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PRC1 serves as a microtubule-bundling protein and is a potential therapeutic target for lung cancer
(2023)
Protein regulator of cytokinesis 1 (PRC1) is a microtubule-associated protein with essential roles in mitosis and cytokinesis. Furthermore, the protein is highly expressed in several cancer types which is correlated with aneuploidy and worse patient outcome. In this study it was investigated, whether PRC1 is a potential target for lung cancer as well as its possible nuclear role.
Elevated PRC1 expression was cell cycle-dependent with increasing levels from S-phase to G2/M-phase of the cell cycle. Thereby, PRC1 localized at the nucleus during interphase and at the central spindle and midbody during mitosis and cytokinesis. Genome-wide expression profiling by RNA sequencing of ectopically expressed PRC1 resulted in activation of the p53 pathway. A mutant version of PRC1, that is unable to enter the nucleus, induced the same gene sets as wildtype PRC1, suggesting that PRC1 has no nuclear-specific functions in lung cancer cells. Finally, PRC1 overexpression leads to proliferation defects, multi-nucleation, and enlargement of cells which was directly linked to microtubule-bundling within the cytoplasm.
For analysis of the requirement of PRC1 in lung cancer, different inducible cell lines were generated to deplete the protein by RNA interference (RNAi) in vitro. PRC1 depletion caused proliferation defects and cytokinesis failures with increased numbers of bi- and multi-nucleated cells compared to non-induced lung cancer cells. Importantly, effects in control cells were less severe as in lung cancer cells. Finally, p53 wildtype lung cancer cells became senescent, whereas p53 mutant cells became apoptotic upon PRC1 depletion. PRC1 is also required for tumorigenesis in vivo, which was shown by using a mouse model for non-small cell lung cancer driven by oncogenic K-RAS and loss of p53. Here, lung tumor area, tumor number, and high-grade tumors were significantly reduced in PRC1 depleted conditions by RNAi.
In this study, it is shown that PRC1 serves as a microtubule-bundling protein with essential roles in mitosis and cytokinesis. Expression of the protein needs to be tightly regulated to allow unperturbed proliferation of lung cancer cells. It is suggested that besides phosphorylation of PRC1, the nuclear localization might be a protective mechanism for the cells to prevent perinuclear microtubule-bundling. In conclusion, PRC1 could be a potential target of lung cancer as mono therapy or in combination with a chemotherapeutic agent, like cisplatin, which enhanced the negative effects on proliferation of lung cancer cells in vitro.
Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde die Methode der durchflusszytometrischen Zellzyklusanalyse von Lymphozyten bei Patienten mit der klinischen Verdachtsdiagnose Ataxia telangiectasia beschrieben. Hierzu wurden die Daten von 327 Patienten ausgewertet. In 82 Fällen ergab sich eine Bestätigung der Verdachtsdiagnose, in 225 Fällen konnte das Vorliegen dieser Erkrankung ausgeschlossen werden, bei den übrigen untersuchten Fällen ergab die Zellzyklusanalyse Auffälligkeiten hinsichtlich des Proliferationsverhaltens der untersuchten Zellen und/oder ihrer Strahlensensitivität, die eine eindeutige Zuordnung zu einer der beiden Gruppen (AT-postiv/AT-negativ) zunächst nicht gestatteten. Diese Auffälligkeiten lassen sich teils auf technische Probleme (geronnenes Blut, langer Zeitraum zwischen Blutentnahme und Analyse), teils auf biologische Besonderheiten (bestehende Begleiterkrankungen wie Leukämie, Lymphom) zurückführen. Die durchflusszytometrische Zellzyklusanalyse von Lymphozyten ergibt als diagnostisch relevante Parameter den Anteil der nicht-proliferierenden Zellen (G0,G1) sowie den Anteil der in der G2-Phase des 1. Zellzyklus verbleibenden Zellen bezogen auf die Wachstumsfraktion (G2/GF). Der Anteil der nicht-proliferierenden Zellen (G0,G1) ist ein Maß für die Stimulierbarkeit der Lymphozyten. Diese Stimulierbarkeit ist bei Zellen von AT-Patienten häufig vermindert, d.h. das Ausmaß der Mitogenantwort gibt ebenso einen Hinweis auf das Vorliegen der Erkrankung AT wie die Strahlensensitivität der Zellen. Letztere wird durch den zweiten der oben angeführten Parameter (G2/GF) repräsentiert. Der für die Erkrankung AT charakteristische Funktionsverlust des ATM-Proteins, welches im unbeeinträchtigten Zustand für die Kontrolle der Reparatur von strahleninduzierten DNA-Schädigungen verantwortlich ist, führt typischerweise zu einer Erhöhung des Anteils von Zellen in der G2-Phase, nachdem diese Zellen ionisierender Strahlung ausgesetzt waren. Die zweidimensionale Auftragung dieser Parameter (G0,G1 gegen G2/GF) erlaubt in der Regel bereits eine guten Abgrenzung der Gruppe der AT-positiven gegen die AT-negativen Fälle. Die Berücksichtigung eines weiteren Parameters, nämlich des AFP-Wertes, gestattet darüberhinaus in mehreren Fällen die Zuordnung der oben erwähnten, zunächst unklaren Fälle zu einer dieser Gruppen. Die durchflusszytometrische Zellzyklusanalyse von bestrahlten Lymphozyten kann daher als Screening-Methode bei der Untersuchung von Patienten mit der Verdachtsdiagnose Ataxia telangiectasia als ein dem CSA überlegenes Verfahren angesehen werden. Die Kombination dreier Parameter: 1) Anteil der nicht-proliferierenden Zellen (G0,G1), 2) Anteil der in der G2-Phase des 1. Zellzyklus verbleibenden Zellen bezogen auf die Wachstumsfraktion (G2/GF) und 3) AFP-Wert erlaubt hierbei im Rahmen der AT-Diagnostik in >93% der Fälle eine eindeutige Zuordnung zur Gruppe der AT-negativen bzw. AT-positiven Fälle.
Mit Hilfe von in vivo ChIP-Experimenten identifizierten wir eine präRC Bindungsstelle von -2519 bis -2152 (Fragment B) innerhalb eines „origin of bidirectional replication (OBR)“ der 44 kb langen Maus-rDNA-Einheit. Diese Bindungsstelle befindet sich ungefähr 2,3 kb ubstream des Transkriptionsstartpunktes der RNA-Poymerase I. An dieser Bindungsstelle konnte in der G1-Phase der komplette ORC-Komplex sowie Geminin, MCM3 und -6 nachgewiesen werden. Für den G1/S-Phasenübergang deuten die Ergebnisse darauf hin, dass sich ORC6 und Geminin von Fragment B ablösen, während sich CDC6 und -45 an den ORC-Komplex anlagern. Mit Erreichen der S-Phase konnte gezeigt werden, dass sich CDC6 und -45 sowie ORC1 wieder ablösen und ein Core-Komplex von ORC2-5 sowie MCM3 und -6 gebunden bleibt. Außerdem konnte an Fragment B eine spezifische Bindung eines aus FM3A-Zellkernprotein angereicherten präRC-Komplexes (Komplex A) auch in vitro mit Hilfe von EMSA-Experimenten beobachtet werden. Die Bindungsaktivität von Komplex A an Fragment B konnte durch ATP verstärkt werden.
Es werden die Parameter Summe-G2/GF und G0/G1 der hochauflösenden, zweiparametrigen Zellzyklusanalyse von Lymphozyten bei Fanconi-Anämie-Patienten, bei denen mehrere Meßwerte vorliegen, im Hinblick auf Schwankungen untersucht. Nach Auswertung der Daten stellen die Werte keine konstanten Parameter für den einzelnen Patienten dar. Die Langzeitanalyse des Zellzyklusverhaltens peripherer Blutlymphozyten reflektiert jedoch weitgehend die klinische Situation der Patienten.
