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ZusammenfassungDigitales Lernen in religiösen Bildungsprozessen befasst sich besonders mit medienethischen Fragestellungen. Sexting und Cybermobbing werden als riskantes Mediennutzungsverhalten von Jugendlichen bewertet. Im Rahmen der schulischen Präventionsarbeit wird daher vor allem die Schuldfrage thematisiert. Die besondere Herausforderung für die Religionspädagogik besteht in der Wahrnehmung der Schamerfahrungen für die Identitätsentwicklung von Mädchen und Jungen in den erweiterten sozialen Räumen der digitalen Kommunikationsmittel. In Anlehnung an die Schamethik von Klaas Huizing und der medienweltorientierten Religionsdidaktik von Manfred Pirner verfolgt eine evangelische Mediennutzungsethik der Schamsensibilisierung (Kristian Fechtner) das Ziel der Kompetenzentwicklung von Mitgefühl und Widerstandsfähigkeit.
Manipulating and utilizing plasmas becomes a more and more important task in various research fields of physics and in industrial developments. Especially in nowadays spacerelevant applications there are different ideas to modify plasmas concerning particular tasks.
One major point of interest is the ability to influence plasmas using magnetic fields. To study the underlying physical effects that were achieved by these magnetic fields for both scenarios Particle-in-Cell simulations were done. Two examples are discussed in this thesis.
The first example originates from an experiment performed by the European Space Agency ESA in collaboration with the German Space Agency DLR. To verify the possibility of heat-flux reduction by magnetic fields onto the thermal protection system of a space vehicle a simplified experiment on earth was developed. Most of the heat that is created during re-entry comes from compression of the air ahead of the hypersonic vehicle, as a result of the basic thermodynamic relation between temperature and pressure. The shock front, which builds up in front of the vehicle deflects most of the heat and prohibits the surface of the space vehicle from direct contact with the maximum flux. State of the art spacecrafts use highly developed materials like ceramics to handle the enormous heat. An attractive approach to reduce costs is to use magnetic fields for heat-flux reduction. This would allow the use of cheaper materials and thus reduce costs for the whole space mission. A partially-ionized Argon beam was used to create a certain heat-flux onto a target. The main finding of the experimental campaign was a large mitigation of heat-flux by applying a dipole-like magnetic field. The Particle-in-Cell method was able to reproduce experimental observations like the heat-flux reduction. An additionally implemented optical diagnostics module allowed to confirm the results of the spectroscopy done during the experiment. The underlying effect that is responsible for the heat-flux reduction was identified as a coupling between the modified plasma and the dominating neutral flux component. The plasma, that is guided towards the target, act as a shield in front of the target surface for arriving neutrals. These neutrals are slowed down by charge-exchange collisions. Furthermore the magnetic field induces an increased turbulent transport that is also needed to reach a reduction in heat-ux. The turbulent transport was also obtained by three-dimensional Direct Simulation Monte Carlo simulations. Unfortunately, such source driven turbulence can not be expected in space, so that a heat flux reduction in real space applications is questionable. Nevertheless, other effects like the induced turbulence by the rotating vehicle can compensate the missing source driven effect.
The second scenario in which a magnetic field is used to modify the heat flux of a plasma is the operation of the pulsed cathodic arc thruster. The same Particle-in-Cell code was used to simulate a typical pulse of this newly developed thruster of Neumann Space Pty Ltd. The typical behavior of the thruster could be reproduced numerically. The thrust is mainly produced by fast electrons. These electrons are accelerated by electric fields as a result of a plasma-beam instability. This plasma-beam instability was verified by a phase space diagnostics for the electrons. To demonstrate the influence of the magnetic field a simulation of the cathodic arc thruster without magnetic field and one with magnetic field were compared. It was shown that the use of a magnetic field leads to a ten times larger thrust by directing the heat ux. The resulting narrow plume is an additional Advantage of the particle guiding magnetic field. This narrowness of the plume reduces the danger of interaction with other components of the space vehicle.
Both scenarios demonstrate the different capabilities for electromagnetic fields to manipulate plasmas and especially the corresponding heat-flux with respect to certain tasks. The possibilities range from reducing the heat-flux onto a target to maximizing the thrust by directing the heat-ux. This thesis demonstrates that simulations are a great tool to support experiments and to deliver an improved physics understanding. They help to identify the basic physics principles in the different systems, because they can deliver information not accessible to experiments.
In particular, a better understanding of the influence of electromagnetic fields on the heat-flux distribution in space-relevant applications was obtained. This can be the basis for further simulation-guided optimization, e.g. for the design of more effective cathodic arc thrusters. Here, the goal is to minimize costs for prototypes by replacing the hardware by virtual prototypes in the simulations. This allows to test basic design ideas in advance and get more highly-optimized designs at a fraction of time and costs.
A Metabolic Labeling Strategy for Relative Protein Quantification in Clostridioides difficile
(2018)
on-healing wounds continue to be a clinical challenge for patients and medical staff.
These wounds have a heterogeneous etiology, including diabetes and surgical trauma wounds. It is
therefore important to decipher molecular signatures that reflect the macroscopic process of wound
healing. To this end, we collected wound sponge dressings routinely used in vacuum assisted therapy
after surgical trauma to generate wound-derived protein profiles via global mass spectrometry.
We confidently identified 311 proteins in exudates. Among them were expected targets belonging to
the immunoglobulin superfamily, complement, and skin-derived proteins, such as keratins. Next to
several S100 proteins, chaperones, heat shock proteins, and immune modulators, the exudates
presented a number of redox proteins as well as a discrete neutrophil proteomic signature, including
for example cathepsin G, elastase, myeloperoxidase, CD66c, and lipocalin 2. We mapped over 200
post-translational modifications (PTMs; cysteine/methionine oxidation, tyrosine nitration, cysteine
trioxidation) to the proteomic profile, for example, in peroxiredoxin 1. Investigating manually
collected exudates, we confirmed presence of neutrophils and their products, such as microparticles
and fragments containing myeloperoxidase and DNA. These data confirmed known and identified
less known wound proteins and their PTMs, which may serve as resource for future studies on
human wound healing
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.
Self-affine tiles and fractals are known as examples in analysis and topology, as models of quasicrystals and biological growth, as unit intervals of generalized number systems, and as attractors of dynamical systems. The author has implemented a software which can find new examples and handle big databases of self-affine fractals. This thesis establishes the algebraic foundation of the algorithms of the IFStile package. Lifting and projection of algebraic and rational iterated function systems and many properties of the resulting attractors are discussed.
Analysis of partial migration strategies of Central European raptors based on ring re-encounter data
(2018)
The phenomenon of partial migration in birds in
which some individuals of a population are migratory while others stay in the breeding area is of increasing scientific interest. The strategies of partial migratory raptors from Central Europe are, however, unclear for most species. We analysed ring re-encounter data of Common Kestrels Falco tinnunculus, Eurasian Sparrowhawks Accipter nisus and Common Buzzards Buteo buteo ringed in Germany in terms of distances and directions between ringing and re-encounter sites. We investigated possible differences between sexes and age classes, as well as effects of ringing region, seasonal weather (in the form of North Atlantic Oscillation indices) and long-term temporal changes (including climate change) on migratory strategies by means of generalized linear models. We found that migration is mostly conducted by juveniles, although migratory adults were also found. In general, males tend to migrate less than females and juveniles less than adults.
Kestrels showed differences between age classes and sexes and they responded to weather in summer and autumn. The migration activities of Kestrels decreased over years. Sparrowhawks from different regions showed no differences in migration activity and no responses to long-term temporal changes. They did not respond to seasonal weather either. Buzzards showed strong responses to winter weather (‘winter escapes’) predominantly in highland regions, and a reduction of migratory intensity probably due to global warming.
The explanatory power of ringing data, however, is limited by low re-encounter rates and temporal and spatial heterogeneity in re-encounter probability. Spatial heterogeneity mainly depends on the distribution of observers as well as on their willingness to report a re-encountered ring to the corresponding ringing scheme. We analyzed a data set of ringing and re-encounter data of Kestrels, Buzzards and Sparrowhawks provided by the EURING Data Bank. We calculated monthly re-encounter rates across Europe and, for different time periods, we predicted re-encounters for individuals of these species ringed in Germany, on the assumption that re-encounter probabilities are evenly distributed at the highest value observed within the respective home ranges. Subsequently, we tested for correlation between re-encounter rates and human population density. The number of predicted re-encounters exceed the observed by 50-300 %. We found differences between monthly re-encounter rates and between different prediction periods. Distances (between ringing and re-encounter sites) differ significantly between observations and predicted re-encounters, with higher distances in predictions. Correlation between re-encounter rates and human population density is significant, but correlation coefficients are low (ρ = 0.291-0.511). Correcting for observer heterogeneity can help to analyze ring re-encounter data e.g. in terms of dispersal and migration. However, a comprehensive data collection and a digitalization of possible prior data records by the respective ringing schemes may allow advances in this method even further.
