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Dive into the research topics where Jeffrey S. Harding is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeffrey S. Harding.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011

Inflammatory dendritic cells migrate in and out of transplanted chronic mycobacterial granulomas in mice

Heidi A. Schreiber; Jeffrey S. Harding; Oliver Hunt; Christopher J. Altamirano; Paul Hulseberg; Danielle Stewart; Zsuzsanna Fabry; Matyas Sandor

An estimated one-third of the worlds population is infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis, although most affected individuals maintain a latent infection. This control is attributed to the formation of granulomas, cell masses largely comprising infected macrophages with T cells aggregated around them. Inflammatory DCs, characterized as CD11c+CD11b+Ly6C+, are also found in granulomas and are an essential component of the acute immune response to mycobacteria. However, their function during chronic infection is less well understood. Here, we report that CD11c+ cells dynamically traffic in and out of both acute and chronic granulomas induced by Mycobacterium bovis strain bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) in mice. By transplanting Mycobacterium-induced granulomas containing fluorescently labeled CD11c+ cells and bacteria into unlabeled mice, we were able to follow CD11c+ cell trafficking and T cell activation. We found that half of the CD11c+ cells in chronic granulomas were exchanged within 1 week. Compared with tissue-resident DC populations, CD11c+ cells migrating out of granuloma-containing tissue had an unexpected systemic dissemination pattern. Despite low antigen availability, systemic CD4+ T cell priming still occurred during chronic infection. These data demonstrate that surveillance of granulomatous tissue by CD11c+ cells is continuous and that these cells are distinct from tissue-resident DC populations and support T cell priming during both stages of Mycobacterium infection. This intense DC surveillance may also be a feature of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection and other granuloma-associated diseases.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Dendritic Cells in Chronic Mycobacterial Granulomas Restrict Local Anti-Bacterial T Cell Response in a Murine Model

Heidi A. Schreiber; Paul Hulseberg; JangEun Lee; József Prechl; Péter Barta; Nora Szlavik; Jeffrey S. Harding; Zsuzsanna Fabry; Matyas Sandor

Background Mycobacterium-induced granulomas are the interface between bacteria and host immune response. During acute infection dendritic cells (DCs) are critical for mycobacterial dissemination and activation of protective T cells. However, their role during chronic infection in the granuloma is poorly understood. Methodology/Principal Findings We report that an inflammatory subset of murine DCs are present in granulomas induced by Mycobacteria bovis strain Bacillus Calmette-guerin (BCG), and both their location in granulomas and costimulatory molecule expression changes throughout infection. By flow cytometric analysis, we found that CD11c+ cells in chronic granulomas had lower expression of MHCII and co-stimulatory molecules CD40, CD80 and CD86, and higher expression of inhibitory molecules PD-L1 and PD-L2 compared to CD11c+ cells from acute granulomas. As a consequence of their phenotype, CD11c+ cells from chronic lesions were unable to support the reactivation of newly-recruited, antigen 85B-specific CD4+IFNγ+ T cells or induce an IFNγ response from naïve T cells in vivo and ex vivo. The mechanism of this inhibition involves the PD-1:PD-L signaling pathway, as ex vivo blockade of PD-L1 and PD-L2 restored the ability of isolated CD11c+ cells from chronic lesions to stimulate a protective IFNγ T cell response. Conclusions/Significance Our data suggest that DCs in chronic lesions may facilitate latent infection by down-regulating protective T cell responses, ultimately acting as a shield that promotes mycobacterium survival. This DC shield may explain why mycobacteria are adapted for long-term survival in granulomatous lesions.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Immune privilege of the CNS is not the consequence of limited antigen sampling

Melissa G. Harris; Paul Hulseberg; Changying Ling; Jozsef Karman; Benjamin D. Clarkson; Jeffrey S. Harding; Mengxue Zhang; Adam Sandor; Kelsey Christensen; Andras Nagy; Matyas Sandor; Zsuzsanna Fabry

