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1.
Inflammasome Genetic Variants, Macrophage Function, and Clinical Outcomes in Cystic Fibrosis.
Graustein, AD, Berrington, WR, Buckingham, KJ, Nguyen, FK, Joudeh, LL, Rosenfeld, M, Bamshad, MJ, Gibson, RL, Hawn, TR, Emond, MJ
American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology. 2021;(2):157-166
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Abstract
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is characterized by chronic airway infection, inflammation, and tissue damage that lead to progressive respiratory failure. NLRP3 and NLRC4 are cytoplasmic pattern recognition receptors that activate the inflammasome, initiating a caspase-1-mediated response. We hypothesized that gain-of-function inflammasome responses are associated with worse outcomes in children with CF. We genotyped nonsynonymous variants in NLRP3 and the NLRC4 pathway from individuals in the EPIC (Early Pseudomonas Infection Control) Observational Study cohort and tested for association with CF outcomes. We generated knockouts of NLRP3 and NLRC4 in human macrophage-like cells and rescued knockouts with wild-type or variant forms of NLRP3 and NLRC4. We identified a SNP in NLRP3, p.(Q705K), that was associated with a higher rate of P. aeruginosa colonization (N = 609; P = 0.01; hazard ratio, 2.3 [Cox model]) and worsened lung function over time as measured by forced expiratory volume in 1 second (N = 445; P = 0.001 [generalized estimating equation]). We identified a SNP in NLRC4, p.(A929S), that was associated with a lower rate of P. aeruginosa colonization as part of a composite of rare variants (N = 405; P = 0.045; hazard ratio, 0.68 [Cox model]) and that was individually associated with protection from lung function decline (P < 0.001 [generalized estimating equation]). Rescue of the NLRP3 knockout with the p.(Q705K) variant produced significantly more IL-1β in response to NLRP3 stimulation than rescue with the wild type (P = 0.020 [Student's t test]). We identified a subset of children with CF at higher risk of early lung disease progression. Knowledge of these genetic modifiers could guide therapies targeting inflammasome pathways.
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A low cartilage formation and repair endotype predicts radiographic progression of symptomatic knee osteoarthritis.
Luo, Y, Samuels, J, Krasnokutsky, S, Byrjalsen, I, Kraus, VB, He, Y, Karsdal, MA, Abramson, SB, Attur, M, Bay-Jensen, AC
Journal of orthopaedics and traumatology : official journal of the Italian Society of Orthopaedics and Traumatology. 2021;(1):10
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Abstract
BACKGROUND Osteoarthritis (OA) is a disease with multiple endotypes. A hallmark of OA is loss of cartilage; however, it is evident that the rate of cartilage loss differs among patients, which may partly be attributed to differential capacity for cartilage repair. We hypothesize that a low cartilage repair endotype exists and that such endotypes are more likely to progress radiographically. The aim of this study is to examine the associations of level of cartilage formation with OA severity and radiographic OA progression. We used the blood-based marker PRO-C2, reflecting type II collagen formation, to assess levels of cartilage formation. MATERIALS AND METHODS The type II collagen propeptide PRO-C2 was measured in the serum/plasma of knee OA subjects from New York University (NYU, n = 106) and a subcohort of the phase III oral salmon calcitonin (sCT) trial SMC021-2301 (SMC, n = 147). Risk of radiographic medial joint space narrowing (JSN) over 24 months was compared between quartiles (very low, low, moderate, and high) of PRO-C2. Associations were adjusted for age, gender, BMI, race, baseline pain levels, and baseline joint space width. RESULTS In both the NYU and SMC cohorts, subjects with low PRO-C2 levels had greater JSN compared with subjects with high PRO-C2. Mean difference in JSN between subjects with very low and high levels of PRO-C2 was 0.65 mm (p = 0.002), corresponding to a 3.4 (1.4-8.6)-fold higher risk of progression. There was no significant effect of sCT treatment, compared with placebo, on JSN over 2 years before stratification based on baseline PRO-C2. However, there were proportionately fewer progressors in the sCT arm of the very low/low PRO-C2 group compared with the moderate/high group (Chi squared = 6.5, p = 0.011). CONCLUSION Serum/plasma level of type II collagen formation, PRO-C2, may be an objective indicator of a low cartilage repair endotype, displaying radiographic progression and superior response to a proanabolic drug. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Level III post hoc exploratory analysis of one longitudinal cohort and a sub-study from one phase III clinical trial.
