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Dive into the research topics where Jason P. Lynch is active.

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Featured researches published by Jason P. Lynch.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

The receptor for complement component C3a mediates protection from intestinal ischemia-reperfusion injuries by inhibiting neutrophil mobilization

Mike C. L. Wu; Faith H. Brennan; Jason P. Lynch; Susanna Mantovani; Simon Phipps; Rick A. Wetsel; Marc J. Ruitenberg; Stephen M. Taylor; Trent M. Woodruff

C3a is a key complement activation fragment, yet its neutrophil-expressed receptor (C3aR) still has no clearly defined role. In this study, we used a neutrophil-dependent mouse model of intestinal ischemia-reperfusion (IR) injury to explore the role of C3aR in acute tissue injuries. C3aR deficiency worsened intestinal injury, which corresponded with increased numbers of tissue-infiltrating neutrophils. Circulating neutrophils were significantly increased in C3aR−/− mice after intestinal ischemia, and C3aR−/− mice also mobilized more circulating neutrophils after granulocyte colony-stimulating factor infusion compared with WT mice, indicating a specific role for C3aR in constraining neutrophil mobilization in response to intestinal injury. In support of this role, C3aR−/− mice reconstituted with WT bone marrow reversed IR pathology back to WT levels. Complement C5a receptor (C5aR) antagonism in C3aR−/− mice also rectified the worsened pathology after intestinal IR injury but had no effect on circulating neutrophils, highlighting the opposing roles of C3a and C5a in disease pathogenesis. Finally, we found that using a potent C3a agonist to activate C3aR in vivo reduced neutrophil mobilization and ameliorated intestinal IR pathology in WT, but not C3aR−/−, mice. This study identifies a role for C3aR in regulating neutrophil mobilization after acute intestinal injury and highlights C3aR agonism as a potential treatment option for acute, neutrophil-driven pathologies.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2013

Toll-like receptor 7 gene deficiency and early-life Pneumovirus infection interact to predispose toward the development of asthma-like pathology in mice

Gerard E. Kaiko; Zhixuan Loh; Kirsten Spann; Jason P. Lynch; Amit Lalwani; Zhenglong Zheng; Sophia Davidson; Satoshi Uematsu; Shizuo Akira; John D. Hayball; Kerrilyn R. Diener; Katherine J. Baines; Jodie L. Simpson; Paul S. Foster; Simon Phipps

BACKGROUND Respiratory tract viruses are a major environmental risk factor for both the inception and exacerbations of asthma. Genetic defects in Toll-like receptor (TLR) 7-mediated signaling, impaired type I interferon responses, or both have been reported in asthmatic patients, although their contribution to the onset and exacerbation of asthma remains poorly understood. OBJECTIVE We sought to determine whether Pneumovirus infection in the absence of TLR7 predisposes to bronchiolitis and the inception of asthma. METHODS Wild-type and TLR7-deficient (TLR7(-/-)) mice were inoculated with the rodent-specific pathogen pneumonia virus of mice at 1 (primary), 7 (secondary), and 13 (tertiary) weeks of age, and pathologic features of bronchiolitis or asthma were assessed. In some experiments infected mice were exposed to low-dose cockroach antigen. RESULTS TLR7 deficiency increased viral load in the airway epithelium, which became sloughed and necrotic, and promoted an IFN-α/β(low), IL-12p70(low), IL-1β(high), IL-25(high), and IL-33(high) cytokine microenvironment that was associated with the recruitment of type 2 innate lymphoid cells/nuocytes and increased TH2-type cytokine production. Viral challenge of TLR7(-/-) mice induced all of the cardinal pathophysiologic features of asthma, including tissue eosinophilia, mast cell hyperplasia, IgE production, airway smooth muscle alterations, and airways hyperreactivity in a memory CD4(+) T cell-dependent manner. Importantly, infections with pneumonia virus of mice promoted allergic sensitization to inhaled cockroach antigen in the absence but not the presence of TLR7. CONCLUSION TLR7 gene defects and Pneumovirus infection interact to establish an aberrant adaptive response that might underlie virus-induced asthma exacerbations in later life.


European Respiratory Journal | 2014

The plasmacytoid dendritic cell: at the cross-roads in asthma

Jason P. Lynch; Stuart B. Mazzone; M. Rogers; Jaisy Arikkatt; Zhixuan Loh; Antonia L. Pritchard; John W. Upham; Simon Phipps

The onset, progression and exacerbations of asthma are frequently associated with viral infections of the lower respiratory tract. An emerging paradigm suggests that this relationship may be underpinned by a defect in the host’s antiviral response, typified by the impaired production of type I and type III interferons (IFNs). The failure to control viral burden probably causes damage to the lung architecture and contributes to an aberrant immune response, which together compromise lung function. Although a relatively rare cell type, the plasmacytoid dendritic cell dedicates much of its transcriptome to the synthesis of IFNs and is pre-armed with virus-sensing pattern recognition receptors. Thus, plasmacytoid dendritic cells are specialised to ensure early viral detection and the rapid induction of the antiviral state to block viral replication and spread. In addition, plasmacytoid dendritic cells can limit immunopathology, and promote peripheral tolerance to prevent allergic sensitisation to harmless antigens, possibly through the induction of regulatory T-cells. Thus, this enigmatic cell may lie at an important intersection, orchestrating the immediate phase of antiviral immunity to effect viral clearance while regulating tolerance. Here, we review the evidence to support the hypothesis that a primary defect in plasmacytoid dendritic function may underlie the development of asthma. A review of the evidence on the role of plasmacytoid dendritic function in the development of asthma http://ow.ly/qieyN


Journal of Immunology | 2015

Regulatory T Cells Prevent Inducible BALT Formation by Dampening Neutrophilic Inflammation

Shen Yun Foo; Vivian Zhang; Amit Lalwani; Jason P. Lynch; Aowen Zhuang; Chuan En Lam; Paul S. Foster; Cecile King; Raymond J. Steptoe; Stuart B. Mazzone; Peter D. Sly; Simon Phipps

Inducible BALT (iBALT) can amplify pulmonary or systemic inflammatory responses to the benefit or detriment of the host. We took advantage of the age-dependent formation of iBALT to interrogate the underlying mechanisms that give rise to this ectopic, tertiary lymphoid organ. In this study, we show that the reduced propensity for weanling as compared with neonatal mice to form iBALT in response to acute LPS exposure is associated with greater regulatory T cell expansion in the mediastinal lymph nodes. Ab- or transgene-mediated depletion of regulatory T cells in weanling mice upregulated the expression of IL-17A and CXCL9 in the lungs, induced a tissue neutrophilia, and increased the frequency of iBALT to that observed in neonatal mice. Remarkably, neutrophil depletion in neonatal mice decreased the expression of the B cell active cytokines, a proliferation-inducing ligand and IL-21, and attenuated LPS-induced iBALT formation. Taken together, our data implicate a role for neutrophils in lymphoid neogenesis. Neutrophilic inflammation is a common feature of many autoimmune diseases in which iBALT are present and pathogenic, and hence the targeting of neutrophils or their byproducts may serve to ameliorate detrimental lymphoid neogenesis in a variety of disease contexts.


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2015

Immunomodulation of airway epithelium cell activation by mesenchymal stromal cells ameliorates house dust mite-induced airway inflammation in mice.

Khang M. Duong; Jaisy Arikkatt; M. Ashik Ullah; Jason P. Lynch; Vivian Zhang; Kerry Atkinson; Peter D. Sly; Simon Phipps

Allergic asthma is underpinned by T helper 2 (Th2) inflammation. Redundancy in Th2 cytokine function and production by innate and adaptive immune cells suggests that strategies aimed at immunomodulation may prove more beneficial. Hence, we sought to determine whether administration of mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) to house dust mite (HDM) (Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus)-sensitized mice would suppress the development of Th2 inflammation and airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) after HDM challenge. We report that the intravenous administration of allogeneic donor MSCs 1 hour before allergen challenge significantly attenuated the features of allergic asthma, including tissue eosinophilia, Th2 cytokine (IL-5 and IL-13) levels in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, and AHR. The number of infiltrating type 2 innate lymphoid cells was not affected by MSC transfer, suggesting that MSCs may modulate the adaptive arm of Th2 immunity. The effect of MSC administration was long lasting; all features of allergic airway disease were significantly suppressed in response to a second round of HDM challenge 4 weeks after MSC administration. Further, we observed that MSCs decreased the release of epithelial cell-derived alarmins IL-1α and high mobility group box-1 in an IL-1 receptor antagonist-dependent manner. This significantly decreased the expression of the pro-Th2 cytokine IL-25 and reduced the number of activated and antigen-acquiring CD11c(+)CD11b(+) dendritic cells in the lung and mediastinal lymph nodes. Our findings suggest that MSC administration can ameliorate allergic airway inflammation by blunting the amplification of epithelial-derived inflammatory cytokines induced by HDM exposure and may offer long-term protection against Th2-mediated allergic airway inflammation and AHR.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2017

The influence of the microbiome on early-life severe viral lower respiratory infections and asthma-Food for thought?

