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Atherosklerotische Stenosen der Karotiden sind eine häufige Erkrankung mit variablem Verlauf und stellen durch ihre potentielle Emboligenität einen wichtigen Risikofaktor für zerebrale Ischämien dar. Klinische und paraklinische Parameter helfen, das individuelle Schlaganfallrisiko bei Patienten mit hochgradigen ACI-Stenosen einzuschätzen, das unmittelbar nach einem thrombembolischen Ereignis besonders hoch ist. Als histomorphologisches Korrelat dieser "Vulnerabilität" wird die Ruptur der fibrotischen Deckplatte der Plaque propagiert, die häufiger bei symptomatischen Patienten nachzuweisen ist. Sie korreliert mit der Infiltration der Gefäßwand durch aktivierte Leukozyten, die über molekulare und zelluläre Interaktionen die Zell- und Bindegewebskomposition der Plaque verändern können. Die strukturelle Integrität atherosklerotischer Läsionen beruht auf der extrazellulären Vernetzung von kollagenem Bindegewebe, das überwiegend von phänotypisch veränderten glatten Gefäßmuskelzellen produziert wird. Eine Hypothese besagt, dass die im Rahmen der Inflammation stattfindende Zunahme proapoptotischer Mediatoren über eine Ausdünnung der zellulären und bindegewebigen Strukturen zu einem Verlust an mechanischer Stabilität führt und somit eine symptomatische Ruptur begünstigt. Da der Nachweis einer Ruptur mit Exponierung des thrombogenen nekrotischen Kerns allerdings nur in einem Teil der symptomatischen Plaques und umgekehrt auch in einem Teil der asymptomatischen nachgewiesen werden kann, ist aber bislang unklar, ob o.g. Abläufe in der humanen Karotis-Atherosklerose tatsächlich mit einer klinischen Relevanz einhergehen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde daher das Auftreten der Apoptose von glatten Gefäßmuskelzellen (mittels DNA in situ end labeling Technik, TUNEL-Färbung) in 38 prospektiv gesammelten Endarterektomie-Präparaten hochgradiger Karotisstenosen quantitativ erfasst und statistisch in Beziehung gesetzt zu Parametern der Plaque-Instabilität, klinisch definiert durch kürzliche (< 60 Tage zurückliegende) ischämische Ereignisse (n=19) und histopathologisch definiert über den Nachweis einer Plaque-Ruptur (n=14). Außerdem wurde eine morphometrische Analyse der einzelnen Plaque-Komponenten durchgeführt und deren Ergebnisse zu den zellulären und klinischen Parametern in Beziehung gesetzt. Die Morphometrie ergab keine signifikanten Unterschiede zwischen symptomatischen vs. asymptomatischen und rupturierten vs. unrupturierten Plaques was die Größe der fibrotischen Deckplatte, die durchschnittliche Dicke (Kern-Lumen-Distanz) und die dünnsten bzw. dicksten Stellen der Deckplatte anbelangt. Anzahl und Konzentration apoptotischer glatter Muskelzellen war deutlich (p<0,001) erhöht in symptomatischen, klinisch instabilen, Karotisplaques. Allerdings waren die Apoptose-Raten in Präparaten, die eine Plaque-Ruptur aufwiesen, nicht signifikant erhöht. Darüber hinaus fand sich kein Hinweis darauf, dass erhöhte Apoptose-Raten zu einem quantifizierbaren Verlust glatter Gefäßmuskelzellen in der fibrotischen Deckplatte führen. Auf dem Boden dieser Ergebnisse kann gefolgert werden, dass erhöhten Apoptose-Raten glatter Gefäßmuskelzellen in der humanen Atherosklerose offenbar eine tragende Bedeutung bei der Entwicklung thrombembolischer Ereignisse zukommt. Allerdings wird die Annahme, dass erhöhte Apoptose-Raten über einen Verlust an glatten Gefäßmuskelzellen Einfluss auf die morphometrischen Eigenschaften der fibrotischen Deckplatte atherosklerotischer Karotis-Läsionen nehmen und zu deren Ausdünnung führen durch die vorliegende Untersuchung nicht gestützt. Vielmehr scheint es plausibel, dass die Apoptose glatter Muskelzellen im Rahmen inflammatorischer Prozesse Einfluss auf die Komposition der Karotisplaque nimmt und so über eine Desintegration der zellulären und bindegewebigen Bestandteile zu reduzierter mechanischer Widerstandskraft und Rupturneigung führt.
