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Dive into the research topics where Erin E. Zoller is active.

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Featured researches published by Erin E. Zoller.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2011

Hemophagocytosis causes a consumptive anemia of inflammation

Erin E. Zoller; Jennifer E. Lykens; Catherine E. Terrell; Julio Aliberti; Alexandra H. Filipovich; Peter M. Henson; Michael B. Jordan

IFN-γ stimulates blood-eating macrophages (hemophagocytes) by acting directly on macrophages to promote phagocytosis and uptake of blood cells.


Blood | 2011

Perforin is a critical physiologic regulator of T-cell activation

Jennifer E. Lykens; Catherine E. Terrell; Erin E. Zoller; Kimberly A. Risma; Michael B. Jordan

Individuals with impaired perforin-dependent cytotoxic function (Ctx(-)) develop a fatal inflammatory disorder called hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH). It has been hypothesized that immune hyperactivation during HLH is caused by heightened infection, defective apoptosis/responsiveness of Ctx(-) lymphocytes, or enhanced antigen presentation. Whereas clinical and experimental data suggest that increased T-cell activation drives HLH, potential abnormalities of T-cell activation have not been well characterized in Ctx(-) hosts. To define such abnormalities and to test these hypotheses, we assessed in vivo T-cell activation kinetics and viral loads after lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) infection of Ctx(-) mice. We found that increased T-cell activation occurred early during infection of Ctx(-) mice, while they had viral burdens that were identical to those of WT animals, demonstrating that T-cell hyperactivation was independent of viral load. Furthermore, cell transfer and signaling studies indicated that increased antigenic stimulation, not a cell-intrinsic defect of responsiveness, underlay heightened T-cell activation in vivo. Finally, direct measurement of viral antigen presentation demonstrated an increase in Ctx(-) mice that was proportional to abnormal T-cell activation. We conclude that perforin-dependent cytotoxicity has an immunoregulatory role that is distinguishable from its pathogen clearance function and limits T-cell activation in the physiologic context by suppressing antigen presentation.


Journal of Immunology | 2010

Mice with a Selective Impairment of IFN-γ Signaling in Macrophage Lineage Cells Demonstrate the Critical Role of IFN-γ–Activated Macrophages for the Control of Protozoan Parasitic Infections In Vivo

Jennifer E. Lykens; Catherine E. Terrell; Erin E. Zoller; Senad Divanovic; Aurelien Trompette; Christopher L. Karp; Julio Aliberti; Matthew J. Flick; Michael B. Jordan

IFN-γ has long been recognized as a cytokine with potent and varied effects in the immune response. Although its effects on specific cell types have been well studied in vitro, its in vivo effects are less clearly understood because of its diverse actions on many different cell types. Although control of multiple protozoan parasites is thought to depend critically on the direct action of IFN-γ on macrophages, this premise has never been directly proven in vivo. To more directly examine the effects of IFN-γ on cells of the macrophage lineage in vivo, we generated mice called the “macrophages insensitive to IFN-γ” (MIIG) mice, which express a dominant negative mutant IFN-γ receptor in CD68+ cells: monocytes, macrophages, dendritic cells, and mast cells. Macrophage lineage cells and mast cells from these mice are unable to respond to IFN-γ, whereas other cells are able to produce and respond to this cytokine normally. When challenged in vitro, macrophages from MIIG mice were unable produce NO or kill Trypanosoma cruzi or Leishmania major after priming with IFN-γ. Furthermore, MIIG mice demonstrated impaired parasite control and heightened mortality after T. cruzi, L. major, and Toxoplasma gondii infection, despite an appropriate IFN-γ response. In contrast, MIIG mice displayed normal control of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus, despite persistent insensitivity of macrophages to IFN-γ. Thus, the MIIG mouse formally demonstrates for the first time in vivo, the specific importance of direct, IFN-γ mediated activation of macrophages for controlling infection with multiple protozoan parasites.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2015

The IRF5–TNPO3 association with systemic lupus erythematosus has two components that other autoimmune disorders variably share

