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HIV-1 Matrix and Envelope Protein Interactions
It is important to characterize how HIV-1 proteins fulfill their functions in order to develop new approaches for curtailing the AIDS epidemic. One of the remaining frontiers of HIV-1 research concerns the mechanisms by which the HIV-1 matrix (MA) and envelope (Env) proteins collaborate with each other to ensure the assembly of infectious viruses. The HIV-1 MA protein directs the delivery of precursor Gag (PrGag) proteins to the plasma membranes (PMs) of infected cells, and drives the formation of lipid raft-like, liquid ordered (Lo) membrane domains. This membrane reorganization attracts a number of proteins that favor lipid raft-type microdomains. Such proteins appear to assemble into virus particles as innocent bystanders, and this appears to be how Env proteins that carry cytoplasmic tail deletions (CT) can be incorporated into virions. In contrast, wild type (WT) Env proteins additionally require an interaction with MA proteins to assemble into viruses. This is most easily understood in the context of the lattice that MA proteins construct at the PMs of infected cells. In particular, multiple lines of evidence imply that the CTs of WT Env proteins are trapped by MA lattices in immature, assembling virus particles, and then are released after assembled viruses are processed into their mature forms. Despite a seeming consensus on the MA-Env interaction steps, there are a number of very significant unknowns. Using our recent and preliminary results as a foundation, and taking advantage of the unique expertise of our collaborators, we propose the characterization of WT and mutant MA lattices, and of interactions of MA and Env with each other, and with membrane lipids. Our results will help clarify how MA and Env cooperate; they will illuminate aspects of host cell protein-membrane interactions; and they will foster the development of new approaches to intefere with HIV-1 replication.
Borrelia burgdorferi genotypic diversity, pathogenesis, and host cellular responses
PROJECT SUMMARY Lyme disease is the most common tick-borne illness in the United States, with an estimated 476,000 cases annually, and Pennsylvania (PA) consistently reports one of the highest case numbers nationwide. Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto (Bb) is a causative agent of Lyme disease in the US and is transmitted by Ixodes spp. ticks. Bb produces various outer surface proteins (Osp) and other mechanisms to survive in vectors, evade host immune systems, and to propagate infection within a host. Over 35 OspC genotypes have been characterized, which fluctuate in abundance in natural vector and host populations, suggesting host adaptation. While many Lyme-infected patients recover following antibiotic treatment, some may experience neurological symptoms, Lyme neuroborreliosis (LNB), which may be associated with specific genotypes. While previous studies focused on clinical manifestations, pathogenicity, genetic variations, and host immune responses using mouse models or patient samples, the genotype-specific immune responses that contribute to disease progression in humans remain poorly understood. Our central hypothesis is that certain Bb OspC genotypes, maintained in natural populations, are associated with distinct host immune responses that influence disease severity, progression, and persistence. Aim 1 will define the dynamics of OspC genotypes in tick and small mammal populations over time in Western PA to establish a 16-year longitudinal tick study and an 8-year longitudinal small mammal study. Using deep amplicon sequencing, we will quantify genotype diversity, detect low-abundance genotypes, and identify potential host-adapted genotypes. These empirical data will inform a compartmental mathematical model to evaluate OspC genotype prevalence, distribution, and public health risks, including LNB, across space and time. Aim 2 will assess how distinct Bb OspC genotypes affect the host immune landscape and cellular responses using human samples. To determine how Bb genotype contributes to disease phenotype, we will perform immune profiling studies which will include microscopy-based assessment of infected cell cultures, flow cytometric analysis of immune cell phenotypes, and measurement of genotype-specific cytokine, chemokine, and antigen production (sub-Aim2a). We will also employ multi-omics approaches that integrate single cell RNA sequencing with antibody-based protein profiling (scRNA-seq/Ab-seq) to characterize transcriptional and functional changes in immune cell populations exposed to different Bb genotypes (sub-Aim2b). This work is innovative in its integration of long-term ecological data with advanced immune profiling and single cell multi- omics to uncover genotype-specific mechanisms of Bb pathogenicity and human immune response—an approach not previously applied in Lyme disease research. These studies will clarify how specific genotypes influence immune responses and disease severity. Together, the proposed aims will identify critical genetic and immunological mechanisms that drive Bb pathogenicity and human susceptibility, informing the development of improved diagnostics, targeted therapies, and public health interventions to reduce the burden of Lyme disease.
Modulating the Action of Cylindrical Proteases to Eliminate Neisseria Gonorrhea and Chlamydia Trachomatis Infections
Project Summary/Abstract Sexually transmitted bacteria diseases caused by Chlamydia trachomatis (Ctr) and Neisseria gonorrhoeae (NG) are the two most common sexually transmitted bacterial diseases. The infections caused by these pathogens may result in infertility, ectopic pregnancy, blindness, and perinatal mortality. Over 1.70 M cases of chlamydia and 0.65 M cases of drug-resistant gonorrhea are reported yearly in the US. Women with gonorrhea are co- infected with chlamydia in 17.6%–57.9% of cases, while women with chlamydia are co-infected with gonorrhea in 2.1%–17.2% of cases. These infections are treated with broad spectrum antibiotics, which can favor the development of resistance on NG/CTr but also in other bacteria, or damage the microbiota, diminishing its protective function and allowing bacteria and viruses to infect the patient. The Caseinolytic protease (ClpP) proteolytic machinery regulates protein turnover and homeostasis and is key in bacterial growth and development The machinery consists of the proteolytic unit (the ClpP) and its chaperone (ClpX), which transports proteins to be degraded, and it is termed the ClpXP. Our theory is that molecules that inhibit the action of the ClpX chaperone can become efficient antibacterial agents against both pathogens. We have found that the dihydrothiazepines can erradicate both pathogens and prevent the action of the ClpXP complex. Our goal is to advance the dihydrothiazepines as selective agents against Ctr and NG infections. To develop these therapeutic agents, we have envisioned four specific aims. Specific Aim 1. Synthesis and Optimization of the Pharmacophore. Our goal is to use computational models to design dihydrothiazepines molecule that will be synthesized, purified, and characterized using chemical techniques. The molecules will be tested against Ctr and NG and their toxicity against human cells evaluated. Also, we will determine their effect in other bacterial, including those from the microbiota. Specific Aim 2. Assessment of Stability and In Vivo Activity. We will study the stability of the most active molecules under various conditions. Then, we will study the pharmacokinetics, biodistribution , and antibacterial activity against Ctr and NG in mice. Specific Aim 3. Target Validation and Effect. We will study the ability of the compounds to inhibit the activity of ClpX using a luciferase assay and to block protein degradation. We will try grow crystal of the protein and the molecule and will study if the molecules prevent the assembly of the ClpXP system. Finally, we will assess the ability of the bacteria to develop resistance to the molecules.
Calcium signaling in MR1-dependent presentation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis antigens
Project Summary The fundamental role of the immune system is to detect self from non-self. The detection and elimination of microbial infection is critical for human survival. One challenge to the immune system is infection from an intracellular microbe because the microbe masks its presence in a host cell. One strategy of the immune system to detect microbes is the sampling of different kinds of antigens, such as peptides, lipids and glycolipids, by antigen presenting molecules. A fundamentally unique arm of the immune system is MR1, which is an antigen presenting molecule that is intracellular, ubiquitously expressed across tissues, and detects small molecules derived from microbial metabolism. These features suggest that MR1 is poised to detect intracellular microbes. MR1 presents antigens to MR1-restricted T cells. These T cells are highly prevalent in the lungs and can kill infected cells. Because MR1 presents small molecule antigens and adopts an intracellular distribution, the mechanisms governing MR1 sampling of the intracellular environment are distinct from other antigen presenting molecules. These mechanisms remain unknown. Our over-arching hypothesis is that intracellular calcium signaling is important for MR1 antigen presentation. We use Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) as a model for intracellular infection and have identified calcium-sensitive trafficking proteins and calcium channels important for MR1 antigen presentation. Aim 1 of this study will determine the mechanism of two-pore channel 1 in MR1- dependent antigen presentation, with a focus on endoplasmic reticulum-endosome contact sites. Aim 2 will determine the role of specific calcium-sensitive Synaptotagmins and their binding partners. Aim 3 will determine the mechanism behind augmented MR1 antigen presentation following modulation of the of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator. Successful completion of these Aims has the potential to lead to new MR1-based immunotherapies.
Structural and functional characterization of autoimmune antibodies against NMDAR
Project Summary. The goal of this project is to understand the origins and molecular mechanisms underlying the anti-cancer autoimmune response against the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) and its correlation with anti-N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor autoimmune encephalitis (NMDARAE). While anti-cancer immune responses can promote tumor elimination, they may also lead to the production of self-reactive antibodies that trigger autoimmune diseases. NMDARAE is the most common form of immune-mediated encephalitis, which results in prominent neuropsychiatric symptoms, including seizures, psychosis, and memory deficits. NMDARs belong to a family of ligand-gated ion channels expressed exclusively in the central nervous system. They are involved in various aspects of brain development and function, including learning and memory. They respond to the neurotransmitter glutamate and a co-agonist, glycine or D-serine, to mediate excitatory neurotransmission, which plays a central role in synaptic plasticity. NMDARAE is associated with ovarian teratomas, where aberrant NMDAR expression is believed to trigger an autoimmune response. In NMDARAE, anti-NMDAR antibodies, as well as B cells and antibody-secreting cells, cross the blood-brain barrier via unknown mechanisms, resulting in the presence of anti-NMDAR antibodies at high titers within the brain and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). These antibodies target NMDARs, modulating their function and contributing to disease pathology. Emerging evidence, supported by our preliminary data, suggests that NMDARs are also expressed in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), extending the relevance of anti-NMDAR autoimmunity beyond ovarian teratomas. In our TNBC mouse model, which ectopically expresses NMDARs (TNBC-NMDAR), we observed the onset of anti-NMDAR autoimmunity, where the produced antibodies cause both anti-tumor activity and symptoms such as lowered seizure threshold, mirroring key features of NMDARAE. Here, we will establish this TNBC mouse model as we develop molecular methods to characterize it. Aim 1 will focus on establishing and characterizing the TNBC- NMDAR mouse model. We will develop a detection method utilizing the intact tetrameric NMDAR channel proteins and a method to isolate B cells expressing B cell receptors against NMDAR from biological samples by using fluorescently labeled intact NMDAR proteins, followed by single-cell RNA sequencing. Aim 2 will utilize single-particle cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) to investigate the interactions between NMDAR and the cloned antibodies, providing insights into epitope recognition, NMDAR subtype specificity, and conformational changes induced by antibody binding. Aim 3 will assess the impact of the cloned antibodies on NMDAR channel activity using electrophysiology. We will also assess anti-tumor activity and NMDARAE onset by each antibody clone. Together, the proposed research will gain insights into the link between anti-cancer anti-NMDAR autoimmunity and NMDARAE. It will also elucidate which functional properties of the cloned antibodies promote anti-tumor activity while contributing to NMDARAE, thereby informing potential therapeutic strategies.
Cartilage targeting exosomes for OA gene therapy and pain treatment
Project Summary Gene therapy has the potential to facilitate targeted expression of therapeutic proteins to promote cartilage regeneration in osteoarthritis (OA). The dense, avascular, aggrecan-glycosaminoglycan rich negatively charged cartilage, however, hinders their transport to reach chondrocytes in effective doses. While viral vector mediated gene delivery has shown promise, concerns over immunogenicity and tumorigenic side-effects persist. To address this, we have developed surface-modified cartilage-targeting MSC exosomes as non-viral carriers for gene therapy. MSC derived exosomes have intrinsic therapeutic potential as they can induce cartilage repair and are non-immunogenic, making them desirable for gene delivery. We have engineered charge-reversed cationic exosomes by anchoring cartilage targeting optimally charged arginine-rich cationic peptide (CPC) motifs into the anionic exosome bilayer (Exo-CPC) by using buffer pH as a charge-reversal switch. Exo-CPC use charge interactions to penetrate through the full thickness of arthritic cartilage (close to tidemark) and deliver the packaged genetic material cargo to chondrocytes residing in the deep tissue layers while native anionic exosomes cannot. They can also bind within the synovial joint, making them effective for OA pain relief gene therapy. Here we will engineer charge-reversed Exo-CPC for delivery of IL-1RA (receptor antagonist of interleukin-1) mRNA and NaV1.8 (voltage gated sodium channel 1.8) inhibitor siRNA to stimulate both disease modifying response and long-term pain relief with a one-time intra-articular dose. IL-1RA mRNA targets are in the chondrocytes and synovium cells; Nav1.8 expressing nerves innervate into synovium and subchondral bone in OA – sites that Exo-CPC can readily target. Aim 1 will engineer cartilage targeting Exo-CPC for delivery of IL- 1RA mRNA and Nav1.8 inhibitor siRNA. Their ability to deliver IL-1RA mRNA to chondrocytes and IL-1RA protein translation efficiency will be evaluated in-vitro. Exo-CPC-Na v1.8’s ability to reduce NaV1.8 bioactivity of sensory nerves will also be evaluated. In Aim 2, their distribution intra-articular (proximity to NaV1.8-positive nerves), extra-articular, and DRG and spinal cord using partial meniscectomy NaV1.8-tdTomato reporter mice OA models will be evaluated. Additionally, their dose dependent reduction on MMP activity, neuronal excitability and pain- related behaviors, and any immunogenicity will be assessed. Aim 3 will use the determined functional doses to study the long-term disease modifying and pain-relief effects of mono and combination therapy with Exo-CPC- IL-1RA and Exo-CPC-Nav1.8 in rescuing injury induced tissue structural damage as well as in reducing pain (weight bearing asymmetry) for up to one month following IA administration in early vs. late stages (intervention at 2 vs 6 weeks) of MMT (medial meniscectomy) induced OA rats. The project paves way for utilizing the intrinsic therapeutic potential of MSC Exosomes as viral-free, non-immunogenic carriers for OA gene therapy by employing cartilage as a drug depot. Cationic exosomes can be used to deliver other OA gene targets, and can be widely used for targeting other negatively charged tissues like meniscus, ligaments, discs, fracture callus etc.
The role of endogenous chimeric mRNA encoded GasderminD fusion proteins in immunity
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.
Linear diribonucleotides regulation of bacterial physiology and infections
RNA degradation was thought to proceed through endonucleolytic fragmentation, followed by exo- ribonuclease trimming which generate short RNA fragments that are turned over into mononucleotides by oligoribonuclease (Orn). In the last funding period, we published data supporting that only specific enzymes (Orn, NrnA, NrnB, and NrnC) cleave diribonucleotides into monoribonucleotides, and that prokaryotic organisms need to encode at least one diribonuclease to fulfill this specific function. These results support a new perspective on RNA degradation in which the short oligoribonucleotides are processed through a sequence of discrete steps involving distinct enzymes. In addition, linear diribonucleotides appear to be biologically active molecules since we reported that mutants lacking these enzymes accumulate diribonucleotides and have altered cell growth, biofilm formation, motility, and sporulation. Here we present additional preliminary data supporting diribonucleotides as active signaling molecules in the cell including: 1. Specific enzymes act trinucleases to generate diribonucleotides, 2. RNase AM of Pseudomonas aeruginosa ∆orn is a cryptic diribonuclease, 3. Two enzymes in central metabolism are diribonucleotide- binding proteins, and 4. P. aeruginosa ∆orn has virulence defects in an animal model of catheter-associated urinary tract infection. Our past publications and preliminary data provide the scientific premise for our hypothesis that cells generate linear dinucleotides from RNA degradation and linearization of cyclic dinucleotides, which can bind target proteins to alter cell physiology and pathogenesis. To test these aims, we will perform the following specific aims: In Aim 1, we will characterize the generation and degradation of diribonucleotides by characterizing how diribonucleases and triribonucleases bind their respective substrates through molecular biology, biochemistry, and computational docking. In Aim 2, we will identify effects of dinucleotides on bacterial metabolism and physiology by characterizing the binding proteins that specifically interact with linear diribonucleotides. Building on our success of identifying cellular diribonucleotide receptors, we will screen for additional proteins from open reading libraries of P. aeruginosa and Bacillus anthracis. We will exploit the strains available to us that lack all diguanylate cyclases to reveal whether the effect of linear diribonucleotides is independent of c-di-GMP signaling. In Aim 3, we will characterize the effect of expression levels of dinucleases and the effect of dinucleotide accumulation on bacterial physiology and pathogenesis. We will develop mass spectrometry methods to detect di- and triribonucleotides. We will employ existing mutants lacking diribonucleases, including P. aeruginosa ∆orn to study the defects in chronic infection in a murine model of catheter-associated urinary tract infection. Results from these studies will advance our understanding of RNA degradation and open a new area of signaling by linear diribonucleotides with the potential to be applied to novel antibacterial strategies.
AI-enabled methods for de novo design of functional peptides
PROJECT SUMMARY Macrocyclic peptides offer unique therapeutic potential, particularly for targeting intracellular protein-protein interactions considered ‘undruggable’ with traditional therapeutic modalities. Additionally, peptides can combine the benefits and bridge the gap between conventional small molecule therapeutics and large biologics. However, developing new peptide-based therapeutics using traditional approaches, such as natural product discovery or high-throughput library screening, has remained slow and challenging. Moreover, these conventional approaches cover a small fraction of the chemical and structural space, are restricted to a few starting peptide scaffolds, and typically fail to optimize for multiple therapeutic properties simultaneously. Our central hypothesis is that structure-guided deep learning methods can rapidly explore the chemical and structural space beyond natural products and enable precise, rapid, and custom design of functional peptides simultaneously optimized for target binding, selectivity, and membrane permeability. In our recent work, we developed physics-based methods for designing constrained peptides and macrocycles and, more recently, introduced deep learning methods for structure prediction, sequence redesign, and de novo design of peptide monomers and targeted binders. Here, we propose to develop a new generation of structure-guided deep learning (DL) tools to address the current limitations of computational and experimental methods and enable accurate, accessible, and broadly applicable design of macrocycles. Specifically, we will pursue the projects focused on: (i) leveraging DL methods to systematically enumerate the chemical and structural space of constrained peptides and membrane-traversing peptides to develop scaffolds and core design principles for functional peptide design; (ii) high-throughput design and data collection to improve design selection, filtering metrics, and sequence design algorithms; (iii) developing generative DL methods that expand beyond current capabilities and allow sequence and structure design with vast chemical space of non-canonical amino acids; and (iv) use those new generative methods to design macrocyclic binders against different therapeutically-relevant targets, including the critical fusion and attachment proteins from viruses of pandemic concern. Our preliminary work in these proposed areas demonstrates the feasibility of this approach. The proposed computational tools, scaffold sets, and designed peptides will significantly advance therapeutic design beyond the state-of-the-art and enable rapid and custom design of drug- like peptides tailored for addressing complex therapeutic, diagnostic and research challenges.
Cytoskeletal connectors: Deciphering the fundamental mechanisms of cytoskeletal dynamics and transport
PROJECT SUMMARY The cytoskeleton is a dynamic network of filamentous structures, including microtubules and actin, that regulate essential cellular processes such as cell shape, growth, and signaling. Cytoskeleton also serves as tracks for molecular motors, which transport a variety of cellular cargoes, including organelles, macromolecules, and vesicles. These cargoes are linked to motors by specialized connector proteins. Disruptions in connector proteins are implicated in a range of neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative diseases, as well as cancers. Despite their importance, these proteins continue to be understudied, primarily due to their perceived role as passive linkers and the technical challenges in working with them. However, recent discoveries suggest that connector proteins may play more active roles, in some cases even have enzymatic functions. This proposal aims to uncover mechanisms of connector protein functions through a detailed investigation of actin-microtubule and motor-cargo interactions. Actin and microtubules are linked by the spectraplakin family of large and evolutionarily conserved proteins, critical for neuronal development and differentiation. Recent discoveries of ATPase domains within these proteins suggest they may haves beyond simply linking cytoskeletal components. One goal of this proposal is to investigate the role of spectraplakin’s ATPase domains via structural, biochemical, and cell biology approaches. Another goal is to explore how dynamic changes in motor-cargo connectors facilitate the transport of diverse cargoes along microtubule tracks. The focus will be on the cytoplasmic dynein-1 (dynein) and the connectors (adaptors) that activate and link dynein to cargo. Dynein is a microtubule minus-end directed motor that plays essential roles in cell division, and transports hundreds of different cellular cargoes. While several motor-cargo connectors have been identified, the regulatory mechanisms enabling cargo transport are not fully understood. We are investigating whether connector proteins work together to activate dynein movement and/or facilitate cargo handoff between different dynein complexes. Using innovative approaches, including time- resolved cryo-EM, complex in-vitro reconstitutions, and live-cell imaging in induced neurons, we are uncovering critical mechanisms that govern cytoskeletal connector proteins, furthering our understanding of how the cytoskeleton regulates essential cellular processes.
