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Featured researches published by Jhen Tsang.


AIDS | 2009

HIV-1 infection of macrophages is dependent on evasion of innate immune cellular activation.

Jhen Tsang; Benjamin M. Chain; Robert F. Miller; Benjamin L. J. Webb; Wendy Barclay; Greg J. Towers; David R. Katz; Mahdad Noursadeghi

Objective:The cellular innate immune response to HIV-1 is poorly characterized. In view of HIV-1 tropism for macrophages, which can be activated via pattern recognition receptors to trigger antimicrobial defences, we investigated innate immune responses to HIV-1 by monocyte-derived macrophages. Design:In a model of productive HIV-1 infection, cellular innate immune responses to HIV-1 were investigated, at the level of transcription factor activation, specific gene expression and genome-wide transcriptional profiling. In addition, the viral determinants of macrophage responses and the physiological effect of innate immune cellular activation on HIV-1 replication were assessed. Results:Productive HIV-1 infection did not activate nuclear factor-κB and interferon regulatory factor 3 transcription factors or interferon gene expression (IFN) and caused remarkably small changes to the host-cell transcriptome, with no evidence of inflammatory or IFN signatures. Evasion of IFN induction was not dependent on HIV-1 envelope-mediated cellular entry, inhibition by accessory proteins or reverse transcription of ssRNA that may reduce innate immune cellular activation by viral RNA. Furthermore, IFNβ priming did not sensitize responses to HIV-1. Importantly, exogenous IFNβ or stimulation with the RNA analogue poly I:C to simulate innate immune activation invoked HIV-1 restriction. Conclusion:We conclude that macrophages lack functional pattern recognition receptors for this virus and that HIV-1 tropism for macrophages helps to establish a foothold in the host without triggering innate immune cellular activation, which would otherwise block viral infection effectively.


BMC Bioinformatics | 2010

Error, reproducibility and sensitivity: a pipeline for data processing of Agilent oligonucleotide expression arrays

Benjamin M. Chain; Helen C. Bowen; John P. Hammond; Wilfried Posch; Jane Rasaiyaah; Jhen Tsang; Mahdad Noursadeghi

BackgroundExpression microarrays are increasingly used to obtain large scale transcriptomic information on a wide range of biological samples. Nevertheless, there is still much debate on the best ways to process data, to design experiments and analyse the output. Furthermore, many of the more sophisticated mathematical approaches to data analysis in the literature remain inaccessible to much of the biological research community. In this study we examine ways of extracting and analysing a large data set obtained using the Agilent long oligonucleotide transcriptomics platform, applied to a set of human macrophage and dendritic cell samples.ResultsWe describe and validate a series of data extraction, transformation and normalisation steps which are implemented via a new R function. Analysis of replicate normalised reference data demonstrate that intrarray variability is small (only around 2% of the mean log signal), while interarray variability from replicate array measurements has a standard deviation (SD) of around 0.5 log2 units ( 6% of mean). The common practise of working with ratios of Cy5/Cy3 signal offers little further improvement in terms of reducing error. Comparison to expression data obtained using Arabidopsis samples demonstrates that the large number of genes in each sample showing a low level of transcription reflect the real complexity of the cellular transcriptome. Multidimensional scaling is used to show that the processed data identifies an underlying structure which reflect some of the key biological variables which define the data set. This structure is robust, allowing reliable comparison of samples collected over a number of years and collected by a variety of operators.ConclusionsThis study outlines a robust and easily implemented pipeline for extracting, transforming normalising and visualising transcriptomic array data from Agilent expression platform. The analysis is used to obtain quantitative estimates of the SD arising from experimental (non biological) intra- and interarray variability, and for a lower threshold for determining whether an individual gene is expressed. The study provides a reliable basis for further more extensive studies of the systems biology of eukaryotic cells.


Journal of Immunology | 2009

Genome-Wide Innate Immune Responses in HIV-1-Infected Macrophages Are Preserved Despite Attenuation of the NF-κB Activation Pathway

Mahdad Noursadeghi; Jhen Tsang; Robert F. Miller; Sarah Straschewski; Paul Kellam; Benjamin M. Chain; David R. Katz

Macrophages contribute to HIV-1 infection at many levels. They provide permissive cells at the site of inoculation, augment virus transfer to T cells, generate long-lived viral reservoirs, and cause bystander cell apoptosis. A body of evidence suggests that the role of macrophages in cellular host defense is also compromised by HIV-1 infection. In this respect, macrophages are potent cells of the innate immune system that initiate and regulate wide-ranging immunological responses. This study focuses on the effect of HIV-1 infection on innate immune responses by macrophages at the level of signal transduction, whole genome transcriptional profiling, and cytokine secretion. We show that in an ex vivo model, M-CSF-differentiated monocyte-derived macrophages uniformly infected with replicating CCR5-tropic HIV-1, without cytopathic effect, exhibit selective attenuation of the NF-κB activation pathway in response to TLR4 and TLR2 stimulation. However, functional annotation clustering analysis of genome-wide transcriptional responses to LPS stimulation suggests substantial preservation of gene expression changes at the systems level, with modest attenuation of a subset of up-regulated LPS-responsive genes, and no effect on a selection of inflammatory cytokine responses at the protein level. These results extend existing reports of inhibitory interactions between HIV-1 accessory proteins and NF-κB signaling pathways, and whole genome expression profiling provides comprehensive assessment of the consequent effects on immune response gene expression. Unexpectedly, our data suggest innate immune responses are broadly preserved with limited exceptions, and pave the way for further study of the complex relationship between HIV-1 and immunological pathways within macrophages.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2014

HIV-1 Infection of Macrophages Dysregulates Innate Immune Responses to Mycobacterium tuberculosis by Inhibition of Interleukin-10

