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19 pages, 335 KB  
Article
Identification and Prioritization of Neoantigens Derived from Non-Synonymous Mutations in Melanoma Through HLA Class I Binding Prediction
by Karina Trejo-Vázquez, Carlos H. Espino-Salinas, Jorge I. Galván-Tejada, Karen E. Villagrana-Bañuelos, Valeria Maeda-Gutiérrez, Carlos E. Galván-Tejada, Gloria V. Cerrillo-Rojas, Hans C. Correa-Aguado and Manuel A. Soto-Murillo
Immuno 2026, 6(2), 21; https://doi.org/10.3390/immuno6020021 - 27 Mar 2026
Viewed by 623
Abstract
Melanoma is characterized by a high mutational burden making it an established model for studying tumor neoantigens and developing strategies for personalized immunotherapy. In this study, a reproducible bioinformatics pipeline was developed and implemented for the identification and prioritization of candidate neoantigens derived [...] Read more.
Melanoma is characterized by a high mutational burden making it an established model for studying tumor neoantigens and developing strategies for personalized immunotherapy. In this study, a reproducible bioinformatics pipeline was developed and implemented for the identification and prioritization of candidate neoantigens derived from non-synonymous somatic mutations in melanoma, using genomic data from the MSK-IMPACT cohort (mel-mskimpact-2020; n = 696) and comparative reference information from TCGA-SKCM. From the somatic mutation annotation file (MAF), 16,311 non-synonymous mutations were filtered, from which 50,480 mutant 8–11-mer peptides were generated using a sliding-window approach centered on the mutated position. Peptide–HLA class I binding affinity was predicted using MHCflurry 2.0 across six representative alleles (HLA-A*02:01, HLA-A*24:02, HLA-B*35:01, HLA-B*39:05, HLA-C*04:01, and HLA-C*07:02). Candidate prioritization was initially based on predicted binding percentile (rank ≤ 2), identifying 12,209 peptide–HLA combinations with high predicted binding affinity. To refine candidate selection, additional computational analyses were incorporated, including proteasomal cleavage prediction using NetChop 3.1 and estimation of T-cell epitope immunogenicity using the Immune Epitope Database (IEDB) immunogenicity predictor. Furthermore, a direct comparison between mutant (MUT) and corresponding wild-type (WT) peptides was performed using Δaffinity and Δrank metrics to evaluate the predicted impact of somatic mutations on HLA binding. The analysis revealed a predominance of peptides associated with the HLA-B locus, particularly the allele HLA-B*35:01, among the interactions with the lowest predicted binding percentiles. Several high-ranking peptide candidates were derived from genes with known roles in melanoma biology, including PLCG2, GATA3, AKT1, PTEN, PTCH1, and SMO. Overall, the integrative computational framework implemented in this study enables the systematic prioritization of candidate neoantigens derived from non-synonymous mutations in melanoma. This pipeline provides a reproducible strategy for exploring tumor neoantigen repertoires and may serve as a foundation for subsequent experimental validation and for studies related to neoantigen-based immunotherapies and immunopeptidomics. Full article
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23 pages, 3028 KB  
Article
SVNeoPP: A Workflow for Structural-Variant-Derived Neoantigen Prediction and Prioritization Using Multi-Omics Data
by Wanyang An, Xiaoxiu Tan, Zhenhao Liu, Li Zou, Manman Lu and Lu Xie
Biology 2026, 15(6), 492; https://doi.org/10.3390/biology15060492 - 19 Mar 2026
Viewed by 572
Abstract
Background: Tumor neoantigens are key targets for personalized vaccines and T-cell therapies, yet most pipelines focus on neoantigens derived from SNV/small indel and often yield a limited number of high-quality candidates. SVs are prevalent in tumors and can generate novel chimeric sequences and [...] Read more.
