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Featured researches published by Helene Bernstein.


Journal of Immunology | 2012

Magnesium Decreases Inflammatory Cytokine Production: A Novel Innate Immunomodulatory Mechanism

Jun Sugimoto; Andrea Romani; Alice Valentin-Torres; Angel A. Luciano; Christina M. R. Kitchen; Nicholas T. Funderburg; Sam Mesiano; Helene Bernstein

MgSO4 exposure before preterm birth is neuroprotective, reducing the risk of cerebral palsy and major motor dysfunction. Neonatal inflammatory cytokine levels correlate with neurologic outcome, leading us to assess the effect of MgSO4 on cytokine production in humans. We found reduced maternal TNF-α and IL-6 production following in vivo MgSO4 treatment. Short-term exposure to a clinically effective MgSO4 concentration in vitro substantially reduced the frequency of neonatal monocytes producing TNF-α and IL-6 under constitutive and TLR-stimulated conditions, decreasing cytokine gene and protein expression, without influencing cell viability or phagocytic function. In summary, MgSO4 reduced cytokine production in intrapartum women, term and preterm neonates, demonstrating effectiveness in those at risk for inflammation-associated adverse perinatal outcomes. By probing the mechanism of decreased cytokine production, we found that the immunomodulatory effect was mediated by magnesium and not the sulfate moiety, and it was reversible. Cellular magnesium content increased rapidly upon MgSO4 exposure, and reduced cytokine production occurred following stimulation with different TLR ligands as well as when magnesium was added after TLR stimulation, strongly suggesting that magnesium acts intracellularly. Magnesium increased basal IĸBα levels, and upon TLR stimulation was associated with reduced NF-κB activation and nuclear localization. These findings establish a new paradigm for innate immunoregulation, whereby magnesium plays a critical regulatory role in NF-κB activation, cytokine production, and disease pathogenesis.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Preterm Labor and Chorioamnionitis Are Associated with Neonatal T Cell Activation

Angel A. Luciano; Haiyan Yu; Leila W. Jackson; Lisa A. Wolfe; Helene Bernstein

Background Preterm parturition is characterized by innate immune activation and increased proinflammatory cytokine levels. This well established association leads us to hypothesize that preterm delivery is also associated with neonatal T lymphocyte activation and maturation. Methodology/Principal Findings Cord blood samples were obtained following term, preterm, and deliveries complicated by clinical chorioamnionitis. Activation marker expression was quantitated by flow cytometric analysis. Infants born following preterm delivery demonstrated enhanced CD4+ T lymphocyte activation, as determined by CD25 (Term 9.72% vs. Preterm 17.67%, p = 0.0001), HLA-DR (Term 0.91% vs. Preterm 1.92%, p = 0.0012), and CD69 expression (Term 0.38% vs. Preterm 1.20%, p = 0.0003). Neonates delivered following clinical chorioamnionitis also demonstrated increased T cell activation. Preterm neonates had an increased frequency of CD45RO+ T cells. Conclusion/Significance Preterm parturition is associated with neonatal CD4+ T cell activation, and an increased frequency of CD45RO+ T cells. These findings support the concept that activation of the fetal adaptive immune system in utero is closely associated with preterm labor.


Journal of Immunology | 2006

CD4 Expression on Activated NK Cells: Ligation of CD4 Induces Cytokine Expression and Cell Migration

Helene Bernstein; Mary C. Plasterer; Sherrie E. Schiff; Christina M. R. Kitchen; Scott G. Kitchen; Jerome A. Zack

NK cells play an important role in the innate immune response. We have isolated NK cells from human lymphoid tissues and found that these cells express the CD4 molecule on their surface at levels higher than those found on peripheral blood NK cells. To study the functional role of the CD4 molecule on NK cells, we developed an in vitro system by which we are able to obtain robust CD4 expression on NK cells derived from blood. CD4+ NK cells efficiently mediate NK cell cytotoxicity, and CD4 expression does not appear to alter lytic function. CD4+ NK cells are more likely to produce the cytokines γ-IFN and TNF-α than are CD4− NK cells. Ligation of CD4 further increases the number of NK cells producing these cytokines. NK cells expressing CD4 are also capable of migrating toward the CD4-specific chemotactic factor IL-16, providing another function for the CD4 molecule on NK cells. Thus, the CD4 molecule is present and functional on NK cells and plays a role in innate immune responses as a chemotactic receptor and by increasing cytokine production, in addition to its well-described function on T cells as a coreceptor for Ag responsive cell activation.


