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Dive into the research topics where Alfred W. Legasse is active.

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Featured researches published by Alfred W. Legasse.


Nature | 2011

Profound early control of highly pathogenic SIV by an effector memory T-cell vaccine

Scott G. Hansen; Julia C. Ford; Matthew S. Lewis; Abigail B. Ventura; Colette M. Hughes; Lia Coyne-Johnson; Nathan Whizin; Kelli Oswald; Rebecca Shoemaker; Tonya Swanson; Alfred W. Legasse; Maria J. Chiuchiolo; Christopher L. Parks; Michael K. Axthelm; Jay A. Nelson; Michael A. Jarvis; Michael Piatak; Jeffrey D. Lifson; Louis J. Picker

The acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)-causing lentiviruses human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) effectively evade host immunity and, once established, infections with these viruses are only rarely controlled by immunological mechanisms. However, the initial establishment of infection in the first few days after mucosal exposure, before viral dissemination and massive replication, may be more vulnerable to immune control. Here we report that SIV vaccines that include rhesus cytomegalovirus (RhCMV) vectors establish indefinitely persistent, high-frequency, SIV-specific effector memory T-cell (TEM) responses at potential sites of SIV replication in rhesus macaques and stringently control highly pathogenic SIVMAC239 infection early after mucosal challenge. Thirteen of twenty-four rhesus macaques receiving either RhCMV vectors alone or RhCMV vectors followed by adenovirus 5 (Ad5) vectors (versus 0 of 9 DNA/Ad5-vaccinated rhesus macaques) manifested early complete control of SIV (undetectable plasma virus), and in twelve of these thirteen animals we observed long-term (≥1 year) protection. This was characterized by: occasional blips of plasma viraemia that ultimately waned; predominantly undetectable cell-associated viral load in blood and lymph node mononuclear cells; no depletion of effector-site CD4+ memory T cells; no induction or boosting of SIV Env-specific antibodies; and induction and then loss of T-cell responses to an SIV protein (Vif) not included in the RhCMV vectors. Protection correlated with the magnitude of the peak SIV-specific CD8+ T-cell responses in the vaccine phase, and occurred without anamnestic T-cell responses. Remarkably, long-term RhCMV vector-associated SIV control was insensitive to either CD8+ or CD4+ lymphocyte depletion and, at necropsy, cell-associated SIV was only occasionally measurable at the limit of detection with ultrasensitive assays, observations that indicate the possibility of eventual viral clearance. Thus, persistent vectors such as CMV and their associated TEM responses might significantly contribute to an efficacious HIV/AIDS vaccine.


Nature Medicine | 2009

Effector memory T cell responses are associated with protection of rhesus monkeys from mucosal simian immunodeficiency virus challenge

Scott G. Hansen; Cassandra Vieville; Nathan Whizin; Lia Coyne-Johnson; Don C. Siess; Derek D. Drummond; Alfred W. Legasse; Michael K. Axthelm; Kelli Oswald; Charles M. Trubey; Michael Piatak; Jeffrey D. Lifson; Jay A. Nelson; Michael A. Jarvis; Louis J. Picker

The rapid onset of massive, systemic viral replication during primary HIV or simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infection and the immune evasion capabilities of these viruses pose fundamental problems for vaccines that depend upon initial viral replication to stimulate effector T cell expansion and differentiation. We hypothesized that vaccines designed to maintain differentiated effector memory T cell (TEM cell) responses at viral entry sites might improve efficacy by impairing viral replication at its earliest stage, and we have therefore developed SIV protein-encoding vectors based on rhesus cytomegalovirus (RhCMV), the prototypical inducer of life-long TEM cell responses. RhCMV vectors expressing SIV Gag, Rev-Tat-Nef and Env persistently infected rhesus macaques, regardless of preexisting RhCMV immunity, and primed and maintained robust, SIV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ TEM cell responses (characterized by coordinate tumor necrosis factor, interferon-γ and macrophage inflammatory protein-1β expression, cytotoxic degranulation and accumulation at extralymphoid sites) in the absence of neutralizing antibodies. Compared to control rhesus macaques, these vaccinated rhesus macaques showed increased resistance to acquisition of progressive SIVmac239 infection upon repeated limiting-dose intrarectal challenge, including four macaques who controlled rectal mucosal infection without progressive systemic dissemination. These data suggest a new paradigm for AIDS vaccine development—vaccines capable of generating and maintaining HIV-specific TEM cells might decrease the incidence of HIV acquisition after sexual exposure.


