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The Gram-negative, spiral-shaped, microaerophilic bacterium Helicobacter pylori is the causative agent of various disorders of the upper gastrointestinal tract, such as chronic superficial gastritis, chronic active gastritis, peptic ulceration and adenocarcinoma. Although many of the bacterial factors associated with disease development have been analysed in some detail in the recent years, very few studies have focused so far on the mechanisms that regulate expression of these factors at the molecular level. In an attempt to obtain an overview of the basic mechanisms of virulence gene expression in H. pylori, three important virulence factors of this pathogen, representative of different pathogenic mechanisms and different phases of the infectious process, are investigated in detail in the present thesis regarding their transcriptional regulation. As an essential factor for the early phase of infection, including the colonisation of the gastric mucosa, the flagella are analysed; the chaperones including the putative adhesion factors GroEL and DnaK are investigated as representatives of the phase of adherence to the gastric epithelium and persistence in the mucus layer; and finally the cytotoxin associated antigen CagA is analysed as representative of the cag pathogenicity island, which is supposed to account for the phenomena of chronic inflammation and tissue damage observed in the later phases of infection. RNA analyses and in vitro transcription demonstrate that a single promoter regulates expression of cagA, while two promoters are responsible for expression of the upstream divergently transcribed cagB gene. All three promoters are shown to be recognised by RNA polymerase containing the vegetative sigma factor sigma 80. Promoter deletion analyses establish that full activation of the cagA promoter requires sequences up to -70 and binding of the C-terminal portion of the alpha subunit of RNA polymerase to an UP-like element located between -40 and -60, while full activation of the major cagB promoter requires sequences upstream of -96 which overlap with the cagA promoter. These data suggest that the promoters of the pathogenicity island represent a class of minimum promoters, that ensure a basic level of transcription, while full activation requires regulatory elements or structural DNA binding proteins that provide a suitable DNA context. Regarding flagellar biosynthesis, a master transcriptional factor is identified that regulates expression of a series of flagellar basal body and hook genes in concert with the alternative sigma factor sigma 54. Evidence is provided that this regulator, designated FlgR (for flagellar regulatory protein), is necessary for motility and transcription of five promoters for seven basal body and hook genes. In addition, FlgR is shown to act as a repressor of transcription of the sigma 28-regulated promoter of the flaA gene, while changes in DNA topology are shown to affect transcription of the sigma 54-regulated flaB promoter. These data indicate that the regulatory network that governs flagellar gene expression in H. pylori shows similarities to the systems of both Salmonella spp. and Caulobacter crescentus. In contrast to the flagellar genes which are regulated by three different sigma factors, the three operons encoding the major chaperones of H. pylori are shown to be transcribed by RNA polymerase containing the vegetative sigma factor sigma 80. Expression of these operons is shown to be regulated negatively by the transcriptional repressor HspR, a homologue of a repressor protein of Streptomyces spp., known to be involved in negative regulation of heat shock genes. In vitro studies with purified recombinant HspR establish that the protein represses transcription by binding to large DNA regions centered around the transcription initiation site in the case of one promoter, and around -85 and -120 in the case of the the other two promoters. In contrast to the situation in Streptomyces, where transcription of HspR-regulated genes is induced in response to heat shock, transcription of the HspR-dependent genes in H. pylori is not inducible with thermal stimuli. Transcription of two of the three chaperone encoding operons is induced by osmotic shock, while transcription of the third operon, although HspR-dependent, is not affected by salt treatment. Taken together, the analyses carried out indicate that H. pylori has reduced its repertoire of specific regulatory proteins to a basic level that may ensure coordinate regulation of those factors that are necessary during the initial phase of infection including the passage through the gastric lumen and the colonisation of the gastric mucosa. The importance of DNA topology and/or context for transcription of many virulence gene promoters may on the other hand indicate, that a sophisticated global regulatory network is present in H. pylori, which influences transcription of specific subsets of virulence genes in response to changes in the microenvironment.
The role of DNA supercoiling in the coordinated regulation of gene expression in Helicobacter pylori
(2004)
Summary Mechanisms of global gene regulation in bacteria are not well characterized yet. Changes in global or local supercoiling of chromosomal DNA are thought to play a role in global gene silencing and gene activation. In Helicobacter pylori, a bacterium with few dedicated transcriptional regulators, the structure of some promoters indicates a dependency on DNA topology. For example, the promoter of the major flagellar subunit gene flaA (ó28-dependent) has a shorter spacing of 13 nucleotides (nt) in comparison to the consensus promoter (15 nt). Supercoiling changes might be a mechanism of gene-specific and global transcriptional regulation in this bacterium. The aim of this study was to elucidate, if changes in global supercoiling have an influence on global gene regulation in H. pylori, and on the temporal regulation of the flagellar biosynthesis pathway in this organism. In the present work, global DNA supercoiling in H. pylori was visualized for the first time, by determining the supercoiling state of plasmids under different growth conditions. Using this method, we showed that cellular supercoiling was clearly growth phase-dependent in H. pylori. Coinciding with increased supercoiling during the growth phases, transcription of the flaA gene was increased, while the transcription of a second ó28-dependent gene with regular promoter spacing (HP0472) was reduced, supporting the hypothesis that growth phase-dependency of promoters might be mediated by changes of DNA topology. Supercoiling in H. pylori could be influenced in a reproducible fashion by inhibition of gyrase using novobiocin, which led to DNA relaxation and to a concomitant decrease of flaA transcript levels. Promoter spacer mutagenesis of the flaA promoter was performed. With flaA promoters of increased or reduced length, transcription of flaA was reduced, less susceptible to supercoiling changes, and, under specific conditions, inverted as compared to the wild type promoter. Transcriptional interdependence between the coupled topA-flaB genes and flaA was found by analysis of the flaA promoter mutants. Chromosomally linked gyrA-flgR, and topA-flaB genes were all dependent on supercoiling and coregulated with each other. Comprehensive transcript profiling (DNA microarrays) of wildtype H. pylori with and without novobiocin treatment identified a number of genes (10% of total genes), including flagellin, virulence and housekeeping genes, which were strongly dependent on and appeared to be synchronized by supercoiling changes (transcriptional up- or downregulation). These findings indicate a tightly coupled temporal regulation of flagellar biogenesis and metabolism in H. pylori, dependent on global supercoiling. A specific group of genes was also regulated in H. pylori by overexpression of Topoisomerase I, as detected by genome-wide analysis (DNA microarray). The DNA-bending protein HU is thought to be responsible for influencing the negative supercoiling of DNA, through its ability to wrap DNA. HU is encoded by the hup single gene in H. pylori, and constitutively expressed during the whole growth curve. An H. pylori hup mutant was constructed. H. pylori cells lacking HU protein were viable, but exhibited a severe growth defect. Our data indicate that the lack of HU dramatically changes global DNA supercoiling, indicating an important function of HU in chromosome structuring in H. pylori. Transcriptome analyses were performed and demonstrated that a total of 66 genes were differentially transcribed upon hup deletion, which include virulence genes and many other cell functions. The data indicate that HU might act as further important global regulator in H. pylori. Increased gene expression of heat shock proteins and a decreased transcription of the urease gene cluster may indicate a co-ordinated response of H. pylori to changes of environmental conditions in its specific ecological niche, mediated by HU. After the whole genomic sequences of H. pylori strains 26695 and J99 were published, two ORFs (HP0116 and HP0440) were presumptively annotated as topoisomerase I orthologs. HP0116 is the functional H. pylori topoisomerase I (TopA). HP0440 (topA2) was found in only few (5 of 43) strains. Western blot analysis indicated that TopA2 is antigenically different from TopA. TopA2 is transcribed in H. pylori, but the protein must be functionally different from TopA, since it is lacking one functionally essential zinc finger motif, and was not able to functionally complement a TopA-deficient E. coli. Like topA, topA2 was also transcribed in a growth phase-dependent manner. We did not find a function of TopA2 in DNA structuring or topology, but, in the present study, we were able for the first time to establish a unique function for TopA2 in global gene regulation, by comprehensive transcriptome analysis (DNA microarray). Transcriptome analysis showed that a total of 46 genes were differentially regulated upon topA2 deletion, which included flagellar genes and urease genes. These results suggest that TopA2 might act as a novel important regulator of both flagellar biosynthesis and urease in H. pylori.
