@phdthesis{Borst2017, author = {Borst, Andreas}, title = {Apoptosis \& senescence: cell fate determination in inhibitor-treated melanoma cells}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-155085}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Neoplasms of the skin represent the most frequent tumors worldwide; fortunately, most of them are benign or semi-malignant and well treatable. However, the two most aggressive and deadly forms of malignant skin-neoplasms are melanoma and Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC), being responsible for more than 90\% of skin-cancer related deaths. The last decade has yielded enormous progress in melanoma therapy with the advent of targeted therapies, like BRAF or MEK inhibitors, and immune-stimulating therapies, using checkpoint antibodies targeting CTLA- 4, PD-1 or PD-L1. Very recent studies suggest that also MCC patients benefit from a treatment with checkpoint antibodies. Nevertheless, in an advanced metastatic stage, a cure for both of these aggressive malignancies is still hard to achieve: while only a subset of patients experience durable benefit from the immune-based therapies, the widely applicable targeted therapies struggle with development of resistances that inevitably occur in most patients, and finally lead to their death. The four articles included in this thesis addressed current questions concerning therapy and carcinogenesis of melanoma and MCC. Moreover, they are discussed in the light of the up-to-date research regarding targeted and immune-based therapies. In article I we demonstrated that besides apoptosis, MAPK pathway inhibition in BRAF-mutated melanoma cells also induces senescence, a permanent cell cycle arrest. These cells may provide a source for relapse, as even permanently arrested cancer cells can contribute to a pro-tumorigenic milieu. To identify molecular factors determining the differential response, we established M14 melanoma cell line derived single cell clones that either undergo cell death or arrest when treated with BRAF/MEK inhibitors. Using these single cell clones, we demonstrated in article IV that downregulation of the pro-apoptotic BH3-only protein BIK via epigenetic silencing is involved in apoptosis deficiency, which can be overcome by HDAC inhibitors. These observations provide a possible explanation for the lack of a complete and durable response to MAPK inhibitor treatment in melanoma patients, and suggest the application of HDAC inhibitors as a complimentary therapy to MAPK pathway inhibition. Concerning MCC, we scrutinized the interactions between the Merkel cell polyomavirus' (MCV) T antigens (TA) and the tumor suppressors p53 and Rb in article II and III, respectively. In article III, we demonstrated that the cell cycle master regulator Rb is the crucial target of MCV large T (LT), while it - in contrast to other polyomavirus LTs - exhibits much lower affinity to the related proteins p107 and p130. Knockdown of MCV LT led to proliferation arrest in MCC cells, which can be rescued by knockdown of Rb, but not by knockdown of p107 and p130. Contrary to Rb, restriction of p53 in MCC seems to be independent of the MCV TAs, as we demonstrated in article II. In conclusion, the presented thesis has revealed new molecular details, regarding the response of melanoma cells towards an important treatment modality and the mechanisms of viral carcinogenesis in MCC.}, subject = {Melanom}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Wiese2015, author = {Wiese, Katrin Evelyn}, title = {Sensing supraphysiological levels of MYC : mechanisms of MIZ1-dependent MYC-induced Apoptosis in Mammary Epithelial Cells}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-132532}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2015}, abstract = {Deregulated MYC expression contributes to cellular transformation as well as progression and maintenance of human tumours. Interestingly, in the absence of additional genetic alterations, potentially oncogenic levels of MYC sensitise cells to a variety of apoptotic stimuli. Hence, MYC-induced apoptosis