Emma E. Hamilton-Williams
Scripps Research Institute
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Publication
Featured researches published by Emma E. Hamilton-Williams.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2004
Thilo Krüger; Dirk Benke; Frank Eitner; Andreas Lang; Monika Wirtz; Emma E. Hamilton-Williams; Daniel R. Engel; Bernd Giese; Gerhard Müller-Newen; Jürgen Floege; Christian Kurts
The kidney tubulointerstitium contains numerous bone marrow-derived antigen-presenting cells, which are often referred to as resident tissue macrophages, although several previous studies had demonstrated characteristics of dendritic cells (DC). In this study, we describe a subset of tubulointerstitial cells expressing the DC marker CD11c. A protocol was established to isolate these cells for in vitro analysis. Renal CD11c(+) cells resembled splenic DC, but not peritoneal macrophages, in morphology, lysosomal content, phagocytic activity, microbicidal effector functions, expression of T cell costimulatory molecules, and ability to activate T cells. Nevertheless, many CD11c(+) renal cells expressed low or intermediate levels of F4/80 and CD11b, indicating that both markers are not absolutely specific for macrophages in the kidney. Subpopulations of renal DC could be distinguished based on their expression of MHC class II and costimulatory molecules and may represent different maturation stages. In nephrotoxic glomerulonephritis, increased numbers of CD11c(+) cells showing DC functionality were found in the tubulointerstitium. Focal accumulation was seen within tubulointerstitial mononuclear infiltrates and adjacent to, but not within, inflamed glomeruli. These results are the first to identify and characterize renal CD11c(+) cells as DC and to demonstrate marked changes in experimental glomerulonephritis.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2009
Felix Heymann; Catherine Meyer-Schwesinger; Emma E. Hamilton-Williams; Linda Hammerich; Ulf Panzer; Sylvia Kaden; Susan E. Quaggin; Jürgen Floege; Hermann Josef Gröne; Christian Kurts
The progression of kidney disease to renal failure correlates with infiltration of mononuclear immune cells into the tubulointerstitium. These infiltrates contain macrophages, DCs, and T cells, but the role of each cell type in disease progression is unclear. To investigate the underlying immune mechanisms, we generated transgenic mice that selectively expressed the model antigens ovalbumin and hen egg lysozyme in glomerular podocytes (NOH mice). Coinjection of ovalbumin-specific transgenic CD8+ CTLs and CD4+ Th cells into NOH mice resulted in periglomerular mononuclear infiltrates and inflammation of parietal epithelial cells, similar to lesions frequently observed in human chronic glomerulonephritis. Repetitive T cell injections aggravated infiltration and caused progression to structural and functional kidney damage after 4 weeks. Mechanistic analysis revealed that DCs in renal lymph nodes constitutively cross-presented ovalbumin and activated CTLs. These CTLs released further ovalbumin for CTL activation in the lymph nodes and for simultaneous presentation to Th cells by distinct DC subsets residing in the kidney tubulointerstitium. Crosstalk between tubulointerstitial DCs and Th cells resulted in intrarenal cytokine and chemokine production and in recruitment of more CTLs, monocyte-derived DCs, and macrophages. The importance of DCs was established by the fact that DC depletion rapidly resolved established kidney immunopathology. These findings demonstrate that glomerular antigen-specific CTLs and Th cells can jointly induce renal immunopathology and identify kidney DCs as a mechanistic link between glomerular injury and the progression of kidney disease.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003
Emma E. Hamilton-Williams; Stephanie Palmer; Brett Charlton; Robyn Maree Slattery
Type 1 diabetes occurs as a result of an autoimmune attack on the insulin-producing beta cells. Although CD8 T cells have been implicated both early and late in this process, the requirement for direct interaction between these cells and MHC class I on the beta cells has not been demonstrated. By using nonobese diabetic mice lacking beta cell class I expression, we show that both initiation and progression of insulitis proceeds unperturbed. However, without beta cell class I expression, the vast majority of these mice do not develop hyperglycemia. These findings demonstrate that a direct interaction between CD8 T cells and beta cells is not required for initiation or early disease progression. The requirement for class I on beta cells is a relatively late checkpoint in the development of diabetes.
