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Institute
Background: One of the most popular and versatile model of murine melanoma is by inoculating B16 cells in the syngeneic C57BL6J mouse strain. A characterization of different B16 modified cell sub-lines will be of real practical interest. For this aim, modern analytical tools like surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy/scattering (SERS) and MTT were employed to characterize both chemical composition and proliferation behavior of the selected cells.
Methods: High quality SERS signal was recorded from each of the four types of B16 cell sub-lines: B164A5, B16GMCSF, B16FLT3, B16F10, in order to observe the differences between a parent cell line (B164A5) and other derived B16 cell sub-lines. Cells were incubated with silver nanoparticles of 50–100 nm diameter and the nanoparticles uptake inside the cells cytoplasm was proved by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) investigations. In order to characterize proliferation, growth curves of the four B16 cell lines, using different cell numbers and FCS concentration were obtained employing the MTT proliferation assay. For correlations doubling time were calculated.
Results: SERS bands allowed the identification inside the cells of the main bio-molecular components such as: proteins, nucleic acids, and lipids. An "on and off" SERS effect was constantly present, which may be explained in terms of the employed laser power, as well as the possible different orientations of the adsorbed species in the cells in respect to the Ag nanoparticles. MTT results showed that among the four tested cell sub-lines B16 F10 is the most proliferative and B164A5 has the lower growth capacity. Regarding B16FLT3 cells and B16GMCSF cells, they present proliferation ability in between with slight slower potency for B16GMCSF cells.
Conclusion: Molecular fingerprint and proliferation behavior of four B16 melanoma cell sub-lines were elucidated by associating SERS investigations with MTT proliferation assay.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit konnte gezeigt werden, dass bestimmte neuronale microRNAs im Rückenmark und in den Spinalganglien konstitutiv exprimiert und nach peripherer Entzündung mit Formalin oder Zymosan differenziell reguliert werden. Bei der SNI-induzierten Neuropathie konnte indessen keine signifikante Regulation der untersuchten microRNAs nachgewiesen werden. Aufgrund der Lokalisation in den Neuronen der Schmerz-verarbeitenden Laminae I und II des Dorsalhorns des Rückenmarks und angesichts der Regulation in entzündlich stimulierten Neuronen und Mikroglia wurde der Fokus der Arbeit auf die Untersuchung von microRNA-124a gelegt. Anhand von Expressionsanalysen konnte gezeigt werden, dass eine periphere entzündliche Stimulation mit Formalin oder Zymosan microRNA-124a im Rückenmark inhibiert, die Expression pro-inflammatorischer und pro-nozizeptiver Gene hiernach ermöglicht und ein vermehrtes Schmerzverhalten bewirkt. Die funktionelle Relevanz von microRNA-124a wurde in vivo mittels intravenöser Applikation von microRNA-124a-Modulatoren bei einem Modell für entzündliche Schmerzen, dem Formalin-Modell untersucht. Dabei führte die Hemmung von microRNA-124a zu einem verstärkten Schmerzverhalten, welches mit einer Hochregulation verschiedener Entzündungsmarker einherging. Die Überexpression von microRNA-124a dagegen antagonisierte die Hochregulation entzündlicher Mediatoren und führte zu einer Schmerzhemmung. Darüber hinaus konnte in der vorliegenden Arbeit der antinozizeptive Effekt von microRNA-124a mit der Regulation der Epigenetik-regulierenden Targets MeCP2, HDAC5 und MYST2 assoziiert werden und u.a. über die Hemmung des neuromodulierenden, pro-inflammatorischen Peptids BDNF verifiziert werden. Die spezielle Darreichung von microRNA-124a könnte demzufolge einen vielversprechenden Ansatz zur Therapie chronisch-entzündlicher Schmerzen liefern. Zukünftig werden weitere Studien notwendig sein um die eindeutige Funktion, die individuelle Wirkung sowie die therapeutische Relevanz von microRNA-124a zu analysieren. Darüber hinaus müssten Dosis-Wirkungs-Beziehungen und Nebenwirkungsprofile für microRNA-124a erstellt werden, um potenzielle Risiken, Chancen und Vorteile der microRNA-Modulation hinsichtlich einer humanen Schmerztherapie bewerten zu können.
