Publications by authors named "Yash R Patankar"

Despite the high remission rates achieved using T cells bearing a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) against hematogical malignancies, there is still a considerable proportion of patients who eventually experience tumor relapse. Clinical studies have established that mechanisms of treatment failure include the down-regulation of target antigen expression and the limited persistence of effective CAR T cells. We hypothesized that dual targeting mediated by a CAR and a chimeric costimulatory receptor (CCR) could simultaneously enhance T cell cytotoxicity and improve durability.

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Immune responses following Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection or vaccination are frequently assessed by measuring T-cell recognition of crude Mtb antigens, recombinant proteins, or peptide epitopes. We previously showed that not all Mtb-specific T cells recognize Mtb-infected macrophages. Thus, an important question is what proportion of T cells elicited by Mtb infection recognize Mtb-infected macrophages.

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Acidic microenvironments commonly occur at sites of inflammation and bacterial infections. In the context of a Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection, we previously demonstrated that acidosis enhances the cellular proinflammatory interleukin (IL)-1β response in vitro. However, how pH alterations affect in vivo IL-1β responses and subsequent IL-1-driven inflammation during infection with P.

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Article Synopsis
  • Scientists believe that both genes and the environment, like exposure to certain chemicals, can lead to Parkinson's disease (PD).
  • They studied a chemical called rotenone, which can harm the brain and is found in insecticides, to see how it affects mice with and without a specific gene called Nlrp3.
  • The results showed that mice with the Nlrp3 gene got worse brain damage and inflammation from rotenone, suggesting that stopping NLRP3 might help protect the brain from this toxin.
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The NLRC4 inflammasome is responsible for IL-1β processing by macrophages in response to Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection. We therefore hypothesized that mice that lack ASC, an NLRC4 inflammasome adaptor protein necessary for in vitro IL-1β production by macrophages, would be preferentially protected from a hyperinflammatory lethal challenge that is dependent on bacterial type three secretion system (T3SS) activity. We report herein that lack of ASC does not confer preferential protection in response to P.

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Infection by Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and bacteria in general, frequently promotes acidification of the local microenvironment, and this is reinforced by pulmonary exertion and exacerbation. However, the consequence of an acidic environment on the host inflammatory response to P. aeruginosa infection is poorly understood.

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Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an opportunistic bacterial pathogen responsible for a high incidence of acute and chronic pulmonary infection. These infections are particularly prevalent in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and cystic fibrosis: much of the morbidity and pathophysiology associated with these diseases is due to a hypersusceptibility to bacterial infection. Innate immunity, primarily through inflammatory cytokine production, cellular recruitment, and phagocytic clearance by neutrophils and macrophages, is the key to endogenous control of P.

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We previously demonstrated that bacterial flagellar motility is a fundamental mechanism by which host phagocytes bind and ingest bacteria. Correspondingly, loss of bacterial motility, consistently observed in clinical isolates from chronic Pseudomonas aeruginosa infections, enables bacteria to evade association and ingestion of P. aeruginosa by phagocytes both in vitro and in vivo.

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