TopicNeuroscience

inflammatory bowel disease

Content Overview
5Total items
3Grants
2Seminars

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GrantNeuroscience

The role of endogenous chimeric mRNA encoded GasderminD fusion proteins in immunity

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
May 31, 2031

Project Summary: Programmed inflammatory cell death, or pyroptosis, is a crucial innate defense mechanism that protects hosts against infection and orchestrates subsequent immune responses. Central to this process is Gasdermin D (GSDMD), a protein that forms plasma membrane pores upon activation, enabling the release of pro- inflammatory cytokines such as IL-1β and driving cell lysis. Although GSDMD-mediated pyroptosis has been conventionally understood to be controlled mainly at the post-translational level, through proteolytic cleavage by inflammatory caspases, we have discovered compelling evidence that alternative RNA processing may introduce additional, previously unappreciated complexity in GSDMD regulation. Our laboratories have developed and optimized a highly innovative long-read direct RNA sequencing pipeline, which bypasses conventional cDNA synthesis to avoid artifacts and enables unbiased discovery of native chimeric mRNA (chRNA) in mammalian cells. Using this approach, we have uncovered a remarkably diverse repertoire of chRNA species, including over a thousand unique fusions in murine macrophages and more than two thousand in human inflamed tissues. Among the chRNA found in mice, we identified a chRNA joining the effector domain of GSDMD with a novel C-terminal region encoded by Tmem106a, giving rise to the GSDMD:TMEM106A fusion protein. Functional studies demonstrate that GSDMD:TMEM106A is not only produced in response to inflammatory signals in macrophages but is critical for GSDMD-dependent cytokine release and optimal pyroptosis. Genetic loss of GSDMD:TMEM106A in mice results in reduced cytokine secretion and increased susceptibility to bacterial infection, while in vivo delivery of Gsdmd:Tmem106a mRNA is sufficient for protective immunity. Intriguingly, we have also identified a putative human counterpart, GSDMD:S100A6, which is highly inducible in colon biopsies from patients with inflammatory bowel disease. In this application, we propose a comprehensive exploration of this newly defined class of naturally occurring GSDMD fusion proteins. The specific aims are: (1) to elucidate the subcellular localization, protein-protein interactions, and pore-forming function of GSDMD:TMEM106A during canonical and non-canonical inflammasome activation; (2) to determine the transcriptomic, proteomic, and physiological consequences of GSDMD chRNA expression in vivo during infection, sepsis, and inflammatory disease, and to validate and functionally characterize GSDMD:S100A6 in relevant immune and barrier cell populations. Collectively, this work will establish chimeric splicing as a fundamental source of immunoregulatory protein diversity, redefining the landscape of cell death control in the immune system. By revealing new layers of gasdermin regulation and function, our studies have the potential to identify novel therapeutic strategies for infectious, auto-inflammatory, and immune-mediated diseases.

GrantNeuroscience

Mechanisms of Commensal- Specific CD8+ T Cell Differentiation, Restraint and Dysregulation in Intestinal Inflammation

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
May 31, 2031

PROJECT SUMMARY Our understanding of immunity largely stems from models of infection with pathogenic microbes. However, the vast majority of microbial-immune encounters occur as a symbiotic relationship with the commensal microbiota. Recently, the contribution of commensal-specific T cells to host physiology has received significant attention. These commensal-specific responses not only control microbiota containment but also promote immune tolerance within the gastrointestinal tract. While commensal-specific CD4+ T cell responses in the lamina propria have dominated models of mucosal immune regulation, these are vastly outnumbered by CD8+ intraepithelial lymphocytes within the epithelium. How CD8+ T cell responses to gut microbiota are primed, differentiate and function under homeostasis has not been addressed. Conversely, aberrant immunity to commensal microbes has been proposed to underlie pathologies of barrier tissues, including inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), where commensal-specific T cells accumulate in blood and intestinal tissues of afflicted patients. A better understanding of the properties and functions of commensal-specific T cell responses is therefore fundamental to studies of tissue immunity in health and disease. Our long term goal is to better understand how commensal-specific T cell responses contribute to barrier tissue homeostasis, and the objective in this application is to investigate the mechanisms regulating induction of commensal-specific CD8+ T cells in homeostasis and how they become dysregulated in IBD. Our rationale for the proposed work is that uncovering these mechanisms has the potential to translate into new therapeutic approaches. Our central hypothesis is that commensal-specific CD8+ T cells develop as functionally restrained intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL) under homeostasis, but that perturbation of local immune regulation within the intestinal epithelium, in the case of patients with ulcerative colitis, by autoantibody-mediated blockade of integrin avb6 results in aberrant CD8+ effector T cell responses in IBD. Based on strong preliminary data, we will test three specific aims: (1) Determine key antigen-presenting cells (APC) priming SFB-specific CD8⍺β+ IEL. (2) Identify how cell-intrinsic pathways drive differentiation, maintenance and restraint of SFB-specific CD8⍺β+ pIEL. (3) Determine how pathogenic KLRG1+Eomes+ CD8+ T cells arise and contribute to inflammation in murine models of ulcerative colitis Our approach is innovative as it investigates new mechanisms of immunity unique to commensal-specific CD8+ T cell responses. The proposed work is significant because it will establish new insights into the interaction and communication between commensal microbes and immune cells in the gut environment and identify potential targets for therapeutic intervention in conditions of chronic intestinal inflammation.

