704 research outputs found
Intravenous apoptotic spleen cell infusion induces a TGF-beta-dependent regulatory T-cell expansion.: Apoptosis and regulatory T cells
International audienceApoptotic leukocytes are endowed with immunomodulatory properties that can be used to enhance hematopoietic engraftment and prevent graft-versus-host disease (GvHD). This apoptotic cell-induced tolerogenic effect is mediated by host macrophages and not recipient dendritic cells or donor phagocytes present in the bone marrow graft as evidenced by selective cell depletion and trafficking experiments. Furthermore, apoptotic cell infusion is associated with TGF-beta-dependent donor CD4+CD25+ T-cell expansion. Such cells have a regulatory phenotype (CD62L(high) and intracellular CTLA-4+), express high levels of forkhead-box transcription factor p3 (Foxp3) mRNA and exert ex vivo suppressive activity through a cell-to-cell contact mechanism. In vivo CD25 depletion after apoptotic cell infusion prevents the apoptotic cell-induced beneficial effects on engraftment and GvHD occurrence. This highlights the role of regulatory T cells in the tolerogenic effect of apoptotic cell infusion. This novel association between apoptosis and regulatory T-cell expansion may also contribute to preventing deleterious autoimmune responses during normal turnover
Unleashing the Power of Proteomics to Develop Blood-Based Cancer Markers
BACKGROUND: There is an urgent need for blood-based molecular tests to assist in the detection and diagnosis of cancers at an early stage, when curative interventions are still possible, and to predict and monitor response to treatment and disease recurrence. The rich content of proteins in blood that are impacted by tumor devel-opment and host factors provides an ideal opportunity to develop noninvasive diagnostics for cancer. CONTENT: Mass spectrometry instrumentation has ad-vanced sufficiently to allow the discovery of protein alterations directly in plasma across no less than 7 or-ders of magnitude of protein abundance. Moreover, the use of proteomics to harness the immune response in the form of seropositivity to tumor antigens has the potential to complement circulating protein bio
Disease Detection by Ultrasensitive Quantification of Microdosed Synthetic Urinary Biomarkers
The delivery of exogenous agents can enable noninvasive disease monitoring, but existing low-dose approaches require complex infrastructure. In this paper, we describe a microdose-scale injectable formulation of nanoparticles that interrogate the activity of thrombin, a key regulator of clotting, and produce urinary reporters of disease state. We establish a customized single molecule detection assay that enables urinary discrimination of thromboembolic disease in mice using doses of the nanoparticulate diagnostic agents that fall under regulatory guidelines for “microdosing.”National Science Foundation (U.S.). Graduate Research FellowshipNational Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award F32CA159496-02)Burroughs Wellcome Fund (Career Award at the Scientific Interface)National Cancer Institute (U.S.) (Koch Institute Support (Core) Grant P30-CA14051)David H. Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT (Frontier Research Program
Multiplexed and scalable super-resolution imaging of three-dimensional protein localization in size-adjustable tissues
The biology of multicellular organisms is coordinated across multiple size scales, from the subnanoscale of molecules to the macroscale, tissue-wide interconnectivity of cell populations. Here we introduce a method for super-resolution imaging of the multiscale organization of intact tissues. The method, called magnified analysis of the proteome (MAP), linearly expands entire organs fourfold while preserving their overall architecture and three-dimensional proteome organization. MAP is based on the observation that preventing crosslinking within and between endogenous proteins during hydrogel-tissue hybridization allows for natural expansion upon protein denaturation and dissociation. The expanded tissue preserves its protein content, its fine subcellular details, and its organ-scale intercellular connectivity. We use off-the-shelf antibodies for multiple rounds of immunolabeling and imaging of a tissue's magnified proteome, and our experiments demonstrate a success rate of 82% (100/122 antibodies tested). We show that specimen size can be reversibly modulated to image both inter-regional connections and fine synaptic architectures in the mouse brain.United States. National Institutes of Health (1-U01-NS090473-01
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A Mouse to Human Search for Plasma Proteome Changes Associated with Pancreatic Tumor Development
