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Dive into the research topics where Hedda Wardemann is active.

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Featured researches published by Hedda Wardemann.


Nature | 2009

Broad diversity of neutralizing antibodies isolated from memory B cells in HIV-infected individuals

Johannes F. Scheid; Hugo Mouquet; Niklas Feldhahn; Michael S. Seaman; Klara Velinzon; John Pietzsch; Rene G. Ott; Robert M. Anthony; Henry Zebroski; Arlene Hurley; Adhuna Phogat; Bimal K. Chakrabarti; Yuxing Li; Mark Connors; Florencia Pereyra; Bruce D. Walker; Hedda Wardemann; David D. Ho; Richard T. Wyatt; John R. Mascola; Jeffrey V. Ravetch; Michel C. Nussenzweig

Antibodies to conserved epitopes on the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) surface protein gp140 can protect against infection in non-human primates, and some infected individuals show high titres of broadly neutralizing immunoglobulin (Ig)G antibodies in their serum. However, little is known about the specificity and activity of these antibodies. To characterize the memory antibody responses to HIV, we cloned 502 antibodies from HIV envelope-binding memory B cells from six HIV-infected patients with broadly neutralizing antibodies and low to intermediate viral loads. We show that in these patients, the B-cell memory response to gp140 is composed of up to 50 independent clones expressing high affinity neutralizing antibodies to the gp120 variable loops, the CD4-binding site, the co-receptor-binding site, and to a new neutralizing epitope that is in the same region of gp120 as the CD4-binding site. Thus, the IgG memory B-cell compartment in the selected group of patients with broad serum neutralizing activity to HIV is comprised of multiple clonal responses with neutralizing activity directed against several epitopes on gp120.


Nature Immunology | 2004

Visualizing dendritic cell networks in vivo.

Randall L Lindquist; Guy Shakhar; Diana Dudziak; Hedda Wardemann; Thomas R. Eisenreich; Michael L. Dustin; Michel C. Nussenzweig

In the steady state, dendritic cells (DCs) in the lymph node induce T cell tolerance to self antigens. Innate signals trigger the maturation of tissue DCs, which migrate into lymph nodes and activate T cells. To examine DCs in vivo, we produced transgenic mice whose DCs expressed enhanced yellow fluorescent protein. Two-photon microscopy of lymph nodes in live mice showed that most of the steady-state DCs were enmeshed in an extensive network and remained in place while actively probing adjacent T cells with their processes. Mature DCs were more motile than steady-state DCs and were rapidly dispersed and integrated into the sessile network, facilitating their interaction with migrating T cells.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2005

Defective B cell tolerance checkpoints in systemic lupus erythematosus

Sergey Yurasov; Hedda Wardemann; Johanna Hammersen; Makoto Tsuiji; Eric Meffre; Virginia Pascual; Michel C. Nussenzweig

A cardinal feature of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is the development of autoantibodies. The first autoantibodies described in patients with SLE were those specific for nuclei and DNA, but subsequent work has shown that individuals with this disease produce a panoply of different autoantibodies. Thus, one of the constant features of SLE is a profound breakdown in tolerance in the antibody system. The appearance of self-reactive antibodies in SLE precedes clinical disease, but where in the B cell pathway tolerance is first broken has not been defined. In healthy humans, autoantibodies are removed from the B cell repertoire in two discrete early checkpoints in B cell development. We found these checkpoints to be defective in three adolescent patients with SLE. 25–50% of the mature naive B cells in SLE patients produce self-reactive antibodies even before they participate in immune responses as compared with 5–20% in controls. We conclude that SLE is associated with abnormal early B cell tolerance.


Nature Biotechnology | 2014

The promise and challenge of high-throughput sequencing of the antibody repertoire.

