571 Physiologie und verwandte Themen
Refine
Has Fulltext
- yes (46)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (46)
Year of publication
Document Type
- Journal article (23)
- Doctoral Thesis (23)
Language
- English (46) (remove)
Keywords
- Drosophila (3)
- Elektrophysiologie (3)
- Latrophilin (3)
- Taufliege (3)
- Fluoreszenzmikroskopie (2)
- Lungenkrebs (2)
- MMB (2)
- Mitose (2)
- Proteinkinase D (2)
- Synapse (2)
Institute
- Theodor-Boveri-Institut für Biowissenschaften (19)
- Graduate School of Life Sciences (18)
- Julius-von-Sachs-Institut für Biowissenschaften (5)
- Rudolf-Virchow-Zentrum (4)
- Institut für Klinische Neurobiologie (2)
- Physiologisches Institut (2)
- Center for Computational and Theoretical Biology (1)
- Deutsches Zentrum für Herzinsuffizienz (DZHI) (1)
- Fakultät für Biologie (1)
- Institut für Anatomie und Zellbiologie (1)
Sonstige beteiligte Institutionen
Polygonum cuspidatum (Japanese knotweed, also known as Huzhang in Chinese), a plant that produces bioactive components such as stilbenes and quinones, has long been recognized as important in traditional Chinese herbal medicine. To better understand the biological features of this plant and to gain genetic insight into the biosynthesis of its natural products, we assembled a draft genome of P. cuspidatum using Illumina sequencing technology. The draft genome is ca. 2.56 Gb long, with 71.54% of the genome annotated as transposable elements. Integrated gene prediction suggested that the P. cuspidatum genome encodes 55,075 functional genes, including 6,776 gene families that are conserved in the five eudicot species examined and 2,386 that are unique to P. cuspidatum. Among the functional genes identified, 4,753 are predicted to encode transcription factors. We traced the gene duplication history of P. cuspidatum and determined that it has undergone two whole-genome duplication events about 65 and 6.6 million years ago. Roots are considered the primary medicinal tissue, and transcriptome analysis identified 2,173 genes that were expressed at higher levels in roots compared to aboveground tissues. Detailed phylogenetic analysis demonstrated expansion of the gene family encoding stilbene synthase and chalcone synthase enzymes in the phenylpropanoid metabolic pathway, which is associated with the biosynthesis of resveratrol, a pharmacologically important stilbene. Analysis of the draft genome identified 7 abscisic acid and water deficit stress-induced protein-coding genes and 14 cysteine-rich transmembrane module genes predicted to be involved in stress responses. The draft de novo genome assembly produced in this study represents a valuable resource for the molecular characterization of medicinal compounds in P. cuspidatum, the improvement of this important medicinal plant, and the exploration of its abiotic stress resistance.
Background: Gene targeting (GT) provides a powerful tool for the generation of precise genetic alterations in embryonic stem (ES) cells to elucidate gene function and create animal models for human diseases. This technology has, however, been limited to mouse and rat. We have previously established ES cell lines and procedures for gene transfer and selection for homologous recombination (HR) events in the fish medaka (Oryzias latipes).
Methodology and Principal Findings: Here we report HR-mediated GT in this organism. We designed a GT vector to disrupt the tumor suppressor gene p53 (also known as tp53). We show that all the three medaka ES cell lines, MES1 similar to MES3, are highly proficient for HR, as they produced detectable HR without drug selection. Furthermore, the positive-negative selection (PNS) procedure enhanced HR by similar to 12 folds. Out of 39 PNS-resistant colonies analyzed, 19 (48.7%) were positive for GT by PCR genotyping. When 11 of the PCR-positive colonies were further analyzed, 6 (54.5%) were found to be bona fide homologous recombinants by Southern blot analysis, sequencing and fluorescent in situ hybridization. This produces a high efficiency of up to 26.6% for p53 GT under PNS conditions. We show that p53 disruption and long-term propagation under drug selection conditions do not compromise the pluripotency, as p53-targeted ES cells retained stable growth, undifferentiated phenotype, pluripotency gene expression profile and differentiation potential in vitro and in vivo.
Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that medaka ES cells are proficient for HR-mediated GT, offering a first model organism of lower vertebrates towards the development of full ES cell-based GT technology.
Platelets are continuously produced from megakaryocytes (MK) in the bone marrow by a cytoskeleton-driven process of which the molecular regulation is not fully understood.
As revealed in this thesis, MK/ platelet-specific Profilin1 (Pfn1) deficiency results in micro- thrombocytopenia, a hallmark of the Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS) in humans, due to accelerated platelet turnover and premature platelet release into the bone marrow. Both Pfn1-deficient mouse platelets and platelets isolated from WAS patients contained abnormally organized and hyper-stable microtubules. These results reveal an unexpected function of Pfn1 as a regulator of microtubule organization and point to a previously unrecognized mechanism underlying the platelet formation defect in WAS patients.
In contrast, Twinfilin2a (Twf2a) was established as a central regulator of platelet reactivity and turnover. Twf2a-deficient mice revealed an age-dependent macrothrombocytopenia that could be explained by a markedly decreased platelet half-life, likely due to the pronounced hyper-reactivity of \(Twf2a^{-/-}\) platelets. The latter was characterized by sustained integrin acti- vation and thrombin generation in vitro that translated into accelerated thrombus formation in vivo. To further elucidate mechanisms of integrin activation, Rap1-GTP-interacting adaptor molecule (RIAM)-null mice were generated. Despite the proposed critical role of RIAM for platelet integrin activation, no alterations in this process could be found and it was concluded that RIAM is dispensable for the activation of β1 and β3 integrins, at least in platelets. These findings change the current mechanistic understanding of platelet integrin activation.
Outside-in signaling by integrins and other surface receptors was supposed to regulate MK migration, but also the temporal and spatial formation of proplatelet protrusions. In this the- sis, phospholipase D (PLD) was revealed as critical regulator of actin dynamics and podo- some formation in MKs. Hence, the unaltered platelet counts and production in \(Pld1/2^{-/-}\) mice and the absence of a premature platelet release in the bone marrow of \(Itga2^{-/-}\) mice question the role of podosomes in platelet production and raise the need to reconsider the proposed inhibitory signaling by α2β1 integrins on proplatelet formation.
Non-muscle myosin IIA (NMMIIA) has been implicated as a downstream effector of the in- hibitory signals transmitted via α2β1 integrins. Besides Rho-GTPase signaling, also \(Mg^{2+}\) and transient receptor potential melastatin-like 7 (TRPM7) channel α-kinase are known regulators of NMMIIA activity. In this thesis, TRPM7 was identified as major regulator of \(Mg^{2+}\) homeostasis in MKs and platelets. Furthermore, decreased \([Mg^{2+}]_i\) led to deregulated NMMIIA activity and altered cytoskeletal dynamics that impaired thrombopoiesis and resulted in macrothrombocytopenia in humans and mice.
These days, treatment of melanoma patients relies on targeted therapy with BRAF/MEK inhibitors and on immunotherapy. About half of all patients initially respond to existing therapies. Nevertheless, the identification of alternative therapies for melanoma patients with intrinsic or acquired resistance is of great importance. In melanoma, antioxidants play an essential role in the maintenance of the redox homeostasis. Therefore, disruption of the redox homeostasis is regarded as highly therapeutically relevant and is the focus of the present work.
An adequate supply of cysteine is essential for the production of the most important intracellular antioxidants, such as glutathione. In the present work, it was investigated whether the depletion of cysteine and glutathione is therapeutically useful. Depletion of glutathione in melanoma cells could be achieved by blocking cysteine supply, glutathione synthesis, and NADPH regeneration. As expected, this led to an increased level of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Surprisingly, however, these changes did not impair the proliferation and survival of the melanoma cells. In contrast, glutathione depletion led to cellular reprogramming which was characterized by the induction of mesenchymal genes and the repression of differentiation markers (phenotypic switch). This was accompanied by an increased migration and invasion potential which was favored by the induction of the transcription factor FOSL1. To study in vivo reprogramming, Gclc, the first and rate-limiting enzyme in glutathione synthesis, was knocked out by CRISPR/Cas9 in murine melanoma cells. The cells were devoid of glutathione, but were fully viable and showed a phenotypic switch, the latter only in MITF-expressing B16F1 cells and not in MITF-deficient D4M3A.781 cells. Following subcutaneous injection into immunocompetent C57BL/6 mice, Gclc knockout B16F1 cells grew more aggressively and resulted in an earlier tumor onset than B16F1 control cells.
