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Hypoxia-inducible protein 2 mediates metabolic adaptation of Ly6ChighLy6Glow monocytes after stroke

New study from Weijie Chen, Xin Wang, Tingting Huang, Weifeng Yu.

Florent Ginhoux, Peiying Li (Shanghai Jiao Tong University) and colleagues identifies hypoxia-inducible protein 2 (HIG2) as a key regulator of anti-inflammatory property of Ly6ChighLy6Glow monocyte-derived macrophages in the ischemic brain after stroke through mediating phosphatidylcholine synthesis.


This study identifies hypoxia-inducible protein 2 (HIG2) as a key regulator of anti-inflammatory property of Ly6ChighLy6Glow monocyte-derived macrophages i.

USP10 Deubiquitinates MTX2 to Suppress cGAS-STING Signaling in MI

Zhao & colleagues found how a protective protein, USP10, helps limit excessive inflammation after a heart attack, which may open new avenues for treating cardiac injury. Learn more at.


BACKGROUND: Myocardial infarction (MI) results in 3 distinct regions within the left ventricle:

The infarct zone, the border zone (BZ), and the remote zone. A major focus of MI research.

Is investigating the intrinsic mechanisms in the BZ to alleviate myocardial injury.

USP10 (ubiquitin-specific peptidase 10) expression is reduced in BZ cardiomyocytes.

Teaching NeuroImages: Sacral Dural Arteriovenous Fistula With Supply From Bilateral Lateral Sacral Arteries

Teaching NeuroImages case: A 51-year-old man presented with a 3-month history of progressive lower extremity weakness and numbness, starting distally and progressing proximally, accompanied by mild gait difficulty but no bowel/bladder symptom. Read the full case.


Download PDF and Supplementary Material Download is in progress.

A PTPN23-dependent ESCRT pathway is essential for constitutive secretion in mammalian cells

Danièle Stalder, Conceição Pereira, David C. Gershlick et al. (University of Cambridge) uncover new regulators of Golgi-to-plasma membrane transport, showing that a PTPN23-dependent ESCRT pathway is essential for secretion of membrane & soluble cargoes, including hormones & antibodies.


Stalder and Pereira et al. combine affinity isolation of post-Golgi carriers, mass spectrometry, and a pooled CRISPR-KO screen to uncover new regulators of.

New DNA base editor minimizes bystander edits while maintaining high efficiency

The trajectory of base editing has been remarkable, progressing from the laboratory to patient care, treating debilitating or terminal illnesses, in less than a decade. A type of gene editing that makes chemical changes to our DNA, base editing was developed by Alexis Komor, associate professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics at the University of California San Diego.

For all of base editing’s success, it is still a relatively new technology, and researchers like Komor are working to improve its efficiency, while lowering the incidence of unwanted edits. One type of unwanted edit is called a bystander edit. This occurs when a base editor not only edits the desired nucleobase, but also edits surrounding bases as well. Komor’s lab has developed a way to minimize bystander edits. This work appears in Nature Biotechnology.

A neuron pair in fruit flies that makes life or death decisions

For the fruit fly, a sense of taste is critical to whether it thrives or dies. The little winged creature has taste organs in its mouthpiece as well as throughout its body, including its legs, abdomen and wing margins. When a fruit fly lands on a ripe or rotting fruit, it instantly receives information about whether the fruit is bitter or sweet. Sweetness indicates a caloric payday that cues the fly to feed; bitterness prompts the fly to move on from the potentially toxic substance.

Researchers in the lab of Brown University professor Gilad Barnea have identified the pair of neurons that make this critical choice. The insights on how flies navigate this complex decision-making process, a process not previously clear to scientists, are published online in Nature Communications.

“If a fly makes just one mistake about what to eat, it may die,” said Barnea, a professor of neuroscience and director of the Center for the Neurobiology of Cells and Circuits at Brown’s Carney Institute for Brain Science. “So the decision is super important. This newly discovered mechanism illustrates the impressive level of computation that a single neuron can do.”

Abstract: Decoding neurodegeneration one cell at a time

https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI199841 As part of the JCI’s Review Series on Neurodegeneration, Olivia Gautier, Thao P. Nguyen & Aaron D. Gitler explore the molecular basis for selective neuronal vulnerability and degeneration and summarize recent advances and applications of single-cell genomic approaches.


How do we decide whether we should choose single-cell or single-nucleus sequencing? This depends on sample types and biological applications. Single-cell sequencing is typically applied to fresh, readily dissociable tissues or cultured cells to study intact cell populations. Because it captures both cytoplasmic and nuclear transcripts, scRNA-seq provides a comprehensive view of cellular gene expression. However, tissue dissociation can induce stress-related transcriptional artifacts and introduce substantial cell-type bias. Large or fragile neurons are often lost during dissociation, whereas smaller cell types, such as astrocytes and oligodendrocytes, tend to be overrepresented. In contrast, single-nucleus sequencing is commonly used for frozen samples or for tissues that are difficult to dissociate, including the brain and spinal cord. Although fresh or fresh-frozen samples are typically used, snRNA-seq is compatible with formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) samples, enabling the analysis of archived human specimens. A key limitation is that snRNA-seq does not capture cytoplasmic transcripts and is therefore biased toward nuclear, often premature, mRNA species.

