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Standard biorelevant media reflect the average gastrointestinal (GI) physiology in healthy volunteers. The use of biorelevant media in in vitro experiments has become an important strategy to predict drug behaviour in vivo and is often combined with in silico tools in order to simulate drug plasma profiles over time. In addition to the healthy population, the effects of disease state or co-administration of other drugs on plasma profiles must be considered to assure drug efficacy and safety. Thus, there is a need for a more accurate representation of the human GI physiology when it is altered by disease or co-administered drugs in in vitro dissolution experiments.
This thesis focused on the development of biorelevant media and dissolution tests reflecting GI physiology in circumstances where the gastric pH is elevated. Diseases linked to an elevated gastric pH are hypochlorhydria and achlorhydria, but these days treatment with acid-reducing agents (ARAs) is the single greatest cause of elevation in gastric pH. pH-dependent drug-drug interactions (DDIs) with ARAs are frequent, as the ARAs are used in a number of diseases using a variety of drugs. As the drugs currently on the market are often poorly soluble and ionisable, their dissolution is highly dependent on the pH of the GI tract, especially the gastric pH.
The thesis research consisted of several steps. In the first step, physiological changes in the human GI tract during the therapy with ARAs were identified. Parameters of the standard biorelevant gastric medium FaSSGF were adjusted to the identified changes to reflect the impact of ARA co-administration on the gastric physiology. The media aim to assess the potential extent of the ARA impact on gastric physiology by introducing biorelevant media pairs, ARA pH 4 and pH 6 media, of which one reflects a lesser, and the other a stronger impact of ARAs.
In the second step these ARA media were implemented in in vitro dissolution set-ups.
The dissolution of poorly soluble ionisable drugs was assessed using one-stage, two-stage and transfer model set-ups, as well as using a more evolved in vitro system TIM-1. Comparison of results from dissolution set-ups using the standard, low pH, gastric biorelevant medium FaSSGF (pH 1.6 or 2), and the same set-ups using ARA pH 4 and pH 6 media, shows a decrease in dissolution rate and extent for weakly basic compounds PSWB 001 and dipyridamole, and an increase in rate and extent of dissolution for the weakly acidic compound raltegravir potassium, when the gastric pH is elevated. Due to different physicochemical properties, the extent of the impact of physiological changes during ARA therapy (when either ARA pH 4 or pH 6 medium is selected) on dissolution varied among the model drugs. Thus, the bracketing approach, which considers a range of the possible ARA co-administration impact on drug dissolution, was confirmed to be best practice in assessing the impact of ARAs.
In the third step, dissolution data from in vitro experiments with ARA media was implemented into in silico models. The predictions using various in silico model approaches in Simcyp™ Simulator (minimal and full PBPK model, dissolution input using DRM and DLM) successfully bracketed in vivo data on drug administration during ARA therapy and correctly predicted an overall decrease in plasma concentration for the two model weakly basic compounds and an increase in plasma concertation for the model weakly acidic compound.
In all assessed scenarios, the ARA methods proved to be an essential part of evaluating and predicting the impact of ARAs on drug pharmacokinetics, and appropriately predicted the extent of a possible impact of ARAs on the drug plasma profiles. Thus, the ARA biorelevant media and dissolution tests were demonstrated to be valuable tools reflecting administration of drugs when the gastric pH is elevated and able to predict the impact of ARA therapy on drug administration.
The ability to evaluate the impact of human (patho) physioloy on drug behaviour in the gastrointestinal tract is of great importance, as the GI conditions play a significant role in drug release and absorption. Thus, there is great interest on the part of the pharmaceutical industry and regulatory agencies to develop best practices in this field, especially for pH-dependent DDIs. The media and dissolution tests developed in this thesis are biorelevant methods appropriate for evaluation of the impact of elevated gastric pH on drug efficacy and safety. Such methods, used as a risk assessment tool, in connection with evaluation of the efficacy window and potential toxicity, may help to increase confidence about decisions as to whether a pH-effect will occur and whether it is relevant or not, prior to conducting clinical studies. They may also enable changes in inclusion/exclusion criteria during recruiting for large-scale efficacy trials. In fact, the biopharmaceutic approach to drug development is becoming standard practice on a number of fronts, including metabolic DDIs, renal and hepatic insufficiency, powering decision-making process and possibly even waiving certain types of clinical studies.
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Resistant microbes are a growing concern. It was estimated that about 33,000 of people die because of the infections caused by multidrug resistant bacteria each year in Europe (ECDC, 2018, https://www.ecdc.europa.eu/). Bacteria can acquire resistance against toxic compounds via different mechanisms and intrinsic active efflux is one of the first mechanisms deployed by bacterial cells. The membrane-localized efflux pumps catalysing this reaction, extract toxic compounds from the interior of the cell and transport these to the outside, thereby maintaining sub-lethal toxin levels in the cytoplasm, periplasm and membranes. Gram-negative three-component efflux pumps, analysed in this study, are composed of an inner membrane protein, a member of the Resistance-Nodulation cell Division (RND) superfamily, an Outer Membrane Factor (OMF) protein and a Membrane Fusion Protein (MFP) that connects the two afore mentioned components into an active efflux pump. The pumps described in this work, AcrAB-TolC and EmrAB-TolC, are drug efflux pumps belonging to the RND and MFS superfamilies, respectively, while CusCBA is an efflux pump that belongs to the RND heavy metal efflux family. Another efflux pump that was used as a model for the design of an in vitro assay for the silver ion transport studies, CopA, belongs to the P-type ATPase superfamily. All pumps analysed in this study are part of the resistance system of Escherichia coli, which is a highly clinically relevant pathogen.
In order to examine the AcrAB-TolC, CopA and CusA efflux pumps, the individual components were separately produced in E. coli, purified to monodispersity and reconstituted in large unilamellar vesicles, LUVs. Means for the optimized production and adequate conditions for efficient reconstitution were presented in this study. The activity of AcrB in LUVs was detected using fluorescence quenching of the dye 8-hydroxy-1,3,6 pyrenetrisulfonate (pyranine), which is incorporated inside the proteoliposomes and is sensitive to the pH changes in its surrounding. The inactive AcrB variant with a substitution in the proton relay network, D407N, showed no activity in proteoliposomes, which correlates with the measurements done in empty liposomes. When AcrA was co-reconstituted with AcrB D407N proteoliposomes it did not restore protein activity. To test the assembly of the AcrAB-TolC pump out of its single components, an in vitro assay was established where the complex assembly was tested with AcrAB- and TolC-containing liposomes. These experiments showed putative AcrAB-TolC formation in the presence or absence of a pump substrate, taurocholate, as well as in the presence of the pump inhibitor, MBX3132. The assembly appeared stable over time and results were invariant in the presence or absence of a pH gradient across the AcrAB-containing membrane.
After determination of the ATPase activity of the P-type ATPase, CopA, in detergent micelles, the protein was reconstituted in LUVs. Quenching of the Ag+-sensitive dye Phen Green SK (PGSK), present on the inside of the CopA-containing proteoliposomes, was observed in presence of ATP and Ag+. Under the same conditions, but in absence of Ag+-ions, quenching was reduced by 80 % after 300 seconds. No PGSK-quenching was observed in control liposomes in the presence of ATP and Ag+. The additional presence of sodium azide led to minimal reduction of the PGSK-quenching as expected since sodium azide is not an inhibitor of P-type ATPases, but the quenching rate was similar to that of the same experimental condition with control liposomes.
The RND superfamily member CusA, as part of the tripartite CusCBA efflux pump, has been proposed to sequester Ag+ or Cu+ from either the cytoplasmic or periplasmic side of the inner membrane. The periplasmic transport of silver ions was implied from an in vitro assay where the quenching of a pH sensitive dye, 9-amino-6-chloro-2-methoxyacridine (ACMA), indicates acidification of the lumen of the proteoliposomes containing CusA when an inwardly directed pH was imposed. The same experiment with the CusA D405N variant, which was previously reported to be an inactive variant, also led to ACMA quenching, although at a slightly lower rate. Under application of an inwardly directed pH and a (negative inside), CusA-containing proteoliposomes showed a strong quenching of the incorporated PGSK dye, suggesting strong Ag+ influx.
The Major Facilitator Superfamily-(MFS-) type EmrAB-TolC pump has an analogous structural setup as the RND-type AcrAB-TolC pump. To examine the efflux of one of its substrates, carbonyl - cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP), a plate-based susceptibility assay was used. The presence of the EmrAB-TolC pump confers lower susceptibility levels towards CCCP in E. coli, compared to cells not expressing the pump or cells expressing only the MFS component, indicating that EmrAB-TolC extrudes CCCP.
The work done in this study opens up a path towards investigation of drug and metal resistance in vitro. The methodologies to obtain proteoliposomal samples of multicomponent efflux pumps and subsequent measurements of drug/metal ion and H+ fluxes, as well as the determination of pump assembly are crucial for the future research on pump catalysis and transport kinetics. The in vivo drug-plate assays done in this work provide initial insights for future investigations of the drug susceptibility of E. coli expressing the MFS-type tripartite efflux pumps.
FPP und GGPP sind Intermediate des Mevalonat-Weges und fungieren als post-translationale Modifikation kleiner GTPasen. Die Prenylierung kleiner GTPasen erfolgt katalysiert von spezifischen Prenyltransferasen und ist notwendig um die kleinen GTPasen in Membranen zu verankern, wo ihre Aktivierung stattfindet. Zu den intrazellulären Funktionen der GTPasen gehören unter anderem der Aufbau des Cytoskeletts, das neuronale Zellwachstum, die Leitung und Ausläuferbildung von Axonen, das Dendritenwachstum, die Synapsenformation, die synaptische Plastizität und die Apoptose. Diese Funktionen spielen in der Gehirnalterung sowie in neurodegenerativen Erkrankungen wie der Alzheimer Demenz (AD) und auch bei der Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) eine wichtige Rolle.
Im Zuge einer in vivo Studie an C57BL/6 Mäusen konnten in der vorliegenden Arbeit altersbedingte Veränderungen der Lokalisation verschiedener Rho- und Rab-GTPasen in Membran- und Cytosol-Präparationen sowie der GGTase-I in Gehirnen gealterter Tiere gezeigt werden. Die zelluläre Lokalisation der Rho GTPasen Rac1, RhoA und Cdc42 verschiebt sich im Alter zu reduzierten Membran-gebundenen und erhöhten cytosolischen Gehalten. Dies ist mit einer Reduktion der Protein- und mRNA- Gehalte des Enzyms GGTase-Iβ assoziiert, der Untereinheit der GGTase-I, die die Bindung des Isoprenoids GGPP an die Rho-GTPasen reguliert. Diese wiederum korrelieren direkt mit der altersbedingten Reduktion der relativen GGTase-Aktivität. Die in vitro Inhibition der GGTase-I mittels GGTI-2133 an SH-SY5Y Zellen erwies sich als Modell, welches die gleichen Effekte wie die gealterten Gehirne in vivo zeigt.
7, 8-Dihydroxyflavon (7, 8-DHF) ist ein natürlich vorkommendes Flavon, welches als hoch affiner selektiver TrkB-Rezeptor-Agonist fungiert und hierdurch wie das Neurotrophin BDNF das Überleben von Neuronen, deren Differenzierung, synaptische Plastizität und Neurogenese vermittelt. In vivo verursacht die orale Gabe von 7, 8-Dihydroxyflavon in Gehirnen alter Tiere eine Abnahme des Isoprenoids GGPP, die Zunahme der prenylierten Membran-gebundenen GTPase Rac1 und eine Reduktion des Gehaltes an Membran-gebundenem Rab3A auf das Niveau der Gehalte in den Gehirnen der jungen Kontroll-Tiere. Das Neurotrophin BDNF interagiert mit dem TrkB-Rezeptor und ist in der Lage direkt an den Rac1-spezifischen GEF Tiam1 zu binden, wodurch dieser aktiviert wird und Veränderungen der zellulären Morphologie der betroffenen Neurone induziert. Während das Alter und die orale Gabe von 7, 8-Dihydroxyflavon in vivo keine Effekte auf die Proteingehalte von BDNF und TrkB in der Tierstudie aufzeigten, konnte eine alterbedingte Reduktion von Tiam1 im Hirngewebe detektiert werden, die wiederum durch 7, 8-Dihydroxyflavon aufgehoben werden konnte.
Die Isoprenoide FPP und GGPP, sowie die Regulation kleiner GTPasen spielen auch eine wichtige Rolle im Zusammenhang mit Veränderungen der APP-Prozessierung in der molekularen Pathogenese der AD. Bei der APP-Prozessierung sind die beiden Sekretasen β- und γ-Sekretase für die Bildung des β-Amyloid-Peptids verantwortlich. In vitro Studien mit dem β-Sekretase-Inhibitor IV und dem γ-Sekretase-Inhibitor DAPT an untransfizierten und APP-transfizierten HEK293 Zellen (HEK293-APP695wt und HEK293-APPsw Zellen) konnten zeigen, dass sowohl die β- als auch die γ-Sekretase an der Regulation der Isoprenoide FPP und GGPP beteiligt sind. FPP und GGPP liegen in APP-transfizierten HEK293 Zellen erhöht vor. Die Inhibition der β-Sekretase führt zur Reduktion von FPP und GGPP. Durch die Inhibition der γ-Sekretase wird ausschließlich FPP reduziert. Weiterhin liegen in APP-transfizierten HEK293 Zellen die Membran-gebundenen prenylierten Rho-GTPasen Rac1, Cdc42 und RhoA erhöht vor. Das Membran-gebundene prenylierte H-Ras kommt jedoch in APP-transfizierten Zellen im Vergleich zu untransfizierten HEK293 Zellen in deutlich niedrigeren Mengen vor. Die Inhibition der β-Sekretase bedingt die Reduktion von Membran-gebundenem prenylierten Rac1 und auch von Membran-gebundenem H-Ras in HEK293-APPsw Zellen.
Veränderungen von Signaltransduktionswegen, die durch kleine GTPasen vermittelt werden, haben sich auch bei der GBM als zentraler Teil der molekularen Pathogenese herausgestellt. Hierbei ist die Prenylierung durch FPP und GGPP die Voraussetzung für die Membran-Insertion und onkogenen Funktion der Ras- und Rho-Proteine über die Stimulierung des Ras-Raf-MEK-ERK Signalweges. In dieser Arbeit konnte gezeigt werden, dass der HMG-CoA-Reduktase Inhibitor Lovastatin die Bildung der beiden Isoprenoide FPP und GGPP in U87 und U343 Glioblastoma Zellen verringert und hierdurch die Isoprenylierung von H-Ras und Rac1 reduziert. Das natürlich vorkommende Monoterpen Perrilylalkohol hingegen inhibiert die Prenyltransferasen FTase und GGTase und verändert dadurch die post-translationale Prenylierung der GTPasen Rac1 und H-Ras in U87 und U343 Zellen ohne die Isoprenoide FPP und GGPP signifikant zu beeinflussen. Jedoch bewirkt Perillylalkohol in U343 Zellen eine Erhöhung des GGPPs. Beide Substanzen bewirkten die Reduktion der ERK-Phosphorylierung und der Migration, Invasion und Proliferation der untersuchten U87 und U343 Glioblastoma Zellen.
ATP-binding cassette (ABC) systems translocate a wide range of solutes across cellular membranes. The thermophilic Gram-negative eubacterium Thermus thermophilus, a model organism for structural genomics and systems biology, discloses ∼46 ABC proteins, which are largely uncharacterized. Here, we functionally analyzed the first two and only ABC half-transporters of the hyperthermophilic bacterium, TmrA and TmrB. The ABC system mediates uptake of the drug Hoechst 33342 in inside-out oriented vesicles that is inhibited by verapamil. TmrA and TmrB form a stable heterodimeric complex hydrolyzing ATP with a Km of 0.9 mm and kcat of 9 s−1 at 68 °C. Two nucleotides can be trapped in the heterodimeric ABC complex either by vanadate or by mutation inhibiting ATP hydrolysis. Nucleotide trapping requires permissive temperatures, at which a conformational ATP switch is possible. We further demonstrate that the canonic glutamate 523 of TmrA is essential for rapid conversion of the ATP/ATP-bound complex into its ADP/ATP state, whereas the corresponding aspartate in TmrB (Asp-500) has only a regulatory role. Notably, exchange of this single noncanonic residue into a catalytic glutamate cannot rescue the function of the E523Q/D500E complex, implicating a built-in asymmetry of the complex. However, slow ATP hydrolysis in the newly generated canonic site (D500E) strictly depends on the formation of a posthydrolysis state in the consensus site, indicating an allosteric coupling of both active sites.
Fluorescently labeled nanoparticles are widely used for evaluating their distribution in the biological environment. However, dye leakage can lead to misinterpretations of the nanoparticles’ biodistribution. To better understand the interactions of dyes and nanoparticles and their biological environment, we explored PLGA nanoparticles labeled with four widely used dyes encapsulated (coumarin 6, rhodamine 123, DiI) or bound covalently to the polymer (Cy5.5.). The DiI label was stable in both aqueous and lipophilic environments, whereas the quick release of coumarin 6 was observed in model media containing albumin (42%) or liposomes (62%), which could be explained by the different affinity of these dyes to the polymer and lipophilic structures and which we also confirmed by computational modeling (log PDPPC/PLGA: DiI—2.3, Cou6—0.7). The importance of these factors was demonstrated by in vivo neuroimaging (ICON) of the rat retina using double-labeled Cy5.5/Cou6-nanoparticles: encapsulated Cou6 quickly leaked into the tissue, whereas the stably bound Cy.5.5 label remained associated with the vessels. This observation is a good example of the possible misinterpretation of imaging results because the coumarin 6 distribution creates the impression that nanoparticles effectively crossed the blood–retina barrier, whereas in fact no signal from the core material was found beyond the blood vessels.
The transient receptor potential (TRP) ankyrin type 1 (TRPA1) channel is highly expressed in a subset of sensory neurons where it acts as an essential detector of painful stimuli. However, the mechanisms that control the activity of sensory neurons upon TRPA1 activation remain poorly understood. Here, using in situ hybridization and immunostaining, we found TRPA1 to be extensively co-localized with the potassium channel Slack (KNa1.1, Slo2.2, or Kcnt1) in sensory neurons. Mice lacking Slack globally (Slack−/−) or conditionally in sensory neurons (SNS-Slack−/−) demonstrated increased pain behavior after intraplantar injection of the TRPA1 activator allyl isothiocyanate. By contrast, pain behavior induced by the TRP vanilloid 1 (TRPV1) activator capsaicin was normal in Slack-deficient mice. Patch-clamp recordings in sensory neurons and in a HEK cell line transfected with TRPA1 and Slack revealed that Slack-dependent potassium currents (IKS) are modulated in a TRPA1-dependent manner. Taken together, our findings highlight Slack as a modulator of TRPA1-mediated, but not TRPV1-mediated, activation of sensory neurons.
Keywords: TRPA1; slack; dorsal root ganglia; pain; mice
The lysosomal ABC transporter associated with antigen processing-like (TAPL, ABCB9) acts as an ATP-dependent polypeptide transporter with broad length selectivity. To characterize in detail its substrate specificity, a procedure for functional reconstitution of human TAPL was developed. By intensive screening of detergents, ideal solubilization conditions were evolved with respect to efficiency, long term stability, and functionality of TAPL. TAPL was isolated in a two-step procedure with high purity and, subsequently, reconstituted into proteoliposomes. The peptide transport activity of reconstituted TAPL strongly depends on the lipid composition. With the help of combinatorial peptide libraries, the key positions of the peptides were localized to the N- and C-terminal residues with respect to peptide transport. At both ends, TAPL favors positively charged, aromatic, or hydrophobic residues and disfavors negatively charged residues as well as asparagine and methionine. Besides specific interactions of both terminal residues, electrostatic interactions are important, since peptides with positive net charge are more efficiently transported than negatively charged ones.
Over the last decade, cryo-EM has developed exponentially due to improvements in both hardware (“machine”-based) and software (“algorithm”-based). These improvements have pushed the best achievable resolutions closer to atomic level, bridging “gaps” not covered by other biophysical techniques, and allowing more difficult biological questions to be addressed. Thus, this PhD project was designed and constructed to apply cryo-EM to answer biological questions, while allowing simultaneous cryo-EM method development.
The biological focus of this research is pentameric ligand-gated ion channels (pLGICs), specifically the serotonin receptor type-3 receptor (5HT3R), which also belongs to the Cys-loop receptor family. 5HT3R plays an important role in fast synaptic signal transduction in response to agonist and antagonist binding. Binding to its native ligand results in opening of the channel at the transmembrane domain, allowing cations to pass through, resulting in membrane depolarization and conversion of the chemical signal into an electrical one.
This work consisted mainly of two specific aims. One was focused on conformational investigation of 5HT3R in its ligand-bound open conformation, using cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-SPA), in order to understand the gating mechanism upon ligand activation. The other one was to combine SPA with cryo-ET and STA to push the resolution limitation of conventional cryo-ET and STA workflows.
In the end, three different cryo-EM conformations of membrane-embedded 5HT3R were resolved using cryo-SPA, two structures in resting closed forms, one C5-symmetric and one C1-asymmetric, and one serotonin-bound open form. These three structures presented a number of novel features related to the transition of the receptor to its ion-conductive state. Specifically, the serotonin-bound receptor shows asymmetric opening, which was speculated to occur via an intermediate asymmetric Apo state. In addition to the cryo-SPA work, application of cryo-ET and STA to the study of 5HT3R in native vesicles is described in this thesis. Additional work on methods development, focused on combining SPA and STA techniques, along with preliminary results on tobacco mosaic virus are also detailed and discussed.
Moreover, previously unreported asymmetric arrangements of the subunits of the homopentameric 5HT3R around the pore axis were revealed. The asymmetric open state is stabilized by phospholipids inserted at the interface between subunits, at a site well-documented for the binding of allosteric pLGIC modulators. These results not only give structural support to a large body of functional data on the effects of lipids on the function of this receptor family, but also provide structural guidance for future studies in this field. Meanwhile, the SPA-STA combined methods developed during the course of this work have the potential to help resolve higher resolution tomography-based structures, which would benefit researchers seeking to do in-situ-based structural studies.
The extremophile Alvinella pompejana, an annelid worm living on the edge of hydrothermal vents in the Pacific Ocean, is an excellent model system for studying factors that govern protein stability. Low intrinsic stability is a crucial factor for the susceptibility of the transcription factor p53 to inactivating mutations in human cancer. Understanding its molecular basis may facilitate the design of novel therapeutic strategies targeting mutant p53. By analyzing expressed sequence tag (EST) data, we discovered a p53 family gene in A. pompejana. Protein crystallography and biophysical studies showed that it has a p53/p63-like DNA-binding domain (DBD) that is more thermostable than all vertebrate p53 DBDs tested so far, but not as stable as that of human p63. We also identified features associated with its increased thermostability. In addition, the A. pompejana homolog shares DNA-binding properties with human p53 family DBDs, despite its evolutionary distance, consistent with a potential role in maintaining genome integrity. Through extensive structural and phylogenetic analyses, we could further trace key evolutionary events that shaped the structure, stability, and function of the p53 family DBD over time, leading to a potent but vulnerable tumor suppressor in humans.
Um sich an ändernde Umwelteinflüsse und metabolische Bedürfnisse anpassen zu können, ist es für Zellen essenziell, dass Boten-RNA (engl. messenger RNA, mRNA) stetig und schnell nach der Translation abgebaut wird. In Prokaryoten ist dafür der Proteinkomplex Degradosom verantwortlich, in dem Endo- und Exoribonukleasen RNase E und PNPase das RNA-Transkript in kleinere Fragmente und schließlich einzelne Nukleotide spalten. Die DEAD-Box Helikase RhlB im Komplex dient zusätzlich dazu, mögliche Sekundärstrukturen in der RNA zu entfalten, welche sonst die weitere Degradation behindern würden. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass RhlB’s sehr geringe katalytische Aktivität – gemessen durch ATP-Verbrauch und Rate an entwundener RNA – signifikant durch die allosterische Bindung an Komplexpartner RNase E erhöht wird. Gleichzeitig deuten andere Studien darauf hin, dass RhlB eine mögliche Selektivität für doppelsträngige RNA-Substrate mit 5‘-Einzelstrang-Überhängen aufweist.
Diese Arbeit liefert neue Erkenntnisse in Bezug auf die Kommunikation zwischen den Degradosom-Komponenten RhlB und RNase E aus E. coli, indem das potenzielle Wechselspiel zwischen RhlBs RNA-Selektivität und der allosterischen Aktivierung durch RNase E untersucht wurde. Der vielseitige Einsatz NMR-spektroskopischer Techniken sowie die Verwendung kurzer RNA-Substrate mit spezifischen Strang-Eigenschaften ermöglicht es, mit einen ungewöhnlichen, RNA-zentrierten Ansatz an diese unzureichend verstandene Protein-Interaktion heranzugehen.
Zunächst wurden hierzu eine Reihe kurzer doppelsträngiger RNA-Konstrukte hergestellt, die sich nicht nur in ihren Einzelstrang-Merkmalen unterscheiden, sondern auch die thermodynamischen Anforderungen eines DEAD-Box Helikase Substrats erfüllen, und gleichzeitig eine ausreichende NMR-spektroskopische Signal-Zuordnung erlauben. Die thermale Stabilität, das Faltungsverhalten sowie die 1H Imino-protonen- und 13C HSQC-Zuordnungen aller geeigneten Konstrukte wurden erfolgreich bestimmt.
Um den Einfluss spezifischer RNA-Substrate sowie die Bindung zweier verschiedener RNase E Fragmente auf RhlBs ATP-Umsatzrate zu untersuchen, wurde sich zunächst eines photometrischen Phosphat-Assays bedient. Damit konnte deutlich gezeigt werden, dass RhlB in Abwesenheit des Komplex-Partners nicht in der Lage ist, signifikante Mengen an ATP umzusetzen, unabhängig davon, welches RNA-Konstrukt eingesetzt wird. Die Bindung der RNase E Fragmente erhöhte signifikant die ATP-Hydrolyse-Rate der Helikase, wobei die größte Aktivierung für den RNA-Duplex mit 5‘-Einzelstrang sowie ein einzelsträngiges Substrat zu beobachten ist. Da diese Ergebnisse deutlich eine RNA-Abhängigkeit beim ATP-Umsatz der Helikase zeigen, wurde untersucht, ob diese Unterschiede ihren Ursprung bereits in der Bindung der spezifischen RNA-Substrate haben. Mittels einer Mischapparatur, die es erlaubt die enzymatische Reaktion direkt im Spektrometer zu initiieren sowie zeitaufgelöster 31P NMR-Experimente konnte die allosterische Aktivierung der ATP-Hydrolyse-Rate von RhlB auch unter NMR-spektroskopischen Messbedingungen nachgewiesen werden.
Da die Ergebnisse des ATPase Assays deutlich eine RNA-Abhängigkeit bei der ATP-Umsatz-Rate der Helikase zeigen, wurde zusätzlich untersucht, ob diese Unterschiede ihren Ursprung in den Affinitäten für die verschiedenen RNA-Substrate haben und ob diese durch die Bindung von RNase E and RhlB beeinflusst werden. Um im gleichen Zuge zu überprüfen, ob die Bindung der RNA an RhlB die RNA-Konformation oder Basenpaarung ändert, werden 1H NMR-Titrationsexperimente durchgeführt. Es konnte erstmals gezeigt werden, dass RhlB eine inhärente Präferenz für Duplexe mit 5‘-Überhang gegenüber Konstrukten mit 3‘-Überhang oder stumpfen Enden besitzt, was sich in einer erhöhten Affinität zeigt. Zusätzlich offenbaren die Messungen, dass RNase Es allosterische Bindung selektiv die Affinität gegenüber Konstrukten mit Einzelstrang-Überhang erhöht, während die Affinität zu RNA Duplexen ohne Überhang sogar verringert wird. Diese Ergebnisse liefern erstmals einen Nachweis, dass RNase E aktiv Einfluss auf RhlBs RNA-Bindung nimmt. Weder die Bindung der RNA and RhlB noch an den RhlB/RNase E Komplex scheint die Basenpaarung oder Konformation der RNA-Substrate zu beeinflussen, da lediglich eine homogene Peak-Verbreitung aller Imino-Protonen-Signale im 1H NMR-Spektrum beobachtet werden konnte.
The electron transport chain (ETC) is used by cells to create an electrochemical proton gradient which can be used by the ATP synthase to produce ATP. ETC, also called respiratory chain, is formed in mitochondria by four complexes (complex I-IV) and mediated by two electron carriers: cytochrome c and ubiquinone. Electrons are passed from one complex to another in a series of redox reactions coupling proton pumping from the negative (N) side of the membrane to the positive (P) side. Complex I can introduce electrons into the ETC by oxidizing NADH to NAD+ and reducing quinone (Q) to quinol (QH2). The process accomplishes pumping of four protons across the membrane. Complex II is another electrons entry point. It catalyzes the oxidation of succinate to fumarate while reducing Q to QH2. Complex III, also called cytochrome bc1 complex, can transfer the electrons from QH2 to cytochrome c and couple to proton pumping. In complex III the Q-cycle contributes four proton translocations: two protons are required for the reduction of one quinone to a quinol and two protons are released to the P side. Complex IV (cytochrome c oxidase), the terminal complex of the ETC, catalyzes the electron transfer to oxygen and pumps four protons to the P side. Structures of ETC complexes are available. However, the structure of a hyperthermophilic cytochrome bc1 complex has not been elucidated till now. Additionally, the dimeric crystal structure of cytochrome c oxidase from bovine has been discussed controversially.
To build up a functional complex, cofactors are required. The active site of A- and B-type cytochrome c oxidases contain the high spin heme a which is synthesized by the integral membrane protein heme A synthase (HAS). HAS can form homooligomeric complexes and its oligomerization is essential for the biological function of HAS. HAS is evolutionarily conserved among prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Despite its importance, little is known about the detailed structural properties of HAS oligomers.
During my PhD studies, I focused on the cytochrome c oxidase (AaCcO), the cytochrome bc1 complex (Aabc1) and the heme A synthase (AaHAS) from Aquifex aeolicus. This organism is one of the most hyperthermophilic ones and can live at extremely high temperatures, even up to 95 °C. Respiratory chain complexes provide energy for the metabolism of organisms, and their structures have been studied extensively in the past few years. However, there has been a lack of atomic structures of complexes from hyperthermophilic and ancient bacteria, so little is known about the mechanism of these macromolecular machines under hyperthermophilic conditions. Therefore, my PhD studies had four main objectives: 1) to structurally and functionally characterize AaCcO, 2) to reveal the mechanism of Aabc1 thermal stability based on its structure, 3) to determine the oligomerization of AaHAS, 4) to provide valuable insights into the relationship between function and oligomerization of AaHAS.
1) Structure of AaCcO
Heme-copper oxidases (HCOs) catalyze the oxygen reduction reaction being the terminal enzymes in the plasma membranes in many prokaryotes or of the aerobic respiratory chain in the inner mitochondrial membrane. By coupling this exothermic reaction to proton pumping across the membrane to the P side, they contribute to the establishment of an electrochemical proton gradient. The energy in the proton electrochemical proton gradient is used by the ATP synthase to generate ATP. HCOs are classified into three major families: A, B and C, based on phylogenetic comparisons. The well-studied aa3-type cytochrome c oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans (P. denitrificans) represents A-family HCOs. So far, the only available structure of the ba3-type cytochrome c oxidase from Thermus thermophilus represents the B-family of HCOs. This family contains a number of bacterial and archaeal oxidases. The C-family contains only cbb3-type cytochrome c oxidases.
The AaCcO is one of the ba3-type cytochrome c oxidases. Based on the genomic DNA sequence analysis, it has been revealed that A. aeolicus possesses two operons coding for cytochrome c oxidases (two different subunit I genes, two different subunit II genes and one subunit III gene). So far, only subunits CoxB2 and CoxA2 were identified. The presence of the additional subunit IIa was reported in 2012. Moreover, a previous paper reported that AaCcO can use horse heart cytochrome c and decylubiquinol as electron donors and the typical cytochrome c oxidase inhibitor cyanide does not block the reaction completely.
In the course of my PhD studies, I performed heterologous expression of AaCcO in Pseudomonas stutzeri (P. stutzeri) and co-expression with AsHAS in Escherichia coli, respectively. The subcomplex CoxA2 and CoxB2 can be purified from P. stutzeri, however, it lacks heme A. Additionally, a protocol for the heterologous production of cytochrome c555 from A. aeolicus was established. In parallel, I also purified the AaCcO from native membranes according to previously reported methods with some modifications. The activity of AaCcO with its native substrate, cytochrome c555, was 14 times higher than with horse heart cytochrome c.
To enable a detailed investigation and comparison of AaCcO and other cytochrome c oxidases, the cryo-EM structure of AaCcO was determined to 3.4 Å resolution. It shows that the three subunits CoxA2, CoxB2, and IIa are tightly bound together to form a dimer in the membrane. Surprisingly, CoxA2 contains two additional TMHs (TMH13 and TMH14) to enhance the protein stability. The cofactors heme a3, heme b, CuA and CuB are also identified. Interestingly, two molecules of 1,4-naphthoquinone and cardiolipin were observed in the dimer interface. Based on the structure analysis, the AaCcO possesses only the K-pathway for proton delivery to the active site and proton pumping.
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The formation of amyloid-β oligomers plays a key role in the onset of Alzheimer’s disease. We investigated the aggregation of amyloid-β oligomers by mass spectrometry and ion mobility spectrometry, revealing those structural properties, which lead to the formation of mature fibrils. We can show that the arrangement of the first oligomers is crucial for the topology of the resulting species, leading to the formation of non-toxic aggregates or fibrils.
B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (B-ALL) is characterized by the overproduction of lymphoblasts in the bone marrow (BM), and it is the most common cancer in children while being comparatively uncommon in adults. On the other hand, in chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML), 70% of cases are found in patients older than 50 years, making it uncommon in children. All CML cases and up to 3% of paediatric B- ALL (and 25% of adult B-ALL) cases are due to fusion gene BCR-ABL1, which gives rise to the cytoplasmatic, constitutively active oncoprotein, tyrosine kinase BCR-ABL1 through a reciprocal translocation between chromosomes 9 and 22. The constitutively active BCR-ABL tyrosine kinase leads to deregulation of different signal transduction pathways such as cell growth, proliferation and cell survival. The role of the bone marrow microenvironment (BMM) can mediate disease initiation (only in mice), progression, therapy resistance, and relapse, as has been increasingly recognized over the last two decades. In general, the BMM is a very complex arrangement of various cell types such as osteoblasts, osteoclasts, endothelial cells, adipocytes, mesenchymal stromal cells, macrophages and several others. In addition, the BMM is composed of multiple chemical and mechanical factors and extra cellular matrix (ECM) proteins which contribute to the BMM’s features influencing leukaemia behaviour. Considering the incidence of B-ALL and CML in children and in adults respectively, we hypothesized that the young and/or an aged BMM might also play a previously unrecognized role in the aggressiveness of B-ALL and CML. We proposed that BM, transduced with BCR-ABL1-expressing retrovirus in the murine transduction/transplantation model of B-ALL, transplanted into young versus old recipient mice would lead to a more aggressive disease in young mice, and similarly CML would be more aggressive in old recipient mice. In close recapitulation with the human incidence, induction of CML led to a significantly shorted survival in old recipient mice. On the other hand, induction of B-ALL showed a shortened survival in young compared to old syngeneic mice, as well as in a xenotransplantation model. Among the highly heterogenous composition of the BMM, we implicate young BM macrophages as a supportive niche for B-ALL cells. The results were found to be mostly due to potential soluble factors differentially secreted from young and old macrophages. Therefore, we hypothesized that the chemokine CXCL13, which has been demonstrated to play a role in B cell migration and act as a diagnostic marker in the cerebrospinal fluid of patients with neuroborreliosis, might be responsible for the observed phenotype. CXCL13 was found to be more highly expressed in healthy and leukaemic young mice as well as in conditioned medium of young macrophages. Using a variety of in vitro experiments, CXCL13 showed to significantly increase the proliferation and the migration of leukaemia cells when exposed to young macrophages, and the phenotype was rescued while using a CXCL13 neutralizing antibody. The CXCL13 role was also confirmed in vivo, since macrophage ablation led to a prolongation of survival in young mice and a reduction of CXCL13 levels. The use of an additional mouse model, leukaemia cells with CXCR5 deficiency, led to a significant prolongation of survival of young mice, confirming the importance of the CXCL13-CXCR5 axis in B-ALL. In line with our murine results, we found that human macrophages and CXCL13 levels were higher in pediatric B-ALL patients than in adults. Consistent with our murine data, the expression level of CXCR5 may act as a prognostic marker in B-ALL, as well as a predictive marker for central nervous system relapse in human B-ALL. The overall findings show that a young BMM, and in particular macrophages, influences B-ALL progression. We specifically identified CXCL13, secreted by young macrophages, as a promoter of proliferation of B-ALL cells, influencing survival in B-ALL via CXCR5. The CXCR5-CXCL13 axis may be relevant in human B-ALL, and higher CXCR5 expression in human B-ALL may act as a predictive marker.
The members of the multidrug/oligosaccharidyl-lipid/polysaccharide (MOP) transporter superfamily mediate export of a wealth of molecules of physiological and pharmacological importance. According to the Transporter Classification Database (TCDB), the MOP superfamily is mainly categorized into six distantly related families functionally characterized families: the multidrug and toxic compound extrusion (MATE), the polysaccharide transporter (PST), the oligosaccharidyl-lipid flippase (OLF), the mouse virulence factor (MVF) the agrocin 84 antibiotic exporter (AgnG), and the progressive ankylosis (Ank) family. Among these, the multidrug resistance MATE family transporters are most ubiquitous, being present in all domains of life: Archaea, Bacteria and Eukarya. As secondary active transporters, they utilize transmembrane electrochemical ion gradients of Na+ and/or H+ in order to drive the efflux of xenobiotics or cytotoxic metabolic waste products with specificity mainly for polyaromatic and cationic substrates. Active efflux of drugs and toxic compounds carried out by multidrug transporters is one of the strategies developed by bacterial pathogens to confer multidrug resistance. MATE proteins provide resistance to, e.g., fluoroquinolone, aminoglycoside antibiotics, and anticancer chemotherapeutical agents, thus serving as promising pharmacological targets for tackling a severe global health issue. Based on their amino acid sequence similarity, the MATE family members are classified into the NorM, the DNA-damage-inducible protein F (DinF), and the eukaryotic subfamilies. Structural information on the alternate conformational states and knowledge of the detailed mechanism of the MATE transport are of great importance for the structure-aided drug design. Over the past decade, the crystal structures of representative members of the NorM, DinF and eukaryotic subfamilies have been presented. They all share similar overall architecture comprising 12 transmembrane helices (TMs) divided into two domains, the N-terminal domain (TMs 1-6) and the C-terminal domain (TMs 7-12), connected by a cytoplasmic loop between TM6 and TM7 (Fig. II.1). Since all available MATE family structures are known only in V-shaped outward-facing states with the central binding cavity open towards the extracellular side, a detailed understanding of the complete transport cycle has remained elusive. In order to elucidate the underlying steps of the MATE transport mechanism, structures of distinct intermediates, particularly inward-facing conformation, are required.In my PhD project, structural and functional studies have been performed on a MATE family (DinF subfamily) transporter, PfMATE, from the hyperthermophilic and anaerobic archaeon Pyrococcus furiosus. This protein was produced homologously in Pyrococcus furiosus as well as heterologously in Escherichia coli, and used for the subsequent purification and crystallization trials by the vapor diffusion (VD) and lipidic cubic phase (LCP) method. To the best of my knowledge, PfMATE is the first example of a successful homologous production of a membrane protein in P. furiosus. Due to the very low final amount of the purified protein from the native source, the heterologously produced PfMATE samples were typically used for the extensive structural studies. Crystal structures of PfMATE have been previously determined in an outward-facing conformation in two distinct states (bent and straight) defined on the arrangement of TM1. A pH dependent conformational transition of this helix regulated by the protonation state of the conserved aspartate residue Asp41 was proposed. However, it has been discussed controversially, leading to the hypothesis about TM1 bending to be rather affected by interactions with exogenous lipids (monoolein) present under the crystallization conditions. Based on these open questions, an experimental approach to investigate the role of lipids as structural and functional modulators of PfMATE has been taken in the course of my PhD project. The interplay between membrane proteins and lipids can affect membrane protein topology, structure and function. Considering differences between archaeal and bacterial lipid composition, cultivation of P. furiosus cells and extraction of its lipids was followed by the mass spectrometry (MS) based lipidomics for identification of individual lipid species in the archaeal extract. In order to assess the effects of lipids on PfMATE, different lipid molecules were used for co-purification and co-crystallization trials. This dissertation presents a workflow leading to the structure determination of a MATE transporter in the long sought-after inward-facing state, which has been achieved upon purification and crystallization of the heterologously produced PfMATE in the presence of lipids from its native source P. furiosus. Also, the PfMATE outward-facing state obtained from the crystals grown at the acidic pH conditions sheds light on the previously proposed pH-dependent structural alterations within TM1. It is interesting to note that the inward and outward-facing states of PfMATE were obtained from the crystals grown under similar conditions, but in the presence and absence of native lipids, respectively. This observation supports the hypothesis about physiologically relevant lipids to act as conformational modulators or/and a new class of substrates, expanding the substrate spectrum of the MATE family transporters. Comparative analysis of two PfMATE states reveals that transition from the outward to the inward-facing state involves rigid body movements of TMs 2-6 and 8-12 to form an inverted V, facilitated by a loose binding of TMs 1 and 7 to their respective bundles and their conformational flexibility. Local fluctuations within TM1 in the inward-facing structure, including bending and unwinding in the intracellular half of the helix, invoke its highly flexible nature, which is suitable for ion and substrate gating.
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Druggability Evaluation of the Neuron Derived Orphan Receptor (NOR-1) Reveals Inverse NOR-1 Agonists
(2022)
The neuron derived orphan receptor (NOR-1, NR4A3) is among the least studied nuclear receptors. Its physiological role and therapeutic potential remain widely elusive which is in part due to the lack of chemical tools that can directly modulate NOR-1 activity. To probe the possibility of pharmacological NOR-1 modulation, we have tested a drug fragment library for NOR-1 activation and repression. Despite low hit-rate (<1 %), we have obtained three NOR-1 ligand chemotypes one of which could be rapidly expanded to an analogue comprising low micromolar inverse NOR-1 agonist potency and altering NOR-1 regulated gene expression in a cellular setting. It confirms druggability of the transcription factor and may serve as an early tool to assess the role and potential of NOR-1.
The genome of the halophilic archaeon Haloferax volcanii encodes more than 40 one-domain zinc finger µ-proteins. Only one of these, HVO_2753, contains four C(P)XCG motifs, suggesting the presence of two zinc binding pockets (ZBPs). Homologs of HVO_2753 are widespread in many euryarchaeota. An in frame deletion mutant of HVO_2753 grew indistinguishably from the wild-type in several media, but had a severe defect in swarming and in biofilm formation. For further analyses, the protein was produced homologously as well as heterologously in Escherichia coli. HVO_2753 was stable and folded in low salt, in contrast to many other haloarchaeal proteins. Only haloarchaeal HVO_2753 homologs carry a very hydrophilic N terminus, and NMR analysis showed that this region is very flexible and not part of the core structure. Surprisingly, both NMR analysis and a fluorimetric assay revealed that HVO_2753 binds only one zinc ion, despite the presence of two ZBPs. Notably, the analysis of cysteine to alanine mutant proteins by NMR as well by in vivo complementation revealed that all four C(P)XCG motifs are essential for folding and function. The NMR solution structure of the major conformation of HVO_2753 was solved. Unexpectedly, it was revealed that ZBP1 was comprised of C(P)XCG motifs 1 and 3, and ZBP2 was comprised of C(P)XCG motifs 2 and 4. There are several indications that ZBP2 is occupied by zinc, in contrast to ZBP1. To our knowledge, this study represents the first in-depth analysis of a zinc finger µ-protein in all three domains of life.
An automated NMR chemical shift assignment algorithm was developed using multi-objective optimization techniques. The problem is modeled as a combinatorial optimization problem and its objective parameters are defined separately in different score functions. Some of the heuristic approaches of evolutionary optimization are employed in this problem model. Both, a conventional genetic algorithm and multi-objective methods, i.e., the non-dominated sorting genetic algorithms II and III (NSGA2 and NSGA3), are applied to the problem. The multi-objective approaches consider each objective parameter separately, whereas the genetic algorithm followed a conventional way, where all objectives are combined in one score function. Several improvement steps and repetitions on these algorithms are performed and their combinations are also created as a hyper-heuristic approach to the problem. Additionally, a hill-climbing algorithm is also applied after the evolutionary algorithm steps. The algorithms are tested on several different datasets with a set of 11 commonly used spectra. The test results showed that our algorithm could assign both sidechain and backbone atoms fully automatically without any manual interactions. Our approaches could provide around a 65% success rate and could assign some of the atoms that could not be assigned by other methods.
Central cholinergic function and metabolic changes in streptozotocin‐induced rat brain injury
(2020)
As glucose hypometabolism in the brain is an early sign of Alzheimer´s dementia (AD), the diabetogenic drug streptozotocin (STZ) has been used to induce Alzheimer‐like pathology in rat brain by intracereboventricular injection (icv‐STZ). However, many details of the pathological mechanism of STZ in this AD model remain unclear. Here, we report metabolic and cholinergic effects of icv‐STZ using microdialysis in freely moving animals. We found that icv‐STZ at a dose of 3 mg/kg (2 × 1.5 mg/kg) causes overt toxicity reflected in body weight loss. Three weeks after STZ administration, histological examination revealed a high number of glial fibrillary acidic protein reactive cells in the hippocampus, accompanied by Fluoro‐Jade C‐positive cells in the CA1 region. Glucose and lactate levels in microdialysates were unchanged, but mitochondrial respiration measured ex vivo was reduced by 9%–15%. High‐affinity choline uptake, choline acetyltransferase, and acetylcholine esterase (AChE) activities in the hippocampus were reduced by 16%, 28%, and 30%, respectively. Importantly, extracellular acetylcholine (ACh) levels in the hippocampus were unchanged and responded to behavioral and pharmacological challenges. In comparison, extracellular ACh levels and cholinergic parameters in the striatum were unchanged or slightly increased. We conclude that the icv‐STZ model poorly reflects central cholinergic dysfunction, an important characteristic of dementia. The icv‐STZ model may be more aptly described as an animal model of hippocampal gliosis.
Release of neuropeptides from dense core vesicles (DCVs) is essential for neuromodulation. Compared to the release of small neurotransmitters, much less is known about the mechanisms and proteins contributing to neuropeptide release. By optogenetics, behavioral analysis, electrophysiology, electron microscopy, and live imaging, we show that synapsin SNN-1 is required for cAMP-dependent neuropeptide release in Caenorhabditis elegans hermaphrodite cholinergic motor neurons. In synapsin mutants, behaviors induced by the photoactivated adenylyl cyclase bPAC, which we previously showed to depend on acetylcholine and neuropeptides (Steuer Costa et al., 2017), are altered like in animals with reduced cAMP. Synapsin mutants have slight alterations in synaptic vesicle (SV) distribution, however, a defect in SV mobilization was apparent after channelrhodopsin-based photostimulation. DCVs were largely affected in snn-1 mutants: DCVs were ∼30% reduced in synaptic terminals, and not released following bPAC stimulation. Imaging axonal DCV trafficking, also in genome-engineered mutants in the serine-9 protein kinase A phosphorylation site, showed that synapsin captures DCVs at synapses, making them available for release. SNN-1 co-localized with immobile, captured DCVs. In synapsin deletion mutants, DCVs were more mobile and less likely to be caught at release sites, and in non-phosphorylatable SNN-1B(S9A) mutants, DCVs traffic less and accumulate, likely by enhanced SNN-1 dependent tethering. Our work establishes synapsin as a key mediator of neuropeptide release.
Currently, due to the misuse of antibiotics, we are facing a major public health problem. The resistance to antibiotics of certain bacterial strains makes the treatment of infections very complex.
In this context, the present thesis project concerns the study of a bacterial efflux complex capable of transporting antibiotics from the cytoplasm to the outside of the cell. This complex is composed of an inner-membrane Major Facilitator Superfamily (MFS) transporter (EmrB, E. coli multidrug resistance), a channel of the outer membrane TolC (Tolerance to Colicin E1) and a periplasmic adapter (EmrA, E. coli multidrug resistance). Unlike RND-type efflux systems (such as AcrAB-TolC), little is known about the MFS-type EmrAB-TolC system. It is therefore important to study the entire complex on a structural and functional level, to analyse the marked differences between these two types of transport systems. The goal of my thesis project was to study at least one EmrAB-TolC complex from a structural point of view. For my studies the aim was to isolate the complex directly from bacteria overexpressing the three protein partners. In a first step, 15 homologous EmrAB-TolC systems were identified and their corresponding genes amplified from genomic DNA of different Gram-negative bacteria. Among the genes of the 15 systems, the genes coding for the E. coli and V. cholerae systems were further studied. The expression vectors encoded fluorescent markers for the monitoring of the expression levels of different proteins and for studying the formation of complexes. In a first step, the different protein expression levels (EmrB-mRFP1 and EmrA-sfGFP) were studied for several expression strains of E. coli by measuring the red and green fluorescence levels and by Western blot (anti-His, Myc, and Strep for EmrB, EmrA, and TolC). The E. coli strain C41(DE3) was best suited for co-expression of EmrAB-TolC. In a second step, the FSEC (Fluorescence detection Size Exclusion Chromatography) methodology was used to identify a complex suitable for structural study. Thus this method enabled the observation that the EmrAB-TolC complex of E. coli was produced in higher amount than that of V. cholerae. The final co-purification protocol consists in perfoming a gentle lysis of the bacteria using lysozyme, then after solubilization with DDM, the purification is started by a Ni2+-NTA affinity chromatography step followed by a size exclusion chromatography step. Finally, the fractions containing the three protein partners are used for the detergent-exchange by amphipol A8-35 before the structural study by electron microscopy. Negative stain EM-micrographs displayed elongated objects with a length of 33 nm in side view. An average image of EmrAB-TolC shows similarities to that of the AcrAB-TolC complex observed under similar conditions. Similarities included the characteristic densities of TolC. Whereas differences were found in the lower part of EmrAB which is thinner than the lower part of AcrAB. The densities visible above the amphipol-ring correspond to EmrA, which displays a channel-like structure as in AcrA. The channel however seems to extend further towards the amphipol belt. Since EmrB does not have an extended periplasmic domain as the RND proteins have, these densities are therefore solely assigned to EmrA. EmrA, on the other side, contacts TolC akin to the interaction of AcrA/MexA to their cognate outer membrane channels (TolC/OprM) in a ‘tip-to-tip’ fashion.
One current goal in native mass spectrometry is the assignment of binding affinities to noncovalent complexes. Here we introduce a novel implementation of the existing laser-induced liquid bead ion desorption (LILBID) mass spectrometry method: this new method, LILBID laser dissociation curves, assesses binding strengths quantitatively. In all LILBID applications, aqueous sample droplets are irradiated by 3 µm laser pulses. Variation of the laser energy transferred to the droplet during desorption affects the degree of complex dissociation. In LILBID laser dissociation curves, laser energy transfer is purposely varied, and a binding affinity is calculated from the resulting complex dissociation. A series of dsDNAs with different binding affinities was assessed using LILBID laser dissociation curves. The binding affinity results from the LILBID laser dissociation curves strongly correlated with the melting temperatures from UV melting curves and with dissociation constants from isothermal titration calorimetry, standard solution phase methods. LILBID laser dissociation curve data also showed good reproducibility and successfully predicted the melting temperatures and dissociation constants of three DNA sequences. LILBID laser dissociation curves are a promising native mass spectrometry binding affinity method, with reduced time and sample consumption compared to melting curves or titrations.
The stress-dependent dynamics of Saccharomyces cerevisiae tRNA and rRNA modification profiles
(2021)
RNAs are key players in the cell, and to fulfil their functions, they are enzymatically modified. These modifications have been found to be dynamic and dependent on internal and external factors, such as stress. In this study we used nucleic acid isotope labeling coupled mass spectrometry (NAIL-MS) to address the question of which mechanisms allow the dynamic adaptation of RNA modifications during stress in the model organism S. cerevisiae. We found that both tRNA and rRNA transcription is stalled in yeast exposed to stressors such as H2O2, NaAsO2 or methyl methanesulfonate (MMS). From the absence of new transcripts, we concluded that most RNA modification profile changes observed to date are linked to changes happening on the pre-existing RNAs. We confirmed these changes, and we followed the fate of the pre-existing tRNAs and rRNAs during stress recovery. For MMS, we found previously described damage products in tRNA, and in addition, we found evidence for direct base methylation damage of 2′O-ribose methylated nucleosides in rRNA. While we found no evidence for increased RNA degradation after MMS exposure, we observed rapid loss of all methylation damages in all studied RNAs. With NAIL-MS we further established the modification speed in new tRNA and 18S and 25S rRNA from unstressed S. cerevisiae. During stress exposure, the placement of modifications was delayed overall. Only the tRNA modifications 1-methyladenosine and pseudouridine were incorporated as fast in stressed cells as in control cells. Similarly, 2′-O-methyladenosine in both 18S and 25S rRNA was unaffected by the stressor, but all other rRNA modifications were incorporated after a delay. In summary, we present mechanistic insights into stress-dependent RNA modification profiling in S. cerevisiae tRNA and rRNA.
