Kapil Chaudhary
Georgia Regents University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kapil Chaudhary.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Buvana Ravishankar; Rahul Shinde; Haiyun Liu; Kapil Chaudhary; Jillian Bradley; Henrique Lemos; Phillip Chandler; Masato Tanaka; David H. Munn; Andrew L. Mellor; Tracy L. McGaha
Significance Apoptotic cell-mediated suppression is critical to prevent inflammatory pathology and fatal autoimmunity. Integral to this process is early recognition by innate phagocytes driving downstream suppressive mechanisms. Though significant progress has been made identifying adaptive immune components involved in apoptotic cell-driven tolerance, early innate mechanisms involved in this process are relatively unknown. Here we report that apoptotic cell capture by CD169+ macrophages promotes rapid expression of the chemokine CCL22, inducing migration and activation of FoxP3+ Tregs and dendritic cells. Moreover, we found CCL22 function is required for generation of stable allograft tolerance and prevention of apoptotic cell-driven autoimmunity. Thus, our findings highlight a previously unknown mechanism whereby stromal macrophages coordinate early cellular interactions required for stable apoptotic cell-driven immune tolerance. Tolerance to apoptotic cells is essential to prevent inflammatory pathology. Though innate responses are critical for immune suppression, our understanding of early innate immunity driven by apoptosis is lacking. Herein we report apoptotic cells induce expression of the chemokine CCL22 in splenic metallophillic macrophages, which is critical for tolerance. Systemic challenge with apoptotic cells induced rapid production of CCL22 in CD169+ (metallophillic) macrophages, resulting in accumulation and activation of FoxP3+ Tregs and CD11c+ dendritic cells, an effect that could be inhibited by antagonizing CCL22-driven chemotaxis. This mechanism was essential for suppression after apoptotic cell challenge, because neutralizing CCL22 or its receptor, reducing Treg numbers, or blocking effector mechanisms abrogated splenic TGF-β and IL-10 induction; this promoted a shift to proinflammatory cytokines associated with a failure to suppress T cells. Similarly, CCR4 inhibition blocked long-term, apoptotic cell-induced tolerance to allografts. Finally, CCR4 inhibition resulted in a systemic breakdown of tolerance to self after apoptotic cell injection with rapid increases in anti-dsDNA IgG and immune complex deposition. Thus, the data demonstrate CCL22-dependent chemotaxis is a key early innate response required for apoptotic cell-induced suppression, implicating a previously unknown mechanism of macrophage-dependent coordination of early events leading to stable tolerance.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Buvana Ravishankar; Haiyun Liu; Rahul Shinde; Kapil Chaudhary; Wei Xiao; Jillian Bradley; Marianne Koritzinsky; Michael P. Madaio; Tracy L. McGaha
Significance Metabolic stress potently modifies immunity. Recently our laboratory identified the stress kinase GCN2 as a key modulator of macrophage responses to toll-like receptor ligands; however, the role of myeloid GCN2 signals in sterile inflammation and homeostatic tolerance is not known. In this study, we tested the requirement of GCN2 for tolerance to apoptotic cells and prevention of autoimmunity in a model of lupus. Our results show that GCN2 in myeloid cells is a critical effector of apoptotic cell-driven tolerance required for regulatory cytokine production and prevention of inflammatory immunity. Moreover, the data indicate that targeting GCN2 is an effective approach to preventing autoimmunity, providing a rationale for developing tools to manipulate GCN2 function in inflammatory immune disease. Efficient apoptotic cell clearance and induction of immunologic tolerance is a critical mechanism preventing autoimmunity and associated pathology. Our laboratory has reported that apoptotic cells induce tolerance by a mechanism dependent on the tryptophan catabolizing enzyme indoleamine 2,3 dioxygenase 1 (IDO1) in splenic macrophages (MΦ). The metabolic-stress sensing protein kinase GCN2 is a primary downstream effector of IDO1; thus, we tested its role in apoptotic cell-driven immune suppression. In vitro, expression of IDO1 in MΦs significantly enhanced apoptotic cell-driven IL-10 and suppressed IL-12 production in a GCN2-dependent mechanism. Suppression of IL-12 protein production was due to attenuation of IL-12 mRNA association with polyribosomes inhibiting translation while IL-10 mRNA association with polyribosomes was not affected. In vivo, apoptotic cell challenge drove a rapid, GCN2-dependent stress response in splenic MΦs with increased IL-10 and TGF-β production, whereas myeloid-specific deletion of GCN2 abrogated regulatory cytokine production with provocation of inflammatory T-cell responses to apoptotic cell antigens and failure of long-tolerance induction. Consistent with a role in prevention of apoptotic cell driven autoreactivity, myeloid deletion of GCN2 in lupus-prone mice resulted in increased immune cell activation, humoral autoimmunity, renal pathology, and mortality. In contrast, activation of GCN2 with an agonist significantly reduced anti-DNA autoantibodies and protected mice from disease. Thus, this study implicates a key role for GCN2 signals in regulating the tolerogenic response to apoptotic cells and limiting autoimmunity.
