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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

The roles of Pbx and Meis TALE-class homeodomain transcription factors in vertebrate neural patterning

Erickson, Timothy Unknown Date
No description available.
12

Understanding the Role of Prdm12b in Zebrafish Development

Yildiz, Ozge 07 March 2019 (has links)
Function of the adult nervous system relies on the appropriate establishment of neural circuits during embryogenesis. In vertebrates, the neurons that make up motor circuits form in distinct domains along the dorsoventral (DV) axis of the neural tube. Each domain is characterized by a unique combination of transcription factors (TFs) that promote a specific fate, while repressing the fates of adjacent domains. The prdm12 TF is required for the expression of eng1b and the generation of V1 interneurons in the p1 domain, but the details of its function remain unclear. We used CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing technology to generate the first germline mutants for the prdm12 gene and used this resource, together with classical luciferase reporter assays and co-immunoprecipitation experiments, to study prdm12b function in zebrafish. We also generated germline mutants for bhlhe22 and nkx6.1 to examine how these TFs act with prdm12b to control p1 formation. We find that prdm12b mutants lack eng1b expression in the p1 domain and also possess an abnormal Mauthner cell-dependent escape response. Using cell culture-based luciferase reporter assays, we demonstrate that Prdm12b acts as transcriptional repressor, most likely by recruiting EHMT2/G9a. We also show that the Bhlhe22 TF binds to the Prdm12b zinc finger domain to form a Bhlhe22:Prdm12b complex. However, bhlhe22 mutants display normal eng1b expression in the p1 domain. While prdm12 has been proposed to promote p1 fates by repressing expression of the nkx6.1 TF, we do not observe an expansion of the nkx6.1 domain upon loss of prdm12b function, nor is eng1b expression restored upon simultaneous loss of prdm12b and nkx6.1. We conclude that prdm12b germline mutations produce a phenotype that is indistinguishable from that of morpholino-mediated loss of prdm12 function. In terms of prdm12b function, our results indicate that Prdm12b acts as transcriptional repressor and interacts with both EHMT2/G9a and Bhlhe22. However, bhlhe22 function is not required for eng1b expression in vivo, perhaps indicating that other bhlh genes can compensate for its loss during embryogenesis. Lastly, we do not find evidence for nkx6.1 and prdm12b acting as a repressive pair in the formation of the p1 domain – suggesting that prdm12b is not solely required to repress non-p1 fates, but is also needed to promote p1 fates.
13

Mechanism of cell adhesion at the midbrain-hindbrain neural plate in the teleost Danio rerio

Kadner, Diana 30 July 2009 (has links) (PDF)
The correct development of multicellular organisms is tightly regulated by intrinsic and extrinsic factors at specific time points. Disturbance on any level of these multiple processes may result in drastic phenotypes or eventually death of the organism. The midbrain-hindbrain boundary (also termed isthmic organizer) is a region of high interest as well in early as also in later development. The isthmic region carries organizer identity by the expression and subsequent release of FGF8. False patterning events of this region in early developmental stages would therefore display dramatic results over time. As it has been shown that the midbrain-hindbrain boundary (mhb) in the zebrafish is a compartment (or lineage restriction) boundary I tried to understand the underlying molecular mechanism for its correct establishment. In this work I focused both on embryological, molecular and genetic means to characterize involved molecules and mechanisms. In the first part of the thesis I followed in vivo cell transplantation assays, having started with an unbiased one. Cells of either side the mhb were challenged with this boundary by bringing them into direct cell contact with their ectopic counterpart. In a biased approach, cells overexpressing mRNA of specific candidate genes were transplanted and their clonal distribution in host embryos was analyzed. In the second part of the thesis I started interfering with specific candidate genes by transiently knocking down their protein translation. The adhesion molecules of the Eph/ephrin class had been shown to restrict cell mixing and thereby creating compartment boundaries in other tissues, such as the hindbrain, in the zebrafish and other organisms. Additionally, we generated several stable genetic mutant lines in cooperation with the Tilling facility at the Max-Planck-Institute. The only acquired potential null mutant ephrinB2bhu2971 was analyzed and characterized further. I observed that a knock down or knock out of only one of the ephrinB2 ligands does not seem to be sufficient for a loss of compartment boundary formation. The combinatory approach of blocking translation of EphrinB2a in ephrinB2bhu2971 mutants gave very complex and interesting phenotypes, which need to be investigated further.
14

