95 research outputs found

    Minicircle DNA provide enhanced and prolonged transgene expression following airway gene transfer

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    Gene therapy for cystic fibrosis using non-viral, plasmid-based formulations has been the subject of intensive research for over two decades but a clinically viable product has yet to materialise in large part due to inefficient transgene expression. Minicircle DNA give enhanced and more persistent transgene expression compared to plasmid DNA in a number of organ systems but has not been assessed in the lung. In this study we compared minicircle DNA with plasmid DNA in transfections of airway epithelial cells. In vitro, luciferase gene expression from minicircles was 5-10-fold higher than with plasmid DNA. In eGFP transfections in vitro both the mean fluorescence intensity and percentage of cells transfected was 2-4-fold higher with minicircle DNA. Administration of equimolar amounts of DNA to mouse lungs resulted in a reduced inflammatory response and more persistent transgene expression, with luciferase activity persisting for 2 weeks from minicircle DNA compared to plasmid formulations. Transfection of equal mass amounts of DNA in mouse lungs resulted in a 6-fold increase in transgene expression in addition to more persistent transgene expression. Our findings have clear implications for gene therapy of airway disorders where plasmid DNA transfections have so far proven inefficient in clinical trials

    a therapeutic strategy for cystic fibrosis

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    The inhibition of ENaC may have therapeutic potential in CF airways by reducing sodium hyperabsorption, restoring lung epithelial surface fluid levels, airway hydration and mucociliary function. The challenge has been to deliver siRNA to the lung with sufficient efficacy for a sustained therapeutic effect. We have developed a self-assembling nanocomplex formulation for siRNA delivery to the airways that consists of a liposome (DOTMA/DOPE; L), an epithelial targeting peptide (P) and siRNA (R). LPR formulations were assessed for their ability to silence expression of the transcript of the gene encoding the α-subunit of the sodium channel ENaC in cell lines and primary epithelial cells, in submerged cultures or grown in air-liquid interface conditions. LPRs, containing 50 nM or 100 nM siRNA, showed high levels of silencing, particularly in primary airway epithelial cells. When nebulised these nanocomplexes still retained their biophysical properties and transfection efficiencies. The silencing ability was determined at protein level by confocal microscopy and western blotting. In vivo data demonstrated that these nanoparticles had the ability to silence expression of the α-ENaC subunit gene. In conclusion, these findings show that LPRs can modulate the activity of ENaC and this approach might be promising as co-adjuvant therapy for cystic fibrosis

    Caffeine inhibits TGFβ activation in epithelial cells, interrupts fibroblast responses to TGFβ, and reduces established fibrosis in ex vivo precision-cut lung slices

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    Caffeine is a commonly used food additive found naturally in many products. In addition to potently stimulating the central nervous system caffeine is able to affect various systems within the body including the cardiovascular and respiratory systems. Importantly, caffeine is used clinically to treat apnoea and bronchopulmonary dysplasia in premature babies. Recently, caffeine has been shown to exhibit antifibrotic effects in the liver in part through reducing collagen expression and deposition, and reducing expression of the profibrotic cytokine TGFβ. The potential antifibrotic effects of caffeine in the lung have not previously been investigated. Using a combined in vitro and ex vivo approach we have demonstrated that caffeine can act as an antifibrotic agent in the lung by acting on two distinct cell types, namely epithelial cells and fibroblasts. Caffeine inhibited TGFβ activation by lung epithelial cells in a concentration-dependent manner but had no effect on TGFβ activation in fibroblasts. Importantly, however, caffeine abrogated profibrotic responses to TGFβ in lung fibroblasts. It inhibited basal expression of the α-smooth muscle actin gene and reduced TGFβ-induced increases in profibrotic genes. Finally, caffeine reduced established bleomycin-induced fibrosis after 5 days treatment in an ex vivo precision-cut lung slice model. Together, these findings suggest that there is merit in further investigating the potential use of caffeine, or its analogues, as antifibrotic agents in the lung

    Visual ratings of atrophy in MCI: prediction of conversion and relationship with CSF biomarkers.

