Results 876-900 of about 1,000
  1. Animal African trypanosomosis (AAT), caused by protist parasites of the genus Trypanosoma, puts upward of a million head of livestock at risk across 37 countries in Africa. The economic impact of AAT and the presence of human-infectious trypanosomes in animals place a clear importance on improving diagnostics for animal trypanosomes to map the distribution of the veterinary parasites and identify reservoirs of human-infectious trypanosomes. We have adapted the CRISPR-based detection toolkit SHERLOCK (Specific High-sensitivity Enzymatic Reporter unLOCKing) for trypanosomatid parasites responsible for AAT (SHERLOCK4AAT) including Pan- trypanosomatid, Trypanozoon , T. vivax , T. congolense , T. theileri , T. simiae and T. suis assays. To test the applicability of this technique in the field, we analysed dried blood spots collected from 200 farm and 224 free-ranging pigs in endemic and historical human African trypanosomiasis foci in Guinea and Côte d’Ivoire, respectively. The results revealed that SHERLOCK4AAT can detect and discriminate between trypanosome species involved in multiple infections with a high sensitivity. 62.7 % [58.1, 67.3] of pigs were found infected with at least one trypanosome species. T. brucei gambiense , a human-infectious trypanosome, was found in one animal at both sites, highlighting the risk that these animals may act as persistent reservoirs. These data suggest that, due to their proximity to humans and their attractiveness to tsetse flies, pigs could act as sentinels to monitor T. b. gambiense circulation using the SHERLOCK4AAT toolbox.
    Date: 2025-03-15
    Authors: Eloiflin R, Pérez-Antón E, Camara A, Henry AD, Boiro S, N’Djetchi M, Taoré M, Koffi M, Kaba D, Pennec YL, Doukouré B, Camara AD, Kagbadouno M, Campagne P, Camara M, Jamonneau V, Thevenon S, Bart J, Glover L, Rotureau B.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  2. Genome editing technologies create the potential for genetic studies and innovative gene therapies. Here we present new CRISPR-Cas9 tools, named ZIP editors (ZE), loaded with a single-stranded oligodeoxynucleotide (ssODN) template on the Cas ribonucleoprotein complex. The ssODN template is annealed to an extended guide RNA (gRNA) allowing its nuclear delivery at the right place, i.e. the targeted DNA cut, and at the right time. This new template import system is easy-to-design, easy-to-use, inexpensive and very versatile. It increases homology-directed repair (HDR) editing efficiency using Cas9 nuclease as demonstrated at many loci in many cell types (up to 12-fold higher HDR editing rate). Based on a heteroduplex gRNA-ssODN, it can also be used with the Cas9 nickase, resulting in HDR editing with minimal InDels, and preventing double-strand break (DSB)-mediated genotoxicity. ZE is a smart easy-to-use non-viral platform adaptable to targeted DSB (high HDR editing efficiency) or nick (high safety) to precisely model and correct a wide range of edits. It is suitable to many biological applications and could be considered for HDR-based gene therapies.
    Date: 2025-03-15
    Authors: Thibault C, Rosier J, Riandière M, Marin V, Fayet S, Berges C, Espasa R, Lamrissi-Garcia I, Trian T, Bui S, Dabernat S, Boutin J, Moreau-Gaudry F, Bedel A.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  3. Lipid droplets (LDs) are neutral lipid storage organelles that emerge from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Their assembly occurs in ER regions enriched with seipin which, through its homooligomeric ring-like structure, facilitates neutral lipid nucleation. In yeast, seipin (Sei1) partners with Ldb16, Ldo45 (yeast homologue of human LDAF1) and Ldo16, which regulate LD formation and consumption. How the molecular architecture of the yeast seipin complex and its interaction with regulatory proteins adapt to different metabolic conditions remains poorly understood. Here, we show that multiple Ldb16 regions contribute differently to recruiting Ldo45 and Ldo16 to the seipin complex. Using an in-vivo site-specific photo-crosslinking approach, we further show that Ldo45 resides at the center of the seipin ring both in the absence and presence of neutral lipids. Interestingly, neutral lipid synthesis leads to the recruitment of Ldo45 but not Ldo16 to the complex. Our findings suggest that the seipin complex serves as a pre-assembled scaffold for lipid storage that can be remodeled in response to increased neutral lipid availability.
    Date: 2025-03-15
    Authors: Klug YA, Carvalho P.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  4. Macrophages infiltrate all human tissues where they play key roles in innate immunity, homeostasis, and tissue function. However, extensive clinical and experimental evidence indicates that macrophages also contribute significantly to the progression of several diseases such as cancer, cardiometabolic disorders, and inflammatory and neurodegenerative conditions. Advances in single-cell omics have revealed diverse macrophage populations in both healthy and diseased tissues. However, studying their functions is challenging due to limitations in tools for targeting specific populations. The Cre-lox system, involving Cre recombinase expression driven by macrophage-specific promoters, is widely used for gene manipulation. Despite its utility, this method has drawbacks like leaky expression, variable efficiency, and potential toxicity. Moreover, genetic models are costly and can have unintended effects on immune cells, hindering comprehensive studies on macrophage function. To address this challenge, we developed an advanced lipid nanoparticle-based system for precise RNA therapeutic delivery to macrophages, either broadly or via antibody-mediated targeting of specific subsets. This versatile platform enables the administration of various RNA molecules, such as mRNA, siRNA, and sgRNA for CRISPR/Cas9 applications, in both in vitro and in vivo settings. It allows for targeted cell depletion or gene knockout, facilitating detailed functional analysis. Furthermore, the system’s flexibility and precision are enhanced by its compatibility with Cre-specific Cas9 expression, enabling comprehensive genomic and proteomic targeting of specific macrophage subsets.
    Date: 2025-03-14
    Authors: Rasmussen RK, Gudbergsson JM, Mathiesen H, Strauss LM, Holten-Møller I, Thomsen MB, Kristensen MW, Nørgaard Andersen M, Etzerodt A.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  5. Acute lysosome damage triggers the endolysosome damage response (ELDR) in order to co-ordinate vesicle repair or removal by autophagy (lysophagy). However, it is unclear whether persistent damage, as occurs after chronic challenge to lysosome integrity, triggers wider cellular responses. Here, we show that longitudinal treatment with a lysosomotropic cancer therapeutic, the CDK4/6 inhibitor Palbociclib, invokes chronic lysosome damage in breast and lung cancer cells. Autophagy ameliorates but does not avert this phenotype, which persists over days. Damaged lysosomes form contacts with mitochondria, invoking mitochondrial stress and cytosolic efflux of immunostimulatory mitochondrial nucleic acids. Importantly, mitochondrial nucleic acid release is necessary for the anti-cancer interferon response to Palbociclib. In conclusion, chronic lysosome damage rewires cellular signalling responses through the mitochondrion and this effect should be considered when assessing the cellular actions of cancer therapeutics.
    Date: 2025-03-14
    Authors: Bozic M, Lim TE, Kemp AJ, Winnington-Ingram K, Murphy L, Dhir A, Wheeler A, Jimenez-Moreno N, Wilkinson S.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  6. Cilia are highly conserved cellular organelles extruding from the surface of cell types carrying either sensory (signaling) or motile functions. These include photoreceptor cells and airway epithelia, where they function in light sensation and mucociliary clearance respectively. Retinitis pigmentosa GTPase regulator ( RPGR ) variants affect both photoreceptor sensory cilia and airway motile cilia, leading to retinitis pigmentosa (RP) and in some cases, primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD), both debilitating conditions. Not all patients develop PCD and it is unclear which RPGR variants predispose patients to PCD and why this happens. In this study, using nasal biopsy samples of patients with RPGR -related RP, we leverage 2D organoid cell culturing, super-resolution microscopy, and live cell imaging to characterize the multiciliated cells from patients with different RPGR variants, healthy human nasal and bronchial multiciliated cells with CRISPR-modified RPGR function. We demonstrate for the first time that multiciliated cells with RPGR variants may have reduced ciliation, shorter cilia, significantly impaired cilia beat, or cilia beat incoordination, which could lead to defective mucociliary clearance and lung disease. In addition, we show the regulation of motile cilia by RPGR involves F-actin, as evidenced by temporarily reduced Gelsolin and undissolved condensed actin meshwork at the apical surface of RPGR-deficient multiciliated cells. In support, we show that the motile cilia defect can be ameliorated by treating with the actin polymerization inhibitor Latrunculin A. Though PCD was observed only in patients with variants that affect both main isoforms ( RPGR 1-19 and RPGR ORF15 ), patients with variants affecting only RPGR ORF15 also showed cilia and airway anomalies. Though all RPGR variants affected motile cilia in one way or another, RPGR loss of function variants affecting both isoforms are associated with more severe cilia and systemic phenotypes, the mechanisms of which involve the accumulation of apical F-actin. One Sentence Summary: Loss of RPGR, through the mechanism of apical F-actin accumulation in airway multiciliated cells, leads to reduced ciliation with short cilia that have an impaired beat, leading to defective mucociliary clearance.
    Date: 2025-03-14
    Authors: Wu Y, Tavares E, Liang B, Wee W, Mennella V, Feng H, Cao J, Zheng J, He M, Stephenson K, Hanan L, Li JM, Dell SD, Heon E, Liu Z.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  7. After administering genome editors, their efficiency is limited by a multi-step process involving cellular uptake, trafficking, and nuclear import of the vector and its payload. These processes vary widely across cell types and differ depending on the nature and structure of the vector, whether it is a lipid nanoparticle or a different synthetic material. We developed a novel genome-wide CRISPR screening strategy to better understand these limitations within human cells to identify genes modulating cellular uptake, payload delivery, and gene editing efficiency. Our screen interrogates the cellular processes controlling genome editing by Cas-based nuclease and base editing strategies in human cells. We designed a genome-wide screen targeting 19,114 genes in HEK293 cells, and we identified six genes whose knockout increased nonviral editing efficiency in human cells by up to five-fold. Further validation through arrayed knockouts of the top hits from our screen boosted the editing efficiency from 5% to 50% when Cas9 was delivered via lipid-based nanoparticles. By designing the guides to target the screen library cassette, we could accurately track the library sgRNA identity and the editing outcome on the same amplicon via short-read sequencing, enabling the identification of rare outcomes via ‘computationally’ sorting edited from unedited cells within a heterogenous pool of >200M cells. In patient-derived human retinal pigment epithelium cells derived from pluripotent stem cells, BET1L, GJB2, and MS4A13 gene knockouts increased targeted genome editing by over five-fold. We anticipate that this high-throughput screening approach will facilitate the systematic engineering of novel nonviral genome editing delivery methods, where the identified novel gene hits can be further used to increase editing efficiency for other therapeutically relevant cell types.
