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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.
Linking transcriptional dynamics of CH4-cycling grassland soil microbiomes to seasonal gas fluxes
(2022)
Soil CH4 fluxes are driven by CH4-producing and -consuming microorganisms that determine whether soils are sources or sinks of this potent greenhouse gas. To date, a comprehensive understanding of underlying microbiome dynamics has rarely been obtained in situ. Using quantitative metatranscriptomics, we aimed to link CH4-cycling microbiomes to net surface CH4 fluxes throughout a year in two grassland soils. CH4 fluxes were highly dynamic: both soils were net CH4 sources in autumn and winter and sinks in spring and summer, respectively. Correspondingly, methanogen mRNA abundances per gram soil correlated well with CH4 fluxes. Methanotroph to methanogen mRNA ratios were higher in spring and summer, when the soils acted as net CH4 sinks. CH4 uptake was associated with an increased proportion of USCα and γ pmoA and pmoA2 transcripts. We assume that methanogen transcript abundance may be useful to approximate changes in net surface CH4 emissions from grassland soils. High methanotroph to methanogen ratios would indicate CH4 sink properties. Our study links for the first time the seasonal transcriptional dynamics of CH4-cycling soil microbiomes to gas fluxes in situ. It suggests mRNA transcript abundances as promising indicators of dynamic ecosystem-level processes.
The impact of summer drought on peat soil microbiome structure and function-A multi-proxy-comparison
(2022)
Different proxies for changes in structure and/or function of microbiomes have been developed, allowing assessing microbiome dynamics at multiple levels. However, the lack and differences in understanding the microbiome dynamics are due to the differences in the choice of proxies in different studies and the limitations of proxies themselves. Here, using both amplicon and metatranscriptomic sequencings, we compared four different proxies (16/18S rRNA genes, 16/18S rRNA transcripts, mRNA taxonomy and mRNA function) to reveal the impact of a severe summer drought in 2018 on prokaryotic and eukaryotic microbiome structures and functions in two rewetted fen peatlands in northern Germany. We found that both prokaryotic and eukaryotic microbiome compositions were significantly different between dry and wet months. Interestingly, mRNA proxies showed stronger and more significant impacts of drought for prokaryotes, while 18S rRNA transcript and mRNA taxonomy showed stronger drought impacts for eukaryotes. Accordingly, by comparing the accuracy of microbiome changes in predicting dry and wet months under different proxies, we found that mRNA proxies performed better for prokaryotes, while 18S rRNA transcript and mRNA taxonomy performed better for eukaryotes. In both cases, rRNA gene proxies showed much lower to the lowest accuracy, suggesting the drawback of DNA based approaches. To our knowledge, this is the first study comparing all these proxies to reveal the dynamics of both prokaryotic and eukaryotic microbiomes in soils. This study shows that microbiomes are sensitive to (extreme) weather changes in rewetted fens, and the associated microbial changes might contribute to ecological consequences.
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.
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.
The aim of this work was to characterize the distribution of TULV in European common vole populations, to clarify the host association of TULV and to investigate correlations between host population dynamics and changes in TULV prevalence. Furthermore, the potential of common voles as reservoir for other rodent-borne pathogens was examined in comparison to other rodent species.
Molecular and serological analysis of rodents captured at 87 locations in Germany, France, Luxembourg, and Austria revealed TULV infections at 53.6 % of all trapping locations. The seroprevalence in common voles was low with a mean of 8.5 % (range: 0 – 19 %). TULV RNA was more often detected (mean: 15.3 %, range 0 - 37.5 %). Field voles (Microtus agrestis) and water voles (Arvicola amphibius) were less often tested positive for TULV: mean seroprevalence was 7 % for field voles and 6.7 % for water voles. RNA could be detected in 5.4 % of all tested field voles and 3.2 % of water voles and with exception of a single field vole only when TULV-RNA-positive common voles were trapped at the same location. Those results indicate that TULV infections of field and water voles are spillover infections from sympatric TULV-infected common voles. Phylogenetic analysis revealed distinct genetic differences between TULV sequences of regions of greater geographical distance which were associated with different evolutionary common vole lineages. Furthermore, we could detect genetic differences between TULV strains from trapping sites close to each other (ca. 10 km).
In a capture-mark-recapture study 1042 common voles captured in live traps in Germany were sampled as well as 225 captured in snap traps. When analyzing the seroprevalence of fluctuating common vole populations over several years and seasons we found a negative correlation between prevalence and population density in the current season but a delayed density-dependent positive correlation between the current population density and seroprevalence in the next season. However, this trend varied geographically between the four trapping locations. Usually, population density as well as seroprevalence peaked at the end of the reproductive period in autumn with the exception of Weissach (2010-2012), Jeeser (2010) and Gotha (2012) where population peaks in summer were observed.
