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The DREAM complex plays an important role in regulation of gene expression during the cell cycle. It was previously shown that the DREAM subunits LIN9 and B-MYB are required for early embryonic development and for the maintenance of the inner cell mass in vitro. In this work the effect of LIN9 or B-MYB depletion on embryonic stem cells (ESC) was examined. It demonstrates that LIN9 and B-MYB knock down changes the cell cycle distribution of ESCs and results in an accumulation of cells in G2 and M and in an increase of polyploid cells. By using genome-wide expression studies it was revealed that the depletion of LIN9 leads to downregulation of mitotic genes and to upregulation of differentiation-specific genes. ChIP-on chip experiments determined that mitotic genes are direct targets of LIN9 while lineage specific markers are regulated indirectly. Importantly, depletion of LIN9 does not alter the expression of the pluripotency markers Sox2 and Oct4 and LIN9 depleted ESCs retain alkaline phosphatase activity. I conclude that LIN9 is essential for proliferation and genome stability of ESCs by activating genes with important functions in mitosis and cytokinesis. The exact molecular mechanisms behind this gene activation are still unclear as no DREAM subunit features a catalytically active domain. It is assumed that DREAM interacts with other proteins or co-factors for transcriptional activation. This study discovered potential binding proteins by combining in vivo isotope labeling of proteins with mass spectrometry
(MS) and further analysed the identified interaction of the tight junction protein ZO-2 with DREAM which is cell cycle dependent and strongest in S-phase. ZO-2 depletion results in reduced cell proliferation and decreased G1 gene expression. As no G2/M genes, typical DREAM targets, are affected upon ZO-2 knock down, it is unlikely that ZO-2 binding is needed for a functional DREAM complex. However, this work demonstrates that with (MS)-based quantitative proteomics, DREAM interacting proteins can be identified which might help to elucidate the mechanisms underlying DREAM mediated gene activation.
GAS2L3 was identified recently as a target gene of the DREAM complex (Reichert et al., 2010; Wolter et al., 2012). It was shown that GAS2L3 is expressed in a cell cycle specific manner and that depletion of the protein leads to defects in cytokinesis and genomic instability (Wolter et al., 2012).
Major aim of this thesis was, to further characterize the biochemical properties and physiological function of GAS2L3.
By in vitro co-sedimentation and bundling assays, GAS2L3 was identified as a cytoskeleton associated protein which bundles, binds and crosslinks F-actin and MTs. GST pulldown assays and co-immunoprecipitation experiments revealed that GAS2L3 interacts in vitro and in vivo with the chromosomal passenger complex (CPC), a very important regulator of mitosis and cytokinesis, and that the interaction is mediated by the GAR domain of GAS2L3 and the C-terminal part of Borealin and the N-terminal part of Survivin. Kinase assays showed that GAS2L3 is not a substrate of the CPC but is strongly phosphorylated by CDK1 in vitro. Depletion of GAS2L3 by shRNA influenced protein stability and activity of the CPC. However pharmacological studies showed that the decreased CPC activity is not responsible for the observed cytokinesis defects upon GAS2L3 depletion. Immunofluorescence experiments revealed that GAS2L3 is localized to the constriction zone by the CPC in a GAR dependent manner and that the GAR domain is important for proper protein function.
New interacting proteins of GAS2L3 were identified by stable isotope labelling by amino acids in cell culture (SILAC) in combination with tandem affinity purification and subsequent mass spectrometrical analysis. Co-immunoprecipitation experiments further confirmed the obtained mass spectrometrical data.
To address the physiological function of GAS2L3 in vivo, a conditional and a non-conditional knockout mouse strain was established. The non-conditional mouse strain showed a highly increased mortality rate before weaning age probably due to heart failure. The physiological function of GAS2L3 in vivo as well as the exact reason for the observed heart phenotype is not known at the moment.
Aurora B is a mitotic kinase that is essential for cell division. Because it is mutated or overexpressed in a range of cancer types, it has been suggested as a novel therapeutic target. Currently chemical inhibitors against Aurora B are in various phases of clinical trials for treatment of solid tumors and leukemia. Information regarding the molecular requirements for the reported phenotypes of Aurora B inhibition such as cell cycle arrest, activation of the tumor suppressor p53 and its target p21 are not well understood.
