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Featured researches published by Janet Jackman.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2012

Increased expression of immunoreactive thymic stromal lymphopoietin in patients with severe asthma.

Aarti Shikotra; David F. Choy; Chandra M. Ohri; Emma Doran; Claire A. Butler; Beverley Hargadon; Maria Shelley; Alexander R. Abbas; Cary D. Austin; Janet Jackman; Lawren C. Wu; Liam Heaney; Joseph R. Arron; Peter Bradding

BACKGROUND Thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) is a cytokine implicated in the pathophysiology of asthma through 2 distinct pathways: a TSLP-OX40 ligand (OX40L)-T cell axis and a TSLP-mast cell axis. Whether these pathways are active in human asthma is unknown. OBJECTIVE We sought to investigate whether mucosal TSLP protein expression relates to asthma severity and distinct immunologic pathways. METHODS In healthy subjects and patients with mild-to-severe asthma, we immunostained bronchial biopsy specimens for TSLP, OX40, OX40L, T(H)2 cytokines, and inflammatory cell markers. We examined gene expression using RNA microarrays and quantitative RT-PCR. RESULTS There was considerable heterogeneity in the levels of TSLP, IL-13, and IL-4 immunostaining across the cohort of asthmatic patients examined. Overall, TSLP protein expression was significantly increased in airway epithelium and lamina propria of asthmatic patients, particularly in patients with severe asthma. TSLP immunostaining in both compartments correlated with the severity of airflow obstruction. The majority of leukocytes expressing IL-13 were possibly nuocytes. Accounting for intersubject variability, the 55% of asthmatic patients with increased IL-13 immunostaining in the lamina propria also had increased IL-4 and TSLP expression. This was further substantiated by significant correlations between TSLP gene expression, a T(H)2 gene expression signature, and eosinophilic inflammation in bronchial biopsy specimens. Immunostaining for OX40, OX40L, and CD83 was sparse, with no difference between asthmatic patients and healthy subjects. CONCLUSION TSLP expression is increased in a subset of patients with severe asthma in spite of high-dose inhaled or oral corticosteroid therapy. Targeting TSLP might only be efficacious in the subset of asthma characterized by increased TSLP expression and T(H)2 inflammation.


Science Translational Medicine | 2015

TH2 and TH17 inflammatory pathways are reciprocally regulated in asthma

David F. Choy; Kevin M. Hart; Lee A. Borthwick; Aarti Shikotra; Deepti R. Nagarkar; Salman Siddiqui; Guiquan Jia; Chandra M. Ohri; Emma Doran; Kevin M. Vannella; Claire A. Butler; Beverley Hargadon; Joshua Sciurba; Richard L. Gieseck; Robert W. Thompson; Sandra White; Alexander R. Abbas; Janet Jackman; Lawren C. Wu; Jackson G. Egen; Liam Heaney; Thirumalai R. Ramalingam; Joseph R. Arron; Thomas A. Wynn; Peter Bradding

Concurrent blockade of IL-13 and IL-17A may improve control of asthma. A tale of two asthmas Classifying diseases according to symptoms is rapidly becoming a thing of the past. Targeted therapeutics have shown us that sets of symptoms can be caused by different pathogenic mechanisms. Now, Choy et al. demonstrate that asthma can be divided into three immunological clusters: TH2-high, TH17-high, and TH2/17-low. The TH2-high and TH17-high clusters were inversely correlated in patients. Moreover, neutralizing one signature promoted the other in a mouse model of asthma. These data suggest that combination therapies targeting both pathways may better treat asthmatic individuals. Increasing evidence suggests that asthma is a heterogeneous disorder regulated by distinct molecular mechanisms. In a cross-sectional study of asthmatics of varying severity (n = 51), endobronchial tissue gene expression analysis revealed three major patient clusters: TH2-high, TH17-high, and TH2/17-low. TH2-high and TH17-high patterns were mutually exclusive in individual patient samples, and their gene signatures were inversely correlated and differentially regulated by interleukin-13 (IL-13) and IL-17A. To understand this dichotomous pattern of T helper 2 (TH2) and TH17 signatures, we investigated the potential of type 2 cytokine suppression in promoting TH17 responses in a preclinical model of allergen-induced asthma. Neutralization of IL-4 and/or IL-13 resulted in increased TH17 cells and neutrophilic inflammation in the lung. However, neutralization of IL-13 and IL-17 protected mice from eosinophilia, mucus hyperplasia, and airway hyperreactivity and abolished the neutrophilic inflammation, suggesting that combination therapies targeting both pathways may maximize therapeutic efficacy across a patient population comprising both TH2 and TH17 endotypes.


