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Dive into the research topics where Indira Guleria is active.

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Featured researches published by Indira Guleria.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2006

Tissue expression of PD-L1 mediates peripheral T cell tolerance

Mary E. Keir; Spencer C. Liang; Indira Guleria; Yvette Latchman; Andi Qipo; Lee A. Albacker; Maria Koulmanda; Gordon J. Freeman; Mohamed H. Sayegh; Arlene H. Sharpe

Programmed death 1 (PD-1), an inhibitory receptor expressed on activated lymphocytes, regulates tolerance and autoimmunity. PD-1 has two ligands: PD-1 ligand 1 (PD-L1), which is expressed broadly on hematopoietic and parenchymal cells, including pancreatic islet cells; and PD-L2, which is restricted to macrophages and dendritic cells. To investigate whether PD-L1 and PD-L2 have synergistic or unique roles in regulating T cell activation and tolerance, we generated mice lacking PD-L1 and PD-L2 (PD-L1/PD-L2−/− mice) and compared them to mice lacking either PD-L. PD-L1 and PD-L2 have overlapping functions in inhibiting interleukin-2 and interferon-γ production during T cell activation. However, PD-L1 has a unique and critical role in controlling self-reactive T cells in the pancreas. Our studies with bone marrow chimeras demonstrate that PD-L1/PD-L2 expression only on antigen-presenting cells is insufficient to prevent the early onset diabetes that develops in PD-L1/PD-L2−/− non-obese diabetic mice. PD-L1 expression in islets protects against immunopathology after transplantation of syngeneic islets into diabetic recipients. PD-L1 inhibits pathogenic self-reactive CD4+ T cell–mediated tissue destruction and effector cytokine production. These data provide evidence that PD-L1 expression on parenchymal cells rather than hematopoietic cells protects against autoimmune diabetes and point to a novel role for PD-1–PD-L1 interactions in mediating tissue tolerance.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Programmed death 1 ligand signaling regulates the generation of adaptive Foxp3+CD4+ regulatory T cells

Li Wang; Karina Pino-Lagos; Victor C. de Vries; Indira Guleria; Mohamed H. Sayegh; Randolph J. Noelle

Although mature dendritic cells (DCs) are potent initiators of adaptive immune response, immature steady-state DCs contribute to immune tolerance. In this study, we show that ex vivo splenic DCs are capable of inducing conversion of naïve CD4+ T cells to adaptive Foxp3+CD4+ regulatory T cells (aTreg) in the presence of TGF-β. In particular, when compared with splenic CD8α− DCs, the CD8α+ DC subset were superior in inducing higher frequencies of conversion. This was not attributable to the difference in basal level of costimulation, because deficiency of CD40 or CD80/86 signaling did not diminish the differential induction of Foxp3. Conversion was regulated by DC maturation status. Further insights into the molecular mechanisms of conversion were gained by analyzing the contribution of several costimulatory and coinhibitory receptors. Costimulatory signals through GITR suppressed conversion, whereas coinhibitory signaling via programmed death 1 ligand (PD-L1) but not PD-L2 was required for conversion. Ex vivo PD-L1−/− DCs failed to support Foxp3 induction in the presence of TGF-β. In vivo blocking PD-L1 signaling abolished conversion in a tumor-induced aTreg conversion model. Collectively, this study highlights the cellular and molecular parameters that might be exploited to control the de novo generation of aTregs and peripheral tolerance.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2005

A critical role for the programmed death ligand 1 in fetomaternal tolerance.

