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result(s) for
"631/61/2300/1850"
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Gut-seeded α-synuclein fibrils promote gut dysfunction and brain pathology specifically in aged mice
by
Sampson, Timothy R
,
Volpicelli-Daley, Laura A
,
Hamilton, Adam M
in
Aging
,
Autonomic nervous system
,
Brain
2020
Parkinson’s disease is a synucleinopathy that is characterized by motor dysfunction, death of midbrain dopaminergic neurons and accumulation of α-synuclein (α-Syn) aggregates. Evidence suggests that α-Syn aggregation can originate in peripheral tissues and progress to the brain via autonomic fibers. We tested this by inoculating the duodenal wall of mice with α-Syn preformed fibrils. Following inoculation, we observed gastrointestinal deficits and physiological changes to the enteric nervous system. Using the AAV-PHP.S capsid to target the lysosomal enzyme glucocerebrosidase for peripheral gene transfer, we found that α-Syn pathology is reduced due to the increased expression of this protein. Lastly, inoculation of α-Syn fibrils in aged mice, but not younger mice, resulted in progression of α-Syn histopathology to the midbrain and subsequent motor defects. Our results characterize peripheral synucleinopathy in prodromal Parkinson’s disease and explore cellular mechanisms for the gut-to-brain progression of α-Syn pathology.Alpha-synuclein fibrils can disrupt the enteric nervous system, which is mitigated by peripheral GBA1 gene transfer via systemic AAVs. Aging increases susceptibility to α-synuclein pathology progression from the gut to the brain.
Journal Article
In vivo enhancement of tumour-specific T cells via peptide–MHC-pseudotyped retroviral gene delivery
by
Borrow, Persephone
,
Kwong, Hugo
in
631/61/2300/1850
,
631/67/1059/2325
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2025
A preprint by Xu et al. shows that MHC-pseudotyped retroviruses can reprogramme, activate and expand tumour-specific T cell populations in vivo.
Journal Article
Regulatory T cells expressing CD19-targeted chimeric antigen receptor restore homeostasis in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
2024
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) is a progressive disease leading to immune-mediated tissue damage, associated with an alteration of lymphoid organs. Therapeutic strategies involving regulatory T (Treg) lymphocytes, which physiologically quench autoimmunity and support long-term immune tolerance, are considered, as conventional treatment often fails. We describe here a therapeutic strategy based on Tregs overexpressing FoxP3 and harboring anti-CD19 CAR (Fox19CAR-Tregs). Fox19CAR-Tregs efficiently suppress proliferation and activity of B cells in vitro, which are relevant for SLE pathogenesis. In an humanized mouse model of SLE, a single infusion of Fox19CAR-Tregs restricts autoantibody generation, delay lymphopenia (a key feature of SLE) and restore the human immune system composition in lymphoid organs, without detectable toxicity. Although a short survival, SLE target organs appear to be protected. In summary, Fox19CAR-Tregs can break the vicious cycle leading to autoimmunity and persistent tissue damage, representing an efficacious and safe strategy allowing restoration of homeostasis in SLE.
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) is a chronic and progressive autoimmune disease characterized by abnormally activated B cells causing organ damage. Here authors introduce an adoptive cell therapy involving regulatory T cells overexpressing FoxP3 and harboring an anti-CD19 CAR to inhibit pathological B cells and thus tissue-harming autoimmunity in a humanized mouse model.
Journal Article
Sequence-specific antimicrobials using efficiently delivered RNA-guided nucleases
2014
Delivery of CRISPR-Cas nucleases using bacteriophage enables targeted killing of microbes in a population
Current antibiotics tend to be broad spectrum, leading to indiscriminate killing of commensal bacteria and accelerated evolution of drug resistance. Here, we use CRISPR-Cas technology to create antimicrobials whose spectrum of activity is chosen by design. RNA-guided nucleases (RGNs) targeting specific DNA sequences are delivered efficiently to microbial populations using bacteriophage or bacteria carrying plasmids transmissible by conjugation. The DNA targets of RGNs can be undesirable genes or polymorphisms, including antibiotic resistance and virulence determinants in carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae and enterohemorrhagic
Escherichia coli
. Delivery of RGNs significantly improves survival in a
Galleria mellonella
infection model. We also show that RGNs enable modulation of complex bacterial populations by selective knockdown of targeted strains based on genetic signatures. RGNs constitute a class of highly discriminatory, customizable antimicrobials that enact selective pressure at the DNA level to reduce the prevalence of undesired genes, minimize off-target effects and enable programmable remodeling of microbiota.