has long been recognised as a major barrier against cancer development. However, it is largely unknown how cells discriminate physiological from supraphysiological levels of MYC in order to execute an appropriate biological response. The experiments described in this thesis demonstrate that induction of apoptosis in mammary epithelial cells depends on the repressive actions of MYC/MIZ1 complexes. Analysis of gene expression profiles and ChIP-sequencing experiments reveals that high levels of MYC are required to invade low-affinity binding sites and repress target genes of the serum response factor SRF. These genes are involved in cytoskeletal dynamics as well as cell adhesion processes and are likely needed to transmit survival signals to the AKT kinase. Restoration of SRF activity rescues MIZ1- dependent gene repression and increases AKT phosphorylation and downstream function. Collectively, these results indicate that association with MIZ1 leads to an expansion of MYC's transcriptional response that allows sensing of oncogenic levels, which points towards a tumour-suppressive role for the MYC/MIZ1 complex in epithelial cells.}, subject = {Myc}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Huber2014, author = {Huber, Annette}, title = {Chlamydial deubiquitinase ChlaDUB1 as regulator of host cell apoptosis and new target for anti-chlamydial therapy}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-110013}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2014}, abstract = {Chlamydia trachomatis is an obligate intracellular pathogen that replicates inside a vacuole, the so-called inclusion. During replication by a biphasic life-cycle Chlamydia secrete via their type 3 secretion system various effector proteins into the inclusion lumen, the inclusion membrane or the host cell cytosol to form their favored replication niche. Chlamydia-infected cells are highly resistant against apoptosis since the replicative form of Chlamydia is non-infectious and premature cell death would cause complete loss of one Chlamydia generation. The bacteria block apoptosis by preventing mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization. Various proteins with anti-apoptotic function are enriched in Chlamydia-infected cells such as Mcl-1, cIAP2, Survivin or HIF1α. The accumulation of these proteins is a result of increased gene expression and direct protein stabilization. However, the molecular mechanisms and involved bacterial effector proteins are mostly unknown. With this work the molecular mechanisms of Mcl-1 stabilization and the participation of chlamydial factors were investigated. Mcl-1 is a member of the Bcl-2 protein family and has an extremely short half-life causing its permanent ubiquitination and subsequent degradation by the 26S proteasome under normal homeostasis whilst Mcl-1 accumulation results in apoptosis inhibition. It was shown that during C. trachomatis infection Mcl-1 ubiquitination is reduced causing its stabilization albeit no cellular ubiquitin-proteasome-system components are involved in this process. However, C. trachomatis express the two deubiquitinases ChlaDUB1 and ChlaDUB2 which are mostly uncharacterized. With this work the expression profile, subcellular localization, substrates and function of the deubiquitinases were investigated. It was shown that ChlaDUB1 is secreted to the surface of the inclusion where it interacts with Mcl-1 which is accumulated in the proximity of this compartment. By utilization of infection experiments, heterologous expression systems and in vitro experiments a direct interaction of ChlaDUB1 and Mcl-1 was demonstrated. Furthermore, it was shown that Mcl-1 is deubiquitinated by ChlaDUB1 causing its stabilization. During replicative phase of infection, ChlaDUB2 seems to be accumulated in the chlamydial particles. However, ChlaDUB2 substrates could not be identified which would give an indication for the physiological role of ChlaDUB2. Since 2011, a protocol to transform C. trachomatis with artificial plasmid DNA is available. As part of this work the transformation of C. trachomatis with