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Dive into the research topics where Dilan Dissanayake is active.

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Featured researches published by Dilan Dissanayake.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Natural killer cell activation enhances immune pathology and promotes chronic infection by limiting CD8+ T-cell immunity

Philipp A. Lang; Karl S. Lang; Haifeng C. Xu; Melanie Grusdat; Ian A. Parish; Mike Recher; Alisha R. Elford; Salim Dhanji; Namir Shaabani; Charles W. Tran; Dilan Dissanayake; Ramtin Rahbar; Magar Ghazarian; Anne Brüstle; Jason P. Fine; Peter W. Chen; Casey T. Weaver; Christoph S.N. Klose; Andreas Diefenbach; Dieter Häussinger; James R. Carlyle; Susan M. Kaech; Tak W. Mak; Pamela S. Ohashi

Infections with HIV, hepatitis B virus, and hepatitis C virus can turn into chronic infections, which currently affect more than 500 million patients worldwide. It is generally thought that virus-mediated T-cell exhaustion limits T-cell function, thus promoting chronic disease. Here we demonstrate that natural killer (NK) cells have a negative impact on the development of T-cell immunity by using the murine lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus. NK cell-deficient (Nfil3−/−, E4BP4−/−) mice exhibited a higher virus-specific T-cell response. In addition, NK cell depletion caused enhanced T-cell immunity in WT mice, which led to rapid virus control and prevented chronic infection in lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus clone 13- and reduced viral load in DOCILE-infected animals. Further experiments showed that NKG2D triggered regulatory NK cell functions, which were mediated by perforin, and limited T-cell responses. Therefore, we identified an important role of regulatory NK cells in limiting T-cell immunity during virus infection.


Nature Medicine | 2009

Adjuvant IL-7 antagonizes multiple cellular and molecular inhibitory networks to enhance immunotherapies

Marc Pellegrini; Thomas Calzascia; Alisha R. Elford; Arda Shahinian; Amy E Lin; Dilan Dissanayake; Salim Dhanji; Linh T. Nguyen; Matthew A. Gronski; Michel Morre; Brigitte Assouline; Katharina Lahl; Tim Sparwasser; Pamela S. Ohashi; Tak W. Mak

Identifying key factors that enhance immune responses is crucial for manipulating immunity to tumors. We show that after a vaccine-induced immune response, adjuvant interleukin-7 (IL-7) improves antitumor responses and survival in an animal model. The improved immune response is associated with increased IL-6 production and augmented T helper type 17 cell differentiation. Furthermore, IL-7 modulates the expression of two ubiquitin ligases: Casitas B-lineage lymphoma b (Cbl-b), a negative regulator of T cell activation, is repressed, and SMAD-specific E3 ubiquitin protein ligase-2 (Smurf2) is enhanced, which antagonizes transforming growth factor-β signaling. Notably, we show that although short term IL-7 therapy potently enhances vaccine-mediated immunity, in the absence of vaccination it is inefficient in promoting antitumor immune responses, despite inducing homeostatic proliferation of T cells. The ability of adjuvant IL-7 to antagonize inhibitory networks at the cellular and molecular level has major implications for immunotherapy in the treatment of tumors.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

Lysosomal disruption preferentially targets acute myeloid leukemia cells and progenitors

Mahadeo A. Sukhai; Swayam Prabha; Rose Hurren; Angela Rutledge; Anna Y. Lee; Shrivani Sriskanthadevan; Hong Sun; Xiaoming Wang; Marko Skrtic; Ayesh Seneviratne; Maria Cusimano; Bozhena Jhas; Marcela Gronda; Neil MacLean; Eunice E. Cho; Paul A. Spagnuolo; Sumaiya Sharmeen; Marinella Gebbia; Malene L. Urbanus; Kolja Eppert; Dilan Dissanayake; Alexia Jonet; Alexandra Dassonville-Klimpt; Xiaoming Li; Alessandro Datti; Pamela S. Ohashi; Jeff Wrana; Ian Rogers; Pascal Sonnet; William Y. Ellis

