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        <copyright>Newgen KnowledgeWorks</copyright>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Immune cells fold and damage fungal hyphae]]></title>
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            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1073/pnas.2020484118</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65542">Macrophages protect against microbial infection, in part by engulfing and killing invading microbes. Fungal pathogens such as <i>Candida albicans</i> are known to evade phagocytic killing by forming hyphae that are physically challenging to engulf because of their length. We now find that macrophages can respond by folding the hyphae of <i>C. albicans</i> (and other fungal species). Hyphal folding implies that immune cells can continue to apply mechanical force after their cargo has been internalized. The involvement of Dectin-1, β2-integrin, and actin–myosin polymerization provides initial mechanistic insight. Folding damages hyphae, inhibits their growth, and facilitates their complete engulfment. Therefore, hyphal folding represents an additional weapon in the immune cell armory that presumably contributes to fungal clearance.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Innate immunity provides essential protection against life-threatening fungal infections. However, the outcomes of individual skirmishes between immune cells and fungal pathogens are not a foregone conclusion because some pathogens have evolved mechanisms to evade phagocytic recognition, engulfment, and killing. For example, <i>Candida albicans</i> can escape phagocytosis by activating cellular morphogenesis to form lengthy hyphae that are challenging to engulf. Through live imaging of <i>C. albicans</i>–macrophage interactions, we discovered that macrophages can counteract this by folding fungal hyphae. The folding of fungal hyphae is promoted by Dectin-1, β2-integrin, VASP, actin–myosin polymerization, and cell motility. Folding facilitates the complete engulfment of long hyphae in some cases and it inhibits hyphal growth, presumably tipping the balance toward successful fungal clearance.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-04-05T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[TBK1 recruitment to STING activates both IRF3 and NF-κB that mediate immune defense against tumors and viral infections]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1766031048987-48992761-0168-4e34-ae5d-a9a052b8c4d3/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1073/pnas.2100225118</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65542">The cGAS-STING pathway is important for immune defense against infection and cancer. STING activation triggers multiple signaling cascades leading to activation of IRF3, NF-κB, and autophagy. By generating mice harboring mutations of STING that specifically inactivate different signaling cascades, we found that ablation of IRF3 activation, which is essential for the induction of type I interferons, was not sufficient to abolish the immune defense against virus infection and cancer in mouse models. Rather, impairing the ability of STING to recruit TBK1, which is important for activating both IRF3 and NF-κB, abolished the immune defense functions of STING. These results demonstrate that the recruitment of TBK1 to STING has functions that are broader than activating IRF3 and inducing type I interferons.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">The induction of type I interferons through the transcription factor interferon regulatory factor 3 (IRF3) is considered a major outcome of stimulator of interferon genes (STING) activation that drives immune responses against DNA viruses and tumors. However, STING activation can also trigger other downstream pathways such as nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) signaling and autophagy, and the roles of interferon (IFN)-independent functions of STING in infectious diseases or cancer are not well understood. Here, we generated a STING mouse strain with a mutation (S365A) that disrupts IRF3 binding and therefore type I interferon induction but not NF-κB activation or autophagy induction. We also generated STING mice with mutations that disrupt the recruitment of TANK-binding kinase 1 (TBK1), which is important for both IRF3 and NF-κB activation but not autophagy induction (L373A or ∆CTT, which lacks the C-terminal tail). The STING-S365A mutant mice, but not L373A or ∆CTT mice, were still resistant to herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) infections and mounted an antitumor response after cyclic guanosine monophosphate-adenosine monophosphate (cGAMP) treatment despite the absence of STING-induced interferons. These results demonstrate that STING can function independently of type I interferons and autophagy, and that TBK1 recruitment to STING is essential for antiviral and antitumor immunity.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-03-30T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[Signatures of immune dysfunction in HIV and HCV infection share features with chronic inflammation in aging and persist after viral reduction or elimination]]></title>
