, HlgC, LukM and LukF, the innate immune system modulating proteins Efb, CHIPS and SCIN-B as well as the enterotoxin SEB. SaeR acts as an activator of its target genes. Some proteins were detected in increased amounts in the extracellular proteome of the Sae-deficient strain. However, these changes did not occur at the transcriptional level. The expression of virulence factors is determined by other global regulators. No influence of SaePQRS on the transcription of five substancial regulators, namely the Agr-system and its effector molecule RNAIII, the alternative sigma factor σB, the two-component system ArlRS and the DNA-binding protein SarA, could be shown. In the second part of this thesis the issue was broached to the regulation of gene-expression of a subgroup of virulence factors, the superantigens (SAgs) of S. aureus by SaePQRS and σB. In contrast to their well described molecule structure and function, the regulation of their gene expression was largely unknown. Six different S. aureus strains (two laboratory strains and four clinical isolates) encoding one to seven SAg-genes each, were used for analysis of a total of twelve SAgs regarding their transcription and mitogenic activity. The transcriptional units were characterized using Northern-Blotting. The expression of SAgs could be correlated to the respective growth phase. While egc-SAgs were expressed mainly at low optical densities, seb was induced during late growth phase. In contrast, the transcription of sea, seh, sek, tst and sep remained constant and growth-phase independent. The transcriptional dataset was verified using T-cell proliferation assays. The expression of seh, tst and the egc-operon was dependent on σB. A potential σB-dependent promotor could be identified preceeding seo, the first gene of the egc-operon. In contrast, the expression of seb was increased in sigB-deficient background. This might be due to indirect effects. Expression of seb required SaePQRS. Transcriptional datasets were verified by Immuno-Blotting and T-cell-proliferation assays. In conclusion, the same mutation in sigB but in different strain backgrounds could result in opposite phenotypes with respect to their mitogenic activity. Besides well characterized virulence factors, some secreted proteins with so far unknown function belong to the Sae-regulon. Given that the influence of SaePQRS was restricted to virulence factors and induced especially modulators of the innate immune system, it can be assumed, that these proteins potentially play a role in virulence of S. aureus. In the third part of this thesis, one of these potential new virulence factors, namely SACOL0908, was analysed in detail. In cooperation with the group of Prof. Stehle, Tübingen, the crystal structure was solved. The protein folding of SACOL0908 is new with only minor similarities to described protein structures. Recombinantly expressed SACOL0908 binds to granulocytes. These cells belong to the innate immune system, incorporate bacteria by phagocytosis and kill them. The receptor for SACOL0908 on the surface of granulocytes could not be identified using immunoprecipitation, antibody-blocking assays and functional assays in cooperation with the group of Prof. Peschel, Tübingen. The gene encoding SACOL0908 was deleted in two S. aureus strain backgrounds (COL and Newman). These mutants are currently in use to characterize their phenotype in mouse-infection studies.
The goal of our study was to examine the effects of low abundances of nylon fibers on feeding rates of calanoid copepods (Crustacea, Copepoda) and doliolids (Tunicata, Thaliacea) in the presence of diatoms at near environmental concentration levels. In addition, we examined microscopically the fecal pellets produced by copepods and doliolids in the presence of fibers. Adult females of the calanoid Eucalanus pileatus and early gonozooids of Dolioletta gegenbauri (both of similar dry weight) cleared the diatom Rhizosolenia alata at similar rates. Nylon fibers were cleared at higher rates by Dolioletta gegenbauri compared to Eucalanus pileatus. Examination of fecal pellets revealed that copepods and doliolids could ingest the about 300 µm long fibers. The latter also ingested the occasionally occurring fibers of > 1 mm length. It appears that in seawater fiber abundances of about seven fibers ml−1 did not have a negative effect on feeding of either E. pileatus or D. gegenbauri. As doliolids and copepods remove plastic fibers from seawater by packing them into their pellets, they might play a role in the reduction of microplastic pollution and the microplastic transfer from the water column to the seafloor. Calanoid copepods may limit ingesting fibers by not perceiving them, as compared to doliolids which do not seem to be able to avoid ingesting them.
Microbial infections can be either caused by a single species or complex multi-species consortia. One of the most prominent opportunistic human pathogens leading to mono- or mixed-species infections is the Gram-negative bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Understanding the molecular basis of its adaptation to infection-related stresses is an essential prerequisite for the prevention and treatment of P. aeruginosa infections. We therefore employed state-of-the-art proteomics approaches to elucidate the molecular adaptation mechanisms of P. aeruginosa to infection-related conditions. Moreover, structure, function and interaction of complex microbial consortia containing P. aeruginosa and causing catheter-associated urinary tract infections were investigated by metaproteomics analyses. Our investigations revealed that the adaptation of P. aeruginosa during infection is either based on gene expression changes caused by environmental signal integration or by gene mutations leading to a selective advantage in a particular host environment. In study I, investigating the proteome response of P. aeruginosa biofilms to the clinical relevant antibiotic ciprofloxacin, global changes in the protein profile were observed. Ciprofloxacin induced the expression of proteins involved in the Lex-induced SOS-response, drug efflux pumps and gene products of the ciprofloxacin-responsive prophage cluster and repressed the expression of porins and DNA-binding proteins. In study II the transcriptome and proteome of two clonal P. aeruginosa lineages during long-term colonization of cystic fibrosis (CF) patient’s lungs were analyzed. Point mutations in global regulator genes, i.e. retS, gacS, and gacA, were identified by genomic sequencing. Inactivation of RetS, found two years after the initial colonization, induced the expression of genes involved in chronic infections and coding for the type 6-secretion system (T6SS). Additional mutations in the GacS/GacA two-component regulatory system (TCS) were found to repress the expression of T6SS proteins and to induce the expression of proteins belonging to the type 3-secretion system (T3SS). In study III we elucidated the niche-specific adaptation of P. aeruginosa isolates from different infection sites by investigating their protein expression patterns and glucose metabolic fluxes. We could show that isolates from the urinary tract express a higher amount of proteins involved