Leah C. Kottyan; Erin E. Zoller; Jessica Bene; Xiaoming Lu; Jennifer A. Kelly; Andrew Rupert; Christopher J. Lessard; Samuel E. Vaughn; Miranda C. Marion; Matthew T. Weirauch; Bahram Namjou; Adam Adler; Astrid Rasmussen; Stuart B. Glenn; Courtney G. Montgomery; Gideon M. Hirschfield; Gang Xie; Catalina Coltescu; Christopher I. Amos; He Li; John A. Ice; Swapan K. Nath; Xavier Mariette; Simon Bowman; Maureen Rischmueller; Susan Lester; Johan G. Brun; Lasse G. Gøransson; Erna Harboe; Roald Omdal

Exploiting genotyping, DNA sequencing, imputation and trans-ancestral mapping, we used Bayesian and frequentist approaches to model the IRF5-TNPO3 locus association, now implicated in two immunotherapies and seven autoimmune diseases. Specifically, in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), we resolved separate associations in the IRF5 promoter (all ancestries) and with an extended European haplotype. We captured 3230 IRF5-TNPO3 high-quality, common variants across 5 ethnicities in 8395 SLE cases and 7367 controls. The genetic effect from the IRF5 promoter can be explained by any one of four variants in 5.7 kb (P-valuemeta = 6 × 10(-49); OR = 1.38-1.97). The second genetic effect spanned an 85.5-kb, 24-variant haplotype that included the genes IRF5 and TNPO3 (P-valuesEU = 10(-27)-10(-32), OR = 1.7-1.81). Many variants at the IRF5 locus with previously assigned biological function are not members of either final credible set of potential causal variants identified herein. In addition to the known biologically functional variants, we demonstrated that the risk allele of rs4728142, a variant in the promoter among the lowest frequentist probability and highest Bayesian posterior probability, was correlated with IRF5 expression and differentially binds the transcription factor ZBTB3. Our analytical strategy provides a novel framework for future studies aimed at dissecting etiological genetic effects. Finally, both SLE elements of the statistical model appear to operate in Sjögrens syndrome and systemic sclerosis whereas only the IRF5-TNPO3 gene-spanning haplotype is associated with primary biliary cirrhosis, demonstrating the nuance of similarity and difference in autoimmune disease risk mechanisms at IRF5-TNPO3.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2015

Lupus Risk Variant Increases pSTAT1 Binding and Decreases ETS1 Expression

Xiaoming Lu; Erin E. Zoller; Matthew T. Weirauch; Zhiguo Wu; Bahram Namjou; Adrienne H. Williams; Julie T. Ziegler; Mary E. Comeau; Miranda C. Marion; Stuart B. Glenn; Adam Adler; Nan Shen; Swapan K. Nath; Anne M. Stevens; Barry I. Freedman; Betty P. Tsao; Chaim O. Jacob; Diane L. Kamen; Elizabeth E. Brown; Gary S. Gilkeson; Graciela S. Alarcón; John D. Reveille; Juan-Manuel Anaya; Judith A. James; Kathy L. Sivils; Lindsey A. Criswell; Luis M. Vilá; Marta E. Alarcón-Riquelme; Michelle Petri; R. Hal Scofield