Journal Article
A synthetic AAV vector enables safe and efficient gene transfer to the mammalian inner ear
2017
Efficient gene transfer to the mouse inner ear is achieved with a synthetic adeno-associated viral vector.
Efforts to develop gene therapies for hearing loss have been hampered by the lack of safe, efficient, and clinically relevant delivery modalities
1
,
2
. Here we demonstrate the safety and efficiency of Anc80L65, a rationally designed synthetic vector
3
, for transgene delivery to the mouse cochlea.
Ex vivo
transduction of mouse organotypic explants identified Anc80L65 from a set of other adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors as a potent vector for the cochlear cell targets. Round window membrane injection resulted in highly efficient transduction of inner and outer hair cells in mice, a substantial improvement over conventional AAV vectors. Anc80L65 round window injection was well tolerated, as indicated by sensory cell function, hearing and vestibular function, and immunologic parameters. The ability of Anc80L65 to target outer hair cells at high rates, a requirement for restoration of complex auditory function, may enable future gene therapies for hearing and balance disorders.
Journal Article
Direct conversion of quiescent cardiomyocytes to pacemaker cells by expression of Tbx18
2013
Rodent cardiomyocytes are converted to sinoatrial-node pacemaker cells by expression of the transcription factor Tbx18.
The heartbeat originates within the sinoatrial node (SAN), a small structure containing <10,000 genuine pacemaker cells. If the SAN fails, the ∼5 billion working cardiomyocytes downstream of it become quiescent, leading to circulatory collapse in the absence of electronic pacemaker therapy. Here we demonstrate conversion of rodent cardiomyocytes to SAN cells
in vitro
and
in vivo
by expression of
Tbx18
, a gene critical for early SAN specification. Within days of
in vivo Tbx18
transduction, 9.2% of transduced, ventricular cardiomyocytes develop spontaneous electrical firing physiologically indistinguishable from that of SAN cells, along with morphological and epigenetic features characteristic of SAN cells.
In vivo
, focal
Tbx18
gene transfer in the guinea-pig ventricle yields ectopic pacemaker activity, correcting a bradycardic disease phenotype. Myocytes transduced
in vivo
acquire the cardinal tapering morphology and physiological automaticity of native SAN pacemaker cells. The creation of induced SAN pacemaker (iSAN) cells opens new prospects for bioengineered pacemakers.
Journal Article
Engineered serum markers for non-invasive monitoring of gene expression in the brain
2024
Measurement of gene expression in the brain requires invasive analysis of brain tissue or non-invasive methods that are limited by low sensitivity. Here we introduce a method for non-invasive, multiplexed, site-specific monitoring of endogenous gene or transgene expression in the brain through engineered reporters called released markers of activity (RMAs). RMAs consist of an easily detectable reporter and a receptor-binding domain that enables transcytosis across the brain endothelium. RMAs are expressed in the brain but exit into the blood, where they can be easily measured. We show that expressing RMAs at a single mouse brain site representing approximately 1% of the brain volume provides up to a 100,000-fold signal increase over the baseline. Expression of RMAs in tens to hundreds of neurons is sufficient for their reliable detection. We demonstrate that chemogenetic activation of cells expressing
Fos
-responsive RMA increases serum RMA levels >6-fold compared to non-activated controls. RMAs provide a non-invasive method for repeatable, multiplexed monitoring of gene expression in the intact animal brain.
Gene expression in the mouse brain is measured with a simple blood draw.
