7 resultados para Blood protein polymorphism

em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha


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In this thesis different approaches for the modeling and simulation of the blood protein fibrinogen are presented. The approaches are meant to systematically connect the multiple time and length scales involved in the dynamics of fibrinogen in solution and at inorganic surfaces. The first part of the thesis will cover simulations of fibrinogen on an all atom level. Simulations of the fibrinogen protomer and dimer are performed in explicit solvent to characterize the dynamics of fibrinogen in solution. These simulations reveal an unexpectedly large and fast bending motion that is facilitated by molecular hinges located in the coiled-coil region of fibrinogen. This behavior is characterized by a bending and a dihedral angle and the distribution of these angles is measured. As a consequence of the atomistic detail of the simulations it is possible to illuminate small scale behavior in the binding pockets of fibrinogen that hints at a previously unknown allosteric effect. In a second step atomistic simulations of the fibrinogen protomer are performed at graphite and mica surfaces to investigate initial adsorption stages. These simulations highlight the different adsorption mechanisms at the hydrophobic graphite surface and the charged, hydrophilic mica surface. It is found that the initial adsorption happens in a preferred orientation on mica. Many effects of practical interest involve aggregates of many fibrinogen molecules. To investigate such systems, time and length scales need to be simulated that are not attainable in atomistic simulations. It is therefore necessary to develop lower resolution models of fibrinogen. This is done in the second part of the thesis. First a systematically coarse grained model is derived and parametrized based on the atomistic simulations of the first part. In this model the fibrinogen molecule is represented by 45 beads instead of nearly 31,000 atoms. The intra-molecular interactions of the beads are modeled as a heterogeneous elastic network while inter-molecular interactions are assumed to be a combination of electrostatic and van der Waals interaction. A method is presented that determines the charges assigned to beads by matching the electrostatic potential in the atomistic simulation. Lastly a phenomenological model is developed that represents fibrinogen by five beads connected by rigid rods with two hinges. This model only captures the large scale dynamics in the atomistic simulations but can shed light on experimental observations of fibrinogen conformations at inorganic surfaces.

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Disruption of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) results in cerebral edema formation, which is a major cause for high mortalityrnafter traumatic brain injury (TBI). As anesthetic care is mandatory in patients suffering from severe TBI it may be importantrnto elucidate the effect of different anesthetics on cerebral edema formation. Tight junction proteins (TJ) such as zonularnoccludens-1 (ZO-1) and claudin-5 (cl5) play a central role for BBB stability. First, the influence of the volatile anestheticsrnsevoflurane and isoflurane on in-vitro BBB integrity was investigated by quantification of the electrical resistance (TEER) inrnmurine brain endothelial monolayers and neurovascular co-cultures of the BBB. Secondly brain edema and TJ expression ofrnZO-1 and cl5 were measured in-vivo after exposure towards volatile anesthetics in native mice and after controlled corticalrnimpact (CCI). In in-vitro endothelial monocultures, both anesthetics significantly reduced TEER within 24 hours afterrnexposure. In BBB co-cultures mimicking the neurovascular unit (NVU) volatile anesthetics had no impact on TEER. In healthyrnmice, anesthesia did not influence brain water content and TJ expression, while 24 hours after CCI brain water contentrnincreased significantly stronger with isoflurane compared to sevoflurane. In line with the brain edema data, ZO-1 expressionrnwas significantly higher in sevoflurane compared to isoflurane exposed CCI animals. Immunohistochemical analysesrnrevealed disruption of ZO-1 at the cerebrovascular level, while cl5 was less affected in the pericontusional area. The studyrndemonstrates that anesthetics influence brain edema formation after experimental TBI. This effect may be attributed tornmodulation of BBB permeability by differential TJ protein expression. Therefore, selection of anesthetics may influence thernbarrier function and introduce a strong bias in experimental research on pathophysiology of BBB dysfunction. Futurernresearch is required to investigate adverse or beneficial effects of volatile anesthetics on patients at risk for cerebral edema.