The release of histone proteins from cells via extracellular vesicles

Muthukrishnan, Uma January 2018 (has links)
Histones are chromatin-associated proteins localized to the nucleus. However, extracellular histones are present in biofluids from healthy individuals and become elevated under disease conditions, such as neurodegeneration and cancer. Hence, extracellular histones may have important biological functions in healthy and diseased states, which are not understood. Histones have been reported in the proteomes of extracellular vesicles (EVs), including microvesicles and exosomes. The main aim of this thesis was to determine whether or not extracellular histones are secreted via EVs/exosomes. In an initial study (Paper I), I optimized methods for human embryonic kidney (HEK293) cell culture, transfection and protein detection using western blotting. In the main study (Paper II), I used oligodendrocyte cell lines (rat OLN-93 and mouse Oli-neu) to investigate the localization of histones to EVs. Western blotting of EVs purified from OLN-93 cell-conditioned media confirmed the presence of linker and core histones in them. Immunolocalization and transmission electron microscopy confirmed that histones are localized to EVs, as well as intraluminal vesicles (ILVs) within multivesicular bodies (MVBs). This suggests that histones are secreted via the MVB/exosome pathway. Localization of histones in EVs was investigated by biochemical/proteolytic degradation and purification followed by western blotting. Surprisingly, histones were associated with the membrane but not the luminal fraction. Overexpression of tagged histones in HEK293 cells confirmed their conserved, membrane localization. OLN-93 cell EVs contained both double stranded and single stranded DNA but nuclease and protease digestion showed that the association of histones and DNA with EVs was not interdependent. The abundance of histones in EVs was not affected by differentiation in Oli-neu cells. However, histone release was upregulated as an early response to cellular stress in OLN-93 cells and occurred before the release of markers of stress including heat shock proteins. Interestingly, a notable upregulation in secretion of small diameter (50-100 nm) EVs was observed following heat stress, suggesting that a sub-population of vesicles may be involved specifically in histone secretion in response to stress. Proteomic analyses identified the downregulation of endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT) as a possible mechanism underlying increased histone secretion. In Paper III, I developed methods to quantify extracellular histone proteins in human ascites samples from ovarian cancer patients.   In summary, we show for the first time that membrane-associated histones are secreted via the MVB/exosome pathway. We demonstrate a novel pathway for extracellular histone release that may have a role in both health and disease.
15

Mechanism of cell adhesion at the midbrain-hindbrain neural plate in the teleost Danio rerio

Kadner, Diana 09 June 2009 (has links)
The correct development of multicellular organisms is tightly regulated by intrinsic and extrinsic factors at specific time points. Disturbance on any level of these multiple processes may result in drastic phenotypes or eventually death of the organism. The midbrain-hindbrain boundary (also termed isthmic organizer) is a region of high interest as well in early as also in later development. The isthmic region carries organizer identity by the expression and subsequent release of FGF8. False patterning events of this region in early developmental stages would therefore display dramatic results over time. As it has been shown that the midbrain-hindbrain boundary (mhb) in the zebrafish is a compartment (or lineage restriction) boundary I tried to understand the underlying molecular mechanism for its correct establishment. In this work I focused both on embryological, molecular and genetic means to characterize involved molecules and mechanisms. In the first part of the thesis I followed in vivo cell transplantation assays, having started with an unbiased one. Cells of either side the mhb were challenged with this boundary by bringing them into direct cell contact with their ectopic counterpart. In a biased approach, cells overexpressing mRNA of specific candidate genes were transplanted and their clonal distribution in host embryos was analyzed. In the second part of the thesis I started interfering with specific candidate genes by transiently knocking down their protein translation. The adhesion molecules of the Eph/ephrin class had been shown to restrict cell mixing and thereby creating compartment boundaries in other tissues, such as the hindbrain, in the zebrafish and other organisms. Additionally, we generated several stable genetic mutant lines in cooperation with the Tilling facility at the Max-Planck-Institute. The only acquired potential null mutant ephrinB2bhu2971 was analyzed and characterized further. I observed that a knock down or knock out of only one of the ephrinB2 ligands does not seem to be sufficient for a loss of compartment boundary formation. The combinatory approach of blocking translation of EphrinB2a in ephrinB2bhu2971 mutants gave very complex and interesting phenotypes, which need to be investigated further.
16

Analysis of mouse kreisler mutants reveals new roles of hindbrain-derived signals in the establishment of the otic neurogenic domain

