Chemical Senses
◐ Oxford University Press (OUP)
Preprints posted in the last 7 days, ranked by how well they match Chemical Senses's content profile, based on 30 papers previously published here. The average preprint has a 0.01% match score for this journal, so anything above that is already an above-average fit.
Kuebler, I. R. K.; Vollan, J. D.; Chin, J. Y.; Suarez, M.; Bass, C. E.; Hubbard, N. A.; Wakabayashi, K. T.
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There is a dearth of information on how different cocktails sweetened with different sugars impact brain activity. Glucose enters the brain faster and in greater concentration than fructose and directly affects neuronal activity of melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) neurons. MCH signaling promotes both glucose drinking and alcohol intake by integrating central and sensory inputs, but it is currently unknown how MCH neuronal activity relates to sweetened cocktail drinking. This study sought to investigate the relationship between MCH activity and sugar-sweetened alcoholic cocktail drinking. We also sought to compare MCH neuronal responses to the sugar solutions without alcohol as well as their response to sensory stimuli. In female and male rats, we used fiber photometry to monitor MCH neurons in response to sensory stimuli and during drinking of 10% glucose, 10% fructose, and glucose or fructose cocktails with 1.25% or 10% alcohol. We found that MCH activity rises in response to a variety of sensory stimuli and peaks before the start of drinking for all cocktails, before returning to baseline near the start of drinking. The cocktail type impacted the dynamics of MCH activity, where increased alcohol concentration resulted in earlier MCH activity for fructose but not glucose cocktails. Finally, we found that peak MCH activity during drinking is correlated with approach behavior for all sugar and cocktail types. These findings suggest that glucose and alcohol may interact to directly influence MCH activity. Further, MCH neurons may regulate cocktail drinking in response to sugar type and alcohol concentration. O_FIG O_LINKSMALLFIG WIDTH=200 HEIGHT=118 SRC="FIGDIR/small/719280v1_ufig1.gif" ALT="Figure 1"> View larger version (17K): org.highwire.dtl.DTLVardef@b992c3org.highwire.dtl.DTLVardef@1526895org.highwire.dtl.DTLVardef@1504c6dorg.highwire.dtl.DTLVardef@c990fc_HPS_FORMAT_FIGEXP M_FIG C_FIG New and noteworthyFiber photometry was used to monitor lateral hypothalamic melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) neurons in male and female rats during sensory stimuli and drinking of glucose, fructose, or glucose- or fructose-sweetened alcoholic cocktails. Subsecond-scale changes in MCH activity occurred after stimuli. Peak MCH activity during drinking was correlated with approach behavior. Alcohol concentration only impacted MCH activity with fructose cocktails. We discuss the implications of MCH dynamics towards brain function, associative learning, and alcohol use disorder.
Hajicek, J.; Harris, S. E.; Neely, S. T.
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Purpose: This research sought to develop a low-cognitive-load speech-in-noise test based on consonant confusions with the potential for assessing hearing-aid benefit. Methods: Vowel-consonant-vowel (VCV) stimuli with added speech-shaped noise were presented as a closed-set consonant identification task. Initially, consonant-confusion matrices were used to select, from a larger set of consonants and vowel contexts, a set of ten consonants and associated signal-to-noise ratios (SNR) that were sensitive to hearing loss. The sensitivity of the qVCV test to hearing loss was validated by comparing predicted pure-tone average (PTA) hearing thresholds with their audiometric PTA. Clinical viability of the qVCV test was assessed by comparisons to the QuickSIN test. Hearing-aid benefit was assessed by comparing test scores in unaided and aided conditions. Results: The consonants most sensitive to hearing loss were /b d g t k v z s [esh] n/ in the vowel context /[a]/. A cross-validated prediction of PTA had a mean-absolute error of 5.7 dB. The repeatability of qVCV at 50 trials was equivalent to the QuickSIN average of two lists. Hearing-aid benefit was quantified as a decibel reduction in hearing loss. Conclusions: qVCV and QuickSIN performed similarly when test times are equated. The advantages of qVCV include lower cognitive demand, fewer learning eeects, and automated scoring. PTA predicted by qVCV which greatly exceeds audiometric PTA may indicate either cognitive deficits or cochlear neural degeneration. The qVCV quantification of hearing-aid benefit may have clinical value
Lien, J. T.-H.; Strahl, S.; Garcia, C.; Vickers, D.
