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Acute myeloid/lymphoid leukemia is a fatal hematological malignancy characterized by accumulation of nonfunctional, immature blasts, which interferes with the production of normal blood cells. Activating mutations of receptor tyrosine kinases are common genetic lesions in leukemia. FLT3-ITD is a frequent activating mutation found in AML patients, leading to uncontrolled proliferation of leukemic blasts. FLT3-ITD directly activates STAT5, leading to the induction of STAT5 target gene expression like PIM kinases and SOCS genes. STAT5 and PIM kinases have been shown to play a crucial role in the FLT3-ITD mediated transformation. On the other hand, the role of SOCS proteins in FLT3-ITD mediated transformation has not been studied to date. SOCS proteins are part of a negative feedback mechanism that controls Jak kinases downstream of cytokine receptors. One of the SOCS family members, SOCS1 has been reported to suppress oncogenecity of several activating kinases implicated in hematologic malignancies. In this thesis the role of these SOCS proteins in FLT3-ITD mediated transformation (in vitro) and leukemogenesis (in vivo) is systematically explored. Expression of FLT3-ITD in cell lines of myeloid (32D) and lymphoid (Ba/F3) origin, led to CIS, SOCS1 and SOCS2 expression. FLT3-ITD expression in primary murine bone marrow stem/progenitor cells led to a 59 fold induction of SOCS1 expression. Furthermore, FLT3-ITD positive AML cell lines (MV4-11, MOLM-13) show kinase dependent CIS, SOCS1, and SOCS3 expression. Importantly SOCS1 is highly expressed in AML patients with FLT3-ITD compared to healthy individuals. SOCS1 protein was expressed in FLT3-ITD transduced murine bone marrow stem cells and SOCS1 expression was abolished with kinase inhibition in MOLM-13 cell line. In conclusion, SOCS1 was highly regulated by FLT3-ITD in myeloid, lymphoid cell lines, in bone marrow stem/progenitors and in AML patient samples. SOCS1 co-expression did not affect FLT3-ITD mediated signaling and proliferation, but abolished IL-3 mediated proliferation and protected 32D cells from interferon-α and interferon-γ mediated growth inhibition. FLT3-ITD expressing 32D cells showed diminished STAT1 activation in response to interferons (α and γ). Alone, SOCS1 strongly inhibited cytokine induced colony formation of bone marrow stem and progenitors, but not FLT3-ITD induced colony formation. Most importantly, in the presence of growth inhibitory interferon-γ, SOCS1 co-expression with FLT3-ITD led to increased colony formation compared to FLT3-ITD alone. Taken together, FLT3-ITD induced and exogenously expressed SOCS1, shielded cells from external cytokines, signals, while not affecting FLT3-ITD induced proliferation/signaling. In further experiments the in vivo effects of SOCS1 were studied in a bone marrow transplantation model. SOCS1 bone marrow transplants were unable to engraft/proliferate in mice. FLT3-ITD was shown to induce a myeloproliferative disease. Both control (empty vector), SOCS1 transplanted mice were normal and did not show any disease phenotype. FLT3-ITD alone and SOCS1 co-expressing FLT3-ITD developed either myeloproliferative disease or acute lymphoblastic leukemia with equal distribution. SOCS1 co-expression with FLT3-ITD led to a decreased latency. Mice transplanted with FLT3-ITD alone and SOCS1 co-expressing FLT3-ITD displayed enlarged spleens, liver and hypercellular bone marrow indicating infiltration of leukemic cells. Mice were also anemic and showed decreased platelet counts. Importantly SOCS1 co-expression particularly shortened the latency of myeloproliferative disease but not of acute lymphoblastic leukemia. In summary, in the context of FLT3-ITD, SOCS1 acts as a ‘conditional oncogene’ and cooperates with FLT3-ITD in the development of myeloproliferative disease. With these data we propose the following model: FLT3-ITD induces SOCS gene expression, which shields cells against proliferation and differentiation signals from cytokines, while not affecting FLT3-ITD mediated proliferative signals. This leaves cells under the dictate of FLT3-ITD thereby contributing to leukemogenesis. Similar to FLT3-ITD, BCR/ABL (P190) (an oncogenic fusion kinase often found in acute lymphoblastic leukemia) induces SOCS gene expression in K562 and long-term cultured cells from patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. SOCS1 co-expression does not affect BCR/ABL mediated proliferation while abrogating IL-3 mediated proliferation. These findings suggest that SOCS proteins may play a general co-operative role in the context of oncogenes which aberrantly activate STAT3/5 independently of JAK kinases. This study reveals a novel molecular mechanism of FLT3-ITD mediated leukemogenesis and suggests SOCS genes as potential therapeutic targets.
