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Human prosociality, encompassing generosity, cooperation, and volunteering, holds a vital role in our daily lives. Over the last decades, the question of whether prosociality undergoes changes over the adult lifespan has gained increased research attention. Earlier studies suggested increased prosociality in older compared to younger individuals. However, recent meta-analyses revealed that this age effect might be heterogeneous and modest. Moreover, the contributing factors and mechanisms behind these age-related variations remain to be identified. To unravel age-related differences in prosociality, the first study of this dissertation employed a meta-analytical approach to summarize existing findings and provide insight into their heterogeneity by exploring linear and quadratic age effects on self-reported and behavioral prosociality. Additionally, two empirical research studies investigated whether these age-related differences in prosociality were observed in real life, assessed through ecological momentary assessment (Study 2), and in a controlled laboratory setting by applying a modified dictator game (Study 3). Throughout these three studies, potential underlying behavioral and computational mechanisms were explored. The outcome of the meta-analysis (Study 1) revealed small linear age effects on prosociality and significant age group differences between younger and older adults, with higher levels of prosociality in older adults. Explorative evidence emerged in favor of a quadratic age effect on behavioral prosociality, indicating the highest levels in midlife. Additionally, heightened prosocial behavior among middle-aged adults was observed compared to younger adults, whereas no significant differences in prosocial behavior were noted between middle-aged and older adults. Situational and contextual features, such as the setting of the study and specific paradigm characteristics, moderated the age-prosociality relationship, highlighting the importance of the (social) context when studying prosociality. For Study 2, no significant age effect on real-life prosocial behavior was observed. However, evidence for a significant linear and quadratic age effect on experiencing empathy in real life emerged, indicating a midlife peak. Additionally, across all age groups, the link between an opportunity to empathize and age significantly predicted real-life prosocial behavior. This effect, indicating higher levels of prosocial behavior when there was a situation possibly evoking empathy, was most pronounced in midlife. Study 3 presented age differences in how older and younger adults integrate values related to monetary gains for self and others to make a potential prosocial decision. Younger individuals effectively combined both values in a multiplicative fashion, enhancing decision-making efficiency. Older adults showed an additive effect of values for self and other and displayed increased decision-making efficiency when considering the values separately. However, among older adults, individuals with better inhibitory control were better able to integrate information about both values in their decisions. Taken together, the findings of this dissertation offer new insights into the multi-faceted nature of prosociality across adulthood and the mechanisms that help explain these age-related disparities. While this dissertation observed increasing prosociality across the adult lifespan, it also questions the assumption that older adults are inherently more prosocial. The studies highlight midlife as a potential peak period in social development but also emphasize the importance of the (social) context and that different operationalizations might capture distinct facets of prosociality. This underpins the need for a comprehensive framework to understand age effects of prosociality better and guide potential interventions.
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is characterized by symptoms of inattentiveness and hyperactivity/impulsivity. Besides, increasing evidence points to ADHD patients showing emotional dysfunctions and concomitant problems in social life. However, systematic research on emotional dysfunctions in ADHD is still rare, and to date most studies lack conceptual differentiation between emotion processing and emotion regulation. The aim of this thesis was to systematically investigate emotion processing and emotion regulation in adult ADHD in a virtual reality paradigm implementing social interaction. Emotional reactions were assessed on experiential, physiological, and behavioral levels.
Experiment 1 was conducted to develop a virtual penalty kicking paradigm implying social feedback and to test it in a healthy sample. This paradigm should then be applied in ADHD patients later on. Pleasant and unpleasant trials in this paradigm consisted of hits respectively misses and subsequent feedback from a virtual coach. In neutral trials, participants were teleported to different spots of the virtual stadium. Results indicated increased positive affectivity (higher valence and arousal ratings, higher zygomaticus activations, and higher expression rates of positive emotional behavior) in response to pleasant compared to neutral trials. Reactions to unpleasant trials were contradictory, indicating increased levels of both positive and negative affectivity, compared to neutral trials. Unpleasant vs. neutral trials revealed lower valence ratings, higher arousal ratings, higher zygomaticus activations, slightly lower corrugator activations, and higher expression rates of both positive and negative emotional behavior. The intensity of emotional reactions correlated with experienced presence in the virtual reality.
