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Dive into the research topics where Christopher Tipton is active.

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Featured researches published by Christopher Tipton.


Nature Immunology | 2015

Diversity, cellular origin and autoreactivity of antibody-secreting cell population expansions in acute systemic lupus erythematosus

Christopher Tipton; Christopher Fucile; Jaime Darce; Asiya Seema Chida; Travis Ichikawa; Ivan V. Gregoretti; Sandra Schieferl; Jennifer R. Hom; Scott A. Jenks; Ron J Feldman; Ramit Mehr; Chungwen Wei; F. Eun-Hyung Lee; Wan Cheung Cheung; Alexander F. Rosenberg; Iñaki Sanz

Acute systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) courses with surges of antibody-secreting cells (ASCs) whose origin, diversity and contribution to serum autoantibodies remain unknown. Here, deep sequencing, proteomic profiling of autoantibodies and single-cell analysis demonstrated highly diversified ASCs punctuated by clones expressing the variable heavy-chain region VH4-34 that produced dominant serum autoantibodies. A fraction of ASC clones contained autoantibodies without mutation, a finding consistent with differentiation outside the germinal centers. A substantial ASC segment was derived from a distinct subset of newly activated naive cells of considerable clonality that persisted in the circulation for several months. Thus, selection of SLE autoreactivities occurred during polyclonal activation, with prolonged recruitment of recently activated naive B cells. Our findings shed light on the pathogenesis of SLE, help explain the benefit of agents that target B cells and should facilitate the design of future therapies.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Two major autoantibody clusters in systemic lupus erythematosus

Kathryn H. Ching; Peter D. Burbelo; Christopher Tipton; Chungwen Wei; Michelle Petri; Ignacio Sanz; Michael J. Iadarola

Systemic lupus erythematosus is a chronic autoimmune disease of complex clinical presentation and etiology and is likely influenced by numerous genetic and environmental factors. While a large number of susceptibility genes have been identified, the production of antibodies against a distinct subset of nuclear proteins remains a primary distinguishing characteristic in disease diagnosis. However, the utility of autoantibody biomarkers for disease sub-classification and grouping remains elusive, in part, because of the difficulty in large scale profiling using a uniform, quantitative platform. In the present study serological profiles of several known SLE antigens, including Sm-D3, RNP-A, RNP-70k, Ro52, Ro60, and La, as well as other cytokine and neuronal antigens were obtained using the luciferase immunoprecipitation systems (LIPS) approach. The resulting autoantibody profiles revealed that 88% of a pilot cohort and 98% of a second independent cohort segregated into one of two distinct clusters defined by autoantibodies against Sm/anti-RNP or Ro/La autoantigens, proteins often involved in RNA binding activities. The Sm/RNP cluster was associated with a higher prevalence of serositis in comparison to the Ro/La cluster (P = 0.0022). However, from the available clinical information, no other clinical characteristics were associated with either cluster. In contrast, evaluation of autoantibodies on an individual basis revealed an association between anti-Sm (P = 0.006), RNP-A (P = 0.018) and RNP-70k (P = 0.010) autoantibodies and mucocutaneous symptoms and between anti-RNP-70k and musculoskeletal manifestations (P = 0.059). Serologically active, but clinically quiescent disease also had a higher prevalence of anti-IFN-α autoantibodies. Based on our findings that most SLE patients belong to either a Sm/RNP or Ro/La autoantigen cluster, these results suggest the possibility that alterations in RNA-RNA-binding protein interactions may play a critical role in triggering and/or the pathogenesis of SLE.


eLife | 2015

Malaria-associated atypical memory B cells exhibit markedly reduced B cell receptor signaling and effector function

Silvia Portugal; Christopher Tipton; Haewon Sohn; Younoussou Kone; Jing Wang; Shanping Li; Jeff Skinner; Kimmo Virtaneva; Daniel E. Sturdevant; Stephen F. Porcella; Ogobara K. Doumbo; Safiatou Doumbo; Kassoum Kayentao; Aissata Ongoiba; Boubacar Traore; Ignacio Sanz; Susan K. Pierce; Peter D. Crompton