This study aimed at determining the recommended dose of the mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitor everolimus in combination with mitomycin C (MMC) in patients with previously treated metastatic esophagogastric cancer. In this phase I trial, patients received escalated doses of oral everolimus (5, 7.5, and 10 mg/day) in combination with intravenous MMC 5 mg/m2 every 3 weeks. Endpoints were the dose-limiting toxicity (DLT), safety, and response rates. Tumor tissues were tested for HER2-status and mutations in the PTEN, PIK3CA, AKT1, CTNNB1, and E-cadherin type 1 genes. Sixteen patients (12 male, four female) with gastric/gastroesophageal junction cancer were included. All patients were previously treated with a platinum-based chemotherapy. Treatment cohorts were: 5 mg/day, three patients; 7.5 mg/day, three patients; and 10 mg/day, 10 patients. No DLTs occurred during dose escalation. Most frequent grade 3 toxicities were leukopenia (18.8%) and neutropenia (18.8%). All other grade 3 toxicities were below 10%. No grade 4 toxicities occurred. Three (18.8%) patients experienced partial responses and four patients had stable disease (SD). Antitumor activity according to Response Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumors (RECIST)-criteria was highest in the 10 mg/day cohort. No associations between HER2-status or detected mutations and response were observed. The recommended dose of everolimus combined with MMC is 10 mg/day. Encouraging signs of antitumor activity were seen (http://www.ClinicalTrials.gov; Clinical trial registration number: NCT01042782).
Important brain functions need to be conserved throughout organisms of extremely varying sizes. Here we study the scaling properties of an essential component of computation in the brain: the single neuron. We compare morphology and signal propagation of a uniquely identifiable interneuron, the HS cell, in the blowfly (Calliphora) with its exact counterpart in the fruit fly (Drosophila) which is about four times smaller in each dimension. Anatomical features of the HS cell scale isometrically and minimise wiring costs but, by themselves, do not scale to preserve the electrotonic behaviour. However, the membrane properties are set to conserve dendritic as well as axonal delays and attenuation as well as dendritic integration of visual information. In conclusion, the electrotonic structure of a neuron, the HS cell in this case, is surprisingly stable over a wide range of morphological scales.
Reproducing the characteristics and the functional responses of the blood–brain barrier (BBB) in vitro represents an important task for the research community, and would be a critical biotechnological breakthrough. Pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries provide strong demand for inexpensive and easy-to-handle in vitro BBB models to screen novel drug candidates. Recently, it was shown that canonical Wnt signaling is responsible for the induction of the BBB properties in the neonatal brain microvasculature in vivo. In the present study, following on from earlier observations, we have developed a novel model of the BBB in vitro that may be suitable for large scale screening assays. This model is based on immortalized endothelial cell lines derived from murine and human brain, with no need for co-culture with astrocytes. To maintain the BBB endothelial cell properties, the cell lines are cultured in the presence of Wnt3a or drugs that stabilize β-catenin, or they are infected with a transcriptionally active form of β-catenin. Upon these treatments, the cell lines maintain expression of BBB-specific markers, which results in elevated transendothelial electrical resistance and reduced cell permeability. Importantly, these properties are retained for several passages in culture, and they can be reproduced and maintained in different laboratories over time. We conclude that the brain-derived endothelial cell lines that we have investigated gain their specialized characteristics upon activation of the canonical Wnt pathway. This model may be thus suitable to test the BBB permeability to chemicals or large molecular weight proteins, transmigration of inflammatory cells, treatments with cytokines, and genetic manipulation.
