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Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) ist eine vererbte Form der Erblindung, die durch eine progressive Degeneration von Photorezeptorzellen in der Retina verursacht wird. Neben „klassischen“ RP-Krankheitsgenen, die direkt oder indirekt mit dem Sehprozess und der Aufrechterhaltung der Photorezeptoren in Verbindung stehen, können auch Mutationen in Genen für konstitutive Spleißfaktoren zur Photorezeptordegeneration führen. RP kann daher als Paradebeispiel einer Erkrankung mit paradoxer Gewebespezifität angesehen werden: Defekte in essentiellen und ubiquitär exprimierten Genen führen zu einem Phänotyp, der nur wenige Zelltypen betrifft. Um Einblicke in diesen außergewöhnlichen Pathomechanismus zu erhalten, wurde im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit ein Tiermodell für Spleißfaktor-vermittelte RP im Zebrafisch Danio rerio etabliert. Zunächst wurde gezeigt, dass eine RP verursachende Punktmutation des Spleißfaktors Prpf31 auch in dessen Zebrafisch-Homolog zu einem Verlust der physiologischen Aktivität führt. Als Modell für die Prpf31-Mangelsituation diente dann die durch ein Antisense-Morpholino induzierte partielle Reduktion der Prpf31-Expression in Zebrafischlarven. Konsistent mit einem RP-Phänotyp zeigte sich in diesen Larven eine starke Beeinträchtigung des Sehvermögens. Sie wurde – ebenfalls analog zu RP – durch defekte Photorezeptoren verursacht, die bei ansonsten normal entwickelter Retina eine deutlich veränderte Morphologie aufwiesen. Daraufhin konnten in einer genomweiten Transkriptomanalyse der Augen von Prpf31-defizienten Larven erstmals in vivo photorezeptorspezifische Gene identifiziert werden, deren Expression durch den Mangel an Prpf31 beeinträchtigt war. Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit wurde untersucht, ob es neben den bereits bekannten RP-Krankheitsgenen weitere Spleißfaktoren gibt, deren Defekt die Degeneration von Photorezeptoren auslösen kann. Dazu wurde in Zebrafischlarven ein Mangel an Prpf4 erzeugt, einem Spleißfaktor, der bislang nicht mit RP in Verbindung gebracht worden war. Der Phänotyp dieser Fische war nicht von dem des Prpf31 RP-Modells zu unterscheiden. Dies lieferte einen Hinweis darauf, dass auch Defekte in Prpf4 in der Lage sein könnten, RP auszulösen. Tatsächlich konnte durch genetisches Screening ein RP-Patient mit einer Punktmutation in Prpf4 identifiziert werden (Kollaboration mit Hanno Bolz, Universität Köln). Die biochemische Analyse dieser Mutation zeigte, dass sie zu einem Defekt der Integration von Prpf4 in spleißosomale Untereinheiten und zu dessen Funktionsverlust in vivo führt. Mit dem in dieser Arbeit etablierten Tiermodell konnte zum ersten Mal in vivo ein von Spleißfaktor-Mutationen verursachter Pathomechanismus von Retinitis pigmentosa nachvollzogen werden. Die vom Prpf31-Mangel betroffenen Photorezeptortranskripte stellen vielversprechende Kandidaten für die Vermittlung der Gewebespezifität dar und unterstützen die Hypothese, dass ihre ineffiziente Prozessierung den RP-Phänotyp auslöst. Die Entdeckung eines weiteren Spleißfaktors, dessen Defizienz ebenfalls zu defekten Photorezeptoren führt, zeigt, dass offenbar der Funktionsverlust des Spleißosoms generell in der Lage ist, die Degeneration dieser Zellen zu verursachen. Dies ist nicht zuletzt auch von klinischer Relevanz, da vermutet werden kann, dass sich unter den vielen bisher nicht identifizierten RP-Krankheitsgenen weitere Spleißfaktoren befinden.
Background:
Pancreatic cancer is a fatal disease associated with resistance to conventional therapies. This study aimed to determine changes in gene expression patterns associated with infection and susceptibility of pancreatic cancer cells to an oncolyticvaccinia virus, GLV-1h153, carrying the human sodium iodide symporter for deep tissue imaging of virotherapy.
Methods:
Replication and susceptibility of pancreatic adenocarcinoma PANC-1 cells to GLV-1h153 was confirmed with replication and cytotoxicity assays. PANC-1 cells were then infected with GLV-1h153 and near-synchronous infection confirmed via flow cytometry of viral-induced green fluorescent protein (GFP) expression. Six and 24 hours after infection, three samples of each time point were harvested, and gene expression patterns assessed using HG-U133A cDNA microarray chips as compared to uninfected control. Differentially expressed genes were identified using Bioconductor LIMMA statistical analysis package. A fold change of 2.0 or above was used as a cutoff, with a P value of 0.01. The gene list was then analyzed using Ingenuity Pathways Analysis software.