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            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1073/pnas.2022928118</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65542">Chronic inflammation contributes to morbidity and mortality in aging, but whether similar mechanisms underlie dysfunction in infection-associated chronic inflammation is unclear. Using a multicohort systems immunology approach, we identified signatures of immune dysfunction that are shared in aging and chronic viral infections, namely HIV and hepatitis C virus. We show that these shared dysfunctions persist despite viral clearance, and we describe the changes in functional coordination that occur during viral eradication. Finally, we highlight a partial restoration in interferon-α sensitivity across all major immune cell lineages as viral load drops. Our findings suggest a broad and persistent functional remodeling and deterioration of the human immune system despite removal of a chronic pathogenic burden that shares features of chronic inflammation in aging.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Chronic inflammation is thought to be a major cause of morbidity and mortality in aging, but whether similar mechanisms underlie dysfunction in infection-associated chronic inflammation is unclear. Here, we profiled the immune proteome, and cellular composition and signaling states in a cohort of aging individuals versus a set of HIV patients on long-term antiretroviral therapy therapy or hepatitis C virus (HCV) patients before and after sofosbuvir treatment. We found shared alterations in aging-associated and infection-associated chronic inflammation including T cell memory inflation, up-regulation of intracellular signaling pathways of inflammation, and diminished sensitivity to cytokines in lymphocytes and myeloid cells. In the HIV cohort, these dysregulations were evident despite viral suppression for over 10 y. Viral clearance in the HCV cohort partially restored cellular sensitivity to interferon-α, but many immune system alterations persisted for at least 1 y posttreatment. Our findings indicate that in the HIV and HCV cohorts, a broad remodeling and degradation of the immune system can persist for a year or more, even after the removal or drastic reduction of the pathogen load and that this shares some features of chronic inflammation in aging.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-04-02T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[CD11c<sup>+</sup>CD88<sup>+</sup>CD317<sup>+</sup> myeloid cells are critical mediators of persistent CNS autoimmunity]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1766030412251-52ab4b41-c003-4a0d-b9e1-b5ace2258404/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1073/pnas.2014492118</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65542">The bone marrow-derived CD11c<sup>+</sup>CD88<sup>+</sup>CD317<sup>+</sup> myeloid cells within the central nervous system are associated with clinical experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. Transcriptional analyses identify <i>ITGAX-</i> (CD11c), <i>C5AR1-</i> (CD88), and <i>BST2-</i> (CD317) expressing cells as a distinct myeloid subset in human cerebrospinal fluid. The disease-propagating effects of these cells in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis can be effectively antagonized using anti-CD317 monoclonal antibody therapy.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Natalizumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody (mAb) against α4-integrin, reduces the number of dendritic cells (DC) in cerebral perivascular spaces in multiple sclerosis (MS). Selective deletion of α4-integrin in CD11c<sup>+</sup> cells should curtail their migration to the central nervous system (CNS) and ameliorate experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). We generated CD11c.Cre<sup>+/−</sup><i>ITGA4</i><sup>fl/fl</sup> C57BL/6 mice to selectively delete α4-integrin in CD11c<sup>+</sup> cells. Active immunization and adoptive transfer EAE models were employed and compared with WT controls. Multiparameter flow cytometry was utilized to immunophenotype leukocyte subsets. Single-cell RNA sequencing was used to profile individual cells. α4-Integrin expression by CD11c<sup>+</sup> cells was significantly reduced in primary and secondary lymphoid organs in CD11c.Cre<sup>+/−</sup><i>ITGA4</i><sup>fl/fl</sup> mice. In active EAE, a delayed disease onset was observed in CD11c.Cre<sup>+/−</sup><i>ITGA4</i><sup>fl/fl</sup> mice, during which CD11c<sup>+</sup>CD88<sup>+</sup> cells were sequestered in the blood. Upon clinical EAE onset, CD11c<sup>+</sup>CD88<sup>+</sup> cells appeared in the CNS and expressed CD317<sup>+</sup>. In adoptive transfer experiments, CD11c.Cre<sup>+/−</sup><i>ITGA4</i><sup>fl/fl</sup> mice had ameliorated clinical disease phenotype associated with significantly diminished numbers of CNS CD11c<sup>+</sup>CD88<sup>+</sup>CD317<sup>+</sup> cells. In human cerebrospinal fluid from subjects with neuroinflammation, microglia-like cells display coincident expression of <i>ITGAX</i> (CD11c), <i>C5AR1</i> (CD88), and <i>BST2</i> (CD317). In mice, we show that only activated, but not naïve microglia expressed CD11c, CD88, and CD317. Finally, anti-CD317 treatment prior to clinical EAE substantially enhanced recovery in mice.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-03-30T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[Functional monovalency amplifies the pathogenicity of anti-MuSK IgG4 in myasthenia gravis]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1766004524132-5219d1fc-acd2-4db2-8aee-71f4d01bba5d/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1073/pnas.2020635118</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65542">An expanding group of autoimmune diseases is now recognized to be hallmarked by pathogenic IgG4 autoantibodies. IgG4 has the unique ability to exchange Fab-arms, rendering it bispecific and functionally monovalent. Here we show that autoantibody functional monovalency significantly amplifies the pathogenicity of IgG4 autoantibodies using patient-derived monoclonal antibodies in an in vivo model of MuSK myasthenia gravis. Therefore, subclass switching to predominant IgG4 autoantibodies is a critical step in the development of MuSK myasthenia gravis. This new mechanism in autoimmunity is also potentially relevant to 29 other IgG4-mediated autoimmune diseases known to date, allergy and other disease settings where IgG4 antibodies contribute to pathology.