Vázquez Echeverría, Citlali 18 December 2008 (has links)
The inner ear, the sensory organ responsible for hearing and balance, contains specialized sensory and non-sensory epithelia arranged in a highly complex threedimensional structure. To achieve this complexity, a tight coordination between morphogenesis and cell fate specification is essential during otic development. Tisúes surrounding the otic primordium, and more particularly the adjacent segmented hindbrain, have been implicated in specifying structures along the anteroposterior and dorsoventral axes of the inner ear. In this work we have first characterized the generation and axial specification of the otic neurogenic domain, and second, we have investigated the effects of the mutation of kreisler/MafB -a gene transiently expressed in the rhombomeres 5 and 6 of the developing hindbrain- in early otic patterning and cell specification. We show that kr/kr embryos display an expansion of the otic neurogenic domain, due to defects in otic patterning. Although many reports have pointed to the role of FGF3 in otic regionalization, we provide evidence that FGF3 is not sufficient to govern this process. Neither Krox20 nor Fgf3 null mutant embryos, in which Fgf3 is either downregulated or absent in r5 and r6, present ectopic otic neuroblasts in the otic primordium. However, Fgf3-/-Fgf10-/- double mutants show a phenotype very similar to kr/kr embryos: they present ectopic neuroblasts along the AP and DV otic axes. Finally, and remarkably, partial rescue of the kr/kr phenotype is obtained when Fgf3 or Fgf10 are ectopically expressed in the hindbrain of kr/kr embryos. These results highlight a compensatory mechanism between FGFs, and the importance of hindbrain-derived signals in instructing otic patterning and the establishment of the neurogenic domain.
17

The role of pou2/spiel-ohne-grenzen (spg) in brain and endoderm development of the zebrafish, Danio rerio

Reim, Gerlinde 04 August 2003 (has links) (PDF)
The central theme of development, how cells are organized into functional structures and assembled into whole organisms, is addressed by developmental biology. One important feature of embryonic development is pattern formation, which is the generation of a particular arrangement of cells in three-dimensional space at a given point of time. Central to this work is the model system of the zebrafish, Danio rerio. The aim of the first part of this study was to try to understand how a distinct part of the embryonic brain called midbrain-hindbrain boundary (MHB), a region that acts as an organizer for the adjacent brain regions, is established in vertebrates. spiel-ohne-grenzen (spg) is one mutant which interferes with MHB development. Here, I addressed the role of pou2 in brain development by molecular, phenotypical and functional analysis. By genetic complementation and mapping I could elucidate the molecular nature of this mutant and found that the pou2 gene encoding the POU domain transcription factor is affected in spg mutant embryos. By chromosomal syntenic conservation, phylogenetic sequence comparison, and expression and functional data I imply that pou2 is the orthologue of the mammalian Oct4 (Pou5F1) gene. I find by detailed expression and transplantation analysis that pou2 is cell autonomously required within the neuroectoderm to activate genes of the MHB and hindbrain primordium, like pax2.1, wnt1, gbx2 or krox20. By gain-of-function experiments I demonstrate that pou2 synergizes with Fgf8 signaling in order to activate particularly the hindbrain primordium. Since pou2 is already provided to the embryo by the mother, I generated embryos which lack maternal and zygotic pou2 function (MZspg) to reveal a possible earlier than neuroectodermal role of pou2. In the second part of this work I demonstrate that pou2 is a key factor controlling endoderm differentiation. By expression and gain-of-function analysis I suggest a cell autonomous function for Pou2 in the first step of endodermal differentiation. By gain-of-function experiments involving the gene encoding the HMG transcription factor Casanova (Cas) I show that both Cas and Pou2 are necessary to activate expression of the endodermal differentiation marker sox17 in a mutually dependent way, and that the ability of Cas to ectopically induce sox17 strictly requires Pou2. I conclude that both maternal and zygotic pou2 function is necessary for commitment of endodermal progenitor cells to differentiate into endodermal precursor cells.
18

