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- Institut für Virologie und Immunbiologie (3)
Sonstige beteiligte Institutionen
Inefficient vascularisation of solid tumours leads to the formation of oxygen and nutrient gradients. In order to mimic this specific feature of the tumour microenvironment, a multicellular tumour spheroid (SPH) culture system was used. These experiments were implemented in p53 isogenic colon cancer cell lines (HCT116 p53 +/+ and HCT116 p53-/-) since Tp53 has important regulatory functions in tumour metabolism. First, the characteristics of the cells cultured as monolayers and as spheroids were investigated by using RNA sequencing and metabolomics to compare gene expression and metabolic features of cells grown in different conditions. This analysis showed that certain features of gene expression found in tumours are also present in spheroids but not in monolayer cultures, including reduced proliferation and induction of hypoxia related genes. Moreover, comparison between the different genotypes revealed that the expression of genes involved in cholesterol homeostasis is induced in p53 deficient cells compared to p53 wild type cells and this difference was only detected in spheroids and tumour samples but not in monolayer cultures. In addition, it was established that loss of p53 leads to the induction of enzymes of the mevalonate pathway via activation of the transcription factor SREBP2, resulting in a metabolic rewiring that supports the generation of ubiquinone (coenzyme Q10). An adequate supply of ubiquinone was essential to support mitochondrial electron transport and pyrimidine biosynthesis in p53 deficient cancer cells under conditions of metabolic stress. Moreover, inhibition of the mevalonate pathway using statins selectively induced oxidative stress and apoptosis in p53 deficient colon cancer cells exposed to oxygen and nutrient deprivation. This was caused by ubiquinone being required for electron transfer by dihydroorotate dehydrogenase, an essential enzyme of the pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis pathway. Supplementation with exogenous nucleosides relieved the demand for electron transfer and restored viability of p53 deficient cancer cells under metabolic stress. Moreover, the mevalonate pathway was also essential for the synthesis of ubiquinone for nucleotide biosynthesis to support growth of intestinal tumour organoids. Together, these findings highlight the importance of the mevalonate pathway in cancer cells and provide molecular evidence for an enhanced sensitivity towards the inhibition of mitochondrial electron transfer in tumour-like metabolic environments.
The FDA approval of targeted therapy with BRAFV600E inhibitors like vemurafenib and dabrafenib in 2011 has been the first major breakthrough in the treatment of metastatic melanoma since almost three decades. Despite increased progression free survival and elevated overall survival rates, complete responses are scarce due to resistance development approximately six months after the initial drug treatment. It was previously shown in our group that melanoma cells under vemurafenib pressure in vitro and in vivo exhibit features of drug-induced senescence. It is known that some cell types, which undergo this cell cycle arrest, develop a so-called senescence associated secretome and it has been reported that melanoma cell lines also upregulate the expression of different factors after senescence induction. This work describes the effect of the vemurafenib-induced secretome on cells. Conditioned supernatants of vemurafenib-treated cells increased the viability of naive fibroblast and melanoma cell lines. RNA analysis of donor melanoma cells revealed elevated transcriptional levels of FGF1, MMP2 and CCL2 in the majority of tested cell lines under vemurafenib pressure, and I could confirm the secretion of functional proteins. Similar observations were also done after MEK inhibition as well as in a combined BRAF and MEK inhibitor treatment situation. Interestingly, the transcription of other FGF ligands (FGF7, FGF17) was also elevated after MEK/ERK1/2 inhibition. As FGF receptors are therapeutically relevant, I focused on the analysis of FGFR-dependent processes in response to BRAF inhibition. Recombinant FGF1 increased the survival rate of melanoma cells under vemurafenib pressure, while inhibition of the FGFR pathway diminished the viability of melanoma cells in combination with vemurafenib and blocked the stimulatory effect of vemurafenib conditioned medium. The BRAF inhibitor induced secretome is regulated by active PI3K/AKT signaling, and the joint inhibition of mTor and BRAFV600E led to decreased senescence induction and to a diminished induction of the secretome-associated genes. In parallel, combined inhibition of MEK and PI3K also drastically decreased mRNA levels of the relevant secretome components back to basal levels.
In summary, I could demonstrate that BRAF inhibitor treated melanoma cell lines acquire a specific PI3K/AKT dependent secretome, which is characterized by FGF1, CCL2 and MMP2. This secretome is able to stimulate other cells such as naive melanoma cells and fibroblasts and contributes to a better survival under drug pressure. These data are therapeutically highly relevant, as they imply the usage of novel drug combinations, especially specific FGFR inhibitors, with BRAF inhibitors in the clinic.
The plasma membrane is one of the most thoroughly studied and at the same time most complex, diverse, and least understood cellular structures. Its function is determined by the molecular composition as well as the spatial arrangement of its components. Even after decades of extensive membrane research and the proposal of dozens of models and theories, the structural organization of plasma membranes remains largely unknown. Modern imaging tools such as super-resolution fluorescence microscopy are one of the most efficient techniques in life sciences and are widely used to study the spatial arrangement and quantitative behavior of biomolecules in fixed and living cells. In this work, direct stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (dSTORM) was used to investigate the structural distribution of mem-brane components with virtually molecular resolution. Key issues are different preparation and staining strategies for membrane imaging as well as localization-based quantitative analyses of membrane molecules.
An essential precondition for the spatial and quantitative analysis of membrane components is the prevention of photoswitching artifacts in reconstructed localization microscopy images. Therefore, the impact of irradiation intensity, label density and photoswitching behavior on the distribution of plasma membrane and mitochondrial membrane proteins in dSTORM images was investigated. It is demonstrated that the combination of densely labeled plasma membranes and inappropriate photoswitching rates induces artificial membrane clusters. Moreover, inhomogeneous localization distributions induced by projections of three-dimensional membrane structures such as microvilli and vesicles are prone to generate artifacts in images of biological membranes. Alternative imaging techniques and ways to prevent artifacts in single-molecule localization microscopy are presented and extensively discussed.
Another central topic addresses the spatial organization of glycosylated components covering the cell membrane. It is shown that a bioorthogonal chemical reporter system consisting of modified monosaccharide precursors and organic fluorophores can be used for specific labeling of membrane-associated glycoproteins and –lipids. The distribution of glycans was visualized by dSTORM showing a homogeneous molecule distribution on different mammalian cell lines without the presence of clusters. An absolute number of around five million glycans per cell was estimated and the results show that the combination of metabolic labeling, click chemistry, and single-molecule localization microscopy can be efficiently used to study cell surface glycoconjugates.
In a third project, dSTORM was performed to investigate low-expressing receptors on cancer cells which can act as targets in personalized immunotherapy. Primary multiple myeloma cells derived from the bone marrow of several patients were analyzed for CD19 expression as potential target for chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-modified T cells. Depending on the patient, 60–1,600 CD19 molecules per cell were quantified and functional in vitro tests demonstrate that the threshold for CD19 CAR T recognition is below 100 CD19 molecules per target cell. Results are compared with flow cytometry data, and the important roles of efficient labeling and appropriate control experiments are discussed.
Modulation of insulin-induced genotoxicity in vitro and genomic damage in gestational diabetes
(2019)
Diabetes mellitus is a global health problem, where the risk of diabetes increases rapidly
due to the lifestyle changes. Patients with type II diabetes have many complications
with increased risk of morbidity and mortality. High levels of insulin may lead to DNA
oxidation and damage. Several studies proposed that hyperinsulinemia may be an
important risk factor for various types of cancer. To investigate insulin signaling
pathway inducing oxidative stress and genomic damage, pharmaceutical and natural
compounds which can interfere with the insulin pathway including PI3K inhibitors,
resveratrol, lovastatin, and RAD-001 were selected due to their beneficial effects
against metabolic disorder. Thus, the anti-genotoxic potential of these compounds
regarding insulin-mediated oxidative stress were investigated in normal rat kidney cells
in vitro. Our compounds showed protective effect against genotoxic damage and
significantly decreased reactive oxygen specious after treatment of cells with insulin
with different mechanisms of protection between the compounds. Thus, these
compounds may be attractive candidates for future support of diabetes mellitus therapy.
Next, we explored the link between gestational diabetes mellitus and genomic damage
in cells derived from human blood. Moreover, we investigated the influence of
estradiol, progesterone, adrenaline and triiodothyronine on insulin-induced genomic
damage in vitro. First, we studied the effect of these hormones in human promyelocytic
leukemia cells and next ex vivo with non-stimulated and stimulated peripheral blood
mononuclear cells. In parallel, we also measured the basal genomic damage using three
conditions (whole blood, non-stimulated and stimulated peripheral blood mononuclear
cells) in a small patient study including non-pregnant controls with/without hormonal
contraceptives, with a subgroup of obese women, pregnant women, and gestational
diabetes affected women. A second-time point after delivery was also applied for
analysis of the blood samples. Our results showed that GDM subjects and obese
individuals exhibited higher basal DNA damage compared to lower weight nonpregnant
or healthy pregnant women in stimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells
in both comet and micronucleus assays. On the other hand, the DNA damage in GDM
women had decreased at two months after birth. Moreover, the applied hormones also
showed an influence in vitro in the enhancement of the genomic damage in cells of the control and pregnant groups but this damage did not exceed the damage which existed
in obese and gestational diabetes mellitus patients with high level of genomic damage.
In conclusion, insulin can induce genomic damage in cultured cells, which can be
modulated by pharmaceutical and naturals substances. This may be for future use in the
protection of diabetic patients, who suffer from hyperinsulinemia during certain disease
stages. A particular form of diabetes, GDM, was shown to lead to elevated DNA
damage in affected women, which is reduced again after delivery. Cells of affected
women do not show an enhanced, but rather a reduced sensitivity for further DNA
damage induction by hormonal treatment in vitro. A potential reason may be an
existence of a maximally inducible damage by hormonal influences.
Neurodevelopmental disorders, including attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are disorders of mostly unknown etiopathogenesis, for which both genetic and environmental influences are expected to contribute to the phenotype observed in patients. Changes at all levels of brain function, from network connectivity between brain areas, over neuronal survival, synaptic connectivity and axonal growth, down to molecular changes and epigenetic modifications are suspected to play a key roles in these diseases, resulting in life-long behavioural changes.
Genome-wide association as well as copy-number variation studies have linked cadherin-13 (CDH13) as a novel genetic risk factor to neuropsychiatric and neurodevelopmental disorders. CDH13 is highly expressed during embryonic brain development, as well as in the adult brain, where it is present in regions including the hippocampus, striatum and thalamus (among others) and is upregulated in response to chronic stress exposure. It is however unclear how CDH13 interacts with environmentally relevant cues, including stressful triggers, in the formation of long-lasting behavioural and molecular changes. It is currently unknown how the environment influences CDH13 and which long term changes in behaviour and gene expression are caused by their interaction. This work therefore investigates the interaction between CDH13 deficiency and neonatal maternal separation (MS) in mice with the aim to elucidate the function of CDH13 and its role in the response to early-life stress (ELS).
For this purpose, mixed litters of wild-type (Cdh13+/+), heterozygous (Cdh13+/-) and homozygous knockout (Cdh13-/-) mice were maternally separated from postnatal day 1 (PN1) to postnatal day 14 (PN14) for 3 hours each day (180MS; PN1-PN14). In a first series of experiments, these mice were subjected to a battery of behavioural tests starting at 8 weeks of age in order to assess motor activity, memory functions as well as measures of anxiety. Subsequently, expression of RNA in various brain regions was measured using quantitativ real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR). A second cohort of mice was exposed to the same MS procedure, but was not behaviourally tested, to assess molecular changes in hippocampus using RNA sequencing.
Behavioural analysis revealed that MS had an overall anxiolytic-like effect, with mice after MS spending more time in the open arms of the elevated-plus-maze (EPM) and the light compartment in the light-dark box (LDB). As a notable exception, Cdh13-/- mice did not show an increase of time spent in the light compartment after MS compared to Cdh13+/+ and Cdh13+/- MS mice. During the Barnes-maze learning task, mice of most groups showed a similar ability in learning the location of the escape hole, both in terms of primary latency and primary errors. Cdh13-/- control (CTRL) mice however committed more primary errors than Cdh13-/- MS mice. In the contextual fear conditioning (cFC) test, Cdh13-/- mice showed more freezing responses during the extinction recall, indicating a reduced extinction of fear memory. In the step-down test, an impulsivity task, Cdh13-/- mice had a tendency to wait longer before stepping down from the platform, indicative of more hesitant behaviour. In the same animals, qRT-PCR of several brain areas revealed changes in the GABAergic and glutamatergic systems, while also highlighting changes in the gatekeeper enzyme Glykogensynthase-Kinase 3 (Gsk3a), both in relation to Cdh13 deficiency and MS. Results from the RNA sequencing study and subsequent gene-set enrichment analysis revealed changes in adhesion and developmental genes due to Cdh13 deficiency, while also highlighting a strong link between CDH13 and endoplasmatic reticulum function. In addition, some results suggest that MS increased pro-survival pathways, while a gene x environment analysis showed alterations in apoptotic pathways and migration, as well as immune factors and membrane metabolism. An analysis of the overlap between gene and environment, as well as their interaction, highlighted an effect on cell adhesion factors, underscoring their importance for adaptation to the environment.
Overall, the stress model resulted in increased stress resilience in Cdh13+/+ and Cdh13+/- mice, a change absent in Cdh13-/- mice, suggesting a role of CDH13 during programming and adaptation to early-life experiences, that can results in long-lasting consequences on brain functions and associated behaviours. These changes were also visible in the RNA sequencing, where key pathways for cell-cell adhesion, neuronal survival and cell-stress adaptation were altered. In conclusion, these findings further highlight the role of CDH13 during brain development, while also shedding light on its function in the adaptation and response during (early life) environmental challenges.
FinO domain proteins such as ProQ of the model pathogen Salmonella enterica have emerged as a new class of major RNA-binding proteins in bacteria. ProQ has been shown to target hundreds of transcripts, including mRNAs from many virulence regions, but its role, if any, in bacterial pathogenesis has not been studied. Here, using a Dual RNA-seq approach to profile ProQ-dependent gene expression changes as Salmonella infects human cells, we reveal dysregulation of bacterial motility, chemotaxis, and virulence genes which is accompanied by altered MAPK (mitogen-activated protein kinase) signaling in the host. Comparison with the other major RNA chaperone in Salmonella, Hfq, reinforces the notion that these two global RNA-binding proteins work in parallel to ensure full virulence. Of newly discovered infection-associated ProQ-bound small noncoding RNAs (sRNAs), we show that the 3′UTR-derived sRNA STnc540 is capable of repressing an infection-induced magnesium transporter mRNA in a ProQ-dependent manner. Together, this comprehensive study uncovers the relevance of ProQ for Salmonella pathogenesis and highlights the importance of RNA-binding proteins in regulating bacterial virulence programs.
IMPORTANCE
The protein ProQ has recently been discovered as the centerpiece of a previously overlooked “third domain” of small RNA-mediated control of gene expression in bacteria. As in vitro work continues to reveal molecular mechanisms, it is also important to understand how ProQ affects the life cycle of bacterial pathogens as these pathogens infect eukaryotic cells. Here, we have determined how ProQ shapes Salmonella virulence and how the activities of this RNA-binding protein compare with those of Hfq, another central protein in RNA-based gene regulation in this and other bacteria. To this end, we apply global transcriptomics of pathogen and host cells during infection. In doing so, we reveal ProQ-dependent transcript changes in key virulence and host immune pathways. Moreover, we differentiate the roles of ProQ from those of Hfq during infection, for both coding and noncoding transcripts, and provide an important resource for those interested in ProQ-dependent small RNAs in enteric bacteria.
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.
The nuclear envelope serves as important messenger RNA (mRNA) surveillance system. In yeast and human, several control systems act in parallel to prevent nuclear export of unprocessed mRNAs. Trypanosomes lack homologues to most of the involved proteins and their nuclear mRNA metabolism is non-conventional exemplified by polycistronic transcription and mRNA processing by trans-splicing. We here visualized nuclear export in trypanosomes by intra- and intermolecular multi-colour single molecule FISH. We found that, in striking contrast to other eukaryotes, the initiation of nuclear export requires neither the completion of transcription nor splicing. Nevertheless, we show that unspliced mRNAs are mostly prevented from reaching the nucleus-distant cytoplasm and instead accumulate at the nuclear periphery in cytoplasmic nuclear periphery granules (NPGs). Further characterization of NPGs by electron microscopy and proteomics revealed that the granules are located at the cytoplasmic site of the nuclear pores and contain most cytoplasmic RNA-binding proteins but none of the major translation initiation factors, consistent with a function in preventing faulty mRNAs from reaching translation. Our data indicate that trypanosomes regulate the completion of nuclear export, rather than the initiation. Nuclear export control remains poorly understood, in any organism, and the described way of control may not be restricted to trypanosomes.
Proteine können aufgrund ihrer biochemischen Vielfalt eine Vielzahl von Interaktionen
mit anderen Proteinen oder chemischen Verbindungen eingehen. Im ersten Teil dieser
Arbeit wurden Protein-Protein Interaktionen mittels chemischen Quervernetzens
untersucht. Das Ziel war, neue und verbesserte Methoden zu entwickeln, um
Interaktionsnetzwerke zu erstellen. Im zweiten Teil wurden die Interaktionen von
Proteinen mit niedermolekularen Verbindungen untersucht, um Drug Targets zu
identifizieren und zu validieren.
Die Untersuchung von Protein-Protein Interaktionen mittels Massenspektrometrie (MS)
ist eine leistungsfähige Methode, um alle potentiellen Interaktionen eines Proteins nach
einer Anreicherung (Co-IP) aus einem Zelllysat zu detektieren. Durch das zusätzliche
Quervernetzen dieser Proteine und anschließender MS kann ein Interaktionsnetzwerk
erstellt werden, um direkte von indirekten Interaktionen unterscheiden zu können
(Topology Mapping). Zur Methodenetablierung wurden kommerzielle Crosslinker und
rekombinante Proteine von bekannten Interaktionspartnern mit niedriger Komplexität
verwendet. Die beiden Interaktionspartner NPL4 und UFD1 konnten mit dem Crosslinker
BS3 erfolgreich quervernetzt und anhand der vernetzten Peptide identifiziert werden. Im
nächsten Schritt wurde dieser Arbeitsablauf auf eine Co-IP des Mediatorkomplexes aus
Hefe angewendet. Die Probenkomplexität ist hierbei 500 - 1000-fach höher als bei der
Verwendung von rekombinanten Proteinen. Nach der erfolgreichen Quervernetzung
konnte innerhalb des Komplexes ein Interaktionsnetzwerk erstellt werden. Diese Daten
passen zu dem bereits bekannten Modell des Mediatorkomplexes. Interaktionen zu
bekannten Interaktionspartnern, wie der RNA-Pol II, konnten aufgrund deren
substöchiometrischen Anreicherung nicht identifiziert werden.
Aufgrund der genannten Limitationen beim Quervernetzen von Proteinen wurden
folgende neue und verbesserte Methoden entwickelt:
1. Verwendung des spaltbaren Crosslinkers (DSSO), der während der Messung selektiv
durch niedrige Kollisionsenergie gespalten werden kann, um die Datenbanksuche zu
vereinfachen. Die Funktionalität der DSSO-Strategie konnte erfolgreich am Protein
Cytochrom C getestet werden. Bei der ersten Fragmentierung wird der Linker gespalten, anschließend können die getrennten Peptide separat fragmentiert werden. Die erzeugten
Daten sind mit einer Standarddatenbanksuche kompatibel, was bei gemischten Spektren
von zwei Peptiden nicht der Fall wäre. Beim Quervernetzen der rekombinanten
Interaktionspartner UBX und p97N mit DSSO konnte der zu bestätigende Crosslink
zwischen zwei Lysinen nicht identifziert werden. Grund hierfür könnte eine zu kurze
Linkerlänge von DSSO sein. Diese Versuche brachten jedoch einige Limitationen des
Ansatzes zum Vorschein, wie die Beschränkung auf die Protease Trypsin, aufgrund der
positiven Ladung am C-Terminus und die Notwendigkeit von großen Proteinmengen, da
das Spalten des Linkers einen zusätzlichen Intensitätsverlust für die folgende
Identifizierung der Peptide mit sich bringt.
2. Da die niedrige Abundanz von quervernetzten Peptiden das Hauptproblem bei deren
Identifizierung ist, wurde eine Methode entwickelt, um während der Messung direkt nach
diesen niedrig abundanten Spezies zu suchen. Entscheidendes Kriterium hierfür war, dass
quervernetzte Peptide zwei C-Termini haben. Diese wurden zur Hälfte enzymatisch mit
18O bzw. 16O markiert und wieder vereinigt. Der resultierende Massenunterschied von 8
Da (4 x 18O) kommt ausschließlich bei zwei quervernetzten Peptiden vor und kann
während der Messung direkt gesucht werden. Die vollständige Markierung von Peptiden
mit 18O wurde zunächst am Protein Beta-Galaktosidase getestet. Bereits hier stellte sich
heraus, dass der enzymatische Rücktausch von 18O zu 16O ein Problem darstellt und die
Markierungseffizienz von Aminosäuren beeinflusst wird, die sich C-terminal nach der
Spaltstelle befinden. Mit dieser Strategie ließ sich somit keine vollständige Markierung
für alle Peptide erreichen, was für diese Strategie essentiell gewesen wäre.
3. Um alle Probleme zu umgehen, die bei der Identifizierung von quervernetzten Peptiden
auftreten, wurde eine Methode entwickelt, um quervernetzte Proteine anhand von Profilen
nach einer Auftrennung im Polyacrylamidgel (SDS-PAGE) zu identifizieren. Durch das
Quervernetzen von Proteinen entstehen zusätzliche Proteinbanden nach einer SDSPAGE,
die im Gel nach oben verschoben sind. Alle Proteine in diesen neu erzeugten
Bereichen stellen somit potentielle Interaktionspartner dar. Als Modellsystem wurde der
Mediatorkomplex verwendet. Er wurde aus einem Zelllysat mittels Co-IP angereichert
und anschließend quervernetzt. Aus den mittels LC-MS/MS gemessenen Gelfraktionen wurden Proteinprofile erstellt und miteinander verglichen. Die Intensitätsmaxima der
Proteine des Mediatorkomplexes konnten in bestimmten zusätzlichen Fraktionen
gefunden werden, was den indirekten Nachweis für eine Interaktion darstellt. Die
Funktionalität der Strategie konnte somit bestätigt werden. Ein verbleibender Nachteil ist
jedoch die zu geringe Trennleistung von Polyacrylamidgelen. Befinden sich mehr als 50
Proteine in einer Fraktion, können potentielle Interaktionspartner nicht eindeutig zu einer
Untereinheit eines Komplexes zugeordnet werden.
Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit wurde im Rahmen der Klinischen Forschergruppe 216
(CRU216) Interaktionen von Proteinen mit verschiedenen niedermolekularen
Verbindungen massenspektrometrisch untersucht, um potentielle Drug Targets zu
identifizieren. Diese Versuche sind vergleichbar mit Co-IP Experimenten, da sich der
Arbeitsablauf nur durch die Anreicherung mittels chemischer Verbindung unterscheidet.
Hierzu wurden biotinylierte Verbindungen immobilisiert und potentielle Drug Targets
aus einem komplexen Zelllysat angereichert. Die Identifzierung der echten
Bindungspartner wurde über quantitive Massenspektrometrie erreicht. Dabei wurden die
angereicherten Proteine, die an die niedermolekularen Substanzen binden mit einer
geeigneten Kontrollanreicherung verglichen. Mit den getesteten α-acyl
Aminocarboxamiden konnten verschiedene Proteinkomplexe und interagierende Proteine
spezifisch angereichert werden. Hierbei waren die vier Kinasen DNA-PK, ATM, ATR
und mTOR besonders interessant, da sie mit onkogenem Signalling und
Überlebensmechanismen wie der Hitzeschockantwort in Zellen des Multiplen Myeloms
(MM) in Verbidnung stehen. Die Inhibition der DNA-PK, ATM, ATR und mTOR mit α-
acyl Aminocarboxamiden stellt somit einen möglichen Therapieansatz dar, wenn er
zusammen mit hitzestressauslösenden Inhibitoren verwendet wird. Weiterhin konnte
gezeigt werden, dass die Armadillodomäne innerhalb der potentiellen Drug targets
signifkant angereichert wurde. Sie stellt damit eine potentielle Bindestelle der α-acyl
Aminocarboxamide dar.
Abschließend wurden Proteine mit biotinylierten Naphtylisochinolinen aus einem MMZelllysat
angereichert, deren Vorläufersubstanzen eine Wirkung auf Tumorzellen und den Malariaparasit Plasmodium falciparum gezeigt hatten. Hierbei konnten vor allem RNAbindende-
und mRNA-Splicing Proteine identifiziert werden, die zum Teil essentiell für
das Spleißen in-vivo sind. Hierzu gehören mehrere Untereinheiten der Splicing Factoren
3A und 3B. Die Veränderung der transkriptionellen Regulation und der resultierende
Effekt auf Krebszellen konnte bereits in anderen Studien mit dem Inhibitor Spliceostatin
A gezeigt werden, der das Spleißen beeinflusst.
The skeletal system forms the mechanical structure of the body and consists of bone, which is hard connective tissue. The tasks the skeleton and bones take over are of mechanical, metabolic and synthetic nature. Lastly, bones enable the production of blood cells by housing the bone marrow. Bone has a scarless self-healing capacity to a certain degree. Injuries exceeding this capacity caused by trauma, surgical removal of infected or tumoral bone or as a result from treatment-related osteonecrosis, will not heal. Critical size bone defects that will not heal by themselves are still object of comprehensive clinical investigation. The conventional treatments often result in therapies including burdening methods as for example the harvesting of autologous bone material. The aim of this thesis was the creation of a prevascularized bone implant employing minimally invasive methods in order to minimize inconvenience for patients and surgical site morbidity. The basis for the implant was a decellularized, naturally derived vascular scaffold (BioVaSc-TERM®) providing functional vessel structures after reseeding with autologous endothelial cells. The bone compartment was built by the combination of the aforementioned scaffold with synthetic β-tricalcium phosphate. In vitro culture for tissue maturation was performed using bioreactor technology before the testing of the regenerative potential of the implant in large animal experiments in sheep. A tibia defect was treated without the anastomosis of the implant’s innate vasculature to the host’s circulatory system and in a second study, with anastomosis of the vessel system in a mandibular defect. While the non-anastomosed implant revealed a mostly osteoconductive effect, the implants that were anastomosed achieved formation of bony islands evenly distributed over the defect.
In order to prepare preconditions for a rapid approval of an implant making use of this vascularization strategy, the manufacturing of the BioVaSc-TERM® as vascularizing scaffold was adjusted to GMP requirements.