For cellular viability, transcription is a fundamental process. Hereby, the DNA plays the most elemental and highly versatile role. It has long been known that promoters contain conserved and often well-defined motifs, which dictate the site of transcription initiation by providing binding sites for regulatory proteins. However, research within the last decade revealed that it is promoters lacking conserved promoter motifs and transcribing constitutively expressed genes that constitute the majority of promoters in eukaryotes. While the process of transcription initiation is well studied, whether defined DNA sequence motifs are required for the transcription of constitutively expressed genes in eukaryotes remains unknown. In the highly divergent protozoan parasite Trypanosoma brucei, most of the proteincoding genes are organized in large polycistronic transcription units. The genes within one polycistronic transcription unit are generally unrelated and transcribed by a common transcription start site for which no RNA polymerase II promoter motifs have been identified so far. Thus, it is assumed that transcription initiation is not regulated but how transcription is initiated in T. brucei is not known. This study aimed to investigate the requirement of DNA sequence motifs and chromatin structures for transcription initiation in an organism lacking transcriptional regulation. To this end, I performed a systematic analysis to investigate the dependence of transcription initiation on the DNA sequence. I was able to identify GT-rich promoter elements required for directional transcription initiation and targeted deposition of the histone variant H2A.Z, a conserved component during transcription initiation. Furthermore, nucleosome positioning data in this work provide evidence that sites of transcription initiation are rather characterized by broad regions of open and more accessible chromatin than narrow nucleosome depleted regions as it is the case in other eukaryotes. These findings highlight the importance of chromatin during transcription initiation. Polycistronic RNA in T. brucei is separated by adding an independently transcribed miniexon during trans-splicing. The data in this work suggest that nucleosome occupancy plays an important role during RNA maturation by slowing down the progressing polymerase and thereby facilitating the choice of the proper splice site during trans-splicing. Overall, this work investigated the role of the DNA sequence during transcription initiation and nucleosome positioning in a highly divergent eukaryote. Furthermore, the findings shed light on the conservation of the requirement of DNA motifs during transcription initiation and the regulatory potential of chromatin during RNA maturation. The findings improve the understanding of gene expression regulation in T. brucei, a eukaryotic parasite lacking transcriptional Regulation.
Switches in trypanosome differentiation: ALBA proteins acting on post-transcriptional mRNA control
(2011)
Trypanosoma brucei is a digenetic eukaryotic parasite that develops in different tissues of a mammalian host and a tsetse fly. It is responsible for sleeping sickness in sub-saharan Africa. The parasite cycle involves more than nine developmental stages that can be clearly distinguished by their general morphology, their metabolism and the relative positioning of their DNA-containing organelles. During their development, trypanosomes remain exclusively extracellular and encounter changing environments with different physico-chemical properties (nutritional availability, viscosity, temperature, etc.). It has been proposed that trypanosomes use their flagellum as a sensing organelle, in agreement with the established role of structurally-related cilia in metazoa and ciliates. Recognition of environmental triggers is presumed to be at the initiation of differentiation events, leading to the parasite stage that is the best suited to the new environment. These changes are achieved by the modification of gene expression programmes, mostly underlying post-transcriptional control of mRNA transcripts. We first demonstrate that the RNA-binding proteins ALBA3/4 are involved in specific differentiation processes during the parasite development in the fly. They are cytosolic and expressed throughout the parasite cycle with the exception of the stages found in the tsetse fly proventriculus, as shown by both immunofluorescence and live cell analysis upon endogenous tagging with YFP. Knock-down of both proteins in the developmental stage preceding these forms leads to striking modifications: cell elongation, cell cycle arrest and relocalization of the nucleus in a posterior position, all typical of processes acting in parasites found in the proventriculus region. When ALBA3 is over-expressed from an exogenous copy during infection, it interferes with the relocalization of the nucleus in proventricular parasites. This is not observed for ALBA4 over-expression that does not visibly impede differentiation. Both ALBA3/4 proteins react to starvation conditions by accumulating in cytoplasmic stress granules together with DHH1, a recognized RNA-binding protein. ALBA3/4 proteins also partially colocalize with granules formed by polyA+ RNA in these conditions. We propose that ALBA are involved in trypanosome differentiation processes where they control a subset of developmentally regulated transcripts. These processes involving ALBA3/4 are likely to result from the specific activation of sensing pathways. In the second part of the thesis, we identify novel flagellar proteins that could act in sensing mechanisms. Several protein candidates were selected from a proteomic analysis of intact flagella performed in the host laboratory. This work validates their flagellar localization with high success (85% of the proteins examined) and defines multiple different patterns of protein distribution in the flagellum. Two proteins are analyzed during development, one of them showing down-regulation in proventricular stages. The functional analysis of one novel flagellar membrane protein reveals its rapid dynamics within the flagellum but does not yield a visible phenotype in culture. This is coherent with sensory function that might not be needed in stable culture conditions, but could be required in natural conditions during development. In conclusion, this work adds new pieces to the puzzle of identifying molecular switches involved in developmental mRNA control and environmental sensing in trypanosome stages in the tsetse fly.
Platelet activation and aggregation at sites of vascular injury are essential processes to limit blood loss but they also contribute to arterial thrombosis, which can lead to myocardial infarction and stroke. Stable thrombus formation requires a series of events involving platelet receptors which contribute to adhesion, activation and aggregation of platelets. Regulation of receptor expression by (metallo-)proteinases has been described for several platelet receptors, but the molecular mechanisms are ill-defined. The signaling lymphocyte activation molecule (SLAM) family member CD84 is expressed in immune cells and platelets, however its role in platelet physiology was unclear. In this thesis, CD84 deficient mice were generated and analyzed. In well established in vitro and in vivo assays testing platelet function and thrombus formation, CD84 deficient mice displayed phenotypes indistinguishable from wild-type controls. It was concluded that CD84 in platelets does not function as modulator of thrombus formation, but rather has other functions. In line with this, in the second part of this thesis, a novel regulation mechanism for platelet CD84 was discovered and elucidated. Upon platelet activation, the N-terminus of CD84 was found to be cleaved exclusively by the a disintegrin and metalloproteinase 10 (ADAM10), whereas the intracellular part was cleaved by calpain. In addition, regulation of the platelet activating collagen receptor glycoprotein VI (GPVI) was studied and it was shown that GPVI is in contrast to CD84 differentially regulated by ADAM10 and ADAM17. A novel role of CD84 under pathophysiological conditions was revealed as CD84 deficient mice were protected from ischemic stroke in the model of transient middle cerebral artery occlusion and this protection was based on the lack of CD84 in T cells. Ca2+ is an essential second messenger that facilitates activation of platelets and diverse functions in different eukaryotic cell types. Store-operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE) represents the major mechanism leading to rise in intracellular Ca2+ concentration in non-excitable cells. The Ca2+ sensor STIM1 (stromal interaction molecule 1) and the SOC channel subunit protein Orai1 are established mediators of SOCE in platelets. STIM2 is the major STIM isoform in neurons, but the role of the SOC channel subunit protein Orai2 in platelets and neurons has remained elusive. In the third part of this thesis, Orai2 deficient mice were generated and analyzed. Orai2 was dispensable for platelet function, however, Orai2 deficient mice were protected from ischemic neurodegeneration and this phenotype was attributed to defective SOCE in neurons.