Die Bedeutung der Apoptose und die zugrundeliegenden Mechanismen in verschiedenen pathophysiologischen Zuständen des Herzens sind noch weitgehend ungeklärt und es bleibt zu zeigen, daß die Apoptose-Signaltransduktion ähnlich reguliert wird, wie aus in vitro-Versuchen bekannt ist. Deshalb wurde die Apoptose in verschiedenen Tiermodellen kardialer Erkrankungen untersucht werden, um Hinweise auf die zugrundeliegende Signal-transduktion, durch Analyse der Proteine Bcl-2 und Bax, der finalen Exekutor-Caspase Caspase-3 oder p53 zu bekommen. Apoptose in der durch Hyperlipidämie induzierten Atherosklerose: In Aorten von 'Froxfield Heritable Hypercholesterolemic'-Kaninchen (genetische Hyperlipidämie) korrelierte die Apoptose von vaskulären glatten Muskelzellen und Makrophagen in fortgeschrittenen fibrösen Plaques mit einem 18-fachen Anstieg des proapoptotischen Bax. In Aorten Cholesterin gefütterter 'New Zealand White'-Kaninchen (0,25% Cholest., 12 Wochen) konnte eine erhöhte Baxexpression in Endothelzellen nachgewiesen werden, ohne daß morphologische Veränderungen zu beobachten waren. Die Apoptose in akut abgestoßenen allogenen Herztransplantaten (Rattenmodell) war von einer erhöhten Bax-Expression und einer totalen, posttranslationalen Degradation des antiapoptotischen Bcl-2 in ein spezifisches Degradationsprodukt durch eine Serinprotease gekennzeichnet. Die Rolle des wichtigen kardiovaskulären Mediators Stickstoffmonoxid (NO) auf die Apoptose wird kontrovers diskutiert. Da in der Zellkultur protektive Effekte von NO gezeigt werden konnten, wurde deren physiologische Relevanz in der durch Ischämie/Reperfusion induzierten Apoptose ex vivo im Langendorff-Rattenherzen untersucht. Es konnte gezeigt werden, daß Hemmung der endogenen NO-Synthese mit L-NG-Monomethyl-L-Arginin (LNMMA, 1mM) die Apoptose potenzierte und mit einer Aktivierung der Caspase-3 korrelierte. Bcl-2 und Bax wurden nicht reguliert. Untersuchung der Regulation der Proteinexpression der eNOS (endotheliale NO-Synthase) durch den proinflammatorischen/ proatherogenen Tumor-Nekrose-Faktor-[Alpha] (TNF[Alpha]) in der Endothelzellkultur (HUVEC) gaben Hinweise auf einen, die eNOS schützenden, Interaktionspartner. Zusammenfassend konnte in allen untersuchten Modellen für Herz(-Kreislauf)-Krankheiten Apoptose nachgewiesen werden, die jeweils spezifische Charakteristika zeigt, deren genauere Aufklärung interessante Ziele zukünftiger präventiver und therapeutischer Maßnahmen verspricht. Die Befunde weisen zudem auf antiapoptotische Effekte von NO - insbesondere durch die endotheliale NO-Synthaseaktivität - hin, deren genauere Charakterisierung dazu beitragen könnte, pathophysiologische Zustände der kardiovaskulären Biologie zu erklären.
