27 results on '"Schmid, Volker"'
Search Results
2. Genetic Algorithms
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Meyer-Baese, Anke, primary and Schmid, Volker, additional
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- 2014
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3. Feature Selection and Extraction
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Meyer-Baese, Anke, primary and Schmid, Volker, additional
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- 2014
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4. Statistical and Syntactic Pattern Recognition
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Meyer-Baese, Anke, primary and Schmid, Volker, additional
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- 2014
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5. Neuro-Fuzzy Classification
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Meyer-Baese, Anke, primary and Schmid, Volker, additional
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- 2014
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6. Computer-Aided Diagnosis for Diagnostically Challenging Breast Lesions in DCE-MRI
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Meyer-Baese, Anke, primary and Schmid, Volker, additional
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- 2014
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7. Transformation and Signal-Separation Neural Networks
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Meyer-Baese, Anke, primary and Schmid, Volker, additional
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- 2014
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8. Foundations of Neural Networks
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Meyer-Baese, Anke, primary and Schmid, Volker, additional
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- 2014
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9. Analysis of Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast MRI Time-Series Based on Unsupervised Clustering Methods
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Meyer-Baese, Anke, primary and Schmid, Volker, additional
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- 2014
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10. Specialized Neural Networks Relevant to Bioimaging
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Meyer-Baese, Anke, primary and Schmid, Volker, additional
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- 2014
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11. Introduction
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Meyer-Baese, Anke, primary and Schmid, Volker, additional
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- 2014
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12. Subband Coding and Wavelet Transform
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Meyer-Baese, Anke, primary and Schmid, Volker, additional
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- 2014
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13. Transdifferentiation in Medusae
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Schmid, Volker, primary
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- 1992
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14. Chapter 9 The Potential for Transdifferentiation of Differentiated Medusa Tissues in Vitro
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Schmid, Volker, primary and Alder, Hansjürg, additional
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- 1986
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15. Assessment of Chemical Facility Ethylene Oxide Emissions Using Mobile and Multipoint Monitoring.
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Thoma ED, Gitipour A, George I, Kariher P, MacDonald M, Queiroz G, Deshmukh P, Childers J, Rodak T, and Schmid V
- Abstract
Ethylene oxide (EtO) is a hazardous air pollutant that can be emitted from a variety of difficult to measure industrial sources, such as fugitive leaks, wastewater handling, and episodic releases. Emerging next generation emission measurement (NGEM) approaches capable of time-resolved, low parts per billion by volume (ppbv) method detection limits (MDLs) can help facilities understand and reduce EtO and other air pollutant emissions from these sources yielding a range of environmental and public health benefits. In October 2021, a first of its kind 4-day observational study was conducted at an EtO chemical facility in the midwestern United States. The study had dual objectives to both improve understanding of EtO emission sources within the facility and advance NGEM methods. Using cavity ring-down spectroscopy (CRDS) instruments, a combination of mobile surveys and stationary multipoint process unit monitoring assessed EtO concentrations in and near facility operations, while testing and comparing measurement methods. The study concluded that four main areas of EtO source emissions existed within the facility, each possessing unique emission characteristics. Episodic EtO emissions from supply railcar switchovers and batch reactor washouts, lasting seconds to minutes in duration, produced EtO concentrations exceeding 500 ppbv inside the process unit in some cases. In one instance, EtO at ~30 ppbv was briefly observed hundreds of meters from the process unit. Lower level but more sustained EtO concentrations were observed near an EtO transfer pump and wastewater tank outfall and drain system. Overall, 4.6% of mobile survey data were above the 1.2 ppbv mobile test MDL while the nine stationary sampling locations ranged from 17.7% to 82.8% of data above the 1.0 ppbv multipoint test MDL. This paper describes the EtO emissions observed in and near the four defined source areas within the facility and provides details of the NGEM method development advances accomplished as part of the study.
