Product Citations: 116

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The emergence of immunotherapy has revolutionized the paradigm of cancer treatment with immune checkpoint blockades (ICB) in solid cancers, including colorectal cancer (CRC). However, only a small subset of CRC patients harboring deficient mismatch repair (dMMR) or microsatellite instability-high (MSI-H) benefits from ICB therapy. A very limited response to ICB therapy has been achieved in MMR-proficient CRC, representing a significant challenge limiting the clinical application of immunotherapy. MMR is the critical DNA repair pathway that maintains genomic integrity by correcting DNA mismatches, which is mediated by the MutSα or MutSβ complex consisting of MSH2 with MSH6 and MSH3, respectively. Given that MMR status directs effective immune response, we sought to determine whether targeting MMR capacity boosts ICB efficacy.
Azoxymethane/dextran sodium sulfate (AOM/DSS)-induced CRC and xenograft model were used to evaluate the function of PRMT6 and response to PRMT6 inhibitor EPZ020411 and combination therapy of PD1 and EPZ020411. Biochemical assays were performed to elucidate the underlying mechanism of PRMT6-mediated MSH2 methylation and immune evasion.
We have identified PRMT6 as a crucial regulator of MMR capacity via MSH2 dimethylation at R171 and R219. Such a modification abrogates its MMR capacity and prevents the recruitment of MSH3 and MSH6. PRMT6 loss or inhibition triggers cytosolic DNA accumulation and cGAS-STING signaling activation, leading to enhanced immune response in PRMT6-deficient colon tumors or xenografts. Pharmacological inhibition of PRMT6 using EPZ020411 promotes mutagenesis and destabilizes MutSα or MutSβ assembly, and prolonged EPZ020411 exposure maintains an MSI-like phenotype in microsatellite stability (MSS) cells. EPZ020411 treatment sensitizes ICB efficacy of MSS cells, but not MSI cells in vivo. Similar effects have been observed in MSS colon tumors induced by AOM/DSS.
Our study provides a preclinical proof of concept to overcome resistance to immunotherapy by targeting PRMT6 in CRC with MSS.
© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2025. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ Group.

  • Cancer Research
  • Immunology and Microbiology

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is the most prevalent form of leukemia in adults. The cornerstone of first‑line chemotherapy for AML has poor survival rates, underscoring the urgent need for development of novel therapeutic agents. Differentiation therapy targets the blockade of differentiation in myeloid progenitor cells. The present study screened 100 plant extracts native to South Korea to search for those with differentiation‑inducing activity in AML. Differentiation‑inducing activity was assessed by measuring CD11b expression using fluorescence activated cell sorting. Of these, Corydalis incisa (Thunb.) Pers. (CIP) exhibited the highest efficacy. CIP induced myeloid differentiation, decreased viability and increased cell apoptosis and cell cycle arrest in HL‑60, U937 and THP‑1 cells. Furthermore, ultra‑performance liquid chromatography‑quadrupole time‑of‑flight mass spectrometry identified norchelerythrine as the primary anti‑leukemic compound in CIP. Norchelerythrine induced differentiation and promoted cell cycle arrest and apoptosis, mirroring the tumor‑suppressive effects of CIP, and notably decreased cell viability in patients with various genetic abnormalities. The present mechanistic study showed that norchelerythrine stimulated reactive oxygen species generation, leading to activation of DNA damage signaling and upregulation of p21cip1, a cyclin‑dependent kinase inhibitor. Overall, norchelerythrine isolated from CIP may be a novel therapeutic option in AML.

