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Dive into the research topics where Edward E. Lemmens is active.

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Featured researches published by Edward E. Lemmens.


Nature | 2003

CD4 + T cells are required for secondary expansion and memory in CD8 + T lymphocytes

Edith M. Janssen; Edward E. Lemmens; Tom Wolfe; Urs Christen; Matthias von Herrath; Stephen P. Schoenberger

A long-standing paradox in cellular immunology concerns the conditional requirement for CD4+ T-helper (TH) cells in the priming of cytotoxic CD8+ T lymphocyte (CTL) responses in vivo. Whereas CTL responses against certain viruses can be primed in the absence of CD4+ T cells, others, such as those mediated through ‘cross-priming’ by host antigen-presenting cells, are dependent on TH cells. A clearer understanding of the contribution of TH cells to CTL development has been hampered by the fact that most TH-independent responses have been demonstrated ex vivo as primary cytotoxic effectors, whereas TH-dependent responses generally require secondary in vitro re-stimulation for their detection. Here, we have monitored the primary and secondary responses of TH-dependent and TH-independent CTLs and find in both cases that CD4+ T cells are dispensable for primary expansion of CD8+ T cells and their differentiation into cytotoxic effectors. However, secondary CTL expansion (that is, a secondary response upon re-encounter with antigen) is wholly dependent on the presence of TH cells during, but not after, priming. Our results demonstrate that T-cell help is ‘programmed’ into CD8+ T cells during priming, conferring on these cells a hallmark of immune response memory: the capacity for functional expansion on re-encounter with antigen.


Nature Immunology | 2001

Na|[iuml]|ve CTLs require a single brief period of antigenic stimulation for clonal expansion and differentiation

Marianne van Stipdonk; Edward E. Lemmens; Stephen P. Schoenberger

In defense of the host, the immune system must often raise an effective cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) response from a small number of clonal precursors. The degree to which activation stimuli regulate the expansion and differentiation of naïve CTLs, however, remains unknown. Using an engineered antigen-presenting cell (APC) system that allows control over antigenic stimulation, we studied the signaling duration requirements for priming and clonal expansion of naïve CTLs. We found that naïve CTLs become committed after as little as 2 h of exposure to APCs and that their subsequent division and differentiation can occur without the need for further antigenic stimulation of the daughter cells, whether priming is in vitro or in vivo. These data show that after a brief interaction with stimulatory APCs, naïve CTLs initiate a program for their autonomous clonal expansion and development into functional effectors.


Nature | 2005

CD4+ T-cell help controls CD8+ T-cell memory via TRAIL-mediated activation-induced cell death.

Edith M. Janssen; Nathalie M. Droin; Edward E. Lemmens; Michael J. Pinkoski; Steven J. Bensinger; Benjamin D. Ehst; Thomas S. Griffith; Douglas R. Green; Stephen P. Schoenberger

The ‘help’ provided by CD4+ T lymphocytes during the priming of CD8+ T lymphocytes confers a key feature of immune memory: the capacity for autonomous secondary expansion following re-encounter with antigen. Once primed in the presence of CD4+ T cells, ‘helped’ CD8+ T cells acquire the ability to undergo a second round of clonal expansion upon restimulation in the absence of T-cell help. ‘Helpless’ CD8+ T cells that are primed in the absence of CD4+ T cells, in contrast, can mediate effector functions such as cytotoxicity and cytokine secretion upon restimulation, but do not undergo a second round of clonal expansion. These disparate responses have features of being ‘programmed’, that is, guided by signals that are transmitted to naive CD8+ T cells during priming, which encode specific fates for their clonal progeny. Here we explore the instructional programme that governs the secondary response of CD8+ T cells and find that helpless cells undergo death by activation-induced cell death upon secondary stimulation. This death is mediated by tumour-necrosis factor (TNF)-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL). Regulation of Trail expression can therefore account for the role of CD4+ T cells in the generation of CD8+ T cell memory and represents a novel mechanism for controlling adaptive immune responses.


