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Dive into the research topics where Jesse W. Williams is active.

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Featured researches published by Jesse W. Williams.


Nature Communications | 2013

Transcription factor IRF4 drives dendritic cells to promote Th2 differentiation

Jesse W. Williams; Melissa Y. Tjota; Bryan S. Clay; Bryan Vander Lugt; Hozefa S. Bandukwala; Cara L. Hrusch; Donna C. Decker; Kelly M. Blaine; Bethany Fixsen; Harinder Singh; Roger Sciammas; Anne I. Sperling

Atopic asthma is an inflammatory pulmonary disease associated with Th2 adaptive immune responses triggered by innocuous antigens. While dendritic cells (DCs) are known to shape the adaptive immune response, the mechanisms by which DCs promote Th2 differentiation remain elusive. Herein we demonstrate that Th2-promoting stimuli induce DC expression of IRF4. Mice with conditional deletion of Irf4 in DCs show a dramatic defect in Th2-type lung inflammation, yet retain the ability to elicit pulmonary Th1 antiviral responses. Using loss- and gain-of-function analysis, we demonstrate that Th2 differentiation is dependent on IRF4 expression in DCs. Finally, IRF4 directly targets and activates the Il-10 and Il-33 genes in DCs. Reconstitution with exogenous IL-10 and IL-33 recovers the ability of Irf4-deficient DCs to promote Th2 differentiation. These findings reveal a regulatory module in DCs by which IRF4 modulates IL-10 and IL-33 cytokine production to specifically promote Th2 differentiation and inflammation.


Nature Immunology | 2016

Self-renewing resident arterial macrophages arise from embryonic CX3CR1+ precursors and circulating monocytes immediately after birth

Sherine Ensan; Angela Li; Rickvinder Besla; Norbert Degousee; Jake Cosme; Mark Roufaiel; Eric A. Shikatani; Mahmoud El-Maklizi; Jesse W. Williams; Lauren Robins; Cedric Li; Bonnie Lewis; Tae Jin Yun; Jun Seong Lee; Peter Wieghofer; Ramzi Khattar; Kaveh Farrokhi; John Byrne; Maral Ouzounian; Caleb C. J. Zavitz; Gary A. Levy; Carla M. T. Bauer; Peter Libby; Mansoor Husain; Filip K. Swirski; Cheolho Cheong; Marco Prinz; Ingo Hilgendorf; Gwendalyn J. Randolph; Slava Epelman

Resident macrophages densely populate the normal arterial wall, yet their origins and the mechanisms that sustain them are poorly understood. Here we use gene-expression profiling to show that arterial macrophages constitute a distinct population among macrophages. Using multiple fate-mapping approaches, we show that arterial macrophages arise embryonically from CX3CR1+ precursors and postnatally from bone marrow–derived monocytes that colonize the tissue immediately after birth. In adulthood, proliferation (rather than monocyte recruitment) sustains arterial macrophages in the steady state and after severe depletion following sepsis. After infection, arterial macrophages return rapidly to functional homeostasis. Finally, survival of resident arterial macrophages depends on a CX3CR1-CX3CL1 axis within the vascular niche.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2014

Gata6 regulates aspartoacylase expression in resident peritoneal macrophages and controls their survival

Emmanuel L. Gautier; Stoyan Ivanov; Jesse W. Williams; Stanley Ching-Cheng Huang; Genevieve Marcelin; Keke C. Fairfax; Peter L. Wang; Jeremy S. Francis; Paola Leone; David B. Wilson; Maxim N. Artyomov; Edward J. Pearce; Gwendalyn J. Randolph

Gata6 regulates differentiation, metabolism and survival of peritoneal macrophages.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

IL-33–dependent induction of allergic lung inflammation by FcγRIII signaling

Melissa Y. Tjota; Jesse W. Williams; Tiffany Lu; Bryan S. Clay; Tiara Byrd; Cara L. Hrusch; Donna C. Decker; Claudia Alves de Araujo; Paul J. Bryce; Anne I. Sperling

Atopic asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease of the lungs generally marked by excessive Th2 inflammation. The role of allergen-specific IgG in asthma is still controversial; however, a receptor of IgG-immune complexes (IgG-ICs), FcγRIII, has been shown to promote Th2 responses through an unknown mechanism. Herein, we demonstrate that allergen-specific IgG-ICs, formed upon reexposure to allergen, promoted Th2 responses in two different models of IC-mediated inflammation that were independent of a preformed T cell memory response. Development of Th2-type airway inflammation was shown to be both FcγRIII and TLR4 dependent, and T cells were necessary and sufficient for this process to occur, even in the absence of type 2 innate lymphoid cells. We sought to identify downstream targets of FcγRIII signaling that could contribute to this process and demonstrated that bone marrow-derived DCs, alveolar macrophages, and respiratory DCs significantly upregulated IL-33 when activated through FcγRIII and TLR4. Importantly, IC-induced Th2 inflammation was dependent on the ST2/IL-33 pathway. Our results suggest that allergen-specific IgG can enhance secondary responses by ligating FcγRIII on antigen-presenting cells to augment development of Th2-mediated responses in the lungs via an IL-33-dependent mechanism.