Background: Tumor neoantigens are key targets for personalized vaccines and T-cell therapies, yet most pipelines focus on neoantigens derived from SNV/small indel and often yield a limited number of high-quality candidates. SVs are prevalent in tumors and can generate novel chimeric sequences and neopeptides, making them a promising additional source of neoantigens. However, SV-derived neoantigen prediction remains challenging due to breakpoint uncertainty, isoform-dependent coding inference, and limited integration of multi-dimensional evidence and reproducibility. Methods: We developed SVNeoPP (Structural Variant Neoantigen Prediction and Prioritization), an end-to-end workflow for SV-derived neoantigen analysis. SVNeoPP takes WGS and RNA-seq as inputs, performs SV calling and annotation, and reconstructs altered transcripts and coding sequences in a traceable, isoform-aware manner to generate candidate peptides. Candidates are prescreened by integrating antigen-processing features with HLA binding prediction, and then hierarchically filtered and prioritized based on transcript expression, LC–MS/MS proteomics evidence, immunogenicity predictions, and sequence similarity to experimentally validated neoantigen databases. SVNeoPP is implemented in Snakemake to enable modular extension, checkpoint-based restarts, and end-to-end reproducibility. Results: Using a hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) multi-omics dataset as a proof of concept, we demonstrated the performance of SVNeoPP and obtained a high-priority shortlist of candidate peptides. Compared with other methods, SVNeoPP substantially expanded the candidate search space for SV-derived neoantigens and showed more favorable distributions of antigen-processing and HLA binding features. Conclusions: SVNeoPP provides a reusable, traceable, and interpretable multi-dimensional evidence-driven framework for SV-derived neoantigens. As a complementary module to SNV/small-indel pipelines, it broadens the neoantigen candidate repertoire and generates ranked candidates with interpretable evidence to facilitate downstream prioritization and decision-making. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Bioinformatics)
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21 pages, 3450 KB  
Article
The Synergistic Armory: A Global Genome-Wide Association Study Reveals the Integrated Mechanisms of Azithromycin Resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae
by Boris Shaskolskiy, Konstantin Tutaev, Dmitry Kravtsov, Ilya Kandinov and Dmitry Gryadunov
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2026, 27(5), 2258; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27052258 - 27 Feb 2026
Viewed by 699
Abstract
Azithromycin remains an important agent in gonorrhea treatment, yet resistance is a growing global threat. To comprehensively define its genetic basis, we performed a large-scale genome-wide association study of 14,727 Neisseria gonorrhoeae genomes with linked azithromycin MICs from 66 countries. We identified 113 [...] Read more.
Azithromycin remains an important agent in gonorrhea treatment, yet resistance is a growing global threat. To comprehensively define its genetic basis, we performed a large-scale genome-wide association study of 14,727 Neisseria gonorrhoeae genomes with linked azithromycin MICs from 66 countries. We identified 113 genetic variants significantly associated with elevated MICs. Beyond well-known mutations in 23S rRNA (A2059G, C2611T) and mtrCDE operon, we uncovered a broad repertoire of potential resistance determinants, including multiple amino acid substitutions in 16 ribosomal proteins (e.g., L2, L4, L13, L23) forming the nascent peptide exit tunnel (NPET), and porin PorB alterations (G120K, A121D/N). Systematic pairwise analysis revealed extensive synergistic interactions, particularly between variants affecting drug influx/efflux (PorB, MtrCDE) and ribosomal target affinity. Phylogenetic analysis identified successful, globally circulating lineages employing distinct resistance strategies: NPET-dominated, 23S rRNA-associated, and porin/efflux-mediated. Our findings demonstrate that azithromycin resistance is a polygenic trait shaped by functional complementarity and epistasis between target modification, membrane permeability, and efflux. This integrated model is essential for accurate resistance prediction from genomic data and highlights key lineages for focused surveillance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Strategies in Bacterial Antibiotic Resistance)
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17 pages, 4277 KB  
Article
A Peptide-Centric DIA-NN Reanalysis Uncovers Structurally Coherent Salivary Signatures of Type 2 Diabetes
by Rui Vitorino
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2026, 27(4), 2040; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27042040 - 22 Feb 2026
Viewed by 585
Abstract
Type 2 diabetes (T2D) causes systemic metabolic and inflammatory changes that affect the oral cavity, but salivary molecular markers remain poorly characterized. A peptide-centric reanalysis of salivary proteomics data was performed using DIA-NN for peptide-level quantification, without collapsing peptide signals into protein-level summaries. [...] Read more.