Anomalous Nernst effect and three-dimensional
temperature gradients in magnetic tunnel junctions
(2018)
Amine transaminases are versatile biocatalysts for the production of pharmaceutically and agrochemically relevant chiral amines. They represent an environmentally benign alternative to waste intensive transition metal catalysed synthesis strategies, especially because of their high stereoselectivity and robustness. Therefore, they have been frequently used in the (chemo)enzymatic synthesis of amines and/or became attractive targets for enzyme engineering especially in the last decade, mainly in order to enlarge their substrate scope. Certainly, one of the most notable examples of amine transaminase engineering is the
manufacturing of the anti-diabetic drug Sitagliptin in large scale after several rounds of protein engineering. Thereby, the target amine was produced in asymmetric synthesis mode which is the most convenient and favored route to a target chiral amine, starting from the corresponding ketone. The choice of the amine donor is highly relevant for reaction design in terms of economical and thermodynamic considerations. For instance, the use of alanine as the natural amine donor is one of the most common strategies for the amination of target ketones but needs the involvement of auxiliary enzymes to shift the reaction equilibrium towards product formation. In fact, isopropylamine is probably one of the most favored donor molecules since it is cheap and achiral but it is supposed to be accepted only by a limited number of amine transaminases.
This thesis focusses on the optimization and application of amine transaminases for asymmetric synthesis reactions en route to novel target chiral amines using isopropylamine as the preferred amine donor.
Arm Ability Training (AAT) has been specifically designed to promote manual dexterity recovery for stroke patients who have mild to moderate arm paresis. The motor control problems that these patients suffer from relate to a lack of efficiency in terms of the sensorimotor integration needed for dexterity. Various sensorimotor arm and hand abilities such as speed of selective movements, the capacity to make precise goal-directed arm movements, coordinated visually guided movements, steadiness, and finger dexterity all contribute to our “dexterity” in daily life. All these abilities are deficient in stroke patients who have mild to moderate paresis causing focal disability. The AAT explicitly and repetitively trains all these sensorimotor abilities at the individual's performance limit with eight different tasks; it further implements various task difficulty levels and integrates augmented feedback in the form of intermittent knowledge of results. The evidence from two randomized controlled trials indicates the clinical effectiveness of the AAT with regard to the promotion of “dexterity” recovery and the reduction of focal disability in stroke patients with mild to moderate arm paresis. In addition, the effects have been shown to be superior to time-equivalent “best conventional therapy.” Further, studies in healthy subjects showed that the AAT induced substantial sensorimotor learning. The observed learning dynamics indicate that different underlying sensorimotor arm and hand abilities are trained. Capacities strengthened by the training can, in part, be used by both arms. Non-invasive brain stimulation experiments and functional magnetic resonance imaging data documented that at an early stage in the training cortical sensorimotor network areas are involved in learning induced by the AAT, yet differentially for the tasks trained. With prolonged training over 2 to 3 weeks, subcortical structures seem to take over. While behavioral similarities in training responses have been observed in healthy volunteers and patients, training-induced functional re-organization in survivors of a subcortical stroke uniquely involved the ipsilesional premotor cortex as an adaptive recruitment of this secondary motor area. Thus, training-induced plasticity in healthy and brain-damaged subjects are not necessarily the same.
Background
The role of platelets for mediating closure of the ductus arteriosus in human preterm infants is controversial. Especially, the effect of low platelet counts on pharmacological treatment failure is still unclear.
Methods
In this retrospective study of 471 preterm infants [<1,500 g birth weight (BW)], who were treated for a patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) with indomethacin or ibuprofen, we investigated whether platelet counts before or during pharmacological treatment had an impact on the successful closure of a hemodynamically significant PDA. The effects of other factors, such as sepsis, preeclampsia, gestational age, BW, and gender, were also evaluated.
Results
Platelet counts before initiation of pharmacological PDA treatment did not differ between infants with later treatment success or failure. However, we found significant associations between low platelet counts during pharmacological PDA therapy and treatment failure (p < 0.05). Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis showed that platelet counts after the first, and before and after the second cyclooxygenase inhibitor (COXI) cycle were significantly associated with treatment failure (area under the curve of >0.6). However, ROC curve analysis did not reveal a specific platelet cutoff-value that could predict PDA treatment failure. Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that lower platelet counts, a lower BW, and preeclampsia were independently associated with COXI treatment failure.
Conclusion
We provide further evidence for an association between low platelet counts during pharmacological therapy for symptomatic PDA and treatment failure, while platelet counts before initiation of therapy did not affect treatment outcome.
Background: Depression and obesity are widespread and closely linked. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and vitamin D are both assumed to be associated with depression and obesity. Little is known about the interplay between vitamin D and BDNF. We explored the putative associations and interactions between serum BDNF and vitamin D levels with depressive symptoms and abdominal obesity in a large population-based cohort. Methods: Data were obtained from the population-based Study of Health in Pomerania (SHIP)-Trend (n = 3,926). The associations of serum BDNF and vitamin D levels with depressive symptoms (measured using the Patient Health Questionnaire) were assessed with binary and multinomial logistic regression models. The associations of serum BDNF and vitamin D levels with obesity (measured by the waist-to-hip ratio [WHR]) were assessed with binary logistic and linear regression models with restricted cubic splines. Results: Logistic regression models revealed inverse associations of vitamin D with depression (OR = 0.966; 95% CI 0.951–0.981) and obesity (OR = 0.976; 95% CI 0.967–0.985). No linear association of serum BDNF with depression or obesity was found. However, linear regression models revealed a U-shaped association of BDNF with WHR (p < 0.001). Conclusion: Vitamin D was inversely associated with depression and obesity. BDNF was associated with abdominal obesity, but not with depression. At the population level, our results support the relevant roles of vitamin D and BDNF in mental and physical health-related outcomes.
Background: Depression and obesity are widespread and closely linked. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and vitamin D are both assumed to be associated with depression and obesity. Little is known about the interplay between vitamin D and BDNF. We explored the putative associations and interactions between serum BDNF and vitamin D levels with depressive symptoms and abdominal obesity in a large population-based cohort. Methods: Data were obtained from the population-based Study of Health in Pomerania (SHIP)-Trend (n = 3,926). The associations of serum BDNF and vitamin D levels with depressive symptoms (measured using the Patient Health Questionnaire) were assessed with binary and multinomial logistic regression models. The associations of serum BDNF and vitamin D levels with obesity (measured by the waist-to-hip ratio [WHR]) were assessed with binary logistic and linear regression models with restricted cubic splines. Results: Logistic regression models revealed inverse associations of vitamin D with depression (OR = 0.966; 95% CI 0.951–0.981) and obesity (OR = 0.976; 95% CI 0.967–0.985). No linear association of serum BDNF with depression or obesity was found. However, linear regression models revealed a U-shaped association of BDNF with WHR (p < 0.001). Conclusion: Vitamin D was inversely associated with depression and obesity. BDNF was associated with abdominal obesity, but not with depression. At the population level, our results support the relevant roles of vitamin D and BDNF in mental and physical health-related outcomes.
With improvements in breast imaging, mammography, ultrasound and minimally invasive interventions, the detection of early breast cancer, non-invasive cancers, lesions of uncertain malignant potential, and benign lesions has increased. However, with the improved diagnostic capabilities comes a substantial risk of false-positive benign lesions and vice versa false-negative malignant lesions. A statement is provided on the manifestation, imaging, and diagnostic verification of isolated benign breast tumours that have a frequent manifestation, in addition to general therapy management recommendations. Histological evaluation of benign breast tumours is the most reliable diagnostic method. According to the S3 guideline and information gained from analysis of the literature, preference is to be given to core biopsy for each type of tumour as the preferred diagnostic method. An indication for open biopsy is also to be established should the tumour increase in size in the follow-up interval, after recurring discrepancies in the vacuum biopsy results, or at the request of the patient. As an alternative, minimally invasive procedures such as therapeutic vacuum biopsy, cryoablation or high-intensity focused ultrasound are also becoming possible alternatives in definitive surgical management. The newer minimally invasive methods show an adequate degree of accuracy and hardly any restrictions in terms of post-interventional cosmetics so that current requirements of extensive breast imaging can be thoroughly met.