In summary, this work demonstrates that inhibition of cysteine supply and thus, glutathione synthesis leads to cellular reprogramming in melanoma. In this context, melanoma cells show metastatic capabilities, promoting a more aggressive form of the disease.
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.
Significant advances in fluorescence imaging techniques enable life scientists today to gain insights into biological systems at an unprecedented scale. The interpretation of image features in such bioimage datasets and their subsequent quantitative analysis is referred to as bioimage analysis. A substantial proportion of bioimage analyses is still performed manually by a human expert - a tedious process that is long known to be subjective. Particularly in tasks that require the annotation of image features with a low signal-to-noise ratio, like in fluorescence images of tissue samples, the inter-rater agreement drops. However, like any other scientific analysis, also bioimage analysis has to meet the general quality criteria of quantitative research, which are objectivity, reliability, and validity. Thus, the automation of bioimage analysis with computer-aided approaches is highly desirable. Albeit conventional hard-coded algorithms are fully unbiased, a human user has to set its respective feature extraction parameters. Thus, also these approaches can be considered subjective.
Recently, deep learning (DL) has enabled impressive advances in computer vision research. The predominant difference between DL and conventional algorithms is the capability of DL models to learn the respective task on base of an annotated training dataset, instead of following user-defined rules for feature extraction. This thesis hypothesized that DL can be used to increase the objectivity, reliability, and validity of bioimage analyses, thus going beyond mere automation. However, in absence of ground truth annotations, DL models have to be trained on manual and thus subjective annotations, which could cause the model to incorporate such a bias. Moreover, model training is stochastic and even training on the same data could result in models with divergent outputs. Consequently, both the training on subjective annotations and the model-to-model variability could impair the quality of DL-based bioimage analyses. This thesis systematically assessed the impacts of these two limitations experimentally by analyzing fluorescence signals of a protein called cFOS in mouse brain sections. Since the abundance of cFOS correlates with mouse behavior, behavioral analyses could be used for cross-validation of the bioimage analysis results. Furthermore, this thesis showed that pooling the input of multiple human experts during model training and integration of multiple trained models in a model ensemble can mitigate the impact of these limitations. In summary, the present study establishes guidelines for how DL can be used to increase the general quality of bioimage analyses.
In the mammalian host, the Trypanosoma brucei cell surface is covered with a densely packed protein coat of a single protein, the variant surface glycoprotein (VSG). The VSG is believed to shield invariant surface proteins from host antibodies but there is limited information on how far antibodies can penetrate into the VSG monolayer. Here, the VSG surface coat was probed to determine whether it acts as a barrier to binding of antibodies to the membrane proximal VSG C-terminal domain. The binding of C-terminal domain antibodies to VSG221 or VSG118 was compared with antibodies recognising the cognate whole VSGs. The C-terminal VSG domain was inaccessible to antibodies on live cells but not on fixed cells. This provides further evidence that the VSG coat acts as a barrier and protects the cell from antibodies that would otherwise bind to some of the other externally disposed proteins.
The highly motile and versatile protozoan pathogen Trypanosoma brucei undergoes a complex life cycle in the tsetse fly. Here we introduce the host insect as an expedient model environment for microswimmer research, as it allows examination of microbial motion within a diversified, secluded and yet microscopically tractable space. During their week-long journey through the different microenvironments of the fly´s interior organs, the incessantly swimming trypanosomes cross various barriers and confined surroundings, with concurrently occurring major changes of parasite cell architecture. Multicolour light sheet fluorescence microscopy provided information about tsetse tissue topology with unprecedented resolution and allowed the first 3D analysis of the infection process. High-speed fluorescence microscopy illuminated the versatile behaviour of trypanosome developmental stages, ranging from solitary motion and near-wall swimming to collective motility in synchronised swarms and in confinement. We correlate the microenvironments and trypanosome morphologies to high-speed motility data, which paves the way for cross-disciplinary microswimmer research in a naturally evolved environment.
