Nat Cardiovasc Res
May 2025
In this Review, we present a comprehensive analysis of preclinical models used to study immune checkpoint inhibitor-associated myocarditis (hereafter ICI-myocarditis), a potentially lethal immune-related adverse event. We begin by providing an overview of immune checkpoint inhibitors, highlighting how their efficacy in cancer treatment is counterbalanced by their predisposition to cause immune-related adverse events. Next, we draw from human data to identify disease features that an effective mouse model should ideally mimic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThyroid cancer progression from curable well-differentiated thyroid carcinoma to highly lethal anaplastic thyroid carcinoma is distinguished by tumor cell de-differentiation and recruitment of a robust stromal infiltrate. Combining an integrated thyroid cancer single-cell sequencing atlas with spatial transcriptomics and bulk RNA-sequencing, we define stromal cell subpopulations and tumor-stromal cross-talk occurring across the histologic and mutational spectrum of thyroid cancer. We identify distinct inflammatory and myofibroblastic cancer-associated fibroblast (iCAF and myCAF) populations and perivascular-like populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer Immunol Res
August 2024
Immune checkpoint therapies can drive antitumor responses and benefit patients but can also induce life-threatening immune-related adverse events such as myocarditis and myositis. These immune-related adverse events are rare but carry substantial morbidity and mortality. In this issue, Siddiqui and colleagues use single-cell RNA and T-cell receptor sequencing to identify novel cellular subsets and propose various mechanisms that could contribute to the pathogenesis of immune checkpoint inhibitor-associated myocarditis and myositis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPigment Cell Melanoma Res
November 2021
Here, we present a rare case of a patient who developed multiple primary melanomas within the boundaries of two nevi depigmentosa. The melanomas were excised, and as a preventive measure, the remainder of the nevi depigmentosa were removed. We performed whole-exome sequencing on excised tissue from the nevus depigmentosus, adjacent normal skin, and saliva to explain this intriguing phenomenon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDrug resistance is a major healthcare challenge, resulting in a continuous need to develop new inhibitors. The development of these inhibitors requires an understanding of the mechanisms of resistance for a critical mass of occurrences. Recent genome editing technologies based on high-throughput DNA synthesis and sequencing may help to predict mutations resulting in resistance by testing large mutagenesis libraries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn , editing efficiency with Cas9-mediated recombineering varies across targets due to differences in the level of Cas9:gRNA-mediated DNA double-strand break (DSB)-induced cell death. We found that editing efficiency with the same gRNA and repair template can also change with target position, promoter strength, and growth conditions. Incomplete editing, off-target activity, nontargeted mutations, and failure to cleave target DNA even if Cas9 is bound also compromise editing efficiency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDeep mutational scanning can provide significant insights into the function of essential genes in bacteria. Here, we developed a high-throughput method for mutating essential genes of Escherichia coli in their native genetic context. We used Cas9-mediated recombineering to introduce a library of mutations, created by error-prone PCR, within a gene fragment on the genome using a single gRNA pre-validated for high efficiency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSequence to activity mapping technologies are rapidly developing, enabling the generation and isolation of mutations conferring novel phenotypes. Here we used the CRISPR enabled trackable genome engineering (CREATE) technology to investigate the inhibition of the essential ispC gene in its native genomic context in Escherichia coli. We created a full saturation library of 33 sites proximal to the ligand binding pocket and challenged this library with the antimalarial drug fosmidomycin, which targets the ispC gene product, DXR.
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