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- 2023
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16. Spatial Analysis of Hospital Incidence and in Hospital Mortality of Abdominal Aortic Aneurysms in Germany: Secondary Data Analysis of Nationwide Hospital Episode (DRG) Data.
- Author
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Kuehnl A, Salvermoser M, Erk A, Trenner M, Schmid V, and Eckstein HH
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- Age Distribution, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Germany epidemiology, Hospital Mortality, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Humans, Incidence, Male, Residence Characteristics statistics & numerical data, Sex Distribution, Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal mortality
- Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to analyze the spatial distribution and regional variation of the hospital incidence and in hospital mortality of abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA) in Germany., Methods: German DRG statistics (2011-2014) were analysed. Patients with ruptured AAA (rAAA, I71.3, treated or not) and patients with non-ruptured AAA (nrAAA, I71.4, treated by open or endovascular aneurysm repair) were included. Age, sex, and risk standardisation was done using standard statistical procedures. Regional variation was quantified using systematic component of variation. To analyse spatial auto-correlation and spatial pattern, global Moran's I and Getis-Ord Gi* were calculated., Results: A total of 50,702 cases were included. Raw hospital incidence of AAA was 15.7 per 100,000 inhabitants (nrAAA 13.1; all rAAA 2.7; treated rAAA 1.6). The standardised hospital incidence of AAA ranged from 6.3 to 30.3 per 100,000. Systematic component of variation proportion was 96% in nrAAA and 55% in treated rAAA. Incidence rates of all AAA were significantly clustered with above average values in the northwestern parts of Germany and below average values in the south and eastern regions. Standardised mortality of nrAAA ranged from 1.7% to 4.3%, with that of treated rAAA ranging from 28% to 52%. Regional variation and spatial distribution of standardised mortality was not different from random., Conclusions: There was significant regional variation and clustering of the hospital incidence of AAA in Germany, with higher rates in the northwest and lower rates in the southeast. There was no significant variation in standardised (age/sex/risk) mortality between counties., (Copyright © 2018. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2018
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17. Editor's Choice - High Annual Hospital Volume is Associated with Decreased in Hospital Mortality and Complication Rates Following Treatment of Abdominal Aortic Aneurysms: Secondary Data Analysis of the Nationwide German DRG Statistics from 2005 to 2013.
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Trenner M, Kuehnl A, Salvermoser M, Reutersberg B, Geisbuesch S, Schmid V, and Eckstein HH
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Aorta, Abdominal surgery, Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal mortality, Blood Component Transfusion statistics & numerical data, Elective Surgical Procedures methods, Elective Surgical Procedures standards, Endovascular Procedures methods, Endovascular Procedures standards, Female, Germany epidemiology, Hospitals, High-Volume standards, Humans, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Male, Middle Aged, Postoperative Complications etiology, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Vascular Surgical Procedures methods, Vascular Surgical Procedures standards, Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal surgery, Aortic Rupture surgery, Elective Surgical Procedures adverse effects, Endovascular Procedures adverse effects, Hospital Mortality, Hospitals, High-Volume statistics & numerical data, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Vascular Surgical Procedures adverse effects
- Abstract
