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Dive into the research topics where Carolyn A. Cuff is active.

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Featured researches published by Carolyn A. Cuff.


American Journal of Pathology | 2000

Lymphoid Tissue Homing Chemokines Are Expressed in Chronic Inflammation

Peter Hjelmström; Jenny Fjell; Tetsuhiko Nakagawa; Rosalba Sacca; Carolyn A. Cuff; Nancy H. Ruddle

Secondary lymphoid tissue chemokine (SLC) and B lymphocyte chemoattractant (BLC) are homing chemokines that have been implicated in the trafficking of lymphocytes and dendritic cells in lymphoid organs. Lymphotoxin-alpha (LTalpha), a cytokine crucial for development of lymphoid organs, is important for expression of SLC and BLC in secondary lymphoid organs during development. Here we report that transgenic expression of LTalpha induces inflammation and ectopic expression of SLC and BLC in the adult animal. LTbeta was not necessary for induction of BLC and SLC in inflamed tissues, whereas, in contrast, tumor necrosis factor receptor-1 was found to be important for the LTalpha-mediated induction of these chemokines. The ectopic expression of LTalpha is associated with a chronic inflammation that closely resembles organized lymphoid tissue and this lymphoid neogenesis can also be seen in several chronic inflammatory diseases, including in the pancreas of the prediabetic nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse. Expression of SLC was also observed in the pancreas of prediabetic NOD mice. This study implicates BLC and SLC in chronic inflammation and presents further evidence that LTalpha orchestrates lymphoid organogenesis both during development and in inflammatory processes.


Neurochemical Research | 1998

Cytokine-Induced Inflammation in the Central Nervous System Revisited

James A. Martiney; Carolyn A. Cuff; Mona S. Litwak; Joan W. Berman; Celia F. Brosnan

Cytokines play an essential role as mediators of the immune response. They usually function as part of a network of interactive signals that either activate, enhance, or inhibit the ensuing reaction. An important contribution of this cytokine cascade is the induction of an inflammatory response that recruits and activates subsets of leukocytes that function as effector cells in the response to the sensitizing antigen. Proinflammatory cytokines activate endothelial cells (EC) to express adhesion molecules and induce the release of members of the chemokine family, thus focusing and directing the inflammatory response to sites of antigen recognition. However, the vasculature of the central nervous system (CNS) is highly specialized and restricts the access of components of the immune system to the CNS compartment. In this review, we address the question as to whether endothelial cells in the CNS respond differently to specific cytokines known to induce either a proinflammatory effect or a regulatory effect in systemic vascular beds.


Glia | 1996

The ordered array of perivascular macrophages is disrupted by IL-1-induced inflammation in the rabbit retina

Carolyn A. Cuff; Joan W. Berman; Celia F. Brosnan

In this study we have shown that an antibody to CD18 identified a population of cells in the rabbit retina that resembled the perivascular macrophage found in other regions of the central nervous system. In the normal retina these cells possessed a ramified morphology and presented in an ordered array on the vitreal surface in association with the epiretinal vessels. Approximately 50% of the perivascular macrophages constitutively expressed MHC class II. In response to interleukin‐1β (IL‐1β)‐induced inflammation, these cells became activated, as evidenced by a change from a ramified to an ameboid morphology and increased expression of MHC class II, and migrated away from the vessels. These changes were first detected around 3 h post‐intraocular challenge coincident with the onset of inflammation. At the peak of the inflammatory response (∼24 h post‐challenge), many activated perivascular macrophages were no longer associated with the vessels and formed long “cords” of MHC class II+ cells associated with underlying deposits of fibrin. In eyes challenged with heat‐inactivated IL‐1, no change in the morphology or distribution of the perivascular macrophage was noted. At 3 weeks post‐challenge with IL‐1, the number and distribution of the perivascular macrophages were restored to baseline values, although with a reduced cell size. Since these changes closely resemble those that occur in non‐lymphoid dendritic cells in the skin, heart, and/or kidney following activation with cytokines or bacterial products, the results suggest that the perivascular macrophage represents the dendritic cell of the retina and may thus play an important role in immune surveillance in the eye and maintenance of the blood‐retina barrier.


