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Dive into the research topics where Bruce T. Seet is active.

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Featured researches published by Bruce T. Seet.


Immunological Reviews | 1999

Immunomodulation by viruses: the myxoma virus story.

Piers Nash; John W. Barrett; Jing-Xin Cao; Sheela Hota-Mitchell; Alshad S. Lalani; Helen Everett; Xiao-Ming Xu; Janine Robichaud; Shawna Hnatiuk; Cheryl Ainslie; Bruce T. Seet; Grant McFadden

Summary: Myxoma virus is a poxvirus pathogen of rabbits that has evolved to replicate successfully in the presence of an active immune response by an infected host. To accomplish this, the virus has developed a variety of strategies to avoid detection by or obstruct specific aspects of the antiviral response whose consolidated action is antagonistic to virus survival. We describe two distinct viral strategies carried out by viral proteins with which myxoma virus subverts the host immune response. The first strategy is the production of virus‐encoded proteins known as viroceptors or virokines that mimic host receptors or cytokines. These seek to actively block extracellular immune signals required for effective virus clearance and produce a local environment in the infected tissue that is “virus friendly”. The second strategy, carried out by intracellular viral proteins, seeks to retard the innate antiviral responses such as apoptosis, and hinder attempts by the infected cell to communicate with the cellular arm of the immune system. By studying these viral strategies of immune evasion, the myxoma system can provide insights into virus‐host interactions and also provide new insights into the complex immune system.


Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2002

Viral chemokine‐binding proteins

Bruce T. Seet; Grant McFadden

The chemokines are a large family of small signaling proteins that bind to G‐protein‐coupled receptors (GPCRs) on target cells and mediate the directional migration of immune cells into sites of infection or inflammation. The large DNA viruses, particularly the poxviruses and herpesviruses, have evolved several mechanisms to corrupt the normal functioning of the chemokine network. Two strategies rely on mimicking chemokines or chemokine receptors. A third strategy involves the production of secreted chemokine‐binding proteins (CKBPs) that exhibit no sequence similarity to any known host proteins, yet function to competitively bind and inhibit the interactions of chemokines with cognate receptors. Each strategy has provided unique insights into the elusively complex world of the chemokines. Here, we focus on recent advances made in the understanding of secreted CKBPs encoded by poxviruses and herpesviruses. A better understanding of how viral CKBPs function to manipulate the immune response may provide further clues as to how to develop specific therapeutic agents to abrogate chemokine‐mediated disease conditions.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2000

The viral anti-inflammatory chemokine-binding protein M-T7 reduces intimal hyperplasia after vascular injury

Liying Liu; Alshad S. Lalani; Erbin Dai; Bruce T. Seet; Colin Macauley; Raj Singh; Lilly Fan; Grant McFadden; Alexandra Lucas

Chemokines and IFN-gamma function as central regulators of inflammatory responses to vascular injury. Both classes of cytokines are upregulated during restenosis, a response to vascular injury that leads to recurrent atherosclerotic plaque growth, but the relative impact of each class of cytokines remains undetermined. M-T7 is a secreted myxoma viral immunomodulatory glycoprotein that functions both as a species-specific inhibitor of rabbit IFN-gamma and as a chemokine-binding protein, interacting with a wide range of C, C-C, and C-X-C chemokines in a species-nonspecific fashion. We wished to (a) assess the efficacy of purified M-T7 protein in inhibiting intimal hyperplasia after angioplasty injury and (b) exploit unique species-specific functions of M-T7 in order to judge the relative importance of each cytokine class on plaque growth. Anesthetized New Zealand white rabbits and Sprague-Dawley rats received either M-T7 or control at the time of arterial angioplasty injury. Histological analysis at 28 days demonstrated significant reductions in intimal hyperplasia with M-T7 treatment in both models, with an associated early inhibition of inflammatory cell invasion. Purified M-T7 protein inhibits intimal hyperplasia after angioplasty injury in a species-nonspecific fashion, thus implicating the chemokine-binding activity as more critical for prevention of plaque growth after vascular injury.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Poxvirus ankyrin repeat proteins are a unique class of F-box proteins that associate with cellular SCF1 ubiquitin ligase complexes

Stephanie Sonnberg; Bruce T. Seet; Tony Pawson; Stephen B. Fleming; Andrew A. Mercer

F-box proteins direct the degradation of an extensive range of proteins via the ubiquitin-proteasome system. Members of this large family of proteins are typically bipartite. They recruit specific substrates through a substrate-binding domain and, via the F-box, link these to core components of a major class of ubiquitin ligases (SCF1). F-box proteins thus determine the specificity of SCF1-mediated ubiquitination. F-box-like motifs were recently detected in poxvirus ankyrin repeat (ANK) proteins but clear compositional differences to typical F-box proteins raise questions regarding the classification and function of the motif. Here we show that all five ANK proteins of a representative poxvirus, Orf virus, interact in vivo with core components of the SCF1 ubiquitin ligase complex. Interaction is dependent on the poxviral F-box-like motif and the adaptor subunit of the complex (SKP1). The viral protein does not block enzymatic activity of the complex. These observations identify the poxviral motif as a functional F-box. They also identify a new class of F-box that in contrast to cellular counterparts is truncated, has an extreme C-terminal location and is paired with an ANK protein-binding domain. ANK proteins constitute the largest family of poxviral proteins but their function and the significance of their abundance have remained an enigma. We propose that poxviruses use these unique ANK/F-box proteins to dictate target specificity to SCF1 ubiquitin ligases and thereby exploit the cells ubiquitin-proteasome machinery.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Molecular determinants for CC-chemokine recognition by a poxvirus CC-chemokine inhibitor