Despite efforts to understand and treat acute myeloid leukemia (AML), there remains a need for more comprehensive therapies to prevent AML-associated relapses. To identify new therapeutic strategies for AML, we screened a library of on- and off-patent drugs and identified the antimalarial agent mefloquine as a compound that selectively kills AML cells and AML stem cells in a panel of leukemia cell lines and in mice. Using a yeast genome-wide functional screen for mefloquine sensitizers, we identified genes associated with the yeast vacuole, the homolog of the mammalian lysosome. Consistent with this, we determined that mefloquine disrupts lysosomes, directly permeabilizes the lysosome membrane, and releases cathepsins into the cytosol. Knockdown of the lysosomal membrane proteins LAMP1 and LAMP2 resulted in decreased cell viability, as did treatment of AML cells with known lysosome disrupters. Highlighting a potential therapeutic rationale for this strategy, leukemic cells had significantly larger lysosomes compared with normal cells, and leukemia-initiating cells overexpressed lysosomal biogenesis genes. These results demonstrate that lysosomal disruption preferentially targets AML cells and AML progenitor cells, providing a rationale for testing lysosomal disruption as a novel therapeutic strategy for AML.


Nature Immunology | 2013

ARIH2 is essential for embryogenesis, and its hematopoietic deficiency causes lethal activation of the immune system

Amy E Lin; Gregor Ebert; Yongkai Ow; Simon Preston; Jesse G. Toe; James Cooney; Hamish W. Scott; Masato Sasaki; Samuel D. Saibil; Dilan Dissanayake; Raymond H. Kim; Andrew Wakeham; Annick You-Ten; Arda Shahinian; Gordon S. Duncan; Jennifer Silvester; Pamela S. Ohashi; Tak W. Mak; Marc Pellegrini

The E3 ligase ARIH2 has an unusual structure and mechanism of elongating ubiquitin chains. To understand its physiological role, we generated gene-targeted mice deficient in ARIH2. ARIH2 deficiency resulted in the embryonic death of C57BL/6 mice. On a mixed genetic background, the lethality was attenuated, with some mice surviving beyond weaning and then succumbing to an aggressive multiorgan inflammatory response. We found that in dendritic cells (DCs), ARIH2 caused degradation of the inhibitor IκBβ in the nucleus, which abrogated its ability to sequester, protect and transcriptionally coactivate the transcription factor subunit p65 in the nucleus. Loss of ARIH2 caused dysregulated activation of the transcription factor NF-κB in DCs, which led to lethal activation of the immune system in ARIH2-sufficent mice reconstituted with ARIH2-deficient hematopoietic stem cells. Our data have therapeutic implications for targeting ARIH2 function.


Journal of Immunology | 2015

miR-155 Upregulation in Dendritic Cells Is Sufficient To Break Tolerance In Vivo by Negatively Regulating SHIP1.

Evan F. Lind; Douglas G. Millar; Dilan Dissanayake; Jonathan C. Savage; Natasha K. Grimshaw; William G. Kerr; Pamela S. Ohashi

