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Proton-pumping complex I of the mitochondrial respiratory chain is among the largest and most complex membrane protein complexes. The enzyme contributes substantially to oxidative energy-conversion in eukaryotic cells. Its malfunctions are implicated in many hereditary and degenerative disorders. Here, we report the X-ray structure of mitochondrial complex I at 3.6- 3.9 Å resolution describing in detail the central subunits that execute the bioenergetic function. A continuous axis of basic and acidic residues running centrally through the membrane arm connects the ubiquinone reduction site in the hydrophilic arm to four putative proton-pumping units. The binding position for a substrate analogous inhibitor and blockage of the predicted ubiquinone binding site provide a model for the ‘deactive’ form of the enzyme. The proposed transition into the active form is based on a concerted structural rearrangement at the ubiquinone reduction site rendering support for a two-state stabilization-change mechanism of protonpumping.
Mechanism of Na+-dependent citrate transport from the structure of an asymmetrical CitS dimer
(2015)
The common human pathogen Salmonella enterica takes up citrate as a nutrient via the sodium symporter SeCitS. Uniquely, our 2.5 Å x-ray structure of the SeCitS dimer shows three different conformations of the active protomer. One protomer is in the outside-facing state. Two are in different inside-facing states. All three states resolve the substrates in their respective binding environments. Together with comprehensive functional studies on reconstituted proteoliposomes, the structures explain the transport mechanism in detail. Our results indicate a six-step process, with a rigid-body 31° rotation of a helix bundle that translocates the bound substrates by 16 Å across the membrane. Similar transport mechanisms may apply to a wide variety of related and unrelated secondary transporters, including important drug targets.
Die Arachidonsäurekaskade spielt bei Entzündungsprozessen und der Schmerzentstehung eine wichtige Rolle. Deren primäre Produkte, die Leukotriene und die Prostaglandine, sind entzündungsfördernde Mediatoren und nehmen Einfluss auf den Entzündungs-auflösendenprozess und sind bei einer Dysregulation für diverse Erkrankungen wie z.B. Asthma bronchiale und allergische Rhinitis mitverantwortlich. Die Kaskade gliedert sich mit ihren beiden Hauptenzymen, Cyclooxygenase und 5-Lipoxygenase (5-LO), in zwei Wege auf. Beide Enzyme sind außerdem in der Lage entzündungsauflösenden Mediatoren zu bilden. Die Mediatoren wie z.B. Lipoxin können im Zellstoffwechsel einerseits über die Lipoxygenase-Route, oder andererseits wie „aspirin-triggered“-Lipoxin von der durch geeignete Wirkstoffe acetylierten Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) katalysiert werden. Diese Mediatoren werden benötigt, um (chronische) Entzündungen und beschädigtes Gewebe zurück zur Homöostase zu führen.
Die Pharmakotherapie chronisch entzündlicher Erkrankungen mit guter Wirksamkeit und verträglichem Profil bei Langzeiteinnahme stellt jedoch eine Herausforderung dar. Die Therapie verzögern oft, z. B bei Einnahme von nicht-steroidalen Antirheumatika (NSAR), die Entzündungsauflösung, da die Bildung von entzündungshemmenden und entzündungs-auflösenden Lipidmediatoren gehemmt werden. Die gezielte Modulation und Einflussnahme auf die Arachidonsäurekaskade an einem der beiden Enzyme, stellt daher einen guten Ansatz für eine verbesserte Therapiemöglichkeit von (chronischen) entzündlichen Krankheiten dar. Diese Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit der Synthese von Modulatoren und Inhibitoren der Arachidonsäurekaskade. Zum einen befasst sie sich mit der Entwicklung von irreversiblen COX-2-acetylierenden Substanzen als neues anti-entzündliches und entzündungsauflösendes Prinzip. Zum anderen mit der Untersuchung der Struktur-Wirkungsbeziehung (SAR) von 2-Aminothiazolen als direkte 5-LO-Inhibitoren ausgehend von SKI-II, welches zuvor als Leitstruktur zur Entwicklung von 5-LO-Inhibitoren entdeckt wurde.
Als Leitstrukturen für die irreversiblen COX-2-acetylierenden Substanzen wurden bekannte COX-2 selektive Substanzen ausgewählt sowie vereinzelte nicht-selektive NSAR. Es wurden an der COX-2 Kristallstruktur Docking-Studien durchgeführt, um die geeignetsten Positionen für die Einführung einer (labilen) Acetylgruppe zu identifizieren. Aufgrund dieser Studien wurden drei Positionen ausgewählt zur Derivatisierung. Es wurden daraufhin zahlreiche Derivate synthetisiert von Celecoxib, Valdecoxib, Rofecoxib, Etericoxib, als Vertreter der (COX-2) selektive Inhibitoren, sowie von Acetylsalicylsäure, Diclofenac und Nimesulid-Analoga als Vertreter der nicht-selektiven NSARs. Zusätzlich wurden Derivate synthetisiert mit Michael-Akzeptoren als kovalente bindende Komponente. Alle synthetisierten Substanzen wurden sukzessiv auf ihre COX inhibitorischen Eigenschaften hin untersucht und auf COX-2 Selektivitäten überprüft. Weiterhin wurden von allen Derivaten Auswaschungs-Studien durchgeführt als Vorversuche welche Derivate eine irreversible COX-2-Inhibition hervorrufen. In den Vorversuchen zeigte die Verbindung ST-1650 am deutlichsten eine COX-2-Selektivität sowie eine starke irreversible Inhibition der COX-2. Die Verbindung ST-1650 wurde weiterhin auf indirekte Hinweise zur Entstehung von heilungsfördernden Mediatoren untersucht anhand von: M1-Macrophagen Polarisation und einem Schmerzmodell, dem Zymosan-Überempfindlichkeit Pfotenmodell. Im Makrophagen-Modell konnte ST-1650 keine Phänotypverschiebung hinzu entzündungsauflösenden M2-Makrophagen bewirken, sowie in den Schmerzmodellen leider keine schnellere Schmerzauflösung als die Kontrollgruppe. Ob diese Effekte durch mangelnde oder zu geringer Entstehung von entzündungshemmenden Mediatoren zurückzuführen ist, ist noch unklar.
Für die SAR der 2-Aminothiazole als direkte 5-LO-Inhibitoren wurden über 60 Verbindungen synthetisiert und untersucht. Zu Beginn erfolgte eine Optimierung der Grundstruktur als 5-LO-Inhibitor. Es wurden die Einflüsse der Substituenten des Thiazolsrings und des Aminolinkers auf die 5-LO-Aktivität ermittelt, um die SAR initialer Arbeiten zu vertiefen. Nach der SAR-Untersuchung im intakten Zellsystem konnten durch Kombination bevorzugter Strukturelemente die zwei Verbindungen ST-1853 und ST-1906, als neue potente 5-LO-Inhibitoren entwickelt werden, die sich als nicht-toxisch herausstellten. Diese beiden 5-LO-Inhibitoren wirken um einen Faktor 10 potenter und sind weniger toxisch verglichen mit der Leitstruktur SKI-II. ST-1853 wurde innerhalb der Arachidonsäurekaskade auch auf Off-targets getestet, deren Aktivitäten sie erst bei 100-fach höherer Konzentration beeinflusst, sowie in humanem Vollblut, wo sie sich ihre 10-fach bessere Wirksamkeit im Vergleich zu SKI-II bestätigte. Darüber hinaus erwies sich ST-1853 bei den ersten Überprüfungen seiner Stabilität unter physiologischen Bedingungen wie bei der in vitro Metabolisierung durch Rattenlebermikrosomen als ausreichend stabil und daher zur weiteren Charakterisierung gut geeignet.
In dieser Arbeit werden Projekte beschrieben, in denen das Adsorptionsverhalten von Proteinen und Bakterien an verschiedene Materialoberflächen manipuliert wird.
Durch die Reaktion verschiedener oxidischer Oberflächen mit Glycidol konnten biorepulsive Polyglycerolschichten erzeugt werden. Für die Herstellung dieser Polyglycerolschichten wurden zwei unterschiedliche Verfahren entwickelt und untersucht. Die erste Methode beruht auf der Bildung einer aminoterminierten Monolage auf Silicium-Oberflächen, an der in einem zweiten Schritt die Polymerisation von Glycidol durchgeführt wird. Die Dicke der angebundenen Polyglycerolschicht ist abhängig von der Beschichtungsdauer, wobei die dicksten Schichten bis zu 98% der Bakterienadhäsion unterdrücken können. Das zweite Verfahren ist die direkte Anbindung von stabilen Polyglycerol-Beschichtungen an Silicium-, Aluminium- oder Stahl-Oberflächen. Je größer die abgeschiedene Polyglycerolmenge ist, desto höher ist die Biorepulsivität der Schicht, was durch Adsorptionstests mit Proteinen und ermittelt wurde.
Polyglycerolschichten eignen sich besonders gut für die nachträgliche Modifizierung. So konnten beispielsweise mittels Elektronenstrahlen laterale Strukturierungen der Polyglycerol-beschichteten Oberflächen erfolgreich durchgeführt werden. Sensorisch aktive Moleküle wie Ethylendiamintetraessigsäure oder Biotin konnten im Rahmen dieser Arbeit nachträglich an Polyglycerolschichten angebunden werden. Die Aktivität der Bindungsstellen nach der Anbindung an die Oberfläche konnte dabei durch spezifische Erkennungsereignisse nachgewiesen werden.
Im zweiten Teil dieser Arbeit wurden selbstanordnende Monoschichten mit Oligoethylenglycol (OEG)-Kopfgruppen und Thiolat-Ankergruppen verwendet, um lateral strukturierbare, biorepulsive Schichten auf Gold zu erzeugen. Es wurde untersucht, ob derartige OEG-Monolagen kontrolliert durch langwelliges UV-Licht (390 nm) abgebaut werden können, um proteinbindende und proteinrepulsive Bereiche auf einer Substrat-Oberfläche zu generieren. Die Bestrahlung mit UV-Licht bewirkte die Oxidation und Abspaltung der Ethylenglycol-Einheiten, wodurch die unspezifische Adsorption von Proteinen erfolgen kann. Zusätzlich konnten Photooxidations-Reaktionen an der Thiolat-Ankergruppe nachgewiesen werden, welche die Ablösung des SAM-Bausteins zur Folge haben.
Für den Einsatz von Lithographie-Techniken in mikrofluidischen Anlagen wurde das Abbauverhalten der biorepulsiven Monolage bei der Bestrahlung unter Wasser untersucht. In Abwesenheit von molekularem Sauerstoff kommt es hier lediglich zur Spaltung der Etherbindung zwischen den Ethylenglycol-Einheiten. Die Beobachtung, dass die An- bzw. Abwesenheit von molekularem Sauerstoff zu zwei unterschiedlichen Abbaumechanismen führt, kann für die Feinabstimmung der Oberflächenbeschaffenheit und somit der Proteinanlagerung genutzt werden.
Biorepulsive OEG-Monolagen können auch dazu verwendet werden, um gezielt bestimmte Biomoleküle anzulagern. Dazu können die Monolagen mit Erkennungsstellen ausgestattet werden, welche die spezifische Anbindung einer Biomolekül-Spezies ermöglichen. Gerade bei der Detektion von großen Biomolekülen oder Mikroorganismen spielt jedoch nicht nur die chemische Zusammensetzung, sondern auch die Ausrichtung der Bindungsstelle eine entscheidende Rolle. Für die Untersuchung des Orientierungseinflusses wurden Moleküle verwendet, die neben einer Mannose-Einheit als Bindungsstelle für Bakterien auch eine Azobenzol-Gruppe, welche die strahlungsinduzierte reversible Schaltung der Konformation ermöglicht, tragen. Bakterien-Adhäsionstests zeigten, dass sich die Orientierung der Mannose-Einheit auf die Anbindung der Bakterien auswirkt.
Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden neuartige Methoden zur Herstellung, Charakterisierung und Strukturierung biorepulsiver und biosensorischer Schichten entwickelt. Die dadurch gewonnenen Erkenntnisse sind von bedeutender wissenschaftlicher Relevanz und ermöglichen die potentielle industrielle Anwendung der entwickelten Methoden im Kontext der Material- und Biotechnologie sowie der Nanofabrikation.
Die Glühbirne hat ausgedient. Auch Energiesparlampen sind nur eine Übergangslösung. Große Hoffnungen richten sich auf organische Leuchtdioden, zumal man daraus auch großflächige und biegsame Displays und Flachbildschirme herstellen kann. Für eines der größten Probleme, das Ausbleichen der blauen Leuchtstoffe, findet man immer bessere Lösungen. Anwendungen, die heute noch wie Science-Fiction klingen, rücken damit in erreichbare Nähe.
Transport processes across the membrane are essential to ensure survival of every living cell. Therefore, the exchange of membrane impermeable molecules is mediated by specific transport proteins, which are embedded in the lipid bilayer.
One important class comprises secondary active transporters, which couple very efficiently the uphill transport of the main substrate against its concentration gradient to the downhill transport of an additional substrate. These transporters are widely distributed among all kingdoms of life and accomplish many crucial functions. One function is to counteract the deleterious effect of hyperosmotic stress in bacteria. Several members of the BCCT (betaine-choline-carnitinetransport) family of secondary transporters mediate osmostress protection by the accumulation of the compatible solute betaine or its precursor choline (Lamark et al., 1991; Peter et al., 1996; Ziegler et al., 2010). Besides osmo-dependent sodium or proton-coupled symporters, the BCCT family includes few rare representatives of osmo-independent transporters such as the substrate:product antiporter CaiT from E. coli (Jung et al., 2002; Ziegler et al., 2010).
The best-characterized member of the BCCT family is the sodium-coupled betaine transporter BetP from Corynebacterium glutamicum. BetP together with the ABCtransporter OpuA and the H+-solute symporter ProP, became a paradigm for osmoregulated osmolyte transport. Although, all three transporters were extensively studied, the general mechanism of osmoregulation is still far from being understood. Thus, one task of this thesis was to elucidate further the regulatory properties of BetP.
BetP is tightly regulated by osmotic stress and is able to increase its basal betaine uptake activity dramatically upon elevated osmolalities within one second (Peter et al., 1998a). The osmotic stress is sensed by BetP via two stimuli, one is the increase of the internal K+ concentration above a threshold of 220 mM (Rübenhagen et al., 2001), the second is related to a change in the physical state of the membrane (Maximov et al., 2014). So far, several solved crystal structures in combination with functional and computational analysis provided insights into the coupling mechanism of betaine and its co-substrate sodium (Khafizov et al., 2012; Perez et al., 2012). Despite the wealth of data, the precise regulatory mechanism of trimeric BetP is still unclear.
Pflanzen, aber auch einige Bakterien und Archäen verfügen über hocheffiziente Mechanismen, Licht in Energie umzuwandeln. Photovoltaik-Zellen reichen an die Perfektion dieser natürlichen Systeme noch lange nicht heran. Deshalb versuchen Forscher, mit ultraschnellen spektroskopischen Methoden der Natur in die Karten zu schauen und von ihr zu lernen.
We compiled an NMR data set consisting of exact nuclear Overhauser enhancement (eNOE) distance limits, residual dipolar couplings (RDCs) and scalar (J) couplings for GB3, which forms one of the largest and most diverse data set for structural characterization of a protein to date. All data have small experimental errors, which are carefully estimated. We use the data in the research article Vogeli et al., 2015, Complementarity and congruence between exact NOEs and traditional NMR probes for spatial decoding of protein dynamics, J. Struct. Biol., 191, 3, 306–317, doi:10.1016/j.jsb.2015.07.008 [1] for cross-validation in multiple-state structural ensemble calculation. We advocate this set to be an ideal test case for molecular dynamics simulations and structure calculations.
CD44v6, a member of the CD44 family of transmembrane glycoproteins is a co-receptor for two receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs), Met and VEGFR-2 (vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2). CD44v6 is not only required for the activation of these RTKs but also for signalling. In order to understand the role of CD44v6 in Met and VEGFR-2 activation and signalling we tested whether CD44v6 binds to their ligands, HGF (hepatocyte growth factor) and VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor), respectively. FACS analysis and cellular ELISA showed binding of HGF and VEGF only to cells expressing CD44v6. Direct binding of CD44v6 to HGF and VEGF was demonstrated in pull-down assays and the binding affinities were determined using MicroScale Thermophoresis, fluorescence correlation spectroscopy and fluorescence anisotropy. The binding affinity of CD44v6 to HGF is in the micromolar range in contrast with the high-affinity binding measured in the case of VEGF and CD44v6, which is in the nanomolar range. These data reveal a heparan sulfate-independent direct binding of CD44v6 to the ligands of Met and VEGFR-2 and suggest different roles of CD44v6 for these RTKs.
In the title salt, [Ag(C27H36N2)2]Cl·C4H8O, the AgI atom is coordinated by two 1,3-bis(2,6-dimethylphenyl)imidazol-2-ylidene ligands. The imidazole rings are inclined to one another by 46.69 (13)° and the benzene rings in each ligand are almost normal to the imdazole ring to which they are attached, with dihedral angles varying from 82.39 (13) to 88.27 (12)°. There are C—H⋯π interactions present in the cation, involving the two ligands, and the solvent molecule is linked to the cation via a C—H⋯O hydrogen bond. In the crystal, molecules are linked by trifurcated C—H⋯(Cl,Cl,Cl) hydrogen bonds, forming slabs parallel to (101). One isopropyl group is disordered over two sets of sites with an occupancy ratio of 0.447 (17):0.553 (17) and the THF molecule is disordered over two positions with an occupancy ratio of 0.589 (6):0.411 (6).
With only a 2.6 Å resolution laboratory powder diffraction pattern of the θ phase of Pigment Yellow 181 (P.Y. 181) available, crystal-structure solution and Rietveld refinement proved challenging; especially when the crystal structure was shown to be a triclinic dimethylsulfoxide N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone (1:1:1) solvate. The crystal structure, which in principle has 28 possible degrees of freedom, was determined in three stages by a combination of simulated annealing, partial Rietveld refinement with dummy atoms replacing the solvent molecules and further simulated annealing. The θ phase not being of commercial interest, additional experiments were not economically feasible and additional dispersion-corrected density functional theory (DFT-D) calculations were employed to confirm the correctness of the crystal structure. After the correctness of the structure had been ascertained, the bond lengths and valence angles from the DFT-D minimized crystal structure were fed back into the Rietveld refinement as geometrical restraints (‘polymorph-dependent restraints’) to further improve the details of the crystal structure; the positions of the H atoms were also taken from the DFT-D calculations. The final crystal structure is a layered structure with an elaborate network of hydrogen bonds.
Membrane proteins are biological macromolecules that are located in a cell’s membrane and are responsible for essential functions within an organism, which makes them to prominent drug targets. The extraction of membrane proteins from the hydrophobic membrane bilayer to determine high-resolution crystal structures is a difficult task and only 2% of all solved proteins structures are membrane proteins. Computational methods may help to gain deeper insights into membrane protein structures and their functions. This study will give an overview of such computational methods on a representative set of membrane proteins and will provide ideas for future computational and experimental research on membrane proteins.
