T cells are the central players in antitumor immunity, and effective tumor killing depends on their ability to infiltrate into the tumor microenvironment (TME) while maintaining normal cytotoxicity. However, late-stage tumors develop immunosuppressive mechanisms that impede T cell movement and induce exhaustion. Investigating T cell migration in human tumors in vivo could provide insights into tumor immune escape, although it remains a challenging task. In this study, we developed ReMiTT, a computational method that leverages spatial transcriptomics data to track T cell migration patterns within tumor tissue. Applying ReMiTT to multiple tumor samples, we identified potential migration trails. On these trails, chemokines that promote T cell trafficking displayed an increasing trend. Additionally, we identified key genes and pathways enriched on these migration trails, including those involved in cytoskeleton rearrangement, leukocyte chemotaxis, cell adhesion, leukocyte migration, and extracellular matrix remodeling. Furthermore, we characterized the phenotypes of T cells along these trails, showing that the migrating T cells are highly proliferative. Our findings introduce an approach for studying T cell migration and interactions within the TME, offering valuable insights into tumor-immune dynamics.
Significant loss of pigmentation can increase visual disability, skin cancer risk, and psychosocial stress. Tyrosinase (TYR) catalyzes the first and rate-limiting step of melanin synthesis. Inhibitors of TYR are well established and are currently used in clinical settings; however, there is a dearth of direct activators of TYR. Here, using a human TYR construct, we developed high-throughput screening methods, in cell confirmatory assays employing 13C-tyrosine tracing, and computational analysis techniques, and identified ampyrone (4-aminoantipyrine) as a TYR activator. Ampyrone increased the in vitro catalytic activity of the human recombinant intra-melanosomal domain of TYR (hTYR) and its hypomorphic variant, Pro406Leu (P406L), a cause of oculocutaneous albinism type 1B (OCA1B). Moreover, ampyrone induced melanin synthesis in both wild-type and OCA1B human melanocytes, mouse OCA2 melanocytes, as well as 3-dimensional (3D) human skin cultures. Computational studies provided additional insight into the effects of direct TYR agonists on enzyme activity. Our results identified ampyrone as a lead candidate for TYR activation, potentially supporting the development of therapies for patients with genetic and acquired diseases of hypopigmentation.
Human CD4+ T cells utilize nutrients, including lipids, to support their activation and polarization. Considering the pivotal role of lipoproteins in lipid transport, we reasoned that lipoprotein uptake and processing could effect CD4+ T cell function. Here, we demonstrate that activation of human CD4+ T cells induced expression of LDL receptor (LDLR) to facilitate LDLR-mediated endocytosis of LDL. Degradation of surface LDLR on CD4+ T cells with PCSK9 hampered activation and proliferation of the cells. Lipoprotein deprivation or blocking of lysosomal cholesterol egress impaired activation of mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1), affecting CD4+ T cell activation and proliferation. Furthermore, lipoprotein deprivation of cultured primary CD4+ T cells lead to reduced expression of c-MAF and FOXP3, key transcription factors for IL-10, accompanied by reduced IL-10 secretion. The pivotal role of LDLR-mediated lipoprotein uptake for mTORC1 activity, c-MAF and FOXP3 expression, and IL-10 secretion was confirmed using LDLR-dysfunctional CD4+ T cells from patients with homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia. Our study offers valuable insights into the lipoprotein metabolism of human CD4+ T cells and their reliance on the LDLR pathway for activation and polarization, a feature that may be leveraged to modulate CD4+ T cell function.
Biallelic loss-of-function variants in the adaptor protein complex 4 (AP-4) disrupt trafficking of transmembrane proteins at the trans-Golgi network, including the autophagy-related protein 9A (ATG9A), leading to childhood-onset hereditary spastic paraplegia (AP-4-HSP). AP-4-HSP is characterized by features of both a neurodevelopmental and degenerative neurological disease. To investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying AP-4-HSP and identify potential therapeutic targets, we conducted an arrayed CRISPR/Cas9 loss-of-function screen of 8,478 genes, targeting the 'druggable genome', in a human neuronal model of AP-4 deficiency. Through this phenotypic screen and subsequent experiments, key modulators of ATG9A trafficking were identified, and complementary pathway analyses provided insights into the regulatory landscape of ATG9A transport. Knockdown of ANPEP and NPM1 enhanced ATG9A availability outside the trans-Golgi network, suggesting they regulate ATG9A localization. These findings deepen our understanding of ATG9A trafficking in the context of AP-4 deficiency and offer a framework for the development of targeted interventions for AP-4-HSP.