Indira Guleria; Arezou Khosroshahi; Mohammed Javeed Ansari; Antje Habicht; Miyuki Azuma; Hideo Yagita; Randolph J. Noelle; Anthony J. Coyle; Andrew L. Mellor; Samia J. Khoury; Mohamed H. Sayegh

Fetal survival during gestation implies that tolerance mechanisms suppress the maternal immune response to paternally inherited alloantigens. Here we show that the inhibitory T cell costimulatory molecule, programmed death ligand 1 (PDL1), has an important role in conferring fetomaternal tolerance in an allogeneic pregnancy model. Blockade of PDL1 signaling during murine pregnancy resulted in increased rejection rates of allogeneic concepti but not syngeneic concepti. Fetal rejection was T cell– but not B cell–dependent because PDL1-specific antibody treatment caused fetal rejection in B cell–deficient but not in RAG-1–deficient females. Blockade of PDL1 also resulted in a significant increase in the frequency of IFN-γ–producing lymphocytes in response to alloantigen in an ELISPOT assay and higher IFN-γ levels in placental homogenates by ELISA. Finally, PDL1-deficient females exhibited decreased allogeneic fetal survival rates as compared with littermate and heterozygote controls and showed evidence of expansion of T helper type 1 immune responses in vivo. These results provide the first evidence that PDL1 is involved in fetomaternal tolerance.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2006

Insulin-induced remission in new-onset NOD mice is maintained by the PD-1–PD-L1 pathway

Brian T. Fife; Indira Guleria; Melanie Gubbels Bupp; Todd N. Eagar; Qizhi Tang; Hélène Bour-Jordan; Hideo Yagita; Miyuki Azuma; Mohamed H. Sayegh; Jeffrey A. Bluestone

The past decade has seen a significant increase in the number of potentially tolerogenic therapies for treatment of new-onset diabetes. However, most treatments are antigen nonspecific, and the mechanism for the maintenance of long-term tolerance remains unclear. In this study, we developed an antigen-specific therapy, insulin-coupled antigen-presenting cells, to treat diabetes in nonobese diabetic mice after disease onset. Using this approach, we demonstrate disease remission, inhibition of pathogenic T cell proliferation, decreased cytokine production, and induction of anergy. Moreover, we show that robust long-term tolerance depends on the programmed death 1 (PD-1)–programmed death ligand (PD-L)1 pathway, not the distinct cytotoxic T lymphocyte–associated antigen 4 pathway. Anti–PD-1 and anti–PD-L1, but not anti–PD-L2, reversed tolerance weeks after tolerogenic therapy by promoting antigen-specific T cell proliferation and inflammatory cytokine production directly in infiltrated tissues. PD-1–PD-L1 blockade did not limit T regulatory cell activity, suggesting direct effects on pathogenic T cells. Finally, we describe a critical role for PD-1–PD-L1 in another powerful immunotherapy model using anti-CD3, suggesting that PD-1–PD-L1 interactions form part of a common pathway to selectively maintain tolerance within the target tissues.


Nature Medicine | 2000

The trophoblast is a component of the innate immune system during pregnancy.

Indira Guleria; Jeffrey W. Pollard

Systemic infection with Listeria monocytogenes, a Gram-positive intracellular bacterium, has been used extensively to analyze the innate immune response. Macrophages are central to this response, acting as both the host for and principal defense against this bacterium. During pregnancy L. monocytogenes has a predilection for replication at the maternal–placental interface and consequently is an important cause of fetal morbidity and mortality. However, macrophages are mostly excluded from the murine placenta with neutrophils acting as the main immune effector cell against this bacterium. Colony stimulating factor (CSF)-1, a macrophage growth factor, is synthesized in high concentrations by the uterine epithelium during pregnancy, where it is targeted to trophoblast bearing CSF-1-receptors. To define the involvement of CSF-1 in placental immunity, we infected pregnant mice either homozygous or heterozygous for an inactivating recessive mutation in the gene for CSF-1 (osteopetrotic; Csfmop) with L. monocytogenes. CSF-1 was required to recruit neutrophils to the site of listerial infection in the decidua basalis, and infection by Listeria remained unrestrained in its absence. CSF-1 acted by inducing the trophoblast to synthesize the neutrophil chemoattractants (KC) and macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)-2. Thus, during pregnancy, trophoblast responsive to CSF-1 acts to organize the maternal immune response to bacterial infection at the utero–placental interface. This previously unknown function indicates that the trophoblast acts as a pregnancy-specific component of the innate immune system.


Journal of Immunology | 2007

Maternal Acceptance of the Fetus: True Human Tolerance

Indira Guleria; Mohamed H. Sayegh

Induction and maintenance of immunologic tolerance in humans remains a desirable but elusive goal. Therefore, understanding the physiologic mechanisms of regulation of immune responses is highly clinically relevant for immune-mediated diseases (e.g., autoimmunity and asthma/allergy) and for cell and organ transplantation. Acceptance of the fetus, which expresses paternally inherited alloantigens, by the mother during pregnancy is a unique example of how the immune system reshapes a destructive alloimmune response to a state of tolerance. Understanding the complex mechanisms of fetomaternal tolerance has important implications for developing novel strategies to induce immunologic tolerance in humans in general and for prevention of spontaneous abortion in at-risk populations in particular.


Diabetes | 2008

Targeting CD22 Reprograms B-Cells and Reverses Autoimmune Diabetes

Paolo Fiorina; Andrea Vergani; Shirine Dada; Mollie Jurewicz; Masie Wong; Kenneth Law; Erxi Wu; Ze Tian; Reza Abdi; Indira Guleria; Scott J. Rodig; Kyri Dunussi-Joannopoulos; Jeffrey A. Bluestone; Mohamed H. Sayegh

OBJECTIVES—To investigate a B-cell–depleting strategy to reverse diabetes in naïve NOD mice. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—We targeted the CD22 receptor on B-cells of naïve NOD mice to deplete and reprogram B-cells to effectively reverse autoimmune diabetes. RESULTS—Anti-CD22/cal monoclonal antibody (mAb) therapy resulted in early and prolonged B-cell depletion and delayed disease in pre-diabetic mice. Importantly, when new-onset hyperglycemic mice were treated with the anti-CD22/cal mAb, 100% of B-cell–depleted mice became normoglycemic by 2 days, and 70% of them maintained a state of long-term normoglycemia. Early therapy after onset of hyperglycemia and complete B-cell depletion are essential for optimal efficacy. Treated mice showed an increase in percentage of regulatory T-cells in islets and pancreatic lymph nodes and a diminished immune response to islet peptides in vitro. Transcriptome analysis of reemerging B-cells showed significant changes of a set of proinflammatory genes. Functionally, reemerging B-cells failed to present autoantigen and prevented diabetes when cotransferred with autoreactive CD4+ T-cells into NOD.SCID hosts. CONCLUSIONS—Targeting CD22 depletes and reprograms B-cells and reverses autoimmune diabetes, thereby providing a blueprint for development of novel therapies to cure autoimmune diabetes.


Journal of Immunology | 2006

Differential role of programmed death-1 ligand and programmed death-2 ligand in regulating the susceptibility and chronic progression of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis

Bing Zhu; Indira Guleria; Arezou Khosroshahi; Tanuja Chitnis; Jaime Imitola; Miyuki Azuma; Hideo Yagita; Mohamed H. Sayegh; Samia J. Khoury

Programmed death-1 (PD-1) is a negative costimulatory molecule, and blocking the interaction of PD-1 with its ligands, PD-L1 (B7-H1) and PD-L2 (B7-DC), enhances autoimmune disease in several animal models. We have studied the role of PD-1 ligands in disease susceptibility and chronic progression in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). In BALB/c mice immunized with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) peptide 35–55, PD-L1 but not PD-L2 blockade significantly increased EAE incidence. In B10.S mice immunized with myelin proteolipid protein (PLP) peptide 139–151, both PD-L1 and PD-L2 blockade markedly enhanced EAE severity. In prediabetic NOD mice immunized with PLP48-70, PD-L2 blockade worsened EAE but did not induce diabetes, whereas PD-L1 blockade precipitated diabetes but did not worsen EAE, suggesting different regulatory roles of these two ligands in EAE and diabetes. B6 mice immunized with MOG35-55 developed chronic persistent EAE, and PD-L2 blockade in the chronic phase exacerbated EAE, whereas PD-L1 blockade did not. In contrast, SJL/J mice immunized with PLP139-151 developed chronic relapsing-remitting EAE, and only PD-L1 blockade during remission precipitated EAE relapse. The strain-specific effects of PD-1 ligand blockade did not correlate with the expression of PD-L1 and PD-L2 on dendritic cells and macrophages in lymphoid tissue, or on inflammatory cells in the CNS. However, EAE enhancement is correlated with less prominent Th2 cytokine induction after specific PD-1 ligand blockade. In conclusion, PD-L1 and PD-L2 differentially regulate the susceptibility and chronic progression of EAE in a strain-specific manner.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2013

Comprehensive assessment and standardization of solid phase multiplex-bead arrays for the detection of antibodies to HLA.