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a hematopoietic cell disorder characterized by a block in differentiation and increased proliferation and survival of malignant blasts. Expansion of the malignant cell clone effects the normal production of blood cells and – if left untreated – leads to death. Receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) play an important role in the pathogenesis of AML, as they are either often mutated or overexpressed. In normal hematopoiesis, RTK signal termination is tightly controlled, and involves ubiquitination, internalization, endocytosis and degradation. Cbl proteins are E3 ligases and have been shown to ubiquitinate several activated RTKs, including Flt3 and Kit, targeting them for degradation. Recently, several Cbl mutations have been identified: Cbl-R420Q was identified in an AML patient and Cbl-70Z was identified in a mouse lymphoma model. In this thesis work, the role of these Cbl mutants in Kit signaling and in a mouse transplantation model was studied. Cbl mutants (Cbl-R420Q, Cbl-70Z) have the ability to transform the myeloid 32D cell line in cooperation with Kit WT. Cbl mutants along with Kit promoted interleukin-3 (IL3)-independent proliferation and enhanced the cell survival of 32D cells. In contrast, expression of the Cbl mutants alone did not confer IL3-independent growth. Stem cell factor (SCF, the Kit ligand) dependent growth was enhanced in the presence of Cbl mutants and Cbl mutants promoted colonogenic growth in the presence of Kit. Furthermore, Cbl mutants inhibited the ubiquitination of the activated Kit receptor. In addition, Cbl mutants inhibited the endocytosis of the activated Kit receptor. Retroviral expression of Cbl mutants in transplanted bone marrow induced a generalized mastocytosis, a myeloproliferative disease and, in rare care cases, myeloid leukemia. Splenomegaly was observed in the presence of Cbl mutants. Furthermore, mast cells with variable range of infiltration were noticed in all the vital organs (spleen, liver, bone marrow, lung, kidney, heart) of Cbl (mutant) transplanted mice. Almost all recipients of bone marrow cells transduced with Cbl mutants developed a lethal hematologic disorder with a mean latency of 341 days in the Cbl-R420Q group and 395 days in the Cbl-70Z group. This is the first published report on a hematological disease with Cbl mutants in a mouse model. Co-immunoprecipitation studies indicated that Cbl-70Z binds to Kit, even in the absence of Kit ligand. Cbl-R420Q also bound to Kit in the absence of SCF, albeit to a lesser extent. Association of Cbl mutants to Kit was enhanced in the presence of SCF. Signaling studies demonstrated the constitutive activation of Akt and Erk in the presence of Cbl mutants and Kit. In addition, Cbl mutants enhanced the SCF-dependent Kit, Akt and Erk activation. Cbl-70Z, in association with kinase-dead Kit (Kit-KD) or kinase-dead Flt3 (Flt3-KD), conferred IL3-independent growth and survival to the myeloid 32D cell line. Cbl-R420Q provided only a slight growth advantage in the presence of Kit-KD. As demonstrated by pharmacological inhibition studies, Akt activation was necessary for the transformation mediated by Cbl-70Z and Kit-KD / Flt3-KD. Cbl mutants enhanced the Src family kinases (SFKs) activity. The pharmacological inhibition of SFK activity inhibited the proliferation and colonogenic growth. Interaction was found between Cbl-70Z, SFKs and Kit-KD. The SFK member Fyn was identified to bind to Cbl. In addition, kinase activity of SFKs was necessary for binding to Cbl, since SFKs inhibition by PP-2 abolished the binding between the complex-binding partners. Dasatinib and PP-2, both SFK inhibitors, inhibited the Cbl and Akt phosphorylation indicating that Fyn acts upstream of Akt. Inhibition of Kit with imatinib reduced the proliferation of cells overexpressing Kit WT and Cbl-70Z much stronger compared with cells expressing Kit-KD and Cbl-70Z, but much less than the dual KIT/SFK inhibitor dasatinib. This indicated that Kit kinase activity was required but not essential. The data presented in this thesis work implies that both RTK and SFK inhibition may have to be targeted, in order to effectively prevent transformation. In summary, the present thesis work indicates an important role of Cbl, Kit and SFKs in myeloid transformation and deregulated signal transduction.