Journal of Immunology | 2012
Christian J. Maine; Emma E. Hamilton-Williams; Jocelyn Cheung; Stephanie M. Stanford; Nunzio Bottini; Linda S. Wicker; Linda A. Sherman
PTPN22 encodes a tyrosine phosphatase that inhibits Src-family kinases responsible for Ag receptor signaling in lymphocytes and is strongly linked with susceptibility to a number of autoimmune diseases. As strength of TCR signal is critical to the thymic selection of regulatory T cells (Tregs), we examined the effect of murine PTPN22 deficiency on Treg development and function. In the thymus, numbers of pre-Tregs and Tregs increased inversely with the level of PTPN22. This increase in Tregs persisted in the periphery and could play a key part in the reduced severity observed in the PTPN22-deficient mice of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, a mouse model of multiple sclerosis. This could explain the lack of association of certain autoimmune conditions with PTPN22 risk alleles.
Journal of Immunology | 2005
Emma E. Hamilton-Williams; Andreas Lang; Dirk Benke; Gayle M. Davey; Karl-Heinz Wiesmüller; Christian Kurts
Cross-presentation of peripheral self-Ags by dendritic cells (DC) can induce deletion of autoreactive CTL by a mechanism termed cross-tolerance. Activation of DC by microbial TLR ligands is thought to result in adaptive immunity. However, activation of tolerogenic DC may cause autoimmunity by stimulating instead of deleting autoreactive CTL. To investigate this scenario, we have monitored the response of autoreactive CTL in specific for the transgenic self Ag, OVA, expressed in pancreatic islets of RIP-mOVA mice injected with ligands of TLR2, 3, 4, and 9. This somewhat enhanced proliferation and cytokine production, and moderately reduced the CTL number able to induce autoimmunity. Nevertheless, physiological CTL numbers were deleted before disease ensued, unless specific CD4 T cell help was provided. In conclusion, DC activation by TLR ligands was insufficient to break peripheral cross-tolerance in the absence of specific CD4 T cell help, and triggered autoimmunity by stimulating the early effector phase of autoreactive CTL only when their precursor frequency was extremely high.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2005
Andreas Lang; Dirk Benke; Frank Eitner; Daniel R. Engel; Svenja Ehrlich; Minka Breloer; Emma E. Hamilton-Williams; Sabine Specht; Achim Hoerauf; Jürgen Floege; Arne von Bonin; Christian Kurts
Heat shock proteins (Hsp) are ubiquitous intracellular proteins that can be released in various forms of cellular stress. Some Hsp, such as Hsp60, have been shown to stimulate directly T cell-mediated immune responses in vitro. Here, it is demonstrated that Hsp60 is released from the kidneys and excreted into the urine of mice with nephrotoxic nephritis (NTN), a model of rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis. For examining the functional relevance of Hsp60 release, this protein was injected into mice with subnephritogenic NTN, in which only transient proteinuria and minimal organ damage occur that do not progress to terminal kidney failure. Injection of Hsp60 strikingly aggravated disease, as evidenced by global glomerular necrosis, tubulointerstitial damage, and complete anuria after 10 to 12 d. This effect was mediated neither by endotoxin contaminations of Hsp60 nor by autologous antibodies. It was strictly T cell dependent but not associated with a systemic Th1/Th2 shift. Thus, Hsp60 is an endogenous mediator stimulating immune effector mechanisms that contribute to the progression of NTN. These findings demonstrate in vivo that Hsp60 fulfills criteria of immunologic danger signals and suggest that such signals may be involved in immune-mediated kidney disease.
Journal of Immunology | 2011
Huiming Sheng; Saleema Hassanali; Courtney Nugent; Li Wen; Emma E. Hamilton-Williams; Peter Dias; Yang D. Dai
Exosomes (EXO) are secreted intracellular microparticles that can trigger inflammation and induce Ag-specific immune responses. To test possible roles of EXO in autoimmunity, we isolated small microparticles, mainly EXO, from mouse insulinoma and examined their activities to stimulate the autoimmune responses in NOD mice, a model for human type 1 diabetes. We demonstrate that the EXO contains strong innate stimuli and expresses candidate diabetes autoantigens. They can induce secretion of inflammatory cytokines through a MyD88-dependent pathway, and activate purified APC and result in T cell proliferation. To address whether EXO or the secreted microparticles are possible autoimmune targets causing islet-specific inflammation, we monitored the T cell responses spontaneously developed in prediabetic NOD mice for their reactivity to the EXO, and compared this reactivity between diabetes-susceptible and -resistant congenic mouse strains. We found that older NOD females, which have advanced islet destruction, accumulated more EXO-reactive, IFN-γ–producing lymphocytes than younger females or age-matched males, and that pancreatic lymph nodes from the prediabetic NOD, but not from the resistant mice, were also enriched with EXO-reactive Th1 cells. In vivo, immunization with the EXO accelerates insulitis development in nonobese diabetes-resistant mice. Thus, EXO or small microparticles can be recognized by the diabetes-associated autoreactive T cells, supporting that EXO might be a possible autoimmune target and/or insulitis trigger in NOD or congenic mouse strains.
Journal of Immunology | 2008
Isis Ludwig-Portugall; Emma E. Hamilton-Williams; Catherine Gottschalk; Christian Kurts
To study the role of CD25+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) in peripheral B cell tolerance, we generated transgenic rat insulin promoter RIP-OVA/HEL mice expressing the model Ags OVA and HEL in pancreatic islet β cells (where RIP is rat insulin promoter and HEL is hen egg lysozyme). Adoptively transferred transgenic OVA-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells proliferated only in the autoantigen-draining pancreatic lymph node (PLN), demonstrating pancreas-specific Ag expression. Transferred HEL-specific transgenic B cells (IgHEL cells) disappeared within 3 wk from transgenic but not from nontransgenic mice immunized with autoantigen. Depletion of CD25+ FoxP3+ cells completely restored IgHEL cell numbers. Treg exerted an analogous suppressive effect on endogenous HEL-specific autoreactive B cells. Tregs acted by inhibiting the proliferation of IgHEL cells in the spleen and PLN and by systemic induction of their apoptosis. Furthermore, they reduced BCR and MHC II surface expression on IgHEL cells in the PLN. These findings demonstrate that autoreactive B cells specific for a nonlymphoid tissue autoantigen are controlled by Tregs.
Journal of Immunology | 2009
Emma E. Hamilton-Williams; Xavier Martinez; Jan Clark; Sarah Howlett; Kara Hunter; Daniel B. Rainbow; Li Wen; Mark J. Shlomchik; Jonathan D. Katz; Georg F. Beilhack; Linda S. Wicker; Linda A. Sherman
In humans and NOD mice, defects in immune tolerance result in the spontaneous development of type-1-diabetes. Recent studies have ascribed a breakdown in tolerance to dysfunction in regulatory T cells that is secondary to reduced IL-2 production by T cells having the NOD diabetes susceptibility region insulin-dependent diabetes 3 (Idd3). In this study, we demonstrate a peripheral tolerance defect in the dendritic cells of NOD mice that is independent of regulatory T cells. NOD CD8 T cells specific for islet Ags fail to undergo deletion in the pancreatic lymph nodes. Deletion was promoted by expression of the protective alleles of both Idd3 (Il2) and Idd5 in dendritic cells. We further identify a second tolerance defect that involves endogenous CD4 T cell expression of the disease-promoting NOD alleles of these genetic regions. Pervasive insulitis can be reduced by expression of the Idd3 and Idd5 protective alleles by either the Ag-presenting cell or lymphocytes.
European Journal of Immunology | 2009
Isis Ludwig-Portugall; Emma E. Hamilton-Williams; Janine Gotot; Christian Kurts
To study B‐cell tolerance against non‐lymphoid tissue autoantigens, we generated transgenic rat insulin promoter (RIP)‐OVA/hen egg lysozyme (HEL) mice expressing the model antigens, OVA and HEL, in pancreatic islets. Their vaccination with OVA or HEL induced far less auto‐Ab titers compared with non‐transgenic controls. Depletion of CD25+ cells during immunization completely restored auto‐Ab production, but did not affect antibodies against a foreign control antigen. Depletion at later time‐points was not effective. OVA‐specific CD25+ FoxP3+ Treg were more frequent in the autoantigen‐draining pancreatic LN than in other secondary lymphatics of RIP‐OVA/HEL mice. Consistently, B cells were suppressed in that LN and also in the spleen, which is known to concentrate circulating antigen, such as the antigens used for vaccination. Suppression involved preventing expansion of autoreactive B cells in response to autoantigen, reducing antibody production per B‐cell and isotype changes. These findings demonstrate that CD25+ Treg suppress auto‐Ab production against non‐lymphoid tissue antigens in an antigen‐specific manner.