Neurofibromatosis Type 1 (NF1) is caused by mutations in the NF1 gene that encodes neurofibromin, a RAS GTPase-Activating Protein. Inactivating NF1 mutations cause hyperactivation of RAS-mediated signaling, resulting in development of multiple neoplasms, including Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumors (MPNSTs). MPNSTs are an aggressive tumor and the main cause of mortality in NF1 patients. MPNSTs are difficult to resect and refractory to chemo- and radiotherapy, and no molecular therapies currently exist. Immune Checkpoint Blockade (ICB) is an approach to treat inoperable, undruggable cancers like MPNST, but successful outcomes require an immune cell-rich tumor microenvironment (TME). While MPNSTs are non-inflamed “cold” tumors, here, we turned MPNSTs into T cell-inflamed “hot” tumors by activating “stimulator of interferon genes” (STING) signaling. Mouse genetic and human xenograft MPNST models treated with STING agonist plus ICB exhibited growth delay via increased apoptotic cell death. This strategy offers a potential treatment regimen for MPNST.
Bandarigoda N. Somatilaka, Laasya Madana, Ali Sadek, Zhiguo Chen, Sanjay Chandrasekaran, Renee M. McKay, Lu Q. Le
SARS-CoV-2 infection of the upper airway and the subsequent immune response are early, critical factors in COVID-19 pathogenesis. By studying infection of human biopsies in vitro and in a hamster model in vivo, we demonstrated a transition in nasal tropism from olfactory to respiratory epithelium as the virus evolved. Analyzing each variant revealed that SARS-CoV-2 WA1 or Delta infect a proportion of olfactory neurons in addition to the primary target sustentacular cells. The Delta variant possessed broader cellular invasion capacity into the submucosa, while Omicron displayed enhanced nasal respiratory infection and longer retention in the sinonasal epithelium. The olfactory neuronal infection by WA1 and the subsequent olfactory bulb transport via axon were more pronounced in younger hosts. In addition, the observed viral clearance delay and phagocytic dysfunction in aged olfactory mucosa were accompanied by a decline of phagocytosis related genes. Furthermore, robust basal stem cell activation contributed to neuroepithelial regeneration and restores ACE2 expression post-infection. Together, our study characterized the nasal tropism of SARS-CoV-2 strains, immune clearance, and regeneration post infection. The shifting characteristics of viral infection at the airway portal provides insight into the variability of COVID-19 clinical features, particularly long COVID, and may suggest differing strategies for early local intervention.
Mengfei Chen, Andrew Pekosz, Jason S. Villano, Wenjuan Shen, Ruifeng Zhou, Heather Kulaga, Zhexuan Li, Amy Smith, Asiana Gurung, Sarah E. Beck, Kenneth W. Witwer, Joseph L. Mankowski, Murugappan Ramanathan Jr., Nicholas R. Rowan, Andrew P. Lane
In lung, thromboxane A2 (TXA2) activates the TP receptor to induce pro-inflammatory and bronchoconstrictor effects. Thus, TP receptor antagonists and TXA2 synthase inhibitors have been tested as potential asthma therapeutics in humans. Th9 cells play key roles in asthma and regulate the lung immune response to allergens. Herein, we found that TXA2 reduces Th9 cell differentiation during allergic lung inflammation. Th9 cells were decreased ~2-fold and airway hyperresponsiveness was attenuated in lungs of allergic mice treated with TXA2. Naïve CD4+ T cell differentiation to Th9 cells and IL-9 production was inhibited dose-dependently by TXA2 in vitro. TP receptor deficient mice had a ~2-fold increase in numbers of Th9 cells in lungs in vivo after OVA exposure compared to wild type (WT) mice. Naïve CD4+ T cells from TP deficient mice exhibited increased Th9 cell differentiation and IL-9 production in vitro compared to CD4+ T cells from WT mice. TXA2 also suppressed Th2 and enhanced Treg differentiation both in vitro and in vivo. Thus, in contrast to its acute, pro-inflammatory effects, TXA2 also has longer-lasting immunosuppressive effects that attenuate the Th9 differentiation that drives asthma progression. These findings may explain the paradoxical failure of anti-thromboxane therapies in the treatment of asthma.
Hong Li, J. Alyce Bradbury, Matthew L. Edin, Artiom Gruzdev, Huiling Li, Joan P. Graves, Laura M. DeGraff, Fred B. Lih, Chiguang Feng, Erin R. Wolf, Carl D. Bortner, Stephanie J. London, Matthew A. Sparks, Thomas M. Coffman, Darryl C. Zeldin
Fotios Spyropoulos, Apabrita Ayan Das, Markus Waldeck-Weiermair, Shambhu Yadav, Arvind K. Pandey, Ruby Guo, Taylor A. Covington, Venkata Thulabandu, Kosmas Kosmas, Benjamin Steinhorn, Mark Perella, Xiaoli Liu, Helen Christou, Thomas Michel
Macrophage immune checkpoint inhibitors, such as anti-CD47 antibodies, show promise in clinical trials for solid and hematologic malignancies. However, the best strategies to use these therapies remain unknown, and ongoing studies suggest they may be most effective when used in combination with other anticancer agents. Here, we developed a novel screening platform to identify drugs that render lung cancer cells more vulnerable to macrophage attack, and we identified therapeutic synergy exists between genotype-directed therapies and anti-CD47 antibodies. In validation studies, we found the combination of genotype-directed therapies and CD47 blockade elicited robust phagocytosis and eliminated persister cells in vitro and maximized anti-tumor responses in vivo. Importantly, these findings broadly applied to lung cancers with various RTK/MAPK pathway alterations—including EGFR mutations, ALK fusions, or KRASG12C mutations. We observed downregulation of β2-microglobulin and CD73 as molecular mechanisms contributing to enhanced sensitivity to macrophage attack. Our findings demonstrate that dual inhibition of the RTK/MAPK pathway and the CD47/SIRPa axis is a promising immunotherapeutic strategy. Our study provides strong rationale for testing this therapeutic combination in patients with lung cancers bearing driver mutations.
Kyle Vaccaro, Juliet Allen, Troy W. Whitfield, Asaf Maoz, Sarah Reeves, José Velarde, Dian Yang, Anna Meglan, Juliano Ribeiro, Jasmine Blandin, Nicole Phan, George W. Bell, Aaron Hata, Kipp Weiskopf
BACKGROUND. Weakly virulent environmental mycobacteria (EM) can cause severe disease in HLA-DRB1*15:02 or 16:02 adult individuals harboring neutralizing anti-IFN-γ autoantibodies (nAIGAs). The overall prevalence of nAIGA in a general population are unknown as is the the penetrance of nAIGA in HLA-DRB1*15:02 or 16:02 individuals, and the proportion of patients with unexplained, adult-onset EM infections carrying nAIGAs. METHODS. This study analyzed the detection and neutralization of anti-IFN-γ autoantibodies (auto-Abs) from 8,430 healthy individuals of the general population, 257 HLA-DRB1*15:02 or 16:02 carriers, 1,063 patients with autoimmune disease, and 497 patients with unexplained severe disease due to EM. RESULTS. We find that anti-IFN-γ autoantibodies detected in 4,148 of 8,430 healthy individuals (49.2%) from the general population of an unknown HLA-DRB1 genotype are not neutralizing. Moreover, we do not find nAIGAs in 257 individuals carrying HLA-DRB1* 15:02 or 16:02, including 71 individuals with detectable anti-IFN-g autoantibodies (27.6%). Additionally, nAIGA are absent in 1,063 patients with an autoimmune disease. Furthermore, we find only a few other autoantibodies in seven patients with nAIGAs tested. Finally, seven of 497 patients (1.4%) with unexplained severe disease due to EM harbored nAIGA. Yet, nAIGA are absent in the remaining 41 patients who are HLA-DRB1*15:02 or 16:02, the 45 patients with IFN-g autoantibodies, and the five patients with HLA-DRB1*15:02 or 16:02 and IFN-g autoantibodies . CONCLUSION. These findings suggest that nAIGAs are isolated and that their penetrance in HLA-DRB1*15:02 or 16:02 individuals is low, implying that they may be triggered by rare germline or somatic variants. In contrast, the risk of mycobacterial disease in patients with nAIGAs is high, confirming that these nAIGAs are causal of EM disease. FUNDING. The Laboratory of Human Genetics of Infectious Diseases is supported by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the Rockefeller University, the St. Giles Foundation, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) (R01AI095983), the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS), the NIH Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) program (UL1 TR001866), and partly by French National Research Agency (ANR).