The thesis entitled „Investigations on the significance of nucleo-cytoplasmic transport for the biological function of cellular proteins" aimed to unreveal molecular mechanisms in order to improve our understanding of the impact of nucleo-cytoplasmic transport on cellular functions. Within the scope of this work, it could be shown that regulated nucleo-cytoplasmic transport of a subfamily of homeobox transcription factors controlled their intra- and intercellular transport, and thereby influencing also their transcriptional activity. This study describes a novel regulatory mechanism, which could in general play an important role for the ordered differentiation of complex organisms. Besides cis-active transport Signals, also post-translational modifications can influence the localization and biological activity of proteins in trans. In addition to the known impact of phosphorylation on the transport and activity of STAT1, experimental evidence was provided demonstrating that acetylation affected the interaction of STAT1 with NF-kB p65, and subsequently modulated the expression of apoptosis-inducing NF-kB target genes. The impact of nucleo-cytoplasmic transport on the regulation of apoptosis was underlined by showing that the evolutionary conservation of a NES within the anti-apoptotic protein survivin plays an essential role for its dual function in the inhibition of apoptosis and ordered cell division. Since survivin is considered a bona fide cancer therapy target, these results strongly encourage future work to identify molecular decoys that specifically inhibit the nuclear export of survivin as novel therapeutics. In order to further dissect the regulation of nuclear transport and to efficiently identify transport inhibitors, cell-based assays are urgently required. Therefore, the cellular assay Systems developed in this work may not only serve to identify synthetic nuclear export and Import inhibitors but may also be applied in systematic RNAi-screening approaches to identify novel components of the transport machinery. In addition, the translocation based protease- and protein-interaction biosensors can be applied in various biological Systems, in particular to identify protein-protein interaction inhibitors of cancer relevant proteins. In summary, this work does not only underline the general significance of nucleo-cytoplasmic transport for cell biology, but also demonstrates its potential for the development of novel therapies against diseases like cancer and viral infections.
Gene therapy is a promising therapeutic strategy that emerged from the attractive idea of targeting therapy at the molecular level. For many patients who suffer from genetic and acquired diseases that cannot be effectively treated by conventional treatment approaches gene therapy remains a huge hope of cure in spite of the hurdles regarding efficacy and safety that need to be overcome. The development of efficient gene transfer vehicles, mainly retroviral vectors, led to the first successful gene therapy trial, to treat patients suffering from X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency syndrome (X-SCID) using gene modified stem cells (Hacein-Bey-Abina, Le Deist et al. 2002). Despite the success of this trial, it revealed the danger of retroviral insertional mutagenesis as a major adverse event of gene therapy using gene-modified stem cells (Hacein-Bey-Abina, von Kalle et al. 2003). In contrast to stem cells, T cells are relatively resistant to insertional mutagenesis and transformation even after transduction with potent oncogenes using retroviral vectors (Newrzela, Cornils et al. 2008). However, mature T cells can self-renew, proliferate and survive for long periods. These criteria are supposed to render T cells prone to transformation. Therefore, the questions of mature T cells transformability and the control mechanism limiting their transformation are still elusive.
Drug toxicity and viral resistance limit long-term efficacy of antiviral drug treatment for HIV
infection. Thus, alternative therapies need to be explored. Previously, group of “Prof. von Laer”
tested the infusion of T lymphocytes transduced with a retroviral vector (M87o) that expresses an
HIV entry inhibitory peptide (maC46). Gene-modified autologous T cells were infused into 10
HIV-infected patients with advanced disease and multidrug resistant virus during antiretroviral
combination therapy. T cell infusions were tolerated well with no severe side effects. A
significant increase of CD4 counts was observed post infusion. At the end of the one-year
follow-up, the CD4 counts of all patients were still around or above baseline. Gene-modified
cells could be detected in peripheral blood, lymph nodes and bone marrow throughout the oneyear
follow-up, whereby marking levels correlated with the cell dose. No significant changes of
viral load were observed during the first four months. Four of the seven patients that changed
their antiviral drug regimen thereafter responded with a significant decline in plasma viral load.
In conclusion, the transfer of gene-modified cells was safe, led to sustained levels of gene
marking and may improve immune competence in HIV-infected patients with advanced disease
and multidrug resistant virus. However, the low level of gene marking and the lack of substantial
long-term in vivo accumulation of gene-protected cells observed in this trial clearly demonstrate
the requirement for new vectors with new strategy.
In this thesis self‐inactivating lentiviral vectors harboring internal promoters and RNA elements
were therefore evaluated for their potential use in a clinical gene‐therapy trial. The results from
this work provide the basis for the selection of a suitable candidate vector for extensive
preclinical testing. Apart from being capable of transducing non‐dividing cells, lentiviral vectors
incorporate a number of additional features that are of potential value for gene therapeutic
applications. These include a larger packaging capacity, higher titers than γ‐retroviral vectors
and, most importantly, a reduced risk of deregulating cellular genes due to its natural integration
profile. The use of internal promoters to drive expression of the therapeutic transgene maC46
should further improve the safety profile of these new‐generation vectors, while an additional
artificial splice acceptor (SA) into the 5‟UTR of the transgene over all elevate transgene
expression. The rationale for this is that hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells will be
Summary
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protected from enhancer‐mediated transactivation effects and also from potential side effects due
to the aberrant expression of maC46 while at the same time the full clinical benefit for the
patients is maintained.