To better understand the impact of hits or misses per se vs. hits or misses with coach feedback healthy participants’ emotional reactions, only 50% of all shots were followed by coach feedback in experiment 2. Neutral trials consisted of shots over the free soccer field which were followed by coach feedback in 50 % of all trials. Shots and feedback evoked more extreme valence and arousal ratings, higher zygomaticus activations, lower corrugator activations, and higher skin conductance responses than shots alone across emotional conditions. Again, results speak for the induction of positive emotions in pleasant trials whereas the induction of negative emotions in unpleasant trials seems ambiguous. Technical improvements of the virtual reality were reflected in higher presence ratings than in experiment 1.
Experiment 3 investigated emotional reactions of adult ADHD patients and healthy controls after emotion processing and response-focused emotion regulation. Participants successively
went through an ostensible online ball-tossing game (cyber ball) inducing negative emotions, and an adapted version of the virtual penalty kicking game. Throughout cyber ball, participants were included or ostracized by two other players in different experimental blocks. Participants were instructed to explicitly show, not regulate, or hide their emotions in different experimental blocks. Results provided some evidence for deficient processing of positive emotions in ADHD. Patients reported slightly lower positive affect than controls during cyber ball, gave lower valence ratings than controls in response to pleasant penalty kicking trials, and showed lower zygomaticus activations than controls especially during penalty kicking. Patients in comparison with controls showed slightly increased processing of unpleasant events during cyber ball (higher ratings of negative affect, especially in response to ostracism), but not during penalty kicking. Patients showed lower baseline skin conductance levels than controls, and impaired skin conductance modulations. Compared to controls, patients showed slight over-expression of positive as well as negative emotional behavior. Emotion regulation analyses revealed no major difficulties of ADHD vs. controls in altering their emotional reactions through deliberate response modulation. Moreover, patients reported to habitually apply adaptive emotion regulation strategies even more frequently than controls. The analyses of genetic high-risk vs. low-risk groups for ADHD across the whole sample revealed similar results as analyses for patients vs. controls for zygomaticus modulations during emotion processing, and for modulations of emotional reactions due to emotion regulation.
To sum up, the virtual penalty kicking paradigm proved to be successful for the induction of positive, but not negative emotions. The importance of presence in virtual reality for the intensity of induced emotions could be replicated. ADHD patients showed impaired processing of primarily positive emotions. Aberrations in negative emotional responding were less clear and need further investigation. Results point to adult ADHD in comparison to healthy controls suffering from baseline deficits in autonomic arousal and deficits in arousal modulation. Deficits of ADHD in the deliberate application of response-focused emotion regulation could not be found.
Obesity-induced diabetes affects over 400 million people worldwide. Obesity is a complex metabolic disease and is associated with several co-morbidities, all of which negatively affect the individual’s quality of life. It is commonly considered that obesity is a result of a positive energy misbalance, as increased food intake and lower expenditure eventually lead to the development of this disease. Moreover, the pathology of obesity is attributed to several genetic and epigenetic factors that put an individual at high risk compared to another. Adipose tissue is the main site of the organism’s energy storage. During the time when the nutrients are available in excess, adipocytes acquire triglycerides, which are released during the time of food deprivation in the process of lipolysis (free fatty acids and glycerol released from adipocytes). Uncontrolled lipolysis is the consequent event that contributes to the development of diabetes and paradoxically obesity. To identify the genetic factors aiming for future therapeutic avenues targeting this pathway, we performed a high-throughput screen and identified the Extracellular-regulated kinase 3 (ERK3) as a hit. We demonstrate that β-adrenergic stimulation stabilizes ERK3 leading to the formation of a complex with the co-factor MAP kinase-activated protein kinase 5 (MK5) thereby driving lipolysis. Mechanistically, we identify a downstream target of the ERK3/MK5 pathway, the transcription factor FOXO1, which promotes the expression of the major lipolytic enzyme ATGL. Finally, we provide evidence that targeted deletion of ERK3 in mouse adipocytes inhibits lipolysis, but elevates energy dissipation, promoting lean phenotype and ameliorating diabetes. Moreover, we shed the light on our pharmacological approach in targeting ERK3/MK5 pathways using MK5 specific inhibitor. Already after 1 week of administering the inhibitor, mice showed signs of improvement of their metabolic fitness as showed here by a reduction in induced lipolysis and the elevation in the expression of thermogenic genes. Taken together, our data suggest that targeting the ERK3/MK5 pathway, a previously unrecognized signaling axis in adipose tissue, could be an attractive target for future therapies aiming to combat obesity-induced diabetes.
