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Featured researches published by Hoa Dang.


Journal of Immunology | 2006

B Cells Are Crucial for Determinant Spreading of T Cell Autoimmunity among β Cell Antigens in Diabetes-Prone Nonobese Diabetic Mice

Jide Tian; Dan Zekzer; Yuxin Lu; Hoa Dang; Daniel L. Kaufman

The determinant spreading of T cell autoimmunity plays an important role in the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes and in the protective mechanism of Ag-based immunotherapy in NOD mice. However, little is known about the role of APCs, particularly B cells, in the spreading of T cell autoimmunity. We studied determinant spreading in NOD/scid or Igμ−/− NOD mice reconstituted with NOD T and/or B cells and found that mice with mature B cells (TB NOD/scid and BMB Igμ−/− NOD), but not mice that lacked mature B cells (T NOD/scid and BM Igμ−/− NOD), spontaneously developed Th1 autoimmunity, which spread sequentially among different β cell Ags. Immunization of T NOD/scid and BM Igμ−/− NOD mice with a β cell Ag could prime Ag-specific Th1 or Th2 responses, but those T cell responses did not spread to other β cell Ags. In contrast, immunization of TB NOD/scid and BMB Igμ−/− NOD mice with a β cell Ag in IFA induced Th2 responses, which spread to other β cell Ags. Furthermore, we found that while macrophages and dendritic cells could evoke memory and effector T cell responses in vitro, B cells significantly enhanced the detection of spontaneously primed and induced Th1 responses to β cell Ags. Our data suggest that B cells, but not other APCs, mediate the spreading of T cell responses during the type 1 diabetes process and following Ag-based immunotherapy. Conceivably, the modulation of the capacity of B cells to present Ag may provide new interventions for enhancing Ag-based immunotherapy and controlling autoimmune diseases.


Autoimmunity | 2011

Oral GABA treatment downregulates inflammatory responses in a mouse model of rheumatoid arthritis

Jide Tian; Jing Yong; Hoa Dang; Daniel L. Kaufman

Current treatments for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) have long-term side effects such that new treatments are needed that can safely help manage the disease. There is a growing appreciation that GABA receptors (GABA-Rs) on immune cells provide new targets that can be used to modulate immune cell activity. Here, we show for the first time that activation of peripheral GABA-Rs can inhibit the development of disease in the collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) mouse model of RA. Mice that received oral GABA had a reduced incidence of CIA, and those mice that did develop CIA had milder symptoms. T cells from GABA-treated mice displayed reduced proliferative responses to collagen and their APC had a reduced ability to promote the proliferation of collagen-reactive T cells. Thus, GABA downregulated both T-cell autoimmunity and APC activity. Collagen-reactive T cells from GABA-treated mice displayed reduced recall responses in the presence of GABA ex vivo, indicating that GABA consumption did not desensitize these cells to GABA. GABA-treated mice had reduced collagen-reactive IgG2a, but not IgG1 antibodies, consistent with reduced Th1 help. The levels of serum anti-collagen IgG2a antibodies were correlated significantly with the CIA disease scores of individual mice. Our results suggest that activation of peripheral GABA-Rs may provide a new modality to modulate T cell, B cell, and APC activity and help ameliorate RA and other inflammatory diseases.


Diabetes | 2013

γ-Aminobutyric Acid Regulates Both the Survival and Replication of Human β-Cells

Jide Tian; Hoa Dang; Zheying Chen; Alice Guan; Yingli Jin; Mark A. Atkinson; Daniel L. Kaufman

γ-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) has been shown to inhibit apoptosis of rodent β-cells in vitro. In this study, we show that activation of GABAA receptors (GABAA-Rs) or GABAB-Rs significantly inhibits oxidative stress–related β-cell apoptosis and preserves pancreatic β-cells in streptozotocin-rendered hyperglycemic mice. Moreover, treatment with GABA, or a GABAA-R– or GABAB-R–specific agonist, inhibited human β-cell apoptosis following islet transplantation into NOD/scid mice. Accordingly, activation of GABAA-Rs and/or GABAB-Rs may be a useful adjunct therapy for human islet transplantation. GABA-R agonists also promoted β-cell replication in hyperglycemic mice. While a number of agents can promote rodent β-cell replication, most fail to provide similar activities with human β-cells. In this study, we show that GABA administration promotes β-cell replication and functional recovery in human islets following implantation into NOD/scid mice. Human β-cell replication was induced by both GABAA-R and GABAB-R activation. Hence, GABA regulates both the survival and replication of human β-cells. These actions, together with the anti-inflammatory properties of GABA, suggest that modulation of peripheral GABA-Rs may represent a promising new therapeutic strategy for improving β-cell survival following human islet transplantation and increasing β-cells in patients with diabetes.


