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Dive into the research topics where Donna K. Finch is active.

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Featured researches published by Donna K. Finch.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2015

Oxidative stress–induced mitochondrial dysfunction drives inflammation and airway smooth muscle remodeling in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Coen Wiegman; Charalambos Michaeloudes; Gulammehdi Haji; Priyanka Narang; Colin Clarke; Kirsty Russell; Wuping Bao; Stelios Pavlidis; Peter J. Barnes; Justin Kanerva; Anton Bittner; Navin Rao; Michael P. Murphy; Paul Kirkham; Kian Fan Chung; Ian M. Adcock; Christopher E. Brightling; Donna E. Davies; Donna K. Finch; Andrew J. Fisher; Alasdair Gaw; Alan J. Knox; Ruth J. Mayer; Michael I. Polkey; Michael Salmon; David Singh

Background Inflammation and oxidative stress play critical roles in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Mitochondrial oxidative stress might be involved in driving the oxidative stress–induced pathology. Objective We sought to determine the effects of oxidative stress on mitochondrial function in the pathophysiology of airway inflammation in ozone-exposed mice and human airway smooth muscle (ASM) cells. Methods Mice were exposed to ozone, and lung inflammation, airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR), and mitochondrial function were determined. Human ASM cells were isolated from bronchial biopsy specimens from healthy subjects, smokers, and patients with COPD. Inflammation and mitochondrial function in mice and human ASM cells were measured with and without the presence of the mitochondria-targeted antioxidant MitoQ. Results Mice exposed to ozone, a source of oxidative stress, had lung inflammation and AHR associated with mitochondrial dysfunction and reflected by decreased mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm), increased mitochondrial oxidative stress, and reduced mitochondrial complex I, III, and V expression. Reversal of mitochondrial dysfunction by the mitochondria-targeted antioxidant MitoQ reduced inflammation and AHR. ASM cells from patients with COPD have reduced ΔΨm, adenosine triphosphate content, complex expression, basal and maximum respiration levels, and respiratory reserve capacity compared with those from healthy control subjects, whereas mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels were increased. Healthy smokers were intermediate between healthy nonsmokers and patients with COPD. Hydrogen peroxide induced mitochondrial dysfunction in ASM cells from healthy subjects. MitoQ and Tiron inhibited TGF-β–induced ASM cell proliferation and CXCL8 release. Conclusions Mitochondrial dysfunction in patients with COPD is associated with excessive mitochondrial ROS levels, which contribute to enhanced inflammation and cell hyperproliferation. Targeting mitochondrial ROS represents a promising therapeutic approach in patients with COPD.


PLOS ONE | 2011

IL-1α/IL-1R1 Expression in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Mechanistic Relevance to Smoke-Induced Neutrophilia in Mice

Fernando Botelho; Carla M. T. Bauer; Donna K. Finch; Jake K. Nikota; Caleb C. J. Zavitz; Ashling Kelly; Kristen N. Lambert; Sian Piper; Martyn L. Foster; James J.P. Goldring; Jadwiga A. Wedzicha; Jennifer Bassett; Jonathan Bramson; Yoichiro Iwakura; Matthew A. Sleeman; Roland Kolbeck; Anthony J. Coyle; Alison A. Humbles; Martin R. Stämpfli

Background Cigarette smoking is the main risk factor for the development of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Despite this, the cellular and molecular mechanisms that contribute to COPD pathogenesis are still poorly understood. Methodology and Principal Findings The objective of this study was to assess IL-1 α and β expression in COPD patients and to investigate their respective roles in perpetuating cigarette smoke-induced inflammation. Functional studies were pursued in smoke-exposed mice using gene-deficient animals, as well as blocking antibodies for IL-1α and β. Here, we demonstrate an underappreciated role for IL-1α expression in COPD. While a strong correlation existed between IL-1α and β levels in patients during stable disease and periods of exacerbation, neutrophilic inflammation was shown to be IL-1α-dependent, and IL-1β- and caspase-1-independent in a murine model of cigarette smoke exposure. As IL-1α was predominantly expressed by hematopoietic cells in COPD patients and in mice exposed to cigarette smoke, studies pursued in bone marrow chimeric mice demonstrated that the crosstalk between IL-1α+ hematopoietic cells and the IL-1R1+ epithelial cells regulates smoke-induced inflammation. IL-1α/IL-1R1-dependent activation of the airway epithelium also led to exacerbated inflammatory responses in H1N1 influenza virus infected smoke-exposed mice, a previously reported model of COPD exacerbation. Conclusions and Significance This study provides compelling evidence that IL-1α is central to the initiation of smoke-induced neutrophilic inflammation and suggests that IL-1α/IL-1R1 targeted therapies may be relevant for limiting inflammation and exacerbations in COPD.


European Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

Effects of CXCL13 inhibition on lymphoid follicles in models of autoimmune disease

Donna K. Finch; Rachel Ettinger; Jodi L. Karnell; Ronald Herbst; Matthew A. Sleeman

The chemokine CXCL13 has a key role in secondary lymphoid tissue orchestration and lymphoid neogenesis. Transgenic mice deficient in CXCL13 or its receptor CXCR5 have severely impaired lymph node development, lack peritoneal B‐lymphocytes and are deficient in circulating antibodies to common bacterial antigens. However, total circulating numbers of B‐lymphocytes are slightly elevated and humoral responses to T‐dependent or blood‐borne antigens are relatively normal. Lymphoid neogenesis is an aberrant process that occurs in chronically inflamed tissue and provides a microenvironment supportive of pathogenic B‐cell survival and activation. Here, we describe the impact of therapeutic dosing of a CXCL13 antibody in a mouse model of arthritis, and detail the contribution CXCL13 makes to lymphoid follicle microenvironment, without affecting humoral immune responses.


Blood | 2013

Rituximab causes a polarization of B cells that augments its therapeutic function in NK-cell–mediated antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity

Dominika Rudnicka; Anna Oszmiana; Donna K. Finch; Ian Strickland; Darren Schofield; David Lowe; Matthew A. Sleeman; Daniel M. Davis

Rituximab, which binds CD20 on B cells, is one of the best-characterized antibodies used in the treatment of B-cell malignancies and autoimmune diseases. Rituximab triggers natural killer (NK)-cell-mediated antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC), but little is known about the spatial and temporal dynamics of cell-cell interactions during ADCC or what makes rituximab potent at triggering ADCC. Here, using laser scanning confocal microscopy, we found that rituximab caused CD20 to cap at the B-cell surface independent of antibody crosslinking or intercellular contact. Unexpectedly, other proteins, including intercellular adhesion molecule 1 and moesin, were selectively recruited to the cap of CD20 and the microtubule organizing center became polarized toward the cap. Importantly, the frequency at which NK cells would kill target cells via ADCC increased by 60% when target cells were polarized compared with when they were unpolarized. Polarized B cells were lysed more frequently still when initial contact with NK cells occurred at the place where CD20 was capped. This demonstrates that the site of contact between immune cells and target cells influences immune responses. Together, these data establish that rituximab causes a polarization of B cells and this augments its therapeutic function in triggering NK-cell-mediated ADCC.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

A cytokine-neutralizing antibody as a structural mimetic of 2 receptor interactions

Christian Grütter; Trevor Wilkinson; Richard Turner; Sadhana Podichetty; Donna K. Finch; Matthew McCourt; Scott Loning; Lutz Jermutus; Markus G. Grütter

TGF-β isoforms are key modulators of a broad range of biological pathways and increasingly are exploited as therapeutic targets. Here, we describe the crystal structures of a pan-TGF-β neutralizing antibody, GC-1008, alone and in complex with TGF-β3. The antibody is currently in clinical evaluation for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, melanoma, and renal cell cancer. GC-1008 recognizes an asymmetric binding interface across the TGF-β homodimer with high affinity. Whereas both cognate receptors, TGF-β-receptor types I and II, are required to recognize all 3 TGF-β isoforms, GC-1008 has been engineered to bind with high affinity to TGF-β1, 2, and 3 via a single interaction surface. Comparison with existing structures and models of TGF-β interaction with its receptors suggests that the antibody binds to a similar epitope to the 2 receptors together and is therefore a structurally different but functionally identical mimic of the binding mode of both receptors.


