Systems Biology
Disrupting the Repeat Domain of Premelanosome Protein (PMEL) Produces Dysamyloidosis and Dystrophic Ocular Pigment Reflective of Pigmentary Glaucoma
Int J Mol Sci. 2023 Sep 22;24(19):14423. doi: 10.3390/ijms241914423.
ABSTRACT
Pigmentary glaucoma has recently been associated with missense mutations in PMEL that are dominantly inherited and enriched in the protein's fascinating repeat domain. PMEL pathobiology is intriguing because PMEL forms functional amyloid in healthy eyes, and this PMEL amyloid acts to scaffold melanin deposition. This is an informative contradistinction to prominent neurodegenerative diseases where amyloid formation is neurotoxic and mutations cause a toxic gain of function called "amyloidosis". Preclinical animal models have failed to model this PMEL "dysamyloidosis" pathomechanism and instead cause recessively inherited ocular pigment defects via PMEL loss of function; they have not addressed the consequences of disrupting PMEL's repetitive region. Here, we use CRISPR to engineer a small in-frame mutation in the zebrafish homolog of PMEL that is predicted to subtly disrupt the protein's repetitive region. Homozygous mutant larvae displayed pigmentation phenotypes and altered eye morphogenesis similar to presumptive null larvae. Heterozygous mutants had disrupted eye morphogenesis and disrupted pigment deposition in their retinal melanosomes. The deficits in the pigment deposition of these young adult fish were not accompanied by any detectable glaucomatous changes in intraocular pressure or retinal morphology. Overall, the data provide important in vivo validation that subtle PMEL mutations can cause a dominantly inherited pigment pathology that aligns with the inheritance of pigmentary glaucoma patient pedigrees. These in vivo observations help to resolve controversy regarding the necessity of PMEL's repeat domain in pigmentation. The data foster an ongoing interest in an antithetical dysamyloidosis mechanism that, akin to the amyloidosis of devastating dementias, manifests as a slow progressive neurodegenerative disease.
PMID:37833870 | DOI:10.3390/ijms241914423
PacBio long read-assembled draft genome of Pythium insidiosum strain Pi-S isolated from a Thai patient with pythiosis
BMC Res Notes. 2023 Oct 13;16(1):271. doi: 10.1186/s13104-023-06532-7.
ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVES: Pythium insidiosum is the causative agent of pythiosis, a difficult-to-treat condition, in humans and animals worldwide. Biological information about this filamentous microorganism is sparse. Genomes of several P. insidiosum strains were sequenced using the Illumina short-read NGS platform, producing incomplete genome sequence data. PacBio long-read platform was employed to obtain a better-quality genome of Pythium insidiosum. The obtained genome data could promote basic research on the pathogen's biology and pathogenicity.
DATA DESCRIPTION: gDNA sample was extracted from the P. insidiosum strain Pi-S for whole-genome sequencing by PacBio long-read NGS platform. Raw reads were assembled using CANU (v2.1), polished using ARROW (SMRT link version 5.0.1), aligned with the original raw PacBio reads using pbmm2 (v1.2.1), consensus sequence checked using ARROW, and gene predicted using Funannotate pipeline (v1.7.4). The genome completion was assessed using BUSCO (v4.0.2). As a result, 840 contigs (maximum length: 1.3 Mb; N50: 229.9 Kb; L50: 70) were obtained. Sequence assembly showed a genome size of 66.7 Mb (178x coverage; 57.2% G-C content) that contained 20,375 ORFs. A BUSCO-based assessment revealed 85.5% genome completion. All assembled contig sequences have been deposited in the NCBI database under the accession numbers BBXB02000001 - BBXB02000840.