PLOS ONE | 2011

BCG Vaccine-Induced Neuroprotection in a Mouse Model of Parkinson's Disease

Jing Yong; Goran Lacan; Hoa Dang; Terry Hsieh; Blake Middleton; Clive Wasserfall; Jide Tian; William P. Melega; Daniel L. Kaufman

There is a growing interest in using vaccination with CNS antigens to induce autoreactive T cell responses that home to damaged areas in the CNS and ameliorate neurodegenerative disease. Neuroprotective vaccine studies have focused on administering oligodendrocyte antigens or Copaxone® in complete Freunds adjuvant (CFA). Theoretical considerations, however, suggest that vaccination with a neuronal antigen may induce more robust neuroprotective immune responses. We assessed the neuroprotective potential of vaccines containing tyrosine hydroxylase (a neuronal protein involved in dopamine synthesis) or Copaxone® in CFA in the 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) mouse model of Parkinsons disease. Surprisingly, we observed that the main beneficial factor in these vaccines was the CFA. Since the major immunogenic component in CFA is Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which closely related to the bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) that is used in human vaccines, we tested BCG vaccination in the MPTP mouse model. We observed that BCG vaccination partially preserved markers of striatal dopamine system integrity and prevented an increase in activated microglia in the substantia nigra of MPTP-treated mice. These results support a new neuroprotective vaccine paradigm in which general (nonself-reactive) immune stimulation in the periphery can limit potentially deleterious microglial responses to a neuronal insult and exert a neurorestorative effect in the CNS. Accordingly, BCG vaccination may provide a new strategy to augment current treatments for a wide range of neuropathological conditions.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Antigen-Based Therapies Using Ignored Determinants of β Cell Antigens Can More Effectively Inhibit Late-Stage Autoimmune Disease in Diabetes-Prone Mice

Angelica P. Olcott; Jide Tian; Valerie Walker; Hoa Dang; Blake Middleton; Luciano Adorini; Lorraine Washburn; Daniel L. Kaufman

As organ-specific autoimmune diseases do not become manifest until well-advanced, interventive therapies must inhibit late-stage disease processes. Using a panel of immunogenic peptides from various β cell Ags, we evaluated the factors influencing the efficacy of Ag-based therapies in diabetes-prone NOD mice with advanced disease. The ability of the major β cell autoantigen target determinants (TDs) to prime Th2 responses declined sharply between 6 and 12 wk of age, whereas the ability of immunogenic ignored determinants (IDs) of β cell Ags to prime Th2 responses was unaffected by the disease process. The different patterns of TD and ID immunogenicity (even from the same β cell Ag) may be due to the exhaustion of uncommitted TD-reactive, but not ID-reactive, T cell pools by recruitment into the autoimmune cascade. Therapeutic efficacy was associated with a peptide’s immunogenicity and ability to promote Th2 spreading late in the disease process but not its affinity for I-Ag7 or its expression pattern (β cell specific/nonspecific or rare/abundant). Characterization of some IDs revealed them to be “absolute” cryptic determinants. Such determinants have little impact on T cell selection, leaving large precursor T cell pools available for priming by synthetic peptides. Traditional Ag-based therapeutics using whole autoantigens or their TDs cannot prime responses to such determinants. These findings suggest a new strategy for designing more efficacious Ag-based therapeutics for late-stage autoimmune diseases.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2013

Bacillus Calmette‐Guerin vaccine‐mediated neuroprotection is associated with regulatory T‐cell induction in the 1‐methyl‐4‐phenyl‐1,2,3,6‐tetrahydropyridine mouse model of Parkinson's disease

Goran Lacan; Hoa Dang; Blake Middleton; Marcus A. Horwitz; Jide Tian; William P. Melega; Daniel L. Kaufman