PLOS ONE | 2013

The Role of Interleukin-1 and Interleukin-18 in Pro-Inflammatory and Anti-Viral Responses to Rhinovirus in Primary Bronchial Epithelial Cells

Siân C. Piper; John Ferguson; Linda J. Kay; Lisa C. Parker; Ian Sabroe; Matthew A. Sleeman; Emmanuel Briend; Donna K. Finch

Human Rhinovirus (HRV) is associated with acute exacerbations of chronic respiratory disease. In healthy individuals, innate viral recognition pathways trigger release of molecules with direct anti-viral activities and pro-inflammatory mediators which recruit immune cells to support viral clearance. Interleukin-1alpha (IL-1α), interleukin-1beta (IL-1β) and interleukin-18 (IL-18) have critical roles in the establishment of neutrophilic inflammation, which is commonly seen in airways viral infection and thought to be detrimental in respiratory disease. We therefore investigated the roles of these molecules in HRV infection of primary human epithelial cells. We found that all three cytokines were released from infected epithelia. Release of these cytokines was not dependent on cell death, and only IL-1β and IL-18 release was dependent on caspase-1 catalytic activity. Blockade of IL-1 but not IL-18 signaling inhibited up-regulation of pro-inflammatory mediators and neutrophil chemoattractants but had no effect on virus induced production of interferons and interferon-inducible genes, measured at both mRNA and protein level. Similar level of virus mRNA was detected with and without IL-1RI blockade. Hence IL-1 signaling, potentially involving both IL-1β and IL-1α, downstream of viral recognition plays a key role in induction of pro-inflammatory signals and potentially in recruitment and activation of immune cells in response to viral infection instigated by the epithelial cells, whilst not participating in direct anti-viral responses.


Respiratory Research | 2012

Cigarette smoke-induced accumulation of lung dendritic cells is interleukin-1α-dependent in mice

Fernando Botelho; Jake K. Nikota; Carla M. T. Bauer; Mathieu C Morissette; Yoichiro Iwakura; Roland Kolbeck; Donna K. Finch; Alison A. Humbles; Martin R. Stämpfli

BackgroundEvidence suggests that dendritic cells accumulate in the lungs of COPD patients and correlate with disease severity. We investigated the importance of IL-1R1 and its ligands IL-1α and β to dendritic cell accumulation and maturation in response to cigarette smoke exposure.MethodsMice were exposed to cigarette smoke using a whole body smoke exposure system. IL-1R1-, TLR4-, and IL-1α-deficient mice, as well as anti-IL-1α and anti-IL-1β blocking antibodies were used to study the importance of IL-1R1 and TLR4 to dendritic cell accumulation and activation.ResultsAcute and chronic cigarette smoke exposure led to increased frequency of lung dendritic cells. Accumulation and activation of dendritic cells was IL-1R1/IL-1α dependent, but TLR4- and IL-1β-independent. Corroborating the cellular data, expression of CCL20, a potent dendritic cells chemoattractant, was IL-1R1/IL-1α-dependent. Studies using IL-1R1 bone marrow-chimeric mice revealed the importance of IL-1R1 signaling on lung structural cells for CCL20 expression. Consistent with the importance of dendritic cells in T cell activation, we observed decreased CD4+ and CD8+ T cell activation in cigarette smoke-exposed IL-1R1-deficient mice.ConclusionOur findings convey the importance of IL-1R1/IL-1α to the recruitment and activation of dendritic cells in response to cigarette smoke exposure.


mAbs | 2015

Affinity Maturation of a Novel Antagonistic Human Monoclonal Antibody with a Long Vh Cdr3 Targeting the Class a Gpcr Formyl-Peptide Receptor 1.

Julie A. Douthwaite; Sudharsan Sridharan; Catherine Huntington; Jayne Hammersley; Rose Marwood; Jonna K Hakulinen; Margareta Ek; Tove Sjögren; David Rider; Cyril Privezentzev; Jonathan Seaman; Peter Cariuk; Vikki Knights; Joyce Young; Trevor Wilkinson; Matthew A. Sleeman; Donna K. Finch; David Lowe; Tristan J. Vaughan