The reality of an aging population demands a deeper understanding of aging as a biological process, rather than as a chronological descriptor. Chronological age poorly captures interindividual heterogeneity in physiological and functional decline, disease susceptibility, and mortality risk. In contrast, biological age encompasses deterioration at the molecular, cellular, tissue, organ, functional, and organismal levels and provides insight into why two individuals with the same chronological age exhibit differences in physiological function, disease susceptibility, and mortality risk. While early models of biological age relied on functional markers or composite scores derived largely from longitudinal cohort studies, more recent models integrate molecular profiling with machine learning to ascertain biological aging trajectories. In parallel, new artificial intelligence tools have been applied to various imaging modalities and other forms of complex data to elucidate latent patterns and estimate biological age. In this state-of-the-art Review, we explore historical and modern approaches to estimating biological age and highlight key conceptual, technical, and translational challenges that remain unresolved. As geroscience-guided interventions are incorporated into clinical evaluations, robust and accurate interpretable measures of biological aging are crucial to ascertain treatment effects in clinical trials.
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), encompassing ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD), is marked by chronic intestinal inflammation and dysregulated immunity. Although UC and CD affect different areas of the gastrointestinal tract, both diseases share aberrant CD4+ memory T cell responses, with HLA-DRB1 as a major genetic risk factor. HLA-DRB1 encodes MHC class II molecules that influence the CD4+ T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire, yet how these genotypes shape TCR specificity in IBD remains unclear. Here, we genotyped HLA-DRB1 and profiled 3.13 million TCRb sequences from circulating memory CD4+ T cells in 33 IBD patients (20 UC, 13 CD) and 14 healthy controls. Using the GLIPH2 algorithm, we distilled 468,441 candidates based on CDR3 amino acid motifs into 440 high-confidence TCR specificity groups significantly enriched among individuals sharing HLA-DRB1 alleles. Notably, five specificity groups were IBD-enriched and shared between UC and CD, suggesting common antigen targets in both diseases. We also observed increased frequencies of clonally expanded cytotoxic GZMB+PRF1+ memory CD4+ T cells and KIRs+CD8+ T cells in a subset of risk-allele carriers with IBD. These findings elucidate distinct, HLA-linked TCR specificity groups in IBD and provide mechanistic insights that may advance antigen discovery and personalized medicine.
Immune responses against transgene products can compromise AAV-mediated gene transfer. Although several factors influencing this immunogenicity have been described, the early in vivo events driving CD8+ T cell activation remain poorly defined. Here, we examined antigen presentation kinetics following intramuscular AAV administration in mice. Strikingly, viral genomes were detected in draining lymph nodes as early as one hour post-injection, and transgene-derived peptides were presented to CD8+ T cells from day 1, resulting in progressive activation and first cell divisions detected at day 4. Removal of the injection site demonstrated that AAV particles reaching draining lymph nodes within the first hour were sufficient to induce cytotoxic transgene-specific CD8+ T cells. Finally, AAV vectors incorporating different muscle-specific promoters and regulatory sequences were evaluated. Although muscle-specific, all promoters exhibited variable transgene expression in dendritic cells in vitro, correlating with early T-cell activation in vivo; notably, those associated with higher early antigen presentation induced robust T cell response, whereas reduced presentation correlated with absence of CD8+ T cells. These findings reveal an unexpectedly early onset of transgene-derived epitope presentation, modulated by promoter specificity, which critically shapes CD8+ T cell response. This provides a rationale for evaluating and mitigating AAV immunogenicity in gene therapy design.