Objectives: The aim of this study was to analyse the association between annual hospital procedural volume and post-operative outcomes following repair of abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA) in Germany., Methods: Data were extracted from nationwide Diagnosis Related Group (DRG) statistics provided by the German Federal Statistical Office. Cases with a diagnosis of AAA (ICD-10 GM I71.3, I71.4) and procedure codes for endovascular aortic repair (EVAR; OPS 5-38a.1*) or open aortic repair (OAR; OPS 5-38.45, 5-38.47) treated between 2005 and 2013 were included. Hospitals were empirically grouped to quartiles depending on the overall annual volume of AAA procedures. A multilevel multivariable regression model was applied to adjust for sex, medical risk, type of procedure, and type of admission. Primary outcome was in hospital mortality. Secondary outcomes were complications, use of blood products, and length of stay (LOS). The association between AAA volume and in hospital mortality was also estimated as a function of continuous volume., Results: A total of 96,426 cases, of which 11,795 (12.6%) presented as ruptured (r)AAA, were treated in >700 hospitals (annual median: 501). The crude in hospital mortality was 3.3% after intact (i)AAA repair (OAR 5.3%; EVAR 1.7%). Volume was inversely associated with mortality after OAR and EVAR. Complication rates, LOS, and use of blood products were lower in high volume hospitals. After rAAA repair, crude mortality was 40.4% (OAR 43.2%; EVAR 27.4%). An inverse association between mortality and volume was shown for rAAA repair; the same accounts for the use of blood products. When considering volume as a continuous variate, an annual caseload of 75-100 elective cases was associated with the lowest mortality risk., Conclusions: In hospital mortality and complication rates following AAA repair are inversely associated with annual hospital volume. The use of blood products and the LOS are lower in high volume hospitals. A minimum annual case threshold for AAA procedures might improve post-operative results., (Copyright © 2017 European Society for Vascular Surgery. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2018
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18. Development of bispecific molecules for the in situ detection of protein-protein interactions and protein phosphorylation.
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van Dieck J, Schmid V, Heindl D, Dziadek S, Schraeml M, Gerg M, Massoner P, Engel AM, Tiefenthaler G, Vural S, Stritt S, Tetzlaff F, Soukupova M, Kopetzki E, Bossenmaier B, Thomas M, Klein C, Mertens A, Heller A, and Tacke M
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- Animals, Antibodies chemistry, Antibodies immunology, Cell Line, Tumor, Dimerization, HEK293 Cells, Humans, Immunoglobulin Fab Fragments chemistry, Immunoglobulin Fab Fragments genetics, Immunoglobulin Fab Fragments metabolism, MCF-7 Cells, Mice, Oligonucleotides chemical synthesis, Oligonucleotides chemistry, Phosphorylation, Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs, Receptor, ErbB-2 genetics, Receptor, ErbB-2 metabolism, Receptor, ErbB-3 genetics, Receptor, ErbB-3 metabolism, Recombinant Proteins biosynthesis, Recombinant Proteins chemistry, Recombinant Proteins genetics, Immunohistochemistry, Proteins metabolism, Receptor, ErbB-2 analysis, Receptor, ErbB-3 analysis
- Abstract
Investigation of protein-protein interactions (PPIs) and protein phosphorylation in clinical tissue samples can offer valuable information about the activation status and function of proteins involved in disease progression. However, existing antibody-based methods for phosphorylation detection have been found to lack specificity, and methods developed for examining PPIs in vitro cannot be easily adapted for tissues samples. In this study, we eliminated some of these limitations by developing a specific immunohistochemical staining method that uses "dual binders" (DBs), which are bispecific detection agents consisting of two Fab fragment molecules joined by a flexible linker, to detect PPIs and protein phosphorylation. We engineered DBs by selecting Fab fragments with fast off-rate kinetics, which allowed us to demonstrate that stable target binding was achieved only upon simultaneous, cooperative binding to both epitopes. We show that DBs specifically detect the activated HER2/HER3 complex in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded cancer cells and exhibit superior detection specificity for phospho-HER3 compared to the corresponding monoclonal antibody. Overall, the performance of DBs makes them attractive tools for future development for clinical applications., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2014
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19. Bayesian space-time analysis of Echinococcus multilocularis-infections in foxes.