Echinococcosis is an important zoonosis. The causative agent of Alveolar Echinococcosis (AE) is Echinococcus multilocularis. The treatment of human AE is limited to surgery and chemotherapy with albendazole (ABZ). However, ABZ works only parasitostatically and it needs to be taken for long periods, although it causes adverse side effects. Thus, development of new, parasiticidal drug with selective toxicity is required. Because undifferentiated stem cells of E. multilocularis play key role in its longevity and regenerative capacity, targeting stem cells is especially important.
In vitro screening of protein kinases inhibitors demonstrated that human PIM kinases inhibitors have detrimental effects on E. multilocularis. Through yeast two hybrid assay, the interaction of parasite PIM kinase (EmPIM) and its CDC25 (EmCDC25) was indicated. Through in situ hybridization, expression of EmPIM in the stem cells was observed. Therefore, EmPim is likely to be a positive regulator of cell cycle progression, the same as human Pim1. In addition, 20 compounds against EmPIM were selected through in silico screening and synthesized. One of them has a detrimental effect on E.multilocularis comparable to human pan-PIM inhibitors, but has much weaker toxicity on human cell lines.
Furthermore, triclabendazole (TCBZ) and its metabolite TCBZSX, which are approved for another flatworm disease, Fascioliasis were tried on E. multilocularis. With two stem cell markers, damage to stem cells by TCBZSX was shown. In addition, primary cells from treated vesicles never regenerated and the damage to stem cells proved to be irreversible.
Our in silico screening method used in EmPIM research has potential to identify compounds which overcome the side effect problem in ABZ-based chemotherapy. On the other hand, it is expected that my research of TCBZ can lead to development of a practical parasiticidal chemotherapy by combining TCBZ, which damages stem cells, and ABZ, which damages differentiated cells.
Aurora B is a mitotic kinase that is essential for cell division. Because it is mutated or overexpressed in a range of cancer types, it has been suggested as a novel therapeutic target. Currently chemical inhibitors against Aurora B are in various phases of clinical trials for treatment of solid tumors and leukemia. Information regarding the molecular requirements for the reported phenotypes of Aurora B inhibition such as cell cycle arrest, activation of the tumor suppressor p53 and its target p21 are not well understood.
In this study, I investigated the requirements for p21 induction after Aurora B inhibition. I found that p38 is phosphorylated and activated when Aurora B is inhibited. Experiments with chemical inhibitors against p38 indicate that p38 is required for p21 induction and cell cycle arrest in response to Aurora B inhibition. p53 induction after impairment of Aurora B function and the recruitment of p53 to its binding site in the p21 gene promoter occur independently of p38 signaling. Instead, I found that p38 is required for the enrichment of the elongating RNA Polymerase II in the coding region of the p21 gene. Furthermore, p38 is required for formation of the full-length p21 mRNA transcript. These data indicate that p38 promotes the transcriptional elongation of p21 gene in response to Aurora B inhibition. In further experiments I could show that the p21 causes cell cycle arrest due to a decrease in E2F-dependent transcription by promoting the dephosphorylation of the retinoblastoma protein.
Using synchronized cells I could show that the induction of p21 in response to Aurora B inhibition requires transition through an aberrant mitosis and does not occur in cells that are arrested in interphase. Interestingly, p38, p53 and p21 are already induced by partial inhibition of Aurora B, which results in aneuploidy but not in cytokinesis failure and in tetraploidy. This supports the notion that activation of p38-p53-p21 signaling correlates with aneuploidy but not with tetraploidy or binucleation. Partial inhibition of Aurora B also leads to increased generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which are required for the activation of p38, p21 and cell cycle arrest. Based on these observations I propose the following model: Inhibition of Aurora B leads to chromosome missegregation resulting in aneuploidy. This results in increased generation of ROS (reactive oxygen species) possibly through proteotoxic stress caused by an imbalance of protein synthesis in aneuploid cells. ROS triggers the activation of p38, which then stimulates the transcriptional elongation of p21 resulting in cell cycle arrest.
Aneuploidy, proteotoxic stress and oxidative stress are hallmarks of cancer cells. Based on my results reported in this study, I suggest that the combination of Aurora B inhibitors with drugs that specifically target aneuploid cells might be a novel strategy for cancer therapy, as this is a lethal combination for proliferation of cancer cells.
