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1.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 1458, 2024 Feb 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38368418

ABSTRACT

Nme2Cas9 has been established as a genome editing platform with compact size, high accuracy, and broad targeting range, including single-AAV-deliverable adenine base editors. Here, we engineer Nme2Cas9 to further increase the activity and targeting scope of compact Nme2Cas9 base editors. We first use domain insertion to position the deaminase domain nearer the displaced DNA strand in the target-bound complex. These domain-inlaid Nme2Cas9 variants exhibit shifted editing windows and increased activity in comparison to the N-terminally fused Nme2-ABE. We next expand the editing scope by swapping the Nme2Cas9 PAM-interacting domain with that of SmuCas9, which we had previously defined as recognizing a single-cytidine PAM. We then use these enhancements to introduce therapeutically relevant edits in a variety of cell types. Finally, we validate domain-inlaid Nme2-ABEs for single-AAV delivery in vivo.


Subject(s)
Adenine , CRISPR-Associated Protein 9 , CRISPR-Associated Protein 9/genetics , CRISPR-Associated Protein 9/metabolism , Adenine/metabolism , Gene Editing , DNA/genetics , CRISPR-Cas Systems
2.
Mol Neurobiol ; 61(2): 1140-1156, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37688709

ABSTRACT

Neuroinflammation is closely related to prognosis in ischemic stroke. Microglia are the main immune cells in the nervous system. Under physiological conditions, microglia participate in clearance of dead cells, synapse pruning and regulation of neuronal circuits to maintain the overall health of the nervous system. Once ischemic stroke occurs, microglia function in the occurrence and progression of neuroinflammation. Therefore, the regulation of microglia-mediated neuroinflammation is a potential therapeutic strategy for ischemic stroke. The anti-inflammatory activity of gypenosides (GPs) has been confirmed to be related to the activity of microglia in other neurological diseases. However, the role of GPs in neuroinflammation after ischemic stroke has not been studied. In this study, we investigated whether GPs could reduce neuroinflammation by regulating microglia and the underlying mechanism through qRT-PCR and western blot. Results showed that GPs pretreatment mitigated blood-brain barrier (BBB) damage in the mice subjected to middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) and improved motor function. According to the results of immunofluorescence staining, GPs pretreatment alleviated neuroinflammation in MCAO mice by reducing the number of microglia and promoting their phenotypic transformation from M1 to M2. Furthermore, GPs pretreatment reduced the number of astrocytes in the penumbra and inhibited their polarization into the A1 type. We applied oxygen and glucose deprivation (OGD) on BV2 cells to mimic ischemic conditions in vitro and found similar effect as that in vivo. At the molecular level, the STAT-3/HIF1-α and TLR-4/NF-κB/HIF1-α pathways were involved in the anti-inflammatory effects of GPs in vitro and in vivo. Overall, this research indicates that GPs are potential therapeutic agents for ischemic stroke and has important reference significance to further explore the possibility of GPs application in ischemic stroke.


Subject(s)
Brain Injuries , Brain Ischemia , Ischemic Stroke , Mice , Animals , Neuroinflammatory Diseases , Microglia/metabolism , Brain Ischemia/complications , Brain Ischemia/drug therapy , Brain Ischemia/metabolism , Ischemia/metabolism , Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery/complications , Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery/drug therapy , Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery/metabolism , Brain Injuries/metabolism , Anti-Inflammatory Agents/pharmacology , Ischemic Stroke/metabolism , Plant Extracts , Gynostemma
4.
Nat Biotechnol ; 2023 Sep 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37709915

ABSTRACT

Reverse transcriptases, used in prime editing systems, exhibit lower fidelity, processivity and dNTP affinity than many DNA-dependent DNA polymerases. We report that a DNA-dependent DNA polymerase (phi29), untethered from Cas9, enables editing from a synthetic, end-stabilized DNA-containing template at up to 60% efficiency in human cells. Compared to prime editing, DNA polymerase editing avoids autoinhibitory intramolecular base pairing of the template, facilitates template synthesis and supports larger insertions (>100 nucleotides).

5.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Apr 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37131611

ABSTRACT

Nme2Cas9 has been established as a genome editing platform with compact size, high accuracy, and broad targeting range, including single-AAV-deliverable adenine base editors. Here, we have engineered Nme2Cas9 to further increase the activity and targeting scope of compact Nme2Cas9 base editors. We first used domain insertion to position the deaminase domain nearer the displaced DNA strand in the target-bound complex. These domain-inlaid Nme2Cas9 variants exhibited shifted editing windows and increased activity in comparison to the N-terminally fused Nme2-ABE. We next expanded the editing scope by swapping the Nme2Cas9 PAM-interacting domain with that of SmuCas9, which we had previously defined as recognizing a single-cytidine PAM. We used these enhancements to correct two common MECP2 mutations associated with Rett syndrome with little or no bystander editing. Finally, we validated domain-inlaid Nme2-ABEs for single-AAV delivery in vivo.

6.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37027594

ABSTRACT

Recently, contrastive learning based on augmentation invariance and instance discrimination has made great achievements, owing to its excellent ability to learn beneficial representations without any manual annotations. However, the natural similarity among instances conflicts with instance discrimination which treats each instance as a unique individual. In order to explore the natural relationship among instances and integrate it into contrastive learning, we propose a novel approach in this paper, Relationship Alignment (RA for abbreviation), which forces different augmented views of current batch instances to main a consistent relationship with other instances. In order to perform RA effectively in existing contrastive learning framework, we design an alternating optimization algorithm where the relationship exploration step and alignment step are optimized respectively. In addition, we add an equilibrium constraint for RA to avoid the degenerate solution, and introduce the expansion handler to make it approximately satisfied in practice. In order to better capture the complex relationship among instances, we additionally propose Multi-Dimensional Relationship Alignment (MDRA for abbreviation), which aims to explore the relationship from multiple dimensions. In practice, we decompose the final high-dimensional feature space into a cartesian product of several low-dimensional subspaces and perform RA in each subspace respectively. We validate the effectiveness of our approach on multiple self-supervised learning benchmarks and get consistent improvements compared with current popular contrastive learning methods. On the most commonly used ImageNet linear evaluation protocol, our RA obtains significant improvements over other methods, our MDRA gets further improvements based on RA to achieve the best performance. The source code of our approach will be released soon.

7.
Nano Lett ; 23(7): 2601-2606, 2023 Apr 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36995278

ABSTRACT

The refractory metal-oxide semiconductors are an overlooked platform for nanophononics that offer alloys with high melting points and tunable optical constants through stoichiometry changes and ion intercalation. We show that these semiconductors can form metamaterial coatings (metacoatings) made from a set of highly subwavelength, periodic metal-oxide layers (≤20 nm) with a varying and graded refractive index profile that includes a combination of high and low refractive indices and plasmonic layers. These metacoatings exhibit vibrant, structural color arising from the periodic index profile that can be tuned across the visible spectrum, over ultralarge lateral areas through bottom-up thermal annealing techniques.

8.
Brief Bioinform ; 24(1)2023 01 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36528388

ABSTRACT

Membrane-based cells are the fundamental structural and functional units of organisms, while evidences demonstrate that liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) is associated with the formation of membraneless organelles, such as P-bodies, nucleoli and stress granules. Many studies have been undertaken to explore the functions of protein phase separation (PS), but these studies lacked an effective tool to identify the sequence segments that critical for LLPS. In this study, we presented a novel software called dSCOPE (http://dscope.omicsbio.info) to predict the PS-driving regions. To develop the predictor, we curated experimentally identified sequence segments that can drive LLPS from published literature. Then sliding sequence window based physiological, biochemical, structural and coding features were integrated by random forest algorithm to perform prediction. Through rigorous evaluation, dSCOPE was demonstrated to achieve satisfactory performance. Furthermore, large-scale analysis of human proteome based on dSCOPE showed that the predicted PS-driving regions enriched various protein post-translational modifications and cancer mutations, and the proteins which contain predicted PS-driving regions enriched critical cellular signaling pathways. Taken together, dSCOPE precisely predicted the protein sequence segments critical for LLPS, with various helpful information visualized in the webserver to facilitate LLPS-related research.


Subject(s)
Proteins , Software , Humans , Proteins/chemistry
9.
Zhonghua Nan Ke Xue ; 29(8): 746-750, 2023 Aug.
Article in Chinese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38619524

ABSTRACT

The incidence of erectile dysfunction (ED) has been reported to increase after COVID-19 infection, and it is common in COVID-19 patients during recovery. This paper presents a summary of the latest research progress on COVID-19-induced ED and explores the traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) diagnosis and treatment approach based on TCM theory and clinical experience. COVID-19 infection may lead to ED through endothelial dysfunction, testicular injury, hormonal imbalance, and psychological factors. The pathogenesis of COVID-19-related ED is mainly characterized by deficiency of the body's essence and excess of pathogenic factors. In the early stage, it is dominated by deficiency of qi and yin, while in the middle stage, it is mainly due to deficiency of qi and blood stasis. In the long-term, ED is based on the imbalance of yin and yang, with liver stagnation and qi stagnation often co-existing. Clinical manifestations of ED vary, and treatment should focus on tonifying qi and nourishing yin, promoting blood circulation, regulating yin and yang, and soothing liver depression according to TCM diagnosis and treatment principles.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Erectile Dysfunction , Male , Humans , Erectile Dysfunction/diagnosis , Erectile Dysfunction/etiology , Erectile Dysfunction/therapy , Medicine, Chinese Traditional , Liver , COVID-19 Testing
10.
GEN Biotechnol ; 1(3): 285-299, 2022 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35811581