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The human auditory system decomposes complex sounds into distinct components via a collection of processing steps. Knowing whether Spiral Ganglion Cells (SGCs) play an active role in the decoding of complex sounds can facilitate the development of Cochlear Implant (CI) coding strategies and clinical assessment tools. Early animal studies reported SGCs being similar across different characteristic frequencies (CFs). In this study, human electrically evoked compound action potentials (eCAPs) were analysed to probe the relationship between the reciprocal of CF and the duration of the eCAP. A significant relationship could indicate that SGCs may not simply be passive cables. eCAP datasets from 6 published studies (175 CI users, 1243 recordings) were analysed and their peaks were automatically labelled. The n1p2 latency was derived for each recording as a proxy of the action potential duration. The CF of each recording was estimated by mapping the average insertion angle of the electrode to the human SGC map. A weak but statistically significant relationship was observed between the n1p2 latency and the reciprocal of CF (random-effects model with random intercepts for subject, r = 0.09, p = 0.024, n= 450) supporting the hypothesis that lower CF is associated with slower repolarisation (longer n1p2 latency) in human spiral ganglion cells.
Chen, L.-Y.; Lin, X.-Y.; Wang, K.-X.; Xiao, F.; Tang, H.-T.; Dong, S.; Zheng, L.-L.; Xia, Y.-H.
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Elongases are essential enzymes in the biosynthesis of sex pheromones in many lepidopteran species. Together with desaturases, they determine the carbon skeletons of many pheromone precursors, thereby contributing to the production of species-specific chemical signals. However, to date, such fatty acyl elongase gene has not been functionally characterized. The rice leaffolder, Cnaphalocrocis medinalis, utilizes a blend of C18 monounsaturated aldehydes and alcohols as its sex pheromone, implying a critical elongation step from C16 precursors. In this study, we performed pheromone gland transcriptome analysis and identified 45 candidate biosynthetic genes. Functional assays in Nicotiana benthamiana showed that the {Delta}11 desaturase Cmed070400 produces (Z)-11-hexadecenoic acid, which serves as the substrate for elongation. Multiple elongases catalyzed its conversion to (Z)-13-octadecenoic acid, with Cmed092440 showing the highest activity. These findings provide the first experimental evidence for elongase-mediated formation of C18 pheromone precursors in C. medinalis. The identification of a minimal set of functionally active enzymes further enables reconstruction of this pathway in plant systems, offering a basis for sustainable production of pheromone precursors for pest management applications.
Dolin, P.; Keogh, K. A.; Rowell, J.; Edmonds, C.; Kielar, D.; Meyers, J.; Esterberg, E.; Nham, T.; Chen, S. Y.
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Purpose: We evaluated healthcare resource utilization (HCRU) and costs in patients with eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis (EGPA). Methods: Patients with newly diagnosed EGPA (2017--2021), [≥]12 months' pre-diagnosis health plan enrollment, and [≥]1 inpatient or [≥]2 outpatient claims with an EGPA diagnosis were included. Follow-up was from EGPA diagnosis until disenrollment or database end. HCRU and health insurer payment costs during follow-up were compared with those for matched cohorts of general insured patients without EGPA (comparison A) and without EGPA but with severe uncontrolled asthma (SUA; comparison B). Results: In comparison A, all-cause HCRU was higher in the EGPA cohort (n = 213) versus matched patients (n = 779) for all clinical encounters/pharmacy claim types; annualized, mean total all-cause costs were 16-fold higher ($117,563/patient) versus matched patients ($7,520/patient). In comparison B, all-cause HCRU was higher for the EGPA cohort (n = 182) versus the matched SUA cohort (n = 640) for all clinical encounters/pharmacy claim types, with 5-fold higher mean total all-cause costs ($118,127/patient vs $22,286/patient). In both EGPA cohorts, HCRU and associated costs increased between the baseline and follow-up periods. Conclusions: These findings highlight the need for more effective treatments to reduce the clinical and economic burden of EGPA.
