Endothelial cell-related genetic variants identify LDL cholesterol-sensitive individuals who derive greater benefit from aggressive lipid lowering

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Cholesterol homeostasis and lipid raft dynamics at the basis of tumor-induced immune dysfunction in chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Autologous T-cell therapies show limited efficacy in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), where acquired immune dysfunction prevails. In CLL, disturbed mitochondrial metabolism has been linked to defective T-cell activation and proliferation. Recent research suggests that lipid metabolism regulates mitochondrial function and differentiation in T cells, yet its role in CLL remains unexplored. This comprehensive study compares T-cell lipid metabolism in CLL patients and healthy donors, revealing critical dependence on exogenous cholesterol for human T-cell expansion following TCR-mediated activation. Using multi-omics and functional assays, we found that T cells present in viably frozen samples of patients with CLL (CLL T cells) showed impaired adaptation to cholesterol deprivation and inadequate upregulation of key lipid metabolism transcription factors. CLL T cells exhibited altered lipid storage, with increased triacylglycerols and decreased cholesterol, and inefficient fatty acid oxidation (FAO). Functional consequences of reduced FAO in T cells were studied using samples from patients with inherent FAO disorders. Reduced FAO was associated with lower T-cell activation but did not affect proliferation. This implicates low cholesterol levels as a primary factor limiting T-cell proliferation in CLL. CLL T cells displayed fewer and less clustered lipid rafts, potentially explaining the impaired immune synapse formation observed in these patients. Our findings highlight significant disruptions in lipid metabolism as drivers of functional deficiencies in CLL T cells, underscoring the pivotal role of cholesterol in T-cell proliferation. This study suggests that modulating cholesterol metabolism could enhance T-cell function in CLL, presenting novel immunotherapeutic approaches to improve outcome in this challenging disease.

Mechanisms of NLRP3 activation and inhibition elucidated by functional analysis of disease-associated variants

The NLRP3 inflammasome is a multiprotein complex that mediates caspase-1 activation and the release of proinflammatory cytokines, including interleukin (IL)-1β and IL-18. Gain-of-function variants in the gene encoding NLRP3 (also called cryopyrin) lead to constitutive inflammasome activation and excessive IL-1β production in cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes (CAPS). Here we present functional screening and automated analysis of 534 NLRP3 variants from the international INFEVERS registry and the ClinVar database. This resource captures the effect of NLRP3 variants on ASC speck formation spontaneously, at low temperature, after inflammasome stimulation and with the specific NLRP3 inhibitor MCC950. Most notably, our analysis facilitated the updated classification of NLRP3 variants in INFEVERS. Structural analysis suggested multiple mechanisms by which CAPS variants activate NLRP3, including enhanced ATP binding, stabilizing the active NLRP3 conformation, destabilizing the inactive NLRP3 complex and promoting oligomerization of the pyrin domain. Furthermore, we identified pathogenic variants that can hypersensitize the activation of NLRP3 in response to nigericin and cold temperature exposure. We also found that most CAPS-related NLRP3 variants can be inhibited by MCC950; however, NLRP3 variants with changes to proline affecting helices near the inhibitor binding site are resistant to MCC950, as are variants in the pyrin domain, which likely trigger activation directly with the pyrin domain of ASC. Our findings could help stratify the CAPS population for NLRP3 inhibitor clinical trials and our automated methodologies can be implemented for molecules with a different mechanism of activation and in laboratories worldwide that are interested in adding new functionally validated NLRP3 variants to the resource. Overall, our study provides improved diagnosis for patients with CAPS, mechanistic insight into the activation of NLRP3 and stratification of patients for the future application of targeted therapeutics.

A functional single-cell metabolic survey identifies Elovl1 as a target to enhance CD8+ T cell fitness in solid tumours

Reprogramming T cell metabolism can improve intratumoural fitness. By performing a CRISPR/Cas9 metabolic survey in CD8+ T cells, we identified 83 targets and we applied single-cell RNA sequencing to disclose transcriptome changes associated with each metabolic perturbation in the context of pancreatic cancer. This revealed elongation of very long-chain fatty acids protein 1 (Elovl1) as a metabolic target to sustain effector functions and memory phenotypes in CD8+ T cells. Accordingly, Elovl1 inactivation in adoptively transferred T cells combined with anti-PD-1 showed therapeutic efficacy in resistant pancreatic and melanoma tumours. The accumulation of saturated long-chain fatty acids in Elovl1-deficient T cells destabilized INSIG1, leading to SREBP2 activation, increased plasma membrane cholesterol and stronger T cell receptor signalling. Elovl1-deficient T cells increased mitochondrial fitness and fatty acid oxidation, thus withstanding the metabolic stress imposed by the tumour microenvironment. Finally, ELOVL1 in CD8+ T cells correlated with anti-PD-1 response in patients with melanoma. Altogether, Elovl1 targeting synergizes with anti-PD-1 to promote effective T cell responses.

Anionic lipids direct efficient microfluidic encapsulation of stable and functionally active proteins in lipid nanoparticles

Because proteins do not efficiently pass through the plasma membrane, protein therapeutics are limited to target ligands located at the cell surface or in serum. Lipid nanoparticles can facilitate delivery of polar molecules across a membrane. We hypothesized that because most proteins are amphoteric ionizable polycations, proteins would associate with anionic lipids, enabling microfluidic chip assembly of stable EP-LNPs (Encapsulated Proteins in Lipid NanoParticles). Here, by employing anionic lipids we were able to efficiently load proteins into EP-LNPs at protein:lipid w:w ratios of 1:20. Several proteins with diverse molecular weights and isoelectric points were encapsulated at efficiencies of 70 75%–90% and remained packaged for several months. Proteins packaged in EP-LNPs efficiently entered mammalian cells and fungal cells with cell walls. The proteins delivered intracellularly were functional. EP-LNPs technology should improve cellular delivery of medicinal antibodies, enzymes, peptide antimetabolites, and dominant negative proteins, opening new fields of protein therapeutics

Cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying obesity in degenerative spine and joint diseases

Degenerative spine and joint diseases, including intervertebral disc degeneration (IDD), ossification of the spinal ligaments (OSL), and osteoarthritis (OA), are common musculoskeletal diseases that cause pain or disability to the patients. However, the pathogenesis of these musculoskeletal disorders is complex and has not been elucidated clearly to date. As a matter of fact, the spine and joints are not independent of other organs and tissues. Recently, accumulating evidence demonstrates the association between obesity and degenerative musculoskeletal diseases. Obesity is a common metabolic disease characterized by excessive adipose tissue or abnormal adipose distribution in the body. Excessive mechanical stress is regarded as a critical risk factor for obesity-related pathology. Additionally, obesity-related factors, mainly including lipid metabolism disorder, dysregulated pro-inflammatory adipokines and cytokines, are reported as plausible links between obesity and various human diseases. Importantly, these obesity-related factors are deeply involved in the regulation of cell phenotypes and cell fates, extracellular matrix (ECM) metabolism, and inflammation in the pathophysiological processes of degenerative spine and joint diseases. In this study, we systematically discuss the potential cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying obesity in these degenerative musculoskeletal diseases, and hope to provide novel insights for developing targeted therapeutic strategies.

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