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Multi-omics analysis of a pig-to-human decedent kidney xenotransplant

Schmauch, Eloi; Piening, Brian D; Dowdell, Alexa K; Mohebnasab, Maedeh; Williams, Simon H; Stukalov, Alexey; Robinson, Fred L; Bombardi, Robin; Jaffe, Ian; Khalil, Karen; Kim, Jacqueline; Aljabban, Imad; Eitan, Tal; O'Brien, Darragh P; Rophina, Mercy; Wang, Chan; Bartlett, Alexandra Q; Zanoni, Francesca; Albay, Jon; Andrijevic, David; Maden, Berk; Mauduit, Vincent; Vikman, Susanna; Argibay, Diana; Zayas, Zasha; Wu, Leah; Moi, Kiana; Lau, Billy; Zhang, Weimin; Gragert, Loren; Weldon, Elaina; Gao, Hui; Hamilton, Lauren; Kagermazova, Larisa; Camellato, Brendan R; Gandla, Divya; Bhatt, Riyana; Gao, Sarah; Al-Ali, Rudaynah A; Habara, Alawi H; Chang, Andrew; Ferdosi, Shadi; Chen, Han M; Motter, Jennifer D; Chacon, Fiorella A; Thomas, Scott C; Saxena, Deepak; Fairchild, Robert L; Loupy, Alexandre; Heguy, Adriana; Crawford, Ali; Batzoglou, Serafim; Snyder, Michael P; Siddiqui, Asim; Holmes, Michael V; Chong, Anita S; Kaikkonen, Minna U; Linna-Kuosmanen, Suvi; Ayares, David; Lorber, Marc; Nellore, Anoma; Skolnik, Edward Y; Mattoo, Aprajita; Tatapudi, Vasishta S; Taft, Ryan; Mangiola, Massimo; Guo, Qian; Herati, Ramin S; Stern, Jeffrey; Griesemer, Adam; Kellis, Manolis; Boeke, Jef D; Montgomery, Robert A; Keating, Brendan J
Organ shortage remains a major challenge in transplantation, and gene-edited pig organs offer a promising solution1-3. Despite gene-editing, the immune reactions following xenotransplantation can still cause transplant failure4. To understand the immunological response of a pig-to-human kidney xenotransplantation, we conducted large-scale multi-omics profiling of the xenograft and the host's blood over a 61-day procedure in a brain-dead human (decedent) recipient. Blood plasmablasts, natural killer (NK) cells, and dendritic cells increased between postoperative day (POD)10 and 28, concordant with expansion of IgG/IgA B-cell clonotypes, and subsequent biopsy-confirmed antibody-mediated rejection (AbMR) at POD33. Human T-cell frequencies increased from POD21 and peaked between POD33-49 in the blood and xenograft, coinciding with T-cell receptor diversification, expansion of a restricted TRBV2/J1 clonotype and histological evidence of a combined AbMR and cell-mediated rejection at POD49. At POD33, the most abundant human immune population in the graft was CXCL9+ macrophages, aligning with IFN-γ-driven inflammation and a Type I immune response. In addition, we see evidence of interactions between activated pig-resident macrophages and infiltrating human immune cells. Xenograft tissue showed pro-fibrotic tubular and interstitial injury, marked by S100A65, SPP16 (Osteopontin), and COLEC117, at POD21-POD33. Proteomics profiling revealed human and pig complement activation, with decreased human component after AbMR therapy with complement inhibition. Collectively, these data delineate the molecular orchestration of human immune responses to a porcine kidney, revealing potential immunomodulatory targets for improving xenograft survival.
PMID: 41233547
ISSN: 1476-4687
CID: 5967082

Aging, Rather than Genotype, Is the Principal Contributor to Differential Gene Expression Within Targeted Replacement APOE2, APOE3, and APOE4 Mouse Brain

Labuza, Amanda; Pidikiti, Harshitha; Alldred, Melissa J; Ibrahim, Kyrillos W; Peng, Katherine Y; Pasato, Jonathan; Heguy, Adriana; Mathews, Paul M; Ginsberg, Stephen D
PMCID:12563672
PMID: 41154211
ISSN: 2076-3425
CID: 5961242