Abstract
Glioblastomas, primary brain tumors, represent a tumor entity with a dismal prognosis and a median survival of only about one year. Invasion into the healthy brain parenchyma contributes substantially to the malignancy of this type of brain tumor. Therefore, a better understanding of the mechanisms promoting the invasive behavior of these brain tumors is needed to identify new therapeutic targets.
Cofilin, an actin regulatory protein, has been shown to be an important regulator of the invasive behavior of tumor cells in other types of cancer and the actin cytoskeleton is involved in the formation of a variety of cellular structures important for cell migration and invasion. Cofilin is regulated by phosphorylation on a single residue, serine 3. The aim of this thesis was to examine the role of the cofilin regulatory phosphatase chronophin for glioma cell migration and invasion.
First, it was established that chronophin depletion in the cell line GBM6840 leads to an increase in the ratio of phosphorylated cofilin to total cofilin. Higher chronophin levels were correlated with a decrease in F-actin in the cell lines GBM6840 and U87 as measured in an actin spin down assay and in a flow cytometry based assay.
Furthermore, it was shown that knockdown of chronophin in two different cell lines, GBM6840 and DBTRG-05-MG, strongly increased their invasiveness in vitro. Expression of human chronophin in the cell line U87 decreased its invasiveness substantially. There was no difference in cell proliferation between GBM6840 and DBTRG-05-MG cells expressing a chronophin targeting shRNA or a control shRNA and U87 cells transfected with an empty vector or a human chronophin encoding plasmid. The increase in invasiveness after chronophin depletion could be correlated with an increase in directionality in cell migration under 2D culture conditions in the cell lines U87 and GBM6840. Moreover, treatment with the ROCK inhibitor Y-27632 decreased directionality in GBM6840 cells under 2D culture conditions and reduced the invasiveness of GBM6840 chronophin shRNA cells back to control levels.
Expression of a non-phosphorylatable cofilin mutant, the S3A mutant, was able to reduce invasiveness and to reduce directionality under 2D culture conditions back to control levels in GBM6840 chronophin shRNA cells.
This provides important evidence for the involvement of cofilin phosphoregulation in the phenotypes described above.
In vivo, when injected into NOD-SCID mice, chronophin depleted cells showed a dramatic growth reduction as compared to control and rescue cells.
Transciptomic characterization of GBM6840 cells by microarray analysis and subsequent comparison of the data with microarray profiles of normal brain tissues and different glioma entities identified two specifically chronophin regulated transcripts potentially involved in tumor progression and invasion, MXI1 and EDIL3. Moreover, c-myc was identified as a significantly altered transcription factor after chronophin deregulation based on the number of c-myc target molecules in the microarray dataset.
MXI1 is a potential negative regulator of c-myc dependent transcription, and was strongly downregulated after chronophin knockdown in GBM6840. In line with this, the activity of a c-myc reporter plasmid was increased after chronophin depletion in GBM6840 and reduced after chronophin expression in U87 cells.
However, the protein level of the c-myc protein was reduced after chronophin depletion in GBM6840.
Finally, anaylsis of the expression of proteases known to be important for glioblastoma pathogenesis revealed no major changes in protease expression between chronophin depleted and control cells.
Therefore, a comprehensive analysis of chronophin in the context of glioma pathogenesis has been performed in this thesis. It has been shown that chronophin depletion strongly enhanced invasiveness of glioma cells and that it induced transcriptomic changes potentially involved in tumor progression. The proteins regulating cofilin phosphorylation are therefore valuable therapeutic targets for anti-invasive therapy in glioblastomas. Inhibitors for kinases upstream of cofilin, e.g. LIMKs and ROCKs, are available, and might be promising agents for anti-invasive therapy.
During my PhD I studied two principal biological aspects employing Drosophila melanogaster. Therefore, this study is divided into Part I and II.
