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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.
121

Optogenetic Inhibition of the mPFC During Delay Discounting

Shelby M White (6615890) 10 June 2019 (has links)
<p> <i>Impulsivity</i>, or the tendency to act prematurely without foresight, has been linked to a diverse range of pathological conditions. Foresight refers to the ability to envision future rewards and events (i.e. prospectively sample) and has been associated with decreased impulsivity. One form of impulsivity is measured by the ability to delay gratification and is often studied in the framework of Delay Discounting (DD). DD provides the means to study impulsivity in a number of pathological conditions. However, whether impulsivity precedes the development of pathological states or results from the pathological state itself is not fully understood. This necessitates an understanding of neurobiological mechanisms contributing to decision making in both non-impulsive as well as impulsive populations of individuals. </p> <p> Animal models allow invasive techniques to be used to dissect the neurocircuitry involved in decision making. Given that the decision-making process is an ongoing process rather than an isolated event, optogenetics provide the temporal and spatial specificity necessary for evaluating brain region specific contributions to decision making in DD. In the present study, optogenetics were used to assess the contribution of the medial Prefrontal Cortex (mPFC), a brain region involved in ‘goal-directed’ behavior, in the planning of future choices (i.e. prospective plans) and subsequent measures of impulsivity in an adjusting amount DD procedure. Optogenetic inhibition of mPFC was conducted in Wistar rats during different epochs of a DD task in order to assess how mPFC affects planning behavior in a population of rat not considered to be highly impulsive. Although no direct effects on planning behavior (e.g. consistency) were observed, inhibiting mPFC after a trial has been initiated and directly before a choice was made (Epoch 2) was observed to increase measures of impulsivity in comparison to days where no optogenetic manipulation occurred in a delay-specific manner. This suggests that mPFC differentially contributes to decision making at different delays. A pattern of associations between choice latency, impulsivity, and consistency began to emerge for inactivation occurring in Epoch 2, suggesting that mPFC contributes to some aspect of planning choices during this epoch. Moreover, these results indicate that mPFC is involved in decision making in Wistar Rats. Understanding the direct role that mPFC plays in promoting choices of delayed rewards provides a neurobiological target for treatment aimed at reducing impulsivity in the clinical population.</p>
122

Signal transformation at the input and output of the Drosophila visual system

Morimoto, Mai January 2017 (has links)
A key function of the nervous system is to sample data from the external world, generate internal signals, and transform them into meaningful information that can be used to trigger behaviour. In order to gain insight into the underlying mechanism for signal transformation, the visual system has been extensively studied: partly owing to the stimulus being reliably presentable, and the anatomy being well described. The Drosophila visual system is one such system, with the added advantage of genetic tractability. In this thesis, I studied the filtering property of visual neurons at two levels, biophysical and circuit levels. The first study looks at signal transformation at the biophysical level, at the input of the visual system, in photoreceptors. Voltage-gated potassium channels counteract the depolarization caused by opening of light sensitive channels, and the heterogeneous properties of their kinetics can fine-tune the photoreceptor’s frequency response to fulfill the animal’s ecological requirements. Shaker (Kv1) and Shab (Kv2) have been identified as fast and slow inactivating components of the photoreceptor’s outward currents, however a current with intermediate kinetics (IKf) has not been molecularly identified, but had been postulated to be Shal (Kv4). I focused on characterizing this current using whole-cell patch clamp in wild type and mutants, and using antibodies for Shal. My results from whole-cell patch clamp indicated that IKf in adult R1-6 cells are not Shal, from their voltage dependence and insensitivity to a Kv4 blocker. This calls for alternative molecular basis for IKf, which is likely to be a slow inactivating component of Shaker, or a combination of its many splice variants. The second study looks at signal transformation at the circuit level, at the output end, in the third optic neuropil, lobula. Visual projection neurons project from the lobula to the central brain, and have been proposed to carry behaviourally relevant visual features to higher brain regions. It was recently shown that optogenetic activation of individual visual projection neuron types could induce distinct behaviours such as takeoff and backward walking, linking these visual neurons to specific behavioural programs downstream. Using in vivo two-photon calcium imaging, I recorded visually evoked calcium responses from three of these cell types. Cell types that showed induced takeoff and backward walking preferentially responded to dark looming stimuli or fragmented expanding local features, suggesting their role in behaviours triggered by object approach. To explore how this visual information is transformed in the downstream circuit, we identified several candidate neurons that receive input from this cell type by anatomical overlap, and then validated their connections using optogenetic activation and calcium imaging. One downstream cell-type that projects bilaterally had very similar response properties to its upstream partner, whereas another cell-type that projects ipsilaterally seemed to filter out some information from its upstream partner. This is one of the first studies that functionally characterizes lobula visual projection neurons and their downstream partners in Drosophila, and their response properties agree with the general idea that visual information becomes increasingly selective as it is sent to higher brain regions.
123

