232 results match your criteria: "Center for Immunity and Immunotherapies[Affiliation]"

IP6, PF74 affect HIV-1 capsid stability through modulation of hexamer-hexamer tilt angle preference.

Biophys J

December 2024

Department of Integrative Structural and Computational Biology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California. Electronic address:

The HIV-1 capsid is an irregularly shaped protein complex containing the viral genome and several proteins needed for integration into the host cell genome. Small molecules, such as the drug-like compound PF-3450074 (PF74) and the anionic sugar inositolhexakisphosphate (IP6), are known to impact capsid stability, although the mechanisms through which they do so remain unknown. In this study, we employed atomistic molecular dynamics simulations to study the impact of molecules bound to hexamers at the central pore (IP6) and the FG-binding site (PF74) on the interface between capsid oligomers.

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Targeting human plasma cells using small molecule regulated BCMA CAR T cells eliminates circulating antibodies in humanized mice.

Mol Ther

December 2024

Program for Cell and Gene Therapy and Center for Immunity and Immunotherapies, Seattle Children's Research Institute, Seattle, WA, 98101, USA; Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, 98105, USA; Department of Immunology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, 98109, USA. Electronic address:

Pathogenic long-lived plasma cells (LLPCs) secrete autoreactive antibodies, exacerbating autoimmune diseases and complicating solid organ transplantation. Targeted elimination of the autoreactive B-cell pool represents a promising therapeutic strategy, yet current treatment modalities fall short in depleting mature plasma cells. Here, we demonstrate that chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells, targeting BCMA utilizing a split-receptor design, offer a controlled and effective therapeutic strategy against LLPCs.

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Article Synopsis
  • RNA sequencing can uncover various types of transcriptional regulation beyond just gene expression, but current studies often struggle with the complexity of analyzing multiple RNA characteristics.
  • Pantry is a new framework that efficiently generates diverse RNA phenotypes from sequencing data and integrates these phenotypes with genetic data using QTL mapping and other analyses.
  • By applying Pantry to existing datasets, researchers found a significant increase in gene associations, highlighting the importance of analyzing multiple RNA modalities for discovering unique gene-trait relationships and understanding the mechanisms behind genetic regulation.
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Article Synopsis
  • BCAP (B cell adapter for PI 3-kinase) plays a critical role in B cell signaling, particularly in response to viral particles, but its specific function in antibody production was unclear.
  • Research shows that deleting BCAP in B cells reduces their ability to respond to specific antigens by impairing the process of endocytosis through the B cell receptor (BCR).
  • BCAP is essential for organizing actin around antigens for effective endocytosis and processing, which is crucial for presenting these antigens to T cells and facilitating B cell activation.
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Identification of a novel PDC-E2 epitope in primary biliary cholangitis: Application for engineered Treg therapy.

J Autoimmun

December 2024

Center for Translational Immunology, Benaroya Research Institute at Virginia Mason, Seattle, WA, USA; Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA; Department of Immunology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • Primary biliary cholangitis (PBC) is a chronic autoimmune liver disease primarily affecting small bile ducts, with limited treatment options and a reliance on liver transplants in severe cases.
  • Researchers studied T cell responses to a specific protein (PDC-E2) linked to PBC, focusing on a common genetic marker (HLA Class II DRB4∗01:01) found in many patients.
  • They discovered unique T cell receptors (TCRs) that can target a new PDC-E2 epitope, leading to the development of engineered regulatory T cells (EngTreg) that could help suppress harmful immune responses in PBC patients, offering potential for new therapies.
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Dysregulation of T cell response in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease.

Scand J Immunol

December 2024

Center for Immunity and Immunotherapies and Program for Cell and Gene Therapy, Seattle Children's Research Institute, Seattle, Washington, USA.

Article Synopsis
  • Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), which includes Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, is rising in incidence, especially in countries like India, where it has become the second highest in the world.* -
  • The disease is linked to an inappropriate immune response involving various helper T cell subsets and their cytokines, which contribute to gut inflammation and severity.* -
  • The review discusses how different T cell types, including CD8, NKT, and γδT cells, affect IBD outcomes and also explores potential therapeutic options for managing the disease.*
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Blunting specific T-dependent antibody responses with engineered "decoy" B cells.

