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Drug toxicity and viral resistance limit long-term efficacy of antiviral drug treatment for HIV
infection. Thus, alternative therapies need to be explored. Previously, group of “Prof. von Laer”
tested the infusion of T lymphocytes transduced with a retroviral vector (M87o) that expresses an
HIV entry inhibitory peptide (maC46). Gene-modified autologous T cells were infused into 10
HIV-infected patients with advanced disease and multidrug resistant virus during antiretroviral
combination therapy. T cell infusions were tolerated well with no severe side effects. A
significant increase of CD4 counts was observed post infusion. At the end of the one-year
follow-up, the CD4 counts of all patients were still around or above baseline. Gene-modified
cells could be detected in peripheral blood, lymph nodes and bone marrow throughout the oneyear
follow-up, whereby marking levels correlated with the cell dose. No significant changes of
viral load were observed during the first four months. Four of the seven patients that changed
their antiviral drug regimen thereafter responded with a significant decline in plasma viral load.
In conclusion, the transfer of gene-modified cells was safe, led to sustained levels of gene
marking and may improve immune competence in HIV-infected patients with advanced disease
and multidrug resistant virus. However, the low level of gene marking and the lack of substantial
long-term in vivo accumulation of gene-protected cells observed in this trial clearly demonstrate
the requirement for new vectors with new strategy.
In this thesis self‐inactivating lentiviral vectors harboring internal promoters and RNA elements
were therefore evaluated for their potential use in a clinical gene‐therapy trial. The results from
this work provide the basis for the selection of a suitable candidate vector for extensive
preclinical testing. Apart from being capable of transducing non‐dividing cells, lentiviral vectors
incorporate a number of additional features that are of potential value for gene therapeutic
applications. These include a larger packaging capacity, higher titers than γ‐retroviral vectors
and, most importantly, a reduced risk of deregulating cellular genes due to its natural integration
profile. The use of internal promoters to drive expression of the therapeutic transgene maC46
should further improve the safety profile of these new‐generation vectors, while an additional
artificial splice acceptor (SA) into the 5‟UTR of the transgene over all elevate transgene
expression. The rationale for this is that hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells will be
Summary
98
protected from enhancer‐mediated transactivation effects and also from potential side effects due
to the aberrant expression of maC46 while at the same time the full clinical benefit for the
patients is maintained.
In order to find a suitable candidate for preclinical studies, two candidate therapeutic vectors
harboring different regulatory elements were selected based on results from pilot experiments.
The internal promoters used to drive expression of codon optimized maC46 were the PGK
promoter and MPSV promoter. This work focuses on the transgene expression levels in
lymphoid cells and antiviral activity. The issues of long term expression, propensity to
methylation mediated silencing of the promoters, and genotoxicity were also touched. In a first
step the performance of different vectors was evaluated in the human T cell lines. Based on
promising data from ex vivo human peripheral blood mononuclear cells, the vector carrying the
MPSV promoter along with intron were selected for in vivo transplantation experiments.
In summary, the ex vivo data suggested the long term survival of lentiviral gene modified cells,
along with maintained expression of introduced genes. It was observed that the expression of
these constructs depends strongly on the activation and differentiation status of the targeted T
cells. This regulation was not linked to any specific promotor. In vivo study shows that maC46
can be introduced into murine multiple hematopoietic lineages via lentiviral vector and expressed
at high levels in their mulilineage progeny, without altering the hematopoiesis. There was no
sign of any kind of hematopoietic or lymphoid malignancies. Although gene-modified
lymphocytes persisted in-vivo, the downregulation of transgene expression was consistent with
the ex-vivo observation. In contrast to that the T cells transplanted group showed delayed
engraftment of donor cells and there was no expression of C46 in blood and lymphatic organs. .
In conclusion, when considering HIV gene therapy focusing CD4+ T cells, potential problems of
T cell activation status as related to the desired clinical effect must be addressed. These results
might open the way for a gene therapy targeting mainly or exclusively activated T cells and
could be exploited for immunostimulatory as well as suppressive approaches.
Chapter I of this work addressed the piggyBac (PB) transposon system, a non-viral genome engineering tool that is capable of efficiently performing stable integration of DNA sequences into a target cells genome and has already been used in clinical trials. However, the PB transposase has the problematic property of preferentially integrating transposons near transcriptional start sites (TSSs). This increases the likelihood of causing genotoxic effects, limiting its potential use as a tool in clinical applications. It has been shown in the past that the PB transposase shows physical interactions with BET proteins (e.g. BRD4) through Co-IP experiments. Representatives of these proteins are part of the transcriptional activation complex and are abundant at TSSs. Accordingly, it was previously proposed that this interaction is the underlying cause for the biased integration preference. For the first chapter of this thesis, the goal was to disrupt this interaction potentially modifying said integration preference. A secondary structure hypothesized to be mainly responsible for said interaction was extensively mutated resulting in several PB variants that were analyzed for their interaction capacity through a series of Co-IP experiments with BRD4. In total, seven substitutions were identified (E380F, V390K, T392Y, M394R, K407C, K407Q, and K407V) which exhibited reduced interaction capacity with BRD4. Each of the aforementioned mutants were used to generate integration libraries and, through NGS, it was determined if the integration preferences of the respective mutants had changed. In the immediate range 200 base pairs up- and downstream from known TSSs all mutants used exhibited a reduced integration bias. At a wider observation window 3 kbp up- and downstream from TSSs, further mutants with the substitutions M394R, T392Y and V390K showed a reduction in integration frequency of 17.3%, 1.5% and 5.4%, respectively, compared to the wildtype. Of particular note was the M394R mutant, which showed a reduction in all window sizes analyzed with a maximum of 65% less integration preference in the immediate vicinity of TSSs, theoretically generating a safety advantage over the wildtype transposase.
Chapter II was dedicated to the overall safety improvement for transposon-based gene modification and addresses the time point after the transgene has already been integrated and serious side effects may not be preventable. With this in mind, the aim was to develop a novel suicide-switch that can be stably introduced into cells via transposition, and reliably leads to cell death of the modified cells once activated. A system based on CRISPR/Cas9 was developed, where single guide RNAs were used to guide the Cas9 nuclease to Alu elements. These are short, repetitive sequences, which are distributed over the human genome in more than one million copies. Inducing double strand breaks within these elements would lead to genomic fragmentation and cell death. To be inducible, a transcriptional as well as post- translational control mechanism was added. Transcription of the Cas9 nuclease was regulated using a tet-on system, making expression dependent on doxycycline (DOX) supplementation. Furthermore, a version of the Cas9 nuclease called arC9 was used that allows double strand break generation only in the presence of 4-Hydroxytamoxifen (4-HT). Together with an expression cassette for the Alu-specific guide RNA and an expression cassette for the reverse tetracycline controlled transactivator all components were arranged between transposase-specific recognition sequences on a plasmid to allow transposon-system based gene transfer. The system was tested in HeLa cells. First, conditional expression of the arC9 nuclease was confirmed by addition of 1 μg/ml DOX. Second, the suicide-switch was further induced by adding 200 nM 4-HT and protein extracts were assayed for the KAP1 phosphorylation. Only upon induction with DOX and 4-HT phosphorylated KAP1 was detected, indicating DNA damage. Further, extensive growth and survival experiments were conducted to determine the effect of suicide-switch induction on cell proliferation and survival. Between 24 and 48 hours after induction, a halt in cell division was detected, after which extensive cell death was observed. Within 5 days post induction, >99% of all cells were eliminated. In the absence of both inducers, no significant differences in survival were observed compared to control cells line lacking Alu-specific guide RNAs. Microscopic examinations of the <1% surviving cell fraction revealed a senescence-associated phenotype and showed no signs of resumption of the cell division process. Accordingly, the second chapter of this thesis also achieved its goal in developing a functional suicide-switch that can be inserted into human cells via transposition, is highly dependent on the necessary induction signals, and exhibits excellent elimination capabilities in the context tested.
