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Dive into the research topics where Bryan Coon is active.

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Featured researches published by Bryan Coon.


Immunity | 2002

CD40L blockade prevents autoimmune diabetes by induction of bitypic NK/DC regulatory cells

Dirk Homann; Angelika Jahreis; Tom Wolfe; Anna Hughes; Bryan Coon; Marianne van Stipdonk; Kiley R. Prilliman; Stephen P. Schoenberger; Matthias von Herrath

Systemic treatment with antibody to CD40 ligand (aCD40L) can prevent autoimmunity and transplant rejection in several animal models and is currently under evaluation in clinical trials. While it is known that aCD40L administration inhibits expansion and effector functions of aggressive T cells, it is still unclear whether additional regulatory mechanisms are operative. Here we demonstrate that a single episode of CD40L blockade during development of the autoaggressive immune response completely prevented autoimmune disease in the RIP-LCMV mouse model for virally induced type 1 diabetes. Interestingly, protection could be transferred by a highly potent, bitypic cell population sharing phenotypic and functional properties of both natural killer (NK) and dendritic cells (DC). Furthermore, protection of prediabetic recipients was autoantigen specific and did not result in generalized immunosuppression. The origin, function, and therapeutic potential of these bitypic NK/DC regulatory cells is discussed.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2004

A viral epitope that mimics a self antigen can accelerate but not initiate autoimmune diabetes

Urs Christen; Kurt H. Edelmann; Dorian B. McGavern; Tom Wolfe; Bryan Coon; Meghann K. Teague; Stephen D. Miller; Michael B. A. Oldstone; Matthias von Herrath

We document here that infection of prediabetic mice with a virus expressing an H-2Kb-restricted mimic ligand to a self epitope present on beta cells accelerates the development of autoimmune diabetes. Immunization with the mimic ligand expanded autoreactive T cell populations, which was followed by their trafficking to the islets, as visualized in situ by tetramer staining. In contrast, the mimic ligand did not generate sufficient autoreactive T cells in naive mice to initiate disease. Diabetes acceleration did not occur in H-2Kb-deficient mice or in mice tolerized to the mimic ligand. Thus, arenavirus-expressed mimics of self antigens accelerate a previously established autoimmune process. Sequential heterologous viral infections might therefore act in concert to precipitate clinical autoimmune disease, even if single exposure to a viral mimic does not always cause sufficient tissue destruction.


Journal of Virology | 2003

T Cells Infiltrate the Brain in Murine and Human Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies

Hanna Lewicki; Antoinette Tishon; Dirk Homann; Honoré Mazarguil; Françoise Laval; Valérie C. Asensio; Iain L. Campbell; Stephen J. DeArmond; Bryan Coon; Chao Teng; Jean Edouard Gairin; Michael B. A. Oldstone

ABSTRACT CD4 and CD8 T lymphocytes infiltrate the parenchyma of mouse brains several weeks after intracerebral, intraperitoneal, or oral inoculation with the Chandler strain of mouse scrapie, a pattern not seen with inoculation of prion protein knockout (PrP−/−) mice. Associated with this cellular infiltration are expression of MHC class I and II molecules and elevation in levels of the T-cell chemokines, especially macrophage inflammatory protein 1β, IFN-γ-inducible protein 10, and RANTES. T cells were also found in the central nervous system (CNS) in five of six patients with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. T cells harvested from brains and spleens of scrapie-infected mice were analyzed using a newly identified mouse PrP (mPrP) peptide bearing the canonical binding motifs to major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I H-2b or H-2d molecules, appropriate MHC class I tetramers made to include these peptides, and CD4 and CD8 T cells stimulated with 15-mer overlapping peptides covering the whole mPrP. Minimal to modest Kb tetramer binding of mPrP amino acids (aa) 2 to 9, aa 152 to 160, and aa 232 to 241 was observed, but such tetramer-binding lymphocytes as well as CD4 and CD8 lymphocytes incubated with the full repertoire of mPrP peptides failed to synthesize intracellular gamma interferon (IFN-γ) or tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) cytokines and were unable to lyse PrP−/− embryo fibroblasts or macrophages coated with 51Cr-labeled mPrP peptide. These results suggest that the expression of PrPsc in the CNS is associated with release of chemokines and, as shown previously, cytokines that attract and retain PrP-activated T cells and, quite likely, bystander activated T cells that have migrated from the periphery into the CNS. However, these CD4 and CD8 T cells are defective in such an effector function(s) as IFN-γ and TNF-α expression or release or lytic activity.