Validating Causality of Disputed Mitochondrial Variants in Inborn Errors of Metabolism
PROJECT SUMMARY Primary mitochondrial disease (PMD) encompasses multi-systemic disorders caused by impaired mitochondrial function. PMDs arise from pathogenic variants in either nuclear genes encoding mitochondrial proteins, or in the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) genome. Clinical diagnosis is challenging due to phenotypic heterogeneity, underscoring the importance of genetic diagnosis. ACMG/AMP guidelines provide a well-established framework for interpreting nuclear DNA variants while diagnosing genetic diseases. Their application to mtDNA variants, however, remains challenging due to unique features of mtDNA: maternal inheritance, heteroplasmy, threshold effects, and effect of transfer or ribosomal RNA rather than coding variants. To address these challenges, the ClinGen Mitochondrial Disease Nuclear and Mitochondrial Variant Curation Expert Panel, co-chaired by the Multi-PIs of this study, developed widely adopted ACMG/AMP revised guidelines for mtDNA variant interpretation. Over the past five years, this global expert panel has curated more than 280 mtDNA variant. Because of the lack of functional data of individual mtDNA variants in the literature, 23 previously reported pathogenic (P) variants were classified as Variants of Uncertain Significance (VUS), hindering definitive PMD diagnoses and therapeutic development. This R01 project aims to resolve the pathogenicity of these 23 mtDNA VUS through functional validation, leveraging advanced mtDNA base editing and single-cell genomics in in vitro and in vivo models. In Aim 1, we will create human 143B cell line models for 20 VUS using cutting-edge mtDNA editing techniques, optimized for efficiency and minimal off-target effects. Single-cell genomics (mtscATAC-seq and scRNA-seq) will assess heteroplasmy and genomic changes, while functional assays will evaluate mitochondrial ATP production, oxidative phosphorylation, membrane potential, and redox stress. Aim 2 will develop zebrafish models for 17 conserved VUS, characterizing phenotypic and mitochondrial outcomes to corroborate in vitro findings and PMD patient phenotypes. This study will clarify longstanding uncertainties regarding the pathogenicity of these mtDNA VUSs which were nonetheless reported to be pathogenic with often strong genetic evidence but limited functional data. The study will also establish valuable cell and zebrafish models and provide mechanistic insights of PMDs. The resulting resources will be shared with the scientific community to accelerate research and therapeutic advancements for novel precision medicine approaches for PMDs.
Airway Epithelial Defense Mechanisms in Combating STAT3-Deficiency-Related Lung Infections
Airway Epithelial Defense Mechanisms in Combating STAT3-Deficiency-Related Lung Infections Signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) regulates the expression of genes essential for various cellular processes, including survival, proliferation, differentiation, self-renewal, angiogenesis, and immune response. Abnormal and persistent STAT3 activation is detected in diverse human cancers, driving multiple pro- oncogenic functions. Multiple antitumor drug development targets the inhibition of STAT3 to treat various types of cancer. Unfortunately, downregulated STAT3 significantly increases host susceptibility to recurrent infections, especially pneumonia. Additionally, individuals with genetic polymorphisms associated with lower STAT3 expression are more susceptible to severe tuberculosis. Furthermore, patients with autosomal dominant hyper- IgE syndrome (AD-HIES), also known as Job Syndrome, which is caused by de novo STAT3 mutations and substantially decreased STAT3 expression, have a significantly increased susceptibility to bacterial and fungal infections, with high mortality rates and a shortened life span often associated with Pseudomonas aeruginosa infections. Gram-negative bacteria, particularly P. aeruginosa, are opportunistic pathogens that frequently cause hospital-acquired infections. The problems are worsened by the emerging P. aeruginosa with multidrug resistance (MDR), especially in patients with repeated antibiotic treatments, such as Job Syndrome sufferers. Notably, airway epithelial cell-derived proteins play a significant role in the antimicrobial milieu, promoting effective host defense against invading pathogens. One of the most critical STAT3-regulated antimicrobial molecules is bactericidal permeability-increasing protein fold A1 (BPIFA1, also known as SPLUNC1), a multifunctional innate immunity molecule and indispensable host defense protein that is abundantly secreted in the lungs. This application aims to elucidate how STAT3 deficiency impairs host epithelial defense against microbial infections and whether BPIFA1-mediated innate immune responses can sufficiently restore effective antimicrobial protection to prevent pneumonia. The long-term objective is to advance our understanding of the respiratory innate immune response, particularly in relation to epithelial cell-specific antimicrobial defense. We characterized BPIFA1 as an airway lining fluid protein secreted apically in the airway lumen and in primary human airway epithelial cultures. In this study, we hypothesize that mucosal BPIFA1 is an essential antimicrobial protein that plays a critical role in host defense against microbial infections in STAT3-deficiency- associated pneumonia. Our proposed studies will assess innate immunity mechanisms regulating the antimicrobial activity of the airway epithelium in STAT3 deficiency-associated lung infections. By focusing on the crucial epithelial-derived protein product, BPIFA1, our study will provide an alternative treatment for respiratory infections by augmenting native host defense mechanisms in high-risk individuals, including AD-HIES, cancer, and immunocompromised patients.
Identifying host-interacting proteins of Sneathia vaginalis
PROJECT SUMMARY AND ABSTRACT Sneathia vaginalis is a member of the human normal flora of the vagina. It is also a human pathogen that is associated with preterm birth and amniotic fluid infections as well as the most common bacterial species associated with HPV infection and cervical cancer. The identification of S. vaginalis as a human pathogen is recent and little is known about how this bacterium interacts with the host in either its commensal or pathogenic lifestyles. With the exception of a single toxin, no additional virulence factors have been identified. Our preliminary data demonstrates that S. vaginalis grows to high cell density in rich media; however, it fails to grow planktonically in other media unless host cells are present indicating that S. vaginalis relies on host cells for nutrients. This is consistent with its reduced genome. In addition, bacterial proliferation requires close proximity with the host cells and previous studies demonstrate that S. vaginalis can bind a variety of host cells. The proteins that mediate contact are unknown. We hypothesize that proteins on the surface of S. vaginalis are critical for host cell adhesion. We will use two Aims to examine this. Aim 1 will use mass spectrometry to identify S. vaginalis surface proteins. Aim 2 generates deletion strains of potential adhesins identified in Aim 1 as well as predicted host-interacting proteins that have already been identified bioinformatically based on those in other bacteria. The mutant bacteria are then tested in host-cell adhesion assays. Together, these aims will identify for the first time the proteins found on the surface of S. vaginalis while identifying proteins that interact with host cells that would be expected to contribute to either its commensal or pathogenic lifestyles or both. Moreover, these studies would be used to inform clinical lab practice as surface-expressed proteins could be used to identify identifying markers of S. vaginalis detection.
Enteric virus-induced innate immune responses in oral tolerance
Project Summary The human gut must constantly balance between defending against harmful microbe, including virus infections, and tolerating harmless substances, like food. One important immune process called oral tolerance helps prevent the immune system from overreacting to dietary proteins such as gluten. When this tolerance breaks down, known as loss of oral tolerance (LOT), it can lead to celiac disease, where the body mounts an immune attack against gluten. Viruses that infect the gut, known as enteric viruses, can disturb the intestinal immune homeostasis and contribute to gastrointestinal diseases. Our research has found that one such virus, the Type 1 Lang (T1L) strain of reovirus, capable of infecting human and mice, can induce LOT to gluten. We discovered that T1L triggers a type of inflammatory cell death called necroptosis in intestinal epithelial cells. This cell death sends danger signals to dendritic cells (DCs) presenting dietary antigens, including gluten to T cells. These signals appear to shift DCs from a tolerance-promoting mode to one that drives inflammation and gluten-specific TH1 responses, a hallmark of celiac disease. We believe this process begins when the virus produces a specific form of RNA called Z-RNA, which is sensed by a host protein called ZBP1, triggering necroptosis and inflammation. Our research aims to understand this pathway in detail. Aim 1 will investigate how ZBP1 detects viral Z-RNA and induces necroptosis in intestinal epithelial cells. Aim 2 will examine how this necroptosis leads to LOT and will test whether blocking or engaging the pathway can prevent or induce inflammatory dietary antigen-specific TH1 immune responses. By revealing how a common virus can break oral tolerance and trigger inflammation, this study could lead to new ways to prevent or treat autoimmune and food-related disease such as celiac disease.
Investigating the role of noncoding RNAs in malaria parasites through targeted Cas13-mediated degradation
Project Summary/Abstract One of the most significant sources of morbidity and mortality throughout large regions of the developing world continues to be malaria caused by infection with mosquito-borne parasites of the genus Plasmodium. The parasite species responsible for the most severe form of the disease is P. falciparum. To avoid antibodies produced by their host and thereby maintain lengthy infections, these parasites undergo a process called antigenic variation by which they can extend an infection for over a year. This results from changes in expression of a protein called PfEMP1, the primary antigenic and virulence determinant expressed on the surface of infected red blood cells. A large, multicopy gene family called var encodes different forms of PfEMP1, and switching expression between var genes enables parasites to evade antibody recognition and destruction by the immune system. The process requires precise and coordinated regulation of transcription of each var gene, however how this is accomplished is unknown. It was recently hypothesized that a family of noncoding RNAs (ncRNAs) plays a key role in controlling the expression of each var gene and in determining the likelihood of activation of any given gene. If correct, this would represent a significant advance in our understanding of how P. falciparum controls antigenic variation and avoids immune clearance. To test this hypothesis, we propose to adapt the CRISPR/Cas13 system of targeted RNA degradation for use in P. falciparum. Similar to the extensively used CRISPR/Cas9 system, CRISPR/Cas13 employes guide RNAs to target a nuclease to a sequence-specific target, however Cas13 targets single stranded RNA rather than DNA. By applying this system to the study of var-related ncRNAs, we will degrade specific ncRNAs and determine the effect on var gene expression. Two classes of ncRNAs previously proposed to regulate var gene expression will be targeted, one called ruf6 and a second encoded by the second exon of all var genes. This will enable us to alter ncRNA expression while leaving the underlying genomic DNA untouched, thereby allowing the unambiguous attribution of any resulting phenotypes to the ncRNAs. Aim 1 will optimize the Cas13 system for P. falciparum by testing different variants of the Cas13 endonuclease for their ability to degrade mRNAs encoding fluorescent reporter proteins. We will determine both the efficiency and sequence specificity of the system. Aim 2 will apply the system to var-associated ncRNAs and quantitatively measure changes in var gene expression and transcriptional switching. If successful, the adaptation of the Cas13 system to P. falciparum will provide the malaria research community with a powerful new tool for manipulating gene expression. In addition, we will gain valuable new insights into how malaria parasites regulate var gene expression, antigenic variation and immune evasion.