Nature Medicine | 2012

NKG2D signaling on CD8 + T cells represses T-bet and rescues CD4-unhelped CD8 + T cell memory recall but not effector responses

Andrew Zloza; Frederick J. Kohlhapp; Gretchen E. Lyons; Jason M. Schenkel; Tamson V. Moore; Andrew T. Lacek; Jeremy A. O'Sullivan; Vineeth Varanasi; Jesse W. Williams; Michael C. Jagoda; Emily Bellavance; Amanda L. Marzo; Paul G. Thomas; Biljana Zafirova; Bojan Polić; Lena Al-Harthi; Anne I. Sperling; José A. Guevara-Patiño

CD4-unhelped CD8+ T cells are functionally defective T cells primed in the absence of CD4+ T cell help. Given the co-stimulatory role of natural-killer group 2, member D protein (NKG2D) on CD8+ T cells, we investigated its ability to rescue these immunologically impotent cells. We demonstrate that augmented co-stimulation through NKG2D during priming paradoxically rescues memory, but not effector, CD8+ T cell responses. NKG2D-mediated rescue is characterized by reversal of elevated transcription factor T-box expressed in T cells (T-bet) expression and recovery of interleukin-2 and interferon-γ production and cytolytic responses. Rescue is abrogated in CD8+ T cells lacking NKG2D. Augmented co-stimulation through NKG2D confers a high rate of survival to mice lacking CD4+ T cells in a CD4-dependent influenza model and rescues HIV-specific CD8+ T cell responses from CD4-deficient HIV-positive donors. These findings demonstrate that augmented co-stimulation through NKG2D is effective in rescuing CD4-unhelped CD8+ T cells from their pathophysiological fate and may provide therapeutic benefits.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2016

Homeostatic Control of Innate Lung Inflammation by Vici Syndrome Gene Epg5 and Additional Autophagy Genes Promotes Influenza Pathogenesis

Qun Lu; Christine C. Yokoyama; Jesse W. Williams; Megan T. Baldridge; Xiaohua Jin; Brittany L. DesRochers; Traci L. Bricker; Craig B. Wilen; Juhi Bagaitkar; Ekaterina Loginicheva; Alexey Sergushichev; Darren Kreamalmeyer; Brian C. Keller; Yan Zhao; Amal Kambal; Douglas R. Green; Jennifer Martinez; Mary C. Dinauer; Michael J. Holtzman; Erika C. Crouch; Wandy L. Beatty; Adrianus C. M. Boon; Hong Zhang; Gwendalyn J. Randolph; Maxim N. Artyomov; Herbert W. Virgin

Mutations in the autophagy gene EPG5 are linked to the multisystem human disease Vici syndrome, which is characterized in part by pulmonary abnormalities, including recurrent infections. We found that Epg5-deficient mice exhibited elevated baseline innate immune cellular and cytokine-based lung inflammation and were resistant to lethal influenza virus infection. Lung transcriptomics, bone marrow transplantation experiments, and analysis of cellular cytokine expression indicated that Epg5 plays a role in lung physiology through its function in macrophages. Deletion of other autophagy genes including Atg14, Fip200, Atg5, and Atg7 in myeloid cells also led to elevated basal lung inflammation and influenza resistance. This suggests that Epg5 and other Atg genes function in macrophages to limit innate immune inflammation in the lung. Disruption of this normal homeostatic dampening of lung inflammation results in increased resistance to influenza, suggesting that normal homeostatic mechanisms that limit basal tissue inflammation support some infectious diseases.


Journal of Allergy | 2012

The Contribution of Allergen-Specific IgG to the Development of Th2-Mediated Airway Inflammation

Jesse W. Williams; Melissa Y. Tjota; Anne I. Sperling

In both human asthmatics and animal models of allergy, allergen-specific IgG can contribute to Th2-mediated allergic inflammation. Mouse models have elucidated an important role for IgG and Fc-gamma receptor (FcγR) signaling on antigen presenting cells (APC) for the induction of airway inflammation. These studies suggest a positive feedback loop between IgG produced by the adaptive B cell response and FcγR signaling on innate immune cells. Studies of IgG and FcγRs in humans with asthma or allergic lung disease have been more controversial. Some reports have identified associations between allergen-specific IgG and severity of allergic responses, while other studies have found associations of IgG subclass IgG4 with allergic tolerance. In this paper, we review the literature to help define the nature of IgG and FcγR signaling on innate immune cells and how it contributes to the development of allergic immune responses.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2016

MHC II+ resident peritoneal and pleural macrophages rely on IRF4 for development from circulating monocytes.

Ki-Wook Kim; Jesse W. Williams; Ya-Ting Wang; Stoyan Ivanov; Susan Gilfillan; Marco Colonna; Herbert W. Virgin; Emmanuel L. Gautier; Gwendalyn J. Randolph

Randolph and colleagues describe the ontogenic origin and developmental program of a distinct resident peritoneal macrophage population.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2016

CCR7 and IRF4-dependent dendritic cells regulate lymphatic collecting vessel permeability

Stoyan Ivanov; Joshua P. Scallan; Ki-Wook Kim; Kathrin Werth; Michael W. Johnson; Brian T. Saunders; Peter L. Wang; Emma L. Kuan; Adam C. Straub; Melissa Ouhachi; Erica G. Weinstein; Jesse W. Williams; Carlos G. Briseño; Marco Colonna; Brant E. Isakson; Emmanuel L. Gautier; Reinhold Förster; Michael J. Davis; Bernd H. Zinselmeyer; Gwendalyn J. Randolph

Lymphatic collecting vessels direct lymph into and from lymph nodes (LNs) and can become hyperpermeable as the result of a previous infection. Enhanced permeability has been implicated in compromised immunity due to reduced flow of lymph and immune cells to LNs, which are the primary site of antigen presentation to T cells. Presently, very little is known about the molecular signals that affect lymphatic collecting vessel permeability. Here, we have shown that lymphatic collecting vessel permeability is controlled by CCR7 and that the chronic hyperpermeability of collecting vessels observed in Ccr7-/- mice is followed by vessel fibrosis. Reexpression of CCR7 in DCs, however, was sufficient to reverse the development of such fibrosis. IFN regulatory factor 4-positive (IRF4+) DCs constitutively interacted with collecting lymphatics, and selective ablation of this DC subset in Cd11c-Cre Irf4fl/fl mice also rendered lymphatic collecting vessels hyperpermeable and fibrotic. Together, our data reveal that CCR7 plays multifaceted roles in regulating collecting vessel permeability and fibrosis, with one of the key players being IRF4-dependent DCs.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Protective effector memory CD4 T cells depend on ICOS for survival.

Tamson V. Moore; Bryan S. Clay; Caroline M. Ferreira; Jesse W. Williams; Magdalena Rogozinska; Rebecca A. Shilling; Amanda L. Marzo; Anne I. Sperling

Memory CD4 T cells play a vital role in protection against re-infection by pathogens as diverse as helminthes or influenza viruses. Inducible costimulator (ICOS) is highly expressed on memory CD4 T cells and has been shown to augment proliferation and survival of activated CD4 T cells. However, the role of ICOS costimulation on the development and maintenance of memory CD4 T cells remains controversial. Herein, we describe a significant defect in the number of effector memory (EM) phenotype cells in ICOS−/− and ICOSL−/− mice that becomes progressively more dramatic as the mice age. This decrease was not due to a defect in the homeostatic proliferation of EM phenotype CD4 T cells in ICOS−/− or ICOSL−/− mice. To determine whether ICOS regulated the development or survival of EM CD4 T cells, we utilized an adoptive transfer model. We found no defect in development of EM CD4 T cells, but long-term survival of ICOS−/− EM CD4 T cells was significantly compromised compared to wild-type cells. The defect in survival was specific to EM cells as the central memory (CM) ICOS−/− CD4 T cells persisted as well as wild type cells. To determine the physiological consequences of a specific defect in EM CD4 T cells, wild-type and ICOS−/− mice were infected with influenza virus. ICOS−/− mice developed significantly fewer influenza-specific EM CD4 T cells and were more susceptible to re-infection than wild-type mice. Collectively, our findings demonstrate a role for ICOS costimulation in the maintenance of EM but not CM CD4 T cells.

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Gwendalyn J. Randolph

Washington University in St. Louis

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Bernd H. Zinselmeyer

Washington University in St. Louis

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Brian T. Saunders

Washington University in St. Louis

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Ki-Wook Kim

Washington University in St. Louis

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