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Dive into the research topics where Hanna I. Filutowicz is active.

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Featured researches published by Hanna I. Filutowicz.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011

Vaccine-induced protection against 3 systemic mycoses endemic to North America requires Th17 cells in mice

Marcel Wüthrich; Benjamin Gern; Chiung Yu Hung; Karen Ersland; Nicole Rocco; John Pick-Jacobs; Kevin Galles; Hanna I. Filutowicz; Thomas F. Warner; Michael D. Evans; Garry T. Cole; Bruce S. Klein

Worldwide rates of systemic fungal infections, including three of the major pathogens responsible for such infections in North America (Coccidioides posadasii, Histoplasma capsulatum, and Blastomyces dermatitidis), have soared recently, spurring interest in developing vaccines. The development of Th1 cells is believed to be crucial for protective immunity against pathogenic fungi, whereas the role of Th17 cells is vigorously debated. In models of primary fungal infection, some studies have shown that Th17 cells mediate resistance, while others have shown that they promote disease pathology. Here, we have shown that Th1 immunity is dispensable and that fungus-specific Th17 cells are sufficient for vaccine-induced protection against lethal pulmonary infection with B. dermatitidis in mice. Further, vaccine-induced Th17 cells were necessary and sufficient to protect against the three major systemic mycoses in North America. Mechanistically, Th17 cells engendered protection by recruiting and activating neutrophils and macrophages to the alveolar space, while the induction of Th17 cells and acquisition of vaccine immunity unexpectedly required the adapter molecule Myd88 but not the fungal pathogen recognition receptor Dectin-1. These data suggest that human vaccines against systemic fungal infections should be designed to induce Th17 cells if they are to be effective.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2003

Vaccine Immunity to Pathogenic Fungi Overcomes the Requirement for CD4 Help in Exogenous Antigen Presentation to CD8+ T Cells Implications for Vaccine Development in Immune-deficient Hosts

Marcel Wüthrich; Hanna I. Filutowicz; Thomas F. Warner; George S. Deepe; Bruce S. Klein

Systemic fungal infections with primary and opportunistic pathogens have become increasingly common and represent a growing health menace in patients with AIDS and other immune deficiencies. T lymphocyte immunity, in particular the CD4+ Th 1 cells, is considered the main defense against these pathogens, and their absence is associated with increased susceptibility. It would seem illogical then to propose vaccinating these vulnerable patients against fungal infections. We report here that CD4+ T cells are dispensable for vaccine-induced resistance against experimental fungal pulmonary infections with two agents, Blastomyces dermatitidis an extracellular pathogen, and Histoplasma capsulatum a facultative intracellular pathogen. In the absence of T helper cells, exogenous fungal antigens activated memory CD8+ cells in a major histocompatibility complex class I–restricted manner and CD8+ T cell–derived cytokines tumor necrosis factor α, interferon γ, and granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor–mediated durable vaccine immunity. CD8+ T cells could also rely on alternate mechanisms for robust vaccine immunity, in the absence of some of these factors. Our results demonstrate an unexpected plasticity of immunity in compromised hosts at both the cellular and molecular level and point to the feasibility of developing vaccines against invasive fungal infections in patients with severe immune deficiencies, including those with few or no CD4+ T cells.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2000

Mutation of the WI-1 gene yields an attenuated blastomyces dermatitidis strain that induces host resistance.