In this study, I investigated the requirements for p21 induction after Aurora B inhibition. I found that p38 is phosphorylated and activated when Aurora B is inhibited. Experiments with chemical inhibitors against p38 indicate that p38 is required for p21 induction and cell cycle arrest in response to Aurora B inhibition. p53 induction after impairment of Aurora B function and the recruitment of p53 to its binding site in the p21 gene promoter occur independently of p38 signaling. Instead, I found that p38 is required for the enrichment of the elongating RNA Polymerase II in the coding region of the p21 gene. Furthermore, p38 is required for formation of the full-length p21 mRNA transcript. These data indicate that p38 promotes the transcriptional elongation of p21 gene in response to Aurora B inhibition. In further experiments I could show that the p21 causes cell cycle arrest due to a decrease in E2F-dependent transcription by promoting the dephosphorylation of the retinoblastoma protein.
Using synchronized cells I could show that the induction of p21 in response to Aurora B inhibition requires transition through an aberrant mitosis and does not occur in cells that are arrested in interphase. Interestingly, p38, p53 and p21 are already induced by partial inhibition of Aurora B, which results in aneuploidy but not in cytokinesis failure and in tetraploidy. This supports the notion that activation of p38-p53-p21 signaling correlates with aneuploidy but not with tetraploidy or binucleation. Partial inhibition of Aurora B also leads to increased generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which are required for the activation of p38, p21 and cell cycle arrest. Based on these observations I propose the following model: Inhibition of Aurora B leads to chromosome missegregation resulting in aneuploidy. This results in increased generation of ROS (reactive oxygen species) possibly through proteotoxic stress caused by an imbalance of protein synthesis in aneuploid cells. ROS triggers the activation of p38, which then stimulates the transcriptional elongation of p21 resulting in cell cycle arrest.
Aneuploidy, proteotoxic stress and oxidative stress are hallmarks of cancer cells. Based on my results reported in this study, I suggest that the combination of Aurora B inhibitors with drugs that specifically target aneuploid cells might be a novel strategy for cancer therapy, as this is a lethal combination for proliferation of cancer cells.
The recently discovered human DREAM complex (for DP, RB-like, E2F and MuvB complex) is a chromatin-associated pocket protein complex involved in cell cycle- dependent gene expression. DREAM consists of five core subunits and forms a complex either with the pocket protein p130 and the transcription factor E2F4 to repress gene expression or with the transcription factors B-MYB and FOXM1 to promote gene expression.
Gas2l3 was recently identified by our group as a novel DREAM target gene. Subsequent characterization in human cell lines revealed that GAS2L3 is a microtubule and F-actin cross-linking protein, expressed in G2/M, plays a role in cytokinesis, and is important for chromosomal stability.
The aim of the first part of the study was to analyze how expression of GAS2L3 is regulated by DREAM and to provide a better understanding of the function of GAS2L3 in mitosis and cytokinesis.
ChIP assays revealed that the repressive and the activating form of DREAM bind to the GAS2L3 promoter. RNA interference (RNAi) mediated GAS2L3 depletion demonstrated the requirement of GAS2L3 for proper cleavage furrow ingression in cytokinesis. Immunofluorescence-based localization studies showed a localization of GAS2L3 at the mitotic spindle in mitosis and at the midbody in cytokinesis. Additional experiments demonstrated that the GAS2L3 GAR domain, a putative microtubule- binding domain, is responsible for GAS2L3 localization to the constriction zones in cytokinesis suggesting a function for GAS2L3 in the abscission process.
DREAM is known to promote G2/M gene expression. DREAM target genes include several mitotic kinesins and mitotic microtubule-associated proteins (mitotic MAPs). However, it is not clear to what extent DREAM regulates mitotic kinesins and MAPs, so far. Furthermore, a comprehensive study of mitotic kinesin expression in cancer cell lines is still missing.
Therefore, the second major aim of the thesis was to characterize the regulation of mitotic kinesins and MAPs by DREAM, to investigate the expression of mitotic kinesins in cancer cell line panels and to evaluate them as possible anti-cancer targets.
ChIP assays together with RNAi mediated DREAM subunit depletion experiments demonstrated that DREAM is a master regulator of mitotic kinesins. Furthermore, expression analyses in a panel of breast and lung cancer cell lines revealed that mitotic kinesins are up-regulated in the majority of cancer cell lines in contrast to non-transformed controls. Finally, an inducible lentiviral-based shRNA system was developed to effectively deplete mitotic kinesins. Depletion of selected mitotic kinesins resulted in cytokinesis failures and strong anti-proliferative effects in several human cancer cell lines.
Thus, this system will provide a robust tool for future investigation of mitotic kinesin function in cancer cells.
The Role of DREAM/MMB-mediated mitotic gene expression downstream of mutated K-Ras in lung cancer
(2017)
The evolutionary conserved Myb-MuvB (MMB) multiprotein complex has an essential role in transcriptional activation of mitotic genes. MMB target genes as well as the MMB associated transcription factor B-Myb and FoxM1 are highly expressed in a range of different cancer types. The elevated expression of these genes correlates with an advanced tumor state and a poor prognosis. This suggests that MMB could contribute to tumorigenesis by mediating overexpression of mitotic genes. Although MMB has been extensively characterized biochemically, the requirement for MMB to tumorigenesis in vivo remains largely unknown and has not been tested directly so far.
In this study, conditional knockout of the MMB core member Lin9 inhibits tumor formation in vivo in a mouse model of lung cancer driven by oncogenic K-Ras and loss of p53. The incomplete recombination observed within tumors points towards an enormous selection pressure against the complete loss of Lin9. RNA interference (RNAi)-mediated depletion of Lin9 or the MMB associated subunit B-Myb provides evidence that MMB is required for the expression of mitotic genes in lung cancer cells. Moreover, it was demonstrated that proliferation of lung cancer cells strongly depends on MMB. Furthermore, in this study, the relationship of MMB to the p53 tumor suppressor was investigated in a primary lung cancer cell line with restorable p53 function. Expression analysis revealed that mitotic genes are downregulated after p53 re-expression. Moreover, activation of p53 induces formation of the repressive DREAM complex and results in enrichment of DREAM at mitotic gene promoters. Conversely, MMB is displaced at these promoters.
Based on these findings the following model is proposed: In p53-negative cells, mitogenic stimuli foster the switch from DREAM to MMB. Thus, mitotic genes are overexpressed and may promote chromosomal instability and tumorigenesis.
This study provides evidence that MMB contributes to the upregulation of G2/M phase-specific genes in p53-negative cells and suggests that inhibition of MMB (or its target genes) might be a strategy for treatment of lung cancer.
The evolutionary conserved Myb-MuvB (MMB) multiprotein complex is a transcriptional master regulator of mitotic gene expression. The MMB subunits B-MYB, FOXM1 as well as target genes of MMB are often overexpressed in different cancer types. Elevated expression of these genes correlates with an advanced tumor state and a poor prognosis for patients. Furthermore, it has been reported that pathways, which are involved in regulating the mitotic machinery are attractive for a potential treatment of cancers harbouring Ras mutations (Luo et al., 2009).
This suggest that the MMB complex could be required for tumorigenesis by mediating overactivity of mitotic genes and that the MMB could be a useful target for lung cancer treatment. However, although MMB has been characterized biochemically, the contribution of MMB to tumorigenesis is largely unknown in particular in vivo.
In this thesis, it was demonstrated that the MMB complex is required for lung tumorigenesis in vivo in a mouse model of non small cell lung cancer. Elevated levels of B-MYB, NUSAP1 or CENPF in advanced tumors as opposed to low levels of these proteins levels in grade 1 or 2 tumors support the possible contribution of MMB to lung tumorigenesis and the oncogenic potential of B-MYB.The tumor growth promoting function of B-MYB was illustrated by a lower fraction of KI-67 positive cells in vivo and a significantly high impairment in proliferation after loss of B-Myb in vitro. Defects in cytokinesis and an abnormal cell cycle profile after loss of B-Myb underscore the impact of B-MYB on proliferation of lung cancer cell lines. The incomplete recombination of B-Myb in murine lung tumors and in the tumor derived primary cell lines illustrates the selection pressure against the complete loss of B-Myb and further demonstrats that B-Myb is a tumor-essential gene. In the last part of this thesis, the contribution of MMB to the proliferation of human lung cancer cells was demonstrated by the RNAi-mediated depletion of B-Myb. Detection of elevated B-MYB levels in human adenocarcinoma and a reduced proliferation, cytokinesis defects and abnormal cell cycle profile after loss of B-MYB in human lung cancer cell lines underlines the potential of B-MYB to serve as a clinical marker.