Nature | 2013

Immune clearance of highly pathogenic SIV infection

Scott G. Hansen; Michael Piatak; Abigail B. Ventura; Colette M. Hughes; Roxanne M. Gilbride; Julia C. Ford; Kelli Oswald; Rebecca Shoemaker; Yuan Li; Matthew S. Lewis; Awbrey N. Gilliam; Guangwu Xu; Nathan Whizin; Benjamin J. Burwitz; Shannon L. Planer; John M. Turner; Alfred W. Legasse; Michael K. Axthelm; Jay A. Nelson; Klaus Früh; Jonah B. Sacha; Jacob D. Estes; Brandon F. Keele; Paul T. Edlefsen; Jeffrey D. Lifson; Louis J. Picker

Established infections with the human and simian immunodeficiency viruses (HIV and SIV, respectively) are thought to be permanent with even the most effective immune responses and antiretroviral therapies only able to control, but not clear, these infections. Whether the residual virus that maintains these infections is vulnerable to clearance is a question of central importance to the future management of millions of HIV-infected individuals. We recently reported that approximately 50% of rhesus macaques (RM; Macaca mulatta) vaccinated with SIV protein-expressing rhesus cytomegalovirus (RhCMV/SIV) vectors manifest durable, aviraemic control of infection with the highly pathogenic strain SIVmac239 (ref. 5). Here we show that regardless of the route of challenge, RhCMV/SIV vector-elicited immune responses control SIVmac239 after demonstrable lymphatic and haematogenous viral dissemination, and that replication-competent SIV persists in several sites for weeks to months. Over time, however, protected RM lost signs of SIV infection, showing a consistent lack of measurable plasma- or tissue-associated virus using ultrasensitive assays, and a loss of T-cell reactivity to SIV determinants not in the vaccine. Extensive ultrasensitive quantitative PCR and quantitative PCR with reverse transcription analyses of tissues from RhCMV/SIV vector-protected RM necropsied 69–172 weeks after challenge did not detect SIV RNA or DNA sequences above background levels, and replication-competent SIV was not detected in these RM by extensive co-culture analysis of tissues or by adoptive transfer of 60 million haematolymphoid cells to naive RM. These data provide compelling evidence for progressive clearance of a pathogenic lentiviral infection, and suggest that some lentiviral reservoirs may be susceptible to the continuous effector memory T-cell-mediated immune surveillance elicited and maintained by cytomegalovirus vectors.


Science | 2013

Cytomegalovirus vectors violate CD8+ T cell epitope recognition paradigms

Scott G. Hansen; Jonah B. Sacha; Colette M. Hughes; Julia C. Ford; Benjamin J. Burwitz; Isabel Scholz; Roxanne M. Gilbride; Matthew S. Lewis; Awbrey N. Gilliam; Abigail B. Ventura; Daniel Malouli; Guangwu Xu; Rebecca Richards; Nathan Whizin; Jason S. Reed; Katherine B. Hammond; Miranda Fischer; John M. Turner; Alfred W. Legasse; Michael K. Axthelm; Paul T. Edlefsen; Jay A. Nelson; Jeffrey D. Lifson; Klaus Früh; Louis J. Picker