Spatial transcriptomics does not require tissue dissociation and enables examination of cellular transcriptomes within their native tissue niches. Some spatial transcriptomic technologies are now compatible with FFPE samples, allowing analyses of preserved clinical specimens along with fixed-frozen and fresh-frozen samples. These technologies can be broadly classified into two main categories: imaging-based and sequencing-based (Figure 2B). Imaging-based approaches, like multiplexed error-robust fluorescence in situ hybridization (MERFISH), spatially resolved transcript amplicon readout mapping (STARmap), and 10x Genomics Xenium, rely on probe hybridization and multiplexed imaging to detect and visualize transcripts at high spatial resolution, often achieving single-cell or even subcellular resolution (17, 18). Although whole-transcriptome measurements are possible, MERFISH typically targets predefined gene panels due to the constraints of iterative hybridization and imaging. In contrast, sequencing-based approaches, including NanoString GeoMx and 10x Genomics Visium, capture RNA on spatially barcoded tissue slides or nanobeads followed by next-generation sequencing. These methods generally recover a broader range of transcripts than imaging-based approaches but, in most cases, do not yet achieve true single-cell resolution. Instead, they measure gene expression within spatial “spots” that encompass multiple cells and therefore rely on computational deconvolution to infer cell-type composition. Newer spatial transcriptomic methods, like spatial enhanced resolution omics sequencing (Stereo-seq) and reverse-padlock amplicon-encoding fluorescence in situ hybridization (RAEFISH), are approaching single-cell and single-molecule resolution (1921).

In this Review, we summarize recent advances and applications of single-cell genomics approaches to study neurodegenerative disorders, including Alzheimer disease (AD), Parkinson disease (PD), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), frontotemporal dementia (FTD), and Huntington disease (HD). We focus on how these approaches provide insight into the unique vulnerabilities of specific neuronal populations, define novel disease-associated cellular states, and reveal contributions of non-neuronal cells to disease pathogenesis. We then look to the future, envisioning how these technologies will empower genetic screens to uncover modifiers of neurodegeneration and new therapeutic targets.

Prodrug lipid nanoparticle could unlock universal immunotherapy for solid cancers

Engineers at the University of Pennsylvania have developed a new type of lipid nanoparticle (LNP) that could one day serve as a universal immunotherapy for cancers that form solid tumors, including common variants such as cancers of the breast, liver, and colon.

One of the greatest challenges in immunotherapy is the exhaustion of T cells, the white blood cells responsible for detecting and destroying cancer cells. Many tumors produce an enzyme called IDO that dampens immune activity. Over time, exposure to the harsh environment inside tumors further weakens T cells.

The new particles counter both effects at once. By delivering a drug that blocks IDO together with mRNA that instructs cells to produce an immune-activating protein, the engineered nanoparticles reinvigorate exhausted T cells, enabling them to attack tumors without the need for costly and time-consuming, patient-specific adjustments.

The Effect of Exogenous Acid Identity on Iron Tetraphenylporphyrin-Catalyzed CO2 ReductionClick to copy article linkArticle link copied!

‘The Effect of Exogenous Acid Identity on Iron Tetraphenylporphyrin-Catalyzed CO2 Reduction’ from Inorganic Chemistry is currently free to read as an ACSEditorsChoice.

📖 Read the article.


Iron tetraphenylporphyrin (FeTPP) is a privileged electrocatalyst for the 2e–/2H+ reduction of CO2 to CO. FeTPP-catalyzed CO2 reduction typically employs phenol as an exogenous acid to promote the rate-limiting proton-coupled electron transfer. Beyond the observation that catalytic rates increase with decreasing pKa, the effects of acid identity on reaction kinetics are largely unexplored. Herein, we report rates of FeTPP-catalyzed CO2 reduction with structurally diverse O–H, N–H, and C–H acids. While many of these acids follow the expected Brønsted relationship, there are several notable exceptions: the fluorinated alcohols hexafluoroisopropanol (log(kcat) = 4.54) and 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol (log(kcat) = 3.55)─and the N–H acid imidazole (log(kcat) = 4.41)─display catalytic rates that are several times greater than rates obtained with similarly acidic phenols. Amides with pKas 19 (in dimethyl sulfoxide) display similar activity as comparably acidic O–H acids, while rates obtained with less acidic amides are ∼2 orders of magnitude slower than O–H donors of similar pKa. Each C–H acid affords poor activity. An Eyring analysis suggests that acids enforcing less ordered transition states afford superior kinetics. This study reveals that acid pKa is only one relevant parameter for altering catalytic rates, and judicious selection of the acid is crucial for enhancing catalytic rates.

Liquid biopsy method uses nanoparticle Raman signals to separate two lookalike enzymes

RIKEN researchers have demonstrated a method that can detect tiny amounts of biomarkers in liquid samples and can distinguish between highly similar biomarkers. This promises to boost the versatility and usefulness of liquid biopsies. The results are published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Liquid biopsies are powerful tools for research and diagnosis since they can detect minute amounts of biomarkers in blood, saliva and urine. In particular, they are often used to detect enzymes that are connected to diseases.

“During the COVID-19 pandemic, liquid biopsies attracted unprecedented attention as a diagnostic method for infectious diseases,” notes Rikiya Watanabe of the RIKEN Molecular Physiology Laboratory. “As a result, the effectiveness of liquid biopsies is now being recognized for both testing for infectious diseases but also for a wide range of medical diagnostics.”

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