Publications by authors named "Zev Gartner"

Three-dimensional (3D) printing can be beneficial to tissue engineers and the regenerative medicine community because of its potential to rapidly build elaborate 3D structures from cellular and material inks. However, predicting changes to the structure and pattern of printed tissues arising from the mechanical activity of constituent cells is technically and conceptually challenging. This perspective is targeted to scientists and engineers interested in 3D bioprinting, but from the point of view of cells and tissues as mechanically active living materials.

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Somatic mutations in mitochondrial genomes (mtDNA) accumulate exponentially during aging. Using single cell sequencing, we characterize the spectrum of age-accumulated mtDNA mutations in mouse and human liver and identify directional forces that accelerate the accumulation of mutations beyond the rate predicted by a neutral model. "Driver" mutations that give genomes a replicative advantage rose to high cellular abundance and carried along "passenger" mutations, some of which are deleterious.

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Metastasis is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths. It is unclear how intratumor heterogeneity (ITH) contributes to metastasis and how metastatic cells adapt to distant tissue environments. The study of these adaptations is challenged by the limited access to patient material and a lack of experimental models that appropriately recapitulate ITH.

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Tissue folds are structural motifs critical to organ function. In the intestine, bending of a flat epithelium into a periodic pattern of folds gives rise to villi, finger-like protrusions that enable nutrient absorption. However, the molecular and mechanical processes driving villus morphogenesis remain unclear.

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Article Synopsis
  • Juvenile dermatomyositis (JDM) is an autoimmune disorder in children linked to abnormal immune responses and limited treatment options due to unclear disease mechanisms.
  • The study analyzed the blood of JDM patients at various disease stages, revealing that B cells were skewed towards an immature state and T cells showed signs of sustained Th2-mediated inflammation even during inactive disease.
  • By using network analysis, researchers found that a heightened type I IFN response across immune cells is connected to dysfunctional processes in CD4+ T cells and cell death regulation in other T cell types, highlighting the complex immune dysregulation in JDM and hinting at potential treatment strategies.
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Organoids are powerful models of tissue physiology, yet their applications remain limited due to their relatively simple morphology and high organoid-to-organoid structural variability. To address these limitations we developed a soft, composite yield-stress extracellular matrix that supports optimal organoid morphogenesis following freeform 3D bioprinting of cell slurries at tissue-like densities. The material is designed with two temperature regimes: at 4 °C it exhibits reversible yield-stress behavior to support long printing times without compromising cell viability.

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A key aspect of nutrient absorption is the exquisite division of labour across the length of the small intestine, with individual nutrients taken up at different proximal:distal positions. For millennia, the small intestine was thought to comprise three segments with indefinite borders: the duodenum, jejunum and ileum. By examining the fine-scale longitudinal transcriptional patterns that span the mouse and human small intestine, we instead identified five domains of nutrient absorption that mount distinct responses to dietary changes, and three regional stem cell populations.

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Sample multiplexing enables pooled analysis during single-cell RNA sequencing workflows, thereby increasing throughput and reducing batch effects. A challenge for all multiplexing techniques is to link sample-specific barcodes with cell-specific barcodes, then demultiplex sample identity post-sequencing. However, existing demultiplexing tools fail under many real-world conditions where barcode cross-contamination is an issue.

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Article Synopsis
  • Juvenile Dermatomyositis (JDM) is an autoimmune disorder in children characterized by immune system dysfunction and limited treatment options due to unclear disease mechanisms.
  • Researchers studied blood samples from JDM patients to examine the immune system's behavior, finding that B cells showed signs of immaturity and were linked to inflammation patterns.
  • The study revealed a coordinated hyperactivation of the type I interferon response across immune cells, suggesting new ways to understand and potentially improve immune regulation in JDM.
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Although robustly expressed in the disease-free (DF) breast stroma, CD36 is consistently absent from the stroma surrounding invasive breast cancers (IBCs). In this study, we primarily observed CD36 expression in adipocytes and intralobular capillaries within the DF breast. Larger vessels concentrated in interlobular regions lacked CD36 and were instead marked by the expression of CD31.

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A key aspect of nutrient absorption is the exquisite division of labor across the length of the small intestine, with individual classes of micronutrients taken up at different positions. For millennia, the small intestine was thought to comprise three segments with indefinite borders: the duodenum, jejunum, and ileum. By examining fine-scale longitudinal segmentation of the mouse and human small intestines, we identified transcriptional signatures and upstream regulatory factors that define five domains of nutrient absorption, distinct from the three traditional sections.

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The gastrointestinal tract relies on the production, maturation, and transit of mucin to protect against pathogens and to lubricate the epithelial lining. Although the molecular and cellular mechanisms that regulate mucin production and movement are beginning to be understood, the upstream epithelial signals that contribute to mucin regulation remain unclear. Here, we report that the inflammatory cytokine tumor necrosis factor (TNF), generated by the epithelium, contributes to mucin homeostasis by regulating both cell differentiation and cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) activity.