In order to find a suitable candidate for preclinical studies, two candidate therapeutic vectors
harboring different regulatory elements were selected based on results from pilot experiments.
The internal promoters used to drive expression of codon optimized maC46 were the PGK
promoter and MPSV promoter. This work focuses on the transgene expression levels in
lymphoid cells and antiviral activity. The issues of long term expression, propensity to
methylation mediated silencing of the promoters, and genotoxicity were also touched. In a first
step the performance of different vectors was evaluated in the human T cell lines. Based on
promising data from ex vivo human peripheral blood mononuclear cells, the vector carrying the
MPSV promoter along with intron were selected for in vivo transplantation experiments.
In summary, the ex vivo data suggested the long term survival of lentiviral gene modified cells,
along with maintained expression of introduced genes. It was observed that the expression of
these constructs depends strongly on the activation and differentiation status of the targeted T
cells. This regulation was not linked to any specific promotor. In vivo study shows that maC46
can be introduced into murine multiple hematopoietic lineages via lentiviral vector and expressed
at high levels in their mulilineage progeny, without altering the hematopoiesis. There was no
sign of any kind of hematopoietic or lymphoid malignancies. Although gene-modified
lymphocytes persisted in-vivo, the downregulation of transgene expression was consistent with
the ex-vivo observation. In contrast to that the T cells transplanted group showed delayed
engraftment of donor cells and there was no expression of C46 in blood and lymphatic organs. .
In conclusion, when considering HIV gene therapy focusing CD4+ T cells, potential problems of
T cell activation status as related to the desired clinical effect must be addressed. These results
might open the way for a gene therapy targeting mainly or exclusively activated T cells and
could be exploited for immunostimulatory as well as suppressive approaches.
In addition to infectious viral particles, hepatitis B virus-replicating cells secrete high amounts of SVPs, which are ssembled by HBsAg in the shape of spheres and filaments but lack any capsid and genome. Filaments are characterized by a much higher amount of the surface protein LHBs as compared to spheres. Spheres are
released via the constitutive secretory pathway, while viral particles are ESCRT-dependently released via MVBs. The interaction of virions with the ESCRT machinery is mediated by α-taxilin that connects the PreS1 domain of LHBs with the ESCRT-component tsg101. Since viral particles and filaments contain a significant amount of LHBs, it is unclear whether filaments are secreted as spheres or released like viral particles. To study the release pathways of HBV filaments in the absence of viral particles, A core-deficient
HBV mutant (1.2×HBVΔCore) was generated by site-directed mutagenesis based on wt1.2x HBV. The start codon of core protein was mutated into stop codon, which was confirmed by DNA sequencing. Data from HBsAg ELISA, Western blot, immunofluorescence microscopy and immunoelectron microscopy showed that the lack of core protein did neither affect the production nor the secretion of HBV SVPs. The intracellular distribution of
LHBs and SHBs showed no difference between wtHBV and the core-deficient mutant expressing cells. Therefore, this system is suitable to investigate the release pathway of HBV filaments in the absence of viral particles. Confocal microscopy analysis of cells cotransfected core-deficient mutants with peYFPRab7 as marker for the endosomal/MVB pathway or with pGalT-eGFP as marker for the trans Golgi apparatus showed that YFP-Rab7, but not GalT-GFP, partially colocalized with LHBs. Furthermore, LHBs could be found in dilated MVBs by immune electron microscopy of ultrathin sections. This was confirmed by isolation of MVBs by cell fractionation using discontinuous sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation and percoll-based linear gradient ultracentrifugation, indicating that filaments enter MVBs in the absence of virion formation. Moreover, inhibition of MVB biogenesis by the small molecular inhibitor U18666A significantly abolished the release of filaments in a dose-dependent manner, but no inhibition could be observed in the production. In contrast, no inhibition on the secretion and production of spheres could be
detected. Inhibition of ESCRT-functionality by coexpression of transdominant negative mutants (Vps4A, Vps4B, CHMP3) abolished the release of filaments while secretion of spheres was not affected. These data indicate that in contrast Abstract 73 to spheres while are secreted via the secretory pathway, filaments are released via ESCRT/MVB pathway like infectious viral particles.