Introduction CD8+ T cell responses focus on a small fraction of total pathogen-encoded peptides, which are similar among individuals with shared major histocompatibility complex (MHC) alleles. This focus can limit immune control of genetically flexible pathogens, such as HIV and SIV, because CD8+ T cells in most infected subjects do not target sequences required for pathogen fitness, resulting in viral escape. Although a vaccine capable of broadening or redirecting CD8+ T cell epitope targeting to prevent viral escape would be highly advantageous, it remains unclear whether this targeting can be diverted from its default pattern during priming. Fibroblast-adapted RhCMV/gag vectors elicit MHC class II–restricted CD8+ T cells, greatly expanding the breadth of the response. (Top) Differential inhibition of SIVgag-specific CD8+ T cells from SIV+, fibroblast-adapted RhCMV/gag vector–vaccinated, and tropism-repaired RhCMV/gag vector–vaccinated rhesus macaques by MHC-I versus MHC-II blockade. (Bottom) Responses to consecutive SIVgag 15mer peptides in the indicated animals, classified by sensitivity to MHC-I versus MHC-II blockade. Methods We used intracellular cytokine analysis to compare the epitope targeting of SIV-specific CD8+ T cell responses in rhesus macaques with controlled SIV infection or after vaccination with either conventional SIV vaccines or rhesus cytomegalovirus (RhCMV) vectors. RhCMV vectors have been associated with stringent control of SIV challenge in the absence of protective MHC alleles. Results Fibroblast-adapted RhCMV/SIV vectors elicited SIV-specific CD8+ T cells that failed to target any canonical epitopes associated with SIV infection or conventional SIV vaccination. Instead, they recognized distinct epitopes characterized by extraordinary breadth (greater than that of conventional vaccines by a factor of >3), MHC class II (MHC-II) restriction (63% of epitopes), and high promiscuity (epitopes common to most or all responses in vaccinated macaques). These unconventionally targeted CD8+ T cell responses recognized autologous SIV-infected cells, indicating that processing and presentation of the unconventional epitopes is CMV-independent. However, CMV gene expression was responsible for directing epitope specificity of CD8+ T cells during priming. The induction of canonical SIV epitope–specific CD8+ T cell responses was specifically suppressed by expression of the Rh189/US11 gene, and the promiscuous MHC-I– and MHC-II–restricted CD8+ T cell responses occurred only in the absence of the Rh157.4–.6/UL128–131 genes involved in CMV tropism for nonfibroblasts. Discussion These findings suggest that CD8+ T cell recognition is more flexible than had been thought, and that the focused epitope recognition profiles of conventional CD8+ T cell responses may be primarily restricted by immunoregulation during priming (which can be subverted by CMV) rather than by intrinsic limitations in antigen processing/presentation or in T cell receptor repertoire. The ability of CMVs with different genetic modifications to differentially elicit CD8+ T cell responses with divergent patterns of epitope recognition raises the possibility of a CMV vector–based vaccine platform with programmable CD8+ T cell epitope targeting, including vectors that can selectively elicit CD8+ T cell responses targeting conventional or unconventional epitopes. Because the latter would be unaffected by escape mutations arising during natural infection, these vectors would be well suited for therapeutic vaccine applications. CMV Breaks All the Rules One vaccine strategy being pursued against HIV is to generate protection that is dependent on cell-mediated, rather than humoral, immune responses. A cytomegalovirus (CMV)–vectored vaccine that expresses simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) antigens exhibits stringent and durable viral control upon SIV challenge in approximately half of vaccinated rhesus macaques. Hansen et al. (10.1126/science.1237874, see the Perspective by Goonetilleke and McMichael) sought to determine the basis for the protection and discovered that the CD8+ T cell response in vaccinated monkeys does not target canonical SIV epitopes, which SIV is known to escape, but rather generates a broad, promiscuous response. A vaccine that uses one virus to deliver components of a second virus elicits T cells that recognize noncanonical epitopes. [Also see Perspective by Goonetilleke and McMichael] CD8+ T cell responses focus on a small fraction of pathogen- or vaccine-encoded peptides, and for some pathogens, these restricted recognition hierarchies limit the effectiveness of antipathogen immunity. We found that simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) protein–expressing rhesus cytomegalovirus (RhCMV) vectors elicit SIV-specific CD8+ T cells that recognize unusual, diverse, and highly promiscuous epitopes, including dominant responses to epitopes restricted by class II major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules. Induction of canonical SIV epitope–specific CD8+ T cell responses is suppressed by the RhCMV-encoded Rh189 gene (corresponding to human CMV US11), and the promiscuous MHC class I– and class II–restricted CD8+ T cell responses occur only in the absence of the Rh157.5, Rh157.4, and Rh157.6 (human CMV UL128, UL130, and UL131) genes. Thus, CMV vectors can be genetically programmed to achieve distinct patterns of CD8+ T cell epitope recognition.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2007

Progressive CD4+ central–memory T cell decline results in CD4+ effector–memory insufficiency and overt disease in chronic SIV infection

Afam A. Okoye; Martin Meier-Schellersheim; Jason M. Brenchley; Shoko I. Hagen; Joshua M. Walker; Mukta Rohankhedkar; Richard Lum; John B. Edgar; Shannon L. Planer; Alfred W. Legasse; Andrew W. Sylwester; Michael Piatak; Jeffrey D. Lifson; Vernon C. Maino; Donald L. Sodora; Michael K. Axthelm; Zvi Grossman; Louis J. Picker

Primary simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infections of rhesus macaques result in the dramatic depletion of CD4+ CCR5+ effector–memory T (TEM) cells from extra-lymphoid effector sites, but in most infections, an increased rate of CD4+ memory T cell proliferation appears to prevent collapse of effector site CD4+ TEM cell populations and acute-phase AIDS. Eventually, persistent SIV replication results in chronic-phase AIDS, but the responsible mechanisms remain controversial. Here, we demonstrate that in the chronic phase of progressive SIV infection, effector site CD4+ TEM cell populations manifest a slow, continuous decline, and that the degree of this depletion remains a highly significant correlate of late-onset AIDS. We further show that due to persistent immune activation, effector site CD4+ TEM cells are predominantly short-lived, and that their homeostasis is strikingly dependent on the production of new CD4+ TEM cells from central–memory T (TCM) cell precursors. The instability of effector site CD4+ TEM cell populations over time was not explained by increasing destruction of these cells, but rather was attributable to progressive reduction in their production, secondary to decreasing numbers of CCR5− CD4+ TCM cells. These data suggest that although CD4+ TEM cell depletion is a proximate mechanism of immunodeficiency, the tempo of this depletion and the timing of disease onset are largely determined by destruction, failing production, and gradual decline of CD4+ TCM cells.


Nature Medicine | 2012

Lymph node T cell responses predict the efficacy of live attenuated SIV vaccines.

Yoshinori Fukazawa; Haesun Park; Mark J. Cameron; François Lefebvre; Richard Lum; Noel Coombes; Eisa Mahyari; Shoko I. Hagen; Jin Young Bae; Marcelo Delos Reyes; Tonya Swanson; Alfred W. Legasse; Andrew W. Sylwester; Scott G. Hansen; Andrew Smith; Petra Stafova; Rebecca Shoemaker; Yuan-Yuan Li; Kelli Oswald; Michael K. Axthelm; Adrian B. McDermott; Guido Ferrari; David C. Montefiori; Paul T. Edlefsen; Michael Piatak; Jeffrey D. Lifson; Rafick Pierre Sekaly; Louis J. Picker

Live attenuated simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) vaccines (LAVs) remain the most efficacious of all vaccines in nonhuman primate models of HIV and AIDS, yet the basis of their robust protection remains poorly understood. Here we show that the degree of LAV-mediated protection against intravenous wild-type SIVmac239 challenge strongly correlates with the magnitude and function of SIV-specific, effector-differentiated T cells in the lymph node but not with the responses of such T cells in the blood or with other cellular, humoral and innate immune parameters. We found that maintenance of protective T cell responses is associated with persistent LAV replication in the lymph node, which occurs almost exclusively in follicular helper T cells. Thus, effective LAVs maintain lymphoid tissue-based, effector-differentiated, SIV-specific T cells that intercept and suppress early wild-type SIV amplification and, if present in sufficient frequencies, can completely control and perhaps clear infection, an observation that provides a rationale for the development of safe, persistent vectors that can elicit and maintain such responses.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Dramatic increase in naïve T cell turnover is linked to loss of naïve T cells from old primates