    Date: 2025-03-14
    Authors: Saxena S, Kabra M, Abdeen A, Sinha D, Zhu M, Xie R, Hanstad G, Zepeda MAF, Gamm DM, Pattnaik BR, Gong S, Saha K.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  8. SUMMARY G-quadruplex (G4) structures are critical regulators of gene expression, yet the role of an individual G4 within its native chromatin remains underexplored. Here, we used CRISPR-Cas9 to introduce guanine-to-thymine mutations at a G4-forming motif within the adh1 + promoter in yeast, creating two mutant strains: one with G4-only mutations and another with both G4 and TATA-box mutations. Chromatin immunoprecipitation using BG4 antibody confirmed reduced G4 enrichment in both mutants, validating G4 structure formation in the wild-type chromatin. Detailed characterizations demonstrated that the G4 mutations alter its dynamics without fully preventing its formation. These mutations significantly reduce adh1 transcript levels, with G4 TATA-box mutant causing the strongest transcriptional suppression. This indicates a positive regulatory role for the Adh1 G4 structure in adh1 + gene expression. Furthermore, both mutants displayed altered transcriptomic profiles, particularly impacting the oxidoreductase pathway. Metabolomic analyses by mass spectrometry further highlighted substantial disruptions in NAD+/NADH metabolism, a key energy reservoir for metabolic regulation. Together, our findings illustrate how deregulation of a single G4 structure influences transcriptome regulation, with implications for metabolic diseases. It also highlights the therapeutic potential of G4 modulation as a novel, controlled approach to reprogram cellular metabolism to achieve targeted phenotypic shifts. GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT
    Date: 2025-03-14
    Authors: Obi I, Sengupta P, Sabouri N.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  9. ESKAPE pathogens include Enterococcus faecium, Staphylococcus aureus, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Acinetobacter baumannii, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Enterobacter spp., which account for the major causes of mortality linked to the spread of infection and antimicrobial resistance (AMR) globally. Advances in omics approaches have pointed to bacteriophages as a promising alternative source of antibacterial agents. Here we enriched two samples from sewage and amplified them on Staphylococcus culture, followed by whole metagenome shotgun sequencing with Illumina NovaSe X. We performed metagenomic classification of high-quality sequence reads using the Kraken 2 database, to delineate the diversity and abundances of taxa. Thereafter we assembled the sequence reads with MAGAHIT and binned them with default parameters of the Bacterial and Viral Bioinformatics Resource Center (BV-BRC) before annotating each bin with PhageScope. From assembly, we recovered multiple metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) including Alistipes phage, Escherichia phage, Vibrio phage, Staphylococcus phage, Klebsiella phage and Acinetobacter phage, to mention the top six best hits. From annotation, while the Acinetobacter phage is virulent, the two Klebsiella phage and Staphylococcus phage are temperate. All the phages possess more than four lysis genes, with the potential to disrupt bacterial membranes. Exceptionally, Vibrio phage, Acinetobacter phage and Alistipes phage possess anti-CRISPR genes, the potential to counteract normal bacterial immune response to phage infection. These findings also inform that MAGs from the sewage have the potential to recover phages with anti-CRISPR/Cas activity, which is one of the desirable attributes for effective phage-bacterial infection to control the growth and multiplication of bacteria. Our datasets can be utilized for genome-guided selection of potent phages through lytic and host-range assays, towards the purification of endolysins (lysozymes) as alternative antibacterial agents. VALUE OF THE DATA Metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) of lytic phages could present a potential model to combat multidrug-resistant Staphylococcus, Klebsiella and Acinetobacter species, which are WHO’s high-priority pathogens. Phages with bacterial infective potential can be used as model gene vehicles and vectors for gene and genome editing studies as they possess hydrolytic enzymes targeting the bacterial cell walls, chromosomal DNA sequences and anti-CRISPR/Cas proteins. Comparing raw and processed datasets, MAGs provide an avenue for the pursuit of novel industrial strains from local resources in East Africa.