Marcel Wüthrich; Hanna I. Filutowicz; Bruce S. Klein

Systemic fungal infections are becoming more common and difficult to treat, and vaccine prevention is not available. Pulmonary infection with the dimorphic fungus Blastomyces dermatitidis often progresses and requires treatment to prevent fatality. We recently created a recombinant strain of the fungus lacking the WI-1 adhesin and pathogenicity. We show here that administration of viable yeast of this attenuated strain vaccinates against lethal pulmonary experimental infection due to isogenic and nonisogenic strains from diverse geographic regions. To our knowledge, this is the first example of a recombinant attenuated vaccine against fungi. The vaccine induces delayed-type hypersensitivity and polarized type 1 cytokine responses, which are linked with resistance. A cell-wall/membrane (CW/M) antigen from the vaccine strain also induces polarized and protective immune responses. Lymph node cells and CD4(+) T-cell lines raised with CW/M antigen transfer protective immunity when they release type 1 cytokine IFN-gamma, but not when they release IL-4, and neutralization of IFN-gamma confirmed its role in vivo. Thus, by mutating a pathogenetic locus in a dimorphic fungus, we have created an attenuated vaccine strain and have begun to elucidate fungal and host elements requisite for vaccine immunity.


Journal of Immunology | 2002

Requisite Elements in Vaccine Immunity to Blastomyces dermatitidis : Plasticity Uncovers Vaccine Potential in Immune-Deficient Hosts

Marcel Wüthrich; Hanna I. Filutowicz; Thomas F. Warner; Bruce S. Klein

Understanding fundamental mechanisms of vaccine immunity will allow proper use and optimization of vaccines. Vaccination with a genetically engineered, live, attenuated strain of Blastomyces dermatitidis carrying a targeted deletion at the BAD1 locus confers sterilizing immunity against experimental lethal pulmonary infection. We found in this study that αβ T cells are requisite for durable vaccine immunity, whereas other T and B cells are dispensable. In immune-competent animals, CD4+ T-cell derived cytokines TNF-α and IFN-γ mediate vaccine immunity. Surprisingly, these factors are dispensable in immune-deficient animals, which rely on alternate mechanisms for robust vaccine immunity, yet still require O2− production rather than generation of NO. Our results clarify the cellular and molecular bases behind the first genetically engineered fungal vaccine. They also illustrate a sharp difference in vaccine mechanisms between immune-competent and immune-deficient hosts, which underscores the plasticity of residual immune elements in compromised hosts, and points to the feasibility of developing vaccines against invasive fungal infection in this fast growing patient population.


Journal of Immunology | 2011

A TCR Transgenic Mouse Reactive with Multiple Systemic Dimorphic Fungi

Marcel Wüthrich; Chiung Yu Hung; Ben H. Gern; John Pick-Jacobs; Kevin Galles; Hanna I. Filutowicz; Garry T. Cole; Bruce S. Klein

Dimorphic fungi collectively account for 5–10 million new infections annually worldwide. Ongoing efforts seek to clarify mechanisms of cellular resistance to these agents and develop vaccines. A major limitation in studying the development of protective T cells in this group of organisms is the lack of tools to detect, enumerate, and characterize fungus-specific T cells during vaccination and infection. We generated a TCR transgenic mouse (Bd 1807) whose CD4+ T cells respond to a native epitope in Blastomyces dermatitidis and also in Histoplasma capsulatum. In this study, we characterize the mouse, reveal its applications, and extend our analysis showing that 1807 cells also respond to the related dimorphic fungi Coccidioides posadasii and Paracoccidioides lutzii. On adoptive transfer into vaccinated wild-type mice, 1807 cells become activated, proliferate, and expand in the draining lymph nodes, and they differentiate into T1 effectors after trafficking to the lung upon lethal experimental challenge. Bd 1807 cells confer vaccine-induced resistance against B. dermatitidis, H. capsulatum, and C. posadasii. Transfer of naive 1807 cells at serial intervals postvaccination uncovered the prolonged duration of fungal Ag presentation. Using 1807 cells, we also found that the administration of vaccine only once induced a maximal pool of effector/memory CD4+ cells and protective immunity by 4 wk after vaccination. The autologous adoptive transfer system described in this study reveals novel features of antifungal immunity and offers a powerful approach to study the differentiation of Ag-specific T cells responsive to multiple dimorphic fungi and the development of CD4+ T cell memory needed to protect against fungal infection.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2015