Genetic variants at chromosomal region 11q23.3, near the gene ETS1, have been associated with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), or lupus, in independent cohorts of Asian ancestry. Several recent studies have implicated ETS1 as a critical driver of immune cell function and differentiation, and mice deficient in ETS1 develop an SLE-like autoimmunity. We performed a fine-mapping study of 14,551 subjects from multi-ancestral cohorts by starting with genotyped variants and imputing to all common variants spanning ETS1. By constructing genetic models via frequentist and Bayesian association methods, we identified 16 variants that are statistically likely to be causal. We functionally assessed each of these variants on the basis of their likelihood of affecting transcription factor binding, miRNA binding, or chromatin state. Of the four variants that we experimentally examined, only rs6590330 differentially binds lysate from B cells. Using mass spectrometry, we found more binding of the transcription factor signal transducer and activator of transcription 1 (STAT1) to DNA near the risk allele of rs6590330 than near the non-risk allele. Immunoblot analysis and chromatin immunoprecipitation of pSTAT1 in B cells heterozygous for rs6590330 confirmed that the risk allele increased binding to the active form of STAT1. Analysis with expression quantitative trait loci indicated that the risk allele of rs6590330 is associated with decreased ETS1 expression in Han Chinese, but not other ancestral cohorts. We propose a model in which the risk allele of rs6590330 is associated with decreased ETS1 expression and increases SLE risk by enhancing the binding of pSTAT1.


Frontiers in Genetics | 2015

Lupus risk variants in the PXK locus alter B-cell receptor internalization

Samuel E. Vaughn; Zubin Patel; Nan Shen; Isaac T.W. Harley; Erin E. Zoller; Albert F. Magnusen; Adrienne H. Williams; Julie T. Ziegler; Mary E. Comeau; Miranda C. Marion; Stuart B. Glenn; Adam Adler; Swapan K. Nath; Anne M. Stevens; Barry I. Freedman; Betty P. Tsao; Chaim O. Jacob; Diane L. Kamen; Elizabeth E. Brown; Gary S. Gilkeson; Graciela S. Alarcón; John D. Reveille; Juan-Manuel Anaya; Judith A. James; Kathy L. Moser; Lindsey A. Criswell; Luis M. Vilá; Marta E. Alarcón-Riquelme; Michelle Petri; R. Hal Scofield

Genome wide association studies have identified variants in PXK that confer risk for humoral autoimmune diseases, including systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE or lupus), rheumatoid arthritis and more recently systemic sclerosis. While PXK is involved in trafficking of epidermal growth factor Receptor (EGFR) in COS-7 cells, mechanisms linking PXK to lupus pathophysiology have remained undefined. In an effort to uncover the mechanism at this locus that increases lupus-risk, we undertook a fine-mapping analysis in a large multi-ancestral study of lupus patients and controls. We define a large (257kb) common haplotype marking a single causal variant that confers lupus risk detected only in European ancestral populations and spans the promoter through the 3′ UTR of PXK. The strongest association was found at rs6445972 with P < 4.62 × 10−10, OR 0.81 (0.75–0.86). Using stepwise logistic regression analysis, we demonstrate that one signal drives the genetic association in the region. Bayesian analysis confirms our results, identifying a 95% credible set consisting of 172 variants spanning 202 kb. Functionally, we found that PXK operates on the B-cell antigen receptor (BCR); we confirmed that PXK influenced the rate of BCR internalization. Furthermore, we demonstrate that individuals carrying the risk haplotype exhibited a decreased rate of BCR internalization, a process known to impact B cell survival and cell fate. Taken together, these data define a new candidate mechanism for the genetic association of variants around PXK with lupus risk and highlight the regulation of intracellular trafficking as a genetically regulated pathway mediating human autoimmunity.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2014

Editorial: What Caused All These Troubles, Anyway? Epstein‐Barr Virus in Sjögren's Syndrome Reevaluated

John B. Harley; Erin E. Zoller

The inflammatory autoimmune and autoinflammatory rheumatic diseases share the persistent, pernicious, and currently depressing feature that they are largely idiopathic. Their true environmental origins remain unknown - or at least there is no general convincing and agreed upon consensus that explains their causation – and this is despite the extraordinary efforts made to date and the awesome capabilities of modern science. Of course, there are exceptions to such a gross generalization. Knowing that the host response to Streptococci is responsible for rheumatic fever, for example, seems to have contributed to our therapeutic success with this disease and its demise as a public health scourge, despite the many important details that remain unexplained about the relationship of this bacterium to the host response and the vagaries of disease expression.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2014

What caused all these troubles, anyway? Epstein Barr virus in Sjögren’s Syndrome re-evaluated

