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Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

AgeFactDB—the JenAge Ageing Factor Database—towards data integration in ageing research

Rolf Hühne; Torsten Thalheim; Jürgen Sühnel

AgeFactDB (http://agefactdb.jenage.de) is a database aimed at the collection and integration of ageing phenotype data including lifespan information. Ageing factors are considered to be genes, chemical compounds or other factors such as dietary restriction, whose action results in a changed lifespan or another ageing phenotype. Any information related to the effects of ageing factors is called an observation and is presented on observation pages. To provide concise access to the complete information for a particular ageing factor, corresponding observations are also summarized on ageing factor pages. In a first step, ageing-related data were primarily taken from existing databases such as the Ageing Gene Database—GenAge, the Lifespan Observations Database and the Dietary Restriction Gene Database—GenDR. In addition, we have started to include new ageing-related information. Based on homology data taken from the HomoloGene Database, AgeFactDB also provides observation and ageing factor pages of genes that are homologous to known ageing-related genes. These homologues are considered as candidate or putative ageing-related genes. AgeFactDB offers a variety of search and browse options, and also allows the download of ageing factor or observation lists in TSV, CSV and XML formats.


Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2010

Tautomer Identification and Tautomer Structure Generation Based on the InChI Code

Torsten Thalheim; Armin Vollmer; Ralf-Uwe Ebert; Ralph Kühne; Gerrit Schüürmann

An algorithm is introduced that enables a fast generation of all possible prototropic tautomers resulting from the mobile H atoms and associated heteroatoms as defined in the InChI code. The InChI-derived set of possible tautomers comprises (1,3)-shifts for open-chain molecules and (1,n)-shifts (with n being an odd number >3) for ring systems. In addition, our algorithm includes also, as extension to the InChI scope, those larger (1,n)-shifts that can be constructed from joining separate but conjugated InChI sequences of tautomer-active heteroatoms. The developed algorithm is described in detail, with all major steps illustrated through explicit examples. Application to approximately 72,500 organic compounds taken from EINECS (European Inventory of Existing Commercial Chemical Substances) shows that around 11% of the substances occur in different heteroatom-prototropic tautomeric forms. Additional QSAR (quantitative structure-activity relationship) predictions of their soil sorption coefficient and water solubility reveal variations across tautomers up to more than two and 4 orders of magnitude, respectively. For a small subset of nine compounds, analysis of quantum chemically predicted tautomer energies supports the view that among all tautomers of a given compound, those restricted to H atom exchanges between heteroatoms usually include the thermodynamically most stable structures.


Nature Cell Biology | 2018

Adhesion forces and cortical tension couple cell proliferation and differentiation to drive epidermal stratification

Yekaterina A. Miroshnikova; Huy Quang Le; David Schneider; Torsten Thalheim; Matthias Rübsam; Nadine Bremicker; Julien Polleux; Nadine Kamprad; Marco Tarantola; Irène Wang; Martial Balland; Carien M. Niessen; Joerg Galle; Sara A. Wickström

To establish and maintain organ structure and function, tissues need to balance stem cell proliferation and differentiation rates and coordinate cell fate with position. By quantifying and modelling tissue stress and deformation in the mammalian epidermis, we find that this balance is coordinated through local mechanical forces generated by cell division and delamination. Proliferation within the basal stem/progenitor layer, which displays features of a jammed, solid-like state, leads to crowding, thereby locally distorting cell shape and stress distribution. The resulting decrease in cortical tension and increased cell–cell adhesion trigger differentiation and subsequent delamination, reinstating basal cell layer density. After delamination, cells establish a high-tension state as they increase myosin II activity and convert to E-cadherin-dominated adhesion, thereby reinforcing the boundary between basal and suprabasal layers. Our results uncover how biomechanical signalling integrates single-cell behaviours to couple proliferation, cell fate and positioning to generate a multilayered tissue.Mechanics of epidermal differentiation Miroshnikova et al. find that during embryonic development, epidermal basal layer crowding generates local changes in cell shape, cortical tension, and adhesion that initiate differentiation and delamination


