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Dive into the research topics where Andrew I. Webb is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew I. Webb.


Nature | 2011

Linear ubiquitination prevents inflammation and regulates immune signalling

Björn Gerlach; Stefanie M. Cordier; Anna C. Schmukle; Christoph H. Emmerich; Eva Rieser; Tobias Haas; Andrew I. Webb; James A Rickard; Holly Anderton; W. Wei-Lynn Wong; Ueli Nachbur; Lahiru Gangoda; Uwe Warnken; Anthony W. Purcell; John Silke; Henning Walczak

Members of the tumour necrosis factor (TNF) receptor superfamily have important functions in immunity and inflammation. Recently linear ubiquitin chains assembled by a complex containing HOIL-1 and HOIP (also known as RBCK1 and RNF31, respectively) were implicated in TNF signalling, yet their relevance in vivo remained uncertain. Here we identify SHARPIN as a third component of the linear ubiquitin chain assembly complex, recruited to the CD40 and TNF receptor signalling complexes together with its other constituents, HOIL-1 and HOIP. Mass spectrometry of TNF signalling complexes revealed RIP1 (also known as RIPK1) and NEMO (also known as IKKγ or IKBKG) to be linearly ubiquitinated. Mutation of the Sharpin gene (Sharpincpdm/cpdm) causes chronic proliferative dermatitis (cpdm) characterized by inflammatory skin lesions and defective lymphoid organogenesis. Gene induction by TNF, CD40 ligand and interleukin-1β was attenuated in cpdm-derived cells which were rendered sensitive to TNF-induced death. Importantly, Tnf gene deficiency prevented skin lesions in cpdm mice. We conclude that by enabling linear ubiquitination in the TNF receptor signalling complex, SHARPIN interferes with TNF-induced cell death and, thereby, prevents inflammation. Our results provide evidence for the relevance of linear ubiquitination in vivo in preventing inflammation and regulating immune signalling.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Activation of the pseudokinase MLKL unleashes the four-helix bundle domain to induce membrane localization and necroptotic cell death

Joanne M. Hildebrand; Maria C. Tanzer; Isabelle S. Lucet; Samuel N. Young; Sukhdeep Kaur Spall; Pooja Sharma; Catia Pierotti; Jean-Marc Garnier; R.J. Dobson; Andrew I. Webb; Anne Tripaydonis; Jeffrey J. Babon; Mark D. Mulcair; Martin J. Scanlon; Warren S. Alexander; Andrew F. Wilks; Peter E. Czabotar; Guillaume Lessene; James M. Murphy; John Silke

Significance The four-helix bundle (4HB) domain of Mixed Lineage Kinase Domain-Like (MLKL) bears two clusters of residues that are required for cell death by necroptosis. Mutations within a cluster centered on the α4 helix of the 4HB domain of MLKL prevented its membrane translocation, oligomerization, and ability to induce necroptosis. This cluster is composed principally of acidic residues and therefore challenges the idea that the 4HB domain engages negatively charged phospholipid membranes via a conventional positively charged interaction surface. The importance of membrane translocation to MLKL-mediated death is supported by our identification of a small molecule that binds the MLKL pseudokinase domain and retards membrane translocation to inhibit necroptotic signaling. Necroptosis is considered to be complementary to the classical caspase-dependent programmed cell death pathway, apoptosis. The pseudokinase Mixed Lineage Kinase Domain-Like (MLKL) is an essential effector protein in the necroptotic cell death pathway downstream of the protein kinase Receptor Interacting Protein Kinase-3 (RIPK3). How MLKL causes cell death is unclear, however RIPK3–mediated phosphorylation of the activation loop in MLKL trips a molecular switch to induce necroptotic cell death. Here, we show that the MLKL pseudokinase domain acts as a latch to restrain the N-terminal four-helix bundle (4HB) domain and that unleashing this domain results in formation of a high-molecular-weight, membrane-localized complex and cell death. Using alanine-scanning mutagenesis, we identified two clusters of residues on opposing faces of the 4HB domain that were required for the 4HB domain to kill cells. The integrity of one cluster was essential for membrane localization, whereas MLKL mutations in the other cluster did not prevent membrane translocation but prevented killing; this demonstrates that membrane localization is necessary, but insufficient, to induce cell death. Finally, we identified a small molecule that binds the nucleotide binding site within the MLKL pseudokinase domain and retards MLKL translocation to membranes, thereby preventing necroptosis. This inhibitor provides a novel tool to investigate necroptosis and demonstrates the feasibility of using small molecules to target the nucleotide binding site of pseudokinases to modulate signal transduction.