The Myb-MuvB (MMB) multiprotein complex is a master regulator of cell cycle-dependent gene expression. Target genes of MMB are expressed at elevated levels in several different cancer types and are included in the chromosomal instability (CIN) signature of lung, brain, and breast tumors.
This doctoral thesis showed that the complete loss of the MMB core subunit LIN9 leads to strong proliferation defects and nuclear abnormalities in primary lung adenocarcinoma cells. Transcriptome profiling and genome-wide DNA-binding analyses of MMB in lung adenocarcinoma cells revealed that MMB drives the expression of genes linked to cell cycle progression, mitosis, and chromosome segregation by direct binding to promoters of these genes. Unexpectedly, a previously unknown overlap between MMB-dependent genes and several signatures of YAP-regulated genes was identified. YAP is a transcriptional co-activator acting downstream of the Hippo signaling pathway, which is deregulated in many tumor types. Here, MMB and YAP were found to physically interact and co-regulate a set of mitotic and cytokinetic target genes, which are important in cancer. Furthermore, the activation of mitotic genes and the induction of entry into mitosis by YAP were strongly dependent on MMB. By ChIP-seq and 4C-seq, the genome-wide binding of MMB upon YAP overexpression was analyzed and long-range chromatin interaction sites of selected MMB target gene promoters were identified. Strikingly, YAP strongly promoted chromatin-association of B-MYB through binding to distal enhancer elements that interact with MMB-regulated promoters through chromatin looping.
Together, the findings of this thesis provide a so far unknown molecular mechanism by which YAP and MMB cooperate to regulate mitotic gene expression and suggest a link between two cancer-relevant signaling pathways.
The Myb-MuvB (MMB) complex plays an essential role in the time-dependent transcriptional activation of mitotic genes. Recently, our laboratory identified a novel crosstalk between the MMB-complex and YAP, the transcriptional coactivator of the Hippo pathway, to coregulate a subset of mitotic genes (Pattschull et al., 2019). Several genetic studies have shown that the Hippo-YAP pathway is essential to drive cardiomyocyte proliferation during cardiac development (von Gise et al., 2012; Heallen et al., 2011; Xin et al., 2011). However, the exact mechanisms of how YAP activates proliferation of cardiomyocytes is not known. This doctoral thesis addresses the physiological role of the MMB-Hippo crosstalk within the heart and characterizes the YAP-B-MYB interaction with the overall aim to identify a potent inhibitor of YAP.
The results reported in this thesis indicate that complete loss of the MMB scaffold protein LIN9 in heart progenitor cells results in thinning of ventricular walls, reduced cardiomyocyte proliferation and early embryonic lethality. Moreover, genetic experiments using mice deficient in SAV1, a core component of the Hippo pathway, and LIN9-deficient mice revealed that the correct function of the MMB complex is critical for proliferation of cardiomyocytes due to Hippo-deficiency. Whole genome transcriptome profiling as well as genome wide binding studies identified a subset of Hippo-regulated cell cycle genes as direct targets of MMB. By proximity ligation assay (PLA), YAP and B-MYB were discovered to interact in embryonal cardiomyocytes. Biochemical approaches, such as co-immunoprecipitation assays, GST-pulldown assays, and µSPOT-based peptide arrays were employed to characterize the YAP-B-MYB interaction. Here, a PY motif within the N-terminus of B-MYB was found to directly interact with the YAP WW-domains. Consequently, the YAP WW-domains were important for the ability of YAP to drive proliferation in cardiomyocytes and to activate MMB target genes in differentiated C2C12 cells. The biochemical information obtained from the interaction studies was utilized to develop a novel competitive inhibitor of YAP called MY-COMP (Myb-YAP competition). In MY-COMP, the protein fragment of B-MYB containing the YAP binding domain is fused to a nuclear localization signal. Co-immunoprecipitation studies as well as PLA revealed that the YAP-B-MYB interaction is robustly blocked by expression of MY-COMP. Adenoviral overexpression of MY-COMP in embryonal cardiomyocytes suppressed entry into mitosis and blocked the pro-proliferative function of YAP. Strikingly, characterization of the cellular phenotype showed that ectopic expression of MY-COMP led to growth defects, nuclear abnormalities and polyploidization in HeLa cells.
