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Dive into the research topics where Brittany A. Goods is active.

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Featured researches published by Brittany A. Goods.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

TGF-β1 modulates microglial phenotype and promotes recovery after intracerebral hemorrhage

Roslyn Taylor; Che Feng Chang; Brittany A. Goods; Matthew D. Hammond; Brian Mac Grory; Youxi Ai; Arthur F. Steinschneider; Stephen C. Renfroe; Michael H. Askenase; Louise D. McCullough; Scott E. Kasner; Michael T. Mullen; David A. Hafler; J. Christopher Love; Lauren H. Sansing

Intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is a devastating form of stroke that results from the rupture of a blood vessel in the brain, leading to a mass of blood within the brain parenchyma. The injury causes a rapid inflammatory reaction that includes activation of the tissue-resident microglia and recruitment of blood-derived macrophages and other leukocytes. In this work, we investigated the specific responses of microglia following ICH with the aim of identifying pathways that may aid in recovery after brain injury. We used longitudinal transcriptional profiling of microglia in a murine model to determine the phenotype of microglia during the acute and resolution phases of ICH in vivo and found increases in TGF-&bgr;1 pathway activation during the resolution phase. We then confirmed that TGF-&bgr;1 treatment modulated inflammatory profiles of microglia in vitro. Moreover, TGF-&bgr;1 treatment following ICH decreased microglial Il6 gene expression in vivo and improved functional outcomes in the murine model. Finally, we observed that patients with early increases in plasma TGF-&bgr;1 concentrations had better outcomes 90 days after ICH, confirming the role of TGF-&bgr;1 in functional recovery from ICH. Taken together, our data show that TGF-&bgr;1 modulates microglia-mediated neuroinflammation after ICH and promotes functional recovery, suggesting that TGF-&bgr;1 may be a therapeutic target for acute brain injury.


Journal of Immunology | 2016

Diversity of Antiviral IgG Effector Activities Observed in HIV-Infected and Vaccinated Subjects

Yunda Huang; Guido Ferrari; Galit Alter; Donald N. Forthal; John C. Kappes; George K. Lewis; J. Christopher Love; Bhavesh R. Borate; Linda Harris; Kelli M. Greene; Hongmei Gao; Tran B. Phan; Gary Landucci; Brittany A. Goods; Karen G. Dowell; Hao D. Cheng; Chris Bailey-Kellogg; David C. Montefiori; Margaret E. Ackerman

Diverse Ab effector functions mediated by the Fc domain have been commonly associated with reduced risk of infection in a growing number of nonhuman primate and human clinical studies. This study evaluated the anti-HIV Ab effector activities in polyclonal serum samples from HIV-infected donors, VAX004 vaccine recipients, and healthy HIV-negative subjects using a variety of primary and cell line–based assays, including Ab-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC), Ab-dependent cell-mediated viral inhibition, and Ab-dependent cellular phagocytosis. Additional assay characterization was performed with a panel of Fc-engineered variants of mAb b12. The goal of this study was to characterize different effector functions in the study samples and identify assays that might most comprehensively and dependably capture Fc-mediated Ab functions mediated by different effector cell types and against different viral targets. Deployment of such assays may facilitate assessment of functionally unique humoral responses and contribute to identification of correlates of protection with potential mechanistic significance in future HIV vaccine studies. Multivariate and correlative comparisons identified a set of Ab-dependent cell-mediated viral inhibition and phagocytosis assays that captured different Ab activities and were distinct from a group of ADCC assays that showed a more similar response profile across polyclonal serum samples. The activities of a panel of b12 monoclonal Fc variants further identified distinctions among the ADCC assays. These results reveal the natural diversity of Fc-mediated Ab effector responses among vaccine recipients in the VAX004 trial and in HIV-infected subjects, and they point to the potential importance of polyfunctional Ab responses.


Neurology | 2016

CNS demyelination and enhanced myelin-reactive responses after ipilimumab treatment.

Yonghao Cao; Alyssa Nylander; Sriram Ramanan; Brittany A. Goods; Gerald Ponath; Rana Zabad; Veronica L. Chiang; Alexander O. Vortmeyer; David A. Hafler; David Pitt

Ipilimumab is a monoclonal antibody that prolongs survival in patients with metastatic melanoma.1 It targets the coinhibitory receptor cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen-4 (CTLA-4). CTLA-4 signaling induces a state of T-cell unresponsiveness, which facilitates tumor escape from immune surveillance. Blockade of CTLA-4 is believed to shift the immune status from T-cell exhaustion to a functional antitumor response. Anti-CTLA-4 therapy is associated with immune-related adverse events in 64% of patients. Autoimmunity involving the nervous system has a low incidence and manifests predominantly as peripheral inflammatory neuropathy.2 We report new-onset inflammatory CNS demyelination in an ipilimumab-treated melanoma patient (figure), confirmed by histology and associated with enhanced responses of myelin-reactive CD4+ T cells.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

Erythrocyte efferocytosis modulates macrophages towards recovery after intracerebral hemorrhage