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Until now, therapeutic vaccination of cancer patients has mainly relied on rather few T cell epitopes processed from structurally normal shared tumor antigens and presented by frequent HLA alleles. So far the design of these studies has not addressed the individuality of tumor-host interactions, which are not only determined by the antigenic tumor phenotype or the natural HLA polymorphism, but also by the individual T cell repertoire. The procedure described herein was developed to identify the preferential targets of the individual repertoire from a panel of known shared tumor-associated antigens. Lymphocytes were isolated from the peripheral blood of cancer patients or healthy donors and stimulated twice with autologous mRNA-transfected FastDC (Dauer et al., J Immunol. 170:4069, 2003). FastDC were generated from blood monocytes and separately transfected via lipofection with in vitro transcribed mRNAs encoding the panel antigens. Responder lymphocytes were tested on day 12 in a 20-hour IFN-g ELISPOT assay for recognition of 293T cells co-transfected pairwise with plasmids encoding the stimulation antigens and the respective individual’s HLA class I alleles. In a first step, stimulation parameters were optimized for the detection of anti-HCMV pp65 responses. A maximum amplification of pp65-specific CD8+ T cell responses was obtained at a rather low IL-2 concentration (25 IU/ml) and at a minimum APC-to-effector ratio of 1:10. Addition of IL-4, IL-7 or IL-15 did not substantially improve the stimulatory potential. The test was applied to the human melanoma models D05 and MZ2, in both of which multiple T cell-defined antigens had previously been identified by expression screening. Blood lymphocytes were stimulated in parallel with autologous tumor cells and with mRNA-transfected FastDC. In D05, T cell reactivities against three out of eleven epitopes induced by stimulation with tumor cells were also found after stimulation with mRNA-transfected FastDC. Two further T cell target epitopes were identified with mRNA but not with tumor cell stimulation. In MZ2, T cell responses against five distinct epitopes were detected on day 12 after stimulation with mRNA transfectants. The same responses were detectable after stimulation with tumor cells only on day 32. mRNA stimulations against 21 tumor-associated antigens in addition to HCMV pp65 were performed in four healthy individuals. In all cases, CD8+ T cells against HCMV pp65 could be expanded. Among tumor-associated antigens, only reactivity against Melan-A/MART-1 in association with HLA-A*0201 was detectable in one of the donors. The vaccination of patients with targets a priori known to be recognized by their T cell repertoire may help to improve the outcome of therapeutic vaccination.

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The t(8;21) (q22;q22) translocation fusing the ETO (also known as MTG8) gene on human chromosome 8 with the AML1 (also called Runx1 or CBFα) gene on chromosome 21 is one of the most common genetic aberrations found in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). This chromosomal translocation occurs in 12 % of de novo AML cases and in up to 40 % of the AML-M2 subtype of the French-American-British classification. To date, the in vivo function of aberrant AML1-ETO fusion protein expression has been investigated by several groups. However, in these studies, controversial results were reported and some key issues remain unknown. Importantly, the consequences of aberrant AML1-ETO expression for self-renewing hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), multipotent hematopoietic progenitors (MPPs) and lineage-restricted precursors are not known. rn The aim of this thesis was to develop a novel experimental AML1-ETO in vivo model that (i) overcomes the current lack of insight into the pre-leukemic condition of t(8;21)-associated AML, (ii) clarifies the in vivo consequences of AML1-ETO for HSCs, MPPs, progenitors and more mature blood cells and (iii) generates an