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Chemical mutagenesis of a GPCR ligand: Detoxifying “inflammo-attraction” to direct therapeutic stem cell migration

A transplanted stem cell’s engagement with a pathologic niche is the first step in its restoring homeostasis to that site. Inflammatory chemokines are constitutively produced in such a niche; their binding to receptors on the stem cell helps direct that cell’s “pathotropism.” Neural stem cells (NSCs...

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Autores principales: Lee, Jean-Pyo, Zhang, Runquan, Yan, Maocai, Duggineni, Srinivas, Wakeman, Dustin R., Niles, Walter L., Feng, Yongmei, Chen, Justin, Hamblin, Milton H., Han, Edward B., Gonzalez, Rodolfo, Fang, Xiao, Zhu, Yinsong, Wang, Juan, Xu, Yan, Wenger, David A., Seyfried, Thomas N., An, Jing, Sidman, Richard L., Huang, Ziwei, Snyder, Evan Y.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: National Academy of Sciences 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7733796/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33219123
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1911444117
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author Lee, Jean-Pyo
Zhang, Runquan
Yan, Maocai
Duggineni, Srinivas
Wakeman, Dustin R.
Niles, Walter L.
Feng, Yongmei
Chen, Justin
Hamblin, Milton H.
Han, Edward B.
Gonzalez, Rodolfo
Fang, Xiao
Zhu, Yinsong
Wang, Juan
Xu, Yan
Wenger, David A.
Seyfried, Thomas N.
An, Jing
Sidman, Richard L.
Huang, Ziwei
Snyder, Evan Y.
author_facet Lee, Jean-Pyo
Zhang, Runquan
Yan, Maocai
Duggineni, Srinivas
Wakeman, Dustin R.
Niles, Walter L.
Feng, Yongmei
Chen, Justin
Hamblin, Milton H.
Han, Edward B.
Gonzalez, Rodolfo
Fang, Xiao
Zhu, Yinsong
Wang, Juan
Xu, Yan
Wenger, David A.
Seyfried, Thomas N.
An, Jing
Sidman, Richard L.
Huang, Ziwei
Snyder, Evan Y.
author_sort Lee, Jean-Pyo
collection PubMed
description A transplanted stem cell’s engagement with a pathologic niche is the first step in its restoring homeostasis to that site. Inflammatory chemokines are constitutively produced in such a niche; their binding to receptors on the stem cell helps direct that cell’s “pathotropism.” Neural stem cells (NSCs), which express CXCR4, migrate to sites of CNS injury or degeneration in part because astrocytes and vasculature produce the inflammatory chemokine CXCL12. Binding of CXCL12 to CXCR4 (a G protein-coupled receptor, GPCR) triggers repair processes within the NSC. Although a tool directing NSCs to where needed has been long-sought, one would not inject this chemokine in vivo because undesirable inflammation also follows CXCL12–CXCR4 coupling. Alternatively, we chemically “mutated” CXCL12, creating a CXCR4 agonist that contained a strong pure binding motif linked to a signaling motif devoid of sequences responsible for synthetic functions. This synthetic dual-moity CXCR4 agonist not only elicited more extensive and persistent human NSC migration and distribution than did native CXCL 12, but induced no host inflammation (or other adverse effects); rather, there was predominantly reparative gene expression. When co-administered with transplanted human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived hNSCs in a mouse model of a prototypical neurodegenerative disease, the agonist enhanced migration, dissemination, and integration of donor-derived cells into the diseased cerebral cortex (including as electrophysiologically-active cortical neurons) where their secreted cross-corrective enzyme mediated a therapeutic impact unachieved by cells alone. Such a “designer” cytokine receptor-agonist peptide illustrates that treatments can be controlled and optimized by exploiting fundamental stem cell properties (e.g., “inflammo-attraction”).
