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Dive into the research topics where Jacqueline A. Quandt is active.

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Featured researches published by Jacqueline A. Quandt.


The EMBO Journal | 2005

Structure of a human autoimmune TCR bound to a myelin basic protein self‐peptide and a multiple sclerosis‐associated MHC class II molecule

Yili Li; Yuping Huang; Jessica Lue; Jacqueline A. Quandt; Roland Martin; Roy A. Mariuzza

Multiple sclerosis is mediated by T‐cell responses to central nervous system antigens such as myelin basic protein (MBP). To investigate self‐peptide/major histocompatibility complex (MHC) recognition and T‐cell receptor (TCR) degeneracy, we determined the crystal structure, at 2.8 Å resolution, of an autoimmune TCR (3A6) bound to an MBP self‐peptide and the multiple sclerosis‐associated MHC class II molecule, human leukocyte antigen (HLA)‐DR2a. The complex reveals that 3A6 primarily recognizes the N‐terminal portion of MBP, in contrast with antimicrobial and alloreactive TCRs, which focus on the peptide center. Moreover, this binding mode, which may be frequent among autoimmune TCRs, is compatible with a wide range of orientation angles of TCR to peptide/MHC. The interface is characterized by a scarcity of hydrogen bonds between TCR and peptide, and TCR‐induced conformational changes in MBP/HLA‐DR2a, which likely explain the low observed affinity. Degeneracy of 3A6, manifested by recognition of superagonist peptides bearing substitutions at nearly all TCR‐contacting positions, results from the few specific interactions between 3A6 and MBP, allowing optimization of interface complementarity through variations in the peptide.


Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 2007

Disease Progression After Bone Marrow Transplantation in a Model of Multiple Sclerosis Is Associated With Chronic Microglial and Glial Progenitor Response

Riccardo Cassiani-Ingoni; Paolo A. Muraro; Tim Magnus; Susan Reichert-Scrivner; Jens Schmidt; Jaebong Huh; Jacqueline A. Quandt; András Bratincsák; Tal Shahar; Fabrizio Eusebi; Larry S. Sherman; Mark P. Mattson; Roland Martin; Mahendra S. Rao

Multiple sclerosis (MS), the most common nontraumatic cause of neurologic disability in young adults in economically developed countries, is characterized by inflammation, gliosis, demyelination, and neuronal degeneration in the CNS. Bone marrow transplantation (BMT) can suppress inflammatory disease in a majority of patients with MS but retards clinical progression only in patients treated in the early stages of the disease. Here, we applied BMT in a mouse model of neuroinflammation, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), and investigated the kinetics of reconstitution of the immune system in the periphery and in the CNS using bone marrow cells isolated from syngeneic donors constitutively expressing green fluorescent protein. This approach allowed us to dissect the contribution of donor cells to the turnover of resident microglia and to the pathogenesis of observed disease relapses after BMT. BMT effectively blocked or delayed EAE development when mice were treated early in the course of the disease but was without effect in mice with chronic disease. We found that there is minimal overall replacement of host microglia with donor cells in the CNS and that newly transplanted cells do not appear to contribute to disease progression. In contrast, EAE relapses are accompanied by the robust activation of endogenous microglial and macroglial cells, which further involves the maturation of endogenous Olig2 glial progenitor cells into reactive astrocytes through the cytoplasmic translocation of Olig2 and the expression of CD44 on the cellular membrane. The observed maturation of large numbers of reactive astrocytes from glial progenitors and the chronic activation of host microglial cells have relevance for our understanding of the resident glial response to inflammatory injury in the CNS. Our data indicate that reactivation of a local inflammatory process after BMT is sustained predominantly by endogenous microglia/macrophages.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2004

Unique clinical and pathological features in HLA-DRB1*0401-restricted MBP 111-129-specific humanized TCR transgenic mice.

Jacqueline A. Quandt; Mirza Saqib Baig; Karen Yao; Kazuyuki Kawamura; Jaebong Huh; Samuel K. Ludwin; Hong-Jin Bian; Mark Bryant; Laura Quigley; Zoltan A. Nagy; Henry F. McFarland; Paolo A. Muraro; Roland Martin; Kouichi Ito

Amino acid residues 111–129 represent an immunodominant epitope of myelin basic protein (MBP) in humans with human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DRB1*0401 allele(s). The MBP 111–129–specific T cell clone MS2-3C8 was repeatedly isolated from a patient with multiple sclerosis (MS), suggesting an involvement of MS2-3C8 T cells in the pathogenesis. To address the pathogenic potential of the MS2-3C8 T cell clone, we generated transgenic (Tg) mice expressing its T cell receptor and restriction element, HLA-DRB1*0401, to examine the pathogenic characteristics of MS2-3C8 Tg T cells by adoptive transfer into HLA-DRB1*0401 Tg mice. In addition to the ascending paralysis typical of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, mice displayed dysphagia due to restriction in jaw and tongue movements and abnormal gait. In accordance with the clinical phenotype, infiltrates of MS2-3C8 Tg T cells and inflammatory lesions were predominantly located in the brainstem and the cranial nerve roots in addition to the spinal cord and spinal nerve roots. Together, these data suggest a pathogenic role of MBP-specific T cells in inflammatory demyelination within the brainstem and cranial nerve roots during the progression of MS. This notion may help to explain the clinical and pathological heterogeneity of MS.


Journal of Immunology | 2012

Myelin Basic Protein-Specific TCR/HLA-DRB5*01:01 Transgenic Mice Support the Etiologic Role of DRB5*01:01 in Multiple Sclerosis

Jacqueline A. Quandt; Jaebong Huh; Mirza Saqib Baig; Karen Yao; Naoko Ito; Mark Bryant; Kazuyuki Kawamura; Clemencia Pinilla; Henry F. McFarland; Roland Martin; Kouichi Ito

Genetic susceptibility to multiple sclerosis (MS) has been linked to the HLA-DR15 haplotype consisting of DRB1*15:01(DR2b) and DRB5*01:01(DR2a) alleles. Given almost complete linkage disequilibrium of the two alleles, recent studies suggested differential roles in susceptibility (DR2b) or protection from MS (DR2a). Our objective was to assess the potential contribution of DR2a to disease etiology in MS using a humanized model of autoimmunity. To assess the potential contribution of DR2a to disease etiology, we created DR2a humanized transgenic (Tg) mice and subsequently crossed them to Tg mice expressing TL3A6, an MS patient-derived myelin basic protein 83-99–specific TCR. In TL3A6/DR2a Tg mice, CD4 Tg T cells escape thymic and peripheral deletion and initiate spontaneous experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) at low rates, depending on the level of DR2a expression. The ability to induce active EAE was also increased in animals expressing higher levels of DR2a. Inflammatory infiltrates and neuronal damage were present throughout the spinal cord, consistent with a classical ascending EAE phenotype with minor involvement of the cerebellum, brainstem, and peripheral nerve roots in spontaneous, as well as actively induced, disease. These studies emphasize the pathologic contribution of the DR2a allele to the development of autoimmunity when expressed as the sole MHC class II molecule, as well as strongly argue for DR2a as a contributor to the CNS autoimmunity in MS.


Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 2007

High Production of CXCL13 in Blood and Brain During Persistent Infection With the Relapsing Fever Spirochete Borrelia turicatae

Harald Gelderblom; Diana Londoño; Yunhong Bai; Erik S. Cabral; Jacqueline A. Quandt; Ron Hornung; Roland Martin; Adriana Marques; Diego Cadavid

Relapsing fever (RF) is a multisystemic borrelial infection with frequent neurologic involvement referred to as neuroborreliosis. The absence of an effective antibody response results in persistent infection. To study the consequences to the brain of persistent infection with the RF spirochete Borrelia turicatae, we studied B cell (Igh6−/−) and B and T (Rag1−/−) cell-deficient mice inoculated with isogenic serotypes 1 (Bt1) or 2 (Bt2). We found that Bt1 was more tissue tropic than Bt2, not only for brain but also for heart. Igh6−/− mice developed more severe clinical disease than Rag1−/− mice. Bt1-infected brains had widespread microgliosis/brain macrophage activation despite localization of spirochetes in the leptomeninges rather than the brain parenchyma itself. Oligoarray analysis revealed that CXCL13 was the most upregulated gene in the brain of Bt1-infected Igh6−/− mice. CXCL13 was also the most abundant of the chemokines we measured in infected blood. Persistent infection did not result in injury to the brain. Treatment with exogenous interleukin-10 reduced microgliosis in the brain and production of CXCL13 in the blood. We concluded that brain involvement in B cell-deficient mice persistently infected with B. turicatae is characterized by prominent microgliosis and production of CXCL13 without detectable injury.


