M. Bézard et al. (Feb 2025)
Scientific Reports 15 6
Amyloidogenic immunoglobulin light chains disturb contractile function and calcium transients in a human cardiac spheroid model of light chain (AL) amyloidosis
Light chain (AL) amyloidosis is a serious systemic disease caused by the deposition of free misfolded immunoglobulin light chains (LCs) in the form of amyloid fibrils within tissues. Cardiac involvement determines prognosis and mortality. An important cytotoxic impact of amyloidogenic prefibrillar LC oligomers on cardiomyocytes is by now established in isolated rodent cardiomyocytes,simple animal models,or cardiomyocyte-like cell lines. However,the response of human cardiomyocytes to this pathogenic condition is currently unknown. In this work,we have set up a human cellular disease model of AL cardiac amyloidosis (AL-CA) in the form of cardiac spheroids,to study the cytotoxic effects of amyloidogenic LCs with regard to contractile function and calcium handling. To mimic the disease in a reconstituted system,soluble amyloidogenic LCs purified from urine of AL-CA patients were added to a mixture of induced pluripotent stem cell-issued human cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CM) and human primary cardiac fibroblasts,which resulted in formation of spheroids within 7 days. This procedure ensured a uniform pericellular LC distribution within spheroids. LC-treated hiPSC-CM cultures and LC-containing spheroids presented structural and functional defects including: (1) decreased levels and subcellular disorganization of sarcomeric protein alpha-actinin; (2) abnormal accumulation of calcium handling SERCA2a protein; (3) impaired contractility of spheroids and altered calcium transients. Three independent patient-derived LCs had similar effects,albeit to varying degrees,highlighting the patient-specific properties of this type of amyloids. Taken together,these results indicate that the present cardiac spheroid disease model could be appropriate to the study of cardiac cytotoxicity caused by different amyloidogenic LCs in AL-CA patients,contributing to a better understanding and therapeutic handling of the disease. The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1038/s41598-024-82442-3.
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K. Desai et al. (Feb 2025)
Nature Communications 16
OLIG2 mediates a rare targetable stem cell fate transition in sonic hedgehog medulloblastoma
Functional cellular heterogeneity in tumours often underlies incomplete response to therapy and relapse. Previously,we demonstrated that the growth of the paediatric brain malignancy,sonic hedgehog subgroup medulloblastoma,is rooted in a dysregulated developmental hierarchy,the apex of which is defined by characteristically quiescent SOX2 + stem-like cells. Integrating gene expression and chromatin accessibility patterns in distinct cellular compartments,we identify the transcription factor Olig2 as regulating the stem cell fate transition from quiescence to activation,driving the generation of downstream neoplastic progenitors. Inactivation of Olig2 blocks stem cell activation and tumour output. Targeting this rare OLIG2-driven proliferative programme with a small molecule inhibitor,CT-179,dramatically attenuates early tumour formation and tumour regrowth post-therapy,and significantly increases median survival in vivo. We demonstrate that targeting transition from quiescence to proliferation at the level of the tumorigenic cell could be a pivotal medulloblastoma treatment strategy. Subject terms: Cancer stem cells,Mechanisms of disease,Cancer therapy
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Li et al. (Feb 2025)
Nature Communications 16
Allogeneic CD33-directed CAR-NKT cells for the treatment of bone marrow-resident myeloid malignancies
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-engineered T cell therapy holds promise for treating myeloid malignancies,but challenges remain in bone marrow (BM) infiltration and targeting BM-resident malignant cells. Current autologous CAR-T therapies also face manufacturing and patient selection issues,underscoring the need for off-the-shelf products. In this study,we characterize primary patient samples and identify a unique therapeutic opportunity for CAR-engineered invariant natural killer T (CAR-NKT) cells. Using stem cell gene engineering and a clinically guided culture method,we generate allogeneic CD33-directed CAR-NKT cells with high yield,purity,and robustness. In preclinical mouse models,CAR-NKT cells exhibit strong BM homing and effectively target BM-resident malignant blast cells,including CD33-low/negative leukemia stem and progenitor cells. Furthermore,CAR-NKT cells synergize with hypomethylating agents,enhancing tumor-killing efficacy. These cells also show minimal off-tumor toxicity,reduced graft-versus-host disease and cytokine release syndrome risks,and resistance to allorejection,highlighting their substantial therapeutic potential for treating myeloid malignancies. Subject terms: Cancer therapy,Immunotherapy,Leukaemia