Biocidal Agents Used for Disinfection Can Enhance Antibiotic Resistance in Gram-Negative Species
(2018)
What shapes the prospect for democracy in the aftermath of civil conflicts? Some authors claim a successful transition from violence to elections mainly depends on the ability of political institutions, such as power-sharing arrangements, to mitigate the security dilemma among former battlefield adversaries. Drawing on a broader literature, others point to potential effects of foreign aid on democratic development.
This predominant focus on elections and the security dilemma, however, limits our understanding in a number of ways. We do not know how the choice of post-conflict elites to hold elections is strategically intertwined with their willingness to reform other state institutions. We also have only begun to understand how post-conflict power-sharing governments function as revenue source for elites. Knowing how this economic function drives or obstructs post-conflict democratic development is particularly helpful if we shift our attention to a major source of income for post-conflict elites: foreign aid, and the democratic conditions donors attach to it.
Addressing these gaps, I argue that both the economic utility from office as well as political conditionalities give rise to a rent-seeking/democracy dilemma for post-conflict elites: they can either hold elections and face uncertainty over their access to power, but secure economic rents from aid. Or they refuse to democratize, secure their hold on power, but risk losing revenues when donors withdraw aid. In this situation, their optimal strategy is to agree to democratic reforms in the area on which donors place most value, elections. But to maximize their chances of electoral victory and continued access to rents from office, elites simultaneously restrain an independent rule of law and narrowly distribute private goods to their supporters.
This rent-seeking/democracy dilemma is particularly prevalent in one of the most popular forms of post-conflict institutions: power-sharing governments. Including rebel groups in post-conflict cabinets increases the number of constituencies that need to be sustained from the government budget. In addition, the interim nature of transitional power-sharing cabinets leads elites to steeply discount the future and increase rent-seeking in the short term. My main hypothesis is therefore that large aid flows to extensive power-sharing governments should be associated with improved elections, but limits in the rule of law and more provision of private instead of public goods.
To test this prediction quantitatively, I combine data on aid flows and rebel participation in post-conflict cabinets between 1990 and 2010 with indicators for democratic development, election quality, rule of law, and public goods provision. Results from a wide range of regression models provide empirical support for my argument. Individually, extensive power-sharing governments and large aid flows do not seem to have strong effects. Models that introduce an interaction term between aid and power-sharing, however, yield strong evidence of a rent-seeking/democracy dilemma: Power-sharing and foreign aid jointly predict a positive, but small change in democracy scores as well as cleaner elections. At the same time, they are jointly associated with a limited rule of law and stronger distribution of private goods. For each indicator, I document evidence for mechanisms and changes in the effect over time.
The theory and empirical results presented in this dissertation have a number of implications for future research. They highlight the importance of moving away from a singular focus on post-conflict elections and looking also at other institutional dimensions of post-conflict politics. My political economy model of power-sharing also demonstrates the utility of explicitly including economic functions of post-conflict institutions into power-sharing and broader peacebuilding research. And I introduce novel evidence into research and practice of aid delivery; this helps not only to clarify academic debates under which conditions aid can be effective, but also informs practitioners who help conflict-affected countries in their transition from war to democracy.
Sexual selection favours traits that confer a competitive advantage in access to mates and to their gametes. This results in males evolving a wide array of adaptations that may be conflictual with female’s interests and even to collateral negative effects on female’s lifespan or reproductive success. Harmful male adaptations are diverse and can be extreme. For example, males of various species evolved adaptations that incur physical damage to the female during copulation, referred to as traumatic mating. Most of these adaptations provide males with a competitive fertilization advantage due to the injection of sperm or non-sperm compounds through the wound. In the spider taxonomical literature, alterations of external genital structures have been reported in females and may result from male inflicted damage during copulation. Contrarily to other cases of traumatic mating, the transfer of sperm or non-sperm compounds does not seem to be the target of selection for external female genital mutilation (EFGM) to evolve. Therefore, investigating EFGM may provide valuable information to extend our understanding of the evolution of harmful male adaptations. In this thesis, I explore this newly discovered phenomenon and combine empirical and theoretical approaches to investigate the causes and consequences of EFGM evolution from male and female perspectives. My findings suggest that EFGM is a natural phenomenon and is potentially widespread throughout spider taxa. I demonstrate the proximal mechanism by which the male copulatory organ mutilates the external female genitalia during genital coupling and show that the mutilation results in full monopolization of the female as mutilated females are unable to remate. Using a theoretical approach, I investigated the conditions for the evolution of EFGM. The model developed suggests that EFGM evolution is favoured for last male sperm precedence and for costs to females that can be relatively high as the male-male competition increases. I present the results of physiological measurements that suggest there is no physiological cost of genital mutilation resulting from healing and immune responses for the female. Finally, I report the results of a behavioural experiment that suggest that females have control over the mutilation and selectively allow or avoid mutilation. These findings suggest that EFGM benefits males by securing paternity, that males and females may have evolved to reduce the costs incurred by the female and that female choice may also play a role in EFGM evolution.
Based on the latest gnomAD dataset, the prevalence of symptomatic hereditary cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) prone to cause epileptic seizures and stroke-like symptoms was re-evaluated in this review and calculated to be 1:5,400-1:6,200. Furthermore, state-of-the-art molecular genetic analyses of the known CCM loci are described which reach an almost 100% mutation detection rate for familial CCMs if whole genome sequencing is performed for seemingly mutation-negative families. An update on the spectrum of CCM1, CCM2, and CCM3 mutations demonstrates that deep-intronic mutations and submicroscopic copy-number neutral genomic rearrangements are rare. Finally, this review points to current guidelines on genetic counselling, neuroimaging, medical as well as neurosurgical treatment and highlights the formation of active patient organizations in various countries.
Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococci) and Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) are human-specific commensals of the upper respiratory tract. Every individual is asymptomatically colonized with both bacteria at least once in their life-time. The opportunistic pathogens can affect further organs and invade into deeper tissue. The occupation of normally sterile niches of the human body with the bacteria can lead to local infections such as sinusitis, otitis media and abscesses, or to life-threatening diseases like pneumonia, meningitis or sepsis. A strong interaction between the bacterium and the respiratory epithelial cells is a prerequisite for a successful colonization. This interaction is ensured by bacterial surface proteins, so called adhesins. The binding of the adhesins to the epithelial lineage occurs predominantly indirectly via components of the extracellular matrix (ECM), but also directly to cellular receptors. Pneumococci and S. aureus bind to various ECM glycoproteins, amongst others: fibronectin, fibrinogen, vitronectin, and collagen. Also binding of both pathogens to human thrombospondin-1 has been described. Thrombospondin-1 is mainly stored in the α-granula of thrombocytes (platelets) and released into the circulation upon activation. However, thrombospondin-1 is also produced and secreted by other cell types like endothelial cells, macrophages, and fibroblasts, which gets subsequently incorporated as component into the ECM. So far, no thrombosponin-1-binding adhesins of pneumococci were identified. PspC, Hic, and PavB are important surface-localized virulence factors, which were shown to interact with human ECM and plasma proteins. PspC and Hic bind to vitronectin and factor H, which inhibits the complement cascade of the human immune system. PavB interacts with fibronectin and plasminogen, and a pavB-deficient mutant of S. pneumoniae showed diminished capacity in colonization in a mouse model. Among the surface proteins of S. aureus, only Eap was identified as thrombospondin-1-binding adhesin. Beyond colonization, pneumococci and S. aureus can enter the blood circulation, interact with platelets, and cause their activation. The aggregation of platelets, especially initiated by S. aureus, plays an important role in the clinic, because most of the septic patients develop thrombocytopenia. Surface localized factors of
S. pneumoniae triggering platelet activation are unknown to date. In contrast, few proteins of S. aureus with potential to activate platelets, including Eap, were identified previously.
This study identified the surface proteins PavB, PspC, and Hic of S. pneumoniae as specific ligands of the human thrombospondin-1. Flow cytometric, surface plasmon resonance spectroscopic and immunological analyses revealed interactions between the pneumococcal proteins and soluble as well as immobilized thrombospondin-1. The use of specific pneumococcal deletion mutants verified the importance of the three virulence factors as binding partners of soluble thrombospondin-1. The results suggest that pneumococci are capable of acquiring soluble thrombospondin-1 from blood as well as utilizing immobilized glycoprotein of the ECM as substrate for adhesion. Furthermore, the thrombospondin-1-binding domain within the pneumococcal proteins was analyzed by use of recombinant fragments of PavB, PspC, and Hic. The binding capacity of thrombospondin-1 increased proportionally with the amount of repetitive sequences in PavB and PspC, and the length of the α-helical region within the Hic molecule. The binding behavior of thrombospondin-1 towards PavB and PspC is comparable with that of the ECM proteins vitronectin and fibronectin, but is unique towards Hic.
The localization of the binding domain of the adhesins within the thrompospondin-1 molecule occurred via use of glycosaminoglycans as competitive inhibitors for the interaction. The results suggest that the pneumococcal proteins Hic and PspC target the identical binding region within thrombospondin-1, which differs from the binding domain for PavB. However, all three virulence factors seem to bind in the N-terminal part of thrombospondin-1.
Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, thrombospondin-1 overlay assay and subsequent mass spectrometric analysis identified AtlA of S. aureus as a surface localized interaction partner of human thrombospondin-1. Moreover, a vitronectin binding activity for AtlA was determined. Immunological and surface plasmon resonance binding studies with recombinant AtlA fragments revealed that interactions with both matrix proteins is mediated via the C-terminal located repeats R1R2 of the AtlA amidase domain. Binding of thrombospondin-1 and vitronectin occurred not simultaneously, due to a competitive inhibition.
The second part of the study focused on the activation of human platelets by recombinant pneumococcal and staphylococcal proteins. In total, 28 proteins of S. pneumoniae and 52 proteins of S. aureus were incubated with human platelets. The activation of the cells was detected by flow cytometry using the activation markers P-selectin and the dimerization of the integrin αIIbβIII. The proteins CbpL, PsaA, PavA, and SP_0899 of S. pneumoniae induced platelet activation, however, the detailed mechanism has to be deciphered in further studies. Furthermore, the secreted proteins CHIPS, FLIPr, and AtlA of S. aureus were discovered as inductors for the activation of platelets. In addition, the domains of AtlA and Eap, crucial for platelet activation, were narrowed down. Interestingly, CHIPS, FLIPr, and Eap were described as inhibitors of neutrophil recruitment. Platelets are recently recognized as immune cells, due to the expression of immune receptors. The data obtained in this study highlight a comprehensive spectrum of effects of the S. aureus proteins towards different type of immune cells. Besides the activation of platelets in suspension buffer and plasma, the aggregation of platelets in whole blood was triggered by the proteins CHIPS, AtlA, and Eap. These results suggest a contribution of the proteins during the S. aureus-induced infectious endocarditis. Secretion of the platelet activating virulence factors, which were identified within this study, might represent a pathogenic strategy during S. aureus infection in which a direct contact between S. aureus and platelets is not required or even avoided.
In conclusion, PavB, PspC, and Hic of S. pneumoniae and AtlA of S. aureus were identified as interaction partners of human thrombospondin-1. Furthermore, CHIPS, FLIPr, AtlA, and Eap were characterized as platelet activators. This study provides candidates for the development of protein-based vaccines, to prevent bacterial colonization and to neutralize secreted pathogenic factors.
Chemosymbiosis in marine bivalves – unravelling host-symbiont interactions and symbiotic adaptions
(2018)
Symbiosis essentially forms the cornerstone of complex life on earth. Spearheading
symbiosis research in the last few decades include the exploration of diverse mutualistic
animal-bacterial associations from marine habitats. Yet, many facets of symbiotic
associations remain under-examined. Here we investigated marine bivalves of the genera
Bathymodiolus and Codakia, inhabiting hydrothermal vents and shallow water
ecosystems, respectively, and their bacterial symbionts. The symbionts reside
intracellularly within gill epithelia and supply their host with chemoautotrophically fixed
carbon. They oxidize reduced substrates like sulfide (thiotrophic symbionts) and methane
(methanotrophic symbionts) from surrounding fluids for energy generation. The nature of
interactions between host and symbiont at the metabolic and physical level, as well as
between the holobiont and its environment remain poorly understood. In vitro cultivations
of both symbiont and host are difficult till date, hampering the feasibility of targeted
molecular investigations.
We bypassed culture-based experiments by proteogenomically investigating physically
separated fractions of host and symbiont cell components for the bivalves Bathymodiolus
azoricus, Bathymodiolus thermophilus and Codakia orbicularis. Using these
enrichments, we sequenced the symbionts’ genomes and established semi-quantitative
host-symbiont (meta-) proteomic profiles. This combined approach enabled us to resolve
symbiosis-relevant metabolic pathways and adaptations, detect molecular factors
mediating physical interactions amongst partners and to understand the association of
symbiotic traits with the environmental factors prevailing within habitats of the respective
bivalve.
Our results revealed intricate metabolic interdependence between the symbiotic partners.
In Bathymodiolus, these metabolic interactions included (1) the concentration of essential
substrates like CO2 and thiosulfate by the host for the thiotrophic symbiont, and (2) the
host’s replenishment of essential TCA cycle intermediates for the thiotroph that lacks
biosynthetic enzymes for these metabolites. In exchange (3), the thiotroph compensates
the host’s putative deficiency in amino acid and cofactor biosynthesis by cycling aminoacids
derived from imported precursors back to the host. In case of Codakia orbicularis,
the symbionts may metabolically supplement their host with N-compounds derived from
fixation of molecular nitrogen, a trait that was hitherto unknown in chemosynthetic
thiotrophic symbionts.
Individual proteogenomic investigations of the bivalves Bathymodiolus azoricus and
Bathymodiolus thermophilus showed that their symbionts are able to exploit a multitude
of energy sources like sulfide, thiosulfate, methane and hydrogen to fuel chemosynthesis.
The bivalves and their thiotrophic symbionts, however, are particularly adapted to
thiosulfate-utilization, as indicated by mitochondrial production and concentration of
thiosulfate by host and dominant expression of thiosulfate oxidation enzymes in the
symbiont. This may be advantageous, because thiosulfate is less toxic to the host than
sulfide. The central metabolic pathways for energy generation, carbon and nitrogen
assimilation and amino acid biosynthesis in thiotrophic symbionts of both Bathymodiolus
host species are highly conserved. Expression levels of these pathways do, however, vary
between symbionts of both species, indicating differential regulation of enzyme synthesis,
possibly to accommodate differences in host morphology and environmental factors.
Systematic comparison of symbiont-containing and symbiont-free sample types within
and between B. azoricus and B. thermophilus revealed the presence of ‘symbiosisspecific’
features allowing direct host-symbiont physical interactions. Host proteins
engaged in symbiosis-specific functions include 1) a large repertoire of host digestive
enzymes predominant in the gill, possibly facilitating symbiont population control and
carbon acquisition via direct enzymatic digestion of symbiont cells and 2) a set of host
pattern-recognition receptors, which may enable the host to selectively recognize
pathogens or even symbionts “ripe” for consumption. Symbiont proteins engaged in
symbiosis-specific interactions included 3) an enormous set of adhesins and toxins,
putatively involved in symbiont colonization, persistence and host-feeding.
Bathymodiolus symbionts also possess repertoires of CRISPR-Cas and restrictionmodification
genes for phage defense that are unusually large for intracellular symbionts.
Genomic and proteomic comparisons of thiotrophic symbionts of distinct Bathymodiolus
host species from different vent sites revealed a conserved core genome but divergent
accessory genomes. The B. thermophilus thiotroph’s accessory genome was notably more
enriched in genes encoding adhesins, toxins and phage defense proteins than that of other
Bathymodiolus symbionts. Phylogenetic analyses suggest that this enrichment possibly
resulted from horizontal gene acquisition followed by multiple internal gene duplication
events. In others symbionts, these gene functions may be substituted by alternate
mechanisms or may not be required at all: The methanotrophic symbionts of B. azoricus,
for example, has the genetic potential to supplement phage defense functions. Thus, the
accessory genomes of Bathymodiolus symbionts are species- or habitat-associated,
possibly facilitating adaptation of the bivalves to their respective micro- and macroenvironments.
In support of this, we show that symbiont biomass in B. thermophilus,
which hosts only one thiotrophic symbiont phylotype, is considerably higher than in B.
azoricus that hosts thiotrophic and methanotrophic symbionts. This suggests that different
symbiont compositions in each species produce distinct microenvironments within the
holobiont.
Our study presents an exhaustive assessment of the genes and proteins involved in this
bivalve-microbe interaction, hinting at intimate host-symbiont interdependencies and
symbiotic crosstalk between partners. The findings open novel prospects for
microbiologists with regard to mechanisms of host-symbiont interplay within highly
specialized niches, origin and distribution of prokaryote-eukaryote interaction factors
across both mutualistic and pathogenic associations.
Climate Change-Induced Shift of Tree Growth Sensitivity at a Central Himalayan Treeline Ecotone
(2018)
Tree growth at northern boreal treelines is generally limited by summer temperature, hence tree rings serve as natural archives of past climatic conditions. However, there is increasing evidence that a changing summer climate as well as certain micro-site conditions can lead to a weakening or loss of the summer temperature signal in trees growing in treeline environments. This phenomenon poses a challenge to all applications relying on stable temperature-growth relationships such as temperature reconstructions and dynamic vegetation models. We tested the effect of differing ecological and climatological conditions on the summer temperature signal of Scots pine at its northern distribution limits by analyzing twelve sites distributed along a 2200 km gradient from Finland to Western Siberia (Russia). Two frequently used proxies in dendroclimatology, ring width and maximum latewood density, were correlated with summer temperature for the period 1901–2013 separately for (i) dry vs. wet micro-sites and (ii) years with dry/warm vs. wet/cold climate regimes prevailing during the growing season. Differing climate regimes significantly affected the temperature signal of Scots pine at about half of our sites: While correlations were stronger in wet/cold than in dry/warm years at most sites located in Russia, differing climate regimes had only little effect at Finnish sites. Both tree-ring proxies were affected in a similar way. Interestingly, micro-site differences significantly affected absolute tree growth, but had only minor effects on the climatic signal at our sites. We conclude that, despite the treeline-proximal location, growth-limiting conditions seem to be exceeded in dry/warm years at most Russian sites, leading to a weakening or loss of the summer temperature signal in Scots pine here. With projected temperature increase, unstable summer temperature signals in Scots pine tree rings might become more frequent, possibly affecting dendroclimatological applications and related fields.
Introduction
We retrospectively evaluated the efficacy and toxicity of gross tumor volume (GTV) mean dose optimized stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) for primary and secondary lung tumors with and without robotic real-time motion compensation.
Materials and methods
Between 2011 and 2017, 208 patients were treated with SBRT for 111 primary lung tumors and 163 lung metastases with a median GTV of 8.2 cc (0.3–174.0 cc). Monte Carlo dose optimization was performed prioritizing GTV mean dose at the potential cost of planning target volume (PTV) coverage reduction while adhering to safe normal tissue constraints. The median GTV mean biological effective dose (BED)10 was 162.0 Gy10 (34.2–253.6 Gy10) and the prescribed PTV BED10 ranged 23.6–151.2 Gy10 (median, 100.8 Gy10). Motion compensation was realized through direct tracking (44.9%), fiducial tracking (4.4%), and internal target volume (ITV) concepts with small (≤5 mm, 33.2%) or large (>5 mm, 17.5%) motion. The local control (LC), progression-free survival (PFS), overall survival (OS), and toxicity were analyzed.
Results
Median follow-up was 14.5 months (1–72 months). The 2-year actuarial LC, PFS, and OS rates were 93.1, 43.2, and 62.4%, and the median PFS and OS were 18.0 and 39.8 months, respectively. In univariate analysis, prior local irradiation (hazard ratio (HR) 0.18, confidence interval (CI) 0.05–0.63, p = 0.01), GTV/PTV (HR 1.01–1.02, CI 1.01–1.04, p < 0.02), and PTV prescription, mean GTV, and maximum plan BED10 (HR 0.97–0.99, CI 0.96–0.99, p < 0.01) were predictive for LC while the tracking method was not (p = 0.97). For PFS and OS, multivariate analysis showed Karnofsky Index (p < 0.01) and tumor stage (p ≤ 0.02) to be significant factors for outcome prediction. Late radiation pneumonitis or chronic rip fractures grade 1–2 were observed in 5.3% of the patients. Grade ≥3 side effects did not occur.
Conclusion
Robotic SBRT is a safe and effective treatment for lung tumors. Reducing the PTV prescription and keeping high GTV mean doses allowed the reduction of toxicity while maintaining high local tumor control. The use of real-time motion compensation is strongly advised, however, well-performed ITV motion compensation may be used alternatively when direct tracking is not feasible.
Mendelian randomization (MR) is a framework for assessing causal inference using cross-sectional data in combination with genetic information. This paper summarizes statistical methods commonly applied and strait forward to use for conducting MR analyses including those taking advantage of the rich dataset of SNP-trait associations that were revealed in the last decade through large-scale genome-wide association studies. Using these data, powerful MR studies are possible. However, the causal estimate may be biased in case the assumptions of MR are violated. The source and the type of this bias are described while providing a summary of the mathematical formulas that should help estimating the magnitude and direction of the potential bias depending on the specific research setting. Finally, methods for relaxing the assumptions and for conducting sensitivity analyses are discussed. Future researches in the field of MR include the assessment of non-linear causal effects, and automatic detection of invalid instruments.
Mendelian randomization (MR) is a framework for assessing causal inference using cross-sectional data in combination with genetic information. This paper summarizes statistical methods commonly applied and strait forward to use for conducting MR analyses including those taking advantage of the rich dataset of SNP-trait associations that were revealed in the last decade through large-scale genome-wide association studies. Using these data, powerful MR studies are possible. However, the causal estimate may be biased in case the assumptions of MR are violated. The source and the type of this bias are described while providing a summary of the mathematical formulas that should help estimating the magnitude and direction of the potential bias depending on the specific research setting. Finally, methods for relaxing the assumptions and for conducting sensitivity analyses are discussed. Future researches in the field of MR include the assessment of non-linear causal effects, and automatic detection of invalid instruments.
There is an increasingly urgent need to understand and predict how organisms will cope with the environmental consequences of global climate change. Adaptation in any form can be mediated by genetic adaptation and/or by phenotypic plasticity. Disentangling these two adaptive processes is critical in understanding and predicting adaptive responses to environmental change. Usually, disentangling genetic adaptation from phenotypic plasticity requires common garden experiments conducted under controlled laboratory conditions. While these experiments are powerful, it is often difficult to translate the results into natural populations and extrapolate to naturally occurring phenotypic variation. One solution to this problem is provided by the many examples of invasive species that exhibit wide phenotypic variation and that reproduce asexually. Besides selecting the appropriate in situ model, one must carefully choose a relevant trait to investigate. Ecomorphology has been a central theme in evolutionary biology because it reflects how organisms can adapt to their environment through their morphology. Intraspecific ecomorphological studies are especially well suited to identify adaptive pressures and provide insights into the microevolutionary mechanisms leading to the phenotypic differentiation.
One excellent candidate for an intraspecific ecomorphological study aiming to understand adaptation through genetic adaptation and phenotypic plasticity is the invasive New Zealand mudsnail Potamopyrgus antipodarum Gray (1853). This ovoviviparous snail features high variability in shell morphology and has successfully invaded a wide range of fresh- and brackish water habitats around the world. The evolutionary and ecological situations in this species’ native and invasive ranges is drastically different. In New Zealand, P. antipodarum’s native range, sexual and asexual individuals coexist and experience selective pressure by sterilizing endoparasites. By contrast, only a few asexual lineages have been established in invaded regions around the globe, where parasite infection is extremely rare. Here, we took advantage of the low genetic diversity among asexually reproducing European individuals in an attempt to characterize the relative contribution of genetic variation and phenotypic plasticity to the wide variation in shell morphology of this snail.
Analysing the ecomorphology of 425 European P. antipodarum in a geometric-morphometric framework, using brood size as proxy for fecundity, and mtDNA and nuclear SNPs to account for relatedness and identify reproductive mode, we hypothesized that 1) shell variation in the invasive range should be adaptive with respect to colonization of novel habitats, and 2) at least some of the variation might be caused by phenotypic plasticity. We then expanded our ecomorphological scope by analysing 996 native specimens, expecting 1) genetic and morphological diversity to be higher in the native range compared to invaded regions; 2) morphological diversity to be higher in sexual compared to asexual individuals according to the frozen niche hypothesis; and 3) shell morphology to be habitat specific, hence adaptative. In a last part, we used computational fluid dynamics simulations to calculate relative drag and lift forces of three shell morphologies (globular, intermediate, and slender). Here, we tested the overall hypothesis that shell morphology in gastropods is an adaptation against dislodgement through lift rather than drag forces, which would explain the counterintuitive presence of wider shells with shorter spires in lotic environments. With a final flow tank experiment, we tested the specific hypothesis that the dislocation velocity of living snails is positively linked to foot size, and that the latter can be predicted by shell morphology, in particular the aperture area as assumed by several authors.
As expected, we found genetic and morphological diversity to be higher in native than in invasive snails, but surprisingly no higher morphological diversity in sexual versus asexual individuals. The relationships between shell morphology, habitat, and fecundity were complex. Shape variation was primarily linked to genetic relatedness, but specific environmental factors including flow rate induced similar shell shapes. By contrast, shell size was largely explained by environmental factors. Fecundity was correlated with size, but showed trade-offs with shape in increasingly extreme conditions. With increasing flow and in smaller habitats such as springs, the trend of shell shape becoming wider was reversed, i.e. snails with slender shells were brooding more embryos. This increase in fitness was explained by our CFD simulations: in lotic habitats, slender shells experience less drag and lift forces compared to globular shells. We found no correlation between foot size and shell shape or aperture area showing that the assumed aperture/foot area correlation should be used with caution and cannot be generalized for all aquatic gastropod species. Finally, shell morphology and foot size were not related to dislodgement speed in our flow tank experiment. We concluded that the relationship of shell morphology and flow velocity is more complex than assumed. Hence, other traits must play a major role in decreasing dislodgement risk in stream gastropods, e.g. specific behaviours or pedal mucus stickiness. Although we did not find that globular shells are adaptations decreasing dislodgement risk, we cannot rule out that they are still flow related adaptations. For instance, globular shells are more crush-resistant and might therefore represent a flow adaptation in terms of diminishing damage caused by tumbling after dislodgement or against lotic specific crush-type predators.
At this point, we can conclude that shell morphology in P. antipodarum varies at least in part as an adaptation to specific environmental factors. This study shows how essential it is to reveal how plastic, genetically as well as phenotypically, adaptive traits in species can be and to identify the causal factors and how these adaptations affect the fitness in order to better predict how organisms will cope with changing environmental conditions.
The fear of somatic sensations is highly relevant in the etiology and maintenance of various disorders. Nevertheless, little is known about this fear of body symptoms and many questions are yet unanswered. Especially physiological studies on interoceptive threat are rare. Therefore, the present thesis investigated defensive mobilization, autonomic arousal, and brain activation during the anticipation of, exposure to, and recovery from unpleasant body sensations. Symptoms were provoked using a standardized hyperventilation procedure in a sample of high (and as controls: low) anxiety sensitive individuals - a population high at risk for developing a panic disorder and high in fear of internal body symptoms.
In study one, anxious apprehension was investigated during anticipation of interoceptive threat (somatic sensations evoked by hyperventilation) and exteroceptive threat (electric shock). Symptom reports, autonomic arousal, and defensive mobilization assessed by the startle eyeblink response were analyzed. Extending the knowledge on anticipation of interoceptive threat, study two investigated the neural networks activated during anxious apprehension of unpleasant body sensations. Symptom reports and startle response data were collected during a learning session after which participants high and low in fear of somatic symptoms attended a fMRI session anticipating threat (hyperventilation – learned to provoke unpleasant symptoms) or safety (normal breathing). Study three examined the actual exposure to internal body symptoms, investigating symptoms reports, autonomic arousal, and the startle eyeblink response during guided breathing (hyperventilation and, as a non-provocative comparison condition, normoventilation) and during recovery. And finally, study four addressed changes in the defensive mobilization during repeated interoceptive exposure via a hyperventilation procedure. High and low anxiety sensitive persons went through two guided hyperventilation and normoventilation procedures that were spaced one week apart while symptom reports, breathing parameters, and startle response magnitudes were measured.
In study one it was demonstrated that the anticipation of exteroceptive threat led to a defensive and autonomic mobilization in high and low anxiety sensitive individuals, while during interoceptive threat only high anxiety sensitive participants were characterized by a potentiated startle response and autonomic activation. Imaging data of study two revealed that 1) during anticipation of hyperventilation all participants were characterized by an increased activation of a fear network consisting of anterior insula/ orbitofrontal cortex and rostral parts of the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex/ dorsomedial prefrontal cortex, 2) high fear individuals showed higher anxious apprehension than low fear controls during the entire context (safe and threat conditions), indexed by an overall stronger activation of the described network, and 3) while low fear controls learned that (undisclosed to all participants) in the fMRI scanner the threat cue was not followed by an unpleasant hyperventilation task, high fear participants continued to show stronger fear network activation to this cue. In study three it was demonstrated, that the hyperventilation procedure led to a marked increase in somatic symptoms and to autonomic arousal. While high and low anxiety sensitive groups did not differ during hyperventilation, in the early recovery only high anxiety sensitive individuals showed defensive mobilization, indicated by potentiated startle response magnitudes, and increased autonomic arousal after hyperventilation as compared to after normoventilation. Substantiating these findings, in study four all participants reported more symptoms during hyperventilation than during normoventilation, in both sessions. Nevertheless, only high anxiety sensitive participants displayed a potentiation of startle response magnitudes after the first hyper- vs. normoventilation. One week later, when the exercise was repeated this potentiation was no longer present and thus both groups no longer differed in their defensive mobilization. Even more, the number of reported baseline symptoms decreased from session one to session two in the high-AS group. While high anxiety sensitive persons reported increased baseline anxiety symptoms in session one, groups did not anymore differ in session two.
These data indicate that the standardized hyperventilation procedure is a valid paradigm to induce somatic symptoms. Moreover, it induces anxious apprehension especially in persons highly fearful of internal body symptoms. The repetition of interoceptive exposure, however, reduces associated fear in highly fearful individuals. Thus, this paradigm might provide an innovative method to study anxious apprehension and also treatment effects in patients with panic disorder. The present findings are integrated and discussed in the light of the current literature.
Do We Need to Rethink the Epidemiology and Healthcare Utilization of Parkinson's Disease in Germany?
(2018)
Epidemiological aspects of Parkinson's disease (PD), co-occurring diseases and medical healthcare utilization of PD patients are still largely elusive. Based on claims data of 3.7 million statutory insurance members in Germany in 2015 the prevalence and incidence of PD was determined. PD cases had at least one main hospital discharge diagnosis of PD, or one physician diagnosis confirmed by a subsequent or independent diagnosis or by PD medication in 2015. Prevalence of (co-)occurring diseases, mortality, and healthcare measures in PD cases and matched controls were compared. In 2015, 21,714 prevalent PD cases (standardized prevalence: 511.4/100,000 persons) and 3,541 incident PD cases (standardized incidence: 84.1/100,000 persons) were identified. Prevalence of several (co-)occurring diseases/complications, e.g., dementia (PD/controls: 39/13%), depression (45/22%), bladder dysfunction (46/22%), and diabetes (35/31%), as well as mortality (10.7/5.8%) differed between PD cases and controls. The annual healthcare utilization was increased in PD cases compared to controls, e.g., regarding mean ± SD physician contacts (15.2 ± 7.6/12.2 ± 7.3), hospitalizations (1.3 ± 1.8/0.7 ± 1.4), drug prescriptions (overall: 37.7 ± 24.2/21.7 ± 19.6; anti-PD medication: 7.4 ± 7.4/0.1 ± 0.7), assistive/therapeutic devices (47/30%), and therapeutic remedies (57/16%). The standardized prevalence and incidence of PD in Germany as well as mortality in PD may be substantially higher than reported previously. While frequently diagnosed with co-occurring diseases/complications, such as dementia, depression, bladder dysfunction and diabetes, the degree of healthcare utilization shows large variability between PD patients. These findings encourage a rethinking of the epidemiology and healthcare utilization in PD, at least in Germany. Longitudinal studies of insurance claims data should further investigate the individual and epidemiological progression and healthcare demands in PD.
Two decades of research indicate that visual processing is typically enhanced for items that are in the space near the hands (near-hand space). Enhanced attention and cognitive control have been thought to be responsible for the observed effects, amongst others. As accumulating experimental evidence and recent theories of dual-tasking suggest an involvement of cognitive control and attentional processes during dual tasking, dual-task performance may be modulated in the near-hand space. Therefore, we performed a series of three experiments that aimed to test if the near-hand space affects the shift between task-component processing in two visual-manual tasks. We applied a Psychological Refractory Period Paradigm (PRP) with varying stimulus-onset asynchrony (SOA) and manipulated stimulus-hand proximity by placing hands either on the side of a computer screen (near-hand condition) or on the lap (far-hand condition). In Experiment 1, Task 1 was a number categorization task (odd vs. even) and Task 2 was a letter categorization task (vowel vs. consonant). Stimulus presentation was spatially segregated with Stimulus 1 presented on the right side of the screen, appearing first and then Stimulus 2, presented on the left side of the screen, appearing second. In Experiment 2, we replaced Task 2 with a color categorization task (orange vs. blue). In Experiment 3, Stimulus 1 and Stimulus 2 were centrally presented as a single bivalent stimulus. The classic PRP effect was shown in all three experiments, with Task 2 performance declining at short SOA while Task 1 performance being relatively unaffected by task-overlap. In none of the three experiments did stimulus-hand proximity affect the size of the PRP effect. Our results indicate that the switching operation between two tasks in the PRP paradigm is neither optimized nor disturbed by being processed in near-hand space.
Ductal Mucus Obstruction and Reduced Fluid Secretion Are Early Defects in Chronic Pancreatitis
(2018)
Objective: Defective mucus production in the pancreas may be an important factor in the initiation and progression of chronic pancreatitis (CP), therefore we aimed to (i) investigate the qualitative and quantitative changes of mucus both in human CP and in an experimental pancreatitis model and (ii) to correlate the mucus phenotype with epithelial ion transport function.
