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Dive into the research topics where Dalam Ly is active.

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Featured researches published by Dalam Ly.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2013

CD1c tetramers detect ex vivo T cell responses to processed phosphomycoketide antigens

Dalam Ly; Anne Kasmar; Tan Yun Cheng; Annemieke de Jong; Shouxiong Huang; Sobhan Roy; Apoorva Bhatt; Ruben P. van Summeren; John D. Altman; William R. Jacobs; Erin J. Adams; Adriaan J. Minnaard; Steven A. Porcelli; D. Branch Moody

CD1c tetramers loaded with a phospholipid antigen from M. tuberculosis are recognized by human T cells.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2015

Bee venom processes human skin lipids for presentation by CD1a

E Bourgeois; Sumithra Subramaniam; Tan-Yun Cheng; Annemieke de Jong; Emilie Layre; Dalam Ly; Maryam Salimi; Annaliza Legaspi; Robert L. Modlin; Mariolina Salio; Vincenzo Cerundolo; D. Branch Moody; Graham S. Ogg

Bee and wasp venom generate small neoantigens via phospholipase A2 that activate human T cells via CD1a presentation.


PLOS ONE | 2012

NKT Cells Stimulated by Long Fatty Acyl Chain Sulfatides Significantly Reduces the Incidence of Type 1 Diabetes in Nonobese Diabetic Mice

Lakshmimathy Subramanian; Hartley Blumenfeld; Robert Tohn; Dalam Ly; Carlos Aguilera; Igor Maricic; Jan-Eric Månsson; Karsten Buschard; Vipin Kumar; Terry L. Delovitch

Sulfatide-reactive type II NKT cells have been shown to regulate autoimmunity and anti-tumor immunity. Although, two major isoforms of sulfatide, C16:0 and C24:0, are enriched in the pancreas, their relative role in autoimmune diabetes is not known. Here, we report that sulfatide/CD1d-tetramer+ cells accumulate in the draining pancreatic lymph nodes, and that treatment of NOD mice with sulfatide or C24:0 was more efficient than C16:0 in stimulating the NKT cell-mediated transfer of a delay in onset from T1D into NOD.Scid recipients. Using NOD.CD1d−/− mice, we show that this delay of T1D is CD1d-dependent. Interestingly, the latter delay or protection from T1D is associated with the enhanced secretion of IL-10 rather than IFN-g by C24:0-treated CD4+ T cells and the deviation of the islet-reactive diabetogenic T cell response. Both C16:0 and C24:0 sulfatide isoforms are unable to activate and expand type I iNKT cells. Collectively, these data suggest that C24:0 stimulated type II NKT cells may regulate protection from T1D by activating DCs to secrete IL-10 and suppress the activation and expansion of type I iNKT cells and diabetogenic T cells. Our results raise the possibility that C24:0 may be used therapeutically to delay the onset and protect from T1D in humans.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 2013

CD1a, CD1b, and CD1c in Immunity Against Mycobacteria

I. van Rhijn; Dalam Ly; D. Branch Moody

The CD1 system is composed of five types of human CD1 proteins, CD1a, CD1b, CD1c, CD1d, and CD1e, and their mammalian orthologs. Each type of CD1 protein has a distinct antigen binding groove and shows differing patterns of expression within cells and in different tissues. Here we review the molecular mechanisms by which CD1a, CD1b, and CD1c capture distinct classes of self- and mycobacterial antigens. We discuss how CD1-restricted T cells participate in the immune response, emphasizing new evidence for mycobacterial recognition in vivo in human and non-human models.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2014

The CD1 size problem: lipid antigens, ligands, and scaffolds

Dalam Ly; D. Branch Moody

Whereas research on CD1d has emphasized a few glycosyl ceramides, the broader family of four human CD1 antigen-presenting molecules binds hundreds of distinct self-lipids. Individual lipid types bind within CD1 grooves in different ways, such that they partially fill the groove, match the groove volume, or protrude substantially from the groove. These differing modes of binding can now be connected to differing immunological functions, as individual lipids can act as stimulatory antigens, inhibitory ligands, or space-filling scaffolds. Because each type of CD1 protein folds to produce antigen-binding grooves with differing sizes and shapes, CD1a, CD1b, CD1c, CD1d, and CD1e have distinct mechanisms of capturing self-lipids and exchanging them for foreign lipids. The size discrepancy between endogeneous lipids and groove volume is most pronounced for CD1b. Recent studies show that the large CD1b cavity can simultaneously bind two self-lipids, the antigen, and its scaffold lipid, which can be exchanged for one large bacterial lipid. In this review, we will highlight recent studies showing how cells regulate lipid antigen loading and the roles CD1 groove structures have in control of the presentation of chemically diverse lipids to T cells.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Molecular basis of mycobacterial lipid antigen presentation by CD1c and its recognition by αβ T cells

S Roy; Dalam Ly; Nan-Sheng Li; John D. Altman; Joseph A. Piccirilli; Moody Db; Erin J. Adams


Nature Medicine | 2006

RETRACTION: The autoimmune regulator (Aire) controls i NKT cell development and maturation

Qing-Sheng Mi; Zhong Bin Deng; Sunil K. Joshi; Zaizhao Wang; Li Zhou; Sarah Eckenrode; Ratanmani Joshi; Dalam Ly; Bing Yi; Terry L. Delovitch; Jin Xiong She


Clinical Immunology | 2010

Identification of Mycobacterial Phospholipid Antigen Reveals a Promiscuous CD1c-restricted T Cell Epitopes

Dalam Ly; Annemieke de Jong; Tan-Yun Cheng; Ruben P. van Summeren; Adriaan J. Minnaard; David Crich; Steven A. Porcelli; D. Branch Moody


Clinical Immunology | 2007

iNKT Cell Regulation of Type 1 Diabetes

Dalam Ly; Qing-Sheng Mi; Shabbir Hussain; Terry L. Delovitch; Steven A. Porcelli


Clinical Immunology | 2007

Innate Immune Modulation of Type 1 Diabetes with Glycosphingolipids

Dalam Ly; Terry L. Delovitch

Collaboration


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Terry L. Delovitch

University of Western Ontario

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D. Branch Moody

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Qing-Sheng Mi

Robarts Research Institute

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Annemieke de Jong

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Bing Yi

Georgia Regents University

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Jin Xiong She

Georgia Regents University

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Li Zhou

Georgia Regents University

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Ratanmani Joshi

Georgia Regents University

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Sarah Eckenrode

Georgia Regents University

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Steven A. Porcelli

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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