The Journal of clinical investigation
Mo, YQ;Nakamura, H;Tanaka, T;Odani, T;Perez, P;Ji, Y;French, BN;Pranzatelli, TJ;Michael, DG;Yin, H;Chow, SS;Khalaj, M;Afione, SA;Zheng, C;Oliveira, FR;Motta, ACF;Ribeiro-Silva, A;Rocha, EM;Nguyen, CQ;Noguchi, M;Atsumi, T;Warner, BM;Chiorini, JA;
PMID: 35113815 | DOI: 10.1172/JCI152780
BMP6 is a central cytokine in the induction of Sjögren's syndrome (SS)-associated secretory hypofunction. However, the upstream initiation leading to the production of this cytokine in SS is unknown. In this study, RNA in situ hybridization on salivary gland sections taken from SS patients indicated monocytic lineage cells as a cellular source of BMP6. RNA sequencing data from human salivary glands suggested TLR4 signaling was an upstream regulator of BMP6, which was confirmed by in vitro cell assays and single-cell transcriptomics of human PBMCs. Further investigation showed HSP70 was an endogenous natural TLR4 ligand that stimulated BMP6 expression in SS. Release of HSP70 from epithelial cells could be triggered by overexpression of lysosome-associated membrane protein 3 (LAMP3), a protein also associated with SS in several transcriptome studies. In vitro studies supported HSP70 was released as a result of lysosomal exocytosis initiated by LAMP3 expression, and reverse transcription PCR on RNA from minor salivary glands of SS patients confirmed a positive correlation between BMP6 and LAMP3 expression. BMP6 expression could be experimentally induced in mice by overexpression of LAMP3, which developed an SS-like phenotype. The newly identified LAMP3/HSP70/BMP6 axis provided an etiological model for SS gland dysfunction and autoimmunity.
Zhang, K;Erkan, EP;Jamalzadeh, S;Dai, J;Andersson, N;Kaipio, K;Lamminen, T;Mansuri, N;Huhtinen, K;Carpén, O;Hietanen, S;Oikkonen, J;Hynninen, J;Virtanen, A;Häkkinen, A;Hautaniemi, S;Vähärautio, A;
PMID: 35196078 | DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abm1831
Chemotherapy resistance is a critical contributor to cancer mortality and thus an urgent unmet challenge in oncology. To characterize chemotherapy resistance processes in high-grade serous ovarian cancer, we prospectively collected tissue samples before and after chemotherapy and analyzed their transcriptomic profiles at a single-cell resolution. After removing patient-specific signals by a novel analysis approach, PRIMUS, we found a consistent increase in stress-associated cell state during chemotherapy, which was validated by RNA in situ hybridization and bulk RNA sequencing. The stress-associated state exists before chemotherapy, is subclonally enriched during the treatment, and associates with poor progression-free survival. Co-occurrence with an inflammatory cancer-associated fibroblast subtype in tumors implies that chemotherapy is associated with stress response in both cancer cells and stroma, driving a paracrine feed-forward loop. In summary, we have found a resistant state that integrates stromal signaling and subclonal evolution and offers targets to overcome chemotherapy resistance.
