Selected Grantee Publications
Large Animal Models Enhance the Study of Crypt-Mediated Epithelial Recovery From Prolonged Intestinal Ischemia Reperfusion Injury
McKinney-Aguirre et al., American Journal of Physiology-Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology. 2024.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39404771/
Intestinal ischemia and reperfusion injury (IRI) is a severe pathological alteration that compromises the intestinal epithelial barrier, causing bacterial translocation, shock, sepsis, and potentially death. Preclinical research for IRI has focused on utilizing murine models, but mice demonstrate key anatomical and physiological intestinal differences from humans, such as tissue enzymes, intestinal permeability, and hypoxic response pathways. The researchers compared a 3-hour IRI porcine model to a 3-hour IRI murine model to reveal which demonstrated a stronger translational capacity. Both models demonstrated crypt damage, but only the porcine model showed recovery-associated crypt death expansion and re-epithelialization. At 72 hours post-IRI, mouse mortality was 84.6%, whereas porcine mortality was 0%. A porcine model would be more reliable for future translational studies focused on understanding IRI mechanisms for diagnosis and therapy advancements. Supported by ORIP (T32OD011130, K01OD010199, R03OD026598) and NIDDK.
Amphiphilic Shuttle Peptide Delivers Base Editor Ribonucleoprotein to Correct the CFTR R553X Mutation in Well-Differentiated Airway Epithelial Cells
Kulhankova et al., Nucleic Acids Research. 2024.
https://academic.oup.com/nar/article/52/19/11911/7771564?login=true
Effective translational delivery strategies for base editing applications in pulmonary diseases remain a challenge because of epithelial cells lining the intrapulmonary airways. The researchers demonstrated that the endosomal leakage domain (ELD) plays a crucial role in gene editing ribonucleoprotein (RNP) delivery activity. A novel shuttle peptide, S237, was created by flanking the ELD with poly glycine-serine stretches. Primary airway epithelia with the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) R533X mutation demonstrated restored CFTR function when treated with S237-dependent ABE8e-Cas9-NG RNP. S237 outperformed the S10 shuttle peptide at Cas9 RNP delivery in vitro and in vivo using primary human bronchial epithelial cells and transgenic green fluorescent protein neonatal pigs. This study highlights the efficacy of S237 peptide–mediated RNP delivery and its potential as a therapeutic tool for the treatment of cystic fibrosis. Supported by ORIP (U42OD027090, U42OD026635), NCATS, NHGRI, NHLBI, NIAID, NIDDK, and NIGMS.
Spatiotemporal Image Reconstruction to Enable High-Frame-Rate Dynamic Photoacoustic Tomography With Rotating-Gantry Volumetric Imagers
Cam et al., Journal of Biomedical Optics . 2024.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38249994
Dynamic photoacoustic computed tomography (PACT) is a valuable imaging technique for monitoring physiological processes. However, the current imaging techniques are often limited to two-dimensional spatial imaging. While PACT imagers capable of taking three-dimensional spatial images are commercially available, these systems have substantial limitations. Typically, the data are acquired sequentially rather than simultaneously at all views. The objects being imaged are dynamic and can vary during this process; as such, image reconstruction is inherently difficult, and the result is often incomplete. Cam et al. propose an image reconstruction method that can address these challenges and enable volumetric dynamic PACT imaging using existing preclinical imagers, which has the potential to significantly advance preclinical research and facilitate the monitoring of critical physiological biomarkers. Supported by ORIP (R44OD023029) and NIBIB.
Synthetic Protein Circuits for Programmable Control of Mammalian Cell Death
Xia et al., Cell. 2024.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38657604/
Natural cell-death pathways have been shown to eliminate harmful cells and shape immunity. Researchers used synthetic protein-level cell-death circuits, collectively termed “synpoptosis” circuits, to proteolytically regulate engineered executioner proteins and mammalian cell death. They show that the circuits direct cell death modes, respond to combinations of protease inputs, and selectively eliminate target cells. This work provides a foundation for programmable control of mammalian cell death. Future studies could focus on programmable control of cell death in various contexts, including cancer, senescence, fibrosis, autoimmunity, and infection. Supported by ORIP (F30OD036190) and NIBIB.
Murine MHC-Deficient Nonobese Diabetic Mice Carrying Human HLA-DQ8 Develop Severe Myocarditis and Myositis in Response to Anti-PD-1 Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor Cancer Therapy
Racine et al., Journal of Immunology. 2024.