Part I: Bruchpilot and Complexin interact to regulate synaptic vesicle tethering to the
active zone cytomatrix
At the presynaptic active zone (AZ) synaptic vesicles (SVs) are often physically linked to an electron-dense cytomatrix – a process referred to as “SV tethering”. This process serves to concentrate SVs in close proximity to their release sites before contacting the SNARE complex for subsequent fusion (Hallermann and Silver, 2013). In Drosophila, the AZ protein Bruchpilot (BRP) is part of the proteinous cytomatrix at which SVs accumulate (Kittel et al., 2006b; Wagh et al., 2006; Fouquet et al., 2009). Intriguingly, truncation of only 1% of the C-terminal region of BRP results in a severe defect in SV tethering to this AZ scaffold (hence named brpnude; Hallermann et al., 2010b).
Consistent with these findings, cell-specific overexpression of a C-terminal BRP fragment, named mBRPC-tip (corresponds to 1% absent in brpnude; m = mobile) phenocopied the brpnude mutant in behavioral and functional experiments. These data indicate that mBRPC-tip suffices to saturate putative SV binding sites, which induced a functional tethering deficit at motoneuronal AZs. However, the molecular identity of the BRP complement to tether SVs to the presynaptic AZ scaffold remains unknown. Moreover, within larval motoneurons membrane-attached C-terminal portions of BRP were sufficient to tether SVs to sites outside of the AZ. Based on this finding a genetic screen was designed to identify BRP interactors in vivo. This screen identified Complexin (CPX), which is known to inhibit spontaneous SV fusion and to enhance stimulus evoked SV release (Huntwork and Littleton, 2007; Cho et al., 2010; Martin et al., 2011). However, so far CPX has not been associated with a function upstream of priming/docking and release of SVs. This work provides morphological and functional evidence, which suggests that CPX promotes recruitment of SVs to the AZ and thereby curtails synaptic short-term depression. Together, the presented findings indicate a functional interaction between BRP and CPX at Drosophila AZs.
Part II: The Adhesion-GPCR Latrophilin/CIRL shapes mechanosensation
The calcium independent receptor of α-latrotoxin (CIRL), also named Latrophilin, represents a prototypic Adhesion class G-protein coupled-receptor (aGPCR). Initially, Latrophilin was identified based on its capacity to bind the α-component of latrotoxin (α-LTX; Davletov et al., 1996; Krasnoperov et al., 1996), which triggers massive exocytotic activity from neurons of the peripheral nervous system (Scheer et al., 1984; Umbach et al., 1998; Orlova et al., 2000). As a result Latrophilin is considered to play a role in synaptic transmission. Later on, Latrophilins have been associated with other biological processes including tissue polarity (Langenhan et al., 2009), fertility (Prömel et al., 2012) and synaptogenesis (Silva et al., 2011). However, thus far its subcellular localization and the identity of endogenous ligands, two aspects crucial for the comprehension of Latrophilin’s in vivo function, remain enigmatic.
Drosophila contains only one latrophilin homolog, named dCirl, whose function has not been investigated thus far.
This study demonstrates abundant dCirl expression throughout the nervous system of Drosophila larvae. dCirlKO animals are viable and display no defects in development and neuronal differentiation. However, dCirl appears to influence the dimension of the postsynaptic sub-synaptic reticulum (SSR), which was accompanied by an increase in the postsynaptic Discs-large abundance (DLG). In contrast, morphological and functional properties of presynaptic motoneurons were not compromised by the removal of dCirl. Instead, dCirl is required for the perception of mechanical challenges (acoustic-, tactile- and proprioceptive stimuli) through specialized mechanosensory devices, chordotonal organs (Eberl, 1999). The data indicate that dCirl modulates the sensitivity of chordotonal neurons towards mechanical stimulation and thereby adjusts their input-output relation. Genetic interaction analyses suggest that adaption of the molecular mechanotransduction machinery by dCirl may underlie this process. Together, these results uncover an unexpected function of Latrophilin/dCIRL in mechanosensation and imply general modulatory roles of aGPCR in mechanoception.