    Date: 2025-03-14
    Authors: Nabona J, Bahati S, Makaranga A, Anyanwu CN, Neel R, Agbaje AB, Eilu E, Mark D, Maghembe RS.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  10. Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitors (PARPi) have revolutionised the treatment of ovarian high grade serous carcinoma (HGSC), especially those with defective homologous recombination. However, the emergence of resistance poses a critical challenge, as over 50% of patients relapse within three years. The mechanisms underlying changes in PARP trapping, a central aspect of PARPi efficacy, are not well understood due to limitations in current experimental methodologies. Existing techniques lack resolution and throughput, impeding efforts to study PARP trapping dynamics over time with single-cell resolution. Effective tools to study PARP trapping in live cells are urgently needed to elucidate resistance mechanisms and inform therapeutic strategies. To address this, we used CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing to dual-label endogenous PARP1 with EGFP and mCherryFP in OVCAR4 cells to develop a novel intramolecular FRET-based biosensor that enables real-time, single-cell visualization of PARP trapping dynamics in live cells. High-content fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) revealed dose dependent PARP trapping upon exposure to PARP inhibitor and distinguished between the trapping efficiencies of four different PARPi (veliparib, olaparib, rucaparib, talazoparib). Moreover, we found reduced PARP trapping in PARPi-resistant models, both in vitro and in vivo , providing critical evidence for altered PARP trapping as a resistance mechanism and illustrating the potential of this FRET biosensor to interrogate resistance mechanisms quantitatively. This PARP trapping biosensor represents a transformative advance, enabling dynamic, high-resolution analysis of mechanisms underlying cancer drug resistance. It provides critical insights into the heterogeneity of PARPi resistance, with implications for developing more effective therapies and improving personalised treatment strategies for ovarian cancer patients. Graphical abstract
    Date: 2025-03-14
    Authors: Marks D, Garcia E, Kumar S, Tyson K, Koch C, Ivanov A, Edel J, Mirza HB, Flanagan W, Dunsby C, French PM, McNeish IA.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  11. The WEE1 kinase negatively regulates CDK1/2 to control DNA replication and mitotic entry. Genetic factors that determine sensitivity to WEE1 inhibitors (WEE1i) are largely unknown. A genome-wide insertional mutagenesis screen revealed that mutation of EIF2A , a translation regulator, sensitized to WEE1i. Mechanistically, WEE1i treatment triggers a translational shut-down, which is lethal in combination with the reduced translation of EIF2A KO cells. A genome-wide CRISPR-Cas9 screen revealed that inactivation of integrated stress response (ISR) kinases GCN1/2 rescued WEE1i-mediated cytotoxicity. WEE1i induced GCN2 activation, ATF4 upregulation, and altered ribosome dynamics. Loss of the collided ribosome sensor ZNF598 conversely increased sensitivity to WEE1i. Notably, the ISR was not required for WEE1i to induce DNA damage, premature mitotic entry or sensitization to DNA-damaging chemotherapeutics. ISR activation was independent of CDK1/2 activation. Importantly, WEE1i-mediated ISR activation was independent of WEE1 presence, pointing at off-target effects, which are shared by multiple chemically distinct WEE1i. This response was also observed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Importantly, low-dose WEE1 inhibition did not induce ISR activation, while it still synergized with PKMYT1 inhibition. Taken together, WEE1i triggers toxic ISR activation and translational shutdown, which can be prevented by low-dose or combination treatments, while retaining the cell cycle checkpoint-perturbing effects.
    Date: 2025-03-14
    Authors: Tjeerdsma RB, Ng TF, Roorda M, Bianchi D, Yang S, Bonnet C, VanInsberghe M, Everts M, Bakker FJ, de Boer HR, Moatti N, Hustedt N, Yin J, Hoeg L, Leibovitch M, Sicheri F, van Oudenaarden A, de Jong S, van den Berg J, Tanenbaum ME, Brummelkamp TR, Durocher D, van Vugt MA.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  12. The ability to assay the molecular composition of biological systems with single-cell resolution has revolutionised our understanding of tissue heterogeneity and function. Recent advances in single-cell proteomics (SCP) now enable the unbiased quantification of the proteome to a depth of several thousand proteins across hundreds of cells. Yet the broader adoption beyond specialised groups remains limited due to the need for specific equipment and expertise. A major challenge in making these analyses more broadly available is sample preservation for transporting biological material to SCP-capable facilities. To address this issue and provide practical solutions; we first evaluated various cell preservation methods from monolayer culture samples, then tested our optimised methodology on both cultured cells and, for the first time, preserved animal tissue from an in vivo mouse model. Our findings highlight the feasibility of SCP analyses in preserved tissues, significantly expanding its current applicability. By optimising upstream processing, our approach enables robust single-cell proteome analysis of both cells and tissues, making SCP more accessible to the wider scientific community. Ultimately, this advancement expands the potential applications of SCP, particularly in disciplines where analysing rare or heterogeneous populations is beneficial.
    Date: 2025-03-13
    Authors: Makar AN, Holkham J, Lilla S, Wilkinson S, von Kriegsheim A.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  13. Chitinase-like proteins (CLPs) are of wide interest due to their significant roles during both biological and pathological processes. Human CLPs such as YKL-40 have been suggested as biomarkers of disease severity in many conditions. Murine CLPs include Brp39, Ym1, and Ym2 and these are similarly upregulated in multiple mouse models of pathology. Investigation of these molecules, particularly Ym1 and Ym2, is plagued by complexity in the genomic locus due to recent gene duplication events in the C57BL/6 strain. Using a novel CRISPR-Cas9 targeting approach involving CB6 mixed background embryos, we generated a Ym1 deficient mouse. Validation using flow cytometry, ELISA, and immunofluorescence confirmed no expression of mature Ym1 protein with no alteration in the expression of related chitinases/CLP genes including Chia and Chil4. This new transgenic mouse line will be key for investigating CLP functions and the genetic approach utilised may provide a useful strategy for other genes which show differences between inbred mouse strains.