Jessica N. Peel, Rui Yang, Tom Le Voyer, Adrian Gervais, Jérémie Rosain, Paul Bastard, Anish Behere, Axel Cederholm, Aaron Bodansky, Yoann Seeleuthner, Clément Conil, Jing-Ya Ding, Wei-Te Lei, Lucy Bizien, Camille Soudee, Mélanie Migaud, Masato Ogishi, Ahmad Yatim, Danyel Lee, Jonathan Bohlen, Thomas Perpoint, Laura Perez, Fernando Messina, Roxana Genet, Ludovic Karkowski, Mathieu Blot, Emmanuel Lafont, Laurie Toullec, Claire Goulvestre, Souad Mehlal-Sedkaoui, Jérôme Sallette, Fernando Martin, Anne Puel, Emmanuelle Jouanguy, Mark S. Anderson, Nils Landegren, Pierre Tiberghien, Laurent Abel, Stéphanie Boisson-Dupuis, Jacinta Bustamante, Cheng-Lung Ku, Jean-Laurent Casanova
Gianfranco Di Giuseppe, Laura Soldovieri, Gea Ciccarelli, Pietro Manuel Ferraro, Giuseppe Quero, Francesca Cinti, Umberto Capece, Simona Moffa, Enrico Celestino Nista, Antonio Gasbarrini, Andrea Mari, Sergio Alfieri, Vincenzo Tondolo, Alfredo Pontecorvi, Jens Juul Holst, Andrea Giaccari, Teresa Mezza
CD4 T cells survey and maintain immune homeostasis in the brain, yet their differentiation states and functional capabilities remain unclear. Our approach, combining single-cell transcriptomic analysis, ATAC-seq, spatial transcriptomics, and flow cytometry, revealed a distinct subset of CCR7+ CD4 T cells resembling lymph node central memory (TCM) cells. We observed chromatin accessibility at the CCR7, CD28, and BCL-6 loci, defining molecular features of TCM. Brain CCR7+ CD4 T cells exhibited recall proliferation and interleukin-2 production ex vivo, showcasing their functional competence. We identified the skull bone marrow as a local niche for these cells alongside CNS border tissues. Sequestering TCM cells in lymph nodes using FTY720 led to reduced CCR7+ CD4 T cell frequencies in the cerebrospinal fluid, accompanied by increased monocyte levels and soluble markers indicating immune activation. In macaques chronically infected with SIVCL757 and experiencing viral rebound due to cessation of antiretroviral therapy, a decrease in brain CCR7+ CD4 T cells was observed, along with increased microglial activation and initiation of neurodegenerative pathways. Our findings highlight a role for CCR7+ CD4 T cells in CNS immune surveillance and their decline during chronic SIV highlights their responsiveness to neuroinflammation.
Sonny R. Elizaldi, Chase E. Hawes, Anil Verma, Yashavanth Shaan Lakshmanappa, Ashok R. Dinasarapu, Brent T. Schlegel, Dhivyaa Rajasundaram, Jie Li, Blythe P. Durbin-Johnson, Zhong-Min Ma, Pabitra B. Pal, Danielle Beckman, Sean Ott, Reben Raeman, Jeffrey Lifson, John H. Morrison, Smita S. Iyer
Craniofacial anomalies, especially midline facial defects, are among the most common birth defects in patients associated with increased mortality or require lifelong treatment. During mammalian embryogenesis, specific instructions arising at genetic, signaling, and metabolic levels are important for stem cell behaviors and fate determination, but how these functionally relevant mechanisms are coordinated to regulate craniofacial morphogenesis remain unknown. Here, we report that BMP signaling in cranial neural crest cells (CNCCs) is critical for glycolytic lactate production and subsequent epigenetic histone lactylation, thereby dictating craniofacial morphogenesis. Elevated BMP signaling in CNCCs through constitutively activated ACVR1 (ca-ACVR1) suppressed glycolytic activity and blocked lactate production via a p53-dependent process that resulted in severe midline facial defects. By modulating epigenetic remodeling, BMP signaling-dependent lactate generation drived histone lactylation levels to alter essential genes of Pdgfra thus regulating CNCC behavior in vitro as well as in vivo. These findings define an axis wherein the BMP signaling controls a metabolic-epigenetic cascade to direct craniofacial morphogenesis, thus providing a conceptual framework for understanding the interaction between genetic and metabolic cues operative during embryonic development. These findings indicate potential preventive strategies of congenital craniofacial birth defects via modulating metabolic-driven histone lactylation.