Jason P. Lynch; Md. Al Amin Sikder; Bodie F. Curren; Rhiannon B. Werder; Jennifer Simpson; Páraic Ó Cuív; Paul G. Dennis; Mark L. Everard; Simon Phipps

Severe viral lower respiratory infections are a major cause of infant morbidity. In developing countries, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)-bronchiolitis induces significant mortality, whereas in developed nations the disease represents a major risk factor for subsequent asthma. Susceptibility to severe RSV-bronchiolitis is governed by gene–environmental interactions that affect the host response to RSV infection. Emerging evidence suggests that the excessive inflammatory response and ensuing immunopathology, typically as a consequence of insufficient immunoregulation, leads to long-term changes in immune cells and structural cells that render the host susceptible to subsequent environmental incursions. Thus, the initial host response to RSV may represent a tipping point in the balance between long-term respiratory health or chronic disease (e.g., asthma). The composition and diversity of the microbiota, which in humans stabilizes in the first year of life, critically affects the development and function of the immune system. Hence, perturbations to the maternal and/or infant microbiota are likely to have a profound impact on the host response to RSV and susceptibility to childhood asthma. Here, we review recent insights describing the effects of the microbiota on immune system homeostasis and respiratory disease and discuss the environmental factors that promote microbial dysbiosis in infancy. Ultimately, this knowledge will be harnessed for the prevention and treatment of severe viral bronchiolitis as a strategy to prevent the onset and development of asthma.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2017

Chronic IL-33 expression predisposes to virus-induced asthma exacerbations by increasing type 2 inflammation and dampening antiviral immunity

Rhiannon B. Werder; Vivian Zhang; Jason P. Lynch; Natale Snape; John W. Upham; Kirsten Spann; Simon Phipps

Background Rhinovirus infection triggers acute asthma exacerbations. IL‐33 is an instructive cytokine of type 2 inflammation whose expression is associated with viral load during experimental rhinovirus infection of asthmatic patients. Objective We sought to determine whether anti–IL‐33 therapy is effective during disease progression, established disease, or viral exacerbation using a preclinical model of chronic asthma and in vitro human primary airway epithelial cells (AECs). Methods Mice were exposed to pneumonia virus of mice and cockroach extract in early and later life and then challenged with rhinovirus to model disease onset, progression, and chronicity. Interventions included anti–IL‐33 or dexamethasone at various stages of disease. AECs were obtained from asthmatic patients and healthy subjects and treated with anti–IL‐33 after rhinovirus infection. Results Anti–IL‐33 decreased type 2 inflammation in all phases of disease; however, the ability to prevent airway smooth muscle growth was lost after the progression phase. After the chronic phase, IL‐33 levels were persistently high, and rhinovirus challenge exacerbated the type 2 inflammatory response. Treatment with anti–IL‐33 or dexamethasone diminished exacerbation severity, and anti–IL‐33, but not dexamethasone, promoted antiviral interferon expression and decreased viral load. Rhinovirus replication was higher and IFN‐&lgr; levels were lower in AECs from asthmatic patients compared with those from healthy subjects. Anti–IL‐33 decreased rhinovirus replication and increased IFN‐&lgr; levels at the gene and protein levels. Conclusion Anti–IL‐33 or dexamethasone suppressed the magnitude of type 2 inflammation during a rhinovirus‐induced acute exacerbation; however, only anti–IL‐33 boosted antiviral immunity and decreased viral replication. The latter phenotype was replicated in rhinovirus‐infected human AECs, suggesting that anti–IL‐33 therapy has the additional benefit of enhancing host defense.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2018

Plasmacytoid dendritic cells protect from viral bronchiolitis and asthma through semaphorin 4a-mediated T reg expansion

Jason P. Lynch; Rhiannon B. Werder; Zhixuan Loh; Md. Al Amin Sikder; Bodie F. Curren; Vivian Zhang; M. Rogers; Katie Lane; Jennifer Simpson; Stuart B. Mazzone; Kirsten Spann; John D. Hayball; Kerrilyn R. Diener; Mark L. Everard; Christopher C. Blyth; Christian Forstner; Paul G. Dennis; Nida Murtaza; Mark Morrison; Páraic Ó Cuív; Ping Zhang; Ashraful Haque; Geoffrey R. Hill; Peter D. Sly; John W. Upham; Simon Phipps

