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Browsing by Author "Liu, Sheng"
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Item A T Cell‐Engaging Tumor Organoid Platform for Pancreatic Cancer Immunotherapy(Wiley, 2023) Zhou, Zhuolong; Van der Jeught, Kevin; Li, Yujing; Sharma, Samantha; Yu, Tao; Moulana, Ishara; Liu, Sheng; Wan, Jun; Territo, Paul R.; Opyrchal, Mateusz; Zhang, Xinna; Wan, Guohui; Lu, Xiongbin; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicinePancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) is a clinically challenging disease with limited treatment options. Despite a small percentage of cases with defective mismatch DNA repair (dMMR), PDA is included in the most immune‐resistant cancer types that are poorly responsive to immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) therapy. To facilitate drug discovery combating this immunosuppressive tumor type, a high‐throughput drug screen platform is established with the newly developed T cell‐incorporated pancreatic tumor organoid model. Tumor‐specific T cells are included in the pancreatic tumor organoids by two‐step cell packaging, fully recapitulating immune infiltration in the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME). The organoids are generated with key components in the original tumor, including epithelial, vascular endothelial, fibroblast and macrophage cells, and then packaged with T cells into their outside layer mimicking a physical barrier and enabling T cell infiltration and cytotoxicity studies. In the PDA organoid‐based screen, epigenetic inhibitors ITF2357 and I‐BET151 are identified, which in combination with anti‐PD‐1 based therapy show considerably greater anti‐tumor effect. The combinatorial treatment turns the TME from immunosuppressive to immunoactive, up‐regulates the MHC‐I antigen processing and presentation, and enhances the effector T cell activity. The standardized PDA organoid model has shown great promise to accelerate drug discovery for the immunosuppressive cancer.Item Aberrant gene expression induced by a high fat diet is linked to H3K9 acetylation in the promoter-proximal region(Elsevier, 2021-03) Morral, Núria; Liu, Sheng; Conteh, Abass M.; Chu, Xiaona; Wang, Yue; Dong, X. Charlie; Liu, Yunlong; Linnemann, Amelia K.; Wan, Jun; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineNon-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the most common chronic liver disease, with an estimated global prevalence of 1 in 4 individuals. Aberrant transcriptional control of gene expression is central to the pathophysiology of metabolic diseases. However, the molecular mechanisms leading to gene dysregulation are not well understood. Histone modifications play important roles in the control of transcription. Acetylation of histone 3 at lysine 9 (H3K9ac) is associated with transcriptional activity and is implicated in transcript elongation by controlling RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) pause-release. Hence, changes in this histone modification may shed information on novel pathways linking transcription control and metabolic dysfunction. Here, we carried out genome-wide analysis of H3K9ac in the liver of mice fed a control or a high-fat diet (an animal model of NAFLD), and asked whether this histone mark associates with changes in gene expression. We found that over 70% of RNAPII peaks in promoter-proximal regions overlapped with H3K9ac, consistent with a role of H3K9ac in the regulation of transcription. When comparing high-fat with control diet, approximately 17% of the differentially expressed genes were associated with changes in H3K9ac in their promoters, showing a strong correlation between changes in H3K9ac signal and gene expression. Overall, our data indicate that in response to a high-fat diet, dysregulated gene expression of a subset of genes may be attributable to changes in transcription elongation driven by H3K9ac. Our results point at an added mechanism of gene regulation that may be important in the development of metabolic diseases.Item Active PSF