in the acquisition of micronutrients (i.e. iron) and carbohydrates compared to isolates from the CF lung. In study IV 16S rDNA sequencing and metaproteomics were employed to demonstrate that the investigated CAUTI-related biofilms consisted of two to five different species with one or two species dominating the mixed community. Following this line of research, we investigated in study V structure and function of a biofilm of a long-term catheterized patient, which was predominantly composed of P. aeruginosa and Morganella morganii, but also contained a minor proportion of the obligate anaerobe Bacteroides sp.. The comparison of in vivo and in vitro protein expression profiles of P. aeruginosa and M. morganii indicated that iron and carbohydrates are the major growth-limiting factors in the bladder. These results indicate different nutritional strategies of the two pathogens in the bladder environment. A comparison of urinary protein profiles of healthy persons and catheterized patients suggested that the human innate immune system is induced by CAUTIs. Moreover, numerous proteins involved in nutritional immunity, e.g. iron-, calcium- and magnesium-binding proteins, were found to be more abundant in the urine of catheterized patients. A follow-up (meta)proteomics study (study VI) aiming at the elucidation of interspecies interactions during multi-species infections indicated that the urease-positive uropathogen Proteus mirabilis induces the precipitation of metal ions by urine alkalization and thereby limits the availability of these important micronutrients for other co-infecting bacteria. This limitation seems to be sensed by the P. aeruginosa PhoP-PhoQ two-component system (TCS) leading to an increased resistance to antimicrobial peptides and biofilm-forming capacity of the pathogen. Also during co-cultivation of P. aeruginosa with Staphylococcus aureus a slight increase in the expression of the PhoP-PhoQ TCS and the alkaline protease could be observed (study VII). In study VIII a combined metagenomics and metaproteomics approach was employed to investigate structure and function of the lichen Lobaria pulmonaria, a complex consortium consisting of a fungus, an algal partner, cyanobacteria, and a highly diverse bacterial microbiome. The results presented in this work contribute to a better understanding of the manifold and complex bacterial adaptation mechanisms to infection-related and environmental stress and thereby foster the development of novel treatment and prevention strategies.
The Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus licheniformis is an important industrial host for the production of enzymes. Genomic DNA arrays and proteomics are being used to investigate the physiology of this bacterium. A genome-wide transcriptional profiling analysis of the adaptation of B. licheniformis to phosphate starvation shows more than 100 induced genes. Most of strongly induced genes belong to the putative Pho regulon. The data of the transcriptome analysis have been verified by the analysis of the extracellular and cytoplasmic proteome. The main response of B. licheniformis to glucose starvation was a switch to the usage of alternative carbon sources. In addition, B. licheniformis seems to be using other organic substances like amino acids and lipids as carbon sources when subjected to glucose starvation. This was indicated by the induction of a high number of genes the proteins of which are involved in amino acid and lipid degradation. During nitrogen starvation genes necessary for the recruitment of nitrogen from alternative sources were induced, e.g. genes for nitrate and nitrite assimilation, several proteases and peptidases. Both starvation conditions led to a down-regulation of the transcription of most vegetative genes and subsequently to a reduced synthesis of the corresponding proteins. Only a few genes were induced by both starvation conditions like yvyD, citA and the methylcitrate shunt genes mmgD, mmgE and yqiQ. Data of this study use to better understand the physiology of this bacterium during fermentation processes and thus to identify and circumvent bottlenecks of B. licheniformis based bioprocesses. In addition, the phytase promoter was tested for the construction of an alternative phosphate regulated expression system for B. licheniformis.
Understanding of the regulatory mechanisms controlling stress gene expression of S.aureus in response to environmental stress is very essential in studying its fitness and virulence. In this work, the changes in protein expression profiles as well as the gene transcription of S.aureus after heat exposure, osmotic stress and in response to the antibiotic puromycin were studied in order to provide detailed insights into the response of S.aureus to various kinds of environmental stress under in vitro conditions, namely: (1) to investigate the global response of S.aureus to heat stress conditions using transcriptomic and proteomic analyses. (2) to study the transcriptome and proteome of S.aureus in response to antibiotic substance puromycin. (3) to define the proteome signatures of S.aureus under NaCl stress condition. (4) to complete the proteome map of cytoplasmic proteins of S.aureus by identifying proteins exclusively synthesized during the exposure to stress. Firstly, the high resolution 2-D protein gel electrophoresis technique combined with MALDI-TOF-MS and a DNA array approach were used to investigate the cellular response of S.aureus to heat stress. A switch from normal growth temperature to high temperature condition revealed complex changes in the protein expression pattern as well as the genes expression profile. The effect of puromycin stress on S.aureus cells was analyzed, using a gel-based proteomic approach and transcriptomic analyses with DNA microarrays. We compared the protein synthesis pattern as well as the transcription data of S.aureus in response to puromycin stress with that in response to heat shock. The results demonstrated that both stress conditions induced specific, overlapping and general responses. Finally, the protein expression profile of S.aureus in response to NaCl stress was analyzed with 2D gel based proteomic approach. Our proteome analyses revealed the repression of the synthesis of many enzymes belong to different metabolism pathways . In summary, the signatures for stress or starvation stimuli can be used as diagnostic tools for the prediction of the mode of action of new antibiotics or for studying the physiological state of cells grown. Expression of the respective genes under in vivo conditions could provide some ideas on the environmental signals that specifically influence the survival of S.aureus within and outside the host.
Proteomic signatures select the physiology state of the cell. By using 2-D technique, proteome signature of Bacillus subtilis under different stresses and starvations are analyzed. Consequently, a proteomic map of Bacillus subtilis in non-growing phase was created. The ammonium and tryptophan as well as phenol and catechol stress are analyzed using both of proteomics and transcriptomics. And the proteomic map represents a good application in the prediction of the mode of action of phenol and catechol stress.