Central nervous system (CNS) immune privilege is complex, and it is still not understood how CNS antigens are sampled by the peripheral immune system under steady state conditions. To compare antigen sampling from immune-privileged or nonprivileged tissues, we created transgenic mice with oligodendrocyte or gut epithelial cell expression of an EGFP-tagged fusion protein containing ovalbumin (OVA) antigenic peptides and tested peripheral anti-OVA peptide-specific sentinel OT-I and OT-II T cell activation. We report that oligodendrocyte or gut antigens are sampled similarly, as determined by comparable levels of OT-I T cell activation. However, activated T cells do not access the CNS under steady state conditions. These data show that afferent immunity is normally intact as there is no barrier at the antigen sampling level, but that efferent immunity is restricted. To understand how this one-sided surveillance contributes to CNS immune privilege will help us define mechanisms of CNS autoimmune disease initiation.


American Journal of Pathology | 2015

Lymphangiogenesis Is Induced by Mycobacterial Granulomas via Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-3 and Supports Systemic T-Cell Responses against Mycobacterial Antigen

Jeffrey S. Harding; Anna Ritter; Aditya Rayasam; Zsuzsanna Fabry; Matyas Sandor

Granulomatous inflammation is characteristic of many autoimmune and infectious diseases. The lymphatic drainage of these inflammatory sites remains poorly understood, despite an expanding understanding of lymphatic role in inflammation and disease. Here, we show that the lymph vessel growth factor Vegf-c is up-regulated in Bacillus Calmette-Guerin- and Mycobacterium tuberculosis-induced granulomas, and that infection results in lymph vessel sprouting and increased lymphatic area in granulomatous tissue. The observed lymphangiogenesis during infection was reduced by inhibition of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 3. By using a model of chronic granulomatous infection, we also show that lymphatic remodeling of tissue persists despite resolution of acute infection and a 10- to 100-fold reduction in the number of bacteria and tissue-infiltrating leukocytes. Inhibition of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 3 decreased the growth of new vessels, but also reduced the proliferation of antigen-specific T cells. Together, our data show that granuloma-up-regulated factors increase granuloma access to secondary lymph organs by lymphangiogenesis, and that this process facilitates the generation of systemic T-cell responses to granuloma-contained antigens.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Mycobacterium-Infected Dendritic Cells Disseminate Granulomatous Inflammation

Jeffrey S. Harding; Aditya Rayasam; Heidi A. Schreiber; Zsuzsanna Fabry; Matyas Sandor

The disappearance and reformation of granulomas during tuberculosis has been described using PET/CT/X-ray in both human clinical settings and animal models, but the mechanisms of granuloma reformation during active disease remains unclear. Granulomas can recruit inflammatory dendritic cells (iDCs) that can regulate local T-cell responses and can carry bacteria into the lymph nodes, which is crucial for generating systemic T-cell responses against mycobacteria. Here, we report that a subset of mycobacterium-infected iDCs are associated with bacteria-specific T-cells in infected tissue, outside the granuloma, and that this results in the formation of new and/or larger multi-focal lesions. Mycobacterium-infected iDCs express less CCR7 and migrate less efficiently compared to the non-infected iDCs, which may support T-cell capture in granulomatous tissue. Capture may reduce antigen availability in the lymph node, thereby decreasing systemic priming, resulting in a possible regulatory loop between systemic T-cell responses and granuloma reformation. T-cell/infected iDCs clusters outside the granuloma can be detected during the acute and chronic phase of BCG and Mtb infection. Our studies suggest a direct role for inflammatory dendritic cells in the dissemination of granulomatous inflammation.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2011

Granuloma transplantation: an approach to study Mycobacterium-host interactions

Jeffrey S. Harding; Heidi A. Schreiber; Matyas Sandor

The host–pathogen biology during infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis is incredibly complex and despite accelerating progress in research, remains poorly understood. Our limited understanding hinders the development of new drugs, next generation vaccines, and novel therapies. The granuloma is the site where mycobacteria are both controlled and allowed to persist, but it remains one of the least studied aspects of the host–pathogen relationship. Here, we review the development, application, potential uses, and limitations of a novel model of granuloma transplantation as a tool to study specific host–pathogen interactions that have been difficult to probe. Application of this new model has already contributed to our understanding of granuloma cell traffic, repopulation, and the relationship between systemic immunity and mycobacteria-containing granulomas. The data collected highlight the dynamic interaction between systemic and local immune processes and support a paradigm that defines the granuloma as a highly dynamic structure. Granuloma transplantation also has special potential as a novel latency model that can contribute to our understanding of host protection factors and bacterial mutants, and serve as a platform for drug testing.