Journal for immunotherapy of cancer
Blumenschein, GR;Devarakonda, S;Johnson, M;Moreno, V;Gainor, J;Edelman, MJ;Heymach, JV;Govindan, R;Bachier, C;Doger de Spéville, B;Frigault, MJ;Olszanski, AJ;Lam, VK;Hyland, N;Navenot, JM;Fayngerts, S;Wolchinsky, Z;Broad, R;Batrakou, D;Pentony, MM;Sanderson, JP;Gerry, A;Marks, D;Bai, J;Holdich, T;Norry, E;Fracasso, PM;
PMID: 35086946 | DOI: 10.1136/jitc-2021-003581
ADP-A2M10 specific peptide enhanced affinity receptor (SPEAR) T cells (ADP-A2M10) are genetically engineered autologous T cells that express a high-affinity melanoma-associated antigen A10 (MAGE-A10)-specific T-cell receptor (TCR) targeting MAGE-A10+ tumors in the context of human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A*02. ADP-0022-003 was a phase I dose-escalation trial that aimed to evaluate the safety and antitumor activity of ADP-A2M10 in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) (NCT02592577).Eligible patients were HLA-A*02 positive with advanced NSCLC expressing MAGE-A10. Patients underwent apheresis; T cells were isolated, transduced with a lentiviral vector containing the TCR targeting MAGE-A10, and expanded. Patients underwent lymphodepletion with varying doses/schedules of fludarabine and cyclophosphamide prior to receiving ADP-A2M10. ADP-A2M10 were administered at 0.08-0.12×109 (dose group 1), 0.5-1.2×109 (dose group 2), and 1.2-15×109 (dose group 3/expansion) transduced cells.Eleven patients (male, n=6; female, n=5) with NSCLC (adenocarcinoma, n=8; squamous cell carcinoma, n=3) were treated. Five, three, and three patients received cells in dose group 1, dose group 2, and dose group 3/expansion, respectively. The most frequently reported grade ≥3 adverse events were lymphopenia (n=11), leukopenia (n=10), neutropenia (n=8), anemia (n=6), thrombocytopenia (n=5), and hyponatremia (n=5). Three patients presented with cytokine release syndrome (grades 1, 2, and 4, respectively). One patient received the highest dose of lymphodepletion (fludarabine 30 mg/m2 on days -5 to -2 and cyclophosphamide 1800 mg/m2 on days -5 to -4) prior to a second infusion of ADP-A2M10 and had a partial response, subsequently complicated by aplastic anemia and death. Responses included: partial response (after second infusion; one patient), stable disease (four patients), clinical or radiographic progressive disease (five patients), and not evaluable (one patient). ADP-A2M10 were detectable in peripheral blood and in tumor tissue. Peak persistence was higher in patients who received higher doses of ADP-A2M10.ADP-A2M10 demonstrated an acceptable safety profile and no evidence of toxicity related to off-target binding or alloreactivity. There was persistence of ADP-A2M10 in peripheral blood as well as ADP-A2M10 trafficking into the tumor. Given the discovery that MAGE-A10 and MAGE-A4 expression frequently overlap, this clinical program closed as trials with SPEAR T cells targeting MAGE-A4 are ongoing.
Hirano, M;So, Y;Tsunekawa, S;Kabata, M;Ohta, S;Sagara, H;Sankoda, N;Taguchi, J;Yamada, Y;Ukai, T;Kato, M;Nakamura, J;Ozawa, M;Yamamoto, T;Yamada, Y;
PMID: 35145326 | DOI: 10.1038/s42255-022-00530-y
β cells have a limited capacity for regeneration, which predisposes towards diabetes. Here, we show that, of the MYC family members, Mycl plays a key role in proliferation of pancreatic endocrine cells. Genetic ablation of Mycl causes a reduction in the proliferation of pancreatic endocrine cells in neonatal mice. By contrast, the expression of Mycl in adult mice stimulates the proliferation of β and α cells, and the cells persist after withdrawal of Mycl expression. A subset of the expanded α cells give rise to insulin-producing cells after this withdrawal. Transient Mycl expression in vivo is sufficient to normalize the hyperglycaemia of diabetic mice. In vitro expression of Mycl similarly provokes active replication in islet cells, even in those from aged mice. Finally, we show that MYCL stimulates the division of human adult cadaveric islet cells. Our results demonstrate that the induction of Mycl alone expands the functional β-cell population, which may provide a regenerative strategy for β cells.
Becker-Krail, D;Ketchesin, K;Burns, J;Zong, W;Hildebrand, M;DePoy, L;Vadnie, C;Tseng, G;Logan, R;Huang, Y;McClung, C;
| DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2022.02.007
Background Substance use disorders (SUDs) are associated with disruptions in circadian rhythms. Both human and animal work has shown the integral role for circadian clocks in the modulation of reward behaviors. Interestingly, astrocytes have emerged as key regulators of circadian rhythmicity. However, no studies to date have identified the role of circadian astrocyte function in the nucleus accumbens (NAc), a hub for reward regulation, or determined the importance of these rhythms for reward-related behavior. Methods Using astrocyte-specific RNA-sequencing across time-of-day, we first characterized diurnal variation of the NAc astrocyte transcriptome. We then investigated the functional significance of this circadian regulation through viral-mediated disruption of molecular clock function in NAc astrocytes, followed by assessment of reward-related behaviors, metabolic-related molecular assays, and whole-cell electrophysiology in the NAc. Results Strikingly, ∼43% of the astrocyte transcriptome has a diurnal rhythm and key metabolic pathways were enriched among the top rhythmic genes. Moreover, mice with a viral-mediated loss of molecular clock function in NAc astrocytes show a significant increase in locomotor response to novelty, exploratory drive, operant food self-administration and motivation. At the molecular level, these animals also show disrupted metabolic gene expression, along with significant downregulation of both lactate and glutathione levels in the NAc. Importantly, loss of NAc astrocyte clock function also significantly altered glutamatergic signaling onto neighboring medium spiny neurons, alongside upregulated glutamate-related gene expression. Conclusions Taken together, these findings demonstrate a novel role for astrocyte circadian molecular clock function in the regulation of the NAc and reward-related behaviors.
