ABSTRACT
The PD-1 inhibitor pembrolizumab is effective in treating Sézary syndrome, a leukemic variant of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma. Our purpose was to investigate the effects of pembrolizumab on healthy and malignant T cells in Sézary syndrome and to discover characteristics that predict pembrolizumab response. Samples were analyzed before and after 3 weeks of pembrolizumab treatment using single-cell RNA-sequencing of 118,961 peripheral blood T cells isolated from six Sézary syndrome patients. T-cell receptor clonotyping, bulk RNA-seq signatures, and whole-exome data were integrated to classify malignant T-cells and their underlying subclonal heterogeneity. We found that responses to pembrolizumab were associated with lower KIR3DL2 expression within Sézary T cells. Pembrolizumab modulated Sézary cell gene expression of T-cell activation associated genes. The CD8 effector populations included clonally expanded populations with a strong cytotoxic profile. Expansions of CD8 terminal effector and CD8 effector memory T-cell populations were observed in responding patients after treatment. We observed intrapatient Sézary cell heterogeneity including subclonal segregation of a coding mutation and copy number variation. Our study reveals differential effects of pembrolizumab in both malignant and healthy T cells. These data support further study of KIR3DL2 expression and CD8 immune populations as predictive biomarkers of pembrolizumab response in Sézary syndrome.
Subject(s)
Sezary Syndrome , Skin Neoplasms , Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized , DNA Copy Number Variations , Humans , RNA , Receptors, KIR3DL2/genetics , Sezary Syndrome/drug therapy , Sezary Syndrome/genetics , Skin Neoplasms/drug therapy , Skin Neoplasms/geneticsABSTRACT
Arteries and veins are specified by antagonistic transcriptional programs. However, during development and regeneration, new arteries can arise from pre-existing veins through a poorly understood process of cell fate conversion. Here, using single-cell RNA sequencing and mouse genetics, we show that vein cells of the developing heart undergo an early cell fate switch to create a pre-artery population that subsequently builds coronary arteries. Vein cells underwent a gradual and simultaneous switch from venous to arterial fate before a subset of cells crossed a transcriptional threshold into the pre-artery state. Before the onset of coronary blood flow, pre-artery cells appeared in the immature vessel plexus, expressed mature artery markers, and decreased cell cycling. The vein-specifying transcription factor COUP-TF2 (also known as NR2F2) prevented plexus cells from overcoming the pre-artery threshold by inducing cell cycle genes. Thus, vein-derived coronary arteries are built by pre-artery cells that can differentiate independently of blood flow upon the release of inhibition mediated by COUP-TF2 and cell cycle factors.
Subject(s)
Arteries/cytology , Coronary Vessels/cytology , Single-Cell Analysis , Stem Cells/cytology , Stem Cells/metabolism , Veins/cytology , Animals , Arteries/metabolism , COUP Transcription Factor II/metabolism , Cell Cycle/genetics , Cell Differentiation , Cell Lineage , Coronary Vessels/metabolism , Female , Male , Mice , Sequence Analysis, RNA , Veins/metabolismABSTRACT
Cellular membranes act as signaling platforms and control solute transport. Membrane receptors, transporters, and enzymes communicate with intracellular processes through protein-protein interactions. Using a split-ubiquitin yeast two-hybrid screen that covers a test-space of 6.4 × 10(6) pairs, we identified 12,102 membrane/signaling protein interactions from Arabidopsis. Besides confirmation of expected interactions such as heterotrimeric G protein subunit interactions and aquaporin oligomerization, >99% of the interactions were previously unknown. Interactions were confirmed at a rate of 32% in orthogonal in planta split-green flourescent protein interaction assays, which was statistically indistinguishable from the confirmation rate for known interactions collected from literature (38%). Regulatory associations in membrane protein trafficking, turnover, and phosphorylation include regulation of potassium channel activity through abscisic acid signaling, transporter activity by a WNK kinase, and a brassinolide receptor kinase by trafficking-related proteins. These examples underscore the utility of the membrane/signaling protein interaction network for gene discovery and hypothesis generation in plants and other organisms.