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Dive into the research topics where Lesley F Drynan is active.

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Featured researches published by Lesley F Drynan.


Nature Immunology | 2012

Transcription factor ROR[alpha] is critical for nuocyte development

See Heng Wong; Jennifer Walker; Helen E. Jolin; Lesley F Drynan; Emily Hams; Ana Camelo; Jillian L. Barlow; Daniel R Neill; Veera Panova; Ute Koch; Freddy Radtke; Clare S. Hardman; You Yi Hwang; Padraic G. Fallon; Andrew N. J. McKenzie

Nuocytes are essential in innate type 2 immunity and contribute to the exacerbation of asthma responses. Here we found that nuocytes arose in the bone marrow and differentiated from common lymphoid progenitors, which indicates they are distinct, previously unknown members of the lymphoid lineage. Nuocytes required interleukin 7 (IL-7), IL-33 and Notch signaling for development in vitro. Pro-T cell progenitors at double-negative stage 1 (DN1) and DN2 maintained nuocyte potential in vitro, although the thymus was not essential for nuocyte development. Notably, the transcription factor RORα was critical for the development of nuocytes and their role in the expulsion of parasitic worms.Nuocytes are essential in innate type-2 immunity and contribute to the exacerbation of asthma responses. Here we show that nuocytes arise in the bone marrow and differentiate from common lymphoid progenitors, which makes them distinct new members of the lymphoid lineage. Nuocytes required interleukin 7 (IL-7), IL-33 and Notch signalling for development in vitro. Double negative 1 (DN1) and DN2 pro-T-cell progenitors maintained nuocyte potential in vitro, although the thymus was not essential for nuocyte development. Notably, the transcription factor Rorα was critical for nuocyte development and their role in parasitic worm expulsion.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2012

Innate IL-13–producing nuocytes arise during allergic lung inflammation and contribute to airways hyperreactivity

Jillian L. Barlow; Agustin Bellosi; Clare S. Hardman; Lesley F Drynan; See Heng Wong; James Cruickshank; Andrew N. J. McKenzie

BACKGROUND IL-4, IL-5, and IL-13 are thought to be central to the allergic asthmatic response. Previous work supposed that the essential source of these cytokines was CD4(+) T(H)2 cells. However, more recent studies have suggested that other innate production of type 2 cytokines might be as important. OBJECTIVES Nuocytes are a novel population of IL-13-producing innate cells, which are critical for protective immunity in Nippostrongylus brasiliensis infection. Given this, we investigated the potential existence and functional importance of nuocytes in experimental allergic asthma. METHODS We generated Il4(+/eGFP)Il13(+/Tomato) dual-reporter mice to study cytokine-producing cells during allergic inflammation. We adoptively transferred innate IL-13-producing cells to investigate their role in airways hyperreactivity (AHR). RESULTS We show that allergen-induced nuocytes infiltrate the lung and are a major innate source of IL-13. CD4(+) T cells in the lung almost exclusively express only IL-13, whereas IL-4-producing T cells were restricted to the draining lymph nodes. Intranasal administration of IL-25 or IL-33 induced IL-13-producing nuocytes in the BAL fluid. Strikingly, adoptive transfer of wild-type nuocytes, but not Il13(-/-) nuocytes, into Il13(-/-) mice, which are normally resistant to IL-25-induced AHR, restored airways resistance and lung cell infiltration. CONCLUSIONS These findings identify nuocytes as a novel cell type in allergic lung inflammation and an innate source of IL-13 that can directly induce AHR in the absence of IL-13-producing CD4(+) T cells. These data highlight nuocytes as an important new consideration in the development of future allergic asthma therapy.


Nature Medicine | 2010

A p53-dependent mechanism underlies macrocytic anemia in a mouse model of human 5q- syndrome

Jillian L. Barlow; Lesley F Drynan; Duncan R. Hewett; Luke R Holmes; Silvia Lorenzo-Abalde; Alison L Lane; Helen E. Jolin; Richard Pannell; Angela J Middleton; See Heng Wong; Alan J. Warren; James S. Wainscoat; Jacqueline Boultwood; Andrew N. J. McKenzie

The identification of the genes associated with chromosomal translocation breakpoints has fundamentally changed understanding of the molecular basis of hematological malignancies. By contrast, the study of chromosomal deletions has been hampered by the large number of genes deleted and the complexity of their analysis. We report the generation of a mouse model for human 5q– syndrome using large-scale chromosomal engineering. Haploinsufficiency of the Cd74–Nid67 interval (containing Rps14, encoding the ribosomal protein S14) caused macrocytic anemia, prominent erythroid dysplasia and monolobulated megakaryocytes in the bone marrow. These effects were associated with defective bone marrow progenitor development, the appearance of bone marrow cells expressing high amounts of the tumor suppressor p53 and increased bone marrow cell apoptosis. Notably, intercrossing with p53-deficient mice completely rescued the progenitor cell defect, restoring common myeloid progenitor and megakaryocytic-erythroid progenitor, granulocyte-monocyte progenitor and hematopoietic stem cell bone marrow populations. This mouse model suggests that a p53-dependent mechanism underlies the pathophysiology of the 5q– syndrome.


