37 research outputs found
The Nlrp3 inflammasome regulates acute graft-versus-host disease
The success of allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation is limited by acute graft-versus-host disease (GvHD), a severe complication accompanied by high mortality rates. Yet, the molecular mechanisms initiating this disease remain poorly defined. In this study, we show that, after conditioning therapy, intestinal commensal bacteria and the damage-associated molecular pattern uric acid contribute to Nlrp3 inflammasome-mediated IL-1β production and that gastrointestinal decontamination and uric acid depletion reduced GvHD severity. Early blockade of IL-1β or genetic deficiency of the IL-1 receptor in dendritic cells (DCs) and T cells improved survival. The Nlrp3 inflammasome components Nlrp3 and Asc, which are required for pro-IL-1β cleavage, were critical for the full manifestation of GvHD. In transplanted mice, IL-1β originated from multiple intestinal cell compartments and exerted its effects on DCs and T cells, the latter being preferentially skewed toward Th17. Compatible with these mouse data, increased levels of active caspase-1 and IL-1β were found in circulating leukocytes and intestinal GvHD lesions of patients. Thus, the identification of a crucial role for the Nlrp3 inflammasome sheds new light on the pathogenesis of GvHD and opens a potential new avenue for the targeted therapy of this severe complication
A Mucosal and Cutaneous Chemokine Ligand for the Lymphocyte Chemoattractant Receptor GPR15
Chemoattractants control lymphocyte recruitment from the blood, contributing to the systemic organization of the immune system. The G protein-linked receptor GPR15 mediates lymphocyte homing to the large intestines and skin. Here we show that the 9 kDa CC-motif containing cationic polypeptide AP57/colon-derived sushi containing domain-2 binding factor (CSBF), encoded by C10orf99 in the human and 2610528A11Rik in the mouse, functions as a chemokine ligand for GPR15 (GPR15L). GPR15L binds GPR15 and attracts GPR15-expressing T cells including lymphocytes in colon-draining lymph nodes and Vγ3+ thymic precursors of dermal epithelial T cells. Patterns of GPR15L expression by epithelial cells in adult mice and humans suggest a homeostatic role for the chemokine in lymphocyte localization to the large intestines, as well as a role in homing to the epidermis during wound healing or inflammation. GPR15L is also significantly expressed in squamous mucosa of the oral cavity and esophagus with still poorly defined regulation. Identification of the chemotactic activity of GPR15L adds to its reported antibacterial and tumor cell growth regulatory functions and suggests the potential of targeting GPR15L–GPR15 interactions for modulation of mucosal and cutaneous inflammation
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Inflammation switches the chemoattractant requirements for naive lymphocyte entry into lymph nodes.
Sustained lymphocyte migration from blood into lymph nodes (LNs) is important for immune responses. The CC-chemokine receptor-7 (CCR7) ligand CCL21 is required for LN entry but is downregulated during inflammation, and it has been unclear how recruitment is maintained. Here, we show that the oxysterol biosynthetic enzyme cholesterol-25-hydroxylase (Ch25h) is upregulated in LN high endothelial venules during viral infection. Lymphocytes become dependent on oxysterols, generated through a transcellular endothelial-fibroblast metabolic pathway, and the receptor EBI2 for inflamed LN entry. Additionally, Langerhans cells are an oxysterol source. Ch25h is also expressed in inflamed peripheral endothelium, and EBI2 mediates B cell recruitment in a tumor model. Finally, we demonstrate that LN CCL19 is critical in lymphocyte recruitment during inflammation. Thus, our work explains how naive precursor trafficking is sustained in responding LNs, identifies a role for oxysterols in cell recruitment into inflamed tissues, and establishes a logic for the CCR7 two-ligand system
Age-Specific ADME Gene Expression in Infant Intestinal Enteroids
In childhood, developmental changes and environmental interactions highly affect orally dosed drug disposition across the age range. To optimize dosing regimens and ensure safe use of drugs in pediatric patients, understanding this age-dependent biology is necessary. In this proof-of-concept study, we aimed to culture age-specific enteroids from infant tissue which represent its original donor material, specifically for drug transport and metabolism. Enteroid lines from fresh infant tissues ( n = 8, age range: 0.3-45 postnatal weeks) and adult tissues ( n = 3) were established and expanded to 3D self-organizing enteroids. The gene expression of drug transporters P-gp ( ABCB1), BCRP ( ABCG2), MRP2 ( ABCC2), and PEPT1 ( SLC15A1) and drug metabolizing