Journal of Neuroimmunology | 1996

Differential effects of transforming growth factor-β1 on interleukin-1-induced cellular inflammation and vascular permeability in the rabbit retina

Carolyn A. Cuff; James A. Martiney; Joan W. Berman; Celia F. Brosnan

Intra-vitreal injection of 300 U of interleukin (IL)-1 beta into the rabbit eye induces an inflammation of the retina characterized by hemorrhage, monocyte and neutrophil infiltration, and an increase in vascular permeability that peaks 24 h post-injection. Since the epiretinal vessels involved in this inflammation form part of the blood-retina barrier, we used this model to investigate the effects of the immunosuppressive cytokine TGF beta 1 on inflammation within the context of the central nervous system. We found that intra-vitreal injection of 1 microgram rh TGF beta administered concomitantly with rh IL-1 beta significantly reduced IL-1 beta-induced hemorrhage by 78%, and monocyte and neutrophil infiltration by 53% and 62%, respectively. In contrast, TGF beta did not reduce the IL-1 beta-induced increase in vascular permeability. However, TGF beta by itself caused a statistically significant increase in serum proteins in perfused tissues of the eye, to give a 3.1 +/- 0.4 fold increase in protein content over control values. No cellular inflammation accompanied this alteration in vascular permeability. These data indicate that whereas the local administration of TGF beta may be an effective inhibitor of cellular inflammation in the CNS, the effects on alterations in vascular permeability and accumulation of serum proteins may be more complex.


Current Opinion in Immunology | 1997

Mediators of inflammation

Rosalba Sacca; Carolyn A. Cuff; Nancy H. Ruddle

Therapeutic studies and genetically engineered animals have elucidated the inflammatory roles of cytokines and chemokines in autoimmune disease. Most unexpected has been a continuum of recent evidence demonstrating that inflammatory mediators are crucial in lymphoid organ development, thus suggesting that these hitherto unrelated processes have common elements with implications for determinant spreading.


Journal of Immunology | 1998

Lymphotoxin α3 Induces Chemokines and Adhesion Molecules: Insight into the Role of LTα in Inflammation and Lymphoid Organ Development

Carolyn A. Cuff; Jessica Schwartz; Cheryl M. Bergman; Kerry S. Russell; Jeffrey R. Bender; Nancy H. Ruddle


Journal of Immunology | 1998

Differential Activities of Secreted Lymphotoxin-α3 and Membrane Lymphotoxin-α1β2 in Lymphotoxin-Induced Inflammation: Critical Role of TNF Receptor 1 Signaling

Rosalba Sacca; Carolyn A. Cuff; Werner Lesslauer; Nancy H. Ruddle


Journal of Immunology | 1999

Differential Induction of Adhesion Molecule and Chemokine Expression by LTα3 and LTαβ in Inflammation Elucidates Potential Mechanisms of Mesenteric and Peripheral Lymph Node Development

Carolyn A. Cuff; Rosalba Sacca; Nancy H. Ruddle


Archive | 2012

BISPECIFIC IMMUNOBINDERS DIRECTED AGAINST TNF AND IL-17

Carolyn A. Cuff; Jennifer M. Perez; Suju Zhong; Lucia Eaton; Anca Clabbers; Christine Grinnel; Edit Tarsca; Dora Forkas; Suzanne Mathieu


Proceedings of the American Thoracic Society | 2012

The Efficacy of TNF Blockade in Asthma Models Depends on Endotoxin Levels in the Allergic Challenge

Andrew J. Long; Richard McCarthy; Lian Rundell; Christian Goess; Carolyn A. Cuff

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Joan W. Berman

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Celia F. Brosnan

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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