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R. Xu et al. (Jan 2025)
Cancer Cell International 25 4
Formin protein DAAM1 positively regulates PD-L1 expression via mediating the JAK1/STAT1 axis in pancreatic cancer
Dishevelled-associated activator of morphogenesis1 (DAAM1) is a member of the evolutionarily conserved Formin family and plays a significant role in the malignant progression of various human cancers. This study aims to explore the clinical and biological significance of DAAM1 in pancreatic cancer. Multiple public datasets and an in-house cohort were utilized to assess the clinical relevance of DAAM1 in pancreatic cancer. The LinkedOmics platform was employed to perform enrichment analysis of DAAM1-associated molecular pathways in pancreatic cancer. Subsequently,a series of in vitro and in vivo experiments were conducted to evaluate the biological roles of DAAM1 in pancreatic cancer cells and its effects on intratumoral T cells. DAAM1 was found to be upregulated in pancreatic cancer tissues,with higher expression levels observed in tumor cells. Additionally,high expression of DAAM1 was associated with poor prognosis. DAAM1 acted as an oncogene in pancreatic cancer,and its inhibition suppressed tumor cell proliferation,migration,and invasion,while promoted apoptosis. Furthermore,DAAM1 was involved in the JAK1/STAT1 signaling pathway and regulated PD-L1 expression in pancreatic cancer cells. The inhibition of DAAM1 also significantly reduced the exhaustion levels of CD8+ T cells. In conclusion,DAAM1 functions as an oncogene and is immunologically implicated in pancreatic cancer,these findings suggest that DAAM1 may serve as a promising therapeutic target for the clinical management of pancreatic cancer. The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12935-024-03631-8.
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Q. Shi et al. (Jan 2025)
Breast Cancer Research : BCR 27
CXCR4 promotes tumor stemness maintenance and CDK4/6 inhibitors resistance in ER-positive breast cancer
CDK4/6 inhibitors have significantly improved the survival of patients with HR-positive/HER2-negative breast cancer,becoming a first-line treatment option. However,the development of resistance to these inhibitors is inevitable. To address this challenge,novel strategies are required to overcome resistance,necessitating a deeper understanding of its mechanisms. Recent research has identified several dysregulated genes in CDK4/6 inhibitors-resistant breast cancer,but the underlying mechanism is complex due to tumor heterogeneity and warrants further investigation. RNA sequencing and KEGG pathway analysis was carried out to identify the mainly dysregulated genes in CDK4/6 inhibitors-resistant breast cancer cells. The effects of CXCR4 knockdown and overexpression via siRNAs and plasmids transfection were examined by mammosphere formation,RT-qPCR,flow cytometry,MTT and colony formation assays. The regulation mechanisms were analyzed by RT-qPCR,western blotting and immunofluorescence experiments. Mouse xenografts were used to analyze the role of CXCR4 in regulation palbociclib sensitivity in vivo. Additionally,we collected the clinical samples and performed immunohistochemistry to analyze the clinical significance of CXCR4. In our study,we focused on cancer stem cells,a critical contributor to cancer metastasis and therapy resistance,and detected an upregulation of stemness in our established palbociclib-resistant ER-positive breast cancer cells. Additionally,our research pinpointed CXCR4 as a pivotal gene responsible for maintaining cancer stemness and promoting palbociclib resistance. Mechanistically,CXCR4 activates the WNT5A/β-catenin signaling pathway by enhancing the expression of WNT5A and β-catenin,facilitating the nuclear translocation of β-catenin protein. Targeting CXCR4 using siRNAs or small molecular inhibitors effectively reduces cancer stemness and reverses palbociclib resistance both in vitro and in vivo. Clinical sample analysis further underscores the overactivation of the CXCR4/WNT5A/β-catenin axis in palbociclib-resistant breast cancer,suggesting CXCR4 as a potential biomarker for predicting resistance to CDK4/6 inhibitors. Collectively,our study demonstrates that CXCR4 overexpression plays a vital role in maintaining breast cancer stemness and promoting resistance to CDK4/6 inhibitors through the activation of the WNT5A/β-catenin pathway. Targeting CXCR4 may offer a promising therapeutic approach for advanced CDK4/6 inhibitor-resistant ER-positive breast cancer. The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s13058-025-01965-3.