shaping and adaptive optics enable volumetric localization microscopy through brain sections(Springer Nature, 2018-08) Mlodzianoski, Michael J.; Cheng-Hathaway, Paul J.; Bemiller, Shane M.; McCray, Tyler J.; Liu, Sheng; Miller, David A.; Lamb, Bruce T.; Landreth, Gary E.; Huang, Fang; Anatomy and Cell Biology, IU School of MedicineApplication of single-molecule switching nanoscopy (SMSN) beyond the coverslip surface poses substantial challenges due to sample-induced aberrations that distort and blur single-molecule emission patterns. We combined active shaping of point spread functions and efficient adaptive optics to enable robust 3D-SMSN imaging within tissues. This development allowed us to image through 30-μm-thick brain sections to visualize and reconstruct the morphology and the nanoscale details of amyloid-β filaments in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease.Item ADGRG1 enriches for functional human hematopoietic stem cells following ex vivo expansion-induced mitochondrial oxidative stress(The American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2021) Chen, Yandan; Fang, Shuyi; Ding, Qingwei; Jiang, Rongzhen; He, Jiefeng; Wang, Qin; Jin, Yuting; Huang, Xinxin; Liu, Sheng; Capitano, Maegan L.; Trinh, Thao; Teng, Yincheng; Meng, Qingyou; Wan, Jun; Broxmeyer, Hal E.; Guo, Bin; BioHealth Informatics, School of Informatics and ComputingThe heterogeneity of human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs) under stress conditions such as ex vivo expansion is poorly understood. Here, we report that the frequencies of SCID-repopulating cells were greatly decreased in cord blood (CB) CD34+ HSCs and HPCs upon ex vivo culturing. Transcriptomic analysis and metabolic profiling demonstrated that mitochondrial oxidative stress of human CB HSCs and HPCs notably increased, along with loss of stemness. Limiting dilution analysis revealed that functional human HSCs were enriched in cell populations with low levels of mitochondrial ROS (mitoROS) during ex vivo culturing. Using single-cell RNA-Seq analysis of the mitoROS low cell population, we demonstrated that functional HSCs were substantially enriched in the adhesion GPCR G1-positive (ADGRG1+) population of CD34+CD133+ CB cells upon ex vivo expansion stress. Gene set enrichment analysis revealed that HSC signature genes including MSI2 and MLLT3 were enriched in CD34+CD133+ADGRG1+ CB HSCs. Our study reveals that ADGRG1 enriches for functional human HSCs under oxidative stress during ex vivo culturing, which can be a reliable target for drug screening of agonists of HSC expansion.Item Advanced Functions Embedded in the Second Version of Database, Global Evaluation of SARS-CoV-2/hCoV-19 Sequences 2(Frontiers Media, 2022-04-11) Li, Kailing; Wang, Audrey K.Y.; Liu, Sheng; Fang, Shuyi; Lu, Alex Z.; Shen, Jikui; Yang, Lei; Hu, Chang-Deng; Yang, Kai; Wan, Jun; BioHealth Informatics, School of Informatics and ComputingThe Global Evaluation of SARS-CoV-2/hCoV-19 Sequences 2 (GESS v2 https://shiny.ph.iu.edu/GESS_v2/) is an updated version of GESS, which has offered a handy query platform to analyze single-nucleotide variants (SNVs) on millions of high coverages and high-quality severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) complete genomes provided by the Global Initiative on Sharing Avian Influenza Data (GISAID). Including the tools in the first version, the GESS v2 is embedded with new functions, which allow users to search SNVs, given the viral nucleotide or amino acid sequence. The GESS v2 helps users to identify SNVs or SARS-CoV-2 lineages enriched in countries of user's interest and show the migration path of a selected lineage on a world map during specific time periods chosen by the users. In addition, the GESS v2 can recognize the dynamic variations of newly emerging SNVs in each month to help users monitor SNVs, which will potentially become dominant soon. More importantly, multiple sets of analyzed results about SNVs can be downloaded directly from the GESS v2 by which users can conduct their own independent research. With these