Jingwen Yang, Lingxin Zhu, Haichun Pan, Hiroki Ueharu, Masako Toda, Qian Yang, Shawn A. Hallett, Lorin E. Olson, Yuji Mishina
Development of effective strategies to manage the inevitable acquired resistance to osimertinib, an approved 3rd generation EGFR inhibitor for the treatment of EGFR mutant (EGFRm) non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), is urgently needed. This study reported that the DNA topoisomerase II (Topo II) inhibitors, doxorubicin and etoposide (VP-16) synergistically decreased cell survival with enhanced induction of DNA damage and apoptosis in osimertinib-resistant cells, suppressed the growth of osimertinib-resistant tumors, and delayed the emergence of osimertinib acquired resistance. Mechanistically, osimertinib decreased Topo IIα levels in EGFRm NSCLC cells by facilitating FBXW7-mediated proteasomal degradation, resulting in induction of DNA damage; these effects were lost in osimertinib-resistant cell lines possessing elevated levels of Topo IIα. Topo IIα elevation was also detected in the majority of EGFRm NSCLC tissues relapsed from EGFR-TKI treatment. Enforced expression of an ectopic TOP2A gene in sensitive EGFRm NSCLC cells conferred resistance to osimertinib, whereas knockdown of TOP2A in osimertinib-resistant cell lines restored their response to undergo osimertinib-induced DNA damage and apoptosis. Together, these results reveal an essential role of Topo IIα inhibition in mediating the therapeutic efficacy of osimertinib against EGFRm NSCLC, providing scientific rationale for targeting Topo II to manage acquired resistance to osimertinib.
Zhen Chen, Karin A. Vallega, Dongsheng Wang, Zihan Quan, Songqing Fan, Qiming Wang, Ticiana Leal, Suresh S. Ramalingam, Shi-Yong Sun
The appearance of senescent cells in age-related diseases has spurred the search for compounds that can target senescent cells in tissues (“senolytics”). However, a major caveat with current senolytic screens is the use of cell lines as targets where senescence is induced in vitro, which does not necessarily reflect the identity and function of pathogenic senescent cells in vivo. Here, we developed a new pipeline leveraging a fluorescent murine reporter that allows for isolation and quantification of p16Ink4a+ cells in diseased tissues. By high-throughput screening in vitro, precision cut lung slice (PCLS) screening ex vivo, and phenotypic screening in vivo, we identified a HSP90 inhibitor (XL888) as a potent senolytic in tissue fibrosis. XL888 treatment eliminated pathogenic p16Ink4a+ fibroblasts in a murine model of lung fibrosis and reduced fibrotic burden. Finally, XL888 preferentially targeted p16INK4a-high human lung fibroblasts isolated from patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), and reduced p16INK4a+ fibroblasts from IPF PCLS ex vivo. This study provides proof of concept for a platform where p16INK4a+ cells are directly isolated from diseased tissues to identify compounds with in vivo and ex vivo efficacy in mouse and human respectively and provides a senolytic screening platform for other age-related diseases.