Gilbert, H.; Foury, A.; Agboola, L.; Devailly, G.; Gondret, F.; Moisan, M.-P.
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AO_SCPLOWBSTRACTC_SCPLOWImproving feed efficiency in pigs is essential for reducing production costs and environmental impacts. This study examines the influence of circadian feeding rhythms and genetic polymorphisms on feed efficiency variability using two pig lines divergently selected for Residual Feed Intake (RFI) over ten generations. Feeding behavior was monitored using automatic concentrate dispensers, recording 6,494,097 visits from 3,824 pigs to analyze meal frequency, duration, and diurnal patterns. LRFI pigs ate less frequently, with larger meals and longer durations, they exhibited two distinct feeding peaks: one around 8:00 AM and a higher one at 5:00 PM and they consumed more feed during the diurnal period and less at night. HRFI pigs showed a smoother, less rhythmic feeding behavior with increased nocturnal intake. The differences between the two RFI lines became more pronounced as the number of generations of selection increased, suggesting a genetic basis. Feeding behaviors, including intake during the two main diurnal peaks, were found to be heritable (heritability estimates: 0.30-0.40) and genetic correlations were observed between feed intake and RFI, especially for intake between the two peaks. Then, we investigated the evolution of allele frequencies of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in DNA sequences surrounding 10 core clock genes (ARNTL, CLOCK, CRY1, CRY2, NPAS2, NR1D1, PER1, PER2, PER3, RORA) along generations of selection. SNPs with significant frequency changes were mapped to regulatory regions and transposable elements, especially in HRFI line, suggesting potential functional impacts on circadian regulation. These results underscore the role of feeding behavior and genetic variation in feed efficiency, offering insights for breeding programs aimed at improving metabolic efficiency and sustainability in pig production.
Al-Naji, A.; Schubotz, R. I.; Zahedi, A.
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Research in cognitive neuroscience has relied on simple, highly controlled stimuli due to the difficulty in developing standardized, ecologically valid stimulus sets. However, there is a consensus that using ecologically valid stimuli is imperative to generalize results beyond controlled laboratory settings. The current study introduces a naturalistic audio stimulus database, consisting of short, recognizable, and emotionally rated stimuli. To create such a database, the current study collected 291 audio files from a wide range of sources. 361 participants rated the audio clips on emotionality, arousal, and recognizability, and subsequently freely described the audios by typing what they believed the sound to be. The text responses of the participants were embedded and clustered using an unsupervised machine-learning algorithm to derive a participant-grounded organization of auditory object categories. The results indicate audio clips were easily recognizable, while emotionality and arousal ratings showed broad variability, making the database suitable for diverse experimental needs. Furthermore, the final database comprises 10 distinct semantic categories, providing a diverse set of auditory stimuli.
C A, A.; Upadhayay, R.; Patankar, S. A.
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Toxoplasma gondii is a widespread human pathogen that has multiple, clinically relevant stages in its complex life cycle, including fast-replicating tachyzoites and latent bradyzoites. Bradyzoite differentiation is triggered by stress responses that lead to changes in transcription, translation, and metabolism. Two aspects of this process are addressed in this report: first, whether proteins that play roles in bradyzoite differentiation are specific to T. gondii and other bradyzoite-forming parasites of the Sarcocystidae family, and second, whether new bradyzoite differentiation proteins can be identified in T. gondii. To answer these questions, a phylogenetic approach was used, comparing proteomes of select members of the Sarcocystidae family that form morphologically different bradyzoite cysts and members of the Eimeriidae family that do not form cysts. This approach resulted in 8 distinct clusters of T. gondii proteins that reflected different conservation patterns; for example, one cluster showed conservation among all organisms, while another showed conservation in bradyzoite cyst-forming organisms. Known T. gondii proteins involved in bradyzoite differentiation were found in all clusters, indicating that this process uses both highly conserved pathways as well as bradyzoite-specific pathways. Importantly, the cluster containing proteins that are conserved in bradyzoite-forming organisms contained several known regulators of bradyzoites, and will be a source for identifying novel T. gondii proteins that are involved in bradyzoite differentiation.
