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This thesis aimed the development of a correlated device which combines FluidFM® with Fluorescence Microscopy (FL) (FL-FluidFM®) and enables the simultaneous quantification of adhesion forces and fluorescent visualization of mature cells. The implementation of a PIFOC was crucial to achieve a high-resolution as well as a stable but dynamic focus level. The functionality of SCFS after hardware modification was verified by comparing two force-curves, both showing the typical force progression and measured with the optimized and conventional hardware, respectively. Then, the integration of FL was examined by detaching fluorescently labeled REF52 cells. The fluorescence illumination of the cytoskeleton showed the expected characteristic force profile and no evidence of interference effects. Afterwards a corresponding correlative data analysis was addressed including manual force step fitting, the identification of visualized cellular unbinding, and a time-dependent correlation. This procedure revealed a link between the area of cytoskeletal unbinding and force-jumps. This was followed by a comparison of the detachment characteristics of intercellular connected HUVECs and individual REF52 cells. HUVECs showed maximum detachment forces in the same order of magnitude as the ones of single REF52 cells. This contrasted with the expected strong cohesiveness of endothelial cells and indicated a lack of cell-cell contact formation. The latter was confirmed by a comparison of HUVECs, primary HBMVECs, and immortalized EA.hy926 cells fluorescently labeled for two marker proteins of intercellular junctions. This unveiled that both the previous cultivation duration and the cell type have a major impact on the development of intercellular junctions. In summary, the correlative FL FluidFM® represents a powerful novel approach, which enables a truly contemporaneous performance and, thus, has the potential to reveal new insights into the mechanobiological properties of cell adhesion.
Protein phosphatases can be classified into at least three major families based on amino acid sequences at their active sites. A newly emerging phosphatase family contains the active site sequence DXDX(T/V), and belongs to the haloacid dehalogenase (HAD) superfamily of hydrolases, a ubiquitous and evolutionarily conserved enzyme family. Although the existence of 58 human HAD enzymes has been predicted by database analysis, our understanding of their biological functions remains rudimentary.By database mining amd phylogenetic analysis of human HAD phosphatases, we have found a marked increase in cell area of spreading cells, as well as accelerated cell spreading onfibronectin. Taken together, we have identified and characterized AUM as a novel member of the emerging family of aspartate-dependent protein tyrosine phosphatases. Our findings implicate AUM as an important regulator of Src-dependent cytoskeletal dynamics during cell adhesion and migration. a previously unidentified enzyme with homology to Chronophin, a cytoskeletal regulatory HAD phosphatase. We have cloned and characterized this novel enzyme and named it AUM,for actin remodeling, ubiquitously expressed, magnesium-dependent HAD phosphatase. By Northern blot, real-time PCR and Western blot analysis, we show that AUM is broadly expressed in all major human and mouse tissues with highest levels found in testis. Using immunohistochemistry, we can show that AUM is specifically expressed in maturing germ cells and that its expression peaks during spermiogenesis. To characterize the substrate preference of AUM, we have conducted an in vitro phosphatase substrate screen with 720 phosphopeptides derived from human phosphorylation sites. AUM exclusively dephosphorylates phosphotyrosine (pTyr)-containing peptides. Furthermore, only 17 pTyr peptides (~2% of all pTyr peptides investigated) acted as AUM substrates, indicating a high degree of substrate specificity. Putative AUM substrates include proteins involved in cytoskeletal dynamics and tyrosine kinase signaling.In accordance with the phosphopeptide screen, phosphatase overlay assays employing whole-cell extracts of pervanadate-treated HeLa cells show that AUM dephosphorylates only a limited number of tyrosyl-phosphorylated proteins.The role of AUM for cellular signaling was investigated in response to epidermal growth factor (EGF) stimulation in a spermatogonial cell line (GC-1 spg). The overexpression of AUM reduces, whereas the RNAi-mediated depletion of endogenous AUM increases EGF inducedtyrosine phosphorylation, including changes in the phosphorylation of the EGF receptor itself. Interestingly, in vitro kinase/phosphatase assays with purified Src and AUM indicate that AUM can activate Src, which in turn phosphorylates and inactivates AUM. Although it is at present unclear how Src and AUM regulate each other, our initial findings suggests that AUM enhances Src kinase activity independently of its phosphatase activity, whereas Src diminishes AUM phosphatase activity in a kinase dependent manner. On a cellular level, AUM-depleted cells are characterized by altered actin cytoskeletal dynamics and adhesion, as indicated by stabilized actin filaments, enlarged focal adhesions,a marked increase in cell area of spreading cells, as well as accelerated cell spreading on fibronectin. Taken together, we have identified and characterized AUM as a novel member of the emerging family of aspartate-dependent protein tyrosine phosphatases. Our findings implicate AUM as an important regulator of Src-dependent cytoskeletal dynamics during cell adhesion and migration.