Design: Utilizing human tissue samples and a murine model of cerulein induced CP we measured pancreatic ductal mucus content by morphometric analysis and the relative expression of different mucins in health and disease. Pancreatic fluid secretion in CP model was measured in vivo by magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) and in vitro on cultured pancreatic ducts. Time-changes of ductal secretory function were correlated to those of the mucin production.
Results: We demonstrate increased mucus content in the small pancreatic ducts in CP. Secretory mucins MUC6 and MUC5B were upregulated in human, Muc6 in mouse CP. In vivo and in vitro fluid secretion was decreased in cerulein-induced CP. Analysis of time-course changes showed that impaired ductal ion transport is paralleled by increased Muc6 expression.
Conclusion: Mucus accumulation in the small ducts is a combined effect of mucus hypersecretion and epithelial fluid secretion defect, which may lead to ductal obstruction. These results suggest that imbalance of mucus homeostasis may have an important role in the early-phase development of CP, which may have novel diagnostic and therapeutic implications.
Optomechanical (om) systems are characterized by their nonlinear light-matter interaction. This is responsible for unique dynamic properties and allows the detection of a variety of classical and quantum mechanical phenomena on a microscopic as well as on a macroscopic scale. In this work we have studied the dynamic behavior of two laser-driven om systems, the single om cell ("cavity optomechanics / membrane-in-the-middle setup") and a two-dimensional hexagonal array of these cells ("om graphene"). The first case was motivated by the possibility to detect the transition from quantum mechanics to classical mechanics directly on the basis of the dynamic behavior. For this we focus on multistability effects of the optical and mechanical degrees of freedom, that are modeled by harmonic oscillators. Our description is based on the quantum optical master equation, which takes into account the environmental interaction assuming a vanishing temperature. As a consequence of decoherence, the dynamics occur near the semiclassical limit, i.e. it is characterized by quantum fluctuations. The quantum-to-classical transition is realized formally by rescaling the equations of motion. In the classical limit, quantum fluctuations disappear and the mean field equations were evaluated by analytical and numerical methods. We found that classical multistability is characterized by stationary signatures on the route to chaos, as well as by the coexistence of single-periodic orbits for the mechanical degree of freedom. The latter point was extensively evaluated by means of a self-consistent approach. For the dynamics in the quantum regime quantum fluctuations cannot be neglected. For this purpose, the master equation was solved by means of a numerical implementation of the Quantum State Diffusion (QSD) method. Based on Wigner and autocorrelation functions, we were able to show that quantum multistability is a dynamic effect: chaotic dynamics is suppressed and there is a time-dependent distribution of the phase space volume on classical simple-periodic orbits. The results can be interpreted within a semiclassical picture, which makes use of the single QSD quantum trajectory. Accordingly, the quantum-classical transition is explained as a time-scale effect, which is determined by tunneling probabilities in an effective mean-field potential. The subject of the second part of the work is the transport of low-energy Dirac quasiparticles in om graphene, propagating as light and sound waves. For this purpose, we investigated the scattering of a plane light wave by laser-induced photon-phonon coupling planar and circular barriers. The starting point is the om Dirac equation, which results from the continuum approximation of the Hamiltonian description of the two-dimensional array near the semiclassical limit. This work was motivated by the rich and interesting relativistic transport and tunneling phenomena found for electrons in graphene, which now appear in a new way. The reason is the presence of the new spin degree of freedom, which distinguishes the optical and mechanical excitations. In this spin space, the om interaction can be understood as a potential, which in our analysis consists of a time-independent and a time-dependent sinusoidal part. For the first case of a static barrier, the transport is elastic and is characterized by stationary scattering signatures. After solving the scattering problem via continuity conditions we were able to identify different scattering regimes depending on scattering parameters. In addition to relativistic phenomena such as Klein tunneling, simple parameter variation allows to use the barrier as a resonant light-sound interconverter and angle-dependent emitter. For the oscillating barrier, the transport is inelastic and is characterized by dynamic scattering signatures. To solve the time-periodic scattering problem, we have applied the Floquet theory for an effective two-level system. As a result of the barrier oscillation, photons and phonons can get and give away energy portions in the form of integer multiples of the oscillation frequency. The interference of short (classical) and long-wave (quantum) components leads to mixing of the scattering regimes. This allows to use the barrier as a time-periodic light-sound interconverter with interesting radiation characteristics. In addition, we have argued that the oscillating barrier provides the necessary energetic conditions for detecting zitterbewegung.
: An enhanced indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase 1 (IDO1) activity is associated with an increased
mortality risk in sepsis patients. Thus, the preventive inhibition of IDO1 activity may be
a promising strategy to attenuate the severity of septic shock. 1-methyltryptophan (1-MT)
is currently in the interest of research due to its potential inhibitory effects on IDO1 and
immunomodulatory properties. The present study aims to investigate the protective and
immunomodulatory effects of 1-methyltryptophan against endotoxin-induced shock in a porcine
in vivo model. Effects of 1-MT were determined on lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced tryptophan
(TRP) degradation, immune response and sickness behaviour. 1-MT increased TRP and its metabolite
kynurenic acid (KYNA) in plasma and tissues, suppressed the LPS-induced maturation of neutrophils
and increased inactivity of the animals. 1-MT did not inhibit the LPS-induced degradation of TRP
to kynurenine (KYN)—a marker for IDO1 activity—although the increase in KYNA indicates that
degradation to one branch of the KYN pathway is facilitated. In conclusion, our findings provide
no evidence for IDO1 inhibition but reveal the side effects of 1-MT that may result from the proven
interference of KYNA and 1-MT with aryl hydrocarbon receptor signalling. These effects should be
considered for therapeutic applications of 1-MT.
Recent research suggests that the P3b may be closely related to the activation of the locus coeruleus-norepinephrine (LC-NE) system. To further study the potential association, we applied a novel technique, the non-invasive transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation (tVNS), which is speculated to increase noradrenaline levels. Using a within-subject cross-over design, 20 healthy participants received continuous tVNS and sham stimulation on two consecutive days (stimulation counterbalanced across participants) while performing a visual oddball task. During stimulation, oval non-targets (standard), normal-head (easy) and rotated-head (difficult) targets, as well as novel stimuli (scenes) were presented. As an indirect marker of noradrenergic activation we also collected salivary alpha-amylase (sAA) before and after stimulation. Results showed larger P3b amplitudes for target, relative to standard stimuli, irrespective of stimulation condition. Exploratory post hoc analyses, however, revealed that, in comparison to standard stimuli, easy (but not difficult) targets produced larger P3b (but not P3a) amplitudes during active tVNS, compared to sham stimulation. For sAA levels, although main analyses did not show differential effects of stimulation, direct testing revealed that tVNS (but not sham stimulation) increased sAA levels after stimulation. Additionally, larger differences between tVNS and sham stimulation in P3b magnitudes for easy targets were associated with larger increase in sAA levels after tVNS, but not after sham stimulation. Despite preliminary evidence for a modulatory influence of tVNS on the P3b, which may be partly mediated by activation of the noradrenergic system, additional research in this field is clearly warranted. Future studies need to clarify whether tVNS also facilitates other processes, such as learning and memory, and whether tVNS can be used as therapeutic tool.
Objective: To evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of brivaracetam (BRV) in a severely drug refractory cohort of patients with epileptic encephalopathies (EE).
Method: A multicenter, retrospective cohort study recruiting all patients treated with EE who began treatment with BRV in an enrolling epilepsy center between 2016 and 2017.
Results: Forty-four patients (27 male [61%], mean age 29 years, range 6 to 62) were treated with BRV. The retention rate was 65% at 3 months, 52% at 6 months and 41% at 12 months. A mean retention time of 5 months resulted in a cumulative exposure to BRV of 310 months. Three patients were seizure free during the baseline. At 3 months, 20 (45%, 20/44 as per intention-to-treat analysis considering all patients that started BRV including three who were seizure free during baseline) were either seizure free (n = 4; 9%, three of them already seizure-free at baseline) or reported at least 25% (n = 4; 9%) or 50% (n = 12; 27%) reduction in seizures. An increase in seizure frequency was reported in two (5%) patients, while there was no change in the seizure frequency of the other patients. A 50% long-term responder rate was apparent in 19 patients (43%), with two (5%) free from seizures for more than six months and in nine patients (20%, with one [2 %] free from seizures) for more than 12 months. Treatment-emergent adverse events were predominantly of psychobehavioural nature and were observed in 16%.