Bottone, D.; Gerken, L. R.; Habermann, S.; Mateos, J. M.; Lucas, M. S.; Riemann, J.; Fachet, M.; Resch-Genger, U.; Kissling, V. M.; Roesslein, M.; Gogos, A.; Herrmann, I. K.
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AO_SCPLOWBSTRACTC_SCPLOWSpatially resolved characterization of nanomaterial (NM) distribution within cellular ultrastructure is essential for understanding NM fate and activity in biological systems. Volume electron microscopy (vEM) is uniquely positioned to address this challenge, yet fully documented quantitative pipelines that simultaneously segment NMs and cellular structures remain scarce. Here, an end-to-end analytical pipeline is presented based on the example of serial block-face scanning electron microscopy (SBF-SEM) data of tumor spheroids containing nanoparticles (NPs). A hybrid segmentation strategy is adopted: a fine-tuned Cellpose-SAM model for cells and nuclei, and an empirical Bayes approach for AuNPs. The fine-tuned model outperforms both the pre-trained baseline and benchmark experiments in Amira, and shows good generalization to 2D EM datasets of varying sample types, suggesting potential as a general-purpose segmentation model for electron microscopy. Full 3D reconstruction of NP distributions reveals preferential clustering in the perinuclear region, with a median nucleus-to-NP distance of 2.57 {micro}m and NM uptake spanning several orders of magnitude across cells. Furthermore, morphological analysis of segmented cells and nuclei using 3D shape descriptors and local curvature metrics provides quantitative access to features inaccessible from single sections. Together, these results establish a reproducible, open framework for the joint quantitative analysis of NM distribution and cellular morphology in vEM data.
Lemasle, P.-G.; Paillisson, J.-M.; Roussel, J.-M.; Lacroix, R.; Lacroix, P.; Lacroix, G.; Edeline, E.
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The theory of island biogeography and its trophic extensions predict that both species richness and food-web complexity should increase with increasing ecosystem surface area. Accordingly, Species-Area Relationships (SARs) and Network-Area Relationships (NARs) are often observed to be positively-sloped, an observation that came to be considered as a law, and on which rest many area-based conservation plans for biodiversity. However, our mechanistic understanding of the driving mechanisms of SARs and NARs slopes remains limited, undermining our ability to predict how biodiversity will respond to habitat gain or loss. We show in 180 rural ponds sampled across five years that invasive alien predators reversed the SAR and NARs from positive in invader-free ponds, to negative in invaded ponds. Relationship reversal resulted from a higher prevalence of invasive alien predators driving magnified prey extinctions and simplified food webs in larger ponds. The ability of invasive alien predators to reverse SAR and NARs presumably reflected disproportionately high predation rates combined with a low sensitivity to prey extinction conferred by a wide trophic generalism. In a world where virtually all ecosystems face biological invasions, omnipresent invasive alien predators stress the pivotal role played by predation in shaping biocomplexity-area relationships, and highlight a growing need to preserve small ecosystems where invasive alien predators are less prevalent.
Wirshing, A. C. E.; Yan, M.; Lew, D. J.
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Cellular organelle content is fairly constant within a given cell type. This is accomplished in part by ensuring equitable organelle partitioning during division. Much of our understanding of organelle inheritance has come from investigating cells that divide in half producing two daughter cells. However, more elaborate division strategies that give rise to multiple daughters are not uncommon in nature. Here, we present the first characterization of organelle inheritance in a fungus that grows by multi-budding, producing several (2-20) daughter cells in a single cell cycle. We find that some organelles (mitochondria and ER) are evenly delivered to all growing buds, while others (vacuole and peroxisomes) are more variably inherited. We discuss the implications of even and uneven inheritance for this polyextremotolerant fungus capable of growing in dynamic, and diverse, environments.
Rossotti, M.; Burgos, J. I.; Ramms, D. J.; Romero, A.; Burgui, V.; Zelicovich, M.; Traba, S. A.; Heidenreich, A. C.; Gutkind, J. S.; Rodriguez-Segui, S. A.
