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The expression profile and tumorigenic mechanisms of CD97 (ADGRE5) in glioblastoma render it a targetable vulnerability
Ravn-Boess, Niklas; Roy, Nainita; Hattori, Takamitsu; Bready, Devin; Donaldson, Hayley; Lawson, Christopher; Lapierre, Cathryn; Korman, Aryeh; Rodrick, Tori; Liu, Enze; Frenster, Joshua D; Stephan, Gabriele; Wilcox, Jordan; Corrado, Alexis D; Cai, Julia; Ronnen, Rebecca; Wang, Shuai; Haddock, Sara; Sabio Ortiz, Jonathan; Mishkit, Orin; Khodadadi-Jamayran, Alireza; Tsirigos, Aris; Fenyö, David; Zagzag, David; Drube, Julia; Hoffmann, Carsten; Perna, Fabiana; Jones, Drew R; Possemato, Richard; Koide, Akiko; Koide, Shohei; Park, Christopher Y; Placantonakis, Dimitris G
Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common and aggressive primary brain malignancy. Adhesion G protein-coupled receptors (aGPCRs) have attracted interest for their potential as treatment targets. Here, we show that CD97 (ADGRE5) is the most promising aGPCR target in GBM, by virtue of its de novo expression compared to healthy brain tissue. CD97 knockdown or knockout significantly reduces the tumor initiation capacity of patient-derived GBM cultures (PDGCs) in vitro and in vivo. We find that CD97 promotes glycolytic metabolism via the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway, which depends on phosphorylation of its C terminus and recruitment of β-arrestin. We also demonstrate that THY1/CD90 is a likely CD97 ligand in GBM. Lastly, we show that an anti-CD97 antibody-drug conjugate selectively kills tumor cells in vitro. Our studies identify CD97 as a regulator of tumor metabolism, elucidate mechanisms of receptor activation and signaling, and provide strong scientific rationale for developing biologics to target it therapeutically in GBM.
PMID: 37938973
ISSN: 2211-1247
CID: 5590372
Modulation of GluA2-γ5 synaptic complex desensitization, polyamine block and antiepileptic perampanel inhibition by auxiliary subunit cornichon-2
Gangwar, Shanti Pal; Yen, Laura Y; Yelshanskaya, Maria V; Korman, Aryeh; Jones, Drew R; Sobolevsky, Alexander I
Synaptic complexes of α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) receptors (AMPARs) with auxiliary subunits mediate most excitatory neurotransmission and can be targeted to treat neuropsychiatric and neurological disorders, including epilepsy. Here we present cryogenic-electron microscopy structures of rat GluA2 AMPAR complexes with inhibitory mouse γ5 and potentiating human cornichon-2 (CNIH2) auxiliary subunits. CNIH2 appears to destabilize the desensitized state of the complex by reducing the separation of the upper lobes in ligand-binding domain dimers. At the same time, CNIH2 stabilizes binding of polyamine spermidine to the selectivity filter of the closed ion channel. Nevertheless, CNIH2, and to a lesser extent γ5, attenuate polyamine block of the open channel and reduce the potency of the antiepileptic drug perampanel that inhibits the synaptic complex allosterically by binding to sites in the ion channel extracellular collar. These findings illustrate the fine-tuning of synaptic complex structure and function in an auxiliary subunit-dependent manner, which is critical for the study of brain region-specific neurotransmission and design of therapeutics for disease treatment.
PMCID:10584687
PMID: 37653241
ISSN: 1545-9985
CID: 5590992
Profiling the Functional Microbiome in Mild COPD
Isaacs, B.; Chung, M.; Wu, B.G.; Tsay, J.-C.; Barnett, C.R.; Kwok, B.; Kugler, M.C.; Natalini, J.G.; Singh, S.; Li, Y.; Schluger, R.; Carpenito, J.; Collazo, D.E.; Perez, L.; Kyeremateng, Y.; Chang, M.; Weiden, M.D.; Clemente, J.; Askenazi, M.; Jones, D.; Ghedin, E.; Segal, L.N.; Sulaiman, I.