Gillian S. Tomlinson; Lucy C. K. Bell; Naomi F. Walker; Jhen Tsang; Jeremy S. Brown; Ronan Breen; Marc Lipman; David R. Katz; Robert F. Miller; Benjamin M. Chain; Paul T. Elkington; Mahdad Noursadeghi

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 and Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tuberculosis) both target macrophages, which are key cells in inflammatory responses and their resolution. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that HIV-1 may modulate macrophage responses to coinfection with M. tuberculosis. HIV-1 caused exaggerated proinflammatory responses to M. tuberculosis that supported enhanced virus replication, and were associated with deficient stimulus-specific induction of anti-inflammatory interleukin (IL)-10 and attenuation of mitogen-activated kinase signaling downstream of Toll-like receptor 2 and dectin-1 stimulation. Our in vitro data were mirrored by lower IL-10 and higher proinflammatory IL-1β in airway samples from HIV-1-infected patients with pulmonary tuberculosis compared with those with non-tuberculous respiratory tract infections. Single-round infection of macrophages with HIV-1 was sufficient to attenuate IL-10 responses, and antiretroviral treatment of replicative virus did not affect this phenotype. We propose that deficient homeostatic IL-10 responses may contribute to the immunopathogenesis of active tuberculosis and propagation of virus infection in HIV-1/M. tuberculosis coinfection.


European Journal of Immunology | 2011

Transcriptional profiling of innate and adaptive human immune responses to mycobacteria in the tuberculin skin test

Gillian S. Tomlinson; Tamaryn J. Cashmore; Paul T. Elkington; John R. Yates; Rannakoe Lehloenya; Jhen Tsang; Michael Brown; Robert F. Miller; Keertan Dheda; David R. Katz; Benjamin M. Chain; Mahdad Noursadeghi

The tuberculin skin test (TST) is a model of integrated innate and adaptive human immune responses to Mycobacterium tuberculosis, but the component processes that are involved in this model have not previously been defined in vivo. We used transcriptional profiling to study these responses within the TST at molecular and system levels. Skin biopsies from TST injection sites were examined in subjects classified as TST+ or TST− by clinical and histological criteria. Genome‐wide expression arrays showed evolution of immune responses reflecting T‐cell activation and recruitment with uniquely Th1‐polarized responses and cytotoxic T cells (CTLs). In addition, distinct innate immune and IFN‐γ‐stimulated gene expression signatures were identified, under the regulation of NF‐κB and STAT1 transcriptional control. These were highly enriched for chemokines and MHC class II molecules providing a potential mechanism for paracrine amplification of inflammatory responses in the TST, by supporting cellular recruitment and enhancing antigen presentation. The same repertoire of innate and adaptive immune responses was evident in TST+ and TST− subjects alike, clinically positive TSTs being distinguished only by quantitatively greater differences. These data provide new insights into complex multifaceted responses within the TST, with much greater sensitivity than previous clinical or histological assessments.


Vaccine | 2008

HIV blocking antibodies following immunisation with chimaeric peptides coding a short N-terminal sequence of the CCR5 receptor

Benjamin M. Chain; Mahdad Noursadeghi; Michelle Gardener; Jhen Tsang; Edward Wright

The chemokine receptor CCR5 is required for cellular entry by many strains of HIV, and provides a potential target for molecules, including antibodies, designed to block HIV transmission. This study investigates a novel approach to stimulate antibodies to CCR5. Rabbits were immunised with chimaeric peptides which encode a short fragment of the N-terminal sequence of CCR5, as well as an unrelated T cell epitope from Tetanus toxoid. Immunisation with these chimaeric peptides generates a strong antibody response which is highly focused on the N-terminal CCR5 sequence. The antibody to the chimaeric peptide containing an N-terminal methionine also recognises the full length CCR5 receptor on the cell surface, albeit at higher concentrations. Further comparison of binding to intact CCR5 with binding to CCR5 peptide suggest that the receptor specific antibody generated represents a very small fragment of the total anti-peptide antibody. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that the N-terminal peptide in the context of the intact receptor has a different structure to that of the synthetic peptide. Finally, the antibody was able to block HIV infection of macrophages in vitro. Thus results of this study suggest that N-terminal fragments of CCR5 may provide potential immunogens with which to generate blocking antibodies to this receptor, while avoiding the dangers of including T cell auto-epitopes.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

Comment on "Transcription factor FOXO3a mediates apoptosis in HIV-1-infected macrophages".

Mahdad Noursadeghi; Jhen Tsang; Robert F. Miller; David R. Katz

We read with interest the recent article by Cui et al. ([1][1]) in which they show that HIV-1 infection of monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM) induces dephosphorylation and nuclear translocation of the proapoptotic transcription factor FOXO3a. This extends their previous work showing that TRAIL-


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2008

Quantitative imaging assay for NF-κB nuclear translocation in primary human macrophages

Mahdad Noursadeghi; Jhen Tsang; Thomas Haustein; Robert F. Miller; Benjamin M. Chain; David R. Katz


Archive | 2010

Activation Pathway Attenuation of the NF-{kappa}B Macrophages Are Preserved Despite Responses in HIV-1-Infected Genome-Wide Innate Immune

David R. Katz; Sarah Straschewski; Paul Kellam; Benjamin M. Chain; Mahdad Noursadeghi; Jhen Tsang; Robert F. Miller


Journal of Infection | 2008

Studying the effect of hiv infection in human macrophages

Mahdad Noursadeghi; Jhen Tsang; Robert Miller; David R. Katz

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David R. Katz

University College London

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Robert Miller

National Institutes of Health

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Paul Kellam

Imperial College London

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Benny Chain

University College London

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Edward Wright

University of Westminster

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