In a first step (chapter 2), I updated an earlier, manually-curated data set of homologous membrane proteins (HOMEP) to more recent versions in 2010 (HOMEP2) and 2013 (HOMEP3) using an automated clustering approach. High-resolution structures of membrane proteins listed in the PDB_TM database were structurally aligned and subsequently clustered using structural similarity scores. Both data sets were used as a standard gold reference set for subsequent work.
Subsequently, I have updated and applied the sequence alignment program AlignMe to determine protein descriptors that are suitable for detecting evolutionary relationship between homologous a-helical membrane proteins. Single input descriptors were tested alone and in combination with each other in different modes of AlignMe by optimizing gap penalties on the HOMEP2 data set. Most accurate alignments and homology models on the HOMEP2 data set were observed when using position-specific substitution information (P), secondary structure propensities (S) and transmembrane propensities (T) in the AlignMe PST mode. An evaluation on an independent reference set of membrane protein sequence alignments from the BAliBASE collection showed that different modes of AlignMe are suitable for different sequence similarity levels. The AlignMe PST mode improved the alignment accuracy significantly for distantly related proteins, whereas for closely-related proteins from the BAliBASE set the AlignMe PS mode was more suitable. This work was published in March 2013 in PLOS ONE. In order to allow also an easier usage of the AlignMe program, I have implemented a web server of AlignMe (chapter 4) that provides the optimized settings and gap penalties for the AlignMe P, PS and PST modes. A comparison to other recent alignment web server shows that the alignments of AlignMe are similar or even more accurate than those of other methods, especially for very distantly related proteins for which the inclusion of membrane protein information has been shown to be suitable. This work was published in the NAR web server issue in July 2014.
Although membrane-specific information has been shown to be suitable for aligning distantly related membrane proteins on a sequence level, such information was not incorporated into structural alignment programs making it unclear which method is the most suitable for aligning membrane proteins. Thus, I compared 13 widely-used pairwise structural alignment methods on an updated reference set of homologous membrane protein structures (HOMEP3) and evaluated their accuracy by building models based on the underlying sequence alignments and used scoring functions (e.g., AL4 or CAD-score) to rate the model accuracy (chapter 5). The analysis showed that fragment-based approaches such as FR-TM-align are the most useful for aligning structures of membrane proteins that have undergone large conformational changes whereas rigid approaches were more suitable for proteins that were solved in the same or a similar state. However, no method showed a significant higher accuracy than any other. Additionally, all methods lack a measure to rate the reliability of the accuracy for a specific position within a structure alignment. In order to solve these problems, I propose a consensus-type approach that combines alignments from four different methods, namely FR-TM-align, DaliLite, MATT and FATCAT and assigns a confidence value to each position of the alignment that describes the agreement between the methods. This work has been published 2015 in the journal “PROTEINS: structure, function and bioinformatics”.
Consensus alignments were then generated for each pair of proteins of the HOMEP3 data set and subsequently analyzed for single evolutionary events within membrane spanning segments and for irregular structures (e.g., 310- and p-helices) (chapter 6). Interestingly, single insertions and deletions could be observed with the help of consensus alignments in the conserved membrane-spanning segments of membrane proteins in four protein families. The detection of such single InDels might help to identify crucial residues for a proteins function.
Tectonin β-propeller containing protein 2 (TECPR2) was first identified in a mass- spectrometric approach as an interactor of GABARAP, an ATG8-family protein playing a role in autophagy. The mammalian ATG8 protein family consists of seven members, namely MAP1LC3A (LC3A), MAP1LC3B (LC3B), MAP1LC3C (LC3C), GABARAP, GABARAPL1 and GABARAPL2. All share an ubiquitin-like core and possess two additional N-terminal α-helices, which are important for the distinct functions of the proteins. First determined in various organelles the ATG8 proteins are shown to be involved in autophagy, supporting the formation and cargo recruitment of autophagosomes, the vesicles transporting cargo for autophagic degradation.
Autophagy is the process of recycling cytoplasmic contents by degradation of misfolded proteins or damaged organelles in order to supply nutrients. Also clearance of pathogens can be achieved via autophagy. Importantly, LC3B is incorporated into the autophagosomal membrane and is therefore used as the main marker for autophagosomes. Previous studies exhibited that depletion of TECPR2 leads to a loss of LC3B-positive structures in cells, which suggests TECPR2 to positively regulate autophagic processes.
A frame shift deletion in the gene encoding for TECPR2 causes the generation of a premature stop codon and subsequent an unstable version of the protein, which is then degraded. Mutation in the TECPR2 gene triggers a neurodegenerative disorder termed hereditary spastic paraparesis (HSP). HSPs are a diverse group of neurodegenerative diseases that are characterized by spasticity in prevalent lower extremities and were mediated by a loss of axonal integrity of the corticospinal motor neurons. In the context of HSP more than 50 gene loci were identified by now. While TECPR2 is a human ATG8 binding protein and positive regulator of autophagy causing a form of HSP, the exact function of TECPR2 is unknown.
This study primarily focused on the determination of TECPR2’s binding mode to ATG8 proteins in vitro and in cells. The association of TECPR2 to all ATG8-family proteins was confirmed in in vitro pulldown experiments. Following fragment-based binding and peptide array experiments, the LC3-interacting region (LIR) of TECPR2 could be verified with mutants of TECPR2 lacking the LIR motif. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) were conducted to gain deeper insights into the binding preference to the different ATG8-family members. Moreover, the crystal structure of TECPR2-LIR was solved. In cells colocalization studies with overexpressed ATG8 proteins unraveled a preferential binding to the LC3-subfamily.
Further, mass spectrometric analysis revealed novel association partners of TECPR2: SEC24D, HOPS and BLOC-1, all of those participating in different endomembrane trafficking pathways. Interaction and colocalization of TECPR2 with these components was validated with several immunoprecipitation experiments and the N-terminal part of the protein comprising the WD40-domain could be defined as the binding site for all three of the association partners. In further approaches, the requirement of the LIR-motif and the necessity of the availability of LC3 protein for the particular interactions were determined. Interestingly, in the absence of LC3C the binding of TECPR2 to SEC24D was completely disrupted whereas a loss of LC3B only resulted in a decreased association. Notably, the binding proteins were not subjected to autophagosomal degradation, indicating that TECPR2 may operate as a multifunctional scaffold protein. While depletion of TECPR2 destabilized HOPS and BLOC-1, the autophagy defect observed in TECRP2-deficient cells could not be attributed to functional impairment of these two complexes.
Moreover, loss of TECPR2 led to a decline in protein levels of SEC24D and of its heterodimer partner SEC23A. Thus, TECPR2 is required to regulate the protein levels of SEC23A and SEC24D and subsequently the formation of the heterodimers. Together, SEC24D and SEC23A form the inner coat of COPII vesicles. These vesicles are responsible for the anterograde transport of cargo from the ER toward the Golgi compartment. COPII-coated vesicles are secreted form ER at distinct sites, termed ER exit sites (ERES). The small GTPase SAR1A maintains the vesicle budding, coating and secretion at the ERES. Together with SEC13, SEC31 forms the outer coat of the COPII vesicles and therefore serves as a general ERES marker.
Consistent with a defect in COPII coat assembly, the number of ERES diminished in the absence of TECPR2. These phenotypes could be rescued by the wildtype TECPR2 protein but not by the LIR-mutant. Intriguingly, these results were mimicked by depletion of LC3C, which localized to ERES. By monitoring the release of various cargos from ER in dependency of TECPR2 or LC3C, a role of both proteins in ER export was determined. These facts indicated that TECPR2 cooperates with LC3C to facilitate COPII assembly, ERES maintenance and ER export. Notably, fibroblast derived from a HSP patient carrying mutated TECPR2 showed diminished SEC24D protein levels and delayed ER export.
Concurrent with emerging evidence for a role of ERES in autophagosome formation, depletion of TECPR2 or LC3C or overexpression of a constitutive inactive SAR1 mutant reduced puncta formation of the early autophagosomal protein WIPI2.
In summary, this study uncovered a role for TECPR2 in ER export at ERES through interaction and stabilization of SEC24D, a COPII coat protein. This process also depended on ATG8-family protein LC3C, which is localized at ERES. Both proteins are required for correct COPII-mediated secretion. Moreover, the presence of TECPR2 and LC3C on ER allows development of omegasomes, membranous structures budding ER to form autophagosomes, by stabilization of WIPI2 and therefore contribute to autophagosome formation.
Cardiac arrhythmias are often associated with mutations in ion channels or other proteins. To enable drug development for distinct arrhythmias, model systems are required that allow implementing patient-specific mutations. We assessed a muscular pump in Caenorhabditis elegans. The pharynx utilizes homologues of most of the ion channels, pumps and transporters defining human cardiac physiology. To yield precise rhythmicity, we optically paced the pharynx using channelrhodopsin-2. We assessed pharynx pumping by extracellular recordings (electropharyngeograms--EPGs), and by a novel video-microscopy based method we developed, which allows analyzing multiple animals simultaneously. Mutations in the L-type VGCC (voltage-gated Ca(2+)-channel) EGL-19 caused prolonged pump duration, as found for analogous mutations in the Cav1.2 channel, associated with long QT syndrome. egl-19 mutations affected ability to pump at high frequency and induced arrhythmicity. The pharyngeal neurons did not influence these effects. We tested whether drugs could ameliorate arrhythmia in the optogenetically paced pharynx. The dihydropyridine analog Nemadipine A prolonged pump duration in wild type, and reduced or prolonged pump duration of distinct egl-19 alleles, thus indicating allele-specific effects. In sum, our model may allow screening of drug candidates affecting specific VGCCs mutations, and permit to better understand the effects of distinct mutations on a macroscopic level.
Rotary adenosine triphosphate (ATP)ases are ubiquitous, membrane-bound enzyme complexes involved in biological energy conversion. The first subtype, the so-called F1Fo ATP synthase, predominantly functions as an ATP synthesizing machinery in most bacteria, mitochondria and chloroplasts. The vacuolar subtype of enzyme, the V1Vo ATPase, operates as an ATP driven ion pump in eukaryotic membranes. The subtype found in archaea and some bacteria is called A1Ao ATP (synth)ase and is capable of working in both directions either to synthesize ATP or to generate an ion motive force by consuming the same.
All the three above-mentioned subtypes of rotary ATPases work as nanomolecular machines sharing a conserved mechanism to perform the energy conservation process. The simplest form of these enzymes is the bacterial F1Fo ATP synthase. Here, ions are channelled via the membrane stator subunit a to the rotor ring of the enzyme. After almost a complete rotation of the ring the ions are released again on the other side of the membrane. This rotation is further transmitted via the central stalk to the soluble part of the enzyme, the F1-complex, where conformational changes within the nucleotide binding sites result in the synthesis of ATP from ADP and Pi.
The rotor or c-ring of the enzyme is the key protein complex in mediating transmembrane ion translocation. Several structural and biochemical methods have been applied in the past years to study the rotor rings from many different organisms. The results revealed that the stoichiometry of a c-ring of a given species is constant while it can vary between different species within a range of 8 to 15 c subunits. The c-ring stoichiometry determines directly the number of ions transported through Fo per rotation whereby three molecules of ATP are concurrently synthesized in the water-soluble F1 headgroup. Hence the number of c subunits has an important influence on the bioenergetics of the corresponding enzyme and thus the entire organism.
The c-ring of a rotary ATPase is able to specifically bind either protons (H+) or sodium ions (Na+) as the coupling ion for the enzyme. Several structures are already available revealing the coordination network of both types of rotor rings. In each case ion binding includes a highly-conserved carboxylic acid residue (glutamate or aspartate), in addition to a more varying combination of amino acid residues, whereby Na+ coordination is structurally more demanding than H+ binding.
In the first part of my PhD thesis, I aimed to characterize the F1Fo ATP synthase rotor ring of the opportunistic pathogenic bacterium Fusobacterium nucleatum on a functional and structural level. F. nucleatum is an anaerobic bacterium which uses peptides and amino acids as a primary energy source. It is one of the most frequently occuring bacteria in human body infections and involved in human periodontal diseases.
The protein complex was heterologously expressed within a hybrid ATP synthase in Escherichia coli and purified without an affinity tag for further analysis. Two high resolution X-ray structures of the c-ring were solved at low (5.3) and high (8.7) pH to 2.2 and 2.64 Å, respectively. In both structures, the conserved glutamate is in an ion-locked conformation, revealing that the conformational state of the ion binding carboxylate is not depending on the pH of the crystallization condition, which is in good agreement with previous structural and biochemical studies of other c-rings.
A Na+ ion is present within the c-ring binding site and directly coordinated by four amino acid residues and a structural water molecule. Remarkably, the Na+ is bound by two glutamate residues instead of one as is the case in the I. tartaricus Na+ binding c-ring, of which the first high resolution X-ray structure of a c-ring has been solved in 2005. Thus, a new type of Na+ coordination in an ATP synthase rotor ring with a two-carboxylate ion binding motif is described here, which also occurs in other bacteria, including several pathogens. Na+ specificity of the investigated c-ring was further confirmed by a competitive biochemical labeling reaction performed with a fluorescent ATP synthase inhibitor molecule (N-cyclohexyl-N`-[4(dimethylamino)-α-naphtyl] carbodiimide, NCD-4).
We furthermore complemented our functional and structural data of the F. nucleatum c-ring by computational studies to explore the ion translocation mechanism of this enzyme in more details. We therefore analyzed the protonation state of the second, additional glutamate in the ion binding site. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and free-energy calculations indicated that this glutamate is constitutively protonated, in the ion-locked as well as in a simulated, more hydrated open-conformation of the ion binding glutamate as when it is travelling through the a/c-ring interface upon c-ring rotation.
Die 5-Lipoxygenase (5-LOX) stellt den Startpunkt des Leukotrienstoffwechsels dar, da sie Arachidonsäure (AA) über die 5(S)-Hydroperoxy-6-trans-8,11,14-cis-eicosatetraensäure (5-HpETE) in Leukotrien A4 (LTA4) umwandelt. 5-HpETE kann zum korrespondierenden Alkohol 5(S)-Hydroxy-6-trans-8,11,14-cis-eicosatetraensäure (5-HETE) reduziert werden. LTA4 dient als Zwischenprodukt für die Synthese von LTB4 und den Cysteinyl-gebundenden LTs LTC4, LTD4 und LTE4. LTs nehmen eine wichtige Funktion in der Immunabwehr ein, sind jedoch auch an einer Vielzahl von Krankheitsgeschehen wie z. B. Asthma bronchiale, Atherosklerose und einiger Tumorarten beteiligt. Die 5-LOX teilt sich in zwei Domänen auf: der reglatorischen, N-terminalen Domäne und der katalytischen, C-terminalen Domäne. Ihre Aktivität unterliegt einer komplexen allosterischen Regulation und kinetischen Besonderheiten wie einer Substratinhibition. In vielen Fällen ist die regulatorische PLAT-(Polycystin-1, Lipoxygenase, alpha-Toxin)-Domäne involviert. Sie ist essentiell an der Bindung von Calcium, Membranen und weiterer Faktoren wie dem Coactosin-like protein (CLP) und Dicer beteiligt. Auch eine zweite Bindungsstelle für das Substrat oder einen seiner Metaboliten wird dort vermutet. Letztlich bleibt jedoch die Regulation der 5-LOX-Aktivität durch die PLAT-Domäne unzureichend geklärt. Diese Tatsache und die fortwährende Suche nach neuen Ansatzpunkten für die 5-LOX-Inhibition bilden den Hintergrund, vor dem diese Arbeit angefertigt wurde.
Das Ziel lag in der Entwicklung einer stabilen, isolierten PLAT-Domäne und deren Charakterisierung. Es stellte sich jedoch heraus, dass sich die isolierte Domäne durch eine hohe thermische Instabilität und starke Aggregationsneigung auszeichnet. Mittels Mutationsstudien auf Basis der 5-LOX AS 1-115, verbunden mit Gelfiltrationsläufen zur Analyse der Proteinaggregation, wurde schließlich ein Konstrukt entwickelt, das in Konzentrationen < 0,5 mg/ml als Monomer vorlag: die sogenannte PLAT1-115 W75G. Ein Austausch des W75 in Glycin erhöhte ebenfalls die thermische Stabilität, so dass Versuche bei 20°C durchgeführt werden konnten. Zunächst wurden jedoch die grundlegenden Eigenschaften der Mutante untersucht. Dies umfasste die Beantwortung der Frage, ob auch die PLAT1-115 W75G Calcium bindet, sowie die Aufnahme eines Circulardichroismus-(CD)-Spektrums. Der erste Aspekt konnte mit mehreren Methoden bestätigt werden. Eine Calciumzugabe zum Laufpuffer 20 mM MOPS, 50 mM KCl pH 7,4 erhöhte konzentrationsabhängig das Elutionsvolumen der PLAT1-115 W75G auf der analytischen Gelfiltrationssäule – vermutlich durch den bekannten Einfluss von Calcium auf die Hydrophobizität der PLAT-Domäne. Zusätzlich wurde die Interaktion durch differential scanning fluorimetry (DSF) und Oberflächen-Plasmonen-Resonanz-Spektroskopie (SPR) nachgewiesen. Allerdings gelang aus verschiedenen Gründen keine Quantifizierung der Bindungsaffinität. Das CD-Spektrum bestätigte die Struktur der PLAT-Domäne als sogenanntes all-beta_protein und ermöglichte die Einordnung der PLAT1-115 W75G in die Gruppe der betaII-Proteine.
Ein weiterer Fokus dieser Arbeit lag auf der vermuteten allosterischen Fettsäurebindungsstelle in der PLAT-Domäne. Es wurde versucht, die Interaktion mittels SPR nachzuweisen. Zur Vorbereitung wurde im 5-LOX-Aktivitätstest und im DSF an der isolierten Domäne ein Detergens bestimmt, das einen möglichst geringen Einfluss auf das Protein ausübt. Dabei zeigte Octyl-beta-D-glucopyranosid (beta-OG) das vorteilhafteste Profil. Auf dieser Basis wurde die kritische Mizellbildungs-Konzentration (CMC) der AA und einiger HETEs in beta-OG-haltigen Puffern bestimmt. Die SPR-Studien ergaben jedoch keine reproduzierbaren Ergebnisse. In einem weiteren Schritt wurden die Substrathemmung des Gesamtproteins 5-LOX und der Einfluss von Calcium charakterisiert. Sowohl in Gegenwart von ~ 1 mM freiem Calcium als auch von 1 mM EDTA lag mit 20 µM AA die höchste Produktbildung nach 10-minütiger Reaktion vor. Das Detergens Tween20 (T20) hob in einer Konzentration unter seiner CMC (0,001 % m/V) in Anwesenheit von Calcium die Inhibition auf. Ohne Calcium zeigte sich auch in Gegenwart von T20 die bekannte Substratinhibition der 5-LOX einschließlich ihrer Maximalaktivität bei 20 µM AA. Diese Ergebnisse deuten darauf hin, dass Calcium eine Bindung der 5-LOX an eventuell vorhandene, negativ geladene Vesikel aus AA und Detergens vermitteln und dadurch die Substratinhibition aufheben kann. In Fällen, in denen die Substratinhibition vor dem Erreichen der AA-CMC auftritt, hat Calcium folglich keinen Einfluss.