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Human immunoglobulin (Ig) G4 usually displays antiinflammatory activity, and observations of IgG4 autoantibodies causing severe autoimmune disorders are therefore poorly understood. In blood, IgG4 naturally engages in a stochastic process termed “Fab-arm exchange” in which unrelated IgG4s exchange half-molecules continuously. The resulting IgG4 antibodies are composed of two different binding sites, thereby acquiring monovalent binding and inability to cross-link for each antigen recognized. Here, we demonstrate that this process amplifies autoantibody pathogenicity in a classic IgG4-mediated autoimmune disease: muscle-specific kinase (MuSK) myasthenia gravis. In mice, monovalent anti-MuSK IgG4s caused rapid and severe myasthenic muscle weakness, whereas the same antibodies in their parental bivalent form were less potent or did not induce a phenotype. Mechanistically this could be explained by opposing effects on MuSK signaling. Isotype switching to IgG4 in an autoimmune response thereby may be a critical step in the development of disease. Our study establishes functional monovalency as a pathogenic mechanism in IgG4-mediated autoimmune disease and potentially other disorders.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-03-22T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[Mitochondrial metabolism is essential for invariant natural killer T cell development and function]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1766004362923-e3fbb022-9487-4d88-8d91-166783bf795b/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1073/pnas.2021385118</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65542">We show CD1d-restricted natural killer (NK)T cells have distinct metabolic profiles compared with CD4<sup>+</sup> conventional T cells. Mature NKT cells have poor fatty acid oxidation and exhibit reduced mitochondrial respiratory reserve in the steady state. In addition, NKT cell development is more sensitive to alterations in mitochondrial electron transport chain function than conventional T cells. Using T cell-specific mitochondrial complex III ablation in mice, we further demonstrate that mitochondrial metabolism plays a crucial role in NKT cell development and function by modulating T cell receptor/interleukin-15 signaling and NFAT activity. Collectively, our data provide evidence for a critical role of mitochondrial metabolism in NKT cell development and activation, opening a new avenue for NKT cell-based immunotherapy by manipulating NKT cell metabolism.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Conventional T cell fate and function are determined by coordination between cellular signaling and mitochondrial metabolism. Invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells are an important subset of “innate-like” T cells that exist in a preactivated effector state, and their dependence on mitochondrial metabolism has not been previously defined genetically or in vivo. Here, we show that mature iNKT cells have reduced mitochondrial respiratory reserve and iNKT cell development was highly sensitive to perturbation of mitochondrial function. Mice with T cell-specific ablation of Rieske iron-sulfur protein (RISP; T-<i>Uqcrfs1</i><sup><i>−/−</i></sup>), an essential subunit of mitochondrial complex III, had a dramatic reduction of iNKT cells in the thymus and periphery, but no significant perturbation on the development of conventional T cells. The impaired development observed in T-<i>Uqcrfs1</i><sup><i>−/−</i></sup> mice stems from a cell-autonomous defect in iNKT cells, resulting in a differentiation block at the early stages of iNKT cell development. Residual iNKT cells in T-<i>Uqcrfs1</i><sup><i>−/−</i></sup> mice displayed increased apoptosis but retained the ability to proliferate in vivo, suggesting that their bioenergetic and biosynthetic demands were not compromised. However, they exhibited reduced expression of activation markers, decreased T cell receptor (TCR) signaling and impaired responses to TCR and interleukin-15 stimulation. Furthermore, knocking down RISP in mature iNKT cells diminished their cytokine production, correlating with reduced NFATc2 activity. Collectively, our data provide evidence for a critical role of mitochondrial metabolism in iNKT cell development and activation outside of its traditional role in supporting cellular bioenergetic demands.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-03-22T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[Gain-of-function factor H–related 5 protein impairs glomerular complement regulation resulting in kidney damage]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1766003533131-d8fec48e-47a6-4117-808c-dc78f89a27c7/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1073/pnas.2022722118</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65542">The complement system is integral to innate immunity and host defense. However, inappropriate activation causes host tissue damage and disease. In health, this is prevented by a complex protein network that includes the factor H proteins. Understanding control of complement is critical to treat complement-mediated disease. We demonstrate that a gain-of-function mutant factor H–related 5 protein (FHR5) results in glomerular damage. The mutant interfered with complement regulation within the kidney, resulting in complement accumulation within glomeruli and kidney damage. Administration of a complement regulator with enhanced surface regulatory activity reduced mutant-associated glomerular complement. FHR5 can disrupt the homeostatic regulation of complement within the kidney, and targeting FHR5 represents a way to treat some types of complement-mediated kidney injury.