Type 2 diabetes (T2D) causes systemic metabolic and inflammatory changes that affect the oral cavity, but salivary molecular markers remain poorly characterized. A peptide-centric reanalysis of salivary proteomics data was performed using DIA-NN for peptide-level quantification, without collapsing peptide signals into protein-level summaries. Although the qualitative peptide repertoire was largely conserved between T2D and control samples (>96% overlap), T2D showed coordinated quantitative changes in specific peptide subsets. Differentially abundant peptides primarily originated from complement C3, alpha-2-macroglobulin, serotransferrin, mucins, apolipoproteins, and hemoglobin, with a significant enrichment of oxidized cysteine-containing peptides, indicating redox imbalance and low-grade inflammation. Structural analysis with AlphaFold showed that T2D-associated peptides are located in solvent-exposed and conformationally dynamic regions of proteins. These findings suggest that disease specificity in diabetic saliva occurs mainly at the peptide level, offering mechanistic insight into non-invasive biomarker identification and longitudinal disease monitoring. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Bioprinting: Progress and Challenges)
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35 pages, 3301 KB  
Review
Exploring the Structure–Activity Relationships and Molecular Mechanisms of Black Soldier Fly-Derived Antimicrobial Peptides with AI Insights
by Muhammad Raheel Tariq, Hui Wang, Shaojuan Liu, Ilaria Armenia, Gianluca Tettamanti, Shakal Khan Korai, Haiwen Lin, Chaozhong Zheng, Yanwen Liang, Jianguang Qin, Youming Liu, Muhammad Qasim, Muhammad Asif Ismail and Fei Wang
Insects 2026, 17(2), 207; https://doi.org/10.3390/insects17020207 - 15 Feb 2026
Viewed by 1246
Abstract
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) was associated with 4.95 million deaths in 2019 and may cause 10 million deaths annually by 2050. We synthesize evidence on how the black soldier fly (Hermetia illucens) has evolved an expanded antimicrobial peptide (AMP) repertoire, which structural [...] Read more.
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) was associated with 4.95 million deaths in 2019 and may cause 10 million deaths annually by 2050. We synthesize evidence on how the black soldier fly (Hermetia illucens) has evolved an expanded antimicrobial peptide (AMP) repertoire, which structural features drive family-specific activity, what mechanisms are directly demonstrated in H. illucens, and how AI contributes. PubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus (plus targeted Google Scholar) were searched from inception to 1 February 2026; studies were included when they reported BSF peptide identities, expression/proteomics, evolutionary analyses, quantitative activity, mechanistic assays, or BSF-focused computation, and claims were tiered as predicted, expression-supported, or experimentally supported. The literature supports 50–80 BSF AMP genes, plausibly shaped by gene duplication and balancing/diversifying selection in microbe-rich substrates, with marked induction plasticity across tissues, development, diet, and challenge. SAR is family-dependent: defensin-like peptides rely on disulfide-stabilized CSαβ folds and cationic surface topology; cecropin-like peptides on amphipathic α-helices with selectivity trade-offs; attacin-like peptides on β-architecture where charge-based heuristics are weak; and diptericin/proline-rich peptides remain largely inference-driven in BSF. Mechanistic evidence is strongest for membrane/envelope-centered killing by DLP4 and pore-associated envelope disruption by a recombinant attacin-like peptide, whereas pore geometry, oligomerization, intracellular targets, and broad “resistance-proof” claims remain unresolved. Key gaps include assay heterogeneity, salt/serum stability, selectivity/toxicity, resistance-risk testing, and limited in vivo validation, which must be addressed for credible AMR-relevant translation. Full article
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21 pages, 2800 KB  
Review
Host Defense Antimicrobial Peptides (HDPs) as Regulators of Hemostasis and Vascular Biology
by Sergio Roberto Aguilar-Ruiz, Francisco Javier Sánchez-Peña, Héctor Maximino Rodríguez-Magadán, Miguel Angel Domínguez-Martínez, Héctor Ulises Bernardino-Hernández and Alba Soledad Aquino-Domínguez
Biomolecules 2026, 16(2), 220; https://doi.org/10.3390/biom16020220 - 2 Feb 2026
Viewed by 759
Abstract
Host defense peptides (HDPs), ancestral effectors of innate immunity, have emerged as pleiotropic regulators transcending their antimicrobial origins. This review critically examines the complex interplay among HDPs, hemostasis, and tissue repair. We analyze molecular mechanisms governing interactions with platelets and endothelial cells, highlighting [...] Read more.