Zuletzt wurde die Interaktion der PLAT1–115 W75G mit CLP und einem C-terminalen Fragment von Dicer untersucht. Im Crosslinking ließ sich nicht auf eine Interaktion der isolierten PLAT-Domäne mit CLP schließen. Dagegen ergaben Diamid-Crosslinking-Studien, dass die isolierte PLAT-Domäne in der Lage ist, das Dicer-Fragment zu binden. Dieses Ergebnis wurde im SPR bestätigt.
Das Enzym 5-Lipoxygenase (5-LO) spielt eine entscheidende Rolle in der Generierung von Leukotrienen. Diese fungieren als wichtige proinflammatorische Mediatoren. Darüber hinaus ist die 5-LO anhand ihrer N-terminalen Domäne in der Lage mit verschiedenen Proteinen zu interagieren. Unter den Interaktionspartnern befindet sich Dicer, ein Enzym welches für den finalen Schritt der microRNA (miRNA)-Biosynthese verantwortlich ist. MiRNA sind kurze, nicht kodierende RNA Stränge mit einer typischen Länge von etwa 23 Nukleotiden, die an der posttranskriptionalen Regulierung der Proteinbiosynthese beteiligt sind.
Ziel dieser Arbeit war es den Einfluss der 5-LO auf die miRNA-Prozessierung im zellulären Kontext zu untersuchen. Als Modellsystem wurde die MonoMac6 (MM6) Zelllinie ausgewählt. MM6-Zellen exprimieren im undifferenzierten Grundzustand nur geringe Mengen an 5-LO. Erst nach Differenzierung mittels transformierenden Wachstumsfaktors ß (TGFß) und Calcitriol kommt es zur Induktion der 5-LO Proteinbiosynthese. Darüber hinaus war es Basavarajappa et al. möglich die 5-LO-Expression in diesen Zellen mittels RNA-Interferenz stark herunter zu regulieren (Δ5-LO).
Um die Frage der Auswirkungen des 5-LO knockdowns auf die miRNA-Expression analysieren zu können, wurde ein Microarray in differenzierten Kontroll-und Δ5-LO-Zellen durchgeführt.Es wurden 37 miRNAs identifiziert deren Expression 5-LO abhängig ist. Dabei war das Niveau von 30 Vertretern in Abwesenheit der 5-LO erhöht, wohingegen die Expression von sieben miRNAs reduziert war. Unter diesen sieben herunter regulierten miRNAs befanden sich miR-99b-5p und miR-125a-5p, die einem gemeinsamen Cluster entstammen. Als Cluster wird eine Gruppe von miRNAs bezeichnet, die aus einem gemeinsamen primären Transkript (pri-miRNA) hervorgeht. Diese Eigenschaft führte zur Vermutung, dass bereits die Expression dieser pri-miRNA durch die 5-LO reguliert wird. Allerdings zeigte sichim Verlauf dieser Arbeit, dass die Expression der pri-miRNA 5-LO unabhängig verläuft. Im Gegensatz dazu wies die Zwischenstufe zwischen pri-miRNA und reifer miRNA eine reduzierte Expression in Δ5-LO Zellen auf. Für die Prozessierung dieser sogenannten precursor miRNAs (pre-miRNA) ist die Ribonuklease III Drosha verantwortlich, welche die pre-miRNA aus der jeweiligen pri-miRNAs chneidet. Das verringerte pre-miR-99b-und pre-miR-125a-Niveau ist daher ein Hinweis darauf, dass überDicerhinausmöglicherweise ebenfalls die Drosha Aktivität mittels 5-LO reguliert wird.
Des Weiteren wurde untersucht iniefern Leukotriene beziehungsweise 5-LO-Inhibitoren die Expression von miR-99b-5p und miR-125a-5p beeinflussen. Dabei stellte sich heraus, dass das miRNA-Niveau unabhängig von der vorhandenen Leukotrien-Menge ist. Das 5-LO aktivierende Protein (FLAP) besitzt dahingegen einen mit der 5-LO vergleichbaren Einfluss auf die reife miRNA. FLAP ist ein weiterer Interaktionspartner der 5-LO und essentiell für die Leukotrien-Biosynthese in vivo. Anhand von Protein-Lokalisationsstudien mittels Immunofluoreszenz konnte gezeigt werden, dass FLAP außerdem in der Lage zu sein scheint die Relokalisation der 5-LO aus dem Zytoplasma in den Nukleus einzuschränken. Im Zytoplasma ist die 5-LO in der Lage mit Dicer zu interagieren. Daten bezüglich einer Interaktion zwischen Drosha und 5-LO im Zellkern liegen bisher nicht vor. Eine etwaige Interaktion könnte allerdings helfen die reduzierten pre-miRNA Spiegel in Abwesenheit der 5-LO zu erklären.
Im Laufe dieser Arbeit wurden weiterhin die Auswirkungen von proinflammatorischen Lipopolysacchariden (LPS) auf die Prozessierung von miR-99b-5p und miR-125a-5p analysiert. Ausschließlich in Anwesenheit von 5-LO zeigte sich eine differenzierungsunabhängig gesteigerte Biosynthese der pri-und der reifen miRNA. Allerdings konnte kein Einfluss von LPS auf die 5-LO-Lokalisation beziehungsweise Expression festgestellt werden. Aufgrund dessen sind weiterführende Studien, die den Zusammenhang zwischen LPS induzierter miR-99b-5p- beziehungsweise miR-125a-5p-Biosynthese und 5-LO herstellen, nötig.
Abschließend hat sich diese Arbeit mit den Zielgenen der durch 5-LO regulierten miRNAs auseinandergesetzt. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass in Abwesenheit von miR-99b-5p und miR-125a-5p die Freisetzung der beiden durch LPS stimulierten Zytokine Interleukin 6 (IL-6) und Tumornekrosefaktor α (TNFα) gesteigert ist. Interessanterweise besitzt TNFα einen stimulierenden Effekt auf die Leukotrien-Biosynthese. Allerdings konnte kein direkter Zusammenhang zwischen miR-99b-5p/miR-125a-5p Expression, TNFα und der 5-LO Aktivität hergestellt werden. Der Einsatz von miR-99b-5p-und miR-125a-5p-Inhibitoren zeigte keine Auswirkungen auf die Leukotrien-Biosynthese nach LPS Stimulation. Im Gegensatz dazu konnte in unstimulierten Zellen eine signifikante Aktivitätssteigerung in Abwesenheit von miR-125a-5p festgestellt werden. Diese Beobachtungen legen nahe, dass miR-125a-5p einen TNFα unabhängigen Einfluss auf die 5-LO Aktivität besitzt. In LPS stimulierten Zellen kommt es möglicherweise zu Überlagerungen dieses Effektes.
Zusammenfassend konnte in dieser Arbeit gezeigt werden, dass 5-LO eine regulierende Funktion auf die Reifung der beiden miRNAs miR-99b-5p und miR-125a-5p aufweist. Dieser Effekt könnte einer direkten Interaktion zwischen 5-LO und Dicer zuzuschreiben sein. Des Weiteren konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Regulierung der Expression bestimmter miRNAs mittels 5-LO nicht auf deren kanonischer enzymatischer Aktivität beruht. Diese Ergebnisse schlagen eine neue Richtung der 5-LO-Forschung ein und können in Zukunft dazu beitragen 5-LO vermittelte Effekte besser charakterisieren zu können.
Habituation ist eine der einfachsten Formen des Gedächtnisses. Hierbei handelt es sich um die erlerne Gewöhnung an einen harmlosen Reiz. Dies bedeutet, dass nach mehrfacher wiederholter Repräsentation eines harmlosen Reizes die Reaktion darauf stetig abnimmt, bis sie völlig zum erliegen kommt. Je nach Trainingsprotokoll kann diese Gewöhnung bis zu mehren Tagen andauern. Habituation ist hoch konserviert und ein Verhaltensmuster, dass auch bei sehr einfachen vielzelligen Organismen zu finden ist und untersucht werden kann. Zur Untersuchung des Zusammenspiels innerhalb eines neuronalen Netzwerkes, welches für die Habituation des Rückzugsreflexes (Ausweichreaktion nach Berührung) verantwortlich ist wurde hier der Fadenwurm Caenohabditis elegans (C. elegans) als Modell Organismus verwendet. Aufgrund seines einfachen, nur 302 Zellen umfassenden, Nervensystems eignet sich C. elegans sehr gut für Grundlagenforschung in diesem Bereich. Das neuronale Netzwerk, das verantwortlich ist für den Rückzugsreflex ist in drei Ebenen organisiert. Wahrgenommen wird der Reiz von sensorischen Neuronen (ASH, ALM, AVM, PLM, PVM). Die Weiterleitung erfolgt über verschiedene Interneuronen (AVA, AVB, AD, AVE, PVC) hin zu den Motorneuronen, welche die Muskeln enervieren und somit die Reaktion auf den in erster Ebenen wahrgenommen Reiz auslösen.
Mit Hilfe von optogenetischen Werkzeugen wurde hier Untersucht welche Rolle einzelne Zellen innerhalb dieses Netzwerkes innehaben und an welcher Stelle innerhalb des Netzwerkes die kurzzeitige Habituation des Reizes, nach einem Einfachen Lernprotokoll stattfindet. Zuerst musste eine Möglichkeit gefunden werden die zur Verfügung stehenden optogenetischen Werkzeuge zellspezifisch zu exprimieren. In dieser Arbeit wurden hierfür Rekombinasesysteme verwendet, die es ermöglichten zur Expression eine Kombination aus 2 verschiedenen Promotoren zu verwenden. Beide Promotoren dürfen hierbei nur in einer Zelle, der Zielzelle, überlappen. Es konnte zellspezifische Expression des Kationenkanals Chanelrhodopsin 2 (ChR2) in den beiden Zellparen AVAL/R und ASHL/R (nimmt aversive Reize wahr) erreicht werden.
Zur Untersuchung der Habituation wurde zusätzlich noch ein Wurmstamm verwendet, welcher ChR2 unter dem mec-4 Promotor exprimiert. ChR2 ist hier in den Mechanorezeptorneuronen (MRN) ALM, AVM, PLM und PVM exprimiert. Die hier durchgeführten Experimente deuten darauf hin das den MRNs die Größte Rolle bei der Ausbildung einer Habituation zukommt. Es gibt jedoch auch Hinweise darauf, dass AVA zusätzlich eine Rolle spielt.
Im weiteren Verlauf der Arbeit wurde die Rolle von AVA genauer untersucht. AVA gilt als der Hauptsignalgeber für eine Rückwärtsbewegung (spontan und nach Reizempfang). Es konnte gezeigt werden dass eine Unterbrechung der ’Gap Junktionen’ zwischen AVA und PVC eine stärkere Reaktion zur Folge haben. AVA scheint also durch PVC inhibiert zu werden. Ebenfalls mit AVA direkt interagierende Neuronen sind AVD und AVE. Mit den hier zur Verfügung stehenden Mitteln konnte die genaue Modulation von AVA durch diese Zellen jedoch nicht gezeigt werden.
In dieser Arbeit konnte der Grundstein für eine funktionale Aufklärung des Nervensystems von C. elegans gelegt werden. Vor allem durch die Möglichkeit der zellspezifischen Expression kann es zukünftig gelingen das Zusammenspiel der einzelnen Nervenzellen und ihren Anteil an einem bestimmtem Verhalten zu Untersuchen.
Necroptosis is a programmed cell death pathway that is implicated in a variety of human diseases. In recent years, increasing knowledge has been gained on the necroptotic signaling cascade. Nevertheless, the role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in necroptosis is still ambiguous. In this study, we reveal that ROS critically regulate BV6/TNFα-induced necroptotic signaling in FADD-deficient Jurkat cells and in zVAD-treated MV4-11 cells. We show that several ROS scavengers such as butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA), N-acetylcysteine (NAC), α-tocopherol (αToc) and ethyl pyruvate (EP) significantly reduce ROS production and BV6/TNFα–induced cell death. Importantly, ROS are produced prior to cell death induction and promote the assembly of the Receptor-interacting protein kinase (RIP)1/RIP3 necrosome complex via a potential positive feedback loop since on the one hand radical scavengers diminish RIP1/RIP3 necrosome formation and since on the other hand RIP1 or RIP3 silencing attenuates ROS production. Furthermore, the deubiquitinase CYLD contributes to BV6/TNFα-induced ROS generation, necrosome assembly and cell death since CYLD knockdown attenuates all these events. Of note, knockdown of the downstream effector protein mixed lineage kinase domain like (MLKL) only partly reduces BV6/TNFα-triggered ROS production and cell death and does not affect necrosome formation. Contrary to expectations, the MLKL inhibitor Necrosulfonamide (NSA) not only decreases BV6/TNFα-stimulated ROS production and cell death but also attenuates RIP1/RIP3 necrosome assembly pointing to additional and MLKL-independent anti-necroptotic effects of NSA. Interestingly, silencing of the potential necroptotic excecutors mitochondrial proteins phosphoglycerate mutase family member 5 (PGAM5) or Dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1) does not affect BV6/TNFα-induced cell death. Consistently, mitochondrial perturbations are not implicated in BV6/TNFα-induced cell death since mitochondrial membrane potential and respiration remain stable along with to BV6/TNFα-triggered necroptosis induction. Interference with the mitochondrial potential by depolarizing agents such as FCCP reduces BV6/TNFα-induced necroptosis indicating that proper mitochondrial function or a well-defined redox status is required for necroptotic cell death execution. This study demonstrates that ROS are critically involved in BV6/TNFα-induced necroptosis and thus provides novel insights into the redox regulation of necroptotic signaling.
The structure of the 1:2 co-crystalline adduct C8H16N4·2C6H5BrO, (I), from the solid-state reaction of 1,3,6,8-tetraazatricyclo[4.4.1.13,8]dodecane (TATD) and 4-bromophenol, has been determined. The asymmetric unit of the title co-crystalline adduct comprises a half molecule of aminal cage polyamine plus a 4-bromophenol molecule. A twofold rotation axis generates the other half of the adduct. The primary inter-species association in the title compound is through two intermolecular O—H⋯N hydrogen bonds. In the crystal, the adducts are linked by weak non-conventional C—H⋯O and C—H⋯Br hydrogen bonds, giving a two-dimensional supramolecular structure parallel to the bc plane.
In the title compound, C23H19NO2, an oxazine Mannich base derivative, the oxazine ring has a half-chair conformation. The 2-hydroxynaphthalen-1-yl substituent is placed in an axial position. There is an intramolecular O-H...N hydrogen bond, forming an S(6) graph-set motif. In the crystal, molecules are connected by a pair of C-H...[pi] interactions into an inversion dimer, which is reinforced by another pair of weak C-H...[pi] interactions. The dimers are linked by a [pi]-[pi] interaction [centroid-centroid distance = 3.6268 (17) Å], consolidating a column along the a axis. Furthermore, the columns interact with each other by a weak C-H...[pi] interaction, generating a three-dimensional network.
In the crystal of the title co-crystalline adduct, C8H16N4·C8H9ClO, (I), prepared by solid-state reaction, the molecules are linked by intermolecular O—H⋯N hydrogen bonds, forming a D motif. The azaadamantane structure in (I) is slightly distorted, with N—CH2—CH2—N torsion angles of 10.4 (3) and −9.0 (3)°. These values differ slightly from the corresponding torsion angles in the free aminal cage (0.0°) and in related co-crystalline adducts, which are not far from a planar geometry and consistent with a D2d molecular symmetry in the tetraazatricyclo structure. The structures also differ in that there is a slight elongation of the N—C bond lengths about the N atom that accepts the hydrogen bond in (I) compared with the other N—C bond lengths. In the crystal, the two molecules are not only linked by a classical O—H⋯N hydrogen bond but are further connected by weak C—H⋯π interactions, forming a two-dimensional supramolecular network parallel to the bc plane.
The crystal structure of the title compound, C25H24N2O2, at 173 K has monoclinic (C2/c) symmetry. The molecule is located on a crystallographic twofold rotation axis with only half a molecule in the asymmetric unit. The imidazolidine ring adopts a twist conformation, with a twist about the ring C—C bond. The crystal structure shows the anticlinal disposition of the two (2-hydroxynaphthalen-1-yl)methyl substituents of the imidazolidine ring. The structure displays two intramolecular O—H⋯N hydrogen bonds, each forming an S(6) ring motif.
In the title ternary co-crystalline adduct, C7H14N4·2C6H5NO3, molecules are linked by two intermolecular O—H⋯N hydrogen bonds, forming a tricomponent aggregates in the asymmetric unit. The hydrogen-bond formation to one of the N atoms is enough to induce structural stereoelectronic effects in the normal donor→acceptor direction. In the title adduct, the two independent nitrophenol molecules are essentially planar, with maximum deviations of 0.0157 (13) and 0.0039 (13) Å. The dihedral angles between the planes of the nitro group and the attached benzene rings are 4.04 (17) and 5.79 (17)°. In the crystal, aggregates are connected by C—H⋯O hydrogen bonds, forming a supramolecular dimer enclosing an R66(32) ring motif. Additional C—H⋯O intermolecular hydrogen-bonding interactions form a second supramolecular inversion dimer with an R22(10) motif. These units are linked via C—H⋯O and C—H⋯N hydrogen bonds, forming a three-dimensional network.
The title compound, C21H26Cl2N2O2, was prepared in a solvent-free microwave-assisted synthesis, and crystallizes in the orthorhombic space group Pna21. The imidazolidine ring adopts an envelope conformation and its mean plane is almost perpendicular to the two pendant aromatic rings [dihedral angles = 84.61 (9) and 86.54 (9)°]. The molecular structure shows the presence of two intramolecular O—H⋯N hydrogen bonds between the phenolic hydroxy groups and imidazolidine N atoms. The two 3-chloro-6-hydroxy-2,4-dimethylbenzyl groups are located in a cis orientation with respect to the imidazolidine fragment. As a result, the lone pairs of electrons on the N atoms are presumed to be disposed in a syn conformation. This is therefore the first example of an exception to the `rabbit-ears' effect in such 2,2′-[imidazolidine-1,3-diylbis(methylene)]diphenol derivatives.
