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Dive into the research topics where Andrew N. J. McKenzie is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew N. J. McKenzie.


Nature | 2010

Nuocytes represent a new innate effector leukocyte that mediates type-2 immunity

Daniel R. Neill; See Heng Wong; Agustin Bellosi; Robin J. Flynn; Maria Daly; Theresa K. A. Langford; Christine Bucks; Colleen M. Kane; Padraic G. Fallon; Richard Pannell; Helen E. Jolin; Andrew N. J. McKenzie

Innate immunity provides the first line of defence against invading pathogens and provides important cues for the development of adaptive immunity. Type-2 immunity—responsible for protective immune responses to helminth parasites and the underlying cause of the pathogenesis of allergic asthma—consists of responses dominated by the cardinal type-2 cytokines interleukin (IL)4, IL5 and IL13 (ref. 5). T cells are an important source of these cytokines in adaptive immune responses, but the innate cell sources remain to be comprehensively determined. Here, through the use of novel Il13-eGFP reporter mice, we present the identification and functional characterization of a new innate type-2 immune effector leukocyte that we have named the nuocyte. Nuocytes expand in vivo in response to the type-2-inducing cytokines IL25 and IL33, and represent the predominant early source of IL13 during helminth infection with Nippostrongylus brasiliensis. In the combined absence of IL25 and IL33 signalling, nuocytes fail to expand, resulting in a severe defect in worm expulsion that is rescued by the adoptive transfer of in vitro cultured wild-type, but not IL13-deficient, nuocytes. Thus, nuocytes represent a critically important innate effector cell in type-2 immunity.


Nature Reviews Immunology | 2013

Innate lymphoid cells — a proposal for uniform nomenclature

Hergen Spits; David Artis; Marco Colonna; Andreas Diefenbach; James P. Di Santo; Gérard Eberl; Shigeo Koyasu; Richard M. Locksley; Andrew N. J. McKenzie; Reina E. Mebius; Fiona Powrie; Eric Vivier

Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) are a family of developmentally related cells that are involved in immunity and in tissue development and remodelling. Recent research has identified several distinct members of this family. Confusingly, many different names have been used to characterize these newly identified ILC subsets. Here, we propose that ILCs should be categorized into three groups based on the cytokines that they can produce and the transcription factors that regulate their development and function.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2007

IL-33 and ST2 comprise a critical biomechanically induced and cardioprotective signaling system

Shoji Sanada; Daihiko Hakuno; Luke J. Higgins; Eric R. Schreiter; Andrew N. J. McKenzie; Richard T. Lee

ST2 is an IL-1 receptor family member with transmembrane (ST2L) and soluble (sST2) isoforms. sST2 is a mechanically induced cardiomyocyte protein, and serum sST2 levels predict outcome in patients with acute myocardial infarction or chronic heart failure. Recently, IL-33 was identified as a functional ligand of ST2L, allowing exploration of the role of ST2 in myocardium. We found that IL-33 was a biomechanically induced protein predominantly synthesized by cardiac fibroblasts. IL-33 markedly antagonized angiotensin II- and phenylephrine-induced cardiomyocyte hypertrophy. Although IL-33 activated NF-kappaB, it inhibited angiotensin II- and phenylephrine-induced phosphorylation of inhibitor of NF-kappa B alpha (I kappa B alpha) and NF-kappaB nuclear binding activity. sST2 blocked antihypertrophic effects of IL-33, indicating that sST2 functions in myocardium as a soluble decoy receptor. Following pressure overload by transverse aortic constriction (TAC), ST2(-/-) mice had more left ventricular hypertrophy, more chamber dilation, reduced fractional shortening, more fibrosis, and impaired survival compared with WT littermates. Furthermore, recombinant IL-33 treatment reduced hypertrophy and fibrosis and improved survival after TAC in WT mice, but not in ST2(-/-) littermates. Thus, IL-33/ST2 signaling is a mechanically activated, cardioprotective fibroblast-cardiomyocyte paracrine system, which we believe to be novel. IL-33 may have therapeutic potential for beneficially regulating the myocardial response to overload.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2006

Identification of an interleukin (IL)-25–dependent cell population that provides IL-4, IL-5, and IL-13 at the onset of helminth expulsion