Oncogenesis | 2016
S Sivaprakasam; Ashish Gurav; Amy V. Paschall; G L Coe; Kapil Chaudhary; Y Cai; Ravindra Kolhe; P Martin; Lei Huang; Huidong Shi; H Sifuentes; Matam Vijay-Kumar; Stuart A. Thompson; David H. Munn; Andrew L. Mellor; Tracy L. McGaha; P Shiao; C W Cutler; Kebin Liu; Vadivel Ganapathy; H Li; Nagendra Singh
Composition of the gut microbiota has profound effects on intestinal carcinogenesis. Diet and host genetics play critical roles in shaping the composition of gut microbiota. Whether diet and host genes interact with each other to bring specific changes in gut microbiota that affect intestinal carcinogenesis is unknown. Ability of dietary fibre to specifically increase beneficial gut microbiota at the expense of pathogenic bacteria in vivo via unknown mechanism is an important process that suppresses intestinal inflammation and carcinogenesis. Free fatty acid receptor 2 (FFAR2 or GPR43) is a receptor for short-chain fatty acids (acetate, propionate and butyrate), metabolites of dietary fibre fermentation by gut microbiota. Here, we show FFAR2 is down modulated in human colon cancers than matched adjacent healthy tissue. Consistent with this, Ffar2−/− mice are hypersusceptible to development of intestinal carcinogenesis. Dietary fibre suppressed colon carcinogenesis in an Ffar2-dependent manner. Ffar2 played an essential role in dietary fibre-mediated promotion of beneficial gut microbiota, Bifidobacterium species (spp) and suppression of Helicobacter hepaticus and Prevotellaceae. Moreover, numbers of Bifidobacterium is reduced, whereas those of Prevotellaceae are increased in human colon cancers than matched adjacent normal tissue. Administration of Bifidobacterium mitigated intestinal inflammation and carcinogenesis in Ffar2−/− mice. Taken together, these findings suggest that interplay between dietary fibre and Ffar2 play a key role in promoting healthy composition of gut microbiota that stimulates intestinal health.
American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2013
Nino Kvirkvelia; Malgorzata McMenamin; Kapil Chaudhary; Manuela Bartoli; Michael P. Madaio
We postulated that prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), which exhibits regulatory functions to control immune-mediated inflammation, fibrosis, oxidative stress, and tissue/cellular regeneration, has the potential to improve the course of nephritis. Therefore, the therapeutic potential of prostanoid on established nephritis in mice was evaluated focusing on its role on renal cellular recovery, with emphasis on its cytoprotecting and growth-promoting effects. Acute nephritis was induced in mice by single injection of nephrotoxic serum (NTS), followed by PGE2 administration with severity of nephritis evaluated over time. Mice injected with PGE2 recovered promptly with normalization of blood urea nitrogen and urine protein levels and histology. Recovery was observed with dosing of prostanoid at day 1, as well as day 4. With the use of selective EP1-4 receptor agonists, EP3 receptor has been identified as important in mediating beneficial effects of PGE2 in our system. PGE2 normalized glomerular cell losses during nephrotoxic serum-induced nephritis, restored synaptopodin distribution and F-actin filaments arrangement in glomeruli. In cell culture, PGE2 reduced nephrotoxim serum (NTS)-induced apoptosis of glomerular cells and promoted cell reproliferation after NTS-mediated injury. In conclusion, PGE2 treatment promotes resolution of glomerular inflammation. Consistent with this observation, the regenerative and cytoprotective effects of prostanoid on glomerular cells in culture were observed, suggesting that PGE2 may be beneficial in the treatment of glomerulonephritis.
Journal of Immunology | 2015
Kapil Chaudhary; Rahul Shinde; Haiyun Liu; Jaya P. Gnana-Prakasam; Rajalakshmi Veeranan-Karmegam; Lei Huang; Buvana Ravishankar; Jillian Bradley; Nino Kvirkvelia; Malgorzata McMenamin; Wei Xiao; Daniel T. Kleven; Andrew L. Mellor; Michael P. Madaio; Tracy L. McGaha
Inflammatory kidney disease is a major clinical problem that can result in end-stage renal failure. In this article, we show that Ab-mediated inflammatory kidney injury and renal disease in a mouse nephrotoxic serum nephritis model was inhibited by amino acid metabolism and a protective autophagic response. The metabolic signal was driven by IFN-γ–mediated induction of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase 1 (IDO1) enzyme activity with subsequent activation of a stress response dependent on the eIF2α kinase general control nonderepressible 2 (GCN2). Activation of GCN2 suppressed proinflammatory cytokine production in glomeruli and reduced macrophage recruitment to the kidney during the incipient stage of Ab-induced glomerular inflammation. Further, inhibition of autophagy or genetic ablation of Ido1 or Gcn2 converted Ab-induced, self-limiting nephritis to fatal end-stage renal disease. Conversely, increasing kidney IDO1 activity or treating mice with a GCN2 agonist induced autophagy and protected mice from nephritic kidney damage. Finally, kidney tissue from patients with Ab-driven nephropathy showed increased IDO1 abundance and stress gene expression. Thus, these findings support the hypothesis that the IDO–GCN2 pathway in glomerular stromal cells is a critical negative feedback mechanism that limits inflammatory renal pathologic changes by inducing autophagy.
Journal of Immunology | 2015
Rahul Shinde; Michiko Shimoda; Kapil Chaudhary; Haiyun Liu; Eslam Mohamed; Jillian Bradley; Sridhar Kandala; Xia Li; Kebin Liu; Tracy L. McGaha
Humoral responses to nonproteinaceous Ags (i.e., T cell independent [TI]) are a key component of the early response to bacterial and viral infection and a critical driver of systemic autoimmunity. However, mechanisms that regulate TI humoral immunity are poorly defined. In this study, we report that B cell–intrinsic induction of the tryptophan-catabolizing enzyme IDO1 is a key mechanism limiting TI Ab responses. When Ido1−/− mice were immunized with TI Ags, there was a significant increase in Ab titers and formation of extrafollicular Ab-secreting cells compared with controls. This effect was specific to TI Ags, as Ido1 disruption did not affect Ig production after immunization with protein Ags. The effect of IDO1 abrogation was confined to the B cell compartment, as adoptive transfer of Ido1−/− B cells to B cell–deficient mice was sufficient to replicate increased TI responses observed in Ido1−/− mice. Moreover, in vitro activation with TLR ligands or BCR crosslinking rapidly induced Ido1 expression and activity in purified B cells, and Ido1−/− B cells displayed enhanced proliferation and cell survival associated with increased Ig and cytokine production compared with wild-type B cells. Thus, our results demonstrate a novel, B cell–intrinsic, role for IDO1 as a regulator of humoral immunity that has implications for both vaccine design and prevention of autoimmunity.
Nature Immunology | 2018
Rahul Shinde; Kebria Hezaveh; Marie Jo Halaby; Andreas Kloetgen; Ankur Chakravarthy; Tiago Medina; Reema Deol; Kieran P. Manion; Yuriy Baglaenko; Maria Eldh; Sara Lamorte; Drew Wallace; Sathi Babu Chodisetti; Buvana Ravishankar; Haiyun Liu; Kapil Chaudhary; David H. Munn; Aristotelis Tsirigos; Michael P. Madaio; Susanne Gabrielsson; Zahi Touma; Joan E. Wither; Daniel D. De Carvalho; Tracy L. McGaha
The transcription factor AhR modulates immunity at multiple levels. Here we report that phagocytes exposed to apoptotic cells exhibited rapid activation of AhR, which drove production of the cytokine IL-10. Activation of AhR was dependent on interactions between apoptotic-cell DNA and the pattern-recognition receptor TLR9 that was required for the prevention of immune responses to DNA and histones in vivo. Moreover, disease progression in mouse systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) correlated with strength of the AhR signal, and the disease course could be altered by modulation of AhR activity. Deletion of AhR in the myeloid lineage caused systemic autoimmunity in mice, and an enhanced AhR transcriptional signature correlated with disease in patients with SLE. Thus, AhR activity induced by apoptotic cell phagocytes maintains peripheral tolerance.McGaha and colleagues show that phagocytosis of apoptotic cells leads to activation of the transcription factor AhR and production of the cytokine IL-10 in phagocytes, in a manner dependent on the recognition of DNA.
Kidney International | 2013
Kapil Chaudhary; Daniel T. Kleven; Tracy L. McGaha; Michael P. Madaio
Progressive kidney disease is a significant clinical problem. However, despite research aimed toward developing improved predictors of disease, the major tool to assess kidney ultrastructure damage is the kidney biopsy. Here we tested the capability of a labeled human monoclonal antibody (F1.1), directed against the NC1 domain of α3(IV) collagen, to detect pathologic kidney alterations in vivo using mouse models of nephrotoxic serum-induced nephritis and puromycin aminoglycoside nephrosis. The F1.1 antibody-fluorophore conjugate signal rapidly localized specifically to injured glomeruli in both the severe and mild kidney disease models while minimally labeling healthy kidney. This differential labeling is likely due to cryptic NC1-domain exposure as enzymatic or chemical treatment of healthy human or mouse kidney sections significantly increased F1.1 binding to the glomeruli. Finally, kidney tissue from patients with renal disease show significant glomerular staining by F1.1 indicating that exposure of the NC1 domain occurs in clinically relevant circumstances. Thus, NC1 domain exposure may represent an in situ biomarker for assessment of kidney injury. Our study suggests that F1.1 and similar antibodies may represent a new class of non-invasive renal imaging reagents.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Kapil Chaudhary; Wanwisa Promsote; Sudha Ananth; Rajalakshmi Veeranan-Karmegam; Amany Tawfik; Pachiappan Arjunan; Pamela M. Martin; Sylvia B. Smith; Muthusamy Thangaraju; Oleg G. Kisselev; Vadivel Ganapathy; Jaya P. Gnana-Prakasam
Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is a leading cause of blindness among working-age adults. Increased iron accumulation is associated with several degenerative diseases. However, there are no reports on the status of retinal iron or its implications in the pathogenesis of DR. In the present study, we found that retinas of type-1 and type-2 mouse models of diabetes have increased iron accumulation compared to non-diabetic retinas. We found similar iron accumulation in postmortem retinal samples from human diabetic patients. Further, we induced diabetes in HFE knockout (KO) mice model of genetic iron overload to understand the role of iron in the pathogenesis of DR. We found increased neuronal cell death, vascular alterations and loss of retinal barrier integrity in diabetic HFE KO mice compared to diabetic wildtype mice. Diabetic HFE KO mouse retinas also exhibited increased expression of inflammation and oxidative stress markers. Severity in the pathogenesis of DR in HFE KO mice was accompanied by increase in retinal renin expression mediated by G-protein-coupled succinate receptor GPR91. In light of previous reports implicating retinal renin-angiotensin system in DR pathogenesis, our results reveal a novel relationship between diabetes, iron and renin-angiotensin system, thereby unraveling new therapeutic targets for the treatment of DR.
Translational cancer research | 2016
Kapil Chaudhary; Michael P. Madaio