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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.
1

The role of Histone H3 Lysine 4 trimethylation in zebrafish embryonic development

Krause, Maximilian 06 April 2017 (has links) (PDF)
Cells within multicellular organisms share the same genetic information, yet their shape and function can differ dramatically. This diversity of form and function is established by differential use of the genetic information. Early embryonic development describes the processes that lead to a fully differentiated embryo starting from a single fertilized cell - the zygote. Interestingly, in metazoan species this early development is governed by maternally provided factors (nutrients, RNA, protein), while the zygotic genome is transcriptionally inactive. Only at a specific developmental stage, the zygotic genome becomes transcriptionally active, and zygotic transcripts drive further embryonic development. This major change is called zygotic genome activation (ZGA). While major regulators of activation of early zygotic genes could be identified recently, the molecular mechanisms that contribute to robust global genome activation during embryonic development is not fully understood. In this study, I investigated whether the establishment of histone H3 lysine 4 trimethylation (H3K4me3) is involved in zebrafish zygotic transcription activation and early embryonic development. H3K4me3 is a chromatin modification that is implicated in transcription regulation. H3K4me3 has been shown to be enriched at Transcription Start Sites (TSS) of genes prior to their activation, and is postulated facilitate transcription activation of developmentally important genes. To interfere with H3K4me3 establishment, I generated histone methyltransferase mutants. I further inhibited H3K4me3 establishment by introduction of histones with lysine 4-to-methionine (K4-to-M) substitution, which act as dominant-negative inhibitors of H3K4me3 establishment. Upon H3K4me3 reduction, I studied the resulting effect on early transcription activation. I found that H3K4me3 is not involved in transcription activation during early zebrafish embryogenesis. Finally I analyzed possible cues in DNA sequence and chromatin environment that might favor early H3K4me3 establishment. These studies show that H3K4me3 is established during ZGA, yet it is not involved in transcription activation during early zebrafish development. Establishment of H3K4me3 might be a consequence of histone methyltransferase recruitment during a permissive chromatin state, and might be targeted to CpG-rich promoter elements that are enriched for the histone variant H2A.z. / Jede Zelle eines multizellulären Organismus enthält dieselbe Erbinformation, und doch können Form und Funktion von Zellen untereinander sehr unterschiedlich sein. Diese Diversität wird durch unterschiedliches Auslesen - Transkribieren - der Erbinformation erreicht. Embryogenese beschreibt den Prozess, der aus einer einzelnen Zelle - der Zygote - einen multizellulären Embryo entstehen lässt. Interessanterweise laufen frühe Stadien der Embryogenese ohne Transkription der embryonalen Erbinformation ab, sondern werden durch maternal bereitgestellte Faktoren ermöglicht. Erst nach einer spezies-spezifischen Entwicklungsphase wird das Erbgut der Zygote aktiv transkribiert und ermöglicht die weitere Embryonalentwicklung. Obwohl bereits wichtige Regulatoren dieser globalen Genomaktivierung identifiziert werden konnten, sind viele molekulare Mechanismen, die zur Aktivierung des zygotischen Genoms beitragen, bisher unbekannt. In der hier vorliegenden Doktorarbeit habe ich die Rolle von Histon H3 Lysin 4 Trimethylierung (H3K4me3) während der frühen Embryogenese des Zebrafischs untersucht. H3K4me3 ist eine Chromatinmodifikation, die mit aktiver Transkription in Verbindung gebracht wird. H3K4me3 ist an Transkriptions-Start-Stellen von aktiv ausgelesenen Genen angereichert und es wird vermutet, dass diese Modifikation das Binden von Transkriptionsfaktoren und der Transkriptionsmaschinerie erleichtert. Während meiner Arbeit habe ich durch Mutation verschiedener Histon-Methyltransferasen beziehungsweise die Überexpression eines dominant-negativen Histonsubstrats versucht, die Etablierung von H3K4me3 in frühen Entwicklungsstadien des Zebrafischs zu verhindern. Anschliessend habe untersucht, welchen Effekt H3K4me3-Reduktion auf Tranksriptionsaktivität entsprechender Gene hat. Allerdings konnte ich keinen Zusammenhang zwischen H3K4me3-Reduktion und Transkriptionsaktivität beobachten. Um herauszufinden, weshalb H3K4me3 dennoch während früher Embryonalstadien etabliert wird, habe ich nachfolgend untersucht, ob möglicherweise bestimmte DNASequenzen oder Chromatin-Modifikationen zur Etablierung von H3K4me3 wahrend der Embryogenese des Zebrafischs beitragen. Aus der hier vorliegenden Arbeit lässt sich schlussfolgern, dass H3K4me3 in Tranksriptionsaktivierung während früher Embryonalstadien des Zebrafischs nicht involviert ist. Möglicherweise wird H3K4me3 in diesen Stadien in einer permissiven Chromatinumgebung etabliert, bevorzugt an Promotoren mit starker H2A.z-Anreicherung und CpG-reichen DNA-Elementen.
2

Identification of proteins controlling gastrulation movements by a proteomic approach in zebrafish