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Genetic variation within the factor H–related (FHR) genes is associated with the complement-mediated kidney disease, C3 glomerulopathy (C3G). There is no definitive treatment for C3G, and a significant proportion of patients develop end-stage renal disease. The prototypical example is CFHR5 nephropathy, through which an internal duplication within a single <i>CFHR5</i> gene generates a mutant FHR5 protein (FHR5mut) that leads to accumulation of complement C3 within glomeruli. To elucidate how abnormal FHR proteins cause C3G, we modeled CFHR5 nephropathy in mice. Animals lacking the murine factor H (FH) and FHR proteins, but coexpressing human FH and FHR5mut (hFH-FHR5mut), developed glomerular C3 deposition, whereas mice coexpressing human FH with the normal FHR5 protein (hFH-FHR5) did not. Like in patients, the FHR5mut had a dominant gain-of-function effect, and when administered in hFH-FHR5 mice, it triggered C3 deposition. Importantly, adeno-associated virus vector-delivered homodimeric mini-FH, a molecule with superior surface C3 binding compared to FH, reduced glomerular C3 deposition in the presence of the FHR5mut. Our data demonstrate that FHR5mut causes C3G by disrupting the homeostatic regulation of complement within the kidney and is directly pathogenic in C3G. These results support the use of FH-derived molecules with enhanced C3 binding for treating C3G associated with abnormal FHR proteins. They also suggest that targeting FHR5 represents a way to treat complement-mediated kidney injury.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-03-22T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[Major alterations in the mononuclear phagocyte landscape associated with COVID-19 severity]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765999503641-843b934d-5adf-4255-892a-a11a3879a74f/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1073/pnas.2018587118</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65542">While broad efforts toward getting an overview of immune cell and soluble factor alterations in COVID-19 are under way, a deep and comprehensive understanding of the mononuclear phagocyte system, including circulating progenitors, is still largely lacking. This study provides a reference for the mononuclear phagocyte response to SARS-CoV-2 infection and unravels mononuclear phagocyte dysregulations associated with severe COVID-19.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Dendritic cells (DCs) and monocytes are crucial mediators of innate and adaptive immune responses during viral infection, but misdirected responses by these cells may contribute to immunopathology. Here, we performed high-dimensional flow cytometry-analysis focusing on mononuclear phagocyte (MNP) lineages in SARS-CoV-2–infected patients with moderate and severe COVID-19. We provide a deep and comprehensive map of the MNP landscape in COVID-19. A redistribution of monocyte subsets toward intermediate monocytes and a general decrease in circulating DCs was observed in response to infection. Severe disease coincided with the appearance of monocytic myeloid-derived suppressor cell-like cells and a higher frequency of pre-DC2. Furthermore, phenotypic alterations in MNPs, and their late precursors, were cell-lineage–specific and associated either with the general response against SARS-CoV-2 or COVID-19 severity. This included an interferon-imprint in DC1s observed in all patients and a decreased expression of the coinhibitory molecule CD200R in pre-DCs, DC2s, and DC3 subsets of severely sick patients. Finally, unsupervised analysis revealed that the MNP profile, alone, pointed to a cluster of COVID-19 nonsurvivors. This study provides a reference for the MNP response to SARS-CoV-2 infection and unravels mononuclear phagocyte dysregulations associated with severe COVID-19.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-01-21T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[Macrophages inhibit and enhance endometriosis depending on their origin]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765998963716-6ece2217-bcc3-4998-8804-cdd7c9b9c210/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1073/pnas.2013776118</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65542">Endometriosis is a chronic, incurable inflammatory disorder impacting 190 million women worldwide. Immune cells called macrophages are implicated in promoting endometriosis. Macrophages have different origins and their origin can dictate function. In this study we demonstrate that endometriotic lesion-resident macrophages are derived from the uterine lining (endometrium), the abdominal (peritoneal) cavity, and recruited bone-marrow precursors (monocytes). Endometriosis triggers continuous recruitment of monocytes that differentiate into macrophages that differ from those usually present within the peritoneal cavity. By depleting different populations, we demonstrate that endometrial macrophages are “proendometriosis” while monocyte-derived peritoneal macrophages are “antiendometriosis” acting to protect the cavity from lesion establishment. In the future, immune-based therapies may allow targeting of prodisease macrophages and/or harnessing of antiendometriosis macrophages in endometriosis.