Product Citations: 24

Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) is one of the most established environmental risk factors for the development of dementia and long term neurological deficits representing a critical health problem for our society. It is well-established that TBI-induced neuroinflammation contributes to the long-lasting cognitive deficits and engages brain-resident macrophages (microglia) as well as monocytes-derived macrophages (MDMs) recruited from the periphery. While numerous studies have characterized microglia response to TBI, and the critical role of early infiltrated MDMs in the development of cognitive dysfunctions, the fate of MDMs in TBI remains unknown. Microglia and MDMs have distinct embryological origins and it is unclear if MDMs can fully transition to microglia after infiltrating the brain. This gap in knowledge is due to the fact that after brain engraftment, MDMs stop expressing their signature markers, thus making discrimination from resident microglia cells elusive. Here, for the first time, we longitudinally trace the fate of MDMs by taking advantage of two complementary yet distinct fate mapping mouse lines, CCR2-creER T2 and Ms4a3-cre, where inflammatory monocytes are permanently labeled even after in situ reprogramming. We demonstrated that early infiltrated MDMs persist in the brain for up to 8 months after TBI in adult female and male mice. Notably, MDMs retain their phagocytic activity while remaining transcriptomically distinct from microglia, and show a signature associated with aging and disease. Our data significantly advance the understanding of long-lasting MDMs and provide critical knowledge for developing more targeted therapeutic interventions for myeloid cells.

  • Mus musculus (House mouse)

Directed differentiation of mouse pluripotent stem cells into functional lung-specific mesenchyme.

In Nature Communications on 13 June 2023 by Alber, A. B., Marquez, H. A., et al.

While the generation of many lineages from pluripotent stem cells has resulted in basic discoveries and clinical trials, the derivation of tissue-specific mesenchyme via directed differentiation has markedly lagged. The derivation of lung-specific mesenchyme is particularly important since this tissue plays crucial roles in lung development and disease. Here we generate a mouse induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) line carrying a lung-specific mesenchymal reporter/lineage tracer. We identify the pathways (RA and Shh) necessary to specify lung mesenchyme and find that mouse iPSC-derived lung mesenchyme (iLM) expresses key molecular and functional features of primary developing lung mesenchyme. iLM recombined with engineered lung epithelial progenitors self-organizes into 3D organoids with juxtaposed layers of epithelium and mesenchyme. Co-culture increases yield of lung epithelial progenitors and impacts epithelial and mesenchymal differentiation programs, suggesting functional crosstalk. Our iPSC-derived population thus provides an inexhaustible source of cells for studying lung development, modeling diseases, and developing therapeutics.
© 2023. The Author(s).

  • Stem Cells and Developmental Biology

Protection of cell therapeutics from antibody-mediated killing by CD64 overexpression.

In Nature Biotechnology on 1 May 2023 by Gravina, A., Tediashvili, G., et al.

Allogeneic cell therapeutics for cancer therapy or regenerative medicine are susceptible to antibody-mediated killing, which diminishes their efficacy. Here we report a strategy to protect cells from antibody-mediated killing that relies on engineered overexpression of the IgG receptor CD64. We show that human and mouse iPSC-derived endothelial cells (iECs) overexpressing CD64 escape antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) and complement-dependent cytotoxicity from IgG antibodies in vitro and in ADCC-enabled mice. When CD64 expression was combined with hypoimmune genetic modifications known to protect against cellular immunity, B2M-/-CIITA-/- CD47/CD64-transgenic iECs were resistant to both IgG antibody-mediated and cellular immune killing in vitro and in humanized mice. Mechanistic studies demonstrated that CD64 or its intracellularly truncated analog CD64t effectively capture monomeric IgG and occupy their Fc, and the IgG bind and occupy their target antigens. In three applications of the approach, human CD64t-engineered thyroid epithelial cells, pancreatic beta cells and CAR T cells withstood clinically relevant levels of graft-directed antibodies and fully evaded antibody-mediated killing.
© 2023. The Author(s).

Population-wide gene disruption in the murine lung epithelium via AAV-mediated delivery of CRISPR-Cas9 components.

In Molecular Therapy. Methods Clinical Development on 8 December 2022 by Chen, H., Durinck, S., et al.

With the aim of expediting drug target discovery and validation for respiratory diseases, we developed an optimized method for in situ somatic gene disruption in murine lung epithelial cells via AAV6-mediated CRISPR-Cas9 delivery. Efficient gene editing was observed in lung type II alveolar epithelial cells and distal airway cells following assessment of single- or dual-guide AAV vector formats, Cas9 variants, and a sequential dosing strategy with combinatorial guide RNA expression cassettes. In particular, we were able to demonstrate population-wide gene disruption within distinct epithelial cell types for separate targets in Cas9 transgenic animals, with minimal to no associated inflammation. We also observed and characterized AAV vector integration events that occurred within directed double-stranded DNA break sites in lung cells, highlighting a complicating factor with AAV-mediated delivery of DNA nucleases. Taken together, we demonstrate a uniquely effective approach for somatic engineering of the murine lung, which will greatly facilitate the modeling of disease and therapeutic intervention.
© 2022 The Author(s).

  • FC/FACS
  • Mus musculus (House mouse)

Endogenous metabolism in endothelial and immune cells generates most of the tissue vitamin B3 (nicotinamide).

In IScience on 18 November 2022 by Zeidler, J. D., Chini, C. C. S., et al.

In mammals, nicotinamide (NAM) is the primary NAD precursor available in circulation, a signaling molecule, and a precursor for methyl-nicotinamide (M-NAM) synthesis. However, our knowledge about how the body regulates tissue NAM levels is still limited. Here we demonstrate that dietary vitamin B3 partially regulates plasma NAM and NAM-derived metabolites, but not their tissue levels. We found that NAD de novo synthesis from tryptophan contributes to plasma and tissue NAM, likely by providing substrates for NAD-degrading enzymes. We also demonstrate that tissue NAM is mainly generated by endogenous metabolism and that the NADase CD38 is the main enzyme that produces tissue NAM. Tissue-specific CD38-floxed mice revealed that CD38 activity on endothelial and immune cells is the major contributor to tissue steady-state levels of NAM in tissues like spleen and heart. Our findings uncover the presence of different pools of NAM in the body and a central role for CD38 in regulating tissue NAM levels.
© 2022 The Author(s).

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