neighborhood analysis
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2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A192-A192
Author(s):  
John Hickey ◽  
Garry Nolan ◽  
Markus Covert ◽  
Eran Agmon ◽  
Nina Horowitz ◽  
...  

BackgroundImmune cell therapies continue to have success in treatment of cancers yet face challenges of complexity, cost, toxicity, and low solid-tumor efficacy. Much work has focused on the phenotype characterization and control of ex vivo expanded cells; however, little is known about its relationship to changes in the tumor microenvironment in vivo. Thus, we imaged tumors treated with different phenotype tumor-specific CD8+ T cells with CODEX multiplexed imaging1–4 that is able to visualize 42 antibodies at the same tissue in the tissue (figure 1A). To further probe this data in a systems immunology approach we created a multiscale agent-based model including critical circuits from the T cell-tumor microenvironment interactions (figure 1B).MethodsWe initialized our agent-based models various percentages of either PD1+, PD1-, PDL1+, or PDL1- phenotypes and ran simulations for 72 hours. We also treated PMEL CD8+ T cells with or without 2 hydroxycitrate as a metabolic inhibitor during activation to achieve different input phenotypes of CD8+ T cells for therapeutic adoptive transfer on day 10 following B16-F10 tumors had been established. We performed neighborhood analysis on CODEX multiplexed imaging data by clustering neighboring cell types using a sliding window for neighborhood analysis.ResultsInterestingly, the agent-based modeling indicated that the tumor phenotype switch to decrease proliferation was more effective than direct T cell killing. We observed spatially restricted inflammatory immune fronts when simulating with different initial percentages of PD1+ T cells and also from our CODEX multiplexed imaging. Quantitatively we observe that there is a drastic increase in the PDL1+, MHCI+, Ki67- tumor phenotype that increases with metabolically inhibited T cells. Neighborhood analysis indicated that metabolically treated T cells were able to create distinct immune cell environments that supported productive T cell-tumor interactions and also helped maintain T cell phenotype.ConclusionsThis indicates there is a balance for therapeutic T cell to mitigate chronic tumor exposure while controlling tumor growth through killing and by changing tumor phenotype. We observe T cells create distinct tumor microenvironments that differs significantly based on the starting T cell phenotype. Controlling T cell phenotype to promote productive immune-tumor structures will be critical to maintain T cell functionality and efficacy. In the future we will investigate T cell recruitment of immune structures by similar systems biology technologies.AcknowledgementsJ.W.H. is funded by an ACS Postdoctoral Fellowship (PF-20-032-01-CSM).ReferencesGoltsev Y, Samusik N, Kennedy-Darling J, Bhate S, Hale M, Vazquez G, Black S and Nolan GP, Deep profiling of mouse splenic architecture with CODEX multiplexed imaging. Cell, 174(4):968–981.Schürch CM, Bhate SS, Barlow GL, Phillips DJ, Noti L, Zlobec I, Chu P, Black S, Demeter J, McIlwain DR and Samusik N. Coordinated cellular neighborhoods orchestrate antitumoral immunity at the colorectal cancer invasive front. Cell 182(5):1341–1359.Black S, Phillips D, Hickey JW, Kennedy-Darling J, Venkataraaman VG, Samusik N, Goltsev Y, Schürch CM. and Nolan GP. CODEX multiplexed tissue imaging with DNA-conjugated antibodies. Nature Protocols 1–36.Kennedy-Darling J, Bhate SS, Hickey JW, Black S, Barlow GL, Vazquez G, Venkataraaman VG, Samusik N, Goltsev Y, Schürch CM and Nolan GP. Highly multiplexed tissue imaging using repeated oligonucleotide exchange reaction. European Journal of Immunology 51(5):1262–1277.Ethics ApprovalAll studies involving mice were approved under Stanford’s APLAC protocol 33502.


Author(s):  
Yakir A. Reshef ◽  
Laurie Rumker ◽  
Joyce B. Kang ◽  
Aparna Nathan ◽  
Ilya Korsunsky ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 231-239
Author(s):  
Maheshwari S. Biradar ◽  
P. M. Patil ◽  
B. G. Sheeparamatti

Author(s):  
Ashley Moreland ◽  
Naomi Alpert ◽  
Adriana Eugene ◽  
Raja Flores ◽  
Emanuela Taioli

2021 ◽  
pp. 001112872110359
Author(s):  
Daniel C. Semenza ◽  
Richard Stansfield ◽  
Jesssica M. Grosholz ◽  
Nathan W. Link

In this study, we use generalized estimating equation (GEE) models to analyze how rates of eviction correspond to homicide, robbery, and burglary rates across all residential neighborhoods in Philadelphia from 2006 through 2016. We assess the moderating role of neighborhood poverty accounting for residential mobility, economic disadvantage, and community composition. We find that eviction is associated with all three types of crime in fully controlled models. Additionally, neighborhood poverty significantly moderates this relationship for robbery and burglary, but not homicide. We discuss the implications of these results with attention to policy opportunities to reduce eviction and suggestions for future research.


Author(s):  
Katherine H. O'Toole ◽  
Hannah M. Bernstein ◽  
Karen N. Allen ◽  
Barbara Imperiali

Phosphoglycosyl transferases (PGTs) play a pivotal role at the inception of complex glycoconjugate biosynthesis pathways across all domains of life. PGTs promote the first membrane-committed step in the en bloc biosynthetic strategy by catalyzing the transfer of a phospho-sugar from a nucleoside diphospho-sugar to a membrane-resident polyprenol phosphate. Studies on the PGTs have been hampered because they are integral membrane proteins, and often prove to be recalcitrant to expression, purification and analysis. However, in recent years exciting new information has been derived on the structures and the mechanisms of PGTs, revealing the existence of two unique superfamilies of PGT enzymes that enact catalysis at the membrane interface. Genome neighborhood analysis shows that these superfamilies, the polytopic PGT (polyPGT) and monotopic PGT (monoPGT), may initiate different pathways within the same organism. Moreover, the same fundamental two-substrate reaction is enacted through two different chemical mechanisms with distinct modes of catalysis. This review highlights the structural and mechanistic divergence between the PGT enzyme superfamilies and how this is reflected in differences in regulation in their varied glycoconjugate biosynthesis pathways.


2021 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-18
Author(s):  
Jael Sanyanda Wekesa ◽  
Yushi Luan ◽  
Jun Meng

Author(s):  
Felipe Hashimoto Fengler ◽  
Marcela Merides Carvalho ◽  
Afonso Peche Filho

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