Prashant Rai, Martin Sharpe, Charan K. Ganta, Paul J. Baker, Katrin D. Mayer-Barber, Brian E. Fee, Gregory A. Taylor, Michael B. Fessler
Unabated activation of NLRP3 inflammasome activation is linked with the pathogenesis of various inflammatory disorders. PLK1 has been widely studied for its role in mitosis. Here, employing both pharmacological and genetic approaches, we demonstrated that PLK1 promoted NLRP3 inflammasome activation at cell interphase. Using an unbiased Bio-ID screen for PLK1 interactome in macrophages, we showed an enhanced proximal association of NLRP3 with PLK1 upon NLRP3 inflammasome activation. We further confirmed the interaction between PLK1 and NLRP3, and identified the interacting domains. Mechanistically, we showed that PLK1 orchestrated microtubule organizing center (MTOC) structure and NLRP3 subcellular positioning upon inflammasome activation. Treatment with a selective PLK1 kinase inhibitor suppressed IL1B production in in-vivo inflammatory models, including lipopolysaccharide-induced endotoxemia and monosodium urate-induced peritonitis in mice. Our results uncover an unprecedented role of PLK1 in regulating NLRP3 inflammasome activation during interphase, and identify pharmacological inhibition of PLK1 as a potential therapeutic strategy for inflammatory diseases with excessive NLRP3 inflammasome activation.
Marta Baldrighi, Christian Doreth, Yang Li, Xiaohui Zhao, Emily F. Warner, Hannah Chenoweth, Kamal Kishore, Yagnesh Umrania, David-Paul Minde, Sarah Winkler, Xian Yu, Yuning Lu, Alice Knapton, James Harrison, Murray C.H. Clarke, Eicke Latz, Guillermo de Cárcer, Marcos Malumbres, Bernhard Ryffel, Clare E. Bryant, Jinping Liu, Kathryn S. Lilley, Ziad Mallat, Xuan Li
CD8+ T cells outnumber CD4+ cells in multiple sclerosis lesions associated with disease progression, but the pathogenic role and antigenic targets of these clonally expanded effectors are unknown. Based on evidence that demyelination is necessary but not sufficient for disease progression in multiple sclerosis (MS), we previously hypothesized that CNS-infiltrating CD8+ T cells specific for neuronal antigens directly drive the axon and neuron injury that leads to cumulative neurologic disability in MS patients. We now show that demyelination induced expression of MHC class I on neurons and axons and resulted in presentation of a neuron-specific neoantigen (synapsin promoter-driven chicken ovalbumin) to antigen-specific CD8+ T cells (anti-ovalbumin OT-I transgenic T cells). These neuroantigen-specific effectors surveilled the CNS in the absence of demyelination but were not retained. However, upon induction of demyelination via cuprizone intoxication, neuroantigen-specific CD8+ T cells proliferated, accumulated in the CNS, and damaged neoantigen-expressing neurons and axons. We further report elevated neuronal expression of MHC class I and β2-microglobulin transcripts and protein in gray matter and white matter tracts in tissue from patients with MS. These findings support a pathogenic role for autoreactive anti-axonal and anti-neuronal CD8+ T cells in MS progression.
Benjamin D.S. Clarkson, Ethan M. Grund, Miranda M. Standiford, Kanish Mirchia, Maria S. Westphal, Elizabeth S. Muschler, Charles L. Howe
Even when successfully induced, immunological tolerance to solid organ remains vulnerable to inflammatory insults, which can trigger rejection. In a mouse model of cardiac allograft tolerance in which infection with Listeria monocytogenes (Lm) precipitates rejection of previously accepted grafts, we showed that recipient CD4+ TCR75 cells reactive to a donor MHC Class I-derived peptide become hypofunctional if the allograft is accepted for > 3 weeks. Paradoxically, infection-induced transplant rejection was not associated with transcriptional or functional reinvigoration of TCR75 cells. We hypothesized that there is heterogeneity in the level of dysfunction of different allospecific T cells, depending on duration of their cognate antigen expression. Unlike CD4+ TCR75 cells, CD4+ TEa cells specific for a peptide derived from donor MHC Class II, an alloantigen whose expression declines post-transplantation but remains inducible in settings of inflammation, retained function in tolerant mice and expanded during Lm-induced rejection. Repeated injections of alloantigens drove hypofunction in TEa cells and rendered grafts resistant to Lm-dependent rejection. Our results uncover a functional heterogeneity in allospecific T cells of distinct specificities post-tolerance induction and reveal a strategy to defunctionalize a greater repertoire of allospecific T cells, thereby mitigating a critical vulnerability of tolerance.
