Ashik Ullah
Woolcock Institute of Medical Research
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ashik Ullah.
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2014
Ashik Ullah; Zhixuan Loh; Wan Jun Gan; Vivian Zhang; Huan Yang; Jian Hua Li; Yasuhiko Yamamoto; Ann Marie Schmidt; Carol L. Armour; J. Margaret Hughes; Simon Phipps; Maria B. Sukkar
BACKGROUND The receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) shares common ligands and signaling pathways with TLR4, a key mediator of house dust mite (Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus) (HDM) sensitization. We hypothesized that RAGE and its ligand high-mobility group box-1 (HMGB1) cooperate with TLR4 to mediate HDM sensitization. OBJECTIVES To determine the requirement for HMGB1 and RAGE, and their relationship with TLR4, in airway sensitization. METHODS TLR4(-/-), RAGE(-/-), and RAGE-TLR4(-/-) mice were intranasally exposed to HDM or cockroach (Blatella germanica) extracts, and features of allergic inflammation were measured during the sensitization or challenge phase. Anti-HMGB1 antibody and the IL-1 receptor antagonist Anakinra were used to inhibit HMGB1 and the IL-1 receptor, respectively. RESULTS The magnitude of allergic airway inflammation in response to either HDM or cockroach sensitization and/or challenge was significantly reduced in the absence of RAGE but not further diminished in the absence of both RAGE and TLR4. HDM sensitization induced the release of HMGB1 from the airway epithelium in a biphasic manner, which corresponded to the sequential activation of TLR4 then RAGE. Release of HMGB1 in response to cockroach sensitization also was RAGE dependent. Significantly, HMGB1 release occurred downstream of TLR4-induced IL-1α, and upstream of IL-25 and IL-33 production. Adoptive transfer of HDM-pulsed RAGE(+/+)dendritic cells to RAGE(-/-) mice recapitulated the allergic responses after HDM challenge. Immunoneutralization of HMGB1 attenuated HDM-induced allergic airway inflammation. CONCLUSION The HMGB1-RAGE axis mediates allergic airway sensitization and airway inflammation. Activation of this axis in response to different allergens acts to amplify the allergic inflammatory response, which exposes it as an attractive target for therapeutic intervention.
British Journal of Pharmacology | 2012
Maria B. Sukkar; Ashik Ullah; Wan Jun Gan; Peter Wark; Kian Fan Chung; J. Margaret Hughes; Carol L. Armour; Simon Phipps
Asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are heterogeneous inflammatory disorders of the respiratory tract characterized by airflow obstruction. It is now clear that the environmental factors that drive airway pathology in asthma and COPD, including allergens, viruses, ozone and cigarette smoke, activate innate immune receptors known as pattern‐recognition receptors, either directly or indirectly by causing the release of endogenous ligands. Thus, there is now intense research activity focused around understanding the mechanisms by which pattern‐recognition receptors sustain the airway inflammatory response, and how these mechanisms might be targeted therapeutically. One pattern‐recognition receptor that has recently come to attention in chronic airways disease is the receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE). RAGE is a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily of cell surface receptors that recognizes pathogen‐ and host‐derived endogenous ligands to initiate the immune response to tissue injury, infection and inflammation. Although the role of RAGE in lung physiology and pathophysiology is not well understood, recent genome‐wide association studies have linked RAGE gene polymorphisms with airflow obstruction. In addition, accumulating data from animal and clinical investigations reveal increased expression of RAGE and its ligands, together with reduced expression of soluble RAGE, an endogenous inhibitor of RAGE signalling, in chronic airways disease. In this review, we discuss recent studies of the ligand–RAGE axis in asthma and COPD, highlight important areas for future research and discuss how this axis might potentially be harnessed for therapeutic benefit in these conditions.
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2015
Ashik Ullah; Joana A. Revez; Zhixuan Loh; Jennifer Simpson; Vivian Zhang; Lisa Bain; Antiopi Varelias; Stefan Rose-John; Antje Blumenthal; Mark J. Smyth; Geoffrey R. Hill; Maria B. Sukkar; Manuel A. Ferreira; Simon Phipps
BACKGROUND A variant in the IL-6 receptor (IL-6R) gene increases asthma risk and is predicted to decrease IL-6 classic signaling and increase IL-6 trans-signaling. This suggests that inhibition of IL-6 trans-signaling, but not classic signaling, might suppress allergic airway inflammation. OBJECTIVES We sought to determine whether IL-6 signaling contributes to (1) acute experimental asthma induced by clinically relevant allergens and (2) variation in asthma clinical phenotypes in asthmatic patients. METHODS Mice were sensitized to house dust mite (HDM) or cockroach at day 0, treated with IL-6R inhibitors at day 13, and challenged with the same allergen at days 14 to 17. End points were measured 3 hours after the final challenge. IL-6 and soluble IL-6 receptor (sIL-6R) expression in induced sputum of asthmatic patients was correlated with asthma clinical phenotypes. RESULTS Both HDM and cockroach induced a type 2/type 17 cytokine profile and mixed granulocytic inflammation in the airways. Both allergens increased IL-6 expression in the airways, but only cockroach induced sIL-6R expression. Therefore HDM challenge promoted IL-6 classic signaling but not trans-signaling; in this model treatment with anti-IL-6R did not suppress airway inflammation. In contrast, cockroach-induced inflammation involved activation of IL-6 trans-signaling and production of IL-17A by γδ T cells. Anti-IL-6R, selective blockade of sIL-6R, or γδ T-cell deficiency significantly attenuated cockroach-induced inflammation. Asthmatic patients with high airway IL-6 and sIL-6R levels were enriched for the neutrophilic and mixed granulocytic subtypes. CONCLUSION Experimental asthma associated with both high IL-6 and high sIL-6R levels in the airways is attenuated by treatment with IL-6R inhibitors.
Frontiers in Immunology | 2016
Ashik Ullah; Geoffrey R. Hill; Siok-Keen Tey
Natural killer (NK) cells are the first lymphocyte population to reconstitute following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) and are important in mediating immunity against both leukemia and pathogens. Although NK cell numbers generally reconstitute within a month, the acquisition of mature NK cell phenotype and full functional competency can take 6 months or more, and is influenced by graft composition, concurrent pharmacologic immunosuppression, graft-versus-host disease, and other clinical factors. In addition, cytomegalovirus infection and reactivation have a dominant effect on NK cell memory imprinting following allogeneic HSCT just as it does in healthy individuals. Our understanding of NK cell education and licensing has evolved in the years since the “missing self” hypothesis for NK-mediated graft-versus-leukemia effect was first put forward. For example, we now know that NK cell “re-education” can occur, and that unlicensed NK cells can be more protective than licensed NK cells in certain settings, thus raising new questions about how best to harness graft-versus-leukemia effect. Here, we review current understanding of the functional reconstitution of NK cells and NK cell education following allogeneic HSCT, highlighting a conceptual framework for future research.
Science immunology | 2017
Ping Zhang; Jason S. Lee; Kate H. Gartlan; Iona S. Schuster; Iain Comerford; Antiopi Varelias; Ashik Ullah; Slavica Vuckovic; Motoko Koyama; Rachel D. Kuns; Kelly R. Locke; Kirrilee J. Beckett; Stuart D. Olver; Luke D. Samson; Marcela Montes de Oca; Fabian de Labastida Rivera; Andrew D. Clouston; Gabrielle T. Belz; Bruce R. Blazar; Kelli P. A. MacDonald; Ranjeny Thomas; Christian R. Engwerda; Mariapia A. Degli-Esposti; Axel Kallies; Siok-Keen Tey; Geoffrey R. Hill
TR1 cells are the major regulatory population generated after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. Regulatory T cells sans FoxP3 Although expression of FoxP3 is largely synonymous with regulatory T (Treg) cell identity in mice, type 1 regulatory T (TR1) cells are an exception. TR1 cells produce interleukin-10 but are FoxP3−. In comparison with FoxP3+ Treg cells, the development and functions of TR1 cells are poorly understood. Here, Zhang et al. report that TR1 cells play a critical regulatory role after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) in mice and use this model to delineate the molecular circuits driving commitment to the TR1 cell lineage. By documenting the presence of TR1 cells after BMT in humans, they propose that modulation of TR1 cells could be a therapeutic venue for increasing BMT success rates in the clinic. Type 1 regulatory T (TR1) cells are Foxp3− interleukin-10 (IL-10)–producing CD4+ T cells with potent immunosuppressive properties, but their requirements for lineage development have remained elusive. We show that TR1 cells constitute the most abundant regulatory population after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT), express the transcription factor Eomesodermin (Eomes), and are critical for the prevention of graft-versus-host disease. We demonstrate that Eomes is required for TR1 cell differentiation, during which it acts in concert with the transcription factor B lymphocyte–induced maturation protein-1 (Blimp-1) by transcriptionally activating IL-10 expression and repressing differentiation into other T helper cell lineages. We further show that Eomes induction in TR1 cells requires T-bet and donor macrophage–derived IL-27. Thus, we define the cellular and transcriptional control of TR1 cell differentiation during BMT, opening new avenues to therapeutic manipulation.
