LTX-315 is a cationic amphilytic peptide that preferentially permeabilizes mitochondrial membranes, thereby causing partially BAX/BAK1-regulated, caspase-independent necrosis. Based on the ...observation that intratumorally injected LTX-315 stimulates a strong T lymphocyte-mediated anticancer immune response, we investigated whether LTX-315 may elicit the hallmarks of immunogenic cell death (ICD), namely (i) exposure of calreticulin on the plasma membrane surface, (ii) release of ATP into the extracellular space, (iii) exodus of HMGB1 from the nucleus, and (iv) induction of a type-1 interferon response. Using a panel of biosensor cell lines and robotized fluorescence microscopy coupled to automatic image analysis, we observed that LTX-315 induces all known ICD characteristics. This conclusion was validated by several independent methods including immunofluorescence stainings (for calreticulin), bioluminescence assays (for ATP), immunoassays (for HMGB1), and RT-PCRs (for type-1 interferon induction). When injected into established cancers, LTX-315 caused a transiently hemorrhagic focal necrosis that was accompanied by massive release of HMGB1 (from close-to-all cancer cells), as well as caspase-3 activation in a fraction of the cells. LTX-315 was at least as efficient as the positive control, the anthracycline mitoxantrone (MTX), in inducing local inflammation with infiltration by myeloid cells and T lymphocytes. Collectively, these results support the idea that LTX-315 can induce ICD, hence explaining its capacity to mediate immune-dependent therapeutic effects.
Drug discovery is in constant evolution and major advances have led to the development of in vitro high-throughput technologies, facilitating the rapid assessment of cellular phenotypes. One such ...phenotype is immunogenic cell death, which occurs partly as a consequence of inhibited RNA synthesis. Automated cell-imaging offers the possibility of combining high-throughput with high-content data acquisition through the simultaneous computation of a multitude of cellular features. Usually, such features are extracted from fluorescence images, hence requiring labeling of the cells using dyes with possible cytotoxic and phototoxic side effects. Recently, deep learning approaches have allowed the analysis of images obtained by brightfield microscopy, a technique that was for long underexploited, with the great advantage of avoiding any major interference with cellular physiology or stimulatory compounds. Here, we describe a label-free image-based high-throughput workflow that accurately detects the inhibition of DNA-to-RNA transcription. This is achieved by combining two successive deep convolutional neural networks, allowing (1) to automatically detect cellular nuclei (thus enabling monitoring of cell death) and (2) to classify the extracted nuclear images in a binary fashion. This analytical pipeline is R-based and can be easily applied to any microscopic platform.
•UNET allows the segmentation of cellular nuclei in high-throughput brightfield microscopy.•The inhibition of nuclear RNA synthesis can be detected using a VGG16-derived DCNN.•The combination of both methods identifies immunostimulatory anticancer agents.
Acyl-coenzyme A (CoA)-binding protein (ACBP), also known as diazepam-binding inhibitor (DBI), is an extracellular feedback regulator of autophagy. Here, we report that injection of a monoclonal ...antibody neutralizing ACBP/DBI (α-DBI) protects the murine liver against ischemia/reperfusion damage, intoxication by acetaminophen and concanavalin A, and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis caused by methionine/choline-deficient diet as well as against liver fibrosis induced by bile duct ligation or carbon tetrachloride. α-DBI downregulated proinflammatory and profibrotic genes and upregulated antioxidant defenses and fatty acid oxidation in the liver. The hepatoprotective effects of α-DBI were mimicked by the induction of ACBP/DBI-specific autoantibodies, an inducible
knockout or a constitutive
mutation that abolishes ACBP/DBI binding to the GABA
receptor. Liver-protective α-DBI effects were lost when autophagy was pharmacologically blocked or genetically inhibited by knockout of
. Of note, α-DBI also reduced myocardium infarction and lung fibrosis, supporting the contention that it mediates broad organ-protective effects against multiple insults.