Activation du gyrus dentelé par le noyau supramammillaire au cours du sommeil paradoxal chez le rongeur : étude neuroanatomique et fonctionnelle / Activation of the dentale gyrus by the supramammillary nucleus during paradoxical sleep in rodents : a neuroanatomical and functional study

Billwiller, Francesca 08 February 2016 (has links)
Ce travail s'inscrit dans l'étude du réseau neuronal responsable de l'activation corticale au cours du sommeil paradoxal (SP) chez le rongeur. Dans la première partie de ma thèse, j'ai participé à la démonstration que cette activation est limitée à quelques structures limbiques déterminantes pour l'apprentissage, dont le gyrus dentelé de l'hippocampe (GD). Nous avons ensuite montré que l'activation du GD en SP est due à une projection issue du noyau supramammillaire (Sum). J'ai ensuite montré en combinant l'hybridation in situ d'un marqueur des neurones glutamatergiques et GABAergiques et l'immunohistochimie du FOS que les neurones du Sum latéral actifs en SP sont à la fois glutamatergiques et GABAergiques (GLU/GABA). Enfin, j'ai montré que l'augmentation du nombre de neurones FOS+ dans le GD dorsal en SP est abolie après la lésion neurochimique du Sum. De plus, la lésion du Sum induit une nette réduction de la densité de fibres glutamatergiques dans le GD dorsal. Ces résultats indiquent que les neurones du GD dorsal sont activés en SP par les neurones GLU/GABA du Sum latéral. Le deuxième objectif de ma thèse a été de déterminer la fonction de cette voie en SP. Ainsi j'ai utilisé la technique d'optogénétique afin d'inactiver ou activer les fibres GLU/GABA provenant du Sum localisées dans le GD dorsal au cours du SP. Nos résultats montrent que l'activation de ces fibres en SP induit une augmentation de la fréquence et de la puissance du thêta enregistré dans le GD. Ces résultats indiquent que la voie Sum-GD dorsal contrôle le thêta hippocampique et soutiennent l'hypothèse d'un rôle de cette voie dans les processus de consolidation mnésique prenant place au cours du SP / During my PhD I studied the neuronal network responsible for cortical activation during paradoxical sleep (PS) in rodents. In the first part of my thesis, I participated to the demonstration that this activation is limited to a few limbic structures involved in learning, including the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus (DG). Then, we showed that the activation of DG during PS is due to a projection from the supramammillary nucleus (Sum). Besides, by combining the in situ hybridization of markers of GABAergic and glutamatergic neurons and FOS immunohistochemistry, I demonstrated that lateral Sum neurons active in SP are both glutamatergic and GABAergic (GLU/GABA). Finally, I showed that the increasing number of FOS+ neurons in the dorsal DG during PS is abolished by the neurochemical lesion of the Sum. In addition, the Sum lesion induces a clear reduction of the density of glutamatergic fibers in the dorsal DG. These results indicate that during PS, dorsal DG neurons are activated by GLU/GABA neurons located in the lateral Sum. The second aim of my thesis was to determine the function of this pathway during PS. To realize that, I inactivated or activated by optogenetics the Sum GLU/GABA fibers located in the dorsal GD during SP. Our results show that the activation of these fibers during SP induces an increase in the theta frequency and power recorded in the dorsal DG. These results indicate that the Sum-dorsal DG-pathway modulates the hippocampal theta and supports the hypothesis of a role of this pathway in the memory consolidation process during SP
124

Role of the ventromedial hypothalamus in control of innate defensive behaviours

Wroblewska, Natalia January 2018 (has links)
Our senses are constantly bombarded with information. How does the brain integrate such a variety of inputs to generate appropriate behaviours? Innate defensive behaviours are a good model to address this question. They are essential for animal survival and the brain circuits that control them are highly conserved across species. Moreover, the sensory inputs and behavioural outputs can be well defined and reliably reproduced in the lab. This allows us to study function of the individual components of the circuit controlling these behaviours. Ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH) is a key brain region for controlling responses to predators; it has been shown that inactivating the VMH can reduce defensive behaviours. Interestingly, activating the VMH output neurons (SF1+ cells) can produce a variety of different behaviours, from immobility to escape, depending on the intensity of activation. During my PhD I used a variety of approaches to address the question of the function of the VMH in control of defensive behaviours. At first I hypothesised that the VMH might act as a centre responsible for choosing an appropriate behavioural response according to the stimulus. I set to investigate how different activation levels of SF1+ neurons can produce such different behavioural outputs, and how this activity is modulated in vivo in response to predator stimuli. I began the project by quantifying mouse defensive behaviours in response to olfactory and auditory predator cues, as well as to the optogenetic activation of SF1+ neurons. I then questioned whether there was heterogeneity within the population of SF1+ neurons, which could explain their ability to trigger different behaviours. I performed patch clamp recordings from acute brain slices and conducted a study of the electrophysiological properties of SF1+ neurons. I next investigated how SF1+ neurons integrate excitatory inputs from the medial amygdala, a region which receives olfactory inputs from the accessory olfactory bulb. By combining optogenetics with slice electrophysiology and behavioural assessment, I described the physiology and relevance of this connection. Finally, I investigated in vivo activity in the VMH in response to predator cues by performing calcium imaging of the VMH neurons in freely moving mice. By presenting different sensory stimuli, I addressed the question of heterogeneity of the input pattern to the VMH neurons and the relationship between the VMH activity and the behavioural output. Taken all together, the results of this project have led to a hypothesis whereby the function of the VMH is to facilitate rather than directly control the choice of an appropriate behavioural response.
125

THE EFFECT OF COLD ON THE PHYSIOLOGY OF DROSOPHILA LARVA HEART AND ON SYNAPTIC TRANSMISSION AT CRAYFISH NEUROMUSCULAR JUNCTIONS

Zhu, Yuechen 01 January 2017 (has links)
Ectothermic animals are susceptible to temperature changes such as cold shock with seasons. To survive through a cold shock, ectotherms have developed unique strategies. My interest is focusing on the physiological function of during cold shock and prolonged cold exposure in the fruit fly (Drosophila melanogaster) and crayfish (Procambarus clarkii). I used Drosophila melanogaster as a model system to investigate cardiac function in response to modulators (serotonin, acetylcholine, octopamine, dopamine and a cocktail of modulators) in acute cold shock and chronic cold shock conditions as possible mechanism to regulate heart rate in the cold. To examine if the dampened heart rate in the cold could still be enhanced by modulators or calcium loading, modulators and light-sensitive channelrhodopsin proteins were utilized to stimulate the heart. This light induced cardiac activation increased heart rate in all conditions, and potentially can be used for cardiac therapy in mammals. Also, the acute and chronic cold conditioned heart showed responsiveness to the above mention modulators. In examining how synaptic transmission is influenced by acute and chronic cold, the crayfish neuromuscular junction was used as a model. This is a good model as there are high and low output synapses to be investigated. The low output neuromuscular junction was enhanced in response to acute cold. The high output nmj increased in synaptic response to acute cold. In addressing chronic cold conditions, the nmj were physiologically assayed in their response to acute warm changes as well as influence of serotonin and octopamine. In chronic cold condition, the synaptic output was varied in enhanced and dampened responses to an acute warm environment. These junctions were enhanced in their synaptic output by serotonin and octopamine (100nM). In assessing, by HPLC assay, octopamine concentration increased in chronic cold crayfish. This suggests compensation in synaptic transmission in cold acclimation possibility via endocrine responses.
126

Contrôle Optogénétique de la Polarité Cellulaire / Optogenetic Control of Cell Polarity

