Gianna Elena Hammer
University of California, Berkeley
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Publication
Featured researches published by Gianna Elena Hammer.
Nature Immunology | 2006
Gianna Elena Hammer; Federico Gonzalez; Marine Champsaur; Dragana Cado; Nilabh Shastri
Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules present thousands of peptides to allow CD8+ T cells to detect abnormal intracellular proteins. The antigen-processing pathway for generating peptides begins in the cytoplasm, and the MHC molecules are loaded in the endoplasmic reticulum. However, the nature of peptide pool in the endoplasmic reticulum and the proteolytic events that occur in this compartment are unclear. We addressed these issues by generating mice lacking the endoplasmic reticulum aminopeptidase associated with antigen processing (ERAAP). We found that loss of ERAAP disrupted the generation of naturally processed peptides in the endoplasmic reticulum, decreased the stability of peptide–MHC class I complexes and diminished CD8+ T cell responses. Thus, trimming of antigenic peptides by ERAAP in the endoplasmic reticulum is essential for the generation of the normal repertoire of processed peptides.
Nature Immunology | 2011
Gianna Elena Hammer; Emre E. Turer; Kimberly E. Taylor; Celia J. Fang; Rommel Advincula; Shigeru Oshima; Julio Barrera; Eric J. Huang; Barbara A. Malynn; Boris Reizis; Lindsey A. Criswell; Mary C. Nakamura; Averil Ma
Dendritic cells (DCs), which are known to support immune activation during infection, may also regulate immune homeostasis in resting animals. Here we show that mice lacking the ubiquitin-editing molecule A20 specifically in DCs spontaneously showed DC activation and population expansion of activated T cells. Analysis of DC-specific epistasis in compound mice lacking both A20 and the signaling adaptor MyD88 specifically in DCs showed that A20 restricted both MyD88-independent signals, which drive activation of DCs and T cells, and MyD88-dependent signals, which drive population expansion of T cells. In addition, mice lacking A20 specifically in DCs spontaneously developed lymphocyte-dependent colitis, seronegative ankylosing arthritis and enthesitis, conditions stereotypical of human inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Our findings indicate that DCs need A20 to preserve immune quiescence and suggest that A20-dependent DC functions may underlie IBD and IBD-associated arthritides.
Journal of Immunology | 2002
Christopher W. McMahon; Allan J. Zajac; Amanda M. Jamieson; Laura G. Corral; Gianna Elena Hammer; Rafi Ahmed; David H. Raulet
NK cells express several families of receptors that play central roles in target cell recognition. These NK cell receptors are also expressed by certain memory phenotype CD8+ T cells, and in some cases are up-regulated in T cells responding to viral infection. To determine how the profile of NK receptor expression changes in murine CD8+ T cells as they respond to intracellular pathogens, we used class I tetramer reagents to directly examine Ag-specific T cells during lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus and Listeria monocytogenes infections. We found that the majority of pathogen-specific CD8+ T cells initiated expression of the inhibitory CD94/NKG2A heterodimer, the KLRG1 receptor, and a novel murine NK cell marker (10D7); conversely, very few Ag-specific T cells expressed Ly49 family members. The up-regulation of these receptors was independent of IL-15 and persisted long after clearance of the pathogen. The expression of CD94/NKG2A was rapidly initiated in naive CD8+ T cells responding to peptide Ags in vitro and on many of the naive T cells that proliferate when transferred into lymphopenic (Rag-1−/−) hosts. Thus, CD94/NKG2A expression is a common consequence of CD8+ T cell activation. Binding of the CD94/NKG2A receptor by its ligand (Qa-1b) did not significantly inhibit CD8+ T cell effector functions. However, expression of CD94 and NKG2A transgenes partially inhibited early events of T cell activation. These subtle effects suggest that CD94/NKG2A-mediated inhibition of T cells may be limited to particular circumstances or may synergize with other receptors that are similarly up-regulated.