Different modification pathways for m1A58 incorporation in yeast elongator and initiator tRNAs
(2022)
As essential components of the cellular protein synthesis machineries, tRNAs undergo a tightly controlled biogenesis process, which include the incorporation of a large number of posttranscriptional chemical modifications. Maturation defaults resulting in lack of modifications in the tRNA core may lead to the degradation of hypomodified tRNAs by the rapid tRNA decay (RTD) and nuclear surveillance pathways. Although modifications are typically introduced in tRNAs independently of each other, several modification circuits have been identified in which one or more modifications stimulate or repress the incorporation of others. We previously identified m1A58 as a late modification introduced after more initial modifications, such as Ѱ55 and T54 in yeast elongator tRNAPhe. However, previous reports suggested that m1A58 is introduced early along the tRNA modification process, with m1A58 being introduced on initial transcripts of initiator tRNAiMet, and hence preventing its degradation by the nuclear surveillance and RTD pathways. Here, aiming to reconcile this apparent inconsistency on the temporality of m1A58 incorporation, we examined the m1A58 modification pathways in yeast elongator and initiator tRNAs. For that, we first implemented a generic approach enabling the preparation of tRNAs containing specific modifications. We then used these specifically modified tRNAs to demonstrate that the incorporation of T54 in tRNAPhe is directly stimulated by Ѱ55, and that the incorporation of m1A58 is directly and individually stimulated by Ѱ55 and T54, thereby reporting on the molecular aspects controlling the Ѱ55 → T54 → m1A58 modification circuit in yeast elongator tRNAs. We also show that m1A58 is efficiently introduced on unmodified tRNAiMet, and does not depend on prior modifications. Finally, we show that the m1A58 single modification has tremendous effects on the structural properties of yeast tRNAiMet, with the tRNA elbow structure being properly assembled only when this modification is present. This rationalizes on structural grounds the degradation of hypomodified tRNAiMet lacking m1A58 by the nuclear surveillance and RTD pathways.
Cyclophilins, or immunophilins, are proteins found in many organisms including bacteria, plants and humans. Most of them display peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase activity, and play roles as chaperones or in signal transduction. Here, we show that cyclophilin anaCyp40 from the cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 is enzymatically active, and seems to be involved in general stress responses and in assembly of photosynthetic complexes. The protein is associated with the thylakoid membrane and interacts with phycobilisome and photosystem components. Knockdown of anacyp40 leads to growth defects under high-salt and high-light conditions, and reduced energy transfer from phycobilisomes to photosystems. Elucidation of the anaCyp40 crystal structure at 1.2-Å resolution reveals an N-terminal helical domain with similarity to PsbQ components of plant photosystem II, and a C-terminal cyclophilin domain with a substrate-binding site. The anaCyp40 structure is distinct from that of other multi-domain cyclophilins (such as Arabidopsis thaliana Cyp38), and presents features that are absent in single-domain cyclophilins.
Ribosomes catalyze protein synthesis by cycling through various functional states. These states have been extensively characterized in vitro, yet their distribution in actively translating human cells remains elusive. Here, we optimized a cryo-electron tomography-based approach and resolved ribosome structures inside human cells with a local resolution of up to 2.5 angstroms. These structures revealed the distribution of functional states of the elongation cycle, a Z tRNA binding site and the dynamics of ribosome expansion segments. In addition, we visualized structures of Homoharringtonine, a drug for chronic myeloid leukemia treatment, within the active site of the ribosome and found that its binding reshaped the landscape of translation. Overall, our work demonstrates that structural dynamics and drug effects can be assessed at near-atomic detail within human cells.
Bitter taste receptors (TAS2Rs) are expressed in mucous epithelial cells of the tongue but also outside the gustatory system in epithelial cells of the colon, stomach and bladder, in the upper respiratory tract, in the cornified squamous epithelium of the skin as well as in airway smooth muscle cells, in the testis and in the brain. In the present work we addressed the question if bitter taste receptors might also be expressed in other epithelial tissues as well. By staining a tissue microarray with 45 tissue spots from healthy human donors with an antibody directed against the best characterized bitter taste receptor TAS2R38, we observed an unexpected strong TAS2R38 expression in the amniotic epithelium, syncytiotrophoblast and decidua cells of the human placenta. To analyze the functionality we first determined the TAS2R38 expression in the placental cell line JEG-3. Stimulation of these cells with diphenidol, a clinically used antiemetic agent that binds TAS2Rs including TAS2R38, demonstrated the functionality of the TAS2Rs by inducing calcium influx. Restriction enzyme based detection of the TAS2R38 gene allele identified JEG-3 cells as PTC (phenylthiocarbamide)-taster cell line. Calcium influx induced by PTC in JEG-3 cells could be inhibited with the recently described TAS2R38 inhibitor probenecid and proved the specificity of the TAS2R38 activation. The expression of TAS2R38 in human placental tissues points to further new functions and hitherto unknown endogenous ligands of TAS2Rs far beyond bitter tasting.
Approximately 80 % of persistent wound infections are affected by the presence of bacterial biofilms, resulting in a severe clinical challenge associated with prolonged healing periods, increased morbidity, and high healthcare costs. Unfortunately, in vitro models for wound infection research almost exclusively focus on early infection stages with planktonic bacteria. In this study, we present a new approach to emulate biofilm-infected human wounds by three-dimensional human in vitro systems. For this purpose, a matured biofilm consisting of the clinical key wound pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa was pre-cultivated on electrospun scaffolds allowing for non-destructive transfer of the matured biofilm to human in vitro wound models. We infected tissue-engineered human in vitro skin models as well as ex vivo human skin explants with the biofilm and analyzed structural tissue characteristics, biofilm growth behavior, and biofilm-tissue interactions. The structural development of biofilms in close proximity to the tissue, resulting in high bacterial burden and in vivo-like morphology, confirmed a manifest wound infection on all tested wound models, validating their applicability for general investigations of biofilm growth and structure. The extent of bacterial colonization of the wound bed, as well as the subsequent changes in molecular composition of skin tissue, were inherently linked to the characteristics of the underlying wound models including their viability and origin. Notably, the immune response observed in viable ex vivo and in vitro models was consistent with previous in vivo reports. While ex vivo models offered greater complexity and closer similarity to the in vivo conditions, in vitro models consistently demonstrated higher reproducibility. As a consequence, when focusing on direct biofilm-skin interactions, the viability of the wound models as well as their advantages and limitations should be aligned to the particular research question of future studies. Altogether, the novel model allows for a systematic investigation of host-pathogen interactions of bacterial biofilms and human wound tissue, also paving the way for development and predictive testing of novel therapeutics to combat biofilm-infected wounds.
Approximately 80 % of persistent wound infections are affected by the presence of bacterial biofilms, resulting in a severe clinical challenge associated with prolonged healing periods, increased morbidity, and high healthcare costs. Unfortunately, in vitro models for wound infection research almost exclusively focus on early infection stages with planktonic bacteria. In this study, we present a new approach to emulate biofilm-infected human wounds by three-dimensional human in vitro systems. For this purpose, a matured biofilm consisting of the clinical key wound pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa was pre-cultivated on electrospun scaffolds allowing for non-destructive transfer of the matured biofilm to human in vitro wound models. We infected tissue-engineered human in vitro skin models as well as ex vivo human skin explants with the biofilm and analyzed structural tissue characteristics, biofilm growth behavior, and biofilm-tissue interactions. The structural development of biofilms in close proximity to the tissue, resulting in high bacterial burden and in vivo-like morphology, confirmed a manifest wound infection on all tested wound models, validating their applicability for general investigations of biofilm growth and structure. The extent of bacterial colonization of the wound bed, as well as the subsequent changes in molecular composition of skin tissue, were inherently linked to the characteristics of the underlying wound models including their viability and origin. Notably, the immune response observed in viable ex vivo and in vitro models was consistent with previous in vivo reports. While ex vivo models offered greater complexity and closer similarity to the in vivo conditions, in vitro models consistently demonstrated higher reproducibility. As a consequence, when focusing on direct biofilm-skin interactions, the viability of the wound models as well as their advantages and limitations should be aligned to the particular research question of future studies. Altogether, the novel model allows for a systematic investigation of host-pathogen interactions of bacterial biofilms and human wound tissue, also paving the way for development and predictive testing of novel therapeutics to combat biofilm-infected wounds.
As one of the most widespread infectious diseases in the world, it is currently estimated that approximately 296 million people globally are chronically infected with Hepatitis B virus (HBV), the consequences of HBV infection cause more than 620,000 deaths each year. Although safe and effective HBV vaccines have reduced the incidence of new HBV infections in most countries, there are still around 1.5 million new infections each year. HBV remains a major health problem because there is no large-scale effective vaccination strategy in many countries with a high burden of disease, many people with chronic HBV infection are not receiving effective and timely treatment, and a complete cure for chronic infection is still far from being achieved.
Since its discovery, HBV has been identified as an enveloped DNA virus with a diameter of 42 nm. For efficient egress from host cells, HBV is thought to acquire the viral envelope by budding into multivesicular bodies (MVBs) and escape from infected cells via the exosome release pathway. It is clear that HBV hijacks the host vesicle system to complete self-assembly and propagation by interacting with factors that mediate exosome formation. Consequently, the overlap with exosome biogenesis, using MVBs as the release platform, raises the possibility for the release of exosomal HBV particles. Currently, virus containing exosomal vesicles have been described for several viruses. In light of this, this study explored whether intact HBV-virions wrapped in exosomes are released by HBV-producing cells.
First, this study established a robust method for efficient separation of exosomes from HBV virions by a combination of differential ultracentrifugation and iodixanol density gradient centrifugation. Fractionation of the density gradient revealed that two populations of infectious viral particles can be separated from the culture fluids of HBV-producing cells. The population present in the low-density peak co-migrates with the exosome markers. Whereas the population that appeared in the high-density fractions was the classical HBV virions, which are rcDNA-containing nucleocapsids encapsulated by the HBV envelope.
Subsequently, the characterization of this low-density population was performed, namely the highly purified exosome fraction was systematically investigated. Relying on the detergent sensitivity of the exosome membrane and the outer envelope of the HBV virus, disruption of the exosome structure by treatment with limited detergent revealed the presence of HBsAg in the exosomes. At the same time, mild and limited NP-40 treatment of highly purified exosomes and a further combination of density gradient centrifugation resulted in the stepwise release of intact HBV virions and naked capsids from the exosomes generated by HBV-producing cells. This implies the presence of intact HBV particles encapsulated by the host membrane.
The presence of exosome-encapsulated HBV particles was consequently also verified by suppressing the morphogenesis of MVBs or exosomes. Impairment of MVB- or exosome-generation with small molecule inhibitors has significantly inhibited the release of host membrane-encapsulated HBV particles as well. Likewise, silencing of exosome-related proteins caused a diminution of exosome output, which compromised the budding efficiency of wrapped HBV.
Moreover, electron microscopy images of ultra-thin sections combined with immunogold staining visualized the hidden virus in the exosomal structure. Additionally, the presence of LHBs on the surface of exosomes derived from HBV-expressing cells was also observed.
As expected, these exosomal membrane-wrapped HBV particles can spread productive infection in differentiated HepaRG cells. In HBV-susceptible cells, as LHBs on the membrane surface, this type of exosomal HBV appeared to be uptaken in an NTCP receptor-dependent manner.
Taken together these data indicate that a fraction of intact HBV virions can be released as exosomes. This reveals a so far not described release pathway for HBV. Exosomes hijacked by HBV act as a transporter impacting the dissemination of the virus.
Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) serves as a cap-like structure on cellular RNAs (NAD-RNAs) in all domains of life including the bacterium Escherichia coli. NAD also acts as a key molecule in phage-host interactions, where bacterial immune systems deplete NAD to abort phage infection. Nevertheless, NAD-RNAs have not yet been identified during phage infections of bacteria and the mechanisms of their synthesis and degradation are unknown in this context. The T4 phage that specifically infects E. coli presents an important model to study phage infections, but a systematic analysis of the presence and dynamics of NAD-RNAs during T4 phage infection is lacking. Here, we investigate the presence of NAD-RNAs during T4 phage infection in a dual manner. By applying time-resolved NAD captureSeq, we identify NAD-capped host and phage transcripts and their dynamic regulation during phage infection. We provide evidence that NAD-RNAs are – as reported earlier – generated by the host RNA polymerase by initiating transcription with NAD at canonical transcription start sites. In addition, we characterize NudE.1 – a T4 phage-encoded Nudix hydrolase – as the first phage-encoded NAD-RNA decapping enzyme. T4 phages carrying inactive NudE.1 display a delayed lysis phenotype. This study investigates for the first time the dual epitranscriptome of a phage and its host, thereby introducing epitranscriptomics as an important field of phage research.
Mechanistic and structural insights into the quality control of the MHC I antigen processing pathway
(2022)
The human body is permanently exposed to its environment and thus to viruses and other pathogens, which require a flexible response and defense. Alongside to the innate immune system, the adaptive immune system provides highly specialized protection against these threats. The major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC I) antigen presentation system is a cornerstone of the adaptive immune system and a major constituent of cellular immunity. Pathogens such as viruses that invade a cell will leave traces in the form of proteins and peptides which are degraded and loaded onto MHC I molecules. MHC I peptide loading is performed by peptide loading complex (PLC) in the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum as part of a multifaceted and comprehensive quality control machinery. Monitored by multiple layers of quality assurance, the MHC I molecules consequently display the immune status of the cell on its surface. In this context, the captured fragment of the virus serves as a call for help issued by the cell, alerting the adaptive immune system to the infection to mount an appropriate immune response.
The three-dimensional structure as well as the mechanistic details of parts of this complex machinery were characterized in the context of this dissertation. Among other tools, light-modulable nanotools were developed in this thesis, which permit external regulation of cellular processes in temporal and spatial resolution. Furthermore, methods and model systems for the biochemical characterization of cellular signaling cascades, proteins, as well as entire cell organelles were developed, which are likely to influence the field of cellular immunity and protein biochemistry in the future.
This cumulative work comprises a total of six publications whose scientific key advances will be briefly outlined in this abstract. In the introduction, the scientific background as well as the current state of research and methodological background knowledge are conveyed. The results section condenses the main aspects of the publications and links them to each other. Further details can be retrieved from the attached original publications.
In “Semisynthetic viral inhibitor for light control of the MHC I peptide loading complex, Winter, Domnick et al., Angew Chem Int Ed 2022” a photocleavable viral inhibitor of the peptide loading complex was produced by semi-synthesis. This nanotool was shown to be suitable for both purifying the PLC from human Raji cells as well as reactivating it in a light-controlled manner. Thus, this tool establishes the isolation of a fully intact and functional peptide loading complex for biochemical characterization. In addition, a novel flow cytometric analysis pipeline for microsomes was developed, allowing cellular vesicles to be characterized with single organelle resolution, similar to cells.
In “Molecular basis of MHC I quality control in the peptide loading complex, Domnick, Winter et al., Nat Commun 2022” the peptide loading complex was reconstituted into large nanodiscs, and a cryo-EM structural model of the editing module at 3.7 Å resolution was generated. By combining the structural model with in vitro glycan editing assays, an allosteric coupling between peptide-MHC I assembly and glycan processing was revealed, extending the known model of MHC I loading and dissociation from the PLC. These mechanisms provide a prototypical example for endoplasmic reticulum quality control.
In a related context, in “Structure of an MHC I–tapasin–ERp57 editing complex defines chaperone promiscuity, Müller, Winter et al., Nat Commun 2022” a recombinantly assembled editing module comprised of MHC I-tapasin-ERp57 was crystallized for X-ray structural biology. The resulting crystal structure at a resolution of 2.7 Å permitted the precise identification of characteristic features of the editing module and particularly of the peptide proofreading mechanism of tapasin. This study provided pivotal insights into the tapasin-mediated peptide editing of different MHC I allomorphs as well as similarities to TAPBPR-based MHC I peptide proofreading.
In “TAPBPR is necessary and sufficient for UGGT1-mediated quality control of MHC I, Sagert, Winter et al. (in preparation)” novel insights concerning the peptide proofreader TAPBPR and its close interplay with the folding sensor and glucosyltransferase UGGT1 were obtained. It was shown that TAPBPR is an integral part of the second level of endoplasmic quality control and is indispensable for effective MHC I coordination by UGGT1.
In “Light-guided intrabodies for on-demand in situ target recognition in human cells, Joest, Winter et al., Chem Sci 2021” intracellular nanobodies were equipped with a photocaged target recognition domain by genetic code expansion via amber suppression. These intrabodies, acting as high-affinity binding partners endowed with a fluorophore, could be used in a light-triggered approach to instantaneously visualize their target molecule...
Transfer RNA fragments replace microRNA regulators of the cholinergic post-stroke immune blockade
(2020)
Stroke is a leading cause of death and disability. Recovery depends on a delicate balance between inflammatory responses and immune suppression, tipping the scale between brain protection and susceptibility to infection. Peripheral cholinergic blockade of immune reactions fine-tunes this immune response, but its molecular regulators are unknown. Here, we report a regulatory shift in small RNA types in patient blood sequenced two days after ischemic stroke, comprising massive decreases of microRNA levels and concomitant increases of transfer RNA fragments (tRFs) targeting cholinergic transcripts. Electrophoresis-based size-selection followed by RT-qPCR validated the top 6 upregulated tRFs in a separate cohort of stroke patients, and independent datasets of small and long RNA sequencing pinpointed immune cell subsets pivotal to these responses, implicating CD14+ monocytes in the cholinergic inflammatory reflex. In-depth small RNA targeting analyses revealed the most-perturbed pathways following stroke and implied a structural dichotomy between microRNA and tRF target sets. Furthermore, lipopolysaccharide stimulation of murine RAW 264.7 cells and human CD14+ monocytes upregulated the top 6 stroke-perturbed tRFs, and overexpression of stroke-inducible tRF-22-WE8SPOX52 using an ssRNA mimic induced downregulation of immune regulator Z-DNA binding protein 1 (Zbp1). In summary, we identified a “changing of the guards” between RNA types that may systemically affect homeostasis in post-stroke immune responses, and pinpointed multiple affected pathways, which opens new venues for establishing therapeutics and biomarkers at the protein- and RNA-level.
Significance Statement Ischemic stroke triggers peripheral immunosuppression, increasing the susceptibility to post-stroke pneumonia that is linked with poor survival. The post-stroke brain initiates intensive communication with the immune system, and acetylcholine contributes to these messages; but the responsible molecules are yet unknown. We discovered a “changing of the guards,” where microRNA levels decreased but small transfer RNA fragments (tRFs) increased in post-stroke blood. This molecular switch may re-balance acetylcholine signaling in CD14+ monocytes by regulating their gene expression and modulating post-stroke immunity. Our observations point out to tRFs as molecular regulators of post-stroke immune responses that may be potential therapeutic targets.
Transfer RNA fragments replace microRNA regulators of the cholinergic poststroke immune blockade
(2020)
Stroke is a leading cause of death and disability. Recovery depends on a delicate balance between inflammatory responses and immune suppression, tipping the scale between brain protection and susceptibility to infection. Peripheral cholinergic blockade of immune reactions fine-tunes this immune response, but its molecular regulators are unknown. Here, we report a regulatory shift in small RNA types in patient blood sequenced 2 d after ischemic stroke, comprising massive decreases of microRNA levels and concomitant increases of transfer RNA fragments (tRFs) targeting cholinergic transcripts. Electrophoresis-based size-selection followed by qRT-PCR validated the top six up-regulated tRFs in a separate cohort of stroke patients, and independent datasets of small and long RNA sequencing pinpointed immune cell subsets pivotal to these responses, implicating CD14+ monocytes in the cholinergic inflammatory reflex. In-depth small RNA targeting analyses revealed the most-perturbed pathways following stroke and implied a structural dichotomy between microRNA and tRF target sets. Furthermore, lipopolysaccharide stimulation of murine RAW 264.7 cells and human CD14+ monocytes up-regulated the top six stroke-perturbed tRFs, and overexpression of stroke-inducible tRF-22-WE8SPOX52 using a single-stranded RNA mimic induced down-regulation of immune regulator Z-DNA binding protein 1. In summary, we identified a “changing of the guards” between small RNA types that may systemically affect homeostasis in poststroke immune responses, and pinpointed multiple affected pathways, which opens new venues for establishing therapeutics and biomarkers at the protein and RNA level.
Transfer RNA fragments replace microRNA regulators of the cholinergic post-stroke immune blockade
(2020)
Stroke is a leading cause of death and disability. Recovery depends on balance between inflammatory response and immune suppression, which can be CNS-protective but may worsen prognosis by increasing patients’ susceptibility to infections. Peripheral cholinergic blockade of immune reactions fine-tunes this immune response, but its molecular regulators are unknown. Therefore, we sought small RNA balancers of the cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway in peripheral blood from ischemic stroke patients. Using RNA-sequencing and RT-qPCR, we discovered in patients’ blood on day 2 after stroke a “change of guards” reflected in massive decreases in microRNAs (miRs) and increases in transfer RNA fragments (tRFs) targeting cholinergic transcripts. Electrophoresis-based size-selection followed by RT-qPCR validated the top 6 upregulated tRFs in a separate cohort of stroke patients, and independent small RNA-sequencing datasets presented post-stroke enriched tRFs as originating from lymphocytes and monocytes. In these immune compartments, we found CD14+ monocytes to express the highest amounts of cholinergic transcripts. In-depth analysis of CD14+ regulatory circuits revealed minimally overlapping subsets of transcription factors carrying complementary motifs to miRs or tRFs, indicating different roles for the stroke-perturbed members of these small RNA species. Furthermore, LPS-stimulated murine RAW264.7 cells presented dexamethasone-suppressible upregulation of the top 6 tRFs identified in human patients, indicating an evolutionarily conserved and pharmaceutically treatable tRF response to inflammatory cues. Our findings identify tRF/miR subgroups which may co-modulate the homeostatic response to stroke in patients’ blood and open novel venues for establishing RNA-targeted concepts for post-stroke diagnosis and therapeutics.
Several lines of evidence suggest the ligand-sensing transcription factor Nurr1 as a promising target to treat neurodegenerative diseases. Nurr1 modulators to validate and exploit this therapeutic potential are rare, however. To identify novel Nurr1 agonist chemotypes, we have employed the Nurr1 activator amodiaquine as template for microscale analogue library synthesis. The first set of analogues was based on the 7-chloroquiolin-4-amine core fragment of amodiaquine and revealed superior N-substituents compared to diethylaminomethylphenol contained in the template. A second library of analogues was subsequently prepared to replace the chloroquinolineamine scaffold. The two sets of analogues enabled a full scaffold hop from amodiaquine to a novel Nurr1 agonist sharing no structural features with the lead but comprising superior potency on Nurr1. Additionally, pharmacophore modeling based on the entire set of active and inactive analogues suggested key features for Nurr1 agonists.
Nuclear receptor related 1 (Nurr1) is an orphan ligand-activated transcription factor and considered as neuroprotective transcriptional regulator with great potential as therapeutic target for neurodegenerative diseases. However, the collection of available Nurr1 modulators and mechanistic understanding of Nurr1 are limited. Here, we report the discovery of several structurally diverse non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs as inverse Nurr1 agonists demonstrating that Nurr1 activity can be regulated bidirectionally. As chemical tools, these ligands enable unraveling the co-regulatory network of Nurr1 and the mode of action distinguishing agonists from inverse agonists. In addition to its ability to dimerize, we observe an ability of Nurr1 to recruit several canonical nuclear receptor co-regulators in a ligand-dependent fashion. Distinct dimerization states and co-regulator interaction patterns arise as discriminating factors of Nurr1 agonists and inverse agonists. Our results contribute a valuable collection of Nurr1 modulators and relevant mechanistic insights for future Nurr1 target validation and drug discovery.
Leukemia patients bearing the t(4;11)(q21;q23) translocations can be divided into two subgroups: those expressing both reciprocal fusion genes, and those that have only the MLL-AF4 fusion gene. Moreover, a recent study has demonstrated that patients expressing both fusion genes have a better outcome than patients that are expressing the MLL-AF4 fusion protein alone. All this may point to a clonal process where the reciprocal fusion gene AF4-MLL could be lost during disease progression, as this loss may select for a more aggressive type of leukemia. Therefore, we were interested in unraveling the decisive role of the AF4-MLL fusion protein at an early timepoint of disease development. We designed an experimental model system where the MLL-AF4 fusion protein was constitutively expressed, while an inducible AF4-MLL fusion gene was induced for only 48 h. Subsequently, we investigated genome-wide changes by RNA- and ATAC-Seq experiments at distinct timepoints. These analyses revealed that the expression of AF4-MLL for only 48 h was sufficient to significantly change the genomic landscape (transcription and chromatin) even on a longer time scale. Thus, we have to conclude that the AF4-MLL fusion protein works through a hit-and-run mechanism, probably necessary to set up pre-leukemic conditions, but being dispensable for later disease progression.
The majority of B-cell precursor acute leukemias in infants are associated with the chromosomal translocation t(4;11)(q21;q23), resulting in the fusion of the mixed-lineage leukemia (MLL) and ALL1-fused gene of chromosome 4 (AF4) genes. While the fusion protein MLL-AF4 is expressed in all t(4;11) patients and essential for leukemia progression, the distinct role of the reciprocal fusion protein AF4-MLL, that is expressed in only 50-80% of t(4;11) leukemia patients (Meyer et al., 2018), remains unclear. In addition, t(4;11) leukemia could so far exclusively be generated in vivo in the presence of AF4-MLL and independent of the co-expression of MLL-AF4 (Bursen et al., 2010).
In a multifactorial approach inhibiting histone deacetylases (HDACs) and expressing the dominant negative mutation of Taspase1 (dnTASP1), both MLL fusion proteins were targeted simultaneously to evaluate a possible cooperative effect between MLL-AF4 and AF4-MLL during the progression of leukemia. Of note, neither HDACi nor dnTASP1 expression negatively affect endogenous MLL, but rather endorse its function hampered by the MLL fusion proteins (Ahmad et al., 2014; Bursen et al., 2004; Zhao et al., 2019). The mere expression of dnTASP1 failed to induce apoptosis, whereas dnTASP1 could elevate apoptosis levels significantly in HDACi-treated t(4;11) cells underlining the therapeutic potential of co-inhibiting both MLL fusion proteins.
Next, the impact of inhibiting either MLL-AF4 or AF4-MLL in vivo was resolved using whole transcriptome analysis. In PDX cells obtained by the Jeremias Laboratory (Völse, 2020) that co-expressed both t(4;11) fusion proteins, the knock-down of MLL-AF4 revealed the down-regulation of pivotal hemato-malignant factors. The expression of dnTASP1 led to massive deregulation of cell-cycle genes in vivo. Considering that the inhibition of particularly MLL-AF4 but not AF4-MLL impaired leukemic cell growth in vivo (Völse, 2020), the results of this work suggest a cooperative effect between both fusion proteins, while the loss of AF4-MLL during leukemia progression appears not essential.
