Johan Spetz

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21 Following
10 Posts

📣 📣 Happy to share our 1st paper on cilia & cell death   - within the framework and with the support of the @SFB1403  

👉 https://www.nature.com/articles/s41420-022-01272-2

Excellent work, primarily by Emilia, who has killed billions of cultured cells along the way 😉
1000x🙏 to Emilia and the team🥳 🎉!

Right now, we study this in preclinical models to check for translational potential. So more in vivo data will follow soon!

#cilia #CellDeath @cilia
#necroptosis #UniklinikKöln @CECAD
@UniKoeln

Primary cilia suppress Ripk3-mediated necroptosis - Cell Death Discovery

Cilia are sensory organelles that project from the surface of almost all cells. Nephronophthisis (NPH) and NPH-related ciliopathies are degenerative genetic diseases caused by mutation of cilia-associated genes. These kidney disorders are characterized by progressive loss of functional tubular epithelial cells which is associated with inflammation, progressive fibrosis, and cyst formation, ultimately leading to end-stage renal disease. However, disease mechanisms remain poorly understood. Here, we show that targeted deletion of cilia in renal epithelial cells enhanced susceptibility to necroptotic cell death under inflammatory conditions. Treatment of non-ciliated cells with tumor necrosis factor (TNF) α and the SMAC mimetic birinapant resulted in Ripk1-dependent cell death, while viability of ciliated cells was almost not affected. Cell death could be enhanced and shifted toward necroptosis by the caspase inhibitor emricasan, which could be blocked by inhibitors of Ripk1 and Ripk3. Moreover, combined treatment of ciliated and non-ciliated cells with TNFα and cycloheximide induced a cell death response that could be partially rescued with emricasan in ciliated cells. In contrast, non-ciliated cells responded with pronounced cell death that was blocked by necroptosis inhibitors. Consistently, combined treatment with interferon-γ and emricasan induced cell death only in non-ciliated cells. Mechanistically, enhanced necroptosis induced by loss of cilia could be explained by induction of Ripk3 and increased abundance of autophagy components, including p62 and LC3 associated with the Ripk1/Ripk3 necrosome. Genetic ablation of cilia in renal tubular epithelial cells in mice resulted in TUNEL positivity and increased expression of Ripk3 in kidney tissue. Moreover, loss of Nphp1, the most frequent cause of NPH, further increased susceptibility to necroptosis in non-ciliated epithelial cells, suggesting that necroptosis might contribute to the pathogenesis of the disease. Together, these data provide a link between cilia-related signaling and cell death responses and shed new light on the disease pathogenesis of NPH-related ciliopathies.

Nature
Postdoc position, please boost! Carol E Lee and I are hiring a 2-year postdoc at the CEFE in Montpellier to model evolutionary rescue in a changing environment, relying on experiments on the genetics of adaptation in copepods. Full announcement here: https://tinyurl.com/ykxsuzsr
@jobsecoevo
#job #postdoc #evolution #adaptation #Montpellier #France
Making Discoveries: Find the Anomaly - Professor Brent R. Stockwell - Medium

In science class, students are often taught to follow the well-trodden path of existing hypotheses, ongoing data collection efforts, and established model systems. Advisors, thesis committee members…

Medium
I'm probably the last person to realize this, but you can follow hashtags on Mastodon. Search for a hashtag, click on it, then click the icon (plus sign/person) at the top right. All posts that use that hashtag will then show up in your home feed, regardless of the server.
Here are thoughts on our new paper published today in @CellChemBiol on targeting #GPX4 to induce #ferroptosis -- link to free download available there. Congrats to the team & Enjoy! @columbia @Columbia_Bio #cancer #biochemistry https://brentstockwell.medium.com/a-new-way-to-target-gpx4-in-aggressive-cancers-28c4881b79ff
A new way to target the ferroptosis regulator GPX4 - Professor Brent R. Stockwell - Medium

Today my lab published a paper in Cell Chemical Biology describing a new way of targeting the central regulator of ferroptosis — the lipid repair enzyme glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPX4). In short, we…

Medium

Hey #ChemiVerse

Nature Chemistry is recruiting for a full-time editor!

The ideal candidate will have expertise in chemical biology or biological chemistry.

Closing date for applications: 12th December

Locations: London, Berlin, New York, Shanghai

#Editorial #Publishing #Chemistry #Jobs #ScienceJobs #ChemJobs

Boosts appreciated!

https://careers.springernature.com/job/London-Associate-or-Senior-Editor%2C-Nature-Chemistry/871414101/

Associate or Senior Editor, Nature Chemistry

Associate or Senior Editor, Nature Chemistry

@maxplanckgesellschaft
✅ All links on Mastodon count as 23 characters, no matter how long they really are

URLs can be as long as you want, they will never exceed 23 characters of your limit.

There is no need to use a link shortener!

#FediTips #MastoTips #LinkShortener #LinkShorteners #URLShortener #URLShorteners #CharacterLimits #Mastodon

Check out our recent paper on #vascular cell apoptotic vulnerabilities to #cancer therapeutics, including #radiotherapy, #chemotherapy and targeted agents (e.g. #proteasome inhibitors, #BH3mimetics). We find that #EndothelialCells remain primed for #apoptosis throughout development into adulthood and may represent a “weakest link” vulnerability in multiple tissues for development of toxicities. https://www.science.org/doi/full/10.1126/sciadv.abn6579

#Celldeath #CardioOncology #VigiBase #RadioBiology #BH3Profiling

My #Introduction - I am a postdoc doing #Research on #Apoptosis in health and disease, in particular concerning #CardioVascular #Toxicity and #Immunogenic #Celldeath in #CancerTherapy. Transitioning from #HarvardSchoolOfPublicHealth to #UniversityOfGothenburg to start up research on combined #Radiotherapy and #Immunotherapy in #BreastCancer.

#RadioBiology #Cancer #BH3Profiling #Caspases #CardioOncology