In recent years, negative impact of pharmaceutical products on natural environment became an issue of high public interest. Pharmaceutical residues are detected in various ecosystems worldwide. Due to increasing production and consumption of medicines this problem is intensified. Therefore, an efficient way to restrain release into the world’s water system is required.
This work presents an enzymatic approach for the degradation of pharmaceuticals in wastewater treatment plants, using laccase and cytochrome P450 — two enzymes of high biotechnological and industrial potential. Laccase genes from fungi Trametes versicolor and Pycnoporus cinnabarinus were isolated and overexpressed in the non-conventional yeast Arxula adeninivorans. This organism served also as cytochrome P450 gene donor.
Recombinant laccase Tvlcc5 was purified by immobilized-metal ion affinity chromatography and biochemically characterized using 2,2'-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) (ABTS) as substrate for enzyme activity assays. The optimal temperature and pH were found to be 50 °C and 4.5–5.5, respectively. The half-life of Tvlcc5 at 60 °C was around 20 min. It was demonstrated that the presence of copper ions is essential for the synthesis of active protein. Moreover, negative impact of chloride anions on laccase activity was shown.
Cultivation conditions for the Tvlcc5 producing strain A. adeninivorans G1212/YRC102-TEF1-TVLCC5-6H were optimized. It was found that maintaining the pH at a constant level between pH 6.0 and 7.0 is essential for the production of active enzyme. Optimal cell growth and laccase accumulation were reached at 20 °C and in medium supplemented with 0.5 mM CuSO4. Performed fed-batch cultivation resulted in a laccase activity of 4986.3 U L-1.
Factors influencing the synthesis of Tvlcc5 leading to increased production of this protein were investigated. It was found that using three non-native signal peptides (cutinase 2 from A. adeninivorans (ACut2), α-mating factor from S. cerevisiae (MFα), and acid phosphatase from P. pastoris (PHO1) signal peptides) enhances the secretion of active enzyme by 20–80%. Besides that, additional overexpression of copper transporters positively affects laccase production.
Finally, it was proven that recombinant Tvlcc5 is a promising agent for the degradation of certain pharmaceuticals. After 24 h of incubation, the concentration of diclofenac and sulfamethoxazole decreased to 46.8% and 51.1%, respectively. Furthermore, it was shown that the addition of the redox mediator ABTS significantly shortens the degradation time of these substances.
Background: Methanogenic archaea represent a less investigated and likely underestimated part of the intestinal tract microbiome in swine.
Aims/Methods: This study aims to elucidate the archaeome structure and function in the porcine intestinal tract of healthy and H1N1 infected swine. We performed multi-omics analysis consisting of 16S rRNA gene profiling, metatranscriptomics and metaproteomics.
Results and discussion: We observed a significant increase from 0.48 to 4.50% of archaea in the intestinal tract microbiome along the ileum and colon, dominated by genera Methanobrevibacter and Methanosphaera. Furthermore, in feces of naïve and H1N1 infected swine, we observed significant but minor differences in the occurrence of archaeal phylotypes over the course of an infection experiment. Metatranscriptomic analysis of archaeal mRNAs revealed the major methanogenesis pathways of Methanobrevibacter and Methanosphaera to be hydrogenotrophic and methyl-reducing, respectively. Metaproteomics of archaeal peptides indicated some effects of the H1N1 infection on central metabolism of the gut archaea.
Conclusions/Take home message: Finally, this study provides the first multi-omics analysis and high-resolution insights into the structure and function of the porcine intestinal tract archaeome during a non-lethal Influenza A virus infection of the respiratory tract, demonstrating significant alterations in archaeal community composition and central metabolic functions.
Phenolics and its derivatives are aromatic compounds with a wide range of industrial applications. Gallic acid, protocatechuic acid, catechol or pyrogallol are only a few examples of industrially relevant aromatics. The production of bulk fine chemicals primarily for chemical and pharmaceutical industry has put a strong emphasis on optimizing manufacturing conditions. Commercial production of many chemicals is still based on organic chemical synthesis using petroleum derivatives as starting material. Since these processes are considered environmentally unfriendly and posing an irresponsible strain on limited fossil resources, much attention is paid to the development of new microbial factories for the bioproduction of industrially relevant chemicals using renewable sources or organic pollutants as starting material. Arxula adeninivoras is a non-conventional yeast possessing attractive properties for industrial application such as thermo- and osmotolerance. Another major advantage of this organism is its broad substrate spectrum with tannin at the forefront. The present project is dedicated to the study of the tannic acid degradation pathway in A. adeninivorans. Two genes encoding enzymes annotated as gallic acid decarboxylase (AGDC1) and catechol-1,2-dioxygenase (ACDO1) have been selected and investigated. Both enzymes were characterized and their function in tannin catabolism analyzed.
The bacterium Staphylococcus aureus is a notorious pathogen that causes dangerous and difficult-to-treat infections. This applies especially to methicillin-resistant S. aureus, better known as MRSA. MRSA infections were originally associated with healthcare settings as a consequence of clinical antibiotic therapy. However, in recent years MRSA infections have become more common among healthy individuals in the community. The community-associated (CA-)MRSA lineages are generally more aggressive than hospital-associated (HA-) lineages. Therefore, it is alarming that such CA-MRSA lineages are now emerging in hospitals. This raises the fundamental question of how CA-MRSA adapts to this new niche. Further, since the originally distinguishing features of CA- and HA-MRSA are losing discriminative value, it is important from a healthcare perspective to identify novel distinctive markers for early recognition and elimination of hospital-adapted CA-MRSA. In the present PhD research, these challenges were tackled with a ‘multi-omics’ approach focused on the USA300 lineage of MRSA, originally identified as CA, but now also causing hospital outbreaks. The results show that hospital-adapted USA300 isolates produce an altered spectrum of virulence factors, changed their metabolism, and exploit human immune cells as a protective environment against antibiotics. Importantly, hospital-adapted CA-MRSA strains can be recognized through distinctive patterns of gene expression and secreted virulence factors. Altogether, these observations show that the epidemic behaviour of MRSA is a multi-factorial trait, and they provide new insights into the missing links between epidemiology and pathophysiology of S. aureus. Moreover, they highlight the benefits of multi-omics technologies for protecting patients and frail individuals against the aggressive CA-MRSA.