ORIGINAL:0017183
ISSN: 1535-4970
CID: 5651642
In vivo metabolomics identifies CD38 as an emergent vulnerability in LKB1 -mutant lung cancer
Deng, Jiehui; Peng, David H; Fenyo, David; Yuan, Hao; Lopez, Alfonso; Levin, Daniel S; Meynardie, Mary; Quinteros, Mari; Ranieri, Michela; Sahu, Soumyadip; Lau, Sally C M; Shum, Elaine; Velcheti, Vamsidhar; Punekar, Salman R; Rekhtman, Natasha; Dowling, Catríona M; Weerasekara, Vajira; Xue, Yun; Ji, Hongbin; Siu, Yik; Jones, Drew; Hata, Aaron N; Shimamura, Takeshi; Poirier, John T; Rudin, Charles M; Hattori, Takamitsu; Koide, Shohei; Papagiannakopoulos, Thales; Neel, Benjamin G; Bardeesy, Nabeel; Wong, Kwok-Kin
UNLABELLED:. Surprisingly, compared with other genetic subsets, murine and human LKB1-mutant NSCLC show marked overexpression of the NAD+-catabolizing ectoenzyme, CD38 on the surface of tumor cells. Loss of LKB1 or inactivation of Salt-Inducible Kinases (SIKs)-key downstream effectors of LKB1- induces CD38 transcription induction via a CREB binding site in the CD38 promoter. Treatment with the FDA-approved anti-CD38 antibody, daratumumab, inhibited growth of LKB1-mutant NSCLC xenografts. Together, these results reveal CD38 as a promising therapeutic target in patients with LKB1 mutant lung cancer. SIGNIFICANCE/CONCLUSIONS:tumor suppressor of lung adenocarcinoma patients and are associated with resistance to current treatments. Our study identified CD38 as a potential therapeutic target that is highly overexpressed in this specific subtype of cancer, associated with a shift in NAD homeostasis.
PMCID:10153147
PMID: 37131623
ISSN: 2692-8205
CID: 5507602
Cannabidiol modulates excitatory-inhibitory ratio to counter hippocampal hyperactivity
Rosenberg, Evan C; Chamberland, Simon; Bazelot, Michael; Nebet, Erica R; Wang, Xiaohan; McKenzie, Sam; Jain, Swati; Greenhill, Stuart; Wilson, Max; Marley, Nicole; Salah, Alejandro; Bailey, Shanice; Patra, Pabitra Hriday; Rose, Rebecca; Chenouard, Nicolas; Sun, Simón E D; Jones, Drew; Buzsáki, György; Devinsky, Orrin; Woodhall, Gavin; Scharfman, Helen E; Whalley, Benjamin J; Tsien, Richard W
Cannabidiol (CBD), a non-euphoric component of cannabis, reduces seizures in multiple forms of pediatric epilepsies, but the mechanism(s) of anti-seizure action remain unclear. In one leading model, CBD acts at glutamatergic axon terminals, blocking the pro-excitatory actions of an endogenous membrane phospholipid, lysophosphatidylinositol (LPI), at the G-protein-coupled receptor GPR55. However, the impact of LPI-GPR55 signaling at inhibitory synapses and in epileptogenesis remains underexplored. We found that LPI transiently increased hippocampal CA3-CA1 excitatory presynaptic release probability and evoked synaptic strength in WT mice, while attenuating inhibitory postsynaptic strength by decreasing GABAARγ2 and gephyrin puncta. LPI effects at excitatory and inhibitory synapses were eliminated by CBD pre-treatment and absent after GPR55 deletion. Acute pentylenetrazole-induced seizures elevated GPR55 and LPI levels, and chronic lithium-pilocarpine-induced epileptogenesis potentiated LPI's pro-excitatory effects. We propose that CBD exerts potential anti-seizure effects by blocking LPI's synaptic effects and dampening hyperexcitability.