PMID:37833791 | DOI:10.1186/s13104-023-06532-7
Unrealized targets in the discovery of antibiotics for Gram-negative bacterial infections
Nat Rev Drug Discov. 2023 Oct 13. doi: 10.1038/s41573-023-00791-6. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
Advances in areas that include genomics, systems biology, protein structure determination and artificial intelligence provide new opportunities for target-based antibacterial drug discovery. The selection of a 'good' new target for direct-acting antibacterial compounds is the first decision, for which multiple criteria must be explored, integrated and re-evaluated as drug discovery programmes progress. Criteria include essentiality of the target for bacterial survival, its conservation across different strains of the same species, bacterial species and growth conditions (which determines the spectrum of activity of a potential antibiotic) and the level of homology with human genes (which influences the potential for selective inhibition). Additionally, a bacterial target should have the potential to bind to drug-like molecules, and its subcellular location will govern the need for inhibitors to penetrate one or two bacterial membranes, which is a key challenge in targeting Gram-negative bacteria. The risk of the emergence of target-based drug resistance for drugs with single targets also requires consideration. This Review describes promising but as-yet-unrealized targets for antibacterial drugs against Gram-negative bacteria and examples of cognate inhibitors, and highlights lessons learned from past drug discovery programmes.
PMID:37833553 | DOI:10.1038/s41573-023-00791-6
Trace impurities in sodium phosphate influences the physiological activity of Escherichia coli in M9 minimal medium
Sci Rep. 2023 Oct 13;13(1):17396. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-44526-4.
ABSTRACT
In the field of applied microbiology, reproducibility and experimental variability are important factors that influence both basic research as well as process development for industrial applications. Experimental reproducibility and accuracy depend not only on culture conditions such as temperature and aeration but also on raw materials and procedures used for media preparation. The M9 minimal medium is one of the most common synthetic media for culturing Escherichia coli and other bacteria. This synthetic medium can be used to observe and evaluate the physiological activity of microbes under minimal nutritional requirements and determine the limiting factor for the desired phenotype. Although one of the advantages using the M9 medium is that its composition can be modulated, it is difficult to control presence of trace components and impurities from the reagents for preparing this medium. Herein, we showed that trace ingredients present in the reagents used for M9 media preparation affect the bacterial physiological activities (e.g., cell growth, substrate consumption, and byproduct formation). Additionally, we systematically identified the trace ingredient that influenced phenotypic differences. Our results showed that the selection of reagents and accuracy during reagent preparation is important for experimental reproducibility in the field of bio-engineering and systems biology focused on the systematic and continuous development of biomolecular systems (e.g., biorefinery, metabolic engineering, and synthetic biology).
PMID:37833342 | DOI:10.1038/s41598-023-44526-4
A comprehensive spectral assay library to quantify the Halobacterium salinarum NRC-1 proteome by DIA/SWATH-MS
Sci Data. 2023 Oct 13;10(1):697. doi: 10.1038/s41597-023-02590-5.
ABSTRACT
Data-Independent Acquisition (DIA) is a mass spectrometry-based method to reliably identify and reproducibly quantify large fractions of a target proteome. The peptide-centric data analysis strategy employed in DIA requires a priori generated spectral assay libraries. Such assay libraries allow to extract quantitative data in a targeted approach and have been generated for human, mouse, zebrafish, E. coli and few other organisms. However, a spectral assay library for the extreme halophilic archaeon Halobacterium salinarum NRC-1, a model organism that contributed to several notable discoveries, is not publicly available yet. Here, we report a comprehensive spectral assay library to measure 2,563 of 2,646 annotated H. salinarum NRC-1 proteins. We demonstrate the utility of this library by measuring global protein abundances over time under standard growth conditions. The H. salinarum NRC-1 library includes 21,074 distinct peptides representing 97% of the predicted proteome and provides a new, valuable resource to confidently measure and quantify any protein of this archaeon. Data and spectral assay libraries are available via ProteomeXchange (PXD042770, PXD042774) and SWATHAtlas (SAL00312-SAL00319).
PMID:37833331 | DOI:10.1038/s41597-023-02590-5
Integrative solution structure of PTBP1-IRES complex reveals strong compaction and ordering with residual conformational flexibility
Nat Commun. 2023 Oct 13;14(1):6429. doi: 10.1038/s41467-023-42012-z.