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    Medial temporal lobe atrophy (MTA) and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) markers of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology may aid the early detection of AD in mild cognitive impairment (MCI). However, the relationship between structural and pathological markers is not well understood. Furthermore, while posterior atrophy (PA) is well recognized in AD, its value in predicting conversion from late-onset amnestic MCI to AD is unclear. In this study we used visual ratings of MTA and PA to assess their value in predicting conversion to AD in 394 MCI patients. The relationship of atrophy patterns with CSF Aβ1-42, tau, and p-tau(181) was further investigated in 114 controls, 192 MCI, and 99 AD patients. There was a strong association of MTA ratings with conversion to AD (p < 0.001), with a weaker association for PA ratings (p = 0.047). Specific associations between visual ratings and CSF biomarkers were found; MTA was associated with lower levels of Aβ1-42 in MCI, while PA was associated with elevated levels of tau in MCI and AD, which may reflect widespread neuronal loss including posterior regions. These findings suggest both that posterior atrophy may predict conversion to AD in late-onset MCI, and that there may be differential relationships between CSF biomarkers and regional atrophy patterns

    SARS-CoV-2 entry factors are highly expressed in nasal epithelial cells together with innate immune genes.

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    We investigated SARS-CoV-2 potential tropism by surveying expression of viral entry-associated genes in single-cell RNA-sequencing data from multiple tissues from healthy human donors. We co-detected these transcripts in specific respiratory, corneal and intestinal epithelial cells, potentially explaining the high efficiency of SARS-CoV-2 transmission. These genes are co-expressed in nasal epithelial cells with genes involved in innate immunity, highlighting the cells' potential role in initial viral infection, spread and clearance. The study offers a useful resource for further lines of inquiry with valuable clinical samples from COVID-19 patients and we provide our data in a comprehensive, open and user-friendly fashion at www.covid19cellatlas.org.This work was supported by the Wellcome Sanger Institute core funding (WT206194) and the Wellcome Strategic Scientific Support award “Pilot projects for the Human Cell Atlas” (WT211276/Z/18/Z), a Seed Network grant from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative to P.B., T.D., T.E.D., O.E., P.H., N.H., N.K., M.K., K.B.M., A.M., M.C.N., M.N., D.P., J.R., P.R.T., S.Q., A.R., O.R., M.S., J.S., J.G.S., C.E.S., H.B.S., D.S., A.T., J.W. and K.Z. and by the European Union’s H2020 research and innovation program under grant agreement No 874656 (discovAIR) to P.B., A.B., M.K., S.L., J.L., K.B.M., M.C.N., K.S.P., C.S., H.B.S., J.S., F.J.T. and M.vd.B. W.S. acknowledges funding from the Newton Fund, Medical Research Council (MRC), The Thailand Research Fund (TRF), and Thailand’s National Science and Technology Development Agency (NSTDA). M.C.N acknowledges funding from GSK Ltd, Netherlands Lung Foundation project no. 5.1.14.020 and 4.1.18.226. T.D. acknowledges funding from HubMap consortium and Stanford Child Health Research Institute- Woods Family Faculty Scholarship. T.E.D. acknowledges funding from HubMap. P.H. acknowledges funding from LENDULET-BIOMAG Grant (2018-342) and the European Regional Development Funds (GINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00006, GINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00026, GINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00037). J.L.B. acknowledges funding from Medical Research Council (MRC), and the UK Regenerative Medicine Platform (MR/ 5005579/1). P.B. acknowledges funding from Fondation pour la Recherche Médicale (DEQ20180339158), Agence Nationale de la Recherche (UCAJEDI, ANR-15-IDEX-01; SAHARRA, ANR-19-CE14-0027; France Génomique, ANR-10-INBS-09-03), and Conseil Départemental des Alpes Maritimes (2016-294DGADSH-CV; 2019-390DGADSH-CV). N.E.B. and J.K. acknowledge funding from NIH grant R01HL145372 and DOD grant W81XWH1910416. I.G. acknowledges funding from NIH (5R24HD000836) and the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human. N.H., J.G.S. and C.E.S. acknowledge funding by the Leducq foundation. N.H. is recipient of an ERC Advanced Grant. J.K. acknowledges funding from NIH grant K08HL130595 and the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation. N.K. acknowledges funding from NIH grants R01HL127349, U01HL145567 and an unrestricted grant from Three Lakes Foundation. M.K. acknowledges HHMI and Wall Center for Pulmonary Vascular Disease. H.L. acknowledges funding from National Research Foundation of Korea. K.M. acknowledges funding from Wellcome Trust. A.M. acknowledges funding from NIH grants HL135124, AG049665 and AI135964. M.Z.N. acknowledges funding from Rutherford Fund Fellowship allocated by the Medical Research Council and the UK Regenerative Medicine Platform (MR/ 5005579/1 to M.Z.N.). M.Z.N. and M.Y. have been funded by the Rosetrees Grant (Grant number M899). M.N. acknowledges funding from a BHF/DZHK grant and British Heart Foundation (PG/16/47/32156). J.O.-M. acknowledges funding from Richard and Susan Smith Family Foundation. D.P. acknowledges funding from Alan and Sandra Gerry Metastasis and Tumor Ecosystems Center. J.P. acknowledges funding from National Health and Medical Research Council. P.R.T. acknowledges funding from R01HL146557 from NHLBI/NIH. E.L.R. acknowledges funding from MRC MR/P009581/1 and MR/SO35907/1. A.R. and O. R. acknowledge HHMI, the Klarman Cell Observatory, and the Manton Foundation. K.S.-P. acknowledges NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre. C.S. acknowledges Swedish research Council, Swedish Cancer Society, and CPI. H.B.S. acknowledges German Center for Lung Research and Helmholtz Association. J.S. acknowledges Boehringer Ingelheim, by the German Research Foundation (DFG; EXC2151/1, ImmunoSensation2 - the immune sensory system, project number 390873048), project numbers 329123747, 347286815) and by the HGF grant sparse2big. A.K.S. acknowledges the Beckman Young Investigator Program, a Sloan Fellowship in Chemistry, the NIH (5U24AI118672), and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. F.J.T. acknowledges the German Center for Lung Research. M.vd.B. acknowledges from Ministry of Economic Affairs and Climate Policy by means of the PPP. K.B.W. is funded by the University College London-Birkbeck MRC Doctoral Training Programme. J.W. and Y.Y. acknowledge NIH, U01 HL148856 LungMap Phase II. R.X. acknowledges the NIH (DK043351). H.Z. is supported by the National Key R&D Program (no. 2019YFA0801703) and National Natural Science Foundation of China (no. 31871370