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is characterized by parenchymal scarring reflecting an imbalance between collagen deposition by myofibroblasts (MFs) and its turnover. Although collagen clearance is essential for fibrosis resolution, this process and its potential for therapeutic modulation in IPF are poorly understood. Here we evaluated internalization of degraded collagen and the role of its requisite endocytic receptor mannose receptor C-type 2 (MRC2), in lung tissue and MFs from IPF patients and bleomycin-injured mice. Fibrotic human and murine lung tissue exhibited an accumulation of degraded collagen, highlighting a failure of its clearance. MFs from fibrotic lung demonstrated a reduced capacity to internalize extracellular degraded collagen, with a concomitant reduction in MRC2 expression and endolysosomal activity. Both diminished collagen uptake and MRC2 expression recovered to baseline levels during spontaneous resolution of bleomycin fibrosis. In vitro treatment of IPF or TGF-β-elicited MFs with a variety of mechanistically distinct agents known to effect phenotypic dedifferentiation restored defective collagen internalization. Although enhanced uptake was MRC2-dependent, it involved increased endolysosomal activity rather than increased MRC2 expression. These results implicate defective MRC2-dependent collagen internalization and endolysosomal function in MFs as important factors contributing to fibrosis that may be therapeutically targeted to promote resolution.
Aging drives systemic metabolic dysfunction (SMD) and increases the risk of chronic illnesses such as metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) and chronic kidney disease (CKD). However, mechanisms that connect aging to multi-organ deterioration are poorly understood. In this study, we identify hepatocyte Hedgehog signaling as a central regulator of ferroptosis. Using mice with hepatocyte-specific deletion of Smoothened (Smo), a key Hedgehog pathway component, we show that loss of hepatocyte Hedgehog signaling induces ferroptotic stress, lipid peroxidation, and cellular senescence. These changes were sufficient to cause spontaneous MASLD and to trigger secondary kidney injury. Smo deletion also disrupted systemic iron balance, increased hepatocyte production of the angiotensinogen, and reduced liver perfusion. Similar responses (iron dysregulation, vascular dysfunction, and reduced Hedgehog signaling) were observed in patients with MASLD and advanced fibrosis. Inhibition of ferroptosis with ferrostatin-1 reversed hepatocyte senescence, restored hepatic blood flow, and improved both liver and kidney injury in Smo-deficient mice. Overall, these findings show that hepatocyte Hedgehog signaling preserves liver homeostasis by restraining ferroptotic stress and coordinating iron-dependent vasoactive pathways. The results reveal an unrecognized aging-related communication axis between liver and kidney and identify the Hedgehog-ferroptosis pathway as a promising therapeutic target for age-associated metabolic diseases.
HLA-E-restricted HIV-specific T cells offer exciting possibilities for immunotherapy. However, HLA-E binding peptides are rare. A recent study showed that in HLA-B*57:01 people living with HIV (PLWH), the peptide that dominates the T cell response, KAFSPEVIPMF (KF11), also stimulates HLA-E-restricted T cells, even though direct binding of this peptide to HLA-E could not be demonstrated. We therefore changed position 2 alanine for methionine in the peptide (referred to as KMF11) which greatly enhanced binding to HLA-E. This enabled the generation of stabilised HLA-E-KMF11 tetramers which were used to select and then grow specific T cell clones from T cells of HLA-B*57:01 negative blood donors primed with this peptide in vitro. Approximately 20% of these T cell clones reacted with HLA-E positive cells presenting the native KF11 peptide. Furthermore, these T cells inhibited replication of HIV-1 NL4-3 in CD4 T cells in vitro. Therefore, this native peptide can be presented by HLA-E to CD8 T cells, although priming in vivo may depend on cross reactivities to classical MHC Ia types. Nevertheless, such T cells could be exploitable for immunotherapy given the conservation of this HIV1 peptide epitope and the non-polymorphism in HLA-E.