plasmid DNA suitable for the permanent or inducible protein overexpression on a routinely basis was established. In addition, the first targeted homologous recombination into the chlamydial genome to replace the ChlaDUB1 gene by a modified one was performed and validated. The targeted homologous recombination was also used to create a ChlaDUB1 knock-out mutant; however deletion of ChlaDUB1 seems to be lethal for C. trachomatis. Due to the fact that ChlaDUB1-lacking Chlamydia could not be obtained an inhibitor screen was performed and identified CYN312 as a potential ChlaDUB1 inhibitor. Application of CYN312 during infection interfered with chlamydial growth and reduced Mcl-1 quantity in infected cells. Furthermore, CYN312 treated Ctr-infected cells were significantly sensitized for apoptosis. Taken together, C. trachomatis secretes the deubiquitinase ChlaDUB1 to the surface of the inclusion where it deubiquitinates Mcl-1 causing its accumulation in infected cells resulting in apoptosis resistance. Application of the ChlaDUB1 inhibitor CYN312 interferes with Mcl-1 stabilization sensitizing infected cells for apoptosis.}, subject = {Chlamydia trachomatis}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Schlegelmilch2012, author = {Schlegelmilch, Katrin}, title = {Molecular function of WISP1/CCN4 in the musculoskeletal system with special reference to apoptosis and cell survival}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-73430}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Human adult cartilage is an aneural and avascular type of connective tissue, which consequently reflects reduced growth and repair rates. The main cell type of cartilage are chondrocytes, previously derived from human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs). They are responsible for the production and maintainance of the cartilaginous extracellular matrix (ECM), which consists mainly of collagen and proteoglycans. Signal transmission to or from chondrocytes, generally occurs via interaction with signalling factors connected to the cartilaginous ECM. In this context, proteins of the CCN family were identified as important matricellular and multifunctional regulators with high significance during skeletal development and fracture repair. In this thesis, main focus lies on WISP1/CCN4, which is known as a general survival factor in a variety of cell types and seems to be crucial during lineage progression of hMSCs into chondrocytes. We intend to counter the lack of knowledge about the general importance of WISP1-signalling within the musculoskeletal system and especially regarding cell death and survival by a variety of molecular and cell biology methods. First, we established a successful down-regulation of endogenous WISP1 transcripts within different cell types of the human musculoskeletal system through gene-silencing. Interestingly, WISP1 seems to be crucial to the survival of all examined cell lines and primary hMSCs, since a loss of WISP1 resulted in cell death. Bioinformatical analyses of subsequent performed microarrays (WISP1 down-regulated vs. control samples) confirmed this observation in primary hMSCs and the chondrocyte cell line Tc28a2. Distinct clusters of regulated genes, closely related to apoptosis induction, could be identified. In this context, TRAIL induced apoptosis as well as p53 mediated cell death seem to play a crucial role during the absence of WISP1 in hMSCs. By contrast, microarray analysis of WISP1 down-regulated chondrocytes indicated rather apoptosis induction via MAPK-signalling. Despite apoptosis relevant gene regulations, microarray analyses also identified clusters of differentially expressed genes of other important cellular activities, e.g. a huge cluster of interferon-inducible genes in hMSCs or gene regulations affecting cartilage homeostasis in chondrocytes. Results of this thesis emphasize the importance of regulatory mechanisms that influence cell survival of primary hMSCs and chondrocytes in the enforced absence of WISP1. Moreover, findings intensified the assumed importance for WISP1-signalling in cartilage homeostasis. Thus, this thesis generated an essential fundament for further examinations to investigate the role of WISP1-signalling in cartilage homeostasis and cell death.