The interaction of bacterial pathogens and the human host is a complex process that has shaped both organisms on a molecular, cellular and population level. When pathogenic bacteria infect the human body, a battle ensues between the host immune system and the pathogen. In order to escape an immune response and to colonize the host, pathogenic bacteria have developed diverse virulence strategies and some pathogens even replicate within host cells. For survival and propagation within the dynamic environment of a host cell, these bacteria interfere with the regulation of host pathways, such as the cell cycle, for their own benefit.
The intracellular pathogen Salmonella Typhimurium invades eukaryotic cells and resides and replicates in a modified vacuolar compartment in which it is protected from the innate immune response. To this end, it employs a set of virulence factors that help to invade cells (SPI-1 effectors) and to hijack and modify the host endolysosomal system, in order to stabilize and mature its vacuolar niche (SPI-2 effectors). Previous studies have shown that Salmonella arrests host cells in G2/M phase and that Salmonella infected cells progress faster from G1 into S phase, suggesting that the G1 phase is disadvantageous for Salmonella infection. In fact, it has already been observed that Salmonella replication is impaired in G1 arrested cells. However, the reason for this impairment remained unclear.
The current study addressed this question for the first time and revealed that the highly adapted, intracellular lifestyle of Salmonella is drastically altered upon G1 arrest of the host cell. It is shown that proteasomal degradation in G1 arrested cells is delayed and endolysosomal and autophagosomal trafficking is compromised. Accordingly, processing of lysosomal proteins is insufficient and lysosomal activity is decreased; resulting in uneven distribution and accumulation of endolysosomes and autophagosomes, containing undegraded cargo. The deregulation of these cellular signaling pathways affects maturation of the Salmonella containing vacuole (SCV). For the first time it is shown that acidification of SCVs is impaired upon G1 arrest. Thus, an important environmental factor for the switch from SPI-1 to SPI-2 gene expression is
missing and the SPI-2 system is not activated. Consequently, targeting and modification of host cell structures by SPI-2 effectors e.g. recruitment of endolysosomal membrane proteins, like LAMP1, or exchange of endosomal cargo, is compromised.
In addition, degradation of Salmonella SPI-1 effectors by the host proteasome is delayed. Their prolonged presence sustained the recruitment of early endosomes and contributed to the SCV remaining in an early, vulnerable maturation stage. Finally, it was shown that SCV membrane integrity is compromised; the early SCV ruptures and bacteria are released into the cytoplasm. Depending on the host cell type, SPI-2 independent, cytoplasmic replication is promoted. This might favor bacterial spreading, dissemination into the tissue and provide an advantage in host colonization.
Overall, the present study establishes a link between host cell cycle regulation and the outcome of Salmonella infection. It fills the gap of knowledge as to why the host cell cycle stage is of critical importance for Salmonella infection and sheds light on a key aspect of host-pathogen interaction.
Around 10.000 – 150.000 endogenous DNA damage-induced lesions occur in a human body per day and cell. Accumulation of unrepaired lesions can lead to aneuploidy and the loss of genomic integrity which in turn contributes to tumor formation. Therefore, an efficient DNA damage response has to be initiated, in the end leading to cell cycle inhibition and induction of repair. Since it is known that a recently characterized human multiprotein complex named LINC (or human dREAM) together with B-MYB is involved in the regulation of G2/M gene expression (Plk1, cyclin B1, cdc2 etc.), its function in the DNA damage response was analyzed in this study. In growing cells B-MYB is associated to the LIN core complex which consists of 5 different proteins named LIN-9, LIN-54, LIN-52, LIN-37 and RbAp48. After induction of DNA damage B-MYB leaves the complex and binding of E2F4 and p130 to LINC is induced. Importantly, the upstream pathway leading to LINC rearrangement is dependent on the activation of p53 and p21. Interestingly, p53 -/- cells solely have the potential to block in the G2 phase of the cell cycle, thereby making them vulnerable for errors during G2 arrest induction or maintenance. Here I demonstrate that LINC rearrangement is absent in p53 -/- cells and that B-MYB/LINC binding to target gene promoters is increased. This in turn leads to an increased G2/M gene expression after DNA damage induction and triggers premature cell cycle re-entry (checkpoint adaptation). Significantly, B-MYB expression is increased in p53 mutated primary breast cancer tumors and correlates with poor prognosis and reoccurrence probably due to its function in checkpoint adaptation. This study gives evidence that inhibition of B-MYB gene expression or B-MYB function in p53 mutant tumors could be a good choice for adjuvant therapy.