    Date: 2025-03-13
    Authors: Parkinson JE, Baldwin GE, Papotto PH, Humphreys NE, Adamson AD, Allen JE, Sutherland TE.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  14. ABSTRACT Background Water homeostasis is regulated by the peptide hormone arginine vasopressin (AVP), which promotes water reabsorption in the renal collecting duct. The regulation of Aqp2 gene transcription is a key mechanism through which AVP modulates water transport as disruption of this mechanism leads to water balance disorders. Therefore, an important goal is to understand the regulatory processes that control Aqp2 gene transcription. While CREB (CREB1) has been proposed as the primary transcription factor responsible for Aqp2 transcription, recent evidence challenges this view, suggesting that other CREB-like transcription factors, including ATF1 and CREM, may play a role. Methods We employed the CRISPR/Cas9 gene-editing system to delete Atf1 , Creb1 , and Crem in mpkCCD cells, an immortalized mouse collecting duct cell line. These cell lines were then exposed to the vasopressin analog, dDAVP, to assess the role of these transcription factors in regulating Aqp2 expression. AQP2 protein levels were measured by immunoblotting and RNA-seq was used to analyze changes in Aqp2 mRNA abundance, as well as other transcriptomic changes. Results Deletion of all three transcription factors (ATF1, CREB1, and CREM) led to a significant reduction in the vasopressin-induced upregulation of AQP2 protein, confirming their role in regulating Aqp2 expression. RNA-seq data showed that Aqp2 mRNA levels mirrored changes in protein abundance, supporting the idea that these transcription factors affect Aqp2 transcription. Rescue experiments in triple knockout cells showed that expressing any of the three transcription factors restored the response to vasopressin. Conclusions Our findings demonstrate that ATF1, CREB1, and CREM have redundant roles in regulating Aqp2 transcription. Based on these results and prior data, we propose that these CREB-family transcription factors may regulate Aqp2 gene transcription indirectly by controlling the expression of additional unidentified transcription factors. Key Points CREB-family transcription factors (ATF1, CREB1, and CREM) were deleted in mpkCCD cells to assess their roles in Aqp2 gene transcription CRISPR/Cas9 knockout of all three transcription factors strongly reduced the ability of vasopressin to increase AQP2 mRNA and protein Re-expression of any of the three restored the vasopressin response indicating redundant roles of the three transcription factors
    Date: 2025-03-13
    Authors: Murillo-de-Ozores AR, Chen L, Ou S, Park E, Khan S, Raghuram V, Yang C, Chou C, Knepper MA.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  15. Summary Nucleotides are essential for nucleic acid synthesis, signaling, and metabolism, and can be synthesized de novo or through salvage. Rapidly proliferating cells require large amounts of nucleotides, making nucleotide metabolism a widely exploited target for cancer therapy. However, resistance frequently emerges, highlighting the need for a deeper understanding of nucleotide regulation. Here, we harness uridine salvage and CRISPR-Cas9 screening to reveal regulators of de novo pyrimidine synthesis. We identify several factors and report that pyrimidine synthesis can continue in the absence of coenzyme Q (CoQ), the canonical electron acceptor in de novo synthesis. We further investigate NUDT5 and report its conserved interaction with PPAT, the rate-limiting enzyme in purine synthesis. We show that in the absence of NUDT5, hyperactive purine synthesis siphons the phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate (PRPP) pool at the expense of pyrimidine synthesis, promoting resistance to chemotherapy. Intriguingly, the interaction between NUDT5 and PPAT appears to be disrupted by PRPP, highlighting intricate allosteric regulation. Our findings reveal a fundamental mechanism for maintaining nucleotide balance and position NUDT5 as a potential biomarker for predicting resistance to chemotherapy.
    Date: 2025-03-13
    Authors: Strefeler A, Baker ZN, Chollet S, Guerra RM, Ivanisevic J, Gallart-Ayala H, Pagliarini DJ, Jourdain AA.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  16. Summary Variable platinum responses drive high mortality in high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC), but to date, there is no molecular approach to define resistance levels for clinical decision-making. Here, we developed the organoid drug resistance assay (ODR-test) with patient-derived organoids from our ovarian cancer biobank and found that all HGSOC patients develop molecular resistance under exposure to carboplatin, although with varying clinical implications. Sustained phenotypic reprogramming and cellular plasticity under carboplatin pressure emerged as a conserved mechanism irrespective of the basal resistance level. Transcriptional and proteomic analyses revealed changes in cell adhesion and differentiation in post-platinum lines as adaptive responses that drive the increase in resistance. We identified Keratin 17 (KRT17) as a mediator of developing platinum resistance and validated its function by CRISPR/Cas9 and overexpression. Additionally, we found that KRT17 expression status (K-score) is a significant negative prognostic histopathological biomarker in a large cohort (N=384) of advanced HGSOC patients. In organoids, increased KRT17 levels enhanced sensitivity to PI3K/Akt inhibitors Alpelisib and Afuresertib, highlighting the potential of KRT17 as a stratification biomarker for targeted therapies.