Bruce T. Seet; Rajkumari Singh; Chad D. Paavola; Elaine K. Lau; Tracy M. Handel; Grant McFadden

Poxviruses express a family of secreted proteins that bind with high affinity to chemokines and antagonize the interaction with their cognate G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). These viral inhibitors are novel in structure and, unlike cellular chemokine receptors, are able to specifically interact with most, if not all, CC-chemokines. We therefore sought to define the structural features of CC-chemokines that facilitate this broad-spectrum interaction. Here, we identify the residues present on human monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) that are required for high-affinity interaction with the vaccinia virus 35-kDa CC-chemokine binding protein (VV-35kDa). Not only do these residues correspond to those required for interaction with the cognate receptor CCR2b but they are also conserved among many CC-chemokines. Thus, the results provide a structural basis for the ability of VV-35kDa to promiscuously recognize CC-chemokines and block binding to their receptors.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Analysis of an orf virus chemokine-binding protein: Shifting ligand specificities among a family of poxvirus viroceptors

Bruce T. Seet; Catherine A. McCaughan; Tracy M. Handel; Andrew A. Mercer; Craig R. Brunetti; Grant McFadden; Stephen B. Fleming

We identify a secreted chemokine inhibitor encoded by orf virus (ORFV), the prototypic poxvirus of the Parapoxvirus genus, and show that it is related to the poxvirus type II CC-chemokine-binding proteins (CBP-II) produced by members of the Orthopoxvirus and Leporipoxvirus genera. The ORFV chemokine-binding protein (CBP) is functionally similar to the CBP-II proteins in its ability to bind and inhibit many CC-chemokines with high affinity. However, unlike CBP-II, the ORFV CBP also binds with high affinity to lymphotactin, a member of the C-chemokine family, demonstrating that the ORFV CBP possesses an altered binding specificity. Interestingly, the amino acid sequence of ORFV CBP more closely resembles the granulocyte–macrophage colony-stimulating factor/IL-2 inhibitory factor also produced by ORFV, implicating the granulocyte–macrophage colony-stimulating factor/IL-2 inhibitory factor protein as a highly diverged, but related, member of the CBP-II protein family. Notably, these findings suggest that the genes that encode these proteins derive from a common poxvirus ancestral gene that has since been modified in binding specificity during speciation of the poxvirus genera. Overall, these findings illustrate the concept of evolution of viral proteins at the biophysical and molecular interface.


Biochemical Journal | 2000

Post-translational modification of the myxoma-virus anti-inflammatory serpin SERP-1 by a virally encoded sialyltransferase

Piers Nash; Michele Barry; Bruce T. Seet; Kirstin Veugelers; Susy Hota; Jody Heger; Carley Hodgkinson; Kathryn Graham; Ronald J. Jackson; Grant McFadden

SERP-1 is a secreted serpin (serine-proteinase inhibitor) encoded by myxoma virus, a poxvirus pathogen of rabbits. SERP-1 is required for myxoma-virus virulence, and the purified protein has been shown to possess independent anti-inflammatory activity in animal models of restenosis and antigen-induced arthritis. As an inhibitor of serine proteinases, SERP-1 acts against tissue-type plasminogen activator, urokinase-type plasminogen activator, plasmin, thrombin and Factor Xa. In the present study, examination of SERP-1 glycosylation-site mutants showed that the N-linked glycosylation of Asn(172) was essential for SERP-1 secretion, whereas mutation of Asn(99) decreased secretion efficiency, indicating that N-linked glycosylation plays an essential role in the processing and trafficking of SERP-1. Furthermore, comparison of SERP-1 from wild-type myxoma virus and a virus containing a targeted disruption of the MST3N sialyltransferase locus demonstrated that SERP-1 is specifically modified by this myxoma-virus-encoded sialyltransferase, and is thus the first reported viral protein shown to by modified by a virally encoded glycosyltransferase. Sialylation of SERP-1 by the MST3N gene product creates a uniquely charged species of secreted SERP-1 that is distinct from SERP-1 produced from other eukaryotic expression systems, though this has no apparent effect upon the kinetics of in vitro proteinase inhibition. Rather, the role of viral sialylation of SERP-1 likely relates to masking antigenicity or targeting SERP-1 to specific sites of action in vivo.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2004

Interaction Analysis of Viral Cytokine-Binding Proteins Using Surface Plasmon Resonance

Bruce T. Seet; Grant McFadden

Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) biosensors have become an increasingly popular technology for characterizing the protein-protein interactions of virus-host interactions. Various studies have exploited the versatility of SPR to probe the interaction between virus and host components, including constituents of virus particles and host cellular receptors, as well as interactions between viral proteins and host immune molecules. This chapter describes basic procedures for employing SPR to study the interaction between poxvirus proteins and host immune-signaling proteins. We also identify how this methodology may be adapted toward other applications relevant in the study of poxvirus-host interactions.


Annual Review of Immunology | 2003

Poxviruses and Immune Evasion

Bruce T. Seet; James B. Johnston; Craig R. Brunetti; John W. Barrett; Helen Everett; Cheryl M. Cameron; Joanna Sypula; Steven H. Nazarian; Alexandra Lucas; Grant McFadden


Virology | 1998

Functional Comparisons among Members of the Poxvirus T1/35kDa Family of Soluble CC-Chemokine Inhibitor Glycoproteins

Alshad S. Lalani; Traci L. Ness; Rajkumari Singh; Jeffrey K. Harrison; Bruce T. Seet; David J. Kelvin; Grant McFadden; Richard W. Moyer

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John W. Barrett

University of Western Ontario

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Rajkumari Singh

University of Western Ontario

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Colin Macauley

Robarts Research Institute

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Janine Robichaud

University of Western Ontario

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