The anaerobic bacterium Clostridioides difficile represents one of the most problematic pathogens, especially in hospitals. Dysbiosis has been proven to largely reduce colonization resistance against this intestinal pathogen. The beneficial effect of the microbiota is closely associated with the metabolic activity of intestinal microbes such as the ability to transform primary bile acids into secondary ones. However, the basis and the molecular action of bile acids (BAs) on the pathogen are not well understood. We stressed the pathogen with the four most abundant human bile acids: cholic acid (CA), chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA), deoxycholic acid (DCA) and lithocholic acid (LCA). Thin layer chromatography (TLC), confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM), and electron microscopy (EM) were employed to track the enrichment and destination of bile acids in the bacterial cell. TLC not only revealed a strong accumulation of LCA in C. difficile, but also indicated changes in the composition of membrane lipids in BA-treated cells. Furthermore, morphological changes induced by BAs were determined, most pronounced in the virtually complete loss of flagella in LCA-stressed cells and a flagella reduction after DCA and CDCA challenge. Quantification of both, protein and RNA of the main flagella component FliC proved the decrease in flagella to originate from a change in gene expression on transcriptional level. Notably, the loss of flagella provoked by LCA did not reduce adhesion ability of C. difficile to Caco-2 cells. Most remarkably, extracellular toxin A levels in the presence of BAs showed a similar pattern as flagella expression. That is, CA did not affect toxin expression, whereas lower secretion of toxin A was determined in cells stressed with LCA, DCA or CDCA. In summary, the various BAs were shown to differentially modify virulence determinants, such as flagella expression, host cell adhesion and toxin synthesis. Our results indicate differences of BAs in cellular localization and impact on membrane composition, which could be a reason of their diverse effects. This study is a starting point in the elucidation of the molecular mechanisms underlying the differences in BA action, which in turn can be vital regarding the outcome of a C. difficile infection.
Proteolysis represents the final step in the life of a protein. It is one of the most important cellular processes assisted by chaperone systems and ensures an appropriate protein homeostasis. Protein degradation is essential for the removal of cytotoxic protein aggregates and mis-translated/mal-folded proteins, „unemployed“ and regulatory proteins to enable rapid cell adaptation to altering environmental conditions (Gottesman, 2003; Wiegert & Schumann, 2001; Parker, 1981; Stansfield et al., 1998; Drummond & Wilke, 2008; Goldberg, 1972; Gerth et al., 2008). The bacterial Clp (caseinolytic proteins) protease complexes are analogous to the eukaryotic 26S proteasome and consist of Hsp100/Clp proteins of the AAA+ superfamily and an associated barrel-like proteolytic chamber (e.g. ClpP). The Clp proteases seem to be responsible for the major protein turnover in low GC, Gram+ bacteria. The main goal of this thesis was to develop new methods and tools to investigate global proteolysis more precisely and to get a detailed understanding of protein degradation during starvation conditions and it´s regulation in low GC, Gram-positive bacteria. To analyse protein degradation under starvation conditions the well established glucose starvation model was used. In Bacillus subtilis it could be shown that approximately 200 proteins are selectively degraded in a glucose depletion induced stationary phase. Furthermore radioactive pulse-chase labelling experiments coupled with 2D-PAGE analysis revealed that mainly the ClpCP protease complex is involved in the degradation of proteins in the stationary growth phase. To investigate proteolysis in the human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus in the same way, a newly developed chemically defined medium was established suitable for radioactive pulse-chase labelling experiments under stable glucose starvation conditions. The degradation kinetics of individual 2D spots was significantly better resolved using 14C-BSA as an internal marker protein for the sample normalisation. A rather huge overlap was found within the functional protein classes that were degraded in B. subtilis and S. aureus the stationary phase. Among others, especially proteins involved in amino acid, nucleotide and cell wall biosynthesis were rapidly degraded, whereby not always the same and sometimes another enzymes from a biosynthetic chain were targeted for proteolysis. Despite the resolution power of the 2D-PAGE method, there are some drawbacks such as a limited "protein window" with regard to the molecular weight and isoelectric point, loss of low abundance proteins and a rather low reproducibility for time course experiments. Therefore a mass spectrometry based approach for the simultaneous detection of protein synthesis, accumulation and degradation was developed. This pulse-chase SILAC approach provides a very good reliability with a broad spectrum of proteins that can be analysed. Through the combination with ultracentrifugation even non-soluble and aggregated proteins could be analysed. Several hundred proteins were degraded in S. aureus during glucose starvation. Among them was the functional cluster of ribosomal proteins which is degraded in the early stationary phase. Furthermore proteins belonging to complexes were degraded with the same kinetic (e.g. NrdE, NrdF). In addition selective protein degradation took place according to functional categories (e.g., ribosomal proteins, biosynthetic, glycolytic enzymes) and not to regulatory groups (e.g. CcpA, SigB regulon).The investigation of a clpP deletion mutant in S. aureus revealed a greater susceptibility to aggregation, where the cells try to counteract with the expression of chaperones like GroEL/ES, ClpB and DnaK. The renaturation process is very ATP consuming and only takes place in energy rich phases of growth (e.g. from exponential to transient growth phase). Protein aggregation was found enhanced in the stationary phase. Furthermore, a higher GTP level compared to the wild-type probably resulted in a stronger CodY mediated repression with a rather low level of amino acids in clpP mutant cell. In addition substances like glycerol, which thermodynamically stabilise proteins in refolding processes (Maeda et al., 1996; Feng & Yan, 2008), were found in higher levels compared to the wild-type. A strong response to reactive oxygen species was detected in the clpP mutant strain, which is probably due to ROS production during the early stages of protein aggregation. Altogether, different methods were used for investigation protein degradation at a proteome-wide scale. Hundreds of degradation candidates were identified by gel-based and gel-free approaches in S. aureus wild-type cells. “Unemployed” proteins (e.g. ribosomal proteins, biosynthetic enzymes) were degraded and proteins particularly required and synthesized in glucose-starved cells such as TCA cycle enzymes were stable in the stationary phase. Investigation of the clpP mutant strain supports a proposed model for the pleiotropic phenotype and provides a deeper insight in the fine-tuned protein quality control and the important role of ClpP during starving conditions.