Genes & Development | 2011

Uncoupling of GTP hydrolysis from eIF6 release on the ribosome causes Shwachman-Diamond syndrome

Andrew J. Finch; Christine Hilcenko; Nicolas Basse; Lesley F Drynan; Beatriz Goyenechea; Tobias F. Menne; África González Fernández; Paul J. Simpson; Clive S. D'Santos; Mark J. Arends; Jean Donadieu; Christine Bellanné-Chantelot; Michael Costanzo; Charles Boone; Andrew N. J. McKenzie; Stefan M.V. Freund; Alan J. Warren

Removal of the assembly factor eukaryotic initiation factor 6 (eIF6) is critical for late cytoplasmic maturation of 60S ribosomal subunits. In mammalian cells, the current model posits that eIF6 release is triggered following phosphorylation of Ser 235 by activated protein kinase C. In contrast, genetic studies in yeast indicate a requirement for the ortholog of the SBDS (Shwachman-Bodian-Diamond syndrome) gene that is mutated in the inherited leukemia predisposition disorder Shwachman-Diamond syndrome (SDS). Here, by isolating late cytoplasmic 60S ribosomal subunits from Sbds-deleted mice, we show that SBDS and the GTPase elongation factor-like 1 (EFL1) directly catalyze eIF6 removal in mammalian cells by a mechanism that requires GTP binding and hydrolysis by EFL1 but not phosphorylation of eIF6 Ser 235. Functional analysis of disease-associated missense variants reveals that the essential role of SBDS is to tightly couple GTP hydrolysis by EFL1 on the ribosome to eIF6 release. Furthermore, complementary NMR spectroscopic studies suggest unanticipated mechanistic parallels between this late step in 60S maturation and aspects of bacterial ribosome disassembly. Our findings establish a direct role for SBDS and EFL1 in catalyzing the translational activation of ribosomes in all eukaryotes, and define SDS as a ribosomopathy caused by uncoupling GTP hydrolysis from eIF6 release.


Cancer Cell | 2003

Engineering de novo reciprocal chromosomal translocations associated with Mll to replicate primary events of human cancer

Alan Forster; Richard Pannell; Lesley F Drynan; Matthew McCormack; Emma C Collins; Angelika Daser; Terence H. Rabbitts

The etiology of human tumors often involves chromosomal translocations. Models that emulate translocations are essential to understanding the determinants of frank malignancy, those dictating the restriction of translocations to specific lineages, and as a basis for development of rational therapeutic methods. We demonstrate that developmentally regulated Cre-loxP-mediated interchromosomal recombination between the Mll gene, whose human counterpart is involved in a spectrum of leukemias, and the Enl gene creates reciprocal chromosomal translocations that cause myeloid tumors. There is a rapid onset and high penetrance of leukemogenesis in these translocator mice, and high proportions of cells carrying chromosomal translocations can be found in bone marrow as early as 12 days after birth. This de novo strategy is a direct recapitulation of naturally occurring human cancer-associated translocations.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2003

The LMO2 T-cell oncogene is activated via chromosomal translocations or retroviral insertion during gene therapy but has no mandatory role in normal T-cell development.

Matthew P. McCormack; Alan Forster; Lesley F Drynan; Richard Pannell; Terence H. Rabbitts

ABSTRACT The LMO2 gene encodes a LIM-only protein and is a target of chromosomal translocations in human T-cell leukemia. Recently, two X-SCID patients treated by gene therapy to rescue T-cell lymphopoiesis developed T-cell leukemias with retroviral insertion into the LMO2 gene causing clonal T-cell proliferation. In view of the specificity of LMO2 in T-cell tumorigenesis, we investigated a possible role for Lmo2 in T-lymphopoiesis, using conditional knockout of mouse Lmo2 with loxP-flanked Lmo2 and Cre recombinase alleles driven by the promoters of the lymphoid-specific genes Rag1, CD19, and Lck. While efficient deletion of Lmo2 was observed, even in the earliest detectable lymphoid cell progenitors of the bone marrow, there was no disturbance of lymphopoiesis in either T- or B-cell lineages, and in contrast to Lmo2 transgenic mice, there were normal distributions of CD4− CD8− thymocytes. We conclude that there is no mandatory role for LMO2 in lymphoid development, implying that its specific role in T-cell tumorigenesis results from a reprogramming of gene expression after enforced expression in T-cell precursors.