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2016

Stem cell competition in the gut: insights from multi-scale computational modelling

Torsten Thalheim; Peter Buske; Jens Przybilla; Karen Rother; Markus Loeffler; Joerg Galle

Three-dimensional (3D) computational tissue models can provide a comprehensive description of tissue dynamics at the molecular, cellular and tissue level. Moreover, they can support the development of hypotheses about cellular interactions and about synergies between major signalling pathways. We exemplify these capabilities by simulation of a 3D single-cell-based model of mouse small intestinal crypts. We analyse the impact of lineage specification, distribution and cellular lifespan on clonal competition and study effects of Notch- and Wnt activation on fixation of mutations within the tissue. Based on these results, we predict that experimentally observed synergistic effects between autonomous Notch- and Wnt signalling in triggering intestinal tumourigenesis originate in the suppression of Wnt-dependent secretory lineage specification by Notch, giving rise to an increased fixation probability of Wnt-activating mutations. Our study demonstrates that 3D computational tissue models can support a mechanistic understanding of long-term tissue dynamics under homeostasis and during transformation.


Genes | 2018

Linking DNA Damage and Age-Related Promoter DNA Hyper-Methylation in the Intestine

Torsten Thalheim; Maria Herberg; Joerg Galle

Aberrant DNA methylation in stem cells is a hallmark of aging and tumor development. Here, we explore whether and how DNA damage repair might impact on these time-dependent changes, in particular in proliferative intestinal stem cells. We introduce a 3D multiscale computer model of intestinal crypts enabling simulation of aberrant DNA and histone methylation of gene promoters during aging. We assume histone state-dependent activity of de novo DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs) and methylation-dependent binding of maintenance DNMTs to CpGs. We simulate aging with and without repeated DNA repair. Motivated by recent findings on the histone demethylase KDM2b, we consider that DNA repair is associated with chromatin opening and improved recruitment of de novo DNMTs. Our results suggest that methylation-dependent binding of maintenance DNMTs to CpGs, establishing bistable DNA methylation states, is a prerequisite to promoter hyper-methylation following DNA repair. With this, the transient increase in de novo DNMT activity during repair can induce switches from low to high methylation states. These states remain stable after repair, leading to an epigenetic drift. The switches are most frequent in genes with H3K27me3 modified promoters. Our model provides a mechanistic explanation on how even successful DNA repair might confer long term changes of the epigenome.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2017

The Regulatory Capacity of Bivalent Genes—A Theoretical Approach

Torsten Thalheim; Maria Herberg; Markus Loeffler; Joerg Galle

Bivalent genes are frequently associated with developmental and lineage specification processes. Resolving their bivalency enables fast changes in their expression, which potentially can trigger cell fate decisions. Here, we provide a theoretical model of bivalency that allows for predictions on the occurrence, stability and regulatory capacity of this prominent modification state. We suggest that bivalency enables balanced gene expression heterogeneity that constitutes a prerequisite of robust lineage priming in somatic stem cells. Moreover, we demonstrate that interactions between the histone and DNA methylation machineries together with the proliferation activity control the stability of the bivalent state and can turn it into an unmodified state. We suggest that deregulation of these interactions underlies cell transformation processes as associated with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and provide a model of AML blast formation following deregulation of the Ten-eleven Translocation (TET) pathway.


Developmental Biology | 2018

Linking stem cell function and growth pattern of intestinal organoids

Torsten Thalheim; Marianne Quaas; Maria Herberg; Ulf-Dietrich Braumann; Christiane Kerner; Markus Loeffler; Gabriela Aust; Joerg Galle