Valon, Léo 22 September 2014 (has links)
Dans cette thèse, nous avons concentré notre étude sur les mécanismes qui génèrent la polarité cellulaire, en particulier dans le cas de la migration cellulaire. Malgré les derniers développements concernant l’observation de l’activité des RhoGTPases, les principes qui dictent la capacité des cellules à coordonner plusieurs modules de signalisation en parallèle ne sont toujours pas compris. L’optogénétique est un outil d’intérêt pour disséquer ces réseaux de signalisation à partir de la création d’une perturbation dont les caractéristiques spatiotemporelles sont contrôlées. Tout d’abord, à partir de la caractérisation des différents processus biophysiques en jeu, nous avons établi les relations quantitatives entre l’illumination et les gradients moléculaires que l’on induit. Nous avons déterminé qu’il est possible de créer des gradients subcellulaires avec une résolution spatiale de l’ordre de 5 μm et temporelle d’environ 3 minutes Ensuite, nous avons utilisé cette approche optogénétique pour contrôler l’activité de Cdc42, Rac1 et RhoA. Nous avons caractérisé les effets subcellulaires de l’activation de ces RhoGTPases en utilisant l’activité de membrane, les changements de forme cellulaire et leurs déplacements comme rapporteurs de la polarisation et de la migration. Nous avons ainsi montré qu’une activation locale de RhoGTPase permet la réorganisation interne des cellules jusqu’à générer un phénotype de migration.Enfin, nous avons caractérisé les effets d’une activation locale de RhoA sur différents acteurs moléculaires comme les points focaux d’adhésion, l’actine et les moteurs moléculaires myosines. Nous avons mesuré alors la dynamique de l’intégration des points focaux dans le cytosquelette et analysé la réponse du réseau d’acto-myosine au cours d’évènements de rétraction.Notre approche optogénétique couple le contrôle d’une perturbation à la mesure de la réponse cellulaire simultanément de manière directe et reproductible. Elle apporte une méthode pour contrôler la polarité cellulaire et une manière de disséquer des réseaux de signalisation à l’échelle subcellulaire. / In this thesis we focus on the mechanisms that establish cell polarization, particularly during cell migration. Despite latest developments that enable visualization of RhoGTPases activity, the underlying principles dictating the cell’s ability to coordinates multiple signaling modules is still unclear. Optogenetic methods have been recognized as promising tools to dissect these intracellular signaling networks by allowing perturbations to be spatially and temporally controlled. We established the quantitative relationship between illumination patterns and the corresponding gradients of induced signaling activity through the characterization of the biophysical properties of CRY2/CIBN. We determined that it is possible to create subcellular gradients of recruited proteins of different shapes of choice up to spatial resolutions of 5μm and temporal ones of ca. 3 minutes.We applied the aforementioned optogenetic approach as a means to perturb the activity of cdc42, Rac1 and RhoA. We characterized the effects of subcellular activation of those RhoGTPases using membrane activity, cell shape changes and cell displacement as reporters of cell polarization and migration. We show that localized activation of RhoGTPases can trigger cellular organization and drive the cell into a migrating state.We also characterized the effects of local activation of RhoA on different cellular effectors as focal adhesion complexes, actin filaments and myosin molecular motors. We measured the dynamics of the newly formed focal adhesion complexes and the acto-myosin complex during retraction events.Altogether, our optogenetic methodology enables simultaneous measurement of the imposed perturbation and the cell response in a straightforward and reproducible way. It provides a quantitative way to control cell polarity and a step forward in the dissection of subcellular signaling networks.
127

United in Diversity : A Physiological and Molecular Characterization of Subpopulations in the Basal Ganglia Circuitry