Taken together, the results of this thesis reveal the mechanism of the crosstalk between the Hippo signaling pathway and the MMB complex in the heart and form the basis for interference with the oncogenic activity of the Hippo coactivator YAP.
The role of BRCA1 and DCP1A in the coordination of transcription and replication in neuroblastoma
(2021)
The deregulation of the MYC oncoprotein family plays a major role in tumorigenesis and tumour maintenance of many human tumours. Because of their structure and nuclear localisation, they are defined as undruggable targets which makes it difficult to find direct therapeutic approaches. An alternative approach for targeting MYC-driven tumours is the identification and targeting of partner proteins which score as essential in a synthetic lethality screen.
Neuroblastoma, an aggressive entity of MYCN-driven tumours coming along with a bad prognosis, are dependent on the tumour suppressor protein BRCA1 as synthetic lethal data showed. BRCA1 is recruited to promoter regions in a MYCN-dependent manner. The aim of this study was to characterise the role of BRCA1 in neuroblastoma with molecular biological methods.
BRCA1 prevents the accumulation of RNA Polymerase II (RNAPII) at the promoter region. Its absence results in the formation of DNA/RNA-hybrids, so called R-loops, and DNA damage. To prevent the accumulation of RNAPII, the cell uses DCP1A, a decapping factor known for its cytoplasmatic and nuclear role in mRNA decay. It is the priming factor in the removal of the protective 5’CAP of mRNA, which leads to degradation by exonucleases. BRCA1 is necessary for the chromatin recruitment of DCP1A and its proximity to RNAPII. Cells showed upon acute activation of MYCN a higher dependency on DCP1A. Its activity prevents the deregulation of transcription and leads to proper coordination of transcription and replication. The deregulation of transcription in the absence of DCP1A results in replication fork stalling and leads to activation of the Ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3 related (ATR) kinase. The result is a disturbed cell proliferation to the point of increased apoptosis. The activation of the ATR kinase pathway in the situation where DCP1A is knocked down and MYCN is activated, makes those cells more vulnerable for the treatment with ATR inhibitors.
In summary, the tumour suppressor protein BRCA1 and the decapping factor DCP1A, mainly known for its function in the cytoplasm, have a new nuclear role in a MYCN-dependent context. This study shows their essentiality in the coordination of transcription and replication which leads to an unrestrained growth of tumour cells if uncontrolled.
Wilms tumor (WT) is the most common renal tumor in childhood. Among others, MYCN copy number gain and MYCN P44L and MAX R60Q mutations have been identified in WT. The proto-oncogene MYCN encodes a transcription factor that requires dimerization with MAX to activate transcription of numerous target genes. MYCN gain has been associated with adverse prognosis. The MYCN P44L and MAX R60Q mutations, located in either the transactivating or basic helix-loop-helix domain, respectively, are predicted to be damaging by different pathogenicity prediction tools. These mutations have been reported in several other cancers and remain to be functionally characterized.
In order to further describe these events in WT, we screened both mutations in a large cohort of unselected WT patients, to check for an association of the mutation status with certain histological or clinical features. MYCN P44L and MAX R60Q revealed frequencies of 3 % and 0.9 % and also were significantly associated to higher risk of relapse and metastasis, respectively. Furthermore, to get a better understanding of the MAX mutational landscape in WT, over 100 WT cases were analyzed by Sanger sequencing to identify other eventual MAX alterations in its coding sequence. R60Q remained the only MAX CDS alteration described in WT to date.
To analyze the potential functional consequences of these mutations, we used a doxycycline-inducible system to overexpress each mutant in HEK293 cells. This biochemical characterization identified a reduced transcriptional activation potential for MAX R60Q, while the MYCN P44L mutation did not change activation potential or protein stability. The protein interactome of N-MYC-P44L was likewise not altered as shown by mass spectrometric analyses of purified N-MYC complexes. However, we could identify a number of novel N-MYC partner proteins, several of these known for their oncogenic potential. Their correlated expression in WT samples suggested a role in WT oncogenesis and they expand the range of potential biomarkers for WT stratification and targeting, especially for high-risk WT.