Mol Ther

October 2024

Department of Immunology, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA 98109, USA; Center for Immunity and Immunotherapies, Seattle Children's Research Institute, Seattle, WA 98101, USA; Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA 98195, USA. Electronic address:

Antibody inhibitors pose an ongoing challenge to the treatment of subjects with inherited protein deficiency disorders, limiting the efficacy of both protein replacement therapy and corrective gene therapy. Beyond their central role as producers of serum antibody, B cells also exhibit many unique properties that could be exploited in cell therapy applications, notably including antigen-specific recognition and the linked capacity for antigen presentation. Here we employed CRISPR-Cas9 to demonstrate that ex vivo antigen-primed Blimp1-knockout "decoy" B cells, incapable of differentiation into plasma cells, participated in and downregulated host antigen-specific humoral responses after adoptive transfer.

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Article Synopsis
  • Juvenile dermatomyositis (JDM) is a rare childhood autoimmune disease potentially linked to microbial exposure, prompting a study on its association with oral and gut microbiome differences.
  • In this study, researchers analyzed microbiome samples from JDM patients and their unaffected family members to understand the impact of genetics and environment on microbiome diversity.
  • Findings indicated that JDM patients had microbiomes more similar to their unaffected siblings than to other JDM patients, with specific bacterial differences potentially influencing the disease's development or being a result of immune dysfunction.
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FOXP3+ regulatory T cells (Treg) are required for maintaining immune tolerance and preventing systemic autoimmunity. PI3Kδ is required for normal Treg development and function. However, the impacts of dysregulated PI3Kδ signaling on Treg function remain incompletely understood.

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Transcriptome data is commonly used to understand genome function via quantitative trait loci (QTL) mapping and to identify the molecular mechanisms driving genome wide association study (GWAS) signals through colocalization analysis and transcriptome-wide association studies (TWAS). While RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) has the potential to reveal many modalities of transcriptional regulation, such as various splicing phenotypes, such studies are often limited to gene expression due to the complexity of extracting and analyzing multiple RNA phenotypes. Here, we present Pantry (Pan-transcriptomic phenotyping), a framework to efficiently generate diverse RNA phenotypes from RNA-seq data and perform downstream integrative analyses with genetic data.

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Large-scale mutational analysis identifies UNC93B1 variants that drive TLR-mediated autoimmunity in mice and humans.

J Exp Med

August 2024

Division of Immunology and Molecular Medicine, Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA.

Nucleic acid-sensing Toll-like receptors (TLR) 3, 7/8, and 9 are key innate immune sensors whose activities must be tightly regulated to prevent systemic autoimmune or autoinflammatory disease or virus-associated immunopathology. Here, we report a systematic scanning-alanine mutagenesis screen of all cytosolic and luminal residues of the TLR chaperone protein UNC93B1, which identified both negative and positive regulatory regions affecting TLR3, TLR7, and TLR9 responses. We subsequently identified two families harboring heterozygous coding mutations in UNC93B1, UNC93B1+/T93I and UNC93B1+/R336C, both in key negative regulatory regions identified in our screen.

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Multi-ancestry statistical fine-mapping of -molecular quantitative trait loci (-molQTL) aims to improve the precision of distinguishing causal -molQTLs from tagging variants. However, existing approaches fail to reflect shared genetic architectures. To solve this limitation, we present the Sum of Shared Single Effects (SuShiE) model, which leverages LD heterogeneity to improve fine-mapping precision, infer cross-ancestry effect size correlations, and estimate ancestry-specific expression prediction weights.

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Differential expression (DE) analysis is a widely used method for identifying genes that are functionally relevant for an observed phenotype or biological response. However, typical DE analysis includes selection of genes based on a threshold of fold change in expression under the implicit assumption that all genes are equally sensitive to dosage changes of their transcripts. This tends to favor highly variable genes over more constrained genes where even small changes in expression may be biologically relevant.

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(PA) is an opportunistic, frequently multidrug-resistant pathogen that can cause severe infections in hospitalized patients. Antibodies against the PA virulence factor, PcrV, protect from death and disease in a variety of animal models. However, clinical trials of PcrV-binding antibody-based products have thus far failed to demonstrate benefit.

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Posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease (PTLD) is a major therapeutic challenge that has been difficult to study using human cells because of a lack of suitable models for mechanistic characterization. Here, we show that ex vivo-differentiated B cells isolated from a subset of healthy donors can elicit pathologies similar to PTLD when transferred into immunodeficient mice. The primary driver of PTLD-like pathologies were IgM-producing plasmablasts with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) genomes that expressed genes commonly associated with EBV latency.

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Introduction: Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a cancer of the hematopoietic system characterized by hyperproliferation of undifferentiated cells of the myeloid lineage. While most of AML therapies are focused toward tumor debulking, all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) induces neutrophil differentiation in the AML subtype acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL). Macroautophagy has been extensively investigated in the context of various cancers and is often dysregulated in AML where it can have context-dependent pro- or anti-leukemogenic effects.