Yu, T;Cazares, O;Tang, AD;Kim, HY;Wald, T;Verma, A;Liu, Q;Barcellos-Hoff, MH;Floor, SN;Jung, HS;Brooks, AN;Klein, OD;
PMID: 35202586 | DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2022.01.011
Alternative splicing generates distinct mRNA variants and is essential for development, homeostasis, and renewal. Proteins of the serine/arginine (SR)-rich splicing factor family are major splicing regulators that are broadly required for organ development as well as cell and organism viability. However, how these proteins support adult organ function remains largely unknown. Here, we used the continuously growing mouse incisor as a model to dissect the functions of the prototypical SR family protein SRSF1 during tissue homeostasis and renewal. We identified an SRSF1-governed alternative splicing network that is specifically required for dental proliferation and survival of progenitors but dispensable for the viability of differentiated cells. We also observed a similar progenitor-specific role of SRSF1 in the small intestinal epithelium, indicating a conserved function of SRSF1 across adult epithelial tissues. Thus, our findings define a regulatory mechanism by which SRSF1 specifically controls progenitor-specific alternative splicing events to support adult tissue homeostasis and renewal.
Chang, YC;Yang, CF;Chen, YF;Yang, CC;Chou, YL;Chou, HW;Chang, TY;Chao, TL;Hsu, SC;Ieong, SM;Tsai, YM;Liu, PC;Chin, YF;Fang, JT;Kao, HC;Lu, HY;Chang, JY;Weng, RS;Tu, QW;Chang, FY;Huang, KY;Lee, TY;Chang, SY;Yang, PC;
PMID: 35138028 | DOI: 10.15252/emmm.202115298
The emergence of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) variants has altered the trajectory of the COVID-19 pandemic and raised some uncertainty on the long-term efficiency of vaccine strategy. The development of new therapeutics against a wide range of SARS-CoV-2 variants is imperative. We, here, have designed an inhalable siRNA, C6G25S, which covers 99.8% of current SARS-CoV-2 variants and is capable of inhibiting dominant strains, including Alpha, Delta, Gamma, and Epsilon, at picomolar ranges of IC50 in vitro. Moreover, C6G25S could completely inhibit the production of infectious virions in lungs by prophylactic treatment, and decrease 96.2% of virions by cotreatment in K18-hACE2-transgenic mice, accompanied by a significant prevention of virus-associated extensive pulmonary alveolar damage, vascular thrombi, and immune cell infiltrations. Our data suggest that C6G25S provides an alternative and effective approach to combating the COVID-19 pandemic.