Host defense peptides (HDPs), ancestral effectors of innate immunity, have emerged as pleiotropic regulators transcending their antimicrobial origins. This review critically examines the complex interplay among HDPs, hemostasis, and tissue repair. We analyze molecular mechanisms governing interactions with platelets and endothelial cells, highlighting a fundamental paradigm shift: platelets and megakaryocytes are active synthesizers of a specific peptide repertoire rather than passive carriers. Functional dualities are elucidated, contrasting LL-37-driven platelet agonism via glycoprotein VI (GPVI) against the amyloid-like stabilization of fibrin by defensins. Based on these mechanisms, we propose a framework wherein HDPs function as concentration-dependent molecular switches between physiological repair and pathological thromboinflammation. Furthermore, the review addresses the hypothesis of “adaptive thrombopoiesis,” where systemic peptide surges act as danger signals to reprogram the function of newly formed platelets. Finally, therapeutic implications are evaluated, emphasizing the design of protease-resistant peptidomimetics to harness protective effects while mitigating vascular toxicity. Full article
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29 pages, 1055 KB  
Review
Hidden Targets in Cancer Immunotherapy: The Potential of “Dark Matter” Neoantigens
by Francois Xavier Rwandamuriye, Alec J. Redwood, Jenette Creaney and Bruce W. S. Robinson
Vaccines 2026, 14(1), 104; https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines14010104 - 21 Jan 2026
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1534
Abstract
The development of cancer immunotherapies has transformed cancer treatment paradigms, yet durable and tumour-specific responses remain elusive for many patients. Neoantigens, immunogenic peptides arising from tumour-specific genomic alterations, have emerged as promising cancer vaccine targets. Early-phase clinical trials using different vaccine platforms, including [...] Read more.
The development of cancer immunotherapies has transformed cancer treatment paradigms, yet durable and tumour-specific responses remain elusive for many patients. Neoantigens, immunogenic peptides arising from tumour-specific genomic alterations, have emerged as promising cancer vaccine targets. Early-phase clinical trials using different vaccine platforms, including mRNA, peptide, DNA, and viral vector-based personalised cancer vaccines, have demonstrated the feasibility of targeting neoantigens, with early signals of prolonged survival in some patients. Most current vaccine strategies focus on canonical neoantigens, typically derived from exonic single-nucleotide variants (SNVs) and small insertions/deletions (INDELs), yet this represents only a fraction of the potential neoantigen repertoire. Evidence now shows that non-canonical neoantigens, arising mostly from alternative splicing, intron retention, translation of non-coding RNAs, gene fusions, and retroelement activation, broaden the antigenic landscape, with the potential for increasing tumour specificity and immunogenicity. In this review, we explore the biology of non-canonical neoantigens, the technological advances that now enable their systematic detection, and their potential to inform next-generation personalised cancer vaccines. Full article
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26 pages, 2985 KB  
Review
Marine Derived Natural Products: Emerging Therapeutics Against Herpes Simplex Virus Infection
by Vaibhav Tiwari, James Elste, Chunyu Wang and Fuming Zhang
Biomolecules 2026, 16(1), 100; https://doi.org/10.3390/biom16010100 - 7 Jan 2026
Viewed by 1213
Abstract
Herpes simplex viruses (HSV-1 and HSV-2) are highly prevalent human pathogens that establish lifelong latency in sensory neurons, posing a persistent challenge to global public health. Their clinical manifestations range from mild, self-limiting orolabial lesions to severe, life-threatening conditions such as disseminated neonatal [...] Read more.
