Kaufmann, E;Khan, N;Tran, KA;Ulndreaj, A;Pernet, E;Fontes, G;Lupien, A;Desmeules, P;McIntosh, F;Abow, A;Moorlag, SJCFM;Debisarun, P;Mossman, K;Banerjee, A;Karo-Atar, D;Sadeghi, M;Mubareka, S;Vinh, DC;King, IL;Robbins, CS;Behr, MA;Netea, MG;Joubert, P;Divangahi, M;
PMID: 35235831 | DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2022.110502
Since the vast majority of species solely rely on innate immunity for host defense, it stands to reason that a critical evolutionary trait like immunological memory evolved in this primitive branch of our immune system. There is ample evidence that vaccines such as bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) induce protective innate immune memory responses (trained immunity) against heterologous pathogens. Here we show that while BCG vaccination significantly reduces morbidity and mortality against influenza A virus (IAV), it fails to provide protection against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2). In contrast to IAV, SARS-CoV-2 infection leads to unique pulmonary vasculature damage facilitating viral dissemination to other organs, including the bone marrow (BM), a central site for BCG-mediated trained immunity. Finally, monocytes from BCG-vaccinated individuals mount an efficient cytokine response to IAV infection, while this response is minimal following SARS-CoV-2. Collectively, our data suggest that the protective capacity of BCG vaccination is contingent on viral pathogenesis and tissue tropism.
Molecular Analysis of the Kidney From a Patient With COVID-19-Associated Collapsing Glomerulopathy
Meliambro, K;Li, X;Salem, F;Yi, Z;Sun, Z;Chan, L;Chung, M;Chancay, J;Vy, HMT;Nadkarni, G;Wong, JS;Fu, J;Lee, K;Zhang, W;He, JC;Campbell, KN;
PMID: 33942030 | DOI: 10.1016/j.xkme.2021.02.012
Recent Case reports suggest COVID-19 is associated with collapsing glomerulopathy in African Americans with APOL1 risk alleles, however, it is unclear if disease pathogenesis is similar to HIVAN. Here RNA sequencing analysis of a kidney biopsy specimen from a patient with COVID-19-associated collapsing glomerulopathy and APOL1 risk alleles (G1/G1) revealed similar levels of APOL1 and ACE2 mRNA transcripts as compared to 12 control kidney samples downloaded from the GTEx Portal. Whole genome sequencing of the COVID-19-associated collapsing glomerulopathy kidney sample identified four indel gene variants, three of which are of unknown significance with respect to chronic kidney disease and/or FSGS. Molecular profiling of the kidney demonstrated activation of COVID-19-associated cell injury pathways such as inflammation and coagulation. Evidence for direct SARS-CoV-2 infection of kidney cells was lacking, which is consistent with the findings of several recent studies. Interestingly, immunostaining of kidney biopsy sections revealed increased expression of phospho-STAT3 in both COVID-19-associated collapsing glomerulopathy and HIVAN as compared to control kidney tissue. Importantly, IL-6-induced activation of STAT3 may be a targetable mechanism driving COVID-19-associated acute kidney injury.