Che-Feng Chang; Brittany A. Goods; Michael H. Askenase; Matthew D. Hammond; Stephen C. Renfroe; Arthur F. Steinschneider; Margaret J. Landreneau; Youxi Ai; Hannah E. Beatty; Luís Henrique Angenendt da Costa; Matthias Mack; Kevin N. Sheth; David M. Greer; Anita Huttner; Daniel Coman; Fahmeed Hyder; Sourav Ghosh; Carla V. Rothlin; J. Christopher Love; Lauren H. Sansing

Macrophages are a source of both proinflammatory and restorative functions in damaged tissue through complex dynamic phenotypic changes. Here, we sought to determine whether monocyte-derived macrophages (MDMs) contribute to recovery after acute sterile brain injury. By profiling the transcriptional dynamics of MDMs in the murine brain after experimental intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), we found robust phenotypic changes in the infiltrating MDMs over time and demonstrated that MDMs are essential for optimal hematoma clearance and neurological recovery. Next, we identified the mechanism by which the engulfment of erythrocytes with exposed phosphatidylserine directly modulated the phenotype of both murine and human MDMs. In mice, loss of receptor tyrosine kinases AXL and MERTK reduced efferocytosis of eryptotic erythrocytes and hematoma clearance, worsened neurological recovery, exacerbated iron deposition, and decreased alternative activation of macrophages after ICH. Patients with higher circulating soluble AXL had poor 1-year outcomes after ICH onset, suggesting that therapeutically augmenting efferocytosis may improve functional outcomes by both reducing tissue injury and promoting the development of reparative macrophage responses. Thus, our results identify the efferocytosis of eryptotic erythrocytes through AXL/MERTK as a critical mechanism modulating macrophage phenotype and contributing to recovery from ICH.


Small | 2015

Development of a High-Throughput Functional Screen Using Nanowell-Assisted Cell Patterning.

Ayca Yalcin Ozkumur; Brittany A. Goods; J. Christopher Love

Living-cell-based screens can facilitate lead discovery of functional therapeutics of interest. A versatile and scalable method is reported that uses dense arrays of nanowells for imparting defined patterns on monolayers of cells. It is shown that this approach can coordinate a multi-component biological assay by designing and implementing a high-throughput, functional nanoliter-scale neutralization assay to identify neutralizing antibodies against HIV.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Functional differences between PD-1+ and PD-1- CD4+ effector T cells in healthy donors and patients with glioblastoma multiforme

Brittany A. Goods; Amanda L. Hernandez; Daniel E. Lowther; Liliana E. Lucca; Benjamin Lerner; Murat Gunel; Vlad Coric; David A. Hafler; J. Christopher Love

Immune checkpoint inhibitors targeting programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) have been highly successful in the treatment of cancer. While PD-1 expression has been widely investigated, its role in CD4+ effector T cells in the setting of health and cancer remains unclear, particularly in the setting of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), the most aggressive and common form of brain cancer. We examined the functional and molecular features of PD-1+CD4+CD25—CD127+Foxp3—effector cells in healthy subjects and in patients with GBM. In healthy subjects, we found that PD-1+CD4+ effector cells are dysfunctional: they do not proliferate but can secrete large quantities of IFNγ. Strikingly, blocking antibodies against PD-1 did not rescue proliferation. RNA-sequencing revealed features of exhaustion in PD-1+ CD4 effectors. In the context of GBM, tumors were enriched in PD-1+ CD4+ effectors that were similarly dysfunctional and unable to proliferate. Furthermore, we found enrichment of PD-1+TIM-3+ CD4+ effectors in tumors, suggesting that co-blockade of PD-1 and TIM-3 in GBM may be therapeutically beneficial. RNA-sequencing of blood and tumors from GBM patients revealed distinct differences between CD4+ effectors from both compartments with enrichment in multiple gene sets from tumor infiltrating PD-1—CD4+ effectors cells. Enrichment of these gene sets in tumor suggests a more metabolically active cell state with signaling through other co-receptors. PD-1 expression on CD4 cells identifies a dysfunctional subset refractory to rescue with PD-1 blocking antibodies, suggesting that the influence of immune checkpoint inhibitors may involve recovery of function in the PD-1—CD4+ T cell compartment. Additionally, co-blockade of PD-1 and TIM-3 in GBM may be therapeutically beneficial.


JCI insight | 2016

PD-1 marks dysfunctional regulatory T cells in malignant gliomas

Daniel E. Lowther; Brittany A. Goods; Liliana E. Lucca; Benjamin Lerner; David van Dijk; Amanda L. Hernandez; Xiangguo Duan; Murat Gunel; Vlad Coric; Smita Krishnaswamy; J. Christopher Love; David A. Hafler


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2015

Automated pipeline for rapid production and screening of HIV-specific monoclonal antibodies using pichia pastoris.

Kartik A. Shah; John J. Clark; Brittany A. Goods; Timothy J. Politano; Nicholas Joseph Mozdzierz; Ross M. Zimnisky; Rachel Leeson; J. Christopher Love; Kerry Routenberg Love


Stroke | 2018

Abstract TP335: Divergent Responses of Macrophages and Microglia in the Hemorrhagic Brain

Che-Feng Chang; Brittany A. Goods; Michael H. Askenase; J. Christopher Love; Lauren H. Sansing


PMC | 2015

Development of a High-Throughput Functional Screen Using Nanowell-Assisted Cell Patterning

Ayca Yalcin Ozkumur; John C Love; Brittany A. Goods

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J. Christopher Love

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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John C Love

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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