28 research outputs found
Self-Assembly of Glycerol-Amphiphilic Janus Dendrimers Amplifies and Indicates Principles for the Selection of Stereochemistry by Biological Membranes
The principles for the selection of the stereochemistry
of phospholipids of biological membranes remain unclear and continue
to be debated. Therefore, any new experiments on this topic may help
progress in this field. To address this question, three libraries
of constitutional isomeric glycerol-amphiphilic Janus dendrimers (JDs)
with nonsymmetric homochiral, racemic, and symmetric achiral branching
points were synthesized by an orthogonal–modular–convergent
methodology. These JDs amplify self-assembly, and therefore, monodisperse
vesicles known as dendrimersomes (DSs) with predictable dimensions
programmed by JD concentration were assembled by rapid injection of
their ethanol solution into water. DSs of homochiral JD enantiomers,
racemic, including mixtures of different enantiomers, and achiral
exhibited similar DS size-concentration dependence. However, the number
of bilayers of DSs assembled from homochiral, achiral, and racemic
JDs determined by cryo-TEM were different. Statistical analysis of
the number of bilayers and coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations
demonstrated that homochiral JDs formed predominantly unilamellar
DSs. Symmetric achiral JDs assembled only unilamellar DSs while racemic
JDs favored multilamellar DSs. Since cell membranes are unilamellar,
these results indicate a new rationale for nonsymmetric homochiral vs racemic selection. Simultaneously, these experiments
imply that the symmetric achiral lipids forming more stable membrane,
probably had been the preferable assemblies of prebiotic cell membranes
Targeted Delivery of mRNA with One-Component Ionizable Amphiphilic Janus Dendrimers
Targeted
and efficient delivery of nucleic acids with viral and
synthetic vectors is the key step of genetic nanomedicine. The four-component
lipid nanoparticle synthetic delivery systems consisting of ionizable
lipids, phospholipids, cholesterol, and a PEG-conjugated lipid, assembled
by microfluidic or T-tube technology, have been extraordinarily successful
for delivery of mRNA to provide Covid-19 vaccines. Recently, we reported
a one-component multifunctional sequence-defined ionizable amphiphilic
Janus dendrimer (IAJD) synthetic delivery system for mRNA relying
on amphiphilic Janus dendrimers and glycodendrimers developed in our
laboratory. Amphiphilic Janus dendrimers consist of functional hydrophilic
dendrons conjugated to hydrophobic dendrons. Co-assembly of IAJDs
with mRNA into dendrimersome nanoparticles (DNPs) occurs by simple
injection in acetate buffer, rather than by microfluidic devices,
and provides a very efficient system for delivery of mRNA to lung.
Here we report the replacement of most of the hydrophilic fragment
of the dendron from IAJDs, maintaining only its ionizable amine, while
changing its interconnecting group to the hydrophobic dendron from
amide to ester. The resulting IAJDs demonstrated that protonated ionizable
amines play dual roles of hydrophilic fragment and binding ligand
for mRNA, changing delivery from lung to spleen and/or liver. Replacing
the interconnecting ester with the amide switched the delivery back
to lung. Delivery predominantly to liver is favored by pairs of odd
and even alkyl groups in the hydrophobic dendron. This simple structural
change transformed the targeted delivery of mRNA mediated with IAJDs,
from lung to liver and spleen, and expands the utility of DNPs from
therapeutics to vaccines
The Unexpected Importance of the Primary Structure of the Hydrophobic Part of One-Component Ionizable Amphiphilic Janus Dendrimers in Targeted mRNA Delivery Activity
Viral
and synthetic vectors for delivery of nucleic acids impacted
genetic nanomedicine by aiding the rapid development of the extraordinarily
efficient Covid-19 vaccines. Access to targeted delivery of nucleic
acids is expected to expand the field of nanomedicine beyond most
expectations. Both viral and synthetic vectors have advantages and
disadvantages. The major advantage of the synthetic vectors is their
unlimited synthetic capability. The four-component lipid nanoparticles
(LNPs) are the leading nonviral vector for mRNA used by Pfizer and
Moderna in Covid-19 vaccines. Their synthetic capacity inspired us
to develop a one-component multifunctional sequence-defined ionizable
amphiphilic Janus dendrimer (IAJD) delivery system for mRNA. The first
experiments on IAJDs provided, through a rational-library design combined
with orthogonal-modular accelerated synthesis and sequence control
in their hydrophilic part, some of the most active synthetic vectors
for the delivery of mRNA to lung. The second experiments employed
a similar strategy, generating, by a less complex hydrophilic structure,
a library of IAJDs targeting spleen, liver, and lung. Here, we report
preliminary studies designing the hydrophobic region of IAJDs by using
dissimilar alkyl lengths and demonstrate the unexpectedly important
role of the primary structure of the hydrophobic part of IAJDs by
increasing up to 90.2-fold the activity of targeted delivery of mRNA
to spleen, lymph nodes, liver, and lung. The principles of the design
strategy reported here and in previous publications indicate that
IAJDs could have a profound impact on the future of genetic nanomedicine
RNAseq data.
