A gene expression profile of BRCAness was defined in publicly available expression data of 61 patients with epithelial ovarian cancer (34 patients with BRCA-1 or BRCA-2 mutations and 27 patients with sporadic disease). This dataset is publicly available at http://jnci.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/94/13/990/DC1
Gene expression profile of BRCAness that correlates with responsiveness to chemotherapy and with outcome in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer.
Age, Disease stage
View SamplesZika virus (ZIKV) is responsible for a major current outbreak in the Americas and has been causally associated with fetal microcephaly as well as Guillain-Barre syndrome in adults. However, the immune responses associated with controlling ZIKV replication remain poorly characterized. Here we report a detailed analysis of innate and adaptive immune responses following ZIKV infection in 16 rhesus monkeys. A robust proinflammatory innate immune response was observed within the first few days of infection, including upregulation of type 1 interferon, which correlated directly with viral loads. Immunomodulatory pathways, including IL-10 and TGF-, were also upregulated. ZIKV-specific neutralizing antibodies emerged rapidly by day 7 and correlated inversely with viral loads, which were undetectable in peripheral blood by day 6-10. In contrast, virus replication persisted in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) for at least 21-42 days in 75% (3 of 4) of the monkeys that received the lowest dose of ZIKV tested, and ZIKV-specific antibodies were essentially undetectable in CSF. These data suggest that antibodies play a critical role in the rapid control of acute viremia in the periphery but were largely excluded from the central nervous system, allowing viral persistence at this immuonoprivileged site.
Zika Virus Persistence in the Central Nervous System and Lymph Nodes of Rhesus Monkeys.
Time
View SamplesNK cells may provide a rheostat function and have been shown to reduce the magnitude of antigen-specific T cell responses following infection. It remains unknown whether NK cells similarly modulate vaccine-elicited T cell responses following viral challenge. We used the LCMV clone 13 infection model to address whether NK cells regulate T cell responses in Adenovirus vector vaccinated mice following challenge. As expected, NK cell depletion in unvaccinated mice resulted in increased virus-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cell responses and immunopathology following LCMV challenge. In contrast, NK cell depletion had minimal to no impact on antigen-specific T cell responses in mice that were vaccinated with an Ad5-GP vector prior to LCMV challenge. Moreover, NK cell depletion in vaccinated mice prior to challenge did not result in immunopathology and did not compromise protective efficacy. These data suggest that Adenovirus vaccine-elicited T cells may be less sensitive to NK cell-rheostat regulation than are T cells primed by LCMV infection.
No associated publication
Sex, Specimen part
View SamplespNK treatment with a combination of TGFb, 5-aza-2-deoxycytidine and hypoxia yields cells with functional and phenotypic similarities to human dNK cells, called induced dNK-like cells (idNK)
No associated publication
Sex
View SamplesThis SuperSeries is composed of the SubSeries listed below.
SOX9 drives WNT pathway activation in prostate cancer.
Cell line
View SamplesSOX9 is critical for prostate development and is implicated in prostate cancer, we used transcriptome profiling in combination with SOX9 ChIP-seq to identify genes and pathways it regulates in normal or neoplastic epithelium.
SOX9 drives WNT pathway activation in prostate cancer.
Cell line
View SamplesCD4 T cells play critical roles in promoting inflammation and helping immune responses, but knowledge of how memory CD4 T cells are regulated and how they help adaptive immune responses is limited. Using adoptive transfer of virus-specific CD4 T cells, we show that nave CD4 T cells undergo substantial expansion following viral infection, but can induce lethal TH1-driven inflammation. In contrast, memory CD4 T cells exhibit a biased proliferation of T follicular helper (Tfh) cell subsets that correlate with improved adaptive responses and minimal tissue damage following viral infection. Importantly, our analyses revealed that type I interferon regulates the expansion of nave CD4 T cells, but does not seem to play a critical role in regulating the expansion of memory CD4 T cells. Moreover, blockade of type I interferon signaling abrogated lethal CD4 T cell inflammation following viral infection. Taken together, these data demonstrate a previously undescribed function for memory CD4 T cells: to help adaptive immunity with minimal harm to the host. These findings are important for rational vaccine design and for improving the safety and efficacy of adoptive T cell therapies against persistent antigens.
No associated publication
Specimen part
View SamplesGPR146 is a susceptible gene associated with plasma cholesterol levels in humans, its physiological and molecular functions have not been fully characherized. In this study, we generated Gpr146 whole-body knockout mice and found that depletion of GPR146 led to substantilly reduced plasma total cholesterol levels.
GPR146 Deficiency Protects against Hypercholesterolemia and Atherosclerosis.
Specimen part
View SamplesThis SuperSeries is composed of the SubSeries listed below.
No associated publication
No sample metadata fields
View SamplesMany pathways regulating blood formation have been elucidated, yet how each coordinates with embryonic biophysiology to modulate the spatio-temporal production of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) is currently unresolved. Here, we report that glucose metabolism impacts the onset and magnitude of HSC induction in vivo. In zebrafish, transient elevations in physiological glucose levels elicited dose-dependent effects on HSC development, including enhanced runx1 expression and hematopoietic cluster formation in the Aorta-Gonad-Mesonephros (AGM) region; embryonic-to-adult transplantation studies confirmed glucose increased functional HSCs. Glucose uptake was required to mediate the enhancement in HSC development; likewise, metabolic inhibitors diminished nascent HSC production and reversed glucose-mediated effects on HSCs. Increased glucose metabolism preferentially impacted hematopoietic and vascular targets, as determined by gene expression analysis, through mitochondrial-derived reactive oxygen species (ROS)-mediated stimulation of hypoxia inducible factor 1 (hif1); epistasis assays demonstrated hif1 regulates HSC formation in vivo and mediates the dose-dependent effects of glucose metabolism on the timing and magnitude of HSC production. We propose this fundamental metabolic-sensing mechanism enables the embryo to respond to changes in environmental energy input and adjust hematopoietic output to maintain embryonic growth and ensure viability.
No associated publication
Treatment
View Samples