Several lines of evidence implicate a dysregulation of tryptophan hydroxylase (TPH)-dependent serotonin (5-HT) synthesis in emotions and stress and point to their potential relevance to the etiology and pathogenesis of various neuropsychiatric disorders. However, the differential expression pattern of the two isoforms TPH1 and TPH2 which encode two forms of the rate-limiting enzyme of 5-HT synthesis is controversial. Here, a comprehensive spatio-temporal analysis clarifies TPH1 and TPH2 expression during pre- and postnatal development of the mouse brain and in adult human brain as well as in peripheral organs including the pineal gland. Four different methods (real time PCR, in situ hybridization, immunohistochemistry and Western blot analysis) were performed to systematically control for tissue-, species- and isoform-specific expression on both the pre- and posttranslational level. TPH2 expression was consistently detected in the raphe nuclei, as well as in fibres in the deep pineal gland and in the gastrointestinal tract. Although TPH1 expression was found in these peripheral tissues, no significant TPH1 expression was detected in the brain, neither during murine development, nor in mouse and human adult brain. Also under conditions like stress and clearing the tissue from blood cells, no changes in expression levels were detectable. Furthermore, the reuptake of 5-HT into the presynaptic neuron by the serotonin transporter (SERT) is the major mechanism terminating the neurotransmitter signal. Thus, mice with a deletion in the Sert gene (Sert KO mice) provide an adequate model for human affective disorders to study lifelong modified 5-HT homeostasis in interaction with stressful life events. To further explore the role of TPH isoforms, Tph1 and Tph2 expression was studied in the raphe nuclei of Sert deficient mice under normal conditions as well as following exposure to acute immobilization stress. Interestingly, no statistically significant changes in expression were detected. Moreover, in comparison to Tph2, no relevant Tph1 expression was detected in the brain independent from genotype, gender and treatment confirming expression in data from native animals. Raphe neurons of a brain-specific Tph2 conditional knockout (cKO) model were completely devoid of Tph2-positive neurons and consequently 5-HT in the brain, with no compensatory activation of Tph1 expression. In addition, a time-specific Tph2 inducible (i) KO mouse provides a brain-specific knockdown model during adult life, resulting in a highly reduced number of Tph2-positive cells and 5-HT in the brain. Intriguingly, expression studies detected no obvious alteration in expression of 5-HT system-associated genes in these brain-specific Tph2 knockout and knockdown models. The findings on the one hand confirm the specificity of Tph2 in brain 5-HT synthesis across the lifespan and on the other hand indicate that neither developmental nor adult Tph2-dependent 5-HT synthesis is required for normal formation of the serotonergic system, although Tph1 does not compensate for the lack of 5-HT in the brain of Tph2 KO models. A further aim of this thesis was to investigate the expression of the neuropeptide oxytocin, which is primarily produced in the hypothalamus and released for instance in response to stimulation of 5-HT and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). Oxytocin acts as a neuromodulator within the central nervous system (CNS) and is critically involved in mediating pain modulation, anxiolytic-like effects and decrease of stress response, thereby reducing the risk for emotional disorders. In this study, the expression levels of oxytocin in different brain regions of interest (cortex, hippocampus, amygdala, hypothalamus and raphe nuclei) from female and male wildtype (WT) and Sert KO mice with or without exposure to acute immobilization stress were investigated. Results showed significantly higher expression levels of oxytocin in brain regions which are involved in the regulation of emotional stimuli (amygdala and hippocampus) of stressed male WT mice, whereas male Sert KO as well as female WT and Sert KO mice lack these stress-induced changes. These findings are in accordance with the hypothesis of oxytocin being necessary for protection against stress, depressive mood and anxiety but suggest gender-dependent differences. The lack of altered oxytocin expression in Sert KO mice also indicates a modulation of the oxytocin response by the serotonergic system and provides novel research perspectives with respect to altered response of Sert KO mice to stress and anxiety inducing stimuli.
SNAP25 (Synaptosomal-Associated Protein of 25 kDa; part of the SNARE complex) is involved in the docking and fusion of synaptic vesicles in presynaptic neurons necessary for the regulation of neurotransmitter release, as well as in axonal growth and synaptic plasticity. In humans, different single nucleotide polymorphisms of SNAP25 have repeatedly been associated with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Thus, in this study heterozygous Snap25 knockout mice were investigated as a model of ADHD.
Heterozygous (+/-) Snap25 knockout mice as well as their wild-type (+/+) littermates were reared under control conditions or underwent a Maternal Separation (MS) procedure. Starting at the age of 2 months, mice were tested for locomotor activity in a repeated long-term Open Field (OF) task, for attention deficits and impulsive behavior in the 5 Choice Serial Reaction Time Task (5CSRTT), for anxiety-like behavior in the Light-Dark Box (LDB) and for depression-like behavior in the Porsolt Forced Swim Test (FST). The brains of these mice were subsequently tested for the expression of several ADHD related genes in a quantitative Real-Time PCR (qRT-PCR) study. Another group of female mice (+/+; +/-) underwent a one hour OF test after oral administration of 45 mg/kg Methylphenidate (MPH) or placebo.
To find an optimized dosage for this MPH challenge, a pilot study was performed. Wild-type C57BL/6 mice were tested in a long-term OF with several dosages of MPH both intraperitoneally (i.p.) and orally. The brains of these animals were afterwards investigated for neurotransmitter concentrations. In this pilot study the dosages of MPH that were similarly behaviorally effective without causing symptoms of overdosing were 7.5-15 mg/kg intraperitoneally and 30-60 mg/kg orally. However, even though it was possible to find intraperitoneal and oral doses that correlate behaviorally, the neurochemistry was mostly different.
In the study on Snap25-deficient mice, unstressed controls showed a hyperactive phenotype in the second of two long-term OF sessions (60 min) spaced three weeks apart. Considering all groups, there was a significant interaction of stress and genotype in the second session, with animals subjected to MS being overall hyperactive with no genotype differences. In the training phase of the 5CSRTT only effects of stress were found, with MS animals finding and consuming fewer rewards. In the single test trial, several genotype effects became apparent, with tendencies for the number of correct nose pokes and the number of rewards eaten, and a significant effect for the number of rewards eaten directly after the correct response. In all of these variables +/- mice performed worse than their wild-type littermates. In the LDB +/- mice entered the lit compartment of the arena earlier than the controls, thus showing attenuated anxiety-like behavior. Regarding depressive-like behavior in the FST, male +/- mice spent significantly less time struggling than male +/+ mice. In the gene expression study, +/- mice had lower expression levels of Maoa and Comt, and higher expression levels of Nos1 than wild-types. Finally, the locomotor activity response to MPH was exaggerated in +/- mice as compared to controls.
