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Dive into the research topics where J Herbert is active.

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Featured researches published by J Herbert.


Nature | 2002

Targeted pharmacological depletion of serum amyloid P component for treatment of human amyloidosis.

Mark B. Pepys; J Herbert; Winston L. Hutchinson; Glenys A. Tennent; Helen J. Lachmann; J. R. Gallimore; L. B. Lovat; Tamas Bartfai; A. Alanine; C. Hertel; T. Hoffmann; R. Jakob-Roetne; Rd Norcross; J. A. Kemp; Ken Ichi Yamamura; Misao Suzuki; Graham W. Taylor; Sarah S. Murray; D. Thompson; A. Purvis; Simon Kolstoe; S.P. Wood; Philip N. Hawkins

The normal plasma protein serum amyloid P component (SAP) binds to fibrils in all types of amyloid deposits, and contributes to the pathogenesis of amyloidosis. In order to intervene in this process we have developed a drug, R-1-[6-[R-2-carboxy-pyrrolidin-1-yl]-6-oxo-hexanoyl]pyrrolidine-2-carboxylic acid, that is a competitive inhibitor of SAP binding to amyloid fibrils. This palindromic compound also crosslinks and dimerizes SAP molecules, leading to their very rapid clearance by the liver, and thus produces a marked depletion of circulating human SAP. This mechanism of drug action potently removes SAP from human amyloid deposits in the tissues and may provide a new therapeutic approach to both systemic amyloidosis and diseases associated with local amyloid, including Alzheimers disease and type 2 diabetes.


Immunology | 2004

Autoimmunity and glomerulonephritis in mice with targeted deletion of the serum amyloid P component gene: SAP deficiency or strain combination?

Julian D. Gillmore; Winston L. Hutchinson; J Herbert; A Bybee; Daniel A. Mitchell; Robert P. Hasserjian; Ken Ichi Yamamura; Misao Suzuki; Caroline Sabin; Mark B. Pepys

Human serum amyloid P component (SAP) binds avidly to DNA, chromatin and apoptotic cells in vitro and in vivo. 129\Sv × C57BL\6 mice with targeted deletion of the SAP gene spontaneously develop antinuclear autoantibodies and immune complex glomerulonephritis. SAP‐deficient animals, created by backcrossing the 129\Sv SAP gene deletion into pure line C57BL\6 mice and studied here for the first time, also spontaneously developed broad spectrum antinuclear autoimmunity and proliferative immune complex glomerulonephritis but without proteinuria, renal failure, or increased morbidity or mortality. Mice hemizygous for the SAP gene deletion had an intermediate autoimmune phenotype. Injected apoptotic cells and isolated chromatin were more immunogenic in SAP–\– mice than in wild‐type mice. In contrast, SAP‐deficient pure line 129\Sv mice did not produce significant autoantibodies either spontaneously or when immunized with extrinsic chromatin or apoptotic cells, indicating that loss of tolerance is markedly strain dependent. However, SAP deficiency in C57BL\6 mice only marginally affected plasma clearance of exogenous chromatin and had no effect on distribution of exogenous nucleosomes between the liver and kidneys, which were the only tissue sites of catabolism. Furthermore, transgenic expression of human SAP in the C57BL\6 SAP knockout mice did not abrogate the autoimmune phenotype. This may reflect the different binding affinities of mouse and human SAP for nuclear autoantigens and\or the heterologous nature of transgenic human SAP in the mouse. Alternatively, the autoimmunity may be independent of SAP deficiency and caused by expression of 129\Sv chromosome 1 genes in the C57BL\6 background.


Journal of Immunology | 2002

Production of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor in the nonspecific acute phase response enhances host resistance to bacterial infection

Mahdad Noursadeghi; Maria C. M. Bickerstaff; J Herbert; David Moyes; Jonathan Cohen; Mark B. Pepys

Mice mounting an acute phase response, induced by sterile inflammation after a single s.c. injection of casein 24 h beforehand, were remarkably protected against lethal infection with Gram-positive or Gram-negative bacteria. This was associated with enhanced early clearance of bacteremia, greater phagocytosis and oxidative burst responses by neutrophils, and enhanced recruitment of neutrophils into tissues compared with control, nonacute phase mice. Casein-induced inflammation was also associated with increased concentrations of G-CSF in serum, and administration of neutralizing Ab to this cytokine completely abrogated protection against Escherichia coli infection after casein pretreatment. Injection of recombinant murine G-CSF between 3 and 24 h before infection conferred the same protection as casein injection. In contrast, the casein-induced acute phase response affected neither serum values of TNF-α, IL-1β, or IL-6 after E. coli infection nor susceptibility to LPS toxicity. Furthermore, protection against infection was unaffected in IL-1R knockout mice, which have deficient acute phase plasma protein responses, or after nonspecific inhibition of acute phase protein synthesis by d-galactosamine or specific depletion of complement C3 by cobra venom factor. Increased production of G-CSF in the acute phase response is thus a key physiological component of host defense, and pretreatment with G-CSF to prevent bacterial infection in at-risk patients now merits further study, especially in view of increasing bacterial resistance to antibiotics.