Respiratory syncytial virus–bronchiolitis is a major independent risk factor for subsequent asthma, but the causal mechanisms remain obscure. We identified that transient plasmacytoid dendritic cell (pDC) depletion during primary Pneumovirus infection alone predisposed to severe bronchiolitis in early life and subsequent asthma in later life after reinfection. pDC depletion ablated interferon production and increased viral load; however, the heightened immunopathology and susceptibility to subsequent asthma stemmed from a failure to expand functional neuropilin-1+ regulatory T (T reg) cells in the absence of pDC-derived semaphorin 4a (Sema4a). In adult mice, pDC depletion predisposed to severe bronchiolitis only after antibiotic treatment. Consistent with a protective role for the microbiome, treatment of pDC-depleted neonates with the microbial-derived metabolite propionate promoted Sema4a-dependent T reg cell expansion, ameliorating both diseases. In children with viral bronchiolitis, nasal propionate levels were decreased and correlated with an IL-6high/IL-10low microenvironment. We highlight a common but age-related Sema4a-mediated pathway by which pDCs and microbial colonization induce T reg cell expansion to protect against severe bronchiolitis and subsequent asthma.


Scientific Reports | 2017

The Absence of Interferon-β Promotor Stimulator-1 (IPS-1) Predisposes to Bronchiolitis and Asthma-like Pathology in Response to Pneumoviral Infection in Mice

Jennifer Simpson; Jason P. Lynch; Zhixuan Loh; Vivian Zhang; Rhiannon B. Werder; Kirsten Spann; Simon Phipps

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)-bronchiolitis is a major cause of infant morbidity and mortality and a risk factor for subsequent asthma. We showed previously that toll-like receptor (TLR)7 in plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) is critical for protection against bronchiolitis and asthma in mice infected with pneumonia virus of mice (PVM), the mouse homolog of RSV. This lack of redundancy was unexpected as interferon-β promotor stimulator-1 (IPS-1) signalling, downstream of RIG-I-like receptor (RLR) and not TLR7 activation, contributes to host defence in hRSV-inoculated adult mice. To further clarify the role of IPS-1 signalling, we inoculated IPS-1−/− and WT mice with PVM in early-life, and again in later-life, to model the association between bronchiolitis and asthma. IPS-1 deficiency predisposed to severe PVM bronchiolitis, characterised by neutrophilic inflammation and necroptotic airway epithelial cell death, high mobility group box 1 (HMGB1) and IL-33 release, and downstream type-2 inflammation. Secondary infection induced an eosinophilic asthma-like pathophysiology in IPS-1−/− but not WT mice. Mechanistically, we identified that IPS-1 is necessary for pDC recruitment, IFN-α production and viral control. Our findings suggest that TLR7 and RLR signalling work collaboratively to optimally control the host response to pneumovirus infection thereby protecting against viral bronchiolitis and subsequent asthma.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2017

Critical role of plasmacytoid dendritic cells in regulating gene expression and innate immune responses to human rhinovirus-16

Yang Xi; Niamh Troy; Denise Anderson; Olga Pena; Jason P. Lynch; Simon Phipps; Anthony Bosco; John W. Upham

Though human rhinoviruses (HRVs) are usually innocuous viruses, they can trigger serious consequences in certain individuals, especially in the setting of impaired interferon (IFN) synthesis. Plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) are key IFN producing cells, though we know little about the role of pDC in HRV-induced immune responses. Herein, we used gene expression microarrays to examine HRV-activated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from healthy people, in combination with pDC depletion, to assess whether observed gene expression patterns were pDC dependent. As expected, pDC depletion led to a major reduction in IFN-α release. This was associated with profound differences in gene expression between intact PBMC and pDC-depleted PBMC, and major changes in upstream regulators: 70–80% of the HRV activated genes appeared to be pDC dependent. Real-time PCR confirmed key changes in gene expression, in which the following selected genes were shown to be highly pDC dependent: the transcription factor IRF7, both IL-27 chains (IL-27p28 and EBI3), the alpha chain of the IL-15 receptor (IL-15RA) and the IFN-related gene IFI27. HRV-induced IL-6, IFN-γ, and IL-27 protein synthesis were also highly pDC dependent. Supplementing pDC-depleted cultures with recombinant IL-15, IFN-γ, IL-27, or IL-6 was able to restore the IFN-α response, thereby compensating for the absence of pDC. Though pDC comprise only a minority population of migratory leukocytes, our findings highlight the profound extent to which these cells contribute to the immune response to HRV.

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Simon Phipps

University of Queensland

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Kirsten Spann

Queensland University of Technology

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Vivian Zhang

University of Queensland

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John W. Upham

University of Queensland

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Zhixuan Loh

University of Queensland

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Peter D. Sly

University of Queensland

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Ashraful Haque

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

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