James P. Hewitson
University of Edinburgh
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Featured researches published by James P. Hewitson.
Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 2009
James P. Hewitson; John Grainger; Rick M. Maizels
Helminths are masterful immunoregulators. A characteristic feature of helminth infection is a Th2-dominated immune response, but stimulation of immunoregulatory cell populations, such as regulatory T cells and alternatively activated macrophages, is equally common. Typically, Th1/17 immunity is blocked and productive effector responses are muted, allowing survival of the parasite in a “modified Th2” environment. Drug treatment to clear the worms reverses the immunoregulatory effects, indicating that a state of active suppression is maintained by the parasite. Hence, research has focussed on “excretory–secretory” products released by live parasites, which can interfere with every aspect of host immunity from initial recognition to end-stage effector mechanisms. In this review, we survey our knowledge of helminth secreted molecules, and summarise current understanding of the growing number of individual helminth mediators that have been shown to target key receptors or pathways in the mammalian immune system.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2013
Stephen J. Jenkins; Dominik Rückerl; Graham D. Thomas; James P. Hewitson; Sheelagh Duncan; Frank Brombacher; Rick M. Maizels; David A. Hume; Judith E. Allen
IL-4 and CSF-1 both contribute to macrophage proliferation during nematode infection, but IL-4 permits increased tissue macrophage density without the coincident monocyte infiltration associated with elevated CSF-1 levels.
International Journal for Parasitology | 2013
Henry J. McSorley; James P. Hewitson; Rick M. Maizels
Epidemiological and interventional human studies, as well as experiments in animal models, strongly indicate that helminth parasitic infections can confer protection from immune dysregulatory diseases such as allergy, autoimmunity and colitis. Here, we review the immunological pathways that helminths exploit to downregulate immune responses, both against bystander specificities such as allergens and against antigens from the parasites themselves. In particular, we focus on a highly informative laboratory system, the mouse intestinal nematode, Heligmosomoides polygyrus, as a tractable model of host-parasite interaction at the cellular and molecular levels. Analysis of the molecules released in vitro (as excretory-secretory products) and their cellular targets is identifying individual parasite molecules and gene families implicated in immunomodulation, and which hold potential for future human therapy of immunopathological conditions.
Current Opinion in Immunology | 2012
Rick M. Maizels; James P. Hewitson; Katherine A. Smith
Highlights ► New studies identify innate lymphoid cells initiating immunity to helminths. ► The role of epithelial cells in both detection and expulsion of parasites. ► The concerted mechanisms that protect us from infection. ► The role of regulatory T cells in modulating protection. ► New immunoregulatory populations including macrophages, DCs and B cells.
Parasite Immunology | 2005
James P. Hewitson; P. A. Hamblin; Adrian P. Mountford
As a paradigm for the development of a vaccine against human schistosomiasis, the radiation‐attenuated (RA) vaccine has enabled the dissection of different immune responses as putative effector mechanisms. This review considers advances made in the past, and updates our knowledge with reference to recent studies that have provided new information relevant particularly to the early innate events after vaccination, and to the nature of the protective effector mechanism. Priming of a protective response by RA larvae is a highly co‐ordinated series of events starting in the skin, draining lymph nodes and lungs, leading to the development of various effector responses, ranging from Th1‐associated cell‐mediated activity, to anti‐parasitic antibodies, all of which contribute to the elimination of challenge larvae to varying extents. In this respect, the RA vaccine elicits a multifaceted immune response, from which we can derive valuable insights relevant to the future design of novel delivery systems and adjuvants for recombinant and subunit vaccines.
Parasite Immunology | 2005
Stephen J. Jenkins; James P. Hewitson; Gavin R. Jenkins; Adrian P. Mountford
Schistosomes appear to have evolved several strategies to down‐regulate the hosts immune response in order to promote their own survival. For the host, down‐regulation is also beneficial as it can limit the extent of pathology. It is widely accepted that schistosomes modulate the immune response during the chronic phase of infection after egg deposition has started. However, there is increasing evidence that modulation of the immune response can occur much earlier at the time infective cercariae penetrate the host skin. In this review, we explore the various lines of evidence that excretory/secretory (ES) molecules from cercariae down‐regulate the hosts immune response. We highlight the immunological factors that are produced and may be involved in regulating the immune system (e.g. IL‐10, and eicosanoids), as well as speculating on possible mechanisms of immune modulation (e.g. mast‐cell activation, T‐cell apoptosis, and/or the skewed activation of antigen‐presenting cells [APCs]). Finally, we draw attention to several molecules of schistosome origin that have the potential to stimulate the regulatory response (e.g. glycans) and link these to potential host receptors (e.g. TLRs and C‐type lectins).