Two main types of methods are used in gene therapy: integrating vectors and nuclease-based genome engineering. Nucleases are site-specific and are efficient for knock-outs, but inefficient at inserting long DNA sequences. Integrating vectors perform this task with high efficiency, but their insertion occurs at random genomic positions. This can result in transformation of target cells, which leads to severe adverse events in a gene therapy context. Thus, it is of great interest to develop novel genome engineering tools that combine the advantages of both technologies. The main focus of this thesis is on generating such a targetable integrating vector.
The integrating vector used in this project is the Sleeping Beauty (SB) transposon, a DNA transposon characterized by high activity across a wide range of cells. The SB transposase was combined with an RNA-guided Cas9 nuclease domain. This nuclease component was meant to direct transposase integration to specific targets defined by RNAs. The SB transposase was fused to cleavage-inactivated Cas9 (dCas9) to tether it to the target sites. In addition, adapter proteins consisting of dCas9 and domains non-covalently interacting with SB transposase or the SB transposon were generated. All constituent domains of these fusion proteins were tested in enzymatic assays and almost all enzymatic activities could be verified.
Combining the fusion protein dCas9-SB100X with a gRNA binding a sequence from the AluY repetitive element resulted in a weak, but statistically significant enrichment around sites bound by the gRNA. This enrichment was ca. 2-fold and occurred within a 300 bp window downstream of target sites, or within the AluY element.
Targeting with adapter proteins and targeting of other targets (L1 elements or single-copy targets) did not result in statistically significant effects. Single-copy targets tested included the HPRT gene and three specifically selected GSH targets that were known to be receptive to SB insertions. The combination with a more sequence-specific transposase mutant also failed to increase specificity to a level allowing targeting of single-copy loci. Genome-wide analysis of insertions however demonstrated, that dCas9-SB100X has a different insertion profile than SB100X, regardless of the gRNA used.
As low efficiency of retargeting is likely a consequence of the high background activity of the SB100X transposase in the fusion constructs, a SB mutant with reduced DNA affinity, SB(C42), was generated. For this mutant, transposition activity was partly dependent on a dCas9 domain being supplied with a multi-copy target gRNA, specifically a 2-fold increase in the presence of a AluY-directed gRNA. Whether using this mutant results in improved targeting remains to be determined.
In a side project, an attempt was made to direct SB insertions to ribosomal DNA by fusing the transposase to a nucleolar protein. This fusion transposase partially localized to nucleoli and insertions catalyzed by this transposase were found to be enriched in nucleolus organizer regions (NORs) and nucleolus-associated domains (NADs).
The aim of a second side project was increasing the ratio between homology-directed repair (HDR) and non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) at Cas9-mediated double-strand breaks (DSBs). To achieve this, Cas9 was fused to DNA-interacting domains and corresponding binding sequences were fused to the homology donors. While an increased HDR/NHEJ ration could be observed for the fusion proteins, it was not dependent on the presence on the binding sequences in the donor molecules.
In the recent years, myxobacteria have emerged as a novel source of natural compounds with structural diversity and biological activity for drug discovery. In this work, the two myxobacterial compounds archazolid and vioprolide were characterized for their potential pharmacological effects in vascular endothelial cells. Archazolid is a wellestablished v-ATPase inhibitor found in Archangium gephyra and Cystobacter spec. As the v-ATPase represents a promising target in cancer treatment, the effects of archazolid have been intensively studied in cancer cells, but rarely in endothelial cells. Vioprolide is an antifungal and cytotoxic metabolite obtained from Cystobacter violaceus. There are only few studies on vioprolide, most of them focusing on its biosynthesis. Preliminary studies revealed that it inhibited TNF-induced expression of ICAM-1, indicating possible anti-inflammatory properties. As the endothelium plays an important role in cancer and inflammation, it represents an attractive drug target. Therefore, the archazolid and vioprolide were investigated regarding their effects on endothelial cells.