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Macrophages are intimately involved in the pathophysiology of endometriosis, a chronic inflammatory disorder characterized by the growth of endometrial-like tissue (lesions) outside the uterus. By combining genetic and pharmacological monocyte and macrophage depletion strategies we determined the ontogeny and function of macrophages in a mouse model of induced endometriosis. We demonstrate that lesion-resident macrophages are derived from eutopic endometrial tissue, infiltrating large peritoneal macrophages (LpM) and monocytes. Furthermore, we found endometriosis to trigger continuous recruitment of monocytes and expansion of CCR2+ LpM. Depletion of eutopic endometrial macrophages results in smaller endometriosis lesions, whereas constitutive inhibition of monocyte recruitment significantly reduces peritoneal macrophage populations and increases the number of lesions. Reprogramming the ontogeny of peritoneal macrophages such that embryo-derived LpM are replaced by monocyte-derived LpM decreases the number of lesions that develop. We propose a putative model whereby endometrial macrophages are “proendometriosis” while newly recruited monocyte-derived macrophages, possibly in LpM form, are “antiendometriosis.” These observations highlight the importance of monocyte-derived macrophages in limiting disease progression.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-02-03T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[ELF3 activated by a superenhancer and an autoregulatory feedback loop is required for high-level HLA-C expression on extravillous trophoblasts]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765992516844-274a5805-e377-4627-92dd-6b7850baf572/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1073/pnas.2025512118</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65542">Several techniques have identified ELF3 as particularly important in regulating trophoblast-specific HLA-C expression. This results from a single-nucleotide difference in the promotor of the HLA-C gene at the RFX5 binding site that creates an ELF3 binding site not found in the HLA-A or HLA-B promoters. We discovered a superenhancer and a positive autoregulatory feedback loop that promotes expression of the ELF3 gene in trophoblasts. Disruption of either the superenhancer by (+)-JQ1 or interference with the positive-feedback loop by wrenchnolol decreased ELF3 levels, and thus HLA-C expression. Aberrations of this complex regulatory system could be involved in control of infection, miscarriage, preterm birth, preeclampsia, as well as parturition in normal pregnancy and in development of choriocarcinoma.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">HLA-C arose during evolution of pregnancy in the great apes 10 to 15 million years ago. It has a dual function on placental extravillous trophoblasts (EVTs) as it contributes to both tolerance and immunity at the maternal–fetal interface. The mode of its regulation is of considerable interest in connection with the biology of pregnancy and pregnancy abnormalities. First-trimester primary EVTs in which HLA-C is highly expressed, as well as JEG3, an EVT model cell line, were employed. Single-cell RNA-seq data and quantitative PCR identified high expression of the transcription factor ELF3 in those cells. Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)-PCR confirmed that both ELF3 and MED1 bound to the proximal HLA-C promoter region. However, binding of RFX5 to this region was absent or severely reduced, and the adjacent HLA-B locus remained closed. Expression of HLA-C was inhibited by ELF3 small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) and by wrenchnolol treatment. Wrenchnolol is a cell-permeable synthetic organic molecule that mimics ELF3 and is relatively specific for binding to ELF3’s coactivator, MED23, as our data also showed in JEG3. Moreover, the ELF3 gene is regulated by a superenhancer that spans more than 5 Mb, identified by assay for transposase-accessible chromatin using sequencing (ATAC-seq), as well as by its sensitivity to (+)-JQ1 (inhibitor of BRD4). ELF3 bound to its own promoter, thus creating an autoregulatory feedback loop that establishes expression of ELF3 and HLA-C in trophoblasts. Wrenchnolol blocked binding of MED23 to ELF3, thus disrupting the positive-feedback loop that drives ELF3 expression, with down-regulation of HLA-C expression as a consequence.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-02-23T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[Generating tumor-selective conditionally active biologic anti-CTLA4 antibodies via protein-associated chemical switches]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765991657568-4c428713-5baa-478c-8d88-2bae69b183be/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1073/pnas.2020606118</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65542">On-target, off-tumor toxicity of anti-CTLA4 checkpoint inhibitors leads to severe adverse events, restricting therapeutic efficacy. We engineered anti-CTLA4 antibodies and generated a new class of antibodies referred to as conditionally active biologic (CAB) antibodies using physiological chemicals (bicarbonate, hydrogen sulfide) as protein-associated chemical switches (PaCS) to reduce binding under normal physiological conditions, while maintaining binding in the tumor. PaCS add a new dimension to drug discovery. PaCS can be applied to a variety of targets and drug formats, improving safety, increasing the number of targets, allowing the development of new therapies, and enhancing the tolerability of existing therapeutics. The PaCS mechanism can be used to tune the binding activity for disease-related microenvironments, including cancer, infection, inflammation, and cellular senescence.