Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Shih SCC" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Nicotine Suppresses Human Memory Th Cell Subsets With Preferential Effects on Central Memory Th Cells in an α7 Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor-Dependent Manner Gholizadeh F; Hajiaghayi M; Rahbari N; Choi JS; Heidt S; Como A; Kazerouni M; Kargar M; Pinard-LaRoche A; Shih SCC; Darlington PJ; 41928597
SOH
2 Nebivolol prevents exhausted T cells and enhances cytotoxicity against MCF-7 breast cancer cells in a β2-adrenergic receptor-dependent manner Hajiaghayi M; Gholizadeh F; Rahbari N; Emamnia N; Shih SCC; Darlington PJ; 41906691
SOH
3 Correction: Miniaturized scalable arrayed CRISPR screening in primary cells enables discovery at the single donor resolution Patel MA; Boribong BP; Sinha H; Xiao B; Xie K; Vo PQN; Chin AB; Ellouzi A; Little SR; Shih SCC; Wu H; Muller WJ; Hirukawa A; 41028230
BIOLOGY
4 Recovery of phenotypically sorted cells using droplet-digital microfluidics Deng Z; Perry JM; Weiss M; Genth R; Autour A; Merten CA; Shih SCC; 40693295
ENCS
5 Modulatory effects of M3 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor on inflammatory profiles of human memory T helper cells Gholizadeh F; Hajiaghayi M; Choi JS; Little SR; Rahbari N; Kargar M; Brotto K; Han E; Shih SCC; Darlington PJ; 40405417
BIOLOGY
6 A Digital Microfluidic Platform for the Microscale Production of Functional Immune Cell Therapies Little SR; Rahbari N; Hajiaghayi M; Gholizadeh F; Cloarec-Ung FM; Phillips J; Sinha H; Hirukawa A; Knapp DJHF; Darlington PJ; Shih SCC; 40390294
BIOLOGY
7 The β2-adrenergic biased agonist nebivolol inhibits the development of Th17 and the response of memory Th17 cells in an NF-κB-dependent manner Hajiaghayi M; Gholizadeh F; Han E; Little SR; Rahbari N; Ardila I; Lopez Naranjo C; Tehranimeh K; Shih SCC; Darlington PJ; 39445009
BIOLOGY
8 Integrating microfluidics and synthetic biology: advancements and diverse applications across organisms Leal-Alves C; Deng Z; Kermeci N; Shih SCC; 38712893
BIOLOGY
9 An Automated Single-Cell Droplet-Digital Microfluidic Platform for Monoclonal Antibody Discovery Ahmadi F; Tran H; Letourneau N; Little SR; Fortin A; Moraitis AN; Shih SCC; 38441226
BIOLOGY
10 An electrochemical aptasensor for Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol detection in saliva on a microfluidic platform Kékedy-Nagy L; Perry JM; Little SR; Llorens OY; Shih SCC; 36549107
BIOLOGY
11 Droplet digital microfluidic system for screening filamentous fungi based on enzymatic activity Samlali K; Alves CL; Jezernik M; Shih SCC; 36438986
BIOLOGY
12 A Synthetic Biosensor for Detecting Putrescine in Beef Samples Selim AS; Perry JM; Nasr MA; Pimprikar JM; Shih SCC; 36356104
BIOLOGY
13 Viral Generation, Packaging, and Transduction on a Digital Microfluidic Platform Quach ABV; Little SR; Shih SCC; 35192339
BIOLOGY
14 Digital Microfluidics Chips for the Execution and Real-Time Monitoring of Multiple Ribozymatic Cleavage Reactions Davis AN; Samlali K; Kapadia JB; Perreault J; Shih SCC; Kharma N; 34514224
BIOLOGY
15 Expanding the limits towards 'one-pot' DNA assembly and transformation on a rapid-prototype microfluidic device Perry JM; Soffer G; Jain R; Shih SCC; 34369550
BIOLOGY
16 Real-Time Optogenetics System for Controlling Gene Expression Using a Model-Based Design. Soffer G, Perry JM, Shih SCC 33543619
BIOLOGY
17 One Cell, One Drop, One Click: Hybrid Microfluidics for Mammalian Single Cell Isolation. Samlali K, Ahmadi F, Quach ABV, Soffer G, Shih SCC 32705796
BIOLOGY
18 An Automated Induction Microfluidics System for Synthetic Biology. Husser MC, Vo PQN, Sinha H, Ahmadi F, Shih SCC 29516725
ENCS
19 An automated microfluidic gene-editing platform for deciphering cancer genes. Sinha H, Quach ABV, Vo PQN, Shih SCC 29989627
ENCS
20 An integrated droplet-digital microfluidic system for on-demand droplet creation, mixing, incubation, and sorting. Ahmadi F, Samlali K, Vo PQN, Shih SCC 30633267
ENCS
21 Integration of World-to-Chip Interfaces with Digital Microfluidics for Bacterial Transformation and Enzymatic Assays. Moazami E, Perry JM, Soffer G, Husser MC, Shih SCC 30945840
ENCS