Jin Young Lee, Nabora S. Reyes, Supriya Ravishankar, Minqi Zhou, Maria Krasilnikov, Christian Ringler, Grace Pohan, Chris Wilson, Kenny Kean-Hooi Ang, Paul J. Wolters, Tatsuya Tsukui, Dean Sheppard, Michelle R. Arkin, Tien Peng
Antitumor responses of CD8+ T cells are tightly regulated by distinct metabolic fitness. High levels of glutathione (GSH) are observed in the majority of tumors contributing to cancer progression and treatment resistance in part by preventing glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPX4) dependent ferroptosis. Here, we show the necessity of the adenosine A2A receptor (A2AR) signaling and the glutathione (GSH)-GPX4 axis in orchestrating metabolic fitness and survival of functionally competent CD8+ T cells. Activated CD8+ T cells treated ex vivo with simultaneous inhibition of A2AR and lipid peroxidation acquire a superior capacity to proliferate and persist in vivo, demonstrating a translatable means to prevent ferroptosis in adoptive cell therapy (ACT). Additionally, we identify a particular cluster of intratumoral CD8+ T cells expressing a putative gene signature of GSH metabolism (GMGS) in association with clinical response and survival across several human cancers. Our study addresses a key role of GSH-GPX4 and adenosinergic pathways in fine-tuning the metabolic fitness of antitumor CD8+ T cells.
Siqi Chen, Jie Fan, Ping Xie, Jihae Ahn, Michelle Fernandez, Leah K. Billingham, Jason Miska, Jennifer D. Wu, Derek A. Wainwright, Deyu Fang, Jeffrey A. Sosman, Yong Wan, Yi Zhang, Navdeep S. Chandel, Bin Zhang
RAD54 and BLM helicase play pivotal roles during homologous recombination repair (HRR) ensuring genome maintenance. BLM amino acids (181-212) interacts with RAD54 and enhances its chromatin remodelling activity. Functionally, this interaction heightens HRR, leading to a decrease in residual DNA damage in colon cancer cells. This contributes to chemoresistance in colon cancer cells against cisplatin, camptothecin and oxaliplatin, eventually promoting tumorigenesis in preclinical colon cancer mouse models. ChIP-seq analysis and validation revealed increased BLM/RAD54 co-recruitment on MRP2 promoter in camptothecin resistant colon cancer cells, leading to BLM-dependent enhancement of RAD54-mediated chromatin remodelling. We screened Prestwick small molecule library intending to revert camptothecin and oxaliplatin induced chemoresistance by disrupting BLM-RAD54 interaction. Three FDA/EMA approved candidates were identified which could disrupt this interaction. These drugs bind to RAD54, alter its conformation and abrogate BLM-RAD54 dependent chromatin remodeling on G5E4 and MRP2 arrays. Notably, the small molecules also reduced HRR repair efficiency in resistant lines, diminished anchorage independent growth, hampered the proliferation of tumors generated using camptothecin and oxaliplatin resistant colon cancer cells in both xenograft and syngeneic mouse models in BLM dependent manner. Hence the three identified small molecules can serve as possible viable candidates for adjunct therapy in colon cancer treatment.
Ekjot Kaur, Ritu Agrawal, Rimpy Arun, Vinoth Madhavan, Vivek Srivastava, Dilip Kumar, Pragyan Parimita Rath, Nitin Kumar, Sreekanth Vedagopuram, Nishant Pandey, Swati Priya, Patrick Legembre, Samudrala Gourinath, Avinash Bajaj, Sagar Sengupta
Staphylococcus aureus is a leading cause of biofilm-associated prosthetic joint infection (PJI). A primary contributor to infection chronicity is an expansion of granulocytic myeloid-derived suppressor cells (G-MDSCs) that are critical for orchestrating the anti-inflammatory biofilm milieu. Single-cell sequencing and bioinformatic metabolic algorithms were used to explore the link between G-MDSC metabolism and S. aureus PJI outcome. Glycolysis and the hypoxia response through hypoxia-inducible factor-1 alpha (HIF-1a) were significantly enriched in G-MDSCs. Interfering with both pathways in vivo, using a 2-deoxyglucose nanopreparation and granulocyte-targeted HIF-1a conditional knockout mice, respectively, attenuated G-MDSC-mediated immunosuppression and reduced bacterial burden in a mouse model of S. aureus PJI. In addition, scRNA-seq analysis of granulocytes from PJI patients also showed an enrichment in glycolysis and hypoxia response genes. These findings support the importance of a glycolysis/HIF-1a axis in promoting G-MDSC anti-inflammatory activity and biofilm persistence during PJI.