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is characterized by the accumulation of a large number of abnormal, immature blast cells. Recently, histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDIs) received considerable interest on the ground of their ability to overcome the differentiation block in these leukemic blasts regardless of the primary genetic alteration, an effect achieved either alone or in combination with differentiating agents, such as all-trans retinoic acid (t-RA). Valproic acid (VPA), a potent HDI, is now under clinical evaluation owing to its potent differentiation effect on transformed hematopoietic progenitor cells and leukemic blasts from AML patients. Conversely, in a clinical study by Bug et al., the favorable effects of the combination treatment with t-RA/VPA in advanced acute myeloid leukemia patients were reported to be most likely due to an enhancement of nonleukemic myelopoiesis and the suppression of malignant hematopoiesis rather than enforced differentiation of the leukemic cells. Based on the hypothesis that VPA influences normal hematopoiesis, the effect of chromatin modeling through VPA on HSCs was investigated with respect to differentiation, proliferation as well as self-renewal in the present study. It has been shown that valproic acid increases both proliferation and self-renewal of HSC. It accelerates cell cycle progression of HSC accompanied by a down-regulation of p21cip-1/waf-1. Furthermore, valproic acid inhibits GSK3B by phosphorylation on Ser9 accompanied by an activation of the Wnt signaling pathway as well as by an up-regulation of HoxB4, a target gene of Wnt signaling. Both are known to directly stimulate the proliferation of HSC and to expand the HSC pool. To sum up, valproic acid, a potent histone deacetylase inhibitor known to induce differentiation and/or apoptosis in leukemic blasts, stimulates the proliferation and self-renewal of hematopoietic stem cells. Therefore, the data reported in this study suggest to reconsider the role of histone deacetylase inhibitors from a differentiation inducer to a coadjuvant factor for increasing the response to conventional therapy in acute myeloid leukemia.
KMT2A-rearrangements are causative for 70-80% all infant acute lymphoblastic leukemias (Pieters et al., 2019, 2007). Among these, the translocation t(4;11)(q21;23) generating the oncogenic fusion genes KMT2A::AFF1 and AFF1::KMT2A is the most frequent one, accounting for almost every second case of KMT2A-r infant ALL (Meyer et al., 2018). Despite passing a multimodal chemotherapy, 64% of patients achieve an event including relapse or death within four years from diagnosis, and overall survival three years from relapse remains poor with only 17% (Driessen et al., 2016; Pieters et al., 2019, 2007). Vari-ous studies have shown that relapse and therapy resistance were not mediated by chemotherapy-induced mutagenesis as there was no accumulation of secondary mutations in the dominant leukemic clone between diagnosis and relapse (Agraz-Doblas et al., 2019; Andersson et al., 2015; Bardini et al., 2011; Dobbins et al., 2013; Driessen et al., 2013; Mullighan et al., 2007).
Intriguingly, exclusively infant t(4;11) ALL patients were reported to subdivide in two groups depending on the level of HOXA gene cluster expression (Trentin et al., 2009). The HOXAlo group displayed a high expression of IRX1 and the HOXAhi group a low expression of IRX1 (Symeonidou and Ottersbach, 2021; Trentin et al., 2009). Importantly, the HOXAlo/IRX1hi group was characterized to possess a strongly ele-vated relapse incidence compared to the HOXAhi/IRX1lo group (Kang et al., 2012; Stam et al., 2010). IRX1 was identified to upregulate the Early growth response genes EGR1, EGR2 and EGR3 (Kühn et al., 2016).
The doctoral project “EGR-mediated relapse mechanisms in infant t(4;11) acute lymphoblastic leuke-mia” aimed to investigate a potential correlation between the HOXAlo-IRX1-EGR axis and relapse development in infant t(4;11) ALL. The primary objective was to clarify through which molecular mechanism(s) relapse development despite continuous chemotherapy could be achieved. In this context, the role of the EGR genes has been investigated. In addition, this project aimed to disclose molecular targets which could offer novel therapeutic interventions to interfere with therapy resistance and relapse formation.
The overall survival for patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) often is the function of age, in particular in 2019 analysis revealed that 5-year overall survival for patients older than 20 years remains below 35% (American Cancer Society, Cancer Facts &Figures 2019). Importantly, one of the major issues in ALL therapy is the ability of tumor cells to escape the treatment via the establishment of an immunosuppressive environment. The tumor microenvironment has gained tremendous importance in the past decade. This is largely based on the reasoning that, in order to devise better therapeutic strategies for patients, we need to gain better understanding into how malignant cells transform their microenvironment to promote growth, escape immune control and gain therapeutic resistance.
TAM receptors (TAMRs) are engaged in innate immune cells as a feed-back mechanism to terminate the immune response and promote the return to homeostasis (Rothlin et al. 2007). In the context of cancers, aberrant TAMR signaling was mainly explored concerning its pro-oncogenic function (Paolino and Penninger 2016). There are only limited data available suggesting the modulation of cancer immune response via TAMR signaling in highly immunogenic solid tumor models (Paolino et al. 2014; Ubil et al. 2018). So far, however, little is known about their potential indirect immune-modulatory function in hematological malignancies. Taking into account the pronounced importance of TAMR signaling in immune cells combined with the leukemic immune tolerance, the current study focused on the function of TAMR and their ligands in anti-leukemic immunity.
This work uncovers the mechanism of dampening anti-leukemic immune response via TAMR signaling on macrophages using the syngeneic BCR-ABL1 B-ALL mouse model. Using genetic depletion of GAS6 in the host environment or ablation of AXL and/or MERTK receptors in macrophages the bone marrow microenvironment could be rewired in order to achieve an efficient anti-leukemic immune response. In particular, the GAS6/AXL blockade triggers an effective NKand T- cell-dependent anti-leukemic response that results in prolonged survival. This finding specifically tackles the obstacle of inefficient bridging between innate and adaptive immune response typical for hematological malignancies in contrast to solid tumors (E. K. Curran, Godfrey, and Kline 2017).
Besides establishing the vital function of TAMR signaling in anti-leukemic immunity using murine models, the analysis of human blood plasma revealed that age-related immune dysregulation was manifested by significant GAS6 decrease and PROS1 upregulation among elderly donors (>60 y.o.) compared to controls (<25 y.o.). These data are indicative that TAMR signaling likely favors the age-dependent immune system decline, which in turn is associated with a poor survival rate of elderly patients diagnosed with leukemia.
In conclusion, using a preclinical ALL model here it was identified in vivo, that Axl significantly increases upon B-ALL challenge in Mph and NK cells. Therefore, AXL targeting, using the orally bioavailable selective inhibitor Bemcentinib, could serve as a powerful approach to revert early immunosuppression created by leukemia.
Taken together these data propose the AXL receptor as a novel immune checkpoint and attractive candidate for the development of a new therapeutic approach via unleashing the patient’s own immune system to combat leukemic cells.
In the past decade, tissue-resident innate lymphoid cells (ILC) have become a central field of immunological research. ILC are a family of innate immune cells comprising cytotoxic Natural Killer (NK) cells and the non-cytotoxic helper like ILC1, ILC2 and ILC3. They mirror the functions and phenotypes of T cells, but do not require rearranged antigen-specific receptors for their rapid response to signals from injured or infected tissue. As potent cytokine producers being enriched in mucosal tissue, ILC play an essential role in tissue maintenance and regulating immunity to chronic inflammation and infection (Vivier et al., 2018). Although heterogeneity and plasticity of ILC complicates their classification, the pathophysiology of a broad variety of autoimmune and chronic inflammatory diseases have been associated with dysregulations in ILC subset distribution and functions (Dzopalic et al., 2019). This highlights their importance in human health and disease and accounts for the need for markers unambiguously describing the different ILC subtypes. This work introduces NKp65, a C-type lectin-like receptor (CTLR) encoded in the natural killer gene complex by the KLRF2 gene, as an exclusive marker for human ILC3. NKp65 expression especially discerns ILC3-like NK cell precursor from mature NK cells which express the NKp65-relative NKp80. Moreover, flow cytometric analysis of NKp65 expression aids in the demarcation of natural cytotoxicity receptor (NCR) expressing ILC3, from the closely related but functionally distinct RORt+ LTi cells and NCR- ILC3. This work further provides insights into NK cell development by in vitro differentiation studies in which NKp65 expressing cells are generated in presence of OP9 feeder cells and cytokines to support development. In such cultures, NKp65 expressing in vitro ILC (ivILC) acquire NKp80 expression in a Notch-dependent manner indicating their differentiation into mature NK cells. Acquisition of NK cell phenotypic markers is accompanied by NKp65 downregulation which leads to the mutually exclusive expression of NKp80 on NK cells and NKp65 on ILC3-like cells. Further insights are provided into the functional consequences of NKp65 engagement by its cognate high affinity ligand ‘keratinocyte-associated C-type lectin’ (KACL) which is selectively expressed on human keratinocytes (Bauer et al., 2015; Spreu et al., 2010). Expressed on ivILC, NKp65 mediates killing of KACL expressing target cells, suggesting that NKp65-KACL interaction promotes cellular cytotoxicity. In this context, the observed metalloproteinase dependent shedding of NKp65 might play a role in the termination of the cellular interaction. The findings on the regulation of NKp65 expression demonstrate the presence of a functional STAT5 response element in the KLRF2 promoter endowing a transcriptional control of NKp65 expression by IL-7 signaling. This provides an interesting link between the dependency of ILC3 on IL-7 signaling for their maintenance and the specific expression of NKp65 on these cells.
