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Featured researches published by Christine Le.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

A novel Entamoeba histolytica cysteine proteinase, EhCP4, is key for invasive amebiasis and a therapeutic target.

Chen He; George P. Nora; Eric L. Schneider; Iain D. Kerr; Elizabeth Hansell; Ken Hirata; David J. Gonzalez; Mohammed Sajid; Sarah E. Boyd; Petr Hruz; Eduardo R. Cobo; Christine Le; Wei-Ting Liu; Lars Eckmann; Pieter C. Dorrestein; Eric R. Houpt; Linda S. Brinen; Charles S. Craik; William R. Roush; James H. McKerrow; Sharon L. Reed

Entamoeba histolytica cysteine proteinases (EhCPs) play a key role in disrupting the colonic epithelial barrier and the innate host immune response during invasion of E. histolytica, the protozoan cause of human amebiasis. EhCPs are encoded by 50 genes, of which ehcp4 (ehcp-a4) is the most up-regulated during invasion and colonization in a mouse cecal model of amebiasis. Up-regulation of ehcp4 in vivo correlated with our finding that co-culture of E. histolytica trophozoites with mucin-producing T84 cells increased ehcp4 expression up to 6-fold. We have expressed recombinant EhCP4, which was autocatalytically activated at acidic pH but had highest proteolytic activity at neutral pH. In contrast to the other amebic cysteine proteinases characterized so far, which have a preference for arginine in the P2 position, EhCP4 displayed a unique preference for valine and isoleucine at P2. This preference was confirmed by homology modeling, which revealed a shallow, hydrophobic S2 pocket. Endogenous EhCP4 localized to cytoplasmic vesicles, the nuclear region, and perinuclear endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Following co-culture with colonic cells, EhCP4 appeared in acidic vesicles and was released extracellularly. A specific vinyl sulfone inhibitor, WRR605, synthesized based on the substrate specificity of EhCP4, inhibited the recombinant enzyme in vitro and significantly reduced parasite burden and inflammation in the mouse cecal model. The unique expression pattern, localization, and biochemical properties of EhCP4 could be exploited as a potential target for drug design.


Experimental Parasitology | 2015

IL-17A promotes protective IgA responses and expression of other potential effectors against the lumen-dwelling enteric parasite Giardia

Sara M. Dann; Carolin F. Manthey; Christine Le; Yukiko Miyamoto; Lauren Gima; Andrew Abrahim; Anthony T. Cao; Elaine M. Hanson; Jay K. Kolls; Eyal Raz; Yingzi Cong; Lars Eckmann

Giardia lamblia is a leading protozoan cause of diarrheal disease worldwide. It colonizes the lumen and epithelial surface of the small intestine, but does not invade the mucosa. Acute infection causes only minimal mucosal inflammation. Effective immune defenses exist, yet their identity and mechanisms remain incompletely understood. Interleukin (IL)-17A has emerged as an important cytokine involved in inflammation and antimicrobial defense against bacterial pathogens at mucosal surfaces. In this study, we demonstrate that IL-17A has a crucial function in host defense against Giardia infection. Using murine infection models with G. muris and G. lamblia, we observed marked and selective induction of intestinal IL-17A with peak expression after 2 weeks. Th17 cells in the lamina propria and innate immune cells in the epithelial compartment of the small intestine were responsible for the IL-17A response. Experiments in gene-targeted mice revealed that the cytokine, and its cognate receptor IL-17RA, were required for eradication of the parasite. The actions of the cytokine were mediated by hematopoietic cells, and were required for the transport of IgA into the intestinal lumen, since IL-17A deficiency led to marked reduction of fecal IgA levels, as well as for increased intestinal expression of several other potential effectors, including β-defensin 1 and resistin-like molecule β. In contrast, intestinal hypermotility, another major antigiardial defense mechanism, was not impacted by IL-17A loss. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that IL-17A and IL-17 receptor signaling are essential for intestinal defense against the important lumen-dwelling intestinal parasite Giardia.


