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1.
Hum Gene Ther ; 2024 May 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38767512

ABSTRACT

Genome editing has the potential to treat genetic diseases in a variety of tissues including the lung. We have previously developed and validated a dual adeno-associated virus (AAV) CRISPR platform that supports effective editing in the airways of mice. To validate this delivery vehicle in a large animal model, we have shown that intratracheal instillation of CRISPR/Cas9 in AAV5 can edit a housekeeping gene or a disease-related gene in the lungs of young rhesus monkeys. We observed up to 8% editing of ACE2 in lung lobes after single-dose administration. Single-nuclear RNA-sequencing revealed that AAV5 transduces multiple cell types in the caudal lung lobes, including alveolar cells, macrophages, fibroblasts, endothelial cells, and B cells. These results demonstrate that AAV5 is efficient in the delivery of CRISPR/Cas9 in the lung lobes of young rhesus monkeys.

2.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Feb 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38405697

ABSTRACT

Clustering is commonly used in single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) pipelines to characterize cellular heterogeneity. However, current methods face two main limitations. First, they require user-specified heuristics which add time and complexity to bioinformatic workflows; second, they rely on post-selective differential expression analyses to identify marker genes driving cluster differences, which has been shown to be subject to inflated false discovery rates. We address these challenges by introducing nonparametric clustering of single-cell populations (NCLUSION): an infinite mixture model that leverages Bayesian sparse priors to identify marker genes while simultaneously performing clustering on single-cell expression data. NCLUSION uses a scalable variational inference algorithm to perform these analyses on datasets with up to millions of cells. By analyzing publicly available scRNA-seq studies, we demonstrate that NCLUSION (i) matches the performance of other state-of-the-art clustering techniques with significantly reduced runtime and (ii) provides statistically robust and biologically relevant transcriptomic signatures for each of the clusters it identifies. Overall, NCLUSION represents a reliable hypothesis-generating tool for understanding patterns of expression variation present in single-cell populations.

3.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38077056

ABSTRACT

Under chronic stress, cells must balance competing demands between cellular survival and tissue function. In metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD, formerly NAFLD/NASH), hepatocytes cooperate with structural and immune cells to perform crucial metabolic, synthetic, and detoxification functions despite nutrient imbalances. While prior work has emphasized stress-induced drivers of cell death, the dynamic adaptations of surviving cells and their functional repercussions remain unclear. Namely, we do not know which pathways and programs define cellular responses, what regulatory factors mediate (mal)adaptations, and how this aberrant activity connects to tissue-scale dysfunction and long-term disease outcomes. Here, by applying longitudinal single-cell multi -omics to a mouse model of chronic metabolic stress and extending to human cohorts, we show that stress drives survival-linked tradeoffs and metabolic rewiring, manifesting as shifts towards development-associated states in non-transformed hepatocytes with accompanying decreases in their professional functionality. Diet-induced adaptations occur significantly prior to tumorigenesis but parallel tumorigenesis-induced phenotypes and predict worsened human cancer survival. Through the development of a multi -omic computational gene regulatory inference framework and human in vitro and mouse in vivo genetic perturbations, we validate transcriptional (RELB, SOX4) and metabolic (HMGCS2) mediators that co-regulate and couple the balance between developmental state and hepatocyte functional identity programming. Our work defines cellular features of liver adaptation to chronic stress as well as their links to long-term disease outcomes and cancer hallmarks, unifying diverse axes of cellular dysfunction around core causal mechanisms.

4.
Nature ; 617(7959): 139-146, 2023 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37076617

ABSTRACT

Loss of the PTEN tumour suppressor is one of the most common oncogenic drivers across all cancer types1. PTEN is the major negative regulator of PI3K signalling. The PI3Kß isoform has been shown to play an important role in PTEN-deficient tumours, but the mechanisms underlying the importance of PI3Kß activity remain elusive. Here, using a syngeneic genetically engineered mouse model of invasive breast cancer driven by ablation of both Pten and Trp53 (which encodes p53), we show that genetic inactivation of PI3Kß led to a robust anti-tumour immune response that abrogated tumour growth in syngeneic immunocompetent mice, but not in immunodeficient mice. Mechanistically, PI3Kß inactivation in the PTEN-null setting led to reduced STAT3 signalling and increased the expression of immune stimulatory molecules, thereby promoting anti-tumour immune responses. Pharmacological PI3Kß inhibition also elicited anti-tumour immunity and synergized with immunotherapy to inhibit tumour growth. Mice with complete responses to the combined treatment displayed immune memory and rejected tumours upon re-challenge. Our findings demonstrate a molecular mechanism linking PTEN loss and STAT3 activation in cancer and suggest that PI3Kß controls immune escape in PTEN-null tumours, providing a rationale for combining PI3Kß inhibitors with immunotherapy for the treatment of PTEN-deficient breast cancer.