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Diabetes mellitus is characterized by chronic hyperglycemia and loss of pancreatic {beta}-cell function and mass. Current therapies focus on {beta}-cell protection and regeneration, led by GLP-1 receptor agonists. The G protein -subunit (Gs) acts as a key signaling node downstream of numerous GPCRs, integrating diverse signals that impact {beta}-cell mass and function. Elucidating the integrative role of pancreatic Gs signaling is thus crucial for understanding {beta}-cell biology. Our map of the pancreatic Gs-coupled GPCR landscape reveals sophisticated, cell-type-specific networks, positioning Gs as a central hub for intra-pancreatic communication. Previous studies in mice with {beta}-cell-specific or whole-pancreatic Gs deletion demonstrated reduced {beta}-cell mass, impaired insulin secretion, and glucose intolerance. The stronger phenotype in the whole-pancreas model--marked by -cell expansion and abnormal distribution--points to a crucial role for Gs in differential control of postnatal - and {beta}-cell proliferation. Here, we analyze the organ-wide consequences of Gs deletion using pancreas-specific Gs knockout mice (PGsKO). Consistent with prior findings, PGsKO mice exhibit reduced weight gain from four weeks and severe diabetes due to decreased {beta}-cell mass and concomitant -cell expansion. Furthermore, Gs loss induces profound architectural and functional defects in the exocrine pancreas, linked to YAP reactivation in acinar cells. Importantly, we observed attempted {beta}-cell regeneration in PGsKO mice. Although insufficient to reverse diabetes, our results delineate the full pancreatic phenotype that may facilitate these regenerative efforts and suggest that strategically biasing GPCR signaling network away from Gs could be a viable strategy to promote {beta}-cell regeneration from other pancreatic cell types. ARTICLE HIGHLIGHTSO_LIGs is a central signaling hub that integrates diverse GPCR inputs across pancreatic cell types, yet its organ-wide role remained poorly defined. C_LIO_LIWe addressed how pancreas-wide Gs deletion disrupts both endocrine and exocrine compartments, and whether regenerative programs are engaged. C_LIO_LIGs loss caused severe diabetes through {beta}-cell loss and -cell expansion, induced profound exocrine defects with YAP reactivation, and triggered attempted {beta}-cell regeneration from ducts and potentially other cell types. C_LIO_LIOur findings suggest that strategically biasing GPCR signaling away from Gs could promote regeneration from non-{beta}-cell sources, offering new therapeutic avenues for diabetes. C_LI
Al-Sammak, B. F.; Mahmood, H. M.; Bengoechea-Alonso, M. T.; Horn, H. F.; Ericsson, J.
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This report identifies a bidirectional signaling axis connecting lipid metabolism to nuclear mechanotransduction, with the potential to control fatty acid/triglyceride metabolism. The sterol regulatory element-binding (SREBP) family of transcription factors control fatty acid, triglyceride and cholesterol synthesis and metabolism. The family consists of three members: SREBP1a, SREBP1c, and SREBP2, that are regulated by intracellular cholesterol levels and insulin signaling. The SREBP2-dependent control of the LDL receptor gene is a well-established target for cholesterol-lowering therapeutics and the activity of SREBP1c is an attractive target in metabolic disease. In the current report, we identify SYNE4 (nesprin-4), a component of the Linker of Nucleoskeleton and Cytoskeleton (LINC) complex, as a direct target of the SREBP family of transcription factors, and show that nesprin-4 in turn supports SREBP1c function. We identify functional SREBP binding sites in the human SYNE4 promoter and demonstrate that these are required for the sterol- and SREBP-dependent regulation of the promoter. Furthermore, we show that the endogenous SYNE4 gene is also regulated by SREBP1/2 and intracellular sterol levels. Interestingly, SREBP2 is responsible for the sterol regulation of the SYNE4 gene in HepG2 cells, while SREBP1 is the major regulator in MCF7 cells, demonstrating that diberent cell types use diberent SREBP paralogs to regulate the same promoter/gene. Importantly, we find that nesprin-4 is a positive regulator of SREBP1c expression and function in HepG2 cells and during the diberentiation of human adipose-derived stem cells. In summary, the current report identifies a novel regulatory interaction between lipid metabolism and the LINC complex. Importantly, we demonstrate that this signaling axis is bidirectional, forming a closed loop that has the potential to control SREBP1c activity and thereby fatty acid and triglyceride synthesis/metabolism. Based on our data, we propose that the nesprin-4-dependent regulation of SREBP1c could represent a novel therapeutic target in metabolic disease.