Evaluation of the gut microbiome and sex hormones in postmenopausal women with newly diagnosed hormone receptor-positive breast cancer versus healthy women: a prospective case-control study

Kwa, Maryann; Hussey, Grant; Novik, Yelena; Franke, Adrian A; Volkova, Angelina; Flores, Karina; Blaser, Martin J; Speyer, James; Oratz, Ruth; Meyers, Marleen; Jhaveri, Komal; Fadel, Ezeddin; Heguy, Adriana; Schluter, Jonas; Ruggles, Kelly V; Adams, Sylvia
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:The functional composition and diversity of the gut microbiome may affect breast cancer risk by modulation of systemic sex hormones. Gut bacteria with β-glucuronidase enzymatic activity may deconjugate estrogens, leading to increased estrogen reabsorption into the circulation thereby increasing breast cancer risk. We investigated the relationship between the gut bacterial microbiome and endogenous estrogens and related sex hormones in women with hormone receptor-positive breast cancer compared to healthy control women. The goal was to determine if the estrobolome (i.e., bacteria capable of modulating the body's circulated estrogen levels) was altered in those with breast cancer compared with controls. METHODS:In this prospective case-control study, postmenopausal women (n = 46) with newly diagnosed stage I-III estrogen and/or progesterone receptor-positive breast cancer were compared with healthy postmenopausal female controls (n = 22). Bacterial composition of the gut microbiome was analyzed by 16S rRNA gene sequencing from fecal specimens. Plasma and urine sex hormones were quantified using high-performance liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry. RESULTS:We found evidence that some β-glucuronidase positive bacteria were enriched in the breast cancer patients compared to healthy controls, whereas abundances of some β-glucuronidase negative bacteria were reduced. There was also a wide distribution of prevalence of β-glucuronidase positive taxa in both breast cancer subjects and healthy controls, as well as higher probability of breast cancer subjects having higher average β-glucuronidase levels. Significant differences were found in endogenous progesterone levels between the breast cancer patients and healthy controls. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:This pilot study showed differences in the gut microbiome and endogenous progesterone levels among postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive breast cancer compared with healthy controls. These interesting findings may have implications for breast cancer risk and prevention and warrant further exploration.
PMCID:12494539
PMID: 41044437
ISSN: 1432-1335
CID: 5965892

Benefits of Maternal Choline Supplementation on Aged Basal Forebrain Cholinergic Neurons (BFCNs) in a Mouse Model of Down Syndrome and Alzheimer's Disease

Alldred, Melissa J; Pidikiti, Harshitha; Ibrahim, Kyrillos W; Lee, Sang Han; Heguy, Adriana; Chiosis, Gabriela; Mufson, Elliott J; Stutzmann, Grace E; Ginsberg, Stephen D
Down syndrome (DS), stemming from the triplication of human chromosome 21, results in intellectual disability, with early mid-life onset of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology. Early interventions to reduce cognitive impairments and neuropathology are lacking. One modality, maternal choline supplementation (MCS), has shown beneficial effects on behavior and gene expression in neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative disorders, including trisomic mice. Loss of basal forebrain cholinergic neurons (BFCNs) and other DS/AD relevant hallmarks were observed in a well-established trisomic model (Ts65Dn, Ts). MCS attenuates these endophenotypes with beneficial behavioral effects in trisomic offspring. We postulate MCS ameliorates dysregulated cellular mechanisms within vulnerable BFCNs, with attenuation driven by novel gene expression. Here, choline acetyltransferase immunohistochemical labeling identified BFCNs in the medial septal/ventral diagonal band nuclei of the basal forebrain in Ts and normal disomic (2N) offspring at ~11 months of age from dams exposed to MCS or normal choline during the perinatal period. BFCNs (~500 per mouse) were microisolated and processed for RNA-sequencing. Bioinformatic assessment elucidated differentially expressed genes (DEGs) and pathway alterations in the context of genotype (Ts, 2N) and maternal diet (MCS, normal choline). MCS attenuated select dysregulated DEGs and relevant pathways in aged BFCNs. Trisomic MCS-responsive improvements included pathways such as cognitive impairment and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide signaling, among others, indicative of increased behavioral and bioenergetic fitness. Although MCS does not eliminate the DS/AD phenotype, early choline delivery provides long-lasting benefits to aged trisomic BFCNs, indicating that MCS prolongs neuronal health in the context of DS/AD.
PMCID:12384390
PMID: 40867575
ISSN: 2218-273x
CID: 5910322

