Product Citations: 16

Environmental lipids are essential for fueling tumor energetics, but whether these exogenous lipids transported into cancer cells facilitate immune escape remains unclear. Here, we find that CD36, a transporter for exogenous lipids, promotes acute myeloid leukemia (AML) immune evasion. We show that, separately from its established role in lipid oxidation, CD36 on AML cells senses oxidized low-density lipoprotein (OxLDL) to prime the TLR4-LYN-MYD88-nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) pathway, and exogenous palmitate transfer via CD36 further potentiates this innate immune pathway by supporting ZDHHC6-mediated MYD88 palmitoylation. Subsequently, NF-κB drives the expression of immunosuppressive genes that inhibit anti-tumor T cell responses. Notably, high-fat-diet or hypomethylating agent decitabine treatment boosts the immunosuppressive potential of AML cells by hijacking CD36-dependent innate immune signaling, leading to a dampened therapeutic effect. This work is of translational interest because lipid restriction by US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved lipid-lowering statin drugs improves the efficacy of decitabine therapy by weakening leukemic CD36-mediated immunosuppression.
Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

  • FC/FACS
  • Homo sapiens (Human)
  • Biochemistry and Molecular biology
  • Cell Biology
  • Immunology and Microbiology

Ex vivo resting culture is a standard procedure following genome editing in hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs). However, prolonged culture may critically affect cell viability and stem cell function. We investigated whether varying durations of culture resting times impact the engraftment efficiency of human CD34+ HSPCs edited at the BCL11A enhancer, a key regulator in the expression of fetal hemoglobin. We employed electroporation to introduce CRISPR-Cas9 components for BCL11A enhancer editing and compared outcomes with nonelectroporated (NEP) and electroporated-only (EP) control groups. Post-electroporation, we monitored cell viability, death rates, and the frequency of enriched hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) fractions (CD34+CD90+CD45RA- cells) over a 48-hour period. Our findings reveal that while the NEP group showed an increase in cell numbers 24 hours post-electroporation, both EP and BCL11A-edited groups experienced significant cell loss. Although CD34+ cell frequency remained high in all groups for up to 48 hours post-electroporation, the frequency of the HSC-enriched fraction was significantly lower in the EP and edited groups compared to the NEP group. In NBSGW xenograft mouse models, both conditioned with busulfan and nonconditioned, we found that immediate transplantation post-electroporation led to enhanced engraftment without compromising editing efficiency. Human glycophorin A+ (GPA+) red blood cells (RBCs) sorted from bone marrow of all BCL11A edited mice exhibited similar levels of γ-globin expression, regardless of infusion time. Our findings underscore the critical importance of optimizing the culture duration between genome editing and transplantation. Minimizing this interval may significantly enhance engraftment success and minimize cell loss without compromising editing efficiency. These insights offer a pathway to improve the success rates of genome editing in HSPCs, particularly for conditions like sickle cell disease.
Published by Elsevier Inc.

Efficient manufacturing and engraftment of CCR5 gene-edited HSPCs following busulfan conditioning in nonhuman primates.

In Molecular Therapy. Methods Clinical Development on 14 September 2023 by Murray, J., Einhaus, T., et al.

Hematopoietic stem cell gene therapy has been successfully used for a number of genetic diseases and is also being explored for HIV. However, toxicity of the conditioning regimens has been a major concern. Here we compared current conditioning approaches in a clinically relevant nonhuman primate model. We first customized various aspects of the therapeutic approach, including mobilization and cell collection protocols, conditioning regimens that support engraftment with minimal collateral damage, and cell manufacturing and infusing schema that reflect and build on current clinical approaches. Through a series of iterative in vivo experiments in two macaque species, we show that busulfan conditioning significantly spares lymphocytes and maintains a superior immune response to mucosal challenge with simian/human immunodeficiency virus, compared to total body irradiation and melphalan regimens. Comparative mobilization experiments demonstrate higher cell yield relative to our historical standard, primed bone marrow and engraftment of CRISPR-edited hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) after busulfan conditioning. Our findings establish a detailed workflow for preclinical HSPC gene therapy studies in the nonhuman primate model, which in turn will support testing of novel conditioning regimens and more advanced HSPC gene editing techniques tailored to any disease of interest.
© 2023 The Authors.

  • FC/FACS

Novel Human Umbilical Di-Chimeric (HUDC) cell therapy for transplantation without life-long immunosuppression.

In Stem Cell Investigation on 24 August 2023 by Siemionow, M., Cwykiel, J., et al.

Cell-based therapies are promising for tolerance induction in bone marrow (BM), solid organs, and vascularized composite allotransplantation (VCA). The toxicity of bone marrow transplantation (BMT) protocols precludes this approach from routine clinical applications. To address this problem, we developed a new therapy of Human Umbilical Di-Chimeric (HUDC) cells for tolerance induction in transplantation. This study established in vitro characterization of the created HUDC cells.
We performed sixteen ex vivo polyethylene glycol (PEG)-mediated fusions of human umbilical cord blood (UCB) cells from two unrelated donors. Fusion feasibility was confirmed in vitro by flow cytometry (FC) and confocal microscopy (CM). The HUDC cells' genotype was assessed by lymphocytotoxicity test and short tandem repeat-polymerase chain reaction (STR-PCR) analysis, phenotype by FC, viability by LIVE/DEAD® assay, and apoptosis level by Annexin V staining. We used COMET assay to assess HUDC cells' genotoxicity after the fusion procedure. Clonogenic properties of HUDC cells were evaluated by colony forming unit (CFU) assay. Mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR) assay assessed immunogenic and tolerogenic properties of HUDC cells.
We confirmed the creation of HUDC cells from two unrelated human donors of UCB cells by FC and CM. Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I and II typing, and STR-PCR analysis of HUDC cells confirmed the presence of alleles and loci from both unrelated UCB donors (donor chimerism: 49%±8.3%, n=4). FC confirmed the hematopoietic phenotype of HUDC cells. We confirmed high HUDC cells' viability (0.47% of dead cells) and a low apoptosis level of fused HUDC cells (15.9%) compared to positive control of PKH-stained UCB cells (20.4%) before fusion. COMET assay of HUDC cells revealed a lack of DNA damage. CFU assay confirmed clonogenic properties of HUDC cells, and MLR assay revealed a low immunogenicity of HUDC cells.
This study confirmed creation of a novel HUDC cell line by ex vivo PEG-mediated fusion of UCB cells from two unrelated donors. The unique concept of creating a HUDC cell line, representing the genotype and phenotype of both, transplant donor and the recipient, introduces a promising approach for tolerance induction in BM, solid organs, and VCA transplantation.
2023 Stem Cell Investigation. All rights reserved.

  • FC/FACS

Generation of the NeoThy mouse model for human immune system studies.

In Lab Animal on 1 July 2023 by Del Rio, N. M., Huang, L., et al.

Humanized mouse models, created via transplantation of human hematopoietic tissues into immune-deficient mice, support a number of research applications, including transplantation immunology, virology and oncology studies. As an alternative to the bone marrow, liver, thymus humanized mouse, which uses fetal tissues for generating a chimeric human immune system, the NeoThy humanized mouse uses nonfetal tissue sources. Specifically, the NeoThy model incorporates hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells from umbilical cord blood (UCB) as well as thymus tissue that is typically discarded as medical waste during neonatal cardiac surgeries. Compared with fetal thymus tissue, the abundant quantity of neonatal thymus tissue offers the opportunity to prepare over 1,000 NeoThy mice from an individual thymus donor. Here we describe a protocol for processing of the neonatal tissues (thymus and UCB) and hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell separation, human leukocyte antigen typing and matching of allogenic thymus and UCB tissues, creation of NeoThy mice, assessment of human immune cell reconstitution and all experimental steps from planning and design to data analysis. This entire protocol takes a total of ~19 h to complete, with steps broken up into multiple sessions of 4 h or less that can be paused and completed over multiple days. The protocol can be completed, after practice, by individuals with intermediate laboratory and animal handling skills, enabling researchers to make effective use of this promising in vivo model of human immune function.
© 2023. Springer Nature America, Inc.

  • Immunology and Microbiology
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