Latest
The role of GPR132 in regulating T cell responses in infection and cancer
PROJECT SUMMARY. CD8 T cells play a critical role in protection from a variety of infectious microorganisms, and pathogen-specific CD8 T cells undergo robust expansion, with an individual T cell clones expanding up to 10,000-fold in a matter of days. After infection is resolved, the majority of these T cells die, leaving a small population of memory cells to provide protective immunity from secondary challenge. T cell expansion and contraction are tightly orchestrated processes that involve a delicate balance between stimulatory and inhibitory signals to ensure proper immune function. Dysregulation of the T cell response can have detrimental effects; too little proliferation and the host fails to mount a successful immune response, while excessive proliferation and persistence of effector T cell populations can lead to tissue damage. This proposal aims to determine the role of the G protein coupled receptor GPR132 in the regulation of CD8 T cell responses during infection and tumorigenesis. GPR132 detects oxidized endogenous and microbial lipids, and this can lead to cell cycle arrest; however, the role of GPR132 in CD8 T cells remains unexplored. Here we identify GPR132 as a critical regulator of CD8 T cell expansion and memory differentiation. Completion of the proposed aims will: 1) uncover the temporal role of GPR132 in regulating T cell accumulation and function during infection and tumorigenesis, 2) examine the abundance of GPR132-activating ligands within the tissue during health and disease, and 3) determine how altering GPR132 ligand availability could be used to enhance/inhibit T cell responses. Overall, these studies will provide fundamental insights into the regulatory mechanisms that dictate the magnitude of T cell responses and how they can be modulated therapeutically, which would allow us to boost responses to pathogens/tumors or inhibit pathogenic responses in the context of autoimmune disease.
Overcoming Treatment Resistance by Targeting Polyploid Breast Cancer Cells with AI assisted Single-Cell Analysis
Therapy resistance remains a formidable challenge in breast cancer treatment, with emerging evidence identifying polyploid giant cancer cells (PGCCs) as key drivers. These cells, arising through whole-genome doubling (WGD) events, exhibit enhanced resistance to therapies, contributing to disease relapse. PGCCs are characterized by enlarged cell and nuclear sizes, increased DNA content, and greater resilience compared to non-PGCCs. Their prevalence escalates with disease progression and therapeutic stress, underscoring their critical role in treatment resistance. As such, we hypothesize that inhibiting polyploid cancer cells can effectively reduce therapeutic resistance. Despite this, effective strategies targeting PGCCs are limited, hindered by the lack of high-throughput methods to assess PGCC viability and abundance. Traditional screening assays lack the sensitivity to detect the elimination of small populations of PGCCs, while current detection methods, such as visual inspection and flow cytometry, are not suited for high-throughput compound screening. Our preliminary work has established a high-throughput single-cell morphological analysis pipeline capable of quantifying PGCCs, and we successfully screened 2,726 compounds for their efficacy on PGCCs. Based on the preliminary success, we aim to further improve its robustness and accuracy under diverse staining and imaging conditions, ensuring consistent performance across multiple labs for widespread use in PGCC/WGD studies, with deep learning to accelerate the discovery of therapeutic strategies targeting PGCCs. In addition to empirical screening, our scRNA-Seq analysis of PGCCs has revealed altered gene expression, particularly in genes associated with FOXM1, a transcription factor critical in cell cycle regulation and linked to poor outcomes in various cancers. PGCCs also show altered ferroptosis regulators and elevated reactive oxygen species (ROS), indicating susceptibility to ferroptosis. Here, we propose two independent and complementary aims. Aim 1: We will develop and validate a robust deep learning–based single-cell morphological analysis pipeline for accurate PGCC/non-PGCC discrimination across variable staining, imaging, and lab settings. The model will be benchmarked on independent datasets from external labs and released as open-source, version-controlled software with full documentation to support reproducibility and broad adoption in PGCC/WGD research. Aim 2: Leveraging our screen of 2,726 FDA-approved compounds and mechanistic studies of FOXM1 and ferroptosis, we will prioritize and validate therapies that eradicate PGCCs and reduce treatment resistance. Using patient- derived cells, 3D spheroids, and syngeneic/xenograft models, we will rigorously assess top candidates as monotherapy and in combination with standard-of-care agents. Successful completion of this project will accelerate PGCC/WGD research, advance therapeutic strategies to overcome breast cancer resistance, and especially deliver benefits to patients with high PGCC burden. Given the prevalence of WGD across solid tumors and its induction by standard therapies, our approach holds broad clinical relevance and translational impact.
