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Dive into the research topics where Alisha R. Elford is active.

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Featured researches published by Alisha R. Elford.


Nature Medicine | 2003

Hsp70 promotes antigen-presenting cell function and converts T-cell tolerance to autoimmunity in vivo

Douglas G. Millar; Kristine M. Garza; Bernhard Odermatt; Alisha R. Elford; Nobuyuki Ono; Zihai Li; Pamela S. Ohashi

Pathogens or pathogen-associated molecular patterns can signal to cells of the innate immune system and trigger effective adaptive immunity. However, relatively little is known about how the innate immune system detects tissue injury or necrosis. Evidence suggests that the release of heat-shock proteins (HSPs) may provide adjuvant-like signals, but the ability of HSPs to promote activation or tolerance in vivo has not been addressed. In this study we show that Hsp70 promotes dendritic cell (DC) function and, together with antigen, triggers autoimmune disease in vivo.


Cell | 2011

IL-7 Engages Multiple Mechanisms to Overcome Chronic Viral Infection and Limit Organ Pathology

Marc Pellegrini; Thomas Calzascia; Jesse G. Toe; Simon Preston; Amy E Lin; Alisha R. Elford; Arda Shahinian; Philipp A. Lang; Karl S. Lang; Michel Morre; Brigitte Assouline; Katharina Lahl; Tim Sparwasser; Thomas F. Tedder; Ji Hye Paik; Ronald A. DePinho; Sameh Basta; Pamela S. Ohashi; Tak W. Mak

Understanding the factors that impede immune responses to persistent viruses is essential in designing therapies for HIV infection. Mice infected with LCMV clone-13 have persistent high-level viremia and a dysfunctional immune response. Interleukin-7, a cytokine that is critical for immune development and homeostasis, was used here to promote immunity toward clone-13, enabling elucidation of the inhibitory pathways underlying impaired antiviral immune response. Mechanistically, IL-7 downregulated a critical repressor of cytokine signaling, Socs3, resulting in amplified cytokine production, increased T cell effector function and numbers, and viral clearance. IL-7 enhanced thymic output to expand the naive T cell pool, including T cells that were not LCMV specific. Additionally, IL-7 promoted production of cytoprotective IL-22 that abrogated liver pathology. The IL-7-mediated effects were dependent on endogenous IL-6. These attributes of IL-7 have profound implications for its use as a therapeutic in the treatment of chronic viral diseases.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Natural killer cell activation enhances immune pathology and promotes chronic infection by limiting CD8+ T-cell immunity

Philipp A. Lang; Karl S. Lang; Haifeng C. Xu; Melanie Grusdat; Ian A. Parish; Mike Recher; Alisha R. Elford; Salim Dhanji; Namir Shaabani; Charles W. Tran; Dilan Dissanayake; Ramtin Rahbar; Magar Ghazarian; Anne Brüstle; Jason P. Fine; Peter W. Chen; Casey T. Weaver; Christoph S.N. Klose; Andreas Diefenbach; Dieter Häussinger; James R. Carlyle; Susan M. Kaech; Tak W. Mak; Pamela S. Ohashi

Infections with HIV, hepatitis B virus, and hepatitis C virus can turn into chronic infections, which currently affect more than 500 million patients worldwide. It is generally thought that virus-mediated T-cell exhaustion limits T-cell function, thus promoting chronic disease. Here we demonstrate that natural killer (NK) cells have a negative impact on the development of T-cell immunity by using the murine lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus. NK cell-deficient (Nfil3−/−, E4BP4−/−) mice exhibited a higher virus-specific T-cell response. In addition, NK cell depletion caused enhanced T-cell immunity in WT mice, which led to rapid virus control and prevented chronic infection in lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus clone 13- and reduced viral load in DOCILE-infected animals. Further experiments showed that NKG2D triggered regulatory NK cell functions, which were mediated by perforin, and limited T-cell responses. Therefore, we identified an important role of regulatory NK cells in limiting T-cell immunity during virus infection.


Nature Medicine | 2003

Autoimmune islet destruction in spontaneous type 1 diabetes is not β-cell exclusive

Shawn Winer; Hubert Tsui; Ambrose Lau; Aihua Song; Xiaomao Li; Roy K. Cheung; Anastazia Sampson; Fatemeh Afifiyan; Alisha R. Elford; George Jackowski; Dorothy J. Becker; Pere Santamaria; Pamela S. Ohashi; H.-Michael Dosch