Journal of Immunology | 2002

Nonmitogenic CD3 Antibody Reverses Virally Induced (Rat Insulin Promoter-Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis Virus) Autoimmune Diabetes Without Impeding Viral Clearance

Matthias von Herrath; Bryan Coon; Tom Wolfe; Lucienne Chatenoud

Treatment with nonmitogenic CD3 Ab reverses established autoimmune diabetes in nonobese diabetic mice by restoring self-tolerance, and is currently under clinical evaluation in patients presenting recent onset type I diabetes. Due to the immunosuppressive potential of this strategy, it was relevant to explore how this treatment would influence the outcome of concomitant viral infections. In this study, we used a transgenic model of virally induced autoimmune diabetes (rat insulin promoter-lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus) that allows for more precise tracking of the autoaggressive response and choice of the time point for initiation of autoimmunity. CD3 was most effective during a clearly defined prediabetic phase and prevented up to 100% of diabetes by drastically lowering activation of autoaggressive CD8 lymphocytes and their production of inflammatory cytokines. Interestingly, reversion of established disease could be achieved as well, when nonmitogenic CD3 was administered late during pathogenesis to overtly diabetic recipients. Most importantly, competence to clear viral infections was maintained. Thus, administration of nonmitogenic CD3 prevents diabetes by sufficient systemic reduction of (auto)aggressive lymphocytes, but without compromising antiviral immune competence.


Immunity | 1999

Autoreactive CD4+ T Cells Protect from Autoimmune Diabetes via Bystander Suppression Using the IL-4/Stat6 Pathway

Dirk Homann; Andreas Holz; Adrian Bot; Bryan Coon; Tom Wolfe; Jacob S. Petersen; Thomas Dyrberg; Michael J. Grusby; Matthias von Herrath


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1999

DNA immunization to prevent autoimmune diabetes

Bryan Coon; Ling-Ling An; J. Lindsay Whitton; Matthias von Herrath


Diabetes | 2000

Virus-induced autoimmune diabetes: most beta-cells die through inflammatory cytokines and not perforin from autoreactive (anti-viral) cytotoxic T-lymphocytes.

S Seewaldt; Helen E. Thomas; Mette Ejrnaes; Urs Christen; Thomas C. Wolfe; Evelyn Rodrigo; Bryan Coon; Birgitte Michelsen; Thomas W. H. Kay; M Von Herrath


Journal of Immunology | 1999

Disruption of the STAT4 Signaling Pathway Protects from Autoimmune Diabetes While Retaining Antiviral Immune Competence

Andreas Holz; Adrian Bot; Bryan Coon; Tom Wolfe; Michael J. Grusby; Matthias G. von Herrath


Virology | 1997

Low-Affinity Cytotoxic T-Lymphocytes Require IFN-γ to Clear an Acute Viral Infection ☆

Matthias von Herrath; Bryan Coon; Michael B. A. Oldstone


Journal of Immunology | 1998

In Vivo Treatment with a MHC Class I-Restricted Blocking Peptide Can Prevent Virus-Induced Autoimmune Diabetes

Matthias von Herrath; Bryan Coon; Hanna Lewicki; Honoré Mazarguil; Jean Edouard Gairin; Michael B. A. Oldstone

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Tom Wolfe

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Dirk Homann

University of Colorado Denver

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Andreas Holz

Scripps Research Institute

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Anna Hughes

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Hanna Lewicki

Scripps Research Institute

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Honoré Mazarguil

Scripps Research Institute

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