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G. Liang et al. (Jan 2025)
Cell Discovery 11
Conversion of placental hemogenic endothelial cells to hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells
Hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) are critical for the treatment of blood diseases in clinic. However,the limited source of HSPCs severely hinders their clinical application. In the embryo,hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) arise from hemogenic endothelial (HE) cells lining the major arteries in vivo. In this work,by engineering vascular niche endothelial cells (VN-ECs),we generated functional HSPCs in vitro from ECs at various sites,including the aorta-gonad-mesonephros (AGM) region and the placenta. Firstly,we converted mouse embryonic HE cells from the AGM region (aHE) into induced HSPCs (iHSPCs),which have the abilities for multilineage differentiation and self-renewal. Mechanistically,we found that VN-ECs can promote the generation of iHSPCs via secretion of CX3CL1 and IL1A. Next,through VN-EC co-culture,we showed that placental HE (pHE) cells,a type of extra-embryonic HE cells,were successfully converted into iHSPCs (pHE-iHSPCs),which have multilineage differentiation capacity,but exhibit limited self-renewal ability. Furthermore,comparative transcriptome analysis of aHE-iHSPCs and pHE-iHSPCs showed that aHE-iHSPCs highly expressed HSC-specific and self-renewal-related genes. Moreover,experimental validation showed that retinoic acid (RA) treatment promoted the transformation of pHE cells into iHSPCs that have self-renewal ability. Collectively,our results suggested that pHE cells possess the potential to transform into self-renewing iHSPCs through RA treatment,which will facilitate the clinical application of placental endothelial cells in hematopoietic cell generation. Subject terms: Haematopoietic stem cells,Haematopoietic stem cells
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M. S. Clair‐Glover et al. (Jan 2025)
Journal of Neurochemistry 169 1
GABA B Receptor Modulation of Membrane Excitability in Human Pluripotent Stem Cell‐Derived Sensory Neurons by Baclofen and α‐Conotoxin Vc1.1
GABA B receptor (GABA B R) activation is known to alleviate pain by reducing neuronal excitability,primarily through inhibition of high voltage‐activated (HVA) calcium (Ca V 2.2) channels and potentiating G protein–coupled inwardly rectifying potassium (GIRK) channels. Although the analgesic properties of small molecules and peptides have been primarily tested on isolated murine dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons,emerging strategies to develop,study,and characterise human pluripotent stem cell (hPSC)‐derived sensory neurons present a promising alternative. In this study,hPSCs were efficiently differentiated into peripheral DRG‐induced sensory neurons (iSNs) using a combined chemical and transcription factor‐driven approach via a neural crest cell intermediate. Molecular characterisation and transcriptomic analysis confirmed the expression of key DRG markers such as BRN3A,ISLET1,and PRPH,in addition to GABA B R and ion channels including Ca V 2.2 and GIRK1 in iSNs. Functional characterisation of GABA B R was conducted using whole‐cell patch clamp electrophysiology,assessing neuronal excitability under current‐clamp conditions in the absence and presence of GABA B R agonists baclofen and α‐conotoxin Vc1.1. Both baclofen (100 μM) and Vc1.1 (1 μM) significantly reduced membrane excitability by hyperpolarising the resting membrane potential and increasing the rheobase for action potential firing. In voltage‐clamp mode,baclofen and Vc1.1 inhibited HVA Ca 2+ channel currents,which were attenuated by the selective GABA B R antagonist CGP 55845. However,modulation of GIRK channels by GABA B Rs was not observed in the presence of baclofen or Vc1.1,suggesting that functional GIRK1/2 channels were not coupled to GABA B Rs in hPSC‐derived iSNs. This study is the first to report GABA B R modulation of membrane excitability in iSNs by baclofen and Vc1.1,highlighting their potential as a future model for studying analgesic compounds.