Viereckel, Thomas January 2017 (has links)
The Basal Ganglia consist of a number of different nuclei that form a diverse circuitry of GABAergic, dopaminergic and glutamatergic neurons. This complex network is further organized in subcircuits that govern limbic and motor functions in humans and other vertebrates. Due to the interconnection of the individual structures, dysfunction in one area or cell population can affect the entire network, leading to synaptic and molecular alterations in the circuitry as a whole. The studies in this doctoral thesis aimed at characterizing restricted subpopulations of neurons in the Basal Ganglia circuitry and their importance in the wider function of the network. To this end, we identified subpopulations of neurons in the subthalamic nucleus (STN), substantia nigra (SN) and ventral tegmental area (VTA), characterized their molecular profile and investigated their physiological role in the circuitry. Within the mouse STN, reduction of glutamatergic neurotransmission in a subpopulation expressing Paired-like homeodomain transcription factor 2 (Pitx2) led to structural alterations in the nucleus as well as biochemical alterations of the dopaminergic system in the Nucleus accumbens (NAc) and changes in reward-related behavior. In the ventral midbrain, we identified and characterized novel marker genes selective to the VTA or SN. Of these, transient receptor potential cation channel subfamily V member 1 (TrpV1) marks a population of mainly glutamatergic neurons in the VTA which project to the NAc, while gastrin releasing peptide (Grp) is expressed in a population of dopaminergic neurons neuroprotected in Parkinson's disease. Furthermore, we discovered that disruption of glutamatergic co-release of dopaminergic neurons expressing dopamine transporter (DAT), diminishes fast EPSCs and glutamate release but does not affect the acquisition of reward-related behavioral tasks. To selectively quantify glutamate release from specific subpopulations, we devised a technique combining glutamate-amperometry and optogenetics. This was used to measure glutamate released from Pitx2-expressing synaptic terminals in the Globus pallidus as well as DAT- or TrpV1-expressing terminals in the NAc. In summary, this doctoral thesis has furthered understanding of the function and importance of specific subpopulations within the Basal Ganglia circuitry and provides a novel means to investigate glutamate in the intact rodent brain within clearly defined, restricted cell populations.
128

Implication des interneurones cholinergiques striataux dans la physiopathologie de la maladie de Parkinson : étude optogénétique, pharmacologique et comportementale / Involvement of striatal cholinergic interneurons in the pathophysiology of Parkinson's disease : optogenetics, pharmacological and behavioral approaches

Ztaou, Samira 18 November 2016 (has links)
La maladie de Parkinson (MP) est caractérisée par une perte dopaminergique dans le striatum, structure sous-corticale impliquée dans le contrôle moteur, la mémoire et les comportements émotionnels. Les interneurones cholinergiques (ChIs) striataux jouent un rôle clef dans cette réorganisation pathologique du striatum en modulant l’activité des neurones de projection striataux (MSNs). Ce travail vise à étudier l’implication des ChIs et des récepteurs muscariniques (mAChRs) dans les mécanismes qui sous-tendent l’expression des déficits moteurs, cognitifs et émotionnels dans différents modèles de la MP chez la souris. L’inhibition optogénétique des ChIs réduit les déficits moteurs (akinésie, asymétrie posturale, déficit sensori-moteur). Les enregistrements électrophysiologiques montrent que l’inhibition des ChIs réduit l’excitabilité des MSNs et rétablit l’équilibre d’activité des deux voies de sortie striatale. Ces effets antiparkinsoniens sont reproduits par le blocage pharmacologique striatal des mAChRs M1 et M4. Ils sont dus à une action préférentielle de l’ACh sur les mAChRs au niveau des MSNs à l’origine de la voie striatonigrale puisqu’ils disparaissent chez des souris invalidées pour les récepteurs M4 exprimés dans ces neurones. La photoinhibition des ChIs réduit les déficits mnésiques et l’anxiété. L’antagoniste des mAChRs M1 réduit l’anxiété mais est inefficace sur les déficits mnésiques, suggérant que d’autres récepteurs cholinergiques striataux puissent être engagés dans les fonctions mnésiques. L’ensemble de nos résultats apporte un éclairage nouveau sur l’implication des ChIs striataux dans le fonctionnement physiologique et pathologique du striatum. / Parkinson’s disease (PD) is characterized by a dopamiergic loss into the striatum, a subcortical structure involved in motor control, memory and emotional behaviors. Striatal cholinergic interneurons (ChIs) play a key role in this pathological reorganization of the striatal circuitry by modulating striatal projection neurons (MSNs). This study aims to investigate the involvement of ChIs and muscarinic receptors (mAChRs) in the mechanisms underlying the expression of motor, cognitive and emotional deficits observed in different models of PD in mice. ChIs optogenetic inhibition reduced motor deficits (akinesia, postural asymmetry, sensorimotor deficit). Electrophysiological recordings show that ChIs photoinhibition reduces MSNs excitability and restores the balance between the two striatal output pathways. These antiparkinsonian effects are reproduced by pharmacological intrastriatal blockade of M1 and M4 mAChRs. They are due to a preferential action of ACh on mAChRs expressed on striatonigral MSNs since the deficits disappear in mutant mice that lack M4 mAChRs only in these neurons. ChIs photoinhibition also reduces memory deficits and anxiety. M1 mAChRs antagonist reduces anxiety but is inefficient on memory deficits, suggesting that other cholinergic receptors might be involved in striatal memory functions. Overall, these results give new insights on the role of cholinergic interneurons in the normal and pathological functioning of the striatum.
129

