TY - THES A1 - Fellenberg, Friederike T1 - Charakterisierung von Tumorantigenen des kutanen T-Zell Lymphoms: Serologische Immunantwort und Expressionsanalyse T1 - characterisation of tumor antigens of the cutaneous t-cell lymphoma: serological immune response and expression analysis N2 - Immuntherapien auf der Basis gut charakterisierter, tumorspezifischer Antigene stellen ein vielversprechendes Konzept der Tumortherapie dar. Ein potentielles Antigen für immuntherapeutische Strategien sollte möglichst tumorspezifisch exprimiert sein und es sollte einen Hinweis auf bereits erfolgte Immunantworten im Patienten geben, wie z.B. die Existenz spezifischer Antikörper oder zytotoxischer T-Zellen (CTL). Eine membranständige Lokalisation ist für die Verwendung von Tumorantigenen in Antikörpertherapien notwendig. Während für viele Neoplasien Tumorantigene bekannt sind, wurden für das kutane T-Zell Lymphom (CTCL) bislang nur sehr wenige tumorassoziierte Antigene identifiziert. Die Antigene se57-1, se70-2, cTAGE-1 und GBP-5ta wurden durch serologisches Durchsuchen einer Phagenbank aus Testis- bzw. Tumorgewebe (SEREX-Methode) identifiziert. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde die Immunogenität dieser vier Tumorantigene in einem neu entwickelten ELISA mit CTCL-, Parapsoriasis-, Melanom- und Kontrollseren untersucht. se70-2 und cTAGE-1 Protein erkannten nur wenige Patientenseren. Für GBP-5ta konnte dagegen eine signifikant höhere Reaktivität der CTCL-Seren im Vergleich zu den Kontrollseren ermittelt werden. Bei se57-1 waren die CTCL- und die Parapsoriasisseren hoch signifikant verschieden zu den Kontrollseren. Dieses putativ virusinduzierte Antigen sollte in zukünftigen Arbeiten auf seine mögliche Funktion als Entzündungsmarker weiter untersucht werden. Für das CTCL sollten weitere Kombinationen von Tumorantigenen auf ihren diagnostischen Wert in der Serologie getestet werden. Des Weiteren konnten in dieser Arbeit die CTCL assoziierten Antigene se2-2 und die GBP-5 Familie genauer charakterisiert werden: Die Expressionsanalyse von se2-2 Protein und mRNA in verschiedenen Normalgeweben zeigte ein differentielles Expressionsmuster. Im SEREX wurde se2-2 serologisch spezifisch nur von CTCL-Seren erkannt. Möglicherweise wäre se2-2 eine geeignete Zielstruktur für die serologische Diagnostik des CTCL. Aufgrund seiner fehlenden Tumorspezifität ist se2-2 für die Immuntherapie jedoch wenig geeignet. Die neu identifizierte GBP-5 Familie besteht aus mindestens drei Spleißvarianten (GBP-5ta, GBP-5a und GBP-5b), die zwei Proteine, GBP-5ta und GBP-5a/b, kodieren. GBP-5ta ist gegenüber GBP-5a/b C-terminal um 97 AS verkürzt. GBP-5ta mRNA wird differentiell exprimiert, während GBP-5ta Protein PBMC-spezifisch exprimiert wird. In CTCL-Tumorgewebe konnte GBP-5ta nachgewiesen werden, wogegen in Melanomzelllinien fast ausschließlich GBP-5a/b vorliegt. Gegen GBP-5ta konnte eine humorale Immunantwort bei CTCL-Patienten nachgewiesen werden: Im SEREX wurde GBP-5ta nur von CTCL-Patientenseren erkannt. Auch in der ELISA-Methode reagierten signifikant mehr Patientenseren als Kontrollseren mit GBP-5ta. Die höhere Immunogenität von GBP-5ta gegenüber GBP-5a/b im SEREX unterstreicht die Bedeutung der verkürzten Variante. Ob CTL gegen GBP-5ta präsentierende Zellen existieren, wird momentan untersucht. Die GBP-5 Spleißvarianten sind hoch homolog zur Familie der GTPasen, zu denen auch das Onkogen Ras gehört. Das verkürzte Protein von GBP-5ta könnte durch den Verlust der C-terminalen Domäne seine eventuelle anti-proliferierende Funktion verlieren. Ein Knock-out Versuch von GBP-5 könnte die Bedeutung von GBP-5 in der Tumorzelle untersuchen. Darüber hinaus wäre es vielversprechend, die GTPase Aktivität der GBP-5 Varianten in einem GTP-Bindungs-Assay zu überprüfen. GBP-5ta könnte eine mögliche Ursache des unkontrollierten Wachstums der Tumorzelle und somit eine vielversprechende potentielle Zielstruktur für therapeutische Ansätze für das CTCL sein. N2 - Immunotherapies represent a promising concept of tumor-therapies on the basis of well-characterized, tumor-specific antigens. A potential antigen for immunotherapeutic strategies should be preferably tumor-specific expressed and should give a reference to immune responses in the patient, already taken place, as by antibodies or cytotoxic T-cells (CTL). A localization in the membrane is necessarily for antibody therapies. While for many neoplasia tumor antigens are known, the cutaneous t-cell lymphoma (CTCL) so far only very few tumor-associated antigens were identified. The tumor antigens, se57-1, se70-2, cTAGE-1 and GBP-5ta were identified by screening a testis and tumor tissue phage library (SEREX approach). In this work the immunogenicity of this four antigens was investigated in a newly developed ELISA using sera from CTCL, Parapsoriasis and melanoma patients as well as healthy controls. The ELISA results showed that only few patient sera reacted against se70-2 and cTAGE-1. CTCL sera reacted significantly more frequent against GBP-5ta than control sera. se57-1 protein was detected by sera from CTCL and Parapsoriasis patients, but hardly by any control sera. This putativ virus-induced antigen should be further examined for its possible function as inflammation marker. For the CTCL further combinations of tumor antigens should be tested to their diagnostic value. The CTCL associated antigens se2-2 and antigens of the GBP-5 family could be characterized in this work. The expression analysis of se2-2 protein and mRNA in different control tissues showed a differential expression. Secondary screening by SEREX indicated a serological specificity for se2-2. se2-2 could be a suitable target for serological diagnostic of the CTCL but due to its missing expression specificity se2-2 is little suitable for immunotherapy. The newly identified GBP-5 family consists of at least three splicing variants (GBP-5ta, GBP-5a and GBP-5b), coding for two proteins, GBP-5ta and GBP-5a/b. GBP-5ta is C-terminally truncated by 97 aa in comparison to GBP-5a/b. GBP-5ta mRNA is differentially expressed, while GBP-5ta protein is PBMC-specific. GBP-5ta is expressed in CTCL tumor tissue, while in melanoma cell lines almost exclusively GBP-5a/b was found. A humoral immune response in CTCL patients against GBP-5ta could be: SEREX indicated a serological specificity. Accordingly to the ELISA method significantly more patients` sera than control sera reacted against GBP-5ta. The higher immunogenicity of GBP-5ta in comparison to GBP-5a/b underlines the importance of the shortened variant. Whether CTL exist against GBP-5ta epitopes presently examined. The GBP-5 splicing variants are highly homologous to the GTPase superfamily including the ras oncogen. The loss of the C-terminal domain might be one reason why the truncated protein GBP-5ta loses its possible anti-proliferating function. GBP-5 knockout experiments could examine the meaning of GBP-5 in the tumor cell. Beyond that, it would be promising to examine the GTPase activity of the GBP-5 variants in a GTP-binding-assay. GBP-5ta could be a possible cause of the uncontrolled growth of the tumor cell and thus a promising potential target for therapy for the CTCL. KW - Hautlymphom KW - Tumorantigen KW - CTCL KW - Tumorimmunologie KW - Guanylat bindende Proteine KW - Entzündung KW - ELISA KW - CTCL KW - tumor immunology KW - guanylate binding proteins KW - inflammation KW - ELISA Y1 - 2003 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-7561 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wolf, Annette A1 - Akrap, Nina A1 - Marg, Berenice A1 - Galliardt, Helena A1 - Heiligentag, Martyna A1 - Humpert, Fabian A1 - Sauer, Markus A1 - Kaltschmidt, Barbara A1 - Kaltschmidt, Christian A1 - Seidel, Thorsten T1 - Elements of Transcriptional Machinery Are Compatible among Plants and Mammals JF - PLoS ONE N2 - In the present work, the objective has been to analyse the compatibility of plant and human transcriptional machinery. The experiments revealed that nuclear import and export are conserved among plants and mammals. Further it has been shown that transactivation of a human promoter occurs by human transcription factor NF-\(\kappa\) B in plant cells, demonstrating that the transcriptional machinery is highly conserved in both kingdoms. Functionality was also seen for regulatory elements of NF-\(\kappa\) B such as its inhibitor I\(\kappa\)B isoform \(\alpha\) that negatively regulated the transactivation activity of the p50/RelA heterodimer by interaction with NF-\(\kappa\)B in plant cells. Nuclear export of RelA could be demonstrated by FRAP-measurements so that RelA shows nucleo-cytoplasmic shuttling as reported for RelA in mammalian cells. The data reveals the high level of compatibility of human transcriptional elements with the plant transcriptional machinery. Thus, Arabidopsis thaliana mesophyll protoplasts might provide a new heterologous expression system for the investigation of the human NF-\(\kappa\)B signaling pathways. The system successfully enabled the controlled manipulation of NF-\(\kappa\)B activity. We suggest the plant protoplast system as a tool for reconstitution and analyses of mammalian pathways and for direct observation of responses to e. g. pharmaceuticals. The major advantage of the system is the absence of interference with endogenous factors that affect and crosstalk with the pathway. KW - complexes KW - in vivo KW - DNA-binding KW - nuclear proe KW - gene expression KW - NF-KAPPA-B KW - RNA-binding protein KW - alpha KW - inflammation KW - homodimers Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-131203 VL - 8 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rosenbaum, Corinna A1 - Schick, Martin Alexander A1 - Wollborn, Jakob A1 - Heider, Andreas A1 - Scholz, Claus-Jürgen A1 - Cecil, Alexander A1 - Niesler, Beate A1 - Hirrlinger, Johannes A1 - Walles, Heike A1 - Metzger, Marco T1 - Activation of Myenteric Glia during Acute Inflammation In Vitro and In Vivo JF - PLoS One N2 - Background Enteric glial cells (EGCs) are the main constituent of the enteric nervous system and share similarities with astrocytes from the central nervous system including their reactivity to an inflammatory microenvironment. Previous studies on EGC pathophysiology have specifically focused on mucosal glia activation and its contribution to mucosal inflammatory processes observed in the gut of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients. In contrast knowledge is scarce on intestinal inflammation not locally restricted to the mucosa but systemically affecting the intestine and its effect on the overall EGC network. Methods and Results In this study, we analyzed the biological effects of a systemic LPS-induced hyperinflammatory insult on overall EGCs in a rat model in vivo, mimicking the clinical situation of systemic inflammation response syndrome (SIRS). Tissues from small and large intestine were removed 4 hours after systemic LPS-injection and analyzed on transcript and protein level. Laser capture microdissection was performed to study plexus-specific gene expression alterations. Upon systemic LPS-injection in vivo we observed a rapid and dramatic activation of Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein (GFAP)-expressing glia on mRNA level, locally restricted to the myenteric plexus. To study the specific role of the GFAP subpopulation, we established flow cytometry-purified primary glial cell cultures from GFAP promotor-driven EGFP reporter mice. After LPS stimulation, we analyzed cytokine secretion and global gene expression profiles, which were finally implemented in a bioinformatic comparative transcriptome analysis. Enriched GFAP+ glial cells cultured as gliospheres secreted increased levels of prominent inflammatory cytokines upon LPS stimulation. Additionally, a shift in myenteric glial gene expression profile was induced that predominantly affected genes associated with immune response. Conclusion and Significance Our findings identify the myenteric GFAP-expressing glial subpopulation as particularly susceptible and responsive to acute systemic inflammation of the gut wall and complement knowledge on glial involvement in mucosal inflammation of the intestine. KW - gene expression KW - gastrointestinal tract KW - inflammatory bowel disease KW - central nervous system KW - systemic inflammatory response syndrome KW - inflammation KW - astrocytes KW - cytokines Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-146544 VL - 11 IS - 3 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Oelschlaegel, Diana A1 - Weiss Sadan, Tommy A1 - Salpeter, Seth A1 - Krug, Sebastian A1 - Blum, Galia A1 - Schmitz, Werner A1 - Schulze, Almut A1 - Michl, Patrick T1 - Cathepsin inhibition modulates metabolism and polarization of tumor-associated macrophages JF - Cancers N2 - Stroma-infiltrating immune cells, such as tumor-associated macrophages (TAM), play an important role in regulating tumor progression and chemoresistance. These effects are mostly conveyed by secreted mediators, among them several cathepsin proteases. In addition, increasing evidence suggests that stroma-infiltrating immune cells are able to induce profound metabolic changes within the tumor microenvironment. In this study, we aimed to characterize the impact of cathepsins in maintaining the TAM phenotype in more detail. For this purpose, we investigated the molecular effects of pharmacological cathepsin inhibition on the viability and polarization of human primary macrophages as well as its metabolic consequences. Pharmacological inhibition of cathepsins B, L, and S using a novel inhibitor, GB111-NH\(_2\), led to changes in cellular recycling processes characterized by an increased expression of autophagy- and lysosome-associated marker genes and reduced adenosine triphosphate (ATP) content. Decreased cathepsin activity in primary macrophages further led to distinct changes in fatty acid metabolites associated with increased expression of key modulators of fatty acid metabolism, such as fatty acid synthase (FASN) and acid ceramidase (ASAH1). The altered fatty acid profile was associated with an increased synthesis of the pro-inflammatory prostaglandin PGE\(_2\), which correlated with the upregulation of numerous NF\(_k\)B-dependent pro-inflammatory mediators, including interleukin-1 (IL-1), interleukin-6 (IL-6), C-C motif chemokine ligand 2 (CCL2), and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFα). Our data indicate a novel link between cathepsin activity and metabolic reprogramming in macrophages, demonstrated by a profound impact on autophagy and fatty acid metabolism, which facilitates a pro-inflammatory micromilieu generally associated with enhanced tumor elimination. These results provide a strong rationale for therapeutic cathepsin inhibition to overcome the tumor-promoting effects of the immune-evasive tumor micromilieu. KW - cathepsin KW - activity-based probes KW - tumor-associated macrophage KW - autophagy KW - lysosome KW - lipid metabolism KW - inflammation Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-213040 SN - 2072-6694 VL - 12 IS - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Grassinger, Julia Maria A1 - Floren, Andreas A1 - Müller, Tobias A1 - Cerezo-Echevarria, Argiñe A1 - Beitzinger, Christoph A1 - Conrad, David A1 - Törner, Katrin A1 - Staudacher, Marlies A1 - Aupperle-Lellbach, Heike T1 - Digital lesions in dogs: a statistical breed analysis of 2912 cases JF - Veterinary Sciences N2 - Breed predispositions to canine digital neoplasms are well known. However, there is currently no statistical analysis identifying the least affected breeds. To this end, 2912 canine amputated digits submitted from 2014–2019 to the Laboklin GmbH & Co. KG for routine diagnostics were statistically analyzed. The study population consisted of 155 different breeds (most common: 634 Mongrels, 411 Schnauzers, 197 Labrador Retrievers, 93 Golden Retrievers). Non-neoplastic processes were present in 1246 (43%), tumor-like lesions in 138 (5%), and neoplasms in 1528 cases (52%). Benign tumors (n = 335) were characterized by 217 subungual keratoacanthomas, 36 histiocytomas, 35 plasmacytomas, 16 papillomas, 12 melanocytomas, 9 sebaceous gland tumors, 6 lipomas, and 4 bone tumors. Malignant neoplasms (n = 1193) included 758 squamous cell carcinomas (SCC), 196 malignant melanomas (MM), 76 soft tissue sarcomas, 52 mast cell tumors, 37 non-specified sarcomas, 29 anaplastic neoplasms, 24 carcinomas, 20 bone tumors, and 1 histiocytic sarcoma. Predisposed breeds for SCC included the Schnauzer (log OR = 2.61), Briard (log OR = 1.78), Rottweiler (log OR = 1.54), Poodle (log OR = 1.40), and Dachshund (log OR = 1.30). Jack Russell Terriers (log OR = −2.95) were significantly less affected by SCC than Mongrels. Acral MM were significantly more frequent in Rottweilers (log OR = 1.88) and Labrador Retrievers (log OR = 1.09). In contrast, Dachshunds (log OR = −2.17), Jack Russell Terriers (log OR = −1.88), and Rhodesian Ridgebacks (log OR = −1.88) were rarely affected. This contrasted with the well-known predisposition of Dachshunds and Rhodesian Ridgebacks to oral and cutaneous melanocytic neoplasms. Further studies are needed to explain the underlying reasons for breed predisposition or “resistance” to the development of specific acral tumors and/or other sites. KW - canine KW - subungual KW - toe KW - tumor KW - inflammation KW - breed predisposition Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-242690 SN - 2306-7381 VL - 8 IS - 7 ER -