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Dive into the research topics where Alexandra L. Howell is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexandra L. Howell.


Journal of General Internal Medicine | 2006

Toward a VA Women's Health Research Agenda: setting evidence-based priorities to improve the health and health care of women veterans.

Elizabeth M. Yano; Lori A. Bastian; Susan M. Frayne; Alexandra L. Howell; Linda Lipson; Geraldine McGlynn; Paula P. Schnurr; Margaret R. Seaver; Ann M. Spungen; Stephan D. Fihn

The expansion of women in the military is reshaping the veteran population, with women now constituting the fastest growing segment of eligible VA health care users. In recognition of the changing demographics and special health care needs of women, the VA Office of Research & Development recently sponsored the first national VA Women’s Health Research Agenda-setting conference to map research priorities to the needs of women veterans and position VA as a national leader in Women’s Health Research. This paper summarizes the process and outcomes of this effort, outlining VA’s research priorities for biomedical, clinical, rehabilitation, and health services research.


Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 1994

Role of Fc gamma receptors in cancer and infectious disease.

Paul K. Wallace; Alexandra L. Howell; Michael W. Fanger

Receptors for the Fc domain of immunoglobulin G (FcγR) provide an interface between specific humoral immunity and the cellular branch of the immune system through their interaction with antibody. Gross‐linking FcγR on myeloid cells triggers such diverse functions as clearance of immune complexes, phagocytosis of opsonized pathogens, secretion of reactive oxygen intermediates, and antibody‐dependent cellular cytotoxicity. The FcγR play a major role in the removal of antibody‐coated infectious agents and are the exclusive trigger molecules for tumor cell killing by human myeloid cells. Studies of FcγR function have been aided by the use of FcγR specific monoclonal antibodies, self‐directed target cells, and bispecific antibodies that link target cells or pathogens to specific host cell molecules, including FcγR. These reagents have contributed significantly to our understanding of the role of the different classes of FcγR in mediating protection from various infectious agents and in mediating tumor cell killing. Taken together, these approaches have provided insight into the utility of manipulating Fc?R function in the therapy of cancer and infectious disease. J. Leukoc. Biol. 55: 816–826; 1994.


AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses | 2008

Estradiol and progesterone regulate HIV type 1 replication in peripheral blood cells.

Susana N. Asin; Alysha M. Heimberg; Susan K. Eszterhas; Christiane Rollenhagen; Alexandra L. Howell

Endogenous levels of estradiol and progesterone fluctuate in the peripheral blood of premenopausal women during the reproductive cycle. We studied the effects of these sex hormones on HIV-1 replication in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). We compared HIV-1 replication in PBMCs infected in the presence of mid-secretory (high concentrations) and mid-proliferative (low concentrations) or in the absence of sex hormones. With PBMCs from men, we used concentrations of estradiol and progesterone that are normally present in their plasma. Our findings demonstrate that mid-proliferative phase conditions increased, and mid-secretory phase conditions decreased, HIV-1 replication. To determine if sex hormones affect specific stages of the viral life cycle we performed real-time PCR assays and found decreased levels of HIV-1 integration in the mid-secretory phase and increased levels viral transcription in the mid-proliferative phase. No significant effects on HIV-1 reverse transcription or on CCR5 expression were found. In addition, we assessed hormonal regulation of the HIV-1 LTR in the absence of the viral regulatory protein Tat. We observed that mid-proliferative hormone levels enhanced, whereas mid-secretory hormone concentrations reduced, the activity of the LTR. These findings demonstrate that in HIV-1-infected cells, estradiol and progesterone regulate HIV-1 replication most likely by directly altering HIV-1 transcriptional activation. An additional indirect mechanism of sex hormone regulation of cytokine and chemokine secretion cannot be excluded.


Journal of Virology | 2009

Human Uterine Natural Killer Cells but Not Blood Natural Killer Cells Inhibit Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infection by Secretion of CXCL12

Teddy F. Mselle; Alexandra L. Howell; Mimi Ghosh; Charles R. Wira; Charles L. Sentman

ABSTRACT Natural killer (NK) cells derived from the human female reproductive tract (FRT) are phenotypically and functionally distinct from those obtained from peripheral blood. Because the FRT is a primary site of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection in women, we determined whether soluble factors secreted by uterine-derived NK (uNK) cells inhibit HIV-1 infection. Clonal populations of uNK cells were activated with interleukin-12 (IL-12) and IL-15, and conditioned media (CM) from these cultures evaluated for their ability to inhibit infection of cells by HIV-1IIIB, HIV-1NL4.3, and HIV-1HC4 (X4-tropic) or HIV-1BaL (R5-tropic) viruses. We found that soluble factors secreted by activated uNK cells significantly inhibited X4-tropic virus infection of TZM-bl cells, peripheral blood mononuclear cells, and primary human endometrial cells, but not infection by HIV-1BaL. In contrast, CM from peripheral blood NK (bNK) cells did not inhibit HIV-1 infection of cells. Analysis of factors secreted from uNK clones with anti-HIV-1 activity demonstrated significantly higher levels of CXCL12 compared to uNK clones without this activity, and the HIV inhibitory activity was neutralized by antibodies to CXCL12. Collectively, these data demonstrate that human uNK cells release chemokines with anti-HIV-1 activity for X4-tropic strains and this suggest that these chemokines may contribute to the inhibition of X4-tropic strain transmission across mucosal tissues.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2009