The presence of large protein inclusions is a hallmark of neurodegeneration, and yet the precise molecular factors that contribute to their formation remain poorly understood. Screens using aggregation-prone proteins have commonly relied on downstream toxicity as a readout rather than the direct formation of aggregates. Here, we combined a genome-wide CRISPR knockout screen with Pulse Shape Analysis, a FACS-based method for inclusion detection, to identify direct modifiers of TDP-43 aggregation in human cells. Our screen revealed both canonical and novel proteostasis genes, and unearthed SRRD, a poorly characterized protein, as a top regulator of protein inclusion formation. APEX biotin labeling reveals that SRRD resides in proximity to proteins that are involved in the formation and breakage of disulfide bonds and to intermediate filaments, suggesting a role in regulation of the spatial dynamics of the intermediate filament network. Indeed, loss of SRRD results in aberrant intermediate filament fibrils and the impaired formation of aggresomes, including blunted vimentin cage structure, during proteotoxic stress. Interestingly, SRRD also localizes to aggresomes and unfolded proteins, and rescues proteotoxicity in yeast whereby its N-terminal low complexity domain is sufficient to induce this affect. Altogether this suggests an unanticipated and broad role for SRRD in cytoskeletal organization and cellular proteostasis.</div
APEX2 proximity labeling reveals SRRD in close proximity to intermediate filaments and regulators of IF oligomerization.
1) HEK293Ts stably expressing SRRD-HA stained for HA and either CANX or mitochondria. B) Schematic of APEX2 proximity labeling experiment where APEX2 is fused to SRRD or to an NES control. C) Volcano plot of APEX2 proximity labeling mass spectrometry output, where fold change (x-axis) is plotted by significance (y-axis). Colored dots correspond to STRING clusters in 2E. (*) correspond to indicate functional annotations of interest highlighted in STRING cluster in 2E. D) Filtered GSEA (cellular compartment) of SRRD-APEX2 dataset. E) Clustering of top protein-protein interactions (STRING database) of top 88 proteins ranked by fold change and p-value. Clusters generated with MCL clustering and excludes proteins with no known connections and clusters with insignificant p-values. Clusters colored based on STRING annotated GO terms and proteins with functional annotations of interested are highlighted as follows: Protein-disulfide isomerases circled in pink, proteins involved in calcium binding circled in orange.</p
TDP-43 screen hits (less aggregation).
The presence of large protein inclusions is a hallmark of neurodegeneration, and yet the precise molecular factors that contribute to their formation remain poorly understood. Screens using aggregation-prone proteins have commonly relied on downstream toxicity as a readout rather than the direct formation of aggregates. Here, we combined a genome-wide CRISPR knockout screen with Pulse Shape Analysis, a FACS-based method for inclusion detection, to identify direct modifiers of TDP-43 aggregation in human cells. Our screen revealed both canonical and novel proteostasis genes, and unearthed SRRD, a poorly characterized protein, as a top regulator of protein inclusion formation. APEX biotin labeling reveals that SRRD resides in proximity to proteins that are involved in the formation and breakage of disulfide bonds and to intermediate filaments, suggesting a role in regulation of the spatial dynamics of the intermediate filament network. Indeed, loss of SRRD results in aberrant intermediate filament fibrils and the impaired formation of aggresomes, including blunted vimentin cage structure, during proteotoxic stress. Interestingly, SRRD also localizes to aggresomes and unfolded proteins, and rescues proteotoxicity in yeast whereby its N-terminal low complexity domain is sufficient to induce this affect. Altogether this suggests an unanticipated and broad role for SRRD in cytoskeletal organization and cellular proteostasis.</div
Figs S1-S15.
The presence of large protein inclusions is a hallmark of neurodegeneration, and yet the precise molecular factors that contribute to their formation remain poorly understood. Screens using aggregation-prone proteins have commonly relied on downstream toxicity as a readout rather than the direct formation of aggregates. Here, we combined a genome-wide CRISPR knockout screen with Pulse Shape Analysis, a FACS-based method for inclusion detection, to identify direct modifiers of TDP-43 aggregation in human cells. Our screen revealed both canonical and novel proteostasis genes, and unearthed SRRD, a poorly characterized protein, as a top regulator of protein inclusion formation. APEX biotin labeling reveals that SRRD resides in proximity to proteins that are involved in the formation and breakage of disulfide bonds and to intermediate filaments, suggesting a role in regulation of the spatial dynamics of the intermediate filament network. Indeed, loss of SRRD results in aberrant intermediate filament fibrils and the impaired formation of aggresomes, including blunted vimentin cage structure, during proteotoxic stress. Interestingly, SRRD also localizes to aggresomes and unfolded proteins, and rescues proteotoxicity in yeast whereby its N-terminal low complexity domain is sufficient to induce this affect. Altogether this suggests an unanticipated and broad role for SRRD in cytoskeletal organization and cellular proteostasis.</div
Loss of SRRD results in disorganized and downregulated IFs.
A) Confocal images of indicated cells lines stained for VIM. B) Volcano plot of quantitative proteomics experiment comparing SRRD clonal KO HEK293Ts to WT HEK293Ts where fold change (x-axis) is plotted by significance (y-axis). Horizontal dashed line represents adjusted p-value cutoff of 0.05, vertical line represents fold change of -1. Orange and green colored dots correspond to STRING clusters in 3C. C) Select clusters of top depleted proteins in SRRD KO (STRING database) ranked by fold change and p-value. Clusters generated with MCL clustering and excludes proteins with insignificant p-values. Clusters colored based on STRING annotated GO terms. D) Filtered GSEA (cellular compartment) of quantitative proteomics dataset. E) Representative images of NGN2 neurons transduced with SRRD CRISPRi sgRNA or non-targeting control, stained for MAP2 and INA. F) Quantification of the area per cell covered by INA and MAP2 signal in SRRD CRISPRi and NTC control NGN2 neurons.</p
Processed quantitative proteomics data.
The presence of large protein inclusions is a hallmark of neurodegeneration, and yet the precise molecular factors that contribute to their formation remain poorly understood. Screens using aggregation-prone proteins have commonly relied on downstream toxicity as a readout rather than the direct formation of aggregates. Here, we combined a genome-wide CRISPR knockout screen with Pulse Shape Analysis, a FACS-based method for inclusion detection, to identify direct modifiers of TDP-43 aggregation in human cells. Our screen revealed both canonical and novel proteostasis genes, and unearthed SRRD, a poorly characterized protein, as a top regulator of protein inclusion formation. APEX biotin labeling reveals that SRRD resides in proximity to proteins that are involved in the formation and breakage of disulfide bonds and to intermediate filaments, suggesting a role in regulation of the spatial dynamics of the intermediate filament network. Indeed, loss of SRRD results in aberrant intermediate filament fibrils and the impaired formation of aggresomes, including blunted vimentin cage structure, during proteotoxic stress. Interestingly, SRRD also localizes to aggresomes and unfolded proteins, and rescues proteotoxicity in yeast whereby its N-terminal low complexity domain is sufficient to induce this affect. Altogether this suggests an unanticipated and broad role for SRRD in cytoskeletal organization and cellular proteostasis.</div
Plasmids submitted to AddGene.
The presence of large protein inclusions is a hallmark of neurodegeneration, and yet the precise molecular factors that contribute to their formation remain poorly understood. Screens using aggregation-prone proteins have commonly relied on downstream toxicity as a readout rather than the direct formation of aggregates. Here, we combined a genome-wide CRISPR knockout screen with Pulse Shape Analysis, a FACS-based method for inclusion detection, to identify direct modifiers of TDP-43 aggregation in human cells. Our screen revealed both canonical and novel proteostasis genes, and unearthed SRRD, a poorly characterized protein, as a top regulator of protein inclusion formation. APEX biotin labeling reveals that SRRD resides in proximity to proteins that are involved in the formation and breakage of disulfide bonds and to intermediate filaments, suggesting a role in regulation of the spatial dynamics of the intermediate filament network. Indeed, loss of SRRD results in aberrant intermediate filament fibrils and the impaired formation of aggresomes, including blunted vimentin cage structure, during proteotoxic stress. Interestingly, SRRD also localizes to aggresomes and unfolded proteins, and rescues proteotoxicity in yeast whereby its N-terminal low complexity domain is sufficient to induce this affect. Altogether this suggests an unanticipated and broad role for SRRD in cytoskeletal organization and cellular proteostasis.</div
