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Dive into the research topics where Il-Kang Na is active.

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Featured researches published by Il-Kang Na.


Leukemia | 2015

Ruxolitinib in corticosteroid-refractory graft-versus-host disease after allogeneic stem cell transplantation: A multicenter survey

Robert Zeiser; Andreas Burchert; Claudia Lengerke; Mareike Verbeek; K. Maas-Bauer; Stephan Metzelder; Silvia Spoerl; Markus Ditschkowski; M. Ecsedi; K. Sockel; Francis Ayuk; S. Ajib; F. S. De Fontbrune; Il-Kang Na; L. Penter; Udo Holtick; Dominik Wolf; E. Schuler; Everett Meyer; Petya Apostolova; Hartmut Bertz; Reinhard Marks; Michael Lübbert; Ralph Wäsch; C Scheid; Friedrich Stölzel; Rainer Ordemann; Gesine Bug; Guido Kobbe; Robert S. Negrin

Despite major improvements in allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation over the past decades, corticosteroid-refractory (SR) acute (a) and chronic (c) graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) cause high mortality. Preclinical evidence indicates the potent anti-inflammatory properties of the JAK1/2 inhibitor ruxolitinib. In this retrospective survey, 19 stem cell transplant centers in Europe and the United States reported outcome data from 95 patients who had received ruxolitinib as salvage therapy for SR-GVHD. Patients were classified as having SR-aGVHD (n=54, all grades III or IV) or SR-cGVHD (n=41, all moderate or severe). The median number of previous GVHD-therapies was 3 for both SR-aGVHD (1–7) and SR-cGVHD (1–10). The overall response rate was 81.5% (44/54) in SR-aGVHD including 25 complete responses (46.3%), while for SR-cGVHD the ORR was 85.4% (35/41). Of those patients responding to ruxolitinib, the rate of GVHD-relapse was 6.8% (3/44) and 5.7% (2/35) for SR-aGVHD and SR-cGVHD, respectively. The 6-month-survival was 79% (67.3–90.7%, 95% confidence interval (CI)) and 97.4% (92.3–100%, 95% CI) for SR-aGVHD and SR-cGVHD, respectively. Cytopenia and cytomegalovirus-reactivation were observed during ruxolitinib treatment in both SR-aGVHD (30/54, 55.6% and 18/54, 33.3%) and SR-cGVHD (7/41, 17.1% and 6/41, 14.6%) patients. Ruxolitinib may constitute a promising new treatment option for SR-aGVHD and SR-cGVHD that should be validated in a prospective trial.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2006

Chemokine Receptor CCR6 Expression Level and Liver Metastases in Colorectal Cancer

Pirus Ghadjar; Sarah E. Coupland; Il-Kang Na; Michel Noutsias; Anne Letsch; Andrea Stroux; Sandra Bauer; Heinz J. Buhr; Eckhard Thiel; Carmen Scheibenbogen; Ulrich Keilholz

PURPOSE The liver is the primary organ of metastasis in colorectal cancer (CRC). Chemokine receptor CCR6 is expressed on a subset of T cells and is associated with their migration into the liver. This study was performed to analyze a possible association between CCR6 expressed by primary CRC and liver metastases. PATIENTS AND METHODS CCR6 expression levels were evaluated by immunohistology in 64 CRC primary tumor specimens. Twenty-four of 64 patients had synchronous liver metastases. Evaluation of immunostaining was performed semiquantitatively by visual assessment and quantitatively by digital image analysis (DIA). Multiple logistic regression analysis was performed to assess relevant parameters for liver metastases. RESULTS CCR6 expression was verified in all 64 primary tumor specimens with considerable variations in intensity; 21 tumors (33%) demonstrated weak CCR6 staining, 32 (50%) demonstrated intermediate staining, and 11 (17%) demonstrated strong staining. Quantitative assessment by DIA showed an up to 5-log difference in CCR6 values. CCR6 staining was significantly stronger in tumor cells compared with adjacent colon epithelial cells (P < .0005). Multiple logistic regression analysis, controlling for age, sex, tumor stage, nodal status, pathologic grade, and preoperative carcinoembryonic antigen levels, revealed that CCR6 staining in the primary tumor was independently associated with the presence of liver metastases (odds ratio = 2.1; P = .002). CONCLUSION The association between expression level of CCR6 in primary CRC and synchronous liver metastases suggests that CCR6 and its ligand may be involved in the metastatic spread to the liver. Therefore, CCR6 may be a potential target for specific therapeutic interventions.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2009