Elaine F. Reed; Ping Rao; Zilu Zhang; Howard M. Gebel; Robert A. Bray; Indira Guleria; John G. Lunz; Thalachallour Mohanakumar; Peter Nickerson; Anat R. Tambur; Adriana Zeevi; Peter S. Heeger; David W. Gjertson

Solid phase multiplex‐bead arrays for the detection and characterization of HLA antibodies provide increased sensitivity and specificity compared to conventional lymphocyte‐based assays. Assay variability due to inconsistencies in commercial kits and differences in standard operating procedures (SOP) hamper comparison of results between laboratories. The Clinical Trials in Organ Transplantation Antibody Core Laboratories investigated sources of assay variation and determined if reproducibility improved through utilization of SOP, common reagents and normalization algorithms. Ten commercial kits from two manufacturers were assessed in each of seven laboratories using 20 HLA reference sera. Implementation of a standardized (vs. a nonstandardized) operating procedure greatly reduced MFI variation from 62% to 25%. Although laboratory agreements exceeded 90% (R2), small systematic differences were observed suggesting center specific factors still contribute to variation. MFI varied according to manufacturer, kit, bead type and lot. ROC analyses showed excellent consistency in antibody assignments between manufacturers (AUCu2009>u20090.9) and suggested optimal cutoffs from 1000 to 1500 MFI. Global normalization further reduced MFI variation to levels near 20%. Standardization and normalization of solid phase HLA antibody tests will enable comparison of data across laboratories for clinical trials and diagnostic testing.


Annals of Surgery | 2010

The combination of donor and recipient age is critical in determining host immunoresponsiveness and renal transplant outcome.

Stefan G. Tullius; Huong Tran; Indira Guleria; Sayeed K. Malek; Nicholas L. Tilney; Edgar L. Milford

Objective:To evaluate the interaction of donor and recipient age on transplant outcome and immune response. Summary Background Data:The age of donor and recipient is becoming increasingly important in organ transplantation. We tested the relevance and consequences of recipient and donor age on immunoresponsiveness and transplant outcome in a uni- and multilateral cohort analysis. Methods:We obtained and analyzed data from 108,188 recipients of deceased donor kidneys of the United Network for Organ Sharing database transplanted between 1995 and 2008. Univariate analysis of allograft and patient survival was calculated by Kaplan Meyer. Multivariate analyses were performed using the Cox Proportional Hazards method. Data were assessed and compared by decades of increasing donor and recipient age with and without censoring transplant loss for death with a functioning graft. This approach allowed a detailed analysis of interacting factors. Results:Transplant survival was lowest in elderly recipients. However, when the analysis was censored for patients death with a functioning kidney transplant, survival improved incrementally with each decade of increasing recipient age. This was even more surprising as older recipients had received less well-matched organs of poorer quality. The frequency of acute rejection decreased dramatically with increasing age, emphasizing the effect of age on the vigor of the recipients immune responses. In contrast, increasing donor age was associated with more frequent acute rejection rates. The effects of donor and recipient age in combination demonstrated that grafts of older donors fared significantly better in older recipients. Conclusions:Our results show that increasing recipient age is associated with an improved transplant survival, lower rates of rejection, and superior outcome of older donor organs. Physiological and/or immunologic aspects of organ and recipient age seem to determine, at least in part, the success of renal transplantation.

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Edgar L. Milford

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Mohamed H. Sayegh

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Isabelle G. Wood

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Miyuki Azuma

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Anil Chandraker

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Melissa Y. Yeung

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Hilary J. Goldberg

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Souheil El-Chemaly

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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