Wu, H.; Hegde, R. S.
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We have curated and annotated the topologic determinants for all human membrane proteins made at the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). This census of 4,863 proteins allowed us to systematically analyze the physical properties of their 20,546 TMDs and flanking soluble regions. Single-pass proteins house the majority of large exoplasmic and cytosolic domains, whereas multipass proteins overwhelmingly contain short loops and tails. All classes of transmembrane domains (TMDs) have positively charged cytosolic flanks, but negatively charged exoplasmic flanks feature primarily on TMDs inserted by Oxa1-family insertases. The TMD-pair, a topologic unit of two TMDs with a short exoplasmic loop, is the dominant building block of multipass proteins. TMD-pairs accommodate high-hydrophilicity and charge-containing TMDs crucial for multipass protein functions. We interpret these context-dependent TMD features in light of current mechanistic models for membrane protein biogenesis and function. Our findings have implications for the evolution of membrane proteomes and for engineering new membrane proteins.
Kavanagh, T.; Strobbe, A.; Balcomb, K.; Agius, C.; Gao, J.; Genoud, S.; Kanshin, E.; Ueberheide, B.; Kassiou, M.; Werry, E.; Halliday, G.; Drummond, E.
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BackgroundTau aggregation is the defining feature of tauopathies, however, the mechanisms by which distinct tau strains drive disease-specific responses remain unclear. Existing models largely rely on recombinant tau seeding or tau overexpression, which fail to capture the biochemical diversity of pathological tau. The aim of this study was to develop a robust and reproducible human cell-based model of disease-specific tau pathology and to use this model to determine how tau from unique diseases impact tau accumulation and lysosomal dysfunction. MethodsPatient-derived tau aggregates were enriched from post-mortem brain tissue obtained from sporadic Alzheimers disease (AD), Picks disease (PiD), progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), and control cases using phosphotungstic acid precipitation. Patient-derived tau preparations were biochemically characterised by immunoblotting and mass spectrometry and normalised for tau content prior to seeding. Patient-derived tau aggregates were seeded into multiple human immortalised cell lines (SH-SY5Y, M03.13, U-87 MG, and U-118 MG cells) and iPSC-derived astrocytes. Tau seeding efficiency, aggregate morphology, and integrity of the autophagy-lysosomal pathway was assessed using quantitative imaging approaches. ResultsPatient-derived tau seeds retained disease-specific phosphorylation patterns and isoform composition and led to reproducible, dose-dependent insoluble tau accumulation in all cell lines tested. Despite equivalent tau input and similar background protein composition, PiD-derived tau had the most aggressive pathological signature, showing the highest number of tau aggregates per cell and inducing system wide disruptions in the autophagy lysosomal system including increased SQSTM1 puncta and lysosomal damage markers. Seeding with AD-derived tau led to a high number of tau aggregates per cell and more specifically depleted the lysosomal protease CTSD and uniquely co-seeded A{beta} pathology. Seeding with PSP-derived tau resulted in only a moderate number of tau aggregates per cell and uniquely caused increased lysosomal biogenesis. ConclusionsTogether, these results demonstrate that intrinsic properties of human tau strains drive disease-specific cellular responses and establish a scalable, physiologically relevant platform for dissecting tau-cell interactions and screening therapeutics across tauopathies.
Gaigne, E.; Dezerald, O.; Gorzerino, C.; Coudreuse, J.; Bennevault, Y.; Pannard, A.; Edeline, E.