ABSTRACT
RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) are crucial regulators of gene expression, often composed of defined domains interspersed with flexible, intrinsically disordered regions. Determining the structure of ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes involving such RBPs necessitates integrative structural modeling due to their lack of a single stable state. In this study, we integrate magnetic resonance, mass spectrometry, and small-angle scattering data to determine the solution structure of the polypyrimidine-tract binding protein 1 (PTBP1/hnRNP I) bound to an RNA fragment from the internal ribosome entry site (IRES) of the encephalomyocarditis virus (EMCV). This binding, essential for enhancing the translation of viral RNA, leads to a complex structure that demonstrates RNA and protein compaction, while maintaining pronounced conformational flexibility. Acting as an RNA chaperone, PTBP1 orchestrates the IRES RNA into a few distinct conformations, exposing the RNA stems outward. This conformational diversity is likely common among RNP structures and functionally important. Our approach enables atomic-level characterization of heterogeneous RNP structures.
PMID:37833274 | DOI:10.1038/s41467-023-42012-z
Critical role of VHL/BICD2/STAT1 axis in crystal-associated kidney disease
Cell Death Dis. 2023 Oct 13;14(10):680. doi: 10.1038/s41419-023-06185-1.
ABSTRACT
Nephrolithiasis is highly prevalent and associated with the increased risk of kidney cancer. The tumor suppressor von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) is critical for renal cancer development, however, its role in kidney stone disease has not been fully elucidated until now. Here we reported VHL expression was upregulated in renal epithelial cells upon exposure to crystal. Utilizing Vhl+/mu mouse model, depletion of VHL exacerbated kidney inflammatory injury during nephrolithiasis. Conversely, overexpression of VHL limited crystal-induced lipid peroxidation and ferroptosis in a BICD2-depdendent manner. Mechanistically, VHL interacted with the cargo adaptor BICD2 and promoted itsd K48-linked poly-ubiquitination, consequently resulting in the proteasomal degradation of BICD2. Through promoting STAT1 nuclear translocation, BICD2 facilitated IFNγ signaling transduction and enhanced IFNγ-mediated suppression of cystine/glutamate antiporter system Xc-, eventually increasing cell sensitivity to ferroptosis. Moreover, we found that the BRAF inhibitor impaired the association of VHL with BICD2 through triggering BICD2 phosphorylation, ultimately causing severe ferroptosis and nephrotoxicity. Collectively, our results uncover the important role of VHL/BICD2/STAT1 axis in crystal kidney injury and provide a potential therapeutic target for treatment and prevention of renal inflammation and drug-induced nephrotoxicity.
PMID:37833251 | DOI:10.1038/s41419-023-06185-1
Maintaining beneficial alga-associated bacterial communities under heat stress: Insights from controlled co-culture experiments using antibiotic-resistant bacterial strains
FEMS Microbiol Ecol. 2023 Oct 13:fiad130. doi: 10.1093/femsec/fiad130. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
Brown algae, like many eukaryotes, possess diverse microbial communities. Ectocarpus - a model brown alga- relies on these communities for essential processes, such as growth development. Controlled laboratory systems are needed for functional studies of these algal-bacterial interactions. We selected bacterial strains based on their metabolic networks to provide optimal completion of the algal metabolism, rendered them resistant to two antibiotics, and inoculate them to establish controlled co-cultures with Ectocarpus under continuous antibiotic treatment. We then monitored the stability of the resulting associations under control conditions and heat stress using 16S metabarcoding. Antibiotics strongly reduced bacterial diversity both in terms of taxonomy and predicted metabolic functions. In the inoculated sample, 63-69% of reads corresponded to the inoculated strains, and the communities remained stable during temperature stress. They also partially restored the predicted metabolic functions of the natural community. Overall, the development of antibiotic-resistant helper cultures offers a promising route to fully controlled laboratory experiments with algae and microbiota and thus represents an important step towards generating experimental evidence for specific host-microbe interactions in the systems studied. Further work will be required to achieve full control and progressively expand our repertoire of helper strains including those currently "unculturable".
