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1.
Mol Syst Biol ; 2024 Jun 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38872050

ABSTRACT

Macrophages sense pathogens and orchestrate specific immune responses. Stimulus specificity is thought to be achieved through combinatorial and dynamical coding by signaling pathways. While NFκB dynamics are known to encode stimulus information, dynamical coding in other signaling pathways and their combinatorial coordination remain unclear. Here, we established live-cell microscopy to investigate how NFκB and p38 dynamics interface in stimulated macrophages. Information theory and machine learning revealed that p38 dynamics distinguish cytokine TNF from pathogen-associated molecular patterns and high doses from low, but contributed little to information-rich NFκB dynamics when both pathways are considered. This suggests that immune response genes benefit from decoding immune signaling dynamics or combinatorics, but not both. We found that the heterogeneity of the two pathways is surprisingly uncorrelated. Mathematical modeling revealed potential sources of uncorrelated heterogeneity in the branched pathway network topology and predicted it to drive gene expression variability. Indeed, genes dependent on both p38 and NFκB showed high scRNAseq variability and bimodality. These results identify combinatorial signaling as a mechanism to restrict NFκB-AND-p38-responsive inflammatory cytokine expression to few cells.

2.
Cancer Cell ; 41(12): 2066-2082.e9, 2023 12 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37995683

ABSTRACT

Trans-differentiation from an adenocarcinoma to a small cell neuroendocrine state is associated with therapy resistance in multiple cancer types. To gain insight into the underlying molecular events of the trans-differentiation, we perform a multi-omics time course analysis of a pan-small cell neuroendocrine cancer model (termed PARCB), a forward genetic transformation using human prostate basal cells and identify a shared developmental, arc-like, and entropy-high trajectory among all transformation model replicates. Further mapping with single cell resolution reveals two distinct lineages defined by mutually exclusive expression of ASCL1 or ASCL2. Temporal regulation by groups of transcription factors across developmental stages reveals that cellular reprogramming precedes the induction of neuronal programs. TFAP4 and ASCL1/2 feedback are identified as potential regulators of ASCL1 and ASCL2 expression. Our study provides temporal transcriptional patterns and uncovers pan-tissue parallels between prostate and lung cancers, as well as connections to normal neuroendocrine cell states.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Small Cell , Lung Neoplasms , Prostatic Neoplasms , Small Cell Lung Carcinoma , Male , Humans , Lung Neoplasms/genetics , Carcinoma, Small Cell/genetics , Transcription Factors/genetics , Prostatic Neoplasms/genetics , Prostatic Neoplasms/pathology , Cell Transdifferentiation/genetics , Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Transcription Factors/genetics , Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Transcription Factors/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Cell Line, Tumor , Small Cell Lung Carcinoma/genetics
3.
Cell Syst ; 14(3): 180-195.e5, 2023 03 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36657439

ABSTRACT

Immune sentinel macrophages initiate responses to pathogens via hundreds of immune response genes. Each immune threat demands a tailored response, suggesting that the capacity for stimulus-specific gene expression is a key functional hallmark of healthy macrophages. To quantify this property, termed "stimulus-response specificity" (SRS), we developed a single-cell experimental workflow and analytical approaches based on information theory and machine learning. We found that the response specificity of macrophages is driven by combinations of specific immune genes that show low cell-to-cell heterogeneity and are targets of separate signaling pathways. The "response specificity profile," a systematic comparison of multiple stimulus-response distributions, was distinctly altered by polarizing cytokines, and it enabled an assessment of the functional state of macrophages. Indeed, the response specificity profile of peritoneal macrophages from old and obese mice showed characteristic differences, suggesting that SRS may be a basis for measuring the functional state of innate immune cells. A record of this paper's transparent peer review process is included in the supplemental information.


