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Dive into the research topics where Brian H. Santich is active.

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Featured researches published by Brian H. Santich.


Journal of Immunology | 2012

Protection from Secondary Dengue Virus Infection in a Mouse Model Reveals the Role of Serotype Cross-Reactive B and T Cells

Simona Zompi; Brian H. Santich; P. Robert Beatty; Eva Harris

The four dengue virus (DENV) serotypes cause dengue fever and dengue hemorrhagic fever/dengue shock syndrome. Although severe disease has been associated with heterotypic secondary DENV infection, most secondary DENV infections are asymptomatic or result in classic DF. The role of cross-reactive immunity in mediating cross-protection against secondary heterotypic DENV infection is not well understood. DENV infection of IFN-α/β and IFN-γ receptor-deficient (AG129) mice reproduces key features of human disease. We previously demonstrated a role in cross-protection for pre-existing cross-reactive Abs, maintained by long-lived plasma cells. In this study, we use a sequential infection model, infecting AG129 mice with DENV-1, followed by DENV-2 6–8 wk later. We find that increased DENV-specific avidity during acute secondary heterotypic infection is mediated by cross-reactive memory B cells, as evidenced by increased numbers of DENV-1–specific cells by ELISPOT and higher avidity against DENV-1 of supernatants from polyclonally stimulated splenocytes isolated from mice experiencing secondary DENV-2 infection. However, increased DENV-specific avidity is not associated with increased DENV-specific neutralization, which appears to be mediated by naive B cells. Adoptive transfer of DENV-1–immune B and T cells into naive mice prior to secondary DENV-2 infection delayed mortality. Mice depleted of T cells developed signs of disease, but recovered after secondary DENV infection. Overall, we found that protective cross-reactive Abs are secreted by both long-lived plasma cells and memory B cells and that both cross-reactive B cells and T cells provide protection against a secondary heterotypic DENV infection. Understanding the protective immunity that develops naturally against DENV infection may help design future vaccines.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2014

Abnormal B cell memory subsets dominate HIV-specific responses in infected individuals

Lela Kardava; Susan Moir; Naisha Shah; Wei Wang; Richard Wilson; Clarisa M. Buckner; Brian H. Santich; Leo Kim; Emily Spurlin; Amy Nelson; Adam K. Wheatley; Christopher J. Harvey; Adrian B. McDermott; Kai W. Wucherpfennig; Tae-Wook Chun; John S. Tsang; Yuxing Li; Anthony S. Fauci

Recently, several neutralizing anti-HIV antibodies have been isolated from memory B cells of HIV-infected individuals. Despite extensive evidence of B cell dysfunction in HIV disease, little is known about the cells from which these rare HIV-specific antibodies originate. Accordingly, we used HIV envelope gp140 and CD4 or coreceptor (CoR) binding site (bs) mutant probes to evaluate HIV-specific responses in peripheral blood B cells of HIV-infected individuals at various stages of infection. In contrast to non-HIV responses, HIV-specific responses against gp140 were enriched within abnormal B cells, namely activated and exhausted memory subsets, which are largely absent in the blood of uninfected individuals. Responses against the CoRbs, which is a poorly neutralizing epitope, arose early, whereas those against the well-characterized neutralizing epitope CD4bs were delayed and infrequent. Enrichment of the HIV-specific response within resting memory B cells, the predominant subset in uninfected individuals, did occur in certain infected individuals who maintained low levels of plasma viremia and immune activation with or without antiretroviral therapy. The distribution of HIV-specific responses among memory B cell subsets was corroborated by transcriptional analyses. Taken together, our findings provide valuable insight into virus-specific B cell responses in HIV infection and demonstrate that memory B cell abnormalities may contribute to the ineffectiveness of the antibody response in infected individuals.


Journal of Immunology | 2015

Reversible Reprogramming of Circulating Memory T Follicular Helper Cell Function during Chronic HIV Infection

Rafael Cubas; Julien van Grevenynghe; Saintedym Wills; Lela Kardava; Brian H. Santich; Clarisa M. Buckner; Roshell Muir; Virginie Tardif; Carmen N. Nichols; Francesco A. Procopio; Zhong He; Talibah Metcalf; Khader Ghneim; Michela Locci; Petronella Ancuta; Jean-Pierre Routy; Lydie Trautmann; Yuxing Li; Adrian B. McDermott; Rick A. Koup; Constantinos Petrovas; Steven A. Migueles; Mark Connors; Georgia D. Tomaras; Susan Moir; Shane Crotty; Elias K. Haddad

