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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.
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.
The enzyme acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) plays a fundamental role in the fatty acid metabolism. It regulates the first and rate limiting step in the biosynthesis of fatty acids by catalyzing the carboxylation of acetyl-CoA to malonyl-CoA and exists as two different isoforms, ACC1 and ACC2. In the last few years, ACC has been reported as an attractive drug target for treating different diseases, such as insulin resistance, hepatic steatosis, dyslipidemia, obesity, metabolic syndrome and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. An altered fatty acid metabolism is also associated with cancer cell proliferation. In general, the inhibition of ACC provides two possibilities to regulate the fatty acid metabolism: It blocks the de novo lipogenesis in lipogenic tissues and stimulates the mitochondrial fatty acid β-oxidation. Surprisingly, the role of ACC in human vascular endothelial cells has been neglected so far. This work aimed to investigate the role of the ACC/fatty acid metabolism in regulating important endothelial cell functions like proliferation, migration and tube formation.
To investigate the function of ACC, the ACC-inhibitor soraphen A as well as an siRNA-based approach were used. This study revealed that ACC1 is the predominant isoform both in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) and in human dermal microvascular endothelial cells (HMECs). Inhibition of ACC via soraphen A resulted in decreased levels of malonyl-CoA and shifted the lipid composition of endothelial cell membranes. Consequently, membrane fluidity, filopodia formation and the migratory capacity were attenuated. Increasing amounts of longer acyl chains within the phospholipid subgroup phosphatidylcholine (PC) were suggested to overcompensate the shift towards shorter acyl chains within phosphatidylglycerol (PG), which resulted in a dominating effect on regulating the membrane fluidity. Most importantly, this work provided a link between changes in the phospholipid composition and altered endothelial cell migration. The antimigratory effect of soraphen A was linked to a reduced amount of PG and to an increased amount of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) within the phospholipid cell membrane. This link was unknown in the literature so far. Interestingly, a reduced filopodia formation was observed upon ACC inhibition via soraphen A, which presumably caused the impaired migratory capacity.
This work revealed a relationship between ACC/fatty acid metabolism, membrane lipid composition and endothelial cell migration. The natural compound soraphen A emerged as a valuable chemical tool to analyze the role of ACC/fatty acid metabolism in regulating important endothelial cell functions. Furthermore, regulating endothelial cell migration via ACC inhibition promises beneficial therapeutic perspectives for the treatment of cell migration-related disorders, such as ischemia reperfusion injury, diabetic angiopathy, macular degeneration, rheumatoid arthritis, wound healing defects and cancer.