Christopher M. Horn, Prabhakar Arumugam, Zachary Van Roy, Cortney E. Heim, Rachel W. Fallet, Blake P. Bertrand, Dhananjay Shinde, Vinai C. Thomas, Svetlana G. Romanova, Tatiana K. Bronich, Curtis W. Hartman, Kevin L. Garvin, Tammy Kielian
Adoptive transfer of T cell receptor-engineered T cells (TCR-T) is a promising strategy for immunotherapy against solid tumors. However, the potential of CD4+ T cells in mediating tumor regression has been neglected. Nasopharyngeal cancer is consistently associated with EBV. Here, to evaluate the therapeutic potential of CD4 TCR-T in nasopharyngeal cancer, we screened for CD4 TCRs recognizing EBV nuclear antigen 1 (EBNA1) presented by HLA-DP5. Using mass spectrometry, we identified EBNA567-581, a peptide naturally processed and presented by HLA-DP5. We isolated TCR135, a CD4 TCR with high functional avidity, that can function in both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells and recognizes HLA-DP5-restricted EBNA1567-581. TCR135-transduced T cells functioned in two ways: directly killing HLA-DP5+EBNA1+ tumor cells after recognizing EBNA1 presented by tumor cells and indirectly killing HLA-DP5-negative tumor cells after recognizing EBNA1 presented by antigen-presenting cells. TCR135-transduced T cells preferentially infiltrated into the tumor microenvironment and significantly inhibited tumor growth in xenograft nasopharyngeal tumor models. Additionally, we found that 62% of nasopharyngeal cancer patients showed 50%-100% expression of HLA-DP on tumor cells, indicating that nasopharyngeal cancer is well-suited for CD4 TCR-T therapy. These findings suggest that TCR135 may provide a new strategy for EBV-related nasopharyngeal cancer immunotherapy in HLA-DP5+ patients.
Chenwei Wang, Jiewen Chen, Jingyao Li, Zhihong Xu, Lihong Huang, Qian Zhao, Lei Chen, Xiaolong Liang, Hai Hu, Gang Li, Chengjie Xiong, Bin Wu, Hua You, Danyi Du, Xiaoling Wang, Hongle Li, Zibing Wang, Lin Chen
Chromosomal instability is a prominent biological feature of Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS), with over 50% of MDS patients harboring chromosomal abnormalities or a complex karyotype. Despite this observation, the mechanisms underlying mitotic and chromosomal defects in MDS remain elusive. In this study, we identified a ectopic expression of transcription factor ONECUT3, associated with complex karyotypes and poorer survival outcomes in MDS. ONECUT3-overexpressing cell models exhibited enrichment of several notable pathways, including signatures of sister chromosome exchange separation and mitotic nuclear division with the upregulation of INCENP and CDCA8 genes. Notably, dysregulation of Chromosome Passenger Complex (CPC) accumulation besides the cell equator and midbody during mitotic phases consequently caused cytokinesis failure and defective chromosome segregation. Mechanistically, the Homeobox (HOX) domain of ONECUT3, serving as the DNA binding domain, occupied the unique genomic regions of INCENP and CDCA8, and transcriptionally activated these two genes. A novel lead compound C5484617, was identified that functionally targeted the HOX domain of ONECUT3 inhibiting its transcriptional activity on downstream genes, and synergistically resensitized MDS cells to hypomethylating agents. This study revealed that ONECUT3 promoted chromosomal instability by transcriptional activation of INCENP and CDCA8, suggesting potential prognosis and therapeutic roles for targeting high-risk MDS patients with complex karyotype.