Background: The complexity and heterogeneity of the human plasma proteome have presented significant challenges in the identification of protein changes associated with tumor development. Refined genetically engineered mouse (GEM) models of human cancer have been shown to faithfully recapitulate the molecular, biological, and clinical features of human disease. Here, we sought to exploit the merits of a well-characterized GEM model of pancreatic cancer to determine whether proteomics technologies allow identification of protein changes associated with tumor development and whether such changes are relevant to human pancreatic cancer. Methods and Findings: Plasma was sampled from mice at early and advanced stages of tumor development and from matched controls. Using a proteomic approach based on extensive protein fractionation, we confidently identified 1,442 proteins that were distributed across seven orders of magnitude of abundance in plasma. Analysis of proteins chosen on the basis of increased levels in plasma from tumor-bearing mice and corroborating protein or RNA expression in tissue documented concordance in the blood from 30 newly diagnosed patients with pancreatic cancer relative to 30 control specimens. A panel of five proteins selected on the basis of their increased level at an early stage of tumor development in the mouse was tested in a blinded study in 26 humans from the CARET (Carotene and Retinol Efficacy Trial) cohort. The panel discriminated pancreatic cancer cases from matched controls in blood specimens obtained between 7 and 13 mo prior to the development of symptoms and clinical diagnosis of pancreatic cancer. Conclusions: Our findings indicate that GEM models of cancer, in combination with in-depth proteomic analysis, provide a useful strategy to identify candidate markers applicable to human cancer with potential utility for early detection
Towards an integrated proteomic and glycomic approach to finding cancer biomarkers
Advances in mass spectrometry have had a great impact on the field of proteomics. A major challenge of proteomic analysis has been the elucidation of glycan modifications of proteins in complex proteomes. Glycosylation is the most structurally elaborate and diverse type of protein post-translational modification and, because of this, proteomics and glycomics have largely developed independently. However, given that such a large proportion of proteins contain glycan modifications, and that these may be important for their function or may produce biologically relevant protein variation, a convergence of the fields of glycomics and proteomics would be highly desirable. Here we review the current status of glycoproteomic efforts, focusing on the identification of glycoproteins as cancer biomarkers
Mass-encoded synthetic biomarkers for multiplexed urinary monitoring of disease
Biomarkers are becoming increasingly important in the clinical management of complex diseases, yet our ability to discover new biomarkers remains limited by our dependence on endogenous molecules. Here we describe the development of exogenously administered 'synthetic biomarkers' composed of mass-encoded peptides conjugated to nanoparticles that leverage intrinsic features of human disease and physiology for noninvasive urinary monitoring. These protease-sensitive agents perform three functions in vivo: they target sites of disease, sample dysregulated protease activities and emit mass-encoded reporters into host urine for multiplexed detection by mass spectrometry. Using mouse models of liver fibrosis and cancer, we show that these agents can noninvasively monitor liver fibrosis and resolution without the need for invasive core biopsies and substantially improve early detection of cancer compared with current clinically used blood biomarkers. This approach of engineering synthetic biomarkers for multiplexed urinary monitoring should be broadly amenable to additional pathophysiological processes and point-of-care diagnostics.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Bioengineering Research Partnership R01 CA124427)Kathy and Curt Marble Cancer Research FundNational Institutes of Health (U.S.). Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award (F32CA159496-01
Fibulin-2 Is a Driver of Malignant Progression in Lung Adenocarcinoma
The extracellular matrix of epithelial tumors undergoes structural remodeling during periods of
uncontrolled growth, creating regional heterogeneity and torsional stress. How matrix integrity is
maintained in the face of dynamic biophysical forces is largely undefined. Here we investigated the
role of fibulin-2, a matrix glycoprotein that functions biomechanically as an inter-molecular clasp and
thereby facilitates supra-molecular assembly. Fibulin-2 was abundant in the extracellular matrix of
human lung adenocarcinomas and was highly expressed in tumor cell lines derived from mice that
develop metastatic lung adenocarcinoma from co-expression of mutant K-ras and p53. Loss-offunction
experiments in tumor cells revealed that fibulin-2 was required for tumor cells to grow and
metastasize in syngeneic mice, a surprising finding given that other intra-tumoral cell types are known
to secrete fibulin-2. However, tumor cells grew and metastasized equally well in Fbln2-null and -wildtype
littermates, implying that malignant progression was dependent specifically upon tumor cellderived
fibulin-2, which could not be offset by other cellular sources of fibulin-2. Fibulin-2 deficiency
impaired the ability of tumor cells to migrate and invade in Boyden chambers, to create a stiff
extracellular matrix in mice, to cross-link secreted collagen, and to adhere to collagen. We conclude
that fibulin-2 is a driver of malignant progression in lung adenocarcinoma and plays an unexpected
role in collagen cross-linking and tumor cell adherence to collagen
Disease proteomics
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/62680/1/nature01514.pd
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