Results:
Differential gene analysis revealed a total of 12,412 up- and 11,065 downregulated genes at 6 and 24 hours postinfection with GLV-1h153 as compared to control. At 6 hours postinfection. A total of 139 genes were either up or downregulated >twofold (false discovery rate < 0.05), of which 124 were mapped by Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (IPA). By 24 hours postinfection, a total of 5,698 genes were identified and 5,563 mapped by IPA. Microarray revealed gene expression changes, with gene networks demonstrating downregulation of processes such as cell death, cell cycle, and DNA repair, and upregulation of infection mechanisms (P < 0.01). Six hours after infection, gene changes involved pathways such as HMGB-1, interleukin (IL)-2, IL-6, IL-8, janus kinase/signal tranducer and activator of transcription (JAK/STAT), interferon, and ERK 5 signaling (P < 0.01). By 24 hours, prominent pathways included P53- and Myc-induced apoptotic processes, pancreatic adenocarcinoma signaling, and phosphoinositide 3-kinase/v-akt murine thymoma vial oncogene homolog 1 (PI3/AKT) pathways.
Conclusions:
Our study reveals the ability to assess time-dependent changes in gene expression patterns in pancreatic cancer cells associated with infection and susceptibility to vaccinia viruses. This suggests that molecular assays may be useful to develop safer and more efficacious oncolyticvirotherapies and support the idea that these treatments may target pathways implicated in pancreatic cancer resistance to conventional therapies.
The degradation of poly-adenosine tails of messenger RNAs (mRNAs) in the eukaryotic cells is a determining step in controlling the level of gene expression. The highly conserved Ccr4-Not complex was identified as the major deadenylation complex in all eukaryotic organisms. Plenty of biochemical studies have shown that this complex is also involved in many aspects of the mRNA metabolism, but we are still lacking the detailed structural information about its overall architecture and conformational states that could help to elucidate its multifunction and the way it is coordinated in the cells. Such information can also provide a basis to finding a possible way of intervention since the complex is also involved in some diseases such as cancer and cardiovascular disorders in humans. Meanwhile, the single particle Cryo-EM method has been through a “resolution revolution” recently due to the use of the newly developed direct electron detectors and has since resolved the high-resolution structures of many macromolecular protein complexes in their near-native state. Therefore, it was employed as a suitable method for studying the Ccr4-Not complex here. In this work, the Falcon 3EC direct detector mounted on the 300kV Titan Krios G3i Cryo-EM was evaluated for its practical performance at obtaining high-quality Cryo-EM data from protein samples of different molecular sizes. This served as a proof of principle for this detector’s capabilities and as a data collection guidance for studying the macromolecular complexes, such as the Ccr4-Not, when using an advanced high-performance microscope system. Next, the endogenous yeast Ccr4-Not complex was also purified via the immunoaffinity purification method and evaluated using negative staining EM to assess the conditions of the complex before proceeding to sample preparation for Cryo-EM. This has shown that the complex had an unexpected inherently dynamic property in vitro and extra optimisation procedures were needed to stabilise the complex during the purification and sample preparation. In addition, by using the label-free quantitative Mass spectrometry to examine the coimmunoprecipitated complex via different tagged subunits, it was deduced that two of the subunits (Not3/Not5) that shared some sequence similarity might compete for association with the scaffold subunit of the complex. An uncharacterised protein was also identified coimmunoprecipitating with the Caf130 subunit of the yeast complex. Cryo-EM data from the purified complex provided a low-resolution map that represents a surprisingly smaller partial complex as compared to 3D structures from previous studies, although gel electrophoresis and Mass spectrometry data have identified all of the nine subunits of the Ccr4-Not core complex in the sample. It was concluded that due to the presence of many predicted unstructured regions VI in the subunits and their dynamic composition in solution, the native complex could have been spontaneously denatured at the air/water interface during the sample preparation thus limiting the resolution of the Cryo-EM reconstruction. The purified complex was also examined for its deadenylase and ubiquitin ligase activity by in vitro assays. It was shown that the native complex has a different rate of activity and possibly also a different mode of action compared to the recombinant complexes from other species under similar reaction conditions. The Not4 E3 ligase was also shown to be active in the complex and was likely auto-ubiquitinated in the absence of a substrate. Both types of assays have also shown that the conformational flexibility does not seem to affect the enzymatic reactions when using a chemically crosslinked form of the complex for the assay, which implies that there can be other underlying mechanisms coordinating its structural and functional relationship. The findings from this work have therefore moved our understanding of the Ccr4-Not complex forward by looking at the different structural and functional behaviours of the endogenous complex, especially highlighting the obstacles in sample preparation for the native complex in high-resolution Cryo-EM. This would serve as foundation for future studies on the mechanism of this complex’s catalytic functions and also for optimising the Cryo-EM sample to generate better data that could eventually resolve the structure to a high-resolution.