NOD2 regulates hematopoietic cell function during graft-versus-host disease

Olaf Penack; Odette M. Smith; Amy Cunningham-Bussel; Xin Liu; Uttam K. Rao; Nury Yim; Il-Kang Na; Amanda M. Holland; Arnab Ghosh; Sydney X. Lu; Robert R. Jenq; Chen Liu; George F. Murphy; Katharina Brandl; Marcel R.M. van den Brink

Nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain 2 (NOD2) polymorphisms are independent risk factors for Crohns disease and graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). In Crohns disease, the proinflammatory state resulting from NOD2 mutations have been associated with a loss of antibacterial function of enterocytes such as paneth cells. NOD2 has not been studied in experimental allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (allo-BMT). Using chimeric recipients with NOD2−/− hematopoietic cells, we demonstrate that NOD2 deficiency in host hematopoietic cells exacerbates GVHD. We found that proliferation and activation of donor T cells was enhanced in NOD-deficient allo-BMT recipients, suggesting that NOD2 plays a role in the regulation of host antigen-presenting cells (APCs). Next, we used bone marrow chimeras in an experimental colitis model and observed again that NOD2 deficiency in the hematopoietic cells results in increased intestinal inflammation. We conclude that NOD2 regulates the development of GVHD through its inhibitory effect on host APC function.


Human Pathology | 2008

Nuclear expression of CXCR4 in tumor cells of non-small cell lung cancer is correlated with lymph node metastasis.

Il-Kang Na; Carmen Scheibenbogen; Christine Adam; Andrea Stroux; Pirus Ghadjar; Eckhard Thiel; Ulrich Keilholz; Sarah E. Coupland

The stromal-derived factor 1alpha (CXCL12)/chemokine receptor CXCR4 system plays an important role in the metastatic process of a variety of cancers, with CXCR4 frequently expressed by tumor cells homing to CXCL12-rich compartments. The current study evaluated a possible association of CXCR4 expression with lymph node metastasis in primary non-small cell lung cancer. CXCR4 expression levels were evaluated using immunohistology in 46 non-small cell lung cancer specimens of patients without or with lymph node involvement (N0 = 24, N1/N2/N3 = 22). Evaluation of immunostaining was performed semiquantitatively by visual assessment. Statistical analyses with multiple testing adjustments for confirmatory comparisons were performed to assess relevant parameters associated with lymph node metastases. In all samples of non-small cell lung cancer, tumor cells stained positively for cytoplasmic CXCR4. The intensity of the CXCR4 staining varied considerably between specimens: 2 (4%) tumors demonstrated weak cytoplasmic CXCR4, 22 (48%) intermediate, and 22 (48%) strong staining. Membranous staining was absent; however, nuclear staining of CXCR4 was observed in 5 non-small cell lung cancer samples. Statistical analyses of the association between presence of lymph node metastases and CXCR4 expression levels revealed that cytoplasmic CXCR4 expression was not associated with the presence of lymph node metastases. However, nuclear CXCR4 was significantly correlated with increasing lymph node stage (P = .008), linear-to-linear association. The association between aberrant expression of CXCR4 in the nucleus of non-small cell lung cancer and metastasis to lymph nodes points toward a potential tumor metastasis promoting function of nuclear CXCR4.


Cancer | 2008

Sensitivity of tumor cells to proteasome inhibitors is associated with expression levels and composition of proteasome subunits

Antonia Busse; Marianne Kraus; Il-Kang Na; Anika Rietz; Carmen Scheibenbogen; Christoph Driessen; Igor Wolfgang Blau; Eckhard Thiel; Ulrich Keilholz

Sensitivity of tumor cells to induction of apoptosis by proteasome inhibitors varies greatly. This study was undertaken to investigate the sensitivity of neoplastic B cells and solid tumor cells to proteasome inhibition with respect to constitutive expression levels of proteasome subunits.


Blood | 2011

Abrogation of donor T-cell IL-21 signaling leads to tissue-specific modulation of immunity and separation of GVHD from GVL

Alan M. Hanash; Lucy W. Kappel; Nury Yim; Rebecca A. Nejat; Gabrielle L. Goldberg; Odette M. Smith; Uttam K. Rao; Lindsay Dykstra; Il-Kang Na; Amanda M. Holland; Jarrod A. Dudakov; Chen Liu; George F. Murphy; Warren J. Leonard; Glenn Heller; Marcel R.M. van den Brink