Journal of Immunology | 2014

Endogenously Expressed IL-13Rα2 Attenuates IL-13–Mediated Responses but Does Not Activate Signaling in Human Lung Fibroblasts

Sanjay Chandriani; Daryle J DePianto; Elsa N. N’Diaye; Alexander R. Abbas; Janet Jackman; Jack Bevers; Vladimir Ramirez-Carrozzi; Rajita Pappu; Steven Kauder; Karen Toy; Connie Ha; Zora Modrusan; Lawren C. Wu; Harold R. Collard; Paul J. Wolters; Jackson G. Egen; Joseph R. Arron

IL-13 can bind to two distinct receptors: a heterodimer of IL-13Rα1/IL-4Rα and IL-13Rα2. Whereas IL-13Rα1/IL-4Rα engagement by IL-13 leads to the activation of STAT6, the molecular events triggered by IL-13 binding to IL-13Rα2 remain incompletely understood. IL-4 can bind to and signal through the IL-13Rα1/IL-4Rα complex but does not interact with IL-13Rα2. Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis is a progressive and generally fatal parenchymal lung disease of unknown etiology with no current pharmacologic treatment options that substantially prolong survival. Preclinical models of fibrotic diseases have implicated IL-13 activity on multiple cell types, including macrophages and fibroblasts, in initiating and perpetuating pathological fibrosis. In this study, we show that IL-13, IL-4, IL-13Rα2, and IL-13–inducible target genes are expressed at significantly elevated levels in lung tissue from patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis compared with control lung tissue. IL-4 and IL-13 induce virtually identical transcriptional responses in human monocytes, macrophages, and lung fibroblasts. IL-13Rα2 expression can be induced in lung fibroblasts by IL-4 or IL-13 via a STAT6-dependent mechanism, or by TNF-α via a STAT6-independent mechanism. Endogenously expressed IL-13Rα2 decreases, but does not abolish, sensitivity of lung fibroblasts to IL-13 and does not affect sensitivity to IL-4. Genome-wide transcriptional analyses of lung fibroblasts stimulated with IL-13 in the presence of Abs that selectively block interactions of IL-13 with IL-13Rα1/IL-4Rα or IL-13Rα2 show that endogenously expressed IL-13Rα2 does not activate any unique IL-13–mediated gene expression patterns, confirming its role as a decoy receptor for IL-13 signaling.


Journal of Immunology | 2015

Conditional Deletion of NF-κB–Inducing Kinase (NIK) in Adult Mice Disrupts Mature B Cell Survival and Activation

Hans Brightbill; Janet Jackman; Eric Suto; Heather S. Kennedy; Charles David Jones; Sreedevi Chalasani; Zhonghua Lin; Lucinda Tam; Meron Roose-Girma; Mercedesz Balazs; Cary D. Austin; Wyne P. Lee; Lawren C. Wu

NF-κB–inducing kinase (NIK) is a primary regulator of the noncanonical NF-κB signaling pathway, which plays a vital role downstream of BAFF, CD40L, lymphotoxin, and other inflammatory mediators. Germline deletion or inactivation of NIK in mice results in the defective development of B cells and secondary lymphoid organs, but the role of NIK in adult animals has not been studied. To address this, we generated mice containing a conditional allele of NIK. Deletion of NIK in adult mice results in decreases in B cell populations in lymph nodes and spleen, similar to what is observed upon blockade of BAFF. Consistent with this, B cells from mice in which NIK is acutely deleted fail to respond to BAFF stimulation in vitro and in vivo. In addition, mice with induced NIK deletion exhibit a significant decrease in germinal center B cells and serum IgA, which is indicative of roles for NIK in additional pathways beyond BAFF signaling. Our conditional NIK-knockout mice may be broadly useful for assessing the postdevelopmental and cell-specific roles of NIK and the noncanonical NF-κB pathway in mice.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

LUZ-Y, a Novel Platform for the Mammalian Cell Production of Full-length IgG-bispecific Antibodies

Bernd Wranik; Erin L. Christensen; Gabriele Schaefer; Janet Jackman; Andrew C. Vendel; Dan L. Eaton