Frontal cortex pyramidal neuron expression profiles differentiate the prodromal stage from progressive degeneration across the Alzheimer's disease spectrum

Labuza, Amanda; Alldred, Melissa J; Pidikiti, Harshitha; Malek-Ahmadi, Michael H; Lee, Sang Han; Heguy, Adriana; Coleman, Paul D; Chakrabarty, Souparna; Chiosis, Gabriela; Mufson, Elliott J; Ginsberg, Stephen D
INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND:Underlying causes of Alzheimer's disease (AD) remain unknown, making it imperative to identify molecular mechanisms driving the pathobiology of AD onset and progression. METHODS:Laser capture microdissection was used to isolate layer III pyramidal neurons from post mortem human prefrontal cortex (Brodmann area 9). Single population RNA sequencing was conducted using tissue from subjects with no cognitive impairment (NCI), mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and AD. Differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were compared across groups. RESULTS:DEGs increased from prodromal (MCI vs. NCI) to progression (AD vs. MCI) to frank AD (AD vs. NCI). The majority of DEGs and pathways shared between prodromal and progression exhibited a change in the direction of dysregulation unlike pathways between progression and frank AD. DISCUSSION/CONCLUSIONS:Candidate genes and pathways were identified that demarcate early-stage AD onset from AD progression, providing a roadmap to study cortical cellular vulnerability and key targets for intervention at early stages of AD. HIGHLIGHTS/CONCLUSIONS:Pyramidal neuron differentially expressed genes (DEGs) are directionally divergent between prodromal, progression, and frank Alzheimer's disease (AD). Pyramidal neuron DEGs are directionally convergent between progression and frank AD. Dysfunctional bioenergetic pathways increased dysregulation as the AD spectrum progressed. Immune response pathways were more dysregulated in frank AD than prodromal stages. DEGs, = biological pathways, and interactomes demarcate specific stages across the AD spectrum.
PMID: 40709510
ISSN: 1552-5279
CID: 5901932

Profiling lamina specific pyramidal neurons using postmortem human formalin fixed paraffin embedded frontal cortex tissue in combination with digital spatial profiling

Stanisavljevic, Aleksandra; Ibrahim, Kyrillos W; Stavrides, Philip H; Bare, Christopher; Alldred, Melissa J; Heguy, Adriana; Nixon, Ralph A; Ginsberg, Stephen D
BACKGROUND:/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II and selected for probe collection. RESULTS:This approach significantly reduced the amount of FFPE tissue needed for robust single population RNA-seq. We demonstrate ~20 identified L3 or L5 pyramidal neurons or one lamina-specific cortical ribbon from a single 5µm thick section is sufficient to generate robust RNA-seq reads. Bioinformatic analysis of neurons and ribbons showed notable similarities and differences reflective of the single neuron and multiple admixed cell types within the former and latter, respectively. Comparison with existing methods Protocols exist for DSP of postmortem human FFPE brain tissue. However, this new approach enables profiling small groups of ~14-21 pyramidal neurons using the GeoMx DSP platform. CONCLUSIONS:This optimized DSP assay provides high resolution RNA-seq data demonstrating utility and versatility of the GeoMx platform for individually characterized neurons and isolated cortical ribbons within postmortem FFPE human brain tissue for downstream analyses.
PMID: 40473120
ISSN: 1872-678x
CID: 5862732

Profiling hippocampal neuronal populations reveals unique gene expression mosaics reflective of connectivity-based degeneration in the Ts65Dn mouse model of Down syndrome and Alzheimer's disease

