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39 result(s) for "Waggoner, Stephen N"
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The AIM2 inflammasome is essential for host defense against cytosolic bacteria and DNA viruses
The AIM2 inflammasome induces maturation of the proinflammatory cytokines IL-1β and IL-18. Using AIM2-deficient mice, Fitzgerald and colleagues and Alnemri and colleagues show that the AIM2 inflammasome is essential for host defense against cytosolic bacteria and DNA viruses. Inflammasomes regulate the activity of caspase-1 and the maturation of interleukin 1β (IL-1β) and IL-18. AIM2 has been shown to bind DNA and engage the caspase-1-activating adaptor protein ASC to form a caspase-1-activating inflammasome. Using Aim2 -deficient mice, we identify a central role for AIM2 in regulating caspase-1-dependent maturation of IL-1β and IL-18, as well as pyroptosis, in response to synthetic double-stranded DNA. AIM2 was essential for inflammasome activation in response to Francisella tularensis , vaccinia virus and mouse cytomegalovirus and had a partial role in the sensing of Listeria monocytogenes . Moreover, production of IL-18 and natural killer cell–dependent production of interferon-γ, events critical in the early control of virus replication, were dependent on AIM2 during mouse cytomegalovirus infection in vivo . Collectively, our observations demonstrate the importance of AIM2 in the sensing of both bacterial and viral pathogens and in triggering innate immunity.
Negativity begets longevity in T cells
Killer immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIRs) are polymorphic receptors for human leukocyte antigens (HLAs) that provide positive or negative signals controlling lymphocyte activation. Expression of inhibitory KIRs by CD8+ T cells affects their survival and function, which is linked to improved antiviral immunity and prevention of autoimmunity. In this issue of the JCI, Zhang, Yan, and co-authors demonstrate that increased numbers of functional inhibitory KIR-HLA pairs equating to greater negative regulation promoted longer lifespans of human T cells. This effect was independent of direct signals provided to KIR-expressing T cells and was instead driven by indirect mechanisms. Since the long-term maintenance of CD8+ T cells is critical for immune readiness against cancer and infection, this discovery has implications for immunotherapy and the preservation of immune function during aging.
The Effect of Unconventional Cytokine Combinations on NK-Cell Responses to Viral Infection
Cytokines are soluble and membrane-bound factors that dictate immune responses. Dogmatically, cytokines are divided into families that promote type 1 cell-mediated immune responses (e.g., IL-12) or type 2 humoral responses (e.g., IL-4), each capable of antagonizing the opposing family of cytokines. The discovery of additional families of cytokines (e.g., IL-17) has added complexity to this model, but it was the realization that immune responses frequently comprise mixtures of different types of cytokines that dismantled this black-and-white paradigm. In some cases, one type of response may dominate these mixed milieus in disease pathogenesis and thereby present a clear therapeutic target. Alternatively, synergistic or blended cytokine responses may obfuscate the origins of disease and perplex clinical decision making. Most immune cells express receptors for many types of cytokines and can mediate a myriad of functions important for tolerance, immunity, tissue damage, and repair. In this review, we will describe the unconventional effects of a variety of cytokines on the activity of a prototypical type 1 effector, the natural killer (NK) cell, and discuss how this may impact the contributions of these cells to health and disease.
Generation of cellular immune memory and B-cell immunity is impaired by natural killer cells
The goal of most vaccines is the induction of long-lived memory T and B cells capable of protecting the host from infection by cytotoxic mechanisms, cytokines and high-affinity antibodies. However, efforts to develop vaccines against major human pathogens such as HIV and HCV have not been successful, thereby highlighting the need for novel approaches to circumvent immunoregulatory mechanisms that limit the induction of protective immunity. Here, we show that mouse natural killer (NK) cells inhibit generation of long-lived virus-specific memory T- and B cells as well as virus-specific antibody production after acute infection. Mechanistically, NK cells suppressed CD4 T cells and follicular helper T cells (T FH ) in a perforin-dependent manner during the first few days of infection, resulting in a weaker germinal centre (GC) response and diminished immune memory. We anticipate that innovative strategies to relieve NK cell-mediated suppression of immunity should facilitate development of efficacious new vaccines targeting difficult-to-prevent infections. The need to develop vaccines against pathogens such as HIV requires the development of strategies to overcome inhibitory immunoregulatory mechanisms. Here, the authors report that murine natural killer cells inhibit CD4- and follicular helper T cells, leading to a weaker germinal center response and diminished virus-specific immune memory.