Annual Review of Immunology | 2013
Gianna Elena Hammer; Averil Ma
Dendritic cells (DCs) are specialized sentinels responsible for coordinating adaptive immunity. This function is dependent upon coupled sensitivity to environmental signs of inflammation and infection to cellular maturation-the programmed alteration of DC phenotype and function to enhance immune cell activation. Although DCs are thus well equipped to respond to pathogens, maturation triggers are not unique to infection. Given that immune cells are exquisitely sensitive to the biological functions of DCs, we now appreciate that multiple layers of suppression are required to restrict the environmental sensitivity, cellular maturation, and even life span of DCs to prevent aberrant immune activation during the steady state. At the same time, steady-state DCs are not quiescent but rather perform key functions that support homeostasis of numerous cell types. Here we review these functions and molecular mechanisms of suppression that control steady-state DC maturation. Corruption of these steady-state operatives has diverse immunological consequences and pinpoints DCs as potent drivers of autoimmune and inflammatory disease.
Journal of Immunology | 2013
Joseph Callahan; Gianna Elena Hammer; Alexander Agelides; Bao H. Duong; Shigeru Oshima; Jeffrey P. North; Rommel Advincula; Nataliya Shifrin; Hong-An Truong; Jonathan S. Paw; Julio Barrera; Michael D. Rosenblum; Barbara A. Malynn; Averil Ma
Psoriasis is a chronic, inflammatory skin disease caused by a combination of environmental and genetic factors. The Tnip1 gene encodes A20 binding and inhibitor of NF-κB-1 (ABIN-1) protein and is strongly associated with susceptibility to psoriasis in humans. ABIN-1, a widely expressed ubiquitin-binding protein, restricts TNF- and TLR-induced signals. In this study, we report that mice lacking ABIN-1 specifically in dendritic cells (DCs), ABIN-1fl CD11c-Cre mice, exhibit perturbed immune homeostasis. ABIN-1–deficient DCs display exaggerated NF-κB and MAPK signaling and produce more IL-23 than do normal cells in response to TLR ligands. Challenge of ABIN-1fl CD11c-Cre mice with topical TLR7 ligand leads to greater numbers of Th17 and TCRγδ T cells and exacerbated development of psoriaform lesions. These phenotypes are reversed by DC-specific deletion of the TLR adaptor MyD88. These studies link ABIN-1 with IL-23 and IL-17, and they provide cellular and molecular mechanisms by which ABIN-1 regulates susceptibility to psoriasis.
Nature Communications | 2015
Masashi Kanayama; Makoto Inoue; Keiko Danzaki; Gianna Elena Hammer; You-Wen He; Mari L. Shinohara
Immune responses must be well restrained in a steady state to avoid excessive inflammation. However, such restraints are quickly removed to exert anti-microbial responses. Here, we report a role of autophagy in an early host anti-fungal response by enhancing NFκB activity through A20 sequestration. Enhancement of NFκB activation is achieved by autophagic depletion of A20, an NFκB inhibitor, in F4/80hi macrophages in the spleen, peritoneum, and kidney. We show that p62, an autophagic adaptor protein, captures A20 to sequester it in the autophagosome. This allows the macrophages to release chemokines to recruit neutrophils. Indeed, mice lacking autophagy in myeloid cells show higher susceptibility to Candida albicans infection due to impairment in neutrophil recruitment. Thus, at least in the specific aforementioned tissues, autophagy appears to break A20-dependent suppression in F4/80hi macrophages, which express abundant A20 and contribute to the initiation of efficient innate immune responses.
Nature Immunology | 2007
Gianna Elena Hammer; Federico Gonzalez; Edward James; Hector Nolla; Nilabh Shastri
Immunity | 2006
Takayuki Kanaseki; Nicolas Blanchard; Gianna Elena Hammer; Federico Gonzalez; Nilabh Shastri
Immunity | 2007
Gianna Elena Hammer; Takayuki Kanaseki; Nilabh Shastri
Immunity | 2013
Timothy T. Lu; Michio Onizawa; Gianna Elena Hammer; Emre E. Turer; Qian Yin; Ermelinda Damko; Alexander Agelidis; Nataliya Shifrin; Rommel Advincula; Julio Barrera; Barbara A. Malynn; Hao Wu; Averil Ma