John B. Harley; Erin E. Zoller

The inflammatory autoimmune and autoinflammatory rheumatic diseases share the persistent, pernicious, and currently depressing feature that they are largely idiopathic. Their true environmental origins remain unknown - or at least there is no general convincing and agreed upon consensus that explains their causation – and this is despite the extraordinary efforts made to date and the awesome capabilities of modern science. Of course, there are exceptions to such a gross generalization. Knowing that the host response to Streptococci is responsible for rheumatic fever, for example, seems to have contributed to our therapeutic success with this disease and its demise as a public health scourge, despite the many important details that remain unexplained about the relationship of this bacterium to the host response and the vagaries of disease expression.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2018

A plausibly causal functional lupus-associated risk variant in the STAT1–STAT4 locus

Zubin Patel; Xiaoming Lu; Daniel Miller; Carmy Forney; Joshua Lee; Arthur Lynch; Connor Schroeder; Lois Parks; Albert F. Magnusen; Xiaoting Chen; Mario Pujato; Avery Maddox; Erin E. Zoller; Bahram Namjou; Hermine I. Brunner; Michael Henrickson; Jennifer L. Huggins; Adrienne H. Williams; Julie T. Ziegler; Mary E. Comeau; Miranda C. Marion; Stuart B. Glenn; Adam Adler; Nan Shen; Swapan K. Nath; Anne M. Stevens; Barry I. Freedman; Bernardo A. Pons-Estel; Betty P. Tsao; Chaim O. Jacob

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE or lupus) (OMIM: 152700) is a chronic autoimmune disease with debilitating inflammation that affects multiple organ systems. The STAT1-STAT4 locus is one of the first and most highly replicated genetic loci associated with lupus risk. We performed a fine-mapping study to identify plausible causal variants within the STAT1-STAT4 locus associated with increased lupus disease risk. Using complementary frequentist and Bayesian approaches in trans-ancestral Discovery and Replication cohorts, we found one variant whose association with lupus risk is supported across ancestries in both the Discovery and Replication cohorts: rs11889341. In B cell lines from patients with lupus and healthy controls, the lupus risk allele of rs11889341 was associated with increased STAT1 expression. We demonstrated that the transcription factor HMGA1, a member of the HMG transcription factor family with an AT-hook DNA-binding domain, has enriched binding to the risk allele compared with the non-risk allele of rs11889341. We identified a genotype-dependent repressive element in the DNA within the intron of STAT4 surrounding rs11889341. Consistent with expression quantitative trait locus (eQTL) analysis, the lupus risk allele of rs11889341 decreased the activity of this putative repressor. Altogether, we present a plausible molecular mechanism for increased lupus risk at the STAT1-STAT4 locus in which the risk allele of rs11889341, the most probable causal variant, leads to elevated STAT1 expression in B cells due to decreased repressor activity mediated by increased binding of HMGA1.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2014

Editorial: What Caused All These Troubles, Anyway? Epstein-Barr Virus in Sjögren's Syndrome Reevaluated: Editorial

John B. Harley; Erin E. Zoller

The inflammatory autoimmune and autoinflammatory rheumatic diseases share the persistent, pernicious, and currently depressing feature that they are largely idiopathic. Their true environmental origins remain unknown - or at least there is no general convincing and agreed upon consensus that explains their causation – and this is despite the extraordinary efforts made to date and the awesome capabilities of modern science. Of course, there are exceptions to such a gross generalization. Knowing that the host response to Streptococci is responsible for rheumatic fever, for example, seems to have contributed to our therapeutic success with this disease and its demise as a public health scourge, despite the many important details that remain unexplained about the relationship of this bacterium to the host response and the vagaries of disease expression.

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Catherine E. Terrell

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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John B. Harley

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Michael B. Jordan

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Adam Adler

Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation

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Bahram Namjou

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Julio Aliberti

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Leah C. Kottyan

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Stuart B. Glenn

Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation

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Swapan K. Nath

Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation

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