Christine M. McIntosh, Jennifer B. Allocco, Peter Wang, Michelle L. McKeague, Alexandra Cassano, Ying Wang, Stephen Z. Xie, Grace E. Hynes, Ricardo Mora-Cartín, Domenic Abbondanza, Luqiu Chen, Husain Sattar, Dengping Yin, Zheng J. Zhang, Anita S. Chong, Maria-Luisa Alegre
Donor-recipient (D-R) mismatches outside of human leukocyte antigens (HLA) contribute to kidney allograft loss, but mechanisms remain unclear, specifically for intronic mismatches. We quantified non-HLA mismatches at variant-, gene-, and genome-wide scales from SNP data of D- Rs from two well-phenotyped transplant cohorts: Genomics of Chronic Allograft Rejection (GoCAR; n=385) and Clinical Trials in Organ Transplantation-01/17 (CTOT-01/17; n=146). Unbiased gene-level screening in GoCAR uncovered the LIMS1 locus as the top-ranked gene where D-R mismatches associated with death-censored graft loss (DCGL). A previously unreported, intronic, LIMS1 haplotype of 30 SNPs independently associated with DCGL in both cohorts. Haplotype mismatches showed a dosage effect, and minor-allele introduction to major- allele-carrying recipients showed greater hazard of DCGL. The LIMS1 haplotype and the previously reported LIMS1 SNP rs893403 are expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) in immune cells for GCC2 (not LIMS1), which encodes a protein involved in mannose-6-phosphase receptor (M6PR) recycling. Peripheral blood and T-cell transcriptome analyses associated GCC2 gene and LIMS1 SNPs with the TGFB1-SMAD pathway, suggesting a regulatory effect. In vitro GCC2 modulation impacted M6PR-dependent regulation of active TGFB1 and downstream signaling in T-cells. Together, our data link LIMS1 locus D-R mismatches to DCGL via GCC2 eQTLs that modulate TGFB1-dependent effects on T-cells.
Zeguo Sun, Zhongyang Zhang, Khadija Banu, Ian W. Gibson, Robert B. Colvin, Zhengzi Yi, Weijia Zhang, Bony De Kumar, Anand Reghuvaran, John Pell, Thomas D. Manes, Arjang Djamali, Lorenzo Gallon, Philip J. O'Connell, John He, Jordan S. Pober, Peter S. Heeger, Madhav C. Menon
Consumption of low dietary potassium, common with ultra-processed foods, activates the thiazide-sensitive sodium chloride cotransporter (NCC) via the WNK-SPAK kinase pathway to induce salt retention and elevate blood pressure (BP). However, it remains unclear how high potassium “DASH-like” diets inactivate the cotransporter and whether this decreases BP. A transcriptomic screen identified Ppp1C⍺, encoding PP1A, as a potassium up-regulated gene, and its negative regulator, Ppp1r1a, as a potassium-suppressed gene in the kidney. PP1A directly binds to and dephosphorylates NCC when extracellular potassium is elevated. Using mice genetically engineered to constitutively activate the NCC-regulatory kinase SPAK and thereby eliminate the effects of the WNK-SPAK kinase cascade, we confirmed that PP1A dephosphorylates NCC directly in a potassium-regulated manner. Prior adaptation to a high potassium diet was required to maximally dephosphorylate NCC and lower BP in the constitutively active SPAK mice, and this was associated with potassium-dependent suppression of Ppp1r1a, and dephosphorylation of its cognate protein, Inhibitory Subunit 1 (I1). In conclusion, potassium-dependent activation of PP1A and inhibition of I1 drives NCC dephosphorylation, providing a mechanism to explain how high dietary K+ lowers BP. Shifting signaling of PP1A in favor of activation of WNK-SPAK may provide an improved therapeutic approach for treating salt-sensitive hypertension.
Paul Richard Grimm, Anamaria Tatomir, Lena L. Rosenbaek, Bo Young Kim, Dimin Li, Eric J. Delpire, Robert A. Fenton, Paul A. Welling
Christoph Strumann, Otavio T. Ranzani, Jeanne Moor, Reinhard Berner, Nicole Toepfner, Cho-Ming Chao, Matthias B. Moor
Identifying branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) oxidation enzymes in the nucleus led us to predict that they are a source of propionyl-CoA that are utilized for histone propionylation and, thereby, regulate gene expression. To investigate the effects of BCAA on the development of cardiac hypertrophy and failure, we applied pressure overload on the heart in mice maintained on a diet with standard levels of BCAA (BCAA-control) versus a BCAA-free diet. The former was associated with an increase in histone H3K23-propionyl (H3K23Pr) at the promoters of upregulated genes [e.g., cell signaling and extracellular matrix genes] and a decrease at the promoters of downregulated genes [e.g., electron transfer complex (ETC I-V) and metabolic genes]. Intriguingly, the BCAA-free diet tempered the increases in promoter-H3K23Pr, thus, reducing collagen gene expression and fibrosis during cardiac hypertrophy. Conversely, the BCAA-free diet inhibited the reductions in promoter-H3K23Pr and abolished the downregulation of ETC I-V subunits, enhanced mitochondrial respiration, and curbed progression of cardiac hypertrophy. Thus, lowering the intake of BCAA reduces pressure overload-induced changes in histone propionylation-dependent gene expression in the heart, which retards the development of cardiomyopathy.