Background: Bispecific antibodies (bisAbs) enable novel therapeutic strategies by concomitantly binding two unique antigens. Results: IgG-like bisAbs can be produced in mammalian cells through the use of cleavable leucine zippers and GGS tethers. Conclusion: The LUZ-Y platform enables mammalian cell production of bisAbs. Significance: bisAbs structurally similar to full-length hIgG should enable novel therapies with minimal risk of adverse immune response. The ability of bispecific antibodies to simultaneously bind two unique antigens has great clinical potential. However, most approaches utilized to generate bispecific antibodies yield antibody-like structures that diverge significantly from the structure of archetype human IgG, and those that do approach structural similarity to native antibodies are often challenging to engineer and manufacture. Here, we present a novel platform for the mammalian cell production of bispecific antibodies that differ from their parental mAbs by only a single point mutation per heavy chain. Central to this platform is the addition of a leucine zipper to the C terminus of the CH3 domain of the antibody that is sufficient to drive the heterodimeric assembly of antibody heavy chains and can be readily removed post-purification. Using this approach, we developed various antibody constructs including one-armed Abs, bispecific antibodies that utilize a common light chain, and bispecific antibodies that pair light chains to their cognate heavy chains via peptide tethers. We have applied this technology to various antibody pairings and will demonstrate the engineering, purification, and biological activity of these antibodies herein.


American Journal of Pathology | 2011

Lung Gene Expression in a Rhesus Allergic Asthma Model Correlates with Physiologic Parameters of Disease and Exhibits Common and Distinct Pathways with Human Asthma and a Mouse Asthma Model

Alexander R. Abbas; Janet Jackman; Sherron Bullens; Sarah M. Davis; David F. Choy; Grazyna Fedorowicz; Martha Tan; Bao Tran Truong; Y. Gloria Meng; Lauri Diehl; Lisa A. Miller; Edward S. Schelegle; Dallas M. Hyde; Hilary Clark; Zora Modrusan; Joseph R. Arron; Lawren C. Wu

Experimental nonhuman primate models of asthma exhibit multiple features that are characteristic of an eosinophilic/T helper 2 (Th2)-high asthma subtype, characterized by the increased expression of Th2 cytokines and responsive genes, in humans. Here, we determine the molecular pathways that are present in a house dust mite-induced rhesus asthma model by analyzing the genomewide lung gene expression profile of the rhesus model and comparing it with that of human Th2-high asthma. We find that a prespecified human Th2 inflammation gene set from human Th2-high asthma is also present in rhesus asthma and that the expression of the genes comprising this gene set is positively correlated in human and rhesus asthma. In addition, as in human Th2-high asthma, the Th2 gene set correlates with physiologic markers of allergic inflammation and disease in rhesus asthma. Comparison of lung gene expression profiles from human Th2-high asthma, the rhesus asthma model, and a common mouse asthma model indicates that genes associated with Th2 inflammation are shared by all three species. However, some pathophysiologic aspects of human asthma (ie, subepithelial fibrosis, angiogenesis, neural biology, and immune host defense biology) are better represented in the gene expression profile of the rhesus model than in the mouse model. Further study of the rhesus asthma model may yield novel insights into the pathogenesis of human Th2-high asthma.


Science Signaling | 2015

Inhibition of the kinase ITK in a mouse model of asthma reduces cell death and fails to inhibit the inflammatory response

Yonglian Sun; Ivan Peng; Joshua D. Webster; Eric Suto; Justin Lesch; Xiumin Wu; Kate Senger; George Francis; Kathy Barrett; Jenna L. Collier; Jason D. Burch; Meijuan Zhou; Yuan Chen; Connie Chan; Jeff Eastham-Anderson; Hai Ngu; Olga Li; Tracy Staton; Charles Havnar; Allan Jaochico; Janet Jackman; Surinder Jeet; Lorena Riol-Blanco; Lawren C. Wu; David F. Choy; Joseph R. Arron; Brent S. McKenzie; Nico Ghilardi; Moulay Hicham Alaoui Ismaili; Zhonghua Pei

