Selected Grantee Publications
MIC-Drop: A Platform for Large-scale In Vivo CRISPR Screens
Parvez et al., Science. 2021.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34413171/
CRISPR screens in animals are challenging because generating, validating, and keeping track of large numbers of mutant animals is prohibitive. These authors introduce Multiplexed Intermixed CRISPR Droplets (MIC-Drop), a platform combining droplet microfluidics, single-needle en masse CRISPR ribonucleoprotein injections, and DNA barcoding to enable large-scale functional genetic screens in zebrafish. In one application, they showed that MIC-Drop could identify small-molecule targets. Furthermore, in a MIC-Drop screen of 188 poorly characterized genes, they discovered several genes important for cardiac development and function. With the potential to scale to thousands of genes, MIC-Drop enables genome-scale reverse genetic screens in model organisms. Supported by ORIP (R24OD017870), NIGMS, and NHLBI.
Cell-Specific Transcriptional Control of Mitochondrial Metabolism by TIF1γ Drives Erythropoiesis
Rossmann et al., Science. 2021.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33986176/
Transcription and metabolism both influence cell function but dedicated transcriptional control of metabolic pathways that regulate cell fate has rarely been defined. The authors discovered that inhibition of the pyrimidine biosynthesis enzyme dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODH) rescues erythroid differentiation in bloodless zebrafish moonshine (mon) mutant embryos defective for transcriptional intermediary factor 1 gamma (tif1γ). Upon tif1γ loss, CoQ levels are reduced, and a high succinate/α-ketoglutarate ratio leads to increased histone methylation. A CoQ analog rescues mon's bloodless phenotype. These results demonstrate that mitochondrial metabolism is a key output of a lineage transcription factor that drives cell fate decisions in the early blood lineage. Supported by ORIP (R24OD017870), NIGMS, NHLBI, and NCI.
'Enhancing' Red Cell Fate Through Epigenetic Mechanisms
Rossmann and Zon et al., Current Opinion in Hematology. 2021.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33741760/
Transcription of erythroid-specific genes is regulated by the three-dimensional (3D) structure and composition of chromatin, which changes during erythroid differentiation. These authors address recent developments delineating the interface of chromatin regulation and erythroid-specific lineage transcription. They survey the erythroid chromatin landscape, erythroid enhancer-promotor interactions, super-enhancer functionality, the role of chromatin modifiers and epigenetic crosstalk, as well as the progress in mapping red blood cell (RBC) trait-associated genetic variants within cis-regulatory elements (CREs) identified in genome-wide association study (GWAS) efforts. New emerging technologies allow investigation of small cell numbers have advanced our understanding of chromatin dynamics during erythroid differentiation in vivo. Supported by ORIP (R24OD017870) and NHLBI.
Severely Ill COVID-19 Patients Display Impaired Exhaustion Features in SARS-CoV-2-Reactive CD8+ T Cells
Kusnadi et al., Science Immunology. 2021.
https://immunology.sciencemag.org/content/6/55/eabe4782.long
How CD8+ T cells respond to SARS-CoV-2 infection is not fully known. Investigators reported on the single-cell transcriptomes of >80,000 virus-reactive CD8+ T cells, obtained using a modified Antigen-Reactive T cell Enrichment assay, from 39 COVID-19 patients and 10 healthy subjects. COVID-19 patient cells were segregated into two groups based on whether the dominant CD8+ T cell response to SARS-CoV-2 was “exhausted” or not. SARS-CoV-2-reactive cells in the exhausted subset were increased in frequency and displayed less cytotoxicity and inflammatory features in COVID-19 patients with mild compared to severe illness. In contrast, SARS-CoV-2-reactive cells in the dominant non-exhausted subset from patients with severe disease showed enrichment of transcripts linked to co-stimulation, pro-survival Nuclear Factor κB signaling, and anti-apoptotic pathways, suggesting the generation of robust CD8+ T cell memory responses in patients with severe COVID-19 illness. Overall, this single-cell analysis revealed substantial diversity in the nature of CD8+ T cells responding to SARS-CoV-2. Supported by ORIP (S10RR027366 and S10OD025052), NIAID, NHLBI, and NIGMS.
Lung Expression of Human Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme 2 Sensitizes the Mouse to SARS-CoV-2 Infection
Han et al., American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology. 2021.
https://doi.org/10.1165/rcmb.2020-0354OC
A rapidly deployable mouse model that recapitulates a disease caused by a novel pathogen would be a valuable research tool during a pandemic. Researchers were able to produce C57BL/6J mice with lung expression of human angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (hACE2), the receptor for SARS-CoV-2. They did so by oropharyngeal delivery of a recombinant human adenovirus type 5 expressing hACE2. The transduced mice were then infected with SARS-CoV-2. Thereafter, the mice developed interstitial pneumonia with perivascular inflammation, exhibited higher viral load in lungs compared to controls, and displayed a gene expression phenotype resembling the clinical response in lungs of humans with COVID-19. Supported by ORIP (P51OD011104, R21OD024931), NHLBI, and NIGMS.