George Georgiou; Gregory C. Ippolito; John F. Beausang; Christian E. Busse; Hedda Wardemann; Stephen R. Quake

Efforts to determine the antibody repertoire encoded by B cells in the blood or lymphoid organs using high-throughput DNA sequencing technologies have been advancing at an extremely rapid pace and are transforming our understanding of humoral immune responses. Information gained from high-throughput DNA sequencing of immunoglobulin genes (Ig-seq) can be applied to detect B-cell malignancies with high sensitivity, to discover antibodies specific for antigens of interest, to guide vaccine development and to understand autoimmunity. Rapid progress in the development of experimental protocols and informatics analysis tools is helping to reduce sequencing artifacts, to achieve more precise quantification of clonal diversity and to extract the most pertinent biological information. That said, broader application of Ig-seq, especially in clinical settings, will require the development of a standardized experimental design framework that will enable the sharing and meta-analysis of sequencing data generated by different laboratories.


Nature | 2012

Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia is driven by antigen-independent cell-autonomous signalling

Marcus Dühren-von Minden; Rudolf Übelhart; Dunja Schneider; Thomas Wossning; Martina P. Bach; Maike Buchner; Daniel Hofmann; Elena Surova; Marie Follo; Fabian Kohler; Hedda Wardemann; Katja Zirlik; Hendrik Veelken; Hassan Jumaa

B-cell antigen receptor (BCR) expression is an important feature of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL), one of the most prevalent B-cell neoplasias in Western countries. The presence of stereotyped and quasi-identical BCRs in different CLL patients suggests that recognition of specific antigens might drive CLL pathogenesis. Here we show that, in contrast to other B-cell neoplasias, CLL-derived BCRs induce antigen-independent cell-autonomous signalling, which is dependent on the heavy-chain complementarity-determining region (HCDR3) and an internal epitope of the BCR. Indeed, transferring the HCDR3 of a CLL-derived BCR provides autonomous signalling capacity to a non-autonomously active BCR, whereas mutations in the internal epitope abolish this capacity. Because BCR expression was required for the binding of secreted CLL-derived BCRs to target cells, and mutations in the internal epitope reduced this binding, our results indicate a new model for CLL pathogenesis, with cell-autonomous antigen-independent signalling as a crucial pathogenic mechanism.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2005

Unmutated and mutated chronic lymphocytic leukemias derive from self-reactive B cell precursors despite expressing different antibody reactivity

Maxime Hervé; Kai Xu; Yen-Shing Ng; Hedda Wardemann; Emilia Albesiano; Bradley T. Messmer; Nicholas Chiorazzi; Eric Meffre

B cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is a disease of expanding monoclonal B cells whose B cell receptor (BCR) mutational status defines 2 subgroups; patients with mutated BCRs have a more favorable prognosis than those with unmutated BCRs. CLL B cells express a restricted BCR repertoire including antibodies with quasi-identical complementarity-determining region 3 (CDR3), which suggests specific antigen recognition. The antigens recognized by CLL antibodies may include autoantigens since about half of CLL B cells produce autoreactive antibodies. However, the distribution of autoreactive antibodies between Ig heavy-chain variable-unmutated (IgV-unmutated) CLL (UM-CLL) and IgV-mutated CLL (M-CLL) is unknown. To determine the role of antibody reactivity and the impact of somatic hypermutation (SHM) on CLL antibody specificity, we cloned and expressed in vitro recombinant antibodies from M- and UM-CLL B cells and tested their reactivity by ELISA. We found that UM-CLL B cells expressed highly polyreactive antibodies whereas most M-CLL B cells did not. When mutated nonautoreactive CLL antibody sequences were reverted in vitro to their germline counterparts, they encoded polyreactive and autoreactive antibodies. We concluded that both UM-CLLs and M-CLLs originate from self-reactive B cell precursors and that SHM plays an important role in the development of the disease by altering original BCR autoreactivity.


