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Featured researches published by Bridget Larkin.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2013

T-Helper 17 Cells Are Associated With Pathology in Human Schistosomiasis

Moustapha Mbow; Bridget Larkin; Lynn Meurs; Linda J. Wammes; Sanne E. de Jong; Lucja A. Labuda; Makhtar Camara; Hermelijn H. Smits; Katja Polman; Tandakha Ndiaye Dieye; Souleymane Mboup; Maria Yazdanbakhsh

BACKGROUND Schistosome infections are often clinically silent, but some individuals develop severe pathological reactions. In several disease processes, T-helper 17 (Th17) cells have been linked to tissue injuries, while regulatory T cells (Tregs) are thought to downmodulate inflammatory reactions. We assessed whether bladder pathology in human Schistosoma haematobium infection is related to the balance of Th17 cells and Tregs. We used a murine model of Schistosoma mansoni infection to further investigate whether the peripheral profiles reflected ongoing events in tissues. METHODS We characterized T-helper cell subsets in the peripheral blood of children residing in a S. haematobium-endemic area and in the peripheral blood, spleen, and hepatic granulomas of S. mansoni-infected high-pathology CBA mice and low-pathology C57BL/6 mice. RESULTS S. haematobium-infected children with bladder pathology had a significantly higher percentage of Th17 cells than those without pathology. Moreover, the Th17/Treg ratios were significantly higher in infected children with pathology, compared with infected children without pathology. Percentages of interleukin 17-producing cells were significantly higher in spleen and granulomas of CBA mice, compared with C57BL/6 mice. This difference was also reflected in the peripheral blood. CONCLUSIONS This is the first study to indicate that Th17 cells may be involved in the pathogenesis of human schistosomiasis.


Seminars in Immunopathology | 2012

Induction and regulation of pathogenic Th17 cell responses in schistosomiasis

Bridget Larkin; Patrick M. Smith; Holly E. Ponichtera; Mara G. Shainheit; Laura I. Rutitzky

Schistosomiasis is a major tropical disease caused by trematode helminths in which the host mounts a pathogenic immune response against tissue-trapped parasite eggs. The immunopathology consists of egg antigen-specific CD4 T cell-mediated granulomatous inflammation that varies greatly in magnitude in humans and among mouse strains in an experimental model. New evidence, covered in this review, intimately ties the development of severe pathology to IL-17-producing CD4 T helper (Th17) cells, a finding that adds a new dimension to the traditional CD4 Th1 vs. Th2 cell paradigm. Most examined mouse strains, in fact, develop severe immunopathology with substantial Th17 as well as Th1 and Th2 cell responses; a solely Th2-polarized response is an exception that is only observed in low-pathology strains such as the C57BL/6. The ability to mount pathogenic Th17 cell responses is genetically determined and depends on the production of IL-23 and IL-1β by antigen presenting cells following recognition of egg antigens; analyses of several F2 progenies of (high × low)-pathology strain crosses demonstrated that quantitative trait loci governing IL-17 levels and disease severity vary substantially from cross to cross. Low pathology is dominant, which may explain the low incidence of severe disease in humans; however, coinfection with intestinal nematodes can also dampen pathogenic Th17 cell responses by promoting regulatory mechanisms such as those afforded by alternatively activated macrophages and T regulatory cells. A better understanding of the pathways conducive to severe forms of schistosomiasis and their regulation should lead to interventions similar to those presently used to manage other immune-mediated diseases.


Journal of Immunology | 2011

The Pathogenic Th17 Cell Response to Major Schistosome Egg Antigen Is Sequentially Dependent on IL-23 and IL-1β

Mara G. Shainheit; Krzysztof W. Lasocki; Eduardo Finger; Bridget Larkin; Patrick M. Smith; Arlene H. Sharpe; Charles A. Dinarello; Laura I. Rutitzky

CBA/J mice infected with the helminth Schistosoma mansoni develop severe CD4 T cell-mediated hepatic granulomatous inflammation against parasite eggs associated with a robust Th17 cell response. We investigated the requisites for Th17 cell development using novel CD4 T cells expressing a transgenic TCR specific for the major Sm-p40 egg Ag, which produce IL-17 when stimulated with live schistosome eggs. Neutralization of IL-23 or blockade of the IL-1 receptor, but not IL-6 neutralization, abrogated egg-induced IL-17 secretion by transgenic T cells, whereas exogenous IL-23 or IL-1β reconstituted their ability to produce IL-17 when stimulated by syngeneic IL-12p40–deficient dendritic cells. Kinetic analysis demonstrated that IL-17 production was initiated by IL-23 and amplified by IL-1β. Significantly, schistosome-infected IL-12p40–deficient or IL-1R antagonist-treated CBA/J mice developed markedly reduced hepatic immunopathology with a dampened egg Ag-specific IL-17 response. These results demonstrate that the IL-23–IL-1–IL-17 axis has a central role in the development of severe schistosome egg-induced immunopathology.


