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Modulatoren des Calcineurin-NFATc-Signalweges in humanen TH-Zellen / Modulators of the calcineurin-NFATc signalling pathway in human T helper cellsSieber, Matthias January 2010 (has links)
Die Ca2+/Calmodulin-aktivierte Serin/Threonin-Phosphatase Calcineurin ist ein Schlüsselmolekül des T-Zell-Rezeptorabhängigen Signalnetzwerkes. Calcineurin aktiviert die Transkriptionsfaktoren der NFATc-Familie durch Dephosphorylierung und reguliert darüber die Expression wichtiger Zytokine und Oberflächenproteine. Die Aktivität von Calcineurin wird durch zahlreiche endogene Proteine moduliert und ist Angriffspunkt der immunsuppressiven Substanzen Cyclosporin A und FK506.
In dieser Arbeit wurde der alternative niedermolekulare Calcineurin-NFATc-Inhibitor NCI3 hinsichtlich seiner Effekte auf T-Zell-Rezeptor-abhängige Signalwege charakterisiert. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, daß das Pyrazolopyrimidinderivat NCI3 nichttoxisch und zellmembranpermeabel ist. In T-Zell-Rezeptor-stimulierten primären humanen TH-Zellen unterdrückt NCI3 die Proliferation und IL-2-Produktion (IC50-Wert ~4 µM), da die Dephosphorylierung von NFATc und die anschließende nukleäre Translokation gehemmt wird. NCI3 inhibiert die calcineurinabhängige NFAT- und NF-κB-, aber nicht die AP-1-kontrollierte Reprtergenexpression, in mikromolaren Konzentrationen (IC50-Werte 2 bzw. 7 µM). Im Gegensatz zu Cyclosporin A stört NCI3 nicht die Phosphataseaktivität von Calcineurin, sondern interferiert mit der Calcineurin-NFATc-Bindung.
Ein wichtiges endogenes Modulatorprotein für die Calcineurinaktivität ist RCAN1, das vermutlich den Calcineurin-NFATc-Signalweg über einen negativen Rückkopplungsmechanismus reguliert.
Hier wurde gezeigt, daß RCAN1 in humanen TH-Zellen exprimiert wird. Die Spleißvariante RCAN1-1 ist in ruhenden T-Zellen basal exprimiert und wird nicht durch T-Zell-Rezeptor-Stimulierung in seiner Expression verändert. RCAN1-4 dagegen ist in ruhenden Zellen kaum zu detektieren und wird stimulierungsabhängig induziert. Durch die Verwendung Calcineurin-NFATc-spezifischer Inhibitoren wie NCI3 wurde gezeigt, daß die RCAN1-4-Induktion durch diesen Signalweg limitiert ist.
Die in dieser Arbeit gewonnenen Daten und Erkenntnisse tragen dazu bei, das Verständnis der Funktion und Regulation von Calcineurin in T-Zellen zu vertiefen. / The Ca2+/calmodulin dependent serine/threonine phosphatase calcineurin is a key molecule in the T cell receptor dependent signalling network. Calcineurin dephosphorylates and thereby activates the transcription factors of the NFATc family that, among others, control the expression of important cytokines and cell surface molecules. The activity of Calcineurin is modulated by several endogenous proteins and is inhibited by the immunosuppressants cyclosporine A and FK506.
Here, the novel low molecular weight inhibitor NCI3 was characterized in respect to its effects on T cell receptor dependent signalling. The results of this work show, that the pyrazolopyrimidine derivate NCI3 is nontoxic and permeates the cell membrane. Upon TCR stimulation NCI3 suppresses T cell proliferation and IL-2 production of primary human TH cells with IC50 values of ~4 µM by blocking the dephosphorylation and subsequent nuclear translocation of NFATc. NCI3 conse-quently inhibits calcineurin dependent NFAT- and NF-κB-, but not AP-1-controlled reporter gene expression, in micromolar concentrations (IC50 values 2 and 7 µM, respectively). In opposite to cyclosporine A and FK506, NCI3 does not interfere with the phosphatase activity of calcineurin but rather disturbs the calcineurin-NFATc interaction.
A major endogenous modulator of calcineurin is the protein RCAN1, which is supposed to regulate calcineurin-NFATc signalling in a negative feedback loop.
The presented data show that RCAN1 is expressed in human TH cells. The splice variant RCAN1-1 is basally expressed in resting T cells, and its expression levels are not changed by T cell receptor stimulation. Expression of RCAN1-4, on the other hand, is nearly undetectable in resting TH cells and is induced upon cell stimulation. By using calcineurin-NFATc specific inhibitors such as NCI3 it could be shown that RCAN1-4 induction is limited by this pathway.