Transcriptional reprogramming has an important role in kidney glomerular disease. Using in vivo murine models of podocyte injury, we studied the roles of the FOXC2 and WT1 transcription factors (TFs) in podocyte injury. Podocytes are a crucial cell type of glomeruli, the filtration units of each nephron. Podocyte injury is often the incipient event leading to chronic kidney disease. It is well established that the TFs FOXC2 and WT1 are required in podocytes to maintain the glomerular filtration barrier. Their role in the response to injury is less well understood. Here, we tested the hypothesis that FOXC2 and WT1 act together to mediate transcriptional reprogramming in response to podocyte injury. Similarly to that of WT1, genome-wide FOXC2 binding to target genes is dynamic during the course of injury, initially increasing, but late in injury there is a dramatic decrease in FOXC2 expression and in its binding to target genes. Podocyte-specific inactivation of FoxC2 or Wt1 in adult mice limits the transcriptional response to injury. Correlating FOXC2 and WT1 ChIP-seq analyses demonstrated that they co-bind many genes expressed in podocytes. Thus, reprogramming the transcriptome involves dynamic changes in the binding of FOXC2 and WT1 to their target genes during a reparative injury response.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a devastating neurodegenerative disease caused by the selective loss of upper and lower motor neurons. There is a considerable variability in the disease progression of sporadic ALS, but the molecular basis for phenotypic heterogeneity remains largely unknown. ALS patients often manifest systemic metabolic abnormalities such as glucose intolerance and hypermetabolic state. We conducted reverse translational research to explore therapeutic targets in ALS based on the systemic metabolic alterations in patients and identified several metabolites associated with the disease progression, including metabolites involved in the expanded endocannabinoid system (ECS). In particular, the levels of N-acyl taurines (NATs) were correlated with the longitudinal change in the revised ALS functional rating scale and survival. Experiments with ALS cellular models, iPS cells derived from ALS patients and SOD1G93A transgenic mice revealed that PF-04457845, a fatty acid amide hydrolase inhibitor, upregulated the expanded ECS, particularly the levels of NATs and ameliorated motor neuron degeneration through the regulation of microglial environment, synapse plasticity, and neuronal development. These results collectively indicate that dysregulation of NATs is associated with ALS progression and PF-04457845 may represent a potential disease-modifying therapy for ALS.
The composition of mitochondrial membrane lipids is crucial to cellular respiration, as seen in Barth syndrome (BTHS), a rare disease affecting skeletal muscle, heart, and neutrophils. In BTHS, mutations in the tafazzin (TAZ) gene reduce remodeling of the mitochondrial phospholipid, cardiolipin, causing mitochondrial dysfunction in skeletal muscle and heart. Here, we investigated effects of altering polyunsaturated fatty acid content in cardiolipin using preclinical models of BTHS. In vitro, the absence of TAZ did not impair omega-3 fatty acid incorporation into cardiolipin and resulted in increased turnover of these acyl chains. To examine this in a functional model, we generated a muscle-specific knockout mouse of TAZ (TAZ MKO), which recapitulated the human phenotype in skeletal muscle. Supplementing the diet of TAZ MKO with fish-oil-derived omega-3 fatty acids prevented lean mass loss, improved mitochondrial respiration, altered mitochondrial structure, and revealed moderate improvements in the stress response. Surprisingly, no diet-induced changes to cardiolipin species were observed in the TAZ MKO, but other phospholipids were altered by both genotype and diet, revealing complex regulation and potential compensation. Overall, this work provides evidence that omega-3 fatty acid supplementation is beneficial in muscle lacking TAZ to improve quality of life when added to current BTHS treatments.
Bladder cancer (BCa) mortality is mainly driven by metastatic dissemination and an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. Here, we identify ELN (tropoelastin), an extracellular matrix protein abundantly secreted by cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), as a critical determinant of these processes and a marker of poor prognosis. ELN promotes epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), facilitates lymphatic spread, and induces immune dysfunction characterized by macrophage polarization toward an M2 phenotype and T cell exhaustion. Mechanistically, ELN functions as a binding partner of TGF-β receptor 2 (TGFBR2), thereby triggering SMAD2/3-dependent TGF-β1 secretion and establishing a feed forward signaling loop. This ELN/TGFBR2/TGF-β1 axis amplifies metastatic capacity and immunosuppressive signaling, ultimately accelerating disease progression and diminishing responsiveness to immune checkpoint blockade. Functional studies in BCa organoids and murine models demonstrated that pharmacologic blockade of the ELN-TGFBR2 interaction effectively suppressed tumor metastasis and restored antitumor immunity. Collectively, our findings establish ELN as a CAF-derived driver of metastasis and immune evasion in BCa. Targeting the ELN-TGFBR2 interaction offers a promising therapeutic strategy to limit metastatic progression and enhance the efficacy of immunotherapy in this lethal disease.
