Publications by authors named "Lingxue Niu"

Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) share similar cellular features and various antigens profiles with cancer cells. Leveraging these characteristics, iPSCs hold great promise for developing wide-spectrum vaccines against cancers. In practice, iPSCs are typically combined with immune adjuvants to enhance antitumor immune responses; however, traditional adjuvants lack controllability and can induce systemic toxicity, which has limited their broad application.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Bacteria-based therapies hold great promise for cancer treatment due to their selective tumor colonization and proliferation. However, clinical application is hindered by the need for safe, precise control systems to regulate local therapeutic payload expression and release. Here we developed a near-infrared (NIR) light-mediated PadC-based photoswitch (NETMAP) system based on a chimeric phytochrome-activated diguanylyl cyclase (PadC) and a cyclic diguanylate monophosphate-dependent transcriptional activator (MrkH).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Red light optogenetic systems are in high demand for the precise control of gene expression for gene- and cell-based therapies. Here, we report a red/far-red light-inducible photoswitch (REDLIP) system based on the chimeric photosensory protein FnBphP (Fn-REDLIP) or PnBphP (Pn-REDLIP) and their interaction partner LDB3, which enables efficient dynamic regulation of gene expression with a timescale of seconds without exogenous administration of a chromophore in mammals. We use the REDLIP system to establish the REDLIP-mediated CRISPR-dCas9 (REDLIP) system, enabling optogenetic activation of endogenous target genes in mammalian cells and mice.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Bacteria-based therapies are powerful strategies for cancer therapy, yet their clinical application is limited by a lack of tunable genetic switches to safely regulate the local expression and release of therapeutic cargoes. Rapid advances in remote-control technologies have enabled precise control of biological processes in time and space. We developed therapeutically active engineered bacteria mediated by a sono-activatable integrated gene circuit based on the thermosensitive transcriptional repressor TlpA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Protein activity is crucial for understanding physiological and pathogenic processes, and manipulating these levels is important for studying their functions in cells and animals.
  • Researchers developed ΔTrim21-based targeted protein-degradation systems (ΔTrim-TPD) that can be activated by light or chemicals for more effective control of protein degradation.
  • The study showcased three specific applications: inhibiting HSV-1 virus proliferation, controlling gene editing capabilities, and targeting tumor growth in melanoma, emphasizing the usefulness of these systems in biological research and potential medical therapies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF