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Dive into the research topics where Eslam Mohamed is active.

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Featured researches published by Eslam Mohamed.


Cancer Research | 2016

STING Promotes the Growth of Tumors Characterized by Low Antigenicity via IDO Activation

Henrique Lemos; Eslam Mohamed; Lei Huang; Rong Ou; Gabriela Pacholczyk; Ali S. Arbab; David H. Munn; Andrew L. Mellor

Cytosolic DNA sensing is an important process during the innate immune response that activates the stimulator of interferon genes (STING) adaptor and induces IFN-I. STING incites spontaneous immunity during immunogenic tumor growth and accordingly, STING agonists induce regression of therapy-resistant tumors. However DNA, STING agonists, and apoptotic cells can also promote tolerogenic responses via STING by activating immunoregulatory mechanisms such as indoleamine 2,3 dioxygenase (IDO). Here, we show that IDO activity induced by STING activity in the tumor microenvironment (TME) promoted the growth of Lewis lung carcinoma (LLC). Although STING also induced IDO in tumor-draining lymph nodes (TDLN) during EL4 thymoma growth, this event was insufficient to promote tumorigenesis. In the LLC model, STING ablation enhanced CD8(+) T-cell infiltration and tumor cell killing while decreasing myeloid-derived suppressor cell infiltration and IL10 production in the TME. Depletion of CD8(+) T cells also eliminated the growth disadvantage of LLC tumors in STING-deficient mice, indicating that STING signaling attenuated CD8(+) T-cell effector functions during tumorigenesis. In contrast with native LLC tumors, STING signaling neither promoted growth of neoantigen-expressing LLC, nor did it induce IDO in TDLN. Similarly, STING failed to promote growth of B16 melanoma or to induce IDO activity in TDLN in this setting. Thus, our results show how STING-dependent DNA sensing can enhance tolerogenic states in tumors characterized by low antigenicity and how IDO inhibition can overcome this state by attenuating tumor tolerance. Furthermore, our results reveal a greater complexity in the role of STING signaling in cancer, underscoring how innate immune pathways in the TME modify tumorigenesis in distinct tumor settings, with implications for designing effective immunotherapy trials. Cancer Res; 76(8); 2076-81. ©2016 AACR.


Journal of Immunology | 2014

Activation of the STING Adaptor Attenuates Experimental Autoimmune Encephalitis

Henrique Lemos; Lei Huang; Phillip Chandler; Eslam Mohamed; Guilherme R. Souza; Lingqian Li; Gabriela Pacholczyk; Glen N. Barber; Yoshihiro Hayakawa; David H. Munn; Andrew L. Mellor

Cytosolic DNA sensing activates the stimulator of IFN genes (STING) adaptor to induce IFN type I (IFN-αβ) production. Constitutive DNA sensing to induce sustained STING activation incites tolerance breakdown, leading to autoimmunity. In this study, we show that systemic treatments with DNA nanoparticles (DNPs) induced potent immune regulatory responses via STING signaling that suppressed experimental autoimmune encephalitis (EAE) when administered to mice after immunization with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG), at EAE onset, or at peak disease severity. DNP treatments attenuated infiltration of effector T cells into the CNS and suppressed innate and adaptive immune responses to myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein immunization in spleen. Therapeutic responses were not observed in mice treated with cargo DNA or cationic polymers alone, indicating that DNP uptake and cargo DNA sensing by cells with regulatory functions was essential for therapeutic responses to manifest. Intact STING and IFN-αβ receptor genes, but not IFN-γ receptor genes, were essential for therapeutic responses to DNPs to manifest. Treatments with cyclic diguanylate monophosphate to activate STING also delayed EAE onset and reduced disease severity. Therapeutic responses to DNPs were critically dependent on IDO enzyme activity in hematopoietic cells. Thus, DNPs and cyclic diguanylate monophosphate attenuate EAE by inducing dominant T cell regulatory responses via the STING/IFN-αβ/IDO pathway that suppress CNS-specific autoimmunity. These findings reveal dichotomous roles for the STING/IFN-αβ pathway in either stimulating or suppressing autoimmunity and identify STING-activating reagents as a novel class of immune modulatory drugs.


Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer | 2017

Unfolding anti-tumor immunity: ER stress responses sculpt tolerogenic myeloid cells in cancer

Juan R. Cubillos-Ruiz; Eslam Mohamed; Paulo C. Rodriguez

Established tumors build a stressful and hostile microenvironment that blocks the development of protective innate and adaptive immune responses. Different subsets of immunoregulatory myeloid populations, including dendritic cells, myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) and macrophages, accumulate in the stressed tumor milieu and represent a major impediment to the success of various forms of cancer immunotherapy. Specific conditions and factors within tumor masses, including hypoxia, nutrient starvation, low pH, and increased levels of free radicals, provoke a state of “endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress” in both malignant cells and infiltrating myeloid cells. In order to cope with ER stress, cancer cells and tumor-associated myeloid cells activate an integrated signaling pathway known as the Unfolded Protein Response (UPR), which promotes cell survival and adaptation under adverse environmental conditions. However, the UPR can also induce cell death under unresolved levels of ER stress. Three branches of the UPR have been described, including the activation of the inositol-requiring enzyme 1 (IRE1), the pancreatic ER kinase (PKR)-like ER kinase (PERK), and the activating transcription factor 6 (ATF6). In this minireview, we briefly discuss the role of ER stress and specific UPR mediators in tumor development, growth and metastasis. In addition, we describe how sustained ER stress responses operate as key mediators of chronic inflammation and immune suppression within tumors. Finally, we discuss multiple pharmacological approaches that overcome the immunosuppressive effect of the UPR in tumors, and that could potentially enhance the efficacy of cancer immunotherapies by reprogramming the function of tumor-infiltrating myeloid cells.


PLOS Pathogens | 2016

Virus Infections Incite Pain Hypersensitivity by Inducing Indoleamine 2,3 Dioxygenase.

Lei Huang; Rong Ou; Guilherme R. Souza; Thiago M. Cunha; Henrique Lemos; Eslam Mohamed; Lingqian Li; Gabriela Pacholczyk; Janice Randall; David H. Munn; Andrew L. Mellor

Increased pain sensitivity is a comorbidity associated with many clinical diseases, though the underlying causes are poorly understood. Recently, chronic pain hypersensitivity in rodents treated to induce chronic inflammation in peripheral tissues was linked to enhanced tryptophan catabolism in brain mediated by indoleamine 2,3 dioxygenase (IDO). Here we show that acute influenza A virus (IAV) and chronic murine leukemia retrovirus (MuLV) infections, which stimulate robust IDO expression in lungs and lymphoid tissues, induced acute or chronic pain hypersensitivity, respectively. In contrast, virus-induced pain hypersensitivity did not manifest in mice lacking intact IDO1 genes. Spleen IDO activity increased markedly as MuLV infections progressed, while IDO1 expression was not elevated significantly in brain or spinal cord (CNS) tissues. Moreover, kynurenine (Kyn), a tryptophan catabolite made by cells expressing IDO, incited pain hypersensitivity in uninfected IDO1-deficient mice and Kyn potentiated pain hypersensitivity due to MuLV infection. MuLV infection stimulated selective IDO expression by a discreet population of spleen cells expressing both B cell (CD19) and dendritic cell (CD11c) markers (CD19+ DCs). CD19+ DCs were more susceptible to MuLV infection than B cells or conventional (CD19neg) DCs, proliferated faster than B cells from early stages of MuLV infection and exhibited mature antigen presenting cell (APC) phenotypes, unlike conventional (CD19neg) DCs. Moreover, interactions with CD4 T cells were necessary to sustain functional IDO expression by CD19+ DCs in vitro and in vivo. Splenocytes from MuLV-infected IDO1-sufficient mice induced pain hypersensitivity in uninfected IDO1-deficient recipient mice, while selective in vivo depletion of DCs alleviated pain hypersensitivity in MuLV-infected IDO1-sufficient mice and led to rapid reduction in splenomegaly, a hallmark of MuLV immune pathogenesis. These findings reveal critical roles for CD19+ DCs expressing IDO in host responses to MuLV infection that enhance pain hypersensitivity and cause immune pathology. Collectively, our findings support the hypothesis elevated IDO activity in non-CNS due to virus infections causes pain hypersensitivity mediated by Kyn. Previously unappreciated links between host immune responses to virus infections and pain sensitivity suggest that IDO inhibitors may alleviate heightened pain sensitivity during infections.