The increasing demand for new and effective antibiotics requires intelligent strategies to obtain a wide range of potential candidates. Laccase-catalyzed reactions have been successfully applied to synthesize new β-lactam antibiotics and other antibiotics. In this work, laccases from three different origins were used to produce new aminoglycoside antibiotics. Kanamycin, tobramycin and gentamicin were coupled with the laccase substrate 2,5-dihydroxy-N-(2-hydroxyethyl)-benzamide. The products were isolated, structurally characterized and tested in vitro for antibacterial activity against various strains of Staphylococci, including multidrug-resistant strains. The cytotoxicity of these products was tested using FL cells. The coupling products showed comparable and, in some cases, better antibacterial activity than the parent antibiotics in the agar diffusion assay, and they were not cytotoxic. The products protected mice against infection with Staphylococcus aureus, which was lethal to the control animals. The results underline the great potential of laccases in obtaining new biologically active compounds, in this case new antibiotic candidates from the class of aminoglycosides.
A method employing labeling of cell-surface proteins with Sulfo-NHS-SS-biotin and subsequent affinity enrichment with NeutrAvidin has been optimized in order to make cell-surface proteins from Gram-positive bacteria reliably accessible to quantitative mass spectrometric analyses. The optimized biotinylation approach was applied for analysis of the lipoproteome from S. aureus and S. pneumoniae on a global scale and the influence of mutations in the lipoprotein maturation pathway on the cell-surface and exoproteomes of both species was investigated. The biotinylation approach was integrated into a proteomic workflow that employs metabolic labeling with heavy nitrogen for relative protein quantification to investigate proteomic differences between S. aureus in a biofilm model and its free-floating, planktonic counterparts.
The present work consists of four parts, containing experimental data obtained from analysis of 'Bacillus subtilis' specific and general defense strategies against reactive oxygen species. In the first part, the peroxide and superoxide stress stimulons ob 'B. subtilis' were analyzed by means of transcriptomics and proteomics. Oxidative stress responsive genes were classified into two groups: the gene expression pattern was either similar after both stresses or the genes primarily responded to one stimulus. The high induction observed for members of the PerR-regulon after both stimuli supported the assumption that activation of the peroxide specific PerR-regulon represented the primary stress response after superoxide and peroxide stress. The second part focuses on protein carbonylation in 'B. subtilis' wild-type and 'sigB' mutant cells. The introduction of carbonyl groups into amino acid side chains of proteins represents one possible form of protein modification after attack by reactive oxygen species. Carbonyl groups are readily detectable and the observed amounts can thus serve as an indicator for the severity of protein damage. The resultsdemonstrate clearly that 'B. subtilis' proteins are susceptible to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) mediated carbonylation damage. The application of low concentrations of H2O2 prior to the exposure to otherwise lethal levels of peroxide reduced markedly the degree of protein carbonylation, which also held true for glucose starved cells. Artificial preloading with general stress proteins resulted in a lower level of protein carbonylation when cells were subjected to oxidative stress, but no differences were detected between wild-type and 'sigB' mutant cells. In the third part, strains with mutations in genes encoding general stress proteins were screenedfor decreased resistance after H2O2 challenge. It was demonstrated that resistance to H2O2 challenge. It was demonstrated that resistance to H2O2 after transient heat treatment, likewise to conditions of glucose starvation, was at least partly mediated by the sB-dependent general stress response. The screening of mutants in sB-controlled genes revealed an important role for the deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)-binding protein Dps in the context of sB-mediated resistance to oxidative stress underlining previous reports. Therefore, the experimental strategy opens a global view on the importance of DNA integrity in 'B. subtilis' under conditions of oxidative stress. The fourth part includes analysis of a 'B. subtilis' thioredoxin conditional mutant. The thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase TrxA is an essential protein in 'B. subtilis' that is suggested to be involved in maintaining the cytoplasmic thiol-disulfide state even under conditions of oxidative stress. To investigate the physiological role of TrxA, growth experiments and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis were carried out with exponentially growing cells that were depleted of TrxA. The observations indicate that TrxA essentially involved in the re-reduction of phosphoadenosyl phosphosulfate reductase CysH within the sulfate assimilation pathway of 'B. subtilis'.
Infections with bacterial pathogens are a major cause of morbidity and mortality
worldwide. Furthermore, the extensive use of antibiotics increased the frequency of infections with drug-resistant pathogens. Streptococcus pneumoniae, a major cause of
bacterial pneumonia, is among the pathogens that often show resistances. As an
additional side effect, the use of antibiotics can disrupt the patient’s intestinal microbiome, allowing Clostridioides difficile to cause severe, recurring and hard-to-treat
colitis. Hence, new antimicrobials are needed to combat infections caused by these
pathogens. A promising approach is the usage of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), defense
molecules produced by organisms from all domains of life. AMPs can specifically perforate
bacterial membranes and stimulate the overall immune response of the host.