Link, Vinzenz 20 March 2006 (has links) (PDF)
During vertebrate gastrulation, a well-orchestrated series of cell movements leads to the formation of the three germ layers: ectoderm, mesoderm and endoderm. In zebrafish, a model organism for vertebrate development, the mesendodermal progenitor cells separate from the ectodermal cells and migrate towards the animal pole. To identify proteins controlling these processes, I used a comparative proteomic approach following two alternative strategies: (1) Based on the notion that Wnt11 regulates cell movement and morphology during gastrulation independent of transcriptional regulation, I performed a screen aimed at the identification of proteins phosphorylated upon Wnt11 signalling. To regulate Wnt11 expression tightly, I engineered a transgenic slb/wnt11-/- fish line expressing wnt11 under the control of a heat shock promoter. Using this line, I performed a quantitative comparison of protein phosphorylation with or without Wnt11 pathway activation by analysing 32P-labelled embryo extracts on 2D gels. (2) Since these experiments did not reveal any Wnt11 targets, I addressed, in the second approach, proteomic differences causal for the changes in cell adhesion and motility observed in mesendodermal cells upon involution. Quantitative 2D gel analysis comparing ectodermal and mesendodermal cells revealed 37 significantly regulated spots, 36 of which I identified by mass spectrometry. Interestingly, the majority of these proteins were not regulated on a transcriptional level as determined by an accompanying microarray analysis confirming the complementary nature of proteomics and transcriptomics. Among the identified targets, several proteins, including Ezrin2, had previously been assigned a cytoskeleton-related function. I characterised Ezrin2 in more detail showing that Ezrin2 is specifically activated by phosphorylation in mesendodermal cells and that it is required for proper gastrulation movements. In the course of this study, I developed techniques for proteomic analysis of early zebrafish embryos, including a protocol to remove the yolk. I identified several cytoskeleton-related proteins in a comparative proteomic screen for regulators of gastrulation movements. The subsequent characterisation of Ezrin2 confirmed the power of proteomics for the analysis of developmental processes. In conclusion, this work provides a foundation to study developmental and cell biological questions in early zebrafish embryos using proteomics.
3

Regulation of Zebrafish Gastrulation Movements by slb/wnt11 / Regulation der Zebrafisch-Gastrulation durch slb/wnt11

Ulrich, Florian 02 August 2005 (has links) (PDF)
During zebrafish gastrulation, highly coordinated cellular rearrangements lead to the formation of the three germ layers, ectoderm, mesoderm and endoderm. Recent studies have identified silberblick (slb/wnt11) as a key molecule that regulates gastrulation movement through a conserved pathway, which shares significant similarity with a signalling pathway that establishes epithelial planar cell polarity (PCP) in Drosophila (Heisenberg et al., 2000; Veeman et al., 2003), suggesting a role for cell polarity in regulating gastrulation movements. However, the cellular and molecular mechanisms by which slb/wnt11 functions during zebrafish gastrulation are still not fully understood. In the first part of the thesis, the three-dimensional movement and morphology of individual cells in living embryos during the course of gastrulation were recorded and analysed using high resolution confocal microscopy. It was shown that in slb/wnt11 mutant embryos, hypoblast cells within the forming germ ring display slower, less directed migratory movements at the onset of gastrulation, which are accompanied by defects in the orientation of cellular processes along the individual movement directions of these cells. The net movement direction of the cells is not changed, suggesting that slb/wnt11-mediated orientation of cellular processes serves to facilitate and stabilize cell movements during gastrulation. By using an in vitro reaggregation assay on mesendodermal cells, combined with an analysis of the endogenous expression levels and distribution of E-cadherin in zebrafish embryos at the onset of gastrulation, E-cadherin mediated adhesion was found to be a downstream mechanism regulating slb/wnt11 function during gastrulation. Interestingly, the effects of slb/wnt11 on cell adhesion appear to be dependent on Rab5-mediated endocytosis, suggesting endocytic turnover of cell-cell contacts as one possible mechanism through which slb/wnt11 mediates its effects on gastrulation movements. - Die Druckexemplare enthalten jeweils eine CD-ROM als Anlagenteil: QuickTimeMovies (ca. 23 MB)- Übersicht über Inhalte siehe Dissertation S. 92 - 93"
4

Development of transgenic Ambystoma mexicanum (axolotl) to study cell fate during development and regeneration

Sobkow, Lidia 18 April 2006 (has links) (PDF)
The establishment of transgenesisi in axolotls is crucial for studying development and regeneration, as it would allow for long-term fate tracing as well as gene expression analysis, therefore we were interested in both obtaining animals expresing the transgene with little mosaicism in F0 generation and transgenesis. We demonstrate here that plasmid injection into one cell stage axolotl embryo generates transgenic animals that display germline transmission of a transgene. However, the efficiency of simple plasmid injection is very low, expression of the transgene is mosaic and seems to be promoter dependant. We have tested several methods of transgenesis developed in other systems. First we used Adeno-Associated Viral Terminal Repeats inserted into the injected construct to enhance the expression level of the transgene and reduce mosaicism. However, in the axolotl system we do not observe the enhancement of expression. Moreover, the expression appeared to be transient and disappeared after two months. Further, we tested the effect of the inclusion of ISceI meganuclease in the injections, succesful transgenesis method in the medaka system. It resulted in a higher percentage of F0 animals displaying strong , stable expression throughout the body. This represents the first demonstration in the axolotl of germline transmission of the transgene. Using this technique we have generated a germline transgenic anima expressing GFP ubiquitously in all tissue examined. We have used this anima to study cell fate in the dirsal fin during development. We have discovered a contribution of somite cells to dorsal fin mesenchyme in the axolotl, which was previously assumed to derive solely from neural crest. We have also studied the role of blood during tail regeneration by transplanting the ventral blood-forming region from GFP+ embryos into unlabeled host. During tail regeneration, we do not observe GFP+ cells contributing to muscle or nerve, suggesting that during tail regeneration blood stem cells do not undergo significant plasticity. We are interested in characterization of pluripotency of blastema cells. Previously, it has been shown that neural progenitor cells form the spinal cord can transdifferentiate to muscle and other tissue types in the regenerating tail. To test if blastema cells have the potency of differentiating into a neural tissue , we transplanted GFP+ 4day blastema into an injured spinal cord. Our result shows that blastema cells don't seem to contribute to the regenerating spinal cord.

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