V-ATPase inhibition by archazolid resulted in anti-tumor and anti-metastatic effects in vitro and in vivo. Archazolid was used to study the consequences of v-ATPase inhibition in endothelial cells that might contribute to the anti-metastatic activities observed in vivo. To analyze the impact of archazolid on the interaction endothelial and cancer cells, in vitro cell adhesion and transmigration assays were performed using primary HUVEC or immortalized HMEC-1 and different cancer cell types (MDA-MB-231, PC-3 and Jurkat cells). For these experiments, only the endothelial cells were treated with archazolid. VATPase inhibition by archazolid led to an increased adhesion of the metastatic breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231 and prostate cancer cell line PC-3 onto endothelial cells whereas the adhesion of Jurkat cells was unaffected. Interestingly, archazolid treatment of HUVECs decreased the transendothelial migration of MDA-MB-231 cells. Endothelial ICAM-1, VCAM-1, E-selectin and N-cadherin are potential ligands of interacting cancer cells. Therefore, the mRNA and surface protein levels of these cell adhesion molecules were measured via qRT-PCR and flow cytometry, respectively. These adhesion molecules were not responsible for the archazolid-induced cancer cell adhesion, as archazolid treatment of HUVECs did not upregulate their mRNA or surface expression. Instead, cell adhesion assays using a monoclonal antibody against integrin subunit β1 showed that β1-integrins expressed on MDA-MB-231 and PC-3 cells mediated the archazolid-induced cancer cell adhesion. Cell adhesion assays onto plastic coated with ECM components which are the major ligands of β1-integrins, revealed that MDA-MB231 and PC-3 cells preferably interact with collagen. So next, we investigated the influence of archazolid on surface collagen levels in HUVECs by immunostaining, which demonstrated an increase of nearly 50 % upon archazolid treatment. We confirmed the hypothesis that the expression and activity of cathepsin B, a lysosomal enzyme that degrades extracellular matrix components including collagen, was inhibited by archazolid in endothelial cells. Finally, overexpression of cathepsin B reduced the cancer cell adhesion on archazolid-treated HUVECs, but also in control cells, indicating a negative correlation between cathepsin B expression and cancer cell adhesion.
The influence of vioprolide on the interaction of endothelial cells with leukocytes was analyzed by in vitro cell adhesion assays using HUVECs and primary monocytes, THP-1 or Jurkat cells. Vioprolide inhibited the adhesion of these cells onto TNF-activated HUVECs. In addition, the endothelial-leukocyte interaction was observed in vivo by intravital microscopy in the mouse cremaster muscle. Vioprolide prevented the TNFinduced firm adhesion and transmigration of leukocytes, while leukocyte rolling was not affected. ICAM-1, VCAM-1 and E-selectin are cell adhesion molecules, which are upregulated by TNF and mediate leukocyte adhesion onto endothelial cells. Therefore, flow cytometric analysis was performed to measure their surface expression. Vioprolide significantly decreased TNF-induced expression of surface ICAM-1, VCAM-1 and E-selectin, which was in line with the in vitro results. In vivo, vioprolide may act in a different way on E-selectin expression, so that leukocyte rolling, which is governed by E-selectin, remained unaffected. qRT-PCR experiments revealed that the mRNA expression of ICAM-1 and VCAM-1 were also reduced by vioprolide, indicating a regulation on transcriptional level. In contrast, the mRNA expression of E-selectin was not decreased at the timepoint when surface protein expression was diminished. The induction of these cell adhesion molecules is mainly mediated by the transcription factor NFκB. A Dual-Luciferase® reporter assay was used to study the impact of vioprolide on the TNF-induced NFκB promotor activity. Vioprolide blocked the TNF-induced NFκB promotor activity while the TNF-induced IκBα degradation and nuclear translocation of the NFκB subunit p65 was not altered by vioprolide. Western blot analysis revealed that vioprolide had no effect on the activation of MAPK (p38, JNK) and AKT by TNF, which could interfere with the NFκB-dependent gene expression.
Taken together, archazolid and vioprolide are interesting myxobacterial compounds with different modes of actions. The study suggests that the v-ATPase inhibitor archazolid impairs the expression and activity of cathepsin B in endothelial cells, which leads to a higher amount of collagen on the endothelial surface. As a result, the adhesion of β1-integrin expressing metastatic cancer cells onto archazolid-treated endothelial cells increased while transendothelial migration was reduced. Further, archazolid represents a promising tool to elucidate the role of v-ATPase in endothelial cells. Vioprolide was able to prevent TNF-induced endothelial-leukocyte interaction in vitro and in vivo by interfering with NFκB-dependent gene expression. Further research is required to enlighten the underlying mechanism and the direct target of vioprolide.
In this research project we aimed to generate genetically modified megakaryocytes and platelets, by targeting protein expression to their secretory alpha-granules to delivery ectopic or therapeutic proteins, to be stored and kept there until an external stimulus triggers platelet activation and platelet secretion takes place. During platelet activation, the therapeutic proteins would then be released to the extracellular space, either as a soluble protein or exposed as a transmembrane protein on the cell surface of platelets. For long-term approaches, genetic modifications must be introduced at the hematopoietic stem cell level.