In this work, the proteomic adaptations of S. pneumoniae to the human antimicrobial
peptides LL-37 and hBD3 were assessed by high-resolution mass spectrometry and
compared to general membrane stress, in order to evaluate the specificity of the bacterial
reactions. Furthermore, C. difficile was challenged with the Lactococcus lactis-derived
AMP nisin, and the proteomic alterations were examined. In essence, application of LL-37
and hBD3 changed the abundance of pneumococcal proteins involved in membrane
transport, including a putative AMP transporter, a protease, virulence proteins and
genetic regulators. Moreover, a challenge with LL-37 caused an increase of proteins
involved in cell surface modifications that alter the bacterial membrane charge and repel cationic molecules such as LL-37. In support of this, mutants unable to express these
proteins were more sensitive to LL-37. In contrast, general membrane stress, induced by
the application of cationic detergents, produced a diverse proteomic adjustment, though the same two-component regulatory system was activated. In C. difficile, levels of flagella proteins were significantly increased shortly after treatment with nisin, being in
accordance with subsequent electron microscopy data and pointing at a role of these
proteins in adaptation to nisin. Interestingly, a flagella-overexpressing mutant showed an
enhanced resistance towards nisin, independent of bacterial motility.
Taken together, the bacterial pathogens under investigation seem to possess
mechanisms to reduce the effect of AMPs on their physiology, a finding that should be
considered developing drugs based on AMPs. Although AMPs exhibit membrane
perturbations as a common mechanism of action, bacterial adaptation to AMPs appear
multifactorial and dependent on the exact pathogen observed and AMP used.
The respiratory epithelium acts as both, a barrier of the respiratory tract to Nipah virus (NiV) entry and at the same time as a significant determinant of virus shedding. Both, for humans and pigs, replication in the respiratory tract epithelia is considered a major factor in transmission to other hosts. To understand why the virus constitutes a high-risk pathogen for livestock and humans, knowledge about
viral replication and host responses in relevant cells and tissues is crucial. Most in vitro studies, however, have been performed in conventional cell lines or non-differentiated lung cells. Only a few examples exist where Henipavirus infections have been investigated in fully-differentiated lung
epithelial cell models.
Thus, one aim of this thesis was to investigate infection, replication, spread and host protein dynamics of NiV in primary bronchial epithelial cells (BEC) cultivated at the air-liquid-interphase (ALI). By
immunofluorescence imaging, the NiV infection dynamics in BEC-ALI cultures were monitored over a 12 day time course, in order to provide detailed information about the infection process in the
respiratory epithelium of pigs and ferrets. Compared to undifferentiated primary BEC, the specific infectivity of NiV in BEC-ALI cultures was low. Infections remained focal and complete infection of the
cultures was not observed, even at 12 dpi. Analysis of viral titers and viral mRNA indicated a limited
virion release from the infected ALI-cultures while most of the newly synthesized NiV-RNA remained
cell associated. Immunofluorescence analysis of cross sections from infected ALI-cultures revealed
large infected areas that exhibited a strong cytopathic effect (CPE). Disruption of the epithelium
resulted in apical release of virus antigen-positive cell detritus while ciliated areas and basal cells were
less affected. From these data it was concluded, that NiV transmission could be supported by
exhalation of cell debris associated NiV and thus may contribute to rapid spread of infection in swine
populations.
A second aim was to explore the dynamics of host responses to NiV infection in differentiated BEC-ALI
culture and to assess whether this differs to conventional cell line data available from literature. Even
though strong CPE appeared in later phases of NiV infection, at least the porcine PBEC-ALI cultures
remained robust enough to allow protein sampling over 12 days infection course. Subsequent MS-based proteomics enabled unprecedent insight in complex cell culture response upon NiV infection.
Previous reports indicated a lack of efficient interferon type I induction in non-differentiated pig or
human BEC which were considered a prerequisite for efficient replication in the respiratory epithelium
and virusspread. In contrast to non-differentiated pig BEC (PBEC), in PBEC-ALI cultures multiple factors
involved in interferon responses were upregulated upon NiV infection. Thereby it was demonstrated
that NiV infection induced a robust innate immune response upon infection with elevated components of antigen processing and presentation resulting in the conversion from the constitutive proteasome to the immunoproteasome. In contrast to previous reports about NiV-infected non-differentiated
PBEC or endothelial cells, incomplete immunoproteasome formation and limitations in interferon
response could be excluded. Thus, a model is proposed in which NiV infection and spread in differentiated PBECs is slowed by potent innate immune responses to the virus infection. Overall, the
findings highlight the important role of the respiratory epithelium not only as a physical barrier to virus
infections but also indicate itsrole as a primary site of adaptive immune induction through NiV induced
antigen processing and MHC I presentation.
Finally, to allow functional studies of Henipaviruses at the BSL-2 biosafety level a recombinant CedPV
was generated and rescued. An imaging based screening and quantitative analysis pipeline was established to investigate the role of cellular factors and to screen for potential virus and host gene
directed inhibitory factors. Accordingly, different host and viral genes were targeted with a siRNA-pool
either targeting virus or selected cellular mRNAs followed by the infection with the CedPV and the
quantification of infected cells. With proof of concept of the siRNA screening pipeline, the recombinant
CedPV clone was used as a backbone to insert variousfluorescence reporter genesin order to optimize
the analysis workflow by allowing direct virus quantification in live, unstained samples. Consequently,
this thesis provides a valuable proof for future approaches related to the function of virus proteins,
influence of host-factors and virusreplication and Henipavirus-inhibitorscreens at low biosafety levels.