ABSTRACT

Base editors (BEs) have opened new avenues for the treatment of genetic diseases. However, advances in delivery approaches are needed to enable disease targeting of a broad range of tissues and cell types. Adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors remain one of the most promising delivery vehicles for gene therapies. Currently, most BE/guide combinations and their promoters exceed the packaging limit (∼5 kb) of AAVs. Dual-AAV delivery strategies often require high viral doses that impose safety concerns. In this study, we engineered an adenine base editor (ABE) using a compact Cas9 from Neisseria meningitidis (Nme2Cas9). Compared with the well-characterized Streptococcus pyogenes Cas9-containing ABEs, ABEs using Nme2Cas9 (Nme2-ABE) possess a distinct protospacer adjacent motif (N4CC) and editing window, exhibit fewer off-target effects, and can efficiently install therapeutically relevant mutations in both human and mouse genomes. Importantly, we show that in vivo delivery of Nme2-ABE and its guide RNA by a single AAV vector can efficiently edit mouse genomic loci and revert the disease mutation and phenotype in an adult mouse model of tyrosinemia. We anticipate that Nme2-ABE, by virtue of its compact size and broad targeting range, will enable a range of therapeutic applications with improved safety and efficacy due in part to packaging in a single-vector system.

11.
Nat Biotechnol ; 40(9): 1388-1393, 2022 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35379962

ABSTRACT

Delivery and optimization of prime editors (PEs) have been hampered by their large size and complexity. Although split versions of genome-editing tools can reduce construct size, they require special engineering to tether the binding and catalytic domains. Here we report a split PE (sPE) in which the Cas9 nickase (nCas9) remains untethered from the reverse transcriptase (RT). The sPE showed similar efficiencies in installing precise edits as the parental unsplit PE3 and no increase in insertion-deletion (indel) byproducts. Delivery of sPE to the mouse liver with hydrodynamic injection to modify ß-catenin drove tumor formation with similar efficiency as PE3. Delivery with two adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors corrected the disease-causing mutation in a mouse model of type I tyrosinemia. Similarly, prime editing guide RNAs (pegRNAs) can be split into a single guide RNA (sgRNA) and a circular RNA RT template to increase flexibility and stability. Compared to previous sPEs, ours lacks inteins, protein-protein affinity modules and nuclease-sensitive pegRNA extensions, which increase construct complexity and might reduce efficiency. Our modular system will facilitate the delivery and optimization of PEs.


Subject(s)
RNA, Circular , Tyrosinemias , Animals , CRISPR-Cas Systems , Deoxyribonuclease I/genetics , Gene Editing , Mice , RNA, Circular/genetics , RNA, Guide, Kinetoplastida/genetics , RNA-Directed DNA Polymerase/genetics , Tyrosinemias/genetics
12.
Int J Mol Sci ; 23(3)2022 Jan 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35163360

ABSTRACT

Scaffold materials, neurotrophic factors, and seed cells are three elements of neural tissue engineering. As well-known self-assembling peptide-based hydrogels, RADA16-I and modified peptides are attractive matrices for neural tissue engineering. In addition to its neuroprotective effects, cerebral dopamine neurotrophic factor (CDNF) has been reported to promote the proliferation, migration, and differentiation of neural stem cells (NSCs). However, the role of RADA16-I combined with CDNF on NSCs remains unknown. First, the effect of RADA16-I hydrogel and CDNF on the proliferation and differentiation of cultured NSCs was investigated. Next, RADA16-I hydrogel and CDNF were microinjected into the lateral ventricle (LV) of middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) rats to activate endogenous NSCs. CDNF promoted the proliferation of NSCs, while RADA16-I induced the neural differentiation of NSCs in vitro. Importantly, both RADA16-I and CDNF promoted the proliferation, migration, and differentiation of endogenous NSCs by activating the ERK1/2 and STAT3 pathways, and CDNF exerted an obvious neuroprotective effect on brain ischemia-reperfusion injury. These findings provide new information regarding the application of the scaffold material RADA16-I hydrogel and the neurotrophic factor CDNF in neural tissue engineering and suggest that RADA16-I hydrogel and CDNF microinjection may represent a novel therapeutic strategy for the treatment of stroke.


Subject(s)
Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery/drug therapy , Nerve Growth Factors/administration & dosage , Neural Stem Cells/cytology , Peptides/administration & dosage , Reperfusion Injury/drug therapy , Animals , Apoptosis/drug effects , Cell Differentiation/drug effects , Cell Proliferation/drug effects , Cells, Cultured , Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery/etiology , Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery/metabolism , MAP Kinase Signaling System/drug effects , Male , Nerve Growth Factors/pharmacology , Neural Stem Cells/drug effects , Peptides/pharmacology , Phosphorylation/drug effects , Rats , Reperfusion Injury/metabolism , Reperfusion Injury/pathology , STAT3 Transcription Factor/metabolism , Signal Transduction/drug effects
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