The circulating metabolome provides a snapshot of the physiological state of the organism responding to pathogenic challenges. Here we report alterations in the plasma metabolome reflecting the ...clinical presentation of COVID-19 patients with mild (ambulatory) diseases, moderate disease (radiologically confirmed pneumonitis, hospitalization and oxygen therapy), and critical disease (in intensive care). This analysis revealed major disease- and stage-associated shifts in the metabolome, meaning that at least 77 metabolites including amino acids, lipids, polyamines and sugars, as well as their derivatives, were altered in critical COVID-19 patient's plasma as compared to mild COVID-19 patients. Among a uniformly moderate cohort of patients who received tocilizumab, only 10 metabolites were different among individuals with a favorable evolution as compared to those who required transfer into the intensive care unit. The elevation of one single metabolite, anthranilic acid, had a poor prognostic value, correlating with the maintenance of high interleukin-10 and -18 levels. Given that products of the kynurenine pathway including anthranilic acid have immunosuppressive properties, we speculate on the therapeutic utility to inhibit the rate-limiting enzymes of this pathway including indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase and tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenase.
The hypomethylating agent 5-azacytidine (AZA) is the first-line treatment for AML patients unfit for intensive chemotherapy. The effect of AZA results in part from T-cell cytotoxic responses against ...MHC-I-associated peptides (MAPs) deriving from hypermethylated genomic regions such as cancer-testis antigens (CTAs), or endogenous retroelements (EREs). However, evidence supporting higher ERE MAPs presentation after AZA treatment is lacking. Therefore, using proteogenomics, we examined the impact of AZA on the repertoire of MAPs and their source transcripts. AZA-treated AML upregulated both CTA and ERE transcripts, but only CTA MAPs were presented at greater levels. Upregulated ERE transcripts triggered innate immune responses against double-stranded RNAs but were degraded by autophagy, and not processed into MAPs. Autophagy resulted from the formation of protein aggregates caused by AZA-dependent inhibition of DNMT2. Autophagy inhibition had an additive effect with AZA on AML cell proliferation and survival, increased ERE levels, increased pro-inflammatory responses, and generated immunogenic tumor-specific ERE-derived MAPs. Finally, autophagy was associated with a lower abundance of CD8
T-cell markers in AML patients expressing high levels of EREs. This work demonstrates that AZA-induced EREs are degraded by autophagy and shows that inhibiting autophagy can improve the immune recognition of AML blasts in treated patients.
For anthracycline-based chemotherapy to be immunogenic, dying cancer cells must release annexin A1 (ANXA1) that subsequently interacts with the pattern recognition receptor, formyl peptide receptor 1 ...(FPR1), on the surface of dendritic cells (DC). Approximately 30% of individuals bear loss-of-function alleles of
, calling for strategies to ameliorate their anticancer immune response. Here, we show that immunotherapy with a ligand of Toll-like receptor-3, polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid (pIC), restores the deficient response to chemotherapy of tumors lacking ANXA1 developing in immunocompetent mice or those of normal cancers growing in FPR1-deficient mice. This effect was accompanied by improved DC- and T-lymphocyte-mediated anticancer immunity. Of note, carcinogen-induced breast cancers precociously developed in FPR1-deficient mice as compared with wild-type controls. A similar tendency for earlier cancer development was found in patients carrying the loss-of-function allele of
. These findings have potential implications for the clinical management of FPR1-deficient patients. SIGNIFICANCE: The loss-of-function variant rs867228 in
, harbored by approximately 30% of the world population, is associated with the precocious manifestation of breast, colorectal, esophageal, and head and neck carcinomas. pIC restores deficient chemotherapeutic responses in mice lacking
, suggesting a personalized strategy for compensating for the FPR1 defect.
.