Infection and Immunity | 2014

Attenuation of Intestinal Inflammation in Interleukin-10-Deficient Mice Infected with Citrobacter rodentium

Sara M. Dann; Christine Le; Barun K. Choudhury; Houpu Liu; Omar A. Saldarriaga; Elaine M. Hanson; Yingzi Cong; Lars Eckmann

ABSTRACT Interleukin-10 (IL-10) curtails immune responses to microbial infection and autoantigens and contributes to intestinal immune homeostasis, yet administration of IL-10 has not been effective at attenuating chronic intestinal inflammatory conditions, suggesting that its immune functions may be context dependent. To gain a broader understanding of the importance of IL-10 in controlling mucosal immune responses to infectious challenges, we employed the murine attaching and effacing pathogen Citrobacter rodentium, which colonizes primarily the surfaces of the cecum and colon and causes transient mucosal inflammation driven by Th17 and Th1 T helper cells. Infection induced macrophage and dendritic cell production of IL-10, which diminished antibacterial host defenses, because IL-10-deficient mice cleared infection faster than wild-type controls. In parallel, the mice had less acute infection-associated colitis and resolved it more rapidly than controls. Importantly, transient C. rodentium infection protected IL-10-deficient mice against the later development of spontaneous colitis that normally occurs with aging in these mice. Genome-wide expression studies revealed that IL-10 deficiency was associated with downregulation of proinflammatory pathways but increased expression of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-27 in response to infection. IL-27 was found to suppress in vitro Th17 and, to a lesser degree, Th1 differentiation independent of IL-10. Furthermore, neutralization of IL-27 resulted in more severe colitis in infected IL-10-deficient mice. Together, these findings indicate that IL-10 is dispensable for resolving C. rodentium-associated colitis and further suggest that IL-27 may be a critical factor for controlling intestinal inflammation and Th17 and Th1 development by IL-10-independent mechanisms.


International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents | 2016

Auranofin inactivates Trichomonas vaginalis thioredoxin reductase and is effective against trichomonads in vitro and in vivo

Melissa Hopper; Jeong-fil Yun; Bianhua Zhou; Christine Le; Katelin Kehoe; Ryan Le; Ryan I. Hill; Gregg Jongeward; Anjan Debnath; Liangfang Zhang; Yukiko Miyamoto; Lars Eckmann; Kirkwood M. Land; Lisa A. Wrischnik

Trichomoniasis, caused by the protozoan parasite Trichomonas vaginalis, is the most common, non-viral, sexually transmitted infection in the world, but only two closely related nitro drugs are approved for its treatment. New antimicrobials against trichomoniasis remain an urgent need. Several organic gold compounds were tested for activity against T. vaginalis thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) in cell-free systems as well as for activity against different trichomonads in vitro and in a murine infection model. The organic gold(I) compounds auranofin and chloro(diethylphenylphosphine)gold(I) inhibited TrxR in a concentration-dependent manner in assays with recombinant purified reductase and in cytoplasmic extracts of T. vaginalis transfected with a haemagglutinin epitope-tagged form of the reductase. Auranofin potently suppressed the growth of three independent clinical T. vaginalis isolates as well as several strains of another trichomonad (Tritrichomonas foetus) in a 24 h-assay, with 50% inhibitory concentrations of 0.7-2.5 µM and minimum lethal concentrations of 2-6 µM. The drug also compromised the ability of the parasite to overcome oxidant stress, supporting the notion that auranofin acts, in part, by inactivating TrxR-dependent antioxidant defences. Chloro(diethylphenylphosphine)gold(I) was 10-fold less effective against T. vaginalis in vitro than auranofin. Oral administration of auranofin for 4 days cleared the parasites in a murine model of vaginal T. foetus infection without displaying any apparent adverse effects. The approved human drug auranofin may be a promising agent as an alternative treatment of trichomoniasis in cases when standard nitro drug therapies have failed.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2018

Neutralization of cholera toxin with nanoparticle decoys for treatment of cholera

Soumita Das; Pavimol Angsantikul; Christine Le; Denny Bao; Yukiko Miyamoto; Weiwei Gao; Liangfang Zhang; Lars Eckmann