Calnexin induces expansion of antigen-specific CD4+ T cells that confer immunity to fungal ascomycetes via conserved epitopes

Marcel Wüthrich; Tristan Brandhorst; Thomas D. Sullivan; Hanna I. Filutowicz; Alana K. Sterkel; Douglas Stewart; Mengyi Li; Tassanee Lerksuthirat; Vanessa LeBert; Zu Ting Shen; Gary R. Ostroff; George S. Deepe; Chiung Yu Hung; Garry T. Cole; Jennifer A. Walter; Marc K. Jenkins; Bruce S. Klein

Fungal infections remain a threat due to the lack of broad-spectrum fungal vaccines and protective antigens. Recent studies showed that attenuated Blastomyces dermatitidis confers protection via T cell recognition of an unknown but conserved antigen. Using transgenic CD4(+) T cells recognizing this antigen, we identify an amino acid determinant within the chaperone calnexin that is conserved across diverse fungal ascomycetes. Calnexin, typically an ER protein, also localizes to the surface of yeast, hyphae, and spores. T cell epitope mapping unveiled a 13-residue sequence conserved across Ascomycota. Infection with divergent ascomycetes, including dimorphic fungi, opportunistic molds, and the agent causing white nose syndrome in bats, induces expansion of calnexin-specific CD4(+) T cells. Vaccine delivery of calnexin in glucan particles induces fungal antigen-specific CD4(+) T cell expansion and resistance to lethal challenge with multiple fungal pathogens. Thus, the immunogenicity and conservation of calnexin make this fungal protein a promising vaccine target.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2011

Safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity of a recombinant, genetically-engineered, live-attenuated vaccine against canine blastomycosis

Marcel Wüthrich; Theerapong Krajaejun; Valerie Shearn-Bochsler; Chris Bass; Hanna I. Filutowicz; Alfred M. Legendre; Bruce S. Klein

ABSTRACT Blastomycosis is a severe, commonly fatal infection caused by the dimorphic fungus Blastomyces dermatitidis in dogs that live in the United States, Canada, and parts of Africa. The cost of treating an infection can be expensive, and no vaccine against this infection is commercially available. A genetically engineered live-attenuated strain of B. dermatitidis lacking the major virulence factor BAD-1 successfully vaccinates against lethal experimental infection in mice. Here we studied the safety, toxicity, and immunogenicity of this strain as a vaccine in dogs, using 25 beagles at a teaching laboratory and 78 foxhounds in a field trial. In the beagles, escalating doses of live vaccine ranging from 2 × 104 to 2 × 107 yeast cells given subcutaneously were safe and did not disseminate to the lung or induce systemic illness, but a dose of <2 × 106 yeast cells induced less fever and local inflammation. A vaccine dose of 105 yeast cells was also well tolerated in vaccinated foxhounds who had never had blastomycosis; however, vaccinated dogs with prior infection had more local reactions at the vaccine site. The draining lymph node cells and peripheral blood lymphocytes from vaccinated dogs demonstrated gamma interferon (IFN-γ), tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) specifically in response to stimulation with Blastomyces antigens. Thus, the live-attenuated vaccine against blastomycosis studied here proved safe, well tolerated, and immunogenic in dogs and merits further studies of vaccine efficacy.


PLOS Pathogens | 2013

Structure and function of a fungal adhesin that binds heparin and mimics thrombospondin-1 by blocking T cell activation and effector function.

