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A potential cause of cancer relapse is pretreatment chemoresistant subpopulations. Identifying targetable features of subpopulations that are poorly primed for therapy-induced cell death may improve cancer therapy. Here, we develop and validate real-time BH3 profiling, a live and functional single-cell measurement of pretreatment apoptotic sensitivity that occurs upstream of apoptotic protease activation. On the same single cells, we perform cyclic immunofluorescence, which enables multiplexed immunofluorescence of more than 30 proteins on the same cell. Using cultured cells and rapid ex vivo cultures of colon cancer patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models, we identify Bak as a univariate correlate of apoptotic priming, find that poorly primed subpopulations can correspond to specific stages of the cell cycle, and, in some PDX models, identify increased expression of Bcl-XL, Mcl-1, or Her2 in subpopulations that are poorly primed for apoptosis. Last, we generate and validate mathematical models of single-cell priming that describe how targetable proteins contribute to apoptotic priming.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adg4128 | DOI Listing |
Ecology
September 2025
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Pathogens can alter the phenotype not only of exposed hosts, but also of future generations. Transgenerational immune priming, where parental infection drives reduced susceptibility of offspring, has been particularly well explored, but pathogens can also alter life history traits of offspring. Here, we examined the potential for transgenerational impacts of a microsporidian pathogen, Ordospora pajunii, by experimentally measuring the impact of maternal exposure on offspring fitness in the presence and absence of parasites, and then developing mathematical models that explored the population-level impacts of these transgenerational effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStem Cell Reports
August 2025
Department of Physiology II, Nara Medical University, 840 Shijo-cho, Kashihara, Nara 634-8521, Japan; Department of Genome Biology, Graduate School of Medicine, Osaka University, 2-2 Yamadaoka, Suita, Osaka 565-0871, Japan. Electronic address:
Naive and primed states represent distinct phases of pluripotency during early embryonic development, both of which can be captured and interconverted in vitro. To understand pluripotency regulation, we performed a recessive genetic screen using homozygous mutant mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs) and identified N-myristoyltransferase (NMT) as a novel regulator. Disruption of Nmt1 in mESCs conferred resistance to differentiation, and NMT suppression in mouse epiblast stem cells (mEpiSCs) promoted the conversion from the primed to the naive state.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Speech Lang Hear Res
September 2025
School of Humanities, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China.
Purpose: This study aimed to investigate the changes and deterioration in lexical processing caused by Alzheimer's disease (AD). It analyzed the differences in lexical processing between individuals with healthy controls, mild AD, and moderate AD as well as how these groups processed varying lexical aspects.
Method: A total of 180 older adults participated in the experiment, including 60 healthy controls, 60 with mild AD, and 60 with moderate AD.
PLoS One
August 2025
IRD Global, Hong Leong Building, Singapore, Singapore.
Introduction: Despite intensified global efforts to enhance immunization coverage, one in five children continue to miss out on life-saving vaccines, leaving them vulnerable to a range of vaccine-preventable diseases. In 2022, 14.3 million children failed to receive even a single dose of the pentavalent vaccine (Penta-1) by their first birthday, classified as "zero-dose penta".
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Rep
August 2025
Vollum Institute, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR 97239, USA. Electronic address:
How virus-host cell interactions and innate immune antagonism shape neurotropic infection dynamics across diverse brain cell types is largely unknown. To "unmask" and study how innate immune inhibition affects cell-type-specific transcriptional regulation of the human and viral genome, we perform single-cell RNA sequencing of human brain cell co-cultures, comparing an isolate of rabies virus (RABV) to its mutant incapable of antagonizing interferon- and nuclear factor (NF)-κB-dependent responses. RABV gene expression is shaped by host cell type.
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