Herpes simplex viruses (HSV-1 and HSV-2) are highly prevalent human pathogens that establish lifelong latency in sensory neurons, posing a persistent challenge to global public health. Their clinical manifestations range from mild, self-limiting orolabial lesions to severe, life-threatening conditions such as disseminated neonatal infections, focal encephalitis, and herpetic stromal keratitis, which can lead to irreversible corneal blindness. Beyond direct pathology, HSV-mediated genital ulcerative disease (GUD) significantly enhances mucosal susceptibility to HIV-1 and other sexually transmitted infections, amplifying co-infection risk and disease burden. Despite decades of clinical reliance on nucleoside analogues such as acyclovir, the therapeutic landscape has stagnated with rising antiviral resistance, toxicity associated with prolonged use, and the complete inability of current drugs to eliminate latency or prevent reactivation continue to undermine effective disease control. These persistent gaps underscore an urgent need for next-generation antivirals that operate through fundamentally new mechanisms. Marine ecosystems, the planet’s most chemically diverse environments, are providing an expanding repertoire of antiviral compounds with significant therapeutic promise. Recent discoveries reveal that marine-derived polysaccharides, sulfated glycans, peptides, alkaloids, and microbial metabolites exhibit remarkably potent and multi-targeted anti-HSV activities, disrupting viral attachment, fusion, replication, and egress, while also reshaping host antiviral immunity. Together, these agents showcase mechanisms and scaffolds entirely distinct from existing therapeutics. This review integrates emerging evidence on structural diversity, mechanistic breadth, and translational promise of marine natural products with anti-HSV activity. Collectively, these advances position marine-derived compounds as powerful, untapped scaffolds capable of reshaping the future of HSV therapeutics. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Natural Products and Drug Discovery—2nd Edition)
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15 pages, 2679 KB  
Article
UniTope & TraCR: A Universal Tool to Tag, Enrich, and Track TCR-T Cells and Therapeutic Proteins
by Kanuj Mishra, Barbara Lösch and Dolores J. Schendel
Med. Sci. 2026, 14(1), 18; https://doi.org/10.3390/medsci14010018 - 31 Dec 2025
Viewed by 924
Abstract
Background: Adoptive cell therapy using genetically engineered recombinant T cell receptors (rTCRs) expressed in T cells (TCR-T cell therapy) provides precision targeting of cancer cells expressing tumor-associated or tumor-specific antigens recognized by the rTCRs. Standardized analytical tools are lacking to easily quantify receptor [...] Read more.
Background: Adoptive cell therapy using genetically engineered recombinant T cell receptors (rTCRs) expressed in T cells (TCR-T cell therapy) provides precision targeting of cancer cells expressing tumor-associated or tumor-specific antigens recognized by the rTCRs. Standardized analytical tools are lacking to easily quantify receptor expression. Methods: To overcome this hindrance, a universal tagging system (UniTope & TraCR) was designed consisting of a minimal peptide epitope (UniTope) inserted into the constant region of the rTCR α or β chain and a high-affinity monoclonal antibody (TraCR) specific to this tag. Detailed biophysical, biochemical, and functional assays were performed to evaluate rTCR expression, folding, pairing, and antigen recognition, as well as antibody performance, using the UniTope & TraCR System. Results: Tagged rTCRs were stably expressed in human T cells with surface densities comparable to untagged rTCRs. The TraCR antibody bound UniTope with nanomolar affinity and no detectable cross-reactivity was observed for endogenous proteins expressed by human cells of diverse origin, importantly, including T cells of the natural T cell repertoires of multiple human donors. Functional assays confirmed that UniTope-tagged rTCRs preserved their antigen-specific cytokine secretion and cytolytic activity upon antigen-specific stimulation. The UniTope & TraCR System enabled robust detection of rTCR-expressing T cells by flow cytometry, and rTCR protein expression by Western blot or immunoprecipitation, supporting the quantitative assessment of receptor copy number and structural integrity. Conclusions: The UniTope & TraCR System provides a modular, construct-agnostic platform for monitoring engineered rTCRs, integrated into TCR-T cell therapies currently in development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Cancer and Cancer-Related Research)
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18 pages, 2586 KB  
Article
Novel ACE-Inhibitory Peptides from Royal Jelly Proteins: Comprehensive Screening, Mechanistic Insights, and Endothelial Protection
by Wanyu Yang, Xinyu Zou, Tianrong Zhang, Qingqing Liu, Ziyan Liu, Fan Li, Yuhong Luo, Yiwen Wang, Zhijun Qiu and Bin Zhang
Foods 2026, 15(1), 84; https://doi.org/10.3390/foods15010084 - 26 Dec 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 817
Abstract
This study aimed to identify novel angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE)-inhibitory peptides from royal jelly proteins (RJPs) by integrating in silico digestion, virtual screening, and in vitro evaluation. Three major royal jelly proteins (MRJP1-3) were subjected to in silico digestion using 16 enzymatic systems, yielding [...] Read more.