Addressing C-F bonds and amyloid-formation in biological systems
The ingestion, pulmonary inhalation, and dermal infiltration of C-F bond-containing compounds, most commonly found in the form of per- and polyfluoroalkyl organic acids, causes oxidative stress, inflammation, DNA damage, and developmental defects in infants and adults. These chemicals accumulate in the brain, disrupt neurological function and compromise cognitive and locomotory behavior. Yet, we lack a high-resolution road-map of the interactions between C-F bonds and biomolecular assemblies driving the trajectory towards neurodegenerative outcomes. This gap constitutes a significant barrier to advancing measures designed to mitigate C-F chemistry-associated neurotoxicity. Emerging experimental and computational data from our laboratory reveals that perfluorooctanoic acid, perfluorodecanoic acid and perfluorosulfonic acid corrupt biomolecular structures through C-F:side-chain interactions in tested soluble, globular proteins found in milk and tissues (matrices where C-F chemistries have been detected). Furthermore, they impaired the physiological function in these proteins through displacement of physiological ligands or by compromising the binding of co-factors. The neuroblastoma-derived SHSY-5Y cell line insulted with the said C-F moieties displayed altered gene expression corresponding to reactive oxygen species (ROS), protein ubiquitination, inflammation along with compromised cytoskeletal integrity. C-F bond ingestion ablated dopaminergic (DA) neurons in the nematode C. elegans and induced locomotory deficits in a manner mimicking paraquat. Based on these findings, we propose to gather data towards our hypothesis that C-F bond exposure perturbs biomolecular, cellular and organismal assemblies to onset neurodegeneration-linked trajectories. In Aim 1, we will determine whether organic fluoroacids alter mRNA levels in differentiated SHSY-5Y cells and in neuroprotective gut bacteria (Lactobacillus rhamnosus, Bifidobacterium lactis and Lactobacillus acidophilus). We will examine whether the neuroblastoma cell line exposed to C-F chemistry displays readouts designed to inform the onset of neurodegeneration-associated trajectories (including α-synuclein aggregation). In Aim 2, we will further address in a preclinical model whether C-F burden induces protein aggregation (α-synuclein, amyloid β, mHTT), interferes with dopaminergic neuronal assembles and induces locomotory deficits. Completion of the proposed work will complement ongoing experimental biophysical, structural (crystallographic, NMR) and computational (docking, molecular dynamics simulations) mapping of the interactions between these anthropogenic “forever” chemicals and amyloid-forming proteins potentially resulting in a soluble-to-toxic transformation. It will prepare the stage for vertebrate testing. The findings from this relatively understudied area likely exposes interventional targets for C-F chemistry associated neurotoxicity, spurs therapeutic efforts and can also guide the development of more biocompatible alternatives.
Pathogenic mechanisms of expanded ZFHX3 in SCA4 cerebellar organoids
Spinocerebellar ataxia type 4 (SCA4) is a disabling neurodegenerative disease characterized by progressive cerebellar ataxia, and the causative GGC-repeat expansion in ZFHX3 (ZHFX3-exp) was just discovered this year by our lab and others. Our research aims to understand how ZFHX3-exp causes SCA4 and to identify molecular therapeutic targets that can be quickly advanced into clinical trials. SCA4 is one of the four poly-glycine diseases that share the presence of neuronal intranuclear inclusion (NIIs) as a disease hallmark. In SCA4, NIIs are positive for ZFHX3, p62 and ubiquitin, indicating the loss of proteostasis as a mechanism of neurodegeneration. In addition, ZFHX3 RNA-gain-of-function may also contribute to neurodegeneration. Beyond this, knowledge of the disease mechanisms that underly SCA4 is extremely limited and there are currently no disease-modifying treatments for SCA4 or other polyG/NII diseases. There are no SCA4 mouse models and because of the high GC content in the repeat expansion complicates the production of SCA4 mouse models. We propose a novel approach to characterizing SCA4 Purkinje cell (PC) pathogenesis using human cerebellar organoids. Our approach allows for rapidly advancing the understanding of the pathogenesis and potential treatments of SCA4. Using cerebellar organoids will enable investigation on functional PCs, cerebellar neurodegeneration and the testing of potential therapeutic strategies. In aim 1, we will generate cerebellar organoids from five SCA4 patient-derived iPSC lines, and normal control iPSCs from individuals of the same family. These iPSC lines are already established in our laboratory. In aim 2, we will investigate PC viability, NII protein composition, proteostasis pathways, RNA gain-of-function and cell-type-specific dysregulated pathways by single nucleus RNA sequencing. In addition, we will study potential therapeutic targets by lentiviral knockdown and single nucleus RNA sequencing. SCA4 patient iPSCs express overabundant STAU1 and ATXN2. We will evaluate how lowering the abundance of these proteins modifies the PC molecular phenotype. Together, these experiments will establish a model to greatly enhance the understanding of human PC neurodegeneration, the pathological mechanisms of SCA4 and possible avenues of treatment.
Intrinsic and extrinsic mechanisms underlying trigeminal nerve deficits in familial dysautonomia
PROJECT SUMMARY Rare diseases impose a significant burden on the US healthcare system, accounting for nearly half of all expenditures for their treatment. This statistic alone supports the need to invest in research to develop therapeutic interventions for rare diseases since the economic benefit outweighs the continued expense of financial resources. Familial dysautonomia (FD) is a rare, hereditary disease that arises from a splice site mutation in Elongator acetyltransferase complex subunit 1 (ELP1) and impacts the nervous system. To date, FD patients continue to face life-threatening complications involving basic involuntary functions like swallowing and somatosensation because there is no cure for this ultimately fatal neuropathy. FD patients exhibit symptoms due to defects in their somatosensory trigeminal nerves, whose cell bodies reside in the trigeminal ganglion (TG) and are derived from neural crest and placode cells. Recent studies from our lab using an FD mouse model (Elp1 deleted from neural crest cells) revealed TG axon outgrowth and target tissue innervation deficits, recapitulating phenotypes observed in FD patients. However, the mechanisms by which Elp1 mediates normal TG development, and how this goes awry in FD, remain largely elusive. To gain insight into Elp1 function, we performed mass spectrometry to evaluate the TG proteome of normal and FD mouse embryos. Our results uncovered statistically significant increases in extracellular matrix (ECM) and ECM binding proteins, pointing to altered TG biomechanical properties and, more broadly, changes in mechanotransduction, the process by which cells translate extrinsic cues into intrinsic signaling pathways that modulate gene expression. Importantly, proper axon outgrowth relies upon mechanotransduction as growth cones on axons sense and respond to their environment. In the head, this environment consists of ECM and cranial mesenchyme cells, but the impact of Elp1 loss from the latter is not known, including the potential for altered tissue biomechanics that could influence TG axon outgrowth. We hypothesize that loss of Elp1 induces changes in the biomechanical properties of both the TG/nerves and ECM/cranial mesenchyme, modifying mechanotransduction and leading to TG defects in FD, which we will interrogate in the following Specific Aims: 1) define the biomechanical properties of the TG/nerves and ECM/cranial mesenchyme and 2) determine the role of cranial mesenchyme Elp1 in mediating proper TG axon outgrowth. Our innovative research proposal takes a systems-level, multidisciplinary approach involving embryology, biomechanics, and high-resolution microscopy, with the goal of integrating molecular, cellular, and tissue data. These results will significantly advance our knowledge of the molecular mechanisms underscoring TG development and, collectively, inform treatment strategies for birth defects or disorders like FD with TG dysfunction, as well as nerve repair and/or regeneration after injury or disease.