Background: Hepatitis B coinfection is common in HIV-positive individuals and as antiretroviral therapy has made death due to AIDS less common, hepatitis has become increasingly important. Several drugs are available to treat hepatitis B. The most potent and the one with the lowest risk of resistance appears to be tenofovir (TDF). However there are several questions that remain unanswered regarding the use of TDF, including the proportion of patients that achieves suppression of HBV viral load and over what time, whether suppression is durable and whether prior treatment with other HBV-active drugs such as lamivudine, compromises the efficacy of TDF due to possible selection of resistant HBV strains.
Methods: A systematic review and meta-analysis following PRISMA guidelines and using multilevel mixed effects logistic regression, stratified by prior and/or concomitant use of lamivudine and/or emtricitabine.
Results: Data was available from 23 studies including 550 HBV/HIV coinfected patients treated with TDF. Follow up was for up to seven years but to ensure sufficient power the data analyses were limited to three years. The overall proportion achieving suppression of HBV replication was 57.4%, 79.0% and 85.6% at one, two and three years, respectively. No effect of prior or concomitant 3TC/FTC was shown. Virological rebound on TDF treatment was rare.
Interpretation: TDF suppresses HBV to undetectable levels in the majority of HBV/HIV coinfected patients with the proportion fully suppressed continuing to increase during continuous treatment. Prior treatment with 3TC/FTC does not compromise efficacy of TDF treatment. The use of combination treatment with 3TC/FTC offers no significant benefit over TDF alone.
Background and Aims: Mutations reducing the function of Nav1.7 sodium channels entail diminished pain perception and olfactory acuity, suggesting a link between nociception and olfaction at ion channel level. We hypothesized that if such link exists, it should work in both directions and gain-of-function Nav1.7 mutations known to be associated with increased pain perception should also increase olfactory acuity.
Methods: SCN9A variants were assessed known to enhance pain perception and found more frequently in the average population. Specifically, carriers of SCN9A variants rs41268673C>A (P610T; n = 14) or rs6746030C>T (R1150W; n = 21) were compared with non-carriers (n = 40). Olfactory function was quantified by assessing odor threshold, odor discrimination and odor identification using an established olfactory test. Nociception was assessed by measuring pain thresholds to experimental nociceptive stimuli (punctate and blunt mechanical pressure, heat and electrical stimuli).
Results: The number of carried alleles of the non-mutated SCN9A haplotype rs41268673C/rs6746030C was significantly associated with the comparatively highest olfactory threshold (0 alleles: threshold at phenylethylethanol dilution step 12 of 16 (n = 1), 1 allele: 10.6±2.6 (n = 34), 2 alleles: 9.5±2.1 (n = 40)). The same SCN9A haplotype determined the pain threshold to blunt pressure stimuli (0 alleles: 21.1 N/m2, 1 allele: 29.8±10.4 N/m2, 2 alleles: 33.5±10.2 N/m2).
Conclusions: The findings established a working link between nociception and olfaction via Nav1.7 in the gain-of-function direction. Hence, together with the known reduced olfaction and pain in loss-of-function mutations, a bidirectional genetic functional association between nociception and olfaction exists at Nav1.7 level.
Background: The Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) signaling pathway is known to influence pathophysiological processes within the brain and the synthetic S1P analog FTY720 has been shown to provide neuroprotection in experimental models of acute stroke. However, the effects of a manipulation of S1P signaling at later time points after experimental stroke have not yet been investigated. We examined whether a relatively late initiation of a FTY720 treatment has a positive effect on long-term neurological outcome with a focus on reactive astrogliosis, synapses and neurotrophic factors.
Methods: We induced photothrombotic stroke (PT) in adult C57BL/6J mice and allowed them to recover for three days. Starting on post-stroke day 3, mice were treated with FTY720 (1 mg/kg b.i.d.) for 5 days. Behavioral outcome was observed until day 31 after photothrombosis and periinfarct cortical tissue was analyzed using tandem mass-spectrometry, TaqMan®analysis and immunofluorescence.