In summary, this study provides new insights into the physiologic expression of the CTLR NKp65 on human ILC3. The dependency of NKp65 surface expression on sustained STAT5 signaling provided by IL-7 underlines the connection of NKp65 expression and an ILC3 phenotype which might contribute to promote future research in discerning the interspersed pathways of ILC3 and NK cell development. The tissue and cell specific expression of NKp65 on ILC3 and its ligand KACL on keratinocytes of the human skin further suggests an important role of this genetically coupled receptor-ligand pair in tissue specific immunosurveillance.
In this research project we aimed to generate genetically modified megakaryocytes and platelets, by targeting protein expression to their secretory alpha-granules to delivery ectopic or therapeutic proteins, to be stored and kept there until an external stimulus triggers platelet activation and platelet secretion takes place. During platelet activation, the therapeutic proteins would then be released to the extracellular space, either as a soluble protein or exposed as a transmembrane protein on the cell surface of platelets. For long-term approaches, genetic modifications must be introduced at the hematopoietic stem cell level.
AIMS: As first approach, we aimed to characterize the lineage-specificity of expression of six different promoter fragments in lentiviral vectors: the murine platelet factor 4 (mPf4) 1222 bp (-1074 to +148), human glycoprotein Ib alpha (hGP1BA) 595 bp (-265 to +330), a short and a longer fragment of the human glycoprotein 6 (hGP6 / hGP6s) 351 bp (-322 to +29) / 726 bp (-697 to +29), as well the human glycoprotein 9 (GP9) promoter 794 bp (-782 to -12). These promoter fragments were included as internal cellular promoters in self-inactivating lentiviral vectors (SIN), using an enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) as gene reporter. GFP detection was evaluated in vitro (in transduced non-megakaryocitc blood cell progenitors and in-vitro differentiated megakaryocytes) and in vivo (Bone marrow cells, blood cells and spleen cells). For targeting of proteins to the secretory alpha granules of megakaryocytes and platelets, we followed two strategies: A) The sorting signal of the cytokine RANTES was fused N-terminally to the destabilized GFP, d2eGFP (RANTES. d2eGFP), to deliver the protein into the granules as soluble cargo. B) The transmembrane granular targeting sequence of P-selectin (the transmembrane domain and cytoplasmic tail (referred as TDCT) was fused to d2eGFP or the B domain deleted codon optimized human coagulation Factor VIII cDNA (referred as BDcohFVIII_TDCT or FVIII_TDCT), to deliver the protein into the membrane of alpha granules. These two strategies were tested in-vitro, from transduced differentiated megakaryocytes in liquid cultures, and in-vivo, by analysis of genetically modified platelets by means of Laser Scanning Confocal Microscopy (LSM) in colocalization analysis (performed at the single cell level) and fluorescence intensity analysis.
RESULTS: GFP expression in blood cells from transplanted mice was significantly higher in platelets, with a smaller background promoter activity in leukocytes and erythrocytes. The highest expression was observed from the mPf4-vector, followed by hGP1BA, hGP6 and hGP6s vectors, identifying the hGP6 vectors as the most restricted to the megakaryocyte and platelet lineage. Analysis in bone marrow cells showed that hGP6-vectors have the lowest activity in the hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPC) with less than 10% of GFP positive stem cells. Surprisingly, the mPf4 and hGP1BA vectors were both highly active in the HSPC, in a range of 20 to 70% of GFP-positive cells. Polyploidization in later stages of MK-maturation of in-vitro Mks differentiated from Mpl-/- lineage marker negative cells were recovered after gene transfer of the thrombopoietin receptor Mpl, under the control of MK-specific vectors in differentiated into MKs. These results were corroborated in in-vivo analysis, where Mpl-/- mice transplanted with lin-BM cells transduced with the mPf4.Mpl and hGP6.Mpl vectors, showed significantly elevated platelet counts compared to control mice transplanted with a GFP-encoding control vector (PGK-GFP). In the Fluorescent intensity and colocalization analysis of transduced megakaryocytes with the targeting vectors, we observed a significant difference in the GFP targeting compared with those MK transduced with the non-targeting vectors. The median of the WCC values observed from the RANTES.d2eGFP targeting vector was 0.8 (80 % of colocalization) with P-selectin stained granules, and 0.7 (70%) with von Willebrand Factor stained granules. In the case of the non-targeting vector SFFV.d2eGFP the median of the WCC observed were <0.3 (30%) both in P-selectin and von Willebrand Factor stained granules. We observed as well that the GFP signal of MK transduced with the P-selectin.d2eGFP fusion overlapped the signals emitted by P-selectin and von Willebrand factor stained granules, not just in LSM-digitalized images but in the fluorescens intensity analysis as well, indicating a clear signal of GFP colocalization. Likewise, an evident signal overlap between the targeted FVIII (FVIII_TDCT) with the P-selectin / von Willebrand marker was observed. Colocalization and fluorescens intensity analysis performed on activated platelets from transplanted mice with the targeting vectors, corroborated what was previously observed in in-vitro megakaryocytes. The genetic modification of megakaryocyte and platelets will allow in the furture, not just the development of new generation of cells with advanced functions, but it will help us to elucidate new mechanisms and pathways of important cellular processes, by modifying cell function and cell interactions.
Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) have the unique abilities of life-long self-renewal and multi-lineage differentiation. They are routinely used in BM or stem cell transplantations to reconstitute the blood system of patients suffering from malignant or monogenic blood disorders. For an adequate production of each blood cell lineage in homeostasis and under stress conditions, the fate choice of HSCs to either self-renew or to differentiate must be strictly controlled. The incomplete understanding of the molecular mechanisms that control this balance makes it still impossible to maintain or expand undifferentiated HSCs in culture for advanced regenerative medical purposes.
The aim of this thesis was the identification and molecular characterisation of mechanisms that control the decision of HSCs to self-renew or to differentiate, and how they are connected to extrinsic cytokine signaling control. Prior to this thesis, a screening for genes upregulated under self-renewal promoting thrombopoietin (TPO) signaling via the transcription factors STAT5A/B in HSCs was conducted, and Growth arrest and DNA damage inducible 45 gamma (Gadd45g) was one of the regulated genes. GADD45G was described as stress sensor, DNA-damage response and tumor suppressor gene, that is epigenetically silenced in many solid tumors and leukemia. Furthermore, Gadd45g is upregulated in aged HSCs with impaired multi-lineage reconstitution abilities, and it is induced by differentiation promoting cytokines in GM-committed cells. However, the function of GADD45G in LT-HSCs was unknown. All these points warrant further investigation to unravel the function of GADD45G on early cell fate decisions of HSCs in hematopoiesis.
The expression of Gadd45g was stimulated by hematopoietic cytokines TPO, IL3 and IL6 both in HSCs and MPPs, making GADD45G an interesting target to focus on. To simulate the cytokine-induced expression GADD45G was lentivirally transduced in HSCs. Surprisingly, GADD45G did not induce cell cycle arrest or cell death in hematopoietic cells neither in vitro nor in vivo, as reported in many cell lines. Instead GADD45G revealed an enhanced and markedly accelerated differentiation of HSCs into mainly myelomonocytic cells, similar as observed for IL3 and IL6 containing cultures. Also in vivo, GADD45G rapidly initiates the differentiation program in HSCs at the expense of self-renewal and long-term engraftment, as shown by serial HSC transplantation experiments. Along the same line, HSCs from Gadd45g-knock out mice exhibited an increased self-renewal. In vitro, Gadd45g-/- progenitors showed higher and prolonged colony formation potential and slower expansion after cytokine stimulation. The loss of Gadd45g increased HSC self-renewal and improved repopulation in secondary recipients, determined by serial competitive transplantations. Taken together, GADD45G could be identified as molecular link between differentiation-promoting cytokine signaling and rapid differentiation induction in murine LT-HSCs.
As presented in this thesis the differentiation induction of GADD45G was mediated by the activation of the cascade of MAP3K4 – MKK6 –p38 MAPK. Small molecule inhibition of p38, but not JNK, blocked the GADD45G-induced differentiation. GADD45G binds to MAP3K4 and releases its auto-inhibitory loop by a change in confirmation, initiating this cascade. Phosphoflow cytometry demonstrated the activation of p38 and a downstream kinase MK2 by GADD45G expression in MPPs. Furthermore, the expression of constitutive active MAP3K4 and MKK6 were able to phenocopy GADD45G-induced differentiation, which could be blocked by p38 inhibition.