Brain metastases (BrMs) occur in approximately 30% of cancer patients, causing nearly one-fifth of cancer deaths. While immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) benefit some BrM patients, responses remain highly variable. This variability partly reflects distinct histopathological growth patterns that include minimally invasive (MI) and highly invasive (HI) brain BrMs. Here we show that MI BrMs exhibit robust immune infiltration, whereas HI lesions are immunosuppressed. However, histological differentiation between MI and HI can be challenging because of subjective margin assessment. Here, using highly multiplexed spatial proteomics on 119 tumor sections from 46 patients with BrMs, we identify CHI3L1 as a key mediator of the immunosuppressive microenvironment in HI BrMs. In preclinical models, genetic deletion of CHI3L1 converts immune-cold metastases into lymphocyte-rich, ICI-responsive lesions infiltrated by granzyme B+ CD8+ T cells. In BrM patients treated with ICI, immunohistochemical quantification of CHI3L1 expression was a stronger predictor of ICI response than traditional MI/HI classification. Thus, CHI3L1 represents a promising biomarker and therapeutic target for BrMs.
Ischemia/reperfusion (IR) enhances oxidative stress, leading to myocardial injury. Although Perm1 promotes cytoprotective mechanisms, the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. Cysteine oxidation of Keap1 alleviates Cul3-mediated ubiquitination/degradation of Nrf2 and promotes antioxidant transcription. Here we show that Perm1 activates Nrf2 through cysteine oxidation of Keap1 and stabilization of Nrf2. Endogenous Perm1 was downregulated during IR, whereas the rescue of Perm1 reduced IR injury. Downregulation of Perm1 exacerbated oxidative stress, whereas upregulation of Perm1 alleviated it, accompanied by downregulation and upregulation of Nrf2-regulated antioxidant genes, respectively. Perm1 promoted oxidation of cysteine residues in Keap1, possibly through thiol-disulfide exchange reactions, which decreases Keap1-Nrf2 interaction and inhibits Cul3-mediated degradation of Nrf2. We identified Cys121 and Cys746 in Perm1 as critical for Keap1 oxidation and cardioprotection. Thus, Perm1 induces cysteine oxidation of Keap1, thereby conferring myocardial resistance to IR injury by inducing Nrf2 stabilization and transcriptional activation of antioxidant genes.
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a progressive vascular syndrome characterized by aberrant signaling, severe pulmonary artery remodeling, and right ventricular (RV) failure, a major driver of morbidity and mortality. Dysregulation of the apelinergic pathway has been implicated in pulmonary vascular remodeling in PAH. Using a sugen-hypoxia rat model of PAH, we assessed the ability of a novel apelin analog, resistant to native peptidase degradation, to reverse the pathological hallmarks of PAH and RV dysfunction. Apelin analog therapy corrected the vascular lesions in the lungs and nearly normalized pulmonary arterial pressures. Early cardiorenal syndrome, RV dilation and dysfunction as well as RV cardiomyocyte and fibroblast activation induced by pressure overload, were also reversed by apelin analog treatment. Single-nucleus RNA sequencing of the lungs and RV revealed apelin-analog treatment activated several protective pathways, including rebalancing protective BMPR2 (bone morphogenetic protein receptor type 2) signaling to counteract excessive pathogenic TGFBR2 (transforming growth factor β receptor 2) activity in PAH. These findings highlight the therapeutic potential of exogenous apelin in reversing pulmonary vascular and cardiac pathologies in PAH and support further investigation to evaluate the clinical benefits of apelin analog treatment in patients with PAH and RV failure.