We previously showed that, in the 1‐methyl‐4‐phenyl‐1,2,3,6‐tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) mouse model of Parkinsons disease (PD), vaccination with bacillus Calmette‐Guerin (BCG) prior to MPTP exposure limited the loss of striatal dopamine (DA) and dopamine transporter (DAT) and prevented the activation of nigral microglia. Here, we conducted BCG dose studies and investigated the mechanisms underlying BCG vaccinations neuroprotective effects in this model. We found that a dose of 1 × 106 cfu BCG led to higher levels of striatal DA and DAT ligand binding (28% and 42%, respectively) in BCG‐vaccinated vs. unvaccinated MPTP‐treated mice, but without a significant increase in substantia nigra tyrosine hydroxylase‐staining neurons. Previous studies showed that BCG can induce regulatory T cells (Tregs) and that Tregs are neuroprotective in models of neurodegenerative diseases. However, MPTP is lymphotoxic, so it was unclear whether Tregs were maintained after MPTP treatment and whether a relationship existed between Tregs and the preservation of striatal DA system integrity. We found that, 21 days post‐MPTP treatment, Treg levels in mice that had received BCG prior to MPTP were threefold greater than those in MPTP‐only‐treated mice and elevated above those in saline‐only‐treated mice, suggesting that the persistent BCG infection continually promoted Treg responses. Notably, the magnitude of the Treg response correlated positively with both striatal DA levels and DAT ligand binding. Therefore, BCG vaccine‐mediated neuroprotection is associated with Treg levels in this mouse model. Our results suggest that BCG‐induced Tregs could provide a new adjunctive therapeutic approach to ameliorating pathology associated with PD and other neurodegenerative diseases.


Journal of Neuroimmunology | 2012

Major histocompatibility complex class I molecules modulate embryonic neuritogenesis and neuronal polarization

Tina Bilousova; Hoa Dang; Willem Xu; Sarah Gustafson; Yingli Jin; Lalinda Wickramasinghe; Tony Won; Gabriela Bobarnac; Blake Middleton; Jide Tian; Daniel L. Kaufman

We studied cultured hippocampal neurons from embryonic wildtype, major histocompatibility complex class I (MHCI) heavy chain-deficient (K(b)D(b)-/-) and NSE-D(b) (which have elevated neuronal MHCI expression) C57BL/6 mice. K(b)D(b)-/- neurons displayed slower neuritogenesis and establishment of polarity, while NSE-D(b) neurons had faster neurite outgrowth, more primary neurites, and tended to have accelerated polarization. Additional studies with ß2M-/- neurons, exogenous ß2M, and a self-MHCI monomer suggest that free heavy chain cis interactions with other surface molecules can promote neuritogenesis while tripartite MHCI interactions with classical MHCI receptors can inhibit axon outgrowth. Together with the results of others, MHCI appears to differentially modulate neuritogenesis and synaptogenesis.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Combining Antigen-Based Therapy with GABA Treatment Synergistically Prolongs Survival of Transplanted ß-Cells in Diabetic NOD Mice

Jide Tian; Hoa Dang; Daniel L. Kaufman

Antigen-based therapies (ABTs) very effectively prevent the development of type 1 diabetes (T1D) when given to young nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice, however, they have little or no ability to reverse hyperglycemia in newly diabetic NOD mice. More importantly, ABTs have not yet demonstrated an ability to effectively preserve residual ß-cells in individuals newly diagnosed with type 1 diabetes (T1D). Accordingly, there is great interest in identifying new treatments that can be combined with ABTs to safely protect ß-cells in diabetic animals. The activation of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptors (GABA-Rs) on immune cells has been shown to prevent T1D, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) and rheumatoid arthritis in mouse models. Based on GABAs ability to inhibit different autoimmune diseases and its safety profile, we tested whether the combination of ABT with GABA treatment could prolong the survival of transplanted ß-cells in newly diabetic NOD mice. Newly diabetic NOD mice were untreated, or given GAD/alum (20 or 100 µg) and placed on plain drinking water, or water containing GABA (2 or 6 mg/ml). Twenty-eight days later, they received syngenic pancreas grafts and were monitored for the recurrence of hyperglycemia. Hyperglycemia reoccurred in the recipients given plain water, GAD monotherapy, GABA monotherapy, GAD (20 µg)+GABA (2 mg/ml), GAD (20 µg)+GABA (6 mg/ml) and GAD (100 µg)+GABA (6 mg/ml) about 1, 2-3, 3, 2-3, 3-8 and 10-11 weeks post-transplantation, respectively. Thus, combined GABA and ABT treatment had a synergistic effect in a dose-dependent fashion. These findings suggest that co-treatment with GABA (or other GABA-R agonists) may provide a new strategy to safely enhance the efficacy of other therapeutics designed to prevent or reverse T1D, as well as other T cell-mediated autoimmune diseases.