PMID: 36787750
ISSN: 1097-4199
CID: 5432102
Author Correction: A local tumor microenvironment acquired super-enhancer induces an oncogenic driver in colorectal carcinoma
Zhou, Royce W; Xu, Jia; Martin, Tiphaine C; Zachem, Alexis L; He, John; Ozturk, Sait; Demircioglu, Deniz; Bansal, Ankita; Trotta, Andrew P; Giotti, Bruno; Gryder, Berkley; Shen, Yao; Wu, Xuewei; Carcamo, Saul; Bosch, Kaitlyn; Hopkins, Benjamin; Tsankov, Alexander; Steinhagen, Randolph; Jones, Drew R; Asara, John; Chipuk, Jerry E; Brody, Rachel; Itzkowitz, Steven; Chio, Iok In Christine; Hasson, Dan; Bernstein, Emily; Parsons, Ramon E
PMID: 37024505
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 5463892
Metabolomic, proteomic, and transcriptomic changes in adults with epilepsy on modified Atkins diet
Leitner, Dominique F; Siu, Yik; Korman, Aryeh; Lin, Ziyan; Kanshin, Evgeny; Friedman, Daniel; Devore, Sasha; Ueberheide, Beatrix; Tsirigos, Aristotelis; Jones, Drew R; Wisniewski, Thomas; Devinsky, Orrin
OBJECTIVE:High-fat and low-carbohydrate diets can reduce seizure frequency in some treatment-resistant epilepsy patients, including the more flexible modified Atkins diet (MAD), which is more palatable, mimicking fasting and inducing high ketone body levels. Low-carbohydrate diets may shift brain energy production, particularly impacting neuron- and astrocyte-linked metabolism. METHODS:We evaluated the effect of short-term MAD on molecular mechanisms in adult epilepsy patients from surgical brain tissue and plasma compared to control participants consuming a nonmodified higher carbohydrate diet (n = 6 MAD, mean age = 43.7 years, range = 21-53, diet for average 10 days; n = 10 control, mean age = 41.9 years, range = 28-64). RESULTS: = .48). Brain proteomics and RNAseq identified few differences, including 2.75-fold increased hippocampal MT-ND3 and trends (p < .01, false discovery rate > 5%) in hippocampal nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH)-related signaling pathways (activated oxidative phosphorylation and inhibited sirtuin signaling). SIGNIFICANCE/CONCLUSIONS:Short-term MAD was associated with metabolic differences in plasma and resected epilepsy brain tissue when compared to control participants, in combination with trending expression changes observed in hippocampal NADH-related signaling pathways. Future studies should evaluate how brain molecular mechanisms are altered with long-term MAD in a larger cohort of epilepsy patients, with correlations to seizure frequency, epilepsy syndrome, and other clinical variables. [Clinicaltrials.gov NCT02565966.].
PMID: 36775798
ISSN: 1528-1167
CID: 5448012
Urine Metabolome Dynamics Discriminate Influenza Vaccination Response
Rodrick, Tori C; Siu, Yik; Carlock, Michael A; Ross, Ted M; Jones, Drew R
Influenza represents a major and ongoing public health hazard. Current collaborative efforts are aimed toward creating a universal flu vaccine with the goals of both improving responses to vaccination and increasing the breadth of protection against multiple strains and clades from a single vaccine. As an intermediate step toward these goals, the current work is focused on evaluating the systemic host response to vaccination in both normal and high-risk populations, such as the obese and geriatric populations, which have been linked to poor responses to vaccination. We therefore employed a metabolomics approach using a time-course (n = 5 time points) of the response to human vaccination against influenza from the time before vaccination (pre) to 90 days following vaccination. We analyzed the urinary profiles of a cohort of subjects (n = 179) designed to evenly sample across age, sex, BMI, and other demographic factors, stratifying their responses to vaccination as "High", "Low", or "None" based on the seroconversion measured by hemagglutination inhibition assay (HAI) from plasma samples at day 28 post-vaccination. Overall, we putatively identified 15,903 distinct, named, small-molecule structures (4473 at 10% FDR) among the 895 samples analyzed, with the aim of identifying metabolite correlates of the vaccine response, as well as prognostic and diagnostic markers from the periods before and after vaccination, respectively. Notably, we found that the metabolic profiles could unbiasedly separate the high-risk High-responders from the high-risk None-responders (obese/geriatric) within 3 days post-vaccination. The purine metabolites Guanine and Hypoxanthine were negatively associated with high seroconversion (p = 0.0032, p < 0.0001, respectively), while Acetyl-Leucine and 5-Aminovaleric acid were positively associated. Further changes in Cystine, Glutamic acid, Kynurenine and other metabolites implicated early oxidative stress (3 days) after vaccination as a hallmark of the High-responders. Ongoing efforts are aimed toward validating these putative markers using a ferret model of influenza infection, as well as an independent cohort of human seasonal vaccination and human challenge studies with live virus.