}, subject = {Knorpelzelle}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Dwertmann2012, author = {Dwertmann, Anne}, title = {Impact of the Tumor Suppressor Arf on Miz1 and Sumoylation of Myc and Miz1}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-71876}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Upon oncogenic stress, the tumor suppressor Arf can induce irreversible cell cycle arrest or apoptosis, depending on the oncogenic insult. In this study, it could be shown that Arf interacts with Myc and the Myc-associated zinc-finger protein Miz1 to facilitate repression of genes involved in cell adhesion. Formation of a DNA-binding Arf/Myc/Miz1 complex disrupts interaction of Miz1 with its coactivator nucleophosmin and induces local heterochromatinisation, causing cells to lose attachment and undergo anoikis. The assembly of the complex relies on Myc, which might explain why high Myc levels trigger apoptosis and not cell cycle arrest in the Arf response. This mechanism could play an important role in eliminating cells harboring an oncogenic mutation. Arf furthermore induces sumoylation of Miz1 at a specific lysine by repressing the desumoylating enzyme Senp3. A sumoylation-deficient mutant of Miz1 however does not show phenotypic differences under the chosen experimental conditions. Myc can also be modified by Sumo by multisumoylation at many different lysines, which is unaffected by Arf. The exact mechanism and effect of this modification however stays unsolved.}, subject = {Apoptosis}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Karunakaran2012, author = {Karunakaran, Karthika}, title = {Mechanisms of apoptosis regulation in human cells infected with Simkania negevensis}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-72098}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Chlamydiales are obligate intracellular gram-negative bacteria that have gained high medical relevance. These important human pathogens cause diverse diseases including trachoma and wide spread sexually transmitted diseases. Chlamydia establishes membrane bound inclusions in the host cell and loots the host for nutritional requirements. Infections are usually recognized by the host immune system and eliminated systematically, by triggering apoptosis. However, the pathogen Chlamydia has evolved various strategies to prevent the detection as well as protect the invaded cell against apoptosis or any other form of cell death. The evolutionary conservation of cell death regulation has not been investigated in the order Chlamydiales, which also includes Chlamydia-like organisms with a broader host spectrum. The present study was aimed at investigating the apoptotic response of human cells infected with the Chlamydia-like organism Simkania negevensis (Sn). Simkania infected cells exhibited strong resistance to apoptosis induced by intrinsic stress or by the activation of cell death receptors. Apoptotic signaling was blocked upstream of mitochondria since Bax translocation, Bax and Bak oligomerisation and cytochrome c release were absent in these cells. Caspases were differentially regulated upon Sn infection. Caspase-3 and -9 were not activated upon Sn infection and apoptosis induction; whereas caspases-8 was activated in Sn infected cells even without apoptosis induction. This indicates that, Sn utilizes death receptor association independent caspase activation for thriving in the host environment. Infected cells turned on pro-survival pathways like cellular Inhibitor of Apoptosis Proteins (IAP-1/2 and XIAP) and the Akt/PI3K pathway. Sn infection also 20 activated the pro-survival transcription factor NF-кB. Blocking any of these survival pathways sensitized the infected host cell towards apoptosis induction, demonstrating their role in infection-induced apoptosis resistance. The NF-кB mutant cells also showed reduced infectivity of Sn, which indicated an essential role of