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Medical Microbiology

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Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics Faculty Papers

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Intestinal Neuropod Cell Gucy2c Regulates Visceral Pain, Joshua R. Barton, Annie K. Londregran, Tyler D. Alexander, Ariana A. Entezari, Shely Bar-Ad, Lan Cheng, Angelo C. Lepore, Adam E. Snook, Manuel Covarrubias, Scott A. Waldman Feb 2023

Intestinal Neuropod Cell Gucy2c Regulates Visceral Pain, Joshua R. Barton, Annie K. Londregran, Tyler D. Alexander, Ariana A. Entezari, Shely Bar-Ad, Lan Cheng, Angelo C. Lepore, Adam E. Snook, Manuel Covarrubias, Scott A. Waldman

Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics Faculty Papers

Visceral pain (VP) is a global problem with complex etiologies and limited therapeutic options. Guanylyl cyclase C (GUCY2C), an intestinal receptor producing cyclic GMP(cGMP), which regulates luminal fluid secretion, has emerged as a therapeutic target for VP. Indeed, FDA-approved GUCY2C agonists ameliorate VP in patients with chronic constipation syndromes, although analgesic mechanisms remain obscure. Here, we revealed that intestinal GUCY2C was selectively enriched in neuropod cells, a type of enteroendocrine cell that synapses with submucosal neurons in mice and humans. GUCY2Chi neuropod cells associated with cocultured dorsal root ganglia neurons and induced hyperexcitability, reducing the rheobase and increasing the resulting …


Human Gucy2c-Targeted Chimeric Antigen Receptor (Car)-Expressing T Cells Eliminate Colorectal Cancer Metastases., Michael S. Magee, Tara S. Abraham, Trevor R. Baybutt, John C. Flickinger, Natalie A. Ridge, Glen P Marszalowicz, Priyanka Prajapati, Adam R. Hersperger, Scott A. Waldman, Adam E. Snook May 2018

Human Gucy2c-Targeted Chimeric Antigen Receptor (Car)-Expressing T Cells Eliminate Colorectal Cancer Metastases., Michael S. Magee, Tara S. Abraham, Trevor R. Baybutt, John C. Flickinger, Natalie A. Ridge, Glen P Marszalowicz, Priyanka Prajapati, Adam R. Hersperger, Scott A. Waldman, Adam E. Snook

Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics Faculty Papers

One major hurdle to the success of adoptive T-cell therapy is the identification of antigens that permit effective targeting of tumors in the absence of toxicities to essential organs. Previous work has demonstrated that T cells engineered to express chimeric antigen receptors (CAR-T cells) targeting the murine homolog of the colorectal cancer antigen GUCY2C treat established colorectal cancer metastases, without toxicity to the normal GUCY2C-expressing intestinal epithelium, reflecting structural compartmentalization of endogenous GUCY2C to apical membranes comprising the intestinal lumen. Here, we examined the utility of a human-specific, GUCY2C-directed single-chain variable fragment as the basis for a CAR construct targeting …