PMID:37833238 | DOI:10.1093/femsec/fiad130
Social determinants of health and obstetric outcomes: A report and recommendations of the workshop of the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine, the Commonwealth Foundation, and the Alliance of Innovation on Maternal Health
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2023 Oct 11:S0002-9378(23)00742-1. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2023.10.013. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
This article is a report of a two-day workshop, entitled "Social Determinants of Health and Obstetric Outcomes," held during the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine 2022 Annual Pregnancy Meeting. Participants' fields of expertise included obstetrics, pediatrics, epidemiology, health services, health equity, community-based research, and systems biology. The Commonwealth Foundation and the Alliance of Innovation on Maternal Health co-sponsored the workshop and the Society for Women's Health Research provided additional support. The workshop included presentations and small group discussions, and its goals were to.
PMID:37832813 | DOI:10.1016/j.ajog.2023.10.013
The NCI Imaging Data Commons as a platform for reproducible research in computational pathology
Comput Methods Programs Biomed. 2023 Oct 2;242:107839. doi: 10.1016/j.cmpb.2023.107839. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Reproducibility is a major challenge in developing machine learning (ML)-based solutions in computational pathology (CompPath). The NCI Imaging Data Commons (IDC) provides >120 cancer image collections according to the FAIR principles and is designed to be used with cloud ML services. Here, we explore its potential to facilitate reproducibility in CompPath research.
METHODS: Using the IDC, we implemented two experiments in which a representative ML-based method for classifying lung tumor tissue was trained and/or evaluated on different datasets. To assess reproducibility, the experiments were run multiple times with separate but identically configured instances of common ML services.
RESULTS: The results of different runs of the same experiment were reproducible to a large extent. However, we observed occasional, small variations in AUC values, indicating a practical limit to reproducibility.
CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that the IDC facilitates approaching the reproducibility limit of CompPath research (i) by enabling researchers to reuse exactly the same datasets and (ii) by integrating with cloud ML services so that experiments can be run in identically configured computing environments.
PMID:37832430 | DOI:10.1016/j.cmpb.2023.107839
Transgenerational epigenetic inheritance and immunity in chickens that vary in Marek's disease resistance
Poult Sci. 2023 Aug 26;102(12):103036. doi: 10.1016/j.psj.2023.103036. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
Marek's disease virus (MDV), a naturally oncogenic, highly contagious alpha herpesvirus, induces a T cell lymphoma in chickens that causes severe economic loss. Marek's disease (MD) outcome in an individual is attributed to genetic and environmental factors. Further investigation of the host-virus interaction mechanisms that impact MD resistance is needed to achieve greater MD control. This study analyzed genome-wide DNA methylation patterns in 2 highly inbred parental lines 63 and 72 and 5 recombinant congenic strains (RCS) C, L, M, N, and X strains from those parents. Lines 63 and 72, are MD resistant and susceptible, respectively, whereas the RCS have different combinations of 87.5% Line 63 and 12.5% Line 72. Our DNA methylation cluster showed a strong association with MD incidence. Differentially methylated regions (DMRs) between the parental lines and the 5 RCS were captured. MD-resistant and MD-susceptible markers of DNA methylation were identified as transgenerational epigenetic inheritable. In addition, the growth of v-src DNA tumors and antibody response against sheep red blood cells differed among the 2 parental lines and the RCS. Overall, our results provide very solid evidence that DNA methylation patterns are transgenerational epigenetic inheritance (TEI) in chickens and also play a vital role in MD tumorigenesis and other immune responses; the specific methylated regions may be important modulators of general immunity.