Pancreatic islets of Langerhans are enveloped by peri-islet Schwann cells (pSC), which express glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and S100β. pSC-autoreactive T- and B-cell responses arise in 3- to 4-week-old diabetes-prone non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice, followed by progressive pSC destruction before detectable β-cell death. Humans with probable prediabetes generate similar autoreactivities, and autoantibodies in islet-cell autoantibody (lCA) –positive sera co-localize to pSC. Moreover, GFAP-specific NOD T-cell lines transferred pathogenic peri-insulitis to NOD/severe combined immunodeficient (NOD/SCID) mice, and immunotherapy with GFAP or S100β prevented diabetes. pSC survived in rat insulin promoter Iymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (rip–LCMV) glycoprotein/CD8+ T-cell receptorgp double-transgenic mice with virus-induced diabetes, suggesting that pSC death is not an obligate consequence of local inflammation and β-cell destruction. However, pSC were deleted in spontaneously diabetic NOD mice carrying the CD8+/8.3 T-cell receptor transgene, a T cell receptor commonly expressed in earliest islet infiltrates. Autoimmune targeting of pancreatic nervous system tissue elements seems to be an integral, early part of natural type 1 diabetes.


Nature Medicine | 2009

Adjuvant IL-7 antagonizes multiple cellular and molecular inhibitory networks to enhance immunotherapies

Marc Pellegrini; Thomas Calzascia; Alisha R. Elford; Arda Shahinian; Amy E Lin; Dilan Dissanayake; Salim Dhanji; Linh T. Nguyen; Matthew A. Gronski; Michel Morre; Brigitte Assouline; Katharina Lahl; Tim Sparwasser; Pamela S. Ohashi; Tak W. Mak

Identifying key factors that enhance immune responses is crucial for manipulating immunity to tumors. We show that after a vaccine-induced immune response, adjuvant interleukin-7 (IL-7) improves antitumor responses and survival in an animal model. The improved immune response is associated with increased IL-6 production and augmented T helper type 17 cell differentiation. Furthermore, IL-7 modulates the expression of two ubiquitin ligases: Casitas B-lineage lymphoma b (Cbl-b), a negative regulator of T cell activation, is repressed, and SMAD-specific E3 ubiquitin protein ligase-2 (Smurf2) is enhanced, which antagonizes transforming growth factor-β signaling. Notably, we show that although short term IL-7 therapy potently enhances vaccine-mediated immunity, in the absence of vaccination it is inefficient in promoting antitumor immune responses, despite inducing homeostatic proliferation of T cells. The ability of adjuvant IL-7 to antagonize inhibitory networks at the cellular and molecular level has major implications for immunotherapy in the treatment of tumors.


Nature Medicine | 2004

TCR affinity and negative regulation limit autoimmunity

Matthew A. Gronski; Jonathan M. Boulter; Demetrius Moskophidis; Linh T. Nguyen; Kaisa Holmberg; Alisha R. Elford; Elissa K. Deenick; Hee O Kim; Josef M. Penninger; Bernhard Odermatt; Awen Myfanwy Gallimore; Nicholas R. J. Gascoigne; Pamela S. Ohashi

Autoimmune diseases are often mediated by self-reactive T cells, which must be activated to cause immunopathology. One mechanism, known as molecular mimicry, proposes that self-reactive T cells may be activated by pathogens expressing crossreactive ligands. Here we have developed a model to investigate how the affinity of the T-cell receptor (TCR) for the activating agent influences autoimmunity. Our model shows that an approximately fivefold difference in the TCR affinity for the activating ligand results in a 50% reduction in the incidence of autoimmunity. A reduction in TCR-ligand affinity to approximately 20 times lower than normal does not induce autoimmunity despite the unexpected induction of cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) and insulitis. Furthermore, in the absence of a key negative regulatory molecule, Cbl-b, 100% of mice develop autoimmunity upon infection with viruses encoding the lower-affinity ligand. Therefore, autoimmune disease is sensitive both to the affinity of the activating ligand and to normal mechanisms that negatively regulate the immune response.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2002

CD28-dependent Activation of Protein Kinase B/Akt Blocks Fas-mediated Apoptosis by Preventing Death-inducing Signaling Complex Assembly

Russell G. Jones; Alisha R. Elford; Michael Parsons; Linda X. Wu; Connie M. Krawczyk; Wen-Chen Yeh; Razqallah Hakem; Robert Rottapel; James R. Woodgett; Pamela S. Ohashi

The T cell costimulatory molecule CD28 is important for T cell survival, yet both the signaling pathways downstream of CD28 and the apoptotic pathways they antagonize remain poorly understood. Here we demonstrate that CD4+ T cells from CD28-deficient mice show increased susceptibility to Fas-mediated apoptosis via a phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)-dependent pathway. Protein kinase B (PKBα/Akt1) is an important serine/threonine kinase that promotes survival downstream of PI3K signals. To understand how PI3K-mediated signals downstream of CD28 contribute to T cell survival, we examined Fas-mediated apoptosis in T cells expressing an active form of PKBα. Our data demonstrate that T cells expressing active PKB are resistant to Fas-mediated apoptosis in vivo and in vitro. PKB transgenic T cells show reduced activation of caspase-8, BID, and caspase-3 due to impaired recruitment of procaspase-8 to the death-inducing signaling complex (DISC). Similar alterations are seen in T cells from mice which are haploinsufficient for PTEN, a lipid phosphatase that regulates phosphatidylinositol-3,4,5-trisphosphate (PIP3) and influences PKBα activity. These findings provide a novel link between CD28 and an important apoptosis pathway in vivo, and demonstrate that PI3K/PKB signaling prevents apoptosis by inhibiting DISC assembly.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2007

