Li et al. report on nuclear and cytoskeletal defects that mediate stem cell–associated osteogenic deformities in a mouse model of a premature aging disorder caused by mutations in prelamin A. The cover shows filamentous actin (F-actin, red) outlining the cellular architecture of calvarial osteoprogenitor cells, with nuclei counterstained by DAPI (blue). Image credit: Kai Li and Wei Hsu.
Macrophages (MΦ), endowed with remarkable phenotypic plasticity are essential for orchestrating injury responses and regulating iron homeostasis. Given the central role of ferritin heavy chain (FtH) as a molecular rheostat linking iron sequestration to redox-dependent signaling, we examined how myeloid FtH governs renal iron trafficking and ensuing oxidative-stress pathways during acute kidney injury (AKI). Transcriptome analysis revealed coupling of FtH deficiency in monocytes and MΦ with ferroptosis activation, a regulated cell death associated with iron accumulation. Moreover, myeloid FtH deletion worsened AKI, increasing leukocyte infiltration and iron deposition, together with ferroptosis‐associated gene induction, oxidative stress, and lipid peroxidation. Notably, ⍺-synuclein (SNCA), an iron-binding protein and the main pathological driver of Parkinson’s disease, was robustly induced by both FtH deficiency and following AKI. Mechanistic studies showed that monomeric SNCA exhibits ferrireductase activity, amplifying redox cycling and promoting ferroptotic cell death. Furthermore, SNCA expression was elevated in kidney pathologies characterized by leukocyte expansion in both mouse models and human cohorts, suggesting that inflammatory microenvironments promote SNCA accumulation and redox imbalance. These findings define a MΦ FtH-SNCA regulatory axis as a key driver of ferroptosis in AKI, implicating SNCA as a pathological nexus between iron dyshomeostasis and inflammatory kidney injury.
Tanima Chatterjee, Sarah Machado, Kellen Cowen, Mary E. Miller, Bronte Johnson, Yanfeng Zhang, Laura A. Volpicelli-Daley, Lauren A. Fielding, Rudradip Pattanayak, Frida Rosenblum, László Potor, György Balla, Jozsef Balla, Christian Faul, Abolfazl Zarjou
Moderate hyperoxia (30–60% O₂) in premature infants promotes bronchial airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) via airway smooth muscle (ASM), a key regulator of bronchoconstriction, bronchodilation, and remodeling. Understanding how O2 exposure drives long-term bronchial changes in prematurity is critical for developing therapies for airway disease across the lifespan. Premature lungs have immature antioxidant defenses, potentially due to disrupted mitochondrial dynamics, increasing susceptibility to O2-induced oxidative stress. Thus, mitochondrial homeostasis is highly relevant to ASM dysfunction and airway disease. We propose that hyperoxia in prematurity promotes mitochondrial dysfunction, and that the gasotransmitter hydrogen sulfide (H₂S) mitigates O2-induced mitochondrial damage in developing ASM. Human fetal ASM (fASM) were exposed to moderate hyperoxia to investigate the effects of exogenous H₂S donors (GYY4137, AP39) and stabilization of cystathionine β-synthase (CBS), an H₂S biosynthetic enzyme, on mitochondrial structure and function. Hyperoxia impaired fASM mitochondrial integrity, while H₂S donors in particular, or CBS stabilization attenuated adverse O2 effects on mitochondrial morphology, reactive oxygen species, respiration, calcium regulation, and contractility. These findings highlight the therapeutic potential of H₂S in the premature lung exposed to moderate hyperoxia.