PMID:37832188 | DOI:10.1016/j.psj.2023.103036
Regional transcriptomic profiling reveals immune system enrichment in nonfailing atria as well as all chambers of the failing human heart
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2023 Oct 13. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.00438.2023. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
The different chambers of the human heart demonstrate regional physiological traits and may be differentially affected during pathologic remodeling, resulting in heart failure. Few previous studies have, however, characterized the different chambers at a transcriptomic level. We therefore conducted whole-tissue RNA sequencing and gene set enrichment analysis of biopsies collected from the four chambers of adult failing (n = 8) and nonfailing (n = 11) human hearts. Atria and ventricles demonstrated distinct transcriptional patterns. Compared to nonfailing ventricles, the transcriptional pattern of nonfailing atria was enriched for a large number of gene sets associated with cardiogenesis, the immune system and bone morphogenetic protein (BMP), transforming growth factor beta (TGF beta), MAPK/JNK and Wnt signaling. Differences between failing and nonfailing hearts were also determined. The transcriptional pattern of failing atria was distinct compared to that of nonfailing atria and enriched for gene sets associated with the innate and adaptive immune system, TGF beta/SMAD signaling, and changes in endothelial, smooth muscle cell and cardiomyocyte physiology. Failing ventricles were also enriched for gene sets associated with the immune system. Based on the transcriptomic patterns, upstream regulators associated with heart failure were identified. These included many immune response factors predicted to be similarly activated for all chambers of failing hearts. In summary, the heart chambers demonstrate distinct transcriptional patterns that differ between failing and nonfailing hearts. Immune system signaling may be a hallmark of all four heart chambers in failing hearts, and could constitute a novel therapeutic target.
PMID:37830984 | DOI:10.1152/ajpheart.00438.2023
Down the Penrose stairs, or how selection for fewer recombination hotspots maintains their existence
Elife. 2023 Oct 13;12:e83769. doi: 10.7554/eLife.83769. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
In many species, meiotic recombination events tend to occur in narrow intervals of the genome, known as hotspots. In humans and mice, double strand break (DSB) hotspot locations are determined by the DNA-binding specificity of the zinc finger array of the PRDM9 protein, which is rapidly evolving at residues in contact with DNA. Previous models explained this rapid evolution in terms of the need to restore PRDM9 binding sites lost to gene conversion over time, under the assumption that more PRDM9 binding always leads to more DSBs. This assumption, however, does not align with current evidence. Recent experimental work indicates that PRDM9 binding on both homologs facilitates DSB repair, and that the absence of sufficient symmetric binding disrupts meiosis. We therefore consider an alternative hypothesis: that rapid PRDM9 evolution is driven by the need to restore symmetric binding because of its role in coupling DSB formation and efficient repair. To this end, we model the evolution of PRDM9 from first principles: from its binding dynamics to the population genetic processes that govern the evolution of the zinc finger array and its binding sites. We show that the loss of a small number of strong binding sites leads to the use of a greater number of weaker ones, resulting in a sharp reduction in symmetric binding and favoring new PRDM9 alleles that restore the use of a smaller set of strong binding sites. This decrease, in turn, drives rapid PRDM9 evolutionary turnover. Our results therefore suggest that the advantage of new PRDM9 alleles is in limiting the number of binding sites used effectively, rather than in increasing net PRDM9 binding. By extension, our model suggests that the evolutionary advantage of hotspots may have been to increase the efficiency of DSB repair and/or homolog pairing.
PMID:37830496 | DOI:10.7554/eLife.83769
InterOpt: Improved gene expression quantification in qPCR experiments using weighted aggregation of reference genes
iScience. 2023 Sep 20;26(10):107945. doi: 10.1016/j.isci.2023.107945. eCollection 2023 Oct 20.
ABSTRACT
qPCR is still the gold standard for gene expression quantification. However, its accuracy is highly dependent on the normalization procedure. The conventional method involves using the geometric mean of multiple study-specific reference genes (RGs) expression for cross-sample normalization. While research on selecting stably expressed RGs is extensive, scant literature exists regarding the optimal approach for aggregating multiple RGs into a unified RG. In this paper, we introduce a family of scale-invariant functions as an alternative to the geometric mean aggregation. Our candidate method (weighted geometric mean minimizing standard deviation) demonstrated significantly better results compared to other proposed methods. We provide theoretical and experimental support for this finding using real data from solid tumors and liquid biopsies. Moreover, the closed form and regression-based solution enable efficient computation and straightforward adoption on various platforms. All the proposed methods have been implemented within an easy-to-use R package with graphics processing unit (GPU) acceleration.
PMID:37829204 | PMC:PMC10565776 | DOI:10.1016/j.isci.2023.107945
Live-bearing cockroach genome reveals convergent evolutionary mechanisms linked to viviparity in insects and beyond
iScience. 2023 Sep 9;26(10):107832. doi: 10.1016/j.isci.2023.107832. eCollection 2023 Oct 20.
ABSTRACT
Live birth (viviparity) has arisen repeatedly and independently among animals. We sequenced the genome and transcriptome of the viviparous Pacific beetle-mimic cockroach and performed comparative analyses with two other viviparous insect lineages, tsetse flies and aphids, to unravel the basis underlying the transition to viviparity in insects. We identified pathways undergoing adaptive evolution for insects, involved in urogenital remodeling, tracheal system, heart development, and nutrient metabolism. Transcriptomic analysis of cockroach and tsetse flies revealed that uterine remodeling and nutrient production are increased and the immune response is altered during pregnancy, facilitating structural and physiological changes to accommodate and nourish the progeny. These patterns of convergent evolution of viviparity among insects, together with similar adaptive mechanisms identified among vertebrates, highlight that the transition to viviparity requires changes in urogenital remodeling, enhanced tracheal and heart development (corresponding to angiogenesis in vertebrates), altered nutrient metabolism, and shifted immunity in animal systems.
PMID:37829199 | PMC:PMC10565785 | DOI:10.1016/j.isci.2023.107832
Targeting hypoxia-inducible factor-1 alpha suppresses <em>Helicobacter pylori</em>-induced gastric injury via attenuation of both <em>cag</em>-mediated microbial virulence and proinflammatory host responses
Gut Microbes. 2023 Dec;15(2):2263936. doi: 10.1080/19490976.2023.2263936. Epub 2023 Oct 13.
ABSTRACT
Helicobacter pylori-induced inflammation is the strongest known risk factor for gastric adenocarcinoma. Hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1α) is a key transcriptional regulator of immunity and carcinogenesis. To examine the role of this mediator within the context of H. pylori-induced injury, we first demonstrated that HIF-1α levels were significantly increased in parallel with the severity of gastric lesions in humans. In interventional studies targeting HIF-1α, H. pylori-infected mice were treated ± dimethyloxalylglycine (DMOG), a prolyl hydroxylase inhibitor that stabilizes HIF-1α. H. pylori significantly increased proinflammatory chemokines/cytokines and inflammation in vehicle-treated mice; however, this was significantly attenuated in DMOG-treated mice. DMOG treatment also significantly decreased function of the H. pylori type IV secretion system (T4SS) in vivo and significantly reduced T4SS-mediated NF-κB activation and IL-8 induction in vitro. These results suggest that prolyl hydroxylase inhibition protects against H. pylori-mediated pathologic responses, and is mediated, in part, via attenuation of H. pylori cag-mediated virulence and suppression of host proinflammatory responses.