Alldred, Melissa J; Ibrahim, Kyrillos W; Pidikiti, Harshitha; Lee, Sang Han; Heguy, Adriana; Chiosis, Gabriela; Mufson, Elliott J; Stutzmann, Grace E; Ginsberg, Stephen D
INTRODUCTION/UNASSIGNED:Individuals with Down syndrome (DS) exhibit neurological deficits throughout life including the development of in Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology and cognitive impairment. At the cellular level, dysregulation in neuronal gene expression is observed in postmortem human brain and mouse models of DS/AD. To date, RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) analysis of hippocampal neuronal gene expression including the characterization of discrete circuit-based connectivity in DS remains a major knowledge gap. We postulate that spatially characterized hippocampal neurons display unique gene expression patterns due, in part, to dysfunction of the integrity of intrinsic circuitry. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:We combined laser capture microdissection to microisolate individual neuron populations with single population RNA-seq analysis to determine gene expression analysis of CA1 and CA3 pyramidal neurons and dentate gyrus granule cells located in the hippocampus, a region critical for learning, memory, and synaptic activity. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:The hippocampus exhibits age-dependent neurodegeneration beginning at ~6 months of age in the Ts65Dn mouse model of DS/AD. Each population of excitatory hippocampal neurons exhibited unique gene expression alterations in Ts65Dn mice. Bioinformatic inquiry revealed unique vulnerabilities and differences with mechanistic implications coinciding with onset of degeneration in this model of DS/AD. CONCLUSIONS/UNASSIGNED:These cell-type specific vulnerabilities may underlie degenerative endophenotypes suggesting precision medicine targeting of individual populations of neurons for rational therapeutic development.
PMCID:11897496
PMID: 40078964
ISSN: 1662-5099
CID: 5808642

Digital spatial profiling to predict recurrence in grade 3 stage I lung adenocarcinoma

Chang, Stephanie H; Mezzano-Robinson, Valeria; Zhou, Hua; Moreira, Andre; Pillai, Raymond; Ramaswami, Sitharam; Loomis, Cynthia; Heguy, Adriana; Tsirigos, Aristotelis; Pass, Harvey I
OBJECTIVE:Early-stage lung adenocarcinoma is treated with local therapy alone, although patients with grade 3 stage I lung adenocarcinoma have a 50% 5-year recurrence rate. Our objective is to determine if analysis of the tumor microenvironment can create a predictive model for recurrence. METHODS:Thirty-four patients with grade 3 stage I lung adenocarcinoma underwent surgical resection. Digital spatial profiling was used to perform genomic (n = 31) and proteomic (n = 34) analyses of pancytokeratin positive and negative tumor cells. K-means clustering was performed on the top 50 differential genes and top 20 differential proteins, with Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves based on patient clustering. External validation of high-expression genes was performed with Kaplan-Meier plotter. RESULTS:There were no significant clinicopathologic differences between patients who did (n = 14) and did not (n = 20) have recurrence. Median time to recurrence was 806 days; median follow-up with no recurrence was 2897 days. K-means clustering of pancytokeratin positive genes resulted in a model with a Kaplan-Meier curve with concordance index of 0.75. K-means clustering for pancytokeratin negative genes was less successful at differentiating recurrence (concordance index 0.6). Genes upregulated or downregulated for recurrence were externally validated using available public databases. Proteomic data did not reach statistical significance but did internally validate the genomic data described. CONCLUSIONS:Genomic difference in lung adenocarcinoma may be able to predict risk of recurrence. After further validation, stratifying patients by this risk may help guide who will benefit from adjuvant therapy.
PMID: 37890657
ISSN: 1097-685x
CID: 5620342

