Kumaraswamy et al. report that the antibiotic colistin retains antimicrobial activity against multidrug-resistant bacterial pathogens expressing the plasmid-borne mobilized colistin resistance (mcr) gene in the presence of physiologic media or host immunity, although this activity is not detected using standard antimicrobial susceptibility testing. Image credit: Adapted from Jezper/Shutterstock and Basica/Shutterstock.
Cytoplasmic TDP43 mislocalization and aggregation are pathological hallmarks of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). However, the initial cellular insults that lead to TDP43 mislocalization remain unclear. In this study, we demonstrate that Nemo-like kinase (NLK) — a proline-directed serine/threonine kinase — promotes the mislocalization of TDP43 and other RNA-binding proteins by disrupting nuclear import. NLK levels are selectively elevated in neurons exhibiting TDP43 mislocalization in ALS patient tissues, while genetic reduction of NLK reduces toxicity in human neuron models of ALS. Our findings suggest that NLK is a promising therapeutic target for neurodegenerative diseases.
Michael E. Bekier II, Emile S. Pinarbasi, Gopinath Krishnan, Jack J. Mesojedec, Madelaine Hurley, Harisankar Harikumar Sheela, Catherine A. Collins, Layla T. Ghaffari, Martina de Majo, Erik M. Ullian, Mark Koontz, Sarah Coleman, Xingli Li, Elizabeth M.H. Tank, Jacob Waksmacki, Fen-Biao Gao, Sami J. Barmada
A subgroup (~20-30%) of castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) aberrantly expresses a gastrointestinal (GI) transcriptome governed by two GI-lineage-restricted transcription factors, HNF1A and HNF4G. In this study, we found that expression of GI transcriptome in CRPC correlates with adverse clinical outcomes to androgen receptor signaling inhibitor treatment and shorter overall survival. Bromo- and extra-terminal domain inhibitors (BETi) downregulated HNF1A, HNF4G, and the GI transcriptome in multiple CRPC models, including cell lines, patient-derived organoids, and patient-derived xenografts, while AR and the androgen-dependent transcriptome were largely spared. Accordingly, BETi selectively inhibited growth of GI transcriptome-positive preclinical models of prostate cancer. Mechanistically, BETi inhibited BRD4 binding at enhancers globally, including both AR and HNF4G bound enhancers while gene expression was selectively perturbed. Restoration of HNF4G expression in the presence of BETi rescued target gene expression without rescuing BRD4 binding. This suggests that inhibition of master transcription factors expression underlies the selective transcriptional effects of BETi.
Shipra Shukla, Dan Li, Woo Hyun Cho, Dana M. Schoeps, Holly M. Nguyen, Jennifer L. Conner, Marjorie L. Roskes, Anisha Tehim, Gabriella Bayshtok, Mohini R. Pachai, Juan Yan, Nicholas A. Teri, Eric Campeau, Sarah Attwell, Patrick Trojer, Irina Ostrovnaya, Anuradha Gopalan, Ekta Khurana, Eva Corey, Ping Chi, Yu Chen
Since the lung is a mucosal barrier organ with a unique immunologic environment, mechanisms of immunoregulation in lung cancer may differ from those of other malignancies. Consistent with this notion, we found that CD8+ T cells play a paradoxical role in facilitating, rather than ameliorating, the growth of multiple lung adenocarcinoma models. These include spontaneous, carcinogen-induced, and transplantable tumor cell line models. Specifically, we found that CD8+ T cells promote homing of CD4+Foxp3+ T regulatory cells to the tumor bed by increasing levels of CCR5 chemokines in the tumor microenvironment in an IFN-γ and TNF-α dependent manner. Contrary to their canonical role, these Th1 cytokines contributed to accelerated growth of murine lung adenocarcinomas while suppressing the growth of other malignancies. Surprisingly, lung cancer cells themselves can serve as a dominant source of IFN-γ, and deletion of this cytokine from cancer cells using CRISPR/Cas-9 decreases tumor growth. Importantly for translational applications, a high level of IFN-γ was also found in human lung cancer patients at both the mRNA and protein level. Our data outlines what we deem a novel and previously undefined lung cancer specific immunoregulatory pathway that may be harnessed to tailor immune based therapy specifically for this malignancy.
