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Dive into the research topics where Hester A. Doyle is active.

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Featured researches published by Hester A. Doyle.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2003

Memory CD4+ T cells do not induce graft-versus-host disease

Britt E. Anderson; Jennifer M. McNiff; Jun Yan; Hester A. Doyle; Mark J. Mamula; Mark J. Shlomchik; Warren D. Shlomchik

Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality in allogeneic stem cell transplantation (alloSCT). Donor T cells that accompany stem cell grafts cause GVHD by attacking recipient tissues; therefore, all patients receive GVHD prophylaxis by depletion of T cells from the allograft or through immunosuppressant drugs. In addition to providing a graft-versus-leukemia effect, donor T cells are critical for reconstituting T cell-mediated immunity. Ideally, immunity to infectious agents would be transferred from donor to host without GVHD. Most donors have been exposed to common pathogens and have an increased precursor frequency of memory T cells against pathogenic antigens. We therefore asked whether memory CD62L-CD44+ CD4+ T cells would induce less GVHD than unfractionated or naive CD4+ T cells. Strikingly, we found that memory CD4 cells induced neither clinical nor histologic GVHD. This effect was not due to the increased number of CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells found in the CD62L-CD44+ fraction because memory T cells depletion of these cells did not cause GVHD. Memory CD4 cells engrafted and responded to antigen both in vivo and in vitro. If these murine results are applicable to human alloSCT, selective administration of memory T cells could greatly improve post-transplant immune reconstitution.


Trends in Immunology | 2001

Post-translational protein modifications in antigen recognition and autoimmunity

Hester A. Doyle; Mark J. Mamula

It is estimated that 50-90% of the proteins in the human body are post-translationally modified. In the proper context, these modifications are necessary for the biological functions of a vast array of proteins and the effector functions of the cells in which they reside. However, it is now clear that some post-translational modifications can create new self antigens (Ags) or even mask Ags normally recognized by the immune system. In either case, they profoundly affect the recognition of Ag by bone marrow-derived cells, as well as their effector functions. How do post-translational protein modifications affect the processing of foreign and self Ags and what is their role in the origin of autoimmune responses?


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2005

Posttranslational Modifications of Self-Antigens

Hester A. Doyle; Mark J. Mamula

Abstract: Although the immune system has developed mechanisms to distinguish “self” from “non‐self,” the presence of autoimmune diseases demonstrates that these mechanisms can be bypassed. The posttranslational modification of self‐antigens is one way in which “new” antigens are created for which immune tolerance does not exist. We review some of the posttranslationally modified self‐antigens associated with autoimmune diseases, how they arise, and how they break immune tolerance.


Current Opinion in Rheumatology | 2002

Posttranslational protein modifications: new flavors in the menu of autoantigens.

Hester A. Doyle; Mark J. Mamula

Perhaps one of the most elusive areas of study in autoimmunity has been identifying the self-antigens that initially trigger the development of autoimmune responses. Recent work in this area has demonstrated that a number of biochemical modifications that arise in proteins after their translation induce autoimmune responses to otherwise ignored self-proteins. This article will describe those autoimmune diseases in which posttranslational modifications may play a role in initiation of disease, as well as identify how these modifications arise and contribute to the breakdown of immune tolerance. Lastly, we will address how posttranslational modifications in self-antigens affect current diagnostic techniques and the development of immunotherapies for autoimmune diseases.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Protein Repair in the Brain, Proteomic Analysis of Endogenous Substrates for Protein L-Isoaspartyl Methyltransferase in Mouse Brain