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K. Wang et al. (Jan 2025)
Journal for Immunotherapy of Cancer 13 1
B7-H3 CAR-T cell therapy combined with irradiation is effective in targeting bulk and radiation-resistant chordoma cancer cells
Chordoma is a slow-growing,primary malignant bone tumor that arises from notochordal tissue in the midline of the axial skeleton. Surgical excision with negative margins is the mainstay of treatment,but high local recurrence rates are reported even with negative margins. High-dose radiation therapy (RT),such as with proton or carbon ions,has been used as an alternative to surgery,but late local failure remains a problem. B7-H3 is an immune checkpoint,transmembrane protein that is dysregulated in many cancers,including chordoma. This study explores the efficacy of B7-H3 chimeric antigen receptor T (CAR-T) therapy in vitro and in vivo. Chordoma cancer stem cells (CCSCs) were identified using flow cytometry,sphere formation,and western blot analysis. The expression of B7-H3 in paraffin-embedded chordoma tissue was determined by immunohistochemical staining,and the expression of B7-H3 in chordoma cells was measured by flow cytometry. Retroviral particles containing either B7-H3 or CD19 CAR-expressing virus were transduced into T cells derived from peripheral blood mononuclear cells isolated from healthy human donor blood to prepare CAR-T cells. Animal bioluminescent imaging was used to evaluate the killing effect of CAR-T cells on chordoma cells in vivo. An irradiator was used for all irradiation (IR) experiments. The combination of B7-H3 CAR-T cell therapy and IR has a greater killing effect on killing radiation-resistant CCSCs and bulk chordoma cells compared with CAR-T cell or IR monotherapy. Additionally,increased expression of B7-H3 antigens on CCSCs and bulk tumor cells is associated with enhanced CAR-T cell killing in vitro and in vivo xenograft mouse models. Upregulation of B7-H3 expression by IR increases CCSCs sensitivity to B7-H3 CAR-T cell-mediated killing. Our preliminary data show that IR and B7-H3 CAR-T cell therapy is synergistically more effective than either IR or CAR-T cell monotherapy in killing chordoma cells in vitro and in a xenograft mouse model. These results provide preclinical evidence for further developing this combinatorial RT and B7-H3 CAR-T cell therapy model in chordoma
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M. B. Mahmoud et al. (Jan 2025)
Scientific Reports 15
Multifactorial approach is needed to unravel the maturation phases of human neurons derived from induced pluripotent stem cells
Neurons derived from induced pluripotent stem cells (h-iPSC-Ns) provide an invaluable model for studying the physiological aspects of human neuronal development under healthy and pathological conditions. However,multiple studies have demonstrated that h-iPSC-Ns exhibit a high degree of functional and epigenetic diversity. Due to the imprecise characterization and significant variation among the currently available maturation protocols,it is essential to establish a set of criteria to standardize models and accurately characterize and define the developmental properties of human neurons derived from iPSCs. In this study,we conducted comprehensive cellular and network level analysis of the functional development of human neurons,generated from iPSCs obtained from healthy young female peripheral blood mononuclear cells by BDNF and GDNF treatment. We provide a thorough description of the maturation process of h-iPSC-Ns over a 10-week in vitro period using conventional whole-cell patch clamp and dynamic clamp techniques,alongside with morphometry and immunocytochemistry. Additionally,we utilized calcium imaging to monitor the progression of synaptic activity and network communication. At the single cell level,human neurons exhibited gradually decreasing membrane resistance in parallel with improved excitability. By the fifth week of maturation,firing profiles were consistent with those of mature regular firing type of neurons. At the network level,fast glutamatergic and depolarizing GABAergic synaptic connections were abundant together with synchronized network activity from the sixth week of maturation. Alterations in the expression of GABA A receptor subunits were also observed during the process of maturation. The sequence of differentiation events was consistent,providing a robust temporal framework to execute experiments at defined stages of neuronal maturation as well as to use a specific set of experiments to assess a culture’s maturation. The uncovered progression of differentiation events provides a powerful tool to aid the planning and designing of targeted experiments during defined stages of neuronal maturation.