The toluene-degrading and solvent-tolerant strain Pseudomonas putida DOT-T1E was investigated with respect to its suitability and economic efficiency as biocatalyst in aqueous-organic two-phase systems with aliphatic solvents as organic phase (Rojas et al. 2004, chapter 4 and 5) and to its adaptive responses to the solvent decanol. The adaptive changes on the level of cell morphology (chapter 2), membrane fatty acids and permeability (chapter 3), as well as energetics and surface properties (chapter 5) of P. putida DOT-T1E have been investigated in order to ascertain information about the strain's suitability for two-phase biotransformation systems (chapter 4). The morphological adaptation to the presence of solvents was observable in changes of the cell size of P. putida DOT-T1E. Those changes were dependent on the cellular activity and occurred only after addition of non-lethal solvent concentrations. The cells reacted to the presence of organic solvents by decreasing the ratio between surface and volume of the cells and therefore reducing their relative surfaces (chapter 2). The cell surface and especially the cytoplasmic membrane are the major targets for toxic effects of membrane-active compounds like solvents. The mechanism of the cis-trans isomerisation of unsaturated fatty acids counteracts the fluidizing effect of solvents by increase the ordering of the membrane and therefore its rigidity. By comparing the responses of the cells to a series of stress factors (like solvents), a direct correlation between the activation of this mechanism and the well investigated K+-uptake pumps was observed (chapter 3). Huertas et al. (1998) reported that this strain tolerated concentrations of heptane, propylbenzene, octanol, and toluene of at least 10 % (vol/vol). 1-decanol is, in comparison to toluene, less hazardous and volatile, and it possesses good extraction properties for the desired fine chemical products. In further investigations of possible biotechnological processes, it was discovered that decanol is also a more suitable solvent as organic phase (chapter 4). Although the cells of P. putida DOT-T1E needed additional energy for their adaptation to the presence of the solvent decanol, they were able to maintain or activate their electron transport phosphorylation allowing homeostasis of ATP level and energy charge in the presence of the solvent, at the price of a reduced growth yield. On the other hand, significantly enhanced cell hydrophobicities converging with more negative cell surface charges were observed in cells grown in the presence of 1-decanol (chapter 5). It is however important to note that all the cell’s properties observed are closely linked to each other since they are all part of the adaptive response of the cells. It can be concluded that the easy adaptability and good growth properties of Pseudomonas putida DOT-T1E in the presence of the organic solvent 1-decanol make this system an excellent candidate for two-phase fermentation processes. Moreover, the absence of differences in the energetics of the bacteria during exposure to 1-decanol as compared to bacteria that grew in the absence of 1-decanol, support that this organism can be used for the industrial production of fine chemicals in an economically sound manner.
Gram-negative bacteria are known to naturally produce outer membrane vesicles (OMVs), which are closed nanoparticles (10 to 450 nm) containing virulence factors and pathogen associated molecular patterns (PAMPs). For over 20 years, OMVs of Neisseria meningitidis (N. meningitidis), in combination with three purified outer membrane proteins, have been successfully used as parts of human vaccines which illustrates the safety and potential of OMV based vaccines. So far only little is known about the OMVs of fish pathogenic bacteria. The production of OMVs has been described for the fish pathogenic gram-negative bacterium Aeromonas salmonicida (A. salmonicida) which is the causative agent of furunculosis resulting in high morbidity and mortality of salmonid fish. The immunostimulatory potential of OMVs derived from A. salmonicida as well as the possibility of establishing an oral vaccine model in Oncorhynchus mykiss (O.mykiss) (Rainbow trout) has been investigated in this study by conducting in vitro and in vivo experiments. Innate immune cells such as macrophages are one of the first cells to respond to pathogens once they breach the skin barrier, therefore the monocyte/macrophage cell line RTS-11 as well as leukocytes from the head kidney, consisting of a high percentage of phagocytic cells have been investigated. Additionally, leukocytes isolated from the peritoneal cavity as the main target for injectable vaccines have been studied in the in vitro experiments. These experiments indicate that OMVs derived from A. salmonicida are recognized by the monocyte/macrophage cell line RTS-11 as well as by leukocytes from the head kidney resulting in significant changes of the mRNA expression pattern of early inflammatory markers (IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, TGFβ). Having used the established peritoneal inflammation model of rainbow trout it could be shown that intraperitoneal (i.p.) vaccination of rainbow trout with OMVs results in a similar local immune response, especially in the recruitment of myeloid cells, compared to the injection of inactivated bacteria. The systemic cellular immune response differed between the two vaccine groups, even though a similar humoral immune response could be observed. Interestingly, i.p.vaccination with 10 µg of OMVs resulted in similar antibody titers as observed for fish, that were i.p. vaccinated with 108 CFU of inactivated A. salmonicida. The similar antibody titers after vaccination with OMVs might be explained by a stronger activation of CD8- T cells (likely CD4+ T cells) in the head kidney as well as in the blood in the OMV vaccinated group alone, which might result in an increased stimulation of B cells to produce antibodies.
Oral vaccination has been described as the ideal vaccination method for fish, but only few vaccines for oral application are licensed. Therefore, the established oral model for vaccination of rainbow trout with attenuated viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus (VHSV) was adapted to be used for inactivated A. salmonicida, even though initial trials indicated great similarities in the cellular response after i.p. and oral vaccination with inactivated strains of A. salmonicida, particularly in the response of the myeloid cells and lymphocytes in the target organs as well as the thrombocytes in the spleen. This could not be confirmed in a second oral vaccination trial. These results show how challenging the development of oral vaccines for fish is. The main challenge is the reproducibility of reliable results, since this is influenced by the difference in uptake of vaccine pellets or antigen degradation in the gut. Future oral vaccine trials should investigate different vaccination regimes, e.g., consecutive feeding, or a different composition of vaccine pellets, in order to further investigate the possibility of establishing an oral vaccine model for trout and so that future vaccine candidates, like OMVs, can be reliably tested in fish.
Deciphering the entire protein complement of a living cell together with the elucidation of dynamic processes on protein level are the main goals of proteomics as it is used today. To achieve this goal, namely the elucidation of dynamic processes of the entire bacterial cell, we have developed strategies and distinct workflows to cover the most proteins in different subcellular localizations in bacteria together with a stable isotopes labeling approach to follow temporal and spatial changes in different proteomic subfractions. In this work, it has been shown that the use of mass spectrometry based in vivo quantitation techniques and the application of subcellular and chromatographic fractionation has lead to a new level of qualitative and quantitative proteomics data. Emphasizing on the studies revealing the dynamics of the bacterial physiology on a time resolved base, both spatial and temporal processes can be monitored to obtain knowledge on physiological processes in a depth that has not been reached before in comparable global studies.
