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Dive into the research topics where Levi B. Watkin is active.

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Featured researches published by Levi B. Watkin.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2005

Cross-reactive influenza virus–specific CD8+ T cells contribute to lymphoproliferation in Epstein-Barr virus–associated infectious mononucleosis

Shalyn Catherine Clute; Levi B. Watkin; Markus Cornberg; Yuri N. Naumov; John L. Sullivan; Katherine Luzuriaga; Raymond M. Welsh; Liisa K. Selin

The marked proliferation of activated CD8+ T cells is pathognomonic of EBV-associated infectious mononucleosis (IM), common in young adults. Since the diversity and size of the memory CD8+ T cell population increase with age, we questioned whether IM was mediated by the reactivation of memory CD8+ T cells specific to previously encountered pathogens but cross-reactive with EBV. Of 8 HLA-A2+ IM patients, 5 had activated T cells specific to another common virus, as evidenced by a significantly higher number of peripheral blood influenza A virus M1(58-66)-specific T cells compared with healthy immune donors. Two patients with an augmented M1 response had tetramer-defined cross-reactive cells recognizing influenza M1 and EBV-BMLF1(280-288), which accounted for up to one-third of their BMLF1-specific population and likely contributed to a skewed M1-specific T cell receptor repertoire. These epitopes, with only 33% sequence similarity, mediated differential effects on the function of the cross-reactive T cells, which may contribute to alterations in disease outcome. EBV could potentially encode an extensive pool of T cell epitopes that activate other cross-reactive memory T cells. Our results support the concept that cross-reactive memory CD8+ T cells activated by EBV contribute to the characteristic lymphoproliferation of IM.


Immunology and Cell Biology | 2014

Cell biological steps and checkpoints in accessing NK cell cytotoxicity

Emily M. Mace; Prachi Dongre; Hsiang-Ting Hsu; Papiya Sinha; Ashley Mentlik James; Shaina S. Mann; Lisa R. Forbes; Levi B. Watkin; Jordan S. Orange

Natural killer (NK) cell‐mediated cytotoxicity is governed by the formation of a lytic immune synapse in discrete regulated steps, which give rise to an extensive array of cellular checkpoints in accessing NK cell‐mediated cytolytic defense. Appropriate progression through these cell biological steps is critical for the directed secretion of specialized secretory lysosomes and subsequent target cell death. Here we highlight recent discoveries in the formation of the NK cell cytolytic synapse as well as the molecular steps and cell biological checkpoints required for this essential host defense process.


Journal of Immunology | 2010

CD8 T Cell Cross-Reactivity Networks Mediate Heterologous Immunity in Human EBV and Murine Vaccinia Virus Infections

Markus Cornberg; Shalyn Catherine Clute; Levi B. Watkin; Frances M. Saccoccio; Sung-Kwon Kim; Yuri N. Naumov; Michael A. Brehm; Nuray Aslan; Raymond M. Welsh; Liisa K. Selin

In this study, we demonstrate complex networks of CD8 T cell cross-reactivities between influenza A virus and EBV in humans and between lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus and vaccinia virus in mice. We also show directly that cross-reactive T cells mediate protective heterologous immunity in mice. Subsets of T cell populations reactive with one epitope cross-reacted with either of several other epitopes encoded by the same or the heterologous virus. Human T cells specific to EBV-encoded BMLF1280–288 could be cross-reactive with two influenza A virus or two other EBV epitopes. Mouse T cells specific to the vaccinia virus-encoded a11r198–205 could be cross-reactive with three different lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus, one Pichinde virus, or one other vaccinia virus epitope. Patterns of cross-reactivity differed among individuals, reflecting the private specificities of the host’s immune repertoire and divergence in the abilities of T cell populations to mediate protective immunity. Defining such cross-reactive networks between commonly encountered human pathogens may facilitate the design of vaccines.


Nature Genetics | 2015

COPA mutations impair ER-Golgi transport and cause hereditary autoimmune-mediated lung disease and arthritis

Levi B. Watkin; Birthe Jessen; Wojciech Wiszniewski; Timothy J. Vece; Max Jan; Youbao Sha; Maike Thamsen; Regie Lyn P. Santos-Cortez; Kwanghyuk Lee; Tomasz Gambin; Lisa R. Forbes; Christopher S. Law; Asbjørg Stray-Pedersen; Mickie H. Cheng; Emily M. Mace; Mark S. Anderson; Dongfang Liu; Ling Fung Tang; Sarah K. Nicholas; Karen Nahmod; George Makedonas; Debra L. Canter; Pui-Yan Kwok; John Hicks; Kirk D. Jones; Samantha Penney; Shalini N. Jhangiani; Michael D. Rosenblum; Sharon D. Dell; Michael Waterfield

Unbiased genetic studies have uncovered surprising molecular mechanisms in human cellular immunity and autoimmunity. We performed whole-exome sequencing and targeted sequencing in five families with an apparent mendelian syndrome of autoimmunity characterized by high-titer autoantibodies, inflammatory arthritis and interstitial lung disease. We identified four unique deleterious variants in the COPA gene (encoding coatomer subunit α) affecting the same functional domain. Hypothesizing that mutant COPA leads to defective intracellular transport via coat protein complex I (COPI), we show that COPA variants impair binding to proteins targeted for retrograde Golgi-to-ER transport. Additionally, expression of mutant COPA results in ER stress and the upregulation of cytokines priming for a T helper type 17 (TH17) response. Patient-derived CD4+ T cells also demonstrate significant skewing toward a TH17 phenotype that is implicated in autoimmunity. Our findings uncover an unexpected molecular link between a vesicular transport protein and a syndrome of autoimmunity manifested by lung and joint disease.