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Tissues comprise ordered arrangements of cells that can be surprisingly disordered in their details. How the properties of single cells and their microenvironment contribute to the balance between order and disorder at the tissue-scale remains poorly understood. Here, we address this question using the self-organization of human mammary organoids as a model.

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Tissue folding generates structural motifs critical to organ function. In the intestine, bending of a flat epithelium into a periodic pattern of folds gives rise to villi, the numerous finger-like protrusions that are essential for nutrient absorption. However, the molecular and mechanical mechanisms driving the initiation and morphogenesis of villi remain a matter of debate.

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Gene regulatory networks within cells modulate the expression of the genome in response to signals and changing environmental conditions. Reconstructions of gene regulatory networks can reveal the information processing and control principles used by cells to maintain homeostasis and execute cell-state transitions. Here, we introduce a computational framework, D-SPIN, that generates quantitative models of gene regulatory networks from single-cell mRNA-seq datasets collected across thousands of distinct perturbation conditions.

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Single-cell sample multiplexing technologies function by associating sample-specific barcode tags with cell-specific barcode tags, thereby increasing sample throughput, reducing batch effects, and decreasing reagent costs. Computational methods must then correctly associate cell-tags with sample-tags, but their performance deteriorates rapidly when working with datasets that are large, have imbalanced cell numbers across samples, or are noisy due to cross-contamination among sample tags - unavoidable features of many real-world experiments. Here we introduce deMULTIplex2, a mechanism-guided classification algorithm for multiplexed scRNA-seq data that successfully recovers many more cells across a spectrum of challenging datasets compared to existing methods.

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Collective cell behavior contributes to all stages of cancer progression. Understanding how collective behavior emerges through cell-cell interactions and decision-making will advance our understanding of cancer biology and provide new therapeutic approaches. Here, we summarize an interdisciplinary discussion on multicellular behavior in cancer, draw lessons from other scientific disciplines, and identify future directions.

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Current single-cell RNA-sequencing approaches have limitations that stem from the microfluidic devices or fluid handling steps required for sample processing. We develop a method that does not require specialized microfluidic devices, expertise or hardware. Our approach is based on particle-templated emulsification, which allows single-cell encapsulation and barcoding of cDNA in uniform droplet emulsions with only a vortexer.

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Adherens junctions (AJs) create spatially, chemically and mechanically discrete microdomains at cellular interfaces. Here, using a mechanogenetic platform that generates artificial AJs with controlled protein localization, clustering and mechanical loading, we find that AJs also organize proteolytic hotspots for γ-secretase with a spatially regulated substrate selectivity that is critical in the processing of Notch and other transmembrane proteins. Membrane microdomains outside of AJs exclusively organize Notch ligand-receptor engagement (LRE microdomains) to initiate receptor activation.

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The construction of three-dimensional (3D) microvascular networks with defined structures remains challenging. Emerging bioprinting strategies provide a means of patterning endothelial cells (ECs) into the geometry of 3D microvascular networks, but the microenvironmental cues necessary to promote their self-organization into cohesive and perfusable microvessels are not well known. To this end, we reconstituted microvessel formation by patterning thin lines of closely packed ECs fully embedded within a 3D extracellular matrix (ECM) and observed how different microenvironmental parameters influenced EC behaviors and their self-organization into microvessels.

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Environmental enteropathy (EE) is a subclinical condition of the small intestine that is highly prevalent in low- and middle-income countries. It is thought to be a key contributing factor to childhood malnutrition, growth stunting, and diminished oral vaccine responses. Although EE has been shown to be the by-product of a recurrent enteric infection, its full pathophysiology remains unclear.

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The balance between stem cell renewal and differentiation is determined by the interplay between intrinsic cellular controls and extrinsic factors presented by the microenvironment, or 'niche'. Previous studies on cultured human epidermis have utilised suspension culture and restricted cell spreading to investigate regulation of differentiation in single keratinocytes. However, keratinocytes are typically adherent to neighbouring cells in vivo.

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The rise and fall of estrogen and progesterone across menstrual cycles and during pregnancy regulates breast development and modifies cancer risk. How these hormones impact each cell type in the breast remains poorly understood because they act indirectly through paracrine networks. Using single-cell analysis of premenopausal breast tissue, we reveal a network of coordinated transcriptional programs representing the tissue-level response to changing hormone levels.

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Organoids recapitulate complex 3D organ structures and represent a unique opportunity to probe the principles of self-organization. While we can alter an organoid's morphology by manipulating the culture conditions, the morphology of an organoid often resembles that of its original organ, suggesting that organoid morphologies are governed by a set of tissue-specific constraints. Here, we establish a framework to identify constraints on an organoid's morphological features by quantifying them from microscopy images of organoids exposed to a range of perturbations.

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Tumor evolution is driven by the progressive acquisition of genetic and epigenetic alterations that enable uncontrolled growth and expansion to neighboring and distal tissues. The study of phylogenetic relationships between cancer cells provides key insights into these processes. Here, we introduced an evolving lineage-tracing system with a single-cell RNA-seq readout into a mouse model of Kras;Trp53(KP)-driven lung adenocarcinoma and tracked tumor evolution from single-transformed cells to metastatic tumors at unprecedented resolution.

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