Cellular dynamics in pig-to-human kidney xenotransplantation

Pan, Wanqing; Zhang, Weimin; Zheng, Binghan; Camellato, Brendan R; Stern, Jeffrey; Lin, Ziyan; Khodadadi-Jamayran, Alireza; Kim, Jacqueline; Sommer, Philip; Khalil, Karen; Weldon, Elaina; Bai, Jiangshan; Zhu, Yinan; Meyn, Peter; Heguy, Adriana; Mangiola, Massimo; Griesemer, Adam; Keating, Brendan J; Montgomery, Robert A; Xia, Bo; Boeke, Jef D
BACKGROUND:Xenotransplantation of genetically engineered porcine organs has the potential to address the challenge of organ donor shortage. Two cases of porcine-to-human kidney xenotransplantation were performed, yet the physiological effects on the xenografts and the recipients' immune responses remain largely uncharacterized. METHODS:We performed single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) and longitudinal RNA-seq analyses of the porcine kidneys to dissect xenotransplantation-associated cellular dynamics and xenograft-recipient interactions. We additionally performed longitudinal scRNA-seq of the peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) to detect recipient immune responses across time. FINDINGS/RESULTS:Although no hyperacute rejection signals were detected, scRNA-seq analyses of the xenografts found evidence of endothelial cell and immune response activation, indicating early signs of antibody-mediated rejection. Tracing the cells' species origin, we found human immune cell infiltration in both xenografts. Human transcripts in the longitudinal bulk RNA-seq revealed that human immune cell infiltration and the activation of interferon-gamma-induced chemokine expression occurred by 12 and 48 h post-xenotransplantation, respectively. Concordantly, longitudinal scRNA-seq of PBMCs also revealed two phases of the recipients' immune responses at 12 and 48-53 h. Lastly, we observed global expression signatures of xenotransplantation-associated kidney tissue damage in the xenografts. Surprisingly, we detected a rapid increase of proliferative cells in both xenografts, indicating the activation of the porcine tissue repair program. CONCLUSIONS:Longitudinal and single-cell transcriptomic analyses of porcine kidneys and the recipient's PBMCs revealed time-resolved cellular dynamics of xenograft-recipient interactions during xenotransplantation. These cues can be leveraged for designing gene edits and immunosuppression regimens to optimize xenotransplantation outcomes. FUNDING/BACKGROUND:This work was supported by NIH RM1HG009491 and DP5OD033430.
PMID: 38776915
ISSN: 2666-6340
CID: 5654702

Analysis of microisolated frontal cortex excitatory layer III and V pyramidal neurons reveals a neurodegenerative phenotype in individuals with Down syndrome

Alldred, Melissa J; Pidikiti, Harshitha; Ibrahim, Kyrillos W; Lee, Sang Han; Heguy, Adriana; Hoffman, Gabriel E; Roussos, Panos; Wisniewski, Thomas; Wegiel, Jerzy; Stutzmann, Grace E; Mufson, Elliott J; Ginsberg, Stephen D
We elucidated the molecular fingerprint of vulnerable excitatory neurons within select cortical lamina of individuals with Down syndrome (DS) for mechanistic understanding and therapeutic potential that also informs Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathophysiology. Frontal cortex (BA9) layer III (L3) and layer V (L5) pyramidal neurons were microisolated from postmortem human DS and age- and sex-matched controls (CTR) to interrogate differentially expressed genes (DEGs) and key biological pathways relevant to neurodegenerative programs. We identified > 2300 DEGs exhibiting convergent dysregulation of gene expression in both L3 and L5 pyramidal neurons in individuals with DS versus CTR subjects. DEGs included over 100 triplicated human chromosome 21 genes in L3 and L5 neurons, demonstrating a trisomic neuronal karyotype in both laminae. In addition, thousands of other DEGs were identified, indicating gene dysregulation is not limited to trisomic genes in the aged DS brain, which we postulate is relevant to AD pathobiology. Convergent L3 and L5 DEGs highlighted pertinent biological pathways and identified key pathway-associated targets likely underlying corticocortical neurodegeneration and related cognitive decline in individuals with DS. Select key DEGs were interrogated as potential hub genes driving dysregulation, namely the triplicated DEGs amyloid precursor protein (APP) and superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1), along with key signaling DEGs including mitogen activated protein kinase 1 and 3 (MAPK1, MAPK3) and calcium calmodulin dependent protein kinase II alpha (CAMK2A), among others. Hub DEGs determined from multiple pathway analyses identified potential therapeutic candidates for amelioration of cortical neuron dysfunction and cognitive decline in DS with translational relevance to AD.
PMID: 39105932
ISSN: 1432-0533
CID: 5696772