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Staubach C, Hoffmann L, Schmid VJ, Ziller M, Tackmann K, and Conraths FJ
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- Animals, Bayes Theorem, Echinococcosis epidemiology, Echinococcus multilocularis, Europe epidemiology, Models, Biological, Time Factors, Echinococcosis veterinary, Foxes
- Abstract
A total of 26,220 foxes that were hunted or found dead in Thuringia, Germany, between 1990 and 2009 were examined for infection with Echinococcus multilocularis, the causative agent of human alveolar echinococcosis, and 6853 animals were found infected. The available data on the foxes including the location (local community; district) and the date of hunting/death were analyzed using a hierarchical Bayesian space-time model. The distribution of the model parameters and their variability was estimated on the basis of the sample size, the number of cases per spatial unit and time interval, and an adjacency matrix of the municipalities using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo simulation technique to assess the spatial and temporal changes in the distribution of the parasite. The model used to evaluate the data is widely applicable and can be applied to analyse data sets with gaps and variable sample sizes per spatial and temporal unit. In the study area, the prevalence of E. multilocularis increased from 11.9% (95% confidence interval 9.9-14.0%) in 1990 to 42.0% (39.1-44.1%) in 2005. While the infection was present in foxes only in the north-western parts of Thuringia in 1990, it had spread over the entire state by 2004. These results demand increased vigilance for human alveolar echinococcosis in Thuringia., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2011
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20. More constraint on ParaHox than Hox gene families in early metazoan evolution.
- Author
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Quiquand M, Yanze N, Schmich J, Schmid V, Galliot B, and Piraino S
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- Animals, Cnidaria embryology, Evolution, Molecular, Homeodomain Proteins physiology, Multigene Family, Phylogeny, Cnidaria genetics, Genes, Homeobox, Homeodomain Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Hox and ParaHox (H/P) genes belong to evolutionary-sister clusters that arose through duplication of a ProtoHOX cluster early in animal evolution. In contrast to bilaterians, cnidarians express, beside PG1, PG2 and Gsx orthologs, numerous Hox-related genes with unclear origin. We characterized from marine hydrozoans three novel Hox-related genes expressed at medusa and polyp stages, which include a Pdx/Xlox ParaHox ortholog induced 1 day later than Gsx during embryonic development. To reconstruct H/P genes' early evolution, we performed multiple systematic comparative phylogenetic analyses, which identified derived sequences that blur the phylogenetic picture, recorded dramatically different evolutionary rates between ParaHox and Hox in cnidarians and showed the unexpected grouping of [Gsx-Pdx/Xlox-PG2-PG3] families in a single metagroup distinct from PG1. We propose a novel more parsimonious evolutionary scenario whereby H/P genes originated from a [Gsx-Pdx/Xlox-PG2-PG3]-related ProtoHox gene, the "posterior" and "anterior" H/P genes appearing secondarily. The ProtoHOX cluster would have contained the three Gsx/PG2, Pdx/PG3, Cdx/PG9 paralogs and produced through tandem duplication the primordial HOX and ParaHOX clusters in the Cnidaria-Bilateria ancestor. The stronger constraint on cnidarian ParaHox genes suggests that the primary function of pre-bilaterian H/P genes was to drive cellular evolutionary novelties such as neurogenesis rather than axis specification.
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- 2009
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21. Animal pole determinants define oral-aboral axis polarity and endodermal cell-fate in hydrozoan jellyfish Podocoryne carnea.
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Momose T and Schmid V
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- Alkaline Phosphatase metabolism, Animals, Cell Differentiation, Embryo, Nonmammalian, Endoderm enzymology, Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, Immunohistochemistry, Models, Biological, Body Patterning, Endoderm cytology, Endoderm physiology, Scyphozoa embryology
- Abstract
Cnidarians, in contrast with bilaterians, are generally considered to exhibit radial symmetry around a single body axis (oral-aboral) throughout their life-cycles. We have investigated how the oral-aboral axis is established in the hydrozoan jellyfish Podocoryne carnea. Vital labeling experiments showed that the oral end of the blastula derives from the animal pole region of the egg as has been demonstrated for other cnidarian species. Gastrulation is restricted to the oral pole such that the oral 20% of blastula cells give rise to endoderm. Unexpectedly, bisection experiments at the 8-cell stage showed that animal regions are able to develop into normally polarized larvae, but that vegetal (aboral) blastomeres completely fail to develop endoderm or to elongate. These vegetal-derived larvae also failed to polarize, as indicated by a lack of oral-specific RFamide-positive nerve cells and a disorganized tyrosinated tubulin-positive nerve net. A different result was obtained following bisection of the late blastula stage: aboral halves still lacked the capacity to develop endoderm but retained features of axial polarity including elongation of the larva and directional swimming. These results demonstrate for the first time in a cnidarian the presence of localized determinants responsible for axis determination and endoderm formation at the animal pole of the egg. They also show that axial polarity and endoderm formation are controlled by separable pathways after the blastula stage.