Padraic G. Fallon; Sarah J. Ballantyne; Niamh E. Mangan; Jillian L. Barlow; Ayan Dasvarma; Duncan R. Hewett; Ann McIlgorm; Helen E. Jolin; Andrew N. J. McKenzie

Type 2 immunity, which involves coordinated regulation of innate and adaptive immune responses, can protect against helminth parasite infection, but may lead to allergy and asthma after inappropriate activation. We demonstrate that il25−/− mice display inefficient Nippostrongylus brasiliensis expulsion and delayed cytokine production by T helper 2 cells. We further establish a key role for interleukin (IL)-25 in regulating a novel population of IL-4–, IL-5–, IL-13–producing non–B/non–T (NBNT), c-kit+, FcɛR1− cells during helminth infection. A deficit in this population in il25−/− mice correlates with inefficient N. brasiliensis expulsion. In contrast, administration of recombinant IL-25 in vivo induces the appearance of NBNT, c-kit+, FcɛR1− cells and leads to rapid worm expulsion that is T and B cell independent, but type 2 cytokine dependent. We demonstrate that these IL-25–regulated cells appear rapidly in the draining lymph nodes, implicating them as a source of type 2 cytokines during initiation of worm expulsion.


Nature Immunology | 2004

ST2 is an inhibitor of interleukin 1 receptor and Toll-like receptor 4 signaling and maintains endotoxin tolerance

Elizabeth Brint; Damo Xu; Haiying Liu; Aisling Dunne; Andrew N. J. McKenzie; Luke A. J. O'Neill; Foo Y. Liew

The Toll–interleukin 1 receptor (TIR) superfamily, defined by the presence of an intracellular TIR domain, initiates innate immunity through activation of the transcription factor NF-κB, leading to the production of proinflammatory cytokines. ST2 is a member of the TIR family that does not activate NF-κB and has been suggested as an important effector molecule of T helper type 2 (TH2) responses. We show here that the membrane-bound form of ST2 negatively regulated type I interleukin 1 receptor (IL-1RI) and Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) but not TLR3 signaling by sequestrating the adaptors MyD88 and Mal. In contrast to wild-type mice, ST2-deficient mice failed to develop endotoxin tolerance. Thus, these results provide a molecular explanation for the function of ST2 in TH2 responses, as inhibition of TLRs promotes a TH2 response, and also identify ST2 as a key regulator of endotoxin tolerance.


Cell | 1996

An Mll–AF9 Fusion Gene Made by Homologous Recombination Causes Acute Leukemia in Chimeric Mice: A Method to Create Fusion Oncogenes

Javier Corral; Isabelle Lavenir; Helen Impey; Alan J. Warren; Alan Forster; Teresa A Larson; Sarah Bell; Andrew N. J. McKenzie; Gareth King; Terence H. Rabbitts

Homologous recombination in embryonal stem cells has been used to produce a fusion oncogene, thereby mimicking chromosomal translocations that frequently result in formation of tumor-specific fusion oncogenes in human malignancies. AF9 sequences were fused into the mouse Mll gene so that expression of the Mll-AF9 fusion gene occurred from endogenous Mll transcription control elements, as in t(9;11) found in human leukemias. Chimeric mice carrying the fusion gene developed tumors, which were restricted to acute myeloid leukemias despite the widespread activity of the Mll promoter. Onset of perceptible disease was preceded by expansion of ES cell derivatives in peripheral blood. This novel use of homologous recombination formally proves that chromosomal translocations contribute to malignancy and provides a general strategy to create fusion oncogenes for studying their role in tumorigenesis.


Nature Reviews Immunology | 2013

Innate lymphoid cells — how did we miss them?

Jennifer Walker; Jillian L. Barlow; Andrew N. J. McKenzie

Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) are newly identified members of the lymphoid lineage that have emerging roles in mediating immune responses and in regulating tissue homeostasis and inflammation. Here, we review the developmental relationships between the various ILC lineages that have been identified to date and summarize their functions in protective immunity to infection and their pathological roles in allergic and autoimmune diseases.