Despite the overwhelming benefits of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in curtailing viral load in HIV-infected individuals, ART does not fully restore cellular and humoral immunity. HIV-infected individuals under ART show reduced responses to vaccination and infections and are unable to mount an effective antiviral immune response upon ART cessation. Many factors contribute to these defects, including persistent inflammation, especially in lymphoid tissues, where T follicular helper (Tfh) cells instruct and help B cells launch an effective humoral immune response. In this study we investigated the phenotype and function of circulating memory Tfh cells as a surrogate of Tfh cells in lymph nodes and found significant impairment of this cell population in chronically HIV-infected individuals, leading to reduced B cell responses. We further show that these aberrant memory Tfh cells exhibit an IL-2–responsive gene signature and are more polarized toward a Th1 phenotype. Treatment of functional memory Tfh cells with IL-2 was able to recapitulate the detrimental reprogramming. Importantly, this defect was reversible, as interfering with the IL-2 signaling pathway helped reverse the abnormal differentiation and improved Ab responses. Thus, reversible reprogramming of memory Tfh cells in HIV-infected individuals could be used to enhance Ab responses. Altered microenvironmental conditions in lymphoid tissues leading to altered Tfh cell differentiation could provide one explanation for the poor responsiveness of HIV-infected individuals to new Ags. This explanation has important implications for the development of therapeutic interventions to enhance HIV- and vaccine-mediated Ab responses in patients under ART.


Blood | 2012

Humans with chronic granulomatous disease maintain humoral immunologic memory despite low frequencies of circulating memory B cells.

Susan Moir; Suk See De Ravin; Brian H. Santich; Jin Young Kim; Jacqueline G. Posada; Jason Ho; Clarisa M. Buckner; Wei Wang; Lela Kardava; Mary Garofalo; Beatriz E. Marciano; Jody Manischewitz; Lisa R. King; Surender Khurana; Tae-Wook Chun; Hana Golding; Anthony S. Fauci; Harry L. Malech

CD27(+) memory B cells are reduced in the blood of patients with chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) for reasons and consequences that remain unclear. Here we confirm not only decreased CD27(+) but also IgG(+) B cells in the blood of CGD patients compared with healthy donors (HDs). However, among IgG(+) B cells, the ratio of CD27(-) to CD27(+) was significantly higher in CGD patients compared with HDs. Similar to conventional memory B cells, CD27(-)IgG(+) B cells of CGD patients expressed activation markers and had undergone somatic hypermutation, albeit at levels lower than their CD27(+) counterparts. Functional analyses revealed slight reductions in frequencies of total IgG but not influenza-specific memory B-cell responses, as measured by Elispot in CGD patients compared with HDs. Serum IgG levels and influenza-specific antibodies were also normal in these CGD patients. Finally, we provide evidence that influenza-specific memory B cells can be present within the CD27(-)IgG(+) B-cell compartment. Together, these findings show that, despite reduced circulating CD27(+) memory B cells, CGD patients maintain an intact humoral immunologic memory, with potential contribution from CD27(-) B cells.


AIDS | 2014

Graves’ disease as immune reconstitution disease in Hiv-positive patients is associated with naive and primary thymic emigrant Cd4+ T-cell recovery

Virginia Sheikh; Rebecca DerSimonian; Aaron Richterman; Brian O. Porter; Ven Natarajan; Peter D. Burbelo; Adam Rupert; Brian H. Santich; Lela Kardava; JoAnn M. Mican; Susan Moir; Irini Sereti

Objective:Immune restoration disease (IRD) can develop in HIV-infected patients following antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation as unmasking or paradoxical worsening of opportunistic infections and, rarely, autoimmune phenomena. Although IRD usually occurs in the first months of ART during memory CD4+ T-cell recovery, Graves’ disease occurs as a distinctive late-onset IRD and its pathogenesis is unclear. Design:Seven patients who developed Graves’ disease following ART initiation from the primary HIV care clinic at the National Institutes of Health were retrospectively identified and each was matched with two HIV-infected controls based on age, sex, and baseline CD4+ T-cell count. Laboratory evaluations on stored cryopreserved samples were performed. Methods:Immunophenotyping of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), T-cell receptor excision circle (TREC) analysis in PBMCs, measurement of serum cytokines, and luciferase immunoprecipitation systems (LIPS) analysis for autoimmune antibodies were performed on stored samples for cases and controls at baseline and longitudinally following ART initiation. TSH/thyrotropin receptor (TSH-R) antibody testing was performed on serum from cases. Data were analyzed using nonparametric testing. Results:In comparison with controls, the proportion of naive CD4+ T cells increased significantly (P = 0.0027) in the Graves’ disease-IRD patients. TREC/106 PBMCs also increased significantly following ART in Graves’ disease-IRD patients compared with controls (P = 0.0071). Similarly, LIPS analysis demonstrated increases in nonthyroid-related autoantibody titers over time following ART in cases compared with controls. Conclusion:Our data suggest that Graves’ disease-IRD, in contrast to early-onset IRD, is associated with naive and primary thymic emigrant CD4+ T-cell recovery and inappropriate autoantibody production.