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- 2006
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22. Evolution of striated muscle: jellyfish and the origin of triploblasty.
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Seipel K and Schmid V
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- Animals, Cnidaria anatomy & histology, Cnidaria genetics, Genes, Regulator genetics, Larva growth & development, Mesoderm physiology, Myosin Heavy Chains genetics, Biological Evolution, Cell Differentiation physiology, Cnidaria growth & development, Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, Germ Layers cytology, Life Cycle Stages physiology, Models, Biological, Muscle, Skeletal growth & development
- Abstract
The larval and polyp stages of extant Cnidaria are bi-layered with an absence of mesoderm and its differentiation products. This anatomy originally prompted the diploblast classification of the cnidarian phylum. The medusa stage, or jellyfish, however, has a more complex anatomy characterized by a swimming bell with a well-developed striated muscle layer. Based on developmental histology of the hydrozoan medusa this muscle derives from the entocodon, a mesoderm-like third cell layer established at the onset of medusa formation. According to recent molecular studies cnidarian homologs to bilaterian mesoderm and myogenic regulators are expressed in the larval and polyp stages as well as in the entocodon and derived striated muscle. Moreover striated and smooth muscle cells may have evolved directly and independently from non-muscle cells as indicated by phylogenetic analysis of myosin heavy chain genes (MHC class II). To accommodate all evidences we propose that striated muscle-based locomotion coevolved with the nervous and digestive systems in a basic metazoan Bauplan from which the ancestors of the Ctenophora (comb jellyfish), Cnidaria (jellyfish and polyps), as well as the Bilateria are derived. We argue for a motile tri-layered cnidarian ancestor and a monophyletic descent of striated muscle in Cnidaria and Bilateria. As a consequence, diploblasty evolved secondarily in cnidarian larvae and polyps.
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- 2005
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23. The Sine oculis/Six class family of homeobox genes in jellyfish with and without eyes: development and eye regeneration.
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Stierwald M, Yanze N, Bamert RP, Kammermeier L, and Schmid V
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- Animals, Base Sequence, DNA Primers, DNA, Complementary genetics, Eye embryology, Hydrozoa genetics, Immunohistochemistry, In Situ Hybridization, Life Cycle Stages genetics, Life Cycle Stages physiology, Molecular Sequence Data, Neurons metabolism, Phylogeny, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Eye growth & development, Eye Proteins metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Genes, Homeobox genetics, Hydrozoa embryology, Regeneration genetics
- Abstract
The development of visual organs is regulated in Bilateria by a network of genes where members of the Six and Pax gene families play a central role. To investigate the molecular aspects of eye evolution, we analyzed the structure and expression patterns of cognate members of the Six family genes in jellyfish (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa), representatives of a basal, non-bilaterian phylum where complex lens eyes with spherical lens, an epidermal cornea, and a retina appear for the first time in evolution. In the jellyfish Cladonema radiatum, a species with well-developed lens eyes in the tentacle bulbs, Six1/2-Cr and Six3/6-Cr, are expressed in the eye cup. Six4/5-Cr is mainly expressed in the manubrium, the feeding, and sex organ. All three Six genes are expressed in different subsets of epidermal nerve cells, possibly of the RFamide type which are part of a net connecting the different eyes with each other and the effector organs. Furthermore, expression is found in other tissues, notably in the striated muscle. During eye regeneration, expression of Six1/2-Cr and Six3/6-Cr is upregulated, but not of Six4/5-Cr. In Podocoryne carnea, a jellyfish without eyes, Six1/2-Pc and Six3/6-Pc are also expressed in the tentacle bulbs, Six1/2-Pc additionally in the manubrium and striated muscle, and Six3/6-Pc in the mechanosensory nematocytes of the tentacle. The conserved gene structure and expression patterns of all Cladonema Six genes suggest broad conservation of upstream regulatory mechanisms in eye development.
