@phdthesis{AlcantarinoMenescal2012, author = {Alcantarino Menescal, Luciana}, title = {In vivo characterization of genetic factors involved in Xmrk driven melanoma formation in Medaka (Oryzias latipes): a closer look at braf, Stat5 and c-myc}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-70762}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Melanoma arises from the malignant transformation of melanocytes and is one of the most aggressive forms of human cancer. In fish of the genus Xiphophorus, melanoma development, although very rarely, happens spontaneously in nature and can be induced by interspecific crossing. The oncogenic receptor tyrosine kinase, Xmrk, is responsible for melanoma formation in these fishes. Since Xiphophorus are live-bearing fishes and therefore not compatible with embryonic manipulation and transgenesis, the Xmrk melanoma model was brought to the medaka (Oryzias latipes) system. Xmrk expression under the control of the pigment cell specific mitf promoter leads to melanoma formation with 100\% penetrance in medaka. Xmrk is an orthologue of the human epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and activates several downstream signaling pathways. Examples of these pathways are the direct phosphorylation of BRAF and Stat5, as well as the enhanced transcription of C-myc. BRAF is a serine-threonine kinase which is found mutated at high frequencies in malignant melanomas. Stat5 is a transcription factor known to be constitutively activated in fish melanoma. C-myc is a transcription factor that is thought to regulate the expression of approximately 15\% of all human genes and is involved in cancer progression of a large number of different tumors. To gain new in vivo information on candidate factors known to be involved in melanoma progression, I identified and analysed BRAF, Stat5 and C-myc in the laboratory fish model system medaka. BRAF protein motifs are highly conserved among vertebrates and the results of this work indicate that its function in the MAPK signaling is maintained in medaka. Transgenic medaka lines carrying a constitutive active version of BRAF (V614E) showed more pigmented skin when compared to wild type. Also, some transiently expressing BRAF V614E fishes showed a disrupted eye phenotype. In addition, I was able to identify two Stat5 copies in medaka, named Stat5ab/a and Stat5ab/b. Sequence analysis revealed a higher similarity between both Stat5 sequences when compared to either human Stat5a or Stat5b. This suggests that the two Stat5 copies in medaka arose by an independent duplication processes. I cloned these two Stat5 present in medaka, produced constitutive active and dominant negative gene versions and successfully established transgenic lines carrying each version under the control of the MITF promoter. These lines will help to elucidate questions that are still remaining in Stat5 biology and its function in melanoma progression, like the role of Stat5 phosphorylation on tumor invasiveness. In a third project during my PhD work, I analysed medaka C-myc function and indentified two copies of this gene in medaka, named c-myc17 and c-myc20, according to the chromosome where they are located. I produced conditional transgenic medaka lines carrying the c-myc17 gene coupled to the hormone binding domain of the estrogen receptor to enable specific transgene activation at a given time point. Comparable to human C-myc, medaka C-myc17 is able to induce proliferation and apoptosis in vivo after induction. Besides that, C-myc17 long-term activation led to liver hyperplasia. In summary, the medaka models generated in this work will be important to bring new in vivo information on genes involved in cancer development. Also, the generated transgenic lines can be easily crossed to the melanoma developing Xmrk medaka lines, thereby opening up the possibility to investigate their function in melanoma progression. Besides that, the generated medaka fishes make it possible to follow the whole development of melanocytes, since the embryos are transparent and can be used for high throughput chemical screens.}, subject = {Japank{\"a}rpfling}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Dwertmann2012, author = {Dwertmann, Anne}, title = {Impact of the Tumor Suppressor Arf on Miz1 and Sumoylation of Myc and Miz1}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-71876}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Upon oncogenic stress, the tumor suppressor Arf can induce irreversible cell cycle arrest or apoptosis, depending on the oncogenic insult. In this study, it could be shown that Arf interacts with Myc and the Myc-associated zinc-finger protein Miz1 to facilitate repression of genes involved in cell adhesion. Formation of a DNA-binding Arf/Myc/Miz1 complex disrupts interaction of Miz1 with its coactivator nucleophosmin and induces local heterochromatinisation, causing cells to lose attachment and undergo anoikis. The assembly of the complex relies on Myc, which might explain why high Myc levels trigger apoptosis and not cell cycle arrest in the Arf response. This mechanism could play an important role in eliminating cells harboring an oncogenic mutation. Arf furthermore induces sumoylation of Miz1 at a specific lysine by repressing the desumoylating enzyme Senp3. A sumoylation-deficient mutant of Miz1 however does not show phenotypic differences under the chosen experimental conditions. Myc can also be modified by Sumo by multisumoylation at many different lysines, which is unaffected by Arf. The exact mechanism and effect of this modification however stays unsolved.}, subject = {Apoptosis}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{CardosoeCastro2012, author = {Cardoso e Castro, In{\^e}s Sofia}, title = {Epigenetic switch induced by MYC in Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-76713}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) is the most frequent human lung cancer and a major cause of death due to its high rate of metastasis1. These facts emphasize the urgent need for the investigation of new targets for anti-metastatic therapy. Up to now a number of genes and gene products have been identified that positively or negatively affect the probability of established human tumor cell lines to metastasize2. Previously, together with the group of Professor Ulf Rapp, we have described the first conditional mouse model for metastasis of NSCLC and identified a gene, c-MYC, that is able to orchestrate all steps of this process. We could identify potential markers for detection of metastasis and highlighted GATA4, which is exclusively expressed during lung development, as a target for future therapeutic intervention2. However, the mechanism underlying this metastatic conversion remained to be identified, and was therefore the focus of the present work. Here, GATA4 is identified as a MYC target in the development of metastasis and epigenetic alterations at the GATA4 promoter level are shown after MYC expression in NSCLC in vivo and in vitro. Such alterations include site-specific demethylation that accompanies the displacement of the MYC-associated zinc finger protein (MAZ) from the GATA4 promoter, which leads to GATA4 expression. Histone modification analysis of the GATA4 promoter revealed a switch from repressive histone marks to active histone marks after MYC binding, which corresponds to active GATA4 expression. This work identifies a novel epigenetic mechanism by which MYC activates GATA4 leading to metastasis in NSCLC, suggesting novel potential targets for the development of anti-metastatic therapy.}, subject = {Nicht-kleinzelliges Bronchialkarzinom}, language = {en} }