Ribosomes are the central cellular assembly lines for protein synthesis. To cope with the translational needs, a proliferating mammalian cell can produce up to 7500-ribosomes per minute. However, under growth limiting conditions, such as nutrient depletion, ribosome synthesis is rapidly shut down exemplifying the importance of a tight coordination between ribosome supply and cellular energy status. In addition to the quantitative regulation, a strict quality control of ribosome synthesis is equally important, because alterations in the composition or function of ribosomes can lead to a variety of pathologies. To cope with these challenges a highly regulated, multi-step pathway of ribosome biogenesis has evolved. In mammals this pathway generates the mature 80S ribosomes that comprise the large 60S and the small 40S subunits. Together they contain around 80 ribosomal proteins and the 28S, 18S, 5.8S and 5S rRNAs. The 28S, 5.8S and 5S rRNAs are assembled into the large subunit, while the 18S rRNA is part of the small subunit. The pathway of ribosome biogenesis is a multi-step cellular process, where specific stages occur in distinct subcellular compartments. Transcription of the 47S rRNA, which is the precursor for the 28S, 18S and 5.8S species, occurs in the nucleolus. Modification of distinct bases and early processing of this precursor also take place in the nucleolus. Subsequently, the 40S and 60S pre-ribosomes take separate maturation routes through the nucleoplasm before their export and final assembly in the cytoplasm. The various stages of preribosomal maturation require the constant and sequential action of a large number of non-ribosomal proteins, known as trans-acting factors. These factors coordinate the delicate remodeling of the pre-ribosomal intermediates and thereby ensure proper progression of the maturation process. The remodeling events largely depend on the dynamics of post-translational modifications, such as phosphorylation or SUMOylation. This requires that the enzymes controlling these modifications are properly targeted to their sites of activity as they fulfill their functions within specific compartments. Here we studied the regulatory principles that govern the subcellular partitioning of the SUMO-specific isopeptidase SENP3 and its associated factor PELP1. Previous work from our laboratory has delineated the importance of the SUMO system for proper ribosome biogenesis in mammalian cells. In particular, we have shown that SENP3 is critically involved in 28S rRNA formation, which is a key step for pre-60S subunit maturation. A critical involvement of SENP3 at this stage of the maturation process is in agreement with the observed enrichment of SENP3 in the nucleolus, since 28S rRNA processing is considered to occur in the nucleolus. Our subsequent work identified the nucleolar scaffold protein NPM1 and the ribosomal trans-acting factor PELP1 as bona fide substrates of SENP3. For both proteins we could demonstrate modification by SUMO2/3 and define SENP3 as the demodifying enzyme. Depletion of SENP3 enhanced the conjugation of SUMO to both proteins and concomitantly reduced conversion of the 32S pre-rRNA to the mature 28S rRNA. PELP1 is part of a larger protein complex consisting of the core components PELP1, TEX10 and WDR18. We could show that the balanced SUMOylation/deSUMOylation of PELP1 controls the nucleolar/nucleoplasmic distribution of this complex. Enhanced SUMOylation, which is observed in the absence of SENP3, triggers the nucleolar release of the complex suggesting that SENP3-mediated deSUMOylation controls the dynamics of nucleolar trans-acting factors. Based on these findings we first wanted to understand, in which cellular compartment(s) SENP3 exerts its function on 28S maturation. Next, we wanted to tackle the question how the subcellular distribution of SENP3 is controlled. Finally
we addressed the question how the SUMOylation of PELP1 determines the subnuclear distribution of the PELP1 complex. This work initially revealed that the nucleolar localization of SENP3 is crucial for proper 28S rRNA formation and 60S ribosome maturation. Importantly, we could demonstrate that the nucleolar compartmentalization of SENP3 depends on its direct physical interaction with NPM1. Further, we could show that the amino-terminal region of SENP3 is necessary for its binding to NPM1 and nucleolar recruitment. Strikingly, this interaction requires the phosphorylation of SENP3, which is brought about by the mTOR kinase. By in-vitro kinase assays and mass-spectrometric approaches we identified five serine/threonine residues within the amino-terminal region of SENP3 that are targeted by mTOR (S/T 25, 26, 141, 142, 143). We could further demonstrate by mutagenesis that these sites in SENP3 are in fact critical for the phospho-dependent binding of SENP3 to NPM1 and its nucleolar recruitment.
Consistent with these data, we found that chemical inhibitors of the mTOR kinase trigger the nucleolar release of SENP3 and impair its interaction with NPM1. Strikingly, this goes along with severe 28S rRNA maturation defects demonstrating the physiological importance of mTOR signaling in the regulation SENP3 function and rRNA processing. By specifically depleting components of the either mTORC1 or mTORC2, we could attribute the observed effects to signaling by mTORC1 rather than mTORC2. In an attempt to find the negative regulators of SENP3 phosphorylation, we identified PP1-γ as the candidate phosphatase in this pathway. We found a strong physical interaction of SENP3 with PP1-γ and observed a loss of SENP3 nucleolar localization upon ectopic expression of PP1-γ. Thus we could define mTOR/PP1-γ mediated phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of SENP3 as an important
mechanism in the control of ribosome maturation. Given that mTOR activity is controlled by nutrient availability, SENP3 functions as a sensor that couples ribosome synthesis with nutrient availability. The second part of this work delineated the role of SUMOylated PELP1 in nucleoplasmic partitioning of the SENP3-PELP1 complex. It was revealed that the AAA-ATPase MDN1 binds preferentially to SUMO modified PELP1 and likely segregates SUMOylated PELP1 from nucleolar pre-60S particles. We initially found that the PELP1 complex associates with MDN1, a factor known to be involved in the 28S rRNA maturation. Notably, depletion of MDN1 led to an enhanced accumulation of the PELP1 complex in the nucleolus and a strong association of PELP1 with pre-60S particles, suggesting that MDN1 is required for the release of this complex from the pre-ribosomes. Intriguingly, the interaction of PELP1 with MDN1 requires SUMO2/3 and SUMOylated PELP1 shows enhanced binding to MDN1 when compared to unmodified PELP1. Taken together this work provides new insights in the control of the SENP3-PELP1 complex dynamics. We could define several layers for the coordinated spatial regulation of SENP3 and the PELP1 complex. This work therefore underscores the crucial importance of dynamic post-translational modifications for the control of ribosome maturation.
A current challenge in life sciences is to image cell membrane receptors while characterizing their specific interactions with various ligands. Addressing this issue has been hampered by the lack of suitable nanoscopic methods. Here we address this challenge and introduce multifunctional high-resolution atomic force microscopy (AFM) to image human protease-activated receptors (PAR1) in the functionally important lipid membrane and to simultaneously localize and quantify their binding to two different ligands. Therefore, we introduce the surface chemistry to bifunctionalize AFM tips with the native receptor-activating peptide and a tris-N-nitrilotriacetic acid (tris-NTA) group binding to a His10-tag engineered to PAR1. We further introduce ways to discern between the binding of both ligands to different receptor sites while imaging native PAR1s. Surface chemistry and nanoscopic method are applicable to a range of biological systems in vitro and in vivo and to concurrently detect and localize multiple ligand-binding sites at single receptor resolution.
The c-MYC proto-oncogene is a regulator of fundamental cellular processes such as cell cycle progression and apoptosis. The development of novel c-MYC inhibitors that can act by targeting the c-MYC DNA G-quadruplex at the level of transcription would provide potential insight into structure-based design of small molecules and lead to a promising arena for cancer therapy. Herein we report our finding that two simple bis-triazolylcarbazole derivatives can inhibit c-MYC transcription, possibly by stabilizing the c-MYC G-quadruplex. These compounds are prepared using a facile and modular approach based on Cu(I) catalysed azide and alkyne cycloaddition. A carbazole ligand with carboxamide side chains is found to be microenvironment-sensitive and highly selective for "turn-on" detection of c-MYC quadruplex over duplex DNA. This fluorescent probe is applicable to visualize the cellular nucleus in living cells. Interestingly, the ligand binds to c-MYC in an asymmetric fashion and selects the minor-populated conformer via conformational selection.
Single-molecule super-resolution microscopy allows imaging of fluorescently-tagged proteins in live cells with a precision well below that of the diffraction limit. Here, we demonstrate 3D sectioning with single-molecule super-resolution microscopy by making use of the fitting information that is usually discarded to reject fluorophores that emit from above or below a virtual-'light-sheet', a thin volume centred on the focal plane of the microscope. We describe an easy-to-use routine (implemented as an open-source ImageJ plug-in) to quickly analyse a calibration sample to define and use such a virtual light-sheet. In addition, the plug-in is easily usable on almost any existing 2D super-resolution instrumentation. This optical sectioning of super-resolution images is achieved by applying well-characterised width and amplitude thresholds to diffraction-limited spots that can be used to tune the thickness of the virtual light-sheet. This allows qualitative and quantitative imaging improvements: by rejecting out-of-focus fluorophores, the super-resolution image gains contrast and local features may be revealed; by retaining only fluorophores close to the focal plane, virtual-'light-sheet' single-molecule localisation microscopy improves the probability that all emitting fluorophores will be detected, fitted and quantitatively evaluated.
A novel series of ribonucleosides of 1,2,3-triazolylbenzyl-aminophosphonates was synthesized through the Kabachnik–Fields reaction using I2 as catalyst followed by copper-catalyzed cycloaddition of the azide–alkyne reaction (CuAAC). All structures of the newly prepared compounds were characterized by 1H NMR, 13C NMR, and HRMS spectra. The structures of 2e, 2f, 3d, and 3g were further confirmed by X-ray diffraction analysis. These compounds were tested against various strains of DNA and RNA viruses; compounds 4b and 4c showed a modest inhibitory activity against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and compound 4h displayed modest inhibitory activity against Coxsackie virus B4.
In the title compound, C20H24N2O4, both peptide bonds adopt a trans configuration with respect to the —N—H and —C=O groups. The dihedral angle between the aromatic rings is 53.58 (4)°. The molecular conformation is stabilized by an intramolecular N—H⋯O hydrogen bond. The crystal packing is characterized by zigzag chains of N—H⋯O hydrogen-bonded molecules running along the b-axis direction.
Prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) favors multiple aspects of tumor development and immune evasion. Therefore, microsomal prostaglandin E synthase (mPGES-1/-2), is a potential target for cancer therapy. We explored whether inhibiting mPGES-1 in human and mouse models of breast cancer affects tumor-associated immunity. A new model of breast tumor spheroid killing by human PBMCs was developed. In this model, tumor killing required CD80 expression by tumor-associated phagocytes to trigger cytotoxic T cell activation. Pharmacological mPGES-1 inhibition increased CD80 expression, whereas addition of PGE2, a prostaglandin E2 receptor 2 (EP2) agonist, or activation of signaling downstream of EP2 reduced CD80 expression. Genetic ablation of mPGES-1 resulted in markedly reduced tumor growth in PyMT mice. Macrophages of mPGES-1-/- PyMT mice indeed expressed elevated levels of CD80 compared to their wildtype counterparts. CD80 expression in tumor-spheroid infiltrating mPGES-1-/- macrophages translated into antigen-specific cytotoxic T cell activation. In conclusion, mPGES-1 inhibition elevates CD80 expression by tumor-associated phagocytes to restrict tumor growth. We propose that mPGES-1 inhibition in combination with immune cell activation might be part of a therapeutic strategy to overcome the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment.
Protein folding in cells is regulated by networks of chaperones, including the heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70) system, which consists of the Hsp40 cochaperone and a nucleotide exchange factor. Hsp40 mediates complex formation between Hsp70 and client proteins prior to interaction with Hsp90. We used mass spectrometry (MS) to monitor assemblies formed between eukaryotic Hsp90/Hsp70/Hsp40, Hop, p23, and a client protein, a fragment of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR). We found that Hsp40 promotes interactions between the client and Hsp70, and facilitates dimerization of monomeric Hsp70. This dimerization is antiparallel, stabilized by post-translational modifications (PTMs), and maintained in the stable heterohexameric client-loading complex Hsp902Hsp702HopGR identified here. Addition of p23 to this client-loading complex induces transfer of GR onto Hsp90 and leads to expulsion of Hop and Hsp70. Based on these results, we propose that Hsp70 antiparallel dimerization, stabilized by PTMs, positions the client for transfer from Hsp70 to Hsp90.
The RAF family of kinases constitutes the members A, B and CRAF. They mediate RAS signaling by linking it to the MEK/ERK transduction module, which regulates cellular processes such as cell proliferation, migration, survival and cell death. As the RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK (MAPK) pathway is found to be activated in human cancers, the RAF kinases have been exploited as valuable therapeutic targets and RAF inhibitors show promising results in the clinic, esp. with tumors harboring an activating BRAFV600E mutation. However, RAF inhibitors paradoxically accelerate metastasis in RAS mutant and BRAF wildtype tumors. They also become ineffective over time in BRAFV600E tumors because of reactivation of downstream mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling by promoting RAF dimerization. Aims of the present work were 1) to investigate the role of ARAF kinase in the paradoxical activation of the enzymatic cascade by RAF inhibitors downstream of mutated RAS and 2) to study the consequences of the loss of ARAF function on signal transduction in vitro and in vivo (nude mice). We have engineered several cell lines that would allow the study of basal and RAF inhibitor induced effects on MAPK activation, tumor cell migration and invasion.
In summary, we were able to show that the RAF isoform ARAF has an obligatory role in promoting MAPK activity and tumor cell invasion in a cell type dependent manner. In these cell types, ARAF depletion prevented the activation of MAPK kinase 1 (MEK1) and extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 and 2 (ERK1/2) and led to a significant decrease of protrusions growing out of tumor cell spheroids in a three-dimensional (3D) culture that were otherwise induced by BRAFV600E-specific or BRAF/CRAF inhibitors (GDC-0879 and sorafenib, respectively). RAF inhibitors stimulated homodimerization of ARAF and heteromerization of BRAF with CRAF and the scaffolding protein KSR1. However, induced oligomerization was not sufficient to activate MAPK signaling if ARAF was depleted. By employing full length recombinant kinases, we were able to show for the first time that the three RAF isoforms competed for the binding to MEK1. In cell culture models, the overexpression of dimer-deficient ARAF mutants impaired the interaction between ARAF and endogenous MEK1 and thus prevented the subsequent phosphorylation of MEK1 and ERK1/2. Our findings reveal a new role for ARAF in directly activating the MAPK cascade through homodimerization and thereby promoting tumor cell invasion, suggesting the conserved RAF-dimer interface as a target for RAS- and RAF mediated cancer therapy.
Collectively, we provide evidence for the dual role ARAF plays in controlling MAPK signaling and cancer as loss of ARAF promoted strong lung metastasis formation in nude mice. Preliminary data describing the underlying mechanisms behind ARAF-regulated metastases have been presented and discussed.
A wide variety of enzymatic pathways that produce specialized metabolites in bacteria, fungi and plants are known to be encoded in biosynthetic gene clusters. Information about these clusters, pathways and metabolites is currently dispersed throughout the literature, making it difficult to exploit. To facilitate consistent and systematic deposition and retrieval of data on biosynthetic gene clusters, we propose the Minimum Information about a Biosynthetic Gene cluster (MIBiG) data standard.
Die Sulfonyl-Gruppe (-SO2-) ist ein weit verbreitetes Strukturmotiv in der organischen Chemie und Bestandteil vieler biologisch aktiver Moleküle, insbesondere Arzneistoffen. Zwei der am häufigsten auftretenden Gruppen sind Sulfone und Sulfonamide, die in über 100 zugelassenen Medikamenten und 10% der meistverkauften Medikamente sind. Insofern kommt der Entwicklung neuer Synthesemethoden eine große Bedeutung zu. Dabei stehen besonders einfache, wirtschaftliche und zeitsparende Vorgehensweisen im Vordergrund, die eine große Bandbreite an neuen Substanzen generieren können. Ein Ansatz hierfür sind Multikomponenten- oder Eintopfreaktionen.
Aufgrund der Wichtigkeit dieser zwei Strukturklassen, sollen im Rahmen der hier vorliegenden Doktorarbeit neue Syntheserouten für Sulfone und Sulfonamide entwickelt werden. Besonderes Augenmerk wird auf die die Einführung der SO2-Einheit während der Reaktionsführung gelegt. Im Vergleich zu bereits existierenden Verfahren ist dies ein enormer Fortschritt, da die Mehrheit der bekannten Routen auf Schwefel- oder Schwefeldioxid-haltige Startmaterialien zurückgreift.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit gelang es, einen synthetischen Zugang zu Arylsulfonen basierend auf von Natrium-, Lithium-, Magnesium- und Zinksulfinaten zu finden. Diese Reaktion besitzt eine sehr große Anwendungsbandbreite und setzt sowohl Aryl- als auch Alkylsulfinate effizient um. Außerdem weisen Reaktionen mit unsymmetrischen Diaryliodoniumsalzen hohe Chemoselektivitäten auf.
Auf der Grundlage auf der Reaktion zwischen Natriumsulfinaten und Iodoniumsalzen wurde eine simple Route zur Synthese von Diarylsulfonen abgeleitet, jedoch war hierbei die Sulfonylgruppe noch Bestandteil eines der Edukte. Um die SO2-Einheit während der Reaktion einführen zu können, wurde ein praktisches Eintopf-Protokoll entwickelt, welches die direkte Umsetzung von (hetero)aromatischen und alkylischen Halogeniden zu Arylsulfonen gestattet. Diese innovative Methode besteht aus folgenden vier Schritten: (1) Generierung des Organometallreagenzes via Halogen-Metall-Austausch, direkte Metallinsertion oder Deprotonierung; (2) Reaktion des Organometallreagenzes mit SO2 zum Sulfinat; (3) Entfernen des SO2-Überschusses und flüchtiger Komponenten und (4) Umsetzung des nicht aufgereinigten Sulfinates mit einem Iodoniumsalz.
Desweiteren wird in dieser Arbeit ein neuartiger Übergangsmetall-katalysierter Ansatz zur Darstellung von Diarylsulfonen ausgehend von Arylhalogeniden und Sulfinaten diskutiert. Erste Experimente deuten auf Nickel-Katalysatoren als gute Wahl für die Reaktion. Optimierungsreaktionen zeigten eine starke Abhängigkeit der Ausbeute in Hinsicht auf die Bisswinkel der an das zentrale Nickelatom koordinierten Liganden. Da die bis dato besten Ergebnisse mit dem Komplex [o-tol-Ni(PPh2Me)2Cl] erzielt wurden, wird der [o-tol-Ni(PMe3)2Cl]-Komplex momentan in unserem Labor weiteren Studien unterzogen. Bislang ist davon auszugehen, dass dieser Katalysator hervorragende Ergebnisse liefert und zu einer allgemein gültigen Methode führt.
In weiteren Kapiteln wird die Anwendbarkeit von SO2-Surrogaten, Metabisulfiten „S2O52-„ oder DABSO; untersucht; mit dem Ziel eine Eintopf- oder Multikomponentenreaktion zu entwickeln.
Zum einen wird die Entwicklung einer Ein-Topf-Reaktion von Alkylhalogeniden mit Metabisulfiten und Organozinkreagenzien zur Darstellung von Alkylarylsulfonen vorgestellt. Darüber hinaus wird eine Übergangsmetall-katalysierte Multikomponenten Reaktion zur Synthese von Sulfonsäureamiden vorgestellt. Eine Reaktion zwischen Aminen, Arylhalogeniden und DABSO als SO2-Quelle wurde in Form einer Palladium-katalysierten Aminosulfonylierung entwickelt.
African trypanosomes cause a parasitic disease known as sleeping sickness. Mitochondrial transcript maturation in these organisms requires a RNA editing reaction that is characterized by the insertion and deletion of U-nucleotides into otherwise non-functional mRNAs. Editing represents an ideal target for a parasite-specific therapeutic intervention since the reaction cycle is absent in the infected host. In addition, editing relies on a macromolecular protein complex, the editosome, that only exists in the parasite. Therefore, all attempts to search for editing interfering compounds have been focused on molecules that bind to proteins of the editing machinery. However, in analogy to other RNA-driven biochemical pathways it should be possible to stall the reaction by targeting its substrate RNAs. Here we demonstrate inhibition of editing by specific aminoglycosides. The molecules bind into the major groove of the gRNA/pre-mRNA editing substrates thereby causing a stabilization of the RNA molecules through charge compensation and an increase in stacking. The data shed light on mechanistic details of the editing process and identify critical parameters for the development of new trypanocidal compounds.