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- 2004
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24. Developmental and evolutionary aspects of the basic helix-loop-helix transcription factors Atonal-like 1 and Achaete-scute homolog 2 in the jellyfish.
- Author
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Seipel K, Yanze N, and Schmid V
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- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Cell Differentiation, Evolution, Molecular, Molecular Sequence Data, Muscles embryology, Regeneration, Scyphozoa genetics, Helix-Loop-Helix Motifs, Scyphozoa embryology, Transcription Factors analysis
- Abstract
The close functional link of nerve and muscle cells in neuromuscular units has led to the hypothesis of a common evolutionary origin of both cell types. Jellyfish are well suited to evaluate this theory since they represent the most basal extant organisms featuring both striated muscle and a nervous system. Here we describe the structure and expression of two novel genes for basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) transcription factors, the Achaete-scute B family member Ash2 and the Atonal-like gene Atl1, in the hydrozoan jellyfish Podocoryne carnea. Ash2 is expressed exclusively in larval and adult endoderm cells and may be involved in differentiation of secretory cells. Atl1 expression is more widespread and includes the developing striated muscle as well as mechanosensory and nerve cell precursors in the medusa tentacles. Moreover, Atl1 expression is upregulated in proliferating nerve cell precursors arising from adult striated muscle cells by transdifferentiation in vitro. Likewise, the neuronal marker gene NP coding for the RFamide neuropeptide is expressed not only in mature nerve cells but also transiently in the developing muscle. The molecular evidence is concurrent to the hypothesis that muscle and nerve cells are closely linked in evolution and derive from a common myoepithelial precursor.
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- 2004
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25. Evolutionary aspects of developmentally regulated helix-loop-helix transcription factors in striated muscle of jellyfish.
- Author
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Müller P, Seipel K, Yanze N, Reber-Müller S, Streitwolf-Engel R, Stierwald M, Spring J, and Schmid V
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- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Base Sequence, Cloning, Molecular, DNA, Complementary genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, Helix-Loop-Helix Motifs genetics, Hydrozoa genetics, In Situ Hybridization, Inhibitor of Differentiation Protein 1, Molecular Sequence Data, Sequence Homology, Amino Acid, Transcription Factors genetics, Evolution, Molecular, Hydrozoa growth & development, Hydrozoa metabolism, Muscle, Skeletal growth & development, Muscle, Skeletal metabolism, Repressor Proteins, Transcription Factors chemistry, Transcription Factors metabolism
- Abstract
The function of basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) proteins in cell differentiation was shown to be conserved from Drosophila to vertebrates, exemplified by the function of MyoD in striated muscle differentiation. In phylogeny striated muscle tissue appears first in jellyfish and the question of its evolutionary position is controversially discussed. For this reason we have studied the developmental role of myogenic bHLH genes in medusa development. Based on their dimerization ability, four genes of the bHLH family of transcription factors were isolated from the hydrozoan jellyfish Podocoryne carnea. While the proteins Id and Ash group with cognate family members from bilaterians, Net-like and JellyD1 could not be unequivocally classified. Id is expressed during the medusa budding process and in the adult medusa, Ash and Net-like are expressed in all life cycle stages from egg to adult medusa and JellyD1 is expressed in the blastula and gastrula stages, the planula larva, and in late medusa bud stages. The dimerization specificity, the expression pattern, and the conservation of two residues specific for a MyoD bHLH domain suggest that JellyD1 is related to an ancestral MyoD gene. Id, Net-like, and JellyD1 are either expressed in the entocodon or its derived tissues, the striated and smooth muscle of the bell. These findings strengthen the hypothesis that the entocodon is a mesoderm-like structure and that the common ancestor of Cnidaria and Bilateria was more complex in cell-type architecture and body organization than commonly thought.