Cellular interdependence and collective aspects of the epithelial phenotype : a quantitative and geometric analysis using optical gene activation / Interdépendance cellulaire et aspects collectifs du phénotype épithélial : une étude quantitative et géométrique par induction optique de gènes

Miquel, Perrine 16 November 2016 (has links)
L’ensemble des tissus et des organismes vivants sont constitués de cellules dans lesquelles un certain nombre de décisions phénotypiques sont prises : division, différentiation, apoptose ou encore transformation. La biologie cellulaire s’est principalement concentrée sur la compréhension des déterminants moléculaires internes de ces décisions, mais il est important de considérer aussi l’existence de déterminants externes provenant des interactions intercellulaires qui sont essentielles à l’émergence de systèmes multicellulaires coordonnés. La compétition entre les déterminants internes et les déterminants externes est un aspect fondamental de la sociologie des communautés cellulaire menant à de possibles situations hautement individualisées ou, au contraire, à un effet collectif dominant. Ce travail de thèse a eu pour but de mettre en place une méthode permettant de mesurer la contribution relative de ces deux types de déterminants en les mettant en opposition. Pour cela, la stabilité collective d’un épithélium in vitro a été mise à l’épreuve grâce à l’induction hétérogène de la transition épithelio-mesenchymateuse (EMT) par le biais de la photoactivation du facteur de transcription Snail1. Les résultats principaux montrent que la réponse transcriptionelle de cellules induites à l’EMT dépend de la présence, ou non, de cellules avoisinantes non-induites. De la même manière, les cellules non-induites répondent de façon transcriptionelle à la présence de cellules induites. Ces effets de control mutuels introduisent la notion que la géométrie de la distribution d’une cause moléculaire donnée peut influencer la conséquence de cette même cause. Notre travail ouvre de nouvelle possibilités pour l’étude de la sociologie de communautés cellulaires hétérogènes, et une meilleure compréhension de phénomènes importants tel la suppression phénotypique ou encore les premiers instants de la carcinogenèse. / Tissues and organisms are built from cells in which important phenotype decisions are made: division, differentiation, apoptosis, and transformation. Cell biology has strongly focused on deciphering the internal molecular determinants of these decisions, but external information originating from intercellular interactions are key elements to coordinate multicellular physiology. The extent to which internal determinants dominate over external determinants or vice versa, is an essential feature of the sociology of cell communities, with possibly strong individualistic situations, or dominant collective effect. The present work was designed to set-up a method for assessing the relative contribution of internal vs. external determinant, by opposing these two classes of inputs. This is achieved by challenging the collective stability of an in vitro epithelium using the heterogeneous induction of the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) via the photoactivation of Snail1. The key results show that the transcriptional response of EMT-induced cells depends on the presence of non-induced cells in the culture. Conversely non-induced cells respond to the presence of induced cells. These mutual control effects lead to the notion that the geometry underlying the distribution of a given molecular cause strongly influences its consequence. Our work opens new perspectives for studying the sociology of heterogeneous cell communities, and better understand important phenomena such as phenotype suppression and or the onset of carcinogenesis.
130

