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Dive into the research topics where Ben Roediger is active.

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Featured researches published by Ben Roediger.


Nature Immunology | 2013

Cutaneous immunosurveillance and regulation of inflammation by group 2 innate lymphoid cells

Ben Roediger; Ryan Kyle; Kwok Ho Yip; Nital Sumaria; Thomas V. Guy; Brian S. Kim; Andrew J. Mitchell; Szun Szun Tay; Rohit Jain; Elizabeth Forbes-Blom; Xi Chen; Philip L. Tong; Holly A. Bolton; David Artis; William E. Paul; Barbara Fazekas de St Groth; Michele A. Grimbaldeston; Graham Le Gros; Wolfgang Weninger

Type 2 immunity is critical for defense against cutaneous infections but also underlies the development of allergic skin diseases. We report the identification in normal mouse dermis of an abundant, phenotypically unique group 2 innate lymphoid cell (ILC2) subset that depended on interleukin 7 (IL-7) and constitutively produced IL-13. Intravital multiphoton microscopy showed that dermal ILC2 cells specifically interacted with mast cells, whose function was suppressed by IL-13. Treatment of mice deficient in recombination-activating gene 1 (Rag1−/−) with IL-2 resulted in the population expansion of activated, IL-5-producing dermal ILC2 cells, which led to spontaneous dermatitis characterized by eosinophil infiltrates and activated mast cells. Our data show that ILC2 cells have both pro- and anti-inflammatory properties and identify a previously unknown interactive pathway between two innate populations of cells of the immune system linked to type 2 immunity and allergic diseases.


PLOS Pathogens | 2008

Migratory dermal dendritic cells act as rapid sensors of protozoan parasites

Lai Guan Ng; Alice Hsu; Michael A. Mandell; Ben Roediger; Christoph Hoeller; Paulus Mrass; Amaya Iparraguirre; Lois L. Cavanagh; James A. Triccas; Stephen M. Beverley; Phillip Scott; Wolfgang Weninger

Dendritic cells (DC), including those of the skin, act as sentinels for intruding microorganisms. In the epidermis, DC (termed Langerhans cells, LC) are sessile and screen their microenvironment through occasional movements of their dendrites. The spatio-temporal orchestration of antigen encounter by dermal DC (DDC) is not known. Since these cells are thought to be instrumental in the initiation of immune responses during infection, we investigated their behavior directly within their natural microenvironment using intravital two-photon microscopy. Surprisingly, we found that, under homeostatic conditions, DDC were highly motile, continuously crawling through the interstitial space in a Gαi protein-coupled receptor–dependent manner. However, within minutes after intradermal delivery of the protozoan parasite Leishmania major, DDC became immobile and incorporated multiple parasites into cytosolic vacuoles. Parasite uptake occurred through the extension of long, highly dynamic pseudopods capable of tracking and engulfing parasites. This was then followed by rapid dendrite retraction towards the cell body. DDC were proficient at discriminating between parasites and inert particles, and parasite uptake was independent of the presence of neutrophils. Together, our study has visualized the dynamics and microenvironmental context of parasite encounter by an innate immune cell subset during the initiation of the immune response. Our results uncover a unique migratory tissue surveillance program of DDC that ensures the rapid detection of pathogens.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2011

Cutaneous immunosurveillance by self-renewing dermal γδ T cells

Nital Sumaria; Ben Roediger; Lai Guan Ng; Jim Qin; Rachel Pinto; Lois L. Cavanagh; Elena Shklovskaya; Barbara Fazekas de St Groth; James A. Triccas; Wolfgang Weninger

The dermis contains a novel population of γδT cells that are distinct from epidermal γδT cells and produce IL-17 in response to mycobacterial infection.


Nature Immunology | 2014

Perivascular macrophages mediate neutrophil recruitment during bacterial skin infection.

Arby Abtin; Rohit Jain; Andrew J. Mitchell; Ben Roediger; Anthony J. Brzoska; Shweta Tikoo; Qiang Cheng; Lai Guan Ng; Lois L. Cavanagh; Ulrich H. von Andrian; Michael J. Hickey; Neville Firth; Wolfgang Weninger

Transendothelial migration of neutrophils in postcapillary venules is a key event in the inflammatory response against pathogens and tissue damage. The precise regulation of this process is incompletely understood. We report that perivascular macrophages are critical for neutrophil migration into skin infected with the pathogen Staphylococcus aureus. Using multiphoton intravital microscopy we showed that neutrophils extravasate from inflamed dermal venules in close proximity to perivascular macrophages, which are a major source of neutrophil chemoattractants. The virulence factor α-hemolysin produced by S. aureus lyses perivascular macrophages, which leads to decreased neutrophil transmigration. Our data illustrate a previously unrecognized role for perivascular macrophages in neutrophil recruitment to inflamed skin and indicate that S. aureus uses hemolysin-dependent killing of these cells as an immune evasion strategy.


