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Dive into the research topics where Benjamin E. Steinberg is active.

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Featured researches published by Benjamin E. Steinberg.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Activation of antibacterial autophagy by NADPH oxidases

Ju Huang; Veronica Canadien; Grace Y. Lam; Benjamin E. Steinberg; Mary C. Dinauer; Marco A. O. Magalhaes; Michael Glogauer; Sergio Grinstein; John H. Brumell

Autophagy plays an important role in immunity to microbial pathogens. The autophagy system can target bacteria in phagosomes, promoting phagosome maturation and preventing pathogen escape into the cytosol. Recently, Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling from phagosomes was found to initiate their targeting by the autophagy system, but the mechanism by which TLR signaling activates autophagy is unclear. Here we show that autophagy targeting of phagosomes is not exclusive to those containing TLR ligands. Engagement of either TLRs or the Fcγ receptors (FcγRs) during phagocytosis induced recruitment of the autophagy protein LC3 to phagosomes with similar kinetics. Both receptors are known to activate the NOX2 NADPH oxidase, which plays a central role in microbial killing by phagocytes through the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). We found that NOX2-generated ROS are necessary for LC3 recruitment to phagosomes. Antibacterial autophagy in human epithelial cells, which do not express NOX2, was also dependent on ROS generation. These data reveal a coupling of oxidative and nonoxidative killing activities of the NOX2 NADPH oxidase in phagocytes through autophagy. Furthermore, our results suggest a general role for members of the NOX family in regulating autophagy.


Immunity | 2010

In vivo requirement for Atg5 in antigen presentation by dendritic cells.

Heung Kyu Lee; Lisa M. Mattei; Benjamin E. Steinberg; Philipp Alberts; Yun Hee Lee; Alexander V. Chervonsky; Noboru Mizushima; Sergio Grinstein; Akiko Iwasaki

Autophagy is known to be important in presentation of cytosolic antigens on MHC class II (MHC II). However, the role of autophagic process in antigen presentation in vivo is unclear. Mice with dendritic cell (DC)-conditional deletion in Atg5, a key autophagy gene, showed impaired CD4(+) T cell priming after herpes simplex virus infection and succumbed to rapid disease. The most pronounced defect of Atg5(-/-) DCs was the processing and presentation of phagocytosed antigens containing Toll-like receptor stimuli for MHC class II. In contrast, cross-presentation of peptides on MHC I was intact in the absence of Atg5. Although induction of metabolic autophagy did not enhance MHC II presentation, autophagic machinery was required for optimal phagosome-to-lysosome fusion and subsequent processing of antigen for MHC II loading. Thus, our study revealed that DCs utilize autophagic machinery to optimally process and present extracellular microbial antigens for MHC II presentation.


Nature | 2008

Listeriolysin O allows Listeria monocytogenes replication in macrophage vacuoles

Cheryl L. Birmingham; Veronica Canadien; Natalia A. Kaniuk; Benjamin E. Steinberg; Darren E. Higgins; John H. Brumell

Listeria monocytogenes is an intracellular bacterial pathogen that replicates rapidly in the cytosol of host cells during acute infection. Surprisingly, these bacteria were found to occupy vacuoles in liver granuloma macrophages during persistent infection of severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) mice. Here we show that L. monocytogenes can replicate in vacuoles within macrophages. In livers of SCID mice infected for 21 days, we observed bacteria in large LAMP1+ compartments that we termed spacious Listeria-containing phagosomes (SLAPs). SLAPs were also observed in vitro, and were found to be non-acidic and non-degradative compartments that are generated in an autophagy-dependent manner. The replication rate of bacteria in SLAPs was found to be reduced compared to the rate of those in the cytosol. Listeriolysin O (LLO, encoded by hly), a pore-forming toxin essential for L. monocytogenes virulence, was necessary and sufficient for SLAP formation. A L. monocytogenes mutant with low LLO expression was impaired for phagosome escape but replicated slowly in SLAPs over a 72 h period. Therefore, our studies reveal a role for LLO in promoting L. monocytogenes replication in vacuoles and suggest a mechanism by which this pathogen can establish persistent infection in host macrophages.