Subject(s)
Cytokines , Macrophages , Animals , Mice , Cytokines/metabolism , Signal Transduction
4.
Cell Rep ; 40(2): 111076, 2022 07 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35830792

ABSTRACT

The genomic positions of nucleosomes are a defining feature of the cell's epigenomic state, but signal-dependent transcription factors (SDTFs), upon activation, bind to specific genomic locations and modify nucleosome positioning. Here we leverage SDTFs as perturbation probes to learn about nucleosome dynamics in living cells. We develop Markov models of nucleosome dynamics and fit them to time course sequencing data of DNA accessibility. We find that (1) the dynamics of DNA unwrapping are significantly slower in cells than reported from cell-free experiments, (2) only models with cooperativity in wrapping and unwrapping fit the available data, (3) SDTF activity produces the highest eviction probability when its binding site is adjacent to but not on the nucleosome dyad, and (4) oscillatory SDTF activity results in high location variability. Our work uncovers the regulatory rules governing SDTF-induced nucleosome dynamics in live cells, which can predict chromatin accessibility alterations during inflammation at single-nucleosome resolution.


Subject(s)
Epigenome , Nucleosomes , Chromatin Assembly and Disassembly , DNA/metabolism , Transcription Factors/metabolism
5.
Annu Rev Immunol ; 40: 295-321, 2022 04 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35471841

ABSTRACT

Macrophages are first responders for the immune system. In this role, they have both effector functions for neutralizing pathogens and sentinel functions for alerting other immune cells of diverse pathologic threats, thereby initiating and coordinating a multipronged immune response. Macrophages are distributed throughout the body-they circulate in the blood, line the mucosal membranes, reside within organs, and survey the connective tissue. Several reviews have summarized their diverse roles in different physiological scenarios and in the initiation or amplification of different pathologies. In this review, we propose that both the effector and the sentinel functions of healthy macrophages rely on three hallmark properties: response specificity, context dependence, and stimulus memory. When these hallmark properties are diminished, the macrophage's biological functions are impaired, which in turn results in increased risk for immune dysregulation, manifested by immune deficiency or autoimmunity. We review the evidence and the molecular mechanisms supporting these functional hallmarks.


Subject(s)
Immunity, Innate , Macrophages , Animals , Humans
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(4)2022 01 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35058362

ABSTRACT

Immune cells infiltrate the peripheral nervous system (PNS) after injury and with autoimmunity, but their net effect is divergent. After injury, immune cells are reparative, while in inflammatory neuropathies (e.g., Guillain Barré Syndrome and chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy), immune cells are proinflammatory and promote autoimmune demyelination. An understanding of immune cell phenotypes that distinguish these conditions may, therefore, reveal new therapeutic targets for switching immune cells from an inflammatory role to a reparative state. In an autoimmune regulator (Aire)-deficient mouse model of inflammatory neuropathy, we used single-cell RNA sequencing of sciatic nerves to discover a transcriptionally heterogeneous cellular landscape, including multiple myeloid, innate lymphoid, and lymphoid cell types. Analysis of cell-cell ligand-receptor interactions uncovered a macrophage-mediated tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) signaling axis that is induced by interferon-γ and required for initiation of autoimmune demyelination. Developmental trajectory visualization suggested that TNF-α signaling is associated with metabolic reprogramming of macrophages and polarization of macrophages from a reparative state in injury to a pathogenic, inflammatory state in autoimmunity. Autocrine TNF-α signaling induced macrophage expression of multiple genes (Clec4e, Marcksl1, Cxcl1, and Cxcl10) important in immune cell activation and recruitment. Genetic and antibody-based blockade of TNF-α/TNF-α signaling ameliorated clinical neuropathy, peripheral nerve infiltration, and demyelination, which provides preclinical evidence that the TNF-α axis may be effectively targeted to resolve inflammatory neuropathies.


Subject(s)
Neuroinflammatory Diseases/etiology , Neuroinflammatory Diseases/metabolism , Peripheral Nervous System Diseases/etiology , Peripheral Nervous System Diseases/metabolism , Polyendocrinopathies, Autoimmune/complications , Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/metabolism , Adoptive Transfer , Animals , Antibodies, Monoclonal/pharmacology , Autocrine Communication , Biomarkers , Cytokines/metabolism , Disease Models, Animal , Disease Susceptibility , Gene Expression Profiling , Inflammation Mediators/metabolism , Macrophages/immunology , Macrophages/metabolism , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Neuroinflammatory Diseases/drug therapy , Neuroinflammatory Diseases/pathology , Paracrine Communication , Peripheral Nervous System Diseases/drug therapy , Peripheral Nervous System Diseases/pathology , Polyendocrinopathies, Autoimmune/genetics , Receptors, Tumor Necrosis Factor/deficiency , Sciatic Nerve/immunology , Sciatic Nerve/metabolism , Sciatic Nerve/pathology , Signal Transduction , Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/antagonists & inhibitors
7.
Immunity ; 54(9): 1915-1932, 2021 09 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34525335

