Product Citations: 86

Mutations that negatively impact mitochondrial function are highly prevalent in humans and lead to disorders with a wide spectrum of disease phenotypes, including deficiencies in immune cell development and/or function. Previous analyses of mice with a hepatocyte-specific cytochrome c oxidase (COX) deficiency revealed an unexpected peripheral blood leukopenia associated with splenic and thymic atrophy. Here, we use mice with a hepatocyte-specific deletion of the COX assembly factor Sco1 to show that metabolic defects extrinsic to the hematopoietic compartment lead to a pan-lymphopenia represented by severe losses in both B and T cells. We further demonstrate that immune defects in these mice are associated with the loss of bone marrow lymphoid progenitors common to both lineages and early signs of autoantibody-mediated autoimmunity. Our findings collectively identify hepatocyte dysfunction as a potential instigator of immunodeficiency in patients with congenital mitochondrial defects who suffer from chronic or recurrent infections.
© 2025 The Author(s).

Myocardial infarction (MI) results in aberrant cardiac metabolism, but no therapeutics have been designed to target cardiac metabolism to enhance heart repair. We engineer a humanized monoclonal antibody against the ectonucleotidase ENPP1 (hENPP1mAb) that targets metabolic crosstalk in the infarcted heart. In mice expressing human ENPP1, systemic administration of hENPP1mAb metabolically reprograms myocytes and non-myocytes and leads to a significant rescue of post-MI heart dysfunction. Using metabolomics, single-nuclear transcriptomics, and cellular respiration studies, we show that the administration of the hENPP1mAb induces organ-wide metabolic and transcriptional reprogramming of the heart that enhances myocyte cellular respiration and decreases cell death and fibrosis in the infarcted heart. Biodistribution and safety studies showed specific organ-wide distribution with the antibody being well tolerated. In humanized animals, with drug clearance kinetics similar to humans, we demonstrate that a single "shot" of the hENPP1mAb after MI is sufficient to rescue cardiac dysfunction.
Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

  • Mus musculus (House mouse)
  • Biochemistry and Molecular biology
  • Cardiovascular biology
  • Cell Biology

MRL/lpr mice develop systemic lupus erythematosus-like autoimmunity due to defective FAS-mediated apoptosis. We generated Fas lpr mice deficient in EAF2, a transcription elongation-associated factor known to promote apoptosis in germinal center (GC) B cells and crucial for preventing autoimmunity. Contrary to expectations, EAF2 deficiency significantly reduced lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly, extended lifespan, and alleviated nephritis by decreasing renal immune complex deposition. Additionally, EAF2 deficiency markedly reduced accumulation of activated B cells, GC B cells, plasma cells, and the abnormal B220+CD3+ T cells in Fas lpr mice. Further analysis revealed that Eaf2 -/- Fas lpr B cells showed hyperactivation upon various stimulations, followed by increased death. RNA sequencing of the B220+CD3+ cells revealed a downregulation in survival-promoting genes such as Bcl-2 and Akt and an upregulation of proapoptotic genes. We conclude that the combined deficiency in FAS- and EAF2-mediated apoptotic pathways leads to B cell hyperactivation and subsequent death, thereby ameliorating systemic autoimmunity in this model.
© 2024 The Author(s).

  • Mus musculus (House mouse)
  • Immunology and Microbiology

Immunometabolic Regulation of Vaccine-Induced Antibody Responses in Aging Mice.

In Vaccines on 26 August 2024 by Frasca, D., Romero, M., et al.

Immune cells undergo metabolic reprogramming to meet the demands associated with immune responses. The effects of aging on these pathways and on the metabolic phenotype of the immune cells participating in antibody responses to vaccines are still largely unknown. Here we used a vaccine for SARS-CoV-2 that utilizes the cellular heat shock chaperone glycoprotein 96 (gp96), engineered to co-express SARS-CoV-2 Spike (spike) protein (gp96-Ig-S). Results show that this vaccine induces comparable B cell primary responses in young and old mice at later time points, but a significantly lesser secondary response in old as compared to young mice, with the antibodies generated in the secondary response being also of lower avidity. This occurs because aging changes the B cell metabolic phenotype and induces hyper-metabolic B cells that are associated with higher intrinsic inflammation and decreased protective antibody responses. However, the gp96-Ig-S vaccine was found to be effective in significantly reducing the metabolic/inflammatory status of B cells from old mice, suggesting the possibility that targeting metabolic pathways may improve immune function in old mice that do not respond adequately to the vaccine.

  • Mus musculus (House mouse)
  • Immunology and Microbiology

Germline CARD11 gain-of-function (GOF) mutations cause B cell Expansion with NF-κB and T cell Anergy (BENTA) disease, whilst somatic GOF CARD11 mutations recur in diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) and in up to 30% of the peripheral T cell lymphomas (PTCL) adult T cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATL), cutaneous T cell lymphoma (CTCL) and Sezary Syndrome. Despite their frequent acquisition by PTCL, the T cell-intrinsic effects of CARD11 GOF mutations are poorly understood.
Here, we studied B and T lymphocytes in mice with a germline Nethyl-N-nitrosourea (ENU)-induced Card11M365K mutation identical to a mutation identified in DLBCL and modifying a conserved region of the CARD11 coiled-coil domain recurrently mutated in DLBCL and PTCL.
Our results demonstrate that CARD11.M365K is a GOF protein that increases B and T lymphocyte activation and proliferation following antigen receptor stimulation. Germline Card11M365K mutation was insufficient alone to cause B or T-lymphoma, but increased accumulation of germinal center (GC) B cells in unimmunized and immunized mice. Card11M365K mutation caused cell-intrinsic over-accumulation of activated T cells, T regulatory (TREG), T follicular (TFH) and T follicular regulatory (TFR) cells expressing increased levels of ICOS, CTLA-4 and PD-1 checkpoint molecules. Our results reveal CARD11 as an important, cell-autonomous positive regulator of TFH, TREG and TFR cells. They highlight T cell-intrinsic effects of a GOF mutation in the CARD11 gene, which is recurrently mutated in T cell malignancies that are often aggressive and associated with variable clinical outcomes.
Copyright © 2023 Masle-Farquhar, Jeelall, White, Bier, Deenick, Brink, Horikawa and Goodnow.

  • Mus musculus (House mouse)
  • Immunology and Microbiology
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