    Mapping interindividual dynamics of innate immune response at single-cell resolution

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    Common genetic variants across individuals modulate the cellular response to pathogens and are implicated in diverse immune pathologies, yet how they dynamically alter the response upon infection is not well understood. Here, we triggered antiviral responses in human fibroblasts from 68 healthy donors, and profiled tens of thousands of cells using single-cell RNA-sequencing. We developed GASPACHO (GAuSsian Processes for Association mapping leveraging Cell HeterOgeneity), a statistical approach designed to identify nonlinear dynamic genetic effects across transcriptional trajectories of cells. This approach identified 1,275 expression quantitative trait loci (local false discovery rate 10%) that manifested during the responses, many of which were colocalized with susceptibility loci identified by genome-wide association studies of infectious and autoimmune diseases, including the OAS1 splicing quantitative trait locus in a COVID-19 susceptibility locus. In summary, our analytical approach provides a unique framework for delineation of the genetic variants that shape a wide spectrum of transcriptional responses at single-cell resolution

    Microbiome-derived carnitine mimics as previously unknown mediators of gut-brain axis communication

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    Alterations to the gut microbiome are associated with various neurological diseases, yet evidence of causality and identity of microbiome-derived compounds that mediate gut-brain axis interaction remain elusive. Here, we identify two previously unknown bacterial metabolites 3-methyl-4-(trimethylammonio)butanoate and 4-(trimethylammonio)pentanoate, structural analogs of carnitine that are present in both gut and brain of specific pathogen–free mice but absent in germ-free mice. We demonstrate that these compounds are produced by anaerobic commensal bacteria from the family Lachnospiraceae (Clostridiales) family, colocalize with carnitine in brain white matter, and inhibit carnitine-mediated fatty acid oxidation in a murine cell culture model of central nervous system white matter. This is the first description of direct molecular inter-kingdom exchange between gut prokaryotes and mammalian brain cells, leading to inhibition of brain cell function

    Associations of β-Amyloid and Vascular Burden With Rates of Neurodegeneration in Cognitively Normal Members of the 1946 British Birth Cohort