This study aimed to identify novel angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE)-inhibitory peptides from royal jelly proteins (RJPs) by integrating in silico digestion, virtual screening, and in vitro evaluation. Three major royal jelly proteins (MRJP1-3) were subjected to in silico digestion using 16 enzymatic systems, yielding 1411 unique peptides. Virtual screening based on predicted bioactivity, toxicity, water solubility, and ADMET profiles resulted in the selection of 27 candidate peptides. Molecular docking revealed strong binding affinities for these peptides compared with the positive control captopril, among which PYPDWSFAK and RPYPDWSF exhibited potent ACE-inhibitory activity, with IC50 values of 110 ± 1.02 μmol/L and 204 ± 0.61 μmol/L, respectively. Kinetic analysis indicated that PYPDWSFAK acts as a mixed-type ACE inhibitor. Docking visualization demonstrated that PYPDWSFAK forms multiple hydrogen bonds with key residues in the ACE active pocket and directly coordinates with the catalytic Zn2+ ion. Cellular assays showed that PYPDWSFAK was non-cytotoxic, suppressed Ang II–induced endothelial cell migration, restored NO and ET-1 balance, and enhanced SOD and GSH-Px activities. Overall, this study enriches the repertoire of ACE-inhibitory peptides derived from royal jelly proteins. Furthermore, PYPDWSFAK is identified as a promising ACE-inhibitory peptide with potential for incorporation into natural antihypertensive ingredients or functional foods. Full article
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20 pages, 2100 KB  
Review
Development of αβ and γδ T Cells in the Thymus and Methods of Analysis
by Aleksey Bulygin, Elena Golikova and Sergey Sennikov
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2025, 26(24), 11939; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms262411939 - 11 Dec 2025
Viewed by 2103
Abstract
The thymus, as the primary lymphoid organ for T cell development, orchestrates a complex continuum of processes encompassing precursor migration, lymphocyte lineage commitment, and antigen-guided selection to generate a self-tolerant and immunocompetent T cell repertoire. The thymus is anatomically divided into the cortex, [...] Read more.
The thymus, as the primary lymphoid organ for T cell development, orchestrates a complex continuum of processes encompassing precursor migration, lymphocyte lineage commitment, and antigen-guided selection to generate a self-tolerant and immunocompetent T cell repertoire. The thymus is anatomically divided into the cortex, which facilitates the positive selection of thymocytes through interactions between T cell receptors and self-peptide–MHC complexes on cortical epithelial cells, and the medulla, which mediates negative selection by medullary epithelial cells in concert with dendritic cells via the presentation of self-antigens. Key regulatory elements controlling thymocyte development include the transcription factors ThPOK/Runx3 and Sox13/PLZF, chemokine-driven migration mediated by CXCR4 and CCR7, and cytokine signaling. These components collectively exert a profound influence on the final outcome: the establishment of TCR affinity thresholds for tissue-specific antigens in mature T cells. In summary, the integration of multidimensional methodologies highlights the pivotal role of the thymus in immune tolerance, with translational implications for autoimmunity, cancer immunotherapy, and regenerative medicine, as reviewed herein. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Molecular Immunology)
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17 pages, 3320 KB  
Article
Genome-Wide Identification, Characterization, and Expression Profiles of TLR Genes in Darkbarbel Catfish (Pelteobagrus vachelli) Following Aeromonas hydrophila Infection
by Zhengyong Wen, Lisha Guo, Jianchao Chen, Qiyu Chen, Yanping Li, Yunyun Lv, Qiong Shi and Shengtao Guo
Biology 2025, 14(12), 1724; https://doi.org/10.3390/biology14121724 - 1 Dec 2025
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 952
Abstract
Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are central to pathogen recognition in teleost innate immunity. In this study, we surveyed 41 genomes from four representative teleost orders (i.e., Cypriniformes, Siluriformes, Perciformes, and Pleuronectiformes) for 15 TLR genes (TLR1–9, 12, 13, 18, 20–22) revealed a [...] Read more.
Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are central to pathogen recognition in teleost innate immunity. In this study, we surveyed 41 genomes from four representative teleost orders (i.e., Cypriniformes, Siluriformes, Perciformes, and Pleuronectiformes) for 15 TLR genes (TLR1–9, 12, 13, 18, 20–22) revealed a conserved core (TLR2/3/7 in nearly all examined species) alongside lineage-specific losses (TLR4/9/18/20/21/22), indicating both strong conservation and dynamic diversification of the TLR repertoire. We further identified and characterized 12 TLR genes in economically important darkbarbel catfish (Pelteobagrus vachellii). Corresponding cDNAs span 2089–4456 bp and encode proteins of 789–1,087 aa, with canonical extracellular LRR arrays and C-terminal TIR domains but notable “non-classical” features (such as absence of signal peptides in TLR1/13; no transmembrane segment in TLR7; multiple transmembranes in TLR3/8/13/18/22), suggesting subcellular and functional heterogeneity of various TLR genes. Subsequent gene-structure comparisons uncovered gene-specific exon–intron organizations and variable UTR lengths, implicating differential post-transcriptional regulation. Predicted 3D structures retain the traditional hallmark LRR horseshoe fold with subtle variations potentially tuning ligand specificity. Genomic synteny with Pseudobagrus ussuriensi and Pangasianodon hypophthalmus reveals conserved chromosomal organization, and phylogeny construction resolves each TLR subtype into well-supported monophyletic clades, which underscore evolutionary stability. Functionally, exogenous Aeromonas hydrophila challenge triggered rapid, tissue-dependent TLR up-regulation in the kidney, liver, and especially gill (with some transcripts > 1000-fold), highlighting coordinated mucosal and systemic surveillance in darkbarbel catfish. Taken together, these valuable data provide a comprehensive framework for the structural, evolutionary, and inducible expression landscape of catfish TLRs and establish a foundation for in-depth studies on antibacterial immunity in diverse teleost species. Full article
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26 pages, 2960 KB  
Article
Tissue-Specific Gene Expression of Digestive Tract Glands in Paroctopus digueti: Insights for Cephalopod Biology and Aquaculture
by María G. Martínez-Morales, Oscar E. Juárez, Dariel Tovar-Ramírez, Clara E. Galindo-Sánchez, Claudia Ventura-López, Carlos Rosas, Héctor Nolasco-Soria and Bertha Patricia Ceballos-Vázquez
Animals 2025, 15(21), 3224; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani15213224 - 6 Nov 2025
Viewed by 1656
Abstract
Pacific pygmy octopus Paroctopus digueti is a promising model for cephalopod research and aquaculture; its feeding and nutritional biology remain poorly understood. The anterior salivary glands (ASG), posterior salivary glands (PSG), and digestive gland (DG) are central to these processes, but molecular comparisons [...] Read more.
Pacific pygmy octopus Paroctopus digueti is a promising model for cephalopod research and aquaculture; its feeding and nutritional biology remain poorly understood. The anterior salivary glands (ASG), posterior salivary glands (PSG), and digestive gland (DG) are central to these processes, but molecular comparisons are lacking. To address this gap, we performed a transcriptomic study to explore the enzymatic repertoire and functional specialization of these tissues. Total RNA was extracted from ASG, PSG, and DG of three pre-adult individuals collected in La Paz Bay, Mexico. RNA-Seq libraries were sequenced, and a non-redundant multi-tissue transcriptome was assembled. The ASG displayed high expression of neuropeptides, playing a role in neuroendocrine regulation. The PSG showed elevated protease expression, supporting its function in extracellular digestion, alongside toxins that reinforce its role as a venom gland. The DG was enriched in proteins linked to biomolecule catabolism and antimicrobial peptides, alluding to metabolic specialization and immune defense. These results were validated by qPCR, and target genes were also amplified in Octopus maya and O. hubbsorum, showing some similarities in expression patterns. Overall, our findings suggest strong glandular specialization in P. digueti, providing insights into cephalopod digestive physiology and supporting its value as a model species. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Advances in Cephalopod Biology Research)
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23 pages, 3903 KB  
Article
Integrative Multi-Omics Identify Key Secondary Metabolites Linked to Acid Tolerance in Leptospirillum ferriphilum
by Yiran Li, Jiejie Yang, Xian Zhang, Luhua Jiang, Shiqi Chen, Manjun Miao, Yili Liang and Xueduan Liu
Microorganisms 2025, 13(11), 2493; https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms13112493 - 30 Oct 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1238
Abstract
Acid mine drainage (AMD) environments feature extreme acidity (pH ≤ 2) and high heavy metal concentrations. Acidophiles survive these conditions through unique genetic adaptations and secondary metabolite (SM) pathways. Leptospirillum ferriphilum, known for its acid and heavy metal resistance, serves as a [...] Read more.