Nature Immunology | 2003

Dynamic programming of CD8+ T lymphocyte responses.

Marianne J. van Stipdonk; Gijs Hardenberg; Martijn S. Bijker; Edward E. Lemmens; Nathalie M. Droin; Douglas R. Green; Stephen P. Schoenberger

The initial encounter with an antigen-presenting cell (APC) is the primary force behind the expansion, differentiation and survival of naive T cells. Using an APC that permits temporal control of priming, we examined whether the duration of antigenic stimulation can influence the functional development of CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) in vivo. Whereas CTLs given a 4-h stimulus underwent an abortive clonal expansion with transient surface CD25 expression, those given a 20-h stimulus sustained CD25 up-regulation, proliferated extensively, and efficiently mediated destruction of peripheral target tissues. Our results show that an instructional program preceding the first cell division integrates differences in signal strength into the decision to activate versus tolerize specific CTL clones.


Science Translational Medicine | 2015

STING agonist formulated cancer vaccines can cure established tumors resistant to PD-1 blockade

Juan Fu; David B. Kanne; Meredith Leong; Laura Hix Glickman; Sarah M. McWhirter; Edward E. Lemmens; Ken Mechette; Justin J. Leong; Peter Lauer; Weiqun Liu; Kelsey E. Sivick; Qi Zeng; Kevin C. Soares; Lei Zheng; Daniel A. Portnoy; Joshua J. Woodward; Drew M. Pardoll; Thomas W. Dubensky; Young J. Kim

Cyclic dinucleotide formulated cancer vaccine combined with PD-1 blockade can induce regression of tumors that do not express PD-L1 constitutively. A therapy that STINGs tumors Stimulator of interferon genes, or STING, is a receptor that is found on a variety of cell types and activates an immune response in response to cyclic dinucleotides. Fu et al. found that combining cyclic dinucleotides with a cellular cancer vaccine called STINGVAX was effective against multiple types of tumors in mouse models. The authors then modified the cyclic dinucleotides to strengthen their binding to human STING, increasing their antitumor activity. The authors also showed that treatment with STINGVAX caused cancer cells to up-regulate PD-L1, a protein that suppresses the immune response. Inhibiting the PD-L1 pathway in mice treated with STINGVAX was very effective at killing even poorly immunogenic tumors. Stimulator of interferon genes (STING) is a cytosolic receptor that senses both exogenous and endogenous cytosolic cyclic dinucleotides (CDNs), activating TBK1/IRF3 (interferon regulatory factor 3), NF-κB (nuclear factor κB), and STAT6 (signal transducer and activator of transcription 6) signaling pathways to induce robust type I interferon and proinflammatory cytokine responses. CDN ligands were formulated with granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF)–producing cellular cancer vaccines—termed STINGVAX—that demonstrated potent in vivo antitumor efficacy in multiple therapeutic models of established cancer. We found that rationally designed synthetic CDN derivative molecules, including one with an Rp,Rp dithio diastereomer and noncanonical c[A(2′,5′)pA(3′,5′)p] phosphate bridge structure, enhanced antitumor efficacy of STINGVAX in multiple aggressive therapeutic models of established cancer in mice. Antitumor activity was STING-dependent and correlated with increased activation of dendritic cells and tumor antigen–specific CD8+ T cells. Tumors from STINGVAX-treated mice demonstrated marked PD-L1 (programmed death ligand 1) up-regulation, which was associated with tumor-infiltrating CD8+IFNγ+ T cells. When combined with PD-1 (programmed death 1) blockade, STINGVAX induced regression of palpable, poorly immunogenic tumors that did not respond to PD-1 blockade alone.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Protein Kinase C-θ Is an Early Survival Factor Required for Differentiation of Effector CD8+ T Cells

Rina Barouch-Bentov; Edward E. Lemmens; Junru Hu; Edith M. Janssen; Nathalie M. Droin; Jianxun Song; Stephen P. Schoenberger; Amnon Altman