Christina Kratzmeier, Mojtaba Taheri, Zhongcheng Mei, Isabelle Lim, May A. Khalil, Brandon Carter-Cooper, Rachel E. Fanaroff, Chin S. Ong, Eric B. Schneider, Stephanie Chang, Erica Leyder, Dongge Li, Irina G. Luzina, Anirban Banerjee, Alexander Sasha Krupnick
Up to 10% of patients with severe early-onset obesity carry pathogenic variants in known obesity-related genes, mostly affecting the leptin-melanocortin pathway. Studying children with severe obesity from consanguineous populations provides a unique opportunity to uncover novel molecular mechanisms. Using whole-exome sequencing, followed by a rigorous analytical and filtration strategy, we identified three different homozygous missense variants in SREK1 (encoding Splicing Regulatory glutamic acid and lysine rich protein) in Pakistani children with severe obesity, from three unrelated consanguineous pedigrees. The wild type SREK1 gene of human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived hypothalamic neurons was individually replaced by each of the three variants and the impact of these changes on global gene expression was studied. Neurons expressing the two variants in the SREK1 RNA recognition domain p.P95L and p.T194M, but not the C-terminally located p.E601K, had markedly reduced expression of the small nucleolar RNA clusters SNORD115 and SNORD116, deficiency of which has been implicated in Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS). In addition to hyperphagic obesity the carriers of these two variants had other features of PWS, such as neonatal hypotonia. In conclusion, homozygous variants in SREK1 result in a subtype of severe early onset obesity sharing features with PWS.
Sadia Saeed, Anna-Maria Siegert, YC Loraine Tung, Roohia Khanam, Qasim M. Janjua, Jaida Manzoor, Mehdi Derhourhi, Bénédicte Toussaint, Brian Y. H. Lam, Sherine Awad, Emmanuel Vaillant, Emmanuel Buse Falay, Souhila Amanzougarene, Hina Ayesha, Waqas Imran Khan, Nosheen Ramzan, Vladimir Saudek, Stephen O'Rahilly, Anthony P. Goldstone, Muhammad Arslan, Amélie Bonnefond, Philippe Froguel, Giles S.H. Yeo
The dystrophin-glycoprotein complex (DGC) is composed of peripheral and integral membrane proteins at the muscle cell membrane that link the extracellular matrix with the intracellular cytoskeleton. While it is well-established that genetic mutations that disrupt the structural integrity of DGC result in numerous muscular dystrophies, the three-dimensional structure of the complex has remained elusive. Two recent elegant cryoEM structures of DGC illuminate its molecular architecture and reveal the unique structural placement of sarcospan (SSPN) within the complex. SSPN, a 25-kDa tetraspanin-like protein, anchors beta-dystroglycan to the beta-, gamma- and delta-sarcoglycan trimer, supporting biochemical studies that SSPN is a core element for DGC assembly and stabilization. Here, we advance these studies by revealing that SSPN provides scaffolding in gamma-sarcoglycanopathies enabling substitution of gamma-sarcoglycan by its homolog, zeta-sarcoglycan, leading to the structural integrity of the DGC and prevention of limb-girdle muscular dystrophy R5. Three-dimensional modeling reveals that zeta-sarcoglycan preserves protein-protein interactions with the sarcospan, sarcoglycans, dystroglycan, and dystrophin. The structural integrity of the complex maintains myofiber attachment to the extracellular matrix and protect the cell membrane from contraction-induced damage. These findings demonstrate that sarcospan prevents limb-girdle muscular dystrophy R5 by remodeling of the sarcoglycan complex composition.
Ekaterina I. Mokhonova, Daniel Helzer, Ravinder Malik, Hafsa Mamsa, Jackson Walker, Mark Maslanka, Tess S. Fleser, Mohammad H. Afsharinia, Shiheng Liu, Johan Holmberg, Z. Hong Zhou, Eric J. Deeds, Kirk C. Hansen, Elizabeth M. McNally, Rachelle H. Crosbie
The complement system executes an evolutionarily ancient innate immune response with important roles in many human diseases, including a variety of conditions involving the kidney, autoimmune disorders, age-related macular degeneration, and more. This series of reviews, curated by Dr. Claudia Kemper, highlights the latest discoveries in complement biology and examines ongoing efforts to target complement therapeutically. From the relatively newly uncovered functions of intracellular complement (complosome) to the complexities involved in using animal models of complementopathies, these reviews convey the challenges of studying complement and developing complement-targeted therapeutics as well as call attention to recent findings that supply momentum to the field.
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