Colleen M. Bartman, Michael Thompson, Samantha K. Hamrick, Niyati A. Borkar, Daniel Pfeffer-Kleemann, Preetham Ravi, Marta Schiliro, Yak Nak, Christian Vivar Ramon, Li Drake, Y. S. Prakash, Christina Pabelick
Heterogeneity in disease severity and treatment response in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) likely evolve from individual differences in host-microbiota-immune interactions. Histological evaluation of intestinal biopsies is central to diagnosis, but histological parameters that define underlying immune mechanisms are limited. We investigated histological features that distinguish individual patient immune profiles in therapy-naive paediatric IBD patients (age 6‒18-years-old) using biopsy immunohistochemistry and transcriptomics and plasma proteomics across two cohorts. High colonic epithelial expression of Secretory Leukocyte Protease Inhibitor (SLPI), a microbiota-induced regulator of epithelial function, occurred in IBD patients with high clinical disease activity and more severe endoscopic and microscopic disease activity. SLPI expression related to increased neutrophil infiltration, transcriptomic signatures of activation and genes known to associate with therapeutic resistance. High SLPI co-localized with high densities of IL-17-secreting cells and was associated with high plasma concentrations of Th17-related immune proteins. Additionally, patients with high intestinal SLPI had an intrinsically different immunotype, in which circulating neutrophils exhibited altered transcription of genes involved in neutrophil granule formation, phagocytosis, oxidative phosphorylation, and interferon signalling. Thus, high colonic SLPI expression at diagnosis associates with severe IBD, increased IL-17A-neutrophil pathway responses and altered transcriptomic wiring of circulating neutrophils.
Sandrine Nugteren, Beatriz Calado, Ytje Simons-Oosterhuis, Daniëlle H. Hulleman-van Haaften, Willem K. Smits, Renz C.W. Klomberg, Bastiaan Tuk, Mohammed Charrout, Dicky J. Lindenbergh-Kortleve, Michail Doukas, Mathijs A. Sanders, Gregory van Beek, Johanna C. Escher, Lissy de Ridder, Maria Fernanda Pascutti, Janneke N. Samsom
Viral lower respiratory tract infections are common early in life and are associated with long-term development of asthma, a chronic condition defined by reversible airflow obstruction secondary to inflammation. Understanding the immunologic mechanism connecting these two pathologies observed early in life becomes imperative to guide therapeutic measures. To investigate this connection, neonatal (day of life 4-6) or adult mice were infected with human metapneumovirus (HMPV) followed by a secondary HMPV infection 6 weeks later. Mice initially infected as neonates demonstrate increased mucus production, eosinophil recruitment, airway hyperresponsiveness, and Th2 T-cell differentiation following re-challenge compared to adult mice rechallenged with HMPV. Neonatal HMPV infection led to formation of Th2 clonally expanded tissue resident memory (TRM) T cells that were absent after adult HMPV. FTY720-mediated disruption of lymphocyte circulation demonstrated TRMs contribute to pathology. Local depletion of lung CD4+ T cells and JAK2-inhibition mitigated pathology. These findings suggest TRMs uniquely generated after early life viral infection can contribute to Th2-driven asthma pathology.
Emma E. Brown, Jie Lan, Olivia B. Parks, Li Fan, Dequan Lou, Alysia McCray, Lisa Mathews, Alexander J. Wardropper, Anna Shull, Michelle L. Manni, Hēth R. Turnquist, Kong Chen, Taylor Eddens
Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) is a global health concern with limited interventions. While the role of gut bacteria in MASLD has been extensively studied, the contribution of gut fungi remains largely unexplored. This study investigates the impact of fungal dysbiosis and the role of CARD9, a key adaptor protein in fungal sensing on gut-liver axis dysfunction in MASLD. Patients with advanced liver fibrosis exhibited distinct mycobiota profiles. Using a CARD9-deficient mouse model subjected to high-fat high-glucose/fructose feeding, we observed exacerbated liver injury and fibrosis accompanied by fungal dysbiosis, paralleling our findings in human patients. Beyond its established expression in myeloid cells, CARD9 was also detected in intestinal enterocytes where its expression was diminished under metabolic stress. Intestinal organoids with CARD9 inhibition had reduced expression of antimicrobial Reg3g, the tight junction protein ZO-1, and the antifungal enteroendocrine hormone PYY. These findings suggest that CARD9 maintains gut barrier integrity, preventing microbial translocation and subsequent liver injury and fibrosis. Our results provide new insights into the interplay between fungal dysbiosis, gut barrier dysfunction, and MASLD, and identify CARD9 as a key protein within this axis.
Vijay Pandyarajan, So Yeon Kim, Takashi Tsuchiya, Selena Liu, Sadam H. Bhat, Jieun Kim, David M. Underhill, Mazen Noureddin, Shelly C. Lu, Ekihiro Seki