Thereafter, a possible short-term role of AF4-MLL during the establishment of t(4;11) leukemia was analyzed. For this purpose, an in vitro t(4;11) model was constructed to investigate the transforming potential of transiently expressed AF4-MLL in cells constitutively expressing MLL-AF4, putatively reflecting the situation in vivo. Due to the lack of a leukemic background of the applied cell line, the aim was to investigate the long-term potential of AF4-MLL to significantly alter the epigenome rather than mimicking the development of leukemia. Strikingly, short-term-expressed AF4-MLL in cooperation with MLL-AF4 exerted durable epigenetic effects on gene transcription and chromatin accessibility. The here obtained in vitro data suggest a clonal evolutionary process initiated by AF4-MLL in a cooperative manner with MLL-AF4. Importantly, no long-term changes in chromatin accessibility could be observed by the transient expression of either MLL-AF4 or AF4-MLL alone.
All in all, considering endogenous MLL, MLL-AF4 and AF4-MLL in a targeted treatment is a promising approach for a more tailored therapy against t(4;11) leukemia, and AF4-MLL is suggested to act in a cooperative manner with MLL-AF4 especially during the development of a t(4;11) leukemia.
Der Fokus der Arbeit liegt auf der Untersuchung von Wechselwirkungen zwischen Molekülen in selbst-anordnenden Monolagen (SAMs) auf Goldoberflächen mittels Rastertunnelmikroskopie und komplementären Methoden wie z.B. Infrarot-Reflektions-Absorptions-Spektro-skopie.
In dieser Arbeit wurde das kürzlich etablierte Konzept von eingebetteten Dipolmomenten in aromatischen, SAM-bildenden Molekülen eingehender untersucht. Das Ausmaß des Dipol-moments und die Größe der SAM-bildenden Moleküle wurden synthetisch variiert und der Einfluss auf die Struktur und elektronischen Eigenschaften der SAMs untersucht. Binäre, gemischte Monolagen aus SAM-bildenden Molekülen mit "entgegen gerichteten", Dipolmomenten wurden hergestellt und charakterisiert. Zur Herstellung der binären, gemischten Monolagen wurden zwei Methoden verwendet: die Monolagen wurden a) aus bereits gemischten Lösungen der Moleküle abgeschieden oder b) eine reine SAM in die Lösung des anderen Moleküls eingelegt, so dass ein Austausch stattfand. Der Vergleich der beiden Methoden ermöglicht Rückschlüsse über die Abscheidungsprozesse. Die Charakterisierung der SAMs dieser Mischungsreihen gab Aufschluss über Eigenschaften wie Packungsdichte, Austrittsarbeit, elektronischen Ladungstransport in Monolagen und Orientierung der Moleküle relativ zur Oberfläche und erlaubte Schlussfolgerungen über die Mischbarkeit und das Ausmaß der Dipolwechselwirkungen der Moleküle in der Monolage. In einem ähnlichen Ansatz zu dem oben beschriebenen Vorgehen wurden Quadrupolwechselwirkungen zwischen SAM-bildenen, Benzol-, Naphtalin- und Anthracenderivaten untersucht. In Mischungsreihen wurden SAMs von nicht- und teilweise (hoch)fluorierten, SAM-bildenden Molekülen auf Goldoberflächen charakterisiert. Die Ergebnisse der Untersuchungen können bei der gezielten Einstellung der elektronischen Eigenschaften in elektronischen Bauteilen wie OFETs Anwendung finden.
In einem weiteren Projekt wurde der Einfluss von polaren Endgruppen auf die in situ Abspaltung von Schutzgruppen an Terphenylthiol-Derivaten untersucht, wobei die Ergebnisse zum Aufbau größerer, aus organischer Elektronik bestehender, Netzwerke verwendet werden können.
Um molekulare Mechanismen in biologischen Prozessen zu verstehen, ist es unerlässlich biologisch aktive Verbindungen zu kontrollieren. Dabei spielt besonders die Aktivierung bzw. Desaktivierung von Genabschnitten eine zentrale Rolle in der gegenwärtigen chemischen, biologischen und medizinischen Forschung. Nukleinsäuren sind dabei offenkundige Zielmoleküle, da sie die Genexpression auf unterster Ebene regulieren und auf vielfältige Art und Weise an biologischen Prozessen beteiligt sind. Um solch eine genaue Steuerung zu erreichen, werden Nukleinsäuren häufig photolabil modifiziert und unter die Kontrolle von Licht gebracht. Da hochentwickelte Technologien es erlauben Photonen bestimmter Energie unter präziser räumlicher und zeitlicher Auflösung zu dosieren, ist Licht als nicht invasives Triggersignal ein besonders geeignetes Werkzeug um molekulare Prozesse zu kontrollieren.
Die Verwendung photolabiler Schutzgruppen („cage“) ermöglicht es, diese lichtaktivierbaren Nukleinsäuren („caged compound“) herzustellen. Üblicherweise werden Oligonukleotide damit an funktionsbestimmenden Stellen versehen, woraufhin die Funktion der Oligonukleotide unterdrückt wird. Die biologische Aktivität kann durch Bestrahlung mit Licht wieder hergestellt werden, da die photolabile Schutzgruppe durch den Lichtimpuls abgespalten wird. Neben der zeitweiligen Maskierung der Nukleinsäureaktivität existiert auch eine Methode, die als „photoaktivierbarer Strangbruch“ (‘‘caged strand break‘‘) bezeichnet wird. Dabei werden mit Hilfe von photolabilen Linkern (‘‘Verknüpfer‘‘) lichtinduzierte Strangbrüche in Oligonukleotiden ausgelöst, um so beispielsweise die Struktur eines Nukleinsäurestrangs zu zerstören. Die Idee der photoaktivierbaren Strangbrüche ist nicht neu, dennoch werden photolabile Schutzgruppen überwiegend nach der erstgenannten Strategie verwendet. Im Rahmen dieses Promotionsvorhabens wurden neue photosensitive Linkerbausteine für Oligonukleotide entwickelt und hergestellt, welche sich vor allem im Hinblick auf die Anwendbarkeit in lebenden biologischen Systemen von den bisherigen photolabilen Linkern unterscheiden.
Im ersten Projekt wurde ein nicht-nukleosidischer, photolabiler Linker, basierend auf dem Cumaringrundgerüst, entwickelt. Das Ziel war hier, vor allem, einen zweiphotonenaktiven Linker für biologische Anwendungen und Zweiphotonen-Fragestellungen nutzbar zu machen. Bisherige Zweiphotonen-Linker konnten hauptsächlich nur für Proteinverknüpfungen bzw. Neurotransmitter verwendet werden oder mussten chemisch umständlich (z.B. Click-Chemie) und postsynthetisch in Oligonukleotide eingeführt werden. Der neu entwickelte Zweiphotonen-Linker wurde als Phosphoramiditbaustein für die Oligonukelotid-Festphasensynthese synthetisiert, was einen problemlosen und automatisierten Einbau garantiert. Mit einem modifizierten Oligonukleotid konnten die photochemischen Eigenschaften des Linkers bestimmt und mit Hilfe eines fluoreszenzbasierten Verdrängungsassays und Lasertechniken der Zweiphotonen-Effekt visualisiert werden. Dazu wurde ein Hairpin-DNA-Strang hergestellt, welcher eine Linkermodifikation im Bereich der Loopregion enthält. Durch eine Thiolmodifikation am 5‘-Ende des Oligonukleotidstranges war es möglich, diesen in einem Maleimid-funktionalisierten Hydrogel zu fixieren. Ein DNA-Duplex mit einem Fluorophor/Quencherpaar und einer korrespondierenden Sequenz zum modifizierten Hairpin-Strang wurde ebenfalls dem System zugegeben, allerdings wurde dieser nicht fixiert, um Diffusion zu ermöglichen. Durch die räumliche Nähe des Fluorophors zum Quencher konnte im unbelichteten Zustand zunächst keine Fluoreszenz gemessen werden. Mit einem (Femtosekunden-)gepulsten Laser und dem damit verbundenen Bindungsbruch im Hairpin-Strang durch Zweiphotonen-Effekte wurde es dem fluoreszierenden Strang des DNA-Duplex ermöglicht, sich vom Quencher-Strang zu lösen und an den fixierten Strang zu hybridisieren. Das Photolyse-Ereignis konnte so in ein lokales Fluoreszenzsignal übersetzt und detektiert werden.
Der eindeutige Beweis, dass es sich tatsächlich um ein Zweiphotonen-induziertes Ereignis handelt, konnte durch die dreidimensional aufgelöste Photolyse und über die quadratische Anhängigkeit des Fluoreszenzsignals von der eingestrahlten Laserleistung erbracht werden.
Die generelle Kompatibilität des Cumarin-Linkers mit biologischen Systemen konnte in Zellkulturexperimenten gezeigt werden. Dazu wurde eine Transkriptionsfaktor-DNA Decoy-Strategie entwickelt, in der Linker-modifizierte DNA Decoys an regulatorische Transkriptionsfaktoren binden und diese aber auch photochemisch wieder freisetzen können („catch and release-Strategie“). Zellkulturexperimente, um mit dieser Methode das Transkriptionsfaktor-gesteuerte und endogene Gen für Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX2) zu regulieren, lieferten keine aussagekräftigen Ergebnisse. Daher wurden die verwendeten Zellen dahingehend manipuliert, sodass sie das Protein GFP (grün fluoreszierendes Protein) in Abhängigkeit von der Anwesenheit eines Transkriptionsfaktors exprimieren. Das so durch die Zellen verursachte Fluoreszenzsignal steht in direkter Abhängigkeit zur Decoy-Aktivität. Mit Hilfe modifizierter GFP-Decoys konnte hierbei eine Regulation auf Transkriptionsebene in biologischen Organismen erreicht werden. Mit dem Electrophoretic Mobility Shift Assay (EMSA), einer molekularbiologischen in vitro-Analysetechnik, wurden die Interaktionen zwischen modifizierten Decoys und dem Transkriptionsfaktor untersucht.
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Atg8-family proteins - structural features and molecular interactions in autophagy and beyond
(2020)
Autophagy is a common name for a number of catabolic processes, which keep the cellular homeostasis by removing damaged and dysfunctional intracellular components. Impairment or misbalance of autophagy can lead to various diseases, such as neurodegeneration, infection diseases, and cancer. A central axis of autophagy is formed along the interactions of autophagy modifiers (Atg8-family proteins) with a variety of their cellular counter partners. Besides autophagy, Atg8-proteins participate in many other pathways, among which membrane trafficking and neuronal signaling are the most known. Despite the fact that autophagy modifiers are well-studied, as the small globular proteins show similarity to ubiquitin on a structural level, the mechanism of their interactions are still not completely understood. A thorough analysis and classification of all known mechanisms of Atg8-protein interactions could shed light on their functioning and connect the pathways involving Atg8-proteins. In this review, we present our views of the key features of the Atg8-proteins and describe the basic principles of their recognition and binding by interaction partners. We discuss affinity and selectivity of their interactions as well as provide perspectives for discovery of new Atg8-interacting proteins and therapeutic approaches to tackle major human diseases.
We demonstrated previously that 5-lipoxygenase (5-LO), a key enzyme in leukotriene biosynthesis, can be phosphorylated by p38 MAPK-regulated MAPKAP kinases (MKs). Here we show that mutation of Ser-271 to Ala in 5-LO abolished MK2 catalyzed phosphorylation and clearly reduced phosphorylation by kinases prepared from stimulated polymorphonuclear leukocytes and Mono Mac 6 cells. Compared with heat shock protein 27 (Hsp-27), 5-LO was a weak substrate for MK2. However, the addition of unsaturated fatty acids (i.e. arachidonate 1-50 microm) up-regulated phosphorylation of 5-LO, but not of Hsp-27, by active MK2 in vitro, resulting in a similar phosphorylation as for Hsp-27. 5-LO was phosphorylated also by other serine/threonine kinases recognizing the motif Arg-Xaa-Xaa-Ser (protein kinase A, Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent kinase II), but these activities were not increased by fatty acids. HeLa cells expressing wild type 5-LO or S271A-5-LO, showed prominent 5-LO activity when incubated with Ca(2+)-ionophore plus arachidonate. However, when stimulated with only exogenous arachidonic acid, activity for the S271A mutant was significantly lower as compared with wild type 5-LO. It appears that phosphorylation at Ser-271 is more important for 5-LO activity induced by a stimulus that does not prominently increase intracellular Ca(2+) and that arachidonic acid stimulates leukotriene biosynthesis also by promoting this MK2-catalyzed phosphorylation.
Most fungal fatty acid synthases assemble from two multidomain subunits, α and β, into a heterododecameric FAS complex. It has been recently shown that the complex assembly occurs in a cotranslational manner and is initiated by an interaction between the termini of α and β subunits. This initial engagement of subunits may be the rate-limiting phase of the assembly and subject to cellular regulation. Therefore, we hypothesized that bypassing this step by genetically fusing the subunits could be beneficial for biotechnological production of fatty acids. To test the concept, we expressed fused FAS subunits engineered for production of octanoic acid in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Collectively, our data indicate that FAS activity is a limiting factor of fatty acid production and that FAS fusion proteins show a superior performance compared to their split counterparts. This strategy is likely a generalizable approach to optimize the production of fatty acids and derived compounds in microbial chassis organisms.
In dieser Arbeit werden die Ergebnisse quantenchemischer Untersuchungen von verschiedenen Siliciumverbindungsklassen vorgestellt, die in weiten Teilen als Begleitung zu experimentellen Arbeiten durchgeführt wurden. Das erste Hauptkapitel befasst sich mit den Chloridkomplexen von Perchlorsilanen, zu denen die inversen Sandwichkomplexe und die Silafullerane mit endohedralem Gast gehören. Der Fokus liegt dabei auf den Bindungseigenschaften zwischen Ligand und Silan. Weiterhin werden thermodynamische Untersuchungen zu Aufbaureaktionen und Eigenschaften der Verbindungen vorgestellt. Mit den durchgeführten Rechnungen kann gezeigt werden, dass durch Wahl geeigneter Substituenten am Siliciumatom ein Wechsel in den Chloridkomplexen von einem hyperkoordinierten Siliciumatom hin zu einem Siliciumatom mit ausgebildeter Tetrelbindung erreicht werden kann. Bei den inversen Sandwichkomplexen sind beide Bindungsmodi möglich, von denen die Tetrelbindung die stärkere darstellt. Neben Chloridionen können hier auch Nitrile und Chlorsubstituenten am eigenen Silangerüst als Liganden fungieren. Die stärksten Tetrelbindungen können bei den endohedral funktionalisierten Silafullerankomplexen gefunden werden. Hier stellt das experimentell isolierte Strukturmotiv mit zwölf äußeren Trichlorsilylsubstituenten das thermodynamisch stabilste Substitutionsmuster dar. Im folgenden Kapitel werden die generellen physikalischen Ursachen für die beobachteten thermodynamischen Trends zwischen Perchlorsilanisomeren sowie Disproportionierungsreaktionen behandelt und ein direkter Vergleich mit Alkanhomologen angestellt. Bei den Perchlorsilanen und den meisten Homologen ist bei den untersuchten Systemen eine energetische Präferenz von verzweigteren Strukturen zu erkennen. Die Ursache hierfür liegt hauptsächlich bei stärkeren attraktiven Wechselwirkungen durch Korrelationseffekte, Hyperkonjugation sowie elektrostatische Effekte, welche stärkere repulsive Wechselwirkungen wie die Pauli-Repulsion überkompensieren. Im letzten Kapitel kommen zu den bisher behandelten Reaktionen unter Si-Cl- und Si-Si-Bindungsbeteiligung noch Reaktionen unter Si-C-Bindungsbeteiligungen hinzu. Dort werden die auch wegen ihrer Elektronentransporteigenschaften interessanten Silacyclopentadiene (Silole) hinsichtlich ihrer Isomerisierung, Dimerisierung und weiteren pericyclischen Reaktivität untersucht. Gegenüber dem verwandten Cyclopentadien zeigen diese eine deutlich erhöhte Reaktivität, was zu verschiedenen Dimerisierungsreaktionen führt, solange keine Abfangreagenzien im Überschuss zugegen sind.
The Kinase Chemogenomic Set (KCGS): An open science resource for kinase vulnerability identification
(2019)
We describe the assembly and annotation of a chemogenomic set of protein kinase inhibitors as an open science resource for studying kinase biology. The set only includes inhibitors that show potent kinase inhibition and a narrow spectrum of activity when screened across a large panel of kinase biochemical assays. Currently, the set contains 187 inhibitors that cover 215 human kinases. The kinase chemogenomic set (KCGS) is the most highly annotated set of selective kinase inhibitors available to researchers for use in cell-based screens.
This cumulative dissertation examines learning in chemistry laboratories, focusing on the challenges and benefits of problem-based learning (PBL) for novices in the lab. It addresses the lack of consistent understanding about what should be learned in labs and why it's important. The research aims to understand what students learn, how they learn, and how lab learning can be improved.
A central concept in PBL labs is Information Literacy, defined as a sociocultural practice enabling learners to identify and use information sources within a specific context as legitimized by the practice community.
The first publication, Wellhöfer and Lühken (2022a), investigates the relationship between PBL and learner motivation. It identifies factors that can foster students' intrinsic motivation in a PBL lab. Autonomy is found to be a key factor, increasing student motivation and presenting a model of the autonomous scientific process. This model involves four steps: information acquisition, designing and applying experimental procedures, experimental feedback, and autonomous process optimization. The results suggest that intrinsic motivation in PBL labs can be enhanced by enabling students to independently execute these steps.
The second publication, Wellhöfer and Lühken (2022b), examines the information process students undergo during their first PBL lab. Using a sociocultural framework, it explores Information Literacy to understand students' handling of information and their perceptions of the information process. The findings reveal that in PBL labs, developing a practical, applicable experimental procedure is crucial for problem-solving and significantly shapes the information-acquisition process. This process is iterative, influenced by new information, leading to more precise information needs. Students assess information quality based on its usefulness for their problem, implementability (considering cognitive understanding, available equipment, and psychomotor skills), and safety.
Furthermore, the role of privileged knowledge forms in evaluating the quality of text sources is explored. Students viewed non-scientific sources as "poor" and scientific sources as "good," yet used both for information gathering. There were discrepancies between their assessment of source quality and actual use, indicating that perception of source quality doesn't always affect their practical decisions.
The third publication, Wellhöfer, Machleid, and Lühken (2023), investigates students' information practices in the lab, focusing on discourse between novice learners and experienced assistants. It shows that theoretical knowledge isn't sufficient for independent practical action, and students need actionable social information from experienced community members. The results highlight that information literacy in the lab for newcomers to a community of practice has distinctive features, and physical experience and tacit knowledge are crucial for learning the methods and group-specific knowledge of the practice community. The article demonstrates how learning information literacy in a practice community requires a social and physical experience and provides insights on how educators can support this process.
This work investigated the influence of the CRISPR/Cas9 mediated knockout of 5-lipoxygenase (5-LO) on different adherent tumour cell lines derived from solid tumours. For this, the 5-LO expressing tumour cell lines HCT-116, HT-29, and U-2 OS were transiently transfected using a plasmid carrying the CRISPR/Cas9 complex sequence to the ALOX5 gene. Subsequently, cells were selected using Puromycin and analysed via Western blotting and DNA Sanger sequencing. Cells that were transfected with a control plasmid missing the guide RNA sequence, were used as a control for all experiments.
Differential gene expression analysis, performed after next-generation RNA sequencing, revealed that the expression of various genes was altered after the knockout of 5-LO. In HCT-116 cells, 28 genes were expressed differentially in all 5-LO knockout single-cell clones, while in HT-29 cells the expression of 18 genes and in U-2 OS cells of 234 genes was influenced by the knockout of 5-LO. These findings were validated by real-time qPCR. A lot of the genes that were influenced by the 5-LO knockout are known to be connected to epithelial-mesenchymal-transition (EMT), a process necessary for tumour metastasis. The results from RNA sequencing were the starting point for further investigations. In the following, different aspects of the tumour cell lines were examined. In HT-29, as
well as in U-2 OS cells, it was shown that knockout of the 5-LO resulted in impaired cell proliferation. Also, the formation of three-dimensional tumour spheroids was altered. In HT-29 cells, the knockout of 5-LO increased the number of cells in spheroids. In contrast, in U-2 OS cells, the number of cells per spheroid was decreased, even though the diameter of the spheroids was increased, due to more loosely packed spheroids. The difference between 5-LO positive and negative U-2 OS cells became even more obvious after embedding the spheroids in an artificial extracellular matrix. In that scenario, cells lacking the 5-LO formed smaller spheroids that did not have the same ability to grow into the extracellular matrix as 5-LO positive cells did. Also, directed cell migration was strongly influenced by the knockout of 5-LO. In both, HCT-116 and U-2 OS cells, directed cell migration towards a serum gradient was increased in 5-LO knockout single-cell clones. Pharmacological inhibition of the enzyme was used to investigate, whether canonical or non-canonical functions were responsible for the previously mentioned effects.
Therefore, vector control cells were treated with the 5-LO inhibitors Zileuton and CJ-13610 in different concentrations. Interestingly, only some of the effects mediated by the complete knockout of 5-LO could be reproduced by inhibiting the enzyme, leading to the suggestion, that canonical, as well as non-canonical functions of 5-LO, play a role in these tumour cells.
To conclude, it was shown in this study, that 5-LO affects various cellular functions when expressed in adherent tumour cell lines. These cell line-dependent effects result in altered gene expression, enhanced proliferation, and spheroid formation, as well as impaired cell motility, and can be mediated by enzymatic activity as well as other non-canonical functions.
The new class of microbial rhodopsins, called xenorhodopsins (XeRs),[1] extends the versatility of this family by inward H+ pumps.[2–4] These pumps are an alternative optogenetic tool to the light-gated ion channels (e.g. ChR1,2), because the activation of electrically excitable cells by XeRs is independent from the surrounding physiological conditions. In this work we functionally and spectroscopically characterized XeR from Nanosalina (NsXeR).[1] The photodynamic behavior of NsXeR was investigated on the ps to s time scale elucidating the formation of the J and K and a previously unknown long-lived intermediate. The pH dependent kinetics reveal that alkalization of the surrounding medium accelerates the photocycle and the pump turnover. In patch-clamp experiments the blue-light illumination of NsXeR in the M state shows a potential-dependent vectoriality of the photocurrent transients, suggesting a variable accessibility of reprotonation of the retinal Schiff base. Insights on the kinetically independent switching mechanism could furthermore be obtained by mutational studies on the putative intracellular H+ acceptor D220.
The new class of microbial rhodopsins, called xenorhodopsins (XeRs),[1] extends the versatility of this family by inward H+ pumps.[2–4] These pumps are an alternative optogenetic tool to the light-gated ion channels (e.g. ChR1,2), because the activation of electrically excitable cells by XeRs is independent from the surrounding physiological conditions. In this work we functionally and spectroscopically characterized XeR from Nanosalina (NsXeR).[1] The photodynamic behavior of NsXeR was investigated on the ps to s time scale elucidating the formation of the J and K and a previously unknown long-lived intermediate. The pH dependent kinetics reveal that alkalization of the surrounding medium accelerates the photocycle and the pump turnover. In patch-clamp experiments the blue-light illumination of NsXeR in the M state shows a potential-dependent vectoriality of the photocurrent transients, suggesting a variable accessibility of reprotonation of the retinal Schiff base. Insights on the kinetically independent switching mechanism could furthermore be obtained by mutational studies on the putative intracellular H+ acceptor D220.
In optogenetischen Anwendungen, welche die Manipulation von zellulären Aktivitäten durch Licht ermöglichen, werden die Eigenschaften von mikrobiellen Rhodopsinen, einer Familie natürlich vorkommender lichtgesteuerter Proteine, ausgenutzt.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden die einwärts transportierende Protonenpumpe NsXeR, sowie die auswärts Natriumionenpumpe KR2 untersucht. Des Weiteren wurden Tandem Proteine betrachtet, die mikrobielle Rhodopsine kombinieren mit dem Chemokinrezeptor CXCR4, der durch SDF1 aktiviert und anschließend in Endosomen internalisiert wird.
Für die Untersuchung des Mechanismus, der die Vektorialität in NsXeR bestimmt, wurde eine umfassende elektrophysiologische Studie durchgeführt. In Patch Clamp Messungen an NsXeR exprimierenden NG108-15 Zellen wurden bei kontinuierlicher 561 nm Beleuchtung aktive Einwärtsströme entgegen eines elektrochemischen Gradienten gemessen. Ein Einfluss des intrazellulären pHs auf die steady-state Ströme und deren Abfallkinetik konnte nicht festgestellt werden. Der Vergleich der exponentiellen Abfallrate k2 mit den Übergängen im NsXeR Photozyklus, lässt den Schluss zu, dass der ratenlimitierende Schritt der MII Zerfall ist.
Die elektrogenen Schritte im NsXeR Photozyklus wurden mit elektrischen Messungen an der black lipid membrane (BLM) an NsXeR Proteoliposomen bestimmt. Die Belichtung mit 20 ns Lichtpulsen bei 556 nm rufen Spannungssignale hervor, die exponentiell gefittet wurden, wobei drei elektrogene Schritte identifiziert werden konnten. Bei pH 7.4 betrugen die ermittelten Zeitkonstanten etwa 220 µs, 1 ms und 15 ms, denen 42%, 10% und 48% an der Gesamtladungsverschiebung zugeordnet wurden. Die elektrogenen Schritte konnten den Übergängen im Photozyklus zugeordnet werden, wobei der erste Schritt mit t1 dem MI Aufbau (Deprotonierung Schiff’sche Base, Protonenabgabe zur intrazellulären Seite) zugeschrieben wurde. t2 wurde dem MI→MII Übergang (Switch, Zugänglichkeitsänderung vom Intra- zum Extrazellulären) zugeordnet und t3 korreliert mit dem MII Zerfall (Reprotonierung Schiff’sche Base, Protonenaufnahme von der extrazellulären Seite).
Die Kinetik und der Ladungstransportanteil des zweiten elektrogenen Schritts haben keine starke pH Abhängigkeit, was sich dadurch erklären lässt, dass t2 durch eine Konformationsänderung bestimmt wird. t1 und t3 werden bei höheren pH Werten beschleunigt, was sich bei t1 mit einer erleichterten intrazellulären Protonenabgabe erklären lässt. Für t3 wurde eine Reprotonierung durch eine Donor Gruppe Asp76 vorgeschlagen. Die pH-sensitive Änderung der relativen Ladungstransferanteile des ersten und dritten elektrogenen Schrittes (∆ΨI und ∆ΨIII) wurden durch eine mögliche Verzögerung der frühen Protonenabgabe bei niedrigen pH Werten erklärt.
Der mutmaßliche Protonenakzeptor Asp220 wurde gegen Asn und Glu ausgetauscht und in Patch Clamp sowie UV-Vis Spektroskopie Messungen untersucht. Für D220N wurden keine Pumpströme und kein Einfluss auf die maximale Absorptionswellenlänge λmax festgestellt. D220E dagegen führte zu einer Erniedrigung des pKa-Werts der Schiff’schen Base und zu einer Verminderung der Iss-Abfallsrate k2 in Patch Clamp Dauerbelichtungsmessungen (D220E k2 = 27.1 ± 1.8 Hz, Wildtyp k2 = 83.1 ± 2.6 Hz). Daraus konnte geschlossen werden, dass Asp220 wesentlich für den Protonentransport ist und nicht als Gegenion für die protonierte Schiff’sche Base dient.
In Patch Clamp Experimenten bei 561 nm Dauerbelichtung und zusätzlicher gepulster Belichtung bei 355 nm wurde der Blaulichteffekt an NsXeR untersucht, bei dem Proteine im M Intermediat ein Photon absorbieren und unter Reprotonierung der Schiff’schen Base in den Grundzustand zurückkehren.
Für NsXeR konnte eine Potentialabhängigkeit für die Richtung der transienten Ströme, die durch die
355 nm Belichtung hervorgerufen wurden, festgestellt werden. Beim NsXeR Blaulichteffekt scheint eine
Reprotonierung der Schiff’schen Base von beiden Seiten möglich zu sein, was auf die unterschiedlichen Zugänglichkeiten in den beiden M Zuständen MI und MII zurückgeführt wurde. Es wurde ein Modell vorgeschlagen, welches auf einem potentialabhängigen Gleichgewicht zwischen MI und MII basiert.
In Patch Clamp Messungen an KR2 exprimierenden NG108-15 Zellen wurden die Pumpströme untersucht, die durch den auswärts Transport von Na+ und H+ hervorgerufen wurden. Die Na+-Konzentrationen der intra- und extrazellulären Lösungen wurden symmetrisch variiert und die steady-state Ströme Iss bei 532 nm Dauerbelichtung betrachtet. Mit steigender Na+-Konzentration zeigte sich ein Übergang von einer linearen Potentialabhängigkeit der Iss, zu einem sättigungsähnlichen Verhalten bis hin zu einer fast glockenförmigen Form. Da die exponentielle Abfallrate der steady-state Ströme k2 in ihrer Potentialabhängigkeit mit den Iss korrelierte, konnte geschlossen werden, dass die Ströme überwiegend kinetisch limitiert sind. Die Erhöhung der Rate k2 mit steigender Na+-Konzentration zwischen -120 mV und -60 mV deutet darauf hin, dass die Na+-Aufnahme von der intrazellulären Seite bei diesen Bedingungen die Limitierung für die Pumpe darstellt.
Unter Na+-“freien” Bedingungen wurde der Einfluss des intrazellulären pHs untersucht. Für die Rate k2 wurde eine Erhöhung bei niedrigen pH Werten festgestellt und die Potentiale E0 (Iss = 0 pA) verschoben bei niedrigem intrazellulärem pH zu hyperpolarisierenden Potentialen. Daraus lässt sich schließen, dass die steady-state Ströme durch den Transport von Protonen hervorgerufen wurden.
In Messungen mit gepulster 530 nm Belichtung wurden die transienten Pumpströme gemessen und durch exponentielles Fitten des Stromabfalls drei elektrogene Schritte identifiziert. Eine Abhängigkeit vom Potential und der Na+-Konzentration konnte nur für den dritten Schritt mit der Rate 1/τ3 festgestellt werden, wobei 1/τ3 mit der Na+-Konzentration und bei positiveren Potentialen steigt. Unter Na+-“freien” Bedingungen steigt 1/τ3 auch mit niedrigeren intrazellulären pH Werten. Die elektrogenen Schritte wurden dem KR2 Photozyklus zugeordnet, wobei ein Modell angewendet wurde, das einen M1→M2 Übergang einführt. Diesem wurde der zweite elektrogene Schritt zugeordnet. Die relativen Ladungstransportanteile Q2 und Q3 des zweiten und dritten elektrogenen Schrittes sind sowohl potential- als auch Na+-abhängig. Um dieses Verhalten zu erklären, wurde ein Modell vorgeschlagen, bei dem ein Ausgleichsladungstransfer in Form von einer Protonenabgabe und -wiederaufnahme während des Photozyklus eingeführt wurde.
In Patch Clamp Messungen wurde die erhaltene Funktionalität der ChR2 Mutante ChR2(L132C) mit erhöhter Ca2+-Permeabilität im Tandem Protein tCXCR4/CatCh nachgewiesen. Auch die Internalisierung von tCXCR4/CatCh konnte anhand der zeitabhängigen Abnahme des CatCh-Signals nach der CXCR4-Aktivierung durch SDF1 in Strommessungen beobachtet werden. Für tCXCR4/Arch, ein Tandem Protein mit einer Protonenpumpe, wurde die SDF1-induzierte Internalisierung mit Hilfe der konfokalen Laser-Scanning-Mikroskopie betrachtet und eine Kolokalisierung der Fluoreszenz des im Tandem exprimierten YFP und der eines gelabelten CXCR4-spezifischen Antikörpers in intrazellulären Vesikeln beobachtet. Bei Behandlung mit dem CXCR4 Antagonisten AMD3100 wurde die Kolokalisierung hauptsächlich in der Zellmembran festgestellt, da die Internalisierung blockiert war. Die Tandem Protein könnten als in intrazellulären Organellen wirkende optogenetische Werkzeuge eingesetzt werden für z.B. die Manipulation der intrazellulären Ca2+-Konzentration.
Bezüglich der Arzneimittelforschung galt für sehr lange Zeit das Paradigma "ein Gen, ein Medikament, eine Krankheit". In jüngerer Zeit ändert sich dieses Paradigma jedoch auf Grund von redundanten Funktionen und alternativen sich kompensierenden Signalmustern, die insbesondere bei Krebserkrankungen vorherrschend sind. Daher kann die logische Konsequenz nur sein, Multi-Target-Strategien gegenüber Single-Target-Ansätzen in Betracht zu ziehen. Auf Grund der Schwierigkeit, mit einer Kombination von zwei Einzelwirkstoffen, in diesem Fall BET- und HDAC-Inhibitoren eine konsistente Biodistribution und Pharmakokinetik zu erreichen, wurde nach Einzelmolekülen gesucht, die mehrere inhibitorische Aktivitäten aufweisen. Dies wurde hier zunächst durch die einfache Konjugation von zwei unterschiedlichen Pharmakophoren erreicht.
Insgesamt wurden vier verschiedene Liganden dieses Typs synthetisiert und einer von ihnen, Verbindung 14, zeigte sehr vielversprechende Ergebnisse. 14 vereint den BET Inhibitor JQ1- mit dem HDAC Inhibitor CI994 und hat eine hemmende Wirkung sowohl gegen BRD4- als auch HDAC-Proteine wie durch DSF- und nanoBRET-Assay gezeigt werden konnte. Außerdem zeigten in vitro Assays in PDAC-Zellen, dass 14 ein noch potenterer dualer BET/HDAC-Inhibitor ist als die Kombination aus JQ1 und CI994. Während die Effekte von 14 auf das BETi-Antwortgen MYC denen von JQ1 ziemlich ähnlich sind, sind insbesondere die HDAC-inhibitorischen Effekte nachhaltiger und verstärkt, wahrscheinlich aufgrund einer längeren Verweildauer von 14 auf HDAC als dies bei CI994 der Fall ist. Dies ist durch das hohe Niveau der acetylierten Lysine von Histon H3 im Western Blot erkennbar. Dieses veränderte Expressionsverhalten hatte einen großen Einfluss auf das Zellwachstum und überleben in allen getesteten PDAC-Zelllinien. Hier wurde die Überlegenheit von 14 gegenüber der gleichzeitigen Behandlung der Zellen mit JQ1 und CI994 sehr deutlich. Wurden PDAC-Zellen mit dem dualen Inhibitor 14 behandelt, hatte dies ein geringeres Wachstum und Überleben der Krebszellen zur Folge als mit beiden ursprünglichen Molekülen, unabhängig davon, ob diese einzeln oder simultan verabreicht wurden. Außerdem wurde 14 mit Gemcitabin, einem gut verträglichen Chemotherapeutikum, kombiniert, dass bei PDAC allein nur eine begrenzte Aktivität aufweist. Es stellte sich heraus, dass die Reihenfolge, in der die Medikamente verabreicht werden, einen großen Einfluss auf die Effektivität hatte. Der durch 14 induzierte Stopp des Zellzyklus verhindert den Einbau von Gemcitabin in die DNA, wenn 14 vor oder gleichzeitig mit Gemcitabin verabreicht wird. Wenn jedoch die Behandlung mit 14 nach der Verabreichung von Gemcitabin folgt, wird der durch Gemcitabin induzierte S-Phasen-Arrest und Replikationsstress aufrechterhalten. Im Vergleich zu den meisten früheren Studien, die sich mit dualen BET/HDAC-Inhibitoren beschäftigten, ist dies eine große Verbesserung, da es bisher keinen signifikanten Unterschied zwischen der Verwendung eines dualen BET/HDAC-Inhibitors und der Kombination von zwei Einzelinhibitoren gab.
Als Proof of Concept unterstützten die Daten weitere Bemühungen zur Entwicklung zusätzlicher dualer BET/HDAC-Inhibitoren. Daher wurden zwei weitere Generationen dualer BET/HDAC Inhibitoren entwickelt, die jedoch bisher nicht an die Eigenschaften von 14 anknüpfen konnten. Vor allem die 3. Generation bietet jedoch Raum für Optimierungen, so dass hier möglicherweise noch ein potenter dualer Inhibitor zu finden ist. Sollte es in Zukunft einen zugelassenen dualen BET/HDAC-Inhibitor geben, ist es jedoch nicht unwahrscheinlich, dass keine der hier verwendet BET inhibierenden Strukturen verwendet werden, aber Struktur des HDAC inhibierenden Teils immer noch vergleichbar ist. Der Grund dafür ist, dass die HDAC Inhibitoren größtenteils relativ einfach aufgebaut. So lange das wichtigste, die zinkbindende Gruppe vorhanden ist, scheint der Linker sowie die Capping-Gruppe zweitranging zu sein. Die größere Herausforderung wird vermutlich die Suche nach dem passenden BET Inhibitor sein und die Wahlmöglichkeiten sind schon jetzt vielfältig.
Generell lässt sich sagen, dass die Idee der dualen BET/HDAC-Inhibitoren äußerst vielversprechend und es wert ist, weiter verfolgt zu werden. Dies liegt vor allem an den guten Testergebnissen, die mit Verbindung 14 erzielt wurden. Mit Hilfe dieser Art von Inhibitoren könnte es in Zukunft möglich sein, die Überlebensrate von PDAC-Patienten zu erhöhen, wenn nicht als alleiniges Medikament, so vielleicht als Zusatz zur Chemotherapie. Darüber hinaus scheint der Einsatz von dualen BET/HDAC-Inhibitoren nicht nur auf die Behandlung von PDAC beschränkt zu sein und kann auch bei anderen Krebsarten angewendet werden. NMC zum Beispiel ist ein ebenso seltener wie tödlicher Subtyp des schlecht differenzierten Plattenepithelkarzinoms und zeichnet sich durch eine Fusion des NUT-Gens mit BRD4 aus, wodurch es potenziell anfällig für eine BET-Inhibition ist. Tatsächlich zeigte 14 auch hier einen größeren positiven Effekt auf die getesteten NMC-Zellen als JQ1 oder CI994 und veranlasste die Zellen unter anderem zur Differenzierung. ...
TNFR1 is a crucial regulator of NF‐ĸB‐mediated proinflammatory cell survival responses and programmed cell death (PCD). Deregulation of TNFα‐ and TNFR1‐controlled NF‐ĸB signaling underlies major diseases, like cancer, inflammation, and autoimmune diseases. Therefore, although being routinely used, antagonists of TNFα might also affect TNFR2‐mediated processes, so that alternative approaches to directly antagonize TNFR1 are beneficial. Here, we apply quantitative single‐molecule localization microscopy (SMLM) of TNFR1 in physiologic cellular settings to validate and characterize TNFR1 inhibitory substances, exemplified by the recently described TNFR1 antagonist zafirlukast. Treatment of TNFR1‐mEos2 reconstituted TNFR1/2 knockout mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) with zafirlukast inhibited both ligand‐independent preligand assembly domain (PLAD)‐mediated TNFR1 dimerization as well as TNFα‐induced TNFR1 oligomerization. In addition, zafirlukast‐mediated inhibition of TNFR1 clustering was accompanied by deregulation of acute and prolonged NF‐ĸB signaling in reconstituted TNFR1‐mEos2 MEFs and human cervical carcinoma cells. These findings reveal the necessity of PLAD‐mediated, ligand‐independent TNFR1 dimerization for NF‐ĸB activation, highlight the PLAD as central regulator of TNFα‐induced TNFR1 oligomerization, and demonstrate that TNFR1‐mEos2 MEFs can be used to investigate TNFR1‐antagonizing compounds employing single‐molecule quantification and functional NF‐ĸB assays at physiologic conditions.
Necroptosis is an immunogenic form of programmed cell death characterized by plasma membrane accumulation of activated mixed lineage kinase domain-like (MLKL) that eventually leads to membrane disruption and release of danger-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs). Necroptotic cell death is tightly controlled by checkpoints, including compartmentalization as well as post-translational modifications (PTMs), like phosphorylation and ubiquitination of receptor-interacting protein kinase (RIPK) 1, RIPK3 and MLKL. Removal of plasma membrane-located activated MLKL via endocytosis or exocytosis can counteract necroptosis, but up till now, the exact mechanisms by which necroptosis is regulated downstream of MLKL activation and oligomerization are not fully understood.
Ubiquitination is a key post-translational modification that regulates various cellular processes including cell survival and cell death signaling via ubiquitination of RIPK1, RIPK3 and MLKL. M1-linked (linear) poly-ubiquitination is mediated exclusively by the linear ubiquitin chain assembly complex (LUBAC) which critically regulates cell fate and immune signaling via death receptors such as TNF receptor 1 (TNFR1).
In this study, we demonstrate that M1 poly-Ubiquitin (poly-Ub) increases during necroptosis which can be blocked by inhibition of LUBAC activity with the small-molecule HOIL-1-interacting protein (HOIP) inhibitor HOIPIN-8 or by loss of LUBAC catalytic subunit HOIP. Intriguingly, HOIPIN-8, as well as the HOIP inhibitor gliotoxin, and HOIP knockdown effectively prevent TNFα/smac mimetic/zVAD.fmk-induced necroptotic cell death in cells of human origin, without affecting necroptotic RIPK1 and RIPK3 phosphorylation, necrosome formation and oligomerization of phosphorylated MLKL. We demonstrate that HOIPIN-8 treatment inhibits MLKL translocation to intracellular membranes and accumulation in plasma membrane hotspots as well as MLKL exocytosis. We further confirm that HOIPIN-8 treatment suppresses necroptotic cell death in primary human pancreatic organoids (hPOs). Using time-lapse imaging and live/dead staining, we demonstrate loss of organoid structure and hPO cell death induced by smac mimetics and caspase inhibitors, thus providing a novel platform to investigate necroptosis in near physiological settings. Inhibition of LUBAC activity with HOIPIN-8 prevents hPO collapse and extends cell viability. Of note, loss of the M1 Ub-targeting deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs) OTU DUB with linear linkage specificity (OTULIN) and cylindromatosis (CYLD) in human cell lines does not affect necroptosis induction and HOIPIN-8-mediated rescue of necroptosis. Intriguingly, inhibition of LUBAC activity with HOIPIN-8 does not block necroptotic cell death in murine cell lines.
Using massive analyses of cDNA ends (MACE)-seq-based global transcriptome analysis we confirm that necroptosis induces a pro-inflammatory cytokine profile which is dependent on LUBAC function and necroptotic signaling. Loss of LUBAC activity prevents the MLKL-dependent production and release of pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines.
Finally, we identify Flotillin-1 and -2 (FLOT1/2) as putative targets of necroptosis-induced M1 poly-Ub. Ubiquitin-binding in ABIN and NEMO (UBAN)-based pulldowns of M1 poly-ubiquitinated proteins revealed enrichment of FLOTs after necroptosis induction which is dependent on LUBAC activity and can be blocked with necroptosis inhibitors Nec-1s, GSK’872 and NSA, targeting RIPK1, RIPK3 and MLKL, respectively. Of note, loss of FLOT1/2 potentiates necroptosis suppression induced by LUBAC inhibition with HOIPIN-8.
Together, these findings identify LUBAC-mediated M1 poly-Ub as an important mediator of necroptosis and identify FLOTs as novel putative targets of LUBAC-mediated M1 poly-Ub during necroptosis. In addition, by modeling necroptosis in primary human organoids, we further expand the spectrum of experimental models to study necroptosis in human cellular settings.
Die vorliegende Doktorarbeit beschäftigt sich mit der Untersuchung von molekularen Systemen, die aus mehreren Chromophoren bestehen und über einen Zweiphotonen-Prozess aktiviert werden können.
Die Zweiphotonen-Absorption (2PA) beschreibt die nahezu simultane Absorption zweier Photonen, deren Summe die Energie ergibt, die für den entsprechenden elektronischen Übergang nötig ist. Da für die Anregung somit zwei niederenergetische Photonen benötigt werden, kann für die 2PA Nahinfrarot-Licht (NIR-Licht) verwendet werden, welches eine geringe Phototoxizität aufweist und eine tiefe Gewebedurchdringung ermöglicht. Weiterhin wird durch die intrinsische dreidimensionale Auflösung der 2PA eine hohe Ortsauflösung der Photoaktivierung erzielt.
Photolabile Schutzgruppen (PPGs) bzw. Photocages sind chemische Verbindungen, die der vorübergehenden Maskierung der biologischen Funktion eines (Makro-)Moleküls dienen. Sie können durch Licht geeigneter Wellenlängen abgespalten werden (uncaging), wodurch die Aktivität des geschützten Substrats wiederhergestellt wird. Leider weisen viele der etablierten PPGs schlechte Zweiphotonen-Eigenschaften auf. Um die 2P-Aktivität einer PPG zu erhöhen, kann sie kovalent mit einem guten Zweiphotonen-Absorber verknüpft werden, der bei Bestrahlung das Licht über einen Zweiphotonen-Prozess absorbiert und anschließend mittels Energietransfer auf die photolabile Schutzgruppe überträgt. Dies führt schließlich zur Uncaging-Reaktion.
Im Zuge von Projekt I dieser Dissertation wurde eine solche molekulare Dyade für verbessertes Zweiphotonen-Uncaging bestehend aus einem Rhodamin-Fluorophor als Zweiphotonen-Absorber und einem Rotlicht-absorbierenden BODIPY als photolabile Schutzgruppe hergestellt und charakterisiert. Die Zweiphotonen-Aktivität des Fluorophors wurde mittels TPEF-Messungen (two-photon excited fluorescence) untersucht. Anschließend wurde das Rhodamin an einen 3,5-Distyryl-substituierten BODIPY-Photocage gekuppelt. Der Energietransfer innerhalb dieser Dyade wurde mithilfe von transienter Ultrakurzzeit-Spektroskopie und quantenmechanischen Berechnungen untersucht. Die Freisetzung der Abgangsgruppe para-Nitroanilin (PNA) bei Belichtung der Dyade konnte sowohl nach Einphotonen-Anregung des Rhodamins als auch des BODIPYs mithilfe von UV/vis-Absorptionsmessungen qualitativ nachgewiesen werden.
Da die Uncaging-Reaktion allerdings nicht besonders effektiv war, wurde für die Weiterführung des Projekts ein neuer BODIPY Photocage, der eine verbesserte Photolyse-Effizienz und eine höhere Photostabilität aufwies, verwendet und erneut an einen Rhodamin-Fluorophor geknüpft. Anhand dieser optimierten Dyade konnte die Einphotonen-Photolyse quantifiziert, d.h. eine Uncaging-Quantenausbeute für die Freisetzung von PNA bestimmt werden. Weiterhin wurde beobachtet, dass die Photolyse der Dyade mit einer deutlichen Änderung ihrer Fluoreszenzeigenschaften einherging. Dies ermöglichte einen Nachweis des Zweiphotonen-Uncagings mithilfe eines Fluoreszenzmikroskops. Die Dyaden-Moleküle wurden zur Immobilisierung in Liposomen eingeschlossen und unter dem konfokalen Fluoreszenzmikroskop belichtet. Sowohl nach Einphotonen- als auch nach Zweiphotonen-Anregung der Rhodamin-Einheit konnte die gewünschte Fluoreszenzänderung beobachtet und somit das Uncaging bestätigt werden.
In Projekt II der Dissertation wurde ein photoaktivierbarer Fluorophor (PAF) hergestellt. PAFs liegen in ihrer geschützten Form dunkel vor. Durch die Aktivierung mit Licht können sie Fluoreszenzsignale emittieren. Sie liefern somit ein direktes Feedback über die Lichtverteilung und –intensität innerhalb einer Probe und werden somit unter anderem für die Charakterisierung und Optimierung von Belichtungsapparaturen verwendet. Besonders wünschenswert ist hierbei eine Fluoreszenzaktivierung mit sichtbarem Licht bzw. mit NIR-Licht über einen Zweiphotonen-Prozess.
Im Zuge der Arbeit wurde ein Rhodamin-Derivat synthetisiert, das durch die Anbringung eines DEACM450-Photocages in seine nichtemittierende Form gezwungen wurde. Bei Bestrahlung mit 455 nm konnte die Abspaltung der Cumarin-Schutzgruppe und der damit verbundene Anstieg der Rhodamin-Fluoreszenz beobachtet und eine Uncaging-Quantenausbeute bestimmt werden. Für die Untersuchung der Zweiphotonen-Photolyse wurde der geschützte Fluorophor in einem Hydrogel immobilisiert und unter dem konfokalen Fluoreszenzmikroskop betrachtet werden. Anschließend wurden Fluoreszenzbilder vor und nach Photoanregung von bestimmten Regionen des Hydrogels aufgenommen. Durch das Uncaging der Probe konnten helle, definierte Muster geschrieben und ausgelesen werden. Die Photoaktivierung führte dabei sowohl über die Einphotonen-Anregung mit blauem Licht (488 nm) als auch über die Zweiphotonen-Anregung mit NIR-Licht (920 nm) zur Generierung von stabilen, gleichmäßigen Fluoreszenzmustern mit hohem Kontrast.
The Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is a mosquito-transmitted alphavirus that causes high fever, rash, and recurrent arthritis in humans. The majority of symptoms disappear after about one week. However, arthritis can last for months or even years (in about 30% of cases), which makes people unable to work during this period. The virus is endemic in Sub-Saharan Africa, the Indian Ocean islands, India, and Southeast Asia. It has additionally caused several large outbreaks in the last few years, affecting millions of people. The mortality rate is very low (0.1%), but the infection rates are high (sometimes 30%) and the number of asymptomatic cases is rare (about 15%). The first CHIKV outbreak in a country with a moderate climate was detected in Italy in 2007. Furthermore, the virus has spread to the Caribbean in late 2013. Due to climate change, globalization, and vector switching, the virus will most likely continue to cause new worldwide outbreaks. Additionally, more temperate regions of the world like Europe or the USA, which have recently reported their first cases, will likely become targets. Alarmingly, there is no specific treatment or vaccination against CHIKV available so far.
The cell entry process of CHIKV is also not understood in detail, and was thusly the focus of study for this project. The E2 envelope protein is responsible for cell attachment and entry. It consists of the domain C, located close to the viral membrane, domain A, in the center of the protein, and domain B, at the distal end, prominently exposed on the viral surface.
In this work, the important role of cell surface glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) for CHIKV cell attachment was uncovered. GAGs consist of long linear chains of heavily sulfated disaccharide units and can be covalently linked to membrane associated proteins. They play an important role in different cell signaling pathways. So far, solely cell culture passage has revealed an increased GAG-dependency of CHIKV due to mutations in E2 domain A, which was associated with virus attenuation in vivo. However, in this work it could be shown that cell surface GAGs promote CHIKV entry using non-cell culture adapted CHIKV envelope (Env) proteins. Transduction and infection of cell surface GAG-deficient pgsA-745 cells with CHIKV Env pseudotyped vector particles (VPs) and with wild-type CHIKV revealed decreased transduction and replication rates. Furthermore, cell entry and transduction rates of GAG-containing cells were also dose-dependently decreased in the presence of soluble GAGs. In contrast, transduction of pgsA-745 cells with CHIKV Env pseudotyped VPs was enhanced by the addition of soluble GAGs. This data suggests a mechanism by which GAGs activate CHIKV particles for subsequent binding to a cellular receptor. However, at least one GAG-independent entry pathway might exist, as CHIKV entry could not be totally inhibited by soluble GAGs and entry into pgsA-745 was, albeit at a lower rate, still possible. Further binding experiments using recombinant CHIKV E2 domains A, B, and C suggest that domain B is responsible for the GAG binding, domain A possibly for receptor binding, and domain C is not involved in cell binding. These results are in line with the geometry of CHIKV Env on the viral surface. They altogether reveal that GAG binding promotes viral cell entry and that the E2 domain B plays a central role for this mechanism.
As no vaccine against CHIKV has been approved so far, another goal of this project was to test new vaccination approaches. It has been published that a single linear epitope of E2 is the target of the majority of early neutralizing antibodies against CHIKV in patients. Artificial E2-derived proteins were created, expressed in E.coli, and successfully purified. They consisted of 5 repeats of the mentioned linear epitope (L), the surface exposed regions of domain A linked by glycine-serine linkers (sA), the whole domain B plus a part of the β-ribbon connector (B+), or a combination of these 3 modules. Vaccination experiments revealed that B+ was necessary and sufficient to induce a neutralizing immune response in mice, with the protein sAB+ yielding the best results. sAB+, as a protein vaccine, efficiently and significantly reduced viral titers in mice upon CHIKV challenge, which was not the case for recombinant Modified Vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA; MVA-CHIKV-sAB+), as a vaccine platform expressing the same protein. These experiments show that a small rationally designed CHIKV Env derived protein might, after optimization of some vaccination parameters, be sufficient as a safe, easy-to-produce, and cheap CHIKV vaccine.
Epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG) is a catechin found in green tea and was, in this work, found to inhibit the CHIKV life cycle at the entry state in in vitro experiments using CHIKV Env VPs and wild-type virus. EGCG was recently published to inhibit attachment of several viruses to cell surface GAGs, which is in line with the role for GAGs in CHIKV entry revealed in this work. EGCG might serve as a lead compound for the development of a small molecule treatment against CHIKV.