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Anticytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA4) antibodies have shown potent antitumor activity, but systemic immune activation leads to severe immune-related adverse events, limiting clinical usage. We developed novel, conditionally active biologic (CAB) anti-CTLA4 antibodies that are active only in the acidic tumor microenvironment. In healthy tissue, this binding is reversibly inhibited by a novel mechanism using physiological chemicals as protein-associated chemical switches (PaCS). No enzymes or potentially immunogenic covalent modifications to the antibody are required for activation in the tumor. The novel anti-CTLA4 antibodies show similar efficacy in animal models compared to an analog of a marketed anti-CTLA4 biologic, but have markedly reduced toxicity in nonhuman primates (in combination with an anti-PD1 checkpoint inhibitor), indicating a widened therapeutic index (TI). The PaCS encompass mechanisms that are applicable to a wide array of antibody formats (e.g., ADC, bispecifics) and antigens. Examples shown here include antibodies to EpCAM, Her2, Nectin4, CD73, and CD3. Existing antibodies can be engineered readily to be made sensitive to PaCS, and the inhibitory activity can be optimized for each antigen’s varying expression level and tissue distribution. PaCS can modulate diverse physiological molecular interactions and are applicable to various pathologic conditions, enabling differential CAB antibody activities in normal versus disease microenvironments.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-02-24T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[T cells selectively filter oscillatory signals on the minutes timescale]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765991252309-ec2b0f3b-3e5f-4c69-8409-6c1406d9d976/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1073/pnas.2019285118</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65542">Immune cells in the body encounter stimuli in complex temporal patterns, but our understanding of how the timing of stimulation determines immune responses is incomplete. We engineered T cells obtained from healthy human donors to respond to light as a stimulus in a laboratory setting. We discovered that T cells can filter out specific signals based only on signal frequency by stimulating engineered T cells with light-based temporal stimulation patterns designed to mimic the dynamic patterns a natural T cell might experience in the human body. This filtering mechanism could contribute to how immune cells distinguish between foreign/altered cells versus self-cells in vivo<i>,</i> since foreign/altered and self-cells exhibit highly distinct interaction dynamics with T cells within the body.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">T cells experience complex temporal patterns of stimulus via receptor–ligand-binding interactions with surrounding cells. From these temporal patterns, T cells are able to pick out antigenic signals while establishing self-tolerance. Although features such as duration of antigen binding have been examined, our understanding of how T cells interpret signals with different frequencies or temporal stimulation patterns is relatively unexplored. We engineered T cells to respond to light as a stimulus by building an optogenetically controlled chimeric antigen receptor (optoCAR). We discovered that T cells respond to minute-scale oscillations of activation signal by stimulating optoCAR T cells with tunable pulse trains of light. Systematically scanning signal oscillation period from 1 to 150 min revealed that expression of CD69, a T cell activation marker, reached a local minimum at a period of ∼25 min (corresponding to 5 to 15 min pulse widths). A combination of inhibitors and genetic knockouts suggest that this frequency filtering mechanism lies downstream of the Erk signaling branch of the T cell response network and may involve a negative feedback loop that diminishes Erk activity. The timescale of CD69 filtering corresponds with the duration of T cell encounters with self-peptide–presenting APCs observed via intravital imaging in mice, indicating a potential functional role for temporal filtering in vivo. This study illustrates that the T cell signaling machinery is tuned to temporally filter and interpret time-variant input signals in discriminatory ways.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-02-24T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[Regulation of neonatal IgA production by the maternal microbiota]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765991060537-c2c053fb-69ea-4135-8356-67b0f469246a/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1073/pnas.2015691118</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65542">Infants are born without an established gut microbiota, which develops rapidly after birth and is shaped by the maternal microbiota. However, how the maternal microbiota, through shaping the neonatal microbiota, would affect the establishment of a strong immune system in neonates remains unclear. Here, we show mechanistically how the maternal microbiota regulates the de novo production of neonatal IgA.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Infants are prone to enteric infections due to an underdeveloped immune system. The maternal microbiota, through shaping the neonatal microbiota, helps establish a strong immune system in infants. We and others have observed the phenomenon of enhanced early neonatal immunoglobulin A (IgA) production in preweaning immunocompetent mice nursed by immunodeficient dams. Here, we show that this enhancement of IgA in neonates results from maternally derived microbiota. In addition, we have found that the neonatal IgA production can be induced by <i>Lactobacillus reuteri</i>, which is enriched in the milk of immunodeficient dams. Moreover, we show that while the production of neonatal IgA is dependent on neonatal T cells, the immunodeficient maternal microbiota-mediated enhancement of neonatal IgA has a T cell–independent component. Indeed, this enhancement may be dependent on type 3 innate lymphoid cells in the neonatal small intestinal lamina propria. Interestingly, maternal microbiota-induced neonatal IgA does not cross-react with common enteric pathogens. Future investigations will determine the functional consequences of having this extra IgA.