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Triggering lysosome‐regulated immunogenic cell death (ICD, e.g., pyroptosis and necroptosis) with nanomedicines is an emerging approach for turning an “immune‐cold” tumor “hot”—a key challenge faced by cancer immunotherapies. Proton sponge such as high‐molecular‐weight branched polyethylenimine (PEI) is excellent at rupturing lysosomes, but its therapeutic application is hindered by uncontrollable toxicity due to fixed charge density and poor understanding of resulted cell death mechanism. Here, a series of proton sponge nano‐assemblies (PSNAs) with self‐assembly controllable surface charge density and cell cytotoxicity are created. Such PSNAs are constructed via low‐molecular‐weight branched PEI covalently bound to self‐assembling peptides carrying tetraphenylethene pyridinium (PyTPE, an aggregation‐induced emission‐based luminogen). Assembly of PEI assisted by the self‐assembling peptide‐PyTPE leads to enhanced surface positive charges and cell cytotoxicity of PSNA. The self‐assembly tendency of PSNAs is further optimized by tuning hydrophilic and hydrophobic components within the peptide, thus resulting in the PSNA with the highest fluorescence, positive surface charge density, cell uptake, and cancer cell cytotoxicity. Systematic cell death mechanistic studies reveal that the lysosome rupturing‐regulated pyroptosis and necroptosis are at least two causes of cell death. Tumor cells undergoing PSNA‐triggered ICD activate immune cells, suggesting the great potential of PSNAs to trigger anticancer immunity.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available February 27, 2025
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Abstract Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most lethal primary brain tumor characterized by high cellular and molecular heterogeneity, hypervascularization, and innate drug resistance. Cellular components and extracellular matrix (ECM) are the two primary sources of heterogeneity in GBM. Here, biomimetic tri‐regional GBM models with tumor regions, acellular ECM regions, and an endothelial region with regional stiffnesses patterned corresponding to the GBM stroma, pathological or normal brain parenchyma, and brain capillaries, are developed. Patient‐derived GBM cells, human endothelial cells, and hyaluronic acid derivatives are used to generate a species‐matched and biochemically relevant microenvironment. This in vitro study demonstrates that biophysical cues are involved in various tumor cell behaviors and angiogenic potentials and promote different molecular subtypes of GBM. The stiff models are enriched in the mesenchymal subtype, exhibit diffuse invasion of tumor cells, and induce protruding angiogenesis and higher drug resistance to temozolomide. Meanwhile, the soft models demonstrate enrichment in the classical subtype and support expansive cell growth. The three‐dimensional bioprinting technology utilized in this study enables rapid, flexible, and reproducible patient‐specific GBM modeling with biophysical heterogeneity that can be employed by future studies as a tunable system to interrogate GBM disease mechanisms and screen drug compounds.
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Abstract The relative importance of global versus local environmental factors for growth and thus carbon uptake of the bryophyte genus
Sphagnum— the main peat‐former and ecosystem engineer in northern peatlands—remains unclear.We measured length growth and net primary production (NPP) of two abundant
Sphagnum species across 99 Holarctic peatlands. We tested the importance of previously proposed abiotic and biotic drivers for peatland carbon uptake (climate, N deposition, water table depth and vascular plant cover) on these two responses. Employing structural equation models (SEMs), we explored both indirect and direct effects of drivers onSphagnum growth.Variation in growth was large, but similar within and between peatlands. Length growth showed a stronger response to predictors than NPP. Moreover, the smaller and denser
Sphagnum fuscum growing on hummocks had weaker responses to climatic variation than the larger and looserSphagnum magellanicum growing in the wetter conditions. Growth decreased with increasing vascular plant cover within a site. Between sites, precipitation and temperature increased growth forS. magellanicum . The SEMs indicate that indirect effects are important. For example, vascular plant cover increased with a deeper water table, increased nitrogen deposition, precipitation and temperature. These factors also influencedSphagnum growth indirectly by affecting moss shoot density.Synthesis . Our results imply that in a warmer climate,S. magellanicum will increase length growth as long as precipitation is not reduced, whileS. fuscum is more resistant to decreased precipitation, but also less able to take advantage of increased precipitation and temperature. Such species‐specific sensitivity to climate may affect competitive outcomes in a changing environment, and potentially the future carbon sink function of peatlands.