Immunity | 2014

Group 2 Innate Lymphoid Cells Are Critical for the Initiation of Adaptive T Helper 2 Cell-Mediated Allergic Lung Inflammation

Timotheus Y.F. Halim; Catherine A. Steer; Laura Mathä; Matthew Gold; Itziar Martinez-Gonzalez; Kelly M. McNagny; Andrew N. J. McKenzie; Fumio Takei

Summary Naive CD4+ T cell differentiation into distinct subsets of T helper (Th) cells is a pivotal process in the initiation of the adaptive immune response. Allergens predominantly stimulate Th2 cells, causing allergic inflammation. However, why allergens induce Th2 cell differentiation is not well understood. Here we show that group 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2s) are required to mount a robust Th2 cell response to the protease-allergen papain. Intranasal administration of papain stimulated ILC2s and Th2 cells, causing allergic lung inflammation and elevated immunoglobulin E titers. This process was severely impaired in ILC2-deficient mice. Whereas interleukin-4 (IL-4) was dispensable for papain-induced Th2 cell differentiation, ILC2-derived IL-13 was critical as it promoted migration of activated lung dendritic cells into the draining lymph node where they primed naive T cells to differentiate into Th2 cells. Papain-induced ILC2 activation and Th2 cell differentiation was IL-33-dependent, suggesting a common pathway in the initiation of Th2 cell responses to allergen.


Journal of Immunology | 2001

Critical Role for IL-13 in the Development of Allergen-Induced Airway Hyperreactivity

David M. Walter; Jennifer J. McIntire; Gerald J. Berry; Andrew N. J. McKenzie; Debra D. Donaldson; Rosemarie H. DeKruyff; Dale T. Umetsu

Airway hyperresponsiveness to a variety of specific and nonspecific stimuli is a cardinal feature of asthma, which affects nearly 10% of the population in industrialized countries. Eosinophilic pulmonary inflammation, eosinophil-derived products, as well as Th2 cytokines IL-13, IL-4, and IL-5, have been associated with the development of airway hyperreactivity (AHR), but the specific immunological basis underlying the development of AHR remains controversial. Herein we show that mice with targeted deletion of IL-13 failed to develop allergen-induced AHR, despite the presence of vigorous Th2-biased, eosinophilic pulmonary inflammation. However, AHR was restored in IL-13−/− mice by the administration of recombinant IL-13. Moreover, adoptive transfer of OVA-specific Th2 cells generated from TCR-transgenic IL-13−/− mice failed to induce AHR in recipient SCID mice, although such IL-13−/− Th2 cells produced high levels of IL-4 and IL-5 and induced significant airway inflammation. These studies definitively demonstrate that IL-13 is necessary and sufficient for the induction of AHR and that eosinophilic airway inflammation in the absence of IL-13 is inadequate for the induction of AHR. Therefore, treatment of human asthma with antagonists of IL-13 may be very effective.


Nature Immunology | 2012

Transcription factor ROR[alpha] is critical for nuocyte development

See Heng Wong; Jennifer Walker; Helen E. Jolin; Lesley F Drynan; Emily Hams; Ana Camelo; Jillian L. Barlow; Daniel R Neill; Veera Panova; Ute Koch; Freddy Radtke; Clare S. Hardman; You Yi Hwang; Padraic G. Fallon; Andrew N. J. McKenzie

Nuocytes are essential in innate type 2 immunity and contribute to the exacerbation of asthma responses. Here we found that nuocytes arose in the bone marrow and differentiated from common lymphoid progenitors, which indicates they are distinct, previously unknown members of the lymphoid lineage. Nuocytes required interleukin 7 (IL-7), IL-33 and Notch signaling for development in vitro. Pro-T cell progenitors at double-negative stage 1 (DN1) and DN2 maintained nuocyte potential in vitro, although the thymus was not essential for nuocyte development. Notably, the transcription factor RORα was critical for the development of nuocytes and their role in the expulsion of parasitic worms.Nuocytes are essential in innate type-2 immunity and contribute to the exacerbation of asthma responses. Here we show that nuocytes arise in the bone marrow and differentiate from common lymphoid progenitors, which makes them distinct new members of the lymphoid lineage. Nuocytes required interleukin 7 (IL-7), IL-33 and Notch signalling for development in vitro. Double negative 1 (DN1) and DN2 pro-T-cell progenitors maintained nuocyte potential in vitro, although the thymus was not essential for nuocyte development. Notably, the transcription factor Rorα was critical for nuocyte development and their role in parasitic worm expulsion.

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Jillian L. Barlow

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Helen E. Jolin

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Niamh E. Mangan

Monash Institute of Medical Research

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Damo Xu

University of Glasgow

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See Heng Wong

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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