Infection and Immunity | 2007

Cerebrospinal Fluid-Infiltrating CD4+ T Cells Recognize Borrelia burgdorferi Lysine-Enriched Protein Domains and Central Nervous System Autoantigens in Early Lyme Encephalitis

J. Lünemann; Harald Gelderblom; Mireia Sospedra; Jacqueline A. Quandt; Clemencia Pinilla; Adriana Marques; Roland Martin

ABSTRACT Neurological manifestations of Lyme disease are usually accompanied by inflammatory changes in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and the recruitment of activated T cells into the CSF compartment. In order to characterize the phenotype and identify target antigens of CSF-infiltrating T cells in early neuroborreliosis with central nervous system (CNS) involvement, we combined T-cell cloning, functional testing of T-cell responses with positional scanning synthetic combinatorial peptide libraries, and biometric data analysis. We demonstrate that CD4+ gamma interferon-producing T cells specifically responding to Borrelia burgdorferi lysate were present in the CSF of a patient with acute Lyme encephalitis. Some T-cell clones recognized previously uncharacterized B. burgdorferi epitopes which show a specific enrichment for lysine, such as the heat shock-induced chaperone HSP90. Degenerate T-cell recognition that included T-cell responses to borrelia-specific and CNS-specific autoantigens derived from the myelin protein 2′,3′-cyclic nucleotide 3′-phosphodiesterase (CNPase) could be demonstrated for one representative clone. Our results show that spirochetal antigen-specific and Th1-polarized CD4+ lymphocytes infiltrate the CSF during monophasic CNS symptoms of Lyme disease and demonstrate that cross-recognition of CNS antigens by B. burgdorferi-specific T cells is not restricted to chronic and treatment-resistant manifestations.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Intranasal Delivery of E-Selectin Reduces Atherosclerosis in ApoE−/− Mice

Xinhui Li; Kory R. Johnson; Mark Bryant; Abdel G. Elkahloun; Marcelo Amar; Alan T. Remaley; Ranil de Silva; John M. Hallenbeck; Jacqueline A. Quandt

Mucosal tolerance to E-selectin prevents stroke and protects against ischemic brain damage in experimental models of stroke studying healthy animals or spontaneously hypertensive stroke-prone rats. A reduction in inflammation and neural damage was associated with immunomodulatory or “tolerogenic” responses to E-selectin. The purpose of the current study on ApoE deficient mice is to assess the capacity of this stroke prevention innovation to influence atherosclerosis, a major underlying cause for ischemic strokes; human E-selectin is being translated as a potential clinical prevention strategy for secondary stroke. Female ApoE−/− mice received intranasal delivery of E-selectin prior to (pre-tolerization) or simultaneously with initiation of a high-fat diet. After 7 weeks on the high-fat diet, lipid lesions in the aorta, serum triglycerides, and total cholesterol were assessed as markers of atherosclerosis development. We also assessed E-selectin-specific antibodies and cytokine responses, in addition to inflammatory responses that included macrophage infiltration of the aorta and altered gene expression profiles of aortic mRNA. Intranasal delivery of E-selectin prior to initiation of high-fat chow decreased atherosclerosis, serum total cholesterol, and expression of the leucocyte chemoattractant CCL21 that is typically upregulated in atherosclerotic lesions of ApoE−/− mice. This response was associated with the induction of E-selectin specific cells producing the immunomodulatory cytokine IL-10 and immunosuppressive antibody isotypes. Intranasal administration of E-selectin generates E-selectin specific immune responses that are immunosuppressive in nature and can ameliorate atherosclerosis, a major risk factor for ischemic stroke. These results provide additional preclinical support for the potential of induction of mucosal tolerance to E-selectin to prevent stroke.


Brain | 2013

Identification of endothelin 2 as an inflammatory factor that promotes central nervous system remyelination

Tracy J Yuen; Kory R. Johnson; Veronique E. Miron; Chao Zhao; Jacqueline A. Quandt; Marie C. Harrisingh; Matthew Swire; Anna Williams; Henry F. McFarland; Robin J.M. Franklin; Charles ffrench-Constant


American Journal of Pathology | 2007

Role of Interleukin 10 during Persistent Infection with the Relapsing Fever Spirochete Borrelia turicatae

Harald Gelderblom; Jens Schmidt; Diana Londoño; Yunhong Bai; Jacqueline A. Quandt; Ron Hornung; Adriana Marques; Roland Martin; Diego Cadavid


Glia | 2009

IDENTIFICATION OF INFLAMMATORY FACTORS THAT PROMOTE MYELINATION

Tracy J Yuen; Henry F. McFarland; Jacqueline A. Quandt; Kory R. Johnson; Robin J.M. Franklin; Charles ffrench-Constant

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Roland Martin

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Henry F. McFarland

National Institutes of Health

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Jaebong Huh

National Institutes of Health

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Adriana Marques

National Institutes of Health

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Clemencia Pinilla

Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies

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Harald Gelderblom

University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey

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Kory R. Johnson

National Institutes of Health

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Mark Bryant

National Institutes of Health

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