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Dive into the research topics where Bruce Beutler is active.

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Featured researches published by Bruce Beutler.


Nature | 2004

Inferences, questions and possibilities in Toll-like receptor signalling

Bruce Beutler

The Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are the key proteins that allow mammals — whether immunologically naive or experienced — to detect microbes. They lie at the core of our inherited resistance to disease, initiating most of the phenomena that occur in the course of infection. Quasi-infectious stimuli that have been used for decades to study inflammatory mechanisms can activate the TLR family of proteins. And it now seems that many inflammatory processes, both sterile and infectious, may depend on TLR signalling. We are in a good position to apply our understanding of TLR signalling to a range of challenges in immunology and medicine.


Nature | 2003

Identification of Lps2 as a key transducer of MyD88-independent TIR signalling

Kasper Hoebe; Xiaoping Du; Philippe Georgel; Edith M. Janssen; Koichi Tabeta; Sung Ouk Kim; Jason Goode; Pei Lin; Navjiwan Mann; Suzanne Mudd; Karine Crozat; Sosathya Sovath; Jiahuai Han; Bruce Beutler

In humans, ten Toll-like receptor (TLR) paralogues sense molecular components of microbes, initiating the production of cytokine mediators that create the inflammatory response. Using N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea, we induced a germline mutation called Lps2, which abolishes cytokine responses to double-stranded RNA and severely impairs responses to the endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS), indicating that TLR3 and TLR4 might share a specific, proximal transducer. Here we identify the Lps2 mutation: a distal frameshift error in a Toll/interleukin-1 receptor/resistance (TIR) adaptor protein known as Trif or Ticam-1. TrifLps2 homozygotes are markedly resistant to the toxic effects of LPS, and are hypersusceptible to mouse cytomegalovirus, failing to produce type I interferons when infected. Compound homozygosity for mutations at Trif and MyD88 (a cytoplasmic TIR-domain-containing adaptor protein) loci ablates all responses to LPS, indicating that only two signalling pathways emanate from the LPS receptor. However, a Trif-independent cell population is detectable when TrifLps2 mutant macrophages are stimulated with LPS. This reveals that an alternative MyD88-dependent ‘adaptor X’ pathway is present in some, but not all, macrophages, and implies afferent immune specialization.


Nature | 2005

Exogenous and endogenous glycolipid antigens activate NKT cells during microbial infections

Jochen Mattner; Kristin L. DeBord; Nahed Ismail; Randal D. Goff; Carlos Cantu; Dapeng Zhou; Pierre Saint-Mezard; Vivien Wang; Ying Gao; Ning Yin; Kasper Hoebe; Olaf Schneewind; David H. Walker; Bruce Beutler; Luc Teyton; Paul B. Savage; Albert Bendelac

CD1d-restricted natural killer T (NKT) cells are innate-like lymphocytes that express a conserved T-cell receptor and contribute to host defence against various microbial pathogens. However, their target lipid antigens have remained elusive. Here we report evidence for microbial, antigen-specific activation of NKT cells against Gram-negative, lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-negative alpha-Proteobacteria such as Ehrlichia muris and Sphingomonas capsulata. We have identified glycosylceramides from the cell wall of Sphingomonas that serve as direct targets for mouse and human NKT cells, controlling both septic shock reaction and bacterial clearance in infected mice. In contrast, Gram-negative, LPS-positive Salmonella typhimurium activates NKT cells through the recognition of an endogenous lysosomal glycosphingolipid, iGb3, presented by LPS-activated dendritic cells. These findings identify two novel antigenic targets of NKT cells in antimicrobial defence, and show that glycosylceramides are an alternative to LPS for innate recognition of the Gram-negative, LPS-negative bacterial cell wall.


Nature | 1985

Identity of tumour necrosis factor and the macrophage-secreted factor cachectin

Bruce Beutler; D. Greenwald; J. D. Hulmes; M. Chang; Yu-Ching E. Pan; John C. Mathison; Richard J. Ulevitch; Anthony Cerami

In mammals, several well-defined metabolic changes occur during infection, many of which are attributable to products of the reticuloendothelial system1–3. Among these changes, a hypertrigly-ceridaemic state is frequently evident4–9, resulting from defective triglyceride clearance, caused by systemic suppression of the enzyme lipoprotein lipase (LPL)9. We have found previously that macrophages secrete the hormone cachectin, which specifically suppresses LPL activity in cultured adipocytes (3T3-L1 cells)10–17. When originally purified from RAW 264.7 (mouse macrophage) cells, cachectin was shown to have a pI of 4.7, a subunit size of relative molecular mass (Mr) 17,000 and to form non-covalent multimers17. A receptor for cachectin was identified on non-tumorigenic cultured cells and on normal mouse liver membranes17. A new high-yield purification technique has enabled us to determine further details of the structure of mouse cachectin. We now report that a high degree of homology exists between the N-terminal sequence of mouse cachectin and the N-terminal sequence recently determined for human tumour necrosis factor (TNF)18,19. Purified cachectin also possesses potent TNF activity in vitro. These findings suggest that the ‘cachectin’ and ‘TNF’ activities of murine macrophage conditioned medium are attributable to a single protein, which modulates the metabolic activities of normal as well as neoplastic cells through interaction with specific high-affinity receptors.