In a pilot study in Austria common voles were captured as well as three other rodent species. They were investigated not only for presence of different viruses (TULV, Dobrava- Belgrade orthohantavirus (DOBV), Puumala orthohantavirus (PUUV), Lymphocytic choriomeningitis mammarenavirus (LCMV), Cowpox virus (CPXV)) but also pathogenic bacteria and endoparasites (Leptospira spp., Toxoplasma gondii, Borrelia afzelii, Coxiella burnetii, Rickettsia spp. und Bartonella spp.). Of all four captured species, common voles were most often infected with at least one pathogen (66.7 %), followed by wood mice (Apodemus sylvaticus) (57.7 %), bank voles (Myodes glareolus) (35 %) and yellow-necked field mice (Apodemus flavicollis) (34.5 %). Common voles were also exceptionally susceptible to multiple infections: 66.7 % of them were infected with two or three different pathogens, compared to 6.9 % of yellow-necked field mice and 2.5 % of bank voles. No multiple infections could be detected in wood mice.
The broad geographic distribution of TULV in its reservoir host is in contrast to the rare reports of human infection but might be explained with a low pathogenicity for humans or with the low prevalence in host populations. In addition, the rare detection of human TULV infections could be a result of the used diagnostic methods. Since the reservoir population is known for its dramatic changes in population density and recurring superabundances which facilitates frequent contact to humans, TULV should more often be considered as cause for human disease in future analysis. In
addition, several other zoonotic pathogens could be detected in common voles which could influence TULV infections in the reservoir host but also TULV transmission to humans and therefore deserve more attention in future research.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Microglia are the resident immune cells of the central nervous system (CNS) and play a major role in the regulation of brain homeostasis. To maintain their cellular protein homeostasis, microglia express standard proteasomes and immunoproteasomes (IP), a proteasome isoform that preserves protein homeostasis also in non-immune cells under challenging conditions. The impact of IP on microglia function in innate immunity of the CNS is however not well described. Here, we establish that IP impairment leads to proteotoxic stress and triggers the unfolded and integrated stress responses in mouse and human microglia models. Using proteomic analysis, we demonstrate that IP deficiency in microglia results in profound alterations of the ubiquitin-modified proteome among which proteins involved in the regulation of stress and immune responses. In line with this, molecular analysis revealed chronic activation of NF-κB signaling in IP-deficient microglia without further stimulus. In addition, we show that IP impairment alters microglial function based on markers for phagocytosis and motility. At the molecular level IP impairment activates interferon signaling promoted by the activation of the cytosolic stress response protein kinase R. The presented data highlight the importance of IP function for the proteostatic potential as well as for precision proteolysis to control stress and immune signaling in microglia function.
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 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.
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.
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.
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.
A significant fraction of the decaying algal biomass in marine ecosystems is expected to be mineralized by particle-associated (PA) heterotrophic bacterial communities, which are thus greatly contributing to large-scale carbon fluxes. Whilst numerous studies have investigated the succession of free-living (FL) marine bacteria, the community structure and functionality of PA bacterial communities remained largely unexplored and knowledge on specific contributions of these microorganisms to carbon cycling is still surprisingly limited. This has mostly been due to technical problems, i.e., caused by the enormous complexity of marine particles and the high abundance of eukaryotic microorganisms within these particles. This thesis presents (a) an optimized metaproteomics protocol for an in-depth characterization of marine PA bacteria, (b) an application example with FL and PA communities sampled during a spring phytoplankton bloom in 2009 in the North Sea, which confirmed the reliability of the optimized metaproteomic workflow, (c) the metaproteomic analysis of particulate communities sampled during a spring phytoplankton bloom in 2018, resulting in an as yet unprecedented number of identified protein groups of the bacterial response bloom and (d) a proteomic analysis of a PA bacterial isolate grown on the two naturally abundant marine polysaccharides laminarin and alginate. The observed succession of bacterial clades during metaproteomic analyses of the investigated blooms highlights individual niche occupations, also visible on genus level. Additionally, functional data shows evidence for the degradation of different marine polysaccharides e.g., laminarin, alginate and xylan supporting the important role of PA bacteria during the turnover of oceanic organic matter. Furthermore, most of the identified functions fit well with the current understanding of the ecology of an algal- or surface-associated microbial community, additionally highlighting the importance of phytoplankton-bacterial interactions in the oceans. More detailed insights into the metabolism of PA bacteria were gained by the proteomic characterization of a selected PA bacterial isolate grown on laminarin and alginate. Functional analyses of the identified proteins suggested that PA bacteria employ more diverse degradation systems partially different from the strategies used by FL bacteria.
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.