Zhi Yang, Minzhen He, Julianne Austin, Danish Sayed, Maha Abdellatif
Lung cancer progression relies on angiogenesis, which is a response to hypoxia typically coordinated by hypoxia-inducible transcription factors (HIFs); but growing evidence indicate that transcriptional programs beyond HIFs control tumor angiogenesis. Here we show that the redox-sensitive transcription factor BTB and CNC homology 1 (BACH1) controls the transcription of a broad range of angiogenesis genes. BACH1 is stabilized by lowering reactive oxygen species levels; consequently, angiogenesis gene expression in lung cancer cells, tumor organoids, and xenograft tumors increased substantially following vitamin C and E and N-acetylcysteine administration in a BACH1-dependent fashion under normoxia. Moreover, angiogenesis gene expression increased in endogenous BACH1–overexpressing cells and decreased in BACH1-knockouts in the absence of antioxidants. BACH1 levels also increased upon hypoxia and following administration of prolyl hydroxylase inhibitors in both HIF1a-knockout and wild-type cells. BACH1 was found to be a transcriptional target of HIF1α but BACH1’s ability to stimulate angiogenesis gene expression was HIF1a independent. Antioxidants increased tumor vascularity in vivo in a BACH1-dependent fashion, and overexpressing BACH1 rendered tumors sensitive to anti-angiogenesis therapy. BACH1 expression in tumor sections from lung cancer patients correlates with angiogenesis gene and protein expression. We conclude that BACH1 is an oxygen- and redox-sensitive angiogenesis transcription factor.
Ting Wang, Yongqiang Dong, Zhiqiang Huang, Guoqing Zhang, Ying Zhao, Haidong Yao, Jianjiang Hu, Elin Tüksammel, Huan Cai, Ning Liang, Xiufeng Xu, Xijie Yang, Sarah Schmidt, Xi Qiao, Susanne Schlisio, Staffan Strömblad, Hong Qian, Changtao Jiang, Eckardt Treuter, Martin O. Bergo
Endothelial phospholipase Cγ (PLCγ) is essential for vascular development, however, its role in healthy, mature or pathological vessels is unexplored. PLCγ was prominently expressed in vessels of several human cancer forms, notably in renal cell carcinoma (RCC). High PLCγ expression in clear cell RCC correlated with angiogenic activity and poor prognosis, while low expression correlated with immune cell activation. PLCγ was induced downstream of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2 (VEGFR2) phosphosite Y1173 (pY1173). Heterozygous Vegfr2+/Y1173F mice or mice lacking endothelial PLCγ (Plcg1iECKO) exhibited a stabilized endothelial barrier and diminished vascular leakage. Barrier stabilization was accompanied by decreased expression of immunosuppressive cytokines, reduced infiltration of B-cells, CD4+ and regulatory T-cells, and improved response to chemo- and immunotherapy. Mechanistically, pY1173/PLCγ signaling induced Ca2+/protein kinase C dependent activation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS), required for tyrosine nitration and activation of Src. Src-induced phosphorylation of VE-cadherin at Y685 was accompanied by disintegration of endothelial junctions. This pY1173/PLCγ/eNOS/Src pathway was detected in both healthy and tumor vessels in Vegfr2Y1173F/+ mice, which displayed decreased activation of PLCγ and eNOS, and suppressed vascular leakage. Thus, we have identified a clinically relevant endothelial PLCγ pathway downstream of VEGFR2 pY1173, which destabilizes the endothelial barrier resulting in loss of anti-tumor immunity.
Elin Sjöberg, Marit Melssen, Mark Richards, Yindi Ding, Catarina Chanoca, Dongying Chen, Emmanuel Nwadozi, Sagnik Pal, Dominic T. Love, Takeshi Ninchoji, Masabumi Shibuya, Michael Simons, Anna Dimberg, Lena Claesson-Welsh
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