eLife | 2017
Jaisy Arikkatt; Ashik Ullah; Kirsty R. Short; Vivian Zhang; Wan Jun Gan; Zhixuan Loh; Rhiannon B. Werder; Jennifer Simpson; Peter D. Sly; Stuart B. Mazzone; Kirsten Spann; Manuel A. Ferreira; John W. Upham; Maria B. Sukkar; Simon Phipps
Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease. Although many patients with asthma develop type-2 dominated eosinophilic inflammation, a number of individuals develop paucigranulocytic asthma, which occurs in the absence of eosinophilia or neutrophilia. The aetiology of paucigranulocytic asthma is unknown. However, both respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection and mutations in the receptor for advanced glycation endproducts (RAGE) are risk factors for asthma development. Here, we show that RAGE deficiency impairs anti-viral immunity during an early-life infection with pneumonia virus of mice (PVM; a murine analogue of RSV). The elevated viral load was associated with the release of high mobility group box-1 (HMGB1) which triggered airway smooth muscle remodelling in early-life. Re-infection with PVM in later-life induced many of the cardinal features of asthma in the absence of eosinophilic or neutrophilic inflammation. Anti-HMGB1 mitigated both early-life viral disease and asthma-like features, highlighting HMGB1 as a possible novel therapeutic target. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.21199.001
American Journal of Pathology | 2014
Kirsten Spann; Zhixuan Loh; Jason P. Lynch; Ashik Ullah; Vivian Zhang; Engin Baturcam; Rhiannon B. Werder; Natthida Khajornjiraphan; Penny A. Rudd; Yeuh Ming Loo; Andreas Suhrbier; Michael Gale; John W. Upham; Simon Phipps
Blood Advances | 2017
Kate H. Gartlan; Antiopi Varelias; Motoko Koyama; Renee J. Robb; Kate A. Markey; Karshing Chang; Andrew N. Wilkinson; David Smith; Ashik Ullah; Rachel D. Kuns; Neil C. Raffelt; Stuart D. Olver; Katie E. Lineburg; Bianca E. Teal; Melody Cheong; Michele W.L. Teng; Mark J. Smyth; Siok-Keen Tey; Kelli P. A. MacDonald; Geoffrey R. Hill
Respirology | 2015
Ashik Ullah; M. Pharm; Joana A. Revez; Zhixuan Loh; Jennifer Simpson; Zhang; Lisa Bain; Antiopi Varelias; Stefan Rose-John; Antje Blumenthal; Mark J. Smyth; Geoffrey R. Hill; Maria B. Sukkar; Manuel A. Ferreira; Simon Phipps
/data/revues/00916749/unassign/S0091674915003383/ | 2015
Ashik Ullah; Joana A. Revez; Zhixuan Loh; Jennifer Simpson; Vivian Zhang; Lisa Bain; Antiopi Varelias; Stefan Rose-John; Antje Blumenthal; Mark J. Smyth; Geoffrey R. Hill; Maria B. Sukkar; Manuel A. Ferreira; Simon Phipps