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-02-22T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[Sema7A is crucial for resolution of severe inflammation]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765990638885-8736d88d-7b61-4170-a77a-f9bbae8243a2/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1073/pnas.2017527118</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65542">Nonresolving inflammation, a hallmark of sepsis and/or multi-organ failure, still poses a challenge in medicine. The mortality rate is enormous, and so far no adequate curative therapy is available. Here we identify a previously unrecognized role of the neuronal guidance protein semaphorin 7A in the transition to resolution processes in severe systematic inflammation such as sepsis.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Endogenous mediators regulating acute inflammatory responses in both the induction and resolution phases of inflammatory processes are pivotal in host defense and tissue homeostasis. Recent studies have identified neuronal guidance proteins characterized in axonal development that display immunomodulatory functions. Here, we identify the neuroimmune guidance cue Semaphorin 7A (Sema7A), which appears to link macrophage (MΦ) metabolic remodeling to inflammation resolution. Sema7A orchestrated MΦ chemotaxis and chemokinesis, activated MΦ differentiation and polarization toward the proresolving M2 phenotype, and promoted leukocyte clearance. Peritoneal MΦ<sup>Sema7A−/−</sup> displayed metabolic reprogramming, characterized by reductions in fatty acid oxidation and oxidative phosphorylation, increases in glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway, and truncation of the tricarboxylic acid cycle, which resulted in increased levels of the intermediates succinate and fumarate. The low accumulation of citrate in MΦ<sup>Sema7A−/−</sup> correlated with the decreased synthesis of prostaglandins, leading to a reduced impact on lipid-mediator class switching and the generation of specialized pro resolving lipid mediators. Signaling network analysis indicated that Sema7A induced the metabolic reprogramming of MΦ by activating the mTOR- and AKT2-signaling pathways. Administration of Sema7A<sup>SL4cd</sup> orchestrated the resolution response to tissue homeostasis by shortening the resolution interval, promoting tissue protection in murine peritonitis, and enhancing survival in polymicrobial sepsis.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-02-26T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[Activation of NF-κB and p300/CBP potentiates cancer chemoimmunotherapy through induction of MHC-I antigen presentation]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765978020132-40246b68-fb78-4d1d-bd33-b19c2ac73c18/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1073/pnas.2025840118</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65542">T cells recognize their targets via their T-cell receptors (TCRs), which in the case of CD8<sup>+</sup> T cells bind to MHC-I:antigen complexes on the surface of target cells. Many cancer cells evade immune recognition and killing by down-regulating MHC-I AgPPM. Here, we show how the histone acetyl transferases p300/CBP together with NF-κB epigenetically regulate expression of MHC-I molecules, immunoproteasome subunits, and peptide transporter to enable proper MHC-I antigen presentation. Notably, this pathway is frequently disrupted in human cancers. We now show that certain chemotherapeutics can augment MHC-I antigen presentation via NF-κB and p300/CBP activation, thereby enhancing cancer cell recognition and killing by effector CD8<sup>+</sup> CTLs.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Many cancers evade immune rejection by suppressing major histocompatibility class I (MHC-I) antigen processing and presentation (AgPP). Such cancers do not respond to immune checkpoint inhibitor therapies (ICIT) such as PD-1/PD-L1 [PD-(L)1] blockade. Certain chemotherapeutic drugs augment tumor control by PD-(L)1 inhibitors through potentiation of T-cell priming but whether and how chemotherapy enhances MHC-I–dependent cancer cell recognition by cytotoxic T cells (CTLs) is not entirely clear. We now show that the lysine acetyl transferases p300/CREB binding protein (CBP) control MHC-I AgPPM expression and neoantigen amounts in human cancers. Moreover, we found that two distinct DNA damaging drugs, the platinoid oxaliplatin and the topoisomerase inhibitor mitoxantrone, strongly up-regulate MHC-I AgPP in a manner dependent on activation of nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB), p300/CBP, and other transcription factors, but independently of autocrine IFNγ signaling. Accordingly, NF-κB and p300 ablations prevent chemotherapy-induced MHC-I AgPP and abrogate rejection of low MHC-I–expressing tumors by reinvigorated CD8<sup>+</sup> CTLs. Drugs like oxaliplatin and mitoxantrone may be used to overcome resistance to PD-(L)1 inhibitors in tumors that had “epigenetically down-regulated,” but had not permanently lost MHC-I AgPP activity.