Targeting subtype specification as a driver of PDAC health disparities
PROJECT SUMMARY Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a deadly disease that is refractory to current treatment strategies due in part to adaptive mechanisms of chemoresistance. Racial health disparities also confound the treatment and care of these patients. Blacks (people with African genetic ancestry) have significantly higher incidence rates of PDAC and decreased survival times compared to Caucasians (White genetic ancestry) even after socioeconomic status and tumor stages are controlled. Therefore, it is possible different racial groups exhibit unique molecular characteristics in PDAC tumors that contribute to these health disparities. The unique molecular characteristics that distinguish PDAC tumors between racial groups exhibiting disparities have the potential to identify new therapeutic targets. In a previous study, we identified 4 distinct subtypes of PDAC (Metabolic, Progenitor-like, Proliferative, and Inflammatory) that can be distinguished using multivariate analysis of quantitative proteomic data. While these PDAC subtypes are predictive of therapeutic response, this has not yet been analyzed in disparity factor balanced studies. We have examined the proteomes of primary PDAC tumors using quantitative mass spectrometry and identified unique protein signatures for Blacks and Whites. PDAC tumors from Black patients display features consistent with the Inflammatory subtype of PDAC, which is characterized by an inflamed microenvironment expressing complement proteins that can promote resistance to chemotherapy. Therefore, it is possible that race influences subtype and Blacks could preferentially develop the more aggressive and treatment refractory Inflammatory subtype. Strategies are needed to modulate subtype to improve response to chemotherapy. Toward this goal, our proteomic analysis identified polycomb repressor complex 1 (PRC1) protein RNF2 as being upregulated in PDACs from Blacks compared to Whites. We have also discovered that RNF2 regulates mRNA expression of the PDAC subtype specification factor GATA6 and inhibiting RNF2 promotes a molecular shift toward the more chemosensitive Classical subtype of PDAC. Therapeutic targeting can be achieved with Tazemetostat that inhibits the upstream PRC2 to prevent RNF2 binding the GATA6 promoter leading to its increased expression. Additionally, the Inflammatory subtype characterized by innate immune complement protein activation could be targeted with another FDA approved drug, Avacopan, which has not previously been studied in PDAC. Therefore, the Specific Aims of this proposal are designed to: 1) Evaluate the extent to which Tazemetostat treatment impacts chemotherapy-induced subtype plasticity in patient derived organoids; and 2) To determine the extent to which strategies targeting pathways associated with PDAC disparities affect progression and subtype characteristics in vivo. The successful completion of these aims has the potential to be moved quickly into phase I clinical trials since both Tazemetostat and Avacopan are FDA approved drugs. Furthermore, if successful, this project has the potential to mitigate health disparities in PDAC and broadly improve patient outcomes by implementing new precision interventions. The mouse models we propose faithfully recapitulate pancreatic cancer's clinical syndrome, histopathology and molecular properties, including the often-unique features of the stromal and immune responses that constitute the complex desmoplasia of this disease, which cannot be addressed using in vitro model systems
Avian influenza virus prevention in the domestic host by a deactivated vaccine
Abstract Influenza viruses, which affect both birds and mammals, pose a substantial public health concern. An estimated 10% of the global population annually becomes infected, resulting in 300,000 to 600,000 deaths worldwide. Our research objectives are to develop a Hemagglutinin (HA) and Neuraminidase (NA) based rabies-vectored vaccine against highly pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) A virus H5N1. We have already demonstrated the vaccine’s immunogenicity and protective efficacy against HPAI H5N1 Vietnam 1203. To advance this research, we propose to utilize a novel RAVB-based deactivated vaccine that harbors the H5 antigens of the current homologous circulation (clade 2.3.4.4b) and a construct expressing N1. Our first aim will involve comparing the H5 or H5/N1 RABV-based vaccines against challenges by PR8 recombinants carrying H5N1 proteins in mice. We will employ a single immunization and a prime/boost approach, either with or without an adjuvant approved for use in animals and humans (SEPIVAC SWE™). We will assess the role of T cells in the vaccine-induced protection by performing CD4/CD8 depletion before challenge Our second aim will utilize the vaccine approach identified to protect our mouse system in dairy cows. Subsequently, we will assess the vaccine’s efficacy against challenges administered intranasally and intramammary. We will verify the role of the vaccine-induced antibodies in protection against H5N1 by performing passive transfer studies of purified IgG from vaccinated cows before challenge. In summary, this study will evaluate the efficacy and delineate the mechanism of protection of a safe and well- established vaccine platform to protect against HPAI H5 and explore its potential as an animal and human vaccine.
Development of a synthetic human centromere
PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT Human artificial chromosomes (HACs) are mini-chromosomes that can be stably inherited across many cellular generation. HACs are potentially powerful gene therapy vectors and extremely useful tools in biological research. The stability of HACs depends on the presence of a functional centromere. Centromeres are unique genomic loci that mediate the segregation of chromosomes during mitosis by forming kinetochores leading to microtubule attachment. These sites are specified by the incorporation of distinct nucleosomes in which histone H3 is replaced by CENP- A. Most centromeric nucleosomes are embedded in highly repetitive alpha-satellite DNA. The current versions of the HACs contain alpha-satellite centromeric DNA, are relatively inefficient and frequently recombine into the genome. Despite the presence of alpha-satellite DNA at centromeres, it is not absolutely required for centromere function. This is evidenced by the existence of neocentromeres in some people, and work from our lab and others that centromeres can be induced to form at non-centromeric sites. Deposition of centromeric nucleosomes is mediated by the CENP-A specific chaperone HJURP and the Mis18 complex. Previous work has shown that artificially targeting HJURP and Mis18 proteins to LacO arrays can create de novo centromeres at non-centromeric sites. This approach leads to the formation of a full centromere, recapitulating most of the characteristics of an endogenous centromere. Here we propose to develop a more versatile approach which can be re-programmed to target many different sequences. This powerful approach will provide new and exciting insight into the rules of centromere formation. The proposal will explore the practical application of de novo centromere formation in supporting the stability of human artificial chromosomes (HACs). We will test if these synthetic centromeres (SynCen) can lead to stable inheritance of a human artificial chromosome. More efficient stable non-repetitive synthetic centromere will greatly expand the potential use of HACs as gene therapy vectors.
Glycoengineering core a(1,3)-fucose motifs to enhance HIV-1 envelope vaccine immunogenicity
Project Summary The HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein (Env) is the sole target of neutralizing antibodies (NAbs). We previously developed a vaccine platform integrating three innovations: (1) the uncleaved prefusion-optimized (UFO) trimer design to stabilize Env; (2) multilayered single-component self-assembling protein nanoparticles (1c-SApNPs) for multivalent trimer display; and (3) enzymatic trimming of oligomannose glycans on CHO cell-produced Env immunogens. Glycan trimming substantially improved Env immunogenicity by enhancing tier 2 NAb elicitation, reducing off-target responses to immunodominant glycan sites, and increasing responder rates. These vaccine candidates are now in phase 1 clinical trials (NCT06541093; NCT06905275). Building on this foundation, we propose a novel strategy to enhance immunogenicity by incorporating core α(1,3)-fucose into HIV-1 Env. Core α(1,3)-fucose, a key allergenic epitope in many plant and insect glycoproteins, is highly immunogenic in humans and other mammals. Our central hypothesis is that the targeted introduction of core α(1,3)-fucose will convert the glycan shield from an immune-evasive barrier into an immunogenic trigger that promotes NAb induction. Glycoengineered cell lines expressing α(1,3)-fucose will enable production of highly immunogenic Env vaccines suitable for preclinical and clinical testing. Importantly, particulate display of these Env trimers on 1c-SApNPs can suppress IgE-mediated allergic pathways by inducing high-affinity protective IgGs, ensuring vaccine safety. Aim 1 will focus on producing core α(1,3)-fucosylated HIV-1 Env immunogens. We will begin by developing a transient insect cell expression system using BTI-TN-5B1-4 (“High Five” or Hi5) cells to produce Env with short paucimannose glycans bearing native α(1,3)-fucose. To further enhance α(1,3)-fucosylation, we will co-express exogenous core α(1,3)-fucosyltransferases in insect and CHO cells. We will validate glycan profiles and characterize the biochemical, biophysical, structural, and antigenic properties of the resulting immunogens. Aim 2 will assess the immunogenicity of these glycoengineered HIV-1 Env immunogens. Using our previously established glycan-trimmed Env immunogens as benchmarks, we will immunize mice, rabbits, and nonhuman primates (NHPs). Mice will be used for early-stage immunogen and adjuvant screening; rabbits to evaluate glycan hole-targeting NAb responses; and key vaccine formulations will advance to NHP studies. We will assess autologous and heterologous tier 2 NAb responses and vaccine responder rates. Aim 3 will elucidate the functional, structural, repertoire, and mechanistic basis of vaccine-induced immunity. We will isolate NAbs via Env-specific single-cell sorting and antibody cloning, map epitopes by electron microscopy (EM) and X-ray crystallography, perform next-generation sequencing (NGS) of B-cell repertoires, and trace NAb lineages. Finally, we will investigate antigen trafficking, retention, presentation, and germinal center (GC) reactions in lymph nodes. Together, these studies will define a new class of glycoengineered HIV-1 vaccines and establish core α(1,3)-fucose as a novel immunomodulatory tool to overcome glycan shield-mediated immune evasion.
How the presynapse forms and functions”
Nervous system function relies on the polarized architecture of neurons, established by directional transport of pre- and postsynaptic cargoes. While delivery of postsynaptic components depends on the secretory pathway, the identity of the membrane compartment(s) that supply presynaptic active zone (AZ) and synaptic vesicle (SV) proteins is largely unknown. I will discuss our recent advances in our understanding of how key components of the presynaptic machinery for neurotransmitter release are transported and assembled focussing on our studies in genome-engineered human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons. Specifically, I will focus on the composition and cell biological identity of the axonal transport vesicles that shuttle key components of neurotransmission to nascent synapses and on machinery for axonal transport and its control by signaling lipids. Our studies identify a crucial mechanism mediating the delivery of SV and active zone proteins to developing synapses and reveal connections to neurological disorders. In the second part of my talk, I will discuss how exocytosis and endocytosis are coupled to maintain presynaptic membrane homeostasis. I will present unpublished data regarding the role of membrane tension in the coupling of exocytosis and endocytosis at synapses. We have identified an endocytic BAR domain protein that is capable of sensing alterations in membrane tension caused by the exocytotic fusion of SVs to initiate compensatory endocytosis to restore plasma membrane area. Interference with this mechanism results in defects in the coupling of presynaptic exocytosis and SV recycling at human synapses.
Cell-type-specific plasticity shapes neocortical dynamics for motor learning
How do cortical circuits acquire new dynamics that drive learned movements? This webinar will focus on mouse premotor cortex in relation to learned lick-timing and explore high-density electrophysiology using our silicon neural probes alongside region and cell-type-specific acute genetic manipulations of proteins required for synaptic plasticity.
