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result(s) for
"Basler, Michael"
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PLGA Particles in Immunotherapy
2023
Poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) particles are a widely used and extensively studied drug delivery system. The favorable properties of PLGA such as good bioavailability, controlled release, and an excellent safety profile due to the biodegradable polymer backbone qualified PLGA particles for approval by the authorities for the application as a drug delivery platform in humas. In recent years, immunotherapy has been established as a potent treatment option for a variety of diseases. However, immunomodulating drugs rely on targeted delivery to specific immune cell subsets and are often rapidly eliminated from the system. Loading of PLGA particles with drugs for immunotherapy can protect the therapeutic compounds from premature degradation, direct the drug delivery to specific tissues or cells, and ensure sustained and controlled drug release. These properties present PLGA particles as an ideal platform for immunotherapy. Here, we review recent advances of particulate PLGA delivery systems in the application for immunotherapy in the fields of allergy, autoimmunity, infectious diseases, and cancer.
Journal Article
On the Role of the Immunoproteasome in Protein Homeostasis
2021
Numerous cellular processes are controlled by the proteasome, a multicatalytic protease in the cytosol and nucleus of all eukaryotic cells, through regulated protein degradation. The immunoproteasome is a special type of proteasome which is inducible under inflammatory conditions and constitutively expressed in hematopoietic cells. MECL-1 (β2i), LMP2 (β1i), and LMP7 (β5i) are the proteolytically active subunits of the immunoproteasome (IP), which is known to shape the antigenic repertoire presented on major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules. Furthermore, the immunoproteasome is involved in T cell expansion and inflammatory diseases. In recent years, targeting the immunoproteasome in cancer, autoimmune diseases, and transplantation proved to be therapeutically effective in preclinical animal models. However, the prime function of standard proteasomes and immunoproteasomes is the control of protein homeostasis in cells. To maintain protein homeostasis in cells, proteasomes remove proteins which are not properly folded, which are damaged by stress conditions such as reactive oxygen species formation, or which have to be degraded on the basis of regular protein turnover. In this review we summarize the latest insights on how the immunoproteasome influences protein homeostasis.
Journal Article
Cellular stress increases DRIP production and MHC Class I antigen presentation
2024
Defective ribosomal products (DRiPs) are non-functional proteins rapidly degraded during or after translation being an essential source for MHC class I ligands. DRiPs are characterized to derive from a substantial subset of nascent gene products that degrade more rapidly than their corresponding native retiree pool. So far, mass spectrometry analysis revealed that a large number of HLA class I peptides derive from DRiPs. However, a specific viral DRiP on protein level was not described. In this study, we aimed to characterize and identify DRiPs derived from a viral protein.
Using the nucleoprotein (NP) of the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) which is conjugated N-terminally to ubiquitin, or the ubiquitin-like modifiers FAT10 or ISG15 the occurrence of DRiPs was studied. The formation and degradation of DRiPs was monitored by western blot with the help of a FLAG tag. Flow cytometry and cytotoxic T cells were used to study antigen presentation.
We identified several short lived DRiPs derived from LCMV-NP. Of note, these DRiPs could only be observed when the LCMV-NP was modified with ubiquitin or ubiquitin-like modifiers, but not in the wild type form. Using proteasome inhibitors, we could show that degradation of LCMV-NP derived DRiPs were proteasome dependent. Interestingly, the synthesis of DRiPs could be enhanced when cells were stressed with the help of FCS starvation. An enhanced NP118-126 presentation was observed when the LCMV-NP was modified with ubiquitin or ubiquitin-like modifiers, or under FCS starvation.
Taken together, we visualize for the first time DRiPs derived from a viral protein. Furthermore, DRiPs formation, and therefore MHC-I presentation, is enhanced under cellular stress conditions. Our investigations on DRiPs in MHC class I antigen presentation open up new approaches for the development of vaccination strategies.
Journal Article
Immunoproteasome Inhibition Impairs T and B Cell Activation by Restraining ERK Signaling and Proteostasis
2018
Immunoproteasome (IP) inhibition holds potential as a novel treatment option for various immune-mediated pathologies. The IP inhibitor ONX 0914 reduced T cell cytokine secretion and Th17 polarization and showed pre-clinical efficacy in a range of autoimmune disorders, transplant-allograft rejection, virus-mediated tissue damage, and colon cancer progression. However, the molecular basis of these effects has remained largely elusive. Here, we have analyzed the effects of ONX 0914 in primary human and mouse lymphocytes. ONX 0914-treatment impaired primary T cell activation
and
. IP inhibition reduced ERK-phosphorylation sustainment, while leaving NF-κB and other signaling pathways unaffected. Naïve T and B cells expressed nearly exclusively immuno- or mixed proteasomes but no standard proteasomes and IP inhibition but not IP-deficiency induced mild proteostasis stress, reduced DUSP5 expression and enhanced DUSP6 protein levels due to impaired degradation. However, accumulation of DUSP6 did not cause the reduced ERK-phosphorylation in a non-redundant manner. We show that broad-spectrum proteasome inhibition and immunoproteasome inhibition have distinct effects on T cell activation at the molecular level. Notably, ONX 0914-treated T cells recovered from proteostasis stress without apoptosis induction, apparently via Nrf1-mediated up-regulation of standard proteasomes. In contrast, B cells were more susceptible to apoptosis after ONX 0914-treatment. Our data thus provide mechanistic insights how IP inhibition functionally impedes T and B cells likely accounting for its therapeutic benefits.
