Throwback at the New Year's event: These were the best Master's theses of 2023

As part of the New Year celebrations, the Biology department honoured the best Master's theses from the previous year. The prizes, donated by the Dean's Office and the GBM, went to Kai Jürgens, Fabian Lange and Sabrina Wilkening. 

First, Dean Prof. Dr. Sabine Zachgo (Botany division) led the guests through the events of the past year in the large lecture hall and gave a foretaste of the developments to be expected in the coming months. During the ceremonial address, the Master's students who had completed excellent theses were also honored with a short laudation by their supervisors.

Kai Jürgens: „Atlas of Drosophila Anatomy“

Kai Jürgens received this year's Dean's Office award in the category "Best organismic Master's thesis". In the Zoology division (headed by Prof. Dr. Achim Paululat), he used scanning electron microscopy to capture high-resolution and aesthetically pleasing images of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. In his master's thesis, entitled "Atlas of Drosophila Anatomy", he compiled his impressive image material of a multitude of anatomical details. Based on these images, a scientific manuscript has been submitted to the highly renowned journal "Genetics" for publication. We hope that the international Drosophila community will soon be able to benefit from a new image atlas with Kai Jürgens as first author in research and teaching. One of his images, a frontal view of the head, has already won the image competition of the microscope manufacturer JEOL in 2022.

Fabio Lange: „Exploring molecular crosstalk between sphingomyelin and phosphoinositide-dependent lysosomal repair using organellar proteomics”

This year's GBM (Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology) Master's Prize went to Fabio Lange, who researched the complex repair mechanisms of damaged lysosomes under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Joost Holthuis (head of the Molecular Cell Biology division). In the course of his Master's thesis, he also succeeded in establishing a new experimental protocol that enabled him for the first time to isolate damaged lysosomes in such a way that they could subsequently be analyzed by mass spectrometry. In this way, he gained a new insight into the protein composition (proteomics) of defective cell organelles and his protocol has already made big waves within the scientific community.

Sabrina Wilkening: „Evaluation of self-labeling enzyme dyes for correlative in-resin light and electron microscopy“

This year, in addition to the two traditional Master's prizes, there was a special GBM prize for the first time, which was intended to honor another particularly outstanding Master's thesis. The special prize was awarded to Sabrina Wilkening for her excellent Master's thesis under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Michael Hensel (head of the Microbiology division).

In this thesis, Sabrina addressed an essential problem in the application of correlative light and electron microscopy (CLEM), a state-of-the-art microscopy technique that combines light and electron microscopy to determine the nanometer-precise localization of proteins in subcellular structures. In a first step, so-called fluorophore tags, i.e. fluorescent markers, are used in living cells to identify the proteins to be examined. After light microscopy, the samples are fixed for electron microscopy in order to correlate the two images with each other and thus place the labeled proteins in the structural context of the cell. The problem: the elaborate fixation methods for electron microscopy change the structure of the sample, and a precise correlation of the two images is not always exact. In addition, most fluorophores lose their effectiveness during sample fixation.

In her Master's thesis, Sabrina Wilkening established an application-safe protocol that uses synthetic, self-activating fluorophores that survive fixation. This allows light and electron microscopic images to be recorded after fixation and without discontinuity, ensuring reliable correlation of electron and light microscopic images. The development of such a protocol to improve correlative light and electron microscopy significantly improves the output of correlative microscopy studies and will certainly find application in numerous studies.

We would like to congratulate Kai Jürgens, Fabio Lange and Sabrina Wilkening on their outstanding theses and wish them all the best for their professional careers!

About the awards

Prof. Dr. Christian Ungermann (head of the Biochemistry division) organizes the call for entries for the Master's prizes. Lecturers at the Biology department are invited to nominate excellent Master's theses under their supervision, and a jury will then select the best theses.

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