Intestinal stem cells (ISCs) require well-defined signals from their environment in order to carry out their specific functions. Most of these signals are provided by neighboring cells that form a stem cell niche, whose shape and cellular composition self-organize. Major features of this self-organization can be studied in ISC-derived organoid culture. In this system, manipulation of essential pathways of stem cell maintenance and differentiation results in well-described growth phenotypes. We here provide an individual cell-based model of intestinal organoids that enables a mechanistic explanation of the observed growth phenotypes. In simulation studies of the 3D structure of expanding organoids, we investigate interdependences between Wnt- and Notch-signaling which control the shape of the stem cell niche and, thus, the growth pattern of the organoids. Similar to in vitro experiments, changes of pathway activities alter the cellular composition of the organoids and, thereby, affect their shape. Exogenous Wnt enforces transitions from branched into a cyst-like growth pattern; known to occur spontaneously during long term organoid expansion. Based on our simulation results, we predict that the cyst-like pattern is associated with biomechanical changes of the cells which assign them a growth advantage. The results suggest ongoing stem cell adaptation to in vitro conditions during long term expansion by stabilizing Wnt-activity. Our study exemplifies the potential of individual cell-based modeling in unraveling links between molecular stem cell regulation and 3D growth of tissues. This kind of modeling combines experimental results in the fields of stem cell biology and cell biomechanics constituting a prerequisite for a better understanding of tissue regeneration as well as developmental processes.


Molecular Informatics | 2015

A Branch-and-Bound Approach for Tautomer Enumeration

Torsten Thalheim; Barbara Wagner; Ralph Kühne; Martin Middendorf; Gerrit Schüürmann

Knowledge about tautomer forms of a structure is important since, e.g., a property prediction for a molecule can yield to different results which depend on the individual tautomer. Tautomers are isomers that can be transformed to each other through chemical equilibrium reactions. In this paper the first exact Branch‐and‐Bound (B&B) algorithm to calculate tautomer structures is proposed. The algorithm is complete in the sense of tautomerism and generates all possible tautomers of a structure according to the tautomer definition, it is initialized with. To be efficient, the algorithm takes advantage of symmetric and formation properties. Some restrictions are used to enable an early pruning of some branches of the B&B tree. This is important, since a simple enumeration strategy would lead to number of candidate tautomers that is exponentially increasing with the number of hydrogen atoms and their attachment sites. The proposed implementation of the B&B algorithm covers the majority of the prototropic tautomer cases, but can be adapted to other kinds of tautomerism too. Furthermore, a computer processable definition of tautomerism is given in the form of the moving hydrogen atom problem.


Journal of Cheminformatics | 2010

A Branch-and-Bound approach for tautomer enumeration

Torsten Thalheim; Ralf-Uwe Ebert; Ralph Kühne; Gerrit Schüürmann

For molecules with mobile H atoms, the result of quantitative structure-activity relationships (QSARs) depends on the position of the respective hydrogen atoms. Thus to obtain reliable results, tautomerism needs to be taken into account. In the last years, many approaches were introduced to achieve this. In this work we present a further development of our previous algorithm based on InChI-layers. While the InChI ansatz supports only heteroatom-tautomerism, we suggest an extension regarding carbon atoms too. Whereas with other tautomer generating algorithms the hydrogen shifts are based on pattern-rules, we try to overcome the rule constriction and evolve a more common solution. The advantage of our approach is quite simple. Due to the avoidance of a rule system with its necessity for exceptions to the rules, we can apply our solution to any kind of tautomerism definition. We set up a Branch-and-Bound approach, which is optimized to generate a complete enumeration of all tautomers, with regard to a certain definition, from any structure. With few and easy decisions like symmetry detection, we avoid a lot of calculation overhead. Decisions with significant influence on the algorithm efficiency are made as early as possible. We have set up several kinds of tautomer definitions and derived a stable definition covering the major kinds of protropic tautomerism. Furthermore we analyzed, what expenditure of time for large databases (case study: more than 70,000 entries) is needed to investigate which structures have tautomers and which not for more than 99% of the database entries. This study has been financially supported by the EU project OSIRIS (IP, contract no. 037017).


Archive | 2008

A Hybrid Population based ACO Algorithm for Protein Folding

Torsten Thalheim; Daniel Merkle; Martin Middendorf

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Gerrit Schüürmann

Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ

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Ralph Kühne

Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ

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Ralf-Uwe Ebert

Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ

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Barbara Wagner

Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ

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