In the context of this thesis, I investigated the molecular causes and functional consequences of genetic instability using a human inherited disease, Fanconi anemia. FA patients display a highly variable clinical phenotype, including congenital abnormalities, progressive bone marrow failure and a high cancer risk. The FA cellular phenotype is characterized by spontaneous and inducible chromosomal instability, and a typical S/G2 phase arrest after exposure to DNA-damaging agents. So far, 13 genes have been identified, whose biallelic (or, in the case of X-linked FANCB, hemizygous) mutations cause this multisystem disorder. The FA proteins interact in a multiprotein network, instrumental and essential in the cellular response to DNA damage. A more comprehensive summary of Fanconi anemia and its myriad clinical, cellular and molecular manifestations is provided in the introduction section of this thesis. The results of my experimental work are presented as published papers and manuscripts ready to be submitted. In the first publication, I investigated the connection between FA genes and bladder tumors. The question I tried to answer was whether a disruption of the FA/BRCA pathway may be a frequent and possibly causal event in bladder cancer, explaining the hypersensitivity of these cells to DNA-crosslinking agents. On the basis of my experimental data I arrived at the conclusion that disruption of the FA/BRCA pathway might be detrimental rather than advantageous for the majority tumor types by rendering them vulnerable towards DNA damaging agents and oxidative stress. The second publication deals with the gene coding for the core complex protein FANCE and tries to answer the question why FANCE is so rarely affected among FA-patients. The conclusion from these studies is that like FANCF, FANCE functions as a probable adaptor protein with a high tolerance towards amino acid substitutions which would explain the relative rareness of FA-E patients. I have also investigated the FANCL gene whose product functions as the catalytic subunit of the E3 ligase. The third publication addresses this issue by providing the first comprehensive description of genetic alterations and phenotypic manifestations in a series of three FA-L patients. The results of my study show that genetic alterations of FANCL are compatible with survival, these alterations may include large deletions such as so far common only in the FANCA gene, FA-L phenotypes can be mild to severe, and FANCL belongs to the group of FA genes that may undergo somatic reversion. The central protein of the FA/BRCA network, FANCD2, is the subject of the fourth publication presented in this thesis. Most importantly, we were able to show that there are no biallelic null mutations in FANCD2. Correspondingly, residual protein of both FANCD2-isotypes (FANCD2-S and FANCD2-L) was present in all available patient cell lines. This suggests that complete abrogation of the FANCD2 protein cannot be tolerated and causes early embryonic lethality. There are at least three FA proteins that are not required for the posttranslational modification of FANCD2. One of these proteins is the 5’-3’ helicase BRIP1 (BRCA1-interacting protein 1), a protein that interacts directly with the breast cancer susceptibility protein BRCA1. I participated in the identification of BRIP1 as the FA protein FANCJ. This discovery is described in the fifth publication of this thesis. The newly discovered protein BRIP1/FANCJ seems to act as one of the mediators of genomic maintenance downstream of FANCD2. Another protein identified downstream of FANCD2 is PALB2. PALB2 was originally discovered as “partner and localizer of BRCA2”. In a candidate gene approach we tested patients with early childhood cancers but without mutations in BRCA2 for mutations in PALB2 (publication 6). PALB2 was identified as a novel FA gene and designated FANCN. FA-N patients are very severely affected. The last publication included in my thesis describes the identification of the FA gene FANCI as the second monoubiquitinated member of the FA/BRCA pathway (publication 7). We identified biallelic mutations in KIAA1794 in four FA patients, thus proving the genuine FA-nature of this candidate sequence. The general discussion provides a synopsis of the results and conclusions of my work with the state of art of FA research.
