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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Early events in cytokine receptor signaling

Gandhi, Hetvi 04 March 2014 (has links) (PDF)
Ligand-activated signal transduction is a process critical to cell survival and function as it serves as a means of communication between the cells and their environment. Endocytosis is generally thought to down-regulate incoming signals by reducing the surface availability of receptors. However, increasing evidence in many systems suggests a notion which is referred to as the „signalling endosome" hypothesis - that endocytosis can also actively contribute to signalling apart from clearance of activated receptors and thereby attenuation of signalling. The functional aspect of signalling endosomes has been well-characterized in several pathways including RTK and TGF-β signalling. There are, however, various other signalling pathways where the active mechanism of endocytotic regulation is yet to be understood. In this study, we probe this aspect in the cytokine signalling system, where the receptors are known to internalize but the significance of such internalization and precise mechanism is unclear. My thesis aims to elucidate the function and molecular details of internalization of cytokine receptor using interleukin-4 receptor (IL-4R) signalling as a model. IL-4 and IL-13 ligands can induce assembly of three distinct complexes: IL4 induced IL-4Rα – IL-2Rγ (type I), IL-4 induced IL-4Rα – IL-13Rα1 (type II) or the IL-13 induced IL-13Rα1-IL-4Rα (type II). The formation of any of these complexes triggers signalling through the JAK/STAT pathway. However, models of how the oligomerization of the transmembrane receptors and activation takes place are very diverse and lack a clear molecular and biophysical understanding of the underlying receptor dynamics. Previous results of the lab had shown that the affinities between subunits are low, precluding complex formation at the plasma membrane at physiological concentrations. In addition, IL-4R subunits localize in to endosomal structures adjacent to the plasma membrane. It had already been shown that the shared IL-4R subunit IL-2Rγ is internalized by a specific, actin dependent, Rac1/Pak1 regulated endocytosis route in the IL-2 context. We could show that pharmacological suppression of this endocytosis pathway also prevented IL-4 induced JAK/STAT signalling, placing endocytosis upstream of signalling. Here I show using immuno-EM techniques that these endosomal structures are multivesicular bodies. Importantly, I could show that receptor subunits are highly enriched in the limiting membrane of these endosomes relative to the adjacent plasma membrane. Using quantitative loading assays I could furthermore demonstrate that this enrichment is achieved by constitutive internalization of receptors from the cell surface into cortical endosomes. The trafficking kinetics of the receptor subunits is independent of ligand occupancy. Pharmacological inhibition shows that receptors and ligand traffic via the previously identified Rac1/Pak1 pathway. Finally, Vav2 was identified as a candidate Guanine Exchange Factor (GEF) that may regulate Rac1 activity and thereby control the actin polymerization cascade driving IL-4R endocytosis. Immunoprecipitations showed that Vav2 interacts both with the cytoplasmic tail region of the receptors and the receptor associated 2 kinase JAK3. Vav2 may thus couple the receptor/JAK complexes to the Rac1/Pak1 mediated endocytosis route. Taken together, our results suggests that stable „signalling endosomes‟ adjacent to the plasma membrane act as enrichment centres, where ligand and receptor concentrations are locally increased by constitutive trafficking. The confined environment of the endosome then compensates for the weak affinities between the ligand and receptor and facilitates ligand-mediated receptor dimerization. Importantly, overexpression of both type II IL-4R subunits renders signal transduction resistant to endocytosis inhibition, strongly suggesting that the critical factor effecting signalling is sufficient concentration, which the endosomes facilitate achieving. The endosomes are thus dispensable as signalling scaffolds when the receptors are in sufficient concentration, where activated receptors could interact with downstream pathway components. Endocytosis thus provides a crucial means for the signalling process to overcome the thermodynamic hurdles for receptor oligomerization. In conclusion, our data propose a novel, purely thermodynamic role of endosomes in regulating cytokine receptor signalling not seen in any other signalling pathway.
2