The other two family members GADD45A and B also induced accelerated differentiation in LT-HSCs. Interestingly, only GADD45G suppressed the differentiation into megakaryocyte and erythrocyte (Mek/E) lineage cells suggesting a role of GADD45G in lineage choice. Long-term time-lapse microscopy-based cell tracking of single LT-HSCs and their progeny revealed that, once GADD45G is expressed, the development of LT-HSCs into granulocyte-macrophage-committed progeny occurred within 36 hours, and uncovered a selective lineage choice with a severe reduction in Mek/E cells. Furthermore, no megakaryocytic-erythroid progenitors (MEPs) could develop from HSPCs in BM 2 weeks after transplantation suggesting a very early selection against Mek/E cell fates. In line with these findings, GADD45G-transduced MEPs could not expand or form colonies in vitro, demonstrating that the differentiation program induced by GADD45G is not compatible with Mek/E lineage fate. Gene expression profiling of HSCs indicated that GADD45G promotes myelomonocytic differentiation programs over programs for self-renewal or megakaryo-/ erythropoiesis. The here identified differentiation induction potential of GADD45G is so strong that the expression of GADD45G in primary acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells inhibited their expansion accompanied by enhanced differentiation and increased apoptosis.
The here presented work shows that IL3 and IL6 induce a differentiation program in HSCs via GADD45G and p38 closing the link of extrinsic cytokine signaling and differentiation induction. Since the loss of Gadd45g increased the self-renewal and slowed HSC differentiation, this may be utilized, i.e. by p38 inhibition, to ex vivo maintain and expand HSCs by preventing cytokine-induced differentiation. Furthermore, Re-expression of GADD45G may overcome the differentiation block in leukemia to eliminate these cells by driving them into terminal differentiation and apoptosis.
HIV vaccine preclinical testing is difficult because HIV’s only relevant hosts are humans and no correlates of protection are known. To this end, we are working on the humanization of different mouse strains with human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) as well as human hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) to generate a useful small animal model.
We generated immune deficient mice (NOD Scid IL2gc -/- /NOD Rag1-/- IL2gc -/-) expressing human MHC class II (HLA-DQ8) on a mouse class II deficient background (Ab-/-). Here, the human HLA-DQ8 should interact with the matching T cell receptors of transferred matching human PBMCs and therefore could support the functionality of the transferred human CD4+ cells in the mice.
Mice that were adoptively transferred with human HLA-DQ8 PBMCs only showed engraftment of CD3+ T cells. Surprisingly, the presence of HLA class II did not significantly change the repopulation rates in the mice. Also, the presence of HLA class II did not advance B cell engraftment, such that humoral immune responses were undetectable. However, the overall survival of DQ8-expressing mice was significantly prolonged, compared to mice expressing mouse MHC class II molecules, and correlated with an increased time span until onset of GvHD.
To avoid GVHD and to increase and maintain the level of human cell reconstitution over a long period of time, the same mouse strains were reconstituted with human HSC. Compared to PBMC-repopulated mice, HSC-reconstituted mice develop almost all subpopulations of the human immune system detectable at week 12 after HSC transfer. These mice developed adaptive immune responses after Tetanus Toxoide (TT) immunizations. In addition, we are testing the susceptibility of these humanized mice to different HIV strains with a detailed look at immune responses.
In the absence of apparent mutations, alteration of gene expression patterns represents the key mechanism by which normal cells evolve to cancer cells.
Gene expression is tightly regulated by posttranscriptional processes. Within this context, RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) represent fundamental factors, since they control mechanisms, such as mRNA-stabilization, -translation and -degradation. Human antigen R (HuR) was among the first RBPs that have been directly associated to carcinogenesis. HuR modulates the stability and translation of mRNAs which encode proteins facilitating various ‘hallmarks of cancer’, namely proliferation, evasion of growth suppression, angiogenesis, cell death resistance, invasion and metastasis. Furthermore, it is well established that tumor-promoting inflammation contributes to tumorigenesis. In this process, monocytes are attracted to the site of the tumor and educated towards a tumor-promoting macrophage phenotype. While HuR has been extensively studied in various tumor cell types, little is known about HuR in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Thus, the aim of my work was to characterize the contribution of HuR to the development of cancer characteristics in HCC. I was particularly interested to investigate if HuR facilitates tumor-promoting inflammation, since a role for HuR has not been described in this context. To this end, I depleted HuR in HepG2 cells (HuR k/d) and used a co-culture model of HepG2 tumor spheroids and infiltrating monocytes to study the impact of HuR on the tumor microenvironment. I could show that depletion of HuR resulted in the reduction of cell numbers. Additionally, the expression of proliferation marker KI-67 and proto-oncogene c-Myc was reduced, supporting a proliferative role of HuR. Furthermore, exposure to cytotoxic staurosporine elevated apoptosis in HuR k/d cells compared to control cells. Concomitantly, the expression of the anti-apoptotic mediator B-cell lymphoma protein-2 (Bcl-2) was markedly reduced in the HuR k/d cells, pointing to an involvement of HuR in cell survival processes.