Mycobacterial Diseases | 2014

Protection Vs. Pathology in Tuberculosis: How Our Growing Understanding of the Molecular Regulators of Cell Recruitment Could Lead to New Therapies

Jeffrey S. Harding; Matyas Sandor; Jeffrey Hardling

The granuloma is the hallmark pathological structure in patients infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb). It is a collection of mostly innate and adaptive immune cells organized around Mtb bacilli with a defined spatial arrangement and cellular composition [1-3]. Infection with Mtb begins after a few inhaled bacilli are phagocytosed by lung-resident macrophages. Infected macrophages release of TNFα, which initiates a cytokine storm and supports the release of other pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines like Il-1β, IL-6, Il-12, CCL2, and, CCL5, to name a few [4]. Eventually, dendritic cells from the granuloma transport bacterial antigen to the lymph node and activate Mtb-specific CD4 and CD8 T-cells, which then migrate to the granuloma and enhance macrophage anti-microbial activity with the release of IFNγ [5-8].


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2018

Regional distribution of CNS antigens differentially determines T-cell mediated neuroinflammation in a CX3CR1 dependent manner

Aditya Rayasam; Julie A. Kijak; McKenna Dallmann; Martin Hsu; Nicole Zindl; Anders Lindstedt; Leah Steinmetz; Jeffrey S. Harding; Melissa G. Harris; Jozsef Karman; Matyas Sandor; Zsuzsanna Fabry

T cells continuously sample CNS-derived antigens in the periphery, yet it is unknown how they sample and respond to CNS antigens derived from distinct brain areas. We expressed ovalbumin (OVA) neoepitopes in regionally distinct CNS areas (Cnp-OVA and Nes-OVA mice) to test peripheral antigen sampling by OVA-specific T cells under homeostatic and neuroinflammatory conditions. We show that antigen sampling in the periphery is independent of regional origin of CNS antigens in both male and female mice. However, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) is differentially influenced in Cnp-OVA and Nes-OVA female mice. Although there is the same frequency of CD45high CD11b+ CD11c+ CX3CL1+ myeloid cell–T-cell clusters in neoepitope-expressing areas, EAE is inhibited in Nes-OVA female mice and accelerated in CNP-OVA female mice. Accumulation of OVA-specific T cells and their immunomodulatory effects on EAE are CX3C chemokine receptor 1 (CX3CR1) dependent. These data show that despite similar levels of peripheral antigen sampling, CNS antigen-specific T cells differentially influence neuroinflammatory disease depending on the location of cognate antigens and the presence of CX3CL1/CX3CR1 signaling. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Our data show that peripheral T cells similarly recognize neoepitopes independent of their origin within the CNS under homeostatic conditions. Contrastingly, during ongoing autoimmune neuroinflammation, neoepitope-specific T cells differentially influence clinical score and pathology based on the CNS regional location of the neoepitopes in a CX3CR1-dependent manner. Altogether, we propose a novel mechanism for how T cells respond to regionally distinct CNS derived antigens and contribute to CNS autoimmune pathology.


European journal of microbiology and immunology | 2011

CONTINUOUS REPOPULATION OF LYMPHOCYTE SUBSETS IN TRANSPLANTED MYCOBACTERIAL GRANULOMAS.

Heidi A. Schreiber; Jeffrey S. Harding; C. J. Altamirano; O. Hunt; Paul Hulseberg; Zs. Fabry; Matyas Sandor


Journal of Immunology | 2016

Recruitment of myeloid cells into mycobacterial granulomas.

Melinda Herbath; Jeffrey S. Harding; György Haskó; Andras Nagy; Zsuzsanna Fabry; Matyas Sandor

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Matyas Sandor

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Zsuzsanna Fabry

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Heidi A. Schreiber

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Aditya Rayasam

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Paul Hulseberg

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Anna Ritter

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Jozsef Karman

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Melissa G. Harris

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Anders Lindstedt

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Ben Clarkson

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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