Journal of Immunology | 2015

B Cell-Intrinsic IDO1 Regulates Humoral Immunity to T Cell-Independent Antigens.

Rahul Shinde; Michiko Shimoda; Kapil Chaudhary; Haiyun Liu; Eslam Mohamed; Jillian Bradley; Sridhar Kandala; Xia Li; Kebin Liu; Tracy L. McGaha

Humoral responses to nonproteinaceous Ags (i.e., T cell independent [TI]) are a key component of the early response to bacterial and viral infection and a critical driver of systemic autoimmunity. However, mechanisms that regulate TI humoral immunity are poorly defined. In this study, we report that B cell–intrinsic induction of the tryptophan-catabolizing enzyme IDO1 is a key mechanism limiting TI Ab responses. When Ido1−/− mice were immunized with TI Ags, there was a significant increase in Ab titers and formation of extrafollicular Ab-secreting cells compared with controls. This effect was specific to TI Ags, as Ido1 disruption did not affect Ig production after immunization with protein Ags. The effect of IDO1 abrogation was confined to the B cell compartment, as adoptive transfer of Ido1−/− B cells to B cell–deficient mice was sufficient to replicate increased TI responses observed in Ido1−/− mice. Moreover, in vitro activation with TLR ligands or BCR crosslinking rapidly induced Ido1 expression and activity in purified B cells, and Ido1−/− B cells displayed enhanced proliferation and cell survival associated with increased Ig and cytokine production compared with wild-type B cells. Thus, our results demonstrate a novel, B cell–intrinsic, role for IDO1 as a regulator of humoral immunity that has implications for both vaccine design and prevention of autoimmunity.


Cancer Research | 2017

Anti-Jagged Immunotherapy Inhibits MDSCs and Overcomes Tumor-Induced Tolerance

Rosa A. Sierra; Jimena Trillo-Tinoco; Eslam Mohamed; Lolie Yu; Bhagelu R. Achyut; Ali S. Arbab; Jennifer W. Bradford; Barbara A. Osborne; Lucio Miele; Paulo C. Rodriguez

Myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSC) are a major obstacle to promising forms of cancer immunotherapy, but tools to broadly limit their immunoregulatory effects remain lacking. In this study, we assessed the therapeutic effect of the humanized anti-Jagged1/2-blocking antibody CTX014 on MDSC-mediated T-cell suppression in tumor-bearing mice. CTX014 decreased tumor growth, affected the accumulation and tolerogenic activity of MDSCs in tumors, and inhibited the expression of immunosuppressive factors arginase I and iNOS. Consequently, anti-Jagged therapy overcame tumor-induced T-cell tolerance, increased the infiltration of reactive CD8+ T cells into tumors, and enhanced the efficacy of T-cell-based immunotherapy. Depletion of MDSC-like cells restored tumor growth in mice treated with anti-Jagged, whereas coinjection of MDSC-like cells from anti-Jagged-treated mice with cancer cells delayed tumor growth. Jagged1/2 was induced in MDSCs by tumor-derived factors via NFkB-p65 signaling, and conditional deletion of NFkB-p65 blocked MDSC function. Collectively, our results offer a preclinical proof of concept for the use of anti-Jagged1/2 to reprogram MDSC-mediated T-cell suppression in tumors, with implications to broadly improve the efficacy of cancer therapy. Cancer Res; 77(20); 5628-38. ©2017 AACR.


Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy | 2017

Endoplasmic reticulum stress regulates tumor growth and anti-tumor immunity: a promising opportunity for cancer immunotherapy

