Ansuman T. Satpathy
Stanford University
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Featured researches published by Ansuman T. Satpathy.
Immunity | 2014
Slava Epelman; Kory J. Lavine; Anna E. Beaudin; Dorothy K. Sojka; Javier A. Carrero; Boris Calderon; Thaddeus Brija; Emmanuel L. Gautier; Stoyan Ivanov; Ansuman T. Satpathy; Joel D. Schilling; Reto A. Schwendener; Ismail Sergin; Babak Razani; E. Camilla Forsberg; Wayne M. Yokoyama; Emil R. Unanue; Marco Colonna; Gwendalyn J. Randolph; Douglas L. Mann
Cardiac macrophages are crucial for tissue repair after cardiac injury but are not well characterized. Here we identify four populations of cardiac macrophages. At steady state, resident macrophages were primarily maintained through local proliferation. However, after macrophage depletion or during cardiac inflammation, Ly6c(hi) monocytes contributed to all four macrophage populations, whereas resident macrophages also expanded numerically through proliferation. Genetic fate mapping revealed that yolk-sac and fetal monocyte progenitors gave rise to the majority of cardiac macrophages, and the heart was among a minority of organs in which substantial numbers of yolk-sac macrophages persisted in adulthood. CCR2 expression and dependence distinguished cardiac macrophages of adult monocyte versus embryonic origin. Transcriptional and functional data revealed that monocyte-derived macrophages coordinate cardiac inflammation, while playing redundant but lesser roles in antigen sampling and efferocytosis. These data highlight the presence of multiple cardiac macrophage subsets, with different functions, origins, and strategies to regulate compartment size.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2012
Ansuman T. Satpathy; Wumesh Kc; Jörn C. Albring; Brian T. Edelson; Nicole M. Kretzer; Deepta Bhattacharya; Theresa L. Murphy; Kenneth M. Murphy
The zinc finger transcription factor Zbtb46 specifically marks cDCs and their committed precursors and, when overexpressed in BM progenitors, promotes cDC development at the expense of granulocytes.
Nature Immunology | 2012
Ansuman T. Satpathy; Xiaodi Wu; Jörn C. Albring; Kenneth M. Murphy
Dendritic cells (DCs) are essential mediators of innate and adaptive immune responses. Study of these critical cells has been complicated by their similarity to other hematopoietic lineages, particularly monocytes and macrophages. Progress has been made in three critical areas of DC biology: the characterization of lineage-restricted progenitors in the bone marrow, the identification of cytokines and transcription factors required during differentiation, and the development of genetic tools for the visualization and depletion of DCs in vivo. Collectively, these advances have clarified the nature of the DC lineage and have provided novel insights into their function during health and disease.
Nature | 2012
Roxane Tussiwand; Wan-Ling Lee; Theresa L. Murphy; Mona Mashayekhi; Wumesh Kc; Jörn C. Albring; Ansuman T. Satpathy; Jeffrey A. Rotondo; Brian T. Edelson; Nicole M. Kretzer; Xiaodi Wu; Leslie A. Weiss; Elke Glasmacher; Peng Li; Wei Liao; Michael S. Behnke; Samuel S.K. Lam; Cora T. Aurthur; Warren J. Leonard; Harinder Singh; Christina L. Stallings; L. David Sibley; Robert D. Schreiber; Kenneth M. Murphy
The AP1 transcription factor Batf3 is required for homeostatic development of CD8α+ classical dendritic cells that prime CD8 T-cell responses against intracellular pathogens. Here we identify an alternative, Batf3-independent pathway in mice for CD8α+ dendritic cell development operating during infection with intracellular pathogens and mediated by the cytokines interleukin (IL)-12 and interferon-γ. This alternative pathway results from molecular compensation for Batf3 provided by the related AP1 factors Batf, which also functions in T and B cells, and Batf2 induced by cytokines in response to infection. Reciprocally, physiological compensation between Batf and Batf3 also occurs in T cells for expression of IL-10 and CTLA4. Compensation among BATF factors is based on the shared capacity of their leucine zipper domains to interact with non-AP1 factors such as IRF4 and IRF8 to mediate cooperative gene activation. Conceivably, manipulating this alternative pathway of dendritic cell development could be of value in augmenting immune responses to vaccines.