Journal of Proteomics | 2011
James P. Hewitson; Yvonne Harcus; Janice Murray; Maaike van Agtmaal; Kara J. Filbey; John Grainger; Stephen Bridgett; Mark Blaxter; Peter D. Ashton; David A. Ashford; Rachel S. Curwen; R. Alan Wilson; Adam A. Dowle; Rick M. Maizels
The intestinal helminth parasite, Heligmosomoides polygyrus bakeri offers a tractable experimental model for human hookworm infections such as Ancylostoma duodenale and veterinary parasites such as Haemonchus contortus. Parasite excretory-secretory (ES) products represent the major focus for immunological and biochemical analyses, and contain immunomodulatory molecules responsible for nematode immune evasion. In a proteomic analysis of adult H. polygyrus secretions (termed HES) matched to an extensive transcriptomic dataset, we identified 374 HES proteins by LC-MS/MS, which were distinct from those in somatic extract HEx, comprising 446 identified proteins, confirming selective export of ES proteins. The predominant secreted protein families were proteases (astacins and other metalloproteases, aspartic, cysteine and serine-type proteases), lysozymes, apyrases and acetylcholinesterases. The most abundant products were members of the highly divergent venom allergen-like (VAL) family, related to Ancylostoma secreted protein (ASP); 25 homologues were identified, with VAL-1 and -2 also shown to be associated with the parasite surface. The dominance of VAL proteins is similar to profiles reported for Ancylostoma and Haemonchus ES products. Overall, this study shows that the secretions of H. polygyrus closely parallel those of clinically important GI nematodes, confirming the value of this parasite as a model of helminth infection.
Gut microbes | 2014
Lisa A. Reynolds; Katherine A. Smith; Kara J. Filbey; Yvonne Harcus; James P. Hewitson; Stephen A. Redpath; Yanet Valdez; María J. Yebra; B. Brett Finlay; Rick M. Maizels
The intestinal microbiota are pivotal in determining the developmental, metabolic and immunological status of the mammalian host. However, the intestinal tract may also accommodate pathogenic organisms, including helminth parasites which are highly prevalent in most tropical countries. Both microbes and helminths must evade or manipulate the host immune system to reside in the intestinal environment, yet whether they influence each other’s persistence in the host remains unknown. We now show that abundance of Lactobacillus bacteria correlates positively with infection with the mouse intestinal nematode parasite, Heligmosomoides polygyrus, as well as with heightened regulatory T cell (Treg) and Th17 responses. Moreover, H. polygyrus raises Lactobacillus species abundance in the duodenum of C57BL/6 mice, which are highly susceptible to H. polygyrus infection, but not in BALB/c mice, which are relatively resistant. Sequencing of samples at the bacterial gyrB locus identified the principal Lactobacillus species as L. taiwanensis, a previously characterized rodent commensal. Experimental administration of L. taiwanensis to BALB/c mice elevates regulatory T cell frequencies and results in greater helminth establishment, demonstrating a causal relationship in which commensal bacteria promote infection with an intestinal parasite and implicating a bacterially-induced expansion of Tregs as a mechanism of greater helminth susceptibility. The discovery of this tripartite interaction between host, bacteria and parasite has important implications for both antibiotic and anthelmintic use in endemic human populations.
Experimental Parasitology | 2012
Rick M. Maizels; James P. Hewitson; Janice Murray; Yvonne Harcus; Blaise Dayer; Kara J. Filbey; John Grainger; Henry J. McSorley; Lisa A. Reynolds; Katherine A. Smith
The intestinal nematode parasite Heligmosomoides polygyrus bakeri exerts widespread immunomodulatory effects on both the innate and adaptive immune system of the host. Infected mice adopt an immunoregulated phenotype, with abated allergic and autoimmune reactions. At the cellular level, infection is accompanied by expanded regulatory T cell populations, skewed dendritic cell and macrophage phenotypes, B cell hyperstimulation and multiple localised changes within the intestinal environment. In most mouse strains, these act to block protective Th2 immunity. The molecular basis of parasite interactions with the host immune system centres upon secreted products termed HES (H. polygyrus excretory-secretory antigen), which include a TGF-β-like ligand that induces de novo regulatory T cells, factors that modify innate inflammatory responses, and molecules that block allergy in vivo. Proteomic and transcriptomic definition of parasite proteins, combined with biochemical identification of immunogenic molecules in resistant mice, will provide new candidate immunomodulators and vaccine antigens for future research.
Immunology and Cell Biology | 2014
Kara J. Filbey; John R. Grainger; Katherine A. Smith; Louis Boon; Nico van Rooijen; Yvonne Harcus; Stephen J. Jenkins; James P. Hewitson; Rick M. Maizels
The nematode Heligmosomoides polygyrus is an excellent model for intestinal helminth parasitism. Infection in mice persists for varying lengths of time in different inbred strains, with CBA and C57BL/6 mice being fully susceptible, BALB/c partially so and SJL able to expel worms within 2–3 weeks of infection. We find that resistance correlates not only with the adaptive Th2 response, including IL‐10 but with activation of innate lymphoid cell and macrophage populations. In addition, the titer and specificity range of the serum antibody response is maximal in resistant mice. In susceptible strains, Th2 responses were found to be counterbalanced by IFN‐γ‐producing CD4+ and CD8+ cells, but these are not solely responsible for susceptibility as mice deficient in either CD8+ T cells or IFN‐γ remain unable to expel the parasites. Foxp3+ Treg numbers were comparable in all strains, but in the most resistant SJL strain, this population does not upregulate CD103 in infection, and in the lamina propria the frequency of Foxp3+CD103+ T cells is significantly lower than in susceptible mice. The more resistant SJL and BALB/c mice develop macrophage‐rich IL‐4Rα‐dependent Type 2 granulomas around intestinal sites of larval invasion, and expression of alternative activation markers Arginase‐1, Ch3L3 (Ym1) and RELM‐α within the intestine and the peritoneal lavage was also strongly correlated with helminth elimination in these strains. Clodronate depletion of phagocytic cells compromises resistance of BALB/c mice and slows expulsion in the SJL strain. Thus, Type 2 immunity involves IL‐4Rα‐dependent innate cells including but not limited to a phagocyte population, the latter likely involving the action of specific antibodies.