Yingwan Luo, Xiaomin Feng, Wei Lang, Weihong Xu, Wei Wang, Chen Mei, Li Ye, Shuanghong Zhu, Lu Wang, Xinping Zhou, Huimin Zeng, Liya Ma, Yanling Ren, Jie Jin, Rongzhen Xu, Gang Huang, Hongyan Tong
Loss of arterial smooth muscle cells (SMCs) and abnormal accumulation of the extracellular domain of the NOTCH3 receptor (Notch3ECD) are the two core features of CADASIL, a common cerebral small vessel disease caused by highly stereotyped dominant mutations in NOTCH3. Yet, the relationship between NOTCH3 receptor activity, Notch3ECD accumulation and arterial SMC loss has remained elusive, hampering the development of disease-modifying therapies. Using dedicated histopathological and multiscale imaging modalities, we could detect and quantify previously undetectable CADASIL-driven arterial SMC loss in the central nervous system of mice expressing the archetypal Arg169Cys mutation. We found that arterial pathology was more severe and Notch3ECD accumulation greater in transgenic mice overexpressing the mutation on a wild-type Notch3 background (TgNotch3R169C) than in knock-in Notch3R170C/R170C mice expressing this mutation without a wild-type Notch3 copy. Notably, expression of Notch3-regulated genes was essentially unchanged in TgNotch3R169C arteries. We further showed that wild-type Notch3ECD co-aggregated with mutant Notch3ECD and that elimination of one copy of wild-type Notch3 in TgNotch3R169C was sufficient to attenuate Notch3ECD accumulation and arterial pathology. These findings suggest that Notch3ECD accumulation, involving mutant and wild-type NOTCH3, is a major driver of arterial SMC loss in CADASIL, paving the way for NOTCH3-lowering therapeutic strategies.
Nicolas Dupré, Florian Gueniot, Valérie Domenga-Denier, Virginie Dubosclard, Christelle Nilles, David Hill-Eubanks, Christelle Morgenthaler-Roth, Mark T. Nelson, Céline Keime, Lydia Danglot, Anne Joutel
Translocation Renal Cell Carcinoma (tRCC) most commonly involves an ASPSCR1-TFE3 fusion, but molecular mechanisms remain elusive and animal models are lacking. Here, we show that human ASPSCR1-TFE3 driven by Pax8-Cre (a credentialed ccRCC driver) disrupted nephrogenesis and glomerular development causing neonatal death, whilst the ccRCC failed driver, Sglt2-Cre, induced aggressive tRCC (as well as ASPS) with complete penetrance and short latency. However, in both contexts, ASPSCR1-TFE3 led to characteristic morphological cellular changes, loss of epithelial markers, and an EMT program. Electron microscopy of tRCC tumors showed lysosome expansion and functional studies revealed simultaneous activation of autophagy and mTORC1 pathways. Comparative genomic analyses encompassing an institutional human tRCC cohort (including a hitherto unreported SFPQ-TFEB fusion) and a variety of tumorgraft models (ASPSCR1-TFE3, PRCC-TFE3, SFPQ-TFE3, RBM10-TFE3, and MALAT1-TFEB) disclosed significant convergence in canonical (cell cycle, lysosome and mTORC1) and less established pathways such as Myc, E2F and inflammation (IL6/JAK/STAT3, interferon-γ, TLR signaling, systemic lupus, etc). Therapeutic trials (adjusted for human drug exposures) showed anti-tumor activity of cabozantinib. Overall, this study provides insight into MiT/TFE-driven tumorigenesis including the cell of origin and characterizes diverse mouse models available for research.