Protective antibodies in Plasmodium falciparum malaria are only acquired after years of repeated infections. Chronic malaria exposure is associated with a large increase in atypical memory B cells (MBCs) that resemble B cells expanded in a variety of persistent viral infections. Understanding the function of atypical MBCs and their relationship to classical MBCs will be critical to developing effective vaccines for malaria and other chronic infections. We show that VH gene repertoires and somatic hypermutation rates of atypical and classical MBCs are indistinguishable indicating a common developmental history. Atypical MBCs express an array of inhibitory receptors and B cell receptor (BCR) signaling is stunted in atypical MBCs resulting in impaired B cell responses including proliferation, cytokine production and antibody secretion. Thus, in response to chronic malaria exposure, atypical MBCs appear to differentiate from classical MBCs becoming refractory to BCR-mediated activation and potentially interfering with the acquisition of malaria immunity. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.07218.001


Journal of Immunology | 2013

Molecular Basis of 9G4 B Cell Autoreactivity in Human Systemic Lupus Erythematosus

Christopher Richardson; Asiya Seema Chida; Diana G. Adlowitz; Lin Silver; Erin Fox; Scott A. Jenks; Elise Palmer; Youliang Wang; Jamie Heimburg-Molinaro; Quan Zhen Li; Chandra Mohan; Richard D. Cummings; Christopher Tipton; Ignacio Sanz

9G4+ IgG Abs expand in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in a disease-specific fashion and react with different lupus Ags including B cell Ags and apoptotic cells. Their shared use of VH4-34 represents a unique system to understand the molecular basis of lupus autoreactivity. In this study, a large panel of recombinant 9G4+ mAbs from single naive and memory cells was generated and tested against B cells, apoptotic cells, and other Ags. Mutagenesis eliminated the framework-1 hydrophobic patch (HP) responsible for the 9G4 idiotype. The expression of the HP in unselected VH4-34 cells was assessed by deep sequencing. We found that 9G4 Abs recognize several Ags following two distinct structural patterns. B cell binding is dependent on the HP, whereas anti-nuclear Abs, apoptotic cells, and dsDNA binding are HP independent and correlate with positively charged H chain third CDR. The majority of mutated VH4-34 memory cells retain the HP, thereby suggesting selection by Ags that require this germline structure. Our findings show that the germline-encoded HP is compulsory for the anti–B cell reactivity largely associated with 9G4 Abs in SLE but is not required for reactivity against apoptotic cells, dsDNA, chromatin, anti-nuclear Abs, or cardiolipin. Given that the lupus memory compartment contains a majority of HP+ VH4-34 cells but decreased B cell reactivity, additional HP-dependent Ags must participate in the selection of this compartment. This study represents the first analysis, to our knowledge, of VH-restricted autoreactive B cells specifically expanded in SLE and provides the foundation to understand the antigenic forces at play in this disease.


Nature Communications | 2016

Long-lived antigen-induced IgM plasma cells demonstrate somatic mutations and contribute to long-term protection.

Caitlin Bohannon; Ryan Powers; Lakshmipriyadarshini Satyabhama; Ang Cui; Christopher Tipton; Miri Michaeli; Ioanna Skountzou; Robert S. Mittler; Steven H. Kleinstein; Ramit Mehr; Frances Eun-Hyung Lee; Ignacio Sanz; Joshy Jacob

Long-lived plasma cells are critical to humoral immunity as a lifelong source of protective antibodies. Antigen-activated B cells—with T-cell help—undergo affinity maturation within germinal centres and persist as long-lived IgG plasma cells in the bone marrow. Here we show that antigen-specific, induced IgM plasma cells also persist for a lifetime. Unlike long-lived IgG plasma cells, which develop in germinal centres and then home to the bone marrow, IgM plasma cells are primarily retained within the spleen and can develop even in the absence of germinal centres. Interestingly, their expressed IgV loci exhibit somatic mutations introduced by the activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID). However, these IgM plasma cells are probably not antigen-selected, as replacement mutations are spread through the variable segment and not enriched within the CDRs. Finally, antibodies from long-lived IgM plasma cells provide protective host immunity against a lethal virus challenge.


Cancer Discovery | 2017

TCR Repertoire Intratumor Heterogeneity in Localized Lung Adenocarcinomas: An Association with Predicted Neoantigen Heterogeneity and Postsurgical Recurrence

Alexandre Reuben; Rachel Gittelman; Jianjun Gao; Jiexin Zhang; Erik Yusko; Chang Jiun Wu; Ryan Emerson; Jianhua Zhang; Christopher Tipton; Jun Li; Kelly Quek; Vancheswaran Gopalakrishnan; Runzhe Chen; Luis Vence; Tina Cascone; Marissa Vignali; Junya Fujimoto; Jaime Rodriguez-Canales; Edwin R. Parra; Latasha Little; Curtis Gumbs; Marie Andrée Forget; Lorenzo Federico; Cara Haymaker; Carmen Behrens; Sharon Benzeno; Chantale Bernatchez; Boris Sepesi; Don L. Gibbons; Jennifer A. Wargo