CD8+ T cells are crucial for host defense against invading pathogens and malignancies. However, relatively little is known about intracellular signaling events that control the genetic program of their activation and differentiation. Using CD8+ T cells from TCR-transgenic mice crossed to protein kinase C-θ (PKCθ)-deficient mice, we report that PKCθ is not required for Ag-induced CD8+ T cell proliferation, but is important for T cell survival and differentiation into functional, cytokine-producing CTLs. Ag-stimulated PKCθ−/− T cells underwent accelerated apoptosis associated with deregulated expression of Bcl-2 family proteins and displayed reduced activation of ERKs and JNKs. Some defects in the function of PKCθ−/− T cells (poor survival and reduced Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL expression, CTL activity, and IFN-γ expression) were partially or fully restored by coculture with wild-type T cells or by addition of exogenous IL-2, whereas others (increased BimEL expression and TNF-α production) were not. These findings indicate that PKCθ, although not essential for initial Ag-induced proliferation, nevertheless plays an important role in promoting and extending T cell survival, thereby enabling the complete genetic program of effector CD8+ differentiation. The requirement for PKCθ in different types of T cell-dependent responses may, therefore, depend on the overall strength of signaling by the TCR and costimulatory receptors and may reflect, in addition to its previously established role in activation, an important, hitherto unappreciated, role in T cell survival.


Infection and Immunity | 2006

Cytosolic Entry Controls CD8+-T-Cell Potency during Bacterial Infection

Keith S. Bahjat; Weiqun Liu; Edward E. Lemmens; Stephen P. Schoenberger; Daniel A. Portnoy; Thomas W. Dubensky; Dirk G. Brockstedt

ABSTRACT Interaction with host immunoreceptors during microbial infection directly impacts the magnitude of the ensuing innate immune response. How these signals affect the quality of the adaptive T-cell response remains poorly understood. Utilizing an engineered strain of the intracellular pathogen Listeria monocytogenes that infects cells but fails to escape from the phagosome, we demonstrate the induction of long-lived memory T cells that are capable of secondary expansion and effector function but are incapable of providing protective immunity. We demonstrate that microbial invasion of the cytosol is required for dendritic cell activation and integration of CD40 signaling, ultimately determining the ability of the elicited CD8+-T-cell pool to protect against lethal wild-type L. monocytogenes challenge. These results reveal a crucial role for phagosomal escape, not for delivery of antigen to the class I major histocompatibility complex pathway but for establishing the appropriate cellular context during CD8+-T-cell priming.


Infection and Immunity | 2008

Constitutive Activation of the PrfA regulon enhances the potency of vaccines based on live-attenuated and killed but metabolically active Listeria monocytogenes strains.

Peter Lauer; Bill Hanson; Edward E. Lemmens; Weiqun Liu; William S. Luckett; Meredith Leong; Heather E. Allen; Justin Skoble; Keith S. Bahjat; Nancy E. Freitag; Dirk G. Brockstedt; Thomas W. Dubensky

ABSTRACT Recombinant vaccines derived from the facultative intracellular bacterium Listeria monocytogenes are presently undergoing early-stage clinical evaluation in oncology treatment settings. This effort has been stimulated in part due to preclinical results that illustrate potent activation of innate and adaptive immune effectors by L. monocytogenes vaccines, combined with efficacy in rigorous animal models of malignant and infectious disease. Here, we evaluated the immunologic potency of a panel of isogenic vaccine strains that varied only in prfA. PrfA is an intracellularly activated transcription factor that induces expression of virulence genes and encoded heterologous antigens (Ags) in appropriately engineered vaccine strains. Mutant strains with PrfA locked into a constitutively active state are known as PrfA* mutants. We assessed the impacts of three PrfA* mutants, G145S, G155S, and Y63C, on the immunologic potencies of live-attenuated and photochemically inactivated nucleotide excision repair mutant (killed but metabolically active [KBMA]) vaccines. While PrfA* substantially increased Ag expression in strains grown in broth culture, Ag expression levels were equivalent in infected macrophage and dendritic cell lines, conditions that more closely parallel those in the immunized host. However, only the prfA(G155S) allele conferred significantly enhanced vaccine potency to KBMA vaccines. In the KBMA vaccine background, we show that PrfA*(G155S) enhanced functional cellular immunity following an intravenous or intramuscular prime-boost immunization regimen. These results form the basis of a rationale for including the prfA(G155S) allele in future live-attenuated or KBMA L. monocytogenes vaccines advanced to the clinical setting.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008