  • Mus musculus (House mouse)
  • Cancer Research
  • Genetics

Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease characterised by inflammatory cell infiltration, keratinocyte hyperproliferation and increased neovascularization. Despite extensive research, the precise mechanisms underlying psoriasis pathology and treatment strategies remain unclear because of a complex aetiology and disease progression. Hence, in this study, we aimed to identify potential therapeutic targets for psoriasis and explore their effects on disease progression. We observed that G protein-coupled receptor LGR4 attenuates psoriasis progression. Bioinformatics analysis of publicly available clinical data revealed lower LGR4 expression in the skin lesions of patients with psoriasis than in their non-lesioned skin. Both in vitro (HaCaT cell) and in vivo (mouse) models confirmed this phenomenon. The Lgr4-knockout mouse model further confirmed that LGR4 plays a positive role in psoriasis progression. Specifically, Lgr4 knockout promoted the secretion of inflammatory factors, accumulation of local immunocyte infiltration in skin lesions, and keratinocyte proliferation. In conclusion, we demonstrated that LGR4 is critical to limiting psoriasis progression, suggesting that it is a viable target for the clinical management of this skin condition.
© 2024 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

  • Mus musculus (House mouse)
  • Immunology and Microbiology

Mechanisms of epigenomic and functional convergence between glucocorticoid- and IL4-driven macrophage programming.

In Nature Communications on 18 October 2024 by Deochand, D., Dacic, M., et al.

Macrophages adopt distinct phenotypes in response to environmental cues, with type-2 cytokine interleukin-4 promoting a tissue-repair homeostatic state (M2IL4). Glucocorticoids (GC), widely used anti-inflammatory therapeutics, reportedly impart a similar phenotype (M2GC), but how such disparate pathways may functionally converge is unknown. We show using integrative functional genomics that M2IL4 and M2GC transcriptomes share a striking overlap mirrored by a shift in chromatin landscape in both common and signal-specific gene subsets. This core homeostatic program is enacted by transcriptional effectors KLF4 and the glucocorticoid receptor, whose genome-wide occupancy and actions are integrated in a stimulus-specific manner by the nuclear receptor cofactor GRIP1. Indeed, many of the M2IL4:M2GC-shared transcriptomic changes were GRIP1-dependent. Consistently, GRIP1 loss attenuated phagocytic activity of both populations in vitro and macrophage tissue-repair properties in the murine colitis model in vivo. These findings provide a mechanistic framework for homeostatic macrophage programming by distinct signals, to better inform anti-inflammatory drug design.
© 2024. The Author(s).

  • FC/FACS
  • Mus musculus (House mouse)
  • Immunology and Microbiology

Hypoxia is a common feature of many solid tumors due to aberrant proliferation and angiogenesis that is associated with tumor progression and metastasis. Most of the well-known hypoxia effects are mediated through hypoxia-inducible factors (HIF). Identification of the long-lasting effects of hypoxia beyond the immediate HIF-induced alterations could provide a better understanding of hypoxia-driven metastasis and potential strategies to circumvent it. Here, we uncovered a hypoxia-induced mechanism that exerts a prolonged effect to promote metastasis. In breast cancer patient-derived circulating tumor cell lines and common breast cancer cell lines, hypoxia downregulated tumor-intrinsic type I IFN signaling and its downstream antigen presentation (AP) machinery in luminal breast cancer cells, via both HIF-dependent and HIF-independent mechanisms. Hypoxia induced durable IFN/AP suppression in certain cell types that was sustained after returning to normoxic conditions, presenting a "hypoxic memory" phenotype. Hypoxic memory of IFN/AP downregulation was established by specific hypoxic priming, and cells with hypoxic memory had an enhanced ability for tumorigenesis and metastasis. Overexpression of IRF3 enhanced IFN signaling and reduced tumor growth in normoxic, but not hypoxic, conditions. The histone deacetylase inhibitor entinostat upregulated IFN targets and erased the hypoxic memory. These results point to a mechanism by which hypoxia facilitates tumor progression through a long-lasting memory that provides advantages for circulating tumor cells during the metastatic cascade. Significance: Long-term cellular memory of hypoxia leads to sustained suppression of tumor-intrinsic type I IFN signaling and the antigen presentation pathway that facilitates tumorigenesis and metastasis. See related commentary by Purdy and Ford, p. 3125.
©2024 American Association for Cancer Research.

  • Cancer Research
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