Jeff X. Zhu; Hester A. Doyle; Mark J. Mamula; Dana W. Aswad

Protein l-isoaspartyl methyltransferase (PIMT) catalyzes repair of l-isoaspartyl peptide bonds, a major source of protein damage under physiological conditions. PIMT knock-out (KO) mice exhibit brain enlargement and fatal epileptic seizures. All organs accumulate isoaspartyl proteins, but only the brain manifests an overt pathology. To further explore the role of PIMT in brain function, we undertook a global analysis of endogenous substrates for PIMT in mouse brain. Extracts from PIMT-KO mice were subjected to two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and blotted onto membranes. Isoaspartyl proteins were radiolabeled on-blot using [methyl-3H]S-adenosyl-l-methionine and recombinant PIMT. Fluorography of the blot revealed 30-35 3H-labeled proteins, 22 of which were identified by peptide mass fingerprinting. These isoaspartate-prone proteins represent a wide range of cellular functions, including neuronal development, synaptic transmission, cytoskeletal structure and dynamics, energy metabolism, nitrogen metabolism, pH homeostasis, and protein folding. The following five proteins, all of which are rich in neurons, accumulated exceptional levels of isoaspartate: collapsin response mediator protein 2 (CRMP2/ULIP2/DRP-2), dynamin 1, synapsin I, synapsin II, and tubulin. Several of the proteins identified here are prone to age-dependent oxidation in vivo, and many have been identified as autoimmune antigens, of particular interest because isoaspartate can greatly enhance the antigenicity of self-peptides. We propose that the PIMT-KO phenotype results from the cumulative effect of isoaspartate-related damage to a number of the neuron-rich proteins detected in this study. Further study of the isoaspartate-prone proteins identified here may help elucidate the molecular basis of one or more developmental and/or age-related neurological diseases.


Infection and Immunity | 2000

Requirement for CD4+ T Lymphocytes in Host Resistance against Cryptococcus neoformans in the Central Nervous System of Immunized Mice

Kent L. Buchanan; Hester A. Doyle

ABSTRACT The importance of cell-mediated immunity (CMI) and CD4+T lymphocytes in host resistance against Cryptococcus neoformans is well documented and is exemplified by the high susceptibility to progressive infection with this pathogen of AIDS patients with reduced CD4+ T-cell numbers. Although much has been learned about the role of CMI in the clearance of C. neoformans from the lungs and other internal organs, less is known about the protective mechanisms in the brain, the organ most frequently involved with a fatal outcome of cryptococcosis. We hypothesized that host resistance mechanisms against C. neoformans in the central nervous system (CNS) were similar to those outside the CNS (i.e., gamma interferon [IFN-γ], CD4+ T cells, and others). To test this hypothesis, we used a murine model of cryptococcal meningitis whereby cryptococci are introduced directly into the CNS. In experiments where mice were immunized to mount an anticryptococcal CMI response, our results indicate that immunization induced protective mechanisms that could be detected in the CNS by inhibition of the growth of viable yeast cells. Flow cytometric analyses of leukocytes in brain and spinal cord homogenates revealed that T lymphocytes, macrophages, and neutrophils accumulated in C. neoformans-infected brains of immune mice. In vivo depletion of CD4+ T cells, but not CD8+ T cells, resulted in significantly reduced leukocyte accumulation in the brains of immune mice. Furthermore, depletion of CD4+ T cells or neutralization of IFN-γ exacerbated CNS infection in immune mice, suggesting a critical role for CMI mechanisms in acquired protection in the CNS.


Journal of Immunology | 2003

A failure to repair self-proteins leads to T cell hyperproliferation and autoantibody production.

Hester A. Doyle; Renelle J. Gee; Mark J. Mamula

It is clear that many factors can perturb T cell homeostasis that is critical in the maintenance of immune tolerance. Defects in the molecules that regulate homeostasis can lead to autoimmune pathology. This simple immunologic concept is complicated by the fact that many self-proteins undergo spontaneous posttranslational modifications that affect their biological functions. This is the case in the spontaneous conversion of aspartyl residues to isoaspartyl residues, a modification occurring at physiological pH and under conditions of cell stress and aging. We have examined the effect of isoaspartyl modifications on the effector functions of T lymphocytes in vivo using mice lacking the isoaspartyl repair enzyme protein carboxyl methyltransferase (PCMT). PCMT−/− CD4+ T cells exhibit increased proliferation in response to mitogen and Ag receptor stimulation as compared with wild-type CD4+ T cells. Hyperproliferation is marked by increased phosphorylation of members of both the TCR and CD28 signaling pathways. Wild-type mice reconstituted with PCMT−/− bone marrow develop high titers of anti-DNA autoantibodies and kidney pathology typical of that found in systemic lupus erythematosus. These observations, coupled with the fact that humans have polymorphisms in the pcmt gene, suggest that isoaspartyl self-proteins may alter the maintenance of peripheral immune tolerance.


Autoimmunity | 2007

Altered immunogenicity of isoaspartate containing proteins.

