Daniel R. Beisner
University of California, San Diego
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Publication
Featured researches published by Daniel R. Beisner.
Nature Immunology | 2009
Yann M. Kerdiles; Daniel R. Beisner; Roberto Tinoco; Anne S. Dejean; Diego H. Castrillon; Ronald A. DePinho; Stephen M. Hedrick
Foxo transcription factors have a conserved role in the adaptation of cells and organisms to nutrient and growth factor availability. Here we show that Foxo1 has a crucial, nonredundant role in T cells. In naive T cells, Foxo1 controlled the expression of the adhesion molecule L-selectin, the chemokine receptor CCR7 and the transcription factor Klf2, and its deletion was sufficient to alter lymphocyte trafficking. Furthermore, Foxo1 deficiency resulted in a severe defect in interleukin 7 receptor α-chain (IL-7Rα) expression associated with its ability to bind an Il7r enhancer. Finally, growth factor withdrawal induced a Foxo1-dependent increase in Sell, Klf2 and Il7r expression. These data suggest that Foxo1 regulates the homeostasis and life span of naive T cells by sensing growth factor availability and regulating homing and survival signals.
Nature Immunology | 2009
Anne S. Dejean; Daniel R. Beisner; Irene L. Ch'en; Yann M. Kerdiles; Anna Babour; Karen C. Arden; Diego H. Castrillon; Ronald A. DePinho; Stephen M. Hedrick
Foxo transcription factors regulate cell cycle progression, cell survival and DNA-repair pathways. Here we demonstrate that deficiency in Foxo3 resulted in greater expansion of T cell populations after viral infection. This exaggerated expansion was not T cell intrinsic. Instead, it was caused by the enhanced capacity of Foxo3-deficient dendritic cells to sustain T cell viability by producing more interleukin 6. Stimulation of dendritic cells mediated by the coinhibitory molecule CTLA-4 induced nuclear localization of Foxo3, which in turn inhibited the production of interleukin 6 and tumor necrosis factor. Thus, Foxo3 acts to constrain the production of key inflammatory cytokines by dendritic cells and to control T cell survival.
Journal of Immunology | 2005
Daniel R. Beisner; Irene L. Ch’en; Ravi V. Kolla; Alexander Hoffmann; Stephen M. Hedrick
Caspase-8 is an essential component of death receptor-mediated apoptosis. Along with Fas-associated death domain protein, it is also essential for T cell proliferation in response to antigenic or mitogenic stimuli. To determine whether caspase-8 is also required for B cell proliferation, we generated mice with a B cell-specific Casp8 deficiency. Unlike T cells, caspase-8 was not required for Ag receptor-driven proliferation or Ab formation. Rather, Casp8-deficient B cells failed to proliferate in response to dsRNA and LPS, ligands for TLR3 and TLR4, respectively, but responded normally to the TLR9 agonist CpG DNA. Similarly, Ab production to trinitrophenol-LPS was selectively reduced in B cell-specific Casp8-deficient mice. The activation of NF-κB or IFN regulatory factor 3 was found to be unaffected by the loss of caspase-8, implicating it in a novel pathway important for some forms of innate immunity mediated by B cells.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Irene L. Ch'en; Daniel R. Beisner; Alexei Degterev; Candace Lynch; Junying Yuan; Alexander Hoffmann; Stephen M. Hedrick
T cells enigmatically require caspase-8, an inducer of apoptosis, for antigen-driven expansion and effective antiviral responses, and yet the pathways responsible for this effect have been elusive. A defect in caspase-8 expression does not affect progression through the cell cycle but causes an abnormally high rate of cell death that is distinct from apoptosis and does not involve a loss of NFκB activation. Instead, antigen or mitogen activated Casp8-deficient T cells exhibit an alternative type of cell death similar to programmed necrosis that depends on receptor interacting protein (Ripk1). The selective genetic ablation of caspase-8, NFκB, and Ripk1, reveals two forms of cell death that can regulate virus-specific T cell expansion.
Journal of Immunology | 2003
Daniel R. Beisner; Isaac H. Chu; Adrian F. Arechiga; Stephen M. Hedrick; Craig M. Walsh
Fas-associated death domain (FADD) is a death domain containing cytoplasmic adapter molecule required for the induction of apoptosis by death receptors. Paradoxically, FADD also plays a crucial role in the development and proliferation of T cells. Using T cells from mice expressing a dominant negative form of FADD (FADDdd), activation with anti-TCR Ab and costimulation or exogenous cytokines is profoundly diminished. This is also seen in wild-type primary T cells transduced with the same transgene, demonstrating that FADD signaling is required in normally differentiated T cells. The defective proliferation does not appear to be related to the early events associated with TCR stimulation. Rather, with a block in FADD signaling, stimulated T cells exhibit a high rate of cell death corresponding to the initiation of cell division. Although CD4 T cells exhibit a moderate deficiency, this effect is most profound in CD8 T cells. In vivo, the extent of this defective accumulation is most apparent; lymphocytic choriomenigitis virus-infected FADDdd-expressing mice completely fail to mount an Ag-specific response. These results show that, in a highly regulated fashion, FADD, and most likely caspases, can transduce either a signal for survival or one that leads directly to apoptosis and that the balance between these opposing outcomes is crucial to adaptive immunity.
Journal of Immunology | 2009
Andrew Todd Miller; Daniel R. Beisner; Daorong Liu; Michael P. Cooke
Inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate 3-kinase B (or Itpkb) converts inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate to inositol 1,3,4,5-tetrakisphosphate upon Ag receptor activation and controls the fate and function of lymphocytes. To determine the role of Itpkb in B cell tolerance, Itpkb−/− mice were crossed to transgenic mice that express a BCR specific for hen egg lysozyme (IgHEL). B cells from Itpkb−/− IgHEL mice possess an anergic phenotype, hypoproliferate in response to cognate Ag, and yet they exhibit enhanced Ag-induced calcium signaling. In IgHEL transgenic mice that also express soluble HEL, lack of Itpkb converts anergy induction to deletion. These data establish Itpkb as a negative regulator of BCR signaling that controls the fate of developing B cells and tolerance induction.
Archive | 2013
Stephen M. Hedrick; Daniel R. Beisner; Irene L. Ch; Ravi V. Kolla
Journal of Immunology | 2013
Daniel R. Beisner; Petra Langerak; Albert Parker; Carol Dahlberg; Francella Otero; Laurent Poirot; Whitney Barnes; Mike Young; Sherry Niessen; Tim Wiltshire; Ursula Bodendorf; Bruno Martoglio; Michael P. Cooke
Journal of Immunology | 2012
Andrew D. Miller; Carol Dahlberg; Albert Parker; Christian Schmedt; Daniel R. Beisner; Martin Gosling
Archive | 2010
Alexander Hoffmann; Stephen M. Hedrick; Daniel R. Beisner; Irene L. Ch; Ravi V. Kolla