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder with an estimated heritability of around 70%. In order to fully understand ADHD biology it is necessary to incorporate multiple different types of research. In this thesis, both human and animal model research is described as both lines of research are required to elucidate the aetiology of ADHD and development new treatments. The role of a single gene, Adhesion G protein-coupled receptor L3 (ADGRL3) was investigated using a knockout mouse model. ADGRL3 has putative roles in neuronal migration and synapse function. Various polymorphisms in ADGRL3 have been linked with an increased risk of attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in human studies. Adgrl3-deficient mice were examined across multiple behavioural domains related to ADHD: locomotive activity, visuospatial and recognition memory, gait impulsivity, aggression, sociability and anxiety-like behaviour. The transcriptomic alterations caused by Adgrl3-depletion were analysed by RNA-sequencing of three ADHD-relevant brain regions: prefrontal cortex (PFC), hippocampus and striatum. Increased locomotive activity in Adgrl3-/- mice was observed across all tests with the specific gait analysis revealing subtle gait abnormalities. Spatial memory and learning domains were also impaired in these mice. Increased levels of impulsivity and sociability accompanying decreased aggression were also detected. None of these alterations were observed in Adgrl3+/- mice. The numbers of genes found to exhibit differential expression was relatively small in all brain regions sequenced. The absence of large scale gene expression dysregulation indicates a specific pathway of action, rather than a broad neurobiological perturbation. The PFC had the greatest number of differentially expressed genes and gene-set analysis of differential expression in this brain region detected a number of ADHD-relevant pathways including dopaminergic synapses as well as cocaine and amphetamine addiction. The most dysregulated gene in the PFC was Slc6a3 which codes for the dopamine transporter, a molecule vital to current pharmacological treatment of ADHD. The behavioural and transcriptomic results described in this thesis further validate Adgrl3 constitutive knockout mice as an experimental model of ADHD and provide neuroanatomical targets for future studies involving ADGRL3 modified animal models.
The study of ADHD risk genes such as ADGRL3 requires the gene to be first identified using human studies. These studies may be genome based such as genome wide association studies (GWAS) or transcriptome based using microarray or RNA sequencing technology. To explore ADHD biology in humans the research described in this thesis includes both GWAS and trancriptomic data. A two-step transcriptome profiling was performed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of 143 ADHD subjects and 169 healthy controls. We combined GWAS and expression data in an expression-based Polygenic Risk Score (PRS) analysis in a total sample of 879 ADHD cases and 1919 controls from three different datasets. Through this exploratory study we found eight differentially expressed genes in ADHD and no support for the genetic background of the disorder playing a role in the aberrant expression levels identified. These results highlight promising candidate genes and gene pathways for ADHD and support the use of peripheral tissues to assess gene expression signatures for ADHD.
This thesis illustrates how both human and animal model research is required to increase our understanding of ADHD. The animal models provide biological insight into the targets identified in human studies and may themselves provide further relevant gene targets. Only by combining research from disparate sources can we develop the thorough understanding on ADHD biology required for treatment development, which is the ultimate goal of translational science research.