Heterozygous Snap25 knockout mice show some of the behavioral characteristics of ADHD, as for example a mild hyperactivity in a familiar environment, difficulties in the correct execution of a given task and even some behavior that can be interpreted as delay aversion. Additionally, expression levels of three ADHD related genes were changed in these animals. Although the exaggerated locomotor activity response to MPH is not to be expected of an ADHD model, the difference in the response between +/+ and +/- mice nonetheless implicates a potential dysfunction of the brain dopaminergic system.
The variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) of African trypanosomes plays an essential role in protecting the parasites from host immune factors. These trypanosomes undergo antigenic variation resulting in the expression of a single VSG isoform out of a repertoire of around 2000 genes. The molecular mechanism central to the expression and regulation of the VSG is however not fully understood.
Gene expression in trypanosomes is unusual due to the absence of typical RNA polymerase II promoters and the polycistronic transcription of genes. The regulation of gene expression is therefore mainly post-transcriptional. Regulatory sequences, mostly present in the 3´ UTRs, often serve as key elements in the modulation of the levels of individual mRNAs. In T. brucei VSG genes, a 100 % conserved 16mer motif within the 3´ UTR has been shown to modulate the stability of VSG transcripts and hence their expression. As a stability-associated sequence element, the absence of nucleotide substitutions in the motif is however unusual. It was therefore hypothesised that the motif is involved in other essential roles/processes besides stability of the VSG transcripts.
In this study, it was demonstrated that the 100 % conservation of the 16mer motif is not essential for cell viability or for the maintenance of functional VSG protein levels. It was further shown that the intact motif in the active VSG 3´ UTR is neither required to promote VSG silencing during switching nor is it needed during differentiation from bloodstream forms to procyclic forms. Crosstalk between the VSG and procyclin genes during differentiation to the insect vector stage is also unaffected in cells with a mutated 16mer motif. Ectopic overexpression of a second VSG however requires the intact motif to trigger silencing and exchange of the active VSG, suggesting a role for the motif in transcriptional VSG switching. The 16mer motif therefore plays a dual role in VSG in situ switching and stability of VSG transcripts. The additional role of the 16mer in the essential process of antigenic variation appears to be the driving force for the 100 % conservation of this RNA motif.
A screen aimed at identifying candidate RNA-binding proteins interacting with the 16mer motif, led to the identification of a DExD/H box protein, Hel66. Although the protein did not appear to have a direct link to the 16mer regulation of VSG expression, the DExD/H family of proteins are important players in the process of ribosome biogenesis. This process is relatively understudied in trypanosomes and so this candidate was singled out for detailed characterisation, given that the 16mer story had reached a natural end point. Ribosome biogenesis is a major cellular process in eukaryotes involving ribosomal RNA, ribosomal proteins and several non-ribosomal trans-acting protein factors. The DExD/H box proteins are the most important trans-acting protein factors involved in the biosynthesis of ribosomes. Several DExD/H box proteins have been directly implicated in this process in yeast. In trypanosomes, very few of this family of proteins have been characterised and therefore little is known about the specific roles they play in RNA metabolism. Here, it was shown that Hel66 is involved in rRNA processing during ribosome biogenesis. Hel66 localises to the nucleolus and depleting the protein led to a severe growth defect. Loss of the protein also resulted in a reduced rate of global translation and accumulation of rRNA processing intermediates of both the small and large ribosomal subunits. Hel66 is therefore an essential nucleolar DExD/H protein involved in rRNA processing during ribosome biogenesis. As very few protein factors involved in the processing of rRNAs have been described in trypanosomes, this finding represents an important platform for future investigation of this topic.
Virulent Agrobacterium tumefaciens strains transfer and integrate a DNA region of the tumor-inducing (Ti) plasmid, the T-DNA, into the plant genome and thereby cause crown gall disease. The most essential genes required for crown gall development are the T-DNA-encoded oncogenes, IaaH (indole-3-acetamide hydrolase), IaaM (tryptophan monooxygenase) for auxin, and Ipt (isopentenyl transferase) for cytokinin biosynthesis. When these oncogenes are expressed in the host cell, the levels of auxin and cytokinin increase and cause cell proliferation. The aim of this study was to unravel the molecular mechanisms, which regulate expression of the agrobacterial oncogenes in plant cells. Transcripts of the three oncogenes were expressed in Arabidopsis thaliana crown galls induced by A. tumefaciens strain C58 and the intergenic regions (IGRs) between their coding sequences (CDS) were proven to have promoter activity in plant cells. These promoters possess eukaryotic sequence structures and contain cis-regulatory elements for the binding of plant transcription factors. The high-throughput protoplast transactivation (PTA) system was used and identified the Arabidopsis thaliana transcription factors WRKY18, WRKY40, WRKY60 and ARF5 to activate the Ipt oncogene promoter. No transcription factor promoted the activity of the IaaH and IaaM promoters, despite the fact that the sequences contained binding elements for type B ARR transcription factors. Likewise, the treatment of Arabidopsis mesophyll protoplasts with cytokinin (trans-zeatin) and auxin (1-NAA) exerted no positive effect on IaaH and IaaM promoter activity. In contrast, the Ipt promoter strongly responded to a treatment with auxin and only modestly to cytokinin. The three Arabidopsis WRKYs play a role in crown gall development as the wrky mutants developed smaller crown galls than wild-type plants. The WRKY40 and WRKY60 genes responded very quickly to pathogen infection, two and four hours post infection, respectively. Transcription of the WRKY18 gene was induced upon buffer infiltration, which implicates a response to wounding. The three WRKY proteins interacted with ARF5 and with each other in the plant nucleus, but only WRKY40 together with ARF5 increased activation of the Ipt promoter. Moreover, ARF5 activated the Ipt promoter in an auxin-dependent manner. The severe developmental phenotype of the arf5 mutant prevented studies on crown gall development, nevertheless, the reduced crown gall growth on the transport inhibitor response 1 (TIR1) tir1 mutant, lacking the auxin sensor, suggested that auxin signaling is required for optimal crown gall development. In conclusion, A. tumefaciens recruits the pathogen defense related WRKY40 pathway to activate Ipt expression in T-DNA-transformed plant cells. IaaH and IaaM gene expression seems not to be controlled by transcriptional activators, but the increasing auxin levels are signaled via ARF5. The auxin-depended activation of ARF5 boosts expression of the Ipt gene in combination with WRKY40 to increase cytokinin levels and induce crown gall development.
PTPN22 encodes the lymphoid tyrosine phosphatase Lyp that can dephosphorylate Lck, ZAP-70 and Fyn to attenuate TCR signaling. A single-nucleotide polymorphism (C1858T) causes a substitution from arginine (R) to tryptophan (W) at 620 residue (R620W). Lyp-620W has been confirmed as a susceptible allele in multiple autoimmune diseases, including type 1 diabetes (T1D). Several independent studies proposed that the disease-associated allele is a gain-of-function variant. However, a recent report found that in human cells and a knockin mouse containing the R620W homolog that Ptpn22 protein degradation is accelerated, indicating Lyp-620W is a loss-of-function variant. Whether Lyp R620W is a gain- or loss-of-function variant remains controversial. To resolve this issue, we generated two lines (P2 and P4) of nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice in which Ptpn22 can be inducibly silenced by RNAi. We found long term silencing of Ptpn22 increased spleen cellularity and regulatory T (Treg) cell numbers, replicating the effect of gene deletion reported in the knockout (KO) B6 mice. Notably, Ptpn22 silencing also increased the reactivity and apoptotic behavior of B lymphocytes, which is consistent with the reduced reactivity and apoptosis of human B cells carrying the alleged gain-of-function PTPN22 allele. Furthermore, loss of Ptpn22 protected P2 KD mice from spontaneous and Cyclophosphamide (CY) induced diabetes. Our data support the notion that Lyp-620W is a gain-of-function variant. Moreover, Lyp may be a valuable target for the treatment of autoimmune diseases.
In acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) alloreactive donor T cells selectively damage skin, liver, and the gastrointestinal tract while other organs are rarely affected. The mechanism of this selective target tissue infiltration is not well understood. We investigated the importance of alloantigen expression for the selective organ manifestation by examining spatiotemporal changes of cellular and molecular events after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT). To accomplish this we established a novel multicolor light sheet fluorescence microscopy (LSFM) approach for deciphering immune processes in large tissue specimens on a single-cell level in 3 dimensions. We combined and optimized protocols for antibody penetration, tissue clearing, and triple-color illumination to create a method for analyzing intact mouse and human tissues. This approach allowed us to successfully quantify changes in expression patterns of mucosal vascular addressin cell adhesion molecule–1 (MAdCAM-1) and T cell responses in Peyer’s patches following allo-HCT. In addition, we proofed that LSFM is suitable to map individual T cell subsets after HCT and detected rare cellular events. We employed this versatile technique to study the role of alloantigen expression for the selective organ manifestation after allo-HCT. Therefore, we used a T cell receptor (TCR) transgenic mouse model of GVHD that targets a single peptide antigen and thereby mimics a major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-matched single antigen mismatched (miHAg-mismatched) HCT. We transplanted TCR transgenic (OT-I) T cells into myeloablatively conditioned hosts that either express the peptide antigen ovalbumin ubiquitously (βa-Ova) or selectively in the pancreas (RIP-mOva), an organ that is normally not affected by acute GVHD. Of note, at day+6 after HCT we observed that OT-I T cell infiltration occurred in an alloantigen dependent manner. In βa-Ova recipients, where antigen was ubiquitously expressed, OT-I T cells infiltrated all organs and were not restricted to gastrointestinal tract, liver, and skin. In RIP-mOva recipients, where cognate antigen was only expressed in the pancreas, OT-I T cells selectively infiltrated this organ that is usually spared in acute GVHD. In conditioned RIP-mOva the transfer of 100 OT-I T cells sufficed to effectively infiltrate and destroy pancreatic islets resulting in 100% mortality. By employing intact tissue LSFM in RIP-mOva recipients, we identified very low numbers of initial islet infiltrating T cells on day+4 after HCT followed by a massive T cell migration to the pancreas within the following 24 hours. This suggested an effective mechanism of effector T cell recruitment to the tissue of alloantigen expression after initial antigen specific T cell encounter. In chimeras that either expressed the model antigen ovalbumin selectively in hematopoietic or in parenchymal cells only, transplanted OT-I T cells infiltrated target tissues irrespective of which compartment expressed the alloantigen. As IFN-γ could be detected in the serum of transplanted ovalbumin expressing recipients (βa-Ova, βa-Ova-chimeras and RIP-mOva) at day+6 after HCT, we hypothesized that this cytokine may be functionally involved in antigen specific OT-I T cell mediated pathology. In vitro activated OT-I T cells responded with the production of IFN-γ upon antigen re-encounter suggesting that IFN-γ might be relevant in the alloantigen dependent organ infiltration of antigen specific CD8+ T cell infiltration after HCT. Based on these data we propose that alloantigen expression plays an important role in organ specific T cell infiltration during acute GVHD and that initial alloreactive T cells recognizing the cognate antigen propagate a vicious cycle of enhanced T cell recruitment that subsequently culminates in the exacerbation of tissue restricted GVHD.
The transcription factor NRF2 is considered as the master regulator of cytoprotective and ROS-detoxifying gene expression. Due to their vulnerability to accumulating reactive oxygen species, melanomas are dependent on an efficient oxidative stress response, but to what extent melanomas rely on NRF2 is only scarcely investigated so far. In tumor entities harboring activating mutations of NRF2, such as lung adenocarcinoma, NRF2 activation is closely connected to therapy resistance. In melanoma, activating mutations are rare and triggers and effectors of NRF2 are less well characterized.
This work revealed that NRF2 is activated by oncogenic signaling, cytokines and pro-oxidant triggers, released cell-autonomously or by the tumor microenvironment. Moreover, silencing of NRF2 significantly reduced melanoma cell proliferation and repressed well-known NRF2 target genes, indicating basal transcriptional activity of NRF2 in melanoma. Transcriptomic analysis showed a large set of deregulated gene sets, besides the well-known antioxidant effectors. NRF2 suppressed the activity of MITF, a marker for the melanocyte lineage, and induced expression of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), thereby stabilizing the dedifferentiated melanoma phenotype and limiting pigmentation markers and melanoma-associated antigens. In general, the dedifferentiated melanoma phenotype is associated with a reduced tumor immunogenicity. Furthermore, stress-inducible cyclooxygenase 2 (COX2) expression, a crucial immune-modulating gene, was regulated by NRF2 in an ATF4-dependent manner. Only in presence of both transcription factors was COX2 robustly induced by H2O2 or TNFα. COX2 catalyzes the first step of the prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) synthesis, which was described to be associated with tumor immune evasion and reduction of the innate immune response.
In accordance with these potentially immune-suppressive features, immunocompetent mice injected with NRF2 knockout melanoma cells had a strikingly longer tumor-free survival compared to NRF2-proficient cells. In line with the in vitro data, NRF2-deficient tumors showed suppression of COX2 and induction of MITF. Furthermore, transcriptomic analyses of available tumors revealed a strong induction of genes belonging to the innate immune response, such as RSAD2 and IFIH1. The expression of these genes strongly correlated with immune evasion parameters in human melanoma datasets and NRF2 activation or PGE2 supplementation limited the innate immune response in vitro.
In summary, the stress dependent NRF2 activation stabilizes the dedifferentiated melanoma phenotype and facilitates the synthesis of PGE2. As a result, NRF2 reduces gene expression of the innate immune response and promotes the generation of an immune-cold tumor microenvironment. Therefore, NRF2 not only elevated the ROS resilience, but also strongly contributed to tumor growth, maintenance, and immune control in cutaneous melanoma.