Significance: In this retrospective analysis the rate of patients with a 50% seizure reduction under BRV proofed to be similar to those seen in regulatory trials for focal epilepsies. BRV appears to be safe and relatively well tolerated in EE and might be considered in patients with psychobehavioral adverse events while on levetiracetam.
Iodine deficiency disorders (IDD) result from insufficient iodine intake, and may lead to many adverse effects on growth, development and thyroid diseases in humans.
Pakistan is a country with history of iodine deficiency.
Before reunification both parts of Germany were iodine deficient. In the Eastern part, however, due to mandatory iodine prophylaxis adaptation in 1983, the iodine status of the population improved from moderate to mild iodine deficiency. After the reunification of Germany in 1989 “voluntary principle” was adopted leading again to a decrease in iodine intake. Germany and Pakistan present different socioeconomics, cultural values and adaptations to the IDD eradication but have resemblance in history of iodine deficiency. In the recent years Germany has improved in IDD eradication more than Pakistan. The purpose of this research was to study the regional influence on iodine nutritional status of pregnant women in Pakistan and to monitor the effectiveness of the iodine fortification programme in the North-East German population.
Pregnant women data was obtained from randomly selected (public and private) prenatal clinics in five districts of the KPK province of Pakistan. Women visited there for their routine checkup between March and September 2012. Data were obtained from almost 250 pregnant women from each district reaching to a total of 1260 in all five districts.
The SHIP project consists of two population-based cohorts, for which only individuals with German citizenship and main residency in the study area were recruited. In the first SHIP cohort; SHIP-0, individuals aged 20-79 years were selected from population registries by a two-stage cluster sampling method. The net sample (without migrated or deceased persons) comprised 6265 eligible subjects, of which 4308 (response 68.8%) participated between 1997 and 2001. A separate stratified random sample of 8826 adults aged 20-79 years was drawn for SHIP-Trend, of which 4420 subjects participated between 2008 and 2012 (response 50.1%) in SHIP-Trend-0.
All the pregnant women were asked to complete a short interview questionnaire containing the information related to sources and reasons for intake and non-intake of iodized salt. The questionnaire also comprised questions related to knowledge of iodized salt nutrition. Information on the number of previous pregnancies and/or abortions (fetal loss due to various reasons, not including voluntary termination of pregnancy) was also obtained. The gestational age of the pregnant women was determined from the first day of the last regular menstrual period with gestational ages of ≤14.9, 28.9, and ≥29 weeks comprising the first, second, and third trimesters of pregnancy, respectively. For goiter assessment in pregnant women the WHO/UNICEF/IGN recommended palpation method was used. UIC was measured using a modification of the Sandell-Kolthoff reaction with spectrophotometric detection. Evaluation of group iodine status was based on median UIC categories defined by the WHO/IGN. These are: recommended – median 150-249 μg/L; mild iodine deficiency – median <150 μg/L.
For the analysis of monitoring trends of thyroid diseases in SHIP, diagnosed thyroid disorders were assessed by computer-assisted personal interviews. Medication data were obtained online using the IDOM program (online drug-database leaded medication assessment) and classified according to the Anatomical-Therapeutic-Chemical (ATC) classification system.In SHIP population goiter assessment was based on thyroid volume determined with ultrasonography. Goiter was defined as a thyroid volume exceeding 18 mL in women and 25 mL in men. Urinary iodine concentrations were measured from spot urine samples by a photometric procedure. Urinary creatinine concentrations were determined with the Jaffé method. Evaluation of group iodine status was based on median UIC categories defined by the WHO/IGN. The iodine/creatinine ratio was calculated by dividing urinary iodine by urinary creatinine concentrations. Serum TSH, fT3, fT4 levels in SHIP study were measured by an immunochemiluminescent procedure. A method comparison between the two TSH laboratory methods showed only negligible differences. High and low serum TSH levels were based on the reference range established from data for SHIP-0 (0.25 mIU/L - 2.12 mIU/L) and SHIP-TREND-0 (0.49 mIU/L - 3.29 mIU/L) respectively (21,22). Anti-TPO Abs were measured by an enzyme immunoassay in the whole SHIP study. The anti-TPO Abs status was defined as follows: normal < 60 IU/ml in men and < 100 IU/ml in women; increased > 60 IU/ml in men and > 100 IU/ml in women; positive: > 200 IU/ml in both sexes.
Thyroid ultrasonography was performed in SHIP-0 using an ultrasound VST-Gateway with a 5 MHz linear array transducer. In SHIP-Trend-0 ultrasonography was performed with a portable device using a 13-MHz linear array transducer. In both studies intra- and inter-observer reliabilities were assessed before the start of the study and semi-annually during the study. For thyroid volume all inter-observer and inter-device variabilities showed mean differences (±2 SD)of < 5% (<25%). Thyroid volume was calculated as length x width x depth x 0.479 (ml) for each lobe (26). The normal thyroid echo pattern was classified as homogeneous. A homogeneous echo pattern with reduced echogenicity was defined as hypoechogenic. Nodular changes exceeding 10 mm in diameter were defined as thyroid nodules.
Multivariable logistic regression analysis adjusting for age was used to regress the outcome measures (knowledge about IDD, iodized salt intake, UIC <150mIU/L and goiter prevalence) on regional influences (as exposure) in each specific district. These results are presented as odd ratios and their 95% confidence interval.
For the analysis in SHIP, all analyses were standardized by base-weights to account for different sampling probabilities. In SHIP-Trend-0, additionally, inverse probability weights for study participation were calculated, which were multiplied with the base-weights. Differences in median levels between SHIP-0 and SHIP-Trend-0 were tested by median regression models; prevalence differences between SHIP-0 and SHIP-Trend-0 were tested by Poisson regression models.
The majority of pregnant women (88.0%) had no knowledge about IDD. A very high (79%) percentage of pregnant women were not taking iodized salt, out of which 36.6% reported that iodized salt would negatively affect reproduction and for 17.0%, it was too expensive. Iodized salt intake in pregnant women was high in the big cities (Peshawar, Nowshehra) and in the urban areas (27.0%)
In 41.3% of the pregnant women, we observed a UIC of >150mIU/L. The median UIC level for the pregnant women was 131µg/L. The total goiter prevalence in pregnant women was 25.5%. The prevalence of UIC <150mIU/L in pregnant women did not differ between rural and urban areas. The results based on logistic regression analysis shows that the prevalence on knowledge about IDD, iodized salt intake, UIC <150mIU/L, and goiter did not differ in pregnant women between urban and rural areas. In district Lakki Marwat except, the pregnant women from urban residence had higher odds of having knowledge on IDD and iodized salt intake than their rural counterparts.
The prevalence of diagnosed thyroid disorders increased from 7.6% [CI 6.9-8.5] in SHIP-0 to 18.9% [CI 17.6-20.1] in SHIP-Trend-0. Likewise, the prevalence of thyroid medication intake increased from 6.2% [CI 5.5-7.0] to 11.1% [CI 10.1-12.2]. The median urinary iodine excretion levels decreased significantly, which was more pronounced in females than in males. The median iodine-to-creatinine ratio declined in all sex- and age-groups with stronger decrease in females than in males. The prevalence of median urinary iodine excretion levels <100µg/L increased between SHIP-0 and SHIP-Trend-0. Median serum TSH levels increased significantly between SHIP-0 and SHIP-Trend-0, resulting in a right shift of the serum TSH level distribution. The prevalence of high serum TSH levels remained almost stable between SHIP-0 and SHIP-Trend-0. Likewise, the prevalence of low TSH remained almost stable between SHIP-0 and SHIP-Trend-0. The prevalence of increased anti-TPO Abs and positive anti-TPO Abs decreased from SHIP-0 to SHIP-Trend-0 in the whole study population. The prevalence of hypoechogenic thyroid pattern decreased from SHIP-0 to SHIP-Trend-0. The median thyroid volume remained similar between SHIP-0 and SHIP-Trend-0 in the whole study population. Goiter prevalence decreased significantly; more pronounced in males than in females, while the prevalence of thyroid nodules increased between SHIP-0 and SHIP-Trend-0.
In pregnant women in Pakistan due to insufficient awareness campaigns and low literacy ratio in rural areas urinary iodine excretion levels indicate a stable iodine supply, which is still not sufficient. Our results show that rural/urban disparity is affecting the IDD prevention program in rural districts, but not in general. The SHIP data indicate that the improved iodine supply over the past two decades in Germany is paralleled by a reduction in prevalence of IDDs, while no increase was observed in markers of autoimmune thyroid disorders arguing for an optimal iodine supply of the general adult population in Northeast Germany. The increase in prevalence of diagnosed thyroid disorders and the intake of thyroid medication might be because of inappropriate therapeutical decisions which should be made with caution, based on regional TSH reference ranges, its prognostic value, and compliance with treatment.