Ubiquitylation in immune disorders and cancer: from molecular mechanisms to therapeutic implications
(2012)
Conjugation of ubiquitin to proteins (ubiquitylation) has emerged to be one of the most crucial post-translational modifications controlling virtually all cellular processes. What was once regarded as a mere signal for protein degradation has turned out to be a major regulator of molecular signalling networks. Deregulation of ubiquitin signalling is closely associated with various human pathologies. Here, we summarize the current knowledge of ubiquitin signalling in immune deficiencies and cancer as well as the available therapeutic strategies targeting the ubiquitin system in combating these pathogenic conditions.
An abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is a pathological widening of the aortic wall characterized by loss of smooth muscle cells (SMCs), extracellular matrix degradation, and local inflammation. This condition is often asymptomatic until rupture occurs, leading to high morbidity and mortality rates. Diagnosis is mostly accidental and the only currently available treatment option remains surgical intervention. Circular RNAs (circRNAs) represent a novel class of regulatory non-coding RNAs that originate from backsplicing. Their highly stable loop structure, combined with a remarkable enrichment in body fluids, make circRNAs promising disease biomarkers. We investigated the contribution of circRNAs to AAA pathogenesis and their potential application to improve AAA diagnostics. Gene expression analysis revealed the presence of deregulated circular transcripts stemming from AAA-relevant gene loci. Among these, the circRNA to the Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated gene (cATM) was upregulated in human AAA specimens, in AAA-derived SMCs, and serum samples collected from aneurysm patients. In primary aortic SMCs, cATM increased upon angiotensin II and doxorubicin stimulation, while its silencing triggered apoptosis. Higher cATM levels made AAA-derived SMCs less vulnerable to oxidative stress, compared with control SMCs. These data suggest that cATM contributes to elicit an adaptive oxidative-stress response in SMCs and provides a reliable AAA disease signature.
Simple Summary:
CDK9, in combination with Cyclin T1, is one of the major regulators of RNA Polymerase II mediated productive transcription of critical genes in any cell. The activity of CDK9 is significantly up-regulated in a wide variety of cancer entities, to aid in the overexpression of genes responsible for the regulation of functions, which are beneficial to the cancer cells, like proliferation, survival, cell cycle regulation, DNA damage repair and metastasis. Enhanced CDK9 activity, therefore, leads to poorer prognosis in many cancer types, offering the rationale to target it using small-molecule inhibitors. Several, increasingly specific inhibitors, have been developed, some of which are presently in clinical trials. Other approaches being tested involve combining inhibitors against CDK9 activity with those against CDK9’s upstream regulators like BRD4, SEC and HSP90; or downstream effectors like cMYC and MCL-1. The inhibition of CDK9’s activity holds the potential to be a highly effective anti-cancer therapeutic.
Abstract:
Cyclin Dependent Kinase 9 (CDK9) is one of the most important transcription regulatory members of the CDK family. In conjunction with its main cyclin partner—Cyclin T1, it forms the Positive Transcription Elongation Factor b (P-TEFb) whose primary function in eukaryotic cells is to mediate the positive transcription elongation of nascent mRNA strands, by phosphorylating the S2 residues of the YSPTSPS tandem repeats at the C-terminus domain (CTD) of RNA Polymerase II (RNAP II). To aid in this process, P-TEFb also simultaneously phosphorylates and inactivates a number of negative transcription regulators like 5,6-dichloro-1-β-D-ribofuranosylbenzimidazole (DRB) Sensitivity-Inducing Factor (DSIF) and Negative Elongation Factor (NELF). Significantly enhanced activity of CDK9 is observed in multiple cancer types, which is universally associated with significantly shortened Overall Survival (OS) of the patients. In these cancer types, CDK9 regulates a plethora of cellular functions including proliferation, survival, cell cycle regulation, DNA damage repair and metastasis. Due to the extremely critical role of CDK9 in cancer cells, inhibiting its functions has been the subject of intense research, resulting the development of multiple, increasingly specific small-molecule inhibitors, some of which are presently in clinical trials. The search for newer generation CDK9 inhibitors with higher specificity and lower potential toxicities and suitable combination therapies continues. In fact, the Phase I clinical trials of the latest, highly specific CDK9 inhibitor BAY1251152, against different solid tumors have shown good anti-tumor and on-target activities and pharmacokinetics, combined with manageable safety profile while the phase I and II clinical trials of another inhibitor AT-7519 have been undertaken or are undergoing. To enhance the effectiveness and target diversity and reduce potential drug-resistance, the future of CDK9 inhibition would likely involve combining CDK9 inhibitors with inhibitors like those against BRD4, SEC, MYC, MCL-1 and HSP90.
