Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
ORCID: 0000-0001-9754-7712Publishes on RNA modifications and cancer, Cancer Immunotherapy and Biomarkers, Immunotherapy and Immune Responses. 87 papers and 4k citations.
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Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a genomically diverse, prevalent, and almost invariably fatal malignancy. Although conventional genetically engineered mouse models of human PDAC have been instrumental in understanding pancreatic cancer development, these models are much too labor-intensive, expensive, and slow to perform the extensive molecular analyses needed to adequately understand this disease. Here we demonstrate that retrograde pancreatic ductal injection of either adenoviral-Cre or lentiviral-Cre vectors allows titratable initiation of pancreatic neoplasias that progress into invasive and metastatic PDAC. To enable in vivo CRISPR/Cas9-mediated gene inactivation in the pancreas, we generated a Cre-regulated Cas9 allele and lentiviral vectors that express Cre and a single-guide RNA. CRISPR-mediated targeting of Lkb1 in combination with oncogenic Kras expression led to selection for inactivating genomic alterations, absence of Lkb1 protein, and rapid tumor growth that phenocopied Cre-mediated genetic deletion of Lkb1. This method will transform our ability to rapidly interrogate gene function during the development of this recalcitrant cancer.
In this work, we find that CD8 + T cells expressing inhibitory killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIRs) are the human equivalent of Ly49 + CD8 + regulatory T cells in mice and are increased in the blood and inflamed tissues of patients with a variety of autoimmune diseases. Moreover, these CD8 + T cells efficiently eliminated pathogenic gliadin-specific CD4 + T cells from the leukocytes of celiac disease patients in vitro. We also find elevated levels of KIR + CD8 + T cells, but not CD4 + regulatory T cells, in COVID-19 patients, correlating with disease severity and vasculitis. Selective ablation of Ly49 + CD8 + T cells in virus-infected mice led to autoimmunity after infection. Our results indicate that in both species, these regulatory CD8 + T cells act specifically to suppress pathogenic T cells in autoimmune and infectious diseases.