Recent progresses and developments in molecular biology provide a wealth of new but insufficiently characterised data. This fund comprises amongst others biological data of genomic DNA, protein sequences, 3-dimensional protein structures as well as profiles of gene expression. In the present work, this information is used to develop new methods for the characterisation and classification of organisms and whole groups of organisms as well as to enhance the automated gain and transfer of information. The first two presented approaches (chapters 4 und 5) focus on the medically and scientifically important enterobacteria. Its impact in medicine and molecular biology is founded in versatile mechanisms of infection, their fundamental function as a commensal inhabitant of the intestinal tract and their use as model organisms as they are easy to cultivate. Despite many studies on single pathogroups with clinical distinguishable pathologies, the genotypic factors that contribute to their diversity are still partially unknown. The comprehensive genome comparison described in Chapter 4 was conducted with numerous enterobacterial strains, which cover nearly the whole range of clinically relevant diversity. The genome comparison constitutes the basis of a characterisation of the enterobacterial gene pool, of a reconstruction of evolutionary processes and of comprehensive analysis of specific protein families in enterobacterial subgroups. Correspondence analysis, which is applied for the first time in this context, yields qualitative statements to bacterial subgroups and the respective, exclusively present protein families. Specific protein families were identified for the three major subgroups of enterobacteria namely the genera Yersinia and Salmonella as well as to the group of Shigella and E. coli by applying statistical tests. In conclusion, the genome comparison-based methods provide new starting points to infer specific genotypic traits of bacterial groups from the transfer of functional annotation. Due to the high medical importance of enterobacterial isolates their classification according to pathogenicity has been in focus of many studies. The microarray technology offers a fast, reproducible and standardisable means of bacterial typing and has been proved in bacterial diagnostics, risk assessment and surveillance. The design of the diagnostic microarray of enterobacteria described in chapter 5 is based on the availability of numerous enterobacterial genome sequences. A novel probe selection strategy based on the highly efficient algorithm of string search, which considers both coding and non-coding regions of genomic DNA, enhances pathogroup detection. This principle reduces the risk of incorrect typing due to restrictions to virulence-associated capture probes. Additional capture probes extend the spectrum of applications of the microarray to simultaneous diagnostic or surveillance of antimicrobial resistance. Comprehensive test hybridisations largely confirm the reliability of the selected capture probes and its ability to robustly classify enterobacterial strains according to pathogenicity. Moreover, the tests constitute the basis of the training of a regression model for the classification of pathogroups and hybridised amounts of DNA. The regression model features a continuous learning capacity leading to an enhancement of the prediction accuracy in the process of its application. A fraction of the capture probes represents intergenic DNA and hence confirms the relevance of the underlying strategy. Interestingly, a large part of the capture probes represents poorly annotated genes suggesting the existence of yet unconsidered factors with importance to the formation of respective virulence phenotypes. Another major field of microarray applications is gene expression analysis. The size of gene expression databases rapidly increased in recent years. Although they provide a wealth of expression data, it remains challenging to integrate results from different studies. In chapter 6 the methodology of an unsupervised meta-analysis of genome-wide A. thaliana gene expression data sets is presented, which yields novel insights in function and regulation of genes. The application of kernel-based principal component analysis in combination with hierarchical clustering identified three major groups of contrasts each sharing overlapping expression profiles. Genes associated with two groups are known to play important roles in Indol-3 acetic acid (IAA) mediated plant growth and development as well as in pathogen defence. Yet uncharacterised serine-threonine kinases could be assigned to novel functions in pathogen defence by meta-analysis. In general, hidden interrelation between genes regulated under different conditions could be unravelled by the described approach. HMMs are applied to the functional characterisation of proteins or the detection of genes in genome sequences. Although HMMs are technically mature and widely applied in computational biology, I demonstrate the methodical optimisation with respect to the modelling accuracy on biological data with various distributions of sequence lengths. The subunits of these models, the states, are associated with a certain holding time being the link to length distributions of represented sequences. An adaptation of simple HMM topologies to bell-shaped length distributions described in chapter 7 was achieved by serial chain-linking of single states, while residing in the class of conventional HMMs. The impact of an optimisation of HMM topologies was underlined by performance evaluations with differently adjusted HMM topologies. In summary, a general methodology was introduced to improve the modelling behaviour of HMMs by topological optimisation with maximum likelihood and a fast and easily implementable moment estimator. Chapter 8 describes the application of HMMs to the prediction of interaction sites in protein domains. As previously demonstrated, these sites are not trivial to predict because of varying degree in conservation of their location and type within the domain family. The prediction of interaction sites in protein domains is achieved by a newly defined HMM topology, which incorporates both sequence and structure information. Posterior decoding is applied to the prediction of interaction sites providing additional information of the probability of an interaction for all sequence positions. The implementation of interaction profile HMMs (ipHMMs) is based on the well established profile HMMs and inherits its known efficiency and sensitivity. The large-scale prediction of interaction sites by ipHMMs explained protein dysfunctions caused by mutations that are associated to inheritable diseases like different types of cancer or muscular dystrophy. As already demonstrated by profile HMMs, the ipHMMs are suitable for large-scale applications. Overall, the HMM-based method enhances the prediction quality of interaction sites and improves the understanding of the molecular background of inheritable diseases. With respect to current and future requirements I provide large-scale solutions for the characterisation of biological data in this work. All described methods feature a highly portable character, which allows for the transfer to related topics or organisms, respectively. Special emphasis was put on the knowledge transfer facilitated by a steadily increasing wealth of biological information. The applied and developed statistical methods largely provide learning capacities and hence benefit from the gain of knowledge resulting in increased prediction accuracies and reliability.
Mechanisms of visual memory formation in bees: About immediate early genes and synaptic plasticity
(2017)
Animals form perceptual associations through processes of learning, and retain that information through mechanisms of memory. Honeybees and bumblebees are classic models for insect perception and learning, and despite their small brains with about one million neurons, they are organized in highly social colonies and possess an astonishing rich behavioral repertoire including navigation, communication and cognition. Honeybees are able to harvest hundreds of morphologically divergent flower types in a quick and efficient manner to gain nutrition and, back in the hive, communicate discovered food sources to nest mates. To accomplish such complex tasks, bees must be equipped with diverse sensory organs receptive to stimuli of different modalities and must be able to associatively learn and memorize the acquired information. Particularly color vision plays a prominent role, e.g. in navigation along landmarks and when bees identify inflorescences by their color signals. Once acquired, bees are known to retain visual information for days or even months. Numerous studies on visual perception and color vision have been conducted in the past decades and largely revealed the information processing pathways in the brain. In contrast, there are no data available on how the brain may change in the course of color learning experience and whether pathways differ for coarse and fine color learning. Although long-term memory (LTM) storage is assumed to generally include reorganization of the neuronal network, to date it is unclear where in the bee brain such changes occur in the course of color learning and whether visual memories are stored in one particular site or decentrally distributed over different brain domains. The present dissertation research aimed to dissect the visual memory trace in bees that is beyond mere stimulus processing and therefore two different approaches were elaborated: first, the application of immediate early genes (IEG) as genetic markers for neuronal activation to localize early processes underlying the formation of a stable LTM. Second, the analysis of late consequences of memory formation, including synaptic reorganization in central brain areas and dependencies of color discrimination complexity.
Immediate early genes (IEG) are a group of rapidly and transiently expressed genes that are induced by various types of cellular stimulation. A great number of different IEGs are routinely used as markers for the localization of neuronal activation in vertebrate brains. The present dissertation research was dedicated to establish this approach for application in bees, with focus on the candidate genes Amjra and Amegr, which are orthologous to the two common vertebrate IEGs c-jun and egr-1. First the general requirement of gene transcription for visual LTM formation was proved. Bumblebees were trained in associative proboscis extension response (PER) conditioning to monochromatic light and subsequently injected with an inhibitor of gene transcription. Memory retention tests at different intervals revealed that gene transcription is not required for the formation of a mid-term memory, but for stable LTM. Next, the appliance of the candidate genes was validated. Honeybees were exposed to stimulation with either alarm pheromone or a light pulse, followed by qPCR analysis of gene expression. Both genes differed in their expression response to sensory exposure: Amjra was upregulated in all analyzed brain parts (antennal lobes, optic lobes and mushroom bodies, MB), independent from stimulus modality, suggesting the gene as a genetic marker for unspecific general arousal. In contrast, Amegr was not significantly affected by mere sensory exposure. Therefore, the relevance of associative learning on Amegr expression was assessed. Honeybees were trained in visual PER conditioning followed by a qPCR-based analysis of the expression of all three Amegr isoforms at different intervals after conditioning. No learning-dependent alteration of gene expression was observed. However, the presence of AmEgr protein in virtually all cerebral cell nuclei was validated by immunofluorescence staining. The most prominent immune-reactivity was detected in MB calyx neurons.