Nature | 2013

A type III effector antagonizes death receptor signalling during bacterial gut infection

Jaclyn S. Pearson; Sze Ong; Catherine L. Kennedy; Michelle Kelly; Keith S. Robinson; Tania Lung; Ashley Mansell; Patrice Riedmaier; Claire Oates; Ali Zaid; Sabrina Mühlen; Valerie F. Crepin; Oliver Marchès; Ching-Seng Ang; Nicholas A. Williamson; Lorraine A. O'Reilly; Aleksandra Bankovacki; Ueli Nachbur; Giuseppe Infusini; Andrew I. Webb; John Silke; Andreas Strasser; Gad Frankel; Elizabeth L. Hartland

Successful infection by enteric bacterial pathogens depends on the ability of the bacteria to colonize the gut, replicate in host tissues and disseminate to other hosts. Pathogens such as Salmonella, Shigella and enteropathogenic and enterohaemorrhagic (EPEC and EHEC, respectively) Escherichia coli use a type III secretion system (T3SS) to deliver virulence effector proteins into host cells during infection that promote colonization and interfere with antimicrobial host responses. Here we report that the T3SS effector NleB1 from EPEC binds to host cell death-domain-containing proteins and thereby inhibits death receptor signalling. Protein interaction studies identified FADD, TRADD and RIPK1 as binding partners of NleB1. NleB1 expressed ectopically or injected by the bacterial T3SS prevented Fas ligand or TNF-induced formation of the canonical death-inducing signalling complex (DISC) and proteolytic activation of caspase-8, an essential step in death-receptor-induced apoptosis. This inhibition depended on the N-acetylglucosamine transferase activity of NleB1, which specifically modified Arg 117 in the death domain of FADD. The importance of the death receptor apoptotic pathway to host defence was demonstrated using mice deficient in the FAS signalling pathway, which showed delayed clearance of the EPEC-like mouse pathogen Citrobacter rodentium and reversion to virulence of an nleB mutant. The activity of NleB suggests that EPEC and other attaching and effacing pathogens antagonize death-receptor-induced apoptosis of infected cells, thereby blocking a major antimicrobial host response.


Science Translational Medicine | 2016

Familial autoinflammation with neutrophilic dermatosis reveals a regulatory mechanism of pyrin activation

Seth L. Masters; Vasiliki Lagou; Isabelle Jéru; Paul J. Baker; Lien Van Eyck; David A. Parry; Dylan Lawless; Dominic De Nardo; Josselyn E. Garcia-Perez; Laura F. Dagley; Caroline L. Holley; James Dooley; Fiona Moghaddas; Emanuela Pasciuto; Pierre-Yves Jeandel; Raf Sciot; Dena Lyras; Andrew I. Webb; Sandra E. Nicholson; Lien De Somer; Erika Van Nieuwenhove; Julia Ruuth-Praz; Bruno Copin; Emmanuelle Cochet; Myrna Medlej-Hashim; Andre Megarbane; Kate Schroder; Sinisa Savic; An Goris; Serge Amselem

A mutation in pyrin that disrupts regulation leads to autoinflammatory disease. Guarding inflammation The innate immune system is hard-wired to protect people from infection. However, mutations in these protective genes can lead to uncontrolled inflammation, resulting in autoinflammatory disease. Now, Masters et al. describe a family with an autoinflammatory disease caused by a previously unreported mutation in pyrin. This mutation disrupts pyrin regulation and mimics the effect of pathogen sensing by pyrin, leading to proinflammatory interleukin-1β (IL-1β) production. Indeed, targeting IL-1β resolved disease in one patient. These data suggest that pyrin is regulated through a guard-like mechanism, which guards against autoinflammation in humans. Pyrin responds to pathogen signals and loss of cellular homeostasis by forming an inflammasome complex that drives the cleavage and secretion of interleukin-1β (IL-1β). Mutations in the B30.2/SPRY domain cause pathogen-independent activation of pyrin and are responsible for the autoinflammatory disease familial Mediterranean fever (FMF). We studied a family with a dominantly inherited autoinflammatory disease, distinct from FMF, characterized by childhood-onset recurrent episodes of neutrophilic dermatosis, fever, elevated acute-phase reactants, arthralgia, and myalgia/myositis. The disease was caused by a mutation in MEFV, the gene encoding pyrin (S242R). The mutation results in the loss of a 14-3-3 binding motif at phosphorylated S242, which was not perturbed by FMF mutations in the B30.2/SPRY domain. However, loss of both S242 phosphorylation and 14-3-3 binding was observed for bacterial effectors that activate the pyrin inflammasome, such as Clostridium difficile toxin B (TcdB). The S242R mutation thus recapitulated the effect of pathogen sensing, triggering inflammasome activation and IL-1β production. Successful therapy targeting IL-1β has been initiated in one patient, resolving pyrin-associated autoinflammation with neutrophilic dermatosis. This disease provides evidence that a guard-like mechanism of pyrin regulation, originally identified for Nod-like receptors in plant innate immunity, also exists in humans.