Results: FTY720 treatment results in a significantly better functional outcome persisting up to day 31 after PT. This is accompanied by a significant decrease in reactive astrogliosis and larger post-synaptic densities as well as changes in the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor α (VEGF α). Within the periinfarct cortex, S1P is significantly increased compared to healthy brain tissue.
Conclusion: Besides its known neuroprotective effects in the acute phase of experimental stroke, the initiation of FTY720 treatment in the convalescence period has a positive impact on long-term functional outcome, probably mediated through reduced astrogliosis, a modulation in synaptic morphology and an increased expression of neurotrophic factors.
Background and Aims: In patients with advanced liver cirrhosis due to chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection antiviral therapy with peginterferon and ribavirin is feasible in selected cases only due to potentially life-threatening side effects. However, predictive factors associated with hepatic decompensation during antiviral therapy are poorly defined.
Methods: In a retrospective cohort study, 68 patients with HCV-associated liver cirrhosis (mean MELD score 9.18±2.72) were treated with peginterferon and ribavirin. Clinical events indicating hepatic decompensation (onset of ascites, hepatic encephalopathy, upper gastrointestinal bleeding, hospitalization) as well as laboratory data were recorded at baseline and during a follow up period of 72 weeks after initiation of antiviral therapy. To monitor long term sequelae of end stage liver disease an extended follow up for HCC development, transplantation and death was applied (240weeks, ±SD 136weeks).
Results: Eighteen patients (26.5%) achieved a sustained virologic response. During the observational period a hepatic decompensation was observed in 36.8%. Patients with hepatic decompensation had higher MELD scores (10.84 vs. 8.23, p<0.001) and higher mean bilirubin levels (26.74 vs. 14.63 µmol/l, p<0.001), as well as lower serum albumin levels (38.2 vs. 41.1 g/l, p = 0.015), mean platelets (102.64 vs. 138.95/nl, p = 0.014) and mean leukocytes (4.02 vs. 5.68/nl, p = 0.002) at baseline as compared to those without decompensation. In the multivariate analysis the MELD score remained independently associated with hepatic decompensation (OR 1.56, 1.18–2.07; p = 0.002). When the patients were grouped according to their baseline MELD scores, hepatic decompensation occurred in 22%, 59%, and 83% of patients with MELD scores of 6–9, 10–13, and >14, respectively. Baseline MELD score was significantly associated with the risk for transplantation/death (p<0.001).
Conclusions: Our data suggest that the baseline MELD score predicts the risk of hepatic decompensation during antiviral therapy and thus contributes to decision making when antiviral therapy is discussed in HCV patients with advanced liver cirrhosis.
Corneal scarring remains a major cause of blindness world-wide, with limited treatment options, all of which have side-effects. Here, we tested the hypothesis that topical application of Rosiglitazone, a Thiazolidinedione and ligand of peroxisome proliferator activated receptor gamma (PPARγ), can effectively block scar formation in a cat model of corneal damage. Adult cats underwent bilateral epithelial debridement followed by excimer laser ablation of the central corneal stroma to a depth of ~160 µm as a means of experimentally inducing a reproducible wound. Eyes were then left untreated, or received 50 µl of either 10 µM Rosiglitazone in DMSO/Celluvisc, DMSO/Celluvisc vehicle or Celluvisc vehicle twice daily for 2 weeks. Cellular aspects of corneal wound healing were evaluated with in vivo confocal imaging and post-mortem immunohistochemistry for alpha smooth muscle actin (αSMA). Impacts of the wound and treatments on optical quality were assessed using wavefront sensing and optical coherence tomography at 2, 4, 8 and 12 weeks post-operatively. In parallel, cat corneal fibroblasts were cultured to assess the effects of Rosiglitazone on TGFβ-induced αSMA expression. Topical application of Rosiglitazone to cat eyes after injury decreased αSMA expression and haze, as well as the induction of lower-order and residual, higher-order wavefront aberrations compared to vehicle-treated eyes. Rosiglitazone also inhibited TGFβ-induced αSMA expression in cultured corneal fibroblasts. In conclusion, Rosiglitazone effectively controlled corneal fibrosis in vivo and in vitro, while restoring corneal thickness and optics. Its topical application may represent an effective, new avenue for the prevention of corneal scarring with distinct advantages for pathologically thin corneas.