TNF-α is critical for antitumor but not antiviral T cell immunity in mice

Thomas Calzascia; Marc Pellegrini; Håkan Hall; Laurent Sabbagh; Nobuyuki Ono; Alisha R. Elford; Tak W. Mak; Pamela S. Ohashi

TNF-alpha antagonists are widely used in the treatment of inflammatory and autoimmune diseases, but their use is associated with reactivation of latent infections. This highlights the importance of TNF-alpha in immunity to certain pathogens and raises concerns that critical aspects of immune function are impaired in its absence. Unfortunately, the role of TNF-alpha in the regulation of T cell responses is clouded by a myriad of contradictory reports. Here, we show a role for TNF-alpha and its receptors, TNFR1 and TNFR2, specifically in antitumor immunity. TNF-alpha-deficient mice exhibited normal antiviral responses associated with strong inflammation. However, TNF-alpha/TNFR1-mediated signals on APCs and TNF-alpha/TNFR2 signals on T cells were critically required for effective priming, proliferation, and recruitment of tumor-specific T cells. Furthermore, in the absence of TNF-alpha signaling, tumor immune surveillance was severely abrogated. Finally, treatment with a CD40 agonist alone or in combination with TLR2 stimuli was able to rescue proliferation of TNF-alpha-deficient T cells. Therefore, TNF-alpha signaling may be required only for immune responses in conditions of limited immunostimulatory capacity, such as tumor surveillance. Importantly, these results suggest that prolonged continuous TNF-alpha blockade in patients may have long-term complications, including potential tumor development or progression.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2002

Tumor Growth Enhances Cross-Presentation Leading to Limited T Cell Activation without Tolerance

Linh T. Nguyen; Alisha R. Elford; Kiichi Murakami; Kristine M. Garza; Stephen P. Schoenberger; Bernhard Odermatt; Daniel E. Speiser; Pamela S. Ohashi

Using a tumor model of spontaneously arising insulinomas expressing a defined tumor-associated antigen, we investigated whether tumor growth promotes cross-presentation and tolerance of tumor-specific T cells. We found that an advanced tumor burden enhanced cross-presentation of tumor-associated antigens to high avidity tumor-specific T cells, inducing T cell proliferation and limited effector function in vivo. However, contrary to other models, tumor-specific T cells were not tolerized despite a high tumor burden. In fact, in tumor-bearing mice, persistence and responsiveness of adoptively transferred tumor-specific T cells were enhanced. Accordingly, a potent T cell–mediated antitumor response could be elicited by intravenous administration of tumor-derived peptide and agonistic anti-CD40 antibody or viral immunization and reimmunization. Thus, in this model, tumor growth promotes activation of high avidity tumor-specific T cells instead of tolerance. Therefore, the host remains responsive to T cell immunotherapy.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

CD4 T cells, lymphopenia, and IL-7 in a multistep pathway to autoimmunity

Thomas Calzascia; Marc Pellegrini; Albert Lin; Kristine M. Garza; Alisha R. Elford; Arda Shahinian; Pamela S. Ohashi; Tak W. Mak

There are many inhibitory mechanisms that function at the cellular and molecular levels to maintain tolerance. Despite this, self-reactive clones escape regulatory mechanisms and cause autoimmunity in certain circumstances. We hypothesized that the same mechanisms that permit T cells to expand during homeostatic proliferation may inadvertently promote autoimmunity under certain conditions. One major homeostatic cytokine is IL-7, and studies have linked it or its receptor to the development of multiple sclerosis and other autoimmune diseases. We show in a model of β-islet cell self-reactivity that the transfer of activated autoreactive CD4 T cells can prime and expand endogenous autoreactive CD8 T cells in a CD28- and CD40-dependent manner through the licensing of dendritic cells. Despite this, mice do not develop diabetes. However, the provision of exogenous IL-7 or the physiological production of IL-7 associated with lymphopenia was able to profoundly promote the expansion of self-reactive clones even in the presence of regulatory T cells. Autoimmune diabetes rapidly ensued with CD4 help and the subsequent activation of CD8 T cells, which contributed to disease progression. With the advent of many biologicals targeting TNFα, IL-6, and IL-1 and their effective use in the treatment of autoimmune diseases, we propose that IL-7 and its receptor may be promising targets for biological agents in the treatment of autoimmunity.

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Pamela S. Ohashi

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Tak W. Mak

University Health Network

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Marc Pellegrini

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

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Salim Dhanji

University Health Network

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Albert Lin

Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

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Douglas G. Millar

Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

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