Acid mine drainage (AMD) environments feature extreme acidity (pH ≤ 2) and high heavy metal concentrations. Acidophiles survive these conditions through unique genetic adaptations and secondary metabolite (SM) pathways. Leptospirillum ferriphilum, known for its acid and heavy metal resistance, serves as a model for AMD bioremediation, though systematic multi-omics studies on its key SMs and biosynthesis pathways remain underexplored. In this study, L. ferriphilum YR01 was isolated and identified from the AMD of the Zijinshan copper mine, China. Pangenomic analysis revealed that YR01 possesses the largest number of genes (2623) among the eight sequenced L. ferriphilum strains. Comparative genomics, antiSMASH, BiG-SCAPE, and metabolomic analyses (LC-MS and HPLC-MS) were integrated to comprehensively explore its biosynthetic capacity. A total of 39 biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) were identified, of which 60% shared <50% similarity with known clusters, indicating substantial novel biosynthetic potential. The sequence alignment of SM biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) demonstrated the potential of L. ferriphilum to synthesize conserved clusters for ectoine, choline, carotenoids, terpenoids, and terpene precursors. YR01 harbors complete BGCs for all five SM types. Notably, key nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) modules implicated in N-acyl homoserine lactone (AHL) synthesis were identified. Untargeted metabolomics (LC-MS) revealed the production of diverse SMs (18 types) putatively involved in environmental adaptation, including phosphocholine, carotenoids (e.g., anteraxanthin), cholera autoinducer-1 (CAI-1), and multiple AHLs. Targeted detection (HPLC-MS) further confirmed that YR01 could produce ectoine (0.10 ng/mL) and specific AHLs (C14-HSL, C12-HSL, C12-OH-HSL), which were beneficial for the survival of the strain in extremely acidic environments and interspecies communication through SMs. This study represents the first comprehensive multi-omics characterization of BGCs in L. ferriphilum and experimentally validates the production of key SMs. Collectively, this study provides a comprehensive elucidation of the SM biosynthetic repertoire and environmental adaptation strategies in L. ferriphilum, advancing our understanding of microbial adaptation and interspecies communication in AMD systems, and offering potential implications for biomining applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Genomics and Ecology of Environmental Microorganisms)
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13 pages, 3994 KB  
Article
Nitazoxanide Shows an Immunomodulatory Effect in Vγ9Vδ2 T Cells
by Ángel Daniel Campos-Juárez, Octavio Rodríguez-Cortes, Andrés Ademar Garcia-Nuñez, Mónica Adriana Rodríguez-Cadena, Jonathan B. Cortés-Serrano, Carlos Zepactonal Gómez-Castro, Itzel Pamela Torres-Avila, Damaris Priscila Romero-Rodríguez, Gamaliel Benítez-Arvizu, Dean J. Naisbitt, Mario Adán Moreno-Eutimio and José Luis Castrejón-Flores
Sci. Pharm. 2025, 93(4), 53; https://doi.org/10.3390/scipharm93040053 - 22 Oct 2025
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Abstract
The γδ T cells belong to a subgroup of T cells known as non-conventional T cells due to their limited T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire and ability to recognize non-peptide antigens. They play a crucial role in combating infections and tumors. Vγ9Vδ2 T [...] Read more.
The γδ T cells belong to a subgroup of T cells known as non-conventional T cells due to their limited T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire and ability to recognize non-peptide antigens. They play a crucial role in combating infections and tumors. Vγ9Vδ2 T cells are typically activated by molecules containing diphosphate groups, collectively known as phosphoantigens (pAgs), through a non-canonical mechanism which involves the intracellular domain of butyrofilin (BTN)3A1 protein. However, no FDA-approved drugs have yet been shown to activate them, and the underlying cellular mechanisms remain unknown. In this study, we combined high-throughput virtual screening of an FDA-approved drug database with in vitro cellular assays to identify potential γδ T cells activators. Our findings demonstrate that Nitazoxanide (NTZ) and Tinidazole induce moderate elicited a statistically significant increase in interferon (IFN)-γ production of Vγ9Vδ2 T cells by their probably interaction with the pAg binding site of BTN3A1. Additionally, NTZ induces expression of CD107a, but only at the highest concentrations tested and promotes the upregulation of HLA-DR in total PBMCs and CD14+ monocytes. Blocking BTN3A with a specific antibody led to a marked reduction in all NTZ-induced activations. This work identifies NTZ as a previously unrecognized activator of γδ T cells, highlighting its immunomodulatory potential beyond its known clinical uses. These findings broaden our understanding of γδ T cells pharmacology and suggest new opportunities for drug repurposing and the design of novel chemical scaffolds. Further mechanistic studies will be essential to fully define how NTZ engages the BTN3A–γδ T cells axis. Full article
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