Science Signaling | 2007

Unconventional Roles of the NADPH Oxidase: Signaling, Ion Homeostasis, and Cell Death

Benjamin E. Steinberg; Sergio Grinstein

Although the central role of the phagocytic NADPH oxidase in mediating bacterial killing has long been appreciated, this sophisticated enzyme complex serves various other important functions. This Perspective focuses on these underappreciated roles of phagocytic NADPH oxidase, highlighting recent work implicating reactive oxygen species in triggering an unconventional form of cell death.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008

Pathogen destruction versus intracellular survival: the role of lipids as phagosomal fate determinants

Benjamin E. Steinberg; Sergio Grinstein

Phagocytosis is a key component of the innate immune response and of the clearance of apoptotic bodies. Phagosome formation and subsequent maturation require extensive cytoskeletal rearrangement and precisely choreographed vesicular fusion and fission events. The objectives of this review are to highlight the functional importance of lipids in the phagocytic process, to discuss how pathogenic microorganisms can in some cases manipulate host lipid metabolism to either co-opt or disrupt phagosome maturation and promote their own survival, and to describe how defective phagosomal lipid metabolism can result in disease.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

In situ measurement of the electrical potential across the phagosomal membrane using FRET and its contribution to the proton-motive force

Benjamin E. Steinberg; Nicolas Touret; Mariana Vargas-Caballero; Sergio Grinstein

Phagosomes employ lytic enzymes, cationic peptides, and reactive oxygen intermediates to eliminate invading microorganisms. The effectiveness of these microbicidal mechanisms is potentiated by the acidic pH created by H+-pumping vacuolar-type ATPases (V-ATPases) on the phagosomal membrane. The degree of phagosomal acidification varies greatly among neutrophils, macrophages, and dendritic cells and can be affected by diseases like cystic fibrosis. The determinants of phagosomal pH are not completely understood, but the permeability to ions that neutralize the electrogenic effect of the V-ATPase has been proposed to play a central role. When counterion conductance is limiting, generation of a large membrane potential will dominate the proton-motive force (pmf), with a proportionally diminished pH gradient. Validation of this notion requires direct measurement of the electrical potential that develops across the phagosomal membrane (ΨΦ). We describe a noninvasive procedure to estimate ΨΦ in intact cells, based on fluorescence resonance energy transfer. This approach, in combination with measurements of phagosomal pH, enabled us to calculate the pmf across phagosomes of murine macrophages and to analyze the factors that limit acidification. At steady state, ΨΦ averaged 27 mV (lumen positive) and was only partially dissipated by inhibition of the V-ATPase with concanamycin A. The comparatively small contribution of the potential to the pmf suggests that proton pumping is not limited by the counterion permeability, a notion that was validated independently by using ionophores. Instead, phagosomal pH stabilizes when the rate of proton pumping, which decreases gradually as the lumen acidifies, is matched by the passive leak of proton equivalents.


Antiviral Research | 2012

Do viral infections mimic bacterial sepsis? The role of microvascular permeability: A review of mechanisms and methods

Benjamin E. Steinberg; N.M. Goldenberg; Warren L. Lee

A dysregulated immune response and functional immunosuppression have been considered the major mechanisms of the bacterial sepsis syndrome. More recently, the loss of endothelial barrier function and resultant microvascular leak have been found to be a key determinant of the pathogenesis of bacterial sepsis. Whether a similar paradigm applies to systemic viral syndromes is not known. Answering this question has far-reaching implications for the development of future anti-viral therapeutic strategies. In this review, we provide an overview of the structure and function of the endothelium and how its barrier integrity is compromised in bacterial sepsis. The various in vitro and in vivo methodologies available to investigate vascular leak are reviewed. Emphasis is placed on the advantages and limitations of cell culture techniques, which represent the most commonly used methods. Within this context, we appraise recent studies of three viruses - hantavirus, human herpes virus 8 and dengue virus - that suggest microvascular leak may play a role in the pathogenesis of these viral infections. We conclude with a discussion of how endothelial barrier breakdown may occur in other viral infections such as H5N1 avian influenza virus.