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Matrix Gla protein polymorphism rs1800801 associates with recurrence of ischemic stroke.
Hendrix, P, Sofoluke, N, Adams, M, Kunaprayoon, S, Zand, R, Kolinovsky, AN, Person, TN, Gupta, M, Goren, O, Kirchner, HL, et al
PloS one. 2020;(6):e0235122
Abstract
The MGP single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs1800801 has previously been associated with recurrent ischemic stroke in a Spanish cohort. Here, we tested for association of this SNP with ischemic stroke recurrence in a North American Caucasian cohort. Acute ischemic stroke patients admitted between 10/2009 and 12/2016 at three hospitals within a large healthcare system in the northeastern United States that were enrolled in a healthcare system-wide exome sequencing program were retrospectively reviewed. Patients with recurrent stroke within 1 year after index event were compared to those without recurrence. Of 9,348 suspected acute ischemic strokes admitted between 10/2009 and 12/2016, 1,727 (18.5%) enrolled in the exome-sequencing program. Among those, 1,068 patients had exome sequencing completed and were eligible for inclusion. Recurrent stroke within the first year of stroke was observed in 79 patients (7.4%). In multivariable analysis, stroke prior to the index stroke (OR 9.694, 95% CI 5.793-16.224, p ≤ 0.001), pro-coagulant status (OR = 3.563, 95% CI 1.504-8.443, p = 0.004) and the AA genotype of SNP rs1800801 (OR = 2.408, 95% CI 1.079-4.389, p = 0.004) were independently associated with recurrent stroke within the first year. The AA genotype of the MGP SNP rs1800801 is associated with recurrence within the first year after ischemic stroke in North American Caucasians. Study of stroke subtypes and additional populations will be required to determine if incorporation of allelic status at this SNP into current risk scores improves prediction of recurrent ischemic stroke.
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Flagellin/NLRC4 Pathway Rescues NLRP3-Inflammasome Defect in Dendritic Cells From HIV-Infected Patients: Perspective for New Adjuvant in Immunocompromised Individuals.
Dos Reis, EC, Leal, VNC, Soares, JLDS, Fernandes, FP, Souza de Lima, D, de Alencar, BC, Pontillo, A
Frontiers in immunology. 2019;:1291
Abstract
Introduction: NLRP3 inflammasome plays a key role in dendritic cells (DC) activation in response to vaccine adjuvants, however we previously showed that it is not properly activated in DC from HIV-infected patients (HIV-DC), explaining, at least in part, the poor response to immunization of these patients. Taking in account that several cytoplasmic receptors are able to activate inflammasome, and that bacterial components are considered as a novel and efficient adjuvant, we postulated that bacterial flagellin (FLG), a natural ligand of NAIP/NLRC4 inflammasome, could rescue the activation of the complex in HIV-DC. Objective: Demonstrate that FLG is able to activate monocyte-derived dendritic cells from HIV-infected individuals better than LPS, and to what extent the entity of inflammasome activation differs between DC from HIV-infected patients and healthy donors. Methods: Monocyte-derived dendritic cells from HIV-infected patients (HIV-DC) and healthy donors (HD-DC) were stimulated with FLG, and inflammasome as well as DC activation (phenotypic profile, cytokine production, autologous lymphocytes activation) were compared. Chemical and genetic inhibitors were used to depict the relative contribution of NLRC4 and NLRP3 in HIV/HD-DC response to FLG. Results: FLG properly activates HD-DC and HIV-DC. FLG induces higher inflammasome activation than LPS in HIV-DC. FLG acts through NLRC4 and NLRP3 in HD-DC, but at a lesser extent in HIV-DC due to intrinsic NLRP3 defect. Conclusions: FLG by-passes NLRP3 defect in HIV-DC, through the activation of NAIP/NLRC4 inflammasome, indicating possible future use of the bacterial component as an efficient adjuvant in immunocompromised individuals.
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IL8 and EDEM3 gene expression ratio indicates peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) quality.
Kofanova, O, Bellora, C, Quesada, RA, Bulla, A, Panadero-Fajardo, S, Keipes, M, Shea, K, Stone, M, Lescuyer, P, Betsou, F
Journal of immunological methods. 2019;:13-19
Abstract
BACKGROUND Uncontrolled preanalytical variables can reduce the accuracy and reproducibility of downstream analytical results from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). METHODS PBMCs were isolated from EDTA and citrate-anticoagulated blood samples, obtained from healthy subjects and patients with inflammatory and infectious conditions. PBMC-derived RNA samples were examined for gene expression changes induced by extended blood pre-centrifugation delays at 4 °C and RT. We used Taqman RTqPCR to evaluate the combination of two target genes for their "diagnostic performance" in identifying EDTA and citrate-anticoagulated PBMC samples with extended pre-centrifugation times. RESULTS We established the PBMC preanalytical score, a gene expression metric to asses the PBMC quality related to the pre-centrifugation delay at room temperature for different anticoagulants. The PBMC preanalytical score measurement can identify: CONCLUSION The proposed PBMC preanalytical score may enable objective PBMC sample qualification for downstream applications, which may be influenced by blood precentrifugation delays.
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A first-in-human phase 1a study of the bispecific anti-DLL4/anti-VEGF antibody navicixizumab (OMP-305B83) in patients with previously treated solid tumors.
Jimeno, A, Moore, KN, Gordon, M, Chugh, R, Diamond, JR, Aljumaily, R, Mendelson, D, Kapoun, AM, Xu, L, Stagg, R, et al
Investigational new drugs. 2019;(3):461-472
Abstract
Purpose Navicixizumab (OMP-305B83) is a bispecific antibody that inhibits delta-like ligand 4 and vascular endothelial growth factor. This Phase 1a trial assessed escalating doses of navicixizumab in refractory solid tumors patients. Design A 3 + 3 dose escalation design was used followed by the treatment of additional patients in an expansion cohort. Study objectives were determination of the maximum tolerated dose, safety, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, immunogenicity and efficacy. Results Sixty-six patients were treated once every 3 weeks in 8 dose-escalation cohorts (0.5, 1, 2.5, 3.5, 5, 7.5, 10, and 12.5 mg/kg) and an expansion cohort (7.5 mg/kg). The median age was 60 years and 68% of the patients were female. The most commonly enrolled tumor types were ovarian (12), colorectal (11) and breast, pancreatic, uterine and endometrial (4 each) cancers. As only 1 dose limiting toxicity occurred, the maximum tolerated dose was not reached, but 7.5 mg/kg was chosen as the dose for the expansion cohort. The treatment related adverse events (≥15% of patients) were hypertension (57.6%), headache (28.8%), fatigue (25.8%), and pulmonary hypertension (18.2%). Pulmonary hypertension was mostly asymptomatic at doses ≤5 mg/kg (6 Gr1, 1 Gr2), but was more severe at higher doses (4 Gr2, 1 Gr3). Navicixizumab's half-life was 11.4 days and there was a moderate (29%) incidence of anti-drug antibody formation. Four patients (3 ovarian cancer, 1 uterine carcinosarcoma) had a partial response and 17 patients had stable disease. Nineteen patients had a reduction in the size of their target lesions including 7/11 patients with ovarian cancer. Four patients remained on study for >300 days and 2 of these patients were on study for >500 days. Conclusions Navicixizumab can be safely administered with manageable toxicities and these data showed preliminary signs of antitumor activity in multiple tumor types, but was most promising in ovarian cancer. As a result these data justify its continued development in combination Phase 1b clinical trials.