Early events in cytokine receptor signaling

Gandhi, Hetvi 27 February 2014 (has links)
Ligand-activated signal transduction is a process critical to cell survival and function as it serves as a means of communication between the cells and their environment. Endocytosis is generally thought to down-regulate incoming signals by reducing the surface availability of receptors. However, increasing evidence in many systems suggests a notion which is referred to as the „signalling endosome" hypothesis - that endocytosis can also actively contribute to signalling apart from clearance of activated receptors and thereby attenuation of signalling. The functional aspect of signalling endosomes has been well-characterized in several pathways including RTK and TGF-β signalling. There are, however, various other signalling pathways where the active mechanism of endocytotic regulation is yet to be understood. In this study, we probe this aspect in the cytokine signalling system, where the receptors are known to internalize but the significance of such internalization and precise mechanism is unclear. My thesis aims to elucidate the function and molecular details of internalization of cytokine receptor using interleukin-4 receptor (IL-4R) signalling as a model. IL-4 and IL-13 ligands can induce assembly of three distinct complexes: IL4 induced IL-4Rα – IL-2Rγ (type I), IL-4 induced IL-4Rα – IL-13Rα1 (type II) or the IL-13 induced IL-13Rα1-IL-4Rα (type II). The formation of any of these complexes triggers signalling through the JAK/STAT pathway. However, models of how the oligomerization of the transmembrane receptors and activation takes place are very diverse and lack a clear molecular and biophysical understanding of the underlying receptor dynamics. Previous results of the lab had shown that the affinities between subunits are low, precluding complex formation at the plasma membrane at physiological concentrations. In addition, IL-4R subunits localize in to endosomal structures adjacent to the plasma membrane. It had already been shown that the shared IL-4R subunit IL-2Rγ is internalized by a specific, actin dependent, Rac1/Pak1 regulated endocytosis route in the IL-2 context. We could show that pharmacological suppression of this endocytosis pathway also prevented IL-4 induced JAK/STAT signalling, placing endocytosis upstream of signalling. Here I show using immuno-EM techniques that these endosomal structures are multivesicular bodies. Importantly, I could show that receptor subunits are highly enriched in the limiting membrane of these endosomes relative to the adjacent plasma membrane. Using quantitative loading assays I could furthermore demonstrate that this enrichment is achieved by constitutive internalization of receptors from the cell surface into cortical endosomes. The trafficking kinetics of the receptor subunits is independent of ligand occupancy. Pharmacological inhibition shows that receptors and ligand traffic via the previously identified Rac1/Pak1 pathway. Finally, Vav2 was identified as a candidate Guanine Exchange Factor (GEF) that may regulate Rac1 activity and thereby control the actin polymerization cascade driving IL-4R endocytosis. Immunoprecipitations showed that Vav2 interacts both with the cytoplasmic tail region of the receptors and the receptor associated 2 kinase JAK3. Vav2 may thus couple the receptor/JAK complexes to the Rac1/Pak1 mediated endocytosis route. Taken together, our results suggests that stable „signalling endosomes‟ adjacent to the plasma membrane act as enrichment centres, where ligand and receptor concentrations are locally increased by constitutive trafficking. The confined environment of the endosome then compensates for the weak affinities between the ligand and receptor and facilitates ligand-mediated receptor dimerization. Importantly, overexpression of both type II IL-4R subunits renders signal transduction resistant to endocytosis inhibition, strongly suggesting that the critical factor effecting signalling is sufficient concentration, which the endosomes facilitate achieving. The endosomes are thus dispensable as signalling scaffolds when the receptors are in sufficient concentration, where activated receptors could interact with downstream pathway components. Endocytosis thus provides a crucial means for the signalling process to overcome the thermodynamic hurdles for receptor oligomerization. In conclusion, our data propose a novel, purely thermodynamic role of endosomes in regulating cytokine receptor signalling not seen in any other signalling pathway.

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