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Dive into the research topics where David C. Wraith is active.

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Featured researches published by David C. Wraith.


Journal of Immunology | 2004

IL-10-Secreting Regulatory T Cells Do Not Express Foxp3 but Have Comparable Regulatory Function to Naturally Occurring CD4+CD25+ Regulatory T Cells

Pedro L. Vieira; Jillian R. Christensen; Sophie Minaee; Emma J. O’Neill; Franck J. Barrat; Andre Boonstra; Thomas Barthlott; Brigitta Stockinger; David C. Wraith; Anne O’Garra

Regulatory T cells (TReg) control immune responses to self and nonself Ags. The relationship between Ag-driven IL-10-secreting TReg (IL-10-TReg) and naturally occurring CD4+CD25+ TReg is as yet unclear. We show that mouse IL-10-TReg obtained using either in vitro or in vivo regimens of antigenic stimulation did not express the CD4+CD25+ TReg-associated transcription factor Foxp3. However, despite the absence of Foxp3 expression, homogeneous populations of IL-10-TReg inhibited the in vitro proliferation of CD4+CD25− T cells with a similar efficiency to that of CD4+CD25+ TReg. This inhibition of T cell proliferation by IL-10-TReg was achieved through an IL-10-independent mechanism as seen for CD4+CD25+ TReg and was overcome by exogenous IL-2. Both IL-10-TReg and CD4+CD25+ TReg were similar in that they produced little to no IL-2. These data show that Foxp3 expression is not a prerequisite for IL-10-TReg activity in vitro or in vivo, and suggest that IL-10-TReg and naturally occurring CD4+CD25+ TReg may have distinct origins.


Immunity | 1995

Low avidity recognition of self-antigen by T cells permits escape from central tolerance.

George Y. Liu; Paul J. Fairchild; Richard M. Smith; John R. Prowle; Dimitris Kioussis; David C. Wraith

The immunodominant epitope of myelin basic protein, Ac1-9, is encephalitogenic in H-2u mice. We have previously demonstrated that this epitope displays low affinity for I-Au and have suggested that the avidity of T cell recognition in the thymus may be compromised, enabling autoreactive T cells to escape self-tolerance. We have addressed this hypothesis directly by constructing transgenic mice expressing an encephalitogenic T cell receptor (TCR). Parenteral administration of Ac1-9 had no discernable impact on developing thymocytes. In contrast, peptide analogs displaying far higher affinity for I-Au, provoked deletion of CD4+ CD8+ cells and transient down-regulation of the TCR by mature CD4+ CD8- thymocytes. The use of analogs of intermediate affinity permitted a margin of error to be defined for the induction of tolerance and confirmed that the affinity of Ac1-9 lies well below the critical threshold.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

Cutting Edge: Th1 Cells Facilitate the Entry of Th17 Cells to the Central Nervous System during Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis

Richard A. O'Connor; Catriona T. Prendergast; Catherine A. Sabatos; Clement W. Z. Lau; Melanie D. Leech; David C. Wraith; Stephen M. Anderton

It has recently been proposed that experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, once considered the classical Th1 disease, is predominantly Th17 driven. In this study we show that myelin-reactive Th1 preparations devoid of contaminating IL-17+ cells are highly pathogenic. In contrast, Th17 preparations lacking IFN-γ+ cells do not cause disease. Our key observation is that only Th1 cells can access the noninflamed CNS. Once Th1 cells establish the experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis lesion, Th17 cells appear in the CNS. These data shed important new light on the ability of Th1 vs Th17 cells to access inflamed vs normal tissue. Because the IL-17-triggered release of chemokines by stromal cells could attract many other immune cells, allowing Th17 cells to access the tissues only under conditions of inflammation may be a key process limiting (auto)immune pathology. This has major implications for the design of therapeutic interventions, many of which are now aiming at Th17 rather than Th1 cells.