Journal Article
Could we see a prescription opioid epidemic in the UK?
2017
The World Health Organization lists opioids and benzodiazepines as essential medicines. 1 A recent UK report from the charity Drugwise has highlighted the misuse of these prescribed substances. 2 But this problem is not new. In the 1800s opium was traded between countries, and the marketing of some of these medications (not just opioids) has been controversial. 5 Social factors in medicine play a role: early hospital discharge, lack of continuity of care, and pressures on health professionals often lead to repeat prescription.
Journal Article
Corrigendum: Immunoproteasome inhibition attenuates experimental psoriasis
2024
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.1075615.].
Journal Article
Valosin-containing protein (VCP/p97) inhibition reduces viral clearance and induces toxicity associated with muscular damage
2022
Valosin-containing protein (VCP)/p97 has emerged as a central regulator of the ubiquitin–proteasome system by connecting ubiquitylation and degradation. The development of CB-5083, an ATPase D2-domain-selective and orally bioavailable inhibitor of VCP/p97, allows targeting of the ubiquitin–proteasome system in human diseases. In this study, we evaluated the effect of CB-5083 on the immune response in mice by using the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) as an infection model. We demonstrate that LCMV infection increased the susceptibility to CB-5083 treatment in a CD8-independent manner. Administration of CB-5083 to mice reduced the cytotoxic T cell response and impaired viral clearance. Compared to uninfected cells, CB-5083 treatment enhanced the unfolded protein response in LCMV-infected cells. Administration of CB-5083 during the expansion of CD8
+
T cells led to strong toxicity in mice within hours, which resulted in enhanced IL-6 levels in the serum and accumulation of poly-ubiquitinated proteins. Furthermore, we linked the observed toxicity to the specific formation of aggregates in the skeletal muscle tissue and the upregulation of both lactate dehydrogenase and creatine kinase in the serum.
Journal Article
On the role of the immunoproteasome in transplant rejection
2019
The immunoproteasome is expressed in cells of hematopoietic origin and is induced during inflammation by IFN-γ. Targeting the immunoproteasome with selective inhibitors has been shown to be therapeutically effective in pre-clinical models for autoimmune diseases, colitis-associated cancer formation, and transplantation. Immunoproteasome inhibition prevents activation and proliferation of lymphocytes, lowers MHC class I cell surface expression, reduces the expression of cytokines of activated immune cells, and curtails T helper 1 and 17 cell differentiation. This might explain the in vivo efficacy of immunoproteasome inhibition in different pre-clinical disease models for autoimmunity, cancer, and transplantation. In this review, we summarize the effect of immunoproteasome inhibition in different animal models for transplantation.
Journal Article
Immunoproteasome inhibition attenuates experimental psoriasis
by
del Rio Oliva, Marta
,
Basler, Michael
,
Mellett, Mark
in
Animal models
,
Animals
,
Autoimmune Diseases
2022
Psoriasis is an autoimmune skin disease associated with multiple comorbidities. The immunoproteasome is a special form of the proteasome expressed in cells of hematopoietic origin.
The therapeutic use of ONX 0914, a selective inhibitor of the immunoproteasome, was investigated in
mice, which spontaneously develop psoriasis-like symptoms, and in the imiquimod murine model.
In both models, treatment with ONX 0914 significantly reduced skin thickness, inflammation scores, and pathological lesions in the analyzed skin tissue. Furthermore, immunoproteasome inhibition normalized the expression of several pro-inflammatory genes in the ear and significantly reduced the inflammatory infiltrate, accompanied by a significant alteration in the αβ
and γδ
T cell subsets.
ONX 0914 ameliorated psoriasis-like symptoms in two different murine psoriasis models, which supports the use of immunoproteasome inhibitors as a therapeutic treatment in psoriasis.
Journal Article
The ubiquitin-like modifier FAT10 is not essential for MHC-I antigen presentation
2025
The presentation of pathogen-derived antigens on major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I is crucial for the antiviral immune response. Degradation of intracellular pathogen-derived proteins by the 26S proteasome generates peptides that can be loaded on MHC-I molecules and presented to cytotoxic T cells. The cytokine-inducible ubiquitin-like modifier (ULM) HLA-F adjacent transcript 10 (FAT10) is encoded in the MHC locus and targets its substrates for proteasomal degradation. Therefore, it acts as an alternative signal for protein degradation, indicating a role in generating the peptide pool for MHC-I presentation. In this study, we aimed to elucidate the role of FAT10 in MHC class I presentation.
Using different human and mouse cell lines deficient for FAT10, the effect of FAT10 on MHC-I surface expression and recovery was studied. For the evaluation of antigen presentation of viral and endogenous epitopes, T cell hybridoma assays and flow cytometry analysis were used.
In our study, using model antigens and FAT10-deficient cells, we found that the absence of FAT10 does not affect the abundance of MHC-I molecules or the generation of endogenous and virus-derived MHC-I epitopes. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the cytotoxic T cell response to different viruses remains unchanged in FAT10-deficient mice compared to wild-type mice.
In summary, our findings indicate that the lack of FAT10 does not impact antigen presentation or the cytotoxic T-cell response across a number of different MHC-I-restricted peptides. Hence, we conclude that the contribution of FAT10 to MHC-I antigen presentation has previously been overestimated.
Journal Article