Publications by authors named "Matthew B Huante"

L-arginine metabolism is strongly linked with immunity to mycobacteria, primarily through the antimicrobial activity of nitric oxide (NO). The potential to modulate tuberculosis (TB) outcomes through interventions that target L-arginine pathways are limited by an incomplete understanding of mechanisms and inadequate in vivo modeling. These gaps in knowledge are compounded for HIV and Mtb co-infections, where activation of arginase-1 due to HIV infection may promote survival and replication of both Mtb and HIV.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on improving human immune system (HIS) mouse models for HIV research, using a method to enhance lymph node and circulating T cell levels through the injection of a specific human ligand (rFLT-3 L).* -
  • The treatment with the Caspase-1/4 inhibitor VX-765 showed promise in reducing CD4 T cell loss and lowering viral load in key lymphoid tissues, coupled with evidence of decreased viral RNA levels.* -
  • These findings suggest that manipulating immune system characteristics in HIS mice can aid in understanding HIV pathology and developing host-directed therapies, although more work is needed to optimize the model further.*
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Therapeutic vaccines have promise as adjunctive treatment for tuberculosis (TB) or as preventives against TB relapse. An important development challenge is the limited understanding of T helper (Th) cell roles during these stages of disease. A murine model of TB relapse was used to identify changes in Th populations and cytokine microenvironment.

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The emergence of a new coronavirus, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), presents an urgent public health crisis. Without available targeted therapies, treatment options remain limited for COVID-19 patients. Using medicinal chemistry and rational drug design strategies, we identify a 2-phenyl-1,2-benzoselenazol-3-one class of compounds targeting the SARS-CoV-2 main protease (M).

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  • Tuberculosis (TB) is influenced by how macrophages' pattern recognition receptors respond to mycobacterial infection, affecting inflammation and antimicrobial actions.
  • The study shows that the macrophage galactose-type lectin (MGL)-1 plays a crucial role in modulating immune responses in a mouse model of TB, with its absence leading to increased inflammation and lipid accumulation.
  • MGL-1 also exhibits unexpected antimycobacterial activity, suggesting that targeting the MGL pathway could offer new therapeutic approaches for enhancing anti-TB immunity.
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Humanized mice have become an important workhorse model for HIV research. Advances that enabled development of a human immune system in immune deficient mouse strains have aided new basic research in HIV pathogenesis and immune dysfunction. The small animal features facilitate development of clinical interventions that are difficult to study in clinical cohorts, and avoid the high cost and regulatory burdens of using non-human primates.

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  • Tuberculosis (TB) relapse after drug treatment poses significant public health challenges, particularly due to worse health outcomes and the risk of drug resistance.
  • Co-infection with HIV, even in those on anti-retroviral therapy, increases the risk of TB relapse and the spread of drug-resistant strains.
  • Researchers used humanized mice to study TB relapse following chemotherapy in the context of HIV infection, revealing changes in lung pathology and viral replication patterns that could enhance understanding of the disease mechanisms and aid in creating new clinical interventions.
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  • Nipah virus (NiV) is a zoonotic virus that can cause severe respiratory illness or brain infections in humans, but its mechanisms of inducing acute lung injury are not fully understood.
  • Research involving human lung grafts in a special type of mouse model demonstrated that NiV-B can replicate in these grafts and trigger significant inflammatory responses, regardless of the human immune cell presence.
  • The findings revealed that while human immune cells did not prevent NiV replication, they played a role in limiting the virus's spread, increasing immune cell migration to the lungs, and elevating inflammatory markers, thus influencing the lung injury response.
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Rift Valley fever is a mosquito-transmitted, zoonotic disease that infects humans and ruminants. Dendritic cell specific intercellular adhesion molecule 3 (ICAM-3) grabbing non-integrin (DC-SIGN) acts as a receptor for members of the phlebovirus genus. The Rift Valley fever virus (RVFV) glycoproteins (Gn/Gc) encode five putative N-glycan sequons (asparagine (N)-any amino acid (X)-serine (S)/threonine (T)) at positions: N438 (Gn), and N794, N829, N1035, and N1077 (Gc).

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Co-infection with HIV increases the morbidity and mortality associated with tuberculosis due to multiple factors including a poorly understood microbial synergy. We developed a novel small animal model of co-infection in the humanized mouse to investigate how HIV infection disrupts pulmonary containment of Mtb. Following dual infection, HIV-infected cells were localized to sites of Mtb-driven inflammation and mycobacterial replication in the lung.

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We recently characterized the Δlpp Δpla double in-frame deletion mutant of Yersinia pestis CO92 molecularly, biologically, and immunologically. While Braun lipoprotein (Lpp) activates toll-like receptor-2 to initiate an inflammatory cascade, plasminogen activator (Pla) protease facilitates bacterial dissemination in the host. The Δlpp Δpla double mutant was highly attenuated in evoking bubonic and pneumonic plague, was rapidly cleared from mouse organs, and generated humoral and cell-mediated immune responses to provide subsequent protection to mice against a lethal challenge dose of wild-type (WT) CO92.

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Memory T cell populations recover following phase I chemotherapy for tuberculosis (TB) and augment the effectiveness of antibiotics during the continuation phase of treatment. For those with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the CD8(+)T cells may have an especially important role in host defense to Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) as CD4(+)T cell function and/or numbers decline.

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Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) is the second leading infectious cause of death worldwide and the primary cause of death in people living with HIV/AIDS. There are several excellent animal models employed to study tuberculosis (TB), but many have limitations for reproducing human pathology and none are amenable to the direct study of HIV/M.

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Natural killer (NK) cells have innate antibacterial activity that could be targeted for clinical interventions for infectious disease caused by naturally occurring or weaponized bacterial pathogens. To determine a potential role for NK cells in immunity to Bacillus anthracis, we utilized primary human and murine NK cells, in vitro assays, and in vivo NK cell depletion in a murine model of inhalational anthrax. Our results demonstrate potent antibacterial activity by human NK cells against B.

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We evaluated two commercial F1 antigen capture-based immunochromatographic dipsticks, Yersinia Pestis (F1) Smart II and Plague BioThreat Alert test strips, in detecting plague bacilli by using whole-blood samples from mice experimentally infected with Yersinia pestis CO92. To assess the specificities of these dipsticks, an in-frame F1-deficient mutant of CO92 (Δcaf) was generated by homologous recombination and used as a negative control. Based on genetic, antigenic/immunologic, and electron microscopic analyses, the Δcaf mutant was devoid of a capsule.

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