The cytokine interleukin-5 (IL-5) is part of the TH2-mediated immune response. As a key regulator of eosinophilic granulocytes (eosinophils), IL-5 controls multiple aspects of eosinophil life. Eosinophils play a pathogenic role in the onset and progression of atopic diseases as well as hypereosinophilic syndrome (HES). Here, cytotoxic proteins and pro-inflammatory mediators stored in intracellular vesicles termed granula are released upon activation thereby causing local inflammation to fight the pathogen. However, if such inflammation persists, tissue damage and organ failure can occur. Due to the close relationship between eosinophils and IL-5 this cytokine has become a major pharmaceutical target for the treatment of atopic diseases or HES. As observed with other cytokines, IL-5 signals by assembling a heterodimeric receptor complex at the cell surface in a stepwise mechanism. In the first step IL-5 binds to its receptor IL-5Rα (CD125). This membrane-located complex then recruits the so-called common beta chain βc (CD131) into a ternary ligand receptor complex, which leads to activation of intracellular signaling cascades. Based on this mechanism various strategies targeting either IL-5 or IL-5Rα have been developed allowing to specifically abrogate IL-5 signaling. In addition to the classical approach of employing neutralizing antibodies against IL 5/IL-5Rα or antagonistic IL-5 variants, two groups comprising small 18 to 30mer peptides have been discovered, that bind to and block IL-5Rα from binding its activating ligand IL-5. Structure-function studies have provided detailed insights into the architecture and interaction of IL-5IL-5Rα and βc. However, structural information for the ternary IL-5 complex as well as IL-5 inhibiting peptides is still lacking.
In this thesis three areas were investigated. Firstly, to obtain insights into the second receptor activation step, i.e. formation of the ternary ligand-receptor complex IL-5•IL-5Rα•βc, a high-yield production for the extracellular domain of βc was established to facilitate structure determination of the ternary ligand receptor assembly by either X-ray crystallography or cryo-electron microscopy.
In a second project structure analysis of the ectodomain of IL-5Rα in its unbound conformation was attempted. Data on IL-5Rα in its ligand-free state would provide important information as to whether the wrench-like shaped ectodomain of IL-5Rα adopts a fixed preformed conformation or whether it is flexible to adapt to its ligand binding partner upon interaction. While crystallization of free IL-5Rα failed, as the crystals obtained did not diffract X rays to high resolution, functional analysis strongly points towards a selection fit binding mechanism for IL-5Rα instead of a rigid and fixed IL-5Rα structure. Hence IL-5 possibly binds to a partially open architecture, which then closes to the known wrench-like architecture. The latter is then stabilized by interactions within the D1-D2 interface resulting in the tight binding of IL-5.
In a third project X-ray structure analysis of a complex of the IL-5 inhibitory peptide AF17121 bound to the ectodomain of IL-5Rα was performed. This novel structure shows how the small cyclic 18mer peptide tightly binds into the wrench-like cleft formed by domains D1 and D2 of IL-5Rα. Due to the partial overlap of its binding site at IL-5Rα with the epitope for IL-5 binding, the peptide blocks IL-5 from access to key residues for binding explaining how the small peptide can effectively compete with the rather large ligand IL-5. While AF17121 and IL-5 seemingly bind to the same site at IL-5Rα, functional studies however showed that recognition and binding of both ligands differ. With the structure for the peptide-receptor complex at hand, peptide design and engineering could be performed to generate AF17121 analogies with enhanced receptor affinity. Several promising positions in the peptide AF17121 could be identified, which could improve inhibition capacity and might serve as a starting point for AF17121-based peptidomimetics that can yield either superior peptide based IL-5 antagonists or small-molecule-based pharmacophores for future therapies of atopic diseases or the hypereosinophilic syndrome.
Barth Syndrome (BTHS) is an inherited X-chromosomal linked disorder, characterized by early development of cardiomyopathy, immune system defects, skeletal muscle myopathy and growth retardation. The disease displays a wide variety of symptoms including heart failure, exercise intolerance and fatigue due to the muscle weakness. The cause of the disease are mutations in the gene encoding for the mitochondrial transacylase Tafazzin (TAZ), which is important for remodeling of the phospholipid cardiolipin (CL). All mutations result in a pronounced decrease of the functional enzyme leading to an increase of monolysocardiolipin (MLCL), the precursor of mature CL, and a decrease in mature CL itself. CL is a hallmark phospholipid of mitochondrial membranes, highly enriched in the inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM). It is not only important for the formation of the cristae structures, but also for the function of different protein complexes associated with the mitochondrial membrane. Reduced levels of mature CL cause remodeling of the respiratory chain supercomplexes, impaired respiration, defects in the Krebs cycle and a loss of mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU) protein. The defective Ca2+ handling causes impaired redox homeostasis and energy metabolism resulting in cellular arrhythmias and defective electrical conduction. In an uncompensated situation, blunting mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake provokes increased mitochondrial emission of H2O2 during workload transitions, related to oxidation of NADPH, which is required to regenerate anti-oxidative enzymes. However, in the hearts and cardiac myocytes of mice with a global knock-down of the Taz gene (Taz-KD), no increase in mitochondrial ROS was observed, suggesting that other metabolic pathways may have compensated for reduced Krebs cycle activation.
The healthy heart produces most of its energy by consuming fatty acids. In this study, the fatty acid uptake into mitochondria and their further degradation was investigated, which showed a switch of the metabolism in general in the Taz-KD mouse model. In vivo studies revealed an increase of glucose uptake into the heart and decreased fatty acid uptake and oxidation. Disturbed energy conversion resulted in activation of retrograde signaling pathways, implicating overall changes in the cell metabolism. Upregulated integrated stress response (ISR) was confirmed by increased levels of the downstream target, i.e., the activating transcription factor 4 (ATF4). A Tafazzin knockout mouse embryonal fibroblast cell model (TazKO) was used to inhibit the ISR using siRNA transfection or pharmaceutical inhibition. This verified the central role of
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the ISR in regulating the metabolism in BTHS. Moreover, an increased metabolic flux into glutathione biosynthesis was observed, which supports redox homeostasis. In vivo PET-CT scans depicted elevated activity of the xCT system in the BTHS mouse heart, which transports essential amino acids for the biosynthesis of glutathione precursors. Furthermore, the stress induced signaling pathway also affected the glutamate metabolism, which fuels into the Krebs cycle via -ketoglutarate and therefore supports energy converting pathways. In summary, this thesis provides novel insights into the energy metabolism and redox homeostasis in Barth syndrome cardiomyopathy and its regulation by the integrated stress response, which plays a central role in the metabolic alterations. The aim of the thesis was to improve the understanding of these metabolic changes and to identify novel targets, which can provide new possibilities for therapeutic intervention in Barth syndrome.
G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are key biological switches that transmit both internal and external stimuli into the cell interior. Among the GPCRs, the “light receptor” rhodopsin has been shown to activate with a re-arrangement of the transmembrane helix bundle within ≈1 ms, while all other receptors are thought to become activated in subsecond range at saturating concentrations. Here we investigate activation kinetics of a dimeric GPCR, the metabotropic glutamate receptor-1 (mGluR1), and several class A GPCRs, as muscarinic receptor 3 (M3R), adrenergic (α2aAR and β1R) and opioid (µOR) receptors. We first used UV-light-triggered uncaging of glutamate in intact cells. Sub-millisecond Förster resonance energy transfer recordings between labels at intracellular receptor sites were used to record conformational changes in the mGluR1. At millimolar ligand concentrations the initial rearrangement between the mGluR1 subunits occurs at a speed of τ1≈1-2 ms. These rapid changes were followed by significantly slower conformational changes in the transmembrane domain (τ2≈20 ms). We further characterized novel photoswitchable negative allosteric modulators for mGluR1, which bind to its transmembrane core and block the conformational change as well as the downstream signaling. Effects of the compounds were quantified in pharmacological cell assays in the dark and using UV and green light illumination. We finally develop a framework for image-based kinetic analysis of GPCRs which allowed us to measure activation kinetics of several prototypical class A GPCRs and to discover membrane heterogeneities of GPCR activation. It appears that GPCR activation signal is not only dependent on the amount of activated receptors, but also has some level of correlation with the local density of activated receptors.
In this work, accelerated non-Cartesian Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) methods were established and applied to cardiovascular imaging (CMR) at different magnetic field strengths (3T and 7T).
To enable rapid data acquisition, highly efficient spiral k-space trajectories were created. In addition, hybrid sampling patterns such as the twisting radial lines (TWIRL) k-space trajectory were studied.