Diabetes | 2011

Multimodality Imaging of β-Cells in Mouse Models of Type 1 and 2 Diabetes

Jing Yong; Julia Rasooly; Hoa Dang; Yuxin Lu; Blake Middleton; Zesong Zhang; Larry Hon; Mohammad Namavari; David Stout; Mark A. Atkinson; Jide Tian; Sanjiv S. Gambhir; Daniel L. Kaufman

OBJECTIVE β-Cells that express an imaging reporter have provided powerful tools for studying β-cell development, islet transplantation, and β-cell autoimmunity. To further expedite diabetes research, we generated transgenic C57BL/6 “MIP-TF” mice that have a mouse insulin promoter (MIP) driving the expression of a trifusion (TF) protein of three imaging reporters (luciferase/enhanced green fluorescent protein/HSV1-sr39 thymidine kinase) in their β-cells. This should enable the noninvasive imaging of β-cells by charge-coupled device (CCD) and micro-positron emission tomography (PET), as well as the identification of β-cells at the cellular level by fluorescent microscopy. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS MIP-TF mouse β-cells were multimodality imaged in models of type 1 and type 2 diabetes. RESULTS MIP-TF mouse β-cells were readily identified in pancreatic tissue sections using fluorescent microscopy. We show that MIP-TF β-cells can be noninvasively imaged using microPET. There was a correlation between CCD and microPET signals from the pancreas region of individual mice. After low-dose streptozotocin administration to induce type 1 diabetes, we observed a progressive reduction in bioluminescence from the pancreas region before the appearance of hyperglycemia. Although there have been reports of hyperglycemia inducing proinsulin expression in extrapancreatic tissues, we did not observe bioluminescent signals from extrapancreatic tissues of diabetic MIP-TF mice. Because MIP-TF mouse β-cells express a viral thymidine kinase, ganciclovir treatment induced hyperglycemia, providing a new experimental model of type 1 diabetes. Mice fed a high-fat diet to model early type 2 diabetes displayed a progressive increase in their pancreatic bioluminescent signals, which were positively correlated with area under the curve–intraperitoneal glucose tolerance test (AUC-IPGTT). CONCLUSIONS MIP-TF mice provide a new tool for monitoring β-cells from the single cell level to noninvasive assessments of β-cells in models of type 1 diabetes and type 2 diabetes.


Journal of Neuroimmunology | 2011

Enhanced neuronal expression of major histocompatibility complex class I leads to aberrations in neurodevelopment and neurorepair.

Zhongqi-Phyllis Wu; Lorraine Washburn; Tina Bilousova; Maia Boudzinskaia; Nathalie Escande-Beillard; Jyes Querubin; Hoa Dang; Cui-Wei Xie; Jide Tian; Daniel L. Kaufman

Mice deficient in classical major histocompatibility complex class I (MHCI) have aberrations in neurodevelopment. The consequences of upregulated neuronal MHCI expression have not been examined. We found that transgenic C57Bl/6 mice that are engineered to express higher levels of self-D(b) on their CNS neurons have alterations in their hippocampal morphology and retinogeniculate projections, as well as impaired neurorepair responses. Thus, enhanced neuronal classical MHCI expression can lead to aberrations in neural circuitry and neurorepair. These findings complement a growing body of knowledge concerning the neurobiological activities of MHCI and may have potential clinical relevance.

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Jide Tian

University of California

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Yuxin Lu

University of California

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Jing Yong

University of California

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Tina Bilousova

University of California

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Zesong Zhang

University of California

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