The microscopic assessment of the colocalization of fluorescent signals has been widely used in cell biology. Although imaging techniques have drastically improved over the past decades, the ...quantification of colocalization by measures such as the Pearson correlation coefficient or Manders overlap coefficient, has not changed. Here, we report the development of an R-based application that allows to (i) automatically segment cells and subcellular compartments, (ii) measure morphology and texture features, and (iii) calculate the degree of colocalization within each cell. Colocalization can thus be studied on a cell-by-cell basis, permitting to perform statistical analyses of cellular populations and subpopulations. ColocalizR has been designed to parallelize tasks, making it applicable to the analysis of large data sets. Its graphical user interface makes it suitable for researchers without specific knowledge in image analysis. Moreover, results can be exported into a wide range of formats rendering post-analysis adaptable to statistical requirements. This application and its source code are freely available at https://github.com/kroemerlab/ColocalizR.
•ColocalizR is an open-source R-based tool for fast high-throughput colocalization assessment.•Cell-by-cell data are generated, allowing to distinguish various phenotypes in heterogeneous cellular populations.•ColocalizR can be used for the assessment of colocalization and the code can be adapted to general image analysis.
Cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) results from the malignant transformation of cholangiocytes. Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) and primary biliary cholangitis (PBC) are chronic diseases in which ...cholangiocytes are primarily damaged. Although PSC is an inflammatory condition predisposing to CCA, CCA is almost never found in the autoimmune context of PBC. Here, we hypothesized that PBC might favor CCA immunosurveillance. In preclinical murine models of cholangitis challenged with syngeneic CCA, PBC (but not PSC) reduced the frequency of CCA development and delayed tumor growth kinetics. This PBC-related effect appeared specific to CCA as it was not observed against other cancers, including hepatocellular carcinoma. The protective effect of PBC was relying on type 1 and type 2 T cell responses and, to a lesser extent, on B cells. Single-cell TCR/RNA sequencing revealed the existence of TCR clonotypes shared between the liver and CCA tumor of a PBC host. Altogether, these results evidence a mechanistic overlapping between autoimmunity and cancer immunosurveillance in the biliary tract.
Recruitment of LC3 to damaged Golgi apparatus Gomes-da-Silva, Lígia C; Jimenez, Ana Joaquina; Sauvat, Allan ...
Cell death and differentiation,
08/2019, Letnik:
26, Številka:
8
Journal Article
Recenzirano
Odprti dostop
LC3 is a protein that can associate with autophagosomes, autolysosomes, and phagosomes. Here, we show that LC3 can also redistribute toward the damaged Golgi apparatus where it clusters with ...SQSTM1/p62 and lysosomes. This organelle-specific relocation, which did not involve the generation of double-membraned autophagosomes, could be observed after Golgi damage was induced by various strategies, namely (i) laser-induced localized cellular damage, (ii) local expression of peroxidase and exposure to peroxide and diaminobenzidine, (iii) treatment with the Golgi-tropic photosensitizer redaporfin and light, (iv) or exposure to the Golgi-tropic anticancer peptidomimetic LTX-401. Mechanistic exploration led to the conclusion that both reactive oxygen species-dependent and -independent Golgi damage induces a similar phenotype that depended on ATG5 yet did not depend on phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase catalytic subunit type 3 and Beclin-1. Interestingly, knockout of ATG5 sensitized cells to Golgi damage-induced cell death, suggesting that the pathway culminating in the relocation of LC3 to the damaged Golgi may have a cytoprotective function.
Cellular senescence is a molecular process that is activated in response to a large variety of distinct stress signals. Mechanistically, cellular senescence is characterized by an arrest in cell ...cycle accompanied by phenotypic adaptations and physiological alterations including changes in the secretory profile of senescent cells termed the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP). Here we describe a detailed, automation- compatible method for the detection of senescence-associated beta galactosidase (SA-β-gal) activity as a hallmark of cellular senescence using a conventional fluorescent microscope equipped with a transmitted light module. Moreover, we outline a protocol for the automated analysis of cellular senescence using convolutional neural networks (CNNs) and mathematical morphology. In sum, we provide a toolset for the high throughput assessment of cellular senescence based on light microscopy and automated image analysis.