IL-21 is a proinflammatory cytokine produced by Th17 cells. Abrogation of IL-21 signaling has recently been shown to reduce GVHD while retaining graft-versus-leukemia/lymphoma (GVL) responses. However, the mechanisms by which IL-21 may lead to a separation of GVHD and GVL remain incompletely understood. In a murine MHC-mismatched BM transplantation model, we observed that IL-21 receptor knockout (IL-21R KO) donor T cells mediate decreased systemic and gastrointestinal GVHD in recipients of a transplant. This reduction in GVHD was associated with expansion of transplanted donor regulatory T cells and with tissue-specific modulation of Th-cell function. IL-21R KO and wild-type donor T cells showed equivalent alloactivation, but IL-21R KO T cells showed decreased infiltration and inflammatory cytokine production within the mesenteric lymph nodes. However, Th-cell cytokine production was maintained peripherally, and IL-21R KO T cells mediated equivalent immunity against A20 and P815 hematopoietic tumors. In summary, abrogation of IL-21 signaling in donor T cells leads to tissue-specific modulation of immunity, such that gastrointestinal GVHD is reduced, but peripheral T-cell function and GVL capacity are retained. IL-21 is thus an exciting target for therapeutic intervention and improvement of clinical transplantation outcomes.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2010

The cytolytic molecules Fas ligand and TRAIL are required for murine thymic graft-versus-host disease

Il-Kang Na; Sydney X. Lu; Nury Yim; Gabrielle L. Goldberg; Jennifer J. Tsai; Uttam K. Rao; Odette M. Smith; Christopher King; David Suh; Daniel Hirschhorn-Cymerman; Lia Palomba; Olaf Penack; Amanda M. Holland; Robert R. Jenq; Arnab Ghosh; Hien Tran; Taha Merghoub; Chen Liu; Gregory D. Sempowski; Melissa S. Ventevogel; Nicole Beauchemin; Marcel R.M. van den Brink

Thymic graft-versus-host disease (tGVHD) can contribute to profound T cell deficiency and repertoire restriction after allogeneic BM transplantation (allo-BMT). However, the cellular mechanisms of tGVHD and interactions between donor alloreactive T cells and thymic tissues remain poorly defined. Using clinically relevant murine allo-BMT models, we show here that even minimal numbers of donor alloreactive T cells, which caused mild nonlethal systemic graft-versus-host disease, were sufficient to damage the thymus, delay T lineage reconstitution, and compromise donor peripheral T cell function. Furthermore, to mediate tGVHD, donor alloreactive T cells required trafficking molecules, including CCR9, L selectin, P selectin glycoprotein ligand-1, the integrin subunits alphaE and beta7, CCR2, and CXCR3, and costimulatory/inhibitory molecules, including Ox40 and carcinoembryonic antigen-associated cell adhesion molecule 1. We found that radiation in BMT conditioning regimens upregulated expression of the death receptors Fas and death receptor 5 (DR5) on thymic stromal cells (especially epithelium), while decreasing expression of the antiapoptotic regulator cellular caspase-8-like inhibitory protein. Donor alloreactive T cells used the cognate proteins FasL and TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) (but not TNF or perforin) to mediate tGVHD, thereby damaging thymic stromal cells, cytoarchitecture, and function. Strategies that interfere with Fas/FasL and TRAIL/DR5 interactions may therefore represent a means to attenuate tGVHD and improve T cell reconstitution in allo-BMT recipients.


Blood | 2014

Bone marrow T-cell infiltration during acute GVHD is associated with delayed B-cell recovery and function after HSCT

Angela Mensen; Korinna Jöhrens; Ioannis Anagnostopoulos; Sonya Demski; Maike Oey; Andrea Stroux; Philipp Hemmati; Jörg Westermann; Olga Blau; Friedrich Wittenbecher; Kamran Movassaghi; Martin Szyska; Sybill Thomas; Bernd Dörken; Carmen Scheibenbogen; Renate Arnold; Il-Kang Na

B-cell immune dysfunction contributes to the risk of severe infections after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT). Delayed B-cell regeneration is found in patients with systemic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) and is often accompanied by bone marrow (BM) suppression. Little is known about human BM GVHD. We analyzed the reconstitution kinetics of B-cell subsets in adult leukemic patients within 6 months after allo-HSCT. B-cell deficiency already existed before transplant and was aggravated after transplant. Onset of B-cell reconstitution characterized by transitional B-cell recovery occurred either early (months 2-3) or late (from month 6 on) and correlated highly positively with reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction quantified numbers of κ-deleting recombination excision circles (KRECs). Delayed recovery was associated with systemic acute GVHD and full-intensity conditioning therapy. Histological analysis of BM trephines revealed increased T-cell infiltration in late recovering patients, which was associated with reduced numbers of osteoblasts. Functionally, late recovering patients displayed less pneumococcal polysaccharide-specific immunoglobin M-producing B cells on ex vivo B-cell activation than early recovering patients. Our results provide evidence for acute BM GVHD in allo-HSCT patients with infiltrating donor T cells and osteoblast destruction. This is associated with delayed B-cell reconstitution and impaired antibody response. Herein, KREC appears suitable to monitor BM B-cell output after transplant.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2010

