Selected Grantee Publications
Generation of SIV-Resistant T Cells and Macrophages from Nonhuman Primate Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells with Edited CCR5 Locus
D’Souza et al., Stem Cell Reports. 2022.
https://www.doi.org/10.1016/j.stemcr.2022.03.003
Genetically modified T cells have shown promise as a potential therapy for HIV. A renewable source of T cells from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) could help to further research progress in this area. The researchers used Mauritian cynomolgus macaques to generate simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)–resistant T cells and macrophages from iPSCs. These engineered cells demonstrated impaired capacity for differentiation into CD4+CD8+ T cells. T cells and macrophages from the edited iPSCs did not support SIV replication. These findings could be applied to the development of new HIV therapies. Supported by ORIP (R24OD021322, P51OD011106) and NHLBI.
Adverse Biobehavioral Effects in Infants Resulting from Pregnant Rhesus Macaques’ Exposure to Wildfire Smoke
Capitanio et al., Nature Communications. 2022.
https://www.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-29436-9
Exposure to wildfire smoke (WFS) is a growing health concern as wildfires increase in number and size due to climate change. Researchers found that developing rhesus monkeys exposed to WFS from the Camp Fire in California (November 2018) during the first third of gestation exhibited greater inflammation, blunted cortisol, more passive behavior, and memory impairment compared to animals conceived after smoke had dissipated. Analysis of a historical control cohort did not support the alternative hypothesis that conception timing alone explained the results. These findings suggest that WFS may have a teratogenic effect on neural development in the primate fetus. Supported by ORIP (P51OD011107, R24OD010962) and NIEHS.
Antibody-Peptide Epitope Conjugates for Personalized Cancer Therapy
Zhang et al., Cancer Research. 2022.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34965933/
Antibody-peptide epitope conjugates (APEC) are a new class of modified antibody-drug conjugates that redirect T cell viral immunity against tumor cells. Investigators developed an experimental pipeline to create patient-specific APECs and identified new preclinical therapies for ovarian carcinoma. Based on functional assessment of viral peptide antigen responses to common viruses like cytomegalovirus in ovarian cancer patients, a library of 192 APECs with distinct protease cleavage sequences was created using the anti-epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM) antibody. The streamlined and systemic approach includes assessing APEC function in vivo using a new zebrafish xenograft platform that facilitates high-resolution single-cell imaging to assess therapy responses and then validating top candidates using traditional mouse xenograft studies and primary patient samples. This study develops a high-throughput preclinical platform to identify patient-specific antibody-peptide epitope conjugates that target cancer cells and demonstrates the potential of this immunotherapy approach for treating ovarian carcinoma. Supported by ORIP (R24OD016761).
HDAC Inhibitor Titration of Transcription and Axolotl Tail Regeneration
Voss et al., Frontiers in Cell and Development Biology. 2021.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35036404/
New patterns of gene expression are enacted and regulated during tissue regeneration. Romidepsin, an FDA-approved HDAC inhibitor, potently blocks axolotl embryo tail regeneration by altering initial transcriptional responses to injury. Regeneration inhibitory concentrations of romidepsin increased and decreased the expression of key genes. Single-nuclei RNA sequencing at 6 HPA illustrated that key genes were altered by romidepsin in the same direction across multiple cell types. These results implicate HDAC activity as a transcriptional mechanism that operates across cell types to regulate the alternative expression of genes that associate with regenerative success versus failure outcomes. Supported by ORIP (P40OD019794, R24OD010435, R24OD021479), NICHD, and NIGMS.
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.
A Novel Non-Human Primate Model of Pelizaeus-Merzbacher Disease
Sherman et al., Neurobiology of Disease. 2021.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S096999612100214X
Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease (PMD) in humans is a severe hypomyelinating disorder of the central nervous system (CNS) linked to mutations in the proteolipid protein-1 (PLP1) gene. Investigators report on three spontaneous cases of male neonatal rhesus macaques (RMs) with clinical symptoms of hypomyelinating disease. Genetic analysis revealed that the parents of these related RMs carried a rare, hemizygous missense variant in exon 5 of the PLP1 gene. These RMs represent the first reported NHP model of PMD, providing an opportunity for studies to promote myelination in pediatric hypomyelinating diseases, as other animal models for PMD do not fully mimic the human disorder. Supported by ORIP (R24OD021324, P51OD011092, and S10OD025002) and NINDS.
Whole-Organism 3D Quantitative Characterization of Zebrafish Melanin by Silver Deposition Micro-CT
Katz et al., eLife. 2021.
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.03.11.434673v1
This research team combined micro-computed tomography (CT) with a novel application of ionic silver staining to characterize melanin distribution in whole zebrafish larvae. The resulting images enabled whole-body, computational analyses of regional melanin content and morphology. Normalized micro-CT reconstructions of silver-stained fish consistently reproduced pigment patterns seen by light microscopy and allowed direct quantitative comparisons of melanin content. Silver staining of melanin for micro-CT provides proof-of-principle for whole-body, 3D computational phenomic analysis of a specific cell type at cellular resolution. Advances such as this in whole-organism, high-resolution phenotyping provide superior context for studying the phenotypic effects of genetic, disease, and environmental variables. Supported by ORIP (R24OD018559).
IL-21 Enhances Influenza Vaccine Responses in Aged Macaques with Suppressed SIV Infection
Kvistad et al., JCI Insight. 2021.
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.150888
Aging with HIV is associated with low-grade systemic inflammation, immune senescence, and impaired antibody (Ab) responses to such vaccines as influenza (flu). Researchers investigated the role of interleukin (IL)-21, a CD4 T follicular helper cell regulator, on flu vaccine Ab response in rhesus macaques in the context of age and controlled simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) mac239 infection. They found that IL-21 enhanced flu vaccine-induced Ab responses in SIV+ (anti-retroviral therapy-suppressed) aged rhesus macaques, adjuvanting the flu vaccine by modulating lymph node germinal center activity. Thus, strategies to supplement IL-21 in aging might improve vaccine responses in people aging with HIV. Supported by ORIP (R24OD010947) and NIAID.
Circulating Integrin α4β7+ CD4 T Cells Are Enriched for Proliferative Transcriptional Programs in HIV Infection
Lakshmanappa et al., Federation of European Biochemical Societies Letters. 2021.
https://doi.org/10.1002/1873-3468.14163
HIV preferentially infects α4β7+ CD4 T cells, forming latent reservoirs that contribute to HIV persistence, yet the properties of α4β7+ CD4 T cells are poorly understood. Investigating HIV-infected humans and SHIV-infected rhesus macaques, investigators demonstrated that α4β7+ CD4 T cells in blood are enriched for genes regulating cell cycle progression and cellular metabolism. In contrast, rectal α4β7+ CD4 T cells exhibited a core tissue-residency gene expression program. These features were conserved across primate species, suggesting that the tissue environment influences memory T-cell transcriptional networks. These findings provide an important foundation for understanding the role of α4β7 in HIV infection. Supported by ORIP (K01OD023034, R24OD010976) and NIAID.
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.