Primary cilia protein IFT88 governs smooth muscle phenotype and vascular remodeling
Project Summary/Abstract Cardiovascular disease remains the leading cause of death in the United States, accounting for nearly 1 million deaths in 2022. Vascular diseases such as atherosclerosis, aneurysm, and coronary artery disease are regulated largely by smooth muscle cells (SMCs) residing in the blood vessel wall. The central dogma of vascular SMC biology is that differentiated cells can de-differentiate and give rise to a spectrum of alternative phenotypes promoting invasion, proliferation, fibrosis, and inflammation, but the mechanisms regulating SMC phenotypic transitions are poorly understood. Intraflagellar transport 88 (IFT88) is an essential protein for the formation of primary cilia, centriole-associated plasma membrane organelles that project into the extracellular milieu and regulate cell cycle reentry and responses to stimuli like growth factors and mechanical strain. Non- ciliary functions of IFT88 also include progression of the cell cycle checkpoint and polarized motility, both of which are functionally critical for SMC-mediated vascular remodeling. Little is known about the functional role of the primary cilia in SMCs and the role of the essential cilia protein IFT88 in regulating SMC phenotype. To address this gap in knowledge, my postdoctoral studies focus on the role of IFT88 in the context of intimal hyperplasia (K99). During the independent phase (R00), I will apply these findings to arteriovenous fistula (AVF) maturation, a surgical intervention often required for dialysis individuals with polycystic kidney disease (PKD), an IFT88 loss-of-function disease. I will test my central hypothesis that cilia are key regulators of SMC phenotype in three Specific Aims: 1) determine the role of IFT88-dependent SMC primary cilia in mechanotransduction of extracellular matrix (ECM) stiffness (K99), 2) determine the role of IFT88 in pathological intimal hyperplasia (K99), and 3) test whether SMC IFT88 expression is required for adaptive remodeling of grafted veins following AVF placement (R00). Overall, we propose that IFT88+ ciliated SMC represent an unidentified subclass of the SMC phenotype spectrum that is primarily responsible for vascular remodeling and is an attractive potential target for treatment of vascular diseases. Building on strong existing collaborations, we have formed a research and mentoring team with expertise in SMC pathophysiology, primary cilia biology, mechanobiology, AVF surgery, and PKD to complete the proposed aims. The additional training in cell-ECM interactions (Aim 1, K99), in vivo murine ligation injury and in vivo cilia imaging (Aim 2, K99), and AVF surgery and PKD pathology (Aim 3, R00) will be indispensable for preparing the PI, Dr. O’Brien, for his career as an independent investigator. Completion of the proposed aims will also contribute directly to an understanding of the function of IFT88-dependent primary cilia in SMCs and may likely identify novel therapeutic targets for treatment of vascular diseases.
The multiciliation cycle: a variant cell cycle coordinating centriole biogenesis and ciliogenesis
Project summary/Abstract Differentiating multiciliated cells line the mammalian airway and are critical for protecting the lungs from inhaled pathogens and particulates. Multiciliated cells have a distinct architecture from other cell types, having hundreds of centrioles, each of which matures into a basal body and nucleates a motile cilium. Defects in multiciliation cause a form of Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia (PCD), a lung disease. Most cells generate two centrioles and one cilium per cell cycle. We found that differentiating multiciliated cells redeploy cell cycle regulators into a novel cell cycle variant, which we refer to as the multiciliation cycle, to break these rules, generate hundreds of centrioles and cilia, and coordinate their differentiation. The multiciliation cycle redeploys many mitotic cell cycle regulators, including cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) and their cognate cyclins. For example, Cyclin D1-CDK4/6, regulators of mitotic G1 to S progression, is required for multiciliated cell fate initiation and entry into the multiciliation cycle. While we have focused on lung multiciliated cells, others have found that cell cycle regulators similarly participate in multiciliation of ependymal cells of the brain. Some cells, such as mammalian trophoblast giant cells, employ cell cycle variants like the endocycle to bypass mitosis. We propose that the multiciliation cycle is another cell cycle variant that augments some aspects of the canonical cell cycle, such as centriole synthesis, and blocks others, such as DNA replication. During the multiciliation cycle, E2F7, a transcriptional regulator of canonical S to G2 progression, is expressed at high levels. During multiciliated cell differentiation, E2F7 directly dampens expression of genes encoding DNA replication machinery and terminates the S phase-like gene expression program. Loss of E2F7 causes a reacquisition of DNA synthesis in multiciliated cells and dysregulation of multiciliation cycle progression, disrupting centriole maturation and ciliogenesis. We propose that multiciliated cell differentiation is coordinated by an alternative cell cycle that organizes, instead of cell proliferation, the steps of cell differentiation. In this project, we investigate how the multiciliation cycle redeploys the mitotic cell cycle regulatory framework to generate many centrioles without undergoing DNA synthesis or cytokinesis. More specifically, we seek to uncover how CDKs and cyclins are regulated to control the amount and timing of basal body synthesis, how Retinoblastoma (RB) protein controls the transcriptional program of multiciliation, and how E2Fs advance the multiciliation cycle. This work will test the hypothesis that multiciliation is organized by a variant cell cycle that uncouples centriole synthesis from DNA replication and mitosis. We propose that his variant cell cycle orchestrates progression through sequential phases required to construct the multiciliated cells that protect the lungs.
Altered subcellular mechanisms and cell cycle in Eml1 mutant neuronal progenitors : primary events leading to a cortical malformation
Add content
Have a seminar, talk, or paper on Cell Cycle? Post it so others working in this area can find it.
Post content