KCa3.1 channels regulate the tumor infiltration of functionally competent NK cells in head and neck cancer
CD8 + T cells and natural killer (NK) cells are the primary defenses against tumor cells. The tumor microenvironment impairs their antitumor capabilities, including the ability to infiltrate the tumor. Our laboratory has shown that tumors suppress T cells by inhibiting KCa3.1 K + channel activity that controls cytokine release, cytotoxicity, and chemotaxis. However, little is known about the role of K + channels in the anti-tumor activity of NK cells. Here, we investigated KCa3.1 channels’ role in human NK cell function in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). Selective blockade of KCa3.1 using TRAM-34 inhibited chemotaxis of NK cells from both healthy donors and patients with HNSCC, while KCa3.1pharmacological activation increased chemotaxis and cytotoxicity. SKA-31, a selective KCa3.1 activator, enhanced antitumor immune responses in a humanized HNSCC mouse model generated by implanting Cal27 cells and healthy donor peripheral blood mononuclear cells into immunodeficient mice. SKA-31 treatment resulted in a 7-fold increase in total NK cells and a 23-fold increase in functionally active (granzyme B-positive) NK cells in these tumors. These data highlight the critical role of KCa3.1 channels in antitumor immunity and open the possibility of targeting KCa3.1 to develop new immunotherapies for HNSCC.
Circadian Rhythms in Immunity
Purpose of ReviewThis review is focused on the existing evidence for circadian control of innate and adaptive immune responses to provide a framework for evaluating the contributions of diurnal rhythms to control of infections and pathogenesis of disease.Recent FindingsCircadian rhythms driven by cell-autonomous biological clocks are central to innate and adaptive immune responses against microbial pathogens. Research during the past few years has uncovered circadian circuits governing leukocyte migration between tissues, the magnitude of mucosal inflammation, the types of cytokines produced, and the severity of immune diseases. Other studies revealed how disruption of the circadian clock impairs immune function or how microbial products alter clock machinery.SummaryRevelations concerning the widespread impact of the circadian clock on immunity and homeostasis highlight how the timing of inflammatory challenges can dictate pathological outcomes and how the timing of therapeutic interventions likely determines clinical efficacy. An improved understanding of circadian circuits controlling immune function will facilitate advances in circadian immunotherapy.
Ebola virus protein VP40 stimulates IL-12– and IL-18–dependent activation of human natural killer cells
Accumulation of activated natural killer (NK) cells in tissues during Ebola virus infection contributes to Ebola virus disease (EVD) pathogenesis. Yet, immunization with Ebola virus-like particles (VLPs) comprising glycoprotein and matrix protein VP40 provides rapid, NK cell-mediated protection against Ebola challenge. We used Ebola VLPs as the viral surrogates to elucidate the molecular mechanism by which Ebola virus triggers heightened NK cell activity. Incubation of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells with Ebola VLPs or VP40 protein led to increased expression of IFN-γ, TNF-α, granzyme B, and perforin by CD3-CD56+ NK cells, along with increases in degranulation and cytotoxic activity of these cells. Optimal activation required accessory cells like CD14+ myeloid and CD14- cells and triggered increased secretion of numerous inflammatory cytokines. VP40-induced IFN-γ and TNF-α secretion by NK cells was dependent on IL-12 and IL-18 and suppressed by IL-10. In contrast, their increased degranulation was dependent on IL-12 with little influence of IL-18 or IL-10. These results demonstrate that Ebola VP40 stimulates NK cell functions in an IL-12- and IL-18-dependent manner that involves CD14+ and CD14- accessory cells. These potentially novel findings may help in designing improved intervention strategies required to control viral transmission during Ebola outbreaks.
Natural killer cells act as rheostats modulating antiviral T cells
Natural killer cells can act as rheostats, or ‘master regulators’, controlling antiviral T-cell responses. Immunoregulation by natural killer cells In mice infected with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus, a model for human hepatitis C virus and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections, natural killer (NK) T cells are shown to regulate antiviral T-cell immunity by directly killing activated CD4 T cells. This immunoregulatory role is in addition to the direct antiviral effects of NK cells. Antiviral T cells are thought to regulate whether hepatitis C virus (HCV) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections result in viral control, asymptomatic persistence or severe disease, although the reasons for these different outcomes remain unclear. Recent genetic evidence, however, has indicated a correlation between certain natural killer (NK)-cell receptors and progression of both HIV and HCV infection 1 , 2 , 3 , implying that NK cells have a role in these T-cell-associated diseases. Although direct NK-cell-mediated lysis of virus-infected cells may contribute to antiviral defence during some virus infections—especially murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) infections in mice and perhaps HIV in humans 4 , 5 —NK cells have also been suspected of having immunoregulatory functions. For instance, NK cells may indirectly regulate T-cell responses by lysing MCMV-infected antigen-presenting cells 6 , 7 . In contrast to MCMV, lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) infection in mice seems to be resistant to any direct antiviral effects of NK cells 5 , 8 . Here we examine the roles of NK cells in regulating T-cell-dependent viral persistence and immunopathology in mice infected with LCMV, an established model for HIV and HCV infections in humans. We describe a three-way interaction, whereby activated NK cells cytolytically eliminate activated CD4 T cells that affect CD8 T-cell function and exhaustion. At high virus doses, NK cells prevented fatal pathology while enabling T-cell exhaustion and viral persistence, but at medium doses NK cells paradoxically facilitated lethal T-cell-mediated pathology. Thus, NK cells can act as rheostats, regulating CD4 T-cell-mediated support for the antiviral CD8 T cells that control viral pathogenesis and persistence.
Prothrombin prevents fatal T cell–dependent anemia during chronic virus infection of mice
Thrombin promotes the proliferation and function of CD8+ T cells. To test if thrombin prevents exhaustion and sustains antiviral T cell activity during chronic viral infection, we depleted the thrombin-precursor prothrombin to 10% of normal levels in mice prior to infection with the clone 13 strain of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus. Unexpectedly, prothrombin insufficiency resulted in 100% mortality after infection that was prevented by depletion of CD8+ T cells, suggesting that reduced availability of prothrombin enhances virus-induced immunopathology. Yet, the number, function, and apparent exhaustion of virus-specific T cells were measurably unaffected by prothrombin depletion. Histological analysis of the lung, heart, liver, kidney, spleen, intestine, and brain did not reveal any evidence of hemorrhage or increased tissue damage in mice with low levels of prothrombin that could explain mortality. Viral loads were also similar in infected mice regardless of prothrombin levels. Instead, infection of prothrombin-depleted mice resulted in a severe, T cell-dependent anemia associated with increased hemolysis. Thus, thrombin plays an unexpected protective role in preventing hemolytic anemia during virus infection, with potential implications for patients who are using direct thrombin inhibitors as an anticoagulant therapy.
Lymph node CXCR5+ NK cells associate with control of chronic SHIV infection
The persistence of virally infected cells as reservoirs despite effective antiretroviral therapy is a major barrier to an HIV/SIV cure. These reservoirs are predominately contained within cells present in the B cell follicles (BCFs) of secondary lymphoid tissues, a site that is characteristically difficult for most cytolytic antiviral effector cells to penetrate. Here, we identified a population of NK cells in macaque lymph nodes that expressed BCF-homing receptor CXCR5 and accumulated within BCFs during chronic SHIV infection. These CXCR5+ follicular NK cells exhibited an activated phenotype coupled with heightened effector functions and a unique transcriptome characterized by elevated expression of cytolytic mediators (e.g., perforin and granzymes, LAMP-1). CXCR5+ NK cells exhibited high expression of FcγRIIa and FcγRIIIa, suggesting a potential for elevated antibody-dependent effector functionality. Consistently, accumulation of CXCR5+ NK cells showed a strong inverse association with plasma viral load and the frequency of germinal center follicular Th cells that comprise a significant fraction of the viral reservoir. Moreover, CXCR5+ NK cells showed increased expression of transcripts associated with IL-12 and IL-15 signaling compared with the CXCR5- subset. Indeed, in vitro treatment with IL-12 and IL-15 enhanced the proliferation of CXCR5+ granzyme B+ NK cells. Our findings suggest that follicular homing NK cells might be important in immune control of chronic SHIV infection, and this may have important implications for HIV cure strategies.