BK polyomavirus-associated nephropathy (BKVN) adversely impacts kidney allograft survival and often mimics acute T cell-mediated rejection (TCMR), confounding diagnosis and management. To address this conundrum, we performed unbiased RNA sequencing of urinary cells matched to biopsies classified as BKVN with intragraft inflammation (BKVN-P), BKVN without inflammation (BKVN-N), TCMR, or no rejection (NR). BKVN-N displayed dominant host DNA replication, cell cycle, and repair programs, while BKVN-P samples exhibited expansive innate immune activation, antigen presentation, chemokine upregulation, and epithelial injury. Both BKVN subtypes shared signatures of T cell exhaustion and mature and tolerogenic dendritic cell activation but differed in immune orientation - Th1 predominance in BKVN-N versus Treg and CD8 enrichment in BKVN-P. Compared with TCMR samples, BKVN-P lacked robust TCR/CD28 signaling and was enriched for viral and innate modules; BKVN-N lacked alloimmune activation. B cell exhaustion characterized BKVN-N, while BKVN-P displayed robust B cell activation with metabolic downregulation. A ratiometric urinary cell biomarker, CXCL10 mRNA/CD3E mRNA, distinguished both BKVN subtypes from TCMR with diagnostic accuracy, replicated by quantitative reverse transcription PCR for clinical translation, and confirmed in an independent cohort. These findings demonstrate the utility of urinary cell transcriptomics for resolving viral injury from alloimmunity, enabling precision diagnostics and targeted immunomodulation in kidney transplantation.
In chronic beryllium disease (CBD), elevated levels of the inflammatory chemokines CCL3 and CCL4 in the lungs coincide with expanded populations of CD4+ T cells specific to beryllium (Be)-modified peptides derived from these chemokines. Here, we generated HLA-DP2 transgenic (Tg) CCL3-deficient mice (CCL3-/-) that also lack CCL4 to investigate their role in disease development. Be-exposed CCL3-/- mice maintained normal numbers of lung macrophages and dendritic cells (DCs) but exhibited significantly reduced total and HLA-DP2-CCL/Be tetramer-specific CD4+ T cells, IFN-γ-producing CD4+ T cells, and peribronchovascular aggregates, consistent with attenuated inflammation. CCL3 was predominantly expressed in macrophages and DCs, and bone marrow chimera studies confirmed that hematopoietic-derived DCs are the key regulators of CCL/Be-specific CD4+ T cell responses. RNA sequencing of lung-resident CCL4/Be tetramer-positive CD4+ T cells revealed a transcriptional profile enriched for inflammatory and cholesterol-metabolism pathways, with elevated expression of Ifng, Tnf, and Il17a. Moreover, Be-exposed HLA-DP2 Tg mice lacking TNF-α or treated with peptide-MHCII CAR-T cells targeting CCL4/Be-specific CD4+ T cells showed reduced T cell responses and cellular aggregates. These findings demonstrate that CCL3 and CCL4 promote CCL/Be-specific CD4+ T cell responses and highlight peptide-MHCII CAR-T cells as a novel strategy for depleting self-peptide/Be-specific CD4+ T cells in CBD.
Several genes guide inner ear development, and mutations in these genes can cause malformations that result in congenital hearing loss. However, the contribution of noncoding regulatory elements remains largely unclear. This study investigates the function of distal enhancer elements in the transcriptional regulation of GDF6, a gene implicated in cochlear development. Using mouse models with targeted deletions, human inner ear organoids, and CRISPR interference (CRISPRi), we identified a downstream regulatory interval harboring a developmental enhancer required to maintain GDF6 expression during otic epithelial maturation and cochlear morphogenesis. Deletion of this regulatory region or targeting of CRISPRi-based repressors to these regions resulted in decreased GDF6 expression, failure of otic-epithelium development, and prevention of hair cell-like differentiation, reflecting cochlear aplasia observed in patients with corresponding genomic deletions. These findings highlight the contribution of long-range regulatory elements to auditory development and illustrate how their disruption contributes to human deafness.