KBMA Listeria monocytogenes is an effective vector for DC-mediated induction of antitumor immunity

Mojca Skoberne; Alice Yewdall; Keith S. Bahjat; Emmanuelle Godefroy; Peter Lauer; Edward E. Lemmens; Weiqun Liu; Will Luckett; Meredith Leong; Thomas W. Dubensky; Dirk G. Brockstedt; Nina Bhardwaj

Vaccine strategies that utilize human DCs to enhance antitumor immunity have yet to realize their full potential. Approaches that optimally target a spectrum of antigens to DCs are urgently needed. Here we report the development of a platform for loading DCs with antigen. It is based on killed but metabolically active (KBMA) recombinant Listeria monocytogenes and facilitates both antigen delivery and maturation of human DCs. Highly attenuated KBMA L. monocytogenes were engineered to express an epitope of the melanoma-associated antigen MelanA/Mart-1 that is recognized by human CD8+ T cells when presented by the MHC class I molecule HLA-A*0201. The engineered KBMA L. monocytogenes induced human DC upregulation of costimulatory molecules and secretion of pro-Th1 cytokines and type I interferons, leading to effective priming of Mart-1-specific human CD8+ T cells and lysis of patient-derived melanoma cells. KBMA L. monocytogenes expressing full-length NY-ESO-1 protein, another melanoma-associated antigen, delivered the antigen for presentation by MHC class I and class II molecules independent of the MHC haplotype of the DC donor. A mouse therapeutic tumor model was used to show that KBMA L. monocytogenes efficiently targeted APCs in vivo to induce protective antitumor responses. Together, our data demonstrate that KBMA L. monocytogenes may be a powerful platform that can both deliver recombinant antigen to DCs for presentation and provide a potent DC-maturation stimulus, making it a potential cancer vaccine candidate.


Journal of Immunology | 2007

Activation of immature hepatic NK cells as immunotherapy for liver metastatic disease.

Keith S. Bahjat; Rodney A. Prell; Heather E. Allen; Weiqun Liu; Edward E. Lemmens; Meredith Leong; Daniel A. Portnoy; Thomas W. Dubensky; Dirk G. Brockstedt; Martin A. Giedlin

NK cells can identify and eliminate emerging tumors due to altered expression of activating and inhibitory ligands on aberrant cells, a process that is greatly enhanced following NK cell activation. As a principal site of both tumor metastases and immature NK cells, the liver represents a unique anatomic location in which activation of the innate immune system could provide substantial therapeutic benefit. We describe here the NK cell-dependent destruction of a primary hepatic tumor following infection with an attenuated intracellular bacterium derived from Listeria monocytogenes. NK cell-mediated immunity correlated with the ordered migration and maturation of NK cells within the liver. Cytolytic activity was partially dependent on NKG2D-mediated tumor cell recognition, but surprisingly was still effective in the absence of type I IFN. Significantly, NK cell-mediated destruction of a primary hepatic tumor in infected mice led to long-lived CD4- and CD8 T cell-dependent tumor-specific adaptive immunity. These findings establish that activation and differentiation of immature NK cells using complex microbial stimuli can elicit potent anti-tumor activity within the liver, promote cross-presentation of tumor-derived Ags leading to long-lived systemic anti-tumor immunity, and suggests a paradigm for clinical intervention of liver metastatic carcinoma.

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Stephen P. Schoenberger

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Meredith Leong

University of California

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Keith S. Bahjat

Providence Portland Medical Center

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Weiqun Liu

University of California

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Edith M. Janssen

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Nathalie M. Droin

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Peter Lauer

University of California

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