Accordingly, a pro-survival function of HuR was also observed in tumor spheroids, since HuR k/d spheroids exhibited a larger necrotic core region at earlier time points and showed elevated numbers of dead cells compared to control (Ctr.) spheroids. Interestingly, HuR k/d spheroids isplayed reduced numbers of infiltrated macrophages, suggesting that HuR contributes to a tumor-promoting, inflammatory microenvironment by recruiting monocytes/macrophages to the tumor site. Aiming at identifying HuR-regulated factors responsible for the recruitment of monocytes, I found reduced levels of the chemokine interleukin 8 (IL-8) in supernatants of HuR k/d spheroids, supporting a critical involvement of HuR in the chemoattraction of monocytes. Analyzing supernatants of co-cultures of macrophages and HuR k/d or Ctr. spheroids revealed additional differences in chemokine secretion patterns. Interestingly, protein levels of many chemokines were elevated in co-cultures of HuR k/d spheroids compared to control co-cultures. Albeit enhanced chemokine secretion was observed, less monocytes are recruited into HuR k/d spheroids, further underlining the necessity of HuR in cancer related monocyte/macrophage attraction and infiltration. Differences between chemokine profiles of mono- and co-cultured spheroids could be attributable to changes in spheroid-derived chemokines as a result of the crosstalk with the immune cells. Provided the chemokines originate from monocytes/macrophages, the different secretion patterns suggest that HuR contributes to the modulation of the functional phenotype of infiltrated macrophages, since the tumorenvironment is critically involved in the shaping of macrophage phenotypes. Regions of low-oxygen (hypoxia) represent another critical feature of tumors. Therefore, I next analyzed the impact of HuR on the hypoxic response. Loss of HuR attenuated hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) 2α expression after exposure to hypoxia, while HIF-1α protein levels remained unaltered. Considering previous results of our group, showing that HIF-2α depletion (HIF-2α k/d) resulted in the enhanced expression of HIF-1α protein, I aimed to determine the involvement of HuR in the compensatory upregulation of HIF-1α protein in HIF-2α k/d cells. I could demonstrate that not only total HuR protein levels, but specifically cytoplasmic HuR was elevated in HIF-2α depleted cells pointing to enhanced HuR activity. Silencing HuR in HIF-2α deficient cells attenuated enhanced HIF-1α protein expression, thus confirming a direct role of HuR in the compensatory upregulation of HIF-1α. This as also reflected on HIF-1α target gene expression. I further investigated the mechanism underlying the compensatory HIF-1α expression in HIF-2α deficient cells. Analyzing HIF-1α mRNA expression, I excluded enhanced HIF1-α transcription and stability to account for elevated HIF-1α expression in HIF-2α k/d cells. HIF-1α promoter activity assays confirmed the mRNA data. Furthermore, HIF-1α protein half-life was not elevated in HIF-2α k/d cells compared to control cells, indicating that HIF-1α protein stability is not altered in HIF-2α k/d cells. Analysis of the association of HIF-1α with the translational machinery using polysomal fractionation finally revealed an increased istribution of HIF-1α mRNA in the heavier polysomal fractions in HIF-2α k/d cells compared to control cells. Since augmented ribosome occupancy is an indicator for more efficient translation, I propose enhanced HIF-1α translation as underlying principle of the compensatory increase in HIF-1α protein levels in HIF-2α k/d cells. In summary, my results demonstrate that HuR is critical for the development of cancer characteristics in HCC. Future work analyzing the impact of HuR on tumor-promoting inflammation, specifically macrophage attraction and activation could provide new trategies to inhibit macrophage-driven tumor progression. Furthermore, I provide evidence that HuR contributes to the hypoxic response by regulating the expression of HIF-1α and HIF-2α. Targeting single HIF-isoforms for tumor therapy should be carefully considered, because of their compensatory regulation when one α-subunit is depleted. Thus, therapeutic strategies targeting factors such as HuR that control both α-subunits and at the same time prevent compensation might be more promising.