Multi-subunit ATPase-dependent chromatin remodelling complexes SWI/SNF (switch/sucrose non-fermentable) are fundamental epigenetic regulators of gene transcription. Functional genomic studies revealed a remarkable mutation prevalence of SWI/SNF-encoding genes in 20–25% of all human cancers, frequently driving oncogenic programmes. Some SWI/SNF-mutant cancers are hypersensitive to perturbations in other SWI/SNF subunits, regulatory proteins and distinct biological pathways, often resulting in sustained anticancer effects and synthetic lethal interactions. Exploiting these vulnerabilities is a promising therapeutic strategy. Here, we review the importance of SWI/SNF chromatin remodellers in gene regulation as well as mechanisms leading to assembly defects and their role in cancer development. We will focus in particular on emerging strategies for the targeted therapy of SWI/SNF-deficient cancers using chemical probes, including proteolysis targeting chimeras, to induce synthetic lethality.
Electrospinning is a versatile and promising drug delivery technology for the development of tailor-made drug delivery systems for various clinical applications. By applying high voltages to drug-loaded polymer solutions, solid polymeric nanofibers can be generated, which encapsulate active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) into their polymer matrix. During the electrospinning process, the fibers are deposited on a collector and form a nonwoven network of drug-loaded polymer fibers. These fibers are spatially distributed in aligned or random orientation, providing the opportunity to design highly tunable structural and mechanical properties, which can be adapted to the biological requirements of the intended application site. The mechanically flexible fiber networks can therapeutically be administered to a multitude of pharmaceutical application sites. Their highly porous fiber structure exhibits a large surface-to-volume ratio, which is ideal for controlled drug release kinetics from the polymer matrix upon contact with biological fluids, such as tear fluid, saliva, mucus, wound exudate or gastro-intestinal fluid. For application at the target site, fiber mats are cut into patches. As the patch size determines the quantity of applied API, the electrospinning process must ensure homogeneous distribution of the API throughout the entire fiber mat area.
In this thesis, electrospinning was established as a formulation technology for the rational fabrication of tailor-made multifunctional drug carrier systems for local and site-specific drug delivery to the epithelial interfaces skin, oral mucosa as well as cornea. For adequate characterization and analysis of the drug delivery systems, a broad panel of robust and predictive analytical tools, based of novel investigation techniques for physicochemical characterization of electrospun fibers, was developed.
The initial part of the thesis thematically focuses on the development of predictive analytical techniques, to determine fiber morphology and physicochemical properties, as well as fiber composition and drug release. By designing two model formulations with contrasting properties, and subsequent analysis and characterization with a set of newly developed techniques and state-of-the-art methods, a comprehensive toolset has been made available and evaluated, aiming at advancing and standardizing respective techniques in the scientific field of electrospun drug delivery systems.
Starting with the initiation of the electrospinning formulation process, which often relies on empirical data rather than analytical methods to predict successful processability, analysis of rheological properties of electrospinning solutions was used to rationally detect the minimum polymer concentration required for electrospinning.
For analysis of fiber morphology, scanning electron microscopy is a common technique. However, little attention is given to underlying readout parameters. By analyzing the fiber orientation and diameter of the respective fibers, predictive results regarding mechanical properties could be obtained, which were subsequently confirmed by measuring elongation force with tensile testing. Confocal Raman microscopy, a label-free method for chemically- selective imaging of the fiber samples, was introduced as a complementary visualization technique, enabling the detection of fiber composition and drug distribution.
A novel technique for investigation of water contact angles on the fiber surface of highly hydrophilic polymers was introduced, which provides predictive data regarding interaction with body fluids and the resulting drug release kinetics. Subsequent release testing in a newly developed setup for analyzing drug release from electrospun fibers in low-volume body compartments, confirmed the anticipated drug release kinetics from measurement of the surface hydrophilicity.
By combining complementary analytical methods, including spectral composition analysis, morphology visualization, characterization of physico-chemical properties and drug release kinetics, as well as the application of multivariate data analysis, a robust and predictive toolset has been established, which can support comparability of future electrospinning studies and the translation from the lab bench into clinics.
Based on the analytical toolset, the main part of the thesis focuses on the development and preparation of electrospun platform drug delivery systems for application on epithelial barriers. Electrospun fiber mats are thin, flat, and mechanically flexible, which allows close adherence to epithelial surfaces and reduction of diffusion paths, which enables efficient drug delivery to the skin, oral mucosa, as well as the cornea.
Electrospun fibers bear a high potential for application as wound dressings, while simultaneously controlling the local delivery of APIs to the wound area. Their close resemblance to the extracellular matrix of human skin provides a suitable microenvironment for cellular proliferation and migration for wound closure. In this work, insulin, a fragile proteohormone with growth factor characteristics, was successfully encapsulated into the core of coaxially electrospun fibers, thus maintaining bioactivity throughout and after the electrospinning process. The shell has been designed from biocompatible polymers, which, upon contact with aqueous wound exudate, partially dissolve and form pores through which bioactive insulin is released in a controlled manner. The shell layer provides a hydrophilic surface for interaction with body fluids and skin cells, and possesses substantial mechanical strength, flexibility, and high tensile elongation required for application on wounds. The biocompatibility of the wound dressing was investigated by interaction with primary human dermal fibroblasts and keratinocytes, which displayed healthy cell morphologies without indicating any elevated levels of cytotoxicity markers.
To investigate the effect of insulin on cell migration, in vitro scratch assays on human skin cells were performed. Increased cellular migration speed and wound closure could be observed, indicating improved wound healing. Bio relevance of in vitro wound healing potential results was advanced by development of 3D ex vivo human epidermal skin wound models from reduction surgery donor material. These complex wound models were treated with electrospun insulin fibers and analyzed by proteome analysis to reveal significant increases in wound healing-associated signaling pathways, which could be attributed to a material-driven remarkably positive impact on wound healing of the electrospun fibers...
Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit sollte der tonische BZR-Signalweg im Burkitt Lymphom näher untersucht werden. Ziel war die Identifizierung von Zielstrukturen, die für die Zellen essentiell für die Aufrechterhaltung des tonischen Signalwegs sind und gleichzeitig die Viabilität der Zellen fördern. Durch die Identifizierung noch unbekannter Zielstrukturen wäre man in der Lage, neue Behandlungsstrategien zu entwickeln oder bereits bestehende zu optimieren. Des Weiteren sollte die Signaltransduktion in der B-ALL, die über einen Vorläufer des BZRs, dem prä-BZR vermittelt wird, hinsichtlich eines tonischen Überlebenssignals untersucht werden.
Durch massenspektrometrische Analysen der tonischen BZR-Signaltransduktion im Burkitt Lymphom, die für die Viabilität der Zellen essentiell ist und die Ergebnisse eines Inhibitorscreens konnte HSP90 als potenzielle neue Zielstruktur im Burkitt Lymphom identifiziert werden.
So konnte gezeigt werden, dass Burkitt-Lymphom-Zellen nach Inhibition der Chaperonfunktion von HSP90 durch zwei auf dem Markt bereits verfügbare Inhibitoren einen Zellzyklusarrest erfahren, der letztlich zur Apoptose der Zellen führt. Dieser Effekt wurde auf einen Verlust des (tonischen) BZR-Signals zurückgeführt, der überwiegend durch den aktiven lysosomalen Abbau von SYK nach HSP90-Inhibition zustande kommt. Demnach führte die Überexpression einer HSP90-resistenten Variante von SYK (TEL-SYK) zu einer Aufhebung der apoptotischen Effekte nach HSP90-Inhibition. Zudem wurde SYK als Interaktionspartner von HSP90 (HSP90-Klientprotein) im Burkitt Lymphom und die für die Interaktion essentielle Phosphorylierungsstelle (pY197 in HSP90α bzw. pY192 in HSP90β) identifiziert bzw. validiert.
Das therapeutische Potenzial der HSP90-Inhibitoren im Burkitt Lymphom offenbarte sich ferner durch den Vergleich der Wirkungseffektivität in gesunden B-Zellen mit der in Tumorzellen. So zeigten HSP90-Inhibitoren eine erhöhte Affinität zu Tumorzellen. Bei verwendeten Konzentrationen der Inhibitoren, die bereits eine apoptotische Wirkung in Tumorzellen hervorriefen, waren gesunde B-Zellen resistent.
In der B-ALL konnte durch den Knockdown von CD79a und der Inhibition von SYK eine tonische Antigenrezeptor-Signalleitung identifiziert werden, die wie im Burkitt Lymphom über den PI3K/AKT-Signalweg vermittelt wird. Durch die Kombination der im Rahmen dieser Arbeit gewonnen Erkenntnisse und weiterführende Analysen (wie zum Beispiel durch Inhibitor- oder CRISPR/Cas-Screens) kann so eine Identifizierung von potenziellen Zielstrukturen mit therapeutischem Nutzen in der B-ALL erfolgen.
Despite all advances in drug delivery, the limitations of the analytical technologies involved in the characterization of next-generation nanomedicines are still impeding further progress of an emerging market. Discriminating between different formulations and batches, drug release is one of the most important quality criteria in development and quality control of pharmaceutics. Unfortunately, there are only few methods available to sensitively measure this important parameter for nanosized carriers. With the development of the dispersion releaser (DR) technology our group has set up a dialysis-based technique that was tested with a number of nanocarrier and nanocrystal formulations such as liposomes and polymeric nanoparticles. By supporting formulation development with a more reliable methodology to assess the drug release from nanosized carriers, a first step has been made to improve future products.
The current pandemic situation caused by the Betacoronavirus SARS-CoV-2 (SCoV2) highlights the need for coordinated research to combat COVID-19. A particularly important aspect is the development of medication. In addition to viral proteins, structured RNA elements represent a potent alternative as drug targets. The search for drugs that target RNA requires their high-resolution structural characterization. Using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, a worldwide consortium of NMR researchers aims to characterize potential RNA drug targets of SCoV2. Here, we report the characterization of 15 conserved RNA elements located at the 5′ end, the ribosomal frameshift segment and the 3′-untranslated region (3′-UTR) of the SCoV2 genome, their large-scale production and NMR-based secondary structure determination. The NMR data are corroborated with secondary structure probing by DMS footprinting experiments. The close agreement of NMR secondary structure determination of isolated RNA elements with DMS footprinting and NMR performed on larger RNA regions shows that the secondary structure elements fold independently. The NMR data reported here provide the basis for NMR investigations of RNA function, RNA interactions with viral and host proteins and screening campaigns to identify potential RNA binders for pharmaceutical intervention.
Bei saurer Hydrolyse wird aus den 5-Halogenuracildesoxyribosiden die DR ** etwa 3 -4-mal rascher abgespalten als aus TdR oder UdR. CdR wird unter den gleichen Bedingungen 16-fach schneller hydrolysiert. Im Gegensatz dazu ist die Ribose im Cytidin um ein Mehrfaches fester gebunden als im Uridin. Im TdR-Dimeren wird durch die Absättigung der 5.6-Doppelbindung die Stabilität der N-glykosidischen Bindung stark erniedrigt. Aus diesen Befunden ergibt sich ein Hinweis auf die Elektronendichte-Verteilung im Pyrimidinring und damit eine chemische Basis für das mutagene Verhalten verschiedener unnatürlicher Desoxyriboside.
Bei der UV-Bestrahlung von Uracil-[5.6-3H] bilden sich je nach eingestrahlter Energie dimeres Uracil und Uracil-Wasseranlagerungsprodukt [5.6-Dihydro-6-hydroxyuracil] als radioaktive Photoprodukte. Während bei der Synthese des Wasseranlagerungsproduktes ein beträchtlicher sekundärer Isotopeneffekt wirksam wird, verändert sich die Radioaktivität des dimeren Uracils gegenüber der des Ausgangsuracils kaum.
Wird das Wasseranlagerungsprodukt durch Erwärmen zu Uracil zurückgewandelt, so dehydratisiert das Molekül ebenfalls unter Mitwirkung eines Isotopeneffektes. Wird das Uracildimere zu Uracil rückgewandelt, so beobachtet man keinen Isotopeneffekt.
Bei der Bestrahlung von Uracil in Tritium-haltigem Wasser werden nur sehr geringe Radioaktivitäten in die Photoprodukte eingebaut. Der Isotopeneffekt beträgt ca. 8. — Durch Synthese der Photoprodukte aus spezifisch an C-5 oder C-6 Tritium-markiertem Uracil bzw. durch Bromierung von 5.6-Tritium-markiertem Uracil bzw. dessen Photoprodukten zu den 5-Brom-Derivaten erhält man Hinweise, daß der Geschwindigkeits-bestimmende Schritt der Wasseraddition an C-6 des Uracils verläuft. Die inversen sekundären Isotopeneffekte betragen für Tritium an C-6 etwa 0,65, für Tritium an C-5 dagegen nur 0,95.
Während hohe Spiegel von reaktiven Sauerstoffspezies (reactive oxygen species, ROS) in Form von oxidativem Stress schädliche Auswirkungen auf den Körper haben können, zeigen aktuelle Forschungsarbeiten, dass Redox-Modifikationen an Thiolresten von Proteinen reversible Signalprozesse steuern können. Dieses Prinzip der posttranslationalen Proteinmodifikation durch Redox-Signale scheint auch bei der Verarbeitung und Chronifizierung von Schmerzen von Bedeutung zu sein. Über die potenziellen Redox-modulierten Zielstrukturen im nozizeptiven System ist jedoch bisher nur wenig bekannt.
Ein potentielles Redoxtarget im nozizeptiven System ist das kleine EF-Hand Ca2+-bindende Protein S100A4. Wie die anderen Familienmitglieder der S100-Proteinfamilie enthält S100A4 Cysteinreste, die in der Lage sind, redoxabhängig modifiziert zu werden. Studien an menschlichen Biopsien nach Gehirnverletzungen und an Mäusen in Verletzungsmodellen konnten zeigen, dass S100A4 neuroprotektiv wirkt. Darüber hinaus kann S100A4 sezerniert werden und vermittelt extrazellulär insbesondere regulatorische Funktionen innerhalb der Angiogenese, bei der Zellmigration sowie bei zellulären Differenzierungsprozessen. Die Funktionen von S100A4 im nozizeptiven System sind jedoch weitgehend unbekannt. In Vorarbeiten zu diesem Projekt wurde in einem Proteom-Screen beobachtet, dass S100A4 nach einer peripheren Nervenverletzung redoxabhängig im verletzten Nervengewebe hochreguliert wird. Darauf basierend wurde im Rahmen dieser Arbeit die Lokalisation von S100A4 innerhalb des nozizeptiven Systems sowie die funktionelle Bedeutung nach peripherer Nervenverletzung genauer untersucht.
Anhand von Immunfluoreszenzaufnahmen konnte gezeigt werden, dass S100A4 basal in Subpopulationen Peripherin- und NF200-positiver sensorischer Neurone lokalisiert ist. Interessanterweise führt eine Nervenverletzung nicht nur zu einer deutlichen Steigerung der S100A4-Expression im Bereich der Verletzungsstelle, sondern auch zu einer Änderung des neuronalen Verteilungsmusters. Die funktionelle Bedeutung von S100A4 für die Verarbeitung von Schmerzen wurde anhand von Verhaltenstests an Mäusen näher charakterisiert. Dafür wurden gewebsspezifische S100A4 Knockout Mäuse (Adv-S100A4-/-) und globale S100A4 Knockout Mäuse (S100A4-/-) generiert. In Modellen der akuten Nozizeption zeigten sowohl Adv-S100A4-/- als auch S100A4-/- Mäuse eine normale Reaktion auf thermische und mechanische Stimuli. Im „Spared Nerve Injury“ (SNI) Modell für periphere Neuropathien zeigten die S100A4-/- Mäuse eine im Vergleich zu wildtypischen (WT) Mäusen signifikant reduzierte mechanische Hyperalgesie, während bei den gewebsspezifischen Adv-S100A4-/- Mäusen kein verändertes Schmerzverhalten beobachtet werden konnte. Im „Crush Injury“ Modell für periphere Neuropathien war die mechanische Hyperalgesie der S100A4-/- Mäuse im Vergleich zu WT Tieren jedoch nicht verändert. Zusätzlich zur mechanischen Hyperalgesie wurden auch weitere Methoden der Quantifizierung des Schmerzverhaltens (Sciatic Functional Index, Brush Test und Wühlverhalten) etabliert. Allerdings war auch hier das Verhalten der S100A4-/- Mäuse mit dem der WT Mäuse vergleichbar. Darüber hinaus war das durch Applikation eines ROS-Donors induzierte nozizeptive Verhalten von S100A4-/- und WT Mäusen ähnlich. Man kann daher schlussfolgern, dass nach einer peripheren Nervenverletzung die S100A4-Expression insbesondere im Bereich der Verletzungsstelle hochreguliert wird. Dem gegenüber scheint S100A4 jedoch für die Schmerzverarbeitung funktionell nur von untergeordneter Bedeutung zu sein.
Ein weiteres potentielles Redoxtarget im nozizeptiven System ist die lösliche Epoxidhydrolase (soluble epoxide hydrolase, sEH). Die funktionelle Bedeutung von sEH für die Schmerzverarbeitung wurde bereits in früheren Studien belegt, da eine Behandlung mit sEH-Inhibitoren bei Ratten zu einer reduzierten Hypersensitivität in inflammatorischen und neuropathischen Schmerzmodellen führte. Während die analgetische Wirkung von sEH-Inhibitoren bereits gut bekannt ist, wurde eine redoxabhängige Modulation der sEH-Aktivität im nozizeptiven System in bisherigen Forschungsarbeiten kaum untersucht. Bestimmte Elektrophile können die sEH inhibieren, indem sie an das redoxaktive Cystein an Position 521 der sEH binden. Forschungsarbeiten konnten in diesem Zusammenhang bereits zeigen, dass die Cys521-vermittelte Inhibition von sEH durch das Prostaglandin 15d-PGJ2 oder 9-/10-Nitrooleonsäure (NO2-OA) im kardiovaskulären System zu einer Dilatation der Koronargefäße und einer Reduktion des Blutdrucks führt. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde untersucht, ob es durch eine redoxabhängige Hemmung der sEH-Funktion auch innerhalb des nozizeptiven Systems zu einer veränderten Schmerzreaktion bei Mäusen kommt. Um diese Fragestellung beantworten zu können, wurden sEH-Knockin (sEH-KI) Mäuse verwendet, deren redox-sensitives Cystein 521 durch ein Serin ersetzt wurde. Bei diesen Knockin-Mäusen können Elektrophile wie 15d-PGJ2 oder 9-/10-NO2-OA keine Enzyminhibition erzeugen. Die Charakterisierung der sEH-KI Mäuse zeigte sowohl in akuten als auch inflammatorischen Schmerzmodellen (Formalin Test und Zymosan-Pfotenentzündungsmodell) keinen Zusammenhang der Redoxmodifikation mit dem Schmerzverhalten der Mäuse. Auch in neuropathischen und viszeralen Schmerzmodellen (SNI-Modell und Modell der Zymosan-induzierten Peritonitis) konnte kein verändertes Schmerzverhalten der sEH-KI-Mäuse im Vergleich zu Kontrolltieren beobachtet werden. Darüber hinaus war das nozizpetive Verhalten nach Applikation von 15d-PGJ2 bei sEH-KI und WT Mäusen vergleichbar. Die redoxabhängige Modulation der sEH an Cystein 521 scheint demnach, im Gegensatz zum kardiovaskulären System, im nozizeptiven System keine Rolle zu spielen.
Glucose hypometabolism, mitochondrial dysfunction, and cholinergic deficits have been reported in early stages of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Here, we examine these parameters in TgF344-AD rats, an Alzheimer model that carries amyloid precursor protein and presenilin-1 mutations, and of wild type F344 rats. In mitochondria isolated from rat hippocampi, we found reductions of complex I and oxidative phosphorylation in transgenic rats. Further impairments, also of complex II, were observed in aged (wild-type and transgenic) rats. Treatment with a “cocktail” containing magnesium orotate, benfotiamine, folic acid, cyanocobalamin, and cholecalciferol did not affect mitochondrial activities in wild-type rats but restored diminished activities in transgenic rats to wild-type levels. Glucose, lactate, and pyruvate levels were unchanged by age, genetic background, or treatment. Using microdialysis, we also investigated extracellular concentrations of acetylcholine that were strongly reduced in transgenic animals. Again, ACh levels in wild-type rats did not change upon treatment with nutrients, whereas the cocktail increased hippocampal acetylcholine levels under physiological stimulation. We conclude that TgF344-AD rats display a distinct mitochondrial and cholinergic dysfunction not unlike the findings in patients suffering from AD. This dysfunction can be partially corrected by the application of the “cocktail” which is particularly active in aged rats. We suggest that the TgF344-AD rat is a promising model to further investigate mitochondrial and cholinergic dysfunction and potential treatment approaches for AD.
The DNA damage response (DDR) is a vast network of molecules that preserves genome integrity and allow the faithful transmission of genetic information in human cells. While the usual response to the detection of DNA lesions in cells involves the control of cell-cycle checkpoints, repair proteins or apoptosis, alterations of the repair processes can lead to cellular dysfunction, diseases, or cancer. Besides, cancer patients with DDR alterations often show poor survival and chemoresistance. Despite the progress made in recent years in identifying genes and proteins involved in DDR and their roles in cellular physiology and pathology, the question of the involvement of DDR in metabolism remains unclear. It remains to study the metabolites associated with specific repair pathways or alterations and to investigate whether differences exist depending on cellular origin. The identification of DDR-related metabolic pathways and of the pathways that cause metabolic reprogramming in DDR-deficient cells may produce new targets for the development of new therapies.
In this thesis, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) was used to assess the metabolic consequence of the loss of two central DNA repair proteins with importance in diseases context, ATM and RNase H2, in haematological cells. An increase in intracellular taurine was found in RNase H2- and ATM-deficient cells compared to wild-type cells for these genes and in cells after exposition to a source of DNA damage. The rise in taurine does not appear to result from an increase in its biosynthesis from cysteine, but more likely from other cellular processes such as degradation pathways.
Overall, evidence for metabolic reprogramming in haematological cells with faults in DNA repair resulting from ATM or RNase H2 deficiencies or upon exposition to a source of DNA damage is presented in this study.
Verschiedene physikalische Effekte erlauben es Licht so zu führen und zu verändern, dass es Einblicke in für Menschen sonst unzugängliche Bereiche gewährt. Eines von insgesamt drei Elementen dieser Dissertationsschrift ist der Aufbau eines Multiphotonen-Mikroskops. Dieses fortschrittliche Werkzeug erweitert das zur Verfügung stehende Instrumentarium um verschiedene Analysemethoden, allen voran die 2-Photonen-Fluoreszenz-Mikroskopie. Durch geringfügige Modifikationen können auch weitere Methoden, wie beispielsweise stimulierte Raman-Streuung realisiert werden.
Insbesondere die 2-Photonen-Fluoreszenz-Mikroskopie war für das zweite Element dieser Dissertationsschrift von großer Bedeutung. In dieser Studie wurde das Bleichverhalten von Spinach bei 2-Photonen-Absorption untersucht, sowohl an frei in Lösung befindlichen als auch auf einem Träger immobilisierten Spinach-Komplexen. Die Ergebnisse zu den frei in Lösung befindlichen Spinach-Komplexen zeigen, dass die Verstärkung der Fluoreszenz von DFHBI grundsätzlich auch im Fall der 2-Photonen-Absorption eintritt. Dabei wurde ein Ausbleichen der 2-Photonen-induzierten Fluoreszenz für frei in Lösung befindliche Spinach-Komplexe erst bei außerordentlich hohen Intensitäten der Anregungsstrahlung beobachtet. Dieser Befund kann zumindest teilweise auf das Eindiffundieren fluoreszenter Spinach-Komplexe in das sehr kleine Fokalvolumen innerhalb der 2-Photonen-Anregung stattfindet zurückgeführt werden. Für immobilisierte Spinach-Komplexe konnte gezeigt werden, dass eine kontinuierliche Bildaufnahme gegenüber einer Bildaufnahme in Intervallen mit jeweils zusätzlichen Dunkelphasen zur Erholung des reversiblen Bleichens der 2-Photonen-induzierten Fluoreszenz, sowie der generelle Verzicht auf spezielle Belichtungsschemata und Methoden der Datenakquise mit keinen besonderen Nachteilen verbunden ist. Abschließend betrachtet erweist sich Spinach bei 2-Photonen-Anregung als ausgesprochen resistent gegenüber einem irreversiblem Ausbleichen des Fluoreszenzsignals.
Als drittes Element dieser Dissertationsschrift wurde die Dynamik von Chrimson, einem Kanalrhodopsin mit rot-verschobener Absorption mittels zeitaufgelöster Spektroskopie im sichtbaren Spektralbereich untersucht. Sowohl die Anregungswellenlänge als auch der pH-Wert bzw. der Protonierungszustand des Gegenions haben einen messbaren Einfluss auf die Primärreaktion. Diese verlangsamt sich, sobald der pH-Wert abgesenkt oder die Anregungswellenlänge rot-verschoben wird. Darüber hinaus führt eine Rot-Verschiebung der Anregungswellenlänge zu einer geringeren Effizienz der Isomerisation des Retinal-Chromophors. Die Primärreaktion von Chrimson entspricht dabei einem Reaktionsmodell mit einer Verzweigung des Reaktionspfades auf der Energiehyperfläche des angeregten Zustandes. Ein Reaktionspfad führt dabei durch ein lokales Minimum, welches in seiner Ausprägung stark von der elektrostatischen Umgebung des Retinal-Chromophors abhängt. Je nach ursprünglichem Protonierungszustand des Gegenions der Retinal-Schiff-Base wurden große Unterschiede hinsichtlich der beobachteten transienten Absorptionsmuster für den im Anschluss von Chrimson durchlaufenen Photozyklus gefunden. Bei pH 6,0 weist der Photozyklus von Chrimson eine insgesamt deutlich schnellere Kinetik auf, als es für den Photozyklus bei pH 9,5 beobachtet wurde. Es ist bemerkenswert, dass in elektrophysiologischen Messungen für beide Photozyklen eine Öffnung des Ionenkanals gefunden wurde. Die Kanalfunktion von Chrimson ist somit grundsätzlich nicht vom Protonierungszustand des Gegenions abhängig, wenngleich die Kinetik des Ionenkanals durchaus davon beeinflusst wird. Dies deutet auf Unterschiede in den Wechselwirkungen zwischen dem Ionenkanal und dem Gegenion der Retinal-Schiff-Base hin.
Large international airports were identified as sources of ultrafine particles (UFPs) (Hu et al., 2009; Yu et al., 2012; Hsu et al., 2013; Keuken et al., 2015; Hudda and Fruin, 2016). Since September 2017 UFP emissions originating from the Frankfurt International Airport, Germany are monitored by the Hessian Agency for Nature Conservation, Environment and Geology (HLNUG) showing elevated UFP concentrations during airport operating hours (05:00–23:00 CET) (Ditas et al., 2022). Referring to that, the organic chemical composition of aviation-related UFPs emerging from the Frankfurt Airport was analysed by performing a comprehensive non-target screening of UFP filter samples.