significant updates, the GESS v2 will continue to serve as a public open platform for researchers to explore SARS-CoV-2 evolutionary patterns from the perspectives of the prevalence and impact of SNVs.Item Aging- and Tumor-Mediated Increase in CD8+CD28- T Cells Might Impose a Strong Barrier to Success of Immunotherapy in Glioblastoma(American Association of Immunologists, 2021-06-08) Huff, Wei X.; Bam, Marpe; Shireman, Jack M.; Kwon, Jae Hyun; Song, Leo; Newman, Sharlé; Cohen-Gadol, Aaron A.; Shapiro, Scott; Jones, Tamara; Fulton, Kelsey; Liu, Sheng; Tanaka, Hiromi; Liu, Yunlong; Wan, Jun; Dey, Mahua; Neurological Surgery, School of MedicineClinical use of various forms of immunotherapeutic drugs in glioblastoma (GBM), has highlighted severe T-cell dysfunction such as exhaustion in GBM patients. However, reversing T-cell exhaustion using immune checkpoint inhibitors in GBM clinical trials has not shown significant overall survival benefit. Phenotypically, CD8+ T cells with downregulated CD28 co-receptors, low CD27 expression, increased CD57 expression, and telomere shortening, are classified as senescent T cells. These senescent T cells are normally seen as part of aging and also in many forms of solid cancers. Absence of CD28 on T-cells leads to several functional irregularities including reduced TCR diversity, incomplete activation of T cells, and defects in antigen induced proliferation. In the context of GBM, presence and/or function of these CD8+CD28− T-cells is unknown. In this clinical correlative study, we investigated the effect of aging as well as tumor microenvironment on CD8+ T-cell phenotype as an indicator of its function in GBM patients. We systematically analyzed and describe a large population of CD8+CD28− T-cells in both the blood and tumor infiltrating lymphocytes of GBM patients. We found that phenotypically these CD8+CD28− T-cells represent a distinct population compared to exhausted T-cells. Comparative transcriptomic and pathway analysis of CD8+CD28− T cell populations in GBM patients revealed that tumor microenvironment might be influencing several immune related pathways and thus further exaggerating the age associated immune dysfunction in this patient population.Item Alkynyl nicotinamides show antileukemic activity in drug-resistant acute myeloid leukemia(The American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2024-06-17) Ramdas, Baskar; Dayal, Neetu; Pandey, Ruchi; Larocque, Elizabeth; Kanumuri, Rahul; Pasupuleti, Santhosh Kumar; Liu, Sheng; Kanellopoulou, Chrysi; Chu, Elizabeth Fei Yin; Mohallem, Rodrigo; Virani, Saniya; Chopra, Gaurav; Aryal, Uma K.; Lapidus, Rena; Wan, Jun; Emadi, Ashkan; Haneline, Laura S.; Holtsberg, Frederick W.; Aman, M. Javad; Sintim, Herman O.; Kapur, Reuben; Pediatrics, School of MedicineActivating mutations of FLT3 contribute to deregulated hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSC/Ps) growth and survival in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), leading to poor overall survival. AML patients treated with investigational drugs targeting mutant FLT3, including Quizartinib and Crenolanib, develop resistance to these drugs. Development of resistance is largely due to acquisition of cooccurring mutations and activation of additional survival pathways, as well as emergence of additional FLT3 mutations. Despite the high prevalence of FLT3 mutations and their clinical significance in AML, there are few targeted therapeutic options available. We have identified 2 novel nicotinamide-based FLT3 inhibitors (HSN608 and HSN748) that target FLT3 mutations at subnanomolar concentrations and are potently effective against drug-resistant secondary mutations of FLT3. These compounds show antileukemic activity against FLT3ITD in drug-resistant AML, relapsed/refractory AML, and in AML bearing a combination of epigenetic mutations of TET2 along with FLT3ITD. We demonstrate that HSN748 outperformed the FDA-approved FLT3 inhibitor Gilteritinib in terms of inhibitory activity against FLT3ITD in vivo.Item Analysis of KLF4 regulated genes in cancer cells reveals