Subject(s)
Immune Evasion , Mammary Neoplasms, Animal , PTEN Phosphohydrolase , Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase , Animals , Mice , Immunotherapy , Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase/metabolism , Phosphoinositide-3 Kinase Inhibitors , PTEN Phosphohydrolase/deficiency , PTEN Phosphohydrolase/genetics , Signal Transduction , Mammary Neoplasms, Animal/enzymology , Mammary Neoplasms, Animal/genetics , Mammary Neoplasms, Animal/immunology , Mammary Neoplasms, Experimental/enzymology , Mammary Neoplasms, Experimental/genetics , Mammary Neoplasms, Experimental/immunology
5.
Sci Adv ; 9(16): eadg2239, 2023 04 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37075115

ABSTRACT

Imidazoquinolines (IMDs), such as resiquimod (R848), are of great interest as potential cancer immunotherapies because of their ability to activate Toll-like receptor 7 (TLR7) and/or TLR8 on innate immune cells. Nevertheless, intravenous administration of IMDs causes severe immune-related toxicities, and attempts to improve their tissue-selective exposure while minimizing acute systemic inflammation have proven difficult. Here, using a library of R848 "bottlebrush prodrugs" (BPDs) that differ only by their R848 release kinetics, we explore how the timing of R848 exposure affects immune stimulation in vitro and in vivo. These studies led to the discovery of R848-BPDs that exhibit optimal activation kinetics to achieve potent stimulation of myeloid cells in tumors and substantial reductions in tumor growth following systemic administration in mouse syngeneic tumor models without any observable systemic toxicity. These results suggest that release kinetics can be tuned at the molecular level to provide safe yet effective systemically administered immunostimulant prodrugs for next-generation cancer immunotherapies.


Subject(s)
Neoplasms , Prodrugs , Mice , Animals , Prodrugs/pharmacology , Toll-Like Receptor 7/agonists , Kinetics , Adjuvants, Immunologic/pharmacology , Neoplasms/drug therapy
6.
Mater Sci Eng C Mater Biol Appl ; 64: 61-73, 2016 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27127029

ABSTRACT

The design of bioresorbable synthetic small diameter (<6mm) vascular grafts (SDVGs) capable of sustaining long-term patency and endothelialization is a daunting challenge in vascular tissue engineering. Here, we synthesized a family of biocompatible and biodegradable polycaprolactone (PCL) urethane macromers to fabricate hollow fiber membranes (HFMs) as SDVG candidates, and characterized their mechanical properties, degradability, hemocompatibility, and endothelial development. The HFMs had smooth surfaces and porous internal structures. Their tensile stiffness ranged from 0.09 to 0.11N/mm and their maximum tensile force from 0.86 to 1.03N, with minimum failure strains of approximately 130%. Permeability varied from 1 to 14×10(-6)cm/s, burst pressures from 1158 to 1468mmHg, and compliance from 0.52 to 1.48%/100mmHg. The suture retention forces ranged from 0.55 to 0.81N. HFMs had slow degradation profiles, with 15 to 30% degradation after 8weeks. Human endothelial cells proliferated well on the HFMs, creating stable cell layer coverage. Hemocompatibility studies demonstrated low hemolysis (<2%), platelet activation, and protein adsorption. There were no significant differences in the hemocompatibility of HFMs in the absence and presence of endothelial layers. These encouraging results suggest great promise of our newly developed materials and biodegradable elastomeric HFMs as SDVG candidates.


Subject(s)
Biodegradable Plastics/chemistry , Cell Proliferation , Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells/metabolism , Materials Testing , Membranes, Artificial , Polyesters/chemistry , Polyurethanes/chemistry , Cell Adhesion , Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells/cytology , Humans , Permeability
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