Metastasic breast cancer is the leading cause of death by malignancy in women worldwide. Tumor metastasis is a multistep process encompassing local invasion of cancer cells at primary tumor site, intravasation into the blood vessel, survival in systemic circulation, and extravasation across the endothelium to metastasize at a secondary site. However, only a small percentage of circulating cancer cells initiate metastatic colonies. This fact, together with the inaccessibility and structural complexity of target tissues has hampered the study of the later steps in cancer metastasis. In addition, most data are derived from in vivo models where critical steps such as intravasation/extravasation of human cancer cells are mediated by murine endothelial cells. Here, we developed a new mouse model to study the molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying late steps of the metastatic cascade. We have shown that a network of functional human blood vessels can be formed by co-implantation of human endothelial cells and mesenchymal cells, embedded within a reconstituted basement membrane-like matrix and inoculated subcutaneously into immunodeficient mice. The ability of circulating cancer cells to colonize these human vascularized organoids was next assessed in an orthotopic model of human breast cancer by bioluminescent imaging, molecular techniques and immunohistological analysis. We demonstrate that disseminated human breast cancer cells efficiently colonize organoids containing a functional microvessel network composed of human endothelial cells, connected to the mouse circulatory system. Human breast cancer cells could be clearly detected at different stages of the metastatic process: initial arrest in the human microvasculature, extravasation, and growth into avascular micrometastases. This new mouse model may help us to map the extravasation process with unprecedented detail, opening the way for the identification of relevant targets for therapeutic intervention.
Hintergrund und Fragestellung: Patientensicherheit ist in den letzten Jahren zum intensiv diskutierten Thema geworden. Zudem rückt als potenzielle Basis der Patientensicherheit die Patientensicherheitskultur von Einrichtungen des Gesundheitswesens in den Fokus, bislang wurde dahingehend vor allem der stationäre Bereich untersucht. Ziel dieser Arbeit ist es, einen Einblick in den aktuellen Stand der Patientensicherheitskultur in Hausarztpraxen zu geben, und diesbezügliche Einflussfaktoren und Zusammenhänge aufzuzeigen. Dabei wurden insbesondere zwei Fragestellungen untersucht: 1. Lässt sich ein Zusammenhang aufzeigen zwischen einzelnen Praxis- und Teammerkmalen einerseits und den Ergebnissen in den Bereichen Sicherheitsklima, Patientensicherheitsindikatoren und Fehlermanagement andererseits? 2. Lassen sich durch einzelne Praxis- und Teammerkmale bzw. Sicherheitsklimafaktoren die Ausprägungen einer Praxis in bestimmten Patientensicherheitsindikatoren und dem Fehlermanagement einer Praxis vorhersagen?
Material und Methoden: In 60 allgemeinärztlich tätigen Praxen aus Hessen wurde die Patientensicherheitskultur anhand von drei Methoden gemessen. Dies waren 1. der auf Selbstauskunft beruhende „Fragebogen zum Sicherheitsklima“, 2. durch Praxisbegehungen und Interviews erfasste Patientensicherheitsindikatoren, sowie 3. detailliert analysierte Fehlerberichte. Die statistische Auswertung umfasste u.a. Korrelationsanalysen (Mann-Whitney-U, Wilcoxon-W, Spearman-Rangkorrelation) sowie multivariate schrittweise Regressionsanalysen.
Ergebnisse: Die Beurteilung des Sicherheitsklimas fiel über alle Praxen hinweg homogen positiv aus (acht von neun Sicherheitsklimafaktoren mit Mittelwerten von mind. vier von fünf Punkten). Bei den 12 Patientensicherheitsindikatoren ergaben sich differenziertere Werte (niedrigster Mittelwert: Indikator „Marcumartherapie“ mit 0,43 von 1, höchster Mittelwert: Indikator „Allergiehinweis“ mit 0,75 von 1). Es gingen 24 Berichte kritischer Ereignisse ein, die zu 79% als „Kein Fehlermanagement“ oder „Unbefriedigendes Fehlermanagement“ beurteilt wurden. Die Korrelations- und Regressionsanalysen zeigten Zusammenhänge auf, z.B. erzielten größere Praxisteams niedrigere Werte beim Patientensicherheitsklima und höhere Werte bei den Patientensicherheitsindikatoren im Vergleich zum Durchschnitt.
Diskussion: Sicherheitsklima, Patientensicherheitsindikatoren und Fehlermanagement sind in einer Hausarztpraxis mit den verwendeten Instrumenten messbar. Jedes der drei Instrumente misst einen anderen, wichtigen Bereich der Sicherheitskultur, wodurch jeweils unterschiedliche Einstellungen und Prozesse beleuchtet und anschließend auch beurteilt und verbessert werden können. In den Analysen zur Beantwortung der beiden Fragestellungen konnten Zusammenhänge und Vorhersagevariablen herausgearbeitet werden, allerdings waren diese Zusammenhänge zum Teil entgegengesetzt. Daraus ergibt sich die Hypothese, dass Praxis- und Teammerkmale als Voraussetzungen zu unterschiedlichen Ausprägungen von Sicherheitsklima, Patientensicherheitsindikatoren und Fehlermanagement führen können. Insgesamt könnte die Qualität der hausärztlichen Arbeit und die Sicherheit der Versorgung durch eine regelmäßige Reflektion der Praxisabläufe anhand der drei Messmethoden gesteigert werden.
Body Integrity Identity Disorder (BIID) ist eine bisher kaum erforschte Störung, bei der die Betroffenen den Wunsch beziehungsweise das Verlangen nach einer Körperbehinderung verspüren. In den meisten Fällen, wie auch in dieser Studie, ist eine Oberschenkelamputation die gewünschte Modifikation. Durch die Amputation erhoffen die Betroffenen endlich sie selbst zu werden, da sie sich mit ihrem realen Körperbild nicht identifizieren können. Ihr vorgestelltes Körperbild ist das eines Amputierten. Die Störung manifestiert sich bereits im Kindesalter. Im Laufe der Zeit nimmt das Verlangen der Amputation zu, so dass es neben der vermehrten Beschäftigung sogar zu lebensgefährlichen Selbstverletzungen im Zuge einer Verwirklichung kommen kann.
Die vorliegende Studie beschäftigt sich erstmalig mittels funktioneller Magnetresonanztomographie mit der neuronalen Repräsentation der Störung BIID beim Anblick des eigenen realen und des gewünschten amputierten Körpers. Für die Studie wurden Fotos von den Probanden und einer fremden Person gemacht und mit einer Software so modifiziert, dass die Probanden in sechs verschiedenen Kategorien sowohl sich selbst real, sowie amputiert und mit Prothese als auch die fremde Person real, amputiert und mit Prothese gezeigt bekamen. Dasselbe Design wurde auch einer gesunden Kontrollgruppe vorgeführt. Aufgrund der Datenmenge wird in dieser Studie nur der reale und der amputierte Körper berücksichtigt.