Hester A. Doyle; Renelle J. Gee; Mark J. Mamula

The development of immune tolerance is dependent on the expression of self-peptides in the thymus and bone marrow during lymphocyte development. However, not all self-antigens are expressed in the thymus, particularly for proteins that become post-translationally modified during other biological processes in a cell. We have found that one such post-translational modification, the spontaneous conversion of an aspartic acid to isoaspartic acid (isoAsp), causes ignored self-antigens to become immunogenic. In order to determine the mechanism for this autoimmune response, pigeon cytochrome c peptide 88–104 (PCC p88–104) was synthesized with and without an isoaspartyl residue. Each form was digested with cathepsin D, an enzyme involved in antigen processing. The products of cathepsin digestion were dramatically different between the two forms of self-protein suggesting that cryptic self-peptides may be revealed to the immune system by natural modifications to self-proteins. This observation also held true if whole PCC protein contained isoaspartyl residues was digested with cathespsin D. Additionally, AND transgenic TCR T cells (recognizing PCC 88–104) proliferated to a greater extent in response to isoaspartyl PCC as compared to the normal form of PCC. These finding demonstrate the importance of post‐translational modifications in shaping autoimmune responses in and the development of tolerance to self-proteins.


Medical Mycology | 2005

Cytokine and chemokine expression in the central nervous system associated with protective cell-mediated immunity against Cryptococcus neoformans

William C. Uicker; Hester A. Doyle; James McCracken; Mary Langlois; Kent L. Buchanan

Cryptococcus neoformans is a yeast that causes cryptococcosis, a life-threatening disease that develops following inhalation and dissemination of the organisms. C. neoformans has a predilection for the central nervous system (CNS) and mortality is most frequently associated with meningoencephalitis. Susceptibility to cryptococcosis is increased in patients with deficiencies in cell-mediated immunity (CMI). Because cryptococcal CNS infections are associated with mortality and diagnosis of cryptococcosis is often not made until after dissemination to the CNS, a better understanding of host defense mechanisms against C. neoformans in the CNS is needed to design improved therapies for immunocompromised individuals suffering from cryptococcosis. Using a mouse model, we previously described a protective cell-mediated immune response induced in the periphery that limited the growth of C. neoformans in the CNS. In the current investigation, we examined cytokine and chemokine expression in the CNS to identify factors important in achieving protective immunity. We observed increased expression of IL-1beta, TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma, MCP-1, RANTES, and IP-10 in C. neoformans-infected brains of immune mice compared to control mice suggesting that these cytokines and chemokines are associated with the protective immune response. Furthermore, the Th1-type cytokines TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma, but not the Th2 cytokines IL-4 and IL-5, were secreted at significantly higher levels in C. neoformans-infected brains of immune mice compared to control mice. Our results demonstrate that cytokines and chemokines associated with CMI are produced following infection in the CNS of immunized mice, and the expression of these factors correlates with protection against C. neoformans in the CNS.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Isoaspartyl Post-translational Modification Triggers Anti-tumor T and B Lymphocyte Immunity

Hester A. Doyle; Jing Zhou; Martin J. Wolff; Bohdan P. Harvey; Robert M. Roman; Renelle J. Gee; Raymond A. Koski; Mark J. Mamula

A hallmark of the immune system is the ability to ignore self-antigens. In attempts to bypass normal immune tolerance, a post-translational protein modification was introduced into self-antigens to break T and B cell tolerance. We demonstrate that immune tolerance is bypassed by immunization with a post-translationally modified melanoma antigen. In particular, the conversion of an aspartic acid to an isoaspartic acid within the melanoma antigen tyrosinase-related protein (TRP)-2 peptide-(181-188) makes the otherwise immunologically ignored TRP-2 antigen immunogenic. Tetramer analysis of iso-Asp TRP-2 peptide-immunized mice demonstrated that CD8+ T cells not only recognized the isoaspartyl TRP-2 peptide but also the native TRP-2 peptide. These CD8+ T cells functioned as cytotoxic T lymphocytes, as they effectively lysed TRP-2 peptide-pulsed targets both in vitro and in vivo. Potentially, post-translational protein modification can be utilized to trigger strong immune responses to either tumor proteins or potentially weakly immunogenic pathogens.

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Dana W. Aswad

University of California

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Jun Yan

University of Louisville

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Kent L. Buchanan

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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