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Abrupt regime shifts of complex ecosystems between alternative stable states are widespread in nature. Yet, our mechanistic understanding of disturbance-shift-ecosystem functioning relationships remains poor, and it is further unclear whether biotic disturbances can drive such shifts. Using a 5-year pond experiment, we demonstrate that invasion by the red swamp crayfish (Procambarus clarkii) drove a regime shift from a clear-water, macrophyte-dominated, to a turbid, phytoplankton-dominated state. The regime shift was associated with increased water temperature due to increased water turbidity enhanced light absorption, and with a seasonal switch of ecosystem metabolism from hetero-to autotrophy due to decreased respiration in summer, despite constant gross primary production. Reducing crayfish population densities by 44 % failed to move ecosystems back towards their initial state and functioning. Our results stress that biotic disturbances may have hardly-reversible consequences on the biophysical and biogeochemical processes that support ecosystem functioning.
Johnston, I.; Johnson, E. E.; Khan, A.; Longworth, M. S.; McDonald, C.
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Intestinal epithelial cells are central players in mucosal barrier integrity and host-microbe interactions. Genetic studies have revealed that epithelial dysfunction is a key contributor to the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease. Non-SMC condensin II complex subunit D3 (NCAPD3) is essential for chromatin organization and stability. NCAPD3 also promotes antimicrobial defense and autophagy responses in vitro. NCAPD3 expression is decreased in intestinal epithelial cells from patients with ulcerative colitis; however, it is not known whether loss of NCAPD3 expression drives intestinal barrier dysfunction or is a result of disease-associated inflammation. To investigate this relationship in vivo, a tissue-specific approach was required, as global constitutive knockout of NCAPD3 is embryonic lethal. Therefore, a transgenic mouse line with doxycycline-inducible expression of a short hairpin RNA targeting NCAPD3 restricted to villin-expressing cells was generated (NCAPD3KD mice) to enable the study of NCAPD3 function in the intestinal epithelium. Treatment of NCAPD3KD mice with 9-tert-butyl doxycycline resulted in [~]75% reduction of NCAPD3 protein in EpCAM intestinal cells. Short-term epithelial NCAPD3 knockdown did not induce spontaneous colitis but was associated with increased serum amyloid A and a trend towards increased intestinal permeability. Upon dextran sodium sulfate or Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium {Delta}AroA challenge, NCAPD3KD mice exhibited exacerbated weight loss, higher disease activity, increased histopathological damage, abnormal colonic cytokines and chemokines, and significantly increased intestinal permeability. These results indicate that NCAPD3 expression in the intestinal epithelium is required for optimal barrier maintenance and antimicrobial defense under chemical or microbial stress. These findings support prior in vitro observations and solidify NCAPD3 as a regulator of intestinal epithelial barrier function and mucosal host defense. Author SummaryNCAPD3 is a multifunctional protein with established roles in chromatin organization, genome stability, mitochondrial function, and antimicrobial defense. Dysregulated NCAPD3 is implicated in human diseases, such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and microcephaly; however, due to its essential role in cellular division, determination of whether NCAPD3 loss drives these pathologies in vivo has been lacking. Using a new transgenic mouse model that selectively reduces NCAPD3 expression in intestinal epithelial cells, our study establishes NCAPD3 as an epithelial regulator of the mammalian intestine that enhances epithelial barrier resilience and antimicrobial defense during stress. Although dispensable for short-term basal homeostasis, NCAPD3 function becomes critical during epithelial injury and enteric infection. Reduced NCAPD3 expression may therefore lower the threshold for inflammatory disease by weakening barrier integrity, amplifying inflammatory cascades, and impairing antimicrobial defenses. These findings position NCAPD3 as a potential modulator of IBD susceptibility and highlight chromatin organization as an important, previously underappreciated layer of intestinal epithelial regulation.
Mays, A.; Cabrera, F.; Macias-Munoz, A.