Journal of Immunology | 2003

Role for IL-10 in Suppression Mediated by Peptide-Induced Regulatory T Cells In Vivo

Anette Sundstedt; Emma J. O'Neill; Kirsty S. Nicolson; David C. Wraith

Regulatory CD4+ T cells were induced in the Tg4 TCR transgenic mouse specific for the N-terminal peptide (Ac1-9) of myelin basic protein by intranasal administration of a high-affinity MHC-binding analog (Ac1-9[4Y]). Peptide-induced tolerant cells (PItol) were anergic, failed to produce IL-2, but responded to Ag by secretion of IL-10. PItol cells were predominantly CD25− and CTLA-4+ and their anergic state was reversed by addition of IL-2 in vitro. PItol cells suppressed the response of naive Tg4 cells both in vitro and in vivo. The in vitro suppression mediated by these cells was not reversed by cytokine neutralization and was cell-cell contact-dependent. However, suppression of proliferation and IL-2 production by PItol cells in vivo was abrogated by neutralization of IL-10. These results emphasize an important role for IL-10 in the function of peptide-induced regulatory T cells in vivo and highlight the caution required in extrapolating mechanisms of T regulatory cell function from in vitro studies.


The Lancet | 2003

Vaccination and autoimmune disease: what is the evidence?

David C. Wraith; Michel Goldman; Paul-Henri Lambert

As many as one in 20 people in Europe and North America have some form of autoimmune disease. These diseases arise in genetically predisposed individuals but require an environmental trigger. Of the many potential environmental factors, infections are the most likely cause. Microbial antigens can induce cross-reactive immune responses against self-antigens, whereas infections can non-specifically enhance their presentation to the immune system. The immune system uses fail-safe mechanisms to suppress infection-associated tissue damage and thus limits autoimmune responses. The association between infection and autoimmune disease has, however, stimulated a debate as to whether such diseases might also be triggered by vaccines. Indeed there are numerous claims and counter claims relating to such a risk. Here we review the mechanisms involved in the induction of autoimmunity and assess the implications for vaccination in human beings.


Nature Immunology | 2002

Destructive processing by asparagine endopeptidase limits presentation of a dominant T cell epitope in MBP.

Bénédicte Manoury; Daniela Mazzeo; Lars Fugger; Nick Viner; Mary Ponsford; Heather Streeter; Graziella Mazza; David C. Wraith; Colin Watts

Little is known about the processing of putative human autoantigens and why tolerance is established to some T cell epitopes but not others. Here we show that a principal human HLA-DR2–restricted epitope—amino acids 85–99 of myelin basic protein, MBP(85–99)—contains a processing site for the cysteine protease asparagine endopeptidase (AEP). Presentation of this epitope by human antigen-presenting cells is inversely proportional to the amount of cellular AEP activity: inhibition of AEP in living cells greatly enhances presentation of the MBP(85–99) epitope, whereas overexpression of AEP diminishes presentation. These results indicate that central tolerance to this encephalitogenic MBP epitope may not be established because destructive processing limits its display in the thymus. Consistent with this hypothesis, AEP is expressed abundantly in thymic antigen-presenting cells.


Gene | 1993

Immunological properties of foreign peptides in multiple display on a filamentous bacteriophage

Anne E. Willis; Richard N. Perham; David C. Wraith

The genome of bacteriophage fd has been engineered to permit construction of hybrid virus particles in which the wild-type major coat protein (gpVIII) subunits were interspersed with coat proteins displaying one or other of two foreign peptides (fdMAL1, sequence NANPNANPNANP or fdMAL2, sequence NDDSYIPSAEKI) in the exposed N-terminal segments [Greenwood et al., J. Mol. Biol. 220 (1991) 821-827]. These sequences represent major antigenic determinants of the circumsporozoite protein of the malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum. The peptide epitopes in the hybrid bacteriophages were found to be strongly immunogenic in four different strains of mice without the use of external adjuvants, and the antibodies (Ab) were highly specific to the individual epitopes in ELISA assays. When tested in nude (nu/nu) and heterozygote (nu +/-) BALB/c mice, the immune response was found to be T-cell dependent and to undergo class-switching from IgM to IgG. Proliferation assays of T-cells taken from lymph nodes of BALB/c mice injected with bacteriophage particles in the presence or absence of Freunds complete adjuvant indicated no difference in the immune response. This way of generating Ab against peptide epitopes is simpler and much less expensive than the conventional method of peptide synthesis and coupling to a carrier protein for injection. The specificity of the immune response, the ability to recruit helper T-cells and the lack of need for external adjuvants suggest that it will also be an inexpensive and simple route to the production of effective vaccines.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008