This work provides a comprehensive characterization of the novel inhibitor NCI3 and insights into the regulation of calcineurin by RCAN1 in human TH cells.
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Implication du Régulateur endogène de la Calcineurine 1 dans la transmission et la plasticité synaptiqueDudilot, Anthony 08 1900 (has links)
Le régulateur endogène de la calcineurine 1 (RCAN1) est exprimé dans les neurones, cependant son rôle dans la régulation de la transmission et de la plasticité synaptique est mal connu. De manière intéressante, plusieurs études dans les cellules cardiaques et les levures montrent une double régulation de la calcineurine 1 (CaN1) par RCAN1. Il est décrit qu'en fonction de son état de phosphorylation par la kinase glycogène synthase 3β (GSK3β), RCAN1 réprime la CaN1 à l'état déphosphorylé, mais il faciliterait son activité à l'état phosphorylé. La régulation de la CaN1 par RCAN1 phosphorylé n'a encore jamais été étudiée dans les neurones et pourrait mettre en relation deux acteurs majeurs de la dépression à long terme (LTD), à savoir la CaN1 et la GSK3β. Par ailleurs une étude récente a montré que RCAN1 peut également être phosphorylé par la protéine kinase A (PKA), une kinase essentielle dans la mise en place de la potentialisation à long terme (LTP), entrainant ainsi une augmentation de l’inhibition de la CaN1 par RCAN1. Dans les neurones, RCAN1 pourrait donc potentiellement réguler à la fois la LTP et la LTD dépendamment de son état de phosphorylation. Mes travaux visent à élucider si RCAN1 est capable de réguler la transmission et de la plasticité synaptique en fonction de son état de phosphorylation et si son action dépend de la CaN1.
Afin de déterminer le rôle de RCAN1 dans ces processus, une combinaison de techniques de biologie moléculaire, d’électrophysiologie et d'imagerie a été employée. Nous avons généré des mutations ponctuelles de RCAN1 sauvage de manière à rendre RCAN1 non phosphorylable par la GSK3β ou la PKA. L’expression virale de RCAN1 et de ses différents mutants dans des cultures primaires de neurones d’hippocampe a révélé que RCAN1, dans ses versions sauvage et mutées, est localisé au niveau des épines dendritiques, suggérant une possible fonction de RCAN1 à la synapse.
De manière à déterminer les effets de RCAN1 sur la transmission et la plasticité synaptique, j’ai exprimé de manière virale RCAN1 et ses différents mutants dans des tranches organotypiques d'hippocampes de rat et analysé leurs effets par enregistrement en ‘‘patch-clamp’’ en configuration de cellule entière. J’ai pu observer que le blocage du site de phosphorylation de RCAN1 par la GSK3β entraînait une augmentation de la transmission synaptique ainsi qu’un blocage de la LTD. De plus j’ai démontré que la LTP été bloquée lorsque la PKA ne pouvait pas phosphoryler RCAN1. Enfin nous avons pu déterminer que ces différents effets de RCAN1 sur la transmission et la plasticité synaptique étaient dépendants de la CaN1. Nous avons donc démontré une cascade d’évènements et mis en évidence le rôle clé de RCAN1 dans la régulation de la LTP et de la LTD. Nous proposons donc que RCAN1 permet de moduler la transmission et la plasticité synaptique en fonction de son état de phosphorylation par la GSK3β et la PKA en agissant sur la CaN1, en étant un effecteur de la GSK3β lors de l’induction de la LTD ainsi qu’un effecteur de la PKA lors de l’induction de la LTP. / The endogenous regulator of calcineurin 1 (RCAN1) is expressed in neurons, nevertheless its role in the regulation of synaptic transmission and plasticity is not well understood. Interestingly, several studies in cardiac cells and yeasts show that RCAN1 is able to inhibit or activate CaN1 depending on its phosphorylation state by glycogen synthase kinase 3β (GSK3β). RCAN1 is able to inhibit CaN1 when it is not phosphorylated by GSK3β and able to activate it in its phosphorylated state. The regulation of CaN1 by phosphorylated RCAN1 has never been studied in neurons although it could provide a critical link between two major actors of long-term depression (LTD), CaN1 and GSK3β. Furthermore, a recent study revealed that RCAN1 can also be phosphorylated by protein kinase A (PKA), a kinase involved in regulating long-term potentiation (LTP), leading to an increase of CaN1 inhibition by RCAN1. Thus, in neurons, the differential phosphorylation of RCAN1 could potentially regulate both LTP and LTD. My work therefore investigates how, depending on its phosphorylation state, RCAN1 affects synaptic transmission and plasticity and if this occurs via a direct action on CaN1.
In order to determine the role of RCAN1 phosphorylation in synaptic plasticity, a combination of molecular biology, imaging and electrophysiology was used. We generated point mutations of wild type RCAN1 in order to obtain two non-phosphorylable forms of RCAN1: one that couldn’t be phosphorylated by GSK3β, and another one that PKA could not phosphorylate. Viral expression of RCAN1 and its phosphorylation deficient mutants in dissociated hippocampal cultures revealed that they are localized within dendritic spines, hinting at a synaptic function of RCAN1.
To determine the effects of RCAN1 on synaptic transmission and plasticity, I virally expressed RCAN1 and the phosphorylation deficient mutants of RCAN1 in rat organotypic hippocampal slice cultures and analyzed their effects on synaptic plasticity by whole cell ‘‘patch-clamp’’ recordings. I observed that the blockade of the GSK3β phosphorylation site in RCAN1 increased synaptic transmission and blocked LTD induction. Furthermore, I demonstrate that LTP was blocked when PKA was unable to phosphorylate RCAN1. Finally, I determined that these distinct effects of RCAN1 on synaptic transmission and plasticity were directly dependent on CaN1. I thus define a cascade of events as well as demonstrate the key role of RCAN1 in the regulation of both LTP and LTD. Based on my results, I propose that
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RCAN1 modulates synaptic transmission and plasticity according to its phosphorylation states by GSK3β and PKA, via its direct action on CaN1, being an effector of both GSK3β during LTD and PKA during LTP induction.
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Characterizing the Role of RCAN1-4 in Thyroid Cancer Growth and MetastasisWang, Chaojie 27 October 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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Molecular and Cellular Mechanisms Leading to Similar Phenotypes in Down and Fetal Alcohol SyndromesSolzak, Jeffrey Peter 22 August 2013 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Down syndrome (DS) and Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) are two leading causes of birth defects with phenotypes ranging from cognitive impairment to craniofacial abnormalities. While DS originates from the trisomy of human chromosome 21 and FAS from prenatal alcohol consumption, many of the defining characteristics for these two disorders are stunningly similar. A survey of the literature revealed over 20 similar craniofacial and structural deficits in both human and mouse models of DS and FAS. We hypothesized that the similar phenotypes observed are caused by disruptions in common molecular or cellular pathways during development. To test our hypothesis, we examined morphometric, genetic, and cellular phenotypes during development of our DS and FAS mouse models at embryonic days 9.5-10.5. Our preliminary evidence indicates that during early development, dysregulation of Dyrk1a and Rcan1, cardinal genes affecting craniofacial and neurological precursors of DS, are also dysregulated in embryonic FAS models. Furthermore, Caspase 3 was also found to have similar expression in DS and FAS craniofacial neural crest derived tissues such as the first branchial arch (BA1) and regions of the brain. This may explain a developmental deficit by means of apoptosis. We have also investigated the expression of pAkt, a protein shown to be affected in FAS models, in cells located within the craniofacial precursor of Ts65Dn. Recent research shows that Ttc3, a gene that is triplicated and shown to be overexpressed in the BA1 and neural tube of Ts65Dn, targets pAkt in the nucleus affecting important transcription factors regulating cell cycle and cell survival. While Akt has been shown to play a role in neuronal development, we hypothesize that it also affects similar cellular properties in craniofacial precursors during development. By comparing common genotypes and phenotypes of DS and FAS we may provide common mechanisms to target for potential treatments of both disorders.
One of the least understood phenotypes of DS is their deficient immune system. Many individuals with DS have varying serious illnesses ranging from coeliac disease to respiratory infections that are a direct result of this immunodeficiency. Proteasomes are an integral part of a competent and efficient immune system. It has been observed that mice lacking immunoproteasomes present deficiencies in providing MHC class I peptides, proteins essential in identifying infections. A gene, Psmg1 (Dscr2), triplicated in both humans and in Ts65Dn mice, is known to act as a proteasome assembly chaperone for the 20S proteasome. We hypothesized that a dysregulation in this gene promotes a proteasome assembly aberration, impacting the efficiency of the DS immune system. To test this hypothesis we performed western blot analysis on specific precursor and processed β-subunits of the 20S proteasome in thymic tissue of adult Ts65Dn. While the β-subunits tested displayed no significant differences between trisomic and euploid mice we have provided further insight to the origins of immunodeficiency in DS.
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