Christiansen, P;Andreasen, C;Laursen, K;Delaisse, J;Andersen, T;
| DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.4224428
Background: Recruitment and proliferation of osteoprogenitors during the reversal-resorption phase, and their differentiation into mature bone-forming osteoblasts is crucial for initiation of bone formation during bone remodeling. This study investigates the osteoprogenitors’ gradual recruitment, proliferation, and differentiation into bone-forming osteoblasts within intracortical remodeling events of healthy adolescent humans. Methods: The study was conducted on cortical bone specimens from 11 healthy adolescent humans. The osteoprogenitor recruitment route and differentiation into osteoblasts were backtracked using immunostainings and in situ hybridizations with osteoblastic markers (CD271, osterix, collage type 1 and 3). The osteoblastic cell populations were defined based on the pore surfaces and their proliferation index (Ki67), density, and number/circumference were estimated in multiplex-immunofluorescence (Ki67, TRAcP, CD34, SMA) stained sections. Results: During the reversal-resorption phase, osteoclasts are intermixed with osteoblastic reversal cells (COL3A1 high CD271 high COL1A1 low Osterix neg ), which are considered to be spatiotemporal osteoprogenitors of bone-forming osteoblasts. Initiation of bone formation requires a critical density of these osteoblastic reversal cells (43±9 cells/mm), which is reached though proliferation (4.4±0.5% proliferative) and even more so through recruitment of osteoprogenitors, but challenged by the ongoing expansion of the canal circumference. These osteoprogenitors most likely originate from osteoblastic bone lining cells and mainly osteoblastic lumen cells, which expand their population though proliferation (4.6±0.3%) and vascular recruitment. These lumen cells resemble canopy cells above trabecular remodeling sites, and like canopy cells they extend above bone-forming osteoblasts where they may rejuvenate the osteoblast population during bone formation. Conclusion: Initiation of bone formation during intracortical remodeling requires a critical density osteoblastic reversal cells, which is reached though proliferation and recruitment of local osteoprogenitors: bone lining cells and osteoblastic lumen cells.
Ebisudani, T;Hamamoto, J;Togasaki, K;Mitsuishi, A;Sugihara, K;Shinozaki, T;Fukushima, T;Kawasaki, K;Seino, T;Oda, M;Hanyu, H;Toshimitsu, K;Emoto, K;Hayashi, Y;Asakura, K;Johnson, TA;Terai, H;Ikemura, S;Kawada, I;Ishii, M;Hishida, T;Asamura, H;Soejima, K;Nakagawa, H;Fujii, M;Fukunaga, K;Yasuda, H;Sato, T;
PMID: 36870059 | DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2023.112212
Human lung cancer is a constellation of tumors with various histological and molecular properties. To build a preclinical platform that covers this broad disease spectrum, we obtained lung cancer specimens from multiple sources, including sputum and circulating tumor cells, and generated a living biobank consisting of 43 lines of patient-derived lung cancer organoids. The organoids recapitulated the histological and molecular hallmarks of the original tumors. Phenotypic screening of niche factor dependency revealed that EGFR mutations in lung adenocarcinoma are associated with the independence from Wnt ligands. Gene engineering of alveolar organoids reveals that constitutive activation of EGFR-RAS signaling provides Wnt independence. Loss of the alveolar identity gene NKX2-1 confers Wnt dependency, regardless of EGFR signal mutation. Sensitivity to Wnt-targeting therapy can be stratified by the expression status of NKX2-1. Our results highlight the potential of phenotype-driven organoid screening and engineering for the fabrication of therapeutic strategies to combat cancer.
FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology
Vaughan-Shaw, PG;Blackmur, JP;Grimes, G;Ooi, LY;Ochocka-Fox, AM;Dunbar, K;von Kriegsheim, A;Rajasekaran, V;Timofeeva, M;Walker, M;Svinti, V;Din, FVN;Farrington, SM;Dunlop, MG;
PMID: 34918389 | DOI: 10.1096/fj.202101430RR
Vitamin D deficiency is associated with risk of several common cancers, including colorectal cancer (CRC). Here we have utilized patient derived epithelial organoids (ex vivo) and CRC cell lines (in vitro) to show that calcitriol (1,25OHD) increased the expression of the CRC tumor suppressor gene, CDH1, at both the transcript and protein level. Whole genome expression analysis demonstrated significant differential expression of a further six genes after 1,25OHD treatment, including genes with established links to carcinogenesis GADD45, EFTUD1 and KIAA1199. Furthermore, gene ontologies relevant to carcinogenesis were enriched by 1,25OHD treatment (e.g., 'regulation of Wnt signaling pathway', 'regulation of cell death'), with common enriched processes across in vitro and ex vivo cultures including 'negative regulation of cell proliferation', 'regulation of cell migration' and 'regulation of cell differentiation'. Our results identify genes and pathways that are modifiable by calcitriol that have links to CRC tumorigenesis. Hence the findings provide potential mechanism to the epidemiological and clinical trial data indicating a causal association between vitamin D and CRC. We suggest there is strong rationale for further well-designed trials of vitamin D supplementation as a novel CRC chemopreventive and chemotherapeutic agent.
