Peng et al. report that serum starvation promotes multivesicular body biogenesis, extracellular vesicle formation, and cargo selection in tumor cells. The cover image is a colored transmission electron micrograph of a HeLa cell expressing Rab5Q79L, which induces the formation of enlarged multivesicular body–like vesicles containing multiple small intraluminal vesicle–like structures. At the ultrastructural level, this image demonstrates that Rab5Q79L promotes abnormal endosomal expansion and the accumulation of intraluminal vesicles
While glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs) like semaglutide are effective in treating obesity, up to 45% of the resulting weight loss can be attributed to skeletal muscle loss. Given the critical role of skeletal muscle in health and mobility, this may have long-term adverse consequences. Herein we investigated whether oral ketone ester supplementation could prevent semaglutide-induced muscle loss and explored the underlying molecular mechanisms. Obese, glucose-intolerant mice received vehicle, semaglutide, or semaglutide plus a β-hydroxybutyrate–generating ketone ester for three weeks. Body composition, muscle strength, and endurance were assessed longitudinally. Semaglutide monotherapy reduced lean mass, impaired muscle strength, and suppressed mitochondrial gene expression while elevating atrophy-related genes in skeletal muscle samples. Co-administration with ketone ester preserved skeletal muscle mass and function without compromising fat loss. Mechanistically, ketone ester co-treatment prevented semaglutide-induced changes in mitochondrial and atrophy-related gene expression, suggesting mitochondrial defects and impaired ketone metabolism contribute to GLP-1RA-induced muscle loss. Together, these findings demonstrate that ketone ester supplementation can maintain muscle mass and performance during semaglutide-driven weight loss. These preclinical findings support ketone therapy as a promising strategy to counteract the sarcopenia-promoting effects of GLP-1RAs and warrant clinical evaluation to assess its translational potential.
Yasser Abuetabh, Mya A. Schmidt, Masaaki Naganuma, Ramana Vaka, Mahmoud A. El-Ghiaty, Shelly Braun, Ethan A. Kwan, Matthieu C.P. Zolondek, Darius Sahid, Laibah Khan, Rajat K. Shandal, Ashley L. Trudeau, Yaning Li, Sufyan O. Malik, Qiuyu Sun, Danica K. Roth, Daniela Y. Morales-Llamas, Jody L. Levasseur, Mourad Ferdaoussi, Richard P. Fahlman, Jason R.B. Dyck
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), encompassing ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn’s disease (CD), is marked by chronic intestinal inflammation and dysregulated immunity. Although UC and CD affect different areas of the gastrointestinal tract, both diseases share aberrant CD4+ memory T cell responses, with HLA-DRB1 as a major genetic risk factor. HLA-DRB1 encodes MHC class II molecules that influence the CD4+ T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire, yet how these genotypes shape TCR specificity in IBD remains unclear. Here, we genotyped HLA-DRB1 and profiled 3.13 million TCRb sequences from circulating memory CD4+ T cells in 33 IBD patients (20 UC, 13 CD) and 14 healthy controls. Using the GLIPH2 algorithm, we distilled 468,441 candidates based on CDR3 amino acid motifs into 440 high-confidence TCR specificity groups significantly enriched among individuals sharing HLA-DRB1 alleles. Notably, five specificity groups were IBD-enriched and shared between UC and CD, suggesting common antigen targets in both diseases. We also observed increased frequencies of clonally expanded cytotoxic GZMB+PRF1+ memory CD4+ T cells and KIRs+CD8+ T cells in a subset of risk-allele carriers with IBD. These findings elucidate distinct, HLA-linked TCR specificity groups in IBD and provide mechanistic insights that may advance antigen discovery and personalized medicine.
Joshua E. Chan, Azam Mohsin, Jens Krijgsman, Ciska Lindelauf, Qinghui Mu, Brianna Cavalla, Xuhuai Ji, Sarah E. Streett, Vincent van Unen, Mark M. Davis
B cells contribute to the pathogenesis of food allergies as they induce allergen-specific antibody production. Clinically-used allergen-specific immunotherapies have shown to induce regulatory B cell (Bregs) subsets as well as target and reduce allergy-driving B cell functions. This report aims to elucidate the contribution of regulatory B cells to an allergen-encapsulating nanoparticle (aeNP) immunotherapy in a murine model of food allergy. In this model, B cells directly associated with aeNPs. CD20+ B cell depletion after aeNP treatment increased the number of mice with severe allergic reactions during oral food challenges and reduced the expansion of regulatory immune cells including CD103+ dendritic cells (DCs) and CCR9+ gut-homing regulatory T cells, indicating that B cells are a component of aeNP immunomodulation. B cell communication in the gastrointestinal tract of aeNP-treated mice identified CD23 signaling as a potential inducer of regulatory CD103+ DC functions and disrupter of allergy-driving B cell-T cell communication. These tolerogenic signaling patterns were also identified in IL-10+ B cells, which have been known to impart regulatory immune effects in both murine and human disease. Ultimately, B cells are a component of the complex immunomodulation leading to aeNP efficacy at reducing allergic reactivity.
Laila M. Rad, Michael N. Saunders, Laura A. Williams, Katarzyna W. Janczak, Chris L. Dorsett, Kate V. Griffin, Elizabeth J. Bealer, Jeffrey A. Ma, Sayre A. Tillery, Jyotirmoy Roy, Stephen D. Miller, Jessica J. O'Konek, Lonnie D. Shea
YAP/TAZ signaling is required for initiation of lung alveolar repair, yet previous studies in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) predicted increased YAP/TAZ signaling in alveolar epithelial cells (AECs). We investigated whether persistent YAP/TAZ AEC signaling contributes to failed epithelial repair and persistent fibrotic remodeling. In IPF lungs, we identified increased YAP+/TAZ+ AECs and increased transcriptional target expression. Pharmacological YAP/TAZ activation in human AEC organoids and in murine AT2 cell organoids generated with genetic YAP/TAZ activation (YTactive) (via deletion of Hippo-kinases Stk3/4), resulted in phenotype shifts into aberrant transitional and airway-like states. Bleomycin injury of YTactive mice resulted in persistent fibrotic remodeling at 28- and 56-days post-bleomycin injury. Gene promoter activity associated with transitional cell markers (Krt19, Hopx, and Runx2) was increased in YTactive AT2 cells. Immunofluorescent staining showed a loss of AT2 associated Cebpa and increased Krt19 in YTactive lineage traced AT2 cells 28 days post-injury. Inhibition of YAP/TAZ using Verteporfin resulted in improved lung repair in YTactive mouse lungs, including restored Cebpa and decreased Krt19+ transitional cells. These findings demonstrate sustained YAP/TAZ activation drives abnormal alveolar repair and persistent fibrotic remodeling. Blocking aberrant persistent YAP/TAZ activity promotes adaptive repair and has potential as a therapeutic strategy for pulmonary fibrosis.
Isabella P. Gaona, A. Scott McCall, Natalie M. Geis, Arlo C. Colvard, Gianluca T. DiGiovanni, Taylor P. Sherrill, Ujjal K. Singha, David S. Nichols, Ana P. Serezani, Holly E. David, Jean-Philippe Cartailler, Shristi Shrestha, Sergey S. Gutor, Timothy S. Blackwell, Jonathan A. Kropski, Jason J. Gokey
The composition of mitochondrial membrane lipids is crucial to cellular respiration, as seen in Barth syndrome (BTHS), a rare disease affecting skeletal muscle, heart, and neutrophils. In BTHS, mutations in the tafazzin (TAZ) gene reduce remodeling of the mitochondrial phospholipid, cardiolipin, causing mitochondrial dysfunction in skeletal muscle and heart. Here, we investigated effects of altering polyunsaturated fatty acid content in cardiolipin using preclinical models of BTHS. In vitro, the absence of TAZ did not impair omega-3 fatty acid incorporation into cardiolipin and resulted in increased turnover of these acyl chains. To examine this in a functional model, we generated a muscle-specific knockout mouse of TAZ (TAZ MKO), which recapitulated the human phenotype in skeletal muscle. Supplementing the diet of TAZ MKO with fish-oil-derived omega-3 fatty acids prevented lean mass loss, improved mitochondrial respiration, altered mitochondrial structure, and revealed moderate improvements in the stress response. Surprisingly, no diet-induced changes to cardiolipin species were observed in the TAZ MKO, but other phospholipids were altered by both genotype and diet, revealing complex regulation and potential compensation. Overall, this work provides evidence that omega-3 fatty acid supplementation is beneficial in muscle lacking TAZ to improve quality of life when added to current BTHS treatments.
Katharina B. Kuentzel, Ana Vranešević, Samuel A.J. Trammell, Fabian Finger, Jesper F. Havelund, Yvette L. Schooneveldt, Ivan Bradić, Nicoline R. Andersen, Anna S. Hassing, Katja T. Michler, Martin R. Larsen, Zachary Gerhart-Hines, Steven M. Claypool, Jonas T. Treebak, Andreas M. Fritzen, Matthew P. Gillum, Steen Larsen, Nils Færgeman, Trisha J. Grevengoed