    Date: 2025-03-13
    Authors: Reichenbach J, Schmid J, Hierlmayer S, Zhang T, Piga I, Geweniger S, Fischer J, Davesar A, Vasovic N, Chelariu-Raicu A, Kraus F, Burges A, Czogalla B, Mayr D, Straub T, Klein C, Olsen JV, Mahner S, Trillsch F, Kessler M.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  17. High-grade serous ovarian carcinoma (HGSC) is the sixth leading cause of cancer-related death among women. Many cases arise from the Fallopian tubal epithelium (TE), exhibit numerous mutations, and present heterogenous pathological features. However, the contribution of specific mutation combinations to cellular transformation, pathological phenotype and chemotherapeutic response remains poorly understood. Here, we used a Trp53-deficient mouse TE-derived organoid platform to perform combinatorial CRISPR mutagenesis of 20 candidate HGSC driver genes. Mutations in Nf1, Cdkn2a and Map2k4 were most frequently observed in transformed organoids. Upon transplantation into mice, those containing Map2k4 mutations predominantly gave rise to papillary-glandular histology, whereas those containing Nf1 mutations formed more mesenchymal-like carcinomas. Transcriptomic analysis revealed that Nf1-mutant tumors of all pathological phenotypes overexpressed the long noncoding RNA Pvt1, a marker associated with poor prognosis in HGSC patients. Map2k4-mutant organoids were more sensitive to paclitaxel and niraparib, while Nf1-mutant combinations responded better to trametinib. Notably, the removal of Rho kinase inhibitor (ROCKi) reduced trametinib sensitivity in both Map2k4- and Nf1-mutant organoids, underscoring the importance of culture conditions and potential antagonistic drug interactions in organoid-based drug screens. Collectively, our results demonstrate that TE-derived organoids coupled with combinatorial CRISPR mutagenesis provide a powerful system to unravel the genetic and phenotypic complexity of HGSC. In particular, we found that Map2k4 functions as a tumor suppressor that shapes distinct tumor histology and chemosensitivity, suggesting it as a potential therapeutic target in select HGSC cases
    Date: 2025-03-13
    Authors: Phuong DJ, Ralston CQ, Ezzat TM, Ashe CS, Armstrong AP, Flesken-Nikitin A, Yamulla RJ, Nikitin AY, Schimenti JC.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  18. Cell migration is crucial for development and deregulation causes diseases. The Scar/WAVE complex promotes mesenchymal cell migration through Arp2/3 mediated lamellipodia protrusion. We previously discovered that all isoforms of Nance-Horan Syndrome-like 1 (NHSL1) protein interact directly with the Scar/WAVE complex and the NHSL1-F1 isoform negatively regulates Scar/WAVE-Arp2/3 activity thereby inhibiting 2D random cell migration. Here, we investigate the NHSL1-A1 isoform, which contains a Scar homology domain (SHD). The SHD in Scar/WAVE mediates the formation of the Scar/WAVE complex. We found that the SHD of NHLS1-A is sufficient for the formation of an NHSL1-A complex composed of the same proteins as the Scar/WAVE complex, but NHSL1-A replaces Scar/WAVE. NHSL1-A SHD recruits the NHSL1-A complex to lamellipodia, where also the Scar/WAVE complex resides. Scar/WAVE contains a WCA domain, which is phosphorylated by CK2 and recruits and activates the Arp2/3 complex to nucleate branched actin networks supporting lamellipodial protrusion. We identified a WCA domain in NHSL1 which interacts with the Arp2/3 complex. The NHSL1 WCA domain is phosphorylated by GSK3, and this increases the interaction with the Arp2/3 complex. In contrast to NHSL1-F1, the NHSL1-A complex promotes cell migration speed but not cell persistence via the Scar/WAVE complex and potentially via its WCA domain. In addition, the NHSL1-A complex is required for chemotaxis. Mechanistically, the NHSL1-A complex may increase lamellipodial Arp2/3 activity and lamellipodial speed while reducing lamellipodial persistence. Our findings reveal an additional layer of Arp2/3 complex control essential for mesenchymal cell migration highly relevant for development and disease.