 

Title:Nebivolol prevents exhausted T cells and enhances cytotoxicity against MCF-7 breast cancer cells in a β2-adrenergic receptor-dependent manner
Authors:Hajiaghayi MGholizadeh FRahbari NEmamnia NShih SCCDarlington PJ
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41906691/
DOI:10.1093/cei/uxag018
Publication:Clinical and experimental immunology
Keywords:T cell exhaustioncytotoxic T cellsnebivololtumor microenvironmentβ-adrenergic receptors
PMID:41906691 Category: Date Added:2026-03-30
Dept Affiliation: SOH
1 Department of Biology, School of Health, Concordia University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
2 Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, Center for Applied Synthetic Biology, Concordia University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
3 Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, School of Health, Concordia University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
4 Department of Health Kinesiology & Applied Physiology, School of Health, Concordia University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.

Description:

Introduction: Cancers often drive T cells toward an exhausted state characterized by impaired cytotoxicity and upregulation of inhibitory receptors (PD-1, TIM-3, CD38) and transcriptional regulators (TOX, NFATc1). Repeated stimulation in vitro is used to model this process, reflecting chronic antigen exposure in the tumor microenvironment. Stress-derived catecholamines further drive dysfunction through ß-adrenergic receptor (ß-AR) signaling. Here, we examined the impact of nebivolol, an atypical ß1-AR blocker with ß2-biased agonist activity, on T-cell exhaustion and cytotoxicity against breast cancer cells.

Methods: Human CD3+ T cells from healthy participants were activated once (early activation) or four times (repeated activation) using CD3/CD28/CD2 T cell activator. Cells were treated in vitro with nebivolol, terbutaline (ß2-agonist), isoproterenol (ß1/ß2-agonist), and metoprolol (ß1-blocker). Exhaustion markers, including PD-1, TIM-3, CD38, and TOX, were measured by flow cytometry and RT-qPCR; NFATc1 by western blot; TNF and IFN-? by ELISA, and cytotoxicity against MCF-7 breast carcinoma cells by co-culture assays. Disruption of the ß2-AR gene (ADRB2) was achieved using CRISPR/Cas9.

Results: Nebivolol reduced the proportion of TIM-3+CD38+PD-1+ T cells, downregulated TOX and nuclear NFATc1, and restored ADRB2 expression under repeated activation conditions. Nebivolol enhanced TNF secretion and improved cytotoxicity against MCF-7 cells. In contrast, terbutaline and isoproterenol had no significant effect on exhaustion markers or cytotoxicity. Metoprolol did not inhibit nebivolol's activity, indicating that its effects are not ß1-AR-dependent. Disruption of ADRB2 indicated that nebivolol's anti-exhaustion effects are mediated by ß2-AR.

Discussion: These findings show that nebivolol reinvigorates CD4+ and CD8+ T cells following repeated activation, restoring their cytotoxic function against breast cancer cells in vitro. The immunomodulatory activity of Nebivolol is independent of ß1-AR and mediated through ß2-AR, suggesting that biased ß2-AR signaling may represent a potential strategy for modulating T cell exhaustion in the tumor microenvironment.





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