Acute myeloid leukemia is a hematopoietic stem cell disorder and a type of acute leukemia which is characterized by clonal proliferation of myeloid precursors with a reduced capacity to differentiate into more mature cellular elements. Clinically AML is characterized by a high degree of heterogeneity with respect to chromosome abnormalities, gene mutations, and changes in expression of multiple genes and microRNAs. Cytogenetic abnormalities can be detected in approximately 50% to 60% of newly diagnosed AML patients. Majority of AML cases are associated with chromosomal aberrations, more specifically translocations that often result in gene arrangements and expression of aberrant fusion proteins. This study was carried out with two fusion proteins: PML/RARα and DEK/CAN which results from the translocations t(15;17) and t (6,9) respectively. PML/RARα is the most common translocation (97%) and the main driver in Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia (APL), a wellcharacterized and well treatable subtype of AML. In contrast, DEK/CAN occurs in 1-5% of AML, associated with poor prognosis and defines a high risk group in AML. The expression of PML/RARα results in a fusion protein that acts as a transcriptional repressor by interfering with gene expression programs involved in differentiation, apoptosis, and selfrenewal. Current therapy focused on the targeting of PML/RARα fusion protien. Success has been achieved by using either ATRA, anthracyclines and Arsenic trioxide or their combinations. These agents induce differentiation in PML/RARα positive AML and hence called differentiation therapy. In comparison with ATRA, ATO and anthracyclines are poor cellular differentiation agents. Despite early promise, several studies have reported that differentiation therapy is unable to target/eradicate leukemic stem cells or eradicate the disease. Therefore current therapeutic focus is to eliminate leukemic stem cells and achieve complete molecular remission not only in APL but also in acute lymphoblastic leukemia and chronic myeloid leukemia as well. Key enzymes of the eicosanoid pathways in the arachidonic acid metabolism, such as COX1/2 as well as the 5-LO have been shown to be good targets for leukemic stem cell therapy approach in AML by interfering with the Wntsignaling which is known to be indispensable for the pathogenesis of AML. Recently it was reported that the third eicosanoid pathway based on the cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes interferes with Wnt-signaling as well as with the proliferation and mobilization of hematopoietic stem cells...
Disturbances in lipid metabolism are responsible for many chronic disorders, such as type 2 diabetes and atherosclerosis. Regulation of lipid metabolism occurs by activated transcription factors peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor δ (PPARδ) and liver X receptor α (LXRα) mediating transcription of different target genes involved in regulation of fatty acid uptake and oxidation or cellular cholesterol homeostasis. This is especially relevant for the macrophages, since pathways regulated by PPARδ and LXRα affect foam cell formation, a process driving the progression of atherosclerotic lesion. AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) plays a central role in energy homeostasis in every type of eukaryotic cell, but its role in human macrophages, particularly with regard to lipid metabolism, is not precisely defined yet. Thus, I investigated the impact of AMPK activity on PPARδ and LXRα and the expression of their target genes involved in fatty acid oxidation (FAO) and cholesterol metabolism.
As PPARδ has been described as a potential target for prevention and treatment of several disorders and AMPK as interesting drug target for diabetes and metabolic syndrome, the aim of the first part of my studies was to investigate their interaction in primary human macrophages. Completing the first challenge successfully, I was able to establish a lentiviral transduction system for constitutively active AMPK (consisting of a truncated catalytic AMPKα1 subunit bearing an activating T198D mutation) in primary human macrophages.
Using genome-wide microarray analysis of gene expression, I demonstrate FAO as the strongest affected pathway during combined AMPKα1 overexpression and PPARδ activation.
The most influenced genes were validated by quantitative PCR as well as by Western analysis. I found that AMPK increases the expression of FAO-associated genes targeted by PPARδ. Corroborating the results obtained using AMPKα1 overexpression, PPARδ target gene expression was increased not only by PPARδ agonist GW501516, but also by pharmacological allosteric AMPK activator A-769662. Additional enhancement of target gene mRNA expression was achieved upon co-activation of PPARδ and AMPK. Silencing PPARδ expression increased basal expression of target genes, confirming the repressive nature of ligand-free PPARδ, abolishing the increased target gene expression upon AMPK or PPARδ activation. Measurements of triglyceride contents of human macrophages incubated with VLDL following PPARδ activation demonstrated a reduction of intracellular triglyceride accumulation in cells, which may reflect the enhancement of fat catabolism.
In the second part of my studies, I concentrated on the regulation of cholesterol transporter ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1) expression by AMPK. ABCA1 facilitates
cholesterol efflux from macrophages thus, preventing atherosclerosis progression. For the first time, AMPK implication in the regulation of the ABCA1 pathway could be presented. Both AMPK overexpression and activation lead to significantly increased ABCA1 expression, whereas AMPKα1 knock-down strongly reduced this effect. Besides, I was able to prove an enhanced activity of ABCA1 during AMPK activation in human THP-1 macrophages by measuring cholesterol efflux into apolipoprotein AI-containing medium.
Previous findings showed regulation of ABCA1 by LXRα. I confirmed these results by silencing experiments indicating an essential role of LXRα in ABCA1 regulation pathway.
Here, ABCA1 mRNA as well as protein expression were positively mediated by LXRα. LXRα activation elevated ABCA1 levels, whereas its silencing down-regulated this effect.
Interestingly, ABCA1 was found to be regulated only by LXRα and not through LXRα. At the same time, knock-down of PPARδ, -γ or -δ, which may be also involved in the regulation of LXR/ABCA1 axis, did not influence the activation of ABCA1 expression by an AMPK activator. To confirm that LXRE on Abca1 promoter is essential for ABCA1 regulation, I performed luciferase reporter assay using constructs based on Abca1 promoter with or without LXRE mutation. Mutation of LXRE abolished reporter activity, whereas AMPK activation increased luciferase activity of wild-type LXRE construct. Furthermore, I demonstrate AMPK-dependent LXRα binding to the LXRE site of Abca1 promoter using the method of chromatin immunoprecipitation. AMPK activation significantly increased, whereas silencing of AMPK significantly attenuated LXRα binding, indicating AMPK as one of the most important regulators of ABCA1 expression.
In summary, I provided an evidence for AMPK involvement into lipid and cholesterol metabolism in human macrophages showing the regulation of PPARδ and LXRα target genes. The understanding of AMPK and PPARδ interaction allows the development of new approaches for treatment of metabolic syndrome and related diseases. Increased FAO during the activation of both proteins may exhibit better therapeutic benefit. On the other hand, I have shown the impact of AMPK activation on ABCA1 via LXRα up-regulation leading to increased cholesterol efflux in human macrophages for the first time. These findings thus may impact future improving of anti-atherosclerosis therapies.
Structural characterization of stressosome complexes by single-particle cryo-electron microscopy
(2015)
The stressosome is a Mega Dalton macromolecular complex involved in stress adaptation in bacteria. Stressosomes are considered as stress signaling hubs. They are able to perceive a variety of different stress stimuli and transduce them into one single cellular answer, which is the initialization of a transcriptional up-regulation of hundreds of different genes encoding for universal but also very specific stress response proteins.
The stressosome of Bacillus subtilis became a prime example for this intriguing stress-triggered transcriptional regulation when its architecture was determined by Single-particle cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) in 2008. In Gram-positive Bacillus species, the stressosome complex senses changes in salt concentration, ethanol content, blue-light, heat or acid stress contributing to the general stress response by activation of the alternative σB factor. σB is a transcriptional promoter that initiates the transcription of over 150 general stress genes, e.g., genes that encode osmolyte transporters to counteract osmotic and chill stress. The B. subtilis stressosome (stressosome_Bc) is composed of multiple copies of the 3 proteins: RsbR, RsbS and RsbT. These three Rsb proteins (Regulator of Sigma B) are found clustered in one operon forming the conserved RST module. RsbS and RsbR are scaffold proteins comprising a STAS domain, respectively. Because these domains are dominantly associated to sulfate transporters and anti-sigma antagonist they were named STAS domains, however, they were also identified in other sensor proteins. In the stressosome they form the internal ball-shaped core, while the N-terminal globin-fold sensor domain of RsbR, protruding to the outside, facilitates stress sensing. It is assumed that the stress signal is transduced to the stressosome core via the STAS domain resulting in conformational changes of the core. These changes affect the binding of the third protein, RsbT, a serin-threonine kinase. As a direct consequence of stress sensing the RsbT kinase is released from the complex to start an activation cascade involving the stepwise activation of RsbU, V, W, and X, which are all part of the same operon, and finally of σB. In Bacillus species, several RsbR orthologs were identified varying mainly in the sequence of the N-terminal sensor domains. It is assumed that the stressosome_Bc assembles with a still unknown combination of RsbR orthologs allowing for the broad spectrum of stress stimuli that can be processed in vivo. The pathogenic bacteria Listeria monocytogenes is a close relative of Bacillus. Its potent stress response allows Listeria to survive the harsh environmental conditions during host infection and therefore the stress regulation machinery is contributing heavily to the virulence of this pathogen. In Listeria the Rsb operon is conserved and highly homologous to the Bacillus one. In the frame of this thesis, the in vitro assembly of Listeria innocua stressosomes was shown for the first time by Single-particle (SP) negative stain EM. Moreover, binding of Listeria RsbT to the assembled RsbR-RsbS complex was demonstrated biochemically.
Despite the conservation of the RST-module the entire Rsb operon is not conserved in the bacterial kingdom suggesting that signal transduction and regulation of gene expression might occur by very different mechanisms in stressosomes of different species. We have focused here on a stressosome type from the Gram-negative pathogen Vibrio vulnificus that is quite distinct from the Bacillus ones with respect to (1) the missing conservation of the Rsb operon, (2) the role of RsbT, (3) the activation of a different transcriptional promoter, and (4) the absence of additional RsbR orthologs. Interestingly, there is only one RsbR protein encoded in the genome. This one contains a Haem-group in its N-terminal domain being oxygen sensitive. It is assumed that the Vibrio stressosome perceive only oxidative stress and that regulation occurs via a diguanylate cyclase with a GAF domain that synthesizes the second messenger c-di-GMP from GTP.
We have started a structure determination of the Vibrio vulnificus stressosome by SP cryo-EM to elucidate the differences in the molecular mechanism of stress sensing in divers stressosome types. A 3D map of the oxidized (activated) Vibrio vulnificus stressosome was determined to 7.6 Å resolution revealing an increased flexibility of both the core and the N-terminal sensor domains in comparison to the Bacillus stressosome suggesting that our structure has trapped for the first time an active state of a stressosome complex. A 3D map of the stressosome core to 7 Å resolution allowed fitting of a homology model of the Vibrio stressosome based on the Bacillus stressosome as template. The conformational changes could be attributed to the entire core, which was confirmed by MD simulations.
During my thesis, I worked on two different membrane proteins. One is a bacterial secondary transporter and the second is a human mitochondrial calcium channel.
The first part of my thesis involves the structural and biochemical characterization of an L-carnitine/ γ-butyrobetaine antiporter from bacteria called CaiT. The aim of the project was to understand the Na+ independence of CaiT and to determine the crystal structures of CaiT in different conformations to expand the mechanistic understanding of substrate/ product antiport in CaiT.
The study revealed how a positively charged amino acid side chain (arginine 262) in CaiT could structurally and functionally mimic a sodium ion. Additionally, various crystal structures of CaiT obtained in this study demonstrate that the central substrate-binding site is highly dynamic and can accommodate the substrate in various orientations.
In the second part of my thesis, I was able to optimize the expression and purification conditions for the human mitochondrial calcium uniporter or the MCU. Understanding how this channel functions can help us unravel the mechanism of calcium uptake by mitochondria. Secondary structure prediction analysis in combination with mass spectrometry of degraded MCU products obtained during the purification of the full-length protein led to the identification of a stable MCU construct. This study resulted in the successful purification of milligram quantities of stable MCU protein for the first time. Further optimization may be required to obtain more homogenous protein that is amenable for crystallization.
G protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) constitute the largest family of cell-surface receptors in mammals and are key players in signal transduction. By responding to a plethora of extracellular stimuli ranging from photons to amines to fatty acids to peptides and proteins, these receptors trigger intracellular signalling cascades and regulate a variety of cellular responses. Approximately 800 genes in humans encode GPCRs which are classified according to sequence conservation into rhodopsin-like, glutamate, adhesion, frizzled/taste2 and secretin receptors. GPCRs share a seven transmembrane domain fold undergoing a conformational change upon ligand binding which is translated to the intracellular surface of the receptor thereby allowing a heterotrimeric G protein to couple. Heterotrimeric G proteins consist of a Ga, Gb and Gg subunit and dissociate into their Ga and Gbg entities upon activation by a GPCR. Subsequently, distinct signalling cascades are triggered by each G protein protomer.
Membrane proteins and GPCRs in particular, are highly important targets in drug design and development as currently approximately 60% of all marketed drugs target membrane proteins. Although these classes of proteins are of high therapeutic interest, our understanding of their mechanism of action and structure remains limited. The first structure of a human GPCR was determined in 2007 and required the development of protein engineering and innovative crystallisation techniques. Since then, approximately 130 GPCR structures of less than 40 individual receptors have been determined providing insights into the structural arrangement of the transmembrane helices, ligand binding pockets and G protein interactions. Combined with spectroscopic methods, these studies allowed a more detailed understanding of the molecular aspects of GPCR activation and signalling. Despite the tremendous advances in GPCR structural biology, certain aspects of GPCR function still remain poorly understood. Due to their size and inherent flexibility, the interaction of protein and peptide ligands with their receptors remains a challenging aspect in the structural characterisation of GPCRs. Moreover, structural information on subtype selectivity of peptide ligands continues to be scarce. To contribute functional and structural information on the molecular mechanisms of peptide interactions with GPCRs, this thesis focused on characterising receptors from the chemoattractant cluster using radioligand binding assays as well as NMR spectroscopy.
The chemoattractant cluster mainly groups the kinin, angiotensin, anaphylatoxin chemotactic complement and apelin receptors according to conserved residues in their ligand binding cavities. All receptors in this cluster bind to peptide ligands deriving from high molecular weight protein precursors upon proteolytic processing. Comparable to the conserved binding pocket of the chemoattractant receptors, the peptide ligands display a certain sequence conservation although they differ strongly in size. The largest ligands used in this thesis are the anaphylatoxins complement 3a and 5a, comprising 77 or 74 residues, respectively. Due to their size and complex fold involving three intramolecular disulphide bonds, solid phase synthesis is impossible, which prompted us to develop a modified cell-free expression system to produce these ligands in tritiated form for subsequent functional characterisation of the complement receptors. To demonstrate the versatility of the developed system, it was applied to another disulphidebond containing peptide ligand, the 21 amino acid endothelin-1. We describe a reliable and multifaceted tool to generate custom labelled peptide ligands for the structural and functional characterisation of GPCRs. The system allows the production of custom radioligands, peptides labelled for NMR studies or with fluorescent amino acids.
Apart from the modulation of GPCR activity by orthosteric ligands, GPCR signalling has long been described to be regulated by allosteric ligands including peptides, small molecules and ions. In this thesis, the influence of sodium ions on the activity state of the chemoattractant cluster receptors and in particular on the apelin, bradykinin 2 and angiotensin II type 1 receptors was examined. In recent high resolution crystal structures an allosteric sodium ion pocket beneath the orthosteric ligand binding cavity was identified and residues contributing to the coordination of sodium ions are conserved throughout the chemoattractant cluster receptors. This allosteric sodium ion coordinated within the transmembrane domain bundle has been described to negatively influence the affinity of agonists but not of antagonists. It was found that sodium ions have distinct influences on the affinity state as well as the available number of binding sites of the chemoattractant receptors. In case of the apelin and bradykinin 2 receptors, sodium ions drastically reduced the number of available binding sites whereas the affinity of peptide ligands to the bradykinin 2 receptors remained constant and the ligand binding affinities to the apelin receptor were completely abolished. In contrast, the angiotensin II type 1 receptor affinity state towards the endogenous peptide ligand angiotensin II is highly dependent on the presence of sodium ions, whereas binding of the synthetic peptide antagonist Sar1-Ile8-angiotensin II remained unaffected by the sodium ion concentration. As differential effects irrespective of the efficacy class but dependent on the amino acid composition of the applied ligands are observed, it can be concluded that electrostatic interactions between charged residues of the peptide ligands and amino acids on the extracellular surface of the receptors are influenced by sodium ions thereby adding another layer of complexity on GPCR signalling.
To elucidate the structure-function relationship of ligand selectivity between the kinin receptors, the structure of desArg10-kallidin (DAK) bound to the bradykinin 1 receptor was determined using solid state NMR (SSNMR) in the course of this thesis. The kinin peptides DAK and bradykinin bind with high affinity and high selectivity to either the bradykinin 1 or bradykinin 2 receptor, respectively. The binding pockets of the receptors are highly conserved and the two peptide ligands only differ in one amino acid at their N- and C-termini whereas the remaining eight amino acids are fully conserved. DAK adopts a U-shaped structure when bound to the bradykinin 1 receptor which resembles a horse shoe-like conformation. Using 2D TEDOR spectroscopy it could furthermore be demonstrated that positively charged residues at the N-terminal part of the peptide engage in ionic interactions with negatively charged amino acids on the extracellular surface of the bradykinin 1 receptor. In contrast, bradykinin displays a distinct b-turn at the C-terminus and an S-shaped conformation of the N-terminal segment when bound to the bradykinin 2 receptor. By using SSNMR to study the binding mode of DAK on the bradykinin 1 receptor we could determine that subtype selectivity between the kinin receptors is conferred by distinct conformational restraints within the peptide ligands and by the formation of specific ionic interaction between charged residues on the peptide and receptor, respectively.
In brief, this thesis contributes structural and functional data on the binding mechanisms and binding mode of different peptide-ligand GPCRs helping to understand subtype selectivity and allosteric modulation of the chemoattractant cluster receptors. In addition, a versatile cell-free expression system was developed that allows the custom synthesis of isotopically labelled peptides containing disulphide bonds for the functional characterisation of GPCRs.