The ability to escape apoptosis or programmed cell death is a hallmark of human cancers, for example pancreatic cancer. This can promote tumorigenesis, since too little cell death by apoptosis disturbs tissue homeostasis. Additionally, defective apoptosis signaling is the underlying cause of failure to respond to current treatment approaches, since therapy-mediated antitumor activity requires the intactness of apoptosis signaling pathways in cancer cells. Thus, the elucidation of defects in the regulation of apoptosis in pancreatic carcinoma can result in the identification of novel targets for therapeutic interference and for exploitation for cancer drug discovery. Keywords: apoptosis; pancreatic cancer; TRAIL; IAPs; mitochondria
Apoptosis is deregulated in most, if not all, cancers, including hematological malignancies. Smac mimetics that antagonize Inhibitor of Apoptosis (IAP) proteins have so far largely been investigated in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cell lines; however, little is yet known on the therapeutic potential of Smac mimetics in primary AML samples. In this study, we therefore investigated the antileukemic activity of the Smac mimetic BV6 in diagnostic samples of 67 adult AML patients and correlated the response to clinical, cytogenetic and molecular markers and gene expression profiles. Treatment with cytarabine (ara-C) was used as a standard chemotherapeutic agent. Interestingly, about half (51%) of primary AML samples are sensitive to BV6 and 21% intermediate responsive, while 28% are resistant. Notably, 69% of ara-C-resistant samples show a good to fair response to BV6. Furthermore, combination treatment with ara-C and BV6 exerts additive effects in most samples. Whole-genome gene expression profiling identifies cell death, TNFR1 and NF-κB signaling among the top pathways that are activated by BV6 in BV6-sensitive, but not in BV6-resistant cases. Furthermore, sensitivity of primary AML blasts to BV6 correlates with significantly elevated expression levels of TNF and lower levels of XIAP in diagnostic samples, as well as with NPM1 mutation. In a large set of primary AML samples, these data provide novel insights into factors regulating Smac mimetic response in AML and have important implications for the development of Smac mimetic-based therapies and related diagnostics in AML.
Evasion of apoptosis, for example, by inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) proteins, contributes to treatment resistance and poor outcome in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Here we identify a novel synergistic interaction between the small-molecule second mitochondria-derived activator of caspases (Smac) mimetic BV6, which antagonizes X-linked IAP, cellular IAP (cIAP)1 and cIAP2, and the demethylating agents 5-azacytidine or 5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine (DAC) to induce cell death in AML cells, including apoptosis-resistant cells. Calculation of combination index (CI) confirms that this drug combination is highly synergistic (CI 0.02–0.4). In contrast, BV6 and DAC at equimolar concentrations do not cause synergistic toxicity against normal peripheral blood lymphocytes, pointing to some tumor cell selectivity. Molecular studies reveal that BV6 and DAC cooperate to trigger the activation of caspases, mitochondrial perturbations and DNA fragmentation, consistent with apoptotic cell death. However, the broad-range caspase inhibitor N-benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp-fluoromethylketone (zVAD.fmk) fails to protect against BV6/DAC-induced cell death and even significantly increases the percentage of Annexin-V/propidium iodide double-positive cells. Importantly, BV6/DAC-induced cell death in the presence of zVAD.fmk is significantly reduced by pharmacological inhibition of key components of necroptosis signaling, that is, receptor-interacting protein (RIP) 1 using necrostatin-1 or mixed lineage kinase domain-like protein (MLKL) using necrosulfonamide. This indicates a switch from BV6/DAC-induced cell death from apoptosis to necroptosis upon caspase inhibition. Thus, BV6 cooperates with demethylating agents to induce cell death in AML cells and circumvents apoptosis resistance via a switch to necroptosis as an alternative mode of cell death. The identification of a novel synergism of BV6 and demethylating agents has important implications for the development of new treatment strategies for AML.