ABSTRACT

Immune sentinel cells initiate immune responses to pathogens and tissue injury and are capable of producing highly stimulus-specific responses. Insight into the mechanisms underlying such specificity has come from the identification of regulatory factors and biochemical pathways, as well as the definition of signaling circuits that enable combinatorial and temporal coding of information. Here, we review the multi-layered molecular mechanisms that underlie stimulus-specific gene expression in macrophages. We categorize components of inflammatory and anti-pathogenic signaling pathways into five layers of regulatory control and discuss unifying mechanisms determining signaling characteristics at each layer. In this context, we review mechanisms that enable combinatorial and temporal encoding of information, identify recurring regulatory motifs and principles, and present strategies for integrating experimental and computational approaches toward the understanding of signaling specificity in innate immunity.


Subject(s)
Immunity, Innate/immunology , Macrophages/immunology , Animals , Humans
8.
Science ; 372(6548): 1349-1353, 2021 06 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34140389

ABSTRACT

The epigenome of macrophages can be reprogrammed by extracellular cues, but the extent to which different stimuli achieve this is unclear. Nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) is a transcription factor that is activated by all pathogen-associated stimuli and can reprogram the epigenome by activating latent enhancers. However, we show that NF-κB does so only in response to a subset of stimuli. This stimulus specificity depends on the temporal dynamics of NF-κB activity, in particular whether it is oscillatory or non-oscillatory. Non-oscillatory NF-κB opens chromatin by sustained disruption of nucleosomal histone-DNA interactions, enabling activation of latent enhancers that modulate expression of immune response genes. Thus, temporal dynamics can determine a transcription factor's capacity to reprogram the epigenome in a stimulus-specific manner.


Subject(s)
Epigenome , Macrophages/metabolism , NF-kappa B/metabolism , Transcription Factor RelA/metabolism , Animals , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , Chromatin/metabolism , DNA/metabolism , Enhancer Elements, Genetic , Gene Expression Regulation , Histones/metabolism , MAP Kinase Signaling System , Macrophages/immunology , Methylation , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Models, Biological , NF-KappaB Inhibitor alpha/genetics , NF-KappaB Inhibitor alpha/metabolism , Nucleosomes/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Transcription, Genetic
9.
Immunity ; 54(5): 916-930.e7, 2021 05 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33979588

ABSTRACT

Macrophages initiate inflammatory responses via the transcription factor NFκB. The temporal pattern of NFκB activity determines which genes are expressed and thus, the type of response that ensues. Here, we examined how information about the stimulus is encoded in the dynamics of NFκB activity. We generated an mVenus-RelA reporter mouse line to enable high-throughput live-cell analysis of primary macrophages responding to host- and pathogen-derived stimuli. An information-theoretic workflow identified six dynamical features-termed signaling codons-that convey stimulus information to the nucleus. In particular, oscillatory trajectories were a hallmark of responses to cytokine but not pathogen-derived stimuli. Single-cell imaging and RNA sequencing of macrophages from a mouse model of Sjögren's syndrome revealed inappropriate responses to stimuli, suggestive of confusion of two NFκB signaling codons. Thus, the dynamics of NFκB signaling classify immune threats through six signaling codons, and signal confusion based on defective codon deployment may underlie the etiology of some inflammatory diseases.


Subject(s)
Codon/genetics , Macrophages/physiology , NF-kappa B/genetics , Signal Transduction/genetics , Animals , Cells, Cultured , Cytokines/genetics , Disease Models, Animal , Gene Expression Regulation/genetics , Inflammation/genetics , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Sjogren's Syndrome/genetics , Transcription Factor RelA/genetics
10.
J Clin Invest ; 131(12)2021 06 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33914706

ABSTRACT

Melanoma dedifferentiation has been reported to be a state of cellular resistance to targeted therapies and immunotherapies as cancer cells revert to a more primitive cellular phenotype. Here, we show that, counterintuitively, the biopsies of patient tumors that responded to anti-programmed cell death 1 (anti-PD-1) therapy had decreased expression of melanocytic markers and increased neural crest markers, suggesting treatment-induced dedifferentiation. When modeling the effects in vitro, we documented that melanoma cell lines that were originally differentiated underwent a process of neural crest dedifferentiation when continuously exposed to IFN-γ, through global chromatin landscape changes that led to enrichment in specific hyperaccessible chromatin regions. The IFN-γ-induced dedifferentiation signature corresponded with improved outcomes in patients with melanoma, challenging the notion that neural crest dedifferentiation is entirely an adverse phenotype.