Journal Article
The Cas9-gRNA ribonucleoprotein complex-mediated editing of pyrG in Ganoderma lucidum and unexpected insertion of contaminated DNA fragments
by
Kim, Minseek
,
Nakazawa, Takehito
,
Ro, Hyeon-Su
in
631/326/193/2484
,
631/61/2300/1850
,
Agaricales
2023
Gene editing is a promising alternative to traditional breeding for the generation of new mushroom strains. However, the current approach frequently uses Cas9-plasmid DNA to facilitate mushroom gene editing, which can leave residual foreign DNA in the chromosomal DNA raising concerns regarding genetically modified organisms. In this study, we successfully edited
pyrG
of
Ganoderma lucidum
using a preassembled Cas9-gRNA ribonucleoprotein complex, which primarily induced a double-strand break (DSB) at the fourth position prior to the protospacer adjacent motif. Of the 66 edited transformants, 42 had deletions ranging from a single base to large deletions of up to 796 bp, with 30 being a single base deletion. Interestingly, the remaining 24 contained inserted sequences with variable sizes at the DSB site that originated from the fragmented host mitochondrial DNA,
E. coli
chromosomal DNA, and the Cas9 expression vector DNA. The latter two were thought to be contaminated DNAs that were not removed during the purification process of the Cas9 protein. Despite this unexpected finding, the study demonstrated that editing
G. lucidum
genes using the Cas9-gRNA complex is achievable with comparable efficiency to the plasmid-mediated editing system.
Journal Article
Immortalization of human normal and NF1 neurofibroma Schwann cells
2016
Neurofibromas, which are benign Schwann cell tumors, are the hallmark feature in the autosomal dominant condition neurofibromatosis 1 (NF1) and are associated with biallelic loss of NF1 gene function. There is a need for effective therapies for neurofibromas, particularly the larger, plexiform neurofibromas. Tissue culture is an important tool for research. However, it is difficult to derive enriched human Schwann cell cultures, and most enter replicative senescence after 6–10 passages, impeding cell-based research in NF1. Through exogenous expression of human telomerase reverse transcriptase and murine cyclin-dependent kinase (mCdk4), normal (NF1 wild-type), neurofibroma-derived Schwann cells heterozygous for NF1 mutation, and neurofibroma-derived Schwann cells homozygous for NF1 mutation were immortalized, including some matched samples from the same NF1 patient. Initial experiments employed retroviral vectors, while subsequent work utilized lentiviral vectors carrying these genes because of improved efficiency. Expression of both transgenes was required for immortalization. Molecular and immunohistochemical analysis indicated that these cell lines are of Schwann cell lineage and have a range of phenotypes, many of which are consistent with their primary cultures. This is the first report of immortalization and detailed characterization of multiple human NF1 normal nerve and neurofibroma-derived Schwann cell lines, which will be highly useful research tools to study NF1 and other Schwann tumor biology and conditions.
Journal Article
In vivo gene editing of T-cells in lymph nodes for enhanced cancer immunotherapy
2024
Immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) therapy, while promising for cancer treatment, faces challenges like unexpected side effects and limited objective responses. Here, we develop an in vivo gene-editing strategy for improving ICB cancer therapy in a lastingly effective manner. The approach uses a conductive hydrogel-based electroporation system to enable nucleofection of programmed cell death protein 1 (PD1) targeted CRISPR-Cas9 DNAs into T-cells directly within the lymph nodes, and subsequently produces PD1-deficient T-cells to combat tumor growth, metastasis and recurrence in different melanoma models in mice. Following in vivo gene editing, animals show enhanced cellular and humoral immune responses along with multi-fold increases of effector T-cells infiltration to the solid tumors, preventing tumor recurrence and prolonging their survival. These findings provide a proof-of-concept for direct in vivo T-cell engineering via localized gene-editing for enhanced cancer immunotherapy, and also unlock the possibilities of using this method to treat more complex human diseases.
As an alternative to the systemic delivery of immune checkpoint inhibitors, here the authors develop an in vivo gene-edit strategy using a conductive hydrogel-based electroporation system to enable nucleofection of PD1-targeted CRISPR-Cas9 DNAs into lymph node T-cells, resulting in suppression of PD1 expression and promotion of anti-tumor immune responses in preclinical cancer models.
Journal Article