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BackgroundTransposable elements (TEs) are repetitive genetic elements that can jump to new loci causing genome expansions, structural rearrangements, and can, ultimately, propel the evolution of genomes. Despite their significance, the role of TEs in the evolution of genomes and phylogenetic groups remains largely understudied in early diverging lineages. Further, the extent to which TE content varies across species is still an open question. Medusozoa, a group within Cnidaria encompassing jellyfish and hydroids, exhibits an exceptional diversity of life history strategies, body plans, and physiological capabilities. These characteristics, along with its early-diverging phylogenetic position, establish Medusozoa as an ideal system for investigating the composition and evolutionary history of TEs within the group. ResultsWe generated a custom repeat library built from annotations of 25 Medusozoan genomes and used it to characterize TEs, aiming to identify lineage-specific TE content and activity that may correlate with the diversity observed within the group. We found that repetitive element percentage and genome size varied considerably, with Hydrozoa exhibiting the most variation among classes in both respects. DNA transposons were the most prevalent TE classification in all but two genomes, averaging 28% of all genomes. Intra-genus comparisons revealed a surprising degree of differences in TE content. In the genus Aurelia, the expansion of a single DNA transposon superfamily accounted for much of the difference in repetitive element percentage between two species, whereas in the genus Turritopsis, a similar divergence resulted from the proliferation of multiple superfamilies. Interestingly, most genomes showed evidence of recent TE expansions, suggesting ongoing activity in many medusozoan species. ConclusionWe present the first comparative analysis of TEs across all medusozoan classes. Our results reveal class-specific TE dynamics and highlight cases of TE proliferations as lineages diverge. This research provides data on TE activity and diversity that can be used as a resource for future study and fills important gaps in our understanding of TEs in early diverging animal lineages.
Frapporti, G.; Capuozzo, A.; Colombo, E.; Fioretti, P.; D'Amore, V. M.; Di Leva, F. S.; Lama, A.; Tripathi, V.; Medaglia, S.; Waich, S.; Montani, C.; Perez-Carrion, M. D.; Marte, A.; Onofri, F.; Gloeckner, C. J.; Marinelli, L.; Seneci, P.; Hess, M. W.; Medina, D. L.; Piccoli, G.
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The maintenance of protein homeostasis is vital for all cells. Alteration in protein handling underlies several diseases. The small molecule sephin1 is a promising clinical candidate against proteostasis disruption, but its mechanism of action is still uncertain. Our experimental evidence shows that sephin1 binds G-actin and drives actin cytoskeleton misfolding, and eventually, Golgi disintegration. At first, sephin1 impairs the autophagic flux and elicits the phosphorylation of the subunit of eIF2 and the ER-stress independent expression of CHOP via GCN2 kinase. Sephin1 also inhibits the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTORC1), activates the transcription Factor EB (TFEB), drives the expression of TFEB-direct target genes, and eventually stimulates the autophagy lysosomal pathway. Our results reveal that the actin cytoskeleton may regulate autophagy via mTORC1-TFEB complemented with the GCN2-eIF2-CHOP signaling pathway.
Sun, C.; Thomas, R.; Stringer, C.; Galani, K.; Ho, L.-L.; Sun, N.; Renfro, A.; Wright, S.; Firenze, R.; Tsai, L.-H.; Head, E.; Kellis, M.; Yang, J.
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Down syndrome (DS), caused by trisomy 21, confers a near-universal risk for Alzheimers disease (AD), yet individuals exhibit marked variability in cognitive decline, suggesting the presence of cellular mechanisms that modulate vulnerability and resilience. However, these mechanisms remain poorly defined in the human brain. Here, we integrate matched single-nucleus RNA-seq and ATAC-seq profiles from the prefrontal cortex (PFC) and amygdala (AMY) of age-matched individuals with DS with and without AD (DSAD), enabling direct comparison within a shared genetic background. We identify basal astrocytes in the PFC as a selectively vulnerable cell state in DSAD, characterized by both reduced abundance and coordinated transcriptional and regulatory reprogramming. This state exhibits a shift away from homeostatic support functions, with decreased cytokine signaling and lipid-handling programs, alongside increased steroid- and nuclear receptor-associated activity. Concomitantly, chromatin accessibility profiling reveals reduced engagement of immune- and stress-responsive transcription factor programs, including AP-1, STAT, and BACH families, with linked regulatory perturbations at loci such as ABCA1, DAB2IP, and IL1RAP. Together, these findings define a previously unrecognized astrocyte state marked by epigenetic constraint and diminished responsiveness to stress and inflammatory signals, distinguishing it from classical reactive astrocyte phenotypes. Our results nominate PFC basal astrocytes as a key locus of vulnerability in DSAD and suggest that failure to mount appropriate astrocyte responses, rather than overt activation alone, may contribute to neurodegenerative progression.