OncoImmunology | 2016

Successful engineering of a highly potent single-chain variable-fragment (scFv) bispecific antibody to target disialoganglioside (GD2) positive tumors

Ming Cheng; Brian H. Santich; Hong Xu; Mahiuddin Ahmed; Morgan Huse; Nai-Kong V. Cheung

ABSTRACT Engineering potent bispecific antibodies from single-chain variable fragments (scFv) remains difficult due to the inherent instability and insufficient binding of scFvs compared to their parental immunoglobulin format. Previously, we described a scFv-based bispecific antibody (scBA) against disialoganglioside (GD2) based on the anti-GD2 murine 5F11-scFv and the anti-CD3 huOKT3-scFv (5F11-scBA). In this study, we substituted the 5F11-scFv with the higher affinity (13-fold) hu3F8-scFv to form hu3F8-scBA. With this modification, hu3F8-scBA redirected T cells to kill GD2(+) cancer cell lines with up to 5,000-fold higher potency (femtomolar EC50) compared with 5F11-scBA (picomolar EC50) in cytotoxicity assays, even against target cells with low GD2 densities. Furthermore, hu3F8-scBA induced stronger T-cell activation than 5F11-scBA, as measured by Ca2+ flux and cytokine release. Additionally, in vivo, hu3F8-scBA suppressed tumor growth and prolonged mice survival much more effectively than 5F11-scBA, in both neuroblastoma and melanoma xenograft models. We conclude that the functional properties of scBAs can be increased substantially by relatively modest increases in antigen affinity.


Journal of Immunology | 2015

Bone Marrow Plasma Cells Are a Primary Source of Serum HIV-1–Specific Antibodies in Chronically Infected Individuals

Jairo Mauricio Montezuma-Rusca; Susan Moir; Lela Kardava; Clarisa M. Buckner; Aaron Louie; Leo Kim; Brian H. Santich; Wei Wang; Olivia R. Fankuchen; Gabriella Diaz; Janine Daub; Sergio D. Rosenzweig; Tae-Wook Chun; Yuxing Li; Raul C. Braylan; Katherine R. Calvo; Anthony S. Fauci

Several potent and broadly neutralizing Abs to HIV-1 have been isolated recently from peripheral blood B cells of infected individuals, based on prescreening of Ab activity in the serum. However, little is known regarding the cells that make the Abs that circulate in the blood. Accordingly, we investigated the most likely source, the bone marrow, of chronically HIV-1–infected individuals who were not receiving antiretroviral therapy. Increased frequencies of plasma cells, as well as B cell precursors, namely preB-I and preB-II, and decreased frequencies of mature B cells were observed in bone marrow aspirates of these individuals compared with HIV-negative counterparts. Increased frequencies of bone marrow plasma cells are consistent with known hallmarks of HIV-1 infection, namely hypergammaglobulinemia and increased frequencies of peripheral blood plasmablasts. Levels of HIV-1 envelope (Env)-binding and HIV-1–neutralizing Abs were measured in serum, and corresponding frequencies of Ab-secreting or Env-binding cells were measured in the blood (plasmablasts and memory B cells) and in the bone marrow (plasma cells). A strong correlation was observed between serum HIV-1–specific Abs and Env-specific bone marrow–derived plasma cells, but not circulating plasmablasts or memory B cells. These findings demonstrate that, despite HIV-1–induced phenotypic and functional B cell dysregulation in the peripheral blood and secondary lymphoid tissues, bone marrow plasma cells remain a primary source for circulating HIV-1–specific Abs in HIV-1–infected individuals.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2014

CXCR4/IgG-expressing plasma cells are associated with human gastrointestinal tissue inflammation.