Journal of Gastroenterology | 2012

Blocking IL-25 signalling protects against gut inflammation in a type-2 model of colitis by suppressing nuocyte and NKT derived IL-13

Ana Camelo; Jillian L. Barlow; Lesley F Drynan; Daniel R. Neill; Sarah J. Ballantyne; See Heng Wong; Richard Pannell; Wei Gao; Keely Wrigley; Justin Sprenkle; Andrew N. J. McKenzie

BackgroundInterleukin-25 (IL-25) is a potent activator of type-2 immune responses. Mucosal inflammation in ulcerative colitis is driven by type-2 cytokines. We have previously shown that a neutralizing anti-IL-25 antibody abrogated airways hyperreactivity in an experimental model of lung allergy. Therefore, we asked whether blocking IL-25 via neutralizing antibodies against the ligand or its receptor IL-17BR could protect against inflammation in an oxazolone-induced mouse model of colitis.MethodsNeutralizing antibodies to IL-25 or IL-17BR were administered to mice with oxazolone-induced colitis, a model of ulcerative colitis. The disease onset was evaluated by weight loss and degree of colon ulceration. Also, lamina propria and mesenteric lymph node (MLN) infiltrates were assessed for mucosal inflammation and cultured in vitro to determine cytokine production.ResultsWe found that in oxazolone colitis IL-25 production derives from intestinal epithelial cells and that IL-17BR+ IL-13-producing natural killer T (NKT) cells and nuocytes drive the intestinal inflammation. Blocking IL-25 signalling considerably improved the clinical aspects of the disease, including weight loss and colon ulceration, and resulted in fewer nuocytes and NKT cells infiltrating the mucosa. The improved pathology correlated with a decrease in IL-13 production by lamina propria cells, a decrease in the production of other type-2 cytokines by MLN cells, and a decrease in blood eosinophilia and IgE.ConclusionIL-25 plays a pro-inflammatory role in the oxazolone colitis model, and neutralizing antibodies to IL-25 or IL-17BR can slow the ongoing inflammation in this disease. Because this model mimics aspects of human ulcerative colitis, these antibodies may represent potential therapeutics for reducing gut inflammation in patients.


The EMBO Journal | 2005

Mll fusions generated by Cre-loxP-mediated de novo translocations can induce lineage reassignment in tumorigenesis.

Lesley F Drynan; Richard Pannell; Alan Forster; Nicole M M Chan; Florencia Cano; Angelika Daser; Terence H. Rabbitts

Chromosomal translocations are primary events in tumorigenesis. Those involving the mixed lineage leukaemia (MLL) gene are found in various guises and it is unclear whether MLL fusions can affect haematopoietic differentiation. We have used a model in which chromosomal translocations are generated in mice de novo by Cre‐loxP‐mediated recombination (translocator mice) to compare the functionally relevant haematopoietic cell contexts for Mll fusions, namely pluripotent stem cells, semicommitted progenitors or committed cells. Translocations between Mll and Enl or Af9 cause myeloid neoplasias, initiating in pluripotent stem cells or multipotent myeloid progenitors. However, while Mll‐Enl translocations can also cause leukaemia from T‐cell progenitors, no tumours arose with Mll‐Af9 translocations in the T‐cell compartment. Furthermore, Mll‐Enl translocations in T‐cell progenitors can cause lineage reassignment into myeloid tumours. Therefore, a permissive cellular environment is required for oncogenicity of Mll‐associated translocations and Mll fusions can influence haematopoietic lineage commitment.


Blood | 2010

Induction of p53 and up-regulation of the p53 pathway in the human 5q- syndrome

Andrea Pellagatti; Teresa Marafioti; Jennifer C. Paterson; Jillian L. Barlow; Lesley F Drynan; Aristoteles Giagounidis; Stefano Pileri; Mario Cazzola; Andrew N. J. McKenzie; James S. Wainscoat; Jacqueline Boultwood

To the editor: There is mounting evidence from the study of animal models of human disorders of defective ribosome biogenesis, including Diamond-Blackfan anemia and Treacher Collins syndrome, that ribosomal stress leads to activation of the p53 pathway.[1][1][⇓][2]–[3][3] Stabilization of p53


PLOS Biology | 2005

The Ews-ERG fusion protein can initiate neoplasia from lineage-committed haematopoietic cells.

Rosalind Codrington; Richard Pannell; Alan Forster; Lesley F Drynan; Angelika Daser; Nati Lobato; Markus Metzler; Terence H. Rabbitts

The EWS-ERG fusion protein is found in human sarcomas with the chromosomal translocation t(21;22)(q22;q12), where the translocation is considered to be an initiating event in sarcoma formation within uncommitted mesenchymal cells, probably long-lived progenitors capable of self renewal. The fusion protein may not therefore have an oncogenic capability beyond these progenitors. To assess whether EWS-ERG can be a tumour initiator in cells other than mesenchymal cells, we have analysed Ews-ERG fusion protein function in a cellular environment not typical of that found in human cancers, namely, committed lymphoid cells. We have used Ews-ERG invertor mice having an inverted ERG cDNA cassette flanked by loxP sites knocked in the Ews intron 8, crossed with mice expressing Cre recombinase under the control of the Rag1 gene to give conditional, lymphoid-specific expression of the fusion protein. Clonal T cell neoplasias arose in these mice. This conditional Ews gene fusion model of tumourigenesis shows that Ews-ERG can cause haematopoietic tumours and the precursor cells are committed cells. Thus, Ews-ERG can function in cells that do not have to be pluripotent progenitors or mesenchymal cells.

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Richard Pannell

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Andrew N. J. McKenzie

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Alan Forster

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Jillian L. Barlow

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Angelika Daser

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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See Heng Wong

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Markus Metzler

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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