Ectopic expression of neural autoantigen in mouse liver suppresses experimental autoimmune neuroinflammation by inducing antigen-specific Tregs

Stefan Lüth; Samuel Huber; Christoph Schramm; Thorsten Buch; Stefan Zander; Christine Stadelmann; Wolfgang Brück; David C. Wraith; Johannes Herkel; Ansgar W. Lohse

Tregs are important mediators of immune tolerance to self antigens, and it has been suggested that Treg inactivation may cause autoimmune disease. Therefore, immunotherapy approaches that aim to restore or expand autoantigen-specific Treg activity might be beneficial for the treatment of autoimmune disease. Here we report that Treg-mediated suppression of autoimmune disease can be achieved in vivo by taking advantage of the ability of the liver to promote immune tolerance. Expression of the neural autoantigen myelin basic protein (MBP) in the liver was accomplished stably in liver-specific MBP transgenic mice and transiently using gene transfer to liver cells in vivo. Such ectopic MBP expression induced protection from autoimmune neuroinflammation in a mouse model of multiple sclerosis. Protection from autoimmunity was mediated by MBP-specific CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ Tregs, as demonstrated by the ability of these cells to prevent disease when adoptively transferred into nontransgenic mice and to suppress conventional CD4+CD25- T cell proliferation after antigen-specific stimulation with MBP in vitro. The generation of MBP-specific CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ Tregs in vivo depended on expression of MBP in the liver, but not in skin, and occurred by TGF-beta-dependent peripheral conversion from conventional non-Tregs. Our findings indicate that autoantigen expression in the liver may generate autoantigen-specific Tregs. Thus, targeting of autoantigens to hepatocytes may be a novel approach to prevention or treatment of autoimmune diseases.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2009

Negative feedback control of the autoimmune response through antigen-induced differentiation of IL-10–secreting Th1 cells

Leona Gabryšová; Kirsty S. Nicolson; Heather Streeter; Johan Verhagen; Catherine A. Sabatos-Peyton; David J Morgan; David C. Wraith

Regulation of the immune response to self- and foreign antigens is vitally important for limiting immune pathology associated with both infections and hypersensitivity conditions. Control of autoimmune conditions can be reinforced by tolerance induction with peptide epitopes, but the mechanism is not currently understood. Repetitive intranasal administration of soluble peptide induces peripheral tolerance in myelin basic protein (MBP)–specific TCR transgenic mice. This is characterized by the presence of anergic, interleukin (IL)-10–secreting CD4+ T cells with regulatory function (IL-10 T reg cells). The differentiation pathway of peptide-induced IL-10 T reg cells was investigated. CD4+ T cells became anergic after their second encounter with a high-affinity MBP peptide analogue. Loss of proliferative capacity correlated with a switch from the Th1-associated cytokines IL-2 and interferon (IFN)-γ to the regulatory cytokine IL-10. Nevertheless, IL-10 T reg cells retained the capacity to produce IFN-γ and concomitantly expressed T-bet, demonstrating their Th1 origin. IL-10 T reg cells suppressed dendritic cell maturation, prevented Th1 cell differentiation, and thereby created a negative feedback loop for Th1-driven immune pathology. These findings demonstrate that Th1 responses can be self-limiting in the context of peripheral tolerance to a self-antigen.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2013

Regulation of adaptive immunity; the role of interleukin-10.

T. H. Sky Ng; Graham J. Britton; Elaine V. Hill; Johan Verhagen; Bronwen R. Burton; David C. Wraith

Since the discovery of interleukin-10 (IL-10) in the 1980s, a large body of work has led to its recognition as a pleiotropic immunomodulatory cytokine that affects both the innate and adaptive immune systems. IL-10 is produced by a wide range of cell types, but for the purposes of this review we shall focus on IL-10 secreted by CD4+ T cells. Here we describe the importance of IL-10 as a mediator of suppression used by both FoxP3+ and FoxP3− T regulatory cells. Moreover, we discuss the molecular events leading to the induction of IL-10 secretion in T helper cell subsets, where it acts as a pivotal negative feedback mechanism. Finally we discuss how a greater understanding of this principle has allowed for the design of more efficient, antigen-specific immunotherapy strategies to exploit this natural phenomenon clinically.

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Johan Verhagen

Swiss Institute of Allergy and Asthma Research

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