Clarisa M. Buckner; Susan Moir; Lela Kardava; Jason Ho; Brian H. Santich; Leo Kim; Emily K. Funk; Amy Nelson; Britanny Winckler; Cheryl Chairez; Narda Theobald-Whiting; Sandra Anaya-O’Brien; Meghna Alimchandani; Martha Quezado; Michael D. Yao; Joseph A. Kovacs; Tae-Wook Chun; Anthony S. Fauci; Harry L. Malech; Suk See De Ravin

BACKGROUND We previously reported abnormalities in circulating B cells in patients with chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) and those with HIV infection. Gastrointestinal complications are common to both diseases and likely involve perturbation of immune cells, including plasma cells (PCs). IgA is the most abundant immunoglobulin in the human body, with roles in protection and maintenance of intestinal homeostasis. IgA is produced primarily by PCs residing in mucosal tissues that are also thought to circulate in the blood. OBJECTIVE We sought to characterize and compare PCs in patients with infectious (HIV) and noninfectious (CGD and Crohn disease) diseases that have been associated with intestinal inflammation. METHODS Phenotypic and transcriptional analyses were performed on cells isolated from the blood and colon. RESULTS IgA-secreting CCR10-expressing PCs predominated in the guts of healthy subjects, whereas in patients with HIV, CGD, and Crohn disease, there was a significant increase in the proportion of IgG-secreting PCs. Where intestinal inflammation was present, IgG-secreting PCs expressed reduced levels of CCR10 and increased levels of CXCR4. The intensity of CXCR4 expression correlated with the frequency of IgG-expressing PCs and the frequency of CXCR4(+)/IgG(+) PCs was associated with the severity of intestinal inflammatory disease yet distinct from PCs and plasmablasts circulating in the blood. CONCLUSIONS These findings suggest that regardless of the underlying disease, the presence of CXCR4(+)/IgG(+) PCs in the gut is a strong yet localized indicator of intestinal inflammation. Furthermore, our findings suggest that CXCR4(+)/IgG(+) PCs might play a role in immune cell homeostasis during inflammatory processes of the gut.


Journal of Translational Medicine | 2017

Impaired B cell immunity in acute myeloid leukemia patients after chemotherapy

Meghali Goswami; Gabrielle T. Prince; Angélique Biancotto; Susan Moir; Lela Kardava; Brian H. Santich; Foo Cheung; Yuri Kotliarov; Jinguo Chen; Rongye Shi; Huizhi Zhou; Hana Golding; Jody Manischewitz; Lisa King; Lauren M. Kunz; Kimberly Noonan; Ivan Borrello; B. Douglas Smith; Christopher S. Hourigan

BackgroundChanges in adaptive immune cells after chemotherapy in adult acute myeloid leukemia (AML) may have implications for the success of immunotherapy. This study was designed to determine the functional capacity of the immune system in adult patients with AML who have completed chemotherapy and are potential candidates for immunotherapy.MethodsWe used the response to seasonal influenza vaccination as a surrogate for the robustness of the immune system in 10 AML patients in a complete remission post-chemotherapy and performed genetic, phenotypic, and functional characterization of adaptive immune cell subsets.ResultsOnly 2 patients generated protective titers in response to vaccination, and a majority of patients had abnormal frequencies of transitional and memory B-cells. B-cell receptor sequencing showed a B-cell repertoire with little evidence of somatic hypermutation in most patients. Conversely, frequencies of T-cell populations were similar to those seen in healthy controls, and cytotoxic T-cells demonstrated antigen-specific activity after vaccination. Effector T-cells had increased PD-1 expression in AML patients least removed from chemotherapy.ConclusionOur results suggest that while some aspects of cellular immunity recover quickly, humoral immunity is incompletely reconstituted in the year following intensive cytotoxic chemotherapy for AML. The observed B-cell abnormalities may explain the poor response to vaccination often seen in AML patients after chemotherapy. Furthermore, the uncoupled recovery of B-cell and T-cell immunity and increased PD-1 expression shortly after chemotherapy might have implications for the success of several modalities of immunotherapy.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2015

Generation of TCR-Like Antibodies Using Phage Display.

Brian H. Santich; Hong Liu; Cheng Liu; Nai-Kong V. Cheung

The adaptive immune response against cancer consists of two arms: the humoral response from B cells, and the cell-mediated response from T cells. The humoral response has the advantage of diversity, theoretically recognizing antigens of any type (sugar, protein, lipid, etc.), but is generally limited to surface-expressed targets. T cells on the other hand, can recognize intracellular targets, but only if they are proteins, and presented as small peptide fragments on major histocompatibility complex (MHC) cell surface antigens. However, with advances in protein engineering and phage display, it has become feasible to quickly identify and generate antibodies or single-chain variable fragments against peptide-MHC, thus bridging the two arms, and allowing for recognition, identification, and effector responses against cells expressing intracellular targets.

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Susan Moir

National Institutes of Health

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Lela Kardava

National Institutes of Health

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Anthony S. Fauci

National Institutes of Health

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Clarisa M. Buckner

National Institutes of Health

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Tae-Wook Chun

National Institutes of Health

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Leo Kim

Case Western Reserve University

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Nai-Kong V. Cheung

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Amy Nelson

National Institutes of Health

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Cheng Liu

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Emily K. Funk

National Institutes of Health

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