Therapeutic monoclonal antibodies targeting G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are desirable for intervention in a wide range of disease processes. The discovery of such antibodies is challenging due to a lack of stability of many GPCRs as purified proteins. We describe here the generation of Fpro0165, a human anti-formyl peptide receptor 1 (FPR1) antibody generated by variable domain engineering of an antibody derived by immunization of transgenic mice expressing human variable region genes. Antibody isolation and subsequent engineering of affinity, potency and species cross-reactivity using phage display were achieved using FPR1 expressed on HEK cells for immunization and selection, along with calcium release cellular assays for antibody screening. Fpro0165 shows full neutralization of formyl peptide-mediated activation of primary human neutrophils. A crystal structure of the Fpro0165 Fab shows a long, protruding VH CDR3 of 24 amino acids and in silico docking with a homology model of FPR1 suggests that this long VH CDR3 is critical to the predicted binding mode of the antibody. Antibody mutation studies identify the apex of the long VH CDR3 as key to mediating the species cross-reactivity profile of the antibody. This study illustrates an approach for antibody discovery and affinity engineering to typically intractable membrane proteins such as GPCRs.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2011

Engineering a High-Affinity Anti-IL-15 Antibody: Crystal Structure Reveals an α-Helix in VH CDR3 as Key Component of Paratope

David Lowe; Stefan Gerhardt; Alison Ward; David Hargreaves; Malcolm Anderson; Franco Ferraro; Richard A. Pauptit; Debbie V. Pattison; Catriona L. Buchanan; Bojana Popovic; Donna K. Finch; Trevor Wilkinson; Matthew A. Sleeman; Tristan J. Vaughan; Philip R. Mallinder

Interleukin (IL) 15 is an inflammatory cytokine that plays an essential role in the activation, proliferation, and maintenance of specific natural killer cell and T-cell populations, and has been implicated as a mediator of inflammatory diseases. An anti-IL-15 antibody that blocked IL-15-dependent cellular responses was isolated by phage display and optimised via mutagenesis of the third complementarity-determining regions (CDRs) of variable heavy (VH) and variable light chains. Entire repertoires of improved variants were recombined with each other to explore the maximum potential sequence space. DISC0280, the most potent antibody isolated using this comprehensive strategy, exhibits a 228-fold increase in affinity and a striking 40,000-fold increase in cellular potency compared to its parent. Such a wholesale recombination strategy therefore represents a useful method for exploiting synergistic potency gains as part of future antibody engineering efforts. The crystal structure of DISC0280 Fab (fragment antigen binding), in complex with human IL-15, was determined in order to map the structural epitope and paratope. The most remarkable feature revealed lies within the paratope and is a novel six-amino-acid α-helix that sits within the VH CDR3 loop at the center of the antigen binding site. This is the first report to describe an α-helix as a principal component of a naturally derived VH CDR3 following affinity maturation.


Protein Expression and Purification | 2009

E. coli expression and purification of human and cynomolgus IL-15.

Alison Ward; Malcolm Anderson; Robert I. Craggs; Justine Maltby; Caroline Grahames; Rick A. Davies; Donna K. Finch; Debbie V. Pattison; Heather Oakes; Philip R. Mallinder

The physiological activities of Interleukin-15 (IL-15) suggest that it could be useful as an immunomodulator to activate the innate immune system, however, the expression and purification yields of recombinant mature IL-15 have typically been low. In this report, a method was optimised to generate milligram quantities of this cytokine. Human IL-15 with an N-terminal (His)(6)-tag was expressed in Escherichia coli as an insoluble protein. The IL-15 material was purified from other cellular proteins by dissolution in 6M guanidine HCl, followed by Ni-NTA chromatography in a buffer containing 8M urea. Use of a multi-component screen identified the optimal conditions for folding (His)(6)-tagged human IL-15 and the method was scaled up to produce milligram quantities of folded material in its native conformation, with two intra-molecular disulphides as determined by electrospray mass spectrometry. Mature IL-15 was generated by cleavage with recombinant enterokinase, which was subsequently removed by Ni-NTA chromatography. Identical methods were used to produce mature cynomolgus monkey (Macaca fascicularis) IL-15 in similar quantities. Human and cynomolgus IL-15 were both active in two IL-15 dependent assays; mouse CTLL2 cell proliferation and human and cynomolgus CD69 upregulation on CD3(-) CD8+ lymphocytes in whole blood. Despite being 96% identical at the amino acid level the human IL-15 was 10-fold more potent than the cynomolgus IL-15 in both assays. The methods described here are useful for producing both mature IL-15 proteins in sufficient quantity for in vivo and in vitro studies, including X-ray crystallography.

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