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    OBJECTIVE: To quantify the independent and interactive associations of amyloid-β (Aβ) and white matter hyperintensity volume (WMHV) - a marker of presumed cerebrovascular disease (CVD) - with rates of neurodegeneration, and to examine the contributions of APOE ε4 and vascular risk measured at different stages of adulthood in cognitively normal members of the 1946 British birth cohort. METHODS: Participants underwent brain MRI and florbetapir-Aβ positron emission tomography as part of Insight 46, an observational population-based study. Changes in whole brain, ventricular and hippocampal volume were directly measured from baseline and repeat volumetric T1 MRI using the Boundary Shift Integral. Linear regression was used to test associations with: baseline Aβ deposition; baseline WMHV; APOE ε4; and office-based Framingham heart study-cardiovascular risk scores (FHS-CVS) and systolic blood pressure (BP) at ages 36, 53 and 69 years. RESULTS: 346 cognitively normal participants (mean [SD] age at baseline scan 70.5 [0.6] years; 48% female) had high-quality T1 MRI data from both time-points (mean [SD] scan interval 2.4 [0.2] years). Being Aβ positive at baseline was associated with 0.87 ml/year faster whole brain atrophy (95% CI 0.03, 1.72), 0.39 ml/year greater ventricular expansion (95% CI 0.16, 0.64) and 0.016 ml/year faster hippocampal atrophy (95% CI 0.004, 0.027), while each 10 ml additional WMHV at baseline was associated with 1.07 ml/year faster whole brain atrophy (95% CI 0.47, 1.67), 0.31 ml/year greater ventricular expansion (95% CI 0.13, 0.60) and 0.014 ml/year faster hippocampal atrophy (95% CI 0.006, 0.022). These contributions were independent and there was no evidence that Aβ and WMHV interacted in their effects. There were no independent associations of APOE ε4 with rates of neurodegeneration after adjusting for Aβ status and WMHV, and no clear relationships between FHS-CVS or systolic BP and rates of neurodegeneration when assessed across the whole sample, nor any evidence that they acted synergistically with Aβ. CONCLUSIONS: Aβ and presumed CVD have distinct and additive effects on rates of neurodegeneration in cognitively normal elderly. These findings have implications for the use of MRI measures as biomarkers of neurodegeneration and emphasize the importance of risk management and early intervention targeting both pathways

    Presumed small vessel disease, imaging and cognition markers in the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative.

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    MRI-derived features of presumed cerebral small vessel disease are frequently found in Alzheimer's disease. Influences of such markers on disease-progression measures are poorly understood. We measured markers of presumed small vessel disease (white matter hyperintensity volumes; cerebral microbleeds) on baseline images of newly enrolled individuals in the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative cohort (GO and 2) and used linear mixed models to relate these to subsequent atrophy and neuropsychological score change. We also assessed heterogeneity in white matter hyperintensity positioning within biomarker abnormality sequences, driven by the data, using the Subtype and Stage Inference algorithm. This study recruited both sexes and included: controls: [n = 159, mean(SD) age = 74(6) years]; early and late mild cognitive impairment [ns = 265 and 139, respectively, mean(SD) ages =71(7) and 72(8) years, respectively]; Alzheimer's disease [n = 103, mean(SD) age = 75(8)] and significant memory concern [n = 72, mean(SD) age = 72(6) years]. Baseline demographic and vascular risk-factor data, and longitudinal cognitive scores (Mini-Mental State Examination; logical memory; and Trails A and B) were collected. Whole-brain and hippocampal volume change metrics were calculated. White matter hyperintensity volumes were associated with greater whole-brain and hippocampal volume changes independently of cerebral microbleeds (a doubling of baseline white matter hyperintensity was associated with an increase in atrophy rate of 0.3 ml/year for brain and 0.013 ml/year for hippocampus). Cerebral microbleeds were found in 15% of individuals and the presence of a microbleed, as opposed to none, was associated with increases in atrophy rate of 1.4 ml/year for whole brain and 0.021 ml/year for hippocampus. White matter hyperintensities were predictive of greater decline in all neuropsychological scores, while cerebral microbleeds were predictive of decline in logical memory (immediate recall) and Mini-Mental State Examination scores. We identified distinct groups with specific sequences of biomarker abnormality using continuous baseline measures and brain volume change. Four clusters were found; Group 1 showed early Alzheimer's pathology; Group 2 showed early neurodegeneration; Group 3 had early mixed Alzheimer's and cerebrovascular pathology; Group 4 had early neuropsychological score abnormalities. White matter hyperintensity volumes becoming abnormal was a late event for Groups 1 and 4 and an early event for 2 and 3. In summary, white matter hyperintensities and microbleeds were independently associated with progressive neurodegeneration (brain atrophy rates) and cognitive decline (change in neuropsychological scores). Mechanisms involving white matter hyperintensities and progression and microbleeds and progression may be partially separate. Distinct sequences of biomarker progression were found. White matter hyperintensity development was an early event in two sequences
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