Diarrheal diseases are a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. In many cases, antibiotic therapy is either ineffective or not recommended due to concerns about emergence of resistance. The pathogenesis of several of the most prevalent infections, including cholera and enteroxigenic Escherichia coli, is dominated by enterotoxins produced by lumen-dwelling pathogens before clearance by intestinal defenses. Toxins gain access to the host through critical host receptors, making these receptors attractive targets for alternative antimicrobial strategies that do not rely on conventional antibiotics. Here, we developed a new nanotechnology strategy as a countermeasure against cholera, one of the most important and prevalent toxin-mediated enteric infections. The key host receptor for cholera toxin, monosialotetrahexosylganglioside (GM1), was coated onto the surface of polymeric nanoparticles. The resulting GM1-polymer hybrid nanoparticles were shown to function as toxin decoys by selectively and stably binding cholera toxin, and neutralizing its actions on epithelial cells in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, the GM1-coated nanoparticle decoys attenuated epithelial 3’,5’-cyclic adenosine monophosphate production and fluid responses to infection with live Vibrio cholera in cell culture and a murine infection model. Together, these studies illustrate that the new nanotechnology-based platform can be employed as a non-traditional antimicrobial strategy for the management of enteric infections with enterotoxin-producing pathogens.


Journal of Immunology | 2018

Giardia Infection of the Small Intestine Induces Chronic Colitis in Genetically Susceptible Hosts

Sara M. Dann; Christine Le; Elaine M. Hanson; Matthew C. Ross; Lars Eckmann

The lumen-dwelling protozoan Giardia is an important parasitic cause of diarrheal disease worldwide. Infection can persist over extended periods with minimal intestinal inflammation, suggesting that Giardia may attenuate host responses to ensure its survival, although clearance eventually occurs in most cases. IL-10 is an anti-inflammatory regulator critical for intestinal homeostasis and controlling host responses to bacterial exposure, yet its potential role in coordinating antiprotozoal host defense in the intestine is not known. In this study, we found that murine infection with the natural enteric pathogen Giardia muris induced a transient IL-10 response after 2–4 wk at the primary site of infection in the upper small intestine, but parasite colonization and eradication were not affected by the absence of the cytokine in gene-targeted mice. However, IL-10 was critical for controlling infection-associated immunological sequelae in the colon because severe and persistent diarrhea and colitis were observed in IL-10–deficient mice within 1–2 wk postinfection but not in uninfected littermate controls. Inflammation was characterized by epithelial hyperplasia, neutrophil and macrophage expansion, and Th1 induction and could be prevented by blockade of IL-12/IL-23 p40 but not depletion of CD11c+ dendritic cells. Furthermore, the intestinal microbiota underwent characteristic shifts in composition and was required for disease because antibiotics and loss of TLR signaling in MyD88-deficient mice protected against colitis. Together, our data suggest that transient infection by a luminal and seemingly noninflammatory pathogen can trigger sustained colitis in genetically susceptible hosts, which has broader implications for understanding postinfectious syndromes and other chronic intestinal inflammatory conditions.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2017

Click Chemistry-Facilitated Structural Diversification of Nitrothiazoles, Nitrofurans, and Nitropyrroles Enhances Antimicrobial Activity against Giardia lamblia

Wan Jung Kim; Keith A. Korthals; Suhua Li; Christine Le; Jaroslaw Kalisiak; K. Barry Sharpless; Valery V. Fokin; Yukiko Miyamoto; Lars Eckmann