Gopinath Prakasam, Akhilesh Mishra, Alana Christie, Jeffrey Miyata, Deyssy Carrillo, Vanina T. Tcheuyap, Hui Ye, Quyen N. Do, Yunguan Wang, Oscar Reig Torras, Ramesh Butti, Hua Zhong, Jeffrey Gagan, Kevin B. Jones, Thomas J. Carroll, Zora Modrusan, Steffen Durinck, Mai-Carmen Requena-Komuro, Noelle S. Williams, Ivan Pedrosa, Tao Wang, Dinesh Rakheja, Payal Kapur, James Brugarolas
Background: Persistent controllers (PC) maintain antiretroviral-free HIV-1 control indefinitely over time while transient controllers (TC) eventually lose virological control. It is essential to characterize the quality of the HIV reservoir of these phenotypes to identify the factors that lead to HIV progression and to open new avenues in HIV cure strategies. Methods: The characterization of HIV-1 reservoir, from peripheral blood mononuclear cells, was performed using next-generation sequencing techniques, such as full-length individual and matched integration site proviral sequencing (FLIP-seq; MIP-seq). Results: PC and TC before losing virological control, presented significantly lower total, intact and defective proviruses compared to participants on antiretroviral therapy (ART). No differences were found in total and defective proviruses between PC and TC. However, intact provirus levels were lower in PC compared to TC, being the intact/defective HIV-DNA ratio significantly higher in TC. Clonally expanded intact proviruses were found only in PC and located in centromeric satellite DNA or zinc-finger genes, both associated with heterochromatin features. In contrast, sampled intact proviruses were located in permissive genic euchromatic positions in TC. Conclusions: These results suggest the need for, and can give guidance to the design of, future research to identify a distinct proviral landscape that may be associated with the persistent control of HIV-1 without ART. Funding: Instituto de Salud Carlos III (FI17/00186, FI19/00083, MV20/00057 PI18/01532, PI19/01127 and PI22/01796), Consejería de Economía, Conocimiento, Empresas y Universidad, Junta de Andalucía (PI20/1276), Gilead Fellowships (GLD22/00147) and I+D+iFEDER Andalucía 2014-2020 (US-1380938).
Carmen Gasca-Capote, Xiaodong Lian, Ce Gao, Isabelle C. Roseto, María Reyes Jiménez-León, Gregory Gladkov, María Inés Camacho-Sojo, Alberto Pérez-Gómez, Isabel Gallego, Luis E. Lopez-Cortes, Sara Bachiller, Joana Vitalle, Mohammed Rafii-El-Idrissi Benhnia, Francisco J. Ostos, Antonio R. Collado-Romacho, Jesús Santos, Rosario Palacios, Cristina Gomez-Ayerbe, Leopoldo Muñoz-Medina, Andrés Ruiz-Sancho, Mario Frias, Antonio Rivero-Juarez, Cristina Roca-Oporto, Carmen Hidalgo-Tenorio, Anna Rull, Julian Olalla, Miguel A. Lopez-Ruz, Francesc Vidal, Consuelo Viladés, Andrea Mastrangelo, Matthias Cavassini, Nuria Espinosa, Matthieu Perreau, Joaquin Peraire, Antonio Rivero, Luis F. López-Cortes, Mathias Lichterfeld, Xu G. Yu, Ezequiel Ruiz-Mateos
While therapies targeting CD19 by antibodies, CAR-T cells and T cell engagers have improved the response rates in B-cell malignancies; the emergence of resistant cell populations with low CD19 expression can lead to relapsed disease. We developed an in vitro model of adaptive resistance facilitated by chronic exposure of leukemia cells to a CD19-immunotoxin. Single-cell (sc) RNAseq showed increase in transcriptionally distinct CD19low populations in resistant cells. Mass cytometry demonstrated that CD22 was also decreased in these CD19low resistant cells. ATAC-seq showed decreased chromatin accessibility at promoters of both CD19 and CD22 during development of resistance. Combined loss of both CD19 and CD22 antigens was validated in samples from pediatric and young adult patients with ALL that relapsed after CD19 CAR-T targeted therapy. Functionally, resistant cells were characterized by slower growth and lower basal levels of MEK activation. CD19low resistant cells exhibited preserved B cell receptor signaling and were more sensitive to both BTK and MEK inhibition. These data demonstrate that resistance to CD19 immunotherapies can result in decreased expression of both CD19 and CD22 and can result in dependency on BTK pathways.
Sarah Aminov, Orsi Giricz, David T. Melnekoff, R. Alejandro Sica, Veronika Polishchuk, Cristian Papazoglu, Bonnie Yates, Hao-Wei Wang, Srabani Sahu, Yanhua Wang, Shanisha Gordon-Mitchell, Violetta V. Leshchenko, Carolina Schinke, Kith Pradhan, Srinivas Aluri, Moah Sohn, Stefan K. Barta, Beamon Agarwal, Mendel Goldfinger, Ioannis Mantzaris, Aditi Shastri, William Matsui, Ulrich Steidl, Joshua D. Brody, Nirali N. Shah, Samir Parekh, Amit Verma