Nature | 2005

CD36 is a sensor of diacylglycerides

Kasper Hoebe; Philippe Georgel; Sophie Rutschmann; Xin Du; Suzanne Mudd; Karine Crozat; Sosathya Sovath; Louis Shamel; Thomas Hartung; Ulrich Zähringer; Bruce Beutler

Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2) is required for the recognition of numerous molecular components of bacteria, fungi and protozoa. The breadth of the ligand repertoire seems unusual, even if one considers that TLR2 may form heteromers with TLRs 1 and 6 (ref. 12), and it is likely that additional proteins serve as adapters for TLR2 activation. Here we show that an N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea-induced nonsense mutation of Cd36 (oblivious) causes a recessive immunodeficiency phenotype in which macrophages are insensitive to the R-enantiomer of MALP-2 (a diacylated bacterial lipopeptide) and to lipoteichoic acid. Homozygous mice are hypersusceptible to Staphylococcus aureus infection. Cd36obl macrophages readily detect S-MALP-2, PAM2CSK4, PAM3CSK4 and zymosan, revealing that some—but not all—TLR2 ligands are dependent on CD36. Already known as a receptor for endogenous molecules, CD36 is also a selective and nonredundant sensor of microbial diacylglycerides that signal via the TLR2/6 heterodimer.


Current Opinion in Immunology | 2000

Tlr4: central component of the sole mammalian LPS sensor.

Bruce Beutler

Mutations of the mouse Lps locus abolish responses to lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Positional cloning work has revealed that Lps encodes the Toll-like receptor 4 (Tlr4), which functions as the transmembrane component of the LPS receptor complex, an unduplicated pathway for the detection of endotoxin. The structurally related protein Tlr2 makes no contribution to LPS signal transduction.


Immunity | 2010

Intracellular Toll-like Receptors

Amanda L. Blasius; Bruce Beutler

Foreign nucleic acids, the signature of invading viruses and certain bacteria, are sensed intracellularly. The nucleic acid-specific Toll-like receptors (TLRs) detect and signal within endolysosomal compartments, triggering the induction of cytokines essential for the innate immune response. These cytokines include proinflammatory molecules produced mainly by macrophages and conventional dendritic cells, as well as type I interferons, which are produced in great quantities by plasmacytoid dendritic cells. The cellular and molecular pathways by which nucleic acids and TLRs meet within the endosome assure host protection yet also place the host at risk for the development of autoimmunity. Here, we review the latest findings on the intracellular TLRs, with special emphasis on ligand uptake, receptor trafficking, signaling, and regulation.


Nature Immunology | 2004

The interface between innate and adaptive immunity

Kasper Hoebe; Edith M. Janssen; Bruce Beutler

This focus analyzes some of the ways the innate immune system influences adaptive immune responses. Here the main principles and themes that govern this intricate relationship are discussed.


Blood | 2008

TLRs and innate immunity

Bruce Beutler

One of the most fundamental questions in immunology pertains to the recognition of non-self, which for the most part means microbes. How do we initially realize that we have been inoculated with microbes, and how is the immune response ignited? Genetic studies have made important inroads into this question during the past decade, and we now know that in mammals, a relatively small number of receptors operate to detect signature molecules that herald infection. One or more of these signature molecules are displayed by almost all microbes. These receptors and the signals they initiate have been studied in depth by random germline mutagenesis and positional cloning (forward genetics). Herein is a concise description of what has been learned about the Toll-like receptors, which play an essential part in the perception of microbes and shape the complex host responses that occur during infection.


Nature Immunology | 2006

Natural killer T cells recognize diacylglycerol antigens from pathogenic bacteria.

Yuki Kinjo; Emmanuel Tupin; Douglass Wu; Masakazu Fujio; Raquel Garcia-Navarro; Mohammed Rafii El Idrissi Benhnia; Dirk M. Zajonc; Gil Ben-Menachem; Gary D. Ainge; Gavin F. Painter; Archana Khurana; Kasper Hoebe; Samuel M. Behar; Bruce Beutler; Ian A. Wilson; Moriya Tsuji; Timothy J. Sellati; Chi-Huey Wong; Mitchell Kronenberg

Natural killer T (NKT) cells recognize glycosphingolipids presented by CD1d molecules and have been linked to defense against microbial infections. Previously defined foreign glycosphingolipids recognized by NKT cells are uniquely found in nonpathogenic sphingomonas bacteria. Here we show that mouse and human NKT cells also recognized glycolipids, specifically a diacylglycerol, from Borrelia burgdorferi, which causes Lyme disease. The B. burgdorferi–derived, glycolipid-induced NKT cell proliferation and cytokine production and the antigenic potency of this glycolipid was dependent on acyl chain length and saturation. These data indicate that NKT cells recognize categories of glycolipids beyond those in sphingomonas and suggest that NKT cell responses driven by T cell receptor–mediated glycolipid recognition may provide protection against diverse pathogens.

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Kasper Hoebe

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Xin Du

Scripps Research Institute

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Eva Marie Y Moresco

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Yu Xia

Scripps Research Institute

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Xiaohong Li

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Owen M. Siggs

Scripps Research Institute

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