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The human CIB1-EVER1-EVER2 complex governs keratinocyte-intrinsic immunity to β-papillomaviruses.
de Jong, SJ, Créquer, A, Matos, I, Hum, D, Gunasekharan, V, Lorenzo, L, Jabot-Hanin, F, Imahorn, E, Arias, AA, Vahidnezhad, H, et al
The Journal of experimental medicine. 2018;(9):2289-2310
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Abstract
Patients with epidermodysplasia verruciformis (EV) and biallelic null mutations of TMC6 (encoding EVER1) or TMC8 (EVER2) are selectively prone to disseminated skin lesions due to keratinocyte-tropic human β-papillomaviruses (β-HPVs), which lack E5 and E8. We describe EV patients homozygous for null mutations of the CIB1 gene encoding calcium- and integrin-binding protein-1 (CIB1). CIB1 is strongly expressed in the skin and cultured keratinocytes of controls but not in those of patients. CIB1 forms a complex with EVER1 and EVER2, and CIB1 proteins are not expressed in EVER1- or EVER2-deficient cells. The known functions of EVER1 and EVER2 in human keratinocytes are not dependent on CIB1, and CIB1 deficiency does not impair keratinocyte adhesion or migration. In keratinocytes, the CIB1 protein interacts with the HPV E5 and E8 proteins encoded by α-HPV16 and γ-HPV4, respectively, suggesting that this protein acts as a restriction factor against HPVs. Collectively, these findings suggest that the disruption of CIB1-EVER1-EVER2-dependent keratinocyte-intrinsic immunity underlies the selective susceptibility to β-HPVs of EV patients.
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High Dephosphorylated-Uncarboxylated MGP in Hemodialysis patients: risk factors and response to vitamin K2, A pre-post intervention clinical trial.
Aoun, M, Makki, M, Azar, H, Matta, H, Chelala, DN
BMC nephrology. 2017;(1):191
Abstract
BACKGROUND Vascular calcifications are highly prevalent in hemodialysis patients. Dephosphorylated-uncarboxylated MGP (dp-ucMGP) was found to increase in vitamin K-deficient patients and may be associated with vascular calcifications. Supplementation of hemodialysis patients with vitamin K2 (menaquinone-7) has been studied in Europe with a maximum 61% drop of dp-ucMGP levels. The aim of this study is to assess first the drop of dp-ucMGP in an Eastern Mediterranean cohort after vitamin K2 treatment and second the correlation between baseline dp-ucMGP and vascular calcification score. METHODS This is a prospective, pre-post intervention clinical trial involving 50 hemodialysis patients who received daily 360 μg of menaquinone-7 for 4 weeks. At baseline they were assessed for plasma dp-ucMGP levels and vascular calcification scores (AC-24) as well as for other demographic, clinical and biological variables. Dp-ucMGP levels were measured a second time at 4 weeks. RESULTS At baseline, dp-ucMGP levels were extremely elevated with a median of 3179.15 (1825.25; 4339.50) pM and correlated significantly with AC-24 (Spearman's rho = 0.43, P = 0.002). Using a bivariate regression analysis, the association between dp-ucMGP levels and AC-24 was most significant when comparing dp-ucMGP levels less than 1000 to those more than 1000 pM (P = 0.02). Dp-ucMGP levels higher than 5000 pM were significantly associated with females, patients with recent fracture and patients with lower serum albumin (respectively P = 0.02, 0.004 and 0.046). The average drop of dp-ucMGP at 4 weeks of treatment was found to be 86% with diabetics having the lowest drop rate (P = 0.01). CONCLUSION Vitamin K deficiency, as assessed by high dp-ucMGP levels, is profound in hemodialysis patients from the Eastern Mediterranean region and it is significantly correlated with vascular calcifications. Daily 360 μg of menaquinone-7, given for 4 weeks, effectively reduces dp-ucMGP in this population. Future studies are needed to assess the changes in vascular calcifications in hemodialysis patients treated with vitamin K2 over a longer follow-up period. TRIAL REGISTRATION The clinical trial was registered on clinicaltrials.gov (Identification number NCT02876354 , on August 11, 2016).