Aluminium-filter samples were collected at an air quality monitoring station 4 km north of the Frankfurt Airport, using a 13-stage impactor system (Nano-MOUDI). The chemical
characterization of UFPs in the size range of 10-18 nm, 18-32 nm and 32-56 nm was accomplished by ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography, heated electrospray ionisation and mass analysis using an Orbitrap high-resolution mass spectrometer. Non-target screening revealed that the majority of detected compounds belong to homologous series of two different types of organic esters, which are base stocks of aircraft lubrication oils.
In reference to five different jet engine lubrication oils of various manufacturers, the corresponding lubricant base stocks and their additives, two amines and one organophosphate, were identified in the UFPs by the use of matching retention time, exact mass and MS/MS fragmentation pattern of single organic molecules. The quantitative analysis of the jet engine oil constituents in the aviation-related UFPs with diameters < 56 nm was accomplished by standard addition. By characterizing the Nano-MOUDI, loss factors for each size stage were determined and used for correction accordingly. Particle-number size distribution measurements, conducted parallel to the filter sampling, enabled the determination of the jet engine oil contribution to the UFP mass.
Furthermore, the nucleation and particle formation potential of a commonly used synthetic jet engine lubrication oil was investigated in the laboratory. Thermodenuder experiments at 20 °C and 300 °C were carried out to monitor the gas-to-particle partitioning behaviour of jet engine oils. At 300 °C a significantly higher number of particles with a mean diameter of ~10 nm are formed, leading to a more than fivefold increase in total particle numbers compared to 20 °C. Particle diameters of the newly formed oil particles in the laboratory experiment appeared in the same size region as UFPs emerging from Frankfurt Airport. Particles originating from the Frankfurt city centre direction showed larger diameters.
Results indicate that aircraft emissions strongly influence the total mass of 10-18 nm particles. The jet oil fraction decreases for bigger particles (e.g., 18-56 nm), implying that these oils form new particles in the cooling exhaust gases of aircraft engines. In addition, non-target screening and in vitro bioassays on aviation-related PM2.5 filter samples were combined to provide indications for potential toxicologically relevant compounds in dependence of different wind directions and airport operations. Most recently, the applied non-target screening method was also used to identify seasonal variations in the organic aerosol composition in Beijing.
In the context of data science, data projection and clustering are common procedures. The chosen analysis method is crucial to avoid faulty pattern recognition. It is therefore necessary to know the properties and especially the limitations of projection and clustering algorithms. This report describes a collection of datasets that are grouped together in the Fundamental Clustering and Projection Suite (FCPS). The FCPS contains 10 datasets with the names "Atom", "Chainlink", "EngyTime", "Golfball", "Hepta", "Lsun", "Target", "Tetra", "TwoDiamonds", and "WingNut". Common clustering methods occasionally identified non-existent clusters or assigned data points to the wrong clusters in the FCPS suite. Likewise, common data projection methods could only partially reproduce the data structure correctly on a two-dimensional plane. In conclusion, the FCPS dataset collection addresses general challenges for clustering and projection algorithms such as lack of linear separability, different or small inner class spacing, classes defined by data density rather than data spacing, no cluster structure at all, outliers, or classes that are in contact. This report describes a collection of datasets that are grouped together in the Fundamental Clustering and Projection Suite (FCPS). It is designed to address specific problems of structure discovery in high-dimensional spaces.
5-lipoxygenase (5-LO), the key enzyme in leukotriene biosynthesis, is expressed in a tissue- and cell differentiation-specific manner. The 5-LO core promoter required for basal promoter activity has a unique (G+C)-rich sequence that contains five tandem Sp1 consensus sequences. The mechanisms involved in the regulation of cell type-specific 5-LO expression are unknown. Here we show that 5-LO expression is regulated by DNA methylation. Treatment of the 5-LO-negative cell lines U937 and HL-60TB with the demethylating agent 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine (AdC) up-regulated expression of 5-LO primary transcripts and mature mRNA in a similar fashion, indicating that AdC stimulates 5-LO gene transcription. Analysis of the methylation status of the 5-LO promoter revealed that the core promoter region was methylated in U937 and HL-60TB cells, whereas it was unmethylated in the 5-LO-positive parent HL-60 cell line. Reporter gene assays with 5-LO promoter constructs gave up to 68- and 655-fold repression of 5-LO promoter activity in HeLa and Mono Mac 6 cells by methylation. 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3) and transforming growth factor-beta (TGFbeta), potent inducers of the 5-LO pathway in myeloid cell lines, increased 5-LO RNA expression in HL-60TB and U937 cells, but co-treatment with AdC was required to achieve 5-LO expression levels in HL-60TB cells that were comparable with wild-type HL-60 cells. In reporter gene assays, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3) and TGFbeta were unable to induce promoter activity when the 5-LO promoter constructs were methylated, which suggests that 5-LO promoter demethylation is a prerequisite for the high level induction of 5-LO gene expression by 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3) and TGFbeta and that the effects of both agents on 5-LO mRNA expression are not related to DNA methylation.
The post-transcriptional modification of the canonical nucleoside uridine into its rotational isomer pseudouridine occurs in non-coding as well as coding RNA and is the most abundant post-transcriptional modification in all kingdoms of life. While the occurrence of pseudouridine has been linked to the enhancement of stability and the codon-anticodon interaction in tRNAs, enhancement of the translation efficiency in rRNAs, regulatory functions in spliceosomal snRNA and nonsense codon suppression in mRNA, its exact role in many RNAs is still ambiguous. The uridine to pseudouridine isomerization can either be catalyzed by one of various standalone pseudouridylases or it can be performed in an RNA-guided manner by H/ACA ribonucleoproteins. In eukaryotes, the guide RNA always adapts a conserved bipartite, double-hairpin conformation. Each hairpin contains an internal RNA-loop motif, which can recruit a specific substrate RNA via base pairing. The catalytically active RNP is formed by the interactions of the guide RNA with four proteins. While Cbf5 forms the catalytically active center, Nop10 and Nhp2 perform auxiliary functions and Gar1 is involved in substrate turnover. Up until now, most structural knowledge about H/ACA RNPs has been derived from archaeal complexes, while the exact structure-function-relationships between RNA and proteins in eukaryotic RNPs is still ambiguous. While archaeal H/ACA RNPs share many similarities with eukaryotic RNPs and act as good model system, there are also many differences between them like eukaryotic specific protein domains as well as the overall bipartite complex structure, dictated by the snoRNA. Investigating pseudouridylation by eukaryotic H/ACA RNPs opens up a broad area of research and helps to gain a better understanding of this enzyme class – especially since malfunction of H/ACA RNPs has been linked to the genetic disease Dyskeratosis congenita as well as several types of cancer.
The main goal of this thesis was to gain new insights into the RNA/protein interactions in the eukaryotic snR81 H/ACA snoRNP from Saccharomyces cerevisiae on a structural as well as dynamical level. In the first part of this thesis, the main goal was to in vitro prepare a functionally active snR81 H/ACA RNP. The guiding snoRNA was prepared by in vitro transcription and purification, while the Saccharomyces cerevisiae proteins were recombinantly expressed from Escherichia coli. Apart from the full length, bipartite snR81 snoRNP, several sub-complexes of the RNP were reconstituted. Therefore, snoRNA constructs were designed and prepared, which only contained a single hairpin motif of the complex. Furthermore, snoRNA constructs in which the apical hairpin stem was replaced by a stable tetraloop were prepared, to investigate the influence of the apical stem on protein binding and activity. Also, for the eukaryotic proteins, a shortened version of Gar1 (Gar1Δ) was utilized, which lacks the eukaryotic specific RGG domains, that have been characterized as accessory RNA binding motifs. Reconstituted snoRNPs were utilized in catalytic activity assays, monitoring the turnover rate of uridine to pseudouridine. For this purpose, radioactively labeled substrate RNAs were prepared by phosphorylation and splinted ligation of oligonucleotides and were objected to reconstituted H/ACA RNPs under single as well as multiple turnover conditions. In the second part of this thesis, the RNA/protein interactions were dissected via single molecule FRET spectroscopy. Therefore, the snoRNA was labeled with an acceptor fluorophore via NHS ester/amine-reaction. Furthermore, the snoRNA contained a biotin-handle, allowing immobilization of the complex during the experimental time-window of the spectroscopic analysis. Eukaryotic specific protein Nhp2 was labeled with a donor fluorophore via “click” chemistry, which included the chemical synthesis and incorporation by genetic code expansion of non-canonical amino acids. The interactions of Nhp2 with the different snoRNA constructs (standalone-hairpins “H5” and “H3”, as well as hairpins lacking the apical binding motif “H5Δ” and “H3Δ”) were monitored on a single molecule level.
In summary, it was possible to gain new insights into the complex structure and the dynamical behavior of the still sparsely characterized eukaryotic H/ACA RNPs. Especially, new knowledge could be obtained about the hairpin specific behavior on the bipartite RNA complex structure, including the rather ambiguous role of the protein Nhp2 and the contribution of the eukaryotic specific features of Gar1 in their interaction with the guide/substrate RNA.
Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde die schnelle Energietransfer- (EET) und Elektronentransfer (ET)-Dynamik unterschiedlichster Quantenpunkte (QD) spektroskopisch untersucht. Die untersuchten Systeme bestanden in den meisten Fällen aus Donor-Akzeptor-Paaren, bei denen die Halbleiternanokristalle als Donor fungierten. Der Fokus lag dabei auf der gezielten Anpassung des Donors, um die optimale Funktionalität zu erreichen. Die Untersuchung der Nanokristalle erstreckte sich daher von einfachen Kernen über verschiedene Kern-Schale-Partikel bis hin zu völlig anderen Strukturen wie Nanoplatelets (NPL). Als Akzeptor wurden eine Vielzahl von Molekülen verwendet, die sich als Elektronen- und/oder Energieakzeptoren für die verschiedenen QDs eignen.
Die Steuerung biochemischer Prozesse oder die Verbesserung von Materialien erfordert zunächst ein tiefgründiges Verständnis über die zugrundeliegenden Systeme. Zur Untersuchung eignet sich Licht als ideales Werkzeug, da hiermit nützliche Informationen über die chemische Struktur, ihre Eigenschaften sowie den zusammenhängenden, schnellen Reaktionsabläufen erhalten werden können. Um die Aufklärung zu erleichtern können kleine, chemische Verbindungen eingeführt werden, welche beispielsweise ein Fluoreszenzmarker, eine photolabile Schutzgruppe oder eine photoschaltbare Verbindung sein können. Von jeweils einem Vertreter dieser Moleküle wurden unterschiedliche Studien durchgeführt, dessen Ergebnisse in dieser Arbeit in insgesamt drei Projekten zusammengefasst werden.
Zunächst wurde die Funktionalität der Helikase RhlB untersucht, die der Familie der DEAD-Box Proteine zugeordnet wird, und RNA-Duplexe in ihre Einzelstränge entwindet. Als RNA-Modellduplex diente JM2h, an dem ein RNA-Einzelstrang fluoreszenzmarkiert war (M2AP6). Die Einführung dieses Markers ermöglichte die Durchführung von statischen Fluoreszenzmessungen sowie von Mischexperimenten, die mit Hilfe der stopped-flow-Technik durchgeführt wurden. In den einleitenden Studien wurde die Helikase weggelassen, wodurch der Fokus auf den Fluoreszenzeigenschaften der RNA gelegt wurde. Die Ergebnisse hierzu zeigten, dass die Fluoreszenzintensität des Einzelstrangs durch Zugabe des komplementären Strangs deutlich abnimmt, wobei das Minimum bei einem äquimolaren Verhältnis erreicht wird. Die dazugehörigen stopped-flow-Messungen zeigten eine Beschleunigung der Hybridisierungsreaktion, wenn höhere Konzentrationen des Gegenstrangs in der Lösung vorhanden waren. Nach anschließender Zugabe der Helikase zur Lösung wurde ein Anstieg der Fluoreszenzintensität erwartet, der vom separierten Einzelstrang M2AP6 herrühren sollte. Dieser Anstieg wurde jedoch erst nach weiterer Zugabe von ATP beobachtet, der auf eine ATP-Abhängigkeit der Entwindungsreaktion von RhlB hindeutet. Diese Abhängigkeit wurde auch bereits für andere Helikasen der DEAD-Box Familie entdeckt. Die korrekte Funktionalität sowie die ATP-Abhängigkeit wurden in stopped-flow-Messungen verfiziert, bei denen der Fluoreszenzanstieg auch zeitaufgelöst betrachtet werden konnte. Für die spektralen Korrekturen der Fluoreszenzspektren wurde ein selbstgeschriebenes MATLAB-Programm namens FluCY verwendet (engl.: Fluorescence Correction & Quantum yield), welches eine schnelle und fehlerfreie Verarbeitung des Datensatzes ermöglichte.
Die zwei im folgenden beschriebenen Projekte handeln von photoaktivierbaren Molekülen. Zum einen photolabile Verbindungen, welche die Funktion z.B. eines Biomoleküls durch eine chemische Modifikation deaktivieren können. Durch eine lichtinduzierte Reaktion kommt es zur Abspaltung der Modifikation und die Funktion ist wiederhergestellt. In dieser Arbeit wurden verschiedene photolabile Schutzgruppen untersucht, die denselben Chromophor BIST (BIsStyryl-Thiophen) tragen. Durch die Einführung dieses Chromophors absorbierten sämtliche untersuchte Verbindungen sehr effizient sichtbares Licht (epsilon(445)=55.700 M^(-1) cm^(-1)), wodurch der photoinduzierte Bindungsbruch mit Wellenlängen durchgeführt werden, die bei einer biologischen Anwendungen keinen Schaden an der Zelle anrichten würden. Hieraufhin wurden in statischen und zeitaufgelösten Absorptionsmessungen Teilschritte der Freisetzungsreaktion untersucht, indem nach Photoanregung die Absorptionsänderungen auf verschiedenen Zeitskalen analysiert wurden. Die ultraschnelle Dynamik im Piko- bis Nanosekundenbereich (10^(-12)-10^(-9) s) wird durch eine spektral breite, positive Absorptionsänderng dominiert. Diese impliziert, dass die Deaktivierung über den Triplettpfad abläuft, der die vergleichsweise niedrigen Freisetzungsausbeuten erklärt (phi(u) < 5). Aufgrund des hohen Extinktionskoeffizienten reichen dennoch bereits niedrige Strahlungsdosen aus, um eine Freisetzung zu initiieren. Der geschwindigkeitsbestimmende Schritt dieser Reaktion ist dem Zerfall des aci-nitro Intermediats zugeordnet. Für ein sekundäres Amin, welches mit BIST geschützt wurde, ist eine Lebensdauer des Intermediats von 71 µs gefunden worden.
In einigen Fällen ist es erwünscht, eine vorliegende Aktivität nicht nur ein-, sondern auch ausschalten zu können, wofür photochrome Verbindungen (oder Photoschalter) verwendet werden. Die in dieser Arbeit untersuchte Verbindung ceCAM ist ein Alken-Photoschalter und vollführt bei Bestrahlung mit Licht eine cis/trans-Isomerisierung. ceCAM ist das Cyanoester-Derivat (ce) von Cumarin-substituierten Allylidenmalonat, von denen beide Konformere sehr effizient sichtbares Licht absorbieren trans: epsilon(489)=50.300 M^(-1) cm^(-1); cis: epsilon(437)=18.600 M^(-1) cm^(-1)). Andere photophysikalische Eigenschaften umfassen u.a. hohe thermische und photochemische Stabilität. Letztere wurde über ein Experiment nachgewiesen, bei dem die lichtinduzierte Isomerisierung alternierend durchgeführt wurde und selbst bei über 250 Zyklen keine signifikate Abnahme der Absorption beobachtet werden konnte. Des Weiteren konnte die Reaktion mit Quantenausbeuten von 39% (trans) und 42% (cis) induziert werden, wobei im photostationären Gleichgewicht auch hohe Isomerenverhältnisse mit bis zu 80% (trans) und 96% (cis) akkumuliert werden konnten. Die Geschwindigkeit der Reaktion wurde mit Hilfe der Ultakurzzeit-Spektroskopie untersucht. Die Dynamik im Zeitbereich von ps-ns zeigte, dass die trans/cis-Isomerisierung unterhalb von 0,5 ns und die umgekehrte Reaktion noch viel schneller (wenige ps) abgeschlossen ist. Durch die Untersuchungen in dieser Arbeit an den BIST-Verbindungen und ceCAM sind viele vorteilhafte, photophysikalische Eigenschaften charakterisiert worden, wodurch sie als verbesserte Alternative zu den bisher bekannten photolabilen Schutzgruppen oder Photoschaltern anzusehen sind.
The intriguing (μ-hydrido)diboranes(4) with their prominent pristine representative [B2H5]− have mainly been studied theoretically. We now describe the behavior of the planarized tetraaryl (μ-hydrido)diborane(4) anion [1H]− in cycloaddition reactions with the homologous series of heterocumulenes CO2, iPrNCO, and iPrNCNiPr. We show that a C=O bond of CO2 selectively activates the B−B bond of [1H]−, while the μ-H ligand is left untouched ([2H]−). The carbodiimide iPrNCNiPr, in contrast, neglects the B−B bond and rather adds the B-bonded H− ion to its central C atom to generate a formamidinate bridge across the B2 pair ([3]−). As a hybrid, the isocyanate iPrNCO combines the reactivity patterns of both its congeners and gives two products: one of them ([4H]−) is related to [2H]−, the other ([5]−) is an analog of [3]−. We finally propose a mechanistic scenario that rationalizes the individual reaction outcomes and combines them to a coherent picture of B–B vs. B–H bond activation.
Phenotypical screening is a widely used approach in drug discovery for the identification of small molecules with cellular activities. However, functional annotation of identified hits often poses a challenge. The development of small molecules with narrow or exclusive target selectivity such as chemical probes and chemogenomic (CG) libraries, greatly diminishes this challenge, but non-specific effects caused by compound toxicity or interference with basic cellular functions still pose a problem to associate phenotypic readouts with molecular targets. Hence, each compound should ideally be comprehensively characterized regarding its effects on general cell functions. Here, we report an optimized live-cell multiplexed assay that classifies cells based on nuclear morphology, presenting an excellent indicator for cellular responses such as early apoptosis and necrosis. This basic readout in combination with the detection of other general cell damaging activities of small molecules such as changes in cytoskeletal morphology, cell cycle and mitochondrial health provides a comprehensive time-dependent characterization of the effect of small molecules on cellular health in a single experiment. The developed high-content assay offers multi-dimensional comprehensive characterization that can be used to delineate generic effects regarding cell functions and cell viability, allowing an assessment of compound suitability for subsequent detailed phenotypic and mechanistic studies.
The potential of a protein-engineered His tag to immobilize macromolecules in a predictable orientation at metal-chelating lipid interfaces was investigated using recombinant 20 S proteasomes His-tagged in various positions. Electron micrographs demonstrated that the orientation of proteasomes bound to chelating lipid films could be controlled via the location of their His tags: proteasomes His-tagged at their sides displayed exclusively side-on views, while proteasomes His-tagged at their ends displayed exclusively end-on views. The activity of proteasomes immobilized at chelating lipid interfaces was well preserved. In solution, His-tagged proteasomes hydrolyzed casein at rates comparable with wild-type proteasomes, unless the His tags were located in the vicinity of the N termini of α-subunits. The N termini of α-subunits might partly occlude the entrance channel in α-rings through which substrates enter the proteasome for subsequent degradation. A combination of electron micrographs and atomic force microscope topographs revealed a propensity of vertically oriented proteasomes to crystallize in two dimensions on fluid lipid films. The oriented immobilization of His-tagged proteins at biocompatible lipid interfaces will assist structural studies as well as the investigation of biomolecular interaction via a wide variety of surface-sensitive techniques including single-molecule analysis.
Salt-inducible kinases (SIKs) are key metabolic regulators. Imbalance of SIK function is associated with the development of diverse cancers, including breast, gastric and ovarian cancer. Chemical tools to clarify the roles of SIK in different diseases are, however, sparse and are generally characterized by poor kinome-wide selectivity. Here, we have adapted the pyrido[2,3-d]pyrimidin-7-one-based PAK inhibitor G-5555 for the targeting of SIK, by exploiting differences in the back-pocket region of these kinases. Optimization was supported by high-resolution crystal structures of G-5555 bound to the known off-targets MST3 and MST4, leading to a chemical probe, MRIA9, with dual SIK/PAK activity and excellent selectivity over other kinases. Furthermore, we show that MRIA9 sensitizes ovarian cancer cells to treatment with the mitotic agent paclitaxel, confirming earlier data from genetic knockdown studies and suggesting a combination therapy with SIK inhibitors and paclitaxel for the treatment of paclitaxel-resistant ovarian cancer.
Die CXCR4-CXCL12-Signalachse gilt als eines der bislang am besten studierten Signalsysteme in der Hämatopoese. Allerdings stammt unser Wissen über diesen kritischen Signalweg maßgeblich aus subtraktiven Studien, wie z.B. knock-out Modellen oder pharmakologischer Inaktivierung. Zwar können aus diesen Modellen wichtige Erkenntnisse über die physiologische Rolle dieses Signalwegs abgeleitet werden, aber dennoch bleiben einige Phänomene ungeklärt. So konnte gezeigt werden, dass es sowohl bei CXCR4-Defizienz als auch bei Patienten mit dem WHIM-Syndrom (ausgelöst durch eine überaktive CXCR4-Mutante) zu einer ausgeprägten B-Zellaplasie kommt. Dies scheint intuitiv nicht vereinbar. Daher wurde in der vorliegenden Arbeit ein Modell mit einer überaktiven CXCR4- Mutante (CXCR41013/1013) hinsichtlich der (un)reifen Hämatopoese systematisch untersucht.
Zunächst wurden hämatopoetische Stamm- und Vorläuferzellen (HSPC) hinsichtlich der aberranten CXCR4-Signalweiterleitung ex vivo analysiert. Die CXCR4-Überaktivierung konnte sowohl in frühen Effekten nach Aktivierung des Rezeptors (F-Aktinpolymerisierung, Aktivierung des MAPK- Signalweges), als auch in späten, zellfunktionellen Effekten (Migrationsassay) nachgewiesen werden. Die veränderte CXCR4 Signalintegration hatte auch bereits in der Homöostase organismische Konsequenzen im Mausmodell. So konnte eine massiv vergrößerte HSPC-Population in der Milz von CXCR41013/1013-Tieren detektiert werden, im Sinne einer extramedullären Hämatopoese. Knochenmarks-HSPC aus CXCR41013/1013-Tiere zeigten ein massiv eingeschränktes (serielles) Repopulationspotenzial. Kombiniert mit der oben genannten ausgeprägten extramedullären Hämatopoese in diesen Tiere interpretieren wir diese Beobachtung als starken Hinweis auf eine dysfunktionelle Interaktion der Stammzellen mit der hämatopoetischen Stammzellnische im Knochenmark. In diesem Zusammenhang besonders interessant ist die Tatsache, dass auch ein Kompetitorknochenmark das Überleben einer Sekundärtransplantation nicht sichert. Dabei ist zu diskutieren, ob dieser Effekt durch eine effizientere Besetzung von Stammzellnischen durch CXCR41013/1013-Zellen, eine Akkumulation von CXCL12 in der Knochenmarkflüssigkeit (siehe unten) oder eventuell sogar ein vesikelabhänginger Transport von mutiertem CXCR4 in Kompetitorzellen ausgelöst wird. Ein weiteres Merkmal dieser Dysfunktion könnte ebenfalls die gezeigte Akkumulation von CXCL12 in der Knochenmarkflüssigkeit von CXCR41013/1013-Tiere darstellen. Diese Akkumulation könnte die Suppression co-transplantierter wildtypischer Hämatopoese sowie die verminderte Effizienz der G-CSF-induzierten Stammzellmobilisierung funktionell erklären. Zusätzlich konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Mobilisierung von Stammzellen aus dem Knochenmark durch einen CXCR4- Inhibitor in CXCR41013/1013-Tieren ebenfalls erheblich hinter der in Wildtypmäusen zurückbleibt.
Analog zu Patienten mit WHIM-Syndrom zeichnen sich CXCR41013/1013-Mäuse weiterhin durch eine ausgeprägte Leukopenie, insbesondere durch einen schweren B-Zell-Mangel, aus. Aus diesem Grund wurde die B-Lymphopoese und humorale Immunfunktion genauer analysiert. Eine grundsätzliche humorale Immunkompetenz von CXCR41013/1013-Tieren konnte nachgewiesen werden, jedoch ist die B-Memory-Funktion erheblich eingeschränkt. Durchflusszytometrisch und funktionell konnte eine reduzierte preB/pro-B Population im Knochenmark bei einer gleichzeitig vergrößerten preB/pro-B Population in der Milz (vgl. extramedulläre Hämatopoese) nachgewiesen werden. Ebenfalls konnten wir in dieser Zellpopulation eine stark erhöhte CXCR4-Oberflächenexpression im Vergleich zu wildtypischen Zellen nachweisen. Da diese unreifen B-Zellen keine verstärke Apoptoserate aufweisen, gehen wir derzeit davon aus, dass der Differenzierungsstopp nicht durch selektiven Zelltod, sondern durch aberrante Retention der preB/proB-Zellen in einer primitiven B-Vorläufer- Nische im Knochenmark zustande kommt, beziehungsweise durch eine gestörte Migration in differenzierende Nischen im Knochenmark. Alternativ könnte die Überdosis CXCR4-Signal differenzierenden Signalen entgegenstehen. Beide Hypothesen können das eingangs erwähnte Paradoxon bezüglich einer B-Zellaplasie in CXCR4-defizienten und CXCR4-überaktiven Zellen hinreichend erklären.
Im Rahmen dieser kumulativen Dissertation konnte eine Methode mitentwickelt werden, die die Bestimmung der absoluten Konfiguration pharmazeutischer Verbindungen aus Röntgenpulverbeugungsdaten ermöglicht. Die Methode basiert auf der Bildung von Salzen. Die notwendige Herstellung dieser Salze mit Salzbildnern bekannter Konfiguration wurde hinsichtlich einer minimalen Ansatzgröße optimiert und erlaubt ein Arbeiten mit Mengen von unter zehn Mikrogramm. Die Kristallisation konnte sogar direkt in den Kapillaren für die Aufnahme der Pulverdiagramme durchgeführt werden. Die absolute Konfiguration einiger als Testfälle gewählter pharmazeutischer Wirkstoffe konnte auf diese Art erfolgreich bestimmt werden. Dies stellt eine erfolgreiche Erweiterung bisher verfügbarer Methoden dar.
1,1,3,3-Tetraethyl-5-nitroisoindolin (TENI) und 1,1,3,3-Tetraethyl-5-nitroisoindolin-2-oxyl (TENO) sind Zwischenstufen in der Synthese von RNS-Spinlabeln für die EPR-Spektroskopie. Die Kristallstrukturen beider Verbindungen konnten aus Einkristallbeugungsdaten bestimmt werden. TENI hat einen Schmelzpunkt nahe der Raumtemperatur. TENO hat dagegen einen wesentlich höheren Schmelzpunkt, obwohl das Molekül nur ein Sauerstoffatom zusätzlich hat. Die Kristallstruktur liefert die Erklärung für dieses Phänomen: In der Kristallstruktur von TENI findet sich als stärkste intermolekulare Wechselwirkung eine einzelne schwache, sehr lange Wasserstoffbrückenbindung.