improved mouse model suitable for mirroring the human condition. For this purpose, a conditional tet on/off mouse model expressing the AML1-ETO fusion protein from the ROSA26 (R26) locus was generated. rn Aberrant AML1-ETO activation in compound ROSA26/tetOAML1-ETO (R26/AE) mice caused high rates of mortality, an overall disruption of hematopoietic organs and a profound alteration of hematopoiesis. However, since the generalized activity of the R26 locus did not recapitulate the leukemic condition found in human patients, it was important to restrict AML1-ETO expression to blood cell lineages. Therefore, bone marrow cells from non-induced R26/AE mice were adoptively transplanted into sublethal irradiated RAG2-/- recipient mice. First signs of phenotypical differences between AML1-ETO-expressing and control mice were observed after eight to nine months of transgene induction. AML1-ETO-expressing mice showed profound changes in hematopoietic organs accompanied by manifest extramedullary hematopoiesis. In addition, a block in early erythropoiesis, B- and T-cell maturation was observed and granulopoiesis was significantly enhanced. Most interestingly, conditional activation of AML1-ETO in chimeric mice did not increase HSCs, MPPs, common lymphoid precursors (CLPs), common myeloid progenitors (CMPs) and megakaryocyte-erythrocyte progenitors (MEPs) but promoted the selective amplification of granulocyte-macrophage progenitors (GMPs). rn The results of this thesis provide clear experimental evidence how aberrant AML1-ETO modulates the developmental properties of normal hematopoiesis and establishes for the first time that AML1-ETO does not increase HSCs, MPPs and common lineage-restricted progenitor pools but specifically amplifies GMPs. The here presented mouse model not only clarifies the role of aberrant AML1-ETO for shaping hematopoietic development but in addition has strong implications for future therapeutic strategies and will be an excellent pre-clinical tool for developing and testing new approaches to treat and eventually cure AML.rn

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Doxorubizin (Dox) gehört zur Gruppe der Anthrazykline, welche seit mehreren Jahrzehnten erfolgreich gegen ein breites Spektrum an Tumoren eingesetzt wird. Neben der guten Wirksamkeit besitzt Dox jedoch auch ein sehr hohes Nebenwirkungspotential. Die wohl folgenschwerste Nebenwirkung stellt die irreversible Schädigung des Herzens dar. Zahlreiche Faktoren, wie zum Beispiel die kumulative Dox-Dosis konnten bereits mit einer erhöhten Inzidenz an kardialen Schäden in Verbindung gebracht werden. Bislang ungeklärt war jedoch die Frage, warum Patienten unterschiedlich sensibel auf die Verabreichung von Dox reagierten. rnAn dem Patientenkollektiv der Ricover60-Studie wurde der Einfluss der individuellen genetischen Ausstattung auf die Entstehung der Anthrazyklin-induzierten Herzschädigung untersucht. Alle Patienten mit Dox-induzierten Herzschäden wurden identifiziert und auf das Vorhandensein von genetischen Polymorphismen der NAD(P)H-Oxidase (CYBA, RAC2 und NCF4) und der Anthrazyklin-Transporter (MRP1 und MRP2) untersucht. Sowohl für CYBA als auch für RAC2 konnte eine Anreicherung bestimmter Genotypen (CYBA: CT/TT; RAC2: TA/AA) in der Gruppe der herzgeschädigten Patienten nachgewiesen werden. In der Multivariaten Analyse von RAC2 erreichte diese Anreicherung ein signifikantes Niveau (p=0.028). Damit konnte für diesen Polymorphismus die klinische Relevanz bestätigt werden.rnDie Ursachen der Dox-induzierten Toxizität wurden außerdem an verschiedenen Mäusestämmen und Zelllinien untersucht. Balb/c- und C57BL/6-Mäuse, die bekanntermassen unterschiedlich sensibel auf Dox reagierten, wurden mit Dox behandelt. Anschliessend wurden die Organe Herz, Leber und Blut via HPLC untersucht. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass sich 1. die Hauptanreicherungsorte für Dox und Doxol (Balb/c: Herz und Blut versus C57BL/6: Leber), 2. die nachgewiesenen Gesamtmengen an Dox+Doxol+Doxon in den drei Organen (MengeC57BL/6 > MengeBalb/c) sowie 3. die An- und Abflutungsgeschwindigkeiten von Dox zwischen den beiden Mäusestämmen unterscheiden. Schlussendlich konnte im Vergleich zu den Balb/c-Mäusen, bei den C57BL/6-Mäusen eine stärkere kardiale Anreicherung von Dox nach der mehrmaligen Dox-Injektion nachgewiesen werden. Somit scheinen der deutlich höhere Dox-Gehalt und die längere Verweilzeit in den Herzen für die stärkere kardiale Schädigung der C57BL/6-Mäuse verantwortlich zu sein. Hingegen verlief die Art der Dox-Metabolisierung in beiden Mäusestämmen ähnlich. rnBei der Betrachtung des oxidativen Stresses konnte gezeigt werden, dass in den Herzen der C57BL/6-Mäusen ein gröβerer oxidativer Stress vorlag, als bei den Balb/c-Mäusen. Ähnlich wie bei der Ricover60-Studie ließ sich auch bei den Mäusen eine Beteiligung der NAD(P)H-Oxidase am Dox-induzierten oxidativen Stress nachweisen. rnMit der HTETOP-Zelllinie konnte gezeigt werden, dass Dox unter physiologischen Bedingungen oxidativen Stress auslösen kann. Die Art und die Konzentration der gebildeten ROS waren abhängig von der Dox-Konzentration, der Einwirkzeit und der Kompensationsfähigkeit der Zellen. Durch die Gabe von Dex ließ sich das Ausmaß des oxidativen Stresses lediglich in den Mäuseherzen reduzieren. In den HTETOP-Zellen zeigte Dex selbst stressauslösende Eigenschaften. Durch die Behandlung mit Dex / DOXY konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Hemmung der Topo IIα selbst oxidativen Stress in den HTETOP-Zellen auslöst. Jedoch scheint weder die Topo IIalpha-Hemmung, noch der Dox-induzierte oxidative Stress bei physiologischen Dox-Konzentrationen (< 1 µM) eine entscheidende Rolle für die Toxizität zu spielen. rnIn der Mikroarray-Analyse der HTETOP-Zellen konnten verschiedene Gene identifiziert werden, die in den oxidativen Stress involviert sind und die durch die Gabe von Dox differentiell reguliert werden. Durch die Komedikation mit Dex / DOXY ließen sich diese Veränderungen teilweise modulieren. rn

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Das Glaukom ist, nach dem Katarakt, die zweithäufigste Ursache für Erblindungen weltweit mit Milionen von Betroffenen, die von dieser zunächst weitgehend symptomfreien neurodegenerativen Erkrankung heimgesucht werden. Die Möglichkeiten auf dem Feld der Diagnose beschränken sich bislang weitestgehend auf die Messung des Augeninnendrucks und der Beurteilung des Augenhintergrundes durch einen erfahrenen Augenarzt. Eine labordiagnostische Prophylaxe ist bis heute nicht verfügbar, die Zahl unerkannter Erkrankungen dementsprechend hoch. Hierdurch geht wertvolle Zeit verloren, die man für eine effektive Therapie nutzen könnte.rnBezüglich der Pathogenese des Glaukoms geht man heute von mehreren, miteinander wechselwirkenden Pathomechanismen aus, zu denen neben mechanischen Einflüssen durch einen erhöhten IOD auch Hypoxie, verminderte Neutrophinversorgung, Exzitotoxizität, oxidativer Stress und eine Beteiligung autoimmuner Prozesse gezählt werden. Unabhängig vom Pathomechanismus folgt stets die Etablierung umfangreicher degenerativer Prozesse im Sehnervenkopf, den retinalen Ganglienzellen und den Axonen des Sehnerven, die letztlich im irreversiblen Untergang dieser Neuronen münden. Diese pathologischen Prozesse im ZNS hinterlassen auf Proteomebene Spuren, die mithilfe moderner massenspektrometrischer Methoden in Kombination mit multivariaten statistischen Methoden detektierbar und als sogenannte Biomarker-Kandidaten mit definiertem Molekulargewicht darstellbar sind. In dieser Arbeit wurde ein „Workflow“ entwickelt, der es ermöglicht, diese Biomarker-Kandidaten im Blutserum und in der Tränenflüssigkeit in einfachen, reproduzierbaren Schritten zu identifizieren und zu charakterisieren. Abweichend von der etablierten Methotik der Bottom-Up-Proteomics musste hierfür eine Methode entsprechend einer Top-Down-Philosophie entwickelt werden, die es erlaubt, die Spuren des Glaukoms im Proteom zu detektieren und zu charakterisieren.rnDies erfolgte in dieser Arbeit durch sowohl massenspektroskopischen Methoden wie SELDI-TOF® und MALDI-Tof-Tof als auch