Compared to other human pathogens, S. aureus outstands with a remarkably broad spectrum of deseases: from minor skin infections over endocarditis, pneumoniae, and osteomyelitis, to septic shock. The prerequisite is an arsenal of adaptation strategies, encoded in the core and variable genome. It includes the coordinated expression of adhesins and toxins, evasion of the immune system, response to stress and starvation, adaptation of the metabolism, formation of biofilms and capsules, antibiotic resistance, and persistence on the skin, in nasal epithelial cells, and even in the inner of macrophages after phagocytosis. All these adaptation strategies enable S. aureus to colonize a diversity of niches within the human host. The inevitable requirement is the ability to activate the appropriate adaptation strategy at the right time and at the right place. S. aureus overcomes this challenge with a sophisticated regulatory network. This PhD thesis covers a broad spectrum of transcriptional regulators, involved in S. aureus pathogenesis: (1) the quorum sensing system Agr (regulation of early- and late stage virulence factors), (2) the Sar family (regulation of early- and late stage virulence factors), (3) SaeRS (regulation of accessory exotoxins and adhesins), (4) CodY (response to amino acid starvation, including extracellular proteases), (5) Sigma B (general stress response, including virulence factors), (6) Rex (anaerobic energy metabolism), (7) CtsR and HrcA (protein quality control), (8) PerR and Fur (oxidative stress response), and (9) antibiotic resistance. Traditionally, Proteomics constitute the long-lasting reputation of the Institute. In fact, the majority of investigations presented in this PhD thesis was initialized by proteomic analyses as the ultimate starting point. From the first day, a major goal of this PhD thesis was to add regulator-promoter interaction studies to the methodical spectrum. In particular, to complement transcriptomic and proteomic results by answering the logical follow-up question: Which regulator is responsible for the observed changes in gene expression and protein synthesis after application of a specific stimulus?
The first chapter provides specific analyses for three major regulators: Rex, CodY, and SarA. Publications were achieved for Rex (Hecker et al., 2009; Pagels et al., 2010). Results were mainly achieved by establishing regulator-promoter interaction methods (in particular EMSA and “footprinting”). Additionally, this chapter describes method development of a novel easy-to-apply method, named REPA (restriction endonuclease protection assay).
The second chapter presents method development for the genome-wide identification of regulator-promoter interactions, named “global footprinting”. This approach combines two already well-established methods: (A) Purification of a recombinant Strep-tagged regulator via Strep-tag affinity chromatography. The modification in “global footprinting” is to incubate the regulator with fragmented genomic S. aureus DNA, resulting in co-purification and enrichment of DNA streches with specific regulator binding sites. (B) Identification and quantification of these DNA streches via “next generation sequencing” (NGS). Using this combined approach, this PhD thesis was able to localize the most affine promoter binding site for the regulator Rex precisely down to one single base pair across the whole S. aureus genome.
The third chapter describes the assembly of a data library, collecting the majority of DNA microarray data and regulator-promoter interaction studies from the worldwide literature. This data library summarizes more than 50,000 regulatory events and more than 2,000 regulator binding sites. As published in the perspectives in Fuchs et al. (2018), this data library can be incorporated into the free-accessible online data base “Aureowiki” (provided and maintained by the Department of Functional Genomics, University of Greifswald). The major effort is the consolidation of these “big data” via in silico cluster analysis, comparing 282 different experimental conditions at once. The major finding of this analysis is the identification of seven functional and regulatory gene clusters in S. aureus pathogenesis that are conserved across S. aureus strain diversity. These findings allowed the creation of a prediction tool, to provide novel experimental starting points for the worldwide S. aureus research community. This prediction tool was successfully applied on several topics, and partially published: functional and regulatory prediction for a set of 20 selected lipoproteins as potential virulence factors (Graf et al., 2018), and prediciton of protein complexes (Liang et al., 2016).
Alltogether, this PhD thesis provides new insights into the molecular mechanisms of three pathogenesis-relevant regulators: Rex, CodY, and SarA. It describes the development of three novel experimental methods for wet and dry lab applications that can be used on research topics beyond S. aureus: REPA, “global footprinting”, and cluster analysis. Finally, cluster analysis identifies seven conserved fuctional and regulatory gene clusters, involved in S. aureus pathogenesis. This cluster anaysis is used as a prediction tool to provide novel experimental starting points, and to predict the physiological mode of action of newly discovered anti-staphylococcal agents.
The virosphere comprises all known and unknown viruses in our ecosystems. Advanced sequencing technologies in combination with metagenomic analysis have become a key tool for exploring this global diversity of viruses. However, discovery of novel viruses and comparative analyses are often based on small sequence fragments or lack biological context, which restricts a proper classification. In this study advanced genomic methods were used that included comprehensive knowledge of viral genomes along with supporting biological metadata in order to identify and classify viruses at different levels of genetic relationships. In a first example, the genetic background of vaccine-induced rabies cases was revealed by analyzing and comparing the genetic diversity of viral populations. Furthermore, the fundament for a taxonomic reclassification of orthopoxviruses was established on basis of a wide scale genomic analysis. In addition, novel neurotropic mamastroviruses from sheep and cattle were classified as members of a single species that provided evidence of interspecies transmission. Finally, two putative novel species of alphaherpesviruses and orthopoxviruses were identified. These examples are based on field cases that provide substantial corresponding clinical metadata and information of host-pathogen interactions. The analyses, therefore, puts taxonomic classification into biological and epidemiological context, rather than addressing generic phylogenetic relationships. Furthermore, the presented work demonstrates that a universal approach for virus classification is neither feasible nor reasonable as analyses must be adjusted the nature of the addressed virus. All results with impact on the current taxonomic classification will be or are already reported to the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses. In conclusion, this thesis contributed to the classification concepts of viruses and expanded the knowledge of virosphere diversity.