Imperfections of the dynamic gradient system of a MR scanner result in k-space sampling errors. Ultimately, these errors can lead to image artifacts in non-Cartesian acquisitions.
Among other reasons such as an increased reconstruction complexity, they cause the lack of spiral sequences in clinical routine compared to standard Cartesian imaging.
Therefore, the Gradient System Transfer Functions (GSTFs) of both scanners were determined and used for k-space trajectory correction in post-correction as well as in terms of a pre-emphasis.
The GSTF pre-emphasis was implemented as a fully automatic procedure, which enabled a precise correction of arbitrary gradient waveforms for double-oblique slice orientations.
Consequently, artifacts due to trajectory errors could be mitigated, which resulted in high image quality in non-Cartesian MRI.
Additionally, the GSTF correction was validated by measuring pre-emphasized spiral gradient outputs, which showed high agreement with the theoretical gradient waveforms.
Furthermore, it could be demonstrated that the performance of the GSTF correction is superior to a simple delay compensation approach.
The developed pulse sequences were applied to gated as well as real-time CMR. Special focus lied on the implementation of a spiral imaging protocol to resolve the beating heart of animals and humans in real time and free breathing.
In order to achieve real-time CMR with high spatiotemporal resolution, k-space undersampling was performed. For this reason, efficient sampling strategies were developed with the aim to facilitate compressed sensing (CS) during image reconstruction.
The applied CS approach successfully removed aliasing artifacts and yielded high-resolution cardiac image series. Image reconstruction was performed offline in all cases such that the images were not available immediately after acquisition at the scanner.
Spiral real-time CMR could be performed in free breathing, which led to an acquisition time of less than 1 minute for a whole short-axis stack.
At 3T, the results were compared to the gold standard of electrocardiogram-gated Cartesian CMR in breath hold, which revealed similar values for important cardiovascular functional and volumetric parameters.
This paves the way to an application of the developed framework in clinical routine of CMR.
In addition, the spiral real-time protocol was transferred to swallowing and speech imaging at 3T, and first images were presented.
The results were of high quality and confirm the straightforward utilization of the spiral sequence in other fields of MRI.
In general, the GSTF correction yielded high-quality images at both field strengths, 3T and 7T.
Off-resonance related blurring was mitigated by applying non-Cartesian readout gradients of short duration. At 7T, however, B1-inhomogeneity led to image artifacts in some cases.
All in all, this work demonstrated great advances in accelerating the MRI process by combining efficient, undersampled non-Cartesian k-space coverage with CS reconstruction.
Trajectory correction using the GSTF can be implemented at any scanner model and enables non-Cartesian imaging with high image quality.
Especially MRI of dynamic processes greatly benefits from the presented rapid imaging approaches.
This work deals with the acceleration of cardiovascular MRI for the assessment
of functional information in steady-state contrast and for viability assessment
during the inversion recovery of the magnetization. Two approaches
are introduced and discussed in detail. MOCO-MAP uses an exponential
model to recover dynamic image data, IR-CRISPI, with its low-rank plus
sparse reconstruction, is related to compressed sensing.
MOCO-MAP is a successor to model-based acceleration of parametermapping
(MAP) for the application in the myocardial region. To this end, it
was augmented with a motion correction (MOCO) step to allow exponential
fitting the signal of a still object in temporal direction. Iteratively, this
introduction of prior physical knowledge together with the enforcement of
consistency with the measured data can be used to reconstruct an image
series from distinctly shorter sampling time than the standard exam (< 3 s
opposed to about 10 s). Results show feasibility of the method as well as
detectability of delayed enhancement in the myocardium, but also significant
discrepancies when imaging cardiac function and artifacts caused already by
minor inaccuracy of the motion correction.
IR-CRISPI was developed from CRISPI, which is a real-time protocol
specifically designed for functional evaluation of image data in steady-state
contrast. With a reconstruction based on the separate calculation of low-rank
and sparse part, it employs a softer constraint than the strict exponential
model, which was possible due to sufficient temporal sampling density via
spiral acquisition. The low-rank plus sparse reconstruction is fit for the use on
dynamic and on inversion recovery data. Thus, motion correction is rendered
unnecessary with it.