Analysis of task-dependent neuronal correlates underlying visual long-term memory was conducted in free-flying honeybees confronted with either absolute conditioning to one of two perceptually similar colors or differential conditioning with both colors. Subsequent presentation of the two colors in non-rewarded discrimination tests revealed that only bees trained with differential conditioning preferred the previously learned color. In contrast, bees of the absolute conditioning group chose randomly among color stimuli. To investigate whether the observed difference in memory acquisition is also reflected at the level of synaptic microcircuits, so called microglomeruli (MG), within the visual domains of the MB calyces, MG distribution was quantified by whole-mount immunostaining three days following conditioning. Although learning-dependent differences in neuroarchitecture were absent, a significant correlation between learning performance and MG density was observed.
Taken together, this dissertation research provides fundamental work on the potential use of IEGs as markers for neuronal activation and promotes future research approaches combining behaviorally relevant color learning tests in bees with examination of the neuroarchitecture to pave the way for unraveling the visual memory trace.
The massive remodeling of the heart tissue, as observed in response to pressure overload or myocardial infarction, is considered to play a causative role in the development of heart failure. Alterations in the heart architecture clearly affect the mechanical properties of the heart muscle, but they are rooted in changes at the cellular level including modulation of gene expression. Together with integrins, the transmembrane receptors linking the extracellular environment to the cytoskeleton, extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins and matricellular proteins are key components of the remodeling process in the heart. Therefore, this thesis was aimed at analysing the role of integrins in the regulation of gene expression and heart muscle performance during cardiac wound repair induced by pressure overload or myocardial infarction (MI). To investigate the contribution of integrin Beta 1, we characterised the response of mice with a conditional, cardiac-specific deletion of the integrin Beta 1 gene in an experimental model of pressure overload by aortic banding (AB). In particular, we measured physiological alterations and gene expression events in the stressed heart in the presence or absence of integrin Beta 1. Interestingly, mice containing a knock-out allele and the ventricular myocyte-specific conditional allele of the integrin Beta 1 gene were born and grew up to adulthood. Though these animals still exhibited minor amounts of integrin Beta1 in the heart (expressed by non-myocytes), these mice displayed abnormal cardiac function and were highly sensitive to AB. Whereas a compensatory hypertrophic response to pressure overload was observed in wildtype mice, the integrin Beta 1-deficient mice were not able to undergo heart tissue remodeling. Furthermore, ECM gene expression was altered and, in particular, the increased expression of the matricellular protein SPARC after AB was abolished in integrin Beta 1–deficient mice. Interestingly, we also found a transient upregulation of SPARC mRNA during heart remodeling after MI using cDNA macroarrays. Indeed, increased SPARC protein levels were observed starting at day 2 (2.55±0.21fold, p<0.01), day 7 (3.72±0.28 fold, p<0.01) and 1 month (1.9±0.16 fold, p<0.01) after MI, which could be abolished by using an integrin alpha v inhibitor in vivo. Immunofluorescence analysis of heart tissue demonstrated that the increased SPARC expression was confined to the infarcted area and occurred together with the influx of fibroblasts into the heart. In vitro, either TGF-Beta 1 or PDGF-BB stimulated SPARC expression by fibroblasts. Inhibition of integrin alpha v did not interfere with TGF-Beta1 or PDGF induced SPARC secretion as determined by ELISA assays or Western blot. However, secretion of TGF-Beta1 and PDGF-BB by cardiomyocytes was induced by vitronectin, a ligand of integrin alpha v, and this response was blocked by the integrin alpga v inhibitor. Functionally, SPARC modulated the migratory response of fibroblasts towards ECM proteins suggesting that the local deposition of SPARC following MI contributes to scar formation. Taken together, our combined in vivo and in vitro data demonstrate that several integrin subunits play critical roles during tissue remodeling in the injured heart. Integrin-dependent gene expression events such as the upregulation of SPARC following MI are critical to orchestrate the healing response. These processes appear to involve complex cross-talk between different cell types such as cardiomyocytes and fibroblasts to allow for locally confined scar formation. The elucidation of the sophisticated interplay between integrins, matricellular proteins such as SPARC, and growth factors will undoubtedly provide us with a better and clinically useful understanding of the molecular mechanisms governing heart remodeling.
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a highly prevalent childhood-onset neurodevelopmental disorder that involves a substantial risk of persisting into adolescence and adulthood. A number of genome-wide screening studies in ADHD have been conducted in recent years, giving rise to the discovery of several variants at distinct chromosomal loci, thus emphasising the genetically complex and polygenic nature of this disorder. Accordingly, promising novel candidate genes have emerged, such as the gene encoding the glucose transporter isoform 3 (SLC2A3) and the gene encoding the latrophilin isoform 3 (LPHN3).
In this thesis, both genes were investigated in form of two separated projects. The first focused on SLC2A3 polymorphisms associated with ADHD and their potential physiological impact. For this purpose, gene expression analyses in peripheral cell models were performed as well as functional EEG measurements in humans. The second project concerned the murine gene Lphn3 including the goal of developing a mouse line containing a genetically modified Lphn3 with conditional knockout potential. In this respect, a specific DNA vector was applied to target the Lphn3 gene locus in murine embryonic stem (ES) cells as a prerequisite for the generation of appropriate chimeric mice.
The results of the first project showed that SLC2A3 duplication carriers displayed increased SLC2A3 mRNA expression in peripheral blood cells and significantly altered event-related potentials (ERPs) during tests of cognitive response control and working memory, possibly involving changes in prefrontal brain activity and memory processing. Interestingly, ADHD patients with the rs12842 T-allele, located within and tagging the SLC2A3 gene, also exhibited remarkable effects during these EEG measurements. However, such effects reflected a reversed pattern to the aforementioned SLC2A3 duplication carriers with ADHD, thus indicative of an opposed molecular mechanism. Besides, it emerged that the impact of the aforementioned SLC2A3 variants on different EEG parameters was generally much more pronounced in the group of ADHD patients than the healthy control group, implying a considerable interaction effect. Concerning the second project, preliminary results were gathered including the successful targeting of Lphn3 in murine ES cells as well as the production of highly chimeric, phenotypically unremarkable and
mostly fertile mouse chimeras. While germline transmission of the modified Lphn3 allele has not yet occurred, there are still several newborn chimeric mice that will be tested in the near future.
In conclusion, the findings suggest that SLC2A3 variants associated with ADHD are accompanied by transcriptional and functional changes in humans. Future research will help to elucidate the molecular network and neurobiological basis involved in these effects and apparently contributing to the complex clinical picture of ADHD. Moreover, given the increasing number of publications concerning latrophilins in recent years and the multitude of research opportunities provided by a conditional knockout of Lphn3 in mice, the establishment of a respective mouse line, which currently is in progress, constitutes a promising approach for the investigation of this gene and its role in ADHD.
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.
