@phdthesis{Herb2023, author = {Herb, Stefanie Maria}, title = {Regulation of MCMV immediate early gene expression by virally encoded miRNAs}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-32331}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-323314}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Gene expression in eukaryotic cells is regulated by the combinatorial action of numerous gene-regulatory factors, among which microRNAs (miRNAs) play a fundamental role at the post-transcriptional level. miRNAs are single-stranded, small non-coding RNA molecules that emerge in a cascade-like fashion via the generation of primary and precursor miRNAs. Mature miRNAs become functional when incorporated into the RNA induced silencing complex (RISC). miRNAs guide RISCs to target mRNAs in a sequence-specific fashion. To this end, base-pairs are usually formed between the miRNA seed region, spanning nucleotide positions 2 to 8 (from the 5' end) and the 3'UTR of the target mRNA. Once miRNA-mRNA interaction is established, RISC represses translation and occasionally induces direct or indirect target mRNA degradation. Interestingly, miRNAs are expressed not only in every multicellular organism but are also encoded by several viruses, predominately by herpesviruses. By controlling both, cellular as well as viral mRNA transcripts, virus-encoded miRNAs confer many beneficial effects on viral growth and persistence. Murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) is a ß-herpesvirus and so far, 29 mature MCMV-encoded miRNAs have been identified during lytic infection. Computational analysis of previously conducted photoactivated ribonucleotide-enhanced individual nucleotide resolution crosslinking immunoprecipitation (PAR-iCLIP) experiments identified a read cluster within the 3' untranslated region (3'UTR) of the immediate early 3 (IE3) transcript in MCMV. Based on miRNA target predictions, two highly abundant MCMV miRNAs, namely miR-m01-2-3p and miR-M23-2-3p were found to potentially bind to two closely positioned target sites within the IE3 PAR-iCLIP peak. To confirm this hypothesis, we performed luciferase assays and showed that activity values of a luciferase fused with the 3'UTR of IE3 were downregulated in the presence of miR-m01- 2 and miR-M23-2. In a second step, we investigated the effect of pre-expression of miR-m01-2 and miR-M23-2 on the induction of virus replication. After optimizing the transfection procedure by comparing different reagents and conditions, plaque formation was monitored. We could demonstrate that the replication cycle of the wild-type but not of our MCMV mutant that harbored point mutations in both miRNA binding sites within the IE3-3'UTR, was significantly delayed in the presence of miR-m01-2 and miR-M23-2. This confirmed that miR-m01-2 and miR-M23-2 functionally target the major transcription factor IE3 which acts as an indispensable regulator of viral gene expression during MCMV lytic infection. Repression of the major immediate early genes by viral miRNAs is a conserved feature of cytomegaloviruses. The functional role of this type of regulation can now be studied in the MCMV mouse model.}, subject = {miRNS}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Eckert2023, author = {Eckert, Ina-Nathalie}, title = {Molecular markers of myeloid-derived suppressor cells and their functional role for homing and in disease models in mice}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-31997}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-319974}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2023}, abstract = {MDSCs are suppressive immune cells with a high relevance in various pathologies including cancer, autoimmunity, and chronic infections. Surface marker expression of MDSCs resembles monocytes and neutrophils which have immunostimulatory functions instead of suppressing T cells. Therefore, finding specific surface markers for MDSCs is important for MDSC research and therapeutic MDSC manipulation. In this study, we analyzed if the integrin VLA-1 has the potential as a novel MDSC marker. VLA-1 was expressed by M-MDSCs but not by G-MDSCs as well as by Teff cells. VLA-1 deficiency did not impact iNOS expression, the distribution of M-MDSC and G-MDSC subsets, and the suppressive capacity of MDSCs towards na{\"i}ve and Teff cells in vitro. In mice, VLA-1 had no effect on the homing capability of MDSCs to the spleen, which is a major reservoir for MDSCs. Since the splenic red pulp contains collagen IV and VLA-1 binds collagen IV with a high affinity, we found MDSCs and Teff cells in this area as expected. We showed that T cell suppression in the spleen, indicated by reduced T cell recovery and proliferation as well as increased apoptosis and cell death, partially depended on VLA-1 expression by the MDSCs. In a mouse model of multiple sclerosis, MDSC injection prior to disease onset led to a decrease of the disease score, and this effect was significantly reduced when MDSCs were VLA-1 deficient. The expression of Sema7A by Teff cells, a ligand for VLA-1 which is implicated in negative T cell regulation, resulted in a slightly stronger Teff cell suppression by MDSCs compared to Sema7A deficient T cells. Live cell imaging and intravital 2-photon microscopy showed that the interaction time of MDSCs and Teff cells was shorter when MDSCs lacked VLA 1 expression, however VLA-1 expression had no impact on MDSC mobility. Therefore, the VLA-1-dependent interaction of MDSC and Teff cells on collagen IV in the splenic red pulp is implicated MDSC-mediated Teff cell suppression.}, subject = {Immunologie}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Reinhart2022, author = {Reinhart, Michael Christian}, title = {Enhancing mucosal B cell responses with all-\(trans\) retinoic acid}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-29292}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-292920}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Diarrheal diseases are a major cause of death in developing countries. Vaccinating against the causative pathogens could reduce mortality and morbidity in these countries. Unfortunately, only for some of the most common enteral pathogens are vaccines available. Some of these available vaccines have limitations in terms of effectiveness and duration of protection. There is therefore an urgent need to develop new vaccine strategies that can generate protection against enteral pathogens. The presence of all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) during lymphocyte maturation is known to imprint a phenotype on lymphocytes that enables them to home to the intestines. Additionally, ATRA is known to play a role in B cell class switch to IgA, which is the dominant immunoglobulin in the intestines. The aim of this study was therefore to investigate whether the addition of all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) or a retinoic acid receptor agonist (AM80) to a parenteral vaccination could provide protection at the intestinal mucosa against enteric pathogens. C57BL/6 mice received s.c. priming and boosting immunizations with Ovalbumin followed by several s.c. injections with either ATRA, AM80 or the respective solvent as control substance. Feces, serum, saliva and vaginal lavage samples were collected and analyzed by ELISA for detection and relative quantification of antigen-specific antibodies. B cell populations in the draining lymph nodes were investigated after immunization using flow-cytometry. Antigen-specific antibodies producing cells were visualized in the small intestine of vaccinated animals using two-photon microscopy. Animals that were vaccinated and were exposed to AM80, and to a lesser extent ATRA exposed mice, had higher serum, fecal, saliva and vaginal lavage antigen-specific IgA titers when compared to animals that were vaccinated but did not receive ATRA/AM80. Antigen-specific IgG titers were not altered in any of the investigated tissues. In the draining lymph nodes, IgA+ and IgG+ B cells were increased after vaccination and AM80 exposure at several time points within 14 days after vaccination. Antigen-specific IgA+ cells were found in the small intestine of immunized and AM80-exposed but not control substance-exposed mice. These results suggest that the addition of ATRA or AM80 to parenteral vaccine formulations increases the abundance of antigen-specific antibodies at mucosal surfaces, and therefore have the potential to generate protective antibody titers at those mucosal surfaces.}, subject = {Impfung}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Chithelen2022, author = {Chithelen, Janice}, title = {Targeting viral and host factors to optimize anti-measles virus therapy}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-29305}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-293059}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Measles is an ancient disease with historical records as early as the 9th century. Extensive study as well as advances in scientific knowledge of virology have led to identification of the viral pathogen and subsequent development of an effective vaccine leading to global efforts towards measles elimination. In 2018, around 140,000 deaths were reported due to measles with incomplete vaccine coverage being one of the leading causes of resurgence. Measles is highly contagious and often regarded as a childhood illness. However, measles is associated with a number of complications and persistent infections like subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE), which have brought into focus the need for specific anti-viral therapies. The aim of this study was to target host and viral factors to optimize anti-measles virus therapy. Our approach was to test a panel of compounds known to inhibit host cell functions or viral factors for their antiviral effect on measles replication. Primary human lymphocytes, persistently infected NT2 cells and post-mitotic neurons were used as in vitro model systems of acute, persistent and neuronal infection respectively to test the inhibitors. Using the inhibitors Ceranib-2 and SKI-II to target the sphingolipid metabolism enzymes acid ceramidase and sphingosine kinase in infected human primary lymphocytes, we observed a decreased protein translational capacity mediated by mTORC1, EIF4E and ribosomal protein S6 phosphorylation that probably contributes to the antiviral effect. In the persistently infected neural NT2 cells and post-mitotic neurons derived from LUHMES cells, we observed effective infection inhibition and viral clearance upon treatment with a small non-nucleoside inhibitor (ERDRP-0519) specifically targeting the Morbillivirus large polymerase. Other inhibitors such as Ribavirin and Favipiravir were less effective. To conclude, 1) we identified a mTOR associated protein translation axis associated with the sphingolipid metabolism, which affects measles virus replication and 2) In vitro persistently infected neuronal and post-mitotic neuron models were successfully used as a rapid method to test antivirals against measles virus.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Juerges2022, author = {J{\"u}rges, Christopher Sebastian}, title = {Algorithmic methods for elucidating the transcriptomic landscape of herpesviruses}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-27282}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-272825}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Transcription describes the process of converting the information contained in DNA into RNA. Although, tremendous progress has been made in recent decades to uncover this complex mechanism, it is still not fully understood. Given the advances and reduction in cost of high-throughput sequencing experiments, more and more data have been generated to help elucidating this complex process. Importantly, these sequencing experiments produce massive amounts of data that are incomprehensible in their raw form for humans. Further, sequencing techniques are not always 100\% accurate and are subject to a certain degree of variability and, in special cases, they might introduce technical artifacts. Thus, computational and statistical methods are indispensable to uncover the information buried in these datasets. In this thesis, I worked with multiple high throughput datasets from herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) and human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infections. During the last decade, it has became clear that a gene might not have a single, but multiple sites at which transcription initiates. These multiple transcription start sites (TiSS) demonstrated to have regulatory effects on the gene itself depending on which TiSS is used. Specialized experimental approaches were developed to help identify TiSS (TiSS-profiling). In order to facilitate the identification of all potential TiSS that are used for cell type- and condition-specific transcription, I developed the tool iTiSS. By using a new general enrichment-based approach to predict TiSS, iTiSS proved to be applicable in integrated studies and made it less prone to false positives compared to other TiSS-calling tools. Another improvement in recent years was made in metabolic labeling experiments such as SLAM-seq. Here, they removed the time consuming and laborious step of physically separating new from old RNA in the samples. This was achieved by inducing specific nucleotide conversions in newly synthesized RNA that are later visible in the data. Consequently, the separation of new and old RNA is now done computationally and, hence, tools are needed that accurately quantify these fold-changes. My second tool that I developed, called GRAND-SLAM proved to be capable to accomplish this task and outperform competing programs. As both of my tools, iTiSS and GRAND-SLAM are not specifically tailored to my own goals, but could also facilitate the research of other groups in this field, I made them publicly available on GitHub. I applied my tools to datasets generated in our lab as well as to publicly available data sets from HSV-1 and HCMV, respectively. For HSV-1, I was able to predict and validate TiSS with nucleotide precision using iTiSS. This has lead to the most comprehensive annotation for HSV-1 to date, which now serves as the fundamental basis of any future transcriptomic research on HSV-1. By combining both my tools, I was further able to uncover parts of the highly complex gene kinetics in HCMV and to resolve the limitations caused by the densely packed genome of HCMV. With the ever-increasing advances in sequencing techniques and their decrease in cost, the amounts of data produced will continue to rise massively in the future. Additionally, more and more specialized omics approaches are appearing, calling for new tools to leverage their full information potential. Consequently, it has become apparent that specialized computational tools such as iTiSS and GRAND-SLAM are needed and will become an essential and indispensable part of the analysis.}, subject = {Herpesviren}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Wiese2022, author = {Wiese, Teresa}, title = {Pharmacological targeting of acid sphingomyelinase increases CD4\(^+\) Foxp3\(^+\) regulatory T cell subsets in patients with major depression}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-23347}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-233471}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Lack of acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) activity, either through genetic deficiency or through pharmacological inhibition, is linked with increased activity and frequency of Foxp3+ regulatory T cells (Treg) among cluster of differentiation (CD) 4+ T cells in mice in vivo and in vitro1. Thus, pharmacological blockade of ASM activity, which catalyzes the cleavage of sphingomyelin to ceramide and phosphocholine, might be used as a new therapeutic mechanism to correct numeric and/ or functional Treg de-ficiencies in diseases like multiple sclerosis or major depression. In the present study, the effect of pharmacological inhibition of ASM in humans, in vitro and in vivo, was analyzed. In the in vitro experiments, peripheral blood mono-nuclear cells (PBMC) of healthy human blood donors were treated with two widely prescribed antidepressants with high (sertraline, Ser) or low (citalopram, Cit) capaci-ty to inhibit ASM activity. Similar to the findings in mice an increase in the frequency of Treg among human CD4+ T cells upon inhibition of ASM activity was observed. For the analysis in vivo, a prospective study of the composition of the CD4+ T cell com-partment of patients treated for major depression was done. The data show that pharmacological inhibition of ASM activity was superior to antidepressants with little or no ASM-inhibitory activity in increasing CD45RA- CD25high effector Treg (efTreg) frequencies among CD4+ T cells to normal levels. Independently of ASM inhibition, correlating the data with the clinical response, i.e. improvement of the Hamilton rat-ing scale for depression (HAMD) by at least 50 per cent (\%) after four weeks of treatment, it was found that an increase in efTreg frequencies among CD4+ cells dur-ing the first week of treatment identified patients with a clinical response. Regarding the underlying mechanism, it could be found that the positive effect of ASM inhibition on Treg required CD28 co-stimulation suggesting that enhanced CD28 co-stimulation was the driver of the observed increase in the frequency of Treg among human CD4+ T cells. Inhibition of ASM activity was further associated with changes in the expression and shuttling of CTLA-4, a key inhibitory molecule ex-pressed by Treg, between cellular compartments but the suppressive activity of CTLA-4 through its transendocytosis activity was unaffected by the inhibition of ASM activity. In summary, the frequency of (effector) Treg among CD4+ T cells in mice and in hu-mans is increased after inhibition of ASM activity suggesting that ASM blockade might beneficially modulate autoimmune diseases and depression-promoting in-flammation.}, subject = {Treg}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Jonas2021, author = {Jonas, Franziska}, title = {CNS1-dependency of \(in\) \(vivo\) peptide-induced CD4\(^+\)Foxp3\(^+\) regulatory T cells}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-24388}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-243887}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2021}, abstract = {CD4+Foxp3+ Tregs can be induced in vitro by TGF-b stimulation. Here, CNS1 deficient CD4+ T cells were found to show compromised Foxp3 upregulation in vitro compared to CNS1 WT CD4+ T cells. Moreover, we could demonstrate that antigen-specific CD4+Foxp3+ Tregs can be induced in vivo by tolerogenic antigen stimulation. Parenteral application of agonist BDC2.5 mimetope induced Foxp3 expression in CD4+ BDC2.5 tg cells. We could show that induction of Foxp3 expression by tolerogenic peptide stimulation is impaired in CNS1 deficient CD4+ BDC2.5 tg cells compared to CNS1 WT CD4+ BDC2.5 tg controls. These results indeed indicate that in vivo induced Tregs share mechanistic characteristics with naturally occurring pTregs. Additional in vivo experiments with blocking monoclonal anti-TGF-b demonstrated that high dosage TGF-b blockade abrogated peptide-induced Foxp3 expression in CNS1 WT BDC2.5 tg CD4+ cells, akin to what is seen for impaired Foxp3 upregulation in peptide-stimulated CNS1 KO BDC2.5 tg CD4+ cells without anti-TGF-b-treatment. Adoptive transfer of CD4+CD25- T cells in T cell deficient recipients dramatically increased CD4+Foxp3+ Treg frequencies in both CNS1 WT CD4+ and CNS1 KO CD4+ donor cells. Despite an initially lower increase in Foxp3 expression in CNS1 KO donor cells compared to CNS1 WT donor cells early after transfer, in this setting impaired Treg induction in CNS1 deficient cells was not preserved over time. Consequently, diabetes onset and progression were indistinguishable between mice that received CNS1 WT or CNS1 KO donor cells. Additional Foxp3 induction by peptide stimulation of immunodeficient recipients after transfer of CNS1 WT BDC2.5. tg or CNS1 KO BDC2.5 tg donor cells was not detectable.}, subject = {Regulatorischer T-Lymphozyt}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Adenugba2021, author = {Adenugba, Akinbami Raphael}, title = {Functional analysis of the gene organization of the pneumoviral attachment protein G}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-12814}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-128146}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2021}, abstract = {The putative attachment protein G of pneumonia virus of mice (PVM), a member of the Pneumoviruses, is an important virulence factor with so far ambiguous function in a virus-cell as well as in virus-host context. The sequence of the corresponding G gene is characterized by significant heterogeneity between and even within strains, affecting the gene and possibly the protein structure. This accounts in particular for the PVM strain J3666 for which two differing G gene organizations have been described: a polymorphism in nucleotide 65 of the G gene results in the presence of an upstream open reading frame (uORF) that precedes the main ORF in frame (GJ366665A) or extension of the major G ORF for 18 codons (GJ366665U). Therefore, this study was designed to analyse the impact of the sequence variations in the respective G genes of PVM strains J3666 and the reference strain 15 on protein expression, replication and virulence. First, the controversy regarding the consensus sequence of PVM J3666 was resolved. The analysis of 45 distinct cloned fragments showed that the strain separated into two distinct virus populations defined by the sequence and structure of the G gene. This division was further supported by nucleotide polymorphisms in the neighbouring M and SH genes. Sequential passage of this mixed strain in the cell line standardly used for propagation of virus stocks resulted in selection for the GJ366665A-containing population in one of two experiments pointing towards a moderate replicative advantage. The replacement of the G gene of the recombinant PVM 15 with GJ366665A or GJ366665U, respectively, using a reverse genetic approach indicated that the presence of uORF within the GJ366665A significantly reduced the expression of the main G ORF on translational level while the potential extension of the ORF in GJ366665U increased G protein expression. In comparison, the effect of the G gene-structure on virus replication was inconsistent and dependent on cell line and type. While the presence of uORF correlated with a replication advantage in the standardly used BHK-21 cells and primary murine embryonic fibroblasts, replication in the murine macrophage cell line RAW 264.7 did not. In comparison, the GJ366665U variant was not associated with any effect on replication in cultured cells at all. Nonetheless, in-vivo analysis of the recombinant viruses associated the GJ366665U gene variant, and hence an increased G expression, with higher virulence whereas the GJ366665A gene, and therefore an impaired G expression, conferred an attenuated phenotype to the virus. To extend the study to other G gene organizations, a recombinant PVM expressing a G protein without the cytoplasmic domain and for comparison a G-deletion mutant, both known to be attenuated in vivo, were studied. Not noticed before, this structure of the G gene was associated with a 75\% reduction in G protein expression and a significant attenuation of replication in macrophage-like cells. This attenuation was even more prominent for the virus lacking G. Taking into consideration the higher reduction in G protein levels compared to the GJ366665A variant indicates that a threshold amount of G is required for efficient replication in these cells. In conclusion, the results gathered indicated that the expression levels of the G protein were modulated by the sequence of the 5' untranslated region of the gene. At the same time the G protein levels modulated the virulence of PVM.}, subject = {G glycoprotein}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Haack2021, author = {Haack, Stephanie}, title = {A novel mouse model for systemic cytokine release upon treatment with a superagonistic anti-CD28 antibody}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-23775}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-237757}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2021}, abstract = {The adaptive immune system is known to provide highly specific and effective immunity against a broad variety of pathogens due to different effector cells. The most prominent are CD4+ T-cells which differentiate after activation into distinct subsets of effector and memory cells, amongst others T helper 1 (Th1) cells. We have recently shown that mouse as well as human Th1 cells depend on T cell receptor (TCR) signals concomitant with CD28 costimulation in order to secrete interferon  (IFN) which is considered as their main effector function. Moreover, there is a class of anti-CD28 monoclonal antibodies that is able to induce T cell (re-)activation without concomitant TCR ligation. These so-called CD28-superagonists (CD28-SA) have been shown to preferentially activate and expand CD4+ Foxp3+ regulatory T (Treg) cells and thereby efficaciously conferring protection e.g. against autoimmune responses in rodents and non-human primates. Considering this beneficial effect, CD28-SA were thought to be of great impact for immunotherapeutic approaches and a humanized CD28-SA was subjected to clinical testing starting with a first-in-man trial in London in 2006. Unexpectedly, the volunteers experienced life-threatening side effects due to a cytokine release syndrome (CRS) that was unpredicted by the preclinical studies prior to the trial. Retrospectively, CD4+ memory T cells within the tissues were identified as source of pro-inflammatory cytokines released upon CD28-SA administration. This was not predicted by the preclinical testing indicating a need for more reliable and predictive animal models. Whether mouse CD4+ T cells are generally irresponsive to CD28-SA stimulation or rather the lack of a bona fide memory T cell compartment in cleanly housed specific-pathogen-free (SPF) mice is the reason why the rodent models failed to predict the risk for a CRS remained unclear. To provide SPF mice with a true pool of memory/effector T cells, we transferred in vitro differentiated TCR-transgenic OT-II Th1 cells into untreated recipient mice. Given that Treg cells suppress T cell activation after CD28- SA injection in vivo, recipients were either Treg-competent or Treg-deficient, wild type or DEREG mice, respectively. Subsequent CD28-SA administration resulted in induction of systemic pro-inflammatory cytokine release, dominated by IFN, that was observed to be much more pronounced and robust in Treg-deficient recipients. Employing a newly established in vitro system mirroring the in vivo responses to CD28-SA stimulation of Th1 cells revealed that antigen-presenting cells (APCs) amplify CD28-SAinduced IFN release by Th1 cells due to CD40/CD40L-interactions. Thus, these data are the first to show that mouse Th1 cells are indeed sensitive to CD28-SA stimulation in vivo and in vitro responding with strong IFN release accompanied by secretion of further pro-inflammatory cytokines, which is compatible with a CRS. In conclusion, this study will facilitate preclinical testing of immunomodulatory agents providing a mouse model constituting more "human-like" conditions allowing a higher degree of reliability and translationability.}, subject = {CD28}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Brado2020, author = {Brado, Dominik Alexander}, title = {Genetic diversity and baseline drug resistance of South African HIV-1 Integrase sequences prior to the availability of Integrase strand-transfer inhibitors}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-21656}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-216562}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Background: Integrase strand transfer inhibitors (INSTIs) are the latest addition to the array of antiretroviral compounds used to treat an infection with Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). Due to their high efficacy and increased tolerability, INSTIs have become an integral part of first-line therapy in most high-income countries over the past years. However, little is known about HIV-1's genetic inter- and intra-subtype diversity on the Integrase (IN)-gene and its impact on the emergence of INSTI-resistance. In the absence of a functional cure, long-term efficacy of first-line compounds remains paramount for reducing virological failure and curbing on-going HIV transmissions. South Africa, harbouring more than 20\% of the global HIV burden (7.7 / 37.9 million people), requires international attention in order to globally pursue UNAIDS' (Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS) 90-90-90 goals and the road to ending the HIV/AIDS (Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome) pandemic by 2030. Methods: In this study, the prevalence of INSTI-resistance associated mutations (RAM) was investigated in a cohort of 169 archived drug-na{\"i}ve blood samples from multiple collection sites around Cape Town, South Africa. Viral RNA was isolated from plasma samples, the integrase fragment amplified by RT-PCR and subsequently sequenced by Sanger-sequencing. Additionally, all publicly available drug-na{\"i}ve, South African IN sequences, isolated before the availability of the first INSTIs in 2007, were retrieved from the Los Alamos HIV sequence database (n=284). All sequences were analysed for RAMs using the Stanford HIV Drug resistance database. The identification of polymorphism in the South African subtype C IN consensus sequence allowed for comparative analyses with global subtype B, as well as subtype C sequences, from countries other than South Africa. Results: The IN gene could be amplified and sequenced in 95/169 samples (56\%). Phylogenetic inference revealed close homology between three sequence-pairs, warranting the exclusion of 3/95 sequences from further analyses. Of the 92 samples used for mutational analyses, 86/92 (93.5\%) belonged to subtype C, 5/92 (5.4\%) to subtype B and 1/92 (1.1\%) to subtype A. The prevalence of major and accessory INSTI RAMs was 0/92 (0\%) and 1/91 (1.1\%), respectively, similar to the observed rates of 8/284 (2.8\%) and 8/284 (2.8\%) in the database sequences (p = 0.2076 and p = 0.6944, Fisher's exact test). Compared to subtype B IN sequences, 15 polymorphisms were significantly enriched in South African subtype C sequences (corrected p<0.0015. Fisher's exact test, Bonferroni post-hoc procedure). Compared to subtype C IN sequences isolated outside South Africa, four polymorphisms were significantly enriched in this study cohort (corrected p<0.0014, Fisher's exact test, Bonferroni post-hoc procedure). The highest prevalence margin was observed for the polymorphism Met50Ile being present in 60.1\% of South African subtype C sequences, compared to 37\% in non-South African subtype C sequences. Conclusions: The low prevalence of major and minor RAMs in all South African Integrase sequences predicts a high susceptibility to INSTIs, however, the presence of natural polymorphisms, in particular Met50Ile, in the majority of sequences warrants further monitoring under therapeutic pressure, as their role in mutational pathways leading to INSTI- resistance is yet to be determined. Additionally, this study revealed the presence of substantial inter- and intra-subtype diversity within the HIV-1 Subtype C IN-gene. These results implicate the need for more research on a regional, potentially patient-specific level, as mutational insights from other diverse backgrounds may not accurately represent the South African context. The implementation of a national pre-treatment INSTI-resistance screening program may provide necessary insights into the development of mutational pathways leading to INSTI-resistance under therapeutic pressure for the South African context and thereby bring South Africa one step closer to achieving UNAIDS 90-90-90 goals and ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030.}, subject = {HIV}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Boerner2020, author = {B{\"o}rner, Kevin}, title = {How CLEC16A modifies the function of thymic epithelial cells}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-20023}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-200230}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Genomweite Assoziationsstudien haben CLEC16A als ein Suszeptibilit{\"a}tsgen f{\"u}r Typ 1 Diabetes und weitere Autoimmunerkrankungen identifiziert. Die genaue Funktion von CLEC16A bleibt jedoch ungekl{\"a}rt. Studien zeigten, dass sowohl das Drosophila Ortholog ema als auch das murine Clec16a eine Rolle in Autophagie spielen. Autophagie tr{\"a}gt zur Beladung der MHC-Klasse-II Molek{\"u}le und somit der Antigenpr{\"a}sentation bei. Dar{\"u}ber hinaus konnten Studien belegen, dass Autophagie zur Antigenpr{\"a}sentation w{\"a}hrend der T-Zell Selektion in Thymus-Epithelzellen ben{\"o}tigt wird. Dies schl{\"a}gt eine m{\"o}gliche Funktion von CLEC16A in Thymus-Epithelzellen w{\"a}hrend der T-Zell Selektion vor. Außerdem berichteten Arbeiten, dass CLEC16A als quantitativer Trait Locus f{\"u}r seine Nachbargene fungiert und dass Clec16a KD in Langerhans Inseln im Pankreas die Insulinsekretion und den Glukosestoffwechsel beeintr{\"a}chtigt. Dieser Arbeit vorausgehend hatten Schuster et al. eine Clec16a KD NOD Maus generiert, welche vor spontanem autoimmunem Diabetes gesch{\"u}tzt war. F{\"u}r diese Arbeit wurde vermutet, dass CLEC16A als Suszeptibilit{\"a}tsgen f{\"u}r Typ 1 Diabetes den Prozess der Autophagie in Thymus-Epithelzellen beeintr{\"a}chtigt und somit Antigenpr{\"a}sentation und das T-Zell Repertoire beeinflusst. Um auf der Vorarbeit von Schuster et al. aufzubauen und diese zu erg{\"a}nzen, zielte diese Arbeit darauf ab, den Einfluss von CLEC16A auf Thymus-Epithelzellen zu untersuchen. Hierf{\"u}r wurde ein CLEC16A KD in menschlichen Zellen mittels RNA Interferenz erzeugt und Autophagie durch Immunoblotting untersucht. Zus{\"a}tzlich wurde die Entz{\"u}ndung im Pankreasgewebe von Clec16a KD NOD M{\"a}usen mittels H.E. F{\"a}rbung beurteilt und bewertet. Thymus-Transplanationen wurden durchgef{\"u}hrt, um zu sehen, ob der Einfluss von Clec16a KD T-Zell intrinsisch ist. Außerdem wurden intraperitoneale Glukosetoleranztests durchgef{\"u}hrt, um den Blutzuckerstoffwechsel in Clec16a KD M{\"a}usen zu beurteilen. Schließlich wurden mittels qPCR Expressionslevel der benachbarten Gene, wie zum Beispiel Dexi und Socs1, erhoben, um die Eigenschaften von CLEC16A als quantitativer Trait Locus einzuordnen. Gemeinsam mit den Ergebnissen von Schuster et al. kann diese Arbeit aufzeigen, dass Clec16a KD die Auspr{\"a}gung von Insulitis im Pankreas reduziert und Clec16a KD NOD M{\"a}use vor spontanem Autoimmundiabetes sch{\"u}tzt. Dieser Schutz vor Erkrankung wird durch beeintr{\"a}chtigte Autophagie in Thymus-Epithelzellen hervorgerufen, welche die T-Zell Selektion beeinflusst und die Reaktivit{\"a}t von T-Zellen reduziert. Der Einfluss des Clec16a KD ist innerhalb des Thymus wirksam. Der Blutzuckerstoffwechsel in Clec16a KD NOD M{\"a}usen bleibt unver{\"a}ndert und kann deshalb als Ursache f{\"u}r den Schutz vor Type 1 Diabetes ausgeschlossen werden. Clec16a und Dexi zeigen {\"a}hnliche Expressionslevel auf, dennoch ben{\"o}tigt es weitere detaillierte Studien, um eine Beziehung zwischen den beiden Genen etablieren zu k{\"o}nnen. Letztlich konnte die Beeintr{\"a}chtigung von Autophagie in menschlichen CLEC16A KD Zellen nachgewiesen werden, was bedeutet, dass die Funktion von CLEC16A evolution{\"a}r konserviert ist und ein m{\"o}glicher Zusammenhang zwischen CLEC16A Polymorphismen und einem erh{\"o}hten Risiko f{\"u}r Typ 1 Diabetes im Menschen besteht.}, subject = {Thymus}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Derakhshani2019, author = {Derakhshani, Shaghayegh}, title = {Measles virus infection enhances dendritic cell migration in a 3D environment}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-18918}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-189182}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The respiratory system is amongst the most important compartments in the human body. Due to its connection to the external environment, it is one of the most common portals of pathogen entry. Airborne pathogens like measles virus (MV) carried in liquid droplets exhaled from the infected individuals via a cough or sneeze enter the body from the upper respiratory tract and travel down to the lower respiratory tract and reach the alveoli. There, pathogens are captured by the resident dendritic cells (DCs) or macrophages and brought to the lymph node where immune responses or, as in case of MV, dissemination via the hematopoietic cell compartment are initiated. Basic mechanisms governing MV exit from the respiratory tract, especially virus transmission from infected immune cells to the epithelial cells have not been fully addressed before. Considering the importance of these factors in the viral spread, a complex close-to-in-vivo 3D human respiratory tract model was generated. This model was established using de-cellularized porcine intestine tissue as a biological scaffold and H358 cells as targets for infection. The scaffold was embedded with fibroblast cells, and later on, an endothelial cell layer seeded at the basolateral side. This provided an environment resembling the respiratory tract where MV infected DCs had to transmigrate through the collagen scaffold and transmit the virus to epithelial cells in a Nectin-4 dependent manner. For viral transmission, the access of infected DCs to the recipient epithelial cells is an essential prerequisite and therefore, this important factor which is reflected by cell migration was analyzed in this 3D system. The enhanced motility of specifically MV-infected DCs in the 3D models was observed, which occurred independently of factors released from the other cell types in the models. Enhanced motility of infected DCs in 3D collagen matrices suggested infection-induced cytoskeletal remodeling, as also verified by detection of cytoskeletal polarization, uropod formation. This enforced migration was sensitive to ROCK inhibition revealing that MV infection induces an amoeboid migration mode in DCs. In support of this, the formation of podosome structures and filopodia, as well as their activity, were reduced in infected DCs and retained in their uninfected siblings. Differential migration modes of uninfected and infected DCs did not cause differential maturation, which was found to be identical for both populations. As an underlying mechanism driving this enforced migration, the role of sphingosine kinase (SphK) and sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) was studied in MV-exposed cultures. It was shown in this thesis that MV-infection increased S1P production, and this was identified as a contributing factor as inhibition sphingosine kinase activity abolished enforced migration of MV-infected DCs. These findings revealed that MV infection induces a fast push-and-squeeze amoeboid mode of migration, which is supported by SphK/S1P axis. However, this push-and-squeeze amoeboid migration mode did not prevent the transendothelial migration of MV-infected DCs. Altogether, this 3D system has been proven to be a suitable model to study specific parameters of mechanisms involved in infections in an in vivo-like conditions.}, subject = {Dendritische Zelle}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Tiwarekar2019, author = {Tiwarekar, Vishakha Rakesh}, title = {The APOBEC3G-regulated host factors REDD1 and KDELR2 restrict measles virus replication}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-17952}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-179526}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Measles is an extremely contagious vaccine-preventable disease responsible for more than 90000 deaths worldwide annually. The number of deaths has declined from 8 million in the pre-vaccination era to few thousands every year due to the highly efficacious vaccine. However, this effective vaccine is still unreachable in many developing countries due to lack of infrastructure, while in developed countries too many people refuse vaccination. Specific antiviral compounds are not yet available. In the current situation, only an extensive vaccination approach along with effective antivirals could help to have a measles-free future. To develop an effective antiviral, detailed knowledge of viral-host interaction is required. This study was undertaken to understand the interaction between MV and the innate host restriction factor APOBEC3G (A3G), which is well-known for its activity against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Restriction of MV replication was not attributed to the cytidine deaminase function of A3G, instead, we identified a novel role of A3G in regulating cellular gene functions. Among two of the A3G regulated host factors, we found that REDD1 reduced MV replication, whereas, KDELR2 hampered MV haemagglutinin (H) surface transport thereby affecting viral release. REDD1, a negative regulator of mTORC1 signalling impaired MV replication by inhibiting mTORC1. A3G regulated REDD1 expression was demonstrated to inversely correlate with MV replication. siRNA mediated silencing of A3G in primary human blood lymphocytes (PBL) reduced REDD1 levels and simultaneously increased MV titres. Also, direct depletion of REDD1 improved MV replication in PBL, indicating its role in A3G mediated restriction of MV. Based on these finding, a new role of rapamycin, a pharmacological inhibitor of mTORC1, was uncovered in successfully diminishing MV replication in Vero as well as in human PBL. The ER and Golgi resident receptor KDELR2 indirectly affected MV by competing with MV-H for cellular chaperones. Due to the sequestering of chaperones by KDELR2, they can no longer assist in MV-H folding and subsequent surface expression. Taken together, the two A3G-regulated host factors REDD1 and KDELR2 are mainly responsible for mediating its antiviral activity against MV.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Kuen2017, author = {Kuen, Janina}, title = {Influence of 3D tumor cell/fibroblast co-culture on monocyte differentiation and tumor progression in pancreatic cancer}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-156226}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Pancreatic cancer (PC) remains one of the most challenging solid tumors to treat with a high unmet medical need as patients poorly respond to standard-of-care-therapies. Prominent desmoplastic reaction involving cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) and the immune cells in the tumor microenvironment (TME) and their cross-talk play a significant role in tumor immune escape and progression. To identify the key cellular mechanisms induce an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment, we established 3D co-culture model with pancreatic cancer cells, CAFs, monocyte as well as T cells. Using this model, we analysed the influence of tumor cells and fibroblasts on monocytes and their immune suppressive phenotype. Phenotypic characterization of the monocytes after 3D co-culture with tumor/fibroblast spheroids was performed by analysing the expression of defined cell surface markers and soluble factors. Functionality of these monocytes and their ability to influence T cell phenotype and proliferation was investigated. 3D co-culture of monocytes with pancreatic cancer cells and fibroblasts induced the production of immunosuppressive cytokines which are known to promote polarization of M2 like macrophages and myeloid derived suppressive cells (MDSCs). These co-culture spheroid polarized monocyte derived macrophages (MDMs) were poorly differentiated and had an M2 phenotype. The immunosuppressive function of these co-culture spheroids polarized MDMs was demonstrated by their ability to inhibit autologous CD4+ and CD8+ T cell activation and proliferation in vitro, which we could partially reverse by 3D co-culture spheroid treatment with therapeutic molecules that are able to re-activate spheroid polarized MDMs or block immune suppressive factors such as Arginase-I. In conclusion, we generated a physiologically relevant 3D co-culture model, which can be used as a promising tool to study complex cell-cell interactions between different cell types within the tumor microenvironment and to support drug screening and development. In future, research focused on better understanding of resistance mechanisms to existing cancer immunotherapies will help to develop new therapeutic strategies in order to combat cancer.}, subject = {monocyte}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Pletinckx2011, author = {Pletinckx, Katrien}, title = {Dendritic cell maturation and instruction of CD4+ T cell tolerance in vitro}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-67375}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Effective T cell immunity was believed to occur by mature DC, whereas tolerogenicity was attributed strictly to immature DC phenotypes. However, intermediate DC maturation stages were identified conditioned by inflammatory mediators like TNF. Furthermore, the T cell tolerance mechanisms are dependent on distinct modes and intensities of co-stimulation. Therefore, in this study it was addressed how distinct DC maturation signatures instruct CD4+ T cell tolerance mechanisms. DC acquire antigens from apoptotic cells for self-peptide-MHC presentation and functionally adapt presumed tolerogenic DC phenotypes. Here, immature murine bone-marrow derived DC representing both inflammatory and conventional DC subsets adapted a maturationresistant DC signature upon apoptotic cell recognition but no additional tolerogenic features. Immature DC instruct CD4+ FoxP3+ regulatory T cells in a TGF-β prone micro-environment or generate anergic CD4+ T cells hampered in the TCR-induced proliferation and IL-2 secretion. Secondary stimulation of such anergic CD4+ T cells by immature DC increased primarily IL-10 production and conferred regulatory function. These IL-10+ regulatory T cells expressed high levels of CTLA-4, which is potently induced by immature DC in particular. Data in this work showed that anergic T cells can be re-programmed to become IL-10+ regulatory T cells upon ligation of CTLA-4 and CD28 signalling cascades by B7 costimulatory ligands on immature DC. In contrast, semi-mature DC phenotypes conditioned by the inflammatory mediator TNF prevented autoimmune disorders by induction of IL-10+ Th2 responses as demonstrated previously. Here, it was shown that TNF as an endogenous maturation stimulus and pathogenic Trypanosoma brucei variant-specific surface glycoproteins (VSG) induced highly similar DC gene expression signatures which instructed default effector Th2 responses. Repetitive administration of the differentially conditioned semi-mature DC effectively skewed T cell immunity to IL-10+ Th2 cells, mediating immune deviation and suppression. Collectively, the data presented in this work provide novel insights how immature and partially mature DC phenotypes generate T cell tolerance mechanisms in vitro, which has important implications for the design of effective DC-targeted vaccines. Unravelling the DC maturation signatures is central to the long-standing quest to break tolerance mimicked by malignant tumours or re-establish immune homeostasis in allergic or autoimmune disorders.}, subject = {Dendritische Zelle}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Kaiser2012, author = {Kaiser, Fabian Marc Philipp}, title = {Analysis of Cross-Clade Neutralizing Antibodies against HIV-1 Env Induced by Immunofocusing}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-75494}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Despite intense research efforts, a safe and effective HIV-1/AIDS vaccine still remains far away. HIV-1 escapes the humoral immune response through various mechanisms and until now, only a few nAbs have been identified. A promising strategy to identify new epitopes that may elicit such nAbs is to dissect and analyze the humoral immune response of sera with broadly reactive nAbs. The identified epitopes recognized by these antibodies might then be incorporated into a vaccine to elicit similar nAbs and thus provide protection from HIV-1 infection. Using random peptide phage display libraries, the Ruprecht laboratory has identified the epitopes recognized by polyclonal antibodies of a rhesus monkey with high-titer, broadly reactive nAbs that had been induced after infection with a SHIV encoding env of a recently transmitted HIV-1 clade C. The laboratory analyzed phage peptide inserts for conformational and linear homology with computational assistance. Several of the identified peptides mimicked domains of the original HIV-1 clade Env, such as conformational V3 loop epitopes and the conserved linear region of the gp120 C-terminus. As part of this work, these mimotopes were analyzed for cross-reactivity with other sera obtained from rhesus monkeys with nAbs and antibody recognition was shown for several mimotopes, particularly those representing the V3 loop. In addition, these mimotopes were incorporated into a novel DNA prime/phage boost strategy to analyze the immunogenicity of such phage-displayed peptides. Mice were primed only once with HIV-1 clade C gp160 DNA and subsequently boosted with mixtures of recombinant phages. This strategy was designed to focus the humoral immune response on a few, selected Env epitopes (immunofocusing) and induced HIV-1 clade C gp160 binding antibodies and cross-clade nAbs. Furthermore, the C-terminus of gp120, a conserved HIV Env region, was linked to the induction of nAbs for the first time. The identification of such conserved antigens may lead to the development of a vaccine that is capable of inducing broadly reactive nAbs that might confer protection form HIV-1 infection.}, subject = {Antik{\"o}rper}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Sbiera2012, author = {Sbiera, Silviu}, title = {Interaction of Human Polyomavirus JC with cells of the hematopoietic system in the periphery}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-74183}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Primary contact with human polyomaviruses is followed by lifelong asymptomatic persistence of viral DNA. Under severe immunosuppression JCV activation may lead to unrestricted virus growth in the CNS followed by development of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML). Besides the kidney and the brain, target cells of persistent infection were also found in the hematopoietic system. This included the presence of JCV genomes in peripheral blood cells (PBCs). In the attempt to understand the role of PBCs for the JCV infection in humans, we asked for the type of cells affected as well as for virus interaction with PBCs. Analysis of separated subpopulations by highly sensitive and specific polymerase chain reaction and Southern blot hybridization revealed the presence of JCV DNA mostly in circulating granulocytes. These cells have important functions in innate immunity and are professional phagocytes. This suggested that PCR amplified DNA might be the result of an extranuclear association of the virus due to membrane attachment or phagocytosis rather than JCV infection with presence of viral DNA in the nucleus. In the attempt to answer this question JCV DNA was subcellularly localized in the blood of 22 healthy donors by JCV specific fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Granulocytes and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were separated by Percoll gradient centrifugation. Intracellular JCV DNA was hybridized with Digoxigenin-labeled JCV specific DNA probes covering half of the viral genome. As the sensitivity of the anti-digoxigenin antibody system was lower than the PCR detection level, a chemical amplification step was included consisting of peroxidase labeled secondary antibody precipitating biotinylated tyramide followed by detection with streptavidin-Texas-Red and fluorescence microscopy. Comparison of the number of cells affected in healthy individuals with 15 HIV-1 infected patients with and without PML revealed that the rate of affected PBMCs was comparable in both groups (2.5±0.4 and 14.5±0.9 per 1000). In contrast, the rate of JCV positive granulocytes in the immunosuppressed group was 92.6±1.7\% compared to 4±1.4\% in healthy donors thus confirming that granulocytes are the major group of circulating cells affected by JCV and that HIV-1 associated immune impairment has an important effect on the virus-cell association. Localization revealed that JCV DNA was predominantly located within the cytoplasm, although hybridizing signals occasionally covered the nuclear compartment. The fluorescent glow of chemical amplification combined with classical fluorescence microscopy did not allow an unequivocal localization of viral DNA. However, confocal microscopy of 24 sections through single cells combined with FISH without chemical amplification confirmed cytoplasmic localization of JCV DNA in a large number of cells. Additionally, it clearly demonstrated that JCV DNA was also located in the nucleus and nuclear localization directly correlated with the number of cells affected. Calculation of the virus load in subcellular compartments revealed that up to 50\% of the JCV genomes were located in the nucleus thus pointing to viral infection at least in the granulocytes of HIV-1 infected patients. This may contribute to the distribution of the virus from sites of peripheral infection to the CNS and may promote the development of active PML in the severely immune impaired patients.}, subject = {Polyomaviren}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Jacobs2011, author = {Jacobs, Graeme Brendon}, title = {HIV-1 resistance analyses from therapy-na{\"i}ve patients in South Africa, Tanzania and the characterization of a new HIV-1 subtype C proviral molecular clone}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-67319}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2011}, abstract = {The acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is currently the most infectious disease worldwide. It is caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). At the moment there are ~33.3 million people infected with HIV. Sub-Saharan Africa, with ~22.5 million people infected accounts for 68\% of the global burden. In most African countries antiretroviral therapy (ART) is administered in limited-resource settings with standardised first- and second-line ART regimens. During this study I analysed the therapy-na{\"i}ve population of Cape Town, South Africa and Mwanza, Tanzania for any resistance associated mutations (RAMs) against protease inhibitors, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors and non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors. My results indicate that HIV-1 subtype C accounts for ~95\% of all circulating strains in Cape Town, South Africa. I could show that ~3.6\% of the patient derived viruses had RAMs, despite patients being therapy-na{\"i}ve. In Mwanza, Tanzania the HIV drug resistance (HIVDR) prevalence in the therapy-na{\"i}ve population was 14.8\% and significantly higher in the older population, >25 years. Therefore, the current WHO transmitted HIVDR (tHIVDR) survey that is solely focused on the transmission of HIVDR and that excludes patients over 25 years of age may result in substantial underestimation of the prevalence of HIVDR in the therapy-na{\"i}ve population. Based on the prevalence rates of tHIVDR in the study populations it is recommended that all HIV-1 positive individuals undergo a genotyping resistance test before starting ART. I also characterized vif sequences from HIV-1 infected patients from Cape Town, South Africa as the Vif protein has been shown to counteract the antiretroviral activity of the cellular APOBEC3G/F cytidine deaminases. There is no selective pressure on the HIV-1 Vif protein from current ART regimens and vif sequences was used as an evolutionary control. As the majority of phenotypic resistance assays are still based on HIV-1 subtype B, I wanted to design an infectious HIV-1 subtype C proviral molecular clone that can be used for in vitro assays based on circulating strains in South Africa. Therefore, I characterized an early primary HIV-1 subtype C isolate from Cape Town, South Africa and created a new infectious subtype C proviral molecular clone (pZAC). The new pZAC virus has a significantly higher transient viral titer after transfection and replication rate than the previously published HIV-1 subtype C virus from Botswana. The optimized proviral molecular clone, pZAC could be used in future cell culture and phenotypic HIV resistance assays regarding HIV-1 subtype C.}, subject = {HIV}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Tabares2011, author = {Tabares, Paula}, title = {Antimicrobial, anti-protease and immunomodulatory activities of secondary metabolites from Caribbean sponges and their associated bacteria}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-67000}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Marine sponges and their associated bacteria have been proven to be a rich source of novel secondary metabolites with therapeutic usefulness in infection and autoimmunity. This Ph.D. project aimed to isolate bioactive secondary metabolites from the marine sponges Amphimedon compressa, Aiolochroia crassa and Theonella swinhoei as well as from bacteria associated with different Caribbean sponges, specifically actinomycetes and sphingomonads. In this study, amphitoxin was isolated from the crude methanol extract of the sponge A. compressa and it was found to have antibacterial and anti-parasitic activities. Amphitoxin showed protease inhibitory activity when tested against the mammalian protease cathepsin B and the parasitic proteases rhodesain and falcipain-2. Furthermore, miraziridine A was identified in the dichloromethane extract of the sponge T. swinhoei collected offshore Israel in the Red Sea. Miraziridine A, a natural peptide isolated previously from the marine sponge Theonella aff. mirabilis, is a potent cathepsin B inhibitor with an IC50 value of 1.4 g/mL (2.1 M). Secondary metabolites from sponge-derived bacteria were also isolated and identified. A total of 79 strains belonging to 20 genera of the order Actinomycetales and seven strains belonging to two genera of the order Sphingomonadales were cultivated from 18 different Caribbean sponges and identified by 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Seven of these strains are likely to represent novel species. Crude extracts from selected strains were found to exhibit protease inhibition against cathepsins B and L, rhodesain, and falcipain-2 as well as immunomodulatory activities such as induction of cytokine release by human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. The isolates Sphingobium sp. CO105 and Lapillicoccus sp. BA53 were selected for cultivation, extraction and purification of bioactive metabolites based on initial bioactive screening results. The isoalloxazine isolumichrome was isolated from the strain Sphingobium sp. CO105 which inhibited the protease rhodesain with an IC50 of 0.2 M. The strain Lapillicoccus sp. BA53 was found to produce p-aminosalicylic acid methyl ester, which showed activity against the proteases cathepsins B and L, falcipain-2 and rhodesain. These results highlight the significance of marine sponge-associated bacteria to produce bioactive secondary metabolites with therapeutic potential in the treatment of infectious diseases and disorders of the immune system.}, subject = {Schw{\"a}mme}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Shityakov2011, author = {Shityakov, Sergey}, title = {Molecular modelling and simulation of retroviral proteins and nanobiocomposites}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-56960}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Molecular modelling and simulation are powerful methods in providing important in-formation on different biological systems to elucidate their structural and functional proper-ties, which cannot be determined in experiment. These methods are applied to analyse versa-tile biological systems: lipid membrane bilayers stabilized by an intercalated single wall carbon nanotube and retroviral proteins such as HIV protease and integrase. HIV-1 integrase has nuclear localization signals (NLS) which play a crucial role in nuclear import of viral preintegration complex (PIC). However, the detailed mechanisms of PIC formation and its nuclear transport are not known. Previously it was shown that NLSs bind to the cell transport machinery e.g. proteins of nuclear pore complex such as transportins. I investigated the interaction of this viral protein HIV-1 integrase with proteins of the nuclear pore complex such as transportin-SR2 (Shityakov et al., 2010). I showed that the transportin-SR2 in nuclear import is required due to its interaction with the HIV-1 integrase. I analyzed key domain interaction, and hydrogen bond formation in transportin-SR2. These results were discussed in comparison to other retroviral species such as foamy viruses to better understand this specific and efficient retroviral trafficking route. The retroviral nuclear import was next analyzed in experiments regarding the retroviral ability to infect nondividing cells. To accomplish the gene transfer task successfully, ret-roviruses must efficiently transduce different cell cultures at different phases of cell cycle. However, promising and safe foamy viral vectors used for gene transfer are unable to effi-ciently infect quiescent cells. This drawback was due to their inability to create a preintegra-tion complex (PIC) for nuclear import of retroviral DNA. On the contrary, the lentiviral vec-tors are not dependant on cell cycle. In the course of reverse transcription the polypurine tract (PPT) is believed to be crucial for PIC formation. In this thesis, I compared the transduction frequencies of PPT modified FV vectors with lentiviral vectors in nondividing and dividing alveolar basal epithelial cells from human adenocarcinoma (A549) by using molecular cloning, transfection and transduction techniques and several other methods. In contrast to lentiviral vectors, FV vectors were not able to effi-ciently transduce nondividing cell (Shityakov and Rethwilm, unpublished data). Despite the findings, which support the use of FV vectors as a safe and efficient alternative to lentiviral vectors, major limitation in terms of foamy-based retroviral vector gene transfer in quiescent cells still remains. Many attempts have been made recently to search for the potential molecules as pos-sible drug candidates to treat HIV infection for over decades now. These molecules can be retrieved from chemical libraries or can be designed on a computer screen and then synthe-sized in a laboratory. Most notably, one could use the computerized structure as a reference to determine the types of molecules that might block the enzyme. Such structure-based drug design strategies have the potential to save off years and millions of dollars compared to a more traditional trial-and-error drug development process. After the crystal structure of the HIV-encoded protease enzyme had been elucidated, computer-aided drug design played a pivotal role in the development of new compounds that inhibit this enzyme which is responsible for HIV maturation and infectivity. Promising repre-sentatives of these compounds have recently found their way to patients. Protease inhibitors show a powerful sustained suppression of HIV-1 replication, especially when used in combi-nation therapy regimens. However, these drugs are becoming less effective to more resistant HIV strains due to multiple mutations in the retroviral proteases. In computational drug design I used molecular modelling methods such as lead ex-pansion algorithm (Tripos®) to create a virtual library of compounds with different binding affinities to protease binding site. In addition, I heavily applied computer assisted combinato-rial chemistry approaches to design and optimize virtual libraries of protease inhibitors and performed in silico screening and pharmacophore-similarity scoring of these drug candidates. Further computational analyses revealed one unique compound with different protease bind-ing ability from the initial hit and its role for possible new class of protease inhibitors is dis-cussed (Shityakov and Dandekar, 2009). A number of atomistic models were developed to elucidate the nanotube behaviour in lipid bilayers. However, none of them provided useful information for CNT effect upon the lipid membrane bilayer for implementing all-atom models that will allow us to calculate the deviations of lipid molecules from CNT with atomistic precision. Unfortunately, the direct experimental investigation of nanotube behaviour in lipid bilayer remains quite a tricky prob-lem opening the door before the molecular simulation techniques. In this regard, more de-tailed multi-scale simulations are needed to clearly understand the stabilization characteristics of CNTs in hydrophobic environment. The phenomenon of an intercalated single-wall carbon nanotube in the center of lipid membrane was extensively studied and analyzed. The root mean square deviation and root mean square fluctuation functions were calculated in order to measure stability of lipid mem-branes. The results indicated that an intercalated carbon nanotube restrains the conformational freedom of adjacent lipids and hence has an impact on the membrane stabilization dynamics (Shityakov and Dandekar, 2011). On the other hand, different lipid membranes may have dissimilarities due to the differing abilities to create a bridge formation between the adherent lipid molecules. The results derived from this thesis will help to develop stable nanobiocom-posites for construction of novel biomaterials and delivery of various biomolecules for medi-cine and biology.}, subject = {Kohlenstoff}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{MonzonCasanova2010, author = {Monz{\´o}n Casanova, Elisa}, title = {Rat iNKT Cells: Phenotype and Function}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-56526}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {iNKT cells are a population of T cells with unique characteristics. In contrast to most αβ T cells which recognize peptides presented by highly polymorphic MHC molecules, iNKT cells are reactive to glycolipids presented by CD1d, a non-polymorphic MHC-I like molecule. Moreover, whereas MHC-restricted αβ T cells bear highly variable receptors (TCRs) formed after somatic recombination of the V(D)J gene segments, the TCR of iNKT cells is formed by an invariant α chain, which always contains the same gene segments: AV14 and AJ18; and a β chain of limited BV gene usage: BV8S2, BV7 or BV2, in the mouse. This invariant α chain is the reason for which these cells are named "i" and the NK part of their name refers to the expression of receptors typical of natural killer (NK) cells. iNKT cells recognize glycolipids of endogenous and microbial origin. After activation they secrete large amounts of very different cytokines such as IFN-γ and IL-4 and thus influence immune responses and pathological conditions. One of the most potent iNKT cell agonists, recognized by the semi-invariant TCR, is the synthetic glycolipid α-Galactosylceramide (α-Gal). iNKT cells can be visualized using CD1d-multimeric complexes loaded with α-Gal and flow cytometry, since this reagent has enough avidity to stain these cells. Interestingly, mouse iNKT cells can be stained with human α-Gal-loaded CD1d oligomers and human iNKT cells can also be visualized with mouse α-Gal-loaded CD1d oligomers, indicating a high degree of conservation of the recognition of α-Gal presented by CD1d through evolution. Previous studies showed that rats have the genes necessary to build semi-invariant TCRs: They have a CD1d homologue; one or two BV8S2 homologues and interestingly, up to ten AV14 gene segments, which are highly conserved when compared to the mouse genes. Importantly, it has been shown at least for two of these AV14 gene segments that they can produce invariant TCRα chains which, when coexpressed with BV8-containing β chains, react to α-Gal presented by rat CD1d. Furthermore, ex vivo stimulation of primary splenocytes with α-Gal results in the secretion of IL-4 and IFN-γ. Surprisingly, rat semi-invariant TCRs do not recognize α-Gal presented by mouse CD1d and accordingly, mouse α-Gal-loaded CD1d tetramers failed to stain a discrete population of rat iNKT cells. Taking all together, despite that strong evidence suggested that iNKT cells are present in the rat, the direct identification of such population and the analysis of CD1d-restricted immune responses were still pending for this species. Hence the work presented in this doctoral thesis was aimed to identify iNKT cells, to analyze their phenotype and also to study the distribution and function of CD1d in the rat. For these purposes, we produced essential reagents which were still lacking such as rat specific anti-CD1d monoclonal antibodies and rat CD1d oligomers. Importantly, two of three anti-rat CD1d monoclonal antibodies (all of them generated in our laboratory before this thesis was initiated) also recognized mouse CD1d and therefore allowed a direct comparison of CD1d expression between rat and mouse. Whereas CD1d distribution in the hematopoietic system was found to be extremely similar between these two species; in non-lymphatic tissues important differences were observed. Interestingly, CD1d protein was detected at not yet described sites such as the rat exocrine pancreas and rat and mouse Paneth cells. These monoclonal antibodies did not only allowed the analysis of CD1d expression, but also the first demonstration of the function of rat CD1d as an antigen presenting molecule, since cytokine release in response to α-Gal was blocked when they were added to ex vivo cultures of rat primary cells. Staining of primary rat iNKT cells (possible now with the newly generated rat CD1d oligomers) revealed interesting similarities with human iNKT cells. First, we observed that rat iNKT cells are only a minority among all NKR-P1A/B positive T cells. Human iNKT cells constitute also a very small proportion of NKR-P1A (CD161) expressing T cells, whereas in mice inbred strains which express NKR-P1C (NK1.1), most of NKRP1C expressing T cells are iNKT cells. Second, the majority of rat iNKT cells are either CD4 or DN and only a small proportion expresses CD8β. These findings are similar to humans and different to mice which lack CD8+ iNKT cells. Third, analysis of various inbred rat strains demonstrated different iNKT cell frequencies which correlated with cytokine secretion after α-Gal stimulation of primary cells. In comparison to mice, iNKT cell numbers are markedly reduced in rats. In F344 rats, inbred rat strain which released the highest cytokine amounts after α-Gal stimulation, approximately 0.25\% and 0.1\% of total liver and spleen lymphocytes, respectively, are iNKT cells. In contrast, in LEW rats iNKT cells were practically absent and neither IL-4 nor IFN-γ were detected after stimulation of primary cells with α-Gal. Once more, these frequencies are very close to those observed in humans. Last, as reported for human peripheral blood cells, rat iNKT cells could be easily expanded in vitro by adding α-Gal to cultures of intrahepatic lymphocytes, whereas the expansion of mouse iNKT cells was not possible using the same protocol. The presence of a multimember AV14 gene segment family in the rat is an intriguing characteristic. These AV14 gene segments are extremely homologous except in the CDR2α region. Based on the amino acid sequence of this region they have been divided into two different types: Type I and II. A specific tissue distribution of the different types was proposed in the first study where the presence of several AV14 gene segments was described. We also analyzed the AV14 gene segment usage in F344 and LEW inbred rat strains. In F344 rats we found no preferential usage of either AV14 gene segment type in the spleen and the liver but type II AV14 gene segments appeared more frequently in the thymus. In contrast, LEW rats show a preferential usage of type I AV14 gene segments in all three compartments analyzed: Thymus, spleen and liver. Taken all together, the usage of newly generated reagents allowed to gain novel insights into CD1d expression in the rat and in the mouse and to directly identify rat iNKT cells for the first time. The phenotypic and functional analysis of rat iNKT cells revealed numerous similarities with human iNKT cells. These are of special interest, since rats serve to investigate several pathological conditions including models for autoimmune diseases. The possibility now to analyze iNKT cells and CD1d-restricted T cell responses in the rat might help to understand the pathogenesis of such diseases. In addition, the uncomplicated in vitro expansion and culture of rat iNKT cells should facilitate the analysis of the immunomoldulatory capacities of these cells.}, subject = {Ratte}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{TranVan2010, author = {Tran-Van, Hieu}, title = {Semaphorin receptors in the immunological synapse: regulation and measles virus-driven modulation}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-53926}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {J{\"a}hrlich gehen ca. 164000 Todesf{\"a}lle (WHO, 2008) auf eine Infektion mit Masernviren (MV) zur{\"u}ck. Die Hauptursache f{\"u}r den t{\"o}dlichen Verlauf der Krankheit ist die MV-induzierte Immunsuppression, deren zugrunde liegende Mechanismen noch nicht v{\"o}llig aufgekl{\"a}rt sind. Es gibt Hinweise darauf, dass MV einerseits die Funktionalit{\"a}t von T-Zellen beeintr{\"a}chtigt, indem es die Aktindynamik behindert, und andererseits dendritische Zellen (DC) infiziert, was dazu f{\"u}hrt, dass sie T-Zellen nicht mehr vollst{\"a}ndig aktivieren k{\"o}nnen. W{\"a}hrend der Entwicklung bzw. des Wachstums von Neuronen kommt es zum Kollaps wachsender Dendriten, wenn Semaphorine (insbesondere SEMA3A) an den Rezeptor Plexin-A1 (plexA1) und seinem Korezeptor Neuropilin-1 (NP-1) binden. Dieser Kollaps wird durch interferenz mit der Aktindynamik verursacht. In dieser Studie wurde die Funktion dieser drei Molek{\"u}le in Immunzellen bzw. ihre Rolle in der MV-induzierten Immunsuppression untersucht. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass plexA1 eine wichtige Komponente der humanen immunologischen Synapse (IS) ist. Nach CD3/CD28-Ligation kommt es zur transienten Translokation zur T-Zelloberfl{\"a}che und zur Akkumulation an der Kontaktfl{\"a}che zwischen T-Zelle und DC bzw. α-CD3/CD28 beschichteten Mikropartikeln. Wird die plexA1-Expression inhibiert (RNAi) oder die plexA1-Funktion gest{\"o}rt (exogenes Blockieren oder Expression einer dominant negativen Mutante), ist die T-Zellexpansion reduziert. Nach MV-Exposition ist die Translokation von plexA1 und NP-1, ebenfalls einem wichtigen Bestandteil der immunologischen Synapse, zur Kontaktfl{\"a}che auf T-Zellseite gest{\"o}rt. Des Weiteren behindert eine MV-Infektion den plexA1/NP-1-Metabolismus in reifenden DC und f{\"u}hrt zus{\"a}tzlich zu einer fr{\"u}hen und starken Aussch{\"u}ttung von SEMA3A durch DC, insbesondere in Gegenwart allogener T-Zellen. Durch rasterelektronenmikroskopische Aufnahmen wurde gezeigt, dass SEMA3A einen transienten Verlust aktinbasierter Zellforts{\"a}tze bei T-Zellen zur Folge hat. Zus{\"a}tzlich reduziert SEMA3A das chemotaktische Migrationsverhalten von DC und T Zell und die Frequenz ihrer Konjugat-Bildung. Zusammenfassend stellt sich die Situation so dar, dass MV die Semaphorinrezeptorfunktion zum einen dadurch beeintr{\"a}chtigt, dass es die Rekrutierung der Rezeptoren zur IS verhindert und zum anderen zur verfr{\"u}hten Aussch{\"u}ttung des kollapsinduzierenden Liganden SEMA3A f{\"u}hrt. Beide Ph{\"a}nomene k{\"o}nnten einen wichtigen Beitrag zur MV-induzierten Immunsuppression leisten.}, subject = {Masernvirus}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Li2010, author = {Li, Jian-Qiang}, title = {Modulating the expression of enzymes of isoprenoid synthesis: effects on Vgamma9Vdelta2 T cell activation and tumor cell growth}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-46388}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {This study focuses on phosphoantigen specific Vg9Vd2 T cells which only exist in human and non-human primates. This population accounts for 1\%-5\% of peripheral blood T-lymphocytes but their frequency can rise to 50\% of total blood T cells upon infection. Vg9Vd2 T cells can be activated by nonpeptide compounds with critical phosphate moieties which are termed as phosphoantigens. These include isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP), a key compound of isoprenoid synthesis in all organisms, and (E)-4-Hydroxy-3-methyl-but-2-enyl pyrophosphate (HMBPP), a direct precursor of IPP in DOXP pathway which only exist in eubacteria, plants, apicomplexaen parasites. Its activity as phosphoantigen is at least 1000 fold higher than that of IPP. However, direct structural evidence of phosphoantigen binding to the TCR is missing so far. Moreover, Vg9Vd2 T cells have potent anti-tumor activity e.g. against the B-cell lymphoma Daudi, whose Vg9Vd2 T cell activating properties have been suggested to result from sensing of abnormal intracellular IPP levels by the Vg9Vd2 TCR or Vg9Vd2 TCR binding to other postulated ligands such as an ectopically expressed F1-ATPase or UL-16 binding protein 4 (ULBP4). Aminobisphosphonates and alkymines were hypothesized to activate Vg9Vd2 T cells indirectly by inhibiting the IPP consuming enzyme farnysyl pyrophosphates synthesis (FPPS) although off target effects of these drugs or a direct interaction with the Vg9Vd2 TCR could not be excluded. This thesis presents new approaches for the mechanistic analysis of Vg9Vd2 T cell activation. By employing retroviral transduction of FPPS specific shRNA, it shows that specific shRNA reduces expression of FPPS and is sufficient to convert hematopoietic and non-hematopoietic tumor cell lines into Vg9Vd2 T cell activators. FPPS knockdown cells activated Vg9Vd2 T cells as measured by increased levels of CD69 and CD107a, kill of FPPS knockdown cells and induction of IFN-\&\#947; secretion. The IPP-synthesis-inhibiting drug mevastatin reduced Vg9Vd2 T cell activation by FPPS knockdown cells or aminobisphosphonate treated cells but not activation by the phosphoantigen bromohydrin pyrophosphate (BrHPP). A reduced growth of the FPPS knockdown cells has not been observed which is different to what has been reported for aminobisphosphonate treated cells. Finally, the human B-cell lymphoma RAJI has been transduced with Tetracyclin-inducible FPPS specific shRNA and proven to gain and loose the capacity to activate Vg9Vd2 TCR transductants upon doxycylin provision or removal. Another approach for the analysis of Vg9Vd2 T cell activation is Vg9Vd2 TCR transduced mouse cell lines with specificity for phosphoantigens. In contrast to the previously used Vg9Vd2 TCR transduced Jurkat cells, these cells do not present phosphoantigens, and are therefore specially suited for analysis of phosphoantigen presentation. The response of the new TCR transductants to presumed Vg9Vd2 TCR ligands/activators such as phosphoantigens, aminobisphosphonates or FPPS knockdown cells, depended strongly on the expression of a rat/mouse CD28 molecule by the transductants and its ligation by the (CD80) counter receptor on the ligand-presenting cell. The response is likely to reflect recognition of cognate Vg9Vd2 TCR antigens since mutations in the TCR-\&\#948; chain CDR2 and 3 abolished this response but activation by TCR or CD3 specific antibodies. A major difference between TCR transductants and primary gd T cells, was the lacking response of TCR transductants to Daudi or IPP. In addition their sensitivity to other soluble phosphoantigens was about 100 fold weaker than that of primary cells, stimulation of both cell type to CD80 expressing FPPS knock down or aminobisphosphonates was similar. Finally, the transductants have also been used to analyze effects of over-expression or knockdown of enzymes of isoprenoid synthesis such as 3-hydroxy-3-methyl-glutaryl-CoA reductase (HMG-CoA reductase or HMGR), mevalonate-5-pyrophosphate decarboxylase (MVD), isopentenyl pyrophosphate isomerase (IDI), geranyl-geranyl pyrophosphate synthase (GGPPS) but no clear effects have been found. In conclusion, this thesis supports the concept of Vg9Vd2 T cells being sensors of a dysregulated isoprenoid metabolism and established new tools to study ligand recognition and TCR mediated activation of this T cell population. These tools will be most useful to address following questions: 1) How does the dysregulation of isoprenoid metabolism affect tumor growth? 2) What is the correlation between the modulation of IPP levels and the Vg9Vd2 TCR binding or expression of other postulated ligands? 3) Are there any mevalonate pathway enzymes other than FPPS and HMGR, which play an important role in Vg9Vd2 T cells activation? 4) What is/are the putative phosphoantigen-presenting molecule(s)?}, subject = {Primaten}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Hochgraefe2009, author = {Hochgr{\"a}fe, Katja}, title = {Cre-loxP based mouse models to study prionpathogenesis in the motor nervous system}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-45967}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Prion diseases such as scrapie in sheep, bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in cattle or Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in humans are fatal neurodegenerative disorders characterized by brain lesions and the accumulation of a disease-associated protein, designated PrPSc. How prions proceed to damage neurons and whether all or only subsets of neurons have to be affected for the onset of the clinical disease is still elusive. The manifestation of clinical prion disease is characterized by motor dysfunctions, dementia and death. Furthermore loss of motor neurons (MN) in the spinal cord is a constant finding in different mouse models of prion disease, suggesting that MN are vulnerable cells for triggering the onset of clinical symptoms. To determine whether the protection of MN against prion induced dysfunctions is an approach for holding the disease at the sub-clinical level, we established a novel conditional model for Cre-mediated expression of a dominant-negative PrP mutant (PrPQ167R) in the cells of interest. Dominant-negative PrP mutants provide protection of prion induced dysfunctions by inhibiting prion replication. Transgenic mice were generated carrying a floxed LacZ marker gene followed by the coding sequence of PrPQ167R under control of the human ubiquitin C promoter. Two Cre strains have been used to direct PrPQ167R expression either to a subset of MN of the spinal cord (Hb9-Cre) or to various neuronal cell populations of the spinal cord and brain (NF-L-Cre). Transgenic mice were infected with mouse-adapted prions via different inoculation routes (intranerval, intracerebral and intraperitoneal) and monitored for effects on incubation time and pathology. Tg floxed LacZ-PrPQ167R/NF-L-Cre mice showed about 15\% prolonged survival upon intraperitoneal low dose prion infection, whereas survival of Tg floxed LacZ-PrPQ167R/Hb9-Cre mice was comparable to control littermates. The results suggest that the protection of spinal MN prolongs the incubation period but is not sufficient to completely inhibit clinical prion disease. In a second approach, Cre was transferred into the hind limb muscles of transgenic mice via a double-stranded adeno-associated virus vector (dsAAV2-Cre). The goal of this strategy was to target a broader cell population and thus to enhance expression levels of protective PrPQ167R in the spinal cord of Tg floxed-LacZ-PrPQ167R mice. After intramuscular (i.m.) application of dsAAV2-Cre, exhibiting a physical titer of 5x1010 GP/ml, recombinant transgenic DNA was detected only in the muscle tissue, pointing out that functional Cre-recombinase was expressed at the side of virus application. However, dsAAV2-Cre did neither induce recombination of transgenic DNA in the spinal cord or brain nor expression of dominant-negative PrPQ167R. In conclusion the dsAAV2-Cre vectors system needs further improvement to achieve efficient transport from muscle tissue to the central nervous system (CNS). 105 7 SUMMARY The lymphoreticular system (LRS) is an early site of prion replication. In splenic tissue prion infectivity is associated with follicular dendritic cells (FDC) as well as with Band T-lymphocytes. However, it is still unknown if those cell types are able to replicate the infectious agent or if other PrP-expressing cell types are engaged. To investigate if neurons and in particular MN are involved, transgenic mice carrying one allele of floxed Prnp (lox2+=\&\#56256;\&\#56320;) and either one allele of Hb9-Cre or NF-L-Cre were generated on a Prnp0=0 background. Therefore a conditional PrP knockout was established in a subset of MN of the spinal cord (Hb9-Cre) or in various neuronal populations of the spinal cord and brain (NF-L-Cre). Transgenic mice were inoculated with prions to study the accumulation of PrPSc and prion infectivity in spleen and spinal cord at an early time point after infection. The findings show that PrPSc accumulation in mice with MN-specific PrP depletion (lox2+=\&\#56256;\&\#56320;/ Hb9-Cre) was comparable to control littermates, while pan-neuronal PrP deficient mice (lox2+=\&\#56256;\&\#56320;/NF-L-Cre) were not able to accumulate PrPSc in splenic tissue until 50 days post inoculation. Moreover spleens of lox2+=\&\#56256;\&\#56320;/NF-L-Cre mice exhibited a clearly reduced prion infectivity titer, suggesting that accumulation of prions in the spleen is dependent on PrP expression in the nervous tissue.}, subject = {Prionkrankheit}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Guenzel2009, author = {Guenzel, Carolin Alexandra}, title = {The Characterization of Nipah Virus V and W proteins}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-37627}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2009}, abstract = {The work of the previous chapters describes the role of Nipah virus (NiV) V and W proteins regarding their role in interferon antagonism and regulation of viral replication. Previous publications have shown that NiV encodes IFN antagonist activity in its V, W and C protein (Park et al., 2003b; Rodriguez et al., 2002). In order to study the effect of both NiV proteins in the context of a virus infection, recombinant Newcastle disease viruses (rNDVs) expressing NiV V or NiV W were constructed. As a control virus served rNDV expressing NDV V proteins, which behaved like wildtype NDV. Growth kinetic experiments demonstrated that rNDVs expressing NiV V or W grew to higher titers than rNDV expressing NDV V in human A549 cells. This result suggested that both NiV V and W were able to render the avian virus, which normally does not replicate well in human cells, into a better growing virus. This hypothesis was supported by the fact that all rNDVs grew similarly in avian DF1 or Vero cells. When rNDV-infected A549 cells were specifically stained for NiV V or W protein it was observed that V is localized in the cytoplasm whereas W could be predominantly found in the nucleus. This observation was in agreement with previous studies reporting a nucleus export signal (NES) for NiV V and a nuclear localization signal (NLS) for NiV W (Rodriguez et al., 2004; Shaw et al., 2005). The specific localization of each NiV protein has also been shown to contribute to different functions in terms of IFN antagonism (Shaw et al., 2005). Here, NiV V and W proteins caused a severe attenuation of the immune response in rNDV-infected human A549 and dendritic cells. The transcription of type I interferons and ISGs was significantly downregulated in the presence of NiV V and W proteins. As a consequence of the transcriptional block, there was also an inhibition at the level of translation (as seen for A549 cells) and the secretion of IFNs and cytokines/chemokines (as seen for DCs). In contrast, NDV V protein induced a host immune response. Both NiV V and W also displayed a strong inhibitory effect on the function DCs. DCs represent a very important cell class because they link the innate immune response to the adaptive immune response (Banchereau \& Steinman, 1998). By downregulating the production and secretion of important cytokines/chemokines that are important for the activation of B and T lymphocytes, NiV V and W were able to disrupt that link. Interestingly, NiV W seemed to be a stronger inhibitor than NiV V in both A549 cells and DCs. Overall, it was demonstrated that NiV V and W were able to prevent the induction of the innate and adaptive host immune response cascade by inhibiting the transcription of immune genes in DCs and A549 cells. The second part of this work addressed the question whether NiV V and W proteins have a regulatory role in viral replication. This has been previously reported for Nipah virus itself (Sleeman et al., 2008) and other viruses (Atreya et al., 1998; Horikami et al., 1996; Witko et al., 2006). In order to study the ability of the V and W proteins of NiV to regulate viral transcription and/or replication, an existing NiV minireplicon assay was used (Halpin et al., 2004). Here, it was shown that NiV V and W (but not C) proteins significantly downregulated NiV minireplicon activity. The common N terminal region was shown to harbor the inhibitory activity. Co-immunoprecipitation experiments showed that both NiV V and W (but not C) were able to interact with NiV N, one component of the NiV polymerase. This result was supported by immunofluorescence experiments that revealed co-localization of NiV N with V and W. The binding of NiV V or W to NiV N occurred via their N terminus and more specifically amino acids 1-50. This suggested that V and W might inhibit viral replication by interacting with the viral polymerase resulting in a loss of function. Exact mechanisms still have to be elucidated.}, subject = {Viren}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{VuXuan2008, author = {Vu Xuan, Nghia}, title = {Generation of tools to investigate Chikungunya virus}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-28993}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2008}, abstract = {CHIKV is the prototype of Alphaviruses and it causes an acute febrile illness with rash, severely painful arthralgias, and sometimes arthritis. While CHIKV has first been identified in the 1950s in Africa, recent outbreaks of CHIKV in the islands of the Indian Ocean and particular in Italia have re-drawn attention to CHIKV. In the past CHIKV disease was considered self-limiting and non-fatal. However, a number of deaths on Reunion (Anonym, 2006) during the outbreak, which was affected directly or indirectly by CHIKV, have changed this view. To defeat CHIKV outbreaks diagnostic tools and anti CHIKV therapies are urgently needed. In this thesis, we generated tools to investigate CHIKV at the molecular level by serological tests. CHIKV was isolated from a German woman who was infected during her holidays on the Mauritius Island. To characterize this viral isolate the complete viral genome was amplified by PCR and molecular cloned. In order to analyse antibody responses of infected individuals some of the structural and non-structural genes were subcloned in bacterial expression vectors. The NSP2, proteinase, capsid, E1 and E2 were subsequently expressed in E.coli using purified successfully. In this thesis, the structural proteins were used to develop a screening test for anti-CHIKV antibodies in patient derived serum samples. These tests were evaluated with pre-characterized anti-CHIKV sera (30 samples) obtained from the BNI Hamburg and 100 serum samples from German blood donors used as negative controls. Immunoblotting analysis revealed that up to 77\% of precharacterised positive sera could recognize the recombinant proteins and there were no detectable reactivity of CHIKV-negative German donor sera. The recombinant proteins were also recognized by 71.4\% of positive sera in the newly established ELISA. In order to go further in analyses of the results, an in house IFA was performed. Positive sera (21 samples) were used. The results showed that all of them reacted positive, but this assay was less sensitive than the IFA from BNI. In comparison with the IFA result from BNI Hamburg, the results were not congruent in all test performed. This could be due to various drawbacks of the tests. A cross reaction in Alphaviruses and the different strains are mentioned as well as the denatured forms of the structural proteins. Besides the main structural proteins (E1, E2 and C), other proteins such as non-structural proteins, uncleaved precursor proteins could participate in the different outcomes of serological assays. In order to go further in the CHIKV diagnoses, the CHIKV recombinant proteins were applied to screen the anti-CHIKV antibodies in the Vietnamese population, who are considered to live in the high risk regions. In serological tests, 158 sera of Vietnamese donors were incubated with the recombinant proteins or the fixed CHIKV infected cells. The results showed that 24\% of Vietnamese donor sera recognized the recombinant proteins in immunoblot assay, while 36\% scored positive in the ELISA assay. In IFA, the sera considered positive were 11.4\%. While some discrepancies in serological tests were found, these results showed that the ratio of CHIKV-positive sera seem to be equal to the other regions in the world, which are affected by CHIKV. It is suggested that CHIKV infection in Vietnam has been repeatedly misdiagnosed. This study cohort consisted only of samples originating from Hanoi area of Northern Vietnam, thus, future studies should expand to include samples from other Vietnam areas. To do this the various subtypes of the virus in the different regions should be isolated and the sequences of these viruses should be well characterized.}, subject = {Viren}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Shishkova2008, author = {Shishkova, Yoana}, title = {Investigations of Measles virus regulation on activation and function of antigen presenting cells}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-28283}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2008}, abstract = {Interaction with dendritic cells (DCs) is considered as central to immunosuppression induced by viruses, including measles virus (MV). Commonly, viral infection of DCs abrogates their ability to promote T cell expansion, yet underlying mechanisms at a cellular level are undefined. It appears that MV-WTF infection modulate DCs morphology and dynamic adhesion on extra cellular matrix proteins such as FN or ICAM-1. By morphological criteria, WTF-DCs resembled LPS-DCs, associated with their mature phenotype also adhered less efficiently to the FN or ICAM-1 support. Reduced adhesion could not be explained by a lack of \&\#61538;1-integrin expression or activation. Similarly, MV-DCs strongly resembled LPS-DCs in that levels of focal adhesion kinase phosphorylated at Y397 were high and not further enhanced upon FN ligation. Fascin, a downstream effector of integrin signaling was highly upregulated in LPS-DCs and moderately in WTF-DCs, and differences in its subcellular distribution were not observed between both cell cultures. Apparently, however, fascin associated less efficiently with PKC\&\#61537; in WTF-DCs then in LPS-DCs. In line with findings for murine DCs, high motility of mature human DCs was found to require expression of Rac-GTPases. Human LPS-DCs and more so, DC transfected to express constitutively active Rac1 were the most motile DC-species analysed, confirming that migration of human DC also involved Rac activity. The velocity of WTF-DCs on FN is below that of LPS-DCs, indicating that maturation induced by WTF may be insufficient to completely promote integrin signaling which leads to Rac activation. The organisation of MV-DC/T cell interfaces was consistent with that of functional immune synapses with regard to CD3 clustering, MHC class II surface recruitment and MTOC location. These analyses are based in the selection of stable conjugates. Subsequently, however, neither contacts nor calcium flux can be stabilised and sustained in the majority of MV-DC/T cell conjugates and only promoted abortive T cell activation. Formation of spatially organised IS in T cells requites, prolonged contact durations. Therefore, aberrant distribution patterns of CD3 in these structures, if occurring, are not likely to contribute to the type of contacts predominating for WTF-DC/T cell interactions. It is also likely that transient interactions of less than 2 minutes may if at all, not efficiently support viral transmission to T cells. Transient interactions are typically observed with immature DCs in the absence of antigen, but this is not likely to be relevant in our allogenic system, which includes SA-loaded WTF-DCs. Thus, MV-infected DCs retain activities required for initiating, but not sustaining T cell conjugation and activation. This is partially rescued if surface expression of the MV glycoproteins on DCs is abolished by infection with a recombinant MV encoding VSV G protein instead, indicating that these contribute directly to synapse destabilisation and thereby act as effectors of T cell inhibition.}, subject = {Masern}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Bach2007, author = {Bach, Patricia}, title = {Immunogenicity of antigen-displaying virus-like particles and their use as a potential vaccine against prion diseases}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-25889}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2007}, abstract = {Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) or prion diseases are a group of infectious neurodegenerative diseases that are associated with misfolding of the cellular form of the cellular prion protein (PrPC) into a disease associated conformer (PrPSc). No therapy for prion diseases is available at present. So far, anti-PrPC vaccination is hampered by immunological tolerance of the mammalian immune system to endogenous PrPC. The aim of this thesis was to set up a new vaccination strategy based on virus-like particles (VLP) to induce anti-PrPC antibody responses in PrPC-competent mice. In a first step it was assessed whether VLP have the capacity to induce antibody responses that are protective against conventional pathogens. For this purpose, VLP displaying the vesicular stomatitis virus-gylcoprotein (VLP-VSV) were generated and tested for their immunogenicity. Similarly to live vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), replication deficient VLP-VSV induced T help-independent VSV neutralizing IgM responses that switched to the IgG subclass in a T help-dependent manner. Furthermore, type I IFN receptor (IFNAR) triggering only marginally affected VLP-VSV induced neutralizing IgM responses, whereas it was critically required to promote the IgG switch. The analysis of conditional knockout mice with a lymphocyte-specific IFNAR deletion revealed that IFNAR triggering of lymphocytes did not play a crucial role, neither upon VLP-VSV nor VSV immunization. Collectively, these data verified the high immunogenicity of VLP. Therefore, in a next step VLP were generated displaying the C-terminal half of PrP (residues 121-231aa) fused to the platelet derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR) transmembrane region (VLP-PrPD111) for anti-PrPC immunization. On the surface of such retroparticles, PrPC was expressed at high levels as determined by electron microscopy. VLP-PrPD111 immunization of Prnp-deficient (Prnp0/0) mice resulted in antibody response specifically binding the cellular form of PrPC. Upon intravenous injection of wild-type mice, high PrPC-specific IgM responses were induced, whereas the T cell-dependent switch from the IgM to the IgG subclass was less pronounced. As a consequence, anti-PrPC titers were rather short-lived. The impaired subclass switch was probably related with host T cell tolerance to endogenous PrPC. Attempts to increase anti-PrPC IgG responses in wild-type mice via administration of VLP-PrPD111 emulsified in various different adjuvants failed. Nevertheless, in single individuals low IgG antibodies were induced after immunization of VLP-PrPD111 emulsified in CFA. To circumvent T cell tolerance in wild-type mice, a multitude of different immunization strategies was tested, including priming and boosting protocols with different types of VLP or VLP expressing PrPC together with foreign T helper epitopes. Overall, those efforts did not improve anti-PrPC IgG responses in wild-type mice. Interestingly, anti-PrPC antibodies induced in Prnp0/0 mice reduced PrPSc levels in prion infected cell cultures, whereas serum of vaccinated wild-type mice did not. To assess the protective capacity of VLP-PrPD111 induced immune responses, vaccinated wild-type mice were infected with scrapie (RML 5.0). Unfortunately, vaccinated mice did not show a significant delay in the onset of scrapie. In a last part of the thesis it was studied whether in the absence of T cell help activated "memory" B cells were able to produce anti-PrPC specific antibodies. To address this question, PrPC-specific memory B cells were sorted from vaccinated Prnp0/0 mice and adoptively transferred into wild-type recipient mice. Upon VLP-PrPD111 challenge, no PrPC-specific IgG titers were induced in the recipients. Nevertheless, several VLP-PrPD111 challenged recipient mice were protected against scrapie infection. In conclusion, VLP were characterized as highly immunogenic vaccines that were used to elucidate various questions concerning adaptive immune response and basic mechanisms of PrPC-specific tolerance vs. immunity. Remarkably, VLP-PrPD111 was able to induce native PrPC-specific antibodies in wild-type mice but major difficulties associated with PrPC-specific tolerance made efficacious scrapie vaccination impossible. New vaccination approaches are being tested to overcome these limitations.}, subject = {Prion}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{RinconOrozco2007, author = {Rinc{\´o}n Orozco, Bladimiro}, title = {TCR and CO-receptors mediated activation of V gamma 9V delta 2 T cells}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-24902}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2007}, abstract = {A small percentage (1-5\%) of the blood lymphocytes expresses alternative T-cell antigen receptor that uses g and d TCR rearranging genes. A subset of them expresses the Vg9Vd2 TCR. Those cells respond to self-nonpeptide and foreign antigens presented by unknown antigen-presenting molecules. Vg9Vd2 T cells also express Toll-like receptors and natural killer receptors that allow them to respond to other nonpeptide microbial components or to alterations in the expression of stress cell surface ligands such as NKG2D ligands. Vg9Vd2 T cells frequently are regulated by the expression of activating and/or inhibitory NKRs (iNKRs) that can fine-tune their activation threshold and the activating NKG2D receptor is one of the most studied until now. NKG2D, a C-type lectin receptor directed against MICA/MICB and UL16-binding protein (ULBP) molecules, have been reported a powerful co-stimulus for Ag-mediated activation of CD8 and Vg9Vd2 T cells. Indeed, NKG2D is recruited within the Vg9Vd2 TCR immunological synapse and enhances recognition by Vg9Vd2 T cells of Mycobacteria-infected DCs and various MICA/MICB or ULBP hemopoietic and non-hemopoietic tumors. The level of NKG2D is upregulated by inflammatory cytokines (e.g. IL-15), and NKG2D ligands are induced after a physical or genotoxic stress and/or along infection by intracellular pathogens. Therefore, NKG2D is a key stress sensor that strongly enhances recognition of altered or infected self by human gd T cells. Recent progress in the field supports the idea that gd T cells fulfill a role in the innate and adaptative immune response in different way of the conventional ab T cells. We demonstrated direct activation of Vg9Vd2 T cells by NKG2D ligation through the association with DAP10 adapter molecules and independently of TCR-Ag recognition, similar to the NKG2D-mediated activation of NK cells. Culture of peripherical blood mononuclear cells with immobilized NKG2D mAb or NKG2D ligand MICA induces up-regulation of CD69 and CD25 in NK and Vg9Vd2 T cells but not in CD8 T cells. Additionally, the ligation of NKG2D induces in Vg9Vd2 T cells the up-regulation of molecules typical for antigenpresenting cells, such as co-stimulator molecules (CD86) antigen presenting molecules (CD1a, HLA-DR), adhesion molecules (CD54), and activation molecules (CD69). Furthermore, NKG2D ligation in Vg9Vd2 T cells induces the production of cytokines such as TNF-a and chemokines such as, MIP-1a, but cannot induce the production of cytokines such as IL-6 or IFN-g and chemokines such as RANTES, MCP-1 and GM-CSF. In addition, NKG2D triggers the activation of the cytolytic machinery as efficient as CD3 stimulation as shown by measurement of the release of granules with esterase activity (BLT assay), perforin and the up-regulation of CD107a on the surface of Vg9Vd2 T cells. This NKG2D dependent cytolysis has been confirmed using purified Vg9Vd2 T cells, which kill MICA-transduced RMA cells but not the control cells. The TCR independence and NKG2D dependence of this killing is supported by mAb inhibition experiment. Finally, DAP 10, which mediates NKG2D signaling of human NK cells, is found in resting and activated Vg9Vd2 T cells. Moreover, data of intracellular signaling studies suggest an important role of Scr kinases in the NKG2D mediated killing and involvement of DAP-10-PI3K and PLCg 1 pathways as mayor proteins implicated in target cell lysis, and shows remarkable difference with the TCR signaling. The identification of these similarities in NKG2D function between NK and Vg9Vd2 T cells may be of interest for development of new strategies for Vg9Vd2 T cell-based immunotherapy in certain types of cancer and help to understand Vg9Vd2 T cell function in general.}, subject = {TCR}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Lim2007, author = {Lim, Hee-Young}, title = {Functional studies of GR and MR function by RNA interference}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-23646}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2007}, abstract = {Die Steroidhormone Corticosteron/Cortisol und Aldosteron werden in Folge von Stress oder eines ver{\"a}nderten Salz-Wasser-Haushalt durch die Nebenniere synthetisiert und sezerniert. Dies wird durch negative R{\"u}ckkopplungsmechanismen kontrolliert, die als HPA-Achse und RAAS bezeichnet werden. Die Aktivit{\"a}t dieser Steroidhormone wird durch den Glukokortikoid Rezeptor (GR) und den Mineralokortikoid-Rezeptor (MR) vermittelt, die im Zytosol als Komplex mit Hitze-Schock-Proteinen vorliegen. Sowohl der GR als auch der MR geh{\"o}ren zur Kern-Rezeptor Superfamilie und besitzen eine gemeinsame Proteinstruktur die aus drei verschiedenen Dom{\"a}nen besteht. Trotzdem haben sie verschiedene Affinit{\"a}ten f{\"u}r ihre Liganden, ihre Aktivit{\"a}t h{\"a}ngt von der Hormonkonzentration ab, sie werden durch Pr{\"a}-Rezeptor-Mechansimen wie der 11b-HSD2 reguliert und ihre Gewebeverteilung ist unterschiedlich. Aldosteron wirkt in epithelialen und nicht-epithelialen Zellen {\"u}ber den MR und reguliert den Salz-Wasser-Haushalt, die Herzfunktion, die neuronale Erregbarkeit und die Adipozyten-Differenzierung. Bislang war die Analyse der Geninaktivierung in vivo auf M{\"a}use beschr{\"a}nkt, obwohl Krankheitsmodelle in der Ratte die Verh{\"a}ltnisse im Menschen manchmal besser widerspiegeln. Da embryonale Stammzellen und damit die gezielte Genmanipulation in Ratten nicht verf{\"u}gbar sind, haben wir MR knock-down Ratten mittels lentiviral eingef{\"u}hrter shRNAs hergestellt. Die F1 Nachkommen der Gr{\"u}nder-Ratten zeigten unterschiedlich stark reduzierte MR mRNA und Protein Niveaus in Niere und Hippocampus, den Hauptexpressions-Regionen des MR. Im Gegensatz dazu war die Expression des GR unver{\"a}ndert, was die Spezifit{\"a}t der Geninaktivierung belegt. Die zwei MR Zielgene Sgk1 und ENaC waren hochreguliert w{\"a}hrend die mRNA Spiegel anderer Gene wie IK1 und SCD2 erniedrigt waren. {\"A}hnlich wie in den knock-out M{\"a}usen und Patienten zeigten die knock-down Ratten die typischen Merkmale des Pseudohypoaldosteronismus Typ I wie erh{\"o}hte Serumspiegel von Aldosteron und Renin sowie Wachstumsretardation. Weiterhin fanden wir einen linearen Zusammenhang zwischen der MR Expression in der Niere, den Serum Aldosteron-Werten und dem K{\"o}rpergewicht. Zusammengefasst sind unsere MR knock-down Ratten unter den ersten Beispielen f{\"u}r RNAi in vivo und belegen, dass diese Technik es erlaubt, abgestufte Auspr{\"a}gugen der Geninktivierung wie in humanen genetischen Erkrankungen zu erreichen. Weiterhin haben wir die Rolle des GR und des MR f{\"u}r die immunmodulatorische Aktivit{\"a}t der Glukokortikoide in peritonealen Makrophagen untersucht. GCs sind an der Kontrolle der Makrophagenfunktion beteiligt und regulieren so die Reaktion gegen{\"u}ber Pathogenen. Aus diesem Grund werden GCs weitverbreitet zur Behandlung von Enz{\"u}ndungen und Autoimmunerkrankungen eingesetzt. Allerdings ist bez{\"u}glich dieser GC Aktivit{\"a}ten weder bekannt welche Kontrolle die Hormonkonzentration spielt noch kennt man den differentiellen Beitrag des GR und des MR. Zuerst best{\"a}tigten wir die Expression beider Rezeptoren in peritonealen Makrophagen w{\"a}hrend die 11b-HSD2 nicht exprimiert war. Anschließend zeigten wir, dass niedrigte Corticosteron-Level die NO Produktion sowie die mRNA Expression von pro-inflammatorischen Zytokinen, Chemokinen und Enzymen die f{\"u}r die Mediator-Synthesee ben{\"o}tigt werden erh{\"o}hen. Im Gegensatz dazu war die Makrophagen Funktion bei hohen Corticosteron-Konzentrationen stark reprimiert. Eine wichtige Beobachtung war, dass die Inaktivierung des GR durch lentiviral eingef{\"u}hrte siRNAs sowohl die immunstimulatorischen als auch die immunsuppressiven GR Aktivit{\"a}ten aufhob w{\"a}hrend die Inaktivierung des MR keine Konsequenzen hatte. Weiterhin f{\"u}hrte der Verlust endogenener GCs nach Adrenalektomie in vivo zu einem pr{\"a}-aktivierten Zustand der Makrophagen, welcher durch Corticosteron moduliert werden konnte. Wir schließen hieraus, dass GCs in Abh{\"a}ngigkeit von ihrer Konzentration unterschiedliche Effekte auf die Makrophagen Funktion haben und dass diese durch den GR vermittelt werden, obwohl der MR ebenfalls exprimiert ist. Zusammengefasst best{\"a}tigen unsere Ergebnisse dass die lenivirale Transduktion von shRNAs eine effiziente Methode zur Geninaktivierung in prim{\"a}ren Zellen und transgenen Ratten darstellt und es so erlaubt, funktionelle Studien durchzuf{\"u}hren die zuvor auf M{\"a}use beschr{\"a}nkt waren.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Eichler2005, author = {Eichler, Lars}, title = {Effects of desialyation on TCR-cross-linking and antigen sensitivity of CD8 positive T lymphocytes}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-19391}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2005}, abstract = {The featured experiments focus on changes in T cell membrane glycosylation as a possible means of controlling TCR cross-linking. Taking the long known fact that activated T cells show decreased levels of surface sialic acid as a starting point, differences in ligand binding and cellular reaction upon in vitro stimulation were investigated in na{\"i}ve, activated and enzymatically desialyated CD8+, 2C TCR transgenic mouse lymphocytes. To detect differences in ligand binding lymphocytes were incubated with various concentrations of fluorescently labeled, soluble MHC/Ig fusion proteins until equilibrium was reached. Without previous washing, cells were analyzed by flow cytometry, determined MCF values were normalized to the plateau and fit to a mathematical model of equilibrium binding of divalent ligands to monomorphic receptors (Perelson 1984). Parameters derived from the model fit of binding data show, that neuraminidase treatment of T cells was sufficient to mimic a partially activated phenotype, showing enhanced TCR cross-linking. Enhanced TCR cross-linking was found to be dependent on the presence of CD8, as neuraminidase treatment of DN cells lead to decreased cross-linking. To elucidate the physiological relevance of desialyation induced increases in TCR cross-linking early tyrosine phosphorylation events and proliferative response upon in vitro stimulation of T cells were investigated. Both were found enhanced in neuraminidase treated cells, as compared to native cells. In conclusion the featured experiments suggest a role of surface sialic acid in controlling TCR cross-linking on na{\"i}ve and activated T cells.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Mayer2006, author = {Mayer, Katrin Doris}, title = {Visualization of type I immunity using bicistronic IFN-gamma reporter mice in vitro and in vivo}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-19415}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2006}, abstract = {Typ I Immunantworten, wie z.B. gegen Influenza Virus, Sendai Virus aber auch gegen intrazellul{\"a}re Erreger wie Toxoplasma gondii sind klassischerweise durch robuste IFN-\&\#947; Expression gekennzeichnet. Th1 und CD8+ Effektor T Zellen z{\"a}hlen zu den Hauptproduzenten von IFN-\&\#947;. Im Zusammenhang mit Autoimmunerkrankungen, Immunpathologie aber auch Impfstoffentwicklung, ist es {\"u}beraus wichtig die Regulierung von IFN-\&\#947; zu verstehen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde die IFN-\&\#947; Expression von CD4+ und CD8+ T Zellen detailliert charakterisiert. Des Weiteren wurde die Rolle des IFN-\&\#947; Rezeptors f{\"u}r die IFN-\&\#947; Expression von T Zellen untersucht. Unter Zuhilfenahme von bicistronischen IFN-\&\#947;-eYFP Reporter M{\"a}usen, welche die direkte Identifizierung und Isolierung von vitalen IFN-\&\#947; exprimierenden Zellen erm{\"o}glichen, wurde die Expression von IFN-\&\#947; in vitro und in vivo, nach Infektion mit den bereits erw{\"a}hnten Erregern,visualisiert. Die Expression des IFN-\&\#947;-eYFP Reporters zeichnete sich, sowohl in vitro als auch in vivo nach Infektion, durch ein {\"a}ußerst heterogenes Fluoreszenzspektrum aus. Die Helligkeit der Reporter Fluoreszenz korrelierte positiv mit der Menge an IFN-\&\#947; Transkripten und mit der Menge des sekretierten IFN-\&\#947; Proteins nach Stimulierung. Die Helligkeit des Reporters reflektierte das Potenzial zur IFN-\&\#947; Produktion, die eigentliche Sekretion war jedoch weitgehend abh{\"a}ngig von zus{\"a}tzlicher Stimulierung durch Antigen. Des Weiteren korrelierte die Helligkeit des Reporters mit der zunehmenden Produktion von weiteren proinflammatorischen Zytokinen und Chemokinen. Hoch fluoreszente Zellen exprimierten zudem vermehrt Marker auf ihrer Oberflache, die auf akute Aktivierung hinweisen. Die am hellsten eYFP fluoreszierenden Zellen waren im Allgemeinen weiter ausdifferenziert und ihre Pr{\"a}senz war auf bestimmte Organe beschr{\"a}nkt. Die anatomische Begrenzung wurde durch den Erreger bestimmt. IFN-\&\#947; exprimierende Zellen wurden nach Infektion mit Sendai Virus oder Toxoplasma gondii in IFN-\&\#947; Rezeptor defizienten Reporter M{\"a}usen generiert. Die Frequenz und die Helligkeit der eYFP Reporter Expression waren jedoch ver{\"a}ndert. Experimente mit dualen Knochenmarks-Chim{\"a}ren M{\"a}usen, welche mit Wild-Typ und IFN-\&\#947; Rezeptor defizientem Knochenmark rekonstituiert wurden, ergaben eine T Zell-intrinsische Abh{\"a}ngigkeit von IFN-\&\#947; Rezeptor vermittelten Signalen f{\"u}r die Expression von IFN-\&\#947;. Die Helligkeit des Reporters dagegen wurde unabh{\"a}ngig von dem IFN-\&\#947; Rezeptor reguliert. Abschließend wurde ein Modell f{\"u}r die Expression von IFN-\&\#947; in CD4+ und CD8+ T Zellen entwickelt. Zusammenfassend f{\"u}hren diese Ergebnisse zu dem Schluss, dass die Expression von IFN-\&\#947; in CD4+ und CD8+ T Zellen und nach viraler oder parasit{\"a}rer Infektion unterschiedlich reguliert wird. Zus{\"a}tzlich wurde gezeigt, dass der IFN-\&\#947; Rezeptor an der \&\#65279;Modulation der IFN-\&\#947; Expression beteiligt ist.}, subject = {Interferon }, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Wang2006, author = {Wang, Dapeng}, title = {The mechanism of glucocorticoid induced murine thymocyte and peripheral T cell apoptosis}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-17317}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2006}, abstract = {Glucocordicoide sind kleine lipophile Verbindungen, die viele biologische Effekte verursachen, wenn sie an den intrazellul{\"a}ren Glukokortikoidrezeptor (GR) binden. Dieser wandert wiederum in den Nucleus, um dort direkt oder indirekt die Transkription der Gene zu regulieren. Glukokortikoide sind der Grundstein in der Behandlung f{\"u}r eine Anzahl von h{\"a}matologischen b{\"o}sartigen Erkrankungen, wie Leuk{\"a}mie, Lymphome und Myelome. In der Literatur wird beschrieben, dass Glukokortikoide {\"u}ber die Vermittlung von Apoptose wirken.die Wirkung. Trotz der enormen Fortschritte im Verst{\"a}ndnis des regulierten Zelltodes, ist der genaue Mechanismus, den Glukokortikoide bei der Apoptose vermitteln, unbekannt. Die Daten, die bis jetzt erzielt wurden, deuten stark darauf hin, dass Gentransaktivierung durch den GR f{\"u}r den Beginn der durch Glukokortikoide verursachten Thymozytenapoptose verantwortlich ist. Außerdem wurde gezeigt, dass das multikatalytische Proteasom, einige Mitglieder der BCL2-Familie, {\"A}nderungen im Kalziumfluss sowie Caspasen eine wichtige Rolle in der Durchf{\"u}hrungsphase des durch Glukokortikoide vermittelten Zelltodes spielen Jedoch ist die genaue Reihenfolge dieses Prozesses bisher nicht bekannt. Ein Hauptschwierigkeit der gegenw{\"a}rtigen Diskussion entsteht aus der Tatsache, dass unterschiedliche Zellarten, wie Thymozyten, reife T-Zellen und Lymphomzellen verglichen werden, ohne ihre unterschiedlichen Eigenschaften und Genexpressionsprofile zu beachten. Obwohl angenommen wird, dass Glukokortikoide Apoptose {\"u}ber einen konservierten Mechanismus, wird dies nicht durch irgendwelche Daten unterst{\"u}tzt. In anderen Worten, es ist m{\"o}glich, dass Apoptose in Thymozyten, reifen T-Zellen und Lymphomzellen {\"u}ber unterschiedliche Signalwege vermittelt wid. Wir fragten uns daher, ob ein einzelner durch Glukokoritkoide eingeleiteter Signaltransduktionsweg daf{\"u}r verantwortlich ist, dass Apoptose in allen T-Lamphozytenarten eingeleitet wird, oder ob noch andere Signalwege existieren. Daher verglichen wir die Rolle des Proteasomes, verschiedener Caspasen, des lysosomalen Kompartements und anderer Faktoren in der durch Glukokortikoide induzierten Apoptose in Mausthymozyten und pepripheren T-Zellen sowie T-ALL Lymphomzellen. Unsere Entdeckungen zeigen, dass die Anfangsphase der durch Glukokortikoide induzierten Apoptose unabh{\"a}ngig von der Differenzierungsstadien der Zelle ist. Apoptose wird sowohl in Thymozyten als auch in reifen T-Zellen durch den GR vermittelt und ist von der Gentranskription abh{\"a}ngig. Im Gegensatz dazu unterscheidet sich die Durchf{\"u}hrungsphase erheblich in ihren Anforderungen f{\"u}r eine Anzahl von Signaltransduktionskomponenten zwischen Thymozyten und peripheren T-Zellen. W{\"a}hrend in Thymozyten das Proteasom, die Caspasen 3, 8 und 9 sowie Cathepsin B eine wichtige Rolle in durch Glukokortikoide induzierten Zelltod spielen, sind diese Faktoren f{\"u}r die Induktion des Zell-Todes in peripheren T- Zellen entbehrlich. Im Gegensatz dazu scheinen {\"A}nderungen in der Expression und intrazellul{\"a}ren Lokalisation von Mitgliedern der Bcl-2 Familie nicht zum durch Glukokortikoide induzierten Zellltod beitzutragen, egal um welchen Zelltyp es sich handelt. Wir haben beobachtet, dass eine Behandlung von Thymozyten mit Glukokortikoiden zu einer Aktivierung der lysosomalen Protease Cathepsin B f{\"u}hrt. Dies ist ein essentieller Schritt zur Einleitung von Apoptose durch Glukortikoide und zeigt zum ersten Mal, dass der lysosomale Amplifikationsloop in diesen Prozess involviert ist. Die Analyse des durch Glukokortikoide induzierten Zelltodes in verschiedenen T-ALL Zelllinien deutet darauf hin, dass die durch Glukokortikoide induzierten Signalwege in Thymozyten und allen Lymphonzelllinien aber nicht in peripheren T Zellen {\"u}bereinstimmen. Da die hoch-dosierte Glukokortikoidbehandlung eine wichtige Rolle in der Behandlung von hematologischen b{\"o}sartigen Erkrankungen spielt, k{\"o}nnen unsere Beobachtungen eine Grundlage f{\"u}r eine neue Anti-Krebs-Stragie bilden, die darauf ausgelegt ist, spezifisch Tumorzellen zu eliminieren aber reife T-Zellen unber{\"u}hrt lassen.}, subject = {T-Lymphozyt}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Duttu2005, author = {Duttu, Vallabhapurapu Subrahmanya}, title = {Regulation of B lymphocyte terminal differentiation and death by the transcription factor Blimp-1}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-17158}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2005}, abstract = {B lymphocyte induced maturation protein-1 (Blimp-1) und X-box-binding protein-1" (XBP-1) sind als Transkriptionsfaktoren unverzichtbar f{\"u}r die terminale Differenzierung von B-Lymphozyten zu Immunglobulin (Ig)-sezernierenden Plasmazellen. Ebenso stellen die unfolded protein response (UPR) und das Spleißen von XBP-1, beides ausgel{\"o}st durch erh{\"o}hte Ig-Produktion, entscheidende Schritte auf dem Weg zur Plasmazellentstehung dar. Allerdings ist das Molek{\"u}l/ sind die Molek{\"u}le nach wie vor unbekannt, die diesen beiden Ereignissen in der Signalkaskade vorgeschaltet sind. Da die ektope Expression von Blimp-1 in B-Zellen hinreicht, diese zu Plasmazellen zu differenzieren, erscheint es plausibel, dass Blimp-1 das Molek{\"u}l sein k{\"o}nnte, das die Ausl{\"o}sung einer UPR und das Spleißen von XBP-1 steuert. Dieser M{\"o}glichkeit wurde durch ektope Expression von Blimp-1 in der Maus-B-Zell-Lymphomlinie WEHI 231 und in prim{\"a}ren B-Zellen aus der Milz von M{\"a}usen nachgegangen. Die ektope Expression von Blimp-1 f{\"u}hrte in beiden Zelltypen zur Erh{\"o}hung der Ig Produktion, zum Spleißen von XBP-1 und zur Sekretion von Immunglobulinen. Interessanterweise war der N-terminale Anteil von Blimp-1, bestehend aus den Aminos{\"a}uren 1-751, hinreichend, um diese Effekte auszul{\"o}sen, w{\"a}hrend der C-Terminus, der die Aminos{\"a}uren 465-856 umfaßte, keinen Effekt hatte. Dar{\"u}berhinaus, wurde die Expression von BIP, dessen Gen ein UPR-Zielgen ist, durch ektope Expression von Blimp-1 bzw. dessen N-Terminus in prim{\"a}ren B-Zellen erh{\"o}ht. Diese Ergebnisse zeigen deutlich, dass Blimp-1, speziell dessen N-terminale Dom{\"a}ne, hinreichend ist, um eine UPR und die Prozessierung von XBP-1 auszul{\"o}sen, was zur Ig-Sekretion von B-Zellen f{\"u}hrt.}, subject = {B-Lymphozyt}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Toben2005, author = {Toben, Catherine Gisela}, title = {Generation and analysis of transgenic mice expressing ovalbumin as a neo-self antigen under control of the myelin basic protein promoter}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-16708}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2005}, abstract = {In this project two novel murine autoimmune models were to be established in an attempt to further investigate the nervous system disorders of Multiple Sclerosis and Guillain Barr{\´e} Syndrome. Previous experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) and experimental autoimmune neuritis (EAN) models have demonstrated that T cells play a major role in these diseases. Which roles CD4 and CD8 T cells specifically have in the initiation, propagation and termination of an autoimmune nervous system disorder remains controversial. To this end two transgenic mice specifically expressing the neo-antigen (Ag) ovalbumin (OVA) in either the central nervous system (CNS) or peripheral nervous system (PNS) were to be generated. The myelin basic protein (MBP) is a major component of the myelin sheath both within the CNS and the PNS. Therefore the MBP promoter was employed for its distinct regulatory elements to facilitate exclusive CNS or PNS OVA expression. The adoptive transfer of OVA specific MHCI restricted (OT-I) and MHCII restricted (OT-II) TCR Tg T cells extended the OVA Tg mouse model by allowing potentially encephalitogenic T cells to be tracked in vivo. Specificity for the target Ag should enable the dynamic role of antigen specific T cells in neuroinflammatory diseases to be revealed in more detail.}, subject = {Multiple Sklerose}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Na2005, author = {Na, Shin-Young}, title = {PKB/Akt : a critical regulator of lymphocyte, development and function}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-13755}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2005}, abstract = {Protein kinase B (PKB), a serine threonine kinase, is highly involved in the regulation of cellular proliferation and survival. To characterize PKB's function in lymphocyte development and activation, transgenic (tg) mice that express a membrane targeted constitutively active form of PKBa (myr PKB) in T and B cells were analysed. Thymocytes from myr PKB tg mice showed enhanced proliferation after T cell receptor (TCR) engagement compared to wild type (wt) mice. Astonishingly, myr PKB tg thymocytes were capable to proliferate in response to PMA only and were also less sensitive to inhibition by the calcineurin inhibitors CsA or FK506, which indicates the proliferative response of myr PKB tg T cells is relatively independent of calcium mobilisation and calcineurin activity. In addition, when TCR signalling was inhibited by the MEKinase inhibitor PD98059 or the Srckinase inhibitor PP1 myr PKB tg thymocytes again were more resistant to inhibition. Western blot analysis revealed myr PKB enhances activation of the kinases Lck, Raf and Erk after TCR/CD3 stimulation. Thus, myr PKB renders proliferative responses of thymocytes more sensitive to TCR signals by positive regulation of the Lck-Raf-MEK-Erk signalling pathway. Studies on the cellular location of the tg protein showed myr PKB is located in membrane socalled "lipid rafts". Furthermore, we found that after TCR/CD3 ligation endogenous cytoplasmic PKB moves into "lipid rafts", which highlights PKB as a crucial mediator of TCR proximal signalling events. Analysing three different TCR tg model systems for positive and negative selection of immature precursors in the thymus, we found myr PKB promotes positive selection of CD4+ but not CD8+ T cells. This most likely results from PKB's positive cross-talk on Lck-Raf-Erk signalling, which is known to influence thymocyte selection and CD4/CD8-lineage choice. Furthermore, myr PKB enhances phosphorylation of glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3), a negative regulator of the transcription factor NFAT (nuclear factor of activated T cells) and T cell activation, and of the adapter protein c-Cbl. Concerning negative selection, myr PKB enhanced (OT1 mice), reduced (HY mice) or had no influence (OT2 mice) on negative selection. Thus, myr PKB's effect on negative selection strongly depends on the model system analysed and this most likely results from differences in TCR affinity/avidity and TCR specificity for MHC. 106 Peripheral CD4+ T cells from myr PKB tg mice showed enhanced production of both Th1 and Th2 cytokines. Furthermore, after TCR/CD3 stimulation in the presence of TGF-b1, wt CD4+ T cells showed a drastic inhibition of proliferation, whereas myr PKB tg CD4+ T cells proliferated even better, i.e. they were resistant to the inhibitory TGF-b1 signals. Expression of myr PKB in B cells leads to reduced Ca2+ flux and proliferation after BCR stimulation, but activation of Lyn, SLP-65, c-Cbl and GSK-3 were enhanced. When we analysed B cell subsets in myr PKB tg mice, a decrease in immature and mature B cells became obvious, whereas cell numbers for marginal zone (MZ) B cells were normal. In aged myr PKB tg mice we detected a very strong reduction of pro/pre and immature B cell populations in the bone marrow, indicating PKB is very important for maintenance of B cell development. Furthermore, myr PKB also lead to a strong reduction of peritoneal B-1 cells. However, expression of NFATc1, which is required for B-1 cell development, was comparable between wt and myr PKB tg B-1 cells. To analyse the effect of myr PKB on immunoglobulin production, mice were immunized with thymus dependent (TD) and independent (TI) antigens. In both cases, B cell responses were strongly elevated in myr PKB tg mice. Finally, RT-PCR analyses of in vitro expanded B cells revealed increased Blimp-1 and Notch3 expression in myr PKB tg B cells, which might be primary candidates involved in their enhanced effector function. In summary, this study clearly shows an important cross-talk between PKB and various critical signalling molecules downstream of the TCR and BCR. Thereby active PKB modulates and regulates the thresholds for thymocyte selection and T cell activation as well as for B cell development and function.}, subject = {Proteinkinase B}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Patra2005, author = {Patra, Amiya Kumar}, title = {Modulation of the NFAT signaling pathway by protein kinase B (PKB) ; a perspective study in the context of thymocyte development and T cell function}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-13315}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2005}, abstract = {To analyze the role of protein kinase B(PKB)on developmental and functional aspects of T cells, we have generated transgenic mouse lines expressing a constitutively active form of PKB (myrPKB) in early stages of T cell development.Peripheral CD4+ T cells from PKB tg mice are hyperreactive, more efficient in producing th1 and th2 cytokines and show faster and CD28 co-stimulation independent cell cycle progression.Interestingly PKB tg T cells are resistant to CsA treatment in proliferation and cytokine production.Further analysis show PKB tg CD4+ T cells have a drastically reduced nuclear translocation of NFAT proteins and this is due to a direct interaction between PKB and NFAT. To study whether the negative regulatiopn of NFATs by PKB affects T cell development, we analyzed double tg mice expressing both, a constitutively active version of calcineurin (dCam) and myrPKB. dCam tg mice have a severe block in thymocyte development at the DN3 stage.But in the dCam/PKB double tg mice this developmental block is significantly rescued.This rescue of thymocyte development by PKB is due to the expression of RAG1 and subsequent TCRb chain expression. CsA treatment of neonatal thymic lobes from dCam mice restores normal thymocyte development, indicating involvement of NFATs in the severe block in dCam thymocyte development.Confocal studies clearly established that compared to dCam DN cells there is a significant reduction in the nuclear levels of NFATc1 and NFATc3 in dCam/PKB cells.Downregulation of nuclear NFAT levels by myrPKB thus seems to be an essential parameter in dCam cells to proceed with normal differentiation. In summary, the data from PKB tg peripheral CD4+ T cells and dCam/PKB double tg thymocytes clearly establish PKB as an important modulator of T cell development and function and PKB as a novel negative regulator of NFAT activation.}, subject = {T-Lymphozyt}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Xiao2004, author = {Xiao, Zheng}, title = {Blimp-1 Regulates Terminal Differentiation of T Cells}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-10530}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2004}, abstract = {The transcriptional repressor-Blimp-1 terminates differentiation of B lymphocytes as well as myeloid cells. Our data show that Blimp-1 is highly expressed in freshly isolated murine primary T lymphocytes, particularly its minor splice variant. Ectopic expression of Blimp-1 by retroviral transduction neither dramatically altered secretion of IFN-{\~a} or IL-4 nor did it induce the ability to suppress as regulatory T cells. However, induction of Blimp-1 resulted in not only a significant reduction in the production of IL-2 but also an inability to proliferate as well as in the reduced viability. These results demonstrate that Blimp-1 might mark end stages of lineage differentiation in T cells.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Pyz2004, author = {Pyz, Elwira}, title = {Identification of rat NKT cells and molecular analysis of their surface receptor mediated activation}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-9767}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2004}, abstract = {Zusammenfassung NKT Zellen wurden urspr{\"u}nglich {\"u}ber die gleichzeitige Expresion eines T-Zellantigenrezeptors (TZR) und den NK-Zellmarkern NKRP1A im Menschen bzw. NK1.1. (NKRP1C) in der Maus definiert. In Mensch und Maus exprimieren die meisten NKT Zellen CD1d restringierte TZR mit charakteristischen Genumlagerungen- Va24JaQ/Vb11 im Menschen und Va14Ja18/Vb8.2 in der Maus. Den NKT Zellen werden außerdem wichtige Funktionen in der „first line defence" und der Immunregulation zugesprochen. Gegenstand der Doktorarbeit war die Charakterisierung eines hypothetischen Gegenst{\"u}ckes in der Ratte. In der Maus wurden rund 30\% der intrahepatischen Lymphozyten (IHL) und 3\% der Milzlymphozyten als CD1d restringierte NK T Zellen identifiziert und konnten mittels a-GalCer beladenen Maus-CD1d Tetramer visualisiert werden. Wie in der Maus wurden in der Ratte NKRP1A+TZR+ Zellen vorwiegend in der Leber gefunden, waren aber f{\"u}nfmal weniger h{\"a}ufig. F344 Ratten NKT Zellen waren dar{\"u}ber hinaus im Gegensatz zu den CD4+ oder CD4-CD8- Maus NKT Zellen meistens CD8 positiv und banden kein mCD1d Tetramer. Da in der menschlichen Leber CD1d-restringierte Va24JQ+ T Zellen ebenfalls viel seltener als in der Maus sind, scheint es nun m{\"o}glich, daß der Ph{\"a}notyp der Ratten NKT Zellen eher dem des Menschen als dem der Maus entspricht. Ein Test der F{\"a}higkeit von F344 Leber- und Milzlymphozyten nach Kultur mit a-GalCer Cytokine zu produzieren, ergab {\"a}hnlich wie in der Maus eine Produktion von IL-4 und IFN-g;. Aus diesem Grund kann eine fehlende Reaktivit{\"a}t von Ratten NKT Zellen f{\"u}r a-GalCer nicht der Grund f{\"u}r eine fehlende mCD1d Tetramerbindung sein. Um die Reaktivit{\"a}t der NKRP1A+TZR+ Rattenzellen auf a-GalCer besser zu verstehen, wurde der Ratten TZR analysiert. RT-PCR von Leberlymphozyten mit Va14-spezifischen Primern und die Analyse der klonierten PCR Produkte ergab ein viel schw{\"a}cheres Signal f{\"u}r Ratten als f{\"u}r Maus cDNA. Dar{\"u}ber hinaus zeigten Sequenzanalysen, daß das Va14 auch mit anderen J als dem f{\"u}r TCRinv typischem Ja18 rearrangiert war. Die niedrige Anzahl von Va14Ja18 „in frame" Umlagerungen legt Nahe, daß nur ein kleiner Anteil der Leber-lymphozyten CD1d restringierte NKT Zellen sind. Maus und humane NKT Zellen erkennen durch CD1d-b2m Komplexe pr{\"a}sentiertes a-GalCer und reagieren mit Aktivierung, Proliferation und Cytokinproduktion. Um die F{\"a}higkeit von Maus und Ratten-CD1d a-GalCer zu pr{\"a}sentieren, zu testen, wurde das CD1d Molek{\"u}l der Ratte kloniert. Sequenzanlyse und funktionelle Tests best{\"a}tigten die strukturelle und funktionelle Homologie des CD1d beider Spezies. Gleichzeitig wurde zur Analyse der Reaktivit{\"a}t von NKRP1A+TZR+ Zellen auf a-GalCer ein Ratten Va14+ invarianter TZR kloniert und in einem TZR- T-Zellhybridom (BWr/mCD28) exprimiert. Zellen die transgenen Ratten Va14+TZR und CD28 exprimierten, sezernierten IL-2 nach Stimulation mit aTZR/CD3 Antik{\"o}rper aber zeigten keine Spezifit{\"a}t f{\"u}r a-GalCer. Die fehlende Reaktivit{\"a}t f{\"u}r a-GalCer und die fehlende Bindung von mCD1-a-GalCer Tetramer waren wahrscheinlich durch Aminos{\"a}uresubstitionen insbesondere an Position 71 (51 nach IMGT Nomenklatur) der klonierten TZRa Kette begr{\"u}ndet. Eine „Umkehrung" dieser {\"A}nderung wurde mittels molekularbiologischer Techniken durchgef{\"u}hrt aber Expression dieses TZR auf BWr/mCD28 wurde nicht erreicht. Im Gegensatz zum invarianten Va14+ Ratten TZR war der Maus Va14+ TZR voll funktional und spezifisch f{\"u}r mCD1d Tetramer. KT12 Hybridom und Maus TZRinv exprimierende BWr/mCD28 Zellen wurden sowohl durch Ratten als durch Maus CD1d pr{\"a}sentiertes a-GalCer aktiviert. Dasselbe galt f{\"u}r TZR, die eine Maus Va14 TZR Kette und eine Ratten Vb8.4 TZR Kette enthielten. Im Gegensatz hierzu antworteten Linien mit mVa14 und Ratten Vb8.2 nur auf durch Ratten und nicht auf durch Maus CD1d pr{\"a}sentiertes a-GalCer und banden nahezu kein mCD1d Tetramer. Dies legt Nahe, daß Keimbahn kodierte der b-Kettenbereiche (CDR2 oder CDR4) speziesspezifische Bereiche des CD1d erkennen. Weiterhin wurde gefunden, das die Zytokinsekretion der Zellinien durch CD80 spezifische monoklonale Antik{\"o}rper inhibiert wurde, was eine wichtige Rolle der CD80-CD28 Interaktion bei der Aktivierung dieser Zellen nahelegt. Um zu sehen ob NKT Zellen auch in anderen Rattenst{\"a}mmen als F344 existieren, wurde H{\"a}ufigkeit und Funktion von NKRP1A+TZR+ Zellen in F344 und LEW Ratten miteinander verglichen. F344 und LEW, zwei Rattenst{\"a}mme die unterschiedliche CD1d Allele tragen, zeigten in der Analyse mit einem neu generierten rCD1d spezifischen monoklonalen Antik{\"o}rper nur geringe Unterschiede in der Expressionsst{\"a}rke. Hingegen, unterschieden sich beide St{\"a}mme in der Reaktivit{\"a}t f{\"u}r a-GalCer. NKRP1A+ Zellen waren in der LEW Ratte weniger h{\"a}ufig als in der F344 Ratte und antworteten in vitro nicht auf a-GalCer oder sein Analogon OCH. Ein Resultat, das insbesodere angesichts der besonderen Empf{\"a}nglichkeit von LEW Ratten f{\"u}r experimentell induzierte organspezifische Autoimmunerkrankungen von besonderem Interesse ist. Zusammgefasst kann gesagt werden, daß das Maus und Ratten CD1d/TZRinv NKT Zellsystem hohe strukturelle und funktionale Homologie aufweist, aber daß es wie im Menschen weniger invariante NKT Zellen in der Ratte als in der Maus gibt. TZR transgene Zelllinien wiesen ein speziesspezifisches Muster in der a-GalCer Erkennung auf, das f{\"u}r die Analyse von CDd/TZR-Kontaktbereichen von großem Nutzen sein wird. Dasselbe gilt f{\"u}r den Ratten und Maus-CD1d-spezifischen monoklonalen Antik{\"o}rper, der im Rahmen der Studie generiert wurde. Dieser kann bei der Charakterisierung der CD1d Proteinexpression in verschiedenen Geweben und der besseren funktionellen Charakterisierung von CD1d restringierten T Zellen der Ratte eingesetzt werden.}, subject = {Ratte}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Lin2004, author = {Lin, Chia-Huey}, title = {Functional characterization of rat CTLA-4 and CD25+CD4+ regulatory T cells}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-8521}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2004}, abstract = {Summary: In the present work, two important negative regulators of T cell responses in rats were examined. At the molecular level, rat CTLA-4, a receptor important for deactivating T cell responses, was examined for the expression pattern and in vitro functions. For this purpose, anti-rat CTLA-4 mAbs were generated. Consistent with the studies in mice and humans, rat CTLA-4 was detectable only in CD25+CD4+ regulatory T cells in unstimulated rats, and was upregulated in all activated T cells. Cross-linking rat CTLA-4 led to the deactivation of anti-TCR- and anti-CD28 stimulated (costimulation) T cell responses such as reduction in activation marker expression, proliferation, and cytokine IL-2 production. Although T cells stimulated with the superagonistic anti-CD28 antibody alone without TCR engagement also increased their CTLA-4 expression, a delayed kinetics of CTLA-4 upregulation was found in cells stimulated in this way. The physiological relevance of this finding needs further investigation. At the cellular level, rat CD25+CD4+ regulatory T cells were examined here in detail. Using rat anti-CTLA-4 mAbs, the phenotype of CD25+CD4+ regulatory T cells was investigated. Identical to the mouse and human Treg phenotype, rat CD25+CD4+ T cells constitutively expressed CTLA-4, were predominantly CD45RC low, and expressed high level of CD62L (L-selectin). CD25+CD4+ cells proliferated poorly and were unable to produce IL-2 upon engagement of the TCR and CD28. Furthermore, rat CD25+CD4+ cells produced high amounts of anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 upon stimulation. Importantly, freshly isolated CD25+CD4+ T cells from na{\"i}ve rats exhibited suppressor activities in the in vitro suppressor assays. In vitro, CD25+CD4+ regulatory T cells proliferated vigorously upon superagonistic anti-CD28 stimulation and became very potent suppressor cells. In vivo, a single injection of CD28 superagonist into rats induced transient accumulation and activation of CD25+CD4+ regulatory T cells. These findings suggest firstly that efficient expansion of CD25+CD4+ cells without losing their suppressive effects (even enhance their suppressive activities) can be achieved with the superagonistic anti- CD28 antibody in vitro. Secondly, the induction of disproportional expansion of CD25+CD4+ cells by a single injection of superagonistic anti-CD28 antibody in vivo implies that superagonistic anti-CD28 antibody may be a promising candidate in treating autoimmune diseases by causing a transient increase of activated CD25+CD4+ T cells and thus tipping ongoing autoimmune responses toward selftolerance.}, subject = {Ratte}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Kleen2003, author = {Kleen, Thomas Oliver}, title = {Dissociated expression of granzyme B and IFN-gamma by T lymphocytes in HIV-1 infected individuals and its implications for Tc1 effector diversity}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-8460}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2003}, abstract = {A CD8+ cell-mediated host defense relies on cognate killing of infected target cells and on local inflammation induced by the secretion of IFN-g. Using assays of single cell resolution, it was studied to what extent these two effector function of CD8+ cells are linked. Granzyme B (GzB) is stored in cytolytic granules of CD8+ cells and its secretion is induced by antigen recognition of these cells. Following entry into the cytosol GzB induces apoptosis in the target cells. It was measured whether GzB release by individual CD8+ cells is accompanied by the secretion of IFN-gƒnƒnand of other cytokines. HIV peptide libraries were tested on bulk peripheral blood mononuclear cells and on purified CD4+ and CD8+ cells obtained from HIV infected individuals. The library included a panel of previously defined HLA class I restricted HIV peptides and an overlapping 20-mer peptide-series that covered the entire gp120 molecule. To characterize the in vivo differentiation state of the T-cells, freshly isolated lymphocytes were tested in assays of 24h duration. The data showed that only ~20\% of the peptides triggered the release of both GzB and IFN-g from CD8+ cells. The majority of the HIV peptides induced either GzB or IFN-g, ~40\% in each category. The GzB positive, IFN-g negative CD8+ cells did not produce IL-4 or IL-5, which suggests that they do not correspond to Tc2 cells but represent a novel Tc1 subclass, which was termed Tc1c. Also the IFN-g positive, GzB negative CD8+ cell subpopulation represents a yet undefined CD8+ effector cell lineage that was termed Tc1b. Tc1b and Tc1c cells are likely to make different, possibly antagonistic contributions to the control of HIV infection. Since IFN-g activates HIV replication in latently infected macrophages, the secretion of this cytokine by Tc1b cells in the absence of killing may have adverse effects on the host defense. In contrast, cytolysis by Tc1c cells in the absence of IFN-g production might represent the protective class of response. Further studies in the field of Tc1 effector cell diversity should lead to valuable insights for management of infections and developing rationales for vaccine design.}, subject = {Antigen CD8}, language = {en} }