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L. Castagnoli et al. (Jan 2025)
Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research : CR 44
CD36 enrichment in HER2-positive mesenchymal stem cells drives therapy refractoriness in breast cancer
Growing evidence shows that the reprogramming of fatty acid (FA) metabolism plays a key role in HER2-positive (HER2 +) breast cancer (BC) aggressiveness,therapy resistance and cancer stemness. In particular,HER2 + BC has been defined as a "lipogenic disease" due to the functional and bi-directional crosstalk occurring between HER2-mediated oncogenic signaling and FA biosynthesis via FA synthase activity. In this context,the functional role exerted by the reprogramming of CD36-mediated FA uptake in HER2 + BC poor prognosis and therapy resistance remains unclear. In this study,we aimed to elucidate whether enhanced CD36 in mesenchymal HER2 + cancer stem cells (CSCs) is directly involved in anti-HER2 treatment refractoriness in HER2 + BC and to design future metabolism-based approaches targeting both FA reprogramming and the “root” of cancer. Molecular,biological and functional characterization of CD36-mediated FA uptake was investigated in HER2 + BC patients,cell lines,epithelial and mesenchymal CSCs. Cell proliferation was analyzed by SRB assay upon treatment with lapatinib,CD36 inhibitor,or Wnt antagonist/agonist. Engineered cell models were generated via lentivirus infection and transient silencing. CSC-like properties and tumorigenesis of HER2 + BC cells with or without CD36 depletion were examined by mammosphere forming efficiency assay,flow cytometry,cell sorting,ALDH activity assay and xenograft mouse model. FA uptake was examined by flow cytometry with FA BODIPY FL C16. Intratumor expression of CSC subsets was evaluated via multiplex immunostaining and immunolocalization analysis. Molecular data demonstrated that CD36 is significantly upmodulated on treatment in therapy resistant HER2 + BC patients and its expression levels in BC cells is correlated with FA uptake. We provided evidence of a consistent enrichment of CD36 in HER2 + epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT)-like CSCs from all tested resistant cell models that mechanistically occurs via Wnt signaling pathway activation. Consistently,both in vitro and in vivo dual blockade of CD36 and HER2 increased the anti-CSC efficacy of anti-HER2 drugs favoring the transition of the therapy resistant mesenchymal CSCs into therapy-sensitive mesenchymal-epithelial transition (MET)-like epithelial state. In addition,expression of CD36 in intratumor HER2 + mesenchymal CSCs is significantly associated with resistance to trastuzumab in HER2 + BC patients. These results support the metabolo-oncogenic nature of CD36-mediated FA uptake in HER2 + therapy-refractory BC. Our study provides evidence that targeting CD36 might be an effective metabolic therapeutic strategy in the treatment of this malignancy. The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s13046-025-03276-z.