Subject(s)
Biomarkers, Tumor , Cell Dedifferentiation/drug effects , Epigenesis, Genetic/drug effects , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic/drug effects , Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors/pharmacology , Interferon-gamma/metabolism , Melanoma , Neoplasm Proteins , Programmed Cell Death 1 Receptor/antagonists & inhibitors , Biomarkers, Tumor/antagonists & inhibitors , Biomarkers, Tumor/metabolism , Cell Line, Tumor , Humans , Melanocytes/metabolism , Melanocytes/pathology , Melanoma/drug therapy , Melanoma/metabolism , Neoplasm Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Neoplasm Proteins/metabolism
11.
Cell Syst ; 10(2): 169-182.e5, 2020 02 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31972132

ABSTRACT

Pathogen-derived lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and cytokine tumor necrosis factor (TNF) activate NFκB with distinct duration dynamics, but how immune response genes decode NFκB duration to produce stimulus-specific expression remains unclear. Here, detailed transcriptomic profiling of combinatorial and temporal control mutants identified 81 genes that depend on stimulus-specific NFκB duration for their stimulus-specificity. Combining quantitative experimentation with mathematical modeling, we found that for some genes a long mRNA half-life allowed effective decoding, but for many genes this was insufficient to account for the data; instead, we found that chromatin mechanisms, such as a slow transition rate between inactive and RelA-bound enhancer states, could also decode NFκB dynamics. Chromatin-mediated decoding is favored by genes acting as immune effectors (e.g., tissue remodelers and T cell recruiters) rather than immune regulators (e.g., signaling proteins and monocyte recruiters). Overall, our results delineate two gene regulatory strategies that decode stimulus-specific NFκB dynamics and determine distinct biological functions.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Regulation/genetics , Gene Expression/genetics , Lipopolysaccharides/metabolism , NF-kappa B/metabolism , Humans
12.
Cancer Cell ; 36(1): 17-34.e7, 2019 07 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31287989

ABSTRACT

Small-cell neuroendocrine cancers (SCNCs) are an aggressive cancer subtype. Transdifferentiation toward an SCN phenotype has been reported as a resistance route in response to targeted therapies. Here, we identified a convergence to an SCN state that is widespread across epithelial cancers and is associated with poor prognosis. More broadly, non-SCN metastases have higher expression of SCN-associated transcription factors than non-SCN primary tumors. Drug sensitivity and gene dependency screens demonstrate that these convergent SCNCs have shared vulnerabilities. These common vulnerabilities are found across unannotated SCN-like epithelial cases, small-round-blue cell tumors, and unexpectedly in hematological malignancies. The SCN convergent phenotype and common sensitivity profiles with hematological cancers can guide treatment options beyond tissue-specific targeted therapies.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Small Cell/diagnosis , Carcinoma, Small Cell/etiology , Hematologic Neoplasms/diagnosis , Hematologic Neoplasms/etiology , Neuroendocrine Tumors/diagnosis , Neuroendocrine Tumors/etiology , Phenotype , Carcinoma, Small Cell/drug therapy , Computational Biology/methods , DNA Copy Number Variations , Disease Susceptibility , Drug Resistance, Neoplasm/genetics , Gene Expression Profiling , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Hematologic Neoplasms/drug therapy , Humans , Mutation , Neuroendocrine Tumors/drug therapy , Transcriptome
13.
Science ; 362(6410): 91-95, 2018 10 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30287662

ABSTRACT

The use of potent therapies inhibiting critical oncogenic pathways active in epithelial cancers has led to multiple resistance mechanisms, including the development of highly aggressive, small cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (SCNC). SCNC patients have a dismal prognosis due in part to a limited understanding of the molecular mechanisms driving this malignancy and the lack of effective treatments. Here, we demonstrate that a common set of defined oncogenic drivers reproducibly reprograms normal human prostate and lung epithelial cells to small cell prostate cancer (SCPC) and small cell lung cancer (SCLC), respectively. We identify shared active transcription factor binding regions in the reprogrammed prostate and lung SCNCs by integrative analyses of epigenetic and transcriptional landscapes. These results suggest that neuroendocrine cancers arising from distinct epithelial tissues may share common vulnerabilities that could be exploited for the development of drugs targeting SCNCs.