Genomic intratumor heterogeneity (ITH) may be associated with postsurgical relapse of localized lung adenocarcinomas. Recently, mutations, through generation of neoantigens, were shown to alter tumor immunogenicity through T-cell responses. Here, we performed sequencing of the T-cell receptor (TCR) in 45 tumor regions from 11 localized lung adenocarcinomas and observed substantial intratumor differences in T-cell density and clonality with the majority of T-cell clones restricted to individual tumor regions. TCR ITH positively correlated with predicted neoantigen ITH, suggesting that spatial differences in the T-cell repertoire may be driven by distinct neoantigens in different tumor regions. Finally, a higher degree of TCR ITH was associated with an increased risk of postsurgical relapse and shorter disease-free survival, suggesting a potential clinical significance of T-cell repertoire heterogeneity.Significance: The present study provides insights into the ITH of the T-cell repertoire in localized lung adenocarcinomas and its potential biological and clinical impact. The results suggest that T-cell repertoire ITH may be tightly associated to genomic ITH and disease relapse. Cancer Discov; 7(10); 1088-97. ©2017 AACR.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1047.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2013

Protein Kinase Cβ Is Required for Lupus Development in Sle Mice

David Oleksyn; Mary Pulvino; Jiyong Zhao; Ravi Misra; Aram Vosoughi; Scott A. Jenks; Christopher Tipton; Frances Lund; George Schwartz; Bruce Goldman; Chandra Mohan; Kamal D. Mehta; Madhu Mehta; Michael Leitgets; Ignacio Sanz; Luojing Chen

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the requirement for protein kinase Cβ (PKCβ) in the development of lupus in mice, and to explore the potential of targeting PKCβ as a therapeutic strategy in lupus. METHODS Congenic mice bearing the disease loci Sle1 or Sle1 and Sle3, which represent different stages of severity in the development of lupus, were crossed with PKCβ-deficient mice. The effect of PKCβ deficiency in lupus development was analyzed. In addition, the effects of the PKCβ-specific inhibitor enzastaurin on the survival of B cells from mice with lupus and human 9G4-positive B cells as well as the in vivo effect of enzastaurin treatment on the development of lupus in Sle mice were investigated. RESULTS In Sle mice, PKCβ deficiency abrogated lupus-associated phenotypes, including high autoantibody levels, proteinuria, and histologic features of lupus nephritis. Significant decreases in spleen size and in the peritoneal B-1 cell population, reduced numbers of activated CD4 T cells, and normalized CD4:CD8 ratios were observed. PKCβ deficiency induced an anergic B cell phenotype and preferentially inhibited autoreactive plasma cells and autoantibodies in mice with lupus. Inhibition of PKCβ enhanced apoptosis of both B cells from Sle mice and human autoreactive B cells (9G4 positive). Treatment of Sle mice with the PKCβ-specific inhibitor enzastaurin prevented the development of lupus. CONCLUSION This study identifies PKCβ as a central mediator of lupus pathogenesis, suggesting that PKCβ represents a promising therapeutic target for the treatment of systemic lupus erythematosus. Moreover, the results indicate the feasibility of using a PKCβ inhibitor for the treatment of lupus.


Cancer immunology research | 2018

Robust Antitumor Responses Result from Local Chemotherapy and CTLA-4 Blockade

Charlotte E. Ariyan; Mary Sue Brady; R.H. Siegelbaum; Jian Hu; Danielle M. Bello; Jamie Rand; Charles Fisher; Robert A. Lefkowitz; Kathleen S. Panageas; Melissa Pulitzer; Marissa Vignali; Ryan Emerson; Christopher Tipton; Harlan Robins; Taha Merghoub; Jianda Yuan; Achim A. Jungbluth; Jorge Blando; Padmanee Sharma; Alexander Y. Rudensky; Jedd D. Wolchok; James P. Allison