Tristan Brandhorst; René M. Roy; Marcel Wüthrich; Som G. Nanjappa; Hanna I. Filutowicz; Kevin Galles; Marco Tonelli; Darrell R. McCaslin; Kenneth A. Satyshur; Bruce S. Klein

Blastomyces adhesin-1 (BAD-1) is a 120-kD surface protein on B. dermatitidis yeast. We show here that BAD-1 contains 41 tandem repeats and that deleting even half of them impairs fungal pathogenicity. According to NMR, the repeats form tightly folded 17-amino acid loops constrained by a disulfide bond linking conserved cysteines. Each loop contains a highly conserved WxxWxxW motif found in thrombospondin-1 (TSP-1) type 1 heparin-binding repeats. BAD-1 binds heparin specifically and saturably, and is competitively inhibited by soluble heparin, but not related glycosaminoglycans. According to SPR analysis, the affinity of BAD-1 for heparin is 33 nM±14 nM. Putative heparin-binding motifs are found both at the N-terminus and within each tandem repeat loop. Like TSP-1, BAD-1 blocks activation of T cells in a manner requiring the heparan sulfate-modified surface molecule CD47, and impairs effector functions. The tandem repeats of BAD-1 thus confer pathogenicity, harbor motifs that bind heparin, and suppress T-cell activation via a CD47-dependent mechanism, mimicking mammalian TSP-1.


Infection and Immunity | 2007

Vβ1+ Jβ1.1+/Vα2+ Jα49+ CD4+ T Cells Mediate Resistance against Infection with Blastomyces dermatitidis

Marcel Wüthrich; Hanna I. Filutowicz; Holly L. Allen; George S. Deepe; Bruce S. Klein

ABSTRACT Immunization with a cell wall/membrane (CW/M) and yeast cytosol extract (YCE) crude antigen from Blastomyces dermatitidis confers T-cell-mediated resistance against lethal experimental infection in mice. We isolated and characterized T cells that recognize components of these protective antigens and mediate protection. CD4+ T-cell clones elicited with CW/M antigen adoptively transferred protective immunity when they expressed a Vα2+ Jα49+/Vβ1+ Jβ1.1+ heterodimeric T-cell receptor (TCR) and produced high levels of gamma interferon (IFN-γ). In contrast, Vβ8.1/8.2+ CD4+ T-cell clones that were reactive against CW/M and YCE antigens and produced little or no IFN-γ either failed to mediate protection or exacerbated the infection depending on the level of interleukin-5 expression. Thus, the outgrowth of protective T-cell clones against immunodominant antigens of B. dermatitidis is biased by a combination of the TCR repertoire and Th1 cytokine production.


Journal of Immunology | 2006

Differential Requirements of T Cell Subsets for CD40 Costimulation in Immunity to Blastomyces dermatitidis

Marcel Wüthrich; Phil L. Fisette; Hanna I. Filutowicz; Bruce S. Klein

Cell-mediated immunity and production of type 1 cytokines are the main defenses against pathogenic fungi. Ligation of CD40 by CD40L on T cells is critical for the induction of these immune responses in vivo. We explored the role of CD40/CD40L interactions in vaccine immunity to Blastomyces dermatitidis by immunizing CD40−/− and CD40L−/− mice and analyzing their resistance to reinfection in a murine pulmonary model. In the absence of CD40 or CD40L, CD4+ cells failed to get primed or produce type 1 cytokine and impaired the generation of CD8+ T1 cells. The CD8+ T cell defect was not due to regulatory T cells or impaired APC maturation or Ag presentation to T cells. If CD4+ cells were first eliminated, vaccination of CD40−/− and CD40L−/− mice restored priming of CD8+ cells, type 1 cytokine production, and resistance. Hence, CD4+ and CD8+ cells differ sharply in their requirement for CD40/CD40L interaction during the generation of antifungal immunity. Despite the plasticity of T cell subsets in vaccine immunity, in absence of CD40/CD40L interaction, CD4+ cells may impede the priming of CD8+ cells at the cost of host survival against a lethal infectious disease.

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Bruce S. Klein

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Marcel Wüthrich

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Kevin Galles

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Thomas F. Warner

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Chiung Yu Hung

University of Texas at San Antonio

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Garry T. Cole

University of Texas at San Antonio

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John Pick-Jacobs

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Tristan Brandhorst

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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John M. Mansfield

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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