In eukaryotes, double-stranded (ds) RNA induces sequence-specific inhibition of gene expression referred to as RNA interference (RNAi). We exploited RNAi to define the role of HER2/neu in the neoplastic proliferation of human breast cancer cells. We transfected SK-BR-3, BT-474, MCF-7, and MDA-MB-468 breast cancer cells with short interfering RNA (siRNA) targeted against human HER2/neu and analyzed the specific inhibition of HER2/neu expression by Northern and Western blots. Transfection with HER2/neu-specific siRNA resulted in a sequence-specific decrease in HER2/neu mRNA and protein levels. Moreover, transfection with HER2/neu siRNA caused cell cycle arrest at G0/G1 in the breast cancer cell lines SKBR-3 and BT-474, consistent with a powerful RNA silencing effect. siRNA treatment resulted in an antiproliferative and apoptotic response in cells overexpressing HER2/neu, but had no influence in cells with almost no expression of HER2/neu proteins like MDA-MB-468 cells. These data indicate that HER2/neu function is essential for the proliferation of HER2/neuoverexpressing breast cancer cells. Our observations suggest that siRNA targeted against human HER2/neu may be valuable tools as anti proliferative agents that display activity against neoplastic cells at very low doses.
Shikonin reduces growth of docetaxel-resistant prostate cancer cells mainly through necroptosis
(2021)
Simple Summary: Prostate carcinoma (PCa) is the most common tumor in men with an increasing age-associated risk. Several therapy strategies, one of which is docetaxel (DX) chemotherapy, have been established. However, due to the development of therapy resistance, in which chemotherapy no longer effectively combats the cancer, advanced, metastasized PCa with a poor prognosis may become manifested and therapy inevitably fails. Thus, new treatment options are urgently needed. Shikonin (SHI), from Traditional Chinese Medicine, has revealed promising antitumor activity in several tumor entities. In the current study, the impact of SHI on four therapy-sensitive and four respective DX-resistant PCa cell lines was determined. SHI induced growth inhibition mainly by necroptosis, a type of cell death, in all the tested therapy-sensitive, but more importantly, DX-resistant PCa cell lines. Corresponding molecular alterations contributing to growth inhibition after SHI exposure were found. SHI could, therefore, be a promising additive in treating advanced PCa.
Abstract: The prognosis for advanced prostate carcinoma (PCa) remains poor due to development of therapy resistance, and new treatment options are needed. Shikonin (SHI) from Traditional Chinese Medicine has induced antitumor effects in diverse tumor entities, but data related to PCa are scarce. Therefore, the parental (=sensitive) and docetaxel (DX)-resistant PCa cell lines, PC3, DU145, LNCaP, and 22Rv1 were exposed to SHI [0.1–1.5 μM], and tumor cell growth, proliferation, cell cycling, cell death (apoptosis, necrosis, and necroptosis), and metabolic activity were evaluated. Correspondingly, the expression of regulating proteins was assessed. Exposure to SHI time- and dose-dependently inhibited tumor cell growth and proliferation in parental and DX-resistant PCa cells, accompanied by cell cycle arrest in the G2/M or S phase and modulation of cell cycle regulating proteins. SHI induced apoptosis and more dominantly necroptosis in both parental and DX-resistant PCa cells. This was shown by enhanced pRIP1 and pRIP3 expression and returned growth if applying the necroptosis inhibitor necrostatin-1. No SHI-induced alteration in metabolic activity of the PCa cells was detected. The significant antitumor effects induced by SHI to parental and DX-resistant PCa cells make the addition of SHI to standard therapy a promising treatment strategy for patients with advanced PCa.