Immunotherapy success depends on inflamed tumor microenvironments. In tumor models, inflammation induced by chemotherapy, combined with CTLA-4 blockade, improved survival rates. In a clinical trial, patients with melanoma showed a durable response to such combined therapy. Clinical responses to immunotherapy have been associated with augmentation of preexisting immune responses, manifested by heightened inflammation in the tumor microenvironment. However, many tumors have a noninflamed microenvironment, and response rates to immunotherapy in melanoma have been <50%. We approached this problem by utilizing immunotherapy (CTLA-4 blockade) combined with chemotherapy to induce local inflammation. In murine models of melanoma and prostate cancer, the combination of chemotherapy and CTLA-4 blockade induced a shift in the cellular composition of the tumor microenvironment, with infiltrating CD8+ and CD4+ T cells increasing the CD8/Foxp3 T-cell ratio. These changes were associated with improved survival of the mice. To translate these findings into a clinical setting, 26 patients with advanced melanoma were treated locally by isolated limb infusion with the nitrogen mustard alkylating agent melphalan followed by systemic administration of CTLA-4 blocking antibody (ipilimumab) in a phase II trial. This combination of local chemotherapy with systemic checkpoint blockade inhibitor resulted in a response rate of 85% at 3 months (62% complete and 23% partial response rate) and a 58% progression-free survival at 1 year. The clinical response was associated with increased T-cell infiltration, similar to that seen in the murine models. Together, our findings suggest that local chemotherapy combined with checkpoint blockade–based immunotherapy results in a durable response to cancer therapy. Cancer Immunol Res; 6(2); 189–200. ©2018 AACR.


Allergy | 2017

Nonlesional atopic dermatitis skin shares similar T‐cell clones with lesional tissues

Patrick M. Brunner; Ryan Emerson; Christopher Tipton; Sandra Garcet; Saakshi Khattri; Israel Coats; James G. Krueger; Emma Guttman-Yassky

Atopic dermatitis (AD) is characterized by robust immune activation. Various T‐cell subsets, including Th2/Th22 cells, are increased in lesional and nonlesional skin. However, there is conflicting literature on the diversity of the T‐cell receptor (TCR) repertoire in lesional AD, and its relation to nonlesional skin remains unclear.


Immunity | 2018

Distinct Effector B Cells Induced by Unregulated Toll-like Receptor 7 Contribute to Pathogenic Responses in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus

Scott A. Jenks; Kevin S. Cashman; Esther Zumaquero; Urko M. Marigorta; Aakash V. Patel; Xiaoqian Wang; Deepak Tomar; Matthew Woodruff; Zoe Simon; Regina Bugrovsky; Emily L. Blalock; Christopher D. Scharer; Christopher Tipton; Chungwen Wei; S. Sam Lim; Michelle Petri; Timothy B. Niewold; Jennifer H. Anolik; Greg Gibson; F. Eun-Hyung Lee; Jeremy M. Boss; Frances E. Lund; Ignacio Sanz

Graphical Abstract Figure. No caption available. SUMMARY Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) is characterized by B cells lacking IgD and CD27 (double negative; DN). We show that DN cell expansions reflected a subset of CXCR5‐ CD11c+ cells (DN2) representing pre‐plasma cells (PC). DN2 cells predominated in African‐American patients with active disease and nephritis, anti‐Smith and anti‐RNA autoantibodies. They expressed a T‐bet transcriptional network; increased Toll‐like receptor‐7 (TLR7); lacked the negative TLR regulator TRAF5; and were hyper‐responsive to TLR7. DN2 cells shared with activated naive cells (aNAV), phenotypic and functional features, and similar transcriptomes. Their PC differentiation and autoantibody production was driven by TLR7 in an interleukin‐21 (IL‐21)‐mediated fashion. An in vivo developmental link between aNAV, DN2 cells, and PC was demonstrated by clonal sharing. This study defines a distinct differentiation fate of autoreactive naive B cells into PC precursors with hyper‐responsiveness to innate stimuli, as well as establishes prominence of extra‐follicular B cell activation in SLE, and identifies therapeutic targets. HIGHLIGHTSAutoreactive CD27‐ IgD‐ CXCR5‐ CD11c+ (DN2) B cells expand in lupus patientsDN2 cells derive from naive cells and are poised to generate plasmablastsDN2 B cells are hyper‐responsive to Toll‐like receptor‐7 signalingThe properties of SLE DN2 B cells stem from distinct transcriptional networks &NA; The role of extrafollicular B cells in human systemic lupus is unknown. Jenks et al. define the main components of this pathway and its prominence in severe disease. Its activation is mediated by hyper‐responsiveness to Toll‐like receptor‐7 and leads to the generation of autoreactive antibody‐secreting plasmablasts.

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Ryan Emerson

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Marissa Vignali

University of Washington Medical Center

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Aissata Ongoiba

University of the Sciences

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Alexandre Reuben

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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