AIMS: As first approach, we aimed to characterize the lineage-specificity of expression of six different promoter fragments in lentiviral vectors: the murine platelet factor 4 (mPf4) 1222 bp (-1074 to +148), human glycoprotein Ib alpha (hGP1BA) 595 bp (-265 to +330), a short and a longer fragment of the human glycoprotein 6 (hGP6 / hGP6s) 351 bp (-322 to +29) / 726 bp (-697 to +29), as well the human glycoprotein 9 (GP9) promoter 794 bp (-782 to -12). These promoter fragments were included as internal cellular promoters in self-inactivating lentiviral vectors (SIN), using an enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) as gene reporter. GFP detection was evaluated in vitro (in transduced non-megakaryocitc blood cell progenitors and in-vitro differentiated megakaryocytes) and in vivo (Bone marrow cells, blood cells and spleen cells). For targeting of proteins to the secretory alpha granules of megakaryocytes and platelets, we followed two strategies: A) The sorting signal of the cytokine RANTES was fused N-terminally to the destabilized GFP, d2eGFP (RANTES. d2eGFP), to deliver the protein into the granules as soluble cargo. B) The transmembrane granular targeting sequence of P-selectin (the transmembrane domain and cytoplasmic tail (referred as TDCT) was fused to d2eGFP or the B domain deleted codon optimized human coagulation Factor VIII cDNA (referred as BDcohFVIII_TDCT or FVIII_TDCT), to deliver the protein into the membrane of alpha granules. These two strategies were tested in-vitro, from transduced differentiated megakaryocytes in liquid cultures, and in-vivo, by analysis of genetically modified platelets by means of Laser Scanning Confocal Microscopy (LSM) in colocalization analysis (performed at the single cell level) and fluorescence intensity analysis.
RESULTS: GFP expression in blood cells from transplanted mice was significantly higher in platelets, with a smaller background promoter activity in leukocytes and erythrocytes. The highest expression was observed from the mPf4-vector, followed by hGP1BA, hGP6 and hGP6s vectors, identifying the hGP6 vectors as the most restricted to the megakaryocyte and platelet lineage. Analysis in bone marrow cells showed that hGP6-vectors have the lowest activity in the hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPC) with less than 10% of GFP positive stem cells. Surprisingly, the mPf4 and hGP1BA vectors were both highly active in the HSPC, in a range of 20 to 70% of GFP-positive cells. Polyploidization in later stages of MK-maturation of in-vitro Mks differentiated from Mpl-/- lineage marker negative cells were recovered after gene transfer of the thrombopoietin receptor Mpl, under the control of MK-specific vectors in differentiated into MKs. These results were corroborated in in-vivo analysis, where Mpl-/- mice transplanted with lin-BM cells transduced with the mPf4.Mpl and hGP6.Mpl vectors, showed significantly elevated platelet counts compared to control mice transplanted with a GFP-encoding control vector (PGK-GFP). In the Fluorescent intensity and colocalization analysis of transduced megakaryocytes with the targeting vectors, we observed a significant difference in the GFP targeting compared with those MK transduced with the non-targeting vectors. The median of the WCC values observed from the RANTES.d2eGFP targeting vector was 0.8 (80 % of colocalization) with P-selectin stained granules, and 0.7 (70%) with von Willebrand Factor stained granules. In the case of the non-targeting vector SFFV.d2eGFP the median of the WCC observed were <0.3 (30%) both in P-selectin and von Willebrand Factor stained granules. We observed as well that the GFP signal of MK transduced with the P-selectin.d2eGFP fusion overlapped the signals emitted by P-selectin and von Willebrand factor stained granules, not just in LSM-digitalized images but in the fluorescens intensity analysis as well, indicating a clear signal of GFP colocalization. Likewise, an evident signal overlap between the targeted FVIII (FVIII_TDCT) with the P-selectin / von Willebrand marker was observed. Colocalization and fluorescens intensity analysis performed on activated platelets from transplanted mice with the targeting vectors, corroborated what was previously observed in in-vitro megakaryocytes. The genetic modification of megakaryocyte and platelets will allow in the furture, not just the development of new generation of cells with advanced functions, but it will help us to elucidate new mechanisms and pathways of important cellular processes, by modifying cell function and cell interactions.