Nature | 2010

Polyreactivity increases the apparent affinity of anti-HIV antibodies by heteroligation

Hugo Mouquet; Johannes F. Scheid; Markus Zoller; Michelle Krogsgaard; Rene G. Ott; Shetha Shukair; Maxim N. Artyomov; John Pietzsch; Mark Connors; Florencia Pereyra; Bruce D. Walker; David D. Ho; Patrick C. Wilson; Michael S. Seaman; Herman N. Eisen; Arup K. Chakraborty; Thomas J. Hope; Jeffrey V. Ravetch; Hedda Wardemann; Michel C. Nussenzweig

During immune responses, antibodies are selected for their ability to bind to foreign antigens with high affinity, in part by their ability to undergo homotypic bivalent binding. However, this type of binding is not always possible. For example, the small number of gp140 glycoprotein spikes displayed on the surface of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disfavours homotypic bivalent antibody binding. Here we show that during the human antibody response to HIV, somatic mutations that increase antibody affinity also increase breadth and neutralizing potency. Surprisingly, the responding naive and memory B cells produce polyreactive antibodies, which are capable of bivalent heteroligation between one high-affinity anti-HIV-gp140 combining site and a second low-affinity site on another molecular structure on HIV. Although cross-reactivity to self-antigens or polyreactivity is strongly selected against during B-cell development, it is a common serologic feature of certain infections in humans, including HIV, Epstein-Barr virus and hepatitis C virus. Seventy-five per cent of the 134 monoclonal anti-HIV-gp140 antibodies cloned from six patients with high titres of neutralizing antibodies are polyreactive. Despite the low affinity of the polyreactive combining site, heteroligation demonstrably increases the apparent affinity of polyreactive antibodies to HIV.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2002

B-1a B Cells that Link the Innate and Adaptive Immune Responses Are Lacking in the Absence of the Spleen

Hedda Wardemann; Thomas Boehm; Neil Dear; Rita Carsetti

Splenectomized individuals are prone to overwhelming infections with encapsulated bacteria and splenectomy of mice increases susceptibility to streptococcal infections, yet the exact mechanism by which the spleen protects against such infections is unknown. Using congenitally asplenic mice as a model, we show that the spleen is essential for the generation of B-1a cells, a B cell population that cooperates with the innate immune system to control early bacterial and viral growth. Splenectomy of wild-type mice further demonstrated that the spleen is also important for the survival of B-1a cells. Transfer experiments demonstrate that lack of these cells, as opposed to the absence of the spleen per se, is associated with an inability to mount a rapid immune response against streptococcal polysaccharides. Thus, absence of the spleen and the associated increased susceptibility to streptococcal infections is correlated with lack of B-1a B cells. These findings reveal a hitherto unknown role of the spleen in generating and maintaining the B-1a B cell pool.


Current Opinion in Immunology | 2008

B-cell tolerance checkpoints in health and autoimmunity

Eric Meffre; Hedda Wardemann

The enormous diversity of the antibody repertoire is generated by two mechanisms: recombination of immunoglobulin (Ig) gene variable (V), diversity (D), and joining (J) gene segments during the early stages of B-cell development in the bone marrow and somatic hypermutation (SHM) of functional Ig genes from antigen-activated B cells within secondary lymphoid organs. Diversity by V(D)J recombination and SHM not only provides protective humoral immunity but also generates potentially harmful clones expressing autoantibodies. Under normal circumstances, several mechanisms regulate the removal of autoreactive B cells and defects in central and peripheral B cell tolerance checkpoints are associated with the development of autoimmunity in humans.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2013

Monoclonal IgG antibodies generated from joint-derived B cells of RA patients have a strong bias toward citrullinated autoantigen recognition

Khaled Amara; Johanna Steen; Fiona Murray; Henner Morbach; Blanca Fernandez-Rodriguez; Vijay Joshua; Marianne Engström; Omri Snir; Lena Israelsson; Anca Irinel Catrina; Hedda Wardemann; Davide Corti; Eric Meffre; Lars Klareskog; Vivianne Malmström

Synovial IgG-expressing B cells from patients with rheumatoid arthritis show specificity for citrullinated autoantigens.

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Michel C. Nussenzweig

California Institute of Technology

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Rajagopal Murugan

German Cancer Research Center

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