Luka Čičin-Šain; Ilhem Messaoudi; Byung Park; Noreen Currier; Shannon L. Planer; Miranda Fischer; Shane Tackitt; Dragana Nikolich-Žugich; Alfred W. Legasse; Michael K. Axthelm; Louis J. Picker; Motomi Mori; Janko Nikolich-Žugich

The loss of naïve T cells is a hallmark of immune aging. Although thymic involution is a primary driver of this naïve T cell loss, less is known about the contribution of other mechanisms to the depletion of naïve T cells in aging primates. We examined the role of homeostatic cycling and proliferative expansion in different T cell subsets of aging rhesus macaques (RM). BrdU incorporation and the expression of the G1-M marker Ki-67 were elevated in peripheral naïve CD4 and even more markedly in the naïve CD8 T cells of old, but not young adult, RM. Proliferating naïve cells did not accumulate in old animals. Rather, the relative size of the naïve CD8 T cell compartment correlated inversely to its proliferation rate. Likewise, T cell receptor diversity decreased in individuals with elevated naïve CD8 T cell proliferation. This apparent contradiction was explained by a significant increase in turnover concomitant with the naïve pool loss. The turnover increased exponentially when the naïve CD8 T cell pool decreased below 4% of total blood CD8 cells. These results link the shrinking naïve T cell pool with a dramatic increase in homeostatic turnover, which has the potential to exacerbate the progressive exhaustion of the naïve pool and constrict the T cell repertoire. Thus, homeostatic T cell proliferation exhibits temporal antagonistic pleiotropy, being beneficial to T cell maintenance in adulthood but detrimental to the long-term T cell maintenance in aging individuals.


Science | 2016

Broadly targeted CD8+ T cell responses restricted by major histocompatibility complex-E

Scott G. Hansen; Helen L. Wu; Benjamin J. Burwitz; Colette M. Hughes; Katherine B. Hammond; Abigail B. Ventura; Jason S. Reed; Roxanne M. Gilbride; Emily Ainslie; David W. Morrow; Julia C. Ford; Andrea N. Selseth; Reesab Pathak; Daniel Malouli; Alfred W. Legasse; Michael K. Axthelm; Jay A. Nelson; Geraldine Gillespie; Lucy C. Walters; Simon Brackenridge; Hannah R. Sharpe; Cesar A. López; Klaus Früh; Bette T. Korber; Andrew J. McMichael; S. Gnanakaran; Jonah B. Sacha; Louis J. Picker

An unconventional route to protection One promising approach toward an HIV-1 vaccine involves infecting people with cytomegalovirus engineered to express proteins from HIV-1. This approach, which works by eliciting virus-killing CD8+ T cells, provides robust protection in nonhuman primate models. Hansen et al. have found out why this approach is so effective. Normally, peptide antigens presented by major histocompatibility complex-1a (MHC-Ia) activate CD8+ T cells. In vaccinated monkeys, however, CD8+ T cells reacted to peptide antigens presented by MHC-E molecules instead. Moreover, MHC-E could present a much wider range of peptides than MHC-Ia. Science, this issue p. 714 Nonclassical major histocompatibility complex E molecules can present highly diverse peptide epitopes to CD8+ T cells. Major histocompatibility complex E (MHC-E) is a highly conserved, ubiquitously expressed, nonclassical MHC class Ib molecule with limited polymorphism that is primarily involved in the regulation of natural killer (NK) cells. We found that vaccinating rhesus macaques with rhesus cytomegalovirus vectors in which genes Rh157.5 and Rh157.4 are deleted results in MHC-E–restricted presentation of highly varied peptide epitopes to CD8αβ+ T cells, at ~4 distinct epitopes per 100 amino acids in all tested antigens. Computational structural analysis revealed that MHC-E provides heterogeneous chemical environments for diverse side-chain interactions within a stable, open binding groove. Because MHC-E is up-regulated to evade NK cell activity in cells infected with HIV, simian immunodeficiency virus, and other persistent viruses, MHC-E–restricted CD8+ T cell responses have the potential to exploit pathogen immune-evasion adaptations, a capability that might endow these unconventional responses with superior efficacy.