    Date: 2025-03-13
    Authors: Jalal S, Pallett T, Wu S, Asokan SB, Bear JE, Krause M.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  19. Nucleotide-binding domain and leucine-rich repeat immune receptors (NLRs) can function in networks of sensors and helpers to induce hypersensitive cell death and immunity against pathogens. The tomato sensor NLR Prf guards the Pto kinase from AvrPto and AvrPtoB effector perturbation and activates the downstream helpers NRC2 and NRC3. Prf is conserved across the Solanaceae and its ortholog in the model species Nicotiana benthamiana is also required for detection of AvrPto/AvrPtoB function on Pto. A recent study reported that cell death induction after transient expression of an autoactive mutant of tomato NRC3 is abolished upon RNAi silencing of Prf in N. benthamiana . Here we generated loss-of-function prf mutants in N. benthamiana and demonstrate that autoactive mutants of eight canonical tomato NRCs (NRC0, NRC1, NRC2, NRC3, NRC4a, NRC4b, NRC6, and NRC7) still induce hypersensitive cell death when expressed transiently in the prf mutant background. Autoactive tomato NRCs also triggered cell death when expressed in lettuce ( Lactuca sativa ), an Asteraceae plant that does not have a Prf ortholog. These results confirm a unidirectional dependency of sensors and helpers in the NRC network and underscore the value of the N. benthamiana and lettuce model systems for studying functional relationships between paired and networked NLRs.
    Date: 2025-03-13
    Authors: Lüdke D, Pai H, Toghani A, Harant A, Wu C, Kamoun S.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  20. ABSTRACT Inhibitors of the protein kinase WEE1 have emerged as promising agents for cancer therapy. In this study, we uncover synergistic interactions between WEE1 small- molecule inhibitors and defects in mRNA translation, mediated by activation of the integrated stress response (ISR) through the kinase GCN2. Using a pooled CRISPRi screen, we identify GSPT1 and ALKBH8 as factors whose depletion confer hypersensitivity to the WEE1 inhibitor, AZD1775. We demonstrate that this synergy depends on ISR activation, which is induced by the off-target activity of WEE1 inhibitors. Furthermore, PROTAC-based WEE1 inhibitors and molecular glues show reduced or no ISR activation, suggesting potential strategies to minimise off-target toxicity. Our findings reveal that certain WEE1 inhibitors elicit dual toxicity via ISR activation and genotoxic stress, with ISR activation being independent of WEE1 itself or cell-cycle status. This dual mechanism highlights opportunities for combination therapies, such as pairing WEE1 inhibitors with agents targeting the mRNA translation machinery. This study also underscores the need for more precise WEE1 targeting strategies to mitigate off-target effects, with implications for optimising the therapeutic potential of WEE1 inhibitors.
    Date: 2025-03-13
    Authors: Wilson JCJ, Zhu J, Lam S, Hart A, Goh CG, Bou-Dagher F, Razumkov H, Kobel L, Kontarakis Z, Fielden J, Schlapansky MF, Loizou JI, Villunger A, Corn JE, Marciniak SJ, Bader AS, Jackson SP.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  21. Cassava production in sub-Saharan Africa is severely impacted by diseases. Most pathogens require interaction with host susceptibility factors to complete their life cycles and cause disease. Targeted DNA methylation is an epigenetic strategy to alter gene expression in plants and we previously reported that a zinc-finger fused to DMS3 could establish methylation at the promoter of MeSWEET10a , a bacterial susceptibility gene, and this resulted in decreased disease. Here, we attempt a similar strategy for cassava brown streak disease. This disease is caused by the ipomoviruses CBSV and UCBSV. These viruses belong to the family Potyviridae , which has been shown extensively to require host eIF4E-family proteins to infect plants and cause disease. We previously found that cassava plants with simultaneous knockout mutations in two eIF4E genes, nCBP-1 and nCBP-2 , resulted in decreased susceptibility to CBSD. Here, we report successful simultaneous targeting of both promoters with methylation using a dCas9-DMRcd-SunTag system. However, in contrast to our previous work with MeSWEET10a , controls indicate that CRISPR interference is occurring in these lines and is sufficient for reduction of gene expression. Future research will use genetic crosses to segregate away the DNA methylation reagents and, if DNA methylation proves heritable, assess whether methylation alone is sufficient increase resistance to CBSD.
    Date: 2025-03-13
    Authors: Lin ZD, Hernandez GL, Stanton MK, Zheng X, Gilbert KB, Feng S, Ghoshal B, Gardiner J, Wang M, Jacobsen SE, Carrington JC, Bart RS.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  22. The size distribution of starch granules in wheat grains influences bread- and pasta-making quality, as well as nutritional properties. Here, we demonstrate that in durum wheat, wide variation in starch granule size distributions can be induced through missense mutations at a single genetic locus encoding the MYOSIN RESEMBLING CHLOROPLAST PROTEIN on chromosome 6A ( TtMRC-A1 ). We isolated 29 independent TILLING mutants in durum cultivar Kronos, each harbouring a different missense mutation that causes an amino acid substitution in the MRC protein. Compared to the B-type granule content of wild-type Kronos (24%), six of the missense lines had significant increases in B-type granule content (33-42%), although not to the extent observed in the mrc-1 mutant (58%) which carries a premature stop codon mutation. Notably, one missense line had significantly decreased B-type granule content (15%), demonstrating that mutations in TtMRC-A1 can achieve both increases and decreases in B-type granule content. In these lines, A-type granule size decreased as B-type granule content increased, and Rapid Visco Analysis on selected lines demonstrated that both B-type granule content and A-type granule size strongly correlated with pasting parameters (e.g., peak viscosity and pasting temperature). However, strong correlations between pasting properties and A-type granule size were still observed after removing most of the B-type granules via sieving, indicating that A-type granule size is the primary contributor to the observed variation in pasting properties. Overall, we demonstrate that mutations at TtMRC-A1 can greatly extend the range of granule size distributions in durum wheat, creating useful alterations in starch properties. Key Message Different missense mutations in TtMRC-A1 can be used to fine tune granule size distributions in durum wheat grains, creating useful alterations in starch properties.