Myocarditis has emerged as a relatively rare but often lethal autoimmune complication of checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) cancer therapy, and significant mortality is associated with this phenomenon. Investigators developed a new mouse model system that spontaneously develops myocarditis. These mice are highly susceptible to myocarditis and acute heart failure following anti-PD-1 ICI-induced treatment. Additionally, the treatment accelerates skeletal muscle myositis. The team performed characterization of cardiac and skeletal muscle T cells using histology, flow cytometry, adoptive transfers, and RNA sequencing analyses. This study sheds light on underlying immunological mechanisms in ICI myocarditis and provides the basis for further detailed analyses of diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. Supported by ORIP (U54OD020351, U54OD030187), NCI, NIA, NIDDK, and NIGMS.
Tumor Explants Elucidate a Cascade of Paracrine SHH, WNT, and VEGF Signals Driving Pancreatic Cancer Angiosuppression
Hasselluhn et al., Cancer Discovery. 2024.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37966260/
This study presents a key mechanism that prevents pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) from undergoing neoangiogenesis, which affects its development, pathophysiology, metabolism, and treatment response. Using human and murine PDAC explants, which effectively retain the complex cellular interactions of native tumor tissues, and single-cell regulatory network analysis, the study identified a cascade of three paracrine pathways bridging between multiple cell types and acting sequentially, Hedgehog to WNT to VEGF, as a key suppressor of angiogenesis in KRAS-mutant PDAC cells. This study provides an experimental paradigm for dissecting higher-order cellular interactions in tissues and has implications for PDAC treatment strategies. Supported by ORIP (S10OD012351, S10OD021764), NCI, and NIDDK.
Naturally Occurring Osteochondrosis Latens Lesions Identified by Quantitative and Morphological 10.5 T MRI in Pigs
Armstrong et al., Journal of Orthopaedic Research. 2023.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35716161/
Juvenile osteochondritis dissecans (JOCD) is a pediatric orthopedic disorder that is associated with pain and gait deficits. JOCD lesions form in the knee, elbow, and ankle joints and can progress to early-onset osteoarthritis. In this study, researchers used a noninvasive magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) method to identify naturally occurring lesions in intact knee and elbow joints of juvenile pigs. This work can be applied to noninvasive identification and monitoring of early JOCD lesions and determination of risk factors that contribute to their progression in children. Supported by ORIP (K01OD021293, T32OD010993), NIAMS, and NIBIB.
Gigapixel Imaging With a Novel Multi-Camera Array Microscope
Thomson et al., eLife. 2022.
https://www.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.74988
The dynamics of living organisms are organized across many spatial scales. The investigators created assembled a scalable multi-camera array microscope (MCAM) that enables comprehensive high-resolution, large field-of-view recording from multiple spatial scales simultaneously, ranging from structures that approach the cellular scale to large-group behavioral dynamics. By collecting data from up to 96 cameras, they computationally generated gigapixel-scale images and movies with a field of view over hundreds of square centimeters at an optical resolution of 18 µm. This system allows the team to observe the behavior and fine anatomical features of numerous freely moving model organisms on multiple spatial scales (e.g., larval zebrafish, fruit flies, slime mold). Overall, by removing the bottlenecks imposed by single-camera image acquisition systems, the MCAM provides a powerful platform for investigating detailed biological features and behavioral processes of small model organisms. Supported by ORIP (R44OD024879), NIEHS, NCI, and NIBIB.
Deep Learning Is Widely Applicable to Phenotyping Embryonic Development and Disease
Naert et al., Development. 2021.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34739029/
Genome editing simplifies the generation of new animal models for congenital disorders. The authors illustrate how deep learning (U-Net) automates segmentation tasks in various imaging modalities. They demonstrate this approach in embryos with polycystic kidneys (pkd1 and pkd2) and craniofacial dysmorphia (six1). They provide a library of pre-trained networks and detailed instructions for applying deep learning to datasets and demonstrate the versatility, precision, and scalability of deep neural network phenotyping on embryonic disease models. Supported by ORIP (P40OD010997, R24OD030008), NICHD, NIDDK, and NIMH.
MRI Characteristics of Japanese Macaque Encephalomyelitis (JME): Comparison to Human Diseases
Tagge et al., Journal of Neuroimaging. 2021.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jon.12868
Magnetic resonance imaging data (MRI) were obtained from 114 Japanese macaques, including 30 animals of both sexes that presented with neurological signs of Japanese macaque encephalomyelitis (JME). Quantitative estimates of blood-brain barrier permeability to gadolinium-based-contrast agent (GBCA) were obtained in acute, GBCA-enhancing lesions, and longitudinal imaging data were acquired for 15 JME animals. Intense, focal neuroinflammation was a key MRI finding in JME. Several features of JME compare directly to human inflammatory demyelinating diseases. The development and validation of noninvasive imaging biomarkers in JME provides the potential to improve diagnostic specificity and contribute to the understanding of human demyelinating diseases. Supported by ORIP (P51OD011092, S10OD018224), NINDS, and NIBIB.