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The seventh iteration of the reference genome assembly for Rattus norvegicus-mRatBN7.2-corrects numerous misplaced segments and reduces base-level errors by approximately 9-fold and increases contiguity by 290-fold compared with its predecessor. Gene annotations are now more complete, improving the mapping precision of genomic, transcriptomic, and proteomics datasets.

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Identification of clickable HIV-1 capsid-targeting probes for viral replication inhibition.

Cell Chem Biol

March 2024

Center for ViroScience and Cure, Laboratory of Biochemical Pharmacology, Department of Pediatrics, Emory University School of Medicine, 1760 Haygood Drive NE, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA; Children's Healthcare of Atlanta, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA; Christopher S. Bond Life Sciences Center, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211, USA; Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, School of Medicine, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65212, USA. Electronic address:

Of the targets for HIV-1 therapeutics, the capsid core is a relatively unexploited but alluring drug target due to its indispensable roles throughout virus replication. Because of this, we aimed to identify "clickable" covalent modifiers of the HIV-1 capsid protein (CA) for future functionalization. We screened a library of fluorosulfate compounds that can undergo sulfur(VI) fluoride exchange (SuFEx) reactions, and five compounds were identified as hits.

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Tregs have the potential to establish long-term immune tolerance in patients recently diagnosed with type 1 diabetes (T1D) by preserving β cell function. Adoptive transfer of autologous thymic Tregs, although safe, exhibited limited efficacy in previous T1D clinical trials, likely reflecting a lack of tissue specificity, limited IL-2 signaling support, and in vivo plasticity of Tregs. Here, we report a cell engineering strategy using bulk CD4+ T cells to generate a Treg cell therapy (GNTI-122) that stably expresses FOXP3, targets the pancreas and draining lymph nodes, and incorporates a chemically inducible signaling complex (CISC).

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Germinal center (GC)-derived memory B cells (MBCs) are critical for humoral immunity as they differentiate into protective antibody-secreting cells during re-infection. GC formation and cellular interactions within the GC have been studied in detail, yet the exact signals that allow for the selection and exit of MBCs are not understood. Here, we showed that IL-4 cytokine signaling in GC B cells directly downregulated the transcription factor BCL6 via negative autoregulation to release cells from the GC program and to promote MBC formation.

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Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is an autoimmune disease in which pancreatic islet β-cells are attacked by the immune system, resulting in insulin deficiency and hyperglycemia. One of the top non-synonymous single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) associated with T1D is in the interferon-induced helicase C domain-containing protein 1 (), which encodes an anti-viral cytosolic RNA sensor. This SNP results in an alanine to threonine substitution at amino acid 946 () and confers an increased risk for several autoimmune diseases, including T1D.

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Efficient and sustained locus editing in hematopoietic stem cells as a therapeutic approach for IPEX syndrome.

Mol Ther Methods Clin Dev

March 2024

Center for Immunity and Immunotherapies and the Program for Cell and Gene Therapy, Seattle Children's Research Institute, Seattle, WA 98101, USA.

Immune dysregulation, polyendocrinopathy, enteropathy, X-linked (IPEX) syndrome is a monogenic disorder caused by mutations in the gene, required for generation of regulatory T (T) cells. Loss of T cells leads to immune dysregulation characterized by multi-organ autoimmunity and early mortality. Hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) transplantation can be curative, but success is limited by autoimmune complications, donor availability and/or graft-vs.

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AIM2 (absent in melanoma 2), an inflammasome component, mediates IL-1β release in murine macrophages and cell lines. AIM2 and IL-1β contribute to murine control of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) infection, but AIM2's impact in human macrophages, the primary niche for M.

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Expression Quantitative Trait Loci (eQTLs) are critical to understanding the mechanisms underlying disease-associated genomic loci. Nearly all protein-coding genes in the human genome have been associated with one or more eQTLs. Here we introduce a multi-variant generalization of allelic Fold Change (aFC), aFC-n, to enable quantification of the cis-regulatory effects in multi-eQTL genes under the assumption that all eQTLs are known and conditionally independent.

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Purpose: Chronic age-related imbalance is a common cause of falls and subsequent death in the elderly and can arise from dysfunction of the vestibular system, an elegant neuroanatomical group of pathways that mediates human perception of acceleration, gravity, and angular head motion. Studies indicate that 27-46% of the risk of age-related chronic imbalance is genetic; nevertheless, the underlying genes remain unknown.

Methods: The cohort consisted of 50,339 cases and 366,900 controls in the Million Veteran Program.

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