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T. Y. Bowley et al. (Feb 2025)
Cancer Research Communications 5 2
A Melanoma Brain Metastasis CTC Signature and CTC:B-cell Clusters Associate with Secondary Liver Metastasis: A Melanoma Brain–Liver Metastasis Axis
Melanoma brain metastasis is linked to dismal prognosis and low overall survival and is detected in up to 80% of patients at autopsy. Circulating tumor cells (CTC) are the smallest functional units of cancer and precursors of fatal metastasis. We previously used an unbiased multilevel approach to discover a unique ribosomal protein large/small subunit (RPL/RPS) CTC gene signature associated with melanoma brain metastasis. In this study,we hypothesized that CTC-driven melanoma brain metastasis secondary metastasis (“metastasis of metastasis” per clinical scenarios) has targeted organ specificity for the liver. We injected parallel cohorts of immunodeficient and newly developed humanized NBSGW (huNBSGW) mice with cells from CTC-derived melanoma brain metastasis to identify secondary metastatic patterns. We found the presence of a melanoma brain–liver metastasis axis in huNBSGW mice. Furthermore,RNA sequencing analysis of tissues showed a significant upregulation of the RPL/RPS CTC gene signature linked to metastatic spread to the liver. Additional RNA sequencing of CTCs from huNBSGW blood revealed extensive CTC clustering with human B cells in these mice. CTC:B-cell clusters were also upregulated in the blood of patients with primary melanoma and maintained either in CTC-driven melanoma brain metastasis or melanoma brain metastasis CTC–derived cells promoting liver metastasis. CTC-generated tumor tissues were interrogated at single-cell gene and protein expression levels (10x Genomics Xenium and HALO spatial biology platforms,respectively). Collectively,our findings suggest that heterotypic CTC:B-cell interactions can be critical at multiple stages of metastasis. This study provides important insights into the relevance of prometastatic CTC:B-cell clusters in melanoma progression,extends the importance of the CTC RPL/RPS gene signature beyond primary metastasis/melanoma brain metastasis driving targeted organ specificity for liver metastasis (“metastasis of metastasis”),and identifies new targets for clinical melanoma metastasis therapies.
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Y. Dong et al. (Jan 2025)
Journal of Translational Medicine 23 1
PRDX2 induces tumor immune evasion by modulating the HDAC3-Galectin-9 axis in lung adenocarcinoma cells
PRDX2 is significantly expressed in various cancers and is associated with the proliferation of tumor cells. Nonetheless,the precise mechanism of PRDX2 in tumor immunity remains incompletely understood. This study aims to investigate the impact of PRDX2,which is highly expressed in lung adenocarcinoma,on T cells in the tumor immune microenvironment,and its immune action target to promote the immune escape of lung cancer cells,to provide a theoretical basis for lung adenocarcinoma treatment with PRDX2 as the target. Mouse animal models to verify the effect of Conoidin A treatment on tumor growth and T cell infiltration. Flow cytometry and Western blot verified tumor cell apoptosis in the in vitro co-culture system as well as granzyme B and perforin expression in T cells. RNA-Seq was used to obtain the downstream immune molecule. si-RNA knockdown of Galectin-9 was co-cultured with T cells in vitro. Immunofluorescence and Western blot verified that PRDX2 regulates Galectin-9 expression through HDAC3. PRDX2 expression was negatively correlated with CD8 + T cell expression in LUAD patients. Inhibition of PRDX2 significantly enhanced T-cell killing of LUAD cells and reduced tumor load in both in vitro and in vivo models. Mechanistically,Conoidin A or shRNA_PRDX2 decreased Galectin-9 expression by down-regulating the phosphorylation of HDAC3,consequently enhancing the infiltration and function of CD8 + T cells. This study reveals the role of the PRDX2/HDAC3/Galectin-9 axis in LUAD immune escape and indicates Galectin-9 as a promising target for immunotherapy. The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12967-024-05888-z.
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