NF-кB in Sn infection. It was interesting to observe that, Acanthamoeba castellanii, a natural host of Sn, survived maintaining its trophozoite forms after infection with Sn upon starvation. The metacaspases, responsible for encystment could be regulated by Sn upon infection. This suggests an early level of gene regulation indicating how the pathogen evolved its ability to inhibit apoptosis in higher organisms. The resistance to apoptosis pathways subverted in Sn-infected cells was similar but not identical to those modulated by Chlamydia. Together, the data supports the hypothesis of evolutionary conserved signaling pathways to apoptosis resistance as common denominators in the order Chlamydiales.}, subject = {Apoptosis}, language = {en} } @article{SeherNickelMuelleretal.2011, author = {Seher, Axel and Nickel, Joachim and Mueller, Thomas D. and Kneitz, Susanne and Gebhardt, Susanne and Meyer ter Vehn, Tobias and Schlunck, Guenther and Sebald, Walter}, title = {Gene expression profiling of connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) stimulated primary human tenon fibroblasts reveals an inflammatory and wound healing response in vitro}, series = {Molecular Vision}, volume = {17}, journal = {Molecular Vision}, number = {08. Okt}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-140189}, pages = {53-62}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Purpose: The biologic relevance of human connective tissue growth factor (hCTGF) for primary human tenon fibroblasts (HTFs) was investigated by RNA expression profiling using affymetrix (TM) oligonucleotide array technology to identify genes that are regulated by hCTGF. Methods: Recombinant hCTGF was expressed in HEK293T cells and purified by affinity and gel chromatography. Specificity and biologic activity of hCTGF was confirmed by biosensor interaction analysis and proliferation assays. For RNA expression profiling HTFs were stimulated with hCTGF for 48h and analyzed using affymetrix (TM) oligonucleotide array technology. Results were validated by real time RT-PCR. Results: hCTGF induces various groups of genes responsible for a wound healing and inflammatory response in HTFs. A new subset of CTGF inducible inflammatory genes was discovered (e.g., chemokine [C-X-C motif] ligand 1 [CXCL1], chemokine [C-X-C motif] ligand 6 [CXCL6], interleukin 6 [IL6], and interleukin 8 [IL8]). We also identified genes that can transmit the known biologic functions initiated by CTGF such as proliferation and extracellular matrix remodelling. Of special interest is a group of genes, e.g., osteoglycin (OGN) and osteomodulin (OMD), which are known to play a key role in osteoblast biology. Conclusions: This study specifies the important role of hCTGF for primary tenon fibroblast function. The RNA expression profile yields new insights into the relevance of hCTGF in influencing biologic processes like wound healing, inflammation, proliferation, and extracellular matrix remodelling in vitro via transcriptional regulation of specific genes. The results suggest that CTGF potentially acts as a modulating factor in inflammatory and wound healing response in fibroblasts of the human eye.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Philippi2011, author = {Philippi, Nicole}, title = {Modellierung von Signalwegen in verschiedenen biologischen Systemen}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-57690}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Die Apoptose der Leberzellen ist abh{\"a}ngig von externen Signalen wie beispielsweise Komponenten der Extrazellul{\"a}ren Matrix sowie anderen Zell-Zell-Kontakten, welche von einer Vielfalt und Vielzahl an Knoten verarbeitet werden. Einige von ihnen wurden im Rahmen dieser Arbeit auf ihre Systemeffekte hin unter- sucht. Trotz verschiedener {\"a}ußerer Einfl{\"u}sse und nat{\"u}rlicher Selektion ist das System daraufhin optimiert, eine kleine Anzahl verschiedener und klar voneinander unterscheidbarer Systemzust{\"a}nde anzunehmen. Die verschiedenartigen Einfl{\"u}sse und Crosstalk-Mechanismen dienen der Optimierung der vorhandenen Systemzust{\"a}nde. Das in dieser Arbeit vorgestellte Modell zeigt zwei apoptotische sowie zwei nicht-apoptotische stabile Systemzust{\"a}nde, wobei der Grad der Aktivierung eines Knotens bis zu dem Moment stark variieren kann, in welchem der absolute Systemzustand selbst ver{\"a}ndert wird (Philippi et al., BMC Systems Biology,2009) [1]. Dieses Modell stellt zwar eine Vereinfachung des gesamten zellul{\"a}ren Netzwerkes und seiner verschiedenen Zust{\"a}nde dar, ist aber trotz allem in der Lage, unabh{\"a}ngig von detaillierten kinetischen Daten und Parametern der einzelnen Knoten zu agieren. Gleichwohl erlaubt das Modell mit guter qualitativer {\"U}bereinstimmung die Apoptose als Folge einer Stimulation mit FasL zu modellieren. Weiterhin umfasst das Modell sowohl Crosstalk-M{\"o}glichkeiten des Collagen-Integrin-Signalwegs, ebenso ber{\"u}cksichtigt es die Auswirkungen der genetischen Deletion von Bid sowie die Konsequenzen einer viralen Infektion. In einem zweiten Teil werden andere Anwendungsm{\"o}glichkeiten dargestellt. Hormonale Signale in Pflanzen, Virusinfektionen und intrazellul{\"a}re Kommunikation werden semi-quantitativ modelliert. Auch hier zeigte sich eine gute Ubereinstimmung der Modelle mit den experimentellen Daten.}, subject = {Systembiologie}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Mueller2010, author = {M{\"u}ller, Judith}, title = {Die Rolle der HectH9/Mcl1-Interaktion in der Myc-induzierten Apoptose und Auswirkungen der Myc V394D-Mutation auf die von c-Myc gesteuerten Tumorgenese in einem transgenen Mausmodell}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-55789}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {W{\"a}hrend der Entstehung von Tumoren k{\"o}nnen zwei Mechanismen auftreten, die beide von der Aktivit{\"a}t der Onkogene abh{\"a}ngig sind und die Tumorgenese einschr{\"a}nken. F{\"u}r das Onkogen Myc ist gezeigt, dass es sowohl Apoptose als auch unter bestimmten Umst{\"a}nden Seneszenz ausl{\"o}sen kann und damit sein eigenes onkogenes Potential limitiert. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit konnte ich mich mit diesen Tumor-suppressiven Mechanismen in zwei unabh{\"a}ngigen Teilprojekten besch{\"a}ftigen. Eine erh{\"o}hte Expression von Myc steigert die Proliferation der Zellen, induziert aber gleichzeitig Doppelstrangbr{\"u}che an der DNA. Durch den dadurch entstandenen Schaden wird die DNA-Schadensantwort ausgel{\"o}st, die zum Beispiel zur Phosphorylierung von H2A.X durch die Kinasen Atm und Atr f{\"u}hrt. Ein weiteres putatives Zielprotein dieser Kinasen ist HectH9, das abh{\"a}ngig vom DNA-Schaden das mitochondriale Protein Mcl1 ubiquitiniert und es damit f{\"u}r den proteasomalen Abbau markiert. Im ungestressten Zustand interagiert das in der mitochondrialen Membran lokalisierte Protein Mcl1 mit proapoptotischen Proteinen und h{\"a}lt deren inerten Status aufrecht. Die Reduktion der Mcl1-Mengen ist essentiell, um die proapoptotischen Proteine zu aktivieren, dadurch die Freisetzung von Zytochrom C aus dem Mitochondrium zu veranlassen und damit den Prozess der Apoptose einleiten zu k{\"o}nnen. Anhand der in dieser Arbeit dokumentierten Daten bietet sich Mcl1 als potentielles Zielprotein f{\"u}r pharmazeutisch Strategien zur Therapie Myc-induzierter Tumore an. Im Idealfall erh{\"o}ht eine verst{\"a}rkte Reduktion seiner Proteinmengen die zellul{\"a}re Apoptose und verringert somit das Tumorwachstum. Im murinen T-Zell-Lymphom wird die Myc-abh{\"a}ngige Tumorgenese durch eine Mutation der Proteinsequenz von Myc verlangsamt. Diese Mutation unterbindet die Bindung von Myc zu Miz1 und verhindert dadurch die Repression von Zielgenen. Abh{\"a}ngig von der Interaktion von Myc zu Miz1 gelingt die Inhibition der Transkription des Zellzyklusinhibitors p15Ink4b. Die Interaktion von Myc und Miz1 ist essentiell um die TGFbeta-abh{\"a}ngige Seneszenz zu umgehen. Dar{\"u}ber hinaus ist Myc direkt an der Repression von TGFbeta beteiligt. Entgegen der bisher verwendeten Modelle konnte in dieser Arbeit gezeigt werden, dass Myc unabh{\"a}ngig von Miz1 zu den Promotoren der reprimierten Zielgene rekrutiert wird und die Bindung der beiden Proteine offensichtlich nur f{\"u}r die Transrepression essentiell ist.}, subject = {Myc}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Mueller2009, author = {M{\"u}ller, Nicole}, title = {Entwicklung antigenabh{\"a}ngig aktivierbarer TNF-Ligand-Fusionsproteine}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-36489}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Von TRAIL, FasL und APRIL, drei Mitgliedern der TNF-Liganden-Familie, ist bekannt, dass Trimerstabilit{\"a}t und Oligomerisierungsstatus maßgeblich das Rezeptoraktivierungspotential dieser Liganden beeinflussen. F{\"u}r die immunstimulatorischen TNF-Liganden CD27L, CD40L, OX40L, 41BBL und GITRL war hingegen vor der Durchf{\"u}hrung dieser Arbeit praktisch nicht bekannt, inwieweit Trimerbildung, Stabilisierung und Oligomerisierung wichtig f{\"u}r deren Aktitvit{\"a}t sind. Dies wurde in dieser Arbeit systematisch untersucht. CD40L besaß bereits als trimeres Molek{\"u}l eine hohe Aktivit{\"a}t, die durch sekund{\"a}re Oligomerisierung nur wenig gesteigert wurde. Die spezifische Aktivit{\"a}t konnte durch Stabilisierung mit Hilfe der Tenascin-C (TNC)-Trimerisierungsdom{\"a}ne nur geringf{\"u}gig gesteigert werden. CD27L war als l{\"o}sliches Flag-markiertes sowie als hexameres Fc-Protein selbst nach Quervernetzen nicht in der Lage, seinen Rezeptor CD27 zu binden und zu aktivieren. Die TNC-stabilisierte trimere Form des CD27L hingegen induzierte nach Oligomerisierung mit einem anti-Flag-Antik{\"o}rper ein starkes Signal. Trimerer OX40L und trimerer 41BBL konnten nur in oligomerisierter Form ihre Rezeptoren aktivieren, wobei die Aktivit{\"a}t der TNC-stabilisierten Form signifikant st{\"a}rker ausgepr{\"a}gt war. GITRL aktivierte seinen Rezeptor bereits als stabilisiertes Trimer und Hexamer, die Aktivit{\"a}t konnte durch Quervernetzen nur gering gesteigert werden. Zusammenfassend kann man sagen, dass CD27L, OX40L und 41BBL zu der Untergruppe der TNF-Ligandenfamilie geh{\"o}rt, f{\"u}r die eine Stabilisierung des trimeren Molek{\"u}ls und dessen Oligomerisierung n{\"o}tig sind, um eine starke Rezeptoraktivierung zu erm{\"o}glichen. Im Gegensatz dazu zeigten CD40L und GITRL bereits oligomerisierungsunabh{\"a}ngig eine hohe Aktivit{\"a}t. GITRL ben{\"o}tigte allerdings die Stabilisierung des trimeren Molek{\"u}ls durch die TNC-Dom{\"a}ne, um gute Aktivit{\"a}t zu zeigen. Im Weiteren wurden Antik{\"o}rperfragment (scFv-)-TNF-Ligand-Fusionsproteine konstruiert und untersucht, die ein Zelloberfl{\"a}chenantigen binden. Eine starke Zelloberfl{\"a}chenantigen-spezifische Aktivierung des jeweiligen Rezeptors konnte f{\"u}r scFv-41BBL und f{\"u}r scFv-OX40L gezeigt werden, wohingegen scFv-CD40L und scFv-GITRL bereits auf antigennegativen Zellen stark aktiv waren. scFv-CD27L war selbst auf antigenpositiven Zellen inaktiv. Verwendet man an Stelle des Antik{\"o}rperfragments eine extrazellul{\"a}re Proteinbindedom{\"a}ne, z.B. die eines TNF-Rezeptors, erh{\"a}lt man Fusionsproteine, die zum einen eine selektive Aktivierung der TNF-Ligandendom{\"a}ne und somit die Aktivierung des korrespondierenden Rezeptors auf der Zielzelle erm{\"o}glichen, zum anderen aber durch die Bindung an den membranst{\"a}ndigen Liganden dessen Aktitv{\"a}t neutralisieren k{\"o}nnen. F{\"u}r CD40-, RANK- und B7-2-FasL konnte der immobilisationabh{\"a}ngige Aktivierungseffekt auf entsprechenden Zelloberfl{\"a}chenmolek{\"u}l-exprimierenden Zellen gezeigt werden. Anhand von T47D-Zellen, die durch eine autokrine CD40L-CD40-Signalschleife vor Apoptose gesch{\"u}tzt sind, konnte gezeigt werden, dass durch die Bindung von CD40-FasL an membranst{\"a}ndigen CD40L die CD40L-CD40-Interaktion gest{\"o}rt und gleichzeitig Apoptose verst{\"a}rkt induziert werden kann. Das Prinzip der antigenabh{\"a}ngigen Aktivierung von TNF-Liganden k{\"o}nnte Anwendung in der Tumortherapie finden, da bei Verwendung entsprechender selektiv exprimierter Marker eine lokale Rezeptoraktivierung erreicht und so Nebenwirkungen minimiert werden k{\"o}nnen.}, subject = {Rekombinantes Protein}, language = {de} }