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Genetic Testing of Non-familial Deaf Patients for CIB2 and GJB2 Mutations: Phenotype and Genetic Counselling.
Shaikh, H, Waryah, AM, Narsani, AK, Iqbal, M, Shahzad, M, Waryah, YM, Shaikh, N, Mahmood, A
Biochemical genetics. 2017;(5-6):410-420
Abstract
CIB2 and GJB2 genes variants contribute significantly in familial cases of prelingual recessive hearing loss (HL). This study was aimed to determine the CIB2 and GJB2 variants and associated phenotype in 150 non-familial individuals with HL. After getting informed consent, 150 non-familial deaf patients were enrolled and blood samples were obtained for DNA extraction. Pure tone air conduction audiometry was performed. Coding exons of CIB2 and GJB2 genes were Sanger sequenced. A tetra primer ARMS assay was developed for recurrent CIB2 variant. Four bi-allelic GJB2 variants, c.71G>A p.(Trp24*), c.231G>A p.(Trp77*), c.235delC p.(Leu79Cysfs3*) and c.35delG p.(Gly11Leufs24*), were found in nine hearing impaired individuals. We also found four homozygotes and five carriers of c.380G>A p. (Arg127His) variant of controversial clinical significance. CIB2 sequencing revealed single recurrent variant c.272T>C p. (Phe91Ser) segregating with HL in ten individuals. Among our patients, c.71G>A (p.Trp24*) was the most common variant, accounted for 45% of GJB2 variants. Two known GJB2 variants, c.235delC p. (Leu79Cysfs3*) and c.310del14 p. (Lys105Argfs2*), are reported here for the first time in Pakistani population. Our data further support the benign nature of c.380G>A p. (Arg127His) variant. For CIB2, c.272T>C p. (Phe91Ser) is the second common cause of HL among our sporadic cases. Phenotypically, in our patients, individuals homozygous for GJB2 variants had profound HL, whereas CIB2 homozygotes had severe to profound prelingual HL. Our results suggest that GJB2 and CIB2 are common cause of HL in different Pakistani ethnicities.
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Extracellular matrix biomarker, fibulin-1 and its association with soluble uPAR in a bi-ethnic South African population: the SAfrEIC study.
du Plooy, CS, Kruger, R, Huisman, HW, Rasmussen, LM, Eugen-Olsen, J, Schutte, AE
Heart, lung & circulation. 2015;(3):298-305
Abstract
BACKGROUND Fibulin-1 and soluble urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor (suPAR) emerged as mediators in the development of sclerotic disease. SuPAR along with C-reactive protein (CRP) and albumin delineate inflammatory processes associated with extracellular matrix turnover in atherosclerosis. We explored the independent relationship of fibulin-1 with these inflammatory markers in a bi-ethnic South African population. METHODS This study included 290 Africans (men: n=130 and women: n=160) and 343 sex- and age-matched Caucasians (men: n=160 and women: n=183). Serum fibulin-1, suPAR, CRP and albumin levels were measured along with conventional cardiovascular and metabolic variables. RESULTS In both single and age-adjusted regression analyses, fibulin-1 correlated with both suPAR and albumin in African men and with suPAR in Caucasian men. These findings were absent in women. In multivariate regression analysis, these associations were confirmed in African men (R(2)=0.22; β=0.329; p<0.001) and Caucasian men (R(2)=0.14; β=0.234; p=0.008). Fibulin-1 independently associated positively with suPAR in all men, but inversely with albumin in African men only. CONCLUSIONS These results are indicating the presence of potential subclinical inflammation (suPAR) within the extracellular matrix of endothelial tissue, contributing to the potential onset of cardiac fibrosis or vascular sclerosis among these South African men with lower albumin levels.