Pretubulysin (PT), a biosynthetic precursor of the myxobacterial compound tubulysin D, was recently identified as a novel microtubule-targeting agent (MTA) causing microtubule destabilization. MTAs are the most frequently used chemotherapeutic drugs. They are well studied regarding their direct cytotoxic effects against various tumors as well as for their anti-angiogenic and vascular-disrupting action addressing endothelial cells of the tumor vasculature. However, the impact of MTAs on endothelial cells of the non-tumor vasculature has been largely neglected, although tumor cell interactions with the healthy endothelium play a crucial role in the process of cancer metastasis. Besides their use as potent anti-cancer drugs, some MTAs such as colchicine are traditionally used or recommended for the therapy of inflammatory diseases. Here, too, the role of endothelial cells has been largely neglected, although the endothelium is crucially involved in regulating the process of inflammation.
In the present study, the impact of PT on tumor-endothelial cell interactions was therefore analyzed in vitro to gain insights into the mechanism underlying its anti-metastatic effect that was recently confirmed in vivo. In the second part of this work, the influence of PT and other MTAs, namely the microtubule-destabilizing compounds vincristine (VIN) and colchicine (COL) and the microtubule-stabilizing drug paclitaxel (PAC), on leukocyte-endothelial cell interactions was investigated in vitro and in vivo (only PT). It is important to mention that in all in vitro experiments solely endothelial cells and not tumor cells or leukocytes were treated with the MTAs to strictly focus on the role of the endothelium in the action of these compounds.
The impact of PT on tumor-endothelial cell interactions was analyzed in vitro by cell adhesion and transendothelial migration assays as well as immunocytochemistry using the breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231 and primary human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs). The treatment of HUVECs with PT increased the adhesion of MDA cells onto the endothelial monolayer, whereas their transendothelial migration was reduced by the compound. Thereafter, the influence of PT on the endothelial cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) E-selectin, N-cadherin, ICAM-1, VCAM-1 and galectin-3 and on the CXCL12/CXCR4 chemokine system was examined, since they might be involved in the PT-triggered tumor cell adhesion. Interestingly, although PT induced the upregulation of ICAM-1, VCAM-1, N-cadherin and CXCL12, cell adhesion assays using neutralizing antibodies or the CXCL12 inhibitor AMD3100 revealed that all these molecules were dispensable for the PT-evoked tumor cell adhesion. As PT induces the formation of interendothelial gaps and MDA cells might adhere onto components of the underlying extracellular matrix (ECM), the precise location of MDA cells attached to the PT-treated endothelial monolayer was investigated. Instead of a direct interaction between tumor and endothelial cells, this work showed that MDA cells preferred to adhere to the ECM component collagen that was exposed within PT-triggered endothelial gaps. Both the PT-evoked increase in tumor cell adhesion onto and the decrease in trans-endothelial migration were completely abolished when β1-integrins were blocked on MDA cells. Similar results were obtained when endothelial cells were treated with VIN and COL but not PAC, indicating that the observed effects of PT depend on its microtubule-destabilizing activity.
The impact of PT, VIN, COL and PAC on leukocyte-endothelial cell interactions was analyzed in vivo (only PT) by intravital microscopy of the mouse cremaster muscle and in vitro by cell adhesion assays using the monocyte-like cell line THP-1 and TNFα-activated human dermal microvascular endothelial cells (HMEC-1). While PT did not affect the rolling of leukocytes on the endothelium, their firm adhesion onto and transmigration through the activated endothelium was reduced by PT in vivo. In accordance, the treatment of HMEC-1 with PT, VIN and COL decreased the TNFα-induced adhesion of THP-1 cells onto the endothelial monolayer, whereas PAC had no influence on this process. Thereafter, the influence of PT, VIN, COL and PAC on endothelial ICAM-1 and VCAM-1 was examined, since these molecules are substantially involved in the firm adhesion of leukocytes onto the endothelium. The cell surface protein expression of ICAM-1 and VCAM-1 was reduced by PT, VIN and COL in activated endothelial cells, whereas PAC did only slightly affect the TNFα-induced upregulation of VCAM-1. As the pro-inflammatory transcription factor NFκB plays a crucial role in the TNFα-induced expression of these CAMs, the impact of the MTAs on the NFκB promotor activity was investigated. While PT, VIN and COL decreased the activation of NFκB in activated endothelial cells, PAC did not affect this process. However, in contrast to the strong effects regarding the cell surface protein expression of ICAM-1 and VCAM-1, the effects of PT, VIN and COL on the NFκB activity was rather low. Thus, the used MTAs might also affect other relevant signaling pathways and/or the intracellular transport of CAMs might be influenced by the impact of the MTAs on the microtubule network.
Taken together, the current study provides – at least in part – an explanation for the anti-metastatic potential of PT and gives first insights into the use of PT and VIN as anti-inflammatory drugs. Moreover, this work highlights the endothelium as an attractive target for the development of new anti-cancer and anti-inflammatory drugs.