durch Bead-, Gel- und Flüssigkeits-chromatographisch-basierte Separations und Fraktionierungstechniken.rnDie erfolgreiche Kombination dieser Methoden führte zu Identifikationen einer ganzen Reihe von Biomarker-Kandidaten. Unter den identifizierten Proteinen, die bezüglich ihres korrespondierenden SELDI-Peaks im Massenbereich von Biomarker-Kandidaten liegen, finden sich Zytokine und Effektormoleküle der angeborernen Immunität, stressinduzierbare Kinasen, Faktoren, die zum Schutz der Telomeren dienen, Proliferationsmarker, neuronale Antigene und Transportproteine. Darüber hinaus wurden Komponenten identifiziert, die an der neuronalen Neutrophinversorgung beteiligt sind, neuronale Rezeptoren und Antigene, Komponenten des Komplementsystems und des MHC-I-Komplexes. All diese identifizierten Proteine sind bezüglich ihrer Funktion und möglichen Rolle innerhalb der Pathogenese des Glaukoms detailliert beschrieben und charakterisiert. Dies erlaubt einen umfassenden Einblick in alle Pathomechanismen, denen nach heutigem Kenntnisstand, eine Rolle an der Pathogenese des Glaukoms unterstellt wird.rn

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The blood-brain barrier (BBB) and the blood-spinal cord barrier (BSCB) separate the brain and the spinal cord from the circulating blood and are important for the maintenance of the CNS homeostasis. They build a physical barrier thereby protecting the CNS from pathogens and toxic agents, and their disruption plays a crucial role in the pathogenesis of several CNS disorders. In this thesis, the blood-CNS-barriers were studied via in vitro models in two case studies for neurodegenerative disorders, in particular Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The first model evaluates treatment possibilities of AD using nanotechnology-based strategies. Since the toxic amyloid-β42 (Aβ42) peptide plays a crucial role in the pathogenesis of AD, reduced generation or enhanced clearance of Aβ42 peptides are expected to modify the disease course in AD. Therefore, several Aβ42-lowering drugs like flurbiprofen had been tested in clinical trials, but most of them failed due to their low brain penetration. Here, flurbiprofen was embedded in polylactide (PLA) nanoparticles and its transport was examined in an in vitro BBB model. The embedding of flurbiprofen into the nanoparticles disguised its cytotoxic potential and enabled the administration of higher drug concentrations which resulted in a sufficient transport of the drug across an endothelial cell monolayer. These results demonstrate that non-permeable drugs can be transported efficiently via nanoparticles and that these nanotechnology-based strategies are a promising tool to generate novel therapeutic options for AD and other CNS diseases. rnThe focus of the second project was to investigate the impaired integrity of the BSCB in a mouse model for ALS. About 20% of all familial ALS cases are associated with missense mutations or small deletions in the gene that encodes Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1). To date, the molecular mechanisms resulting in ALS are still unknown, but there is evidence that the disruption of the BSCB is one of the primary pathological events. In both familial and sporadic ALS patients, loss of endothelial integrity and endothelial cell damage was observed, and studies with SOD1 transgenic mice demonstrated that the BSCB disruption was found prior to motor neuron degeneration and neurovascular inflammation. Thus, an in vitro model for ALS endothelial cells was generated which exhibited comparable integrity characteristics and tight junction (TJ) protein expression profiles as isolated primary endothelial cells of the BSCB of SOD1 transgenic mice. In this, an alteration of the βcat/AKT/FoxO1 pathway, which regulates the expression of the TJ protein claudin-5, could be observed. These data furthermore indicate that ALS is a neurovascular disease, and understanding of the primary events in ALS pathogenesis will hopefully provide ideas for the development of new therapeutic strategies. rn