Nature Immunology | 2016

CIS is a potent checkpoint in NK cell–mediated tumor immunity

Rebecca B. Delconte; Tatiana B. Kolesnik; Laura F. Dagley; Jai Rautela; Wei Shi; Eva M. Putz; Kimberley Stannard; Jian Guo Zhang; Charis E. Teh; Matt Firth; Takashi Ushiki; Christopher E. Andoniou; Mariapia A. Degli-Esposti; Phillip P Sharp; C.E. Sanvitale; Giuseppe Infusini; Nicholas P. D. Liau; Edmond M. Linossi; Christopher J. Burns; Sebastian Carotta; Daniel Gray; Cyril Seillet; Dana S. Hutchinson; Gabrielle T. Belz; Andrew I. Webb; Warren S. Alexander; Shawn S.-C. Li; Alex N. Bullock; Jeffery J. Babon; Mark J. Smyth

The detection of aberrant cells by natural killer (NK) cells is controlled by the integration of signals from activating and inhibitory ligands and from cytokines such as IL-15. We identified cytokine-inducible SH2-containing protein (CIS, encoded by Cish) as a critical negative regulator of IL-15 signaling in NK cells. Cish was rapidly induced in response to IL-15, and deletion of Cish rendered NK cells hypersensitive to IL-15, as evidenced by enhanced proliferation, survival, IFN-γ production and cytotoxicity toward tumors. This was associated with increased JAK-STAT signaling in NK cells in which Cish was deleted. Correspondingly, CIS interacted with the tyrosine kinase JAK1, inhibiting its enzymatic activity and targeting JAK for proteasomal degradation. Cish−/− mice were resistant to melanoma, prostate and breast cancer metastasis in vivo, and this was intrinsic to NK cell activity. Our data uncover a potent intracellular checkpoint in NK cell–mediated tumor immunity and suggest possibilities for new cancer immunotherapies directed at blocking CIS function.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Constraints within major histocompatibility complex class I restricted peptides: presentation and consequences for T-cell recognition

Alexander Theodossis; Carole Guillonneau; Andrew David Welland; Lauren K. Ely; Craig S. Clements; Nicholas A. Williamson; Andrew I. Webb; Jacqueline A. Wilce; Roger J. Mulder; Michelle Anne Dunstone; Peter C. Doherty; James McCluskey; Anthony W. Purcell; Stephen J. Turner; Jamie Rossjohn

Residues within processed protein fragments bound to major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) glycoproteins have been considered to function as a series of “independent pegs” that either anchor the peptide (p) to the MHC-I and/or interact with the spectrum of αβ-T-cell receptors (TCRs) specific for the pMHC-I epitope in question. Mining of the extensive pMHC-I structural database established that many self- and viral peptides show extensive and direct interresidue interactions, an unexpected finding that has led us to the idea of “constrained” peptides. Mutational analysis of two constrained peptides (the HLA B44 restricted self-peptide (B44DPα–EEFGRAFSF) and an H2-Db restricted influenza peptide (DbPA, SSLENFRAYV) demonstrated that the conformation of the prominently exposed arginine in both peptides was governed by interactions with MHC-I-orientated flanking residues from the peptide itself. Using reverse genetics in a murine influenza model, we revealed that mutation of an MHC-I-orientated residue (SSLENFRAYV → SSLENARAYV) within the constrained PA peptide resulted in a diminished cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) response and the recruitment of a limited pMHC-I specific TCR repertoire. Interactions between individual peptide positions can thus impose fine control on the conformation of pMHC-I epitopes, whereas the perturbation of such constraints can lead to a previously unappreciated mechanism of viral escape.


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

Epitope-specific TCRbeta repertoire diversity imparts no functional advantage on the CD8+ T cell response to cognate viral peptides

Nicole L. La Gruta; Paul G. Thomas; Andrew I. Webb; Michelle Anne Dunstone; Tania Cukalac; Peter C. Doherty; Anthony W. Purcell; Jamie Rossjohn; Stephen J. Turner