Astrocyte reprogramming / activation and brain homeostasis
Astrocytes are multifunctional glial cells, implicated in neurogenesis and synaptogenesis, supporting and fine-tuning neuronal activity and maintaining brain homeostasis by controlling blood-brain barrier permeability. During the last years a number of studies have shown that astrocytes can also be converted into neurons if they force-express neurogenic transcription factors or miRNAs. Direct astrocytic reprogramming to induced-neurons (iNs) is a powerful approach for manipulating cell fate, as it takes advantage of the intrinsic neural stem cell (NSC) potential of brain resident reactive astrocytes. To this end, astrocytic cell fate conversion to iNs has been well-established in vitro and in vivo using combinations of transcription factors (TFs) or chemical cocktails. Challenging the expression of lineage-specific TFs is accompanied by changes in the expression of miRNAs, that post-transcriptionally modulate high numbers of neurogenesis-promoting factors and have therefore been introduced, supplementary or alternatively to TFs, to instruct direct neuronal reprogramming. The neurogenic miRNA miR-124 has been employed in direct reprogramming protocols supplementary to neurogenic TFs and other miRNAs to enhance direct neurogenic conversion by suppressing multiple non-neuronal targets. In our group we aimed to investigate whether miR-124 is sufficient to drive direct reprogramming of astrocytes to induced-neurons (iNs) on its own both in vitro and in vivo and elucidate its independent mechanism of reprogramming action. Our in vitro data indicate that miR-124 is a potent driver of the reprogramming switch of astrocytes towards an immature neuronal fate. Elucidation of the molecular pathways being triggered by miR-124 by RNA-seq analysis revealed that miR-124 is sufficient to instruct reprogramming of cortical astrocytes to immature induced-neurons (iNs) in vitro by down-regulating genes with important regulatory roles in astrocytic function. Among these, the RNA binding protein Zfp36l1, implicated in ARE-mediated mRNA decay, was found to be a direct target of miR-124, that be its turn targets neuronal-specific proteins participating in cortical development, which get de-repressed in miR-124-iNs. Furthermore, miR-124 is potent to guide direct neuronal reprogramming of reactive astrocytes to iNs of cortical identity following cortical trauma, a novel finding confirming its robust reprogramming action within the cortical microenvironment under neuroinflammatory conditions. In parallel to their reprogramming properties, astrocytes also participate in the maintenance of blood-brain barrier integrity, which ensures the physiological functioning of the central nervous system and gets affected contributing to the pathology of several neurodegenerative diseases. To study in real time the dynamic physical interactions of astrocytes with brain vasculature under homeostatic and pathological conditions, we performed 2-photon brain intravital imaging in a mouse model of systemic neuroinflammation, known to trigger astrogliosis and microgliosis and to evoke changes in astrocytic contact with brain vasculature. Our in vivo findings indicate that following neuroinflammation the endfeet of activated perivascular astrocytes lose their close proximity and physiological cross-talk with vasculature, however this event is at compensated by the cross-talk of astrocytes with activated microglia, safeguarding blood vessel coverage and maintenance of blood-brain integrity.
Connectome-based models of neurodegenerative disease
Neurodegenerative diseases involve accumulation of aberrant proteins in the brain, leading to brain damage and progressive cognitive and behavioral dysfunction. Many gaps exist in our understanding of how these diseases initiate and how they progress through the brain. However, evidence has accumulated supporting the hypothesis that aberrant proteins can be transported using the brain’s intrinsic network architecture — in other words, using the brain’s natural communication pathways. This theory forms the basis of connectome-based computational models, which combine real human data and theoretical disease mechanisms to simulate the progression of neurodegenerative diseases through the brain. In this talk, I will first review work leading to the development of connectome-based models, and work from my lab and others that have used these models to test hypothetical modes of disease progression. Second, I will discuss the future and potential of connectome-based models to achieve clinically useful individual-level predictions, as well as to generate novel biological insights into disease progression. Along the way, I will highlight recent work by my lab and others that is already moving the needle toward these lofty goals.
The glymphatic system in motor neurone disease
Neurodegenerative diseases are chronic and inexorable conditions characterised by the presence of insoluble aggregates of abnormally ubiquinated and phosphorylated proteins. Recent evidence also suggests that protein misfolding can propagate throughout the body in a prion-like fashion via the interstitial or cerebrospinal fluids (CSF). As protein aggregation occurs well before the onset of brain damage and symptoms, new biomarkers sensitive to early pathology, together with therapeutic strategies that include eliminating seed proteins and blocking cell-to-cell spread, are of vital importance. The glymphatic system, which facilitates the continuous exchange of CSF and interstitial fluid to clear the brain of waste, presents as a potential biomarker of disease severity, therapeutic target, and drug delivery system. In this webinar, Associate Professor David Wright from the Department of Neuroscience, Monash University, will outline recent advances in using MRI to investigate the glymphatic system. He will also present some of his lab’s recent work investigating glymphatic clearance in preclinical models of motor neurone disease. Associate Professor David Wright is an NHMRC Emerging Leadership Fellow and the Director of Preclinical Imaging in the Department of Neuroscience, Monash University and the Alfred Research Alliance, Alfred Health. His research encompasses the development, application and analysis of advanced magnetic resonance imaging techniques for the study of disease, with a particular emphasis on neurodegenerative disorders. Although less than three years post PhD, he has published over 60 peer-reviewed journal articles in leading neuroscience journals such as Nature Medicine, Brain, and Cerebral Cortex.
Systemic regulation and measurement of mammalian aging
Brain aging leads to cognitive decline and is the main risk factor for sporadic forms of neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer’s disease. While brain cell- and tissue-intrinsic factors are likely key determinants of the aging process recent studies document a remarkable susceptibility of the brain to circulatory factors. Thus, blood borne factors from young mice or humans are sufficient to slow aspects of brain aging and improve cognitive function in old mice and, vice versa, factors from old mice are detrimental for young mice and impair cognition. We found evidence that the cerebrovasculature is an important target of circulatory factors and that brain endothelial cells show prominent age-related transcriptional changes in response to plasma. Furthermore, plasma proteins are taken up broadly into the young brain through receptor mediated transport which declines with aging. At the same time, brain derived proteins are detectable in plasma allowing us to measure physiological changes linked to brain aging in plasma. We are exploring the relevance of these findings for neurodegeneration and potential applications towards therapies.
Molecular Logic of Synapse Organization and Plasticity
Connections between nerve cells called synapses are the fundamental units of communication and information processing in the brain. The accurate wiring of neurons through synapses into neural networks or circuits is essential for brain organization. Neuronal networks are sculpted and refined throughout life by constant adjustment of the strength of synaptic communication by neuronal activity, a process known as synaptic plasticity. Deficits in the development or plasticity of synapses underlie various neuropsychiatric disorders, including autism, schizophrenia and intellectual disability. The Siddiqui lab research program comprises three major themes. One, to assess how biochemical switches control the activity of synapse organizing proteins, how these switches act through their binding partners and how these processes are regulated to correct impaired synaptic function in disease. Two, to investigate how synapse organizers regulate the specificity of neuronal circuit development and how defined circuits contribute to cognition and behaviour. Three, to address how synapses are formed in the developing brain and maintained in the mature brain and how microcircuits formed by synapses are refined to fine-tune information processing in the brain. Together, these studies have generated fundamental new knowledge about neuronal circuit development and plasticity and enabled us to identify targets for therapeutic intervention.
How do protein-RNA condensates form and contribute to disease?
In recent years, it has become clear that intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs) of RBPs, and the structure of RNAs, often contribute to the condensation of RNPs. To understand the transcriptomic features of such RNP condensates, we’ve used an improved individual nucleotide resolution CLIP protocol (iiCLIP), which produces highly sensitive and specific data, and thus enables quantitative comparisons of interactions across conditions (Lee et al., 2021). This showed how the IDR-dependent condensation properties of TDP-43 specify its RNA binding and regulatory repertoire (Hallegger et al., 2021). Moreover, we developed software for discovery and visualisation of RNA binding motifs that uncovered common binding patterns of RBPs on long multivalent RNA regions that are composed of dispersed motif clusters (Kuret et al, 2021). Finally, we used hybrid iCLIP (hiCLIP) to characterise the RNA structures mediating the assembly of Staufen RNPs across mammalian brain development, which demonstrated the roles of long-range RNA duplexes in the compaction of long 3’UTRs. I will present how the combined analysis of the characteristics of IDRs in RBPs, multivalent RNA regions and RNA structures is required to understand the formation and functions of RNP condensates, and how they change in diseases.
The Synaptome Architecture of the Brain: Lifespan, disease, evolution and behavior
The overall aim of my research is to understand how the organisation of the synapse, with particular reference to the postsynaptic proteome (PSP) of excitatory synapses in the brain, informs the fundamental mechanisms of learning, memory and behaviour and how these mechanisms go awry in neurological dysfunction. The PSP indeed bears a remarkable burden of disease, with components being disrupted in disorders (synaptopathies) including schizophrenia, depression, autism and intellectual disability. Our work has been fundamental in revealing and then characterising the unprecedented complexity (>1000 highly conserved proteins) of the PSP in terms of the subsynaptic architecture of postsynaptic proteins such as PSD95 and how these proteins assemble into complexes and supercomplexes in different neurons and regions of the brain. Characterising the PSPs in multiple species, including human and mouse, has revealed differences in key sets of functionally important proteins, correlates with brain imaging and connectome data, and a differential distribution of disease-relevant proteins and pathways. Such studies have also provided important insight into synapse evolution, establishing that vertebrate behavioural complexity is a product of the evolutionary expansion in synapse proteomes that occurred ~500 million years ago. My lab has identified many mutations causing cognitive impairments in mice before they were found to cause human disorders. Our proteomic studies revealed that >130 brain diseases are caused by mutations affecting postsynaptic proteins. We uncovered mechanisms that explain the polygenic basis and age of onset of schizophrenia, with postsynaptic proteins, including PSD95 supercomplexes, carrying much of the polygenic burden. We discovered the “Genetic Lifespan Calendar”, a genomic programme controlling when genes are regulated. We showed that this could explain how schizophrenia susceptibility genes are timed to exert their effects in young adults. The Genes to Cognition programme is the largest genetic study so far undertaken into the synaptic molecular mechanisms underlying behaviour and physiology. We made important conceptual advances that inform how the repertoire of both innate and learned behaviours is built from unique combinations of postsynaptic proteins that either amplify or attenuate the behavioural response. This constitutes a key advance in understanding how the brain decodes information inherent in patterns of nerve impulses, and provides insight into why the PSP has evolved to be so complex, and consequently why the phenotypes of synaptopathies are so diverse. Our most recent work has opened a new phase, and scale, in understanding synapses with the first synaptome maps of the brain. We have developed next-generation methods (SYNMAP) that enable single-synapse resolution molecular mapping across the whole mouse brain and extensive regions of the human brain, revealing the molecular and morphological features of a billion synapses. This has already uncovered unprecedented spatiotemporal synapse diversity organised into an architecture that correlates with the structural and functional connectomes, and shown how mutations that cause cognitive disorders reorganise these synaptome maps; for example, by detecting vulnerable synapse subtypes and synapse loss in Alzheimer’s disease. This innovative synaptome mapping technology has huge potential to help characterise how the brain changes during normal development, including in specific cell types, and with degeneration, facilitating novel pathways to diagnosis and therapy.