Nature Immunology | 2012

Transendothelial migration of lymphocytes mediated by intraendothelial vesicle stores rather than by extracellular chemokine depots

Ziv Shulman; Shmuel J. Cohen; Ben Roediger; Vyacheslav Kalchenko; Rohit Jain; Valentin Grabovsky; Eugenia Klein; Vera Shinder; Liat Stoler-Barak; Sara W. Feigelson; Tsipi Meshel; Susanna M. Nurmi; Itamar Goldstein; Olivier Hartley; Carl G. Gahmberg; Amos Etzioni; Wolfgang Weninger; Adit Ben-Baruch; Ronen Alon

Chemokines presented by the endothelium are critical for integrin-dependent adhesion and transendothelial migration of naive and memory lymphocytes. Here we found that effector lymphocytes of the type 1 helper T cell (TH1 cell) and type 1 cytotoxic T cell (TC1 cell) subtypes expressed adhesive integrins that bypassed chemokine signals and established firm arrests on variably inflamed endothelial barriers. Nevertheless, the transendothelial migration of these lymphocytes strictly depended on signals from guanine nucleotide–binding proteins of the Gi type and was promoted by multiple endothelium-derived inflammatory chemokines, even without outer endothelial surface exposure. Instead, transendothelial migration–promoting endothelial chemokines were stored in vesicles docked on actin fibers beneath the plasma membranes and were locally released within tight lymphocyte-endothelial synapses. Thus, effector T lymphocytes can cross inflamed barriers through contact-guided consumption of intraendothelial chemokines without surface-deposited chemokines or extraendothelial chemokine gradients.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Langerhans cells are precommitted to immune tolerance induction.

Elena Shklovskaya; Brendan J. O’Sullivan; Lai Guan Ng; Ben Roediger; Ranjeny Thomas; Wolfgang Weninger; Barbara Fazekas de St Groth

Antigen-dependent interactions between T lymphocytes and dendritic cells (DCs) can produce two distinct outcomes: tolerance and immunity. It is generally considered that all DC subsets are capable of supporting both tolerogenic and immunogenic responses, depending on their exposure to activating signals. Here, we tested whether epidermal Langerhans cells (LCs) can support immunogenic responses in vivo in the absence of antigen presentation by other DC subsets. CD4 T cells responding to antigen presentation by activated LCs initially proliferated but then failed to differentiate into effector/memory cells or to survive long term. The tolerogenic function of LCs was maintained after exposure to potent adjuvants and occurred despite up-regulation of the costimulatory molecules CD80, CD86, and IL-12, but was consistent with their failure to translocate the NF-κB family member RelB from the cytoplasm to the nucleus. Commitment of LCs to tolerogenic function may explain why commensal microorganisms expressing Toll-like receptor (TLR) ligands but confined to the skin epithelium are tolerated, whereas invading pathogens that breach the epithelial basement membrane and activate dermal DCs stimulate a strong immune response.


Nature Protocols | 2012

Intravital multiphoton imaging of immune responses in the mouse ear skin

Jackson LiangYao Li; Chi Ching Goh; Jo Keeble; Jim Qin; Ben Roediger; Rohit Jain; Yilin Wang; Weng Keong Chew; Wolfgang Weninger; Lai Guan Ng

Multiphoton (MP) microscopy enables the direct in vivo visualization, with high spatial and temporal resolution, of fluorescently tagged immune cells, extracellular matrix and vasculature in tissues. This approach, therefore, represents a powerful alternative to traditional methods of assessing immune cell function in the skin, which are mainly based on flow cytometry and histology. Here we provide a step-by-step protocol describing experimental procedures for intravital MP imaging of the mouse ear skin, which can be easily adapted to address many specific skin-related biological questions. We demonstrate the use of this procedure by characterizing the response of neutrophils during cutaneous inflammation, which can be used to perform in-depth analysis of neutrophil behavior in the context of the skin microanatomy, including the epidermis, dermis and blood vessels. Such experiments are typically completed within 1 d, but as the procedures are minimally invasive, it is possible to perform longitudinal studies through repeated imaging.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2011

Visualizing the Neutrophil Response to Sterile Tissue Injury in Mouse Dermis Reveals a Three-Phase Cascade of Events