Neuromeric organization of the midbrain-hindbrain boundary region in zebrafish

Langenberg, Tobias 14 November 2004 (has links) (PDF)
The neuromeric concept of brain formation has become a well-established model to explain how order is created in the developing vertebrate central nervous system. The most important feature of neuromeres is their compartmentalization on the cellular level: Each neuromere comprises a lineage-restricted population of cells that does not intermingle with cells from neighboring compartments. The units of the vertebrate hindbrain, the rhombomeres, serve as the best-studied examples of neuromeres. Here, the lineage restriction mechanism has been found to function on the basis of differentially expressed adhesion molecules. To date, hard evidence for the existence of other lineage restricted regions in more anterior parts of the brain is still scarce. The focus of this study is the midbrain-hindbrain boundary (mhb) region, where the juxtaposition of the mesencephalon and metencephalon gives rise to a signaling center, termed the midbrain-hindbrain or isthmic organizer. Evidence for lineage restriction boundaries in the mhb region is still controversial, with some very recent studies supporting the existence of a lineage boundary between the mesencephalon and metencephalon and others rejecting this. Here, I present data strongly supporting the existence of a compartment boundary between the posterior midbrain and anterior hindbrain territory. I base this proposition on cell-tracing experiments with single cell resolution. By connecting the traces to a molecular midbrain marker, I establish a link between cell fate and behavior. In the second part, I present a novel tissue explant method for the zebrafish that has the potential to serve numerous developmental studies, especially imaging of so far inaccessible regions of the embryo.
19

Neuromeric organization of the midbrain-hindbrain boundary region in zebrafish

Langenberg, Tobias 10 December 2004 (has links)
The neuromeric concept of brain formation has become a well-established model to explain how order is created in the developing vertebrate central nervous system. The most important feature of neuromeres is their compartmentalization on the cellular level: Each neuromere comprises a lineage-restricted population of cells that does not intermingle with cells from neighboring compartments. The units of the vertebrate hindbrain, the rhombomeres, serve as the best-studied examples of neuromeres. Here, the lineage restriction mechanism has been found to function on the basis of differentially expressed adhesion molecules. To date, hard evidence for the existence of other lineage restricted regions in more anterior parts of the brain is still scarce. The focus of this study is the midbrain-hindbrain boundary (mhb) region, where the juxtaposition of the mesencephalon and metencephalon gives rise to a signaling center, termed the midbrain-hindbrain or isthmic organizer. Evidence for lineage restriction boundaries in the mhb region is still controversial, with some very recent studies supporting the existence of a lineage boundary between the mesencephalon and metencephalon and others rejecting this. Here, I present data strongly supporting the existence of a compartment boundary between the posterior midbrain and anterior hindbrain territory. I base this proposition on cell-tracing experiments with single cell resolution. By connecting the traces to a molecular midbrain marker, I establish a link between cell fate and behavior. In the second part, I present a novel tissue explant method for the zebrafish that has the potential to serve numerous developmental studies, especially imaging of so far inaccessible regions of the embryo.
20

Patterning of the embryonic vertebrate Brain in Response to Fibroblast Growth Factor Signaling / Fgf-abhängige Musterbildungsprozesse in der embryonalen Entwicklung des Wirbeltiergehirns

Raible, Florian 23 June 2003 (has links) (PDF)
The term "pattern formation" refers to the process by which order unfolds in development. The present thesis deals with a particular aspect of molecular pattern formation during vertebrate embryogenesis. The model system in the focus of this study is the zebrafish, Danio rerio. In the early developmental phases of the zebrafish, Fibroblast growth factors (Fgfs) are involved in the molecular patterning of various tissues, including two regions of the brain, the forebrain and the midbrain-hindbrain region, affecting cellular processes as diverse as cell proliferation, differentiation, and axonal targeting. The goal of this study was to better understand the mechanisms by which Fgf signaling regulates pattern formation and embryogenesis. I addressed this question on several levels, investigating the extent of intracellular signaling (MAPK activation) relative to sources of Fgf expression, and the transcriptional responses of cells to Fgf signaling during embryogenesis. By a macroarray analysis, I identified putative transcriptional targets of Fgf signaling in late gastrulation, providing a set of molecules that are likely to act as functional players in relaying the patterning information encoded by Fgf signals. Among those are the secreted signaling molecules Chordin and Wnt8, as well as Isthmin, a novel secreted molecule that I found capable to interfere with anterior embryonic patterning. In addition, I identified two ETS domain transcription factors, Erm and Pea3, which constitute bona fide integrators of FgfR signaling. By gain- and loss-of-function studies, I demonstrate that transcript levels of erm and pea3 are tightly regulated by Fgf signaling. Detailed analysis of the expression patterns of erm and pea3 along with other Fgf target genes also provides evidence for a differential read-out of Fgf concentration in the embryo, consistent with a role of Fgf as a vertebrate morphogen. The discovery of novel molecular components downstream of Fgf receptor activity paves a way to characterize previously unknown or underestimated developmental roles of Fgfs in the molecular patterning of the forebrain, the eye and parts of the neural crest.

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