Journal of Immunology | 2017

Cutting Edge: Activation of STING in T Cells Induces Type I IFN Responses and Cell Death

Bridget Larkin; Vladimir Ilyukha; Maxim Sorokin; Anton Buzdin; Edouard Vannier; Alexander Poltorak

Stimulator of interferon genes (STING) was initially described as a sensor of intracellular bacterial and viral DNA and a promising adjuvant target in innate immune cells; more recently STING has also been shown to detect endogenous DNA and play a role in tumor immunity and autoimmune disease development. Thus far STING has been studied in macrophages and dendritic cells. In this study, to our knowledge we provide the first evidence of STING activation in T cells, in which STING agonists not only provoke type I IFN production and IFN-stimulated gene expression, mirroring the response of innate cells, but are also capable of activating cell stress and death pathways. Our results suggest a re-evaluation of STING agonist–based therapies may be necessary to identify the possible effects on the T cell compartment. Conversely, the effects of STING on T cells could potentially be harnessed for therapeutic applications.


Journal of Immunology | 2014

CD209a Expression on Dendritic Cells Is Critical for the Development of Pathogenic Th17 Cell Responses in Murine Schistosomiasis

Holly E. Ponichtera; Mara G. Shainheit; Beiyun C. Liu; Raktima Raychowdhury; Bridget Larkin; Joanne M. Russo; D. Brenda Salantes; Chao-Qiang Lai; Laurence D. Parnell; Tae J. Yun; Cheolho Cheong; Stephen C. Bunnell; Nir Hacohen

In murine schistosomiasis, immunopathology and cytokine production in response to parasite eggs are uneven and strain dependent. CBA/J (CBA) mice develop severe hepatic granulomatous inflammation associated with prominent Th17 cell responses driven by dendritic cell (DC)-derived IL-1β and IL-23. Such Th17 cells fail to develop in low-pathology C57BL/6 (BL/6) mice, and the reasons for these strain-specific differences in APC reactivity to eggs remain unclear. We show by gene profiling that CBA DCs display an 18-fold higher expression of the C-type lectin receptor CD209a, a murine homolog of human DC-specific ICAM-3–grabbing nonintegrin, compared with BL/6 DCs. Higher CD209a expression was observed in CBA splenic and granuloma APC subpopulations, but only DCs induced Th17 cell differentiation in response to schistosome eggs. Gene silencing in CBA DCs and overexpression in BL/6 DCs demonstrated that CD209a is essential for egg-elicited IL-1β and IL-23 production and subsequent Th17 cell development, which is associated with SRC, RAF-1, and ERK1/2 activation. These findings reveal a novel mechanism controlling the development of Th17 cell–mediated severe immunopathology in helminthic disease.


Journal of Immunology | 2015

The role of STING in T lymphocytes (IRM5P.643)

Alexander Poltorak; Bridget Larkin; Guy Surpris; Vladimir Ilyuha


Cytokine | 2015

ID: 73: Type I interferon-associated signaling in T cells: The novel functions of STING

Alexander Poltorak; Olga V. Kurmyshkina; Bridget Larkin; Guy Surpris; Vladimir Ilyukha; Tatyana O. Volkova


Journal of Immunology | 2014

Dendritic cell CD209a expression is critical for the development of pathogenic Th17 cell responses in murine schistosomiasis (INC9P.443)

Holly E. Ponichtera; Mara G. Shainheit; Beiyun Liu; Raktima Raychowdhury; Bridget Larkin; Joanne M. Russo; Danielle Salantes; Chao-Qiang Lai; Laurence D. Parnell; Tae Yun; Cheolho Cheong; Stephen C. Bunnell; Nir Hacohen


International Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2013

T-helper 17 cells are associated with pathology in human schistosomiasis.

Moustapha Mbow; Bridget Larkin; Lynn Meurs; Linda J. Wammes; S.E. de Jong; Lucja A. Labuda; Makhtar Camara; Hermelijn H. Smits; Katja Polman; Tandakha Ndiaye Dieye; Souleymane Mboup; Maria Yazdanbakhsh


Journal of Immunology | 2012

Th17 cells are associated with pathology in human schistosomiasis

Bridget Larkin; Moustapha Mbow; Lynn Meurs; Linda J. Wammes; Sanne de Jong; Lucja A. Labuda; Hermelijn H. Smits; Tanaka Dieye; Katja Polman; Souleyman Mboup; Maria Yazdanbakhsh

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Katja Polman

Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp

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Lynn Meurs

Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp

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Moustapha Mbow

Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp

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Hermelijn H. Smits

Leiden University Medical Center

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Linda J. Wammes

Leiden University Medical Center

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Lucja A. Labuda

Leiden University Medical Center

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Maria Yazdanbakhsh

Leiden University Medical Center

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