Intrinsically disordered protein (IDP) duplexes composed of two IDP chains cross-linked by bivalent partner proteins form scaffolds for assembly of multiprotein complexes. The N-terminal domain of dynein intermediate chain (N-IC) is one such IDP that forms a bivalent scaffold with multiple dynein light chains including LC8, a hub protein that promotes duplex formation of diverse IDP partners. N-IC also binds a subunit of the dynein regulator, dynactin. Here we characterize interactions of a yeast ortholog of N-IC (N-Pac11) with yeast LC8 (Dyn2) or with the intermediate chain-binding subunit of yeast dynactin (Nip100). Residue level changes in Pac11 structure are monitored by NMR spectroscopy, and binding energetics are monitored by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). N-Pac11 is monomeric and primarily disordered except for a single α-helix (SAH) at the N terminus and a short nascent helix, LH, flanked by the two Dyn2 recognition motifs. Upon binding Dyn2, the only Pac11 residues making direct protein-protein interactions are in and immediately flanking the recognition motifs. Dyn2 binding also orders LH residues of Pac11. Upon binding Nip100, only Pac11 SAH residues make direct protein-protein interactions, but LH residues at a distant sequence position and L1 residues in an adjacent linker are also ordered. The long distance, ligand-dependent ordering of residues reveals new elements of dynamic structure within IDP linker regions.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde ein Flugzeitmassenspektrometer (TOF-MS) für die Messung von halogenierten Spurengasen charakterisiert und das verwendete analytische System optimiert. Ein TOF-MS hat den Vorteil, dass es die volle Masseninformation aufzeichnet. Dadurch ist es möglich, auch im Nachhinein Substanzen zu identifizieren und retrospektiv auszuwerten. Eine retrospektive Auswertung kann helfen, Auswirkungen auf die Atmosphäre besser abschätzen zu können. Aus diesem Grund wurde mit Hilfe des TOF-MS ein digitales Datenarchiv durch regelmäßige Messungen von Luftproben, die am Taunus Observatorium auf dem Kleinen Feldberg genommen wurden, initialisiert. Durch die Wahl des Taunus Observatoriums werden in unmittelbarer Nähe des industriellen Ballungsraums Rhein-Main auf der Nordhemisphäre Luftproben genommen, wodurch die Wahrscheinlichkeit erhöht wird, unbekannte Substanzen in erhöhter Konzentration zu messen.
Bevor das TOF-MS jedoch für die Initialisierung des Datenarchivs verwendet werden konnte, wurde es charakterisiert und mit einem, für die Analyse von halogenierten Kohlenwasserstoffen etablierten QP-MS verglichen. Um beide Detektoren vergleichen zu können, erfolgte die Probenaufgabe, Probenaufkonzentrierung und die Separation der Probe im Gaschromatographen innerhalb eines gemeinsamen Systems. Nach der Separation im GC teilt sich der Trägergasfluss auf. Die Charakterisierung des TOF-MS und der Vergleich mit dem QP-MS umfasst die Auswertung der Daten, die Messpräzision, die Linearität, die Sensitivität der Detektoren, die Massenauflösung und die Massenachsenbestimmungsgenauigkeit.
Hinsichtlich der Messpräzision liegen beide Massenspektrometer, wie ermittelt auf dem selben Niveau, wodurch sie auch sehr geringe Variabilitäten in den Mischungsverhältnissen von halogenierten Kohlenwasserstoffen aufzeichnen können.
Die Linearität der Detektoren ist substanzspezifisch. Während das QP-MS in Übereinstimmung mit bereits literaturbekannter Eigenschaft, einen sehr großen linearen Bereich aufweist, zeigt das hier verwendete TOF-MS für 2/3 aller ausgewerteter Substanzen starke substanz- und fragmentabhängig Nichtlinearitäten. Das nichtlineare Verhalten des Detektors des TOF-MS zeigt sich auch bei den Messvergleichen, wobei jedoch nur signifikante Abweichungen bei sehr hohen und sehr niedrig gemessenen Mischungsverhältnissen beobachtet wurden. Diese starke Nichtlinearität stellt eine große Einschränkung für eine retrospektive Auswertung unbekannter Substanzen dar, da deren Verlauf nur qualitativ nicht aber quantitativ dargestellt werden kann.
Die Massenauflösung liegt beim TOF-MS bei 1000 mit einer Massenachsenbestimmungsgenauigkeit zwischen 50-170~ppm, wodurch es dem QP-MS, welches nur Einheitsauflösung vorweist, weit überlegen ist. Mit dieser Auflösung und Massenachsenbestimmungsgenauigkeit ist das TOF-MS in der Lage einen halogenierten von einem nichthalogenierten Kohlenwasserstoff quantitativ zu trennen.
Zum Vergleich der Sensitivität der beiden Massenspektrometer wurde das QP-MS in drei verschiedenen Modi betrieben: Zum einen dem SCAN-Modus, dem operationalen SIM-Modus, welcher im regulärem Messbetrieb verwendet wird und mehrere Ionen pro Zeitfenster misst, und dem optimierten SIM-Modus, welcher nur ein Ion der jeweiligen Substanz misst. Das TOF-MS hat die gleiche Sensitivität wie das QP-MS im optimierten SIM-Modus. Das TOF-MS hat eine um den Faktor 3 höhere Sensitivität als das QP-MS im operationalen SIM-Modus und eine um den Faktor 12 höhere Sensitivität als das QP-MS im SCAN-Modus bei den betrachteten Substanzen.
Die Initialisierung des digitalen Datenarchivs wurde im Oktober 2013 mit der Probennahme am Taunus Observatorium begonnen, wobei in der vorliegenden Arbeit der Zeitraum von einem Jahr betrachtet wurde. Es wurden Identifizierungen aus regulären Proben der Taunus Observatoriums-Zeitreihe durchgeführt und so die Substanzen HFC-32, HFC-245fa,HCFC-133a und HFO-1234yf gefunden. Zusätzlich stellte Martin Vollmer (Eidgenössische Material und Prüfgesellschaft) zwei Gasmischungen zu Verfügung für die Identifikation von noch nicht am System vermessenen Substanzen. Somit konnte die Vielfalt an diesem System vermessener Substanzen von 40 auf insgesamt 64 Substanzen erweitert werden.
Von den neu identifizierten Substanzen wurden HFC-227ea, HFC-236fa, HFC-32, HCFO-1233zd, HFO-1234zd, HFO-1234yf, HFC-245fa, HCFC-31, HFC-133a, Isofluran und HFC-112 in der Taunus Observatoriums-Zeitreihe gefunden und rückwirkend aufgearbeitet.
Durch die retrospektive Auswertung ist das TOF-MS für seine charakterisierte Anwendung zum Einsatz gekommen.
Chemistry and time
(2015)
HDAC inhibitors (HDACI), a new class of anticancer agents, induce apoptosis in many cancer entities. JNJ-26481585 is a second generation class І HDACI that displays improved efficacy in preclinical studies compared to the established HDACI SAHA (Vorinostat). Therefore, this study aims at evaluating the effects of JNJ-26481585 on human rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) and at identifying novel synergistic interactions of JNJ-26481585 or the more common HDACI SAHA with different anticancer drugs in RMS cells. Indeed, we show that JNJ-26481585 and SAHA significantly increase chemotherapeutic drug-induced apoptosis in embryonal and alveolar RMS cell lines, when used in combination with chemotherapeutic agents (i.e. doxorubicin, etoposide, vincristine, and cyclophosphamide) which are currently used in the clinic for the treatment of RMS.
We demonstrate that JNJ-26481585 as single agent and in combination with doxorubicin induces apoptosis, which is characterized by activation of the caspase cascade, PARP cleavage, and DNA fragmentation. Induction of caspase-dependent apoptotic cell death is confirmed by the use of the broad-range caspase inhibitor zVAD.fmk, which significantly decreases both JNJ-26481585-triggered and combination treatment-mediated DNA fragmentation, and in addition completely abrogates loss of cell viability. Importantly, JNJ-26481585 significantly inhibits tumor growth in vivo in two preclinical RMS models, i.e. the chicken chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) model and a xenograft mouse model, supporting the notion that JNJ-26481585 hampers tumor maintenance. Also, in combination with doxorubicin JNJ-26481585 significantly reduces tumor growth in in vivo experiments using the CAM model.
Mechanistically, we identify that JNJ-26481585-induced apoptosis is mediated via the intrinsic apoptotic pathway, since we observe increased loss of mitochondrial membrane potential and activation of the proapoptotic Bcl-2 family members Bax and Bak. Interestingly, we find that JNJ-26481585 triggers induction of Bim, Bmf, Puma, and Noxa on mRNA level as well as on protein level, pointing to an altered transcription of BH3-only proteins as important event for the Bax/Bak-mediated loss of mitochondrial membrane potential as well as mitochondrial apoptosis induction upon JNJ-26481585 treatment. JNJ-26481585-initiated activation of Bax and Bak is not prevented with the addition of zVAD.fmk, suggesting that JNJ-26481585 first disrupts the mitochondria and subsequently activates the caspase cascade. When JNJ-26481585 is used in combination with doxorubicin, we observe not only an increase of proapoptotic Bcl-2 proteins, but also a decrease in the level of the antiapoptotic mitochondrial proteins Bcl-2, Mcl-1, and Bcl-xL. This indicates that Bax, Bak, Bim, and Noxa are crucial for JNJ-26481585-induced as well as JNJ/Dox treatment-induced apoptosis, since RNAi mediated silencing of Bax, Bak, Bim, and Noxa significantly impedes DNA fragmentation upon those treatments.
Furthermore, ectopic overexpression of Bcl-2 profoundly impairs both JNJ-26481585 and combination treatment-mediated apoptosis, abrogates caspase cleavage, and reduces activation of Bax and Bak, underlining the hypothesis that JNJ-26481585 initially targets the mitochondria and then activates caspases.
With the more commonly used HDACI SAHA we confirm the results obtained with the HDACI JNJ-26481585, since combination treatment with SAHA and doxorubicin also induces intrinsic apoptosis, which can be significantly diminished by zVAD.fmk or ectopic overexpression of Bcl-2. Treatment with SAHA and doxorubicin also affects expression levels of pro- and antiapoptotic mitochondrial proteins, thus shifting the balance towards the proapoptotic mitochondrial machinery, resulting in Bax/Bak activation, caspase activation, and subsequently apoptosis.
Taken together, we provide evidence that the HDACIs JNJ-26481585 and SAHA are promising therapeutic agents for the treatment of RMS and that combination regimens with HDACIs represent an efficient strategy to prime RMS cells for chemotherapy-induced apoptosis. These findings have important implications for mitochondrial apoptosis-targeted therapies of RMS.
Small molecule drug discovery is strongly supported by biophysical data. In the reach of this thesis, cell free protein expression was used to produce human target proteins for ligand binding assays using Surface Plasmon Resonance spectroscopy (SPR). In the second step the binding and interaction characteristics of small molecules and fragments were analyzed using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectroscopy (NMR).
The first target protein was the human acid sensing channel 1 (ASIC1a). ASIC1a was expressed in a cell free expression system based on E.coli lysate. To optimize the expression, several parameters including fusion tags, ion concentrations and different hydrophobic environments were tested.
The adaption of the folding environment for ASIC1a needed more optimization, because it is a very challenging target to express in an in vitro system. Three different expression modes were employed to find a suitable folding environment.
SPR binding studies with ASIC1a were performed with chicken ASIC1a expressed in insect cells. The immobilization of cASIC1a and the used buffer conditions were tested using Psalmotoxin 1, a naturally occurring peptide venom which binds strong to the trimeric form of ASIC1a. Compound characterization experiments were performed with a variety of different ligands including amiloride, a general blocker of the whole ENaC protein family. None of the used ligands showed titration curves that would match a simple 1:1 binding model. The experiments either show no binding signal or signal that could be interpreted as unspecific binding. Even amiloride that should be binding the protein shows no signals that fit a simple binding model.
Another target protein that was investigated is the soluble prolyl cis/trans isomerase Cyclophilin D (or peptidyl prolyl isomerase F – PPIF). This protein is involved in the regulation of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore and therefore a potential drug target to treat neurodegenerative diseases. Small molecule binding was tested with CypD using SPR. Following the kinetic analysis of small molecule ligands, the binding position of different binding fragments was analyzed. These fragments originated from a SPR based fragment screen and gave no co-crystal structures with CypD. Therefore NMR was used to investigate the binding position of these fragments. An analysis of the chemical shift perturbations upon ligand addition revealed that the NMR analysis was in line with the results gathered by x-ray crystallography. The fragments with unknown binding position however, all bind to a specific patch slightly outside the binding pocket.
The ligand CL1 showed a special behavior in the NMR experiments. Upon addition to CypD, it produced large shifts on many signals of the protein, accompanied by a severe line broadening. The shift perturbations were so numerous and large that the spectrum had to be reassigned in complex with the ligand. Triple selective labeling was applied to allow a fast and nearly complete signal assignment. The possibility to use highly sophisticated labeling schemes, is one of the advantages of cell free protein expression. After the assignment of the complex spectrum, the chemical shift perturbations were analyzed and quantified. The residues showing the strongest CSPs are also identified in the crystal structure to be involved in the binding of CL1, giving a consistent picture. The numerous and large shift perturbations, produced by CL1 led to the assumption, that the ligand induces a conformational change in CypD, which is not represented in the co-crystal structure. This conformational change was characterized by a NMR based structure determination. CypD apo yielded a defined bundle, whose folded regions overlap well with the corresponding crystal structure.
For the calculation of the CypD-CL1 complex structure, the sidechain resonances were assigned using an automated assignment approach with the software FLYA. The calculation of the CypD-CL1 complex structure did not result in a defined bundle. While parts of the protein converge in a well folded state, the region around the active site shows no defined folding. Careful analysis of the structure calculation suggests that the problems during structure calculation did not originate from an incorrect resonance assignment, but rather from a lack of NOE crosspeaks. This might be due to a broadening of the corresponding NOE crosspeaks or the coexistence of many different conformations. This leads to the conclusion, that the protein conformation is not defined by the NMR data and could be in a dynamic interchange between multiple structures.
This hypothesis is supported by other observations. The line broadening of the signals in the complex is pronounced in the area around the active site and the substrate binding pocket, hinting to a connection between catalytic activity and protein dynamics. In addition many NMR signals are sensitive to changes in the measurement field strength and the temperature. This field dependent signal splitting suggests dynamic conformational changes in the protein between at least two different conformations on a millisecond timescale.
The current working model is that CL1 binds to CypD and induces the catalytic cycle and the connected conformational changes in CypD. As a result the proline like moiety in CL1 is constantly switching between the cis and the trans conformation. Due to the high affinity of CL1, the inhibitor does not leave the binding pocket after successful catalysis, but stays bound in the pocket stimulating further catalytic cycles. These findings as well as the working model are well in line with data published for Cyclophilin A, another member of the cyclophilin family, thereby supporting the model.
Der Auflösung mikroskopischer Verfahren ist durch die Beugungsgrenze eine natürliche Schranke gesetzt. Strukturen, die näher als die halbe Wellenlänge des verwendeten Lichts zusammenliegen, können nicht aufgelöst werden. Doch Forscher haben einen Weg gefunden, diese Grenze zu umgehen. Die entstehenden Bilder ähneln dem Pointillismus in der Malerei.
The solution structure of the lantibiotic immunity protein NisI and its interactions with nisin
(2015)
Many Gram-positive bacteria produce lantibiotics, genetically encoded and posttranslationally modified peptide antibiotics, which inhibit the growth of other Gram-positive bacteria. To protect themselves against their own lantibiotics these bacteria express a variety of immunity proteins including the LanI lipoproteins. The structural and mechanistic basis for LanI-mediated lantibiotic immunity is not yet understood. Lactococcus lactis produces the lantibiotic nisin, which is widely used as a food preservative. Its LanI protein NisI provides immunity against nisin but not against structurally very similar lantibiotics from other species such as subtilin from Bacillus subtilis. To understand the structural basis for LanI-mediated immunity and their specificity we investigated the structure of NisI. We found that NisI is a two-domain protein. Surprisingly, each of the two NisI domains has the same structure as the LanI protein from B. subtilis, SpaI, despite the lack of significant sequence homology. The two NisI domains and SpaI differ strongly in their surface properties and function. Additionally, SpaI-mediated lantibiotic immunity depends on the presence of a basic unstructured N-terminal region that tethers SpaI to the membrane. Such a region is absent from NisI. Instead, the N-terminal domain of NisI interacts with membranes but not with nisin. In contrast, the C-terminal domain specifically binds nisin and modulates the membrane affinity of the N-terminal domain. Thus, our results reveal an unexpected structural relationship between NisI and SpaI and shed light on the structural basis for LanI mediated lantibiotic immunity.
Cyclic GMP (cGMP) signalling regulates multiple biological functions through activation of protein kinase G and cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) channels. In sensory neurons, cGMP permits signal modulation, amplification and encoding, before depolarization. Here we implement a guanylyl cyclase rhodopsin from Blastocladiella emersonii as a new optogenetic tool (BeCyclOp), enabling rapid light-triggered cGMP increase in heterologous cells (Xenopus oocytes, HEK293T cells) and in Caenorhabditis elegans. Among five different fungal CyclOps, exhibiting unusual eight transmembrane topologies and cytosolic N-termini, BeCyclOp is the superior optogenetic tool (light/dark activity ratio: 5,000; no cAMP production; turnover (20 °C) ∼17 cGMP s−1). Via co-expressed CNG channels (OLF in oocytes, TAX-2/4 in C. elegans muscle), BeCyclOp photoactivation induces a rapid conductance increase and depolarization at very low light intensities. In O2/CO2 sensory neurons of C. elegans, BeCyclOp activation evokes behavioural responses consistent with their normal sensory function. BeCyclOp therefore enables precise and rapid optogenetic manipulation of cGMP levels in cells and animals.
Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde einerseits der Einsatz lichtaktivierbarer Oligonukleotide zur Kontrolle der Leitfähigkeit entlang von DNA untersucht sowie neue photoaktivierbare Verbindungen für die Peptidchemie und für eine neu entwickelte Variante des SELEX (Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponetial enrichment) Verfahrens synthetisiert.
DNA vermittelte Ladungsübertragung verläuft entlang des gestapelten π-Systems der heteroaromatischen Nukleobasen. Die Leitfähigkeit von Oligonukleotiden reagiert daher empfindlich auf Störungen in der Watson-Crick-Basenpaarung. Die in der Arbeitsgruppe Heckel etablierte Technik, Nukleobasen an für die Basenpaarung relevanten Positionen mit photolabilen Schutzgruppen zu modifizieren, sollte daher mit Systemen der Ladungsübertragung in DNA kombiniert werden. Im Verlauf dieses Projekts wurden zwei literaturbekannte Varianten, in denen Ladungstransport über einen lichtinduzierten Redoxprozess zwischen Metallkomplexen ablaufen und über eine dabei unterdrückte Fluoreszenz optisch verfolgt werden sollte, als ungeeignete Systeme identifiziert. Durch den Wechsel zu elektrodengestützter Leitfähigkeitsmessung konnte der prinzipielle Effekt von Leitfähigkeit in perfekt gepaarter DNA und deutlich reduziertem Stromfluss in Oligonukleotiden mit Fehlpaarungen gezeigt werden. Beim Einsatz photolabil geschützter Oligonukleotide konnte jedoch auch in diesem System noch nicht der gewünschte Effekt gefunden werden.
Im zweiten Projekt dieser Arbeit wurden neue photolabile Verbindungen hergestellt, die Peptide nach ihrem Einbau in das Peptidrückgrat durch Zwei-Photonen-Anregung mit IR-Licht spalten sollen. Drei entsprechende Nitrodibenzofuran-Verbindungen und ein Cumarin-Baustein konnten erfolgreich synthetisiert werden. Die neuen Moleküle zeigten im Rahmen der Peptid-Festphasensynthese Stabilitätsprobleme. Diese Schwierigkeiten konnten durch Peptid-Kopplungen in Lösung umgangen werden. Mit Hilfe eines der hergestellten Bausteine wurden zwei Tripeptide hergestellt, die jeweils mit dem Farbstoff ATTO565 markiert und hinsichtlich ihrer photochemischen Eigenschaften charakterisiert wurden. Der neue Baustein zeigte neben den Eigenschaften als photospaltbare Gruppe, dass er gleichzeitig ein Quencher für den Farbstoff ATTO565 darstellt. Nach Belichtung stieg die Fluoreszenz um den Faktor 81 an. Die Aktivierung gelang wie erwartet mit Ein- und Zwei-Photonen-Anregung. In Kollaboration mit der Arbeitsgruppe von Prof. Heilemann konnten Antiköper mit einem der Tripeptide modifiziert werden und die Kompatibilität der Verbindung mit hochaufgelöster Einzelmolekül-Fluoreszenzmikroskopie demonstriert werden.
Im letzten in dieser Arbeit thematisierten Projekt wurden neue lichtspaltbare Verbindungen für eine Variante des SELEX-Prozesses hergestellt. Diese Verbindungen erlauben die temporäre Einführung einer Indol Modifikation an Alkin-modifizierte Oligonukleotide über die sogenannte Click-Chemie. Neue chemische Modifikationen wie die hier verwendeten Indole erhöhen die chemische Vielfalt der Oligonukleotide. Eine größere Vielfalt führt zu neuen potentiellen Wechselwirkungen gegenüber Verbindungen, gegen die mit Hilfe herkömmlicher SELEX-Verfahren keine Aptamere erzeugt werden konnten. Da die chemische Modifikation über eine photolabile Gruppe an die Oligonukleotide gebunden wird, kann sie photochemisch von der DNA gespalten werden, wodurch eine Interferenz der Modifikation mit den enzymatisch katalysierten Schritten innerhalb der SELEX ausgeschlossen werden kann.
As a surrogate of live cells, proteo-lipobeads are presented, encapsulating functional membrane proteins in a strict orientation into a lipid bilayer. Assays can be performed just as on live cells, for example using fluorescence measurements. As a proof of concept, we have demonstrated proton transport through cytochrome c oxidase.
Zur Untersuchung der Eigenschaften organischer Halbleiter sollte die Ultrareinigung organischer Materialien durch Zonenschmelzen ermöglicht werden und anschließend dieses Verfahren auf einen neuen molekularen n-Halbleiter, Perfluoranthracen, angewendet werden. Ein Großteil der vorliegenden Arbeit beschäftigte sich daher mit der Konstruktion einer Zonenschmelze. Diese sollte in der Lage sein, laborübliche Mengen organischer Materialien zu reinigen (ca. 0,5-5 g). Ein Eigenbau wurde in Angriff genommen, um eine optimale Anpassung an die zu erwartenden Aufgabenstellungen zu erreichen. Daher wurde das System in einer modularen Bauweise konzipiert, sodass einzelne oder mehrere Heizzonen verwendet werden können und die Apparatur auch später beliebig erweitert werden kann. Zunächst mussten Erfahrungen mit der Wärmezufuhr und Kühlung gesammelt werden und ein verlässlicher Zugmechanismus entwickelt werden, der die Probe in kontrollierter, langsamer Weise durch die Apparatur bewegt. Ein grosses Problem stellte das Bersten der gläsernen Probenbehältnisse beim Zonenschmelzen einiger Substanzen dar. Nach dem erfolgreichen Einsatz verschiedener Puffermaterialien wurde schliesslich ein apparativer Aufbau entwickelt, der auf eine aktive Kühlung verzichtete. Hierdurch konnte die unkontrollierte Sublimation unterbunden werden und das Bersten der Probenbehältnisse wurde unterdrückt. Gleichzeitig musste jedoch sichergestellt werden, dass die Effektivität des Zonenschmelzen auch ohne den Einsatz grosser Temperaturgradienten gegeben war. Die Reinigung verschiedener kommerziell verfügbarer Substanzen wurde getestet und gleichzeitig die Analytik der organischen Verunreinigungen mittels Gaschromatographie im Arbeitskreis etabliert. Das Zonenschmelzen ermöglichte schließlich die Reinigung von Anthracen bis auf 99,97%. In Dibenzothiophen konnten der Anteil der Nebenkomponenten unter die Nachweisgrenze verringert werden. Nach der Herstellung von Perfluoranthracen wurden unterschiedliche Methoden zur Reinigung getestet und schließlich das Zonenschmelzen angewendet. Es war möglich, kleinere Mengen an Perfluoranthracen in einer Reinheit von bis zu 99,11% zu isolieren, was durch reguläre Reinigungsverfahren wie Umkristallisation oder Sublimation nicht erreicht werden konnte. Dennoch limitierte die thermische Instabilität des Materials die Effektivität des Zonenschmelzens.
Weiterhin wurden die optische und elektrochemische Bandlücke von Perfluoranthracen untersucht, um Aussagen über die mögliche Anwendung als n-Halbleiter treffen zu können. Es wurde eine optische Bandlücke von 3,08 eV und eine elektrochemische Bandlücke von 2,82 eV ermittelt. Im Vergleich zu Anthracen wurden niedriger liegende Grenzorbitale bestimmt, was ein Einbringen von Elektronen in das energetisch niedrigste unbesetzte Molekülorbital (LUMO) und somit n-Halbleitung vereinfachen könnte. Schließlich wurde untersucht, ob sich durch die äquimolare Mischung von Anthracen und Perfluoranthracen Mischkristalle herstellen lassen, die Charge-Transfer-Eigenschaften (CT) und eine hohe elektrische Leitfähigkeit aufweisen würden. Hierzu mussten zunächst ausreichend grosse Einkristalle gezüchtet werden, von denen anschliessend die Röntgenkristallstruktur bestimmt wurde. Das einkristalline Material zeigte eine gemischt gestapelte Anordnung (siehe Abbildung 0.2), wie sie für andere Systeme, beispielsweise Benzol/Hexafluorbenzol, bekannt ist. In feldstärkenabhängigen und temperaturabhängigen Messungen wurden danach die elektrischen Eigenschaften des Materials charakterisiert. Es konnten keine Hinweise für CT-Eigenschaften gefunden werden. Dennoch besitzt der Mischkristall im Vergleich zu Anthracen eine etwa 10 12 -fach höhere Leitfähigkeit und erreicht Werte guter anorganischer Halbleiter. Das temperaturabhängige Verhalten selbst zeigt aber keine typisch halbleitenden Charakteristiken, da für die thermisch angeregte Zunahme der Ladungsträgerkonzentration im untersuchten Mischkristall kein lineares Verhalten im Arrhenius-Plot gefunden wurde. Die genauen Leitungsmechanismen bedürfen weiterer Untersuchungen. In nachfolgenden Experimenten könnte die mögliche Anwendbarkeit in elektronischen Anwendungen geklärt werden.
Crystallization and X-ray diffraction studies of a complete bacterial fatty-acid synthase type I
(2015)
While a deep understanding of the fungal and mammalian multi-enzyme type I fatty-acid synthases (FAS I) has been achieved in recent years, the bacterial FAS I family, which is narrowly distributed within the Actinomycetales genera Mycobacterium, Corynebacterium and Nocardia, is still poorly understood. This is of particular relevance for two reasons: (i) although homologous to fungal FAS I, cryo-electron microscopic studies have shown that bacterial FAS I has unique structural and functional properties, and (ii) M. tuberculosis FAS I is a drug target for the therapeutic treatment of tuberculosis (TB) and therefore is of extraordinary importance as a drug target. Crystals of FAS I from C. efficiens, a homologue of M. tuberculosis FAS I, were produced and diffracted X-rays to about 4.5 Å resolution.
Die Biosynthese der Fettsäuren (FS) ist in Eukaryoten und Bakterien ein hochkonserviert zentraler Stoffwechselweg, der in zwei strukturell verschiedenen Systemen ausgeführt wird. Die meisten Bakterien, Parasiten, Pflanzen und Mitochondrien nutzen ein Fettsäuresesynthase Typ-II (FAS-II) System. Bei FAS II Systemen sind alle katalytischen Domänen separate lösliche Proteine. In Eukaryoten wie auch den Bakterien Corynebakteria, Mycobakteria, Nocardia (Klasse der CMN Bakterien) liegen die katalytischen Domänen fusioniert auf einer Polypeptidkette vor, die zu einem Multienzymkomplex der Fettsäuresynthase Typ I (FAS-I) assemblieren. Die Architektur der FAS-I zeigt große Unterschiede; die X förmige Säuger-FAS-I (Maier et al., 2006), sowie die fassartigen Enzyme der Pilz FAS-I (Jenni et al., 2007; Leibundgut et al., 2007; Lomakin et al., 2007; Johansson et al., 2008) und der bakteriellen FAS-I (Boehringer et al., 2013; Ciccarelli et al., 2013). Zwischen Pilz- und bakterieller FAS-I gibt es trotz des ähnlichen Aufbaus bedeutende Unterschiede. Mycobakterium tuberculosis, der Auslöser von Tuberkulose (TB), an der jährlich über eine Million Menschen weltweit sterben (WHO, 2014), synthetisiert durch eine Symbiose von FAS-I, FAS-II und der Polyketidsynthase-13 Mykolsäuren. Durch die Mykolsäuren ist M. tuberculosis resistent gegen äußere Einflüsse. FAS-I ist in die Synthese der Vorstufen der Mykolsäuren involviert. Sie stellt im Kampf gegen TB ein potentielles Inhibierungstarget dar.
Strukturell war die bakterielle FAS-I beim Beginn der vorliegenden Arbeit, nur durch negative-stain-Elektronenmikroskopie (EM) Aufnahmen aus dem Jahr 1982 charakterisiert (Morishima et al., 1982). In dieser Arbeit konnte die bakteriellen FAS I aus M. tuberculosis (MtFAS), sowie Corynebacterium ammoniagenes (CaFAS) und Corynebacterium efficiens (CeFAS) strukturell untersucht werden. Dies geschah mit den Methoden negative-stain-EM, Einzelmolekül-Cryo-EM (Cryo-EM), Cryo EM Tomographie (CET) und Röntgenkristallographie.
Anhand von CeFAS-Kristallen konnte erstmals durch Röntgenkristallographie die Struktur einer bakteriellen FAS-I bestimmt werden. Zudem wurde die hohe konformationelle Flexibilität der bakteriellen FAS-I mit mehreren Methoden gezeigt. Für die CaFAS konnte mit Cryo-EM initiale Prozesse der Proteinkristallbildung abgebildet werden.
Künstliche Ribonucleasen, die sequenzspezifisch und effizient die Spaltung von RNA-Phosphordiesterbindungen katalysieren, könnten potenziell nicht nur als biochemische Werkzeuge dienen, sondern auch als Wirkstoffe gegen eine Vielzahl von Erkrankungen, bei denen mRNA oder miRNA involviert sind, eine wichtige Rolle spielen. Obwohl in den letzten beiden Jahrzehnten zahlreiche sequenzspezifische RNA-Spalter entwickelt wurden, bleibt die Spaltaktivität dieser Verbindungen nach wie vor deutlich hinter der ihrer natürlichen Äquivalente zurück. Die Optimierung künstlicher Ribonucleasen und grundlegend dafür die Erforschung der Faktoren, die die Spaltaktivität einer Verbindung beeinflussen, sind daher weiterhin von großem Interesse. Zwar enthalten die meisten künstlichen Ribonucleasen Metallionen, doch sind auch metallfreie RNA-Spalter, zum Beispiel auf der Basis heterocyclischer Guanidine, bekannt. Prinzipiell kann die Hydrolyse des RNA-Rückgrates durch Deprotonierung der nucleophil am Phosphoratom angreifenden 2‘-OH-Gruppe, durch Protonierung der als Abgangsgruppe fungierenden 5‘-OH-Gruppe sowie durch Stabilisierung des bei der Spaltung durchlaufenen dianionischen Phosphorans katalysiert werden. Daher sollten potenzielle RNA-Spalter in der Lage sein, sowohl als Base als auch als Säure wirken zu können, was bei einem pKa-Wert im Bereich von 7 am besten gegeben ist. Fungiert ein und dasselbe Molekül als Protonenakzeptor und -donor, so kommt es im Fall von Guanidinanaloga zu einer Tautomerisierung vom Amino- zum Iminoisomer. Eine möglichst kleine Energiedifferenz zwischen beiden Formen sollte sich daher positiv auf die Spaltaktivität auswirken. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde eine Reihe heterocyclischer Guanidine synthetisiert, deren pKa-Werte bestimmt und die jeweiligen Energiedifferenzen zwischen Amino- und Iminotautomer grob mittels AM1-Rechnungen abgeschätzt. In Spaltexperimenten wurden Cy5-markierte RNA-Substrate mit den verschiedenen Verbindungen inkubiert (Spalter-Konzentration: 2 bzw. 10 mM). Die Analyse und Quantifizierung der Spaltprodukte erfolgten anschließend mithilfe eines DNA-Sequenziergerätes. Alle untersuchten und ausreichend löslichen Substanzen, die sowohl einen geeigneten pKa-Wert (6 – 8) als auch eine niedrige Energiedifferenz zwischen Amino- und Iminotautomer (≤ 5 kcal/mol) aufwiesen bzw. bei denen nur der pKa-Wert oder nur die Energiedifferenz in geringem Maße vom Idealwert abwich, spalteten RNA, wenn auch teilweise nur mit einer geringen Aktivität. In den Spaltexperimenten erwiesen sich Guanidinanaloga mit einem großen aromatischen System als besonders aktiv, allen voran 2-Aminoperimidin und seine Derivate, die auch bei Konzentrationen unter 50 µM Spaltaktivität zeigten. Gleichzeitig offenbarten diese Verbindungen in Fluoreszenzkorrelationsspektroskopie Experimenten eine große Tendenz zur Aggregation mit RNA, so dass die Spaltung in diesen Fällen möglicherweise nicht durch Einzelmoleküle, sondern durch Aggregate erfolgte. Um RNA-Substrate auch sequenzspezifisch spalten zu können, wurden PNA-Konjugate des bereits bekannten RNA-Spalters Tris(2-aminobenzimidazol) hergestellt, wobei der Spalter über eine neue, quecksilberfreie Route synthetisiert wurde. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass diese PNA-Konjugate RNA sequenzspezifisch mit einer Halbwertszeit von etwa 11 h spalten, was im Rahmen der Halbwertszeit vergleichbarer DNA-Konjugate liegt. Um zu untersuchen, ob 2-Aminoperimidine auch als Einzelverbindungen aktiv sind, wurden zwei PNA-Konjugate von am Naphthylring substituierten 2-Aminoperimidin-Derivaten synthetisiert. Beide Konjugate zeigten keinerlei Spaltaktivität, was darauf hindeuten könnte, dass die Hydrolyse des RNA-Rückgrates nur durch mehrere Spalter-Einheiten – kovalent verknüpft oder in Form von Aggregaten – effizient katalysiert werden kann.
Small molecule inhibitors sensitize neuroblastoma cells for chemotherapeutic drug-induced apoptosis
(2015)
Neuroblastoma (NB) is one of the most common solid extracranial pediatric tumors, deriving from undifferentiated cells of the peripheral nervous system. It accounts for approximately 10% of all childhood cancers. High stage tumors usually show poor prognosis despite aggressive treatment such as radiotherapy or chemotherapy. Therefore, it is of utmost importance to find novel treatment strategies in order to improve existing chemotherapy protocols. Combination treatment offers advantages, as chemotherapeutic drugs can be applied in low and subtoxic doses, reducing possible side-effects. Here, we report in a two-part study that small molecule inhibitors (SMI), namely BI 2536, a PLK1 inhibitor and BV6, a SMAC mimetic (SM), sensitize neuroblastoma cells for chemotherapeutic drug-induced cell death. By using i) BI 2536 in combination with vinca alkaloids and ii) BV6 in combination with either doxorubicin or vinca alkaloids, we show that cell death is synergistically enhanced compared to monotherapy. Furthermore, combination treatment significantly reduces survival of NB cells in long-term assays, compared to single treatment. We identify that vinca alkaloid/SMI combinations induce mitotic arrest, as shown by phosphorylation of histone H3, which results in the induction of intrinsic apoptosis and inhibition of CDK1 by RO-3306 could abolish these findings. Mechanistically, upon vinca alkaloid/SMI-induced mitotic arrest, anti-apoptotic BCL-2 proteins such as MCL-1, BCL-2 or BCL-XL are degraded or inactivated by phosphorylation, which induces the activation of the proapoptotic BCL-2 family proteins BAX and BAK. The importance of the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway in vinca alkaloid/SMI-induced cell death was further highlighted by the fact that ectopic expression of BCL-2 inhibits vinca alkaloid/SMI-induced DNA fragmentation and BAK- and caspase-activation. In contrast to the vinca alkaloid/SMI cotreatment, DOX/SMI (DOX/BV6)-induced apoptosis only partially involves the mitochondrial pathway. Instead, we clarify that RIP1 is required for DOX/BV6-induced apoptosis, as pharmacological and genetic inhibition of RIP1 rescues from apoptosis induction. Although it has been shown in previous studies that SM-treatment (e.g. BV6) can induce the NF-κB pathway and auto-/paracrine TNFα production through cIAP1/2 depletion, DOX/BV6-induced apoptosis is completely independent of NF-κB activation in our setting, despite fast cIAP1 depletion. This conclusion is based on the fact that inhibition of the NF-κB pathway by exogenously expressed dominant-negative IκBα as well as application of a TNFα blocking antibody does not reduce DOX/BV6-induced cell death. In summary, we unravel two new promising treatment strategies for neuroblastoma patients by using a combination treatment of two different small molecule inhibitors, combined with well-characterized chemotherapeutic agents. Furthermore we give detailed insights into cell death pathways induced by these combination treatments, in which mitochondria and RIP1 have a differential role in chemotherapeutic drug-induced apoptosis.
Reactivation of autophagy by spermidine ameliorates the myopathic defects of collagen VI-null mice
(2015)
Autophagy is a self-degradative process responsible for the clearance of damaged or unnecessary cellular components. We have previously found that persistence of dysfunctional organelles due to autophagy failure is a key event in the pathogenesis of COL6/collagen VI-related myopathies, and have demonstrated that reactivation of a proper autophagic flux rescues the muscle defects of Col6a1-null (col6a1(-/-)) mice. Here we show that treatment with spermidine, a naturally occurring nontoxic autophagy inducer, is beneficial for col6a1(-/-) mice. Systemic administration of spermidine in col6a1(-/-) mice reactivated autophagy in a dose-dependent manner, leading to a concurrent amelioration of the histological and ultrastructural muscle defects. The beneficial effects of spermidine, together with its being easy to administer and the lack of overt side effects, open the field for the design of novel nutraceutical strategies for the treatment of muscle diseases characterized by autophagy impairment.