Cyclic GMP signaling during the lytic cycle of Toxoplasma gondii

Günay-Esiyok, Özlem 21 November 2019 (has links)
Der cGMP-Signalweg ist als einer der Hauptregulatoren von diversen Funktionen in Eukaryoten bekannt; allerdings ist seine Funktionsweise in Protozoen wenig verstanden. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde eine Guanylatcyclase, gekoppelt mit N-terminalen P4-ATPase, in intrazellulären Parasiten Toxoplasma gondii gemeldet. Eine in silico-Analyse wies auf eine Aktivierung der Guanylatcyclase durch Heterodimerisierung ihrer Cyclasedomänen hin und ermöglichte wertvolle Einsichten in mögliche Funktionen ihrer ATPase-Domäne. Dieses Protein (477-kDa) bezeichnet als TgATPaseP-GC in dieser Studie, lokalisiert in der Plasmamembran am apikalen Pol des Parasiten. TgATPaseP-GC ist unempfänglich gegenüber genetischer Deletion und seine CRISPR/Cas9 unterstützte Spaltung beendet den lytischen Zyklus von T. gondii vorzeitig. Darüber hinaus reduzierte ein Cre/loxP-vermittelter Knockdown von TgATPaseP-GC die Synthese von cGMP im Tachyzoiten und inhibierte das Parasitenwachstum aufgrund von Beeinträchtigungen Motilitäts-abhängiger Prozesse des Austretens und Eindringens. Trotz seiner zeitlich beschränkten Funktion ist TgATPaseP-GC konstitutiv während des ganzen lytischen Zyklus exprimiert, welches eine post-translationale Regulierung des cGMP-Signalweges bedingt. Nicht zuletzt impliziert das Vorhandensein von TgATPaseP-GC-Orthologen in anderen Alveolata eine divergente Umfunktionierung der cGMP-Signalwege in Protozoen. Darüber hinaus wurde ein optogenetischer Ansatz verwendet, um den cGMP-Weg durch eine photo-aktivierte Rhodopsin-Guanylat-Cyclase (RhoGC) in T. gondii zu exprimiert. Dieses System erlaubte eine kontrollierte Erhöhung von cGMP durch Licht in einer schnellen und reversiblen Weise. Die Anregung von RhoGC stimulierte signifikant die Parasitenmotilität, deren Auswirkung auch mit erhöhten Eindringen und Austreten überwacht wurde; im Gegensatz zum genetischen Knockdown von TgATPaseP-GC. Das System ermöglicht die Vermittler des cGMP-Signalwegs durch Phosphoproteomics zu identifizieren. / cGMP signaling is known as one of the master regulators of diverse functions in eukaryotes; however, its architecture and functioning in protozoans remain poorly understood. In the scope of this thesis, an exclusive guanylate cyclase coupled with N-terminal P4-ATPase was reported in an obligate intracellular parasite Toxoplasma gondii. In silico analysis indicated an activation of the guanylate cyclase by heterodimerization of its two cyclase domains and offered valuable insights into possible functions of its ATPase domain. This bulky protein (477-kDa), termed in this study as TgATPaseP-GC to reflect its envisaged multifunctionality, localizes in the plasma membrane at the apical pole of the parasite. TgATPaseP-GC is refractory to genetic deletion, and its CRISPR/Cas9-assisted disruption aborts the lytic cycle of T. gondii. Besides, Cre/loxP-mediated knockdown of TgATPaseP-GC reduced the synthesis of cGMP in tachyzoites and inhibited the parasite growth due to impairments of motility-dependent egress and invasion events. Notably, despite its temporally restricted function, TgATPaseP-GC is expressed constitutively throughout the lytic cycle, entailing a post-translational regulation of cGMP signaling. Not least, the occurrence of TgATPaseP-GC orthologs in several other alveolates implies a divergent functional repurposing of cGMP signaling in protozoans. Furthermore, an optogenetic approach was utilized to induce cGMP pathway by a photo-activated rhodopsin-guanylate cyclase (RhoGC) in T. gondii. The system enabled a light-control of cGMP elevation on crucial steps of lytic cycle in a fast, spatial and reversible manner. Excitation of RhoGC significantly stimulated the parasite motility of which impact was also monitored with an increased host-cell invasion and egress; as opposed to the genetic knockdown of TgATPaseP-GC. Having an established optogenetic system in the parasite allows to identify downstream targets of cGMP signaling via phosphoproteomic analysis.

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