ABSTRACT Giardia lamblia is an important and ubiquitous cause of diarrheal disease. The primary agents in the treatment of giardiasis are nitroheterocyclic drugs, particularly the imidazoles metronidazole and tinidazole and the thiazole nitazoxanide. Although these drugs are generally effective, treatment failures occur in up to 20% of cases, and resistance has been demonstrated in vivo and in vitro. Prior work had suggested that side chain modifications of the imidazole core can lead to new effective 5-nitroimidazole drugs that can combat nitro drug resistance, but the full potential of nitroheterocycles other than imidazole to yield effective new antigiardial agents has not been explored. Here, we generated derivatives of two clinically utilized nitroheterocycles, nitrothiazole and nitrofuran, as well as a third heterocycle, nitropyrrole, which is related to nitroimidazole but has not been systematically investigated as an antimicrobial drug scaffold. Click chemistry was employed to synthesize 442 novel nitroheterocyclic compounds with extensive side chain modifications. Screening of this library against representative G. lamblia strains showed a wide spectrum of in vitro activities, with many of the compounds exhibiting superior activity relative to reference drugs and several showing >100-fold increase in potency and the ability to overcome existing forms of metronidazole resistance. The majority of new compounds displayed no cytotoxicity against human cells, and several compounds were orally active against murine giardiasis in vivo. These findings provide additional impetus for the systematic development of nitroheterocyclic compounds with nonimidazole cores as alternative and improved agents for the treatment of giardiasis and potentially other infectious agents.


Inflammatory Bowel Diseases | 2012

Acute Small Bowel Infection Induces Colitis Via CD103(-) Antigen Presenting Cells and Th1 Responses: P-195

Sara M. Dann; Kim Nguyen; Christine Le; Elaine Hanson; Lars Eckmann

inflammation occurs unpredictably in some CD patients with resultant stricture formation and bowel obstruction. While a variety of imaging tests can identify bowel wall hyperperfusion and active inflammation in CD, including contrastenhanced ultrasound, no commercially available diagnostic test has been demonstrated to confirm the presence of bowel wall fibrosis in a reliable, noninvasive manner in humans to date. Discriminating bowel wall active inflammation from fibrosis is important as bowel segments that are abnormally narrowed due to active inflammation generally respond to medical therapy, whereas narrowed fibrotic bowel segments frequently require endoscopic dilatation or surgical management The purpose of our study was to determine if acoustic radiation force impulse (ARFI) elastography-derived bowel wall shear wave velocity (SWV) can be used to discriminate inflamed from fibrotic bowel segments in an established CD animal model. If accurate, such an imaging test would almost certainly alter current paradigms of radiologic evaluation and medical and surgical management in CD. METHODS: University Committee on the Use and Care of Animals approval was obtained. An acute inflammation CD model was produced by treating Lewis rats with a single trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS) enema, with imaging performed two days later (n 1⁄4 8). Colonic fibrosis in Lewis rats was achieved by administering repeated TNBS enemas over four weeks, with imaging performed seven days later to allow acute inflammation resolution (n 1⁄4 8). Nine transcutaneous bowel wall SWV measurements (Virtual Touch IQ/Acuson S3000 ultrasound system; Siemens Medical Solutions USA) were obtained from the colon in all rats without and with applied strain. Mean SWVs without and with applied strain were compared between animal cohorts, and receiver operating characteristic curves were created to assess diagnostic performance. Three rats died prior to imaging. RESULTS: Mean bowel wall SWVs were significantly higher for fibrotic versus acute inflammation cohort rats at 0% (3.42 6 1.12 vs. 2.30 6 0.51 m/s; P 1⁄4 0.047) and 30% (6.27 6 2.20 vs. 3.61 6 0.87 m/s; P 1⁄4 0.021) applied strain. Both acute inflammation and fibrotic cohort rats demonstrated linear increases in mean SWVs with increasing applied strain, with significantly different mean slopes (P 1⁄4 0.016) and y-intercepts (P 1⁄4 0.023). The c-statistic of SWV for differentiating histopathologically-confirmed fibrotic from inflamed bowel was 0.895. CONCLUSION(S): Bowel wall SWV distinguishes fibrotic from inflamed intestine in an animal model of Crohn’s disease.


Journal of Immunology | 2011

Novel model of colitis induced by a non-inflammatory small bowel infection

Sara M. Dann; Christine Le; Kim Nguyen; Raymond Dann; Elaine Hanson; Lars Eckmann


Inflammatory Bowel Diseases | 2011

Induction of chronic colitis by a protozoan non-inflammatory small bowel infection.

Sara M. Dann; Christine Le; Raymond Dann; Elaine Hanson; Lars Eckmann

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Lars Eckmann

University of California

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Sara M. Dann

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Yingzi Cong

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Andrew Abrahim

University of Texas Medical Branch

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