PMID:37828903 | DOI:10.1080/19490976.2023.2263936
Strengthening Warfighter Resiliency Using Broad-Spectrum or Host-Directed Therapies within the Rapid Acquisition and Investigation of Drugs for Repurposing (RAIDR) Program
J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2023 Oct 12:JPET-MR-2023-001721. doi: 10.1124/jpet.123.001721. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
The ecosystem of CBRN threats is evolving and becoming more complex. To maintain cadence with looming threats in a prolonged field care environment, the broader medical countermeasure (MCM) enterprise must adopt new strategies for CBRN-addressing drug development. The Countering Emerging Threats - Rapid Acquisition and Investigation of Drugs for Repurposing (CET RAIDR) program within the JPM Medical is designed to rapidly tackle known, unknown, and emerging threats by utilizing late-stage or licensed therapeutics. Responsible and relevant care must be more responsive to needs of expansive and novel threats, as showcased by lessons learned from the COVID-19 pandemic. Repurposing is one such method. The focus of the CET RAIDR effort is to bridge treatment gaps between threat identification and the implementation of licensed targeted MCMs, thereby strengthening warfighter resiliency. The CET RAIDR program conserves both time-to-market and funds by leveraging previous conventional development work as a launch point for repurposing efforts. The CET RAIDR program minimizes development and procurement costs by supplementing the military medical providers' toolbox with post-Phase II therapies that demonstrate established safety and manufacturing processes, leading to a cost-sparing model for niche medicines (i.e., CBRN MCMs). The CET RAIDR program currently focuses on strengthening collaborations with industry, academia, and other government partners to survey and test and evaluate (T&E) U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved products, such as LEUKINE ®, PRECEDEX ®, Ketamine, Isoflurane, and XOFLUZA ®, as well as other promising developmental products against known or undocumented threats. Significance Statement CET RAIDR program candidates are selected based on several pillars: a proven human safety profile, the availability of tools and validated literature on the drug's mechanism of action (MOA), well-defined assays and/or animal models to demonstrate efficacy, as well as collaborations with willing and trusted industry partners. This broader repurposing approach to address the growing CBRN threat landscape will better safeguard the warfighter against well-documented or unpredictable threats when a direct-acting MCM is unavailable, or not-yet conceived.
PMID:37827701 | DOI:10.1124/jpet.123.001721
Antimicrobial susceptibility of Treponema pallidum subspecies pallidum: an in-vitro study
Lancet Microbe. 2023 Oct 9:S2666-5247(23)00219-7. doi: 10.1016/S2666-5247(23)00219-7. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: The increasing incidence of syphilis and the limitations of first-line treatment with penicillin, particularly in neurosyphilis, neonatal syphilis, and pregnancy, highlight the need to expand the therapeutic repertoire for effective management of this disease. We assessed the in-vitro efficacy of 18 antibiotics from several classes on Treponema pallidum subspecies pallidum (T pallidum), the syphilis bacteria.
METHODS: Using the in-vitro culture system for T pallidum, we exposed the pathogen to a concentration range of each tested antibiotic. After a 7-day incubation, the treponemal burden was evaluated by quantitative PCR targeting the T pallidum tp0574 gene. The primary outcome was the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) at which the quantitative PCR values were not significantly higher than the inoculum wells. We also investigated the susceptibility of macrolide-resistant strains to high concentrations of azithromycin, and the possibility of developing resistance to linezolid, a proposed candidate for syphilis treatment.
FINDINGS: Amoxicillin, ceftriaxone, several oral cephalosporins, tedizolid, and dalbavancin exhibited anti-treponemal activity at concentrations achievable in human plasma following regular dosing regimens. The experiments revealed a MIC for amoxicillin at 0·02 mg/L, ceftriaxone at 0·0025 mg/L, cephalexin at 0·25 mg/L, cefetamet and cefixime at 0·0313 mg/L, cefuroxime at 0·0156 mg/L, tedizolid at 0·0625 mg/L, spectinomycin at 0·1 mg/L, and dalbavancin at 0·125 mg/L. The MIC for zoliflodacin and balofloxacin was 2 mg/L. Ertapenem, isoniazid, pyrazinamide, and metronidazole had either a poor or no effect. Azithromycin concentrations up to 2 mg/L (64 times the MIC) were ineffective against strains carrying mutations associated to macrolide resistance. Exposure to subtherapeutic doses of linezolid for 10 weeks did not induce phenotypic or genotypic resistance.