Matrix biology : journal of the International Society for Matrix Biology
Neupane, S;Berardinelli, SJ;Cameron, DC;Grady, RC;Komatsu, DE;Percival, CJ;Takeuchi, M;Ito, A;Liu, TW;Nairn, AV;Moremen, KW;Haltiwanger, RS;Holdener, BC;
PMID: 35167946 | DOI: 10.1016/j.matbio.2022.02.002
Many extracellular matrix (ECM) associated proteins that influence ECM properties have Thrombospondin type 1 repeats (TSRs) which are modified with O-linked fucose. The O-fucose is added in the endoplasmic reticulum to folded TSRs by the enzyme Protein O-fucosyltransferase-2 (POFUT2) and is proposed to promote efficient trafficking of substrates. The importance of this modification for function of TSR-proteins is underscored by the early embryonic lethality of mouse embryos lacking Pofut2. To overcome early lethality and investigate the impact of the Pofut2 knockout on the secretion of POFUT2 substrates and on extracellular matrix properties in vivo, we deleted Pofut2 in the developing limb mesenchyme using Prrx1-Cre recombinase. Loss of Pofut2 in the limb mesenchyme caused significant shortening of the limbs, long bones and tendons and stiff joint resembling the musculoskeletal dysplasias in human and in mice with mutations in ADAMTS or ADAMTSL proteins. Limb shortening was evident at embryonic day 14.5 where loss of O-fucosylation led to an accumulation of fibrillin 2 (FBN2), decreased BMP and IHH signaling, and increased TGF-β signaling. Consistent with these changes we saw a decrease in the size of the hypertrophic zone with lower levels of Collagen-X. Unexpectedly, we observed minimal effects of the Pofut2 knockout on secretion of two POFUT2 substrates, CCN2 or ADAMTS17, in the developing bone. In contrast, CCN2 and two other POFUT2 substrates important for bone development, ADAMTS6 and 10, showed a decrease in secretion from POFUT2-null HEK293T cells in vitro. These combined results suggest that the impact of the Pofut2 mutation is cell-type specific. In addition, these observations raise the possibility that the O-fucose modification on TSRs extends beyond promoting efficient trafficking of POFUT2 substrates and has the potential to influence their function in the extracellular environment.
Clinical and translational medicine
Jiang, H;Yu, D;Yang, P;Guo, R;Kong, M;Gao, Y;Yu, X;Lu, X;Fan, X;
PMID: 35184420 | DOI: 10.1002/ctm2.730
Deciphering intra- and inter-tumoural heterogeneity is essential for understanding the biology of gastric cancer (GC) and its metastasis and identifying effective therapeutic targets. However, the characteristics of different organ-tropism metastases of GC are largely unknown.Ten fresh human tissue samples from six patients, including primary tumour and adjacent non-tumoural samples and six metastases from different organs or tissues (liver, peritoneum, ovary, lymph node) were evaluated using single-cell RNA sequencing. Validation experiments were performed using histological assays and bulk transcriptomic datasets.Malignant epithelial subclusters associated with invasion features, intraperitoneal metastasis propensity, epithelial-mesenchymal transition-induced tumour stem cell phenotypes, or dormancy-like characteristics were discovered. High expression of the first three subcluster-associated genes displayed worse overall survival than those with low expression in a GC cohort containing 407 samples. Immune and stromal cells exhibited cellular heterogeneity and created a pro-tumoural and immunosuppressive microenvironment. Furthermore, a 20-gene signature of lymph node-derived exhausted CD8+ T cells was acquired to forecast lymph node metastasis and validated in GC cohorts. Additionally, although anti-NKG2A (KLRC1) antibody have not been used to treat GC patients even in clinical trials, we uncovered not only malignant tumour cells but one endothelial subcluster, mucosal-associated invariant T cells, T cell-like B cells, plasmacytoid dendritic cells, macrophages, monocytes, and neutrophils may contribute to HLA-E-KLRC1/KLRC2 interaction with cytotoxic/exhausted CD8+ T cells and/or natural killer (NK) cells, suggesting novel clinical therapeutic opportunities in GC. Additionally, our findings suggested that PD-1 expression in CD8+ T cells might predict clinical responses to PD-1 blockade therapy in GC.This study provided insights into heterogeneous microenvironment of GC primary tumours and organ-specific metastases and provide support for precise diagnosis and treatment.
Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy
Packer, MS;Chowdhary, V;Lung, G;Cheng, LI;Aratyn-Schaus, Y;Leboeuf, D;Smith, S;Shah, A;Chen, D;Zieger, M;Cafferty, BJ;Yan, B;Ciaramella, G;Gregoire, FM;Mueller, C;
PMID: 35121111 | DOI: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2022.01.040
Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency (AATD) is a rare autosomal codominant disease caused by mutations within the SERPINA1 gene. The most prevalent variant in patients is PiZ SERPINA1, containing a single G > A transition mutation. PiZ alpha-1 antitrypsin (AAT) is prone to misfolding, leading to the accumulation of toxic aggregates within hepatocytes. In addition, the abnormally low level of AAT secreted into circulation provides insufficient inhibition of neutrophil elastase within the lungs, eventually causing emphysema. Cytosine and adenine base editors enable the programmable conversion of C⋅G to T⋅A and A⋅T to G⋅C base pairs, respectively. In this study, two different base editing approaches were developed: use of a cytosine base editor to install a compensatory mutation (p.Met374Ile) and use of an adenine base editor to mediate the correction of the pathogenic PiZ mutation. After treatment with lipid nanoparticles formulated with base editing reagents, PiZ-transgenic mice exhibited durable editing of SERPINA1 in the liver, increased serum AAT, and improved liver histology. These results indicate that base editing has the potential to address both lung and liver disease in AATD.
Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy
Fang, F;Zhuang, P;Feng, X;Liu, P;Liu, D;Huang, H;Li, L;Chen, W;Liu, L;Sun, Y;Jiang, H;Ye, J;Hu, Y;
PMID: 35114390 | DOI: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2022.01.035
The lack of neuroprotective treatments for retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) and optic nerve (ON) is a central challenge for glaucoma management. Emerging evidence suggests that redox factor NAD+ decline is a hallmark of aging and neurodegenerative diseases. Supplementation with NAD+ precursors and overexpression of NMNAT1, the key enzyme in the NAD+ biosynthetic process, have significant neuroprotective effects. We first profile the translatomes of RGCs in naive mice and mice with silicone oil-induced ocular hypertension (SOHU)/glaucoma by RiboTag mRNA sequencing. Intriguingly, only NMNAT2, but not NMNAT1 or NMNAT3, is significantly decreased in SOHU glaucomatous RGCs, which we confirm by in situ hybridization. We next demonstrate that AAV2 intravitreal injection-mediated overexpression of long half-life NMNAT2 mutant driven by RGC-specific mouse γ-synuclein (mSncg) promoter restores decreased NAD+ levels in glaucomatous RGCs and ONs. Moreover, this RGC-specific gene therapy strategy delivers significant neuroprotection of both RGC soma and axon and preservation of visual function in the traumatic ON crush model and the SOHU glaucoma model. Collectively, our studies suggest that the weakening of NMNAT2 expression in glaucomatous RGCs contributes to a deleterious NAD+ decline, and that modulating RGC-intrinsic NMNAT2 levels by AAV2-mSncg vector is a promising gene therapy for glaucomatous neurodegeneration.
Liu, X;Chen, W;Zhu, G;Yang, H;Li, W;Luo, M;Shu, C;Zhou, Z;
PMID: 35132073 | DOI: 10.1038/s41421-021-00362-2
Thoracic aortic aneurysm and dissection (TAAD) is a life-threatening condition characterized by medial layer degeneration of the thoracic aorta. A thorough understanding of the regulator changes during pathogenesis is essential for medical therapy development. To delineate the cellular and molecular changes during the development of TAAD, we performed single-cell RNA sequencing of thoracic aortic cells from β-aminopropionitrile-induced TAAD mouse models at three time points that spanned from the early to the advanced stages of the disease. Comparative analyses were performed to delineate the temporal dynamics of changes in cellular composition, lineage-specific regulation, and cell-cell communications. Excessive activation of stress-responsive and Toll-like receptor signaling pathways contributed to the smooth muscle cell senescence at the early stage. Three subpopulations of aortic macrophages were identified, i.e., Lyve1+ resident-like, Cd74high antigen-presenting, and Il1rn+/Trem1+ pro-inflammatory macrophages. In both mice and humans, the pro-inflammatory macrophage subpopulation was found to represent the predominant source of most detrimental molecules. Suppression of macrophage accumulation in the aorta with Ki20227 could significantly decrease the incidence of TAAD and aortic rupture in mice. Targeting the Il1rn+/Trem1+ macrophage subpopulation via blockade of Trem1 using mLR12 could significantly decrease the aortic rupture rate in mice. We present the first comprehensive analysis of the cellular and molecular changes during the development of TAAD at single-cell resolution. Our results highlight the importance of anti-inflammation therapy in TAAD, and pinpoint the macrophage subpopulation as the predominant source of detrimental molecules for TAAD. Targeting the IL1RN+/TREM1+ macrophage subpopulation via blockade of TREM1 may represent a promising medical treatment.