    Date: 2025-03-13
    Authors: Fahy B, Chen J, Seung D.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  23. Pennycress is a winter annual intermediate crop with approximately 30% seed oil content suitable for producing biofuels. Here, we evaluated seed development, anatomy, and agronomically relevant traits of a transparent testa 8 knockout mutant ( tt8-2bp ) generated by CRISPR genome editing to improve seed quality. We performed histochemical analyses on wild-type and tt8-2bp seeds at different developmental stages. No visible anatomical defects were observed in embryos and endosperm of tt8-2bp seeds. However, tt8-2bp seed coats completely lost proanthocyanidins which were accumulated in an inner integument cell layer and in the thickened cell wall of an outer integument cell layer of wild-type seed coats. Based on spatial metabolomic and solid-state NMR analyses, tt8-2bp seed coats had decreased aromatic compounds and cell wall polysaccharides compared to wild-type seed coats. Additionally, tt8-2bp seeds had reduced seed coat dry weights and increased embryo dry weights compared to wild-type seeds, indicating changes in macronutrient partitioning during seed development. Mature tt8-2bp seeds exhibited increased imbibition rates and seed coat permeability to water-soluble molecules, suggesting a higher seed coat hydrophilicity than wild-type seeds. In conclusion, we did not find defects in tt8-2bp mutant seeds that were unfavorable agronomically, supporting that TT8 is an attractive target for pennycress domestication. Highlight Histochemical analyses of pennycress seeds revealed a complete loss of proanthocyanidins in tt8-2bp seed coats accompanied by increased seed imbibition rates and seed coat permeability compared to wild-type seeds.
    Date: 2025-03-13
    Authors: Ding X, Duckworth S, Southworth M, Gautam B, Lipton A, Velickovic D, Sedbrook JC, Handakumbura P.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  24. ABSTRACT The regulation of cell division is broadly conserved across eukaryotes, governed by cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) to coordinate progression through the cell cycle. Plants have evolved a complex set of cell-cycle genes with unique features. The high number of cyclin-CDK pairs in flowering plants complicates functional studies due to redundancy and diversification. It is critical to study simple systems in other plant lineages to better understand the functional integration of the cell-cycle control machinery and its evolution across land plants. Through a comprehensive phylogenetic analysis, we show that non-seed plants possess a simple repertoire of cyclin and CDK proteins, suggesting that the observed complexity in seed plants is a derived trait. The liverwort Marchantia polymorpha possess a streamlined set of core cell cycle genes with minimal redundancy during vegetative development. Using single-cell RNA-seq and fluorescent reporters, we found a precise, phase-specific pattern of expression for cell cycle genes. We demonstrated in vivo that only three cyclins are active, one at a given phase, without redundancy. Functional analyses revealed that Mp CYCD;1 promotes cell cycle re-entry and disrupts differentiation, while overexpression of Mp CYCA or Mp CYCB;1 arrests the cell cycle, consistent with their respective roles at G1, S, and G2/M progression. Our findings highlight the functional conservation of mechanisms for cell-cycle control across eukaryotes and provide insights into its ancestral state, revealing a minimal set of functional components required for multicellular development. This study advances our understanding of fundamental aspects of cell-cycle regulation and opens new possibilities for engineering plant growth.
    Date: 2025-03-13
    Authors: Romani F, Bonter I, Rebmann M, Takahashi G, Guzman-Chavez F, Batté FD, Hirakawa Y, Haseloff J.
    Ref: bioRxiv
  25. Microbial host populations evolve traits conferring specific resistance to viral predators via various defense mechanisms, while viruses reciprocally evolve traits to evade these defenses. Such co-evolutionary dynamics often involve diversification promoted by negative frequency-dependent selection. However, microbial traits conferring competitive asymmetries can induce directional selection, opposing diversification. Despite extensive research on microbe-virus co-evolution, the combined effect of both host trait types and associated selection remains unclear. Using a CRISPR-mediated co-evolutionary system, we examine how the co-occurrence of both trait types impacts viral evolution and persistence, previously shown to be transient and non-stationary in computational models. A stochastic model incorporating host competitive asymmetries via variation of intrinsic growth rates reveals that competitively-advantaged host clades generate the majority of immune diversity. Greater asymmetries extend viral extinction times, accelerate viral adaptation locally in time, and augment long-term local adaptation. These findings align with previous experiments, and provide further insights into long-term co-evolutionary dynamics.
    Date: 2025-03-13
    Authors: Liaghat A, Guillemet M, Whitaker R, Gandon S, Pascual M.
    Ref: bioRxiv
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