INTERPRETATION: Cephalosporins and oxazolidinones are potential candidates for expanding the current therapeutic repertoire for syphilis. Our findings warrant testing efficacy in animal models and, if successful, clinical assessment of efficacy.
FUNDING: European Research Council.
PMID:37827185 | DOI:10.1016/S2666-5247(23)00219-7
Systematic comparison of genome information processing and boundary recognition tools used for genomic island detection
Comput Biol Med. 2023 Sep 28;166:107550. doi: 10.1016/j.compbiomed.2023.107550. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
Genomic islands are fragments of foreign DNA that are found in bacterial and archaeal genomes, and are typically associated with symbiosis or pathogenesis. While numerous genomic island detection methods have been proposed, there has been limited evaluation of the efficiency of the genome information processing and boundary recognition tools. In this study, we conducted a review of the statistical methods involved in genomic signatures, host signature extraction, informative signature selection, divergence measures, and boundary detection steps in genomic island prediction. We compared the performances of these methods on simulated experiments using alien fragments obtained from both artificial and real genomes. Our results indicate that among the nine genomic signatures evaluated, genomic signature frequency and full probability performed the best. However, their performance declined when normalized to their expectations and variances, such as Z-score and composition vector. Based on our experiments of the E. coli genome, we found that the confidence intervals of the window variances achieved the best performance in the signature extraction of the host, with the best confidence interval being 1.5-2 times the standard error. Ordered kurtosis was most effective in selecting informative signatures from a single genome, without requiring prior knowledge from other datasets. Among the three divergence measures evaluated, the two-sample t-test was the most successful, and a non-overlapping window with a small eye window (size 2) was best suited for identifying compositionally distinct regions. Finally, the maximum of the Markovian Jensen-Shannon divergence score, in terms of GC-content bias, was found to make boundary detection faster while maintaining a similar error rate.
PMID:37826950 | DOI:10.1016/j.compbiomed.2023.107550
Dynamic roles of small RNAs and DNA methylation associated with heterosis in allotetraploid cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.)
BMC Plant Biol. 2023 Oct 13;23(1):488. doi: 10.1186/s12870-023-04495-2.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Heterosis is a complex phenomenon wherein the hybrids outperform their parents. Understanding the underlying molecular mechanism by which hybridization leads to higher yields in allopolyploid cotton is critical for effective breeding programs. Here, we integrated DNA methylation, transcriptomes, and small RNA profiles to comprehend the genetic and molecular basis of heterosis in allopolyploid cotton at three developmental stages.
RESULTS: Transcriptome analysis revealed that numerous DEGs responsive to phytohormones (auxin and salicylic acid) were drastically altered in F1 hybrid compared to the parental lines. DEGs involved in energy metabolism and plant growth were upregulated, whereas DEGs related to basal defense were downregulated. Differences in homoeologous gene expression in F1 hybrid were greatly reduced after hybridization, suggesting that higher levels of parental expression have a vital role in heterosis. Small RNAome and methylome studies showed that the degree of DNA methylation in hybrid is higher when compared to the parents. A substantial number of allele-specific expression genes were found to be strongly regulated by CG allele-specific methylation levels. The hybrid exhibited higher 24-nt-small RNA (siRNA) expression levels than the parents. The regions in the genome with increased levels of 24-nt-siRNA were chiefly related to genes and their flanking regulatory regions, demonstrating a possible effect of these molecules on gene expression. The transposable elements correlated with siRNA clusters in the F1 hybrid had higher methylation levels but lower expression levels, which suggest that these non-additively expressed siRNA clusters, reduced the activity of transposable elements through DNA methylation in the hybrid.
CONCLUSIONS: These multi-omics data provide insights into how changes in epigenetic mechanisms and gene expression patterns can lead to heterosis in allopolyploid cotton. This makes heterosis a viable tool in cotton breeding.
PMID:37828433 | DOI:10.1186/s12870-023-04495-2