Inhibition of Neovascularization to Simultaneously Ameliorate Graft-vs-Host Disease and Decrease Tumor Growth

Olaf Penack; Erik Henke; David Suh; Christopher King; Odette M. Smith; Il-Kang Na; Amanda M. Holland; Arnab Ghosh; Sydney X. Lu; Robert R. Jenq; Chen Liu; George F. Murphy; Theresa T. Lu; Chad May; David A. Scheinberg; Dingcheng Gao; Vivek Mittal; Glenn Heller; Robert Benezra; Marcel R.M. van den Brink

BACKGROUND Blood vessels are formed either by sprouting of resident tissue endothelial cells (angiogenesis) or by recruitment of bone marrow (BM)-derived circulating endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs, vasculogenesis). Neovascularization has been implicated in tumor growth and inflammation, but its roles in graft-vs-host disease (GVHD) and in tumors after allogeneic BM transplantation (allo-BMT) were not known. METHODS We analyzed neovascularization, the contribution of endothelial cells and EPCs, and the ability of anti-vascular endothelial-cadherin antibody, E4G10, to inhibit neovascularization in mice with GVHD after allo-BMT using immunofluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry. We examined survival and clinical and histopathologic GVHD in mice (n = 10-25 per group) in which GVHD was treated with the E4G10 antibody using immunohistochemistry, flow cytometry, and cytokine immunoassay. We also assessed survival, the contribution of green fluorescent protein-marked EPCs to the tumor vasculature, and the ability of E4G10 to inhibit tumor growth in tumor-bearing mice (n = 20-33 per group) after allo-BMT using histopathology and bioluminescence imaging. All statistical tests were two-sided. RESULTS We found increased neovascularization mediated by vasculogenesis, as opposed to angiogenesis, in GVHD target tissues, such as liver and intestines. Administration of E4G10 inhibited neovascularization by donor BM-derived cells without affecting host vascularization, inhibited both GVHD and tumor growth, and increased survival (at 60 days post-BMT and tumor challenge with A20 lymphoma, the probability of survival was 0.29 for control antibody-treated allo-BMT recipients vs 0.7 for E4G10-treated allo-BMT recipients, 95% confidence interval = 0.180 to 0.640, P < .001). CONCLUSIONS Therapeutic targeting of neovascularization in allo-BMT recipients is a novel strategy to simultaneously ameliorate GVHD and inhibit posttransplant tumor growth, providing a new approach to improve the overall outcome of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.


European Journal of Immunology | 2007

CMV‐specific central memory T cells reside in bone marrow

Anne Letsch; Maren Knoedler; Il-Kang Na; Florian Kern; Anne-Marie Asemissen; Ulrich Keilholz; Michael Loesch; Eckhard Thiel; Hans-Dieter Volk; Carmen Scheibenbogen

CMV‐specific CD8+ T cell responses in peripheral blood (PB) are characterized by a preponderance of effector and effector memory T cells. CMV‐specific central memory T cells (TCM), which are considered crucial in maintaining long‐term immunity, are rarely detectable in PB. In this study we have analyzed differentiation and function of CMV pp65‐specific CD8+ T cells in paired samples of human PB and BM using intracellular cytokine and tetramer staining. Overall frequencies of CMV pp65‐specific T cells were similar in PB compared to BM; however, CMV‐specific CD45RA–CCR7+ TCM were almost exclusively detectable in BM, which was not related to a general accumulation of TCM in BM. In vitro, CMV‐specific T cells could be more efficiently expanded from BM (median 128‐fold, n=6) than from PB (median 72‐fold, p=0.01). Taken together, these data show that the BM is a compartment harboring CMV‐specific TCM and underline the concept of the BM as a secondary immune organ. CMV specific BM‐derived TCM might be a valuable source for generating T cells for adoptive transfer.

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Amanda M. Holland

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Robert R. Jenq

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Nury Yim

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Uttam K. Rao

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Odette M. Smith

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Arnab Ghosh

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Sydney X. Lu

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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