The Journal of General Physiology | 2011

Lysosomal pH and analysis of the counter ion pathways that support acidification

Jessica E. DiCiccio; Benjamin E. Steinberg

Lysosomes serve multiple degradative functions that are potentiated by a profound luminal acid pH generated by an electrogenic proton pump. This proton transport requires charge compensation, and chloride has long been assumed to be the primary counter ion. In this Journal Club, we review the recent


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2007

Phagosomal acidification: measurement, manipulation and functional consequences

Benjamin E. Steinberg; Kassidy K. Huynh; Sergio Grinstein

Phagocytosis holds a central position in the development of a successful innate immune response and in the initiation of the corresponding adaptive response. The destruction of invading pathogens and the presentation of their antigens to lymphoid cells require acidification of the phagosomal lumen. The present review discusses the mechanism of phagosome acidification, with particular reference to the two components of the protonmotive force: the chemical (pH) gradient and the electrical potential across the phagosomal membrane. A method for the in situ measurement of the electrical potential across the phagosomal membrane is described. In addition, we discuss the finding that acidification is not only a consequence, but also a critical determinant of phagosome maturation. Luminal acidification appears to function as a timing device controlling the transition between early and late phagosomes.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Diacylglycerol kinases terminate diacylglycerol signaling during the respiratory burst leading to heterogeneous phagosomal NADPH oxidase activation.

Daniel Schlam; Michal Bohdanowicz; Alexandros Chatilialoglu; Benjamin E. Steinberg; Takehiko Ueyama; Guangwei Du; Sergio Grinstein; Gregory D. Fairn

Background: Cell population-based studies obscure potential phagosomal heterogeneity. Results: We used a dynamic assay to monitor superoxide production in single phagosomes and uncovered variability in NADPH oxidase activity. Conclusion: The heterogeneity is attributable to variations in local DAG accumulation, which is controlled by DAG kinases. Significance: Heterogeneity in phagosome responsiveness could enable the survival of a fraction of invading microorganisms. It is commonly assumed that all phagosomes have identical molecular composition. This assumption has remained largely unchallenged due to a paucity of methods to distinguish individual phagosomes. We devised an assay that extends the utility of nitro blue tetrazolium for detection and quantification of NAPDH oxidase (NOX) activity in individual phagosomes. Implementation of this assay revealed that in murine macrophages there is heterogeneity in the ability of individual phagosomes to generate superoxide, both between and within cells. To elucidate the molecular basis of the variability in NOX activation, we employed genetically encoded fluorescent biosensors to evaluate the uniformity in the distribution of phospholipid mediators of the oxidative response. Despite variability in superoxide generation, the distribution of phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate, phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate, and phosphatidic acid was nearly identical in all phagosomes. In contrast, diacylglycerol (DAG) was not generated uniformly across the phagosomal population, varying in a manner that directly mirrored superoxide production. Modulation of DAG levels suggested that NOX activation is precluded when phagosomes fail to reach a critical DAG concentration. In particular, forced expression of diacylglycerol kinase β abrogated DAG accumulation at the phagosome, leading to impaired respiratory burst. Conversely, pharmacological inhibition of DAG kinases or expression of an inactive diacylglycerol kinase β mutant increased the proportion of DAG-positive phagosomes, concomitantly potentiating phagosomal NOX activity. Our data suggest that diacylglycerol kinases limit the extent of NADPH oxidase activation, curtailing the production of potentially harmful reactive oxygen species. The resulting heterogeneity in phagosome responsiveness could enable the survival of a fraction of invading microorganisms.

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Kevin J. Tracey

The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research

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Emily Battinelli Masi

The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research

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Guangwei Du

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Sangeeta Chavan

The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research

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