Serotonin (5-HT) is an important modulator of many physiological, behavioural and developmental processes and it plays an important role in stress coping reactions. Anxiety disorders and depression are stress-related disorders and they are associated with a malfunction of the 5-HT system, in which the 5-HT transporter (5-HTT) plays an important role. 5-Htt knockout (KO) mice represent an artificially hyperserotonergic environment, show an increased anxiety-like behaviour and seem to be a good model to investigate the role of the 5-HT system concerning stress reactions and anxiety disorders. As synaptic proteins (SPs) seem to be involved in stress reactions, the effect of acute immobilization stress on the expression of the three SPs Synaptotagmin (Syt) I, Syt IV and Syntaxin (Stx) 1A was studied in the 5-Htt KO mouse model as well as the expression of the two immediate early genes (IEGs) FBJ osteosarcoma oncogene (c-Fos) and fos-like antigen 2 (Fra-2). Additionally, the expression of the corticotrophin releasing hormone (CRH) and its two receptors CRHR1 and CRHR2 was investigated as part of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) stress system. Based on gender- and genotype-dependent differences in corticosterone levels, expression differences in the brain were investigated by performing a quantitative real time-PCR study using primer pairs specific for these SPs and for the IEGs c-Fos and Fra-2 in five different brain regions in 5-Htt KO and 5-Htt wild-type (WT) mice. Mainly gender-dependent differences could be found and weaker stress effects on the expression of SPs could be demonstrated. Regarding the expression of IEGs, stress-, gender- and genotype-dependent differences were found mainly in the hypothalamus. Also in the hypothalamus, gender effects were found concerning the expression of CRH and its both receptors. Additionally, in a second study, male 5-Htt WT and male 5-Htt deficient mice were subjected to a resident-intruder-paradigm which stresses the animals through a loser experience. The morphological changes of neurons were subsequently analyzed in Golgi-Cox-stained sections of limbic brain areas in stressed and unstressed animals of both genotypes using the computer-based microscopy system Neurolucida (Microbrightfield, Inc.). While no differences concerning dendritic length, branching patterns and spine density were found in the hippocampus and no differences concerning dendritic length and branching patterns could be shown in the cingulate cortex (CG), pyramidal neurons in the infralimbic cortex (IL) of stressed 5-Htt WT mice displayed longer dendrites compared to unstressed 5-Htt WT mice. The results indicate that, although in this model drastic alterations of neuronal morphology are absent, subtle changes can be found in specific brain areas involved in stress- and anxiety-related behaviour which may represent neural substrates underlying behavioural phenomena.
DNA microarrays have become a standard technique to assess the mRNA levels for complete genomes. To identify significantly regulated genes from these large amounts of data a wealth of methods has been developed. Despite this, the functional interpretation (i.e. deducing biological hypothesis from the data) still remains a major bottleneck in microarray data analysis. Most available methods display the set of significant genes in long lists, from which common functional properties have to be extracted. This is not only a tedious and time-consuming task, which becomes less and less feasible with increasing numbers of experimental conditions, but is also prone to errors, since it is commonly done by eye. In the course of this work methods have been developed and tested, that allow for a computerbased analysis of functional properties being relevant in the given experimental setting. To this end the Gene Ontology was chosen as an appropriate source of annotation data, because it combines human-readability with computer-accessibility of the annotations term and thus allows for a statistical analysis of functional properties. Here the gene-annotations are integrated in a Correspondence Analysis which allows to visualize genes, hybridizations and functional categories in a single plot. Due to the increasing amounts of available annotations and the fact that in most settings only few functional processes are differentially regulated, several filter criteria have been developed to reduce the number of displayed annotations to a set being relevant in the given experimental setting. The applicability of the presented visualization and filtering have both been validated on datasets of varying complexity. Starting from the well studied glucose-pathway in S. cerevisiae up to the comparison of different tumor types in human. In both settings the method generated well interpretable plots, which allowed for an immediate identification of the major functional differences between the experimental conditions [90]. While the integration of annotation data like GO facilitates functional interpretation, it lacks the capability to identify key regulatory elements. To facilitate such an analysis, the occurrence of transcription factor binding sites in upstream regions of genes has been integrated to the analysis as well. Again this methodology was biologically validated on S. cerevisiae as well human cancer data sets. In both settings TFs known to exhibit central roles for the observed transcriptional changes were plotted in marked positions and thus could be immediately identified [206]. In essence, integration of supplementary information in Correspondence Analysis visualizes genes, hybridizations and annotation data in a single, well interpretable plot. This allows for an intuitive identification of relevant annotations even in complex experimental settings. The presented approach is not limited to the shown types of data, but is generalizable to account for the majority of the available annotation data.
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of mortality in both men and women in the Western world. Earlier observations have pointed out that pre-menopausal women have a lower risk of developing cardiovascular disease than age-matched men, with an increase in risk after the onset of menopause. This observation has directed the attention to estrogen as a potential protective factor in the heart. So far the focus of research and clinical studies has been the vascular system, leaving the current knowledge on the role of estrogen in the myocardium itself rather scarce. Functional estrogen receptor-alpha as well as -beta have recently been identified in the myocardium, making the myocardium an estrogen target organ. The focus of this thesis was 1) to investigate the role of estrogen and estrogen receptors in modulating myocardial gene expression both in vivo in an animal model for cardiac hypertrophy (spontaneously hypertensive rats; SHR), as well as in vitro in isolated neonatal cardiomyocytes, 2) to investigate the mechanisms of the rapid induction of an estrogen target gene, the early growth response gene-1 (Egr-1) and 3) to initiate the search for novel estrogen target genes in the myocardium. 1) The effects of estrogen on the expression of one of the major myocardial specific contractile proteins, the alpha-myosin heavy chain (alpha-MHC) have been investigated. In ovarectomised animals treated either with 17beta-estradiol alone or in combination with a specific estrogen receptor antagonist, ICI 182780, it was shown that both alpha-MHC mRNA and protein were upregulated by estrogen in an estrogen receptor specific manner. The in vivo results were confirmed in vitro in isolated neonatal cardiomyocytes which showed that estrogen has a direct action on the myocardium potent enough to upregulate the expression of alpha-MHC. Furthermore it was shown that the alpha-MHC promoter is induced by estrogen in an estrogen receptor-dependent manner and first investigations into the mechanisms involved in this upregulation identified Egr-1 as a potential transcription factor which, upon induction by estrogen, drives the expression of the alpha-MHC promoter. 2) Previously it was shown that Egr-1 is rapidly induced by estrogen in an estrogen receptor-dependent manner which was mediated via 5 serum response elements (SREs) in the promoter region and surprisingly not via the estrogen response elements (EREs). In this study it was shown that estrogen-treatment of cardiomyocytes resulted in the recruitment of serum response factor (SRF), or an antigenically related protein, to the SREs in the Egr-1 promoter, which was specifically inhibited by the estrogen receptor antagonist ICI 182780. Transfection experiments showed that estrogen induced a heterologous promoter consisting only of 5 tandem repeats of the c-fos SRE in an ER-dependent manner, which identified SREs as promoter elements able to confer an estrogen response to target genes. 3) Potentially new target genes regulated by estrogen in vivo were analysed using hearts of ovarectomised animals as well as ovarectomised animals treated with estrogen. Analyses of cDNA microarray filters containing 1250 known genes identified 24 genes that were modified by estrogen in vivo. Among these genes, some might have potentially important functions in the heart and further analyses of these genes will create a more global picture of the role and function of estrogen in the myocardium. Taken together, the results showed that estrogen does have a direct action on the myocardium both by regulating the expression of myocardial specific genes in vivo, as well as exerting rapid non-nuclear effects in cardiac myocytes. It was shown that SREs in the promoter region of genes can confer an estrogen response to genes identifying SREs as important elements in regulation of genes by estrogen. Furthermore, 24 potentially new estrogen targets were identified in the myocardium, contributing to the general understanding of estrogen action in the myocardium.