Lai Guan Ng; Jim Qin; Ben Roediger; Yilin Wang; Rohit Jain; Lois L. Cavanagh; Adrian L. Smith; Cheryl A. Jones; Michael J. de Veer; Michele A. Grimbaldeston; Els N.T. Meeusen; Wolfgang Weninger

Neutrophil granulocytes traffic into sites of organ injury in which they may not only participate in tissue repair and pathogen clearance but may also contribute to collateral cell damage through the release of noxious mediators. The dynamics and mechanisms of neutrophil migration in the extravascular space toward loci of tissue damage are not well understood. Here, we have used intravital multi-photon microscopy to dissect the behavior of neutrophils in response to tissue injury in the dermis of mice. We found that, following confined physical injury, initially rare scouting neutrophils migrated in a directional manner toward the damage focus. This was followed by the attraction of waves of additional neutrophils, and finally stabilization of the neutrophil cluster around the injury. Although neutrophil migration in the steady state and during the scouting phase depended on pertussis toxin-sensitive signals, the amplification phase was sensitive to interference with the cyclic adenosine diphosphate ribose pathway. We finally demonstrated that neutrophil scouts also transit through the non-inflamed dermis, suggesting immunosurveillance function by these cells. Together, our data unravel a three-step cascade of events that mediates the specific accumulation of neutrophils at sites of sterile tissue injury in the interstitial space.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

Epidermal and Dermal Dendritic Cells Display Differential Activation and Migratory Behavior While Sharing the Ability to Stimulate CD4+ T Cell Proliferation In Vivo

Elena Shklovskaya; Ben Roediger; Barbara Fazekas de St Groth

Migrated Langerhans cells (m-LCs) have recently been shown to comprise only a minority of skin-derived dendritic cells (DCs) expressing Langerin in cutaneous lymph nodes. We have used BM chimeric mice that differ in CD45 and MHC class II alleles to unequivocally distinguish between radioresistant m-LCs and radiosensitive migrated dermal DCs (m-dDCs), to determine their phenotype, response to contact sensitization, and ability to activate naive CD4+ T cells in vivo. We have also characterized three subsets of dDCs and their migratory counterparts, as distinguished by expression of CD11b and Langerin. Each of the four subsets of skin DCs showed differential migration to draining LN in response to contact sensitizing agents. Migration of Langerin−CD11b+ and Langerin+CD11blow dDCs peaked after 1 day, followed by Langerin−CD11blow dDCs at 2 days and Langerin+ LCs at 4 days. Moreover, while m-LCs and m-dDCs had similar surface phenotypes in the steady state, they displayed unexpectedly different activation responses to contact sensitization: m-dDCs markedly up-regulated CD80 and CD86 at day 1, whereas only m-LCs up-regulated CD40, with delayed kinetics. Thus, m-dDCs are likely to be responsible for the initial response to skin immunization. However, when expression of cognate MHC class II was restricted to LCs and m-LCs, they were also capable of processing and presenting protein Ag to drive naive CD4 T cell proliferation in vivo. Thus, m-dDCs and m-LCs display distinct behavior in cutaneous lymph nodes while sharing the ability to interact specifically with T cells to control the immune response.


Nature Communications | 2015

ILC2s and T cells cooperate to ensure maintenance of M2 macrophages for lung immunity against hookworms

Tiffany Bouchery; Ryan Kyle; Mali Camberis; Amy Shepherd; Kara J. Filbey; Alex Smith; Marina Harvie; Gavin F. Painter; Karen Johnston; Peter Ferguson; Rohit Jain; Ben Roediger; Brett Delahunt; Wolfgang Weninger; Elizabeth Forbes-Blom; Graham Le Gros

Defining the immune mechanisms underlying protective immunity to helminth infection remains an important challenge. Here we report that lung CD4(+) T cells and Group 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2s) work in concert to block Nippostrongylus brasiliensis (Nb) development in the parenchyma within 48 h in mice. Immune-damaged larvae have a striking morphological defect that is dependent on the expansion of IL-13-producing ILC2 and CD4(+) T cells, and the activation of M2 macrophages. This T-cell requirement can be bypassed by administration of IL-2 or IL-33, resulting in expansion of IL-13-producing ILC2s and larval killing. Depletion of ILC2s inhibits larval killing in IL-2-treated mice. Our results broaden understanding of ILC2s role in immunity to helminths by demonstrating that they not only act as alarmin sensors, but can also be sustained by CD4(+) T cells, ensuring both the prompt activation and the maintenance of IL-13-dependent M2 macrophage immunity in the lung.

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Patrick Bertolino

Royal Prince Alfred Hospital

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