Refine
Year of publication
- 2022 (2) (remove)
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (2)
Language
- English (2) (remove)
Has Fulltext
- yes (2)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (2)
Keywords
- Apoptose (2) (remove)
Institute
Pentathiepins are cyclic polysulfides that exert antiproliferative and cytotoxic activity in cancer cells, induce oxidative stress and apoptosis, and potently inhibit GPx1. These properties render this class of compounds promising candidates for the development of anticancer drugs. However, the biological effects and how they intertwine to promote high cytotoxicity have not been systematically assessed throughout a panel of cancer cell lines from distinct tissues of origin. In this thesis, six novel pentathiepins were analyzed and constitute the second generation of compounds with additional properties such as fluorescence or improved water solubility to facilitate cellular testing. All compounds underwent extensive biological evaluation in 14 human cancer cell lines. These studies included investigations of the inhibitory potential with regards to GPx1 and cell proliferation, examined the cytotoxicity in human cancer cell lines, as well as the induction of oxidative stress and DNA strand breaks. Furthermore, selected hallmarks of apoptosis, ferroptosis, and autophagy were studied. Experimental approaches regarding these cellular mechanisms included observing morphological changes, detecting phosphatidyl serine exposure and caspase activity, and quantifying cleaved PARP1 and levels of LC3B II. In addition, the analysis of the cell cycle aimed to identify aberrations or arrests in cell division.
Five of the six tested pentathiepins proved to be potent inhibitors of the GPx1, while all six exerted high cytotoxic and antiproliferative activity, although to different extents. There was a clear connection observed between the potential to provoke oxidative stress and damage to DNA in the form of single- and double-strand breaks both extra- and intracellularly. Furthermore, various experiments supported apoptosis but not ferroptosis as the mechanism of cell death in four different cell lines. In particular, the externalization of PS, the detection of activated caspases, and the cleavage of PARP1 corroborated this conclusion. Additionally, indications for autophagy were found, but more investigations are required to verify the current data. The findings of this dissertation are mainly in line with the postulated mechanism of action proposed for pentathiepins and a previous publication from our group that described their biological activity. However, the influence of modulators such as oxygen and GSH on the biological effects was ambiguous and dependent on the compound. The expression profile of the cell lines concerning GPx1 and CAT did not influence the cellular response toward the treatment, whereas the cell doubling time correlated with the cytotoxicity.
As the various pentathiepins give rise to different biological responses, modulation of the biological effects depends on the distinct chemical structures fused to the sulfur ring. This may allow for future optimization of the anticancer activity of pentathiepins. An analysis of the structure-activity relationships revealed that the piperazine scaffold was associated with superior biological activity compared to the pyrrolo-pyrazine backbone. Furthermore, substituents with electron-withdrawing properties or those providing a free electron pair, such as fluorine or morpholine, were advantageous. These findings should help design and synthesize the next generation of pentathiepins, thereby expanding the library of compounds, allowing for the further deduction of structure-activity relationships and an improved understanding of their mechanism of action.
Coding constraints imposed by the very small genome sizes of negative-strand RNA viruses (NSVs) have led to the development of numerous strategies that increase viral protein diversity, enabling the virus to both establish a productive viral replication cycle and effectively control the host antiviral response. Arenaviruses are no exception to this, and previous findings have demonstrated that the nucleoprotein (NP) of the highly pathogenic Junín virus (JUNV) exists as three additional N-terminally truncated isoforms of 53 kD (NP53kD), 47 kD (NP47kD), and 40 kD (NP40kD). The two smaller isoforms (i.e. NP47kD and NP40kD) have been characterized as products of caspase cleavage, which appears to serve a decoy function to inhibit apoptosis induction. However, whether they have additional functions in the viral replication cycle remains unknown. Further, the origin and function of NP53kD has not yet been described.
In order to first identify the mechanism responsible for production of the NP53kD variant, a possible role of additional caspase cleavage sites was first excluded using a site mutagenesis approach. Subsequently, alanine mutagenesis was then used to identify a region responsible for NP53kD production. As a result, three methionine residues were identified within the characterized sequence segment of NP, linking the production of NP53kD to an alternative in-frame translation initiation. Further site-directed mutagenesis of the previously identified putative in-frame methionine codons (i.e. M78, M80 and M100) finally led to the identification of translation initiation at M80 as being predominantly responsible for the production of NP53kD. Once the identity of all three NP isoforms was known, it was then of further interest to more deeply characterize their functional roles. Consistent with the N-terminal domain containing RNA binding and homotrimerization motifs that are relevant for the viral RNA synthesis process, it could be demonstrated that all three truncated NP isoforms lost the ability to support viral RNA synthesis in a minigenome assay. However, they also did not interfere with viral RNA synthesis by full-length NP, nor did they affect the ability of the matrix protein Z to inhibit viral RNA synthesis. Moreover, it was observed that loss of the oligomerization motifs in the N-terminus also affected the subcellular localization of all three NP isoforms, which were no longer localized in discrete perinuclear inclusion bodies, but rather showed a diffuse distribution throughout the cytoplasm, with the smallest isoform NP40kD also being able to enter the nucleus. Surprisingly, the 3'-5' exonuclease function of NP, which is associated with the C-terminal domain and plays a role in inhibiting interferon induction by digestion of double-stranded RNAs, was found to be retained only by the NP40kD isoform, despite that all three isoforms retained the associated domain. Finally, previous studies using transfected NP and chemical induction of apoptosis have suggested that cleavage of NP at the caspase motifs responsible for generating NP47kD and NP40kD plays a role in controlling activation of the apoptosis pathway. Therefore, to further characterize the connection between the generation of NP isoforms and the regulation of apoptosis in a viral context, recombinant JUNVs deficient in the respective isoforms were generated. Unlike infections with wild-type JUNV, mutations of the caspase cleavage sites resulted in the induction of caspases activation. Surprisingly, however, this was also the case for mutation of the alternate start codon responsible for NP53kD generation.
Taken together, the data from this study suggest a model whereby JUNV generates a pool of smaller NP isoforms with a predominantly cytoplasmic distribution. As a result of this altered localization, NP53kD appears to be able to serve as the substrate for further generation of NP47kD and NP40kD by caspase cleavage. Not only does this cleavage inhibit apoptosis induction during JUNV infection, it also results in a cytoplasmic isoform of NP that retains strong 3'-5' exonuclease activity (i.e. NP40kD) and thus may play an important role in preventing viral double-stranded RNA accumulation in the cytoplasm, where it can lead to activation of IFN signaling. Overall, such results emphasize the relevance of alternative protein isoforms in virus biology, and particularly in regulation of the host response to infection.