TLR-induced maturation of dendritic cells (DCs) leads to the production of proinflammatory cytokines as well as the upregulation of various molecules involved in T cell activation. These are believed to be the critical events that account for the induction of the adaptive immune response. In this study, we have examined the role of miR-155 in DC function and the induction of immunity. Using a model in which the transfer of self-Ag–pulsed, TLR-matured DCs can induce a functional CD8 T cell response and autoimmunity, we find that DCs lacking miR-155 have an impaired ability to break immune tolerance. Importantly, transfer of self- Ag-pulsed DCs overexpressing miR-155 was sufficient to break tolerance in the absence of TLR stimuli. Although these unstimulated DCs induced T cell function in vivo, there was no evidence for the upregulation of costimulatory ligands or cytokine secretion. Further analysis showed that miR-155 influenced the level of the phosphatase SHIP1 in DCs and that the lack of SHIP1 in DCs was sufficient to break T cell tolerance in vivo, again in the absence of TLR-induced DC maturation. Our study demonstrates that the overexpression of miR-155 in DCs is a critical event that is alone sufficient to break self-tolerance and promote a CD8-mediated autoimmune response in vivo. This process is independent of the induction of conventional DC maturation markers, indicating that miR-155 regulation of SHIP represents a unique axis that regulates DC function in vivo.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Different Toll-Like Receptor Stimuli Have a Profound Impact on Cytokines Required to Break Tolerance and Induce Autoimmunity

Albert Lin; Dilan Dissanayake; Salim Dhanji; Alisha R. Elford; Pamela S. Ohashi

Although toll-like receptor (TLR) signals are critical for promoting antigen presenting cell maturation, it remains unclear how stimulation via different TLRs influence dendritic cell (DC) function and the subsequent adaptive response in vivo. Furthermore, the relationship between TLR-induced cytokine production by DCs and the consequences on the induction of a functional immune response is not clear. We have established a murine model to examine whether TLR3 or TLR4 mediated DC maturation has an impact on the cytokines required to break tolerance and induce T-cell-mediated autoimmunity. Our study demonstrates that IL-12 is not absolutely required for the induction of a CD8 T-cell-mediated tissue specific immune response, but rather the requirement for IL-12 is determined by the stimuli used to mature the DCs. Furthermore, we found that IFNα is a critical pathogenic component of the cytokine milieu that circumvents the requirement for IL-12 in the induction of autoimmunity. These studies illustrate how different TLR stimuli have an impact on DC function and the induction of immunity.


Blood | 2011

Lysosomal Disruption Selectively Targets Leukemia Cells and Leukemia Stem Cells Through A Mechanism Related to Increased Reactive Oxygen Species Production

Mahadeo A. Sukhai; Rose Hurren; Angela Rutledge; Bozena Livak; Xiaoming Wang; Ayesh Seneviratne; Maria Cusimano; Marinella Gebbia; Marko Skrtic; Hong Sun; Marcela Gronda; Paul A. Spagnuolo; Malene L. Urbanus; Kolja Eppert; Dilan Dissanayake; Xiaoming Li; Thomas Sun; Frederick Vizeacoumar; Alessandro Datti; Pamela S. Ohashi; Jeff Wrana; Ian Rogers; Mark D. Minden; Jean C.Y. Wang; John E. Dick; Seth J. Corey; Corey Nislow; Guri Giaever; Aaron D. Schimmer


PLOS ONE | 2014

Induction of diabetes in P14/RIP-gp and RIP-gp mice using peptide/adjuvant vaccines.

Dilan Dissanayake; Kiichi Murakami; Michael D. Tran; Alisha R. Elford; Douglas G. Millar; Pamela S. Ohashi


Journal of Immunology | 2010

Regulation of dendritic cell function and autoimmunity by microRNA-155

Evan F. Lind; Dilan Dissanayake; Pamela S. Ohashi


Cytokine | 2010

PS1-13 LT-βετα-R Signaling in dendritic cells induces a type I IFN response that integrates with CD40-derived signals for cross-priming of CD8+ T cells

Leslie Summers deLuca; Dennis Ng; Yunfei Gao; Albert Lin; Dilan Dissanayake; Ramtin Rahbar; Pamela S. Ohashi; Jennifer L. Gommerman

Collaboration


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Pamela S. Ohashi

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Alisha R. Elford

Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

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Salim Dhanji

University Health Network

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Tak W. Mak

University Health Network

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Amy E Lin

University Health Network

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Arda Shahinian

Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

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Hong Sun

University Health Network

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Marcela Gronda

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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