Highlights d In vivo and in vitro genome-scale CD8 T cell CRISPR screen in immunotherapy contexts d Dhx37 knockout in CD8 T cells enhances adoptive transfer efficacy d Dhx37 modulates CD8 T cell activation, cytokine production, and cytotoxicity d DHX37 interacts with PDCD11 and influences NF-kB activity
The long-held paradigm that B cells cannot uptake nonspecific particulate Ags for the initiation of primary adaptive immunity has been challenged by the recent discovery that teleost B cells have potent phagocytic and microbicidal abilities. This discovery provides preliminary clues that primitive B cells might act as initiating APCs in priming adaptive immunity. In this study, zebrafish B cells clearly showed a potent Ag-presenting ability to both soluble Ags and bacterial particles to prime naive CD4+ T cell activation. This finding demonstrates the innate-like nature of teleost B cells in the interface of innate and adaptive immunity, indicating that they might consist of a major population of initiating APCs whose performance is similar to that of dendritic cells. Given the functional similarities between teleost B cells and the mammalian B-1 subset, we hypothesize that B-1 lineage and teleost B cells might originate from a common ancestor with potent phagocytic and initiating APC capacities. In addition, CD80/86 and CD83 costimulatory signals were identified as being essential for B cell–initiated adaptive immunity. This result suggests that the costimulatory mechanism originated as early as the origin of adaptive immunity and is conserved throughout vertebrate evolution. In fish, only a single CD80/86 copy exists, which is similar to mammalian CD86 rather than to CD80. Thus, CD86 might be a more primordial B7 family member that originated from fish. This study provides valuable insights into the evolutionary history of professional APCs, B cell lineages, and the costimulatory mechanism underlying adaptive immunity as a whole.
The large yellow croaker Larimichthys crocea (L. crocea) is one of the most economically important marine fish in China and East Asian countries. It also exhibits peculiar behavioral and physiological characteristics, especially sensitive to various environmental stresses, such as hypoxia and air exposure. These traits may render L. crocea a good model for investigating the response mechanisms to environmental stress. To understand the molecular and genetic mechanisms underlying the adaptation and response of L. crocea to environmental stress, we sequenced and assembled the genome of L. crocea using a bacterial artificial chromosome and whole-genome shotgun hierarchical strategy. The final genome assembly was 679 Mb, with a contig N50 of 63.11 kb and a scaffold N50 of 1.03 Mb, containing 25,401 protein-coding genes. Gene families underlying adaptive behaviours, such as vision-related crystallins, olfactory receptors, and auditory sense-related genes, were significantly expanded in the genome of L. crocea relative to those of other vertebrates. Transcriptome analyses of the hypoxia-exposed L. crocea brain revealed new aspects of neuro-endocrine-immune/metabolism regulatory networks that may help the fish to avoid cerebral inflammatory injury and maintain energy balance under hypoxia. Proteomics data demonstrate that skin mucus of the air-exposed L. crocea had a complex composition, with an unexpectedly high number of proteins (3,209), suggesting its multiple protective mechanisms involved in antioxidant functions, oxygen transport, immune defence, and osmotic and ionic regulation. Our results reveal the molecular and genetic basis of fish adaptation and response to hypoxia and air exposure. The data generated by this study will provide valuable resources for the genetic improvement of stress resistance and yield potential in L. crocea.
MicroRNAs have been reported as related to multiple diseases and have potential applications in diagnosis and therapeutics. However, detection of miRNAs remains improvable, given their complexity, high cost, and low sensitivity as of currently. In this study, we attempt to build a novel platform that detects miRNAs at low cost and high efficacy. This detection system contains isothermal amplification, detecting and reporting process based on rolling circle amplification, CRISPR-Cas9, and split-horseradish peroxidase techniques. It is able to detect trace amount of miRNAs from samples with mere single-base specificity. Moreover, we demonstrated that such scheme can effectively detect target miRNAs in clinical serum samples and significantly distinguish patients of non-small cell lung cancer from healthy volunteers by detecting the previously reported biomarker: circulating let-7a. As the first to use CRISPR-Cas9 in miRNA detection, this method is a promising approach capable of being applied in screening, diagnosing, and prognosticating of multiple diseases.
Immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) has shown remarkable clinical efficacy in several cancer types. However, only a fraction of patients will respond to ICB. Here, we performed pooled mutagenic screening with CRISPR-mediated genetically engineered mouse models (CRISPR-GEMM) in ICB settings, and identified KMT2D as a major modulator of ICB response across multiple cancer types. KMT2D encodes a histone H3K4 methyltransferase and is among the most frequently mutated genes in patients with cancer. Kmt2d loss led to increased DNA damage and mutation burden, chromatin remodeling, intron retention, and activation of transposable elements. In addition, Kmt2d-mutant cells exhibited increased protein turnover and IFNγ-stimulated antigen presentation. In turn, Kmt2d-mutant tumors in both mouse and human were characterized by increased immune infiltration. These data demonstrate that Kmt2d deficiency sensitizes tumors to ICB by augmenting tumor immunogenicity, and also highlight the power of CRISPR-GEMMs for interrogating complex molecular landscapes in immunotherapeutic contexts that preserve the native tumor microenvironment.
Significance:
ICB is ineffective in the majority of patients. Through direct in vivo CRISPR mutagenesis screening in GEMMs of cancer, we find Kmt2d deficiency sensitizes tumors to ICB. Considering the prevalence of KMT2D mutations, this finding potentially has broad implications for patient stratification and clinical decision-making.
This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1775
The roles of IL-4 and IL-4Rα in Th2-mediated immunity have been well characterized in humans and other mammals. In contrast, few reports have been documented in ancient vertebrates. Several putative IL-4– and IL-4Rα–like molecules were identified recently from a few fish species, providing preliminary insight into the occurrence of Th2-type immunity in teleosts. However, functional determination still is required to address this hypothesis. To this end, these two molecules were characterized functionally in zebrafish (Danio rerio). Besides the identification of a full-length IL-4Rα molecule and an isoform lacking most of the cytoplasmic region as predicted previously, two novel alternatively spliced soluble variants with the extracellular domain only also were identified. Zebrafish IL-4Rα (DrIL-4Rα) shared overall conserved structural features of the IL-4Rα family. Immunofluorescence staining showed that DrIL-4Rα distributed on B cells. In vitro binding assays demonstrated that zebrafish IL-4 (DrIL-4) can bind specifically to DrIL-4Rα. In vivo administration of DrIL-4 significantly upregulated B cell proliferation and Ab production. These DrIL-4–elicited immune responses were downregulated by the administration of zebrafish soluble IL-4Rα or by DrIL-4Rα blockade using anti–DrIL-4Rα Abs. In addition, Th2-related cytokines or transcription factors were upregulated by DrIL-4. The DrIL-4–DrIL-4Rα interaction promoted CD40 expression on B cells and enhanced the CD154–CD40 costimulatory response, both of which are crucial for the initiation of Th2-type immunity. To our knowledge, this is the first report showing that a possible Th2-mediated regulatory mechanism may have appeared before the divergence of teleosts and mammals. These results add greater insight into the evolutionary history of adaptive immunity.
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