The kinase ITK is required for antigen-stimulated T cell death. Targeting ITK in asthma CD4+ T helper 2 (TH2) lymphocytes secrete the cytokines interleukin-4 (IL-4), IL-15, and IL-13, which are implicated in the pathogenesis of asthma. Antigen stimulation of T cells activates the kinase ITK, which is required for TH2-type cytokine production. ITK knockout mice are resistant to airway inflammation, which suggests that ITK inhibitors might be used to treat human asthma. However, Sun et al. found that a mouse model of asthma developed worse disease when treated with an ITK-specific inhibitor, exhibiting increased numbers of T cells and amounts of TH2-type cytokines in the airways. These effects were associated with a failure of ITK-inhibited T cells to undergo antigen-stimulated cell death. Together, these data suggest that targeting the kinase activity of ITK in human asthma may exacerbate disease. Interleukin-2 (IL-2)–inducible T cell kinase (ITK) mediates T cell receptor (TCR) signaling primarily to stimulate the production of cytokines, such as IL-4, IL-5, and IL-13, from T helper 2 (TH2) cells. Compared to wild-type mice, ITK knockout mice are resistant to asthma and exhibit reduced lung inflammation and decreased amounts of TH2-type cytokines in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. We found that a small-molecule selective inhibitor of ITK blocked TCR-mediated signaling in cultured TH2 cells, including the tyrosine phosphorylation of phospholipase C–γ1 (PLC-γ1) and the secretion of IL-2 and TH2-type cytokines. Unexpectedly, inhibition of the kinase activity of ITK during or after antigen rechallenge in an ovalbumin-induced mouse model of asthma failed to reduce airway hyperresponsiveness and inflammation. Rather, in mice, pharmacological inhibition of ITK resulted in T cell hyperplasia and the increased production of TH2-type cytokines. Thus, our studies predict that inhibition of the kinase activity of ITK may not be therapeutic in patients with asthma.


Journal of Immunology | 2017

A CEACAM6-High Airway Neutrophil Phenotype and CEACAM6-High Epithelial Cells Are Features of Severe Asthma

Aarti Shikotra; David F. Choy; Salman Siddiqui; Greer Arthur; Deepti R. Nagarkar; Guiquan Jia; Adam K. A. Wright; Chandra M. Ohri; Emma Doran; Claire A. Butler; Beverley Hargadon; Alexander R. Abbas; Janet Jackman; Lawren C. Wu; Liam Heaney; Joseph R. Arron; Peter Bradding

Severe asthma represents a major unmet clinical need; understanding the pathophysiology is essential for the development of new therapies. Using microarray analysis, we previously found three immunological clusters in asthma: Th2-high, Th17-high, and Th2/17-low. Although new therapies are emerging for Th2-high disease, identifying molecular pathways in Th2-low disease remains an important goal. Further interrogation of our previously described microarray dataset revealed upregulation of gene expression for carcinoembryonic Ag cell adhesion molecule (CEACAM) family members in the bronchi of patients with severe asthma. Our aim was therefore to explore the distribution and cellular localization of CEACAM6 using immunohistochemistry on bronchial biopsy tissue obtained from patients with mild-to-severe asthma and healthy control subjects. Human bronchial epithelial cells were used to investigate cytokine and corticosteroid in vitro regulation of CEACAM6 gene expression. CEACAM6 protein expression in bronchial biopsies was increased in airway epithelial cells and lamina propria inflammatory cells in severe asthma compared with healthy control subjects. CEACAM6 in the lamina propria was localized to neutrophils predominantly. Neutrophil density in the bronchial mucosa was similar across health and the spectrum of asthma severity, but the percentage of neutrophils expressing CEACAM6 was significantly increased in severe asthma, suggesting the presence of an altered neutrophil phenotype. CEACAM6 gene expression in cultured epithelial cells was upregulated by wounding and neutrophil elastase. In summary, CEACAM6 expression is increased in severe asthma and primarily associated with airway epithelial cells and tissue neutrophils. CEACAM6 may contribute to the pathology of treatment-resistant asthma via neutrophil and airway epithelial cell–dependent pathways.


Archive | 2003

Novel compositions and methods for the treatment of immune related diseases

Sarah C. Bodary; Hilary Clark; Brisdell Hunte; Janet Jackman; Jill Schoenfeld; P. Mickey Williams; William I. Wood; Thomas D. Wu


Archive | 2003

Nouvelles compositions et methodes de traitement du psoriasis

Sarah C. Bodary; Hilary Clark; Janet Jackman; Jill Schoenfeld; Mickey P. Williams; William I. Wood; Thomas D. Wu

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