TY - JOUR A1 - Wolfahrt, Sonja A1 - Herman, Sandra A1 - Scholz, Claus-Jürgen A1 - Sauer, Georg A1 - Deissler, Helmut T1 - Identification of alternative transcripts of rat CD9 expressed by tumorigenic neural cell lines and in normal tissues JF - Genetics and Molecular Biology N2 - CD9 is the best-studied member of the tetraspanin family of transmembrane proteins. It is involved in various fundamental cellular processes and its altered expression is a characteristic of malignant cells of different origins. Despite numerous investigations confirming its fundamental role, the heterogeneity of CD9 or other tetraspanin proteins was considered only to be caused by posttranslational modification, rather than alternative splicing. Here we describe the first identification of CD9 transcript variants expressed by cell lines derived from fetal rat brain cells. Variant mRNA-B lacks a potential translation initiation codon in the alternative exon 1 and seems to be characteristic of the tumorigenic BT cell lines. In contrast, variant mRNA-C can be translated from a functional initiation codon located in its extended exon 2, and substantial amounts of this form detected in various tissues suggest a contribution to CD9 functions. From the alternative sequence of variant C, a different membrane topology ( 5 transmembrane domains) and a deviating spectrum of functions can be expected. KW - tetraspanin KW - CD9 KW - antigen KW - cancer KW - noncoding RNAs KW - nervous system KW - poor prognosis KW - tetraspanin protein KW - transcript KW - splice variant KW - membrane topology Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-131801 VL - 36 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Busch, Albert A1 - Tschernitz, Sebastian A1 - Thurner, Anette A1 - Kellersmann, Richard A1 - Lorenz, Udo T1 - Fatal Paraneoplastic Embolisms in Both Circulations in a Patient with Poorly Differentiated Neuroendocrine Tumour JF - Case Reports in Vascular Medicine N2 - Arterial embolism with lower limb ischemia is a rare manifestation of paraneoplastic hypercoagulability in cancer patients. We report a unique case of fatal thromboembolism involving both circulations associated with a poorly differentiated neuroendocrine tumor of the lung with rapid progress despite high doses of unfractioned heparin and review the current literature on anticoagulative regimen in tumour patients. KW - Medizin Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-97335 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kim, Mia A1 - Grimmig, Tanja A1 - Grimm, Martin A1 - Lazariotou, Maria A1 - Meier, Eva A1 - Rosenwald, Andreas A1 - Tsaur, Igor A1 - Blaheta, Roman A1 - Heemann, Uwe A1 - Germer, Christoph-Thomas A1 - Waaga-Gasser, Ana Maria A1 - Gasser, Martin T1 - Expression of Foxp3 in Colorectal Cancer but Not in Treg Cells Correlates with Disease Progression in Patients with Colorectal Cancer JF - PLoS ONE N2 - Background Measles virus (MV) causes T cell suppression by interference with phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K) activation. We previously found that this interference affected the activity of splice regulatory proteins and a T cell inhibitory protein isoform was produced from an alternatively spliced pre-mRNA. Hypothesis Differentially regulated and alternatively splice variant transcripts accumulating in response to PI3K abrogation in T cells potentially encode proteins involved in T cell silencing. Methods To test this hypothesis at the cellular level, we performed a Human Exon 1.0 ST Array on RNAs isolated from T cells stimulated only or stimulated after PI3K inhibition. We developed a simple algorithm based on a splicing index to detect genes that undergo alternative splicing (AS) or are differentially regulated (RG) upon T cell suppression. Results Applying our algorithm to the data, 9% of the genes were assigned as AS, while only 3% were attributed to RG. Though there are overlaps, AS and RG genes differed with regard to functional regulation, and were found to be enriched in different functional groups. AS genes targeted extracellular matrix (ECM)-receptor interaction and focal adhesion pathways, while RG genes were mainly enriched in cytokine-receptor interaction and Jak-STAT. When combined, AS/RG dependent alterations targeted pathways essential for T cell receptor signaling, cytoskeletal dynamics and cell cycle entry. Conclusions PI3K abrogation interferes with key T cell activation processes through both differential expression and alternative splicing, which together actively contribute to T cell suppression. KW - T cells KW - gene regulation KW - alternative splicing KW - measles virus KW - T cell receptors KW - reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction KW - TCR signaling cascade KW - cell cycle and cell division Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-130340 VL - 8 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schlereth, Katharina A1 - Heyl, Charlotte A1 - Krampitz, Anna-Maria A1 - Mernberger, Marco A1 - Finkernagel, Florian A1 - Scharfe, Maren A1 - Jarek, Michael A1 - Leich, Ellen A1 - Rosenwald, Andreas A1 - Stiewe, Thorsten T1 - Characterization of the p53 Cistrome - DNA Binding Cooperativity Dissects p53's Tumor Suppressor Functions JF - PLOS Genetics N2 - p53 protects us from cancer by transcriptionally regulating tumor suppressive programs designed to either prevent the development or clonal expansion of malignant cells. How p53 selects target genes in the genome in a context-and tissue-specific manner remains largely obscure. There is growing evidence that the ability of p53 to bind DNA in a cooperative manner prominently influences target gene selection with activation of the apoptosis program being completely dependent on DNA binding cooperativity. Here, we used ChIP-seq to comprehensively profile the cistrome of p53 mutants with reduced or increased cooperativity. The analysis highlighted a particular relevance of cooperativity for extending the p53 cistrome to non-canonical binding sequences characterized by deletions, spacer insertions and base mismatches. Furthermore, it revealed a striking functional separation of the cistrome on the basis of cooperativity; with low cooperativity genes being significantly enriched for cell cycle and high cooperativity genes for apoptotic functions. Importantly, expression of high but not low cooperativity genes was correlated with superior survival in breast cancer patients. Interestingly, in contrast to most p53-activated genes, p53-repressed genes did not commonly contain p53 binding elements. Nevertheless, both the degree of gene activation and repression were cooperativity-dependent, suggesting that p53-mediated gene repression is largely indirect and mediated by cooperativity-dependently transactivated gene products such as CDKN1A, E2F7 and non-coding RNAs. Since both activation of apoptosis genes with non-canonical response elements and repression of pro-survival genes are crucial for p53's apoptotic activity, the cistrome analysis comprehensively explains why p53-induced apoptosis, but not cell cycle arrest, strongly depends on the intermolecular cooperation of p53 molecules as a possible safeguard mechanism protecting from accidental cell killing. KW - cell-cycle arrest KW - gene expression KW - breast cancer KW - human genome KW - transcriptional repression KW - consensus DNA KW - in-vivo KW - apoptosis KW - network KW - damage Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-127579 SN - 1553-7404 VL - 9 IS - 8 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Linsenmann, Thomas A1 - Monoranu, Camelia M. A1 - Kessler, Almuth F. A1 - Ernestus, Ralf I. A1 - Westermaier, Thomas T1 - Bone chips, fibrin glue, and osteogeneration following lateral suboccipital craniectomy: a case report JF - BMC Research Notes N2 - Background Suboccipital craniectomy is a conventional approach for exploring cerebellopontine angle lesions. A variety of techniques have been successfully employed to reconstruct a craniectomy. This is the first report about the histological findings after performing a cranioplasty by using a mixture of autologous bone chips and human allogenic fibrin glue. Case presentation A 53-year-old German woman underwent left lateral suboccipital retrosigmoidal craniectomy for treatment of trigeminal neuralgia in 2008. Cranioplasty was perfomed by using a mixture of autologous bone chips and human allogenic fibrin glue. Due to recurrent neuralgia, a second left lateral suboccipital craniectomy was performed in 2012. The intraoperative findings revealed a complete ossification of the former craniotomy including widely mature trabecular bone tissue in the histological examination. Conclusion A mixture of autologous bone chips and human allogenic fibrin glue seems to provide sufficient bone-regeneration revealed by histological and neuroradiological examinations. KW - Bone chips KW - Fibrin glue KW - Osteogeneration KW - Lateral suboccipital craniectomy Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-97346 UR - http://www.biomedcentral.com/1756-0500/6/523 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Huang, Bei A1 - Belharazem, Djeda A1 - Li, Li A1 - Kneitz, Susanne A1 - Schnabel, Philipp A. A1 - Rieker, Ralf J. A1 - Körner, Daniel A1 - Nix, Wilfried A1 - Schalke, Berthold A1 - Müller-Hermelink, Hans Konrad A1 - Ott, German A1 - Rosenwald, Andreas A1 - Ströbel, Philipp A1 - Marx, Alexander T1 - Anti-apoptotic signature in thymic squamous cell carcinomas – functional relevance of anti-apoptotic BIRC3 expression in the thymic carcinoma cell line 1889c JF - Frontiers in Oncology N2 - The molecular pathogenesis of thymomas and thymic arcinomas (TCs) is poorly understood and results of adjuvant therapy are unsatisfactory in case of metastatic disease and tumor recurrence. For these clinical settings, novel therapeutic strategies are urgently needed. Recently, limited sequencing efforts revealed that a broad spectrum of genes that play key roles in various common cancers are rarely affected in thymomas and TCs, suggesting that other oncogenic principles might be important.This made us re-analyze historic expression data obtained in a spectrumof thymomas and thymic squamous cell carcinomas (TSCCs) with a custom-made cDNA microarray. By cluster analysis, different anti-apoptotic signatures were detected in type B3 thymoma and TSCC, including overexpression of BIRC3 in TSCCs. This was confirmed by qRT-PCR in the original and an independent validation set of tumors. In contrast to several other cancer cell lines, the BIRC3-positive TSCC cell line, 1889c showed spontaneous apoptosis after BIRC3 knock-down. Targeting apoptosis genes is worth testing as therapeutic principle in TSCC. KW - gene expression KW - MTCH2 KW - targeted KW - myasthenia gravis KW - apoptosis KW - thymus KW - thymoma KW - thymic carcinoma Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-132214 VL - 3 IS - 316 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dmochewitz, Lydia A1 - Förtsch, Christina A1 - Zwerger, Christian A1 - Vaeth, Martin A1 - Felder, Edward A1 - Huber-Lang, Markus A1 - Barth, Holger T1 - A Recombinant Fusion Toxin Based on Enzymatic Inactive C3bot1 Selectively Targets Macrophages JF - PLoS ONE N2 - Background: The C3bot1 protein (~23 kDa) from Clostridium botulinum ADP-ribosylates and thereby inactivates Rho. C3bot1 is selectively taken up into the cytosol of monocytes/macrophages but not of other cell types such as epithelial cells or fibroblasts. Most likely, the internalization occurs by a specific endocytotic pathway via acidified endosomes. Methodology/Principal Findings: Here, we tested whether enzymatic inactive C3bot1E174Q serves as a macrophage-selective transport system for delivery of enzymatic active proteins into the cytosol of such cells. Having confirmed that C3bot1E174Q does not induce macrophage activation, we used the actin ADP-ribosylating C2I (~50 kDa) from Clostridium botulinum as a reporter enzyme for C3bot1E174Q-mediated delivery into macrophages. The recombinant C3bot1E174Q-C2I fusion toxin was cloned and expressed as GST-protein in Escherichia coli. Purified C3bot1E174Q-C2I was recognized by antibodies against C2I and C3bot and showed C2I-specific enzyme activity in vitro. When applied to cultured cells C3bot1E174Q-C2I ADP-ribosylated actin in the cytosol of macrophages including J774A.1 and RAW264.7 cell lines as well as primary cultured human macrophages but not of epithelial cells. Together with confocal fluorescence microscopy experiments, the biochemical data indicate the selective uptake of a recombinant C3-fusion toxin into the cytosol of macrophages. Conclusions/Significance: In summary, we demonstrated that C3bot1E174Q can be used as a delivery system for fast, selective and specific transport of enzymes into the cytosol of living macrophages. Therefore, C3-based fusion toxins can represent valuable molecular tools in experimental macrophage pharmacology and cell biology as well as attractive candidates to develop new therapeutic approaches against macrophage-associated diseases. KW - C3 KW - mammalian cells KW - clostridium botulinum KW - ADP-ribosylation toxins KW - botulinum C2 toxin KW - membrane translocation KW - bacterial toxins KW - actin filaments KW - cellular uptake KW - ribosyltransferase Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-131189 VL - 8 IS - 1 ER -