a role of DNA methylation in promoter- enhancer interactions(Taylor & Francis, 2018) Oyinlade, Olutobi; Wei, Shuang; Kammers, Kai; Liu, Sheng; Wang, Shuyan; Ma, Ding; Huang, Zhi-yong; Qian, Jiang; Zhu, Heng; Wan, Jun; Xia, Shuli; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineRecent studies have revealed an unexpected role of DNA methylation at promoter regions in transcription activation. However, whether DNA methylation at enhancer regions activates gene expression and influences cellular functions remains to be determined. In this study, by employing the transcription factor krÜppel-like factor 4 (KLF4) that binds to methylated CpGs (mCpGs), we investigated the molecular outcomes of the recruitment of KLF4 to mCpGs at enhancer regions in human glioblastoma cells. First, by integrating KLF4 ChIP-seq, whole-genome bisulfite sequence, and H3K27ac ChIP-seq datasets, we found 1,299 highly methylated (β >0.5) KLF4 binding sites, three-quarters of which were located at putative enhancer regions, including gene bodies and intergenic regions. In the meantime, by proteomics, we identified 16 proteins as putative targets upregulated by KLF4-mCpG binding at enhancer regions. By chromosome conformation capture (3C) analysis, we demonstrated that KLF4 bound to methylated CpGs at the enhancer regions of the B-cell lymphocyte kinase (BLK) and Lim domain only protein 7 (LMO7) genes, and activated their expression via 3D chromatin loop formation with their promoter regions. Expression of mutant KLF4, which lacks KLF4 ability to bind methylated DNA, or removal of DNA methylation in enhancer regions by a DNA methyltransferase inhibitor abolished chromatin loop formation and gene expression, suggesting the essential role of DNA methylation in enhancer-promoter interactions. Finally, we performed functional assays and showed that BLK was involved in glioblastoma cell migration. Together, our study established the concept that DNA methylation at enhancer regions interacts with transcription factors to activate gene expression and influence cellular functions.Item Asparagine starvation suppresses histone demethylation through iron depletion(Elsevier, 2023-03-16) Jiang, Jie; Srivastava, Sankalp; Liu, Sheng; Seim, Gretchen; Claude, Rodney; Zhong, Minghua; Cao, Sha; Davé, Utpal; Kapur, Reuben; Mosley, Amber L.; Zhang, Chi; Wan, Jun; Fan, Jing; Zhang, Ji; Pediatrics, School of MedicineIntracellular α-ketoglutarate is an indispensable substrate for the Jumonji family of histone demethylases (JHDMs) mediating most of the histone demethylation reactions. Since α-ketoglutarate is an intermediate of the tricarboxylic acid cycle and a product of transamination, its availability is governed by the metabolism of several amino acids. Here, we show that asparagine starvation suppresses global histone demethylation. This process is neither due to the change of expression of histone-modifying enzymes nor due to the change of intracellular levels of α-ketoglutarate. Rather, asparagine starvation reduces the intracellular pool of labile iron, a key co-factor for the JHDMs to function. Mechanistically, asparagine starvation suppresses the expression of the transferrin receptor to limit iron uptake. Furthermore, iron supplementation to the culture medium restores histone demethylation and alters gene expression to accelerate cell death upon asparagine depletion. These results suggest that suppressing iron-dependent histone demethylation is part of the cellular adaptive response to asparagine starvation.Item Author Correction: Upregulation of lipid metabolism genes in the breast prior to cancer diagnosis(Springer Nature, 2024-06-17) Marino, Natascia; German, Rana; Rao, Xi; Simpson, Ed; Liu, Sheng; Wan, Jun; Liu, Yunlong; Sandusky, George; Jacobsen, Max; Stovall, Miranda; Cao, Sha; Storniolo, Anna Maria V.; Medicine, School of MedicineCorrection to: npj Breast Cancer 10.1038/s41523-020-00191-8, published online 06 October 2020 In this article, the author name Miranda Stovall was incorrectly written as Miranda Stoval. The original article has been corrected.