GrantNeuroscience

Integrins α4β7 in Leukocyte Rolling in Shear Flow, Firm Adhesion, and Therapy

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
May 31, 2031

Abstract. Integrin α4β7 facilitates leukocyte migration to sites of infection and autoimmune disease, making it an important therapeutic target for ulcerative colitis and Crohns disease. However, the currently approved antibody drug vedolizumab targeting α4β7 has limited efficacy. This proposal seeks mechanistic understanding of how α4β7 mediates rolling and firm adhesion of leukocytes during extravasation as well as how therapeutically relevant antibodies modulate α4β7 function to improve drug design. Unlike most integrins, α4β7 mediates rolling adhesion on its ligand MAdCAM. α4β7 can also mediate firm adhesion like α5β1. Integrins typically equilibrate between two low-affinity closed conformations and a high-affinity open conformation. Ligand binding is intimately coordinated with conformational change. During rolling adhesion, receptor-ligand bonds must rapidly form beneath rolling cells as cells are torqued by shear flow onto the substrate. Bonds must also rapidly dissociate at the upstream tethers to the substrate due to hydrodynamic force applied to the cell. To enable their function in rolling adhesion, we hypothesize that α4β7 ligand binding and dissociation and conformational change kinetics are faster than those of other integrins like α5β1 and that α4β7's pathways for conformational change may also differ. We propose that activation of the actin cytoskeleton in the transition from rolling to firm adhesion stabilizes α4β7 in a high-affinity state. Aim 1 will determine high-resolution structures of unliganded α4β7 and its complexes with MAdCAM or medically relevant antibodies using cryo- EM. These structures will reveal how these integrins recognize their ligands, the conformational changes due to ligand binding, and potential structural specializations that enable α4β7 to mediate rolling adhesion. The binding epitopes and conformational specificities of activating antibodies to the β7 subunit will also be defined. The structure of α4β7 bound to vedolizumab will resolve the contention around how it blocks MAdCAM binding. Aim 2 will quantitatively define the mechanisms by which α4β7 mediates both rolling and firm adhesion to improve therapies for inflammatory bowel diseases. Ligand affinity and binding kinetics of α4β7 stabilized in different conformations will be measured as well as single-molecule conformational change rates when bound and unbound to ligand. The effect of mutations that stabilize rolling or firm adhesion will be used to identify parameters important for each adhesion type. The tensile force and bond lifetimes during rolling and firm adhesion will be quantified at the single-molecule level. Together, our studies will enhance our structural, biochemical, and mechanical understanding of α4β7-mediated rolling and firm adhesion and will provide structural and functional information that can be utilized in the development of more effective therapies for inflammatory bowel diseases and multiple myeloma.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Immune regulation by fungal strain diversity in inflammatory bowel disease

Xin Li
UT Southwestern Medical Center
Feb 23, 2023
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

How can we treat visceral pain?

David Bulmer
Department of Pharmacology, University of Cambridge
Nov 29, 2022

Chronic pain is a leading cause of morbidity, common to patients with gastrointestinal diseases such as irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Most pain killers are largely ineffective against this type of pain or restricted for use in these patients due to gut related complications and risk of addition. A significant unmet clinical need therefore exists to develop novel non-opioid based visceral analgesics.

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