TCR repertoire diversity has been convincingly shown to facilitate responsiveness of CD8+ T cell populations to mutant virus peptides, thereby safeguarding against viral escape. However, the impact of repertoire diversity on the functionality of the CD8+ T cell response to cognate peptide-MHC class I complex (pMHC) recognition remains unclear. Here, we have compared TCRβ chain repertoires of three influenza A epitope-specific CD8+ T cell responses in C57BL/6 (B6) mice: DbNP366–374, DbPA224–233, and a recently described epitope derived from the +1 reading frame of the influenza viral polymerase B subunit (residues 62–70) (DbPB1-F262). Corresponding to the relative antigenicity of the respective pMHCs, and irrespective of the location of prominent residues, the DbPA224- and DbPB1-F262-specific repertoires were similarly diverse, whereas the DbNP366 population was substantially narrower. Importantly, parallel analysis of response magnitude, cytotoxicity, TCR avidity, and cytokine production for the three epitope-specific responses revealed no obvious functional advantage conferred by increased T cell repertoire diversity. Thus, whereas a diverse repertoire may be important for recognition of epitope variants, its effect on the response to cognate pMHC recognition appears minimal.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2011

Lectin Switching During Dengue Virus Infection

Wanwisa Dejnirattisai; Andrew I. Webb; Vera Sau-Fong Chan; Amonrat Jumnainsong; Andrew D. Davidson; Juthathip Mongkolsapaya; Gavin R. Screaton

Dengue virus receptors are relatively poorly characterized, but there has been recent interest in 2 C-type lectin molecules, dendritic cell-specific intercellular adhesion molecule 3 (ICAM-3)-grabbing nonintegrin (DC-SIGN) and its close homologue liver/lymph node-specific ICAM-3-grabbing integrin (L-SIGN), which can both bind dengue and promote infection. In this report we have studied the interaction of dengue viruses produced in insect cells, tumor cell lines, and primary human dendritic cells (DCs) with DC-SIGN and L-SIGN. Virus produced in primary DCs is unable to interact with DC-SIGN but remains infectious for L-SIGN-expressing cells. Skin-resident DCs may thus be a site of initial infection by insect-produced virus, but DCs will likely not participate in large-scale virus replication during dengue infection. These results reveal that differential glycosylation of dengue virus envelope protein is highly dependent on cell state and suggest that studies of virus tropism using virus prepared in insect cells or tumor cell lines should be interpreted with caution.


Nature Communications | 2015

A RIPK2 inhibitor delays NOD signalling events yet prevents inflammatory cytokine production

Ueli Nachbur; Che A. Stafford; Aleksandra Bankovacki; Yifan Zhan; Lisa Lindqvist; Berthe Katrine Fiil; Yelena Khakham; Hyun Ja Ko; Jarrod J. Sandow; Hendrik Falk; Jessica K. Holien; Diep Chau; Joanne M. Hildebrand; James E. Vince; Phillip P Sharp; Andrew I. Webb; Katherine A. Jackman; Sabrina Mühlen; Catherine L. Kennedy; Kym N. Lowes; James M. Murphy; Mads Gyrd-Hansen; Michael W. Parker; Elizabeth L. Hartland; Andrew M. Lew; David C. S. Huang; Guillaume Lessene; John Silke

Intracellular nucleotide binding and oligomerization domain (NOD) receptors recognize antigens including bacterial peptidoglycans and initiate immune responses by triggering the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines through activating NF-κB and MAP kinases. Receptor interacting protein kinase 2 (RIPK2) is critical for NOD-mediated NF-κB activation and cytokine production. Here we develop and characterize a selective RIPK2 kinase inhibitor, WEHI-345, which delays RIPK2 ubiquitylation and NF-κB activation downstream of NOD engagement. Despite only delaying NF-κB activation on NOD stimulation, WEHI-345 prevents cytokine production in vitro and in vivo and ameliorates experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in mice. Our study highlights the importance of the kinase activity of RIPK2 for proper immune responses and demonstrates the therapeutic potential of inhibiting RIPK2 in NOD-driven inflammatory diseases.


Organic Letters | 2013

Synthesis of biotinylated episilvestrol: highly selective targeting of the translation factors eIF4AI/II.

Jennifer M. Chambers; Lisa Lindqvist; Andrew I. Webb; David C. S. Huang; G. Paul Savage; Mark A. Rizzacasa

Silvestrol (1) and episilvestrol (2) are protein synthesis inhibitors, and the former has shown efficacy in multiple mouse models of cancer; however, the selectivity of these potent cytotoxic natural products has not been described. Herein, it is demonstrated that eukaryotic initiation factors eIF4AI/II were the only proteins detected to bind silvestrol (1) and biotinylated episilvestrol (9) by affinity purification. Our study demonstrates the remarkable selectivity of these promising chemotherapeutics.

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Laura F. Dagley

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

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John Silke

University of Melbourne

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Giuseppe Infusini

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

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Jarrod J. Sandow

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

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Christopher J. Tonkin

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

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