Nature Immunology | 2013
Ansuman T. Satpathy; Carlos G. Briseño; Jacob S Lee; Dennis Ng; Nicholas A. Manieri; Wumesh Kc; Xiaodi Wu; Stephanie R Thomas; Wan-Ling Lee; Mustafa Turkoz; Keely G. McDonald; Matthew M. Meredith; Christina Song; Cynthia J. Guidos; Rodney D. Newberry; Wenjun Ouyang; Theresa L. Murphy; Thaddeus S. Stappenbeck; Jennifer L. Gommerman; Michel C. Nussenzweig; Marco Colonna; Raphael Kopan; Kenneth M. Murphy
Defense against attaching-and-effacing bacteria requires the sequential generation of interleukin 23 (IL-23) and IL-22 to induce protective mucosal responses. Although CD4+ and NKp46+ innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) are the critical source of IL-22 during infection, the precise source of IL-23 is unclear. We used genetic techniques to deplete mice of specific subsets of classical dendritic cells (cDCs) and analyzed immunity to the attaching-and-effacing pathogen Citrobacter rodentium. We found that the signaling receptor Notch2 controlled the terminal stage of cDC differentiation. Notch2-dependent intestinal CD11b+ cDCs were an obligate source of IL-23 required for survival after infection with C. rodentium, but CD103+ cDCs dependent on the transcription factor Batf3 were not. Our results demonstrate a nonredundant function for CD11b+ cDCs in the response to pathogens in vivo.
Cell | 2014
Malay Haldar; Masako Kohyama; Alex Yick-Lun So; Wumesh Kc; Xiaodi Wu; Carlos G. Briseño; Ansuman T. Satpathy; Nicole M. Kretzer; Hisashi Arase; Namakkal S. Rajasekaran; Li Wang; Takeshi Egawa; Kazuhiko Igarashi; David Baltimore; Theresa L. Murphy; Kenneth M. Murphy
Splenic red pulp macrophages (RPM) degrade senescent erythrocytes and recycle heme-associated iron. The transcription factor SPI-C is selectively expressed by RPM and is required for their development, but the physiologic stimulus inducing Spic is unknown. Here, we report that Spic also regulated the development of F4/80(+)VCAM1(+) bone marrow macrophages (BMM) and that Spic expression in BMM and RPM development was induced by heme, a metabolite of erythrocyte degradation. Pathologic hemolysis induced loss of RPM and BMM due to excess heme but induced Spic in monocytes to generate new RPM and BMM. Spic expression in monocytes was constitutively inhibited by the transcriptional repressor BACH1. Heme induced proteasome-dependent BACH1 degradation and rapid Spic derepression. Furthermore, cysteine-proline dipeptide motifs in BACH1 that mediate heme-dependent degradation were necessary for Spic induction by heme. These findings are the first example of metabolite-driven differentiation of a tissue-resident macrophage subset and provide new insights into iron homeostasis.
Blood | 2012
Amy M. Becker; Drew G. Michael; Ansuman T. Satpathy; Roger Sciammas; Harinder Singh; Deepta Bhattacharya
While most blood lineages are assumed to mature through a single cellular and developmental route downstream of HSCs, dendritic cells (DCs) can be derived from both myeloid and lymphoid progenitors in vivo. To determine how distinct progenitors can generate similar downstream lineages, we examined the transcriptional changes that accompany loss of in vivo myeloid potential as common myeloid progenitors differentiate into common DC progenitors (CDPs), and as lymphoid-primed multipotent progenitors (LMPPs) differentiate into all lymphoid progenitors (ALPs). Microarray studies revealed that IFN regulatory factor 8 (IRF-8) expression increased during each of these transitions. Competitive reconstitutions using Irf8(-/-) BM demonstrated cell-intrinsic defects in the formation of CDPs and all splenic DC subsets. Irf8(-/-) common myeloid progenitors and, unexpectedly, Irf8(-/-) ALPs produced more neutrophils in vivo than their wild-type counterparts at the expense of DCs. Retroviral expression of IRF-8 in multiple progenitors led to reduced neutrophil production and increased numbers of DCs, even in the granulocyte-macrophage progenitor (GMP), which does not normally possess conventional DC potential. These data suggest that IRF-8 represses a neutrophil module of development and promotes convergent DC development from multiple lymphoid and myeloid progenitors autonomously of cellular context.