Eslam Mohamed; Yu Cao; Paulo C. Rodriguez

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress is a cellular process that occurs as a consequence of several stress circumstances, such as the accumulation of unfolded proteins in the lumen of the ER or distinct insults that disturb the ER normal function. Different conditions in the tumor microenvironment (TME), including hypoxia, nutrient deprivation, and the elevated production of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species destabilize the loading and dispatching of the newly synthesized proteins, triggering ER stress in cancer cells and tumor-infiltrating leukocytes. In order to cope with TME-induced ER stress, tumor and stromal cells initiate an adaptive response process that aims to resolve ER stress and to restore cellular homeostasis, which is referred as the unfolded protein responses (UPR). Paradoxically, the UPR can also induce cell death under severe and/or permanent ER stress. The UPR is started through three mediators, the activation of the inositol-requiring enzyme-1α, the pancreatic ER kinase-like ER kinase, and the activating transcription factor 6. In this minireview, we will discuss the pro- and anti-tumorigenic role of the UPR in cancer cells. In addition, we will describe the effects of the TME-induced ER stress in the immunosuppressive activity of tumor-infiltrating myeloid cells. Also, we will review the results of emerging therapeutic interventions that target ER stress and the UPR mediators in cancer. We postulate that the inhibition of ER stress or the UPR-related elements could represent a significant approach to increase the efficacy of various forms of cancer immunotherapy.


Cellular & Molecular Immunology | 2018

The cellular metabolic landscape in the tumor milieu regulates the activity of myeloid infiltrates

Eslam Mohamed; Amir A. Al-Khami; Paulo C. Rodriguez

Malignant cells upregulate distinct energy metabolism programs that support their proliferation, migration, and adaptation to the stressful tumor microenvironment (TME). Additionally, this exaggerated metabolic activity allows cancer cells to hijack essential nutrients and outcompete neighboring infiltrating immune cells, thereby impairing antitumor immunity. During recent years, there has been great interest in the field to understand the tumor-induced energy metabolism signals that regulate the function of immune cells in individuals with cancer. Accordingly, it is now well accepted that uncovering the mechanisms that instruct the metabolic behavior of cancer cells and tumor-associated immune cells is an indispensable strategy for the development of new approaches to overcome immune suppression in tumors. Thus, in this minireview, we briefly discuss the interaction between particular metabolic signaling pathways and immunosuppressive activity in different subsets of myeloid cells within the TME. Additionally, we illustrate potential central mechanisms controlling the metabolic reprogramming of myeloid cells in response to tumor-derived factors.


Journal of Investigative Medicine | 2018

Regulation of indoleamine 2,3 dioxygenase and its role in a porcine model of acute kidney allograft rejection

Youli Wang; Todd D. Merchen; Xuexiu Fang; Randi Lassiter; Chak-Sum Ho; Ryan Jajosky; Daniel T. Kleven; Thomas Thompson; Eslam Mohamed; Miao Yu; Jennifer L. Waller; N. Stanley Nahman

In kidney transplantation acute allograft rejection is the most common cause of late allograft loss. Changes in indoleamine 2,3 dioxygenase (IDO) activity, which catabolizes the degradation of tryptophan to kynurenine, may predict rejection. However, exogenous IDO is immunosuppressive in rodent kidney transplantation. Thus, the increase in IDO activity observed in acute allograft rejection is insufficient to prevent rejection. To address this question, we assessed the regulation of IDO and its role in acute rejection in a porcine model of kidney transplant. In tissue samples from rejecting kidney allografts, we showed a 13-fold increase in IDO gene transcription and 20-fold increase in IDO enzyme activity when compared with autotransplanted kidneys. Allografts also demonstrated an over fourfold increase in tissue interferon (IFN)-γ, with marked increases in tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α, TNF-β and interleukin 1β. Gene transcription and protein levels of kynurenine 3-monooxygenase (KMO) were decreased. KMO generates the immunosuppressive kynurenine, 3-hydroxykynurenine. The results of these studies demonstrate a clear association between rejection and increased allograft IDO expression, likely driven in part by IFN-γ and facilitated by other cytokines of the allogeneic response. Moreover, the loss of downstream enzymatic activity in the IDO metabolic pathway may suggest novel mechanisms for the perpetuation of rejection.


Journal of Immunology | 2016

DNA sensing via STING regulates immune responses in a lung cancer model via IDO

Eslam Mohamed; Henrique Lemos; Lei Huang; Rong Ou; Gabriela Pacholczyk; Ali S. Arbab; David H. Munn; Andrew L. Mellor

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Andrew L. Mellor

Georgia Regents University

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Henrique Lemos

Georgia Regents University

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Lei Huang

Georgia Regents University

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David H. Munn

Georgia Regents University

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Rong Ou

Georgia Regents University

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Ali S. Arbab

Georgia Regents University

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Lingqian Li

Georgia Regents University

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Jillian Bradley

Georgia Regents University

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Kapil Chaudhary

Georgia Regents University

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