PLOS Pathogens | 2009

Simian varicella virus infection of rhesus macaques recapitulates essential features of varicella zoster virus infection in humans.

Ilhem Messaoudi; Alexander Barron; Mary Wellish; Flora Engelmann; Alfred W. Legasse; Shannon L. Planer; Donald H. Gilden; Janko Nikolich-Zugich; Ravi Mahalingam

Simian varicella virus (SVV), the etiologic agent of naturally occurring varicella in primates, is genetically and antigenically closely related to human varicella zoster virus (VZV). Early attempts to develop a model of VZV pathogenesis and latency in nonhuman primates (NHP) resulted in persistent infection. More recent models successfully produced latency; however, only a minority of monkeys became viremic and seroconverted. Thus, previous NHP models were not ideally suited to analyze the immune response to SVV during acute infection and the transition to latency. Here, we show for the first time that intrabronchial inoculation of rhesus macaques with SVV closely mimics naturally occurring varicella (chickenpox) in humans. Infected monkeys developed varicella and viremia that resolved 21 days after infection. Months later, viral DNA was detected only in ganglia and not in non-ganglionic tissues. Like VZV latency in human ganglia, transcripts corresponding to SVV ORFs 21, 62, 63 and 66, but not ORF 40, were detected by RT-PCR. In addition, as described for VZV, SVV ORF 63 protein was detected in the cytoplasm of neurons in latently infected monkey ganglia by immunohistochemistry. We also present the first in depth analysis of the immune response to SVV. Infected animals produced a strong humoral and cell-mediated immune response to SVV, as assessed by immunohistology, serology and flow cytometry. Intrabronchial inoculation of rhesus macaques with SVV provides a novel model to analyze viral and immunological mechanisms of VZV latency and reactivation.


PLOS Pathogens | 2017

Zika Virus infection of rhesus macaques leads to viral persistence in multiple tissues

Alec J. Hirsch; Jessica L. Smith; Nicole Haese; Rebecca Broeckel; Christopher J. Parkins; Craig N. Kreklywich; Victor R. DeFilippis; Michael Denton; Patricia P. Smith; William B. Messer; Lois M. A. Colgin; Rebecca M. Ducore; Peta L. Grigsby; Jon D. Hennebold; Tonya Swanson; Alfred W. Legasse; Michael K. Axthelm; Rhonda MacAllister; Clayton A. Wiley; Jay A. Nelson; Daniel N. Streblow

Zika virus (ZIKV), an emerging flavivirus, has recently spread explosively through the Western hemisphere. In addition to symptoms including fever, rash, arthralgia, and conjunctivitis, ZIKV infection of pregnant women can cause microcephaly and other developmental abnormalities in the fetus. We report herein the results of ZIKV infection of adult rhesus macaques. Following subcutaneous infection, animals developed transient plasma viremia and viruria from 1–7 days post infection (dpi) that was accompanied by the development of a rash, fever and conjunctivitis. Animals produced a robust adaptive immune response to ZIKV, although systemic cytokine response was minimal. At 7 dpi, virus was detected in peripheral nervous tissue, multiple lymphoid tissues, joints, and the uterus of the necropsied animals. Notably, viral RNA persisted in neuronal, lymphoid and joint/muscle tissues and the male and female reproductive tissues through 28 to 35 dpi. The tropism and persistence of ZIKV in the peripheral nerves and reproductive tract may provide a mechanism of subsequent neuropathogenesis and sexual transmission.

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Michael K. Axthelm

Oregon National Primate Research Center

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