HIV Type 1 Infection in Women: Increased Transcription of HIV Type 1 in Ectocervical Tissue Explants

Susana N. Asin; Susan K. Eszterhas; Christiane Rollenhagen; Alysha M. Heimberg; Alexandra L. Howell

BACKGROUND Mucosal surfaces of the female reproductive tract are the main routes of heterosexual transmission of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), but the contribution of each of the reproductive sites to mucosal transmission is unknown. METHODS We compared levels of HIV-1 transcription between ectocervical and endometrial tissue explants infected ex vivo with HIV-1. RESULTS We detected higher levels of HIV-1 transcription in the ectocervix. Although CD45 expression was also increased at this site, higher levels of HIV-1 transcription could not be accounted for exclusively by differences in CD45 expression. This suggests that factors other than CD45 levels regulate HIV-1 transcription within the ectocervix. We detected higher levels of interleukin (IL)-6 at this site. Furthermore, addition of recombinant IL-6 to tissue explants enhanced HIV-1 transcription to a much greater degree in the ectocervix than in the endometrium. CONCLUSIONS This is, to our knowledge, the first study to compare ectocervix and endometrium in a tissue explant model of HIV-1 infection and to demonstrate greater HIV-1 transcription in the ectocervix. Our results suggest that the ectocervix is more conducive to HIV-1 replication than is the endometrium and that IL-6 enhances HIV-1 transcription at this site. Thus, the ectocervix is an important site to be considered in heterosexual transmission of HIV-1.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2001

Human Immunodeficiency Virus–Specific and CD3-Redirected Cytotoxic T Lymphocyte Activity in the Human Female Reproductive Tract: Lack of Correlation between Mucosa and Peripheral Blood

Hillary D. White; Luwy Musey; Mary-Margaret Andrews; Grant R. Yeaman; Leslie R. DeMars; Paul D. Manganiello; Alexandra L. Howell; Charles R. Wira; William R. Green; M. Juliana McElrath

CD8(+) T cell phenotype and function were assessed in the female reproductive tracts (FRTs) of 3 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive patients who had undergone hysterectomy. FRT cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) lytic activity from 1 patient (patient 872) was detected by using CD3-dependent redirected-lysis assay and HIV-specific assay, concomitant with the presence of CD8(+) cells. In contrast, samples from the 2 other HIV-positive patients (patients 1356 and 1364), who also were asymptomatic for HIV-associated illnesses, demonstrated no CTL activity in any solid tissue tested by either assay, despite activity by autologous peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). This absence of CTL activity was correlated with a relative absence of CD8(+) cells in the FRT, whereas CD8(+) cells were present in PBMC. Thus, CTL activity in PBMC may fail to correlate with mucosal activity. The finding of CTL activity in the FRT of patient 872 represents the first description of CTL in upper and lower FRT tissues of an HIV-positive woman.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2003

Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection of human uterine epithelial cells: Viral shedding and cell contact-mediated infectivity

Susana N. Asin; Dunja Wildt-Perinic; Sarah I Mason; Alexandra L. Howell; Charles R. Wira; Michael W. Fanger

We examined the mechanism of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 infection of human uterine epithelial cells to gain a clearer understanding of the events by which HIV-1 infects cells within the female reproductive tract. We demonstrated that these cells can be productively infected by HIV-1 and that infection is associated with viral RNA reverse transcription, DNA transcription, and secretion of infectious virus. Levels of viral DNA and secreted virus decreased gradually after infection. Moreover, virus released by the uterine epithelial cells shortly after infection was able to infect human T cell lines, but virus released later did not. In contrast, human CD4(+) T cell lines were infected after cocultivation with epithelial cells at both early and late stages of infection. These data demonstrated that HIV-1 infects human epithelial cells of upper reproductive tract origin and that productive viral infection of epithelial cells may be an important mechanism of transmission of HIV-1 infection in women.


AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses | 2014

Toll-like receptor agonists are potent inhibitors of human immunodeficiency virus-type 1 replication in peripheral blood mononuclear cells.