Das humane LIN-9 wurde zuerst als pRB-interagierendes Protein beschrieben und spielt eine Rolle als Tumorsuppressor im Kontext des pRB-Signalweges. Über die molekulare Funktion von LIN-9 ist jedoch wenig bekannt. Die Homologe von LIN-9 in D. melanogaster und in C. elegans, sind an der transkriptionellen Regulation verschiedener Genen beteiligt. Dies und die Tatsache, dass LIN-9 mit pRB in der Aktivierung differenzierungspezifischer Gene kooperiert, ließ vermuten, dass humanes LIN-9 einen bedeutenden Einfluss auf die transkriptionelle Regulation von Genen haben könnte. Primäres Ziel dieser Arbeit war daher die Identifizierung LIN-9 regulierter Gene. Dazu sollte mit Hilfe von cDNA-Microarray Analysen, das Genexpressionsprofil LIN-9 depletierter primärer humaner Fibroblasten (BJ ET Zellen) im Vergleich zu Kontrollzellen untersucht werden. Hierfür wurde zunächst ein RNAi-basierendes System etabliert, um die posttranskriptionelle Expression von LIN-9 in BJ-ET Zellen effizient zu reprimieren. Auf dem Ergebnis der cDNA-Microarray Analysen aufbauende Untersuchungen sollten Aufschluss über die molekularbiologische Funktion von LIN-9 geben. In dieser Arbeit konnte erstmals gezeigt werden, dass der Verlust von LIN-9 zu einer verminderten Expression einer Gruppe G2/M-spezifischer Gene führt, deren Produkte für den Eintritt in die Mitose benötigt werden. Bekannt war, dass ein Teil dieser Gene durch den Transkriptionsfaktor B-MYB koreguliert wird. Zudem konnten Untersuchungen in unserem Labor eine Interaktion von LIN-9 und B-MYB auf Proteinebene, sowie die Bindung beider Proteine an die Promotoren der LIN-9 regulierten G2/M-Gene nachweisen. Dies lässt vermuten, dass LIN-9 und B-MYB gemeinsam die Expression der G2/M-Gene kontrollieren. Die verminderte Expression von G2/M-Genen in LIN-9 bzw. B-MYB depletierten Zellen geht mit einer Reihe phänotypischer Veränderungen einher, wie einer deutlich verlangsamten Proliferation und einer Akkumulation der Zellen in der G2/M-Phase. Mit Hilfe eines Durchflusszytometers erstellte Zellzykluskinetiken ergaben, dass die Progression LIN-9 bzw. B-MYB depletierter Fibroblasten von der S-Phase durch die G2/M-Phase und in die nächste G1-Phase deutlich verzögert ist. Es konnte weder ein Arrest dieser Zellen in der Mitose noch eine veränderte Länge der S-Phase nach LIN-9 oder B-MYB Depletion festgestellt werden. Daher ist die verlangsamte Zellzyklusprogression nach LIN-9 bzw. B-MYB Verlust höchstwahrscheinlich auf einen Defekt in der späten G2-Phase zurückzuführen, welcher in einem verzögerten Eintritt in die Mitose resultiert. In D. melanogaster und in C. elegans sind die Homologe von LIN-9 und B-MYB zusammen, als Bestandteile hoch konservierter RB/E2F-Komplexe, an der Regulation von Genen entscheidend beteiligt. Daher liegt es nahe, dass im humanen System LIN-9 und B MYB ebenfalls Bestandteile eines ähnlichen Komplexes sind und dadurch die Aktivierung der LIN 9 abhängigen G2/M-Gene vermitteln. Die Tatsache, dass LIN-9 sowohl als Tumorsuppressor, als auch als positiver Regulator des Zellzyklus fungiert, lässt vermuten, dass LIN-9 zu einer stetig größer werdenden Gruppe von Proteinen gehört, welche in Abhängigkeit vom zellulären und genetischen Kontext sowohl tumorsuppressive als auch onkogene Funktionen besitzen.