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spelling pubmed-77337962020-12-21 Chemical mutagenesis of a GPCR ligand: Detoxifying “inflammo-attraction” to direct therapeutic stem cell migration Lee, Jean-Pyo Zhang, Runquan Yan, Maocai Duggineni, Srinivas Wakeman, Dustin R. Niles, Walter L. Feng, Yongmei Chen, Justin Hamblin, Milton H. Han, Edward B. Gonzalez, Rodolfo Fang, Xiao Zhu, Yinsong Wang, Juan Xu, Yan Wenger, David A. Seyfried, Thomas N. An, Jing Sidman, Richard L. Huang, Ziwei Snyder, Evan Y. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Biological Sciences A transplanted stem cell’s engagement with a pathologic niche is the first step in its restoring homeostasis to that site. Inflammatory chemokines are constitutively produced in such a niche; their binding to receptors on the stem cell helps direct that cell’s “pathotropism.” Neural stem cells (NSCs), which express CXCR4, migrate to sites of CNS injury or degeneration in part because astrocytes and vasculature produce the inflammatory chemokine CXCL12. Binding of CXCL12 to CXCR4 (a G protein-coupled receptor, GPCR) triggers repair processes within the NSC. Although a tool directing NSCs to where needed has been long-sought, one would not inject this chemokine in vivo because undesirable inflammation also follows CXCL12–CXCR4 coupling. Alternatively, we chemically “mutated” CXCL12, creating a CXCR4 agonist that contained a strong pure binding motif linked to a signaling motif devoid of sequences responsible for synthetic functions. This synthetic dual-moity CXCR4 agonist not only elicited more extensive and persistent human NSC migration and distribution than did native CXCL 12, but induced no host inflammation (or other adverse effects); rather, there was predominantly reparative gene expression. When co-administered with transplanted human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived hNSCs in a mouse model of a prototypical neurodegenerative disease, the agonist enhanced migration, dissemination, and integration of donor-derived cells into the diseased cerebral cortex (including as electrophysiologically-active cortical neurons) where their secreted cross-corrective enzyme mediated a therapeutic impact unachieved by cells alone. Such a “designer” cytokine receptor-agonist peptide illustrates that treatments can be controlled and optimized by exploiting fundamental stem cell properties (e.g., “inflammo-attraction”). National Academy of Sciences 2020-12-08 2020-11-20 /pmc/articles/PMC7733796/ /pubmed/33219123 http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1911444117 Text en Copyright © 2020 the Author(s). Published by PNAS. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This open access article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Biological Sciences
Lee, Jean-Pyo
Zhang, Runquan
Yan, Maocai
Duggineni, Srinivas
Wakeman, Dustin R.
Niles, Walter L.
Feng, Yongmei
Chen, Justin
Hamblin, Milton H.
Han, Edward B.
Gonzalez, Rodolfo
Fang, Xiao
Zhu, Yinsong
Wang, Juan
Xu, Yan
Wenger, David A.
Seyfried, Thomas N.
An, Jing
Sidman, Richard L.
Huang, Ziwei
Snyder, Evan Y.
Chemical mutagenesis of a GPCR ligand: Detoxifying “inflammo-attraction” to direct therapeutic stem cell migration
title Chemical mutagenesis of a GPCR ligand: Detoxifying “inflammo-attraction” to direct therapeutic stem cell migration
title_full Chemical mutagenesis of a GPCR ligand: Detoxifying “inflammo-attraction” to direct therapeutic stem cell migration
title_fullStr Chemical mutagenesis of a GPCR ligand: Detoxifying “inflammo-attraction” to direct therapeutic stem cell migration
title_full_unstemmed Chemical mutagenesis of a GPCR ligand: Detoxifying “inflammo-attraction” to direct therapeutic stem cell migration
title_short Chemical mutagenesis of a GPCR ligand: Detoxifying “inflammo-attraction” to direct therapeutic stem cell migration
title_sort chemical mutagenesis of a gpcr ligand: detoxifying “inflammo-attraction” to direct therapeutic stem cell migration
topic Biological Sciences
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7733796/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33219123
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1911444117
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