PMCID:9861122
PMID: 36680282
ISSN: 1999-4915
CID: 5419342
A local tumor microenvironment acquired super-enhancer induces an oncogenic driver in colorectal carcinoma
Zhou, Royce W; Xu, Jia; Martin, Tiphaine C; Zachem, Alexis L; He, John; Ozturk, Sait; Demircioglu, Deniz; Bansal, Ankita; Trotta, Andrew P; Giotti, Bruno; Gryder, Berkley; Shen, Yao; Wu, Xuewei; Carcamo, Saul; Bosch, Kaitlyn; Hopkins, Benjamin; Tsankov, Alexander; Steinhagen, Randolph; Jones, Drew R; Asara, John; Chipuk, Jerry E; Brody, Rachel; Itzkowitz, Steven; Chio, Iok In Christine; Hasson, Dan; Bernstein, Emily; Parsons, Ramon E
Tumors exhibit enhancer reprogramming compared to normal tissue. The etiology is largely attributed to cell-intrinsic genomic alterations. Here, using freshly resected primary CRC tumors and patient-matched adjacent normal colon, we find divergent epigenetic landscapes between CRC tumors and cell lines. Intriguingly, this phenomenon extends to highly recurrent aberrant super-enhancers gained in CRC over normal. We find one such super-enhancer activated in epithelial cancer cells due to surrounding inflammation in the tumor microenvironment. We restore this super-enhancer and its expressed gene, PDZK1IP1, following treatment with cytokines or xenotransplantation into nude mice, thus demonstrating cell-extrinsic etiology. We demonstrate mechanistically that PDZK1IP1 enhances the reductive capacity CRC cancer cells via the pentose phosphate pathway. We show this activation enables efficient growth under oxidative conditions, challenging the previous notion that PDZK1IP1 acts as a tumor suppressor in CRC. Collectively, these observations highlight the significance of epigenomic profiling on primary specimens.
PMCID:9576746
PMID: 36253360
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 5352412
Resurrecting essential amino acid biosynthesis in mammalian cells
Trolle, Julie; McBee, Ross M; Kaufman, Andrew; Pinglay, Sudarshan; Berger, Henri; German, Sergei; Liu, Liyuan; Shen, Michael J; Guo, Xinyi; Martin, J Andrew; Pacold, Michael E; Jones, Drew R; Boeke, Jef D; Wang, Harris H
Major genomic deletions in independent eukaryotic lineages have led to repeated ancestral loss of biosynthesis pathways for nine of the twenty canonical amino acids1. While the evolutionary forces driving these polyphyletic deletion events are not well understood, the consequence is that extant metazoans are unable to produce nine essential amino acids (EAAs). Previous studies have highlighted that EAA biosynthesis tends to be more energetically costly2,3, raising the possibility that these pathways were lost from organisms with access to abundant EAAs in the environment4,5. It is unclear whether present-day metazoans can reaccept these pathways to resurrect biosynthetic capabilities that were lost long ago or whether evolution has rendered EAA pathways incompatible with metazoan metabolism. Here, we report progress on a large-scale synthetic genomics effort to reestablish EAA biosynthetic functionality in mammalian cells. We designed codon-optimized biosynthesis pathways based on genes mined from Escherichia coli. These pathways were de novo synthesized in 3 kilobase chunks, assembled in yeasto and genomically integrated into a Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) cell line. One synthetic pathway produced valine at a sufficient level for cell viability and proliferation, and thus represents a successful example of metazoan EAA biosynthesis restoration. This prototrophic CHO line grows in valine-free medium, and metabolomics using labeled precursors verified de novo biosynthesis of valine. RNA-seq profiling of the valine prototrophic CHO line showed that the synthetic pathway minimally disrupted the cellular transcriptome. Furthermore, valine prototrophic cells exhibited transcriptional signatures associated with rescue from nutritional starvation. 13C-tracing revealed build-up of pathway intermediate 2,3-dihydroxy-3-isovalerate in these cells. Increasing the dosage of downstream ilvD boosted pathway performance and allowed for long-term propagation of second-generation cells in valine-free medium at a consistent doubling time of 3.2 days. This work demonstrates that mammalian metabolism is amenable to restoration of ancient core pathways, paving a path for genome-scale efforts to synthetically restore metabolic functions to the metazoan lineage.
PMID: 36165439
ISSN: 2050-084x
CID: 5334162