Es zeigen sich deutliche Aktivierungsunterschiede zwischen der BIID Gruppe und der Kontrollgruppe beim Anblick des eigenen realen Körpers und beim Anblick des eigenen amputierten Körpers. Beim Anblick des eigenen realen Körpers zeigt die Kontrollgruppe gegenüber der BIID Gruppe einen stärkeren Selbstbezug zu ihrem Körper durch Aktivierungen des medialen frontalen Gyrus, des postzentralen Gyrus oder der Amygdala und einen positiver valenzierten Anblick, der sich im Gruppenvergleich durch eine Mehraktivierung im superioren temporalen Gyrus ausdrückt sowie durch die Ergebnisse der post-fMRT-Fragebögen unterstützt wird. Beim Anblick des eigenen amputierten Körpers zeigt sich durch ein fronto-parietales Netzwerk der stärkere Selbstbezug bei der BIID Gruppe. Die deutliche emotionale Involviertheit wird repräsentiert durch große Teile des limbischen Systems sowie durch präfrontale Bereiche. Hinzu kommen Aktivierungen, die eine deutliche Beteiligung des episodisch-autobiographischen und prozeduralen Gedächtnisses zeigen. So ist eine vollständig geplante Bewegungsabfolge der BIID Probanden beim Anblick ihres amputierten Körpers anhand der aktivierten Areale darstellbar, einschließlich der Feinregulationen in den Basalganglien, dem Nucleus ruber und dem Kleinhirn.
Die Ergebnisse zeigen neuronale Netzwerke der Körperrepräsentation, bei denen fehlende Aktivierungen der BIID Probanden beim Anblick des eigenen realen Körpers auf eine Fehlfunktion hindeuten könnten. Sie zeigen aber auch ein Netzwerk aus Erinnerungen und erlernten Prozessen, die mit Hilfe des mesolimbischen Dopaminsystems zur Aufrechterhaltung der Störung beitragen könnten. Zusammengefasst lässt sich sagen, dass das amputierte Wunschkörperbild neuronal stark und breitgefächert verankert ist und viel dominanter repräsentiert ist als das reale Körperbild. Durch die dargestellten Aktivierungen und Regelkreise leiten sich vor allem neue therapeutische Ansätze ab, die zu einer Linderung der Symptome von BIID beitragen könnten und vielleicht auch neue Anstöße in Hinblick auf eine Heilung der Störung liefern.
RP1 (synonym: MAPRE2, EB2) is a member of the microtubule binding EB1 protein family, which interacts with APC, a key regulatory molecule in the Wnt signalling pathway. While the other EB1 proteins are well characterized the cellular function and regulation of RP1 remain speculative to date. However, recently RP1 has been implicated in pancreatic cancerogenesis. CK2 is a pleiotropic kinase involved in adhesion, proliferation and anti-apoptosis. Overexpression of protein kinase CK2 is a hallmark of many cancers and supports the malignant phenotype of tumor cells. In this study we investigate the interaction of protein kinase CK2 with RP1 and demonstrate that CK2 phosphorylates RP1 at Ser236 in vitro. Stable RP1 expression in cell lines leads to a significant cleavage and down-regulation of N-cadherin and impaired adhesion. Cells expressing a Phospho-mimicking point mutant RP1-ASP236 show a marked decrease of adhesion to endothelial cells under shear stress. Inversely, we found that the cells under shear stress downregulate endogenous RP1, most likely to improve cellular adhesion. Accordingly, when RP1 expression is suppressed by shRNA, cells lacking RP1 display significantly increased cell adherence to surfaces. In summary, RP1 phosphorylation at Ser236 by CK2 seems to play a significant role in cell adhesion and might initiate new insights in the CK2 and EB1 family protein association.
Erkrankungen des Herz-Kreislauf-Systems sind für die größte Zahl der Todesfälle in Deutschland verantwortlich. Das liegt nicht zuletzt daran, dass das menschliche Herz kaum Selbstheilungskräfte besitzt. Wissenschaftler suchen deshalb nach Möglichkeiten, die Regenerationsfähigkeit des Organs zu steigern. Dabei helfen ihnen der Blick ins Tierreich und modernste molekularbiologische Verfahren.