American Journal of Reproductive Immunology | 2013

Magnesium sulfate increases intracellular magnesium reducing inflammatory cytokine release in neonates.

Haruka Suzuki-Kakisaka; Jun Sugimoto; Manas Tetarbe; Andrea Romani; Christina M. R. Kitchen; Helene Bernstein

Magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) exposure reduces the risk of cerebral palsy. As neonatal inflammatory cytokine levels strongly correlate with neurologic outcome, we hypothesize that MgSO4 decreases inflammatory cytokine production.


Virology | 2009

CD4+ NK cells can be productively infected with HIV, leading to downregulation of CD4 expression and changes in function.

Helene Bernstein; Guangwu Wang; Mary C. Plasterer; Jerome A. Zack; Parthasarathy Ramasastry; Shannon M. Mumenthaler; Christina M. R. Kitchen

NK cells mediate the innate immune response, and HIV-infected individuals demonstrate altered NK cell phenotype and function. We find that CD4+ NK cells are susceptible to HIV infection; this could account for the NK cell dysfunction seen in HIV-infected individuals. CD4+ NK cells express CXCR4 and can be infected with X4-tropic viruses and some primary R5-utilizing viral isolates. Treatment with the CXCR4 ligands AMD3100 and SDF-1alpha partially blocks infection with X4-tropic virus, treatment with anti-CCL Igs upregulates CCR5 surface expression and enables infection with HIV-Bal. HIV infection of NK cells results in CD4 downregulation and the production of infectious virus. HIV-infected CD4+ NK cells mediate NK cell cytotoxicity, however, HIV infection is associated with decreased chemotaxis towards IL-16. Thus, HIV infection of CD4+ NK cells could account for the NK cell dysfunction observed in HIV-infected individuals. Furthermore infected NK cells could serve as a viral reservoir of HIV in vivo.


Virology | 2012

Bidirectional NK/DC interactions promote CD4 expression on NK cells, DC maturation, and HIV infection

Alice Valentin-Torres; Christina M. R. Kitchen; Harold S. Haller; Helene Bernstein

Interactions between natural killer (NK) and dendritic cells (DCs) are integral to immune response development, potentially leading to bidirectional NK/DC activation. We demonstrate that autologous NK/DC interactions induce CD4 expression on NK cells, influencing degranulation. Cell contact is required, with high NK:DC ratios and mature DCs most effectively inducing CD4 expression. CD4(+) NK cells, in turn, mediate DC maturation via contact-dependent and independent pathways, more effectively maturing DCs than CD4(-) NK cells. Bidirectional NK/DC interactions also impact HIV infection, as NK-matured DCs effectively deliver infectious HIV to T cells, via trans-infection. DC-induced CD4 expression also renders NK cells susceptible to HIV infection. Focusing on NK/DC interactions, DCs can transfer infectious virus and enhance HIV infection of CD4(+) NK cells, strongly suggesting that these interactions influence HIV pathogenesis. Findings provide new insight regarding NK/DC interactions, defining a mechanism by which cellular interactions in the absence of pathogens promote DC-mediated amplification of HIV infection.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Erratum: CORRIGENDUM: A novel human endogenous retroviral protein inhibits cell-cell fusion

Jun Sugimoto; Makiko Sugimoto; Helene Bernstein; Yoshihiro Jinno; Danny J. Schust


Scientific Reports | 2013

CORRIGENDUM: A novel human endogenous retroviral protein inhibits cell-cell fusion

Jun Sugimoto; Makiko Sugimoto; Helene Bernstein; Yoshihiro Jinno; Danny J. Schust


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2012

823: Magnesium decreases inflammatory cytokine production: a novel innate immunomodulatory mechanism

Helene Bernstein; Jun Sugimoto; Haruka Suzuki-Kakisaka; Andrea Romani


/data/revues/00029378/v187i5/S0002937802004106/ | 2011

The effect of elective cesarean delivery and intrapartum infection on fetal lymphocyte activation and susceptibility to HIV infection

Helene Bernstein; Robert Jackson; Jean Anderson; Audrey Kinter

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Alice Valentin-Torres

Case Western Reserve University

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Andrea Romani

Case Western Reserve University

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Jun Sugimoto

Case Western Reserve University

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Jun Sugimoto

Case Western Reserve University

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Angel A. Luciano

University of South Florida

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Audrey Kinter

National Institutes of Health

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Haruka Suzuki-Kakisaka

Case Western Reserve University

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