46 research outputs found

    Single cells from human primary colorectal tumors exhibit polyfunctional heterogeneity in secretions of ELR+ CXC chemokines

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    Cancer is an inflammatory disease of tissue that is largely influenced by the interactions between multiple cell types, secreted factors, and signal transduction pathways. While single-cell sequencing continues to refine our understanding of the clonotypic heterogeneity within tumors, the complex interplay between genetic variations and non-genetic factors ultimately affects therapeutic outcome. Much has been learned through bulk studies of secreted factors in the tumor microenvironment, but the secretory behavior of single cells has been largely uncharacterized. Here we directly profiled the secretions of ELR+ CXC chemokines from thousands of single colorectal tumor and stromal cells, using an array of subnanoliter wells and a technique called microengraving to characterize both the rates of secretion of several factors at once and the numbers of cells secreting each chemokine. The ELR+ CXC chemokines are highly redundant, pro-angiogenic cytokines that signal via the CXCR1 and CXCR2 receptors, influencing tumor growth and progression. We find that human primary colorectal tumor and stromal cells exhibit polyfunctional heterogeneity in the combinations and magnitudes of secretions for these chemokines. In cell lines, we observe similar variance: phenotypes observed in bulk can be largely absent among the majority of single cells, and discordances exist between secretory states measured and gene expression for these chemokines among single cells. Together, these measures suggest secretory states among tumor cells are complex and can evolve dynamically. Most importantly, this study reveals new insight into the intratumoral phenotypic heterogeneity of human primary tumors.Janssen Pharmaceutical Ltd.National Cancer Institute (U.S.) (Cancer Center Support (Core) Grant P30-CA14051)National Science Foundation (U.S.). Graduate Research FellowshipSingapore. Agency for Science, Technology and ResearchSwiss National Science Foundation (Fellowship for Advanced Researchers PA00P3 139659

    The Clostridium difficile Cell Wall Protein CwpV is Antigenically Variable between Strains, but Exhibits Conserved Aggregation-Promoting Function

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    Clostridium difficile is the main cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhea, leading to significant morbidity and mortality and putting considerable economic pressure on healthcare systems. Current knowledge of the molecular basis of pathogenesis is limited primarily to the activities and regulation of two major toxins. In contrast, little is known of mechanisms used in colonization of the enteric system. C. difficile expresses a proteinaceous array on its cell surface known as the S-layer, consisting primarily of the major S-layer protein SlpA and a family of SlpA homologues, the cell wall protein (CWP) family. CwpV is the largest member of this family and is expressed in a phase variable manner. Here we show CwpV promotes C. difficile aggregation, mediated by the C-terminal repetitive domain. This domain varies markedly between strains; five distinct repeat types were identified and were shown to be antigenically distinct. Other aspects of CwpV are, however, conserved. All CwpV types are expressed in a phase variable manner. Using targeted gene knock-out, we show that a single site-specific recombinase RecV is required for CwpV phase variation. CwpV is post-translationally cleaved at a conserved site leading to formation of a complex of cleavage products. The highly conserved N-terminus anchors the CwpV complex to the cell surface. Therefore CwpV function, regulation and processing are highly conserved across C. difficile strains, whilst the functional domain exists in at least five antigenically distinct forms. This hints at a complex evolutionary history for CwpV

    A New Toolbox for Assessing Single Cells

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    Unprecedented access to the biology of single cells is now feasible, enabled by recent technological advancements that allow us to manipulate and measure sparse samples and achieve a new level of resolution in space and time. This review focuses on advances in tools to study single cells for specific areas of biology. We examine both mature and nascent techniques to study single cells at the genomics, transcriptomics, and proteomics level. In addition, we provide an overview of tools that are well suited for following biological responses to defined perturbations with single-cell resolution. Techniques to analyze and manipulate single cells through soluble and chemical ligands, the microenvironment, and cell-cell interactions are provided. For each of these topics, we highlight the biological motivation, applications, methods, recent advances, and opportunities for improvement. The toolbox presented in this review can function as a starting point for the design of single-cell experiments. © 2014 by Annual Reviews

    The temporal association between religious/spiritual struggles and anxiety symptoms: A longitudinal study of psychiatric outpatients

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    Background: Anxiety disorders like Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) often cooccur with religious/spiritual (R/S) struggles, but the temporal association between anxiety symptoms and R/S struggles has not been studied in many clinical samples. The current longitudinal study examines this association in a sample at high risk for elevated anxiety and R/S struggles—adult psychiatric outpatients. Methods: After their initial psychiatrist evaluation at a U.S. group practice, 163 outpatients completed measures of R/S struggles, anxiety symptoms, depressive symptoms, and religiousness. The analytic sample (N = 120; 77.9% T1 retention) completed these measures 6-months and 12-months later (T2 and T3). Results: Patients exhibited high baseline rates of anxiety symptoms (72.5% met likely criteria for GAD) and R/S struggles (59.2% reported high levels of at least one R/S struggle subtype), yet they demonstrated small-to-moderate decreases in anxiety, depression, and R/S struggles over time. Controlling for sociodemographics and baseline struggles, anxiety, and depression, there was a bidirectional association between T2/T3 overall R/S struggles and T3/T2 anxiety symptoms. T2 moral and ultimate-meaning struggles were related to higher T3 anxiety symptoms, and T2 anxiety symptoms were related to higher T3 demonic struggles. Limitations: Results may have been impacted by attrition, selection bias, maturation, and statistical regression. Findings need replication in larger, more diverse samples and in other countries, treatment settings, and clinical populations. Conclusions: Adult psychiatric outpatients are at high risk for R/S struggles, and these struggles are important to assess and address in their mental health treatment. Moral, ultimate-meaning, and demonic struggles may be most anxiety-relevant
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