Journal of Immunology | 2005
Jason C. O'Connor; Ansuman T. Satpathy; Matthew E. Hartman; Emily M. Horvath; Keith W. Kelley; Robert Dantzer; Rodney W. Johnson; Gregory G. Freund
Chronic inflammation appears to play a critical role in type 2 diabetes and its complications. Here we tested the hypothesis that this inflammatory dysregulation affects the IL-1β system and has functional consequences in the brain. Diabetic, db/db, and nondiabetic, db/+, mice were administered i.p. LPS, a potent cytokine inducer, at a dose of 100 μg/kg/mouse. db/db mouse innate immune-associated sickness behavior was 14.8, 33, 44.7, and 34% greater than that of db/+ mice at 2, 4, 8, and 12 h, respectively. When a fixed dose of LPS was used (5 μg/mouse), db/db mouse sickness was again enhanced 18.4, 22.2, and 14.5% at 4, 8, and 12 h as compared with db/+ mice. In diabetic mice, peritoneal macrophages produced more IL-1β in response to LPS, and peritoneal levels of IL-1β induced by LPS were increased. Importantly, IL-1R antagonist and type 2 IL-1 receptor (IL-1R2) failed to up-regulate in response to LPS in db/db mice. Finally, both peripheral and central administration of IL-1β, itself, induced sickness in db/db mice that mimicked the effects of peripheral LPS and was significantly greater than that seen in db/+ mice. Taken together, these results indicate that IL-1β-mediated innate immunity is augmented in db/db mice both at the periphery and in the brain, and the mechanism is due to diabetes-associated loss of IL-1β counterregulation.
Immunity | 2013
James M. Gardner; Todd Metzger; Eileen J. McMahon; Byron B. Au-Yeung; Anna K. Krawisz; Wen Lu; Jeffrey D. Price; Kellsey Johannes; Ansuman T. Satpathy; Kenneth M. Murphy; Kristin V. Tarbell; Arthur Weiss; Mark S. Anderson
The autoimmune regulator (Aire) is essential for prevention of autoimmunity; its role is best understood in the thymus, where it promotes self-tolerance through tissue-specific antigen (TSA) expression. Recently, extrathymic Aire-expressing cells (eTACs) have been described in murine secondary lymphoid organs, but the identity of such cells and their role in immune tolerance remains unclear. Here we have shown that eTACs are a discrete major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC II)(hi), CD80(lo), CD86(lo), epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM)(hi), CD45(lo) bone marrow-derived peripheral antigen-presenting cell (APC) population. We also have demonstrated that eTACs can functionally inactivate CD4⁺ T cells through a mechanism that does not require regulatory T cells (Treg) and is resistant to innate inflammatory stimuli. Together, these findings further define eTACs as a distinct tolerogenic cell population in secondary lymphoid organs.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007
Markus Feuerer; Wenyu Jiang; Phillip D. Holler; Ansuman T. Satpathy; Christopher L. Campbell; Molly Bogue; Diane Mathis; Christophe Benoist
FoxP3+CD4+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) play a key role in the maintenance of peripheral self-tolerance, and it has been suggested that diabetes-susceptible nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice are defective in the generation and numbers of Tregs. We found thymic selection of Tregs to be under genetic control. Fetal thymic organ cultures on the NOD background required 3- to 10-fold more antigen than corresponding cultures on the B6 background for optimal induction of Tregs, but once the threshold for induction was reached the NOD background yielded close to 10-fold more Tregs. This increased selection of Tregs was also found in nontransgenic NOD mice in fetal through adult stages. This trait did not map to the MHC, idd3, or the chromosome 3 (Chr3) regions that control clonal deletion, but mainly to two regions on Chr1 and Chr11. Thus, NOD mice do not have a global defect in the generation or maintenance of Tregs; if anything, they show the opposite.