Journal of Immunology | 2003

Human C-Reactive Protein Does Not Protect against Acute Lipopolysaccharide Challenge in Mice

Gideon M. Hirschfield; J Herbert; Melvyn C. Kahan; Mark B. Pepys

The physiological and pathophysiological functions of C-reactive protein (CRP), the classical acute-phase protein, are not well established, despite many reports of biological effects of CRP in vitro and in model systems in vivo. Limited, small scale experiments have suggested that rabbit and human CRP may both protect mice against lethal toxicity of Gram-negative bacterial LPS. However, in substantial well-controlled studies in C57BL/6 mice challenged with Escherichia coli O111:B4 LPS, we show in this work that significant protection against lethality was conferred neither by an autologous acute-phase response to sterile inflammatory stimuli given to wild-type mice 24 h before LPS challenge, nor by human CRP, whether passively administered or expressed transgenically. Male mice transgenic for human CRP, which mount a major acute-phase response of human CRP after LPS injection, were also not protected against the lethality of LPS from either E. coli O55:B5 or Salmonella typhimurium. Even when the acute-phase human CRP response was actively stimulated in transgenic mice before LPS challenge, no protection against LPS toxicity was observed. Indeed, male mice transgenic for human CRP that were pretreated with casein to stimulate an acute-phase response 24 h before LPS challenge suffered significantly greater mortality than unstimulated human CRP transgenic controls. Rather than being protective in this situation, human CRP may thus have pathogenic proinflammatory effects in vivo.


Immunology | 2004

Classical and alternative pathway complement activation are not required for reactive systemic AA amyloid deposition in mice

Winston L. Hutchinson; J Herbert; Marina Botto; Mark B. Pepys

During induction of reactive systemic amyloid A protein (AA) amyloidosis in mice, either by chronic inflammation or by severe acute inflammation following injection of amyloid enhancing factor, the earliest deposits form in a perifollicular distribution in the spleen. Because the splenic follicular localization of immune complexes and of the scrapie agent are both complement dependent in mice, we investigated the possible complement dependence of AA amyloid deposition. In preliminary experiments, substantial depletion of circulating C3 by cobra venom factor had little effect on experimental amyloid deposition. More importantly, mice with targeted deletion of the genes for C1q or for both factor B and C2, and therefore unable to sustain activation, respectively, of either the classical complement pathway or both the classical and alternative pathways, showed amyloid deposition similar to wild type controls. Complement activation by either the classical or alternative pathways is thus not apparently necessary for the experimental induction of systemic AA amyloid in mice.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 1999

C-reactive protein and complement are important mediators of tissue damage in acute myocardial infarction.

M. Griselli; J Herbert; Winston L. Hutchinson; K.M. Taylor; Sohail M; Thomas Krausz; Mark B. Pepys


Nature Medicine | 1997

Amyloid deposition is delayed in mice with targeted deletion of the serum amyloid P component gene

M. Botto; Philip N. Hawkins; M.C.M. Bickerstaff; J Herbert; Anne E. Bygrave; A. Mcbride; Winston L. Hutchinson; Glenys A. Tennent; Mark Walport; Mark B. Pepys


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1994

Human serum amyloid P component is an invariant constituent of amyloid deposits and has a uniquely homogeneous glycostructure

Mark B. Pepys; T W Rademacher; S Amatayakul-Chantler; P Williams; G. E. Noble; Winston L. Hutchinson; Philip N. Hawkins; S R Nelson; J. R. Gallimore; J Herbert


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2000

Role of serum amyloid P component in bacterial infection: Protection of the host or protection of the pathogen

Mahdad Noursadeghi; M.C.M. Bickerstaff; Gallimore; J Herbert; Jonathan Cohen; Mark B. Pepys


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 1997

Serum amyloid A protein is a clinically useful indicator of acute renal allograft rejection.

Anders Hartmann; T C Eide; Per Fauchald; O Bentdal; J Herbert; J. R. Gallimore; Mark B. Pepys

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Mark B. Pepys

University College London

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J. R. Gallimore

University College London

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Jonathan Cohen

University College London

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M. Botto

Hammersmith Hospital

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Misao Suzuki

University College London

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