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- 2003
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26. Evolutionary conservation of the chromatin modulator Polycomb in the jellyfish Podocoryne carnea.
- Author
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Lichtneckert R, Müller P, Schmid V, and Reber-Müller S
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- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Base Sequence, Cell Differentiation physiology, Conserved Sequence, Hydrozoa, Molecular Sequence Data, Chromatin physiology, Evolution, Molecular, Repressor Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Polycomb-group (PcG) proteins form chromatin-associated multimeric complexes, which are responsible for the maintenance of the transcriptionally repressive state of regulatory genes during development. We have isolated a Polycomb homologue of the hydrozoan Podocoryne carnea by a PCR-based approach. Our results demonstrate that structure and function of Polycomb-group proteins have been conserved in evolution from cnidarians to vertebrates since Podocoryne Polycomb interacts in yeast with mouse dinG/RING1B, an interaction partner of the mouse Polycomb homologue MPc3. Polycomb is expressed throughout the life cycle of Podocoryne. In situ hybridization reveals a differential expression pattern in proliferating and differentiating tissues of the developing medusa bud. In the transdifferentiation of activated isolated striated muscle of the medusa to smooth muscle and RFamide-positive nerve cells, Polycomb expression is strongly increased when differentiation into nerve cells occurs.
- Published
- 2002
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27. Conservation of Brachyury, Mef2, and Snail in the myogenic lineage of jellyfish: a connection to the mesoderm of bilateria.
- Author
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Spring J, Yanze N, Jösch C, Middel AM, Winninger B, and Schmid V
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- Animals, Cell Differentiation, Cell Division, Cloning, Molecular, Humans, In Situ Hybridization, MEF2 Transcription Factors, Morphogenesis, Myogenic Regulatory Factors, Organ Specificity, Phylogeny, Scyphozoa classification, Scyphozoa genetics, Snail Family Transcription Factors, Brachyury Protein, DNA-Binding Proteins genetics, Fetal Proteins, Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, Mesoderm physiology, Scyphozoa embryology, T-Box Domain Proteins genetics, Transcription Factors genetics
- Abstract
One major difference between simple metazoans such as cnidarians and all the bilaterian animals is thought to involve the invention of mesoderm. The terms diploblasts and triploblasts are therefore, often used to group prebilaterian and bilaterian animals, respectively. However, jellyfish contain well developed striated and smooth muscle tissues that derive from the entocodon, a mesoderm-like tissue formed during medusa development. We investigated the hypothesis, that the entocodon could be homologous to the third germ layer of bilaterians by analyzing the structures and expression patterns of the homologues of Brachyury, Mef2, and Snail in the jellyfish Podocoryne carnea. These are regulatory genes from the T-box, MADS-box and zinc finger families known to play important roles in bilaterian mesoderm patterning and muscle differentiation. The sequence and expression data demonstrate that the genes are structurally and functionally conserved and even more similar to humans or other deuterostomes than to protostome model organisms such as Drosophila or Caenorhabditis elegans. Based on these data we conclude that the common ancestor of the cnidarians and bilaterians not only shared genes that play a role in regulating myogenesis but already used them to develop and differentiate muscle systems similar to those of triploblasts., (Copyright 2002 Elsevier Science (USA).)
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
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