6-Amino-2-iminiumyl-4-oxo-1,2,3,4-tetrahydropyrimidin-5-aminiumsulfat, ein Edukt der Synthese von Leukopterin konnte als Hydrat erhalten werden. Die Kristallstruktur dieses Monohydrats konnte problemlos bestimmt werden, ebenso wie die von synthetisiertem 4-Amino-2,6-dimethylpyrimidin.
Natriumethanolat wurde nach einer 180 Jahre alten Vorschrift von Liebig synthetisiert. Wie die Röntgenpulverdiagramme zeigen, bilden sich dabei jedoch Gemische von verschiedenen Phasen. Die Kristallstruktur von reinem NaOEt konnte aus Pulverdaten bestimmt werden. Ebenfalls wurden ein Diethanolsolvat sowie zwei weitere Phasen identifiziert. Vom Diethanolsolvat NaOEt · 2 HOEt konnten Einkristalle hergestellt und die Kristallstruktur aus diesen bestimmt werden. Die Kristallstrukturen von Natrium-n-propanolat (NaOnPr), Natrium-n-butanolat (NaOnBu) und Natrium-n-amylat (NaOnAm) konnten ebenfalls aus Pulverdaten aufgeklärt werden. Sie weisen ein ähnliches Na-O-Gitter wie Natriumethanolat auf, allerdings kristallisieren sie in der Raumgruppe P 4/n m m. Die abweichende Raumgruppe des NaOEt (P -4 21 m) liegt am sterischen Anspruch der Ethylgruppe. Die längeren Alkylgruppen sind hochgradig fehlgeordnet und somit im Mittel zylinderförmig. Die Ethylgruppe dagegen hat einen weniger symmetrischen Raumbedarf. Die Solvate der Alkalialkoholate wurden mit zunehmender Länge der Alkylketten instabiler. Nichtsdestotrotz konnten drei verschiedene Solvate hergestellt werden: NaOnPr · 2 HOnPr, NaOiPr · 5 HOiPr und NaOtAm · HOtAm. Ihre Kristallstrukturen konnten aus Einkristallbeugungsdaten bestimmt werden. In diesen Strukturen zeigen sich sehr unterschiedliche Strukturmotive, die teilweise die mögliche Existenz weiterer Solvatstufen andeuten.
Die industriellen Rotpigmente Pigment Red 52 und Pigment Red 48 wurden im Labor unter verschiedenen Bedingungen synthetisiert. Dabei wurden neben den kommerziell verfügbaren Phasen einige neue Phasen identifiziert. Erstmals konnten Kristallstrukturen von P.R.52 und P.R.48 bestimmt werden. Von Pigment Red 52 konnte ein bisher unbekanntes Mononatriumsalz hergestellt werden. Von diesem Salz konnte ein DMSO-Solvat-Monohydrat kristallisiert werden. Aus erhaltenen Einkristallen konnte die Struktur bestimmt werden. Von Pigment Red 48 konnte ebenfalls ein bisher nicht literaturbekanntes Mononatriumsalz isoliert werden. Von zwei Hydratstufen dieser Verbindung konnten Einkristalle hergestellt und ihre Kristallstrukturen bestimmt werden. Eine weitere Phase wurde als Anhydrat identifiziert. Vom Di-Natriumsalz des P.R.52 sowie von seinem Calciumsalz wurden insgesamt fünf verschiedene Hydratstufen gefunden. Die Kristallstrukturen dieser Hydrate konnten aus Röntgenpulverbeugungsdaten bestimmt werden. Von einer Hydratstufe konnte ebenfalls ein Einkristall erhalten und die Struktur bestätigt werden. Eine Veröffentlichung ist in Vorbereitung.
Die Isomere des Orangepigments Perinon werden nach gemeinsamer Synthese industriell durch Überführung in „Trennsalze“ getrennt. Weder die Molekülkonstitution der Trennsalz-Ionen, noch die chemische Zusammensetzung der Feststoffe, noch deren Kristallstrukturen waren bisher bekannt. Die industrielle Form des „trans-Trennsalzes“ konnte im Labor hergestellt werden. Eine weitere Phase des trans-Perinontrennsalzes konnte hergestellt und identifiziert werden. Durch die nachfolgende Einkristallstrukturanalyse zeigte sich, dass die Trennsalze eine völlig andere Molekülkonstitution haben, als in der Literatur beschrieben war: Statt eines planaren Perinongerüsts enthält das Trennsalz ein verdrehtes Bis(benzimidazolat)naphthalindicarboxylat-tetraanion, dessen Ladung durch Kalium-Kationen kompensiert wird. Das bisher nie als Feststoff beschriebene cis-Perinontrennsalz wurde hergestellt und kristallisiert. Es konnten Einkristalle hergestellt und die Kristallstruktur aus diesen bestimmt werden. Alle Perinontrennsalze enthalten im Kristallgitter eine beträchtliche Anzahl Wasser- und Ethanolmoleküle. Durch Festkörper-NMR-Spektroskopie konnte gezeigt werden, dass das Wasser-Ethanol-Netzwerk stark dynamisch ist. Bei der Hydrolyse der Trennsalze entstehen wieder die ursprünglichen, wasser- und lösungsmittelfreien Perinonpigmente.
[Nachruf] Hugo Fasold
(2018)
Gram-negative bacteria maintain an intrinsic resistance mechanism against entry of noxious compounds by utilizing highly efficient efflux pumps. The E. coli AcrAB-TolC drug efflux pump contains the inner membrane H+/drug antiporter AcrB comprising three functionally interdependent protomers, cycling consecutively through the loose (L), tight (T) and open (O) state during cooperative catalysis. Here, we present 13 X-ray structures of AcrB in intermediate states of the transport cycle. Structure-based mutational analysis combined with drug susceptibility assays indicate that drugs are guided through dedicated transport channels toward the drug binding pockets. A co-structure obtained in the combined presence of erythromycin, linezolid, oxacillin and fusidic acid shows binding of fusidic acid deeply inside the T protomer transmembrane domain. Thiol cross-link substrate protection assays indicate that this transmembrane domain-binding site can also accommodate oxacillin or novobiocin but not erythromycin or linezolid. AcrB-mediated drug transport is suggested to be allosterically modulated in presence of multiple drugs.
In the course of systematic investigations on sila-substituted parasympatholytics the diphenyl(2-aminoethoxymethyl)silanols 3b and 4b (and its carbon analogue 4a) were synthesized and characterized by their physical and chemical properties. In the solid state 4a and 4b form strong O-H---N hydrogen bonds, which are intramolecular (4a) and intermolecular (4b), respectively. 4a and 4b were found to be weak antimuscarinic agents (4b >4a) and strong papaverine-like spasmolytics (4a ≈4b).
Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is the most common soft tissue sarcoma in early childhood. Despite recent advances in the treatment regimes of rhabdomyosarcoma, the 5-year survival is still alarmingly low for the more aggressive metastasizing alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma subtype. Novel treatment strategies are needed in order to increase the overall survival rate. Hallmarks of cancer include evade cell death induction and evade immune system surveillance. This is mediated in part by up-regulation of inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) proteins. With the development of Smac mimetic compounds mimicking the endogenous IAP antagonist Smac, this tumor evasion mechanism became exploitable.
In this PhD thesis, a combinatory approach for a putative treatment option of RMS will be presented. Here, the Smac mimetic compound BV6 will be used as a pre-treatment of RMS cells. This leads to a sensitizing effect within the tumor cells, increasing the killing efficacy of natural killer (NK) cells.
Subtoxic concentrations of BV6 were chosen to sensitize RMS cells. To remodel the solid tumor characteristics of RMS, a multicellular RMS tumor spheroid culture model was used.
In both tumor spheroids and conventional monolayer cell culture BV6 induced the degradation of IAP proteins (cIAP1, cIAP2, in spheroids XIAP). Further, BV6 led to the activation of both, the canonical and non-canonical NF-κB signaling pathways.
This was demonstrated by an increased IκBα and p65 phosphorylation, and nuclear translocation of p-p65, indicative for an active canonical NF-κB signaling. On the other side, cIAP degradation led to the stabilization and accumulation of NIK and downstream partial degradation of p100 to p52 and its nuclear translocation, indicating non-canonical NF-κB signaling pathway activity. A bulk RNA sequencing approach of BV6 treated RH30 cells validated the NF-κB signaling involvement and identified 182 differentially expressed genes. Among the interesting target genes are NFKBIA (IκBα),BIRC3 (cIAP2), NFKB2 (p100), CCL5 and SSTR2. SSTR2 was thoroughly validated as being up-regulated on a transcriptional and on protein level. Here, SSTR2A, one of the two alternative splicing variants, is up-regulated and opens a hypothetical targeted treatment strategy, as SSTR2 expression is not associated with RMS, but rather described with neuroendocrine tumor entities. In addition, CCL5 was thoroughly validated as a BV6 induced target. Again, the up-regulated mRNA transcription was validated by an increased translation and by increased secretion of CCL5. As CCL5 being associated as pro-migratory and activating of NK cells, CRISPR/Cas9 mediated CCL5 knock-out studies were performed to evaluate the influence of CCL5 within a BV6 pre-treatment and NK cell co-cultivation setting. It was shown that CCL5 knock-out does not rescue BV6 pre-treated RMS spheroids from NK cell attack and killing.
The previous mentioned transcriptional activity by BV6 stimulation was NIK mediated as knock-down of NIK reduced the mRNA transcription of several interesting genes.
However, NIK mediated down-stream signaling had no influence on the BV6 induced sensitizing effect towards NK cell mediated attack. A NIK knock-down had no rescue effect upon BV6 pre-treatment and NK cell co-treatment.
As cIAP proteins are present in receptor bound complexes, e.g. complex I at the TNF receptor 1 (TNFR1), a putative involvement of death receptors in general was evaluated.
Indeed, BV6 treatment of RMS cells could increase the surface presentation of DR5, a death receptor ligating TRAIL. Functionally, co-treatment of BV6 with TRAIL led to an additive cell death inducting effect. However, within the NK cell co-cultivation setting, addition of a neutralizing TRAIL anitbody could not rescue BV6 pre-treated RMS spheroids from NK cell killing. A similar effect was observed when neutralizing TNFα by adding Enbrel during the NK cell co-cultivation. BV6 sensitization of RMS spheroids seems to be independent of death receptors.
In addition to activating NF-κB, BV6 as a Smac mimetic is supposed to be able to release caspases bound by IAP proteins. Indeed, BV6 pre-treatment of RMS spheroids and co-cultivation with NK cells could cleave and thereby activate the executioner caspase-3. Further, treatment with a pan-caspase inhibitor, zVAD.fmk, could reduce the BV6 mediated sensitizing effect towards NK cell attack in RD spheroids.
Taken together, BV6 does induce a thoroughly validated NF-κB signaling pathway, leading to a NIK mediated transcriptional signature change. However, the NF-κB activation might not be responsible for the observed sensitization. Further, BV6 in combination with NK cells led to a seemingly death receptor independent, caspase dependent cell death induction of RMS spheroids. Although the mechanism remains partially con-cealed, a therapeutic benefit by combining a cell death sensitizing compound, i.e. BV6, with cytotoxic lymphocytes is evident.
Membrane receptors are central to cell-cell communication. Receptor clustering at the plasma membrane modulates physiological responses, and mesoscale receptor organization is critical for downstream signaling. Spatially restricted cluster formation of the neuropeptide Y2 hormone receptor (Y2R) was observed in vivo; however, the relevance of this confinement is not fully understood. Here, we controlled Y2R clustering in situ by a chelator nanotool. Due to the multivalent interaction, we observed a dynamic exchange in the microscale confined regions. Fast Y2R enrichment in clustered areas triggered a ligand-independent downstream signaling determined by an increase in cytosolic calcium, cell spreading, and migration. We revealed that the cell response to ligand-induced activation was amplified when cells were pre-clustered by the nanotool. Ligand-independent signaling by clustering differed from ligand-induced activation in the binding of arrestin-3 as downstream effector, which was recruited to the confined regions only in the presence of the ligand. This approach enables in situ clustering of membrane receptors and raises the possibility to explore different modalities of receptor activation.
Membrane receptor clustering is fundamental to cell–cell communication; however, the physiological function of receptor clustering in cell signaling remains enigmatic. Here, we developed a dynamic platform to induce cluster formation of neuropeptide Y2 hormone receptors (Y2R) in situ by a chelator nanotool. The multivalent interaction enabled a dynamic exchange of histidine-tagged Y2R within the clusters. Fast Y2R enrichment in clustered areas triggered ligand-independent signaling as determined by an increase in cytosolic calcium and cell migration. Notably, the calcium and motility response to ligand-induced activation was amplified in preclustered cells, suggesting a key role of receptor clustering in sensitizing the dose response to lower ligand concentrations. Ligand-independent versus ligand-induced signaling differed in the binding of arrestin-3 as a downstream effector, which was recruited to the clusters only in the presence of the ligand. This approach allows in situ receptor clustering, raising the possibility to explore different receptor activation modalities.
ABC transporters fulfill diverse physiological functions in different cellularlocalizations ranging from the plasma membrane to intracellular membranouscompartments. Several ABC transporters have been spotted in the endolyso-somal system, which consists of endosomes, autophagosomes, lysosomes, andlysosome-related organelles. In this review, we present an overview of lysoso-mal ABC transporters including ABCA2, ABCA3, ABCA5, ABCB6,ABCB9, and ABCD4, discussing their trafficking routes, putative substrates,potential physiological functions, and associated diseases. In addition, weoffer a critical evaluation of the literature linking ABC transporters to lyso-somal drug sequestration, examining pitfalls associated with in vitro modelsof drug resistance.
The prevalence and specificity of local protein synthesis during neuronal synaptic plasticity
(2021)
To supply proteins to their vast volume, neurons localize mRNAs and ribosomes in dendrites and axons. While local protein synthesis is required for synaptic plasticity, the abundance and distribution of ribosomes and nascent proteins near synapses remain elusive. Here, we quantified the occurrence of local translation and visualized the range of synapses supplied by nascent proteins during basal and plastic conditions. We detected dendritic ribosomes and nascent proteins at single-molecule resolution using DNA-PAINT and metabolic labeling. Both ribosomes and nascent proteins positively correlated with synapse density. Ribosomes were detected at ~85% of synapses with ~2 translational sites per synapse; ~50% of the nascent protein was detected near synapses. The amount of locally synthesized protein detected at a synapse correlated with its spontaneous Ca2+ activity. A multifold increase in synaptic nascent protein was evident following both local and global plasticity at respective scales, albeit with substantial heterogeneity between neighboring synapses.
The function of the p53 transcription factor family is dependent on several folded domains. In addition to a DNA-binding domain, members of this family contain an oligomerization domain. p63 and p73 also contain a C-terminal Sterile α-motif domain. Inhibition of most transcription factors is difficult as most of them lack deep pockets that can be targeted by small organic molecules. Genetic knock-out procedures are powerful in identifying the overall function of a protein, but they do not easily allow one to investigate roles of individual domains. Here we describe the characterization of Designed Ankyrin Repeat Proteins (DARPins) that were selected as tight binders against all folded domains of p63. We determine binding affinities as well as specificities within the p53 protein family and show that DARPins can be used as intracellular inhibitors for the modulation of transcriptional activity. By selectively inhibiting DNA binding of the ΔNp63α isoform that competes with p53 for the same promoter sites, we show that p53 can be reactivated. We further show that inhibiting the DNA binding activity stabilizes p63, thus providing evidence for a transcriptionally regulated negative feedback loop. Furthermore, the ability of DARPins to bind to the DNA-binding domain and the Sterile α-motif domain within the dimeric-only and DNA-binding incompetent conformation of TAp63α suggests a high structural plasticity within this special conformation. In addition, the developed DARPins can also be used to specifically detect p63 in cell culture and in primary tissue and thus constitute a very versatile research tool for studying the function of p63.
Chromosomal translocations (CTs) are a genetic hallmark of cancer. They could be identified as recurrent genetic aberrations in hemato-malignancies and solid tumors. More than 40% of all “cancer genes” were identified in recurrent CTs. Most of these CTs result in the production of oncofusion proteins of which many have been studied over the past decades. They influence signaling pathways and/or alter gene expression. However, a precise mechanism for how these CTs arise and occur in a nearly identical fashion in individuals remains to be elucidated. Here, we performed experiments that explain the onset of CTs: (1) proximity of genes able to produce prematurely terminated transcripts, which lead to the production of (2) trans-spliced fusion RNAs, and finally, the induction of (3) DNA double-strand breaks which are subsequently repaired via EJ repair pathways. Under these conditions, balanced chromosomal translocations could be specifically induced. The implications of these findings will be discussed.
Chromosomal translocations (CTs) are a genetic hallmark of cancer. They could be identified as recurrent genetic aberrations in hemato-malignancies and solid tumors. More than 40% of all "cancer genes" were identified in recurrent CTs. Most of these CTs result in the production of oncofusion proteins of which many have been studied over the past decades. They influence signaling pathways and/or alter gene expression. However, a precise mechanism for how these CTs arise and occur in a nearly identical fashion in individuals remains to be elucidated. Here, we performed experiments that explain the onset of CTs: proximity of genes able to produce prematurely terminated transcripts, which leads to the production of transspliced fusion RNAs, and finally, the induction of DNA double-strand breaks which are subsequently repaired via EJ repair pathways. Under these conditions, balanced chromosomal translocations could be specifically induced.
The multistep-processes leading to the formation of tumors have been extensively studied in the past decades, leading to the identification of “hallmarks of cancer”. They are characteristic changes in biological processes that discriminate tumor cells from healthy cells. Increasing knowledge on the molecular structures associated with tumorigenesis allowed their specific inhibition in targeted anti-cancer therapy. However, successful targeted anti-cancer therapy is only available for a limited subset of diseases, so the continuous investigation of tumorigenic mechanisms is required to tackle the immense diversity of neoplastic entities.
AVEN and FUSE binding protein 1 (FUBP1) display the ability to regulate apoptosis and cell cycle progression. Thus, the proteins are associated with hallmarks of cancer (resisting cell death and uncontrolled proliferation). Indeed, aberrant expression of AVEN and FUBP1 could be demonstrated in multiple cancers. In contrast, there is only little knowledge on the physiological function of AVEN and FUBP1. The lack of knowledge results in part from the embryonic lethality of the homozygous knockout of Aven and Fubp1 in mouse models, limiting the gain of information by analyzing these animals.
In this study, I generated conditional Aven and Fubp1 knockout mice to investigate their physiological function.
By analyzing reporter mice expressing β-galactosidase under the control of the endogenous Aven promoter, I identified Aven promoter activity to be both tissue- and cell type-specific and dependent on the developmental stage. Detecting apoptotic cell death by immunohistochemistry did not reveal increased apoptosis in Aven knockout mice, suggesting a functional role of AVEN besides apoptosis inhibition during embryogenesis.
Basing on the significant Aven promoter activity detected in the adult brain and in the mammary gland, I generated and characterized conditional Aven knockout mice with Aven deletion restricted to cells within the brain or the mammary gland. AVEN depletion in these tissues was not embryonic lethal and the affected tissues displayed a normal histology.
Since aberrant Aven expression had been associated with hematologic malignancies, I also analyzed mice with an Aven knockout in the hematopoietic system. Depletion of AVEN in the blood cells had no effect on hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell frequencies. Consequently, AVEN seems to be dispensable for the maintenance and differentiation of stem, progenitor and mature blood cells, at least as far as the expression of particular differentiation markers was concerned.
As loss of AVEN in the analyzed tissues did not affect the viability of mice and did not produce any other obvious phenotype, the exact role of AVEN that is essential for embryo survival remains to be identified.
To study the oncogenic potential of AVEN, I investigated the role of AVEN in a mouse model for breast carcinogenesis. While AVEN expression seemed to be increased in breast tumors, tumor onset and progression were not altered in mice with depleted AVEN expression in the mammary gland. Consistently, Aven knockout tumor cells were neither less proliferative nor more prone to undergo apoptosis than Aven wildtype tumor cells. Cell culture experiments demonstrated that AVEN expression is upregulated by estrogen. Knockdown of AVEN in the breast cancer cell line MCF-7 slightly increased UV irradiation-induced apoptosis and accelerated metabolism. So while AVEN does not promote development or progression of breast tumors, enhanced AVEN expression in ER+ breast cancers might contribute to chemotherapy resistance.
To study the physiological role of FUBP1, I generated a conditional Fubp1 knockout mouse model. While the insertion of loxP sites into the Fubp1 locus was occasionally embryonic lethal, some mice with a cell type-specific deletion of Fubp1 in hematopoietic cells or EPO receptor expressing cells were born alive. In these mice, frequencies of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells as well as erythrocytes were unaltered. These results conflict with previous publications. However, compensating mechanisms might be responsible for the discrepancies between the observed phenotypes and reported FUBP1 function.
In cell culture studies, I could demonstrate that the previously reported upstream regulation of FUBP1 by TAL1 depended on an intact GATA motif in the FUBP1 promoter and that binding of GATA1 to the FUBP1 promoter increased during erythropoiesis.
To identify new FUBP1 target genes with relevance for erythropoiesis, I performed differential gene expression analysis in cells with wildtype and depleted FUBP1 expression. RNA-sequencing and PCR-arrays revealed only moderate differences in the expression of genes that are components of the EPO receptor signaling pathway as well as genes associated with apoptosis and proliferation of hematopoietic cells. By regulating the transcription of these genes, FUBP1 could contribute to efficient erythropoiesis.
Fatty acid and polyketide synthases (FASs and PKSs) synthesize physiologically and pharmaceutically important products by condensation of acyl building blocks. The transacylation reaction catalyzed by acyl transferases (ATs) is responsible for the selection of acyl-CoA esters for further processing by FASs and PKSs. In this study, the AT domains of different multidomain (type I) PKS systems are kinetically described in their substrate selectivity, AT−Acyl carrier protein (ACP) domain-domain interaction and enzymatic kinetic properties. We observe that the ATs of modular PKSs, intricate protein complexes occurring in bacteria and responsible for the biosynthesis of bioactive polyketides, are significantly slower than ATs of mammalian FASs, reflecting the respective purpose of the biosynthetic pathways within the organism and their metabolic context. We further perform a mutational study on the kinetics of the AT−ACP interaction in the modular PKS 6-deoxyerythronolide B synthase (DEBS) and find a high plasticity in enzyme properties, which we explain by a high plasticity in AT−ACP recognition. Our study enlarges the understanding of ATs in its molecular properties and is similarly a call for thorough AT-centered PKS engineering strategies.
Polyketides are highly valuable natural products, which are widely used as pharmaceuticals due to their beneficial characteristics, comprising antibacterial, antifungal, immunosuppressive, and antitumor properties, among others. Their biosynthesis is performed by large and complex multiproteins, the polyketide synthases (PKSs). This study solely focuses on the class of type I PKSs, which arrange all their enzymatic domains on one or more polypeptides. Despite their high medical value, little is known about mechanistic details in PKSs.
One central domain is the acyl transferase (AT), which is present in all PKSs and channels small acyl substrates into the enzyme. More precisely, the AT loads the substrates onto the essential acyl carrier protein (ACP), which subsequently shuttles the substrates and all intermediates for condensation and modification to additional domains to build the final polyketide.
Some PKSs use their domains several times during biosynthesis and work iteratively – these are called iterative PKSs. Others feature several sets of domains, each being used only once during biosynthesis – these PKSs are called modular PKSs. All PKSs or PKS modules consist of minimum three essential domains to connect the acyl substrates. Three modifying domains are optional and can enlarge the minimal set. According to the domain composition, the acyl substrate is fully reduced, partly reduced, or not reduced at all. This variation of modifying domains accounts for the huge structural and therefore functional variety of polyketides.
Even though the structure of fatty acids is not exactly reminiscent of polyketides, their biosynthetic pathways are closely related. Fatty acid biosynthesis is carried out by fatty acid synthases (FASs), which share many similarities with PKSs. Both megasynthases feature the same domains, performing the same reactions to connect and modify small acyl substrates. In contrast to PKSs, FASs always contain one full set of modifying domains which is used iteratively, leading to fully reduced fatty acids.
The present thesis extensively analyzes the AT of different PKSs in its substrate selectivity, AT-ACP domain-domain interaction, and enzymatic kinetic properties. The following key findings are revealed through comparison: 1.) ATs of PKSs appear slower than the ones of FASs, which may reflect the different scopes of biosynthetic pathways. Fatty acids as essential compounds in all organisms are needed in high amounts for physiological functions, whereas polyketides as secondary metabolites only require basal concentrations to take effect. 2.) The slower ATs from modular PKSs do not load non-native substrates even in absence of the native substrates. This is different to the faster ATs from iterative PKSs and FASs, which indicates high substrate specificity solely for the ATs from modular PKSs and emphasizes their role as gatekeepers in polyketide synthesis. 3.) The substrate selectivity can emerge in either the first or the second step of the AT-mediated ACP loading and is not assured by a hydrolytic proofreading function.
Moreover, a mutational study on the AT-ACP interaction in the modular PKS 6-deoxyerythronolide B synthase (DEBS) shows that single surface point mutations can influence AT-mediated reactions in a complex manner. Data reveals high enzyme kinetic plasticity of the AT-ACP interaction, which was also recently demonstrated for the interaction in a type II FAS.
Based on these findings, the mammalian FAS is engineered towards a modular PKS-like as- sembly line with the long-term goal to rationally synthesize new products. Basically, three important aspects need to be considered: 1.) AT’s loading needs to be splitted in specific loading of a priming substrate by a priming AT and in specific loading of an elongation substrate by an elongation AT. 2.) FAS-based elongation modules need to be designed with varying domain compositions for introducing functional groups in the product. 3.) Covalent and non-covalent linkers need to be designed for connection of priming and elongation modules.
This study focuses on the first aspect, splitting loading of priming and elongation substrates. An elongation substrate-specific AT is installed in the mammalian FAS via domain swapping. Since ATs from modular PKSs were proven to be substrate specific, these are used to exchange the mammalian FAS AT. This work demonstrates that it is extremely challenging to create stable and functional chimeras, but first essential steps are taken. Proper domain boundaries for AT swapping are established and a stable chimera with 70 % wild type AT activity is created. However, this chimera is only of limited value for application in an elongation module due to the intrinsic slow turnover rate of the wild type AT. Using another PKS AT, a stable elongation module is designed and analyzed in its activity in combination with a priming module. These experiments demonstrate that the loading of priming substrates are successfully suppressed in the elongation module, but nonetheless only minor turnover rates are detected in the assembly line.
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