Journal of Immunology | 2007

Analysis of the Role of Bleomycin Hydrolase in Antigen Presentation and the Generation of CD8 T Cell Responses

Charles Fenton Towne; Ian A. York; Levi B. Watkin; John S. Lazo; Kenneth L. Rock

Long oligopeptides (>10 residues) are generated during the catabolism of cellular proteins in the cytosol. To be presented to T cells, such peptides must be trimmed by aminopeptidases to the proper size (typically 8–10 residues) to stably bind to MHC class I molecules. Aminopeptidases also destroy epitopes by trimming them to even shorter lengths. Bleomycin hydrolase (BH) is a cytosolic aminopeptidase that has been suggested to play a key role in generating MHC class I-presented peptides. We show that BH-deficient cells from mice are unimpaired in their ability to present epitopes from N-extended precursors or whole Ags and express normal levels of MHC class I molecules. Similarly, BH-deficient mice develop normal CD8+ T cell responses to eight epitopes from three different viruses in vivo. Therefore, BH by itself is not essential for the generation or destruction of MHC class I peptides. In contrast, when BH−/− mice are crossed to mice lacking another cytosolic aminopeptidase, leucine aminopeptidase, the resulting BH−/−leucine aminopeptidase−/− progeny show a selective increase in CD8+ T cell responses to the gp276 epitope from lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus, whereas the ability to present and respond to several other epitopes is unchanged. Therefore, BH does influence presentation of some Ags, although its role is largely redundant with other aminopeptidases.


Journal of Immunology | 2010

Broad Cross-Reactive TCR Repertoires Recognizing Dissimilar Epstein-Barr and Influenza A Virus Epitopes

Shalyn Catherine Clute; Yuri N. Naumov; Levi B. Watkin; Nuray Aslan; John L. Sullivan; David A. Thorley-Lawson; Katherine Luzuriaga; Raymond M. Welsh; Roberto Puzone; Franco Celada; Liisa K. Selin

Memory T cells cross-reactive with epitopes encoded by related or even unrelated viruses may alter the immune response and pathogenesis of infection by a process known as heterologous immunity. Because a challenge virus epitope may react with only a subset of the T cell repertoire in a cross-reactive epitope-specific memory pool, the vigorous cross-reactive response may be narrowly focused, or oligoclonal. We show in this article, by examining human T cell cross-reactivity between the HLA-A2–restricted influenza A virus-encoded M158–66 epitope (GILGFVFTL) and the dissimilar Epstein-Barr virus-encoded BMLF1280–288 epitope (GLCTLVAML), that, under some conditions, heterologous immunity can lead to a significant broadening, rather than a narrowing, of the TCR repertoire. We suggest that dissimilar cross-reactive epitopes might generate a broad, rather than a narrow, T cell repertoire if there is a lack of dominant high-affinity clones; this hypothesis is supported by computer simulation.


Journal of Immunology | 2006

Complex T Cell Memory Repertoires Participate in Recall Responses at Extremes of Antigenic Load

Yuri N. Naumov; Elena N. Naumova; Shalyn Catherine Clute; Levi B. Watkin; Kalyani Kota; Jeffrey P. Gorski; Liisa K. Selin

The CD8 T cell memory response to the HLA-A2-restricted influenza epitope M158–66 can be an instructive model of immune memory to a nonevolving epitope of a frequently encountered pathogen that undergoes clearance. This memory repertoire can be complex, composed of a large number of clonotypes represented at low copy numbers, while maintaining a focus on the use of VB17 T cell receptors with identified Ag recognition motifs. Such a repertoire structure might provide a panoply of clonotypes whose differential avidity for the epitope would allow responses under varying antigenic loads. This possibility was tested experimentally by characterizing the responding repertoire in vitro while varying influenza Ag concentration over five orders of magnitude. At higher and lower Ag concentrations there was increased cell death, yet a focused but diverse response could still be observed. Thus, one of the characteristics of complex memory repertoires is to provide effector function at extremes of Ag load, a characteristic that is not generally considered in vaccination development but may be important in measuring its efficacy.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2016

Recurrent Muscle Weakness with Rhabdomyolysis, Metabolic Crises, and Cardiac Arrhythmia Due to Bi-allelic TANGO2 Mutations

Seema R. Lalani; Pengfei Liu; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Levi B. Watkin; Theodore Chiang; Magalie S. Leduc; Wenmiao Zhu; Yan Ding; Shujuan Pan; Francesco Vetrini; Christina Y. Miyake; Marwan Shinawi; Tomasz Gambin; Mohammad K. Eldomery; Zeynep Coban Akdemir; Lisa T. Emrick; Yael Wilnai; Susan Schelley; Mary Kay Koenig; Nada B. Memon; Laura S. Farach; Bradley P. Coe; Mahshid S. Azamian; Patricia Hernandez; Gladys Zapata; Shalini N. Jhangiani; Donna M. Muzny; Timothy Lotze; Gary D. Clark; Angus A. Wilfong

The underlying genetic etiology of rhabdomyolysis remains elusive in a significant fraction of individuals presenting with recurrent metabolic crises and muscle weakness. Using exome sequencing, we identified bi-allelic mutations in TANGO2 encoding transport and Golgi organization 2 homolog (Drosophila) in 12 subjects with episodic rhabdomyolysis, hypoglycemia, hyperammonemia, and susceptibility to life-threatening cardiac tachyarrhythmias. A recurrent homozygous c.460G>A (p.Gly154Arg) mutation was found in four unrelated individuals of Hispanic/Latino origin, and a homozygous ∼34 kb deletion affecting exons 3-9 was observed in two families of European ancestry. One individual of mixed Hispanic/European descent was found to be compound heