Refine
Has Fulltext
- yes (8)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (8)
Document Type
- Journal article (4)
- Doctoral Thesis (4)
Keywords
- integrins (8) (remove)
Institute
- Rudolf-Virchow-Zentrum (4)
- Medizinische Klinik (bis 2004) (2)
- Graduate School of Life Sciences (1)
- Institut für Experimentelle Biomedizin (1)
- Institut für Klinische Biochemie und Pathobiochemie (1)
- Klinik und Poliklinik für Dermatologie, Venerologie und Allergologie (1)
- Lehrstuhl für Molekulare Psychiatrie (1)
- Medizinische Klinik und Poliklinik II (1)
- Neurologische Klinik und Poliklinik (1)
- Universität Würzburg (1)
Background
Serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamin, 5-HT) is an indolamine platelet agonist, biochemically derived from tryptophan. 5-HT is secreted from the enterochromaffin cells into the gastrointestinal tract and blood. Blood 5-HT has been proposed to regulate hemostasis by acting as a vasoconstrictor and by triggering platelet signaling through 5-HT receptor 2A (5HTR2A). Although platelets do not synthetize 5-HT, they take 5-HT up from the blood and store it in their dense granules which are secreted upon platelet activation.
Objective
To identify the molecular composite of the 5-HT uptake system in platelets and elucidate the role of platelet released 5-HT in thrombosis and ischemic stroke. Methods: 5-HT transporter knockout mice (5Htt\(^{-/-}\)) were analyzed in different in vitro and in vivo assays and in a model of ischemic stroke.
Results
In 5Htt\(^{-/-}\) platelets, 5-HT uptake from the blood was completely abolished and agonist-induced Ca2+ influx through store operated Ca\(^{2+}\) entry (SOCE), integrin activation, degranulation and aggregation responses to glycoprotein VI (GPVI) and C-type lectin-like receptor 2 (CLEC-2) were reduced. These observed in vitro defects in 5Htt\(^{-/-}\) platelets could be normalized by the addition of exogenous 5-HT. Moreover, reduced 5-HT levels in the plasma, an increased bleeding time and the formation of unstable thrombi were observed ex vivo under flow and in vivo in the abdominal aorta and carotid artery of 5Htt\(^{-/-}\) mice. Surprisingly, in the transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (tMCAO) model of ischemic stroke 5Htt\(^{-/-}\) mice showed nearly normal infarct volume and the neurological outcome was comparable to control mice.
Conclusion
Although secreted platelet 5-HT does not appear to play a crucial role in the development of reperfusion injury after stroke, it is essential to amplify the second phase of platelet activation through SOCE and plays an important role in thrombus stabilization.
Integrin αIIbβ3 plays a central role in the adhesion and aggregation of platelets and thus is essential for hemostasis and thrombosis. Integrin activation requires the transmission of a signal from the small cytoplasmic tails of the α or β subunit to the large extracellular domains resulting in conformational changes of the extracellular domains to enable ligand binding. Hydrogen peroxide-inducible clone-5 (Hic-5), a member of the paxillin family, serves as a focal adhesion adaptor protein associated with αIIbβ3 at its cytoplasmic tails. Previous studies suggested Hic-5 as a novel regulator of integrin αIIbβ3 activation and platelet aggregation in mice. To assess this in more detail, we generated Hic-5-null mice and analyzed activation and aggregation of their platelets in vitro and in vivo. Surprisingly, lack of Hic-5 had no detectable effect on platelet integrin activation and function in vitro and in vivo under all tested conditions. These results indicate that Hic-5 is dispensable for integrin αIIbβ3 activation and consequently for arterial thrombosis and hemostasis in mice.
Critical illness like sepsis, shock, and intestinal bowel disease are one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in the US and around the world. At present, studies to define new therapeutic interventions that can protect tissues and cells against injury and attenuate inflammation are fields of intense investigation. While research over the past decade has clearly identified GLN as a vital stress substrate facilitating cellular survival following injury, the initiation steps in GLN’s cytoprotective molecular mechanism still remain elusive. Previously published work suggested that stabilization of ECM proteins and activation of ECM receptor osmosignaling may play a central role in the orchestration of many cellular pathways following stress. Thus, I hypothesized that preservation of ECM protein and EGFR levels as well as ECM receptor signaling play key roles in the molecular mechanisms underlying GLN’s protection against thermal injury in the intestine. I was able to confirm via Western blotting and by using silencing RNA against FN, Ntn-1, EGFR, and their negative controls, that GLN-mediated preservation of FN, Ntn-1, and EGFR levels is critical in GLN’s protection against hyperthermia in IEC-6 cells. By using a selective FN-Integrin interaction inhibitor GRGDSP, its negative control peptide GRGESP, and Src-kinase inhibitor PP2, I showed that FN-Integrin signaling and Src-kinase activation are essential in GLN-mediated protection in the intestine. This applied to EGFR signaling as demonstrated using the EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor AG1478. In addition to GRGDSP and AG1478, ERK1/2 inhibitors PD98059 and UO126 as well as the p38MAPK inhibitor SB203580 revealed that GLN is protective by activating ERK1/2 and dephosphorylating p38MAPK via FN-Integrin and EGFR signaling. However, GLN-mediated PI3-K/Akt/Hsp70 activation seems to occur independently of FN-Integrin and EGFR signaling as indicated by Western blots as well as experiments using the PI3-K inhibitor LY294002, GRGDSP, and AG1478. The results showed that GLN activates cell survival signaling pathways via integrins as well as EGFRs after hyperthermia. Moreover, I found that GLN-mediated preservation of FN expression after HS is regulated via PI3-K signaling. Whether GLN-mediated PI3-K signaling happens simultaneously to FN-Integrin and EGFR signaling or whether PI3-K signaling coordinates FN-Integrin and EGFR signaling needs to be investigated in future studies. Further, experiments with PD98059 and GRGDSP revealed that ERK1/2 assists in mediating transactivation of HSF-1 following HS. This leads to increases in Hsp70 expression via FN-Integrin signaling, which is known to attenuate apoptosis after thermal injury. Fluorescence microscopy results indicated that HS and GLN regulate cell are size changes and the morphology of F-actin via FN-Integrin signaling. Experiments using GRGDSP and GRGESP showed that GLN enhances cellular survival via FN-Integrin signaling in a manner that does not require increased intracellular GLN concentrations (as quantified using LC-MS/MS). In summary, my thesis work gives new and potentially clinically relevant mechanistic insights into GLN-mediated molecular cell survival pathways. These results warrant clinical translation to assess if clinical outcome of critically ill patients suffering from gastrointestinal diseases can be improved by GLN treatment and/or by targeting the molecular pathways found in my studies.
von Willebrand factor/ristocetin (vWF/R) induces GPIb-dependent platelet agglutination and activation of αIIbβ3 integrin, which also binds vWF. These conditions make it difficult to investigate GPIb-specific signaling pathways in washed platelets. Here, we investigated the specific mechanisms of GPIb signaling using echicetin-coated polystyrene beads, which specifically activate GPIb. We compared platelet activation induced by echicetin beads to vWF/R. Human platelets were stimulated with polystyrene beads coated with increasing amounts of echicetin and platelet activation by echicetin beads was then investigated to reveal GPIb specific signaling. Echicetin beads induced αIIbβ3-dependent aggregation of washed platelets, while under the same conditions vWF/R treatment led only to αIIbβ3-independent platelet agglutination. The average distance between the echicetin molecules on the polystyrene beads must be less than 7 nm for full platelet activation, while the total amount of echicetin used for activation is not critical. Echicetin beads induced strong phosphorylation of several proteins including p38, ERK and PKB. Synergistic signaling via P2Y12 and thromboxane receptor through secreted ADP and TxA2, respectively, were important for echicetin bead triggered platelet activation. Activation of PKG by the NO/sGC/cGMP pathway inhibited echicetin bead-induced platelet aggregation. Echicetin-coated beads are powerful and reliable tools to study signaling in human platelets activated solely via GPIb and GPIb-triggered pathways.
Integrine sind heterodimere, transmembranöse, ubiquitär vorkommende Glycoproteinrezeptoren, die aus einer alpha und einer beta Untereinheit bestehen und die Extrazellulärmatrix über verschiedene Signalwege mit dem Zytoskelett verbinden. In dieser Arbeit wurde die funktionelle Bedeutung des beta-1-Integrins bei der Entwicklung einer kardialen Hypertrophie und Insuffizienz am herzspezifischen konditionalen beta-1-Integrin Knock Out Mausmodell mit morphologischen, histologischen, echokardiographischen, proteinanalytischen und immunhistochemischen Essungen und Methoden untersucht. Hämodynamische Druckbelastung des Myokards ausgelöst durch transversales Aortic Banding führte bei den Knock Out Tieren verglichen mit Kontrolltieren zu folgenden Ergebnissen: erhöhte postoperative Mortalität, Reduktion der linksventrikulären Hypertrophie und Kontraktilität, Reduktion der Src-Aktivität bei unveränderter FAK-Aktivität sieben Tage postoperativ, sowie Reduktion der Erk 1/2 und P38 MAP Kinase Aktivität zwei, aber nicht sieben Tage postoperativ. Immunhistochemisch konnten das beta-1-Integrin, FAK und Src in der Kardiomyozytenmembran, im Gefäßendothel und teilweise in den Disci Intercalares nachgewiesen werden. Die enorme Bedeutung des beta-1-Integrins bei der Hypertrophieentstehung konnte somit bei Mäusen in vivo gezeigt werden. Für ein vollkommenes Verständnis der molekularen Zusammenhänge im hypertrophierenden Myokard bedarf es allerdings noch weiterer intensiver Forschung.
Chronische Drucküberlastung des adulten Herzens führt zu Umbauvorgängen in der Extrazellulärmatrix und zur Hypertrophie der Herzmuskelzellen. Dabei kommt es zur Aktivierung von Integrinrezeptoren und der dadurch induzierten Entstehung des sogenannten fokalen Adhäsionskomplexes im Zytoskelett der Herzmuskelzelle. Dies konnte kürzlich im Modell der rechtsventrikulären Drucküberlastung an der Katze gezeigt werden. (Laser M et al., J. Biol. Chem, 2000). Um zu testen, ob die Integrinaktivierunng und der Umbau des Zytoskeletts im Hypertrophieprozess des linken Ventrikels eine Rolle spielen, wurden ausgewachsene Mäuse (30g Körpergewicht) nach Konstriktion der transversalen Aorta analysiert und mit scheinoperierten Mäusen verglichen. Morphologisch zeigte sich bei den drucküberlasteten Tieren eine signifikante Herzhypertrophie bezogen auf Körpergewicht und Tibialänge innerhalb eines Monats. Keine Unterschiede fanden sich bei der hämodynamischen Charakterisierung für die in vivo gemessene Herzfrequenz, während der systolische Druck und der enddiastolische Druck signifikant erhöht waren. Zur Western Blot-Analyse wurden jeweils eine Detergens-lösliche sowie eine unlösliche Fraktion (Zytoskelett) der Herzen präpariert. Dabei zeigten sich im Zytoskelett verschiedene tyrosinphosphorylierte Proteine bei 160, 125, 75 und 60 kD, beginnend drei Tage nach Drucküberlastung. Zwei dieser Banden konnten wir als Zytoskelett-assoziierte Tyrosinkinasen, „focal adhesion kinase“(Fak) und c-Src, identifizieren, welche beide zum sogenannten Integrin-abhängigen fokalen Adhäsionskomplex gehören. Weitere Analysen zeigten Phosphorylierungen von Fak bei Tyr-397 und Tyr-925, c-Src bei Tyr-418. Dies lässt darauf schließen, dass beide Kinasen aktiviert sind. Aus diesen Daten wird deutlich, dass eine Aktivierung von Integrinrezeptoren und die Formation des fokalen Adhäsionskomplexes auch im Hypertrophieprozess des linken Ventrikels eine Rolle spielen. Um den Einfluss der Integrin-vermittelten Signalwege auf die Entwicklung der Hypertrophie und deren Signaltransduktion weiter zu testen, wurde eine konditionale „knock-out“-Mauslinie (Cre/loxP-System mit MLC-2v-Promotor) etabliert. Bei diesen Mäusen ist das beta.1-Integrin-Gen selektiv im Myokard ausgeschaltet. Die Ergebnisse aus Phänotypisierung und Charakterisierung dieser Mauslinie im Hypertrophieprozess stehen noch aus.
Background
Platelets are anuclear cell fragments derived from bone marrow megakaryocytes that safeguard vascular integrity by forming thrombi at sites of vascular injury. Although the early events of thrombus formation—platelet adhesion and aggregation—have been intensively studied, less is known about the mechanisms and receptors that stabilize platelet-platelet interactions once a thrombus has formed. One receptor that has been implicated in this process is the signaling lymphocyte activation molecule (SLAM) family member CD84, which can undergo homophilic interactions and becomes phosphorylated upon platelet aggregation.
Objective
The role of CD84 in platelet physiology and thrombus formation was investigated in CD84-deficient mice.
Methods and Results
We generated CD84-deficient mice and analyzed their platelets in vitro and in vivo. \(Cd84^{−/−}\) platelets exhibited normal activation and aggregation responses to classical platelet agonists. Furthermore, CD84 deficiency did not affect integrin-mediated clot retraction and spreading of activated platelets on fibrinogen. Notably, also the formation of stable three-dimensional thrombi on collagen-coated surfaces under flow ex vivo was unaltered in the blood of \(Cd84^{−/−}\) mice. In vivo, \(Cd84^{−/−}\) mice exhibited unaltered hemostatic function and arterial thrombus
formation.
Conclusion
These results show that CD84 is dispensable for thrombus formation and stabilization, indicating that its deficiency may be functionally compensated by other receptors or that it may be important for platelet functions different from platelet-platelet interactions.
Pro-migratory signals mediated by the tumor microenvironment contribute to the cancer progression cascade, including invasion, metastasis and resistance to therapy. Derived from in vitro studies, isolated molecular steps of cancer invasion programs have been identified but their integration into the tumor microenvironment and suitability as molecular targets remain elusive. The purpose of the study was to visualize central aspects of tumor progression, including proliferation, survival and invasion by real-time intravital microscopy. The specific aims were to monitor the kinetics, mode, adhesion and chemoattraction mechanisms of tumor cell invasion, the involved guidance structures, and the response of invasion zones to anti-cancer therapy. To reach deeper tumor regions by optical imaging with subcellular resolution, near-infrared and infrared excited multiphoton microscopy was combined with a modified dorsal skinfold chamber model. Implanted HT-1080 fibrosarcoma and B16/F10 and MV3 melanoma tumors developed zones of invasive growth consisting of collective invasion strands that retained cell-cell contacts and high mitotic activity while invading at velocities of up to 200 μm per day. Collective invasion occurred predominantly along preexisting tissue structures, including blood and lymph vessels, collagen fibers and muscle strands of the deep dermis, and was thereby insensitive to RNAi based knockdown and/or antibody-based treatment against β1 and β3 integrins, chemokine (SDF-1/CXCL12) and growth factor (EGF) signaling. Therapeutic hypofractionated irradiation induced partial to complete regression of the tumor main mass, yet failed to eradicate the collective invasion strands, suggesting a microenvironmentally privileged niche. Whereas no radiosensitization was achieved by interference with EGFR or doxorubicin, the simultaneous inhibition of β1 and β3 integrins impaired cell proliferation and survival in spontaneously growing tumors and strongly enhanced the radiation response up to complete eradication of both main tumor and invasion strands. In conclusion, collective invasion in vivo is a robust process which follows preexisting tissue structures and is mainly independent of established adhesion and chemoattractant signaling. Due to its altered biological response to irradiation, collective invasion strands represent a microenvironmentally controlled and clinically relevant resistance niche to therapy. Therefore supportive regimens, such as anoikisinduction by anti-integrin therapy, may serve to enhance radio- and chemoefficacy and complement classical treatment regimens.