The Journal of clinical investigation
Ren, X;Peng, M;Xing, P;Wei, Y;Galbo, PM;Corrigan, D;Wang, H;Su, Y;Dong, X;Sun, Q;Li, Y;Zhang, X;Edelmann, W;Zheng, D;Zang, X;
PMID: 36377656 | DOI: 10.1172/JCI163620
Cancer immunotherapy targeting the TIGIT/PVR pathway is currently facing challenges. KIR2DL5, a member of the human killer cell, immunoglobulin-like receptor (KIR) family, has recently been identified as another binding partner for PVR. The biology and therapeutic potential of the KIR2DL5/PVR pathway are largely unknown. Here we report that KIR2DL5 was predominantly expressed on human NK cells with mature phenotype and cytolytic function and that it bound to PVR without competition with the other 3 known PVR receptors. The interaction between KIR2DL5 on NK cells and PVR on target cells induced inhibitory synapse formation, whereas new monoclonal antibodies blocking the KIR2DL5-PVR interaction robustly augmented the NK cytotoxicity against PVR+ human tumors. Mechanistically, both intracellular ITIM and ITSM of KIR2DL5 underwent tyrosine phosphorylation after engagement, which was essential for KIR2DL5-mediated NK suppression by recruiting SHP-1 and/or SHP-2. Subsequently, ITIM/SHP-1/SHP-2 and ITSM/SHP-1 downregulated the downstream Vav1/ERK1/2/p90RSK/NF-κB signaling. KIR2DL5+ immune cells infiltrated in various types of PVR+ human cancers. Markedly, the KIR2DL5 blockade reduced tumor growth and improved overall survival across multiple NK cell-based humanized tumor models. Thus, our results revealed functional mechanisms of KIR2DL5-mediated NK cell immune evasion, demonstrated blockade of the KIR2DL5/PVR axis as a therapy for human cancers, and provided an underlying mechanism for the clinical failure of anti-TIGIT therapies.
Ye, Q;Wu, M;Zhou, C;Lu, X;Huang, B;Zhang, N;Zhao, H;Chi, H;Zhang, X;Ling, D;Zhang, RR;Li, Z;Luo, D;Huang, YJ;Qiu, HY;Song, H;Tan, W;Xu, K;Ying, B;Qin, CF;
PMID: 35882870 | DOI: 10.1038/s41541-022-00478-w
As the world continues to experience the COVID-19 pandemic, seasonal influenza remain a cause of severe morbidity and mortality globally. Worse yet, coinfection with SARS-CoV-2 and influenza A virus (IAV) leads to more severe clinical outcomes. The development of a combined vaccine against both COVID-19 and influenza is thus of high priority. Based on our established lipid nanoparticle (LNP)-encapsulated mRNA vaccine platform, we developed and characterized a novel mRNA vaccine encoding the HA antigen of influenza A (H1N1) virus, termed ARIAV. Then, ARIAV was combined with our COVID-19 mRNA vaccine ARCoV, which encodes the receptor-binding domain (RBD) of the SARS-CoV-2 S protein, to formulate the final combined vaccine, AR-CoV/IAV. Further characterization demonstrated that immunization with two doses of AR-CoV/IAV elicited robust protective antibodies as well as antigen-specific cellular immune responses against SARS-CoV-2 and IAV. More importantly, AR-CoV/IAV immunization protected mice from coinfection with IAV and the SARS-CoV-2 Alpha and Delta variants. Our results highlight the potential of the LNP-mRNA vaccine platform in preventing COVID-19 and influenza, as well as other respiratory diseases.
Chen, Q;Huang, XY;Tian, Y;Fan, C;Sun, M;Zhou, C;Li, R;Zhang, RR;Wu, G;Qin, CF;
PMID: 34569016 | DOI: 10.1007/s12250-021-00452-1