Cardiac progenitor cells hold great potential for regenerative therapies in heart disorders. However, the molecular mechanisms regulating cardiac progenitor cell expansion and differentiation remain poorly defined. Here we show that the multi- adaptor protein Ldb1, which mediates interactions between different classes of LIM domain transcription factors, is a multifunctional regulator of cardiac progenitor cell differentiation. Ldb1-deficient embryonic stem cells (ESCs) show a markedly decreased expression of second heart field (SHF) marker genes and subsequently impaired cardiomyocyte differentiation. Conditional ablation of Ldb1 in the early SHF using an Isl1-Cre driver led to embryonic lethality at Embryonic day (E)10.5 with cardiac abnormalities including a significantly smaller right ventricle and a shortened outflow tract, supporting a crucial role of Ldb1 in the SHF. Mechanistically we show that the importance of Ldb1 for SHF development is two-fold: On the one hand, Ldb1 binds to Isl1 and protects it from proteasomal degradation, as a consequence of which Ldb1-deficiency leads to an almost complete loss of Isl1+ cardiovascular progenitor cells. On the other hand the Isl1/Ldb1 complex promotes long-range promoter-enhancer interactions at the loci of the core cardiac transcription factors Mef2c and Hand2. Chromosome conformation capture followed by sequencing (3C- seq) identified specific Ldb1-mediated interactions of the Isl1/Ldb1 responsive Mef2c anterior heart field enhancer with genes which play key roles in cardiac progenitor cell function and cardiovascular development. These interactions are of critical importance to regulate the expression of the downstream target genes since their expression levels are strongly dependent on the Ldb1/Isl1 levels. Overexpression of an Ldb1 mutant, which contains the LIM interaction domain and thereby can protect Isl1 protein from degradation, but lacks the dimerization domain and thus cannot promote long-range interactions, does not collaborate with Isl1 to regulate the expression of their common targets and results in defects in Isl1+ cardiac progenitor differentiation. In this thesis we show one of the first examples of genome-wide chromatin reorganization mediated by a developmental regulated, cell type specific, transcription complex. Ldb1 in concert with Isl1 promotes long range promoter- enhancer and enhancer-enhancer interactions in order to create active chromatin hub where gene important for heart development can be co-regulated. Moreover, Isl1 and Ldb1 genetically interact during heart development, as Isl1/Ldb1 haplodeficient embryos show various cardiac anomalies. The dosage-sensitive interdependence between Isl1 and Ldb1 in the expression of these key factors in cardiogenesis, further supports a key role of the Isl1/Ldb1 complex in coordinating a three dimensional genome organization, upstream of a regulatory network driving cardiac differentiation and heart development.
In conclusion, the Isl1/Ldb1 complex orchestrate a genome-wide three dimensional chromatin reorganization resulting in a transcriptional program responsible for the differentiation of multipotent cardiac progenitor cells into cardiomyocytes.
The knowledge of three-dimensional structures of biomolecules is fundamental for the understanding of their function. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy represents besides X-ray crystallography one of the two most widely used techniques to study macromolecules at atomic resolution. Its application has long been a laborious task that could take months and required the expertise of an experienced scientist, however, owing to the tremendous effort that has been put into the development of respective computer algorithms, structure determination by NMR spectroscopy of small- to medium sized proteins is nowadays routinely performed. CYANA is one widely used software package, which combines the majority of individual steps towards a three-dimensional structure. The most common application of the program, however, restricts to the combined automated NOE assignment and structure calculation based on NOESY peak lists and an existing chemical shift assignment. Completely automated structure determination starting from NMR spectra is to date technically possible with CYANA, however, not yet routinely applied. In order to achieve this long-term goal, the individual steps need to become more robust with regard to data imperfections such as peak overlap, spectral artifacts or a limited amount of NMR data. The work presented in this thesis should be placed within the context of increasing the reliability and improving the accuracy of structures determined by CYANA on the basis of solution- as well as solid-state NMR data.
The chapter “Systematic evaluation of combined automated NOE assignment and structure calculation with CYANA” comprises an extensive study on the robustness of the combined automated NOE assignment and structure calculation algorithm based on experimental solution NMR data sets that were modified in multiple ways to mimic different kinds of data imperfections. The results show that the algorithm is remarkably robust with regard to imperfections of the NOESY peak lists and the chemical shift tolerances but susceptible to lacking or erroneous resonance assignments, in particular for nuclei that are involved in many NOESY cross peaks.
In the chapter “Peakmatch – A simple and robust tool for peaklist matching” a method to achieve self-consistency of the chemical shift referencing among a set of peak lists is presented. The Peakmatch algorithm matches a set of peak lists to a specified reference peak list, neither of which have to be assigned, by optimizing an assignment-free match-score function. The algorithm has been extensively tested on the basis of experimental NMR data sets of five different proteins. The results show that peak lists from many different types of spectra can be matched reliably as long as they contain at least two corresponding dimensions.
NMR structures are represented by bundles of conformers whose spread indicates the precision of the atomic coordinates. However, there is as yet no reliable measure of structural accuracy, i.e. how close NMR conformers are to the “true” structure. Instead, the precision of structure bundles is widely (mis)interpreted as a measure of structural quality. Attempts to increase the precision thus often yield tight structure bundles where the precision overestimates the accuracy. To overcome this problem, the chapter “Increased reliability of NMR protein structures by consensus structure bundles” introduces a new protocol for NMR structure determination with the software package CYANA that produces bundles of conformers with a realistic precision that is throughout a large number of test data sets a much better estimate of the structural accuracy than the precision of conventional structure bundles.
Solid-state NMR is a powerful technique to study molecules which are not amenable to either solution NMR or X-ray crystallography. Despite the reporting of individual atomic resolution structures of membrane proteins and amyloid fibrils based on solid-state NMR data, the application is far from routine. One major obstacle that hinders structure determination by solid-state NMR is the overall lower quality of the solid-state NMR spectra. It is therefore necessary to increase the robustness of the computer algorithms in order to improve the results when using lower quality solid-state NMR spectra. The chapter “Structure calculations of the model protein GB1 from solid-state NMR data” presents structure calculations on the basis of a set of two-dimensional solid-state NMR experiments of the model protein GB1. The most important result obtained from these test calculations is that the limitation of structural accuracy can be attributed to inaccurate distance information resulting from the limited correlation between peak intensities and distance, which is especially severe in spin diffusion-based solid-state NMR experiments.
The chapter “Full relaxation matrix-based correction of relayed polarization transfer for solid-state NMR structure calculation” therefore introduces a method which corrects experimental peak intensities for spin diffusion in order to improve the distance information from solid-state NMR spectra. The results show that the structural accuracy can be significantly improved when using the corrected distance information, however, strongly dependent on the preliminary structural model that is required as input for the method.
Starkes Übergewicht und eine damit einhergehende Hypertrophie von Geweben aber auch des Herz-Kreislauf-Systems führen zu einer Reihe von Folgeerkrankungen wie z. B. Diabetes mellitus Typ 2 oder auch Arteriosklerose. Während im Fettgewebe freie Fettsäuren, die von Makrophagen aufgenommen werden, eine entscheidende Rolle spielen, scheint in der Pathogenese von Arteriosklerose die Aufnahme von Fettsäuren aus Lipoproteinpartikeln durch Makrophagen von großer Wichtigkeit zu sein. Ein weiterer Faktor, der durch freie Fettsäuren ausgelöst wird ist ER-Stress. Makrophagen, die zu Triglycerid (TG) reichen Schaumzellen geworden sind, akkumulieren in arteriosklerotischen Läsionen. Der Lipidmetabolismus von Makrophagen wird transkriptionell u.a. durch den Transkriptionsfaktor PPARγ (Peroxisomproliferator aktivierter Rezeptor γ) reguliert. Sein Zielgen FABP4 (Fettsäuren bindendes Protein 4) beschleunigt die Entwicklung von Arteriosklerose in Mausmodellen. Da die Expression von PPARγ und FABP4 in IL 4- (Interleukin-4) polarisierten Makrophagen induziert wird, sollte die Rolle von FABP4 in humanen, mit IL 4 polarisierten Makrophagen untersucht werden. Hierfür wurden primäre humane Monozyten in Anwesenheit von LPS/IFNγ (Lipopolysaccharid/Interferon γ) bzw. IL 4 zu Makrophagen differenziert. Es zeigte sich, dass in LPS/IFNγ stimulierten Makrophagen PPARγ und dessen Zielgene nicht exprimiert wurden. Dagegen waren sie bei unstimulierten Makrophagen bei IL 4 stimulierten Makrophagen deutlich erhöht. Dies spiegelte sich auch in einer erhöhten Aufnahme von Triglyceriden aus VLDL-Partikeln (Lipoproteinpartikel sehr niedriger Dichte) wider. IL 4 induzierte also einen Fettsäuren akkumulierenden Phänotyp. Durch einen PPAR-Luciferase-Reporter-Test wurde untersucht, ob FABP4 für die Aktivierung von PPARγ nötig war. Dies konnte bestätigt werden, da PPARγ durch seinen Liganden Linolsäure nur in Anwesenheit von FABP4 aktiviert werden konnte. Diese Aktivierung konnte zusätzlich durch den FABP4-Inhibitor HTS01037 verhindert werden. Nun sollte der Einfluss von FABP4 auf die PPARγ-abhängige Genexpression untersucht werden. Hierfür wurde FABP4 während der Differenzierung mit den beiden Inhibitoren HTS01037 oder BMS309403 in IL 4 stimulierten Makrophagen inhibiert. Durch die Inhibition von FABP4 sank die Expression von FABP4 und LPL (Lipoproteinlipase), während die von PPARγ unverändert blieb. Die LPL spielt eine entscheidende Rolle in der Aufnahme von Lipiden aus VLDL-Partikeln und trägt somit zur TG-reichen Schaumzellbildung bei. Die verminderte Expression von LPL spiegelte sich in einer verminderten Lipidaufnahme aus VLDL-Partikeln wider. Gleichzeitig wurde durch die FABP4-Inhibition die Entzündungsantwort der Makrophagen auf VLDL-Partikel abgeschwächt. IL 4 induziert also LPL, indem es PPARγ aktiviert. FABP4 unterstützt hierbei die Aktivierung von PPARγ. Durch die Inhibition kann die LPL-Expression vermindert werden, was die TG-reiche Schaumzellbildung und die Entzündungsreaktion in einem VLDL-reichen Umfeld vermindert und eine neue Therapiemöglichkeit von Arteriosklerose eröffnet. Im Fettgewebe kommt bei starkem Übergewicht, bedingt durch die erhöhte Konzentration an freien Fettsäuren und Hypoxie, zu einer leichten Entzündungsreaktion. Diese Entzündungsreaktion wurde durch eine Stimulation mit Palmitat unter Hypoxie (1 % O2) nachgebildet. Überstände von Makrophagen nach dieser Stimulation (MCM) wurden auf primäre humane Adipozyten übertragen. Diese Überstände konnten zwar keine Insulinresistenz in Adipozyten auslösen, induzierten jedoch eine Entzündungsreaktion. Diese zeigte sich in einer erhöhten Expression der proentzündlichen Zytokine CCL2 (CC-Chemokin-Ligand-2) und IL 6. Gleichzeitig wurde die Expression des antientzündlichen Zytokins Adiponectin vermindert. Der Transfer von MCM ist also ein Modell für die Entstehung der Insulinresistenz in einem frühen Stadium. Beim Versuch, die entzündungsfördernde Fähigkeit des MCMs zu verhindern, wurde AMPK mit verschiedenen Aktivatoren stimuliert. Es zeigte sich, dass der AMPK-Aktivator AICAR (5-Aminoimidazol-4-carboxamidribonukleotid) die Entzündungsantwort und den ER-Stress von mit Hypoxie und Palmitat stimulierten Makrophagen deutlich reduzierte. Der starke Effekt auf den ER-Stress konnte auch mit anderen ER-Stress-Auslösern wie Thapsigargin oder Tunicamycin nachvollzogen werden. Da AICAR ein AMPK-Aktivator ist, wurden typische Effekte der AMPK-Aktvierung wie reduzierte Proteinexpression, verstärkte Sirtuin-1-Aktivierung und Steigerung der Fettsäurenoxidation mittels Inhibitoren verhindert. Dies hatte keinen Einfluss auf die Wirkung von AICAR. Ebenso wurde untersucht, ob AICAR in die Zelle aufgenommen werden musste und ob es zu seiner phosphorylierten Form ZMP umgewandelt werden musste. Durch den Inhibitor ABT 702 kann die Adenosinkinase inhibiert werden, welche die Phosphorylierung katalysiert. Es zeigte sich, dass die Phosphorylierung von AICAR zu ZMP nicht erforderlich war, damit AICAR die ER-Stress-Antwort hemmen konnte. AICAR und nicht ZMP wirkte gegen den ER-Stress. Da durch das fehlende ZMP die AMPK nicht aktiviert wurde, war das ein weiteres Zeichen, dass AICAR AMPK-unabhängig wirkte. Dies konnte durch einen AMPK-Knockdown bestätigt werden. Durch einen Knockdown verschiedener Adenosintransporter konnte gezeigt werden, dass SLC28A3 (Soluttransporterfamlie 28 Typ A3) verantwortlich für die Aufnahme von AICAR in primäre humane Makrophagen war. Es konnte demnach gezeigt werden, dass AICAR den ER-Stress in primären humanen Makrophagen in einem von AMPK unabhängigen Mechanismus vermindert. Dafür wird es mittels SLC28A3 in die Zelle aufgenommen und wirkt als AICAR und nicht als ZMP. Diese Erkenntnisse stellen eine interessante, neue therapeutische Möglichkeit im Feld von Arteriosklerose und Diabetes dar.
Hepatitis B caused by infection with the hepatitis B virus (HBV) still ranks among the most challenging infectious diseases of our time. Despite the availability of an effective prophylactic vaccine, 240 million people worldwide are estimated to be chronically infected with HBV and are at risk of developing life-threatening liver diseases, including cirrhosis and liver cancer. The underlying pathogenic mechanisms of HBV-associated liver diseases are only incompletely understood. It is widely accepted that liver pathology results from long-term immune-mediated liver injury and inflammation as a consequence of inefficient viral elimination. This injury can be naturally compensated by liver regeneration. However, chronic liver damage and permanent inflammation debilitates the regenerative capacity of the liver and fosters fibrosis as well as accumulation of chromosomal aberrations, which both contribute to cirrhosis and liver cancer. Liver regeneration requires the presence of the redox-sensitive transcription factor Nrf2 and intact insulin receptor signaling. A lack of Nrf2 causes increased intracellular levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) that inactivate insulin receptor signaling and induce insulin resistance. Interestingly, HBV was observed to activate Nrf2 and the expression of Nrf2-regulated genes. This argues against an inhibitory effect of HBV on insulin receptor signaling by increased ROS levels. However, chronic HBV infection is associated with dysregulation of hepatocyte proliferation and retardation of liver regeneration. Hence, the aim of this thesis was to investigate the influence of HBV on the process of liver regeneration with respect to the insulin receptor signaling pathway. After short-term carbon tetrachloride (CCl4)-induced liver damage, HBV transgenic mice present prolonged liver damage and impaired liver regeneration as reflected by reduced hepatocyte proliferation and increased apoptosis. Impaired hepatocyte proliferation in HBV transgenic mice correlates with diminished activation of the insulin receptor. It was further observed in vitro that the activation of Nrf2 by HBV induces increased levels of the insulin receptor mRNA and protein in HBV-expressing cells. Strikingly, stably HBV-expressing cells as well as primary mouse hepatocytes from HBV transgenic mice bind less insulin due to reduced amounts of insulin receptor on the cell surface. This is caused by intracellular retention of the insulin receptor in HBV-expressing cells as a consequence of increased amounts of the cellular trafficking factor α-taxilin. The reduced amounts of insulin receptor on the cell surface impair insulin sensitivity in HBV-expressing cells and inactivate downstream signaling cascades that initiate insulin-dependent gene expression and glucose uptake. As a consequence of impaired hepatocyte proliferation and liver regeneration, HBV transgenic mice exhibit increased development of fibrosis after long-term CCl4-induced liver damage. Taken together, in this thesis, a novel pathomechanism could be uncovered that includes inactivation of insulin receptor signaling by HBV via intracellular retention of the insulin receptor leading to impaired liver regeneration after liver damage and promotion of liver fibrosis. These findings significantly contribute to an enhanced understanding of HBV-associated liver pathogenesis.
Recent studies indicate that the abnormal microenvironment of tumors may play a critical role in carcinogenesis, including lung cancer. We comprehensively assessed the number of stromal cells, especially immune/inflammatory cells, in lung cancer and evaluated their infiltration in cancers of different stages, types and metastatic characteristics potential. Immunohistochemical analysis of lung cancer tissue arrays containing normal and lung cancer sections was performed. This analysis was combined with cyto-/histomorphological assessment and quantification of cells to classify/subclassify tumors accurately and to perform a high throughput analysis of stromal cell composition in different types of lung cancer. In human lung cancer sections we observed a significant elevation/infiltration of total-T lymphocytes (CD3+), cytotoxic-T cells (CD8+), T-helper cells (CD4+), B cells (CD20+), macrophages (CD68+), mast cells (CD117+), mononuclear cells (CD11c+), plasma cells, activated-T cells (MUM1+), B cells, myeloid cells (PD1+) and neutrophilic granulocytes (myeloperoxidase+) compared with healthy donor specimens. We observed all of these immune cell markers in different types of lung cancers including squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma, adenosquamous cell carcinoma, small cell carcinoma, papillary adenocarcinoma, metastatic adenocarcinoma, and bronchioloalveolar carcinoma. The numbers of all tumor-associated immune cells (except MUM1+ cells) in stage III cancer specimens was significantly greater than those in stage I samples. We observed substantial stage-dependent immune cell infiltration in human lung tumors suggesting that the tumor microenvironment plays a critical role during lung carcinogenesis. Strategies for therapeutic interference with lung cancer microenvironment should consider the complexity of its immune cell composition.
In eukaryotic cells, mitochondria host ancient essential bioenergetic and biosynthetic pathways. LYR (leucine/tyrosine/arginine) motif proteins (LYRMs) of the Complex1_LYR-like superfamily interact with protein complexes of bacterial origin. Many LYR proteins function as extra subunits (LYRM3 and LYRM6) or novel assembly factors (LYRM7, LYRM8, ACN9 and FMC1) of the oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) core complexes. Structural insights into complex I accessory subunits LYRM6 and LYRM3 have been provided by analyses of EM and X-ray structures of complex I from bovine and the yeast Yarrowia lipolytica, respectively. Combined structural and biochemical studies revealed that LYRM6 resides at the matrix arm close to the ubiquinone reduction site. For LYRM3, a position at the distal proton-pumping membrane arm facing the matrix space is suggested. Both LYRMs are supposed to anchor an acyl-carrier protein (ACPM) independently to complex I. The function of this duplicated protein interaction of ACPM with respiratory complex I is still unknown. Analysis of protein-protein interaction screens, genetic analyses and predicted multi-domain LYRMs offer further clues on an interaction network and adaptor-like function of LYR proteins in mitochondria.
Der viersemestrige Master-Studiengang Biochemie leitet sich aus der langjährigen Tradition in biomolekularer Forschung und Lehre in der Frankfurter Forschungslandschaft her und ist stark forschungsorientiert.
Ziel des Studienganges ist es, fachliche Kenntnisse, Fähigkeiten und Methodenkompetenzen zu vermitteln, mit denen die Absolventen in die Lage versetzt werden, in einem forschungsbezogenem Kontext selbstständig zu arbeiten. ...
[Nachruf] Franz Josef Comes
(2015)