enzymes CYP3A4, CYP2C18, and UGT1A1 was determined with RT-qPCR in fresh tissue and its derivative differentiated enteroids. Expression levels of P-gp, BCRP, MRP2, and CYP3A4 were similar between tissues and enteroids. PEPT1 and CYP2C18 expression was lower in enteroids compared to that in the tissue. The expression of UGT1A1 in the tissue was lower than that in enteroids. The gene expression did not change with the enteroid passage number for all genes studied. Similar maturational patterns in tissues and enteroids were visually observed for P-gp, PEPT1, MRP2, CYP3A4, CYP2C18, and VIL1. In this explorative study, interpatient variability was high, likely due to the diverse patient characteristics of the sampled population (e.g., disease, age, and treatment). To summarize, maturational patterns of clinically relevant ADME genes in tissue were maintained in enteroids. These findings are an important step toward the potential use of pediatric enteroids in pediatric drug development, which in the future may lead to improved pediatric safety predictions during drug development. We reason that such an approach can contribute to a potential age-specific platform to study and predict drug exposure and intestinal safety in pediatrics. </p
Age-Specific ADME Gene Expression in Infant Intestinal Enteroids
In childhood, developmental changes and environmental interactions highly affect orally dosed drug disposition across the age range. To optimize dosing regimens and ensure safe use of drugs in pediatric patients, understanding this age-dependent biology is necessary. In this proof-of-concept study, we aimed to culture age-specific enteroids from infant tissue which represent its original donor material, specifically for drug transport and metabolism. Enteroid lines from fresh infant tissues (n = 8, age range: 0.3-45 postnatal weeks) and adult tissues (n = 3) were established and expanded to 3D self-organizing enteroids. The gene expression of drug transporters P-gp (ABCB1), BCRP (ABCG2), MRP2 (ABCC2), and PEPT1 (SLC15A1) and drug metabolizing enzymes CYP3A4, CYP2C18, and UGT1A1 was determined with RT-qPCR in fresh tissue and its derivative differentiated enteroids. Expression levels of P-gp, BCRP, MRP2, and CYP3A4 were similar between tissues and enteroids. PEPT1 and CYP2C18 expression was lower in enteroids compared to that in the tissue. The expression of UGT1A1 in the tissue was lower than that in enteroids. The gene expression did not change with the enteroid passage number for all genes studied. Similar maturational patterns in tissues and enteroids were visually observed for P-gp, PEPT1, MRP2, CYP3A4, CYP2C18, and VIL1. In this explorative study, interpatient variability was high, likely due to the diverse patient characteristics of the sampled population (e.g., disease, age, and treatment). To summarize, maturational patterns of clinically relevant ADME genes in tissue were maintained in enteroids. These findings are an important step toward the potential use of pediatric enteroids in pediatric drug development, which in the future may lead to improved pediatric safety predictions during drug development. We reason that such an approach can contribute to a potential age-specific platform to study and predict drug exposure and intestinal safety in pediatrics
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Exploration of cell development pathways through high-dimensional single cell analysis in trajectory space
High-dimensional single cell profiling coupled with computational modeling is emerging as a powerful tool to elucidate developmental programs directing cell lineages. We introduce tSpace, an algorithm based on the concept of "trajectory space", in which cells are defined by their distance along nearest neighbor pathways to every other cell in a population. Graphical mapping of cells in trajectory space allows unsupervised reconstruction and exploration of complex developmental sequences. Applied to flow and mass cytometry data, the method faithfully reconstructs thymic T cell development and reveals development and trafficking regulation of tonsillar B cells. Applied to the single cell transcriptome of mouse intestine and C. elegans, the method recapitulates development from intestinal stem cells to specialized epithelial phenotypes more faithfully than existing algorithms and orders C. elegans cells concordantly to the associated embryonic time. tSpace profiling of complex populations is well suited for hypothesis generation in developing cell systems
Neutrophilic infiltration in organ-on-a-chip model of tissue inflammation
We describe a microphysiological model of intestinal inflammation, which incorporates and captures the functional interactions between an epithelial barrier, resident macrophages, infiltrating neutrophils, and extrcellular matrix degradation products.</p