Towards a More Authentic Vision of the (multi)Coding Potential of RNA
Ten of thousands of open reading frames (ORFs) are hidden within transcripts. They have eluded annotations because they are either small or within unsuspected locations. These are named alternative ORFs (altORFs) or small ORFs and have recently been highlighted by innovative proteogenomic approaches, such as our OpenProt resource, revealing their existence and implications in biological functions. Due to the absence of altORFs from annotations, pathogenic mutations within these are being ignored. I will discuss our latest progress on the re-analysis of large-scale proteomics datasets to improve our knowledge of proteomic diversity, and the functional characterization of a second protein coded by the FUS gene. Finally, I will explain the need to map the coding potential of the transcriptome using artificial intelligence rather than with conventional annotations that do not capture the full translational activity of ribosomes.
Sleepless in Vienna - how to rescue folding-deficient dopamine transporters by pharmacochaperoning
Diseases that arise from misfolding of an individual protein are rare. However, collectively, these folding diseases represent a large proportion of hereditary and acquired disorders. In fact, the term "Molecular Medicine" was coined by Linus Pauling in conjunction with the study of a folding disease, i.e. sickle cell anemia. In the past decade, we have witnessed an exponential growth in the number of mutations, which have been identified in genes encoding solute carriers (SLC). A sizable faction - presumably the majority - of these mutations result in misfolding of the encoded protein. While studying the export of the GABA transporter (SLC6A1) and of the serotonin transporter (SLC6A4), from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), we discovered by serendipity that some ligands can correct the folding defect imparted by point mutations. These bind to the inward facing state. The most effective compound is noribogaine, the metabolite of ibogaine (an alkaloid first isolated from the shrub Tabernanthe iboga). There are 13 mutations in the human dopamine transporter (DAT, SLC6A3), which give rise to a syndrome of infantile Parkinsonism and dystonia. We capitalized on our insights to explore, if the disease-relevant mutant proteins were amenable to pharmacological correction. Drosopohila melanogaster, which lack the dopamine transporter, are hyperactive and sleepless (fumin in Japanese). Thus, mutated human DAT variants can be introduced into fumin flies. This allows for examining the effect of pharmacochaperones on delivery of DAT to the axonal territory and on restoring sleep. We explored the chemical space populated by variations of the ibogaine structure to identify an analogue (referred to as compound 9b), which was highly effective: compound 9b also restored folding in DAT variants, which were not amenable to rescue by noribogaine. Deficiencies in the human creatine transporter-1 (CrT1, SLC6A8) give rise to a syndrome of intellectual disability and seizures and accounts for 5% of genetically based intellectual disabilities in boys. Point mutations occur, in part, at positions, which are homologous to those of folding-deficient DAT variants. CrT1 lacks the rich pharmacology of monoamine transporters. Nevertheless, our insights are also applicable to rescuing some disease-related variants of CrT1. Finally, the question arises how one can address the folding problem. We propose a two-pronged approach: (i) analyzing the effect of mutations on the transport cycle by electrophysiological recordings; this allows for extracting information on the rates of conformational transitions. The underlying assumption posits that - even when remedied by pharmacochaperoning - folding-deficient mutants must differ in the conformational transitions associated with the transport cycle. (ii) analyzing the effect of mutations on the two components of protein stability, i.e. thermodynamic and kinetic stability. This is expected to provide a glimpse of the energy landscape, which governs the folding trajectory.
Multimorbidity in the ageing human brain: lessons from neuropathological assessment
Age-associated dementias are neuropathologically characterized by the identification of hallmark intracellular and extracellular deposition of proteins, i.e., hyperphosphorylated-tau, amyloid-β, and α-synuclein, or cerebrovascular lesions. The neuropathological assessment and staging of these pathologies allows for a diagnosis of a distinct disease, e.g., amyloid-β plaques and hyperphosphorylated tau pathology in Alzheimer's disease. Neuropathological assessment in large scale cohorts, such as the UK’s Brains for Dementia Research (BDR) programme, has made it increasingly clear that the ageing brain is characterized by the presence of multiple age-associated pathologies rather than just the ‘pure’ hallmark lesion as commonly perceived. These additional pathologies can range from low/intermediate levels, that are assumed to have little if any clinical significance, to a full-blown mixed disease where there is the presence of two distinct diseases. In our recent paper (McAleese et al. 2021 Concomitant neurodegenerative pathologies contribute to the transition from mild cognitive impairment to dementia, https://alz-journals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/alz.12291, Alzheimer's & Dementia), using the BDR cohort, we investigated the frequency of multimorbidity and specifically investigated the impact of additional low-level pathology on cognition. In this study, of 670 donated post-mortem brains, we found that almost 70% of cases exhibited multimorbidity and only 22% were considered a pure diagnosis. Importantly, no case of Lewy Body dementia or vascular dementia was considered pure. A key finding is that the presence of low levels of additional pathology increased the likelihood of having mild dementia vs mild cognitive impairment by almost 20-fold, indicating low levels of additional pathology do impact the clinical progression of a distinct disease. Given the high prevalence and the potential clinical impact, cerebral multimorbidity should be at the forefront of consideration in dementia research.
Targeting selective autophagy against neurodegenerative diseases
Protein quality control is essential for maintenance of a healthy and functional proteome that can attend the multiplicity of cellular functions. Failure of the systems that contribute to protein homeostasis, the so called proteostasis networks, have been identified in the pathogenesis of multiple neurodegenerative disorders and demonstrated to contribute to disease onset and progression. We are interested in autophagy, one of the components of the proteostasis network, and in the interplay of wo selective types of autophagy, chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA) and endosomal microautophagy (eMI), with neurodegeneration. We have recently found that pathogenic proteins involved in common neurodegenerative conditions such as tauopathies or Parkinson’s disease, can exert a toxic effect in both types of selective types of autophagy compromising their functioning. We have now used mouse models with compromised CMA that support increased propagation of proteins such as tau and alpha-synuclein and an exacerbation of disease phenotype with aging. Conversely, genetic or chemical upregulation of CMA in this context of proteotoxicity slow down disease progression by facilitating effective intracellular removal of pathogenic proteins. Our findings highlight CMA and eMI as potential novel therapeutic targets against neurodegeneration.
The dynamic behaviour of mRNAs and splicing proteins in developing axons
Recent findings have revealed that mRNAs have a much more dynamic behaviour than initially described. This is particularly true in neurons, where mRNAs are transported to specific axonal and dendritic areas. The seminar will present our most recent findings unveiling complex mRNA processing dynamics driven by splicing proteins in developing axons.
How the immune system shapes synaptic functions
The synapse is the core component of the nervous system and synapse formation is the critical step in the assembly of neuronal circuits. The assembly and maturation of synapses requires the contribution of secreted and membrane-associated proteins, with neuronal activity playing crucial roles in regulating synaptic strength, neuronal membrane properties, and neural circuit refinement. The molecular mechanisms of synapse assembly and refinement have been so far largely examined on a gene-by-gene basis and with a perspective fully centered on neuronal cells. However, in the last years, the involvement of non-neuronal cells has emerged. Among these, microglia, the resident immune cells of the central nervous system, have been shown to play a key role in synapse formation and elimination. Contacts of microglia with dendrites in the somatosensory cortex were found to induce filopodia and dendritic spines via Ca2+ and actin-dependent processes, while microglia-derived BDNF was shown to promote learning-dependent synapse formation. Microglia is also recognized to have a central role in the widespread elimination (or pruning) of exuberant synaptic connections during development. Clarifying the processes by which microglia control synapse homeostasis is essential to advance our current understanding of brain functions. Clear answers to these questions will have important implications for our understanding of brain diseases, as the fact that many psychiatric and neurological disorders are synaptopathies (i.e. diseases of the synapse) is now widely recognized. In the last years, my group has identified TREM2, an innate immune receptor with phagocytic and antiinflammatory properties expressed in brain exclusively by microglia, as essential for microglia-mediated synaptic refinement during the early stages of brain development. The talk will describe the role of TREM2 in synapse elimination and introduce the molecular actors involved. I will also describe additional pathways by which the immune system may affect the formation and homeostasis of synaptic contacts.
Microglia, memories, and the extracellular space
Microglia are the immune cells of the brain, and play increasingly appreciated roles in synapse formation, brain plasticity, and cognition. A growing appreciation that the immune system involved in diseases like schizophrenia, epilepsy, and neurodegenerative diseases has led to renewed interest in how microglia regulate synaptic connectivity. Our group previously identified the IL-1 family cytokine Interleukin-33 (IL-33) as a novel regulator of microglial activation and function. I will discuss a mechanism by which microglia regulate synaptic plasticity and long-term memories by engulfing brain extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. These studies raise the question of how these pathways may be altered or could be modified in the context of disease.
Gene Therapy for Neurodegeneration
One of the major challenges in developing therapeutics for the neurodegenerative disorders is the blood-brain barrier, limiting the availability of systemically administered therapies such as recombinant proteins or monoclonal antibodies from reaching the brain. Direct central nervous system (CNS) gene therapy using adeno-associated virus vectors expressing a therapeutic protein, monoclonal antibody or inhibiting RNA-coding sequences has two characteristics ideal for therapy of neurodegenerative disorders: circumventing the blood-brain barrier by directly expressing the therapy in the brain and the ability to provide persistent therapy with only a single administration. There are several critical parameters relevant to successful CNS gene therapy, including choice of vector, design of the gene to be expressed, delivery/route of administration, dose and anti-vector immune responses. The presentation will focus on these issues, the current status of clinical trials of gene therapy for neurodegeneration and specific challenges that will need to be overcome to ensure the success of these therapies.
Role of Tunneling Nanotubes (TNTs) in the spreading of amyloid proteins in neurodegenerative diseases
Targeting the synapse in Alzheimer’s Disease
Alzheimer’s Disease is characterised by the accumulation of misfolded proteins, namely amyloid and tau, however it is synapse loss which leads to the cognitive impairments associated with the disease. Many studies have focussed on single time points to determine the effects of pathology on synapses however this does not inform on the plasticity of the synapses, that is how they behave in vivo as the pathology progresses. Here we used in vivo two-photon microscopy to assess the temporal dynamics of axonal boutons and dendritic spines in mouse models of tauopathy[1] (rTg4510) and amyloidopathy[2] (J20). This revealed that pre- and post-synaptic components are differentially affected in both AD models in response to pathology. In the Tg4510 model, differences in the stability and turnover of axonal boutons and dendritic spines immediately prior to neurite degeneration was revealed. Moreover, the dystrophic neurites could be partially rescued by transgene suppression. Understanding the imbalance in the response of pre- and post-synaptic components is crucial for drug discovery studies targeting the synapse in Alzheimer’s Disease. To investigate how sub-types of synapses are affected in human tissue, the Multi-‘omics Atlas Project, a UKDRI initiative to comprehensively map the pathology in human AD, will determine the synaptome changes using imaging and synaptic proteomics in human post mortem AD tissue. The use of multiple brain regions and multiple stages of disease will enable a pseudotemporal profile of pathology and the associated synapse alterations to be determined. These data will be compared to data from preclinical models to determine the functional implications of the human findings, to better inform preclinical drug discovery studies and to develop a therapeutic strategy to target synapses in Alzheimer’s Disease[3].