IR-CRISPI was equipped with noise suppression via spatial wavelet filtering.
A study comprising 10 patients with cardiac disease show medical
applicability. A comparison with performed traditional reference exams offer
insight into diagnostic benefits. Especially regarding patients with difficulty
to hold their breath, the real-time manner of the IR-CRISPI acquisition provides
a valuable alternative and an increase in robustness.
In conclusion, especially with IR-CRISPI in free breathing, a major acceleration
of the cardiovascular MR exam could be realized. In an acquisition
of less than 100 s, it not only includes the information of two traditional
protocols (cine and LGE), which take up more than 9.6 min, but also allows
adjustment of TI in retrospect and yields lower artifact level with similar
image quality.
Recently, it was shown that MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells express very high levels of the A2BAR as the sole adenosine receptor subtype, and stimulation of the A2BAR in MDA-MB-231 cells triggers an unusual inhibitory signal on ERK1/2 phosphorylation. The ERK1/2 pathway is reported to be associated with the control of growth, proliferation and differentiation of cells and as such might serve as a promising target for tumor treatment. The present study investigated signaling mechanisms involved in linking A2BAR to ERK1/2 phosphorylation in MDA-MB-231 cells. The A2BAR mediated reduction of ERK1/2 phosphorylation and of proliferation of MDA-MB-231 cell is in good agreement with previous results from (Dubey et al., 2005). These observations provide support to the hypothesis that activation of A2BAR could attenuate the growth of some types of cancer cell and argue against a stimulation of proliferation resulting from the activation of A2BAR as discussed by (Fernandez-Gallardo et al., 2016). AC activation by forskolin has recently been shown to enhance the activity of the chemotherapeutic agent doxorubicin in TNBC cells via a mechanism dependent on the PKA-mediated inhibition of ERK1/2 phosphorylation. Furthermore, forskolin also increased the sensitivity of MDA-MB-231 and MDA-MB-468 triple negative breast cancer cells to 5-fluorouracil and taxol (Illiano et al., 2018), and sustains the evidence of anticancer activity mediated by cAMP/PKA-mediated ERK1/2 inhibition. Similar to these studies, a reduced amount of pERK1/2 was also observed after stimulation of AC with FSK, application of cAMP-AM or inhibition of PDE-4. The inhibition of ERK1/2 phosphorylation was mimicked by UTP and abolished with the PLC inhibitor U73122 or by chelating intracellular Ca2+ with BAPTA-AM. These results point to an important role for both cAMP and Ca2+ signaling in the pathway leading to a decrease in ERK1/2 phosphorylation. This study encourages the idea that A2BAR could be used as target in cancer therapy. But A2BAR did not only stimulate signaling cascades associated with cell survival and proliferation reduction, but also key phases relevant in angiogenesis like Ca2+ mobilization (Kohn et al., 1995). Whereas the potency toward AC and Ca2+ are similar for the diverse agonists, the potency to promote ERK1/2 reduction is much higher. Interestingly, the proliferation of MDA-MB-231 cells is inhibited by low nanomolar agonist concentration which is inactive in Ca2+ mobilization. This means that it is certainly possible to reduce the proliferation without promoting angiogenesis. LUF6210 is particularly interesting when considering that it preferentially stimulates a reduction in ERK1/2 phosphorylation over Ca2+ and therefore may not promote angiogenesis. LUF6210 is therapeutically appealing as adjuvant in treatment of cancer. Given that stimulation of AC can activate a reduction of ERK1/2 phosphorylation and proliferation in cancer cells, agonist bias toward Gs-AC-PKA-mediated ERK1/2 inhibition represent a potential therapy of various malignancies. The fact that the reduction of ERK1/2 phosphorylation followed by reduced proliferation observed in MDA-MB-231 cells were mediated by the activation of the A2BAR illustrates the importance of this receptor subtype in cancer. A2BARs must be considered as a key factor in cancer treatment and deserve attention for the development of new therapeutic strategies.