Subject(s)
Carcinogenesis/genetics , Carcinoma, Neuroendocrine/pathology , Cellular Reprogramming/genetics , Lung Neoplasms/pathology , Lung/pathology , Prostate/pathology , Prostatic Neoplasms/pathology , Small Cell Lung Carcinoma/pathology , Carcinoma, Neuroendocrine/genetics , Cell Line, Tumor , Cell Lineage , Cellular Reprogramming Techniques , Drug Delivery Systems , Epithelial Cells/pathology , Epithelium/pathology , Humans , Male , Prostatic Neoplasms/genetics , Retinoblastoma Protein/genetics , Small Cell Lung Carcinoma/genetics , Tumor Suppressor Protein p53/genetics
14.
Cell Rep ; 24(12): 3353-3366.e5, 2018 09 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30232014

ABSTRACT

Cancer progression to an aggressive phenotype often co-opts aspects of stem cell biology. Here, we developed gene signatures for normal human stem cell populations to understand the relationship between epithelial cancers and stem cell transcriptional programs. Using a pan-cancer approach, we reveal that aggressive epithelial cancers are enriched for a transcriptional signature shared by epithelial adult stem cells. The adult stem cell signature selected for epithelial cancers with worse overall survival and alterations of oncogenic drivers. Lethal small cell neuroendocrine lung, prostate, and bladder cancers transcriptionally converged onto the adult stem cell signature and not other stem cell signatures tested. We found that DNA methyltransferase expression correlated with adult stem cell signature status and was enriched in small cell neuroendocrine cancers. DNA methylation analysis uncovered a shared epigenomic profile between small cell neuroendocrine cancers. These pan-cancer findings establish a molecular link between human adult stem cells and aggressive epithelial cancers.


Subject(s)
Adult Stem Cells/metabolism , Epithelial Cells/metabolism , Lung Neoplasms/genetics , Prostatic Neoplasms/genetics , Transcriptome , Urinary Bladder Neoplasms/genetics , Animals , Cell Line , DNA (Cytosine-5-)-Methyltransferases/genetics , DNA (Cytosine-5-)-Methyltransferases/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Lung Neoplasms/metabolism , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred NOD , Prostatic Neoplasms/metabolism , Urinary Bladder Neoplasms/metabolism
15.
Cancer Cell ; 33(5): 890-904.e5, 2018 05 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29657129

ABSTRACT

Malignant transformation can result in melanoma cells that resemble different stages of their embryonic development. Our gene expression analysis of human melanoma cell lines and patient tumors revealed that melanoma follows a two-dimensional differentiation trajectory that can be subclassified into four progressive subtypes. This differentiation model is associated with subtype-specific sensitivity to iron-dependent oxidative stress and cell death known as ferroptosis. Receptor tyrosine kinase-mediated resistance to mitogen-activated protein kinase targeted therapies and activation of the inflammatory signaling associated with immune therapy involves transitions along this differentiation trajectory, which lead to increased sensitivity to ferroptosis. Therefore, ferroptosis-inducing drugs present an orthogonal therapeutic approach to target the differentiation plasticity of melanoma cells to increase the efficacy of targeted and immune therapies.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Profiling/methods , Iron/metabolism , Melanoma/classification , Melanoma/genetics , Vemurafenib/pharmacology , Cell Dedifferentiation , Cell Line, Tumor , Cell Survival/drug effects , DNA Methylation , Drug Resistance, Neoplasm/drug effects , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic/drug effects , Gene Regulatory Networks , Humans , Iron/toxicity , Melanoma/drug therapy , Melanoma/metabolism , Oxidative Stress/drug effects , Piperazines , Signal Transduction
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