Neuron-glia interactions in synapse degeneration in Alzheimer's disease
Tara Spires-Jones’ research focuses on the mechanisms and reversibility of neurodegeneration in Alzheimer’s disease, other degenerative brain diseases, and ageing. The objective of her research group is to understand why synapses and neurons become dysfunctional and die in these diseases in order to develop effective therapeutic strategies. Her work has shown that soluble forms of the pathological proteins amyloid beta and tau contribute to synapse degeneration, and that lowering levels of these proteins can prevent and reverse phenotypes in model systems. Further, she has pioneered high-resolution imaging techniques in human post-mortem brain and found evidence that these proteins accumulate in synapses in human disease.
The many faces of KCC2 in the generation and suppression of seizures
KCC2, best known as the neuron-specific chloride extruder that sets the strength and polarity of GABAergic Cl-currents, is a multifunctional molecule which interacts with other ion-regulatory proteins and (structurally) with the neuronal cytoskeleton. Its multiple roles in the generation and suppression of seizures have been widely studied. In my talk, I will address some fundamental issues which are relevant in this field of research: What are EGABA shifts about? What is the role of KCC2 in shunting inhibition? What is meant by “the balance between excitation and inhibition” and, in this context, by the “NKCC1/KCC2 ratio”? Is down-regulation of KCC2 following neuronal trauma a manifestation of adaptive or maladaptive ionic plasticity? Under what conditions is K-Cl cotransport by KCC2 promoting seizures? Should we pay more attention to KCC2 as molecule involved in dendritic spine formation in brain areas such as the hippocampus? Most of these points are of potential importance also in the design of KCC2-targeting drugs and genetic manipulations aimed at combating seizures.
Emergent scientists discuss Alzheimer's disease
This seminar is part of our “Emergent Scientists” series, an initiative that provides a platform for scientists at the critical PhD/postdoc transition period to share their work with a broad audience and network. Summary: These talks cover Alzheimer’s disease (AD) research in both mice and humans. Christiana will discuss in particular the translational aspects of applying mouse work to humans and the importance of timing in disease pathology and intervention (e.g. timing between AD biomarkers vs. symptom onset, timing of therapy, etc.). Siddharth will discuss a rare variant of Alzheimer’s disease called “Logopenic Progressive Aphasia”, which presents with temporo-parietal atrophy yet relative sparing of hippocampal circuitry. Siddharth will discuss how, despite the unusual anatomical basis underlying this AD variant, degeneration of the angular gyrus in the left inferior parietal lobule contributes to memory deficits similar to those of typical amnesic Alzheimer’s disease. Christiana’s abstract: Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a debilitating neurodegenerative disorder that causes severe deterioration of memory, cognition, behavior, and the ability to perform daily activities. The disease is characterized by the accumulation of two proteins in fibrillar form; Amyloid-β forms fibrils that accumulate as extracellular plaques while tau fibrils form intracellular tangles. Here we aim to translate findings from a commonly used AD mouse model to AD patients. Here we initiate and chronically inhibit neuropathology in lateral entorhinal cortex (LEC) layer two neurons in an AD mouse model. This is achieved by over-expressing P301L tau virally and chronically activating hM4Di DREADDs intracranially using the ligand dechloroclozapine. Biomarkers in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is measured longitudinally in the model using microdialysis, and we use this same system to intracranially administer drugs aimed at halting AD-related neuropathology. The models are additionally tested in a novel contextual memory task. Preliminary findings indicate that viral injections of P301L tau into LEC layer two reveal direct projections between this region and the outer molecular layer of dentate gyrus and the rest of hippocampus. Additionally, phosphorylated tau co-localize with ‘starter cells’ and appear to spread from the injection site. Preliminary microdialysis results suggest that the concentrations of CSF amyloid-β and tau proteins mirror changes observed along the disease cascade in patients. The disease-modifying drugs appear to halt neuropathological development in this preclincial model. These findings will lead to a novel platform for translational AD research, linking the extensive research done in rodents to clinical applications. Siddharth’s abstract: A distributed brain network supports our ability to remember past events. The parietal cortex is a critical member of this network, yet, its exact contributions to episodic remembering remain unclear. Neurodegenerative syndromes affecting the posterior neocortex offer a unique opportunity to understand the importance and role of parietal regions to episodic memory. In this talk, I introduce and explore the rare neurodegenerative syndrome of Logopenic Progressive Aphasia (LPA), an aphasic variant of Alzheimer’s disease presenting with early, left-lateralized temporo-parietal atrophy, amidst relatively spared hippocampal integrity. I then discuss two key studies from my recent Ph.D. work showcasing pervasive episodic and autobiographical memory dysfunction in LPA, to a level comparable to typical, amnesic Alzheimer’s disease. Using multimodal neuroimaging, I demonstrate how degeneration of the angular gyrus in the left inferior parietal lobule, and its structural connections to the hippocampus, contribute to amnesic profiles in this syndrome. I finally evaluate these findings in the context of memory profiles in other posterior cortical neurodegenerative syndromes as well as recent theoretical models underscoring the importance of the parietal cortex in the integration and representation of episodic contextual information.
Physiological importance of phase separation: a case study in synapse formation
Synapse formation during neuronal development is critical to establish neural circuits and a nervous system1. Every presynapse builds a core active zone structure where ion channels are clustered and synaptic vesicles are released2. While the composition of active zones is well characterized2,3, how active zone proteins assemble together and recruit synaptic release machinery during development is not clear. Here, we find core active zone scaffold proteins SYD-2/Liprin-α and ELKS-1 phase separate during an early stage of synapse development, and later mature into a solid structure. We directly test the in vivo function of phase separation with mutants specifically lacking this activity. These mutant SYD-2 and ELKS-1 proteins remain enriched at synapses, but are defective in active zone assembly and synapse function. The defects are rescued with the introduction of a phase separation motif from an unrelated protein. In vitro, we reconstitute the SYD-2 and ELKS-1 liquid phase scaffold and find it is competent to bind and incorporate downstream active zone components. The fluidity of SYD-2 and ELKS-1 condensates is critical for efficient mixing and incorporation of active zone components. These data reveal that a developmental liquid phase of scaffold molecules is essential for synaptic active zone assembly before maturation into a stable final structure.
Potential involvement and target identification of HuR/ELAVL1 in age-related ocular pathologies – Back to the origin
In the last decades, the post-transcriptional control of gene expression has become an area of intense investigation, delineating a complex scenario where several factors (e.g. RNA-binding proteins, coding and non-coding RNAs) orchestrate the fate of a given transcript. An intriguing hypothesis suggests that loss of RNA homeostasis is a central feature of many pathological states, including eye diseases. Since the elav (embryonic lethal, abnormal visual system) gene discovery in the Drosophila melanogaster, the mammalian ELAV-like family has confirmed its leading role in controlling the RNA metabolism (from splicing to translation) of genes with a key function in many physio-pathological contexts. Some relevant findings suggest the involvement of the HuR/ELAV-like1 member and its potential as a therapeutic target in age-related ocular pathologies.
Accumulation and neuron-to-glia spread of human Tau proteins in ageing mice
Anterograde transneuronal transfer of rabies via novel pseudotyping with HSV-1 glycoproteins gE, gI and US9
CNS Capillary Pericytes Express mRNA of cardinal contractile proteins, α-SMA and Myh11: An In-situ Hybridization Study
Changes in synaptic proteins in a transgenic model of autism
Comparative study on effects of maternal depression and perinatal bupropion and mirtazapine treatment on levels of synapse-related proteins in adolescent rat offspring
Coordination of BET family proteins in Fragile X Syndrome
Elucidating the role of STIM proteins in neuronal ER-PM contacts and their role in synaptic plasticity and architecture
Extracellular proteins – a source of amino acids for human glioblastoma cells
Hippocampal sleep spindle dynamics during REM sleep and their distinct underlying parvalbumin and synaptic proteins expression in the reticulo-thalamic nucleus of the parkinsonian rats
Increased surface P2X4 receptors by mutant SOD1 proteins contribute to ALS pathogenesis
Inhibition of bromodomain and extraterminal (BET) proteins modulates the expression of Alzheimer’s disease risk genes in microglia
A new intrabody based optogenetic tool to degrade the aggregation prone proteins
Intravital in-situ characterization of the emission spectra of genetically encoded fluorescent proteins in the pathological brain tumor environment
Investigation of glutamate receptor modulation by integral membrane proteins
Investigations on the modulation of glutamate receptor function by accessory proteins
Molecular Signatures of the Interaction of KARs with G-Proteins
The postsynaptic scaffolding protein SAPAP3 interacts with mitochondrial proteins and is required for maintaining organelle dynamics and function
Pre-gestational stress and perinatal treatment with antidepressants in rats affect levels of synapse-related proteins in hippocampus of adult offspring in a sex-dependent manner
Proteins of the tetraspanin family as potential modulators of AMPA receptors
The role of EEF1A proteins at synapses and in synucleinopathy
Role of Intramembrane Spastic Paraplegia Proteins in Organization of Axonal ER and ER-mitochondria Contacts in Drosophila
Studying the Specificity of Autoantibodies against Glutamate Receptors and Auxiliary Proteins in Rasmussen’s Encephalitis
The survival of VTA dopamine neurons is associated with upregulation of Ca2+ binding proteins in the Tg2576 model of Alzheimer’s Disease
Tight junction proteins expression and cytoskeleton rearrangement are associated with brain microvascular endothelium permeabilisation in epileptogenesis
Transcriptomic analysis of cytoplasmic polyadenylation element binding proteins (CPEBs) in Schizophrenia
Unraveling the unexpected function of wild type and mutated RAD51 proteins in the development of the Corticospinal tract in mice
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