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-02-18T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[A conserved long noncoding RNA, GAPLINC, modulates the immune response during endotoxic shock]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765903375621-a34bcfcf-d3ab-4351-9290-46f95935e90c/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1073/pnas.2016648118</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65542">Inflammation has largely been studied in the context of protein-coding genes. Recent studies have uncovered lncRNAs as important regulators of immunity. The functional characterization of these genes remains an active area of research. In this study, we identify GAPLINC as a functionally conserved lncRNA between human and mouse. GAPLINC depletion results in enhanced expression of immune response genes that are direct NF-κB targets. Astoundingly, we observe that <i>Gaplinc</i> knockout mice show resistance to LPS-induced endotoxic shock and find that basal expression of inflammatory genes prevents clot formation to protect against multiorgan failure and death. These findings have implications in the treatment of sepsis, in which new therapies targeting lncRNAs can contribute valuable information in understanding inflammation and improving patient outcome.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Recent studies have identified thousands of long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) in mammalian genomes that regulate gene expression in different biological processes. Although lncRNAs have been identified in a variety of immune cells and implicated in immune response, the biological function and mechanism of the majority remain unexplored, especially in sepsis. Here, we identify a role for a lncRNA—gastric adenocarcinoma predictive long intergenic noncoding RNA (GAPLINC)—previously characterized for its role in cancer, now in the context of innate immunity, macrophages, and LPS-induced endotoxic shock. Transcriptome analysis of macrophages from humans and mice reveals that GAPLINC is a conserved lncRNA that is highly expressed following macrophage differentiation. Upon inflammatory activation, GAPLINC is rapidly down-regulated. Macrophages depleted of GAPLINC display enhanced expression of inflammatory genes at baseline, while overexpression of GAPLINC suppresses this response. Consistent with GAPLINC-depleted cells, <i>Gaplinc </i>knockout mice display enhanced basal levels of inflammatory genes and show resistance to LPS-induced endotoxic shock. Mechanistically, survival is linked to increased levels of nuclear NF-κB in <i>Gaplinc </i>knockout mice that drives basal expression of target genes typically only activated following inflammatory stimulation. We show that this activation of immune response genes prior to LPS challenge leads to decreased blood clot formation, which protects <i>Gaplinc </i>knockout mice from multiorgan failure and death. Together, our results identify a previously unknown function for GAPLINC as a negative regulator of inflammation and uncover a key role for this lncRNA in modulating endotoxic shock.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-02-10T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[CD20 as a gatekeeper of the resting state of human B cells]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765902843806-443f9831-b866-4ab7-9a5a-7fa637577d07/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1073/pnas.2021342118</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65542">Worldwide about one million patients are given anti-CD20 antibodies such as rituximab (RTX) for the treatment of B cell-associated diseases. Despite the success of this first therapeutic antibody, little is known about the function of its target. The role of CD20 only becomes clear in the context of the nanoscale compartmentalization of the B lymphocyte membrane. We found that CD20 is an organizer of the IgD-class nanocluster on the B cell membrane. The loss of CD20 on human B cells results in a dissolution of the IgD-class nanocluster and a transient B cell activation inducing a B cell-to-PC differentiation. Thus, CD20 is an essential gatekeeper of a membrane nanodomain and the resting state of naive B cells.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">CD20 is a B cell-specific membrane protein and represents an attractive target for therapeutic antibodies. Despite widespread usage of anti-CD20 antibodies for B cell depletion therapies, the biological function of their target remains unclear. Here, we demonstrate that CD20 controls the nanoscale organization of receptors on the surface of resting B lymphocytes. CRISPR/Cas9-mediated ablation of CD20 in resting B cells resulted in relocalization and interaction of the IgM-class B cell antigen receptor with the coreceptor CD19. This receptor rearrangement led to a transient activation of B cells, accompanied by the internalization of many B cell surface marker proteins. Reexpression of CD20 restored the expression of the B cell surface proteins and the resting state of Ramos B cells. Similarly, treatment of Ramos or naive human B cells with the anti-CD20 antibody rituximab induced nanoscale receptor rearrangements and transient B cell activation in vitro and in vivo. A departure from the resting B cell state followed by the loss of B cell identity of CD20-deficient Ramos B cells was accompanied by a PAX5 to BLIMP-1 transcriptional switch, metabolic reprogramming toward oxidative phosphorylation, and a shift toward plasma cell development. Thus, anti-CD20 engagement or the loss of CD20 disrupts membrane organization, profoundly altering the fate of human B cells.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-02-09T00:00]]></pubDate>
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