Maarten Buitendijk; Susan K. Eszterhas; Alexandra L. Howell

Innate immune responses to microbial pathogens are initiated following the binding of ligand to specific pattern recognition receptors. Each pattern recognition receptor, which includes members of the Toll-like receptor (TLR) family, is specific for a particular type of pathogen associated molecular pattern ensuring that the organism can respond rapidly to a wide range of pathogens including bacteria, viruses, and fungi. We studied the extent to which agonists to endosomal TLR could induce anti-HIV-1 activity in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). When agonists to TLR3, TLR7, TLR8 and TLR9 were added prior to infection with HIV-1, they significantly reduced infection of peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Interestingly, agonists to TLR8 and TLR9 were highly effective at blocking HIV replication even when added as late as 48 h or 72 h, respectively, after HIV-1 infection, indicating that the anti-viral effect was durable and long lasting. Analysis of the induction of anti-viral genes after agonist activation of TLR indicated that all of the agonists induced expression of the type I interferons and interferon stimulated genes, although to variable levels that depended on the agonist used. Interestingly, only the agonist to TLR9, ODN2395 DNA, induced expression of type II interferon and the anti-HIV proteins Apobec3G and SAMHD1. By blocking TLR activity using an inhibitor to the MyD88 adaptor protein, we demonstrated that, at least for TLR8 and TLR9, the anti-HIV activity was not entirely mediated by TLR activation, but likely by the activation of additional anti-viral sensors in HIV target cells. These findings suggest that agonists to the endosomal TLR function to induce expression of anti-HIV molecules by both TLR-mediated and non-TLR-mediated mechanisms. Moreover, the non-TLR-mediated mechanisms induced by these agonists could potentially be exploited to block HIV-1 replication in recently HIV-exposed individuals.


Infectious Disease Reports | 2011

Nanoparticles containing siRNA to silence CD4 and CCR5 reduce expression of these receptors and inhibit HIV-1 infection in human female reproductive tract tissue explants

Susan K. Eszterhas; Nicole O. Ilonzo; Jennifer E. Crozier; Stela Celaj; Alexandra L. Howell

Human Immunodeficiency Virus-type 1 (HIV-1) binds to CD4 and CCR5 receptors on target cells in the human female reproductive tract. We sought to determine whether reducing levels of messenger RNA (mRNA) transcripts that encode these receptors in female reproductive tract cells could protect mucosal tissue explants from HIV-1 infection. Explants prepared from the endometrium, endocervix, and ectocervix of hysterectomy tissues from HIV-1 sero-negative women were exposed to nanoparticles containing CD4- and CCR5-specific short-interfering RNA (siRNA) sequences. Explants were then exposed two days later to HIV-1, and HIV-1 reverse transcripts were measured five days post-infection. Explants treated with nanoparticles containing CD4- and CCR5-specific siRNA showed reduced levels of CD4 and CCR5 transcripts, and significantly lower levels of HIV-1 reverse transcripts compared to those treated with an irrelevant siRNA. In female reproductive tract explants and in peripheral blood cell cultures, siRNA transfection induced the secretion of IFN-alpha (IFN-α), a potent antiviral cytokine. In female mice, murine-specific Cd4-siRNA nanoparticles instilled within the uterus significantly reduced murine Cd4 transcripts by day 3. Our findings demonstrate that siRNA nanoparticles reduce expression of HIV-1 infectivity receptors in human female reproductive tract tissues and also inhibit HIV-1 infection. Murine studies demonstrate that nanoparticles can penetrate the reproductive tract tissues in vivo and silence gene expression. The induction of IFN-α after siRNA transfection can potentially contribute to the antiviral effect. These findings support the therapeutic development of nanoparticles to deliver siRNA molecules to silence host cell receptors in the female reproductive tract as a novel microbicide to inhibit mucosal HIV-1 transmission.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Breast Milk from Tanzanian Women Has Divergent Effects on Cell-Free and Cell-Associated HIV-1 Infection In Vitro

Magdalena A. Lyimo; Matilda Ngarina Mosi; Molly L. Housman; Muhammad Zain-ul-abideen; Frederick V. Lee; Alexandra L. Howell; Ruth I. Connor

Transmission of HIV-1 during breastfeeding is a significant source of new pediatric infections in sub-Saharan Africa. Breast milk from HIV-positive mothers contains both cell-free and cell-associated virus; however, the impact of breast milk on HIV-1 infectivity remains poorly understood. In the present study, breast milk was collected from HIV-positive and HIV-negative Tanzanian women attending antenatal clinics in Dar es Salaam. Milk was analyzed for activity in vitro against both cell-free and cell-associated HIV-1. Potent inhibition of cell-free R5 and X4 HIV-1 occurred in the presence of milk from all donors regardless of HIV-1 serostatus. Inhibition of cell-free HIV-1 infection positively correlated with milk levels of sialyl-LewisX from HIV-positive donors. In contrast, milk from 8 of 16 subjects enhanced infection with cell-associated HIV-1 regardless of donor serostatus. Milk from two of these subjects contained high levels of multiple pro-inflammatory cytokines including TNFα, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, MIP-1α, MIP-1β, MCP-1 and IP-10, and enhanced cell-associated HIV-1 infection at dilutions as high as 1∶500. These findings indicate that breast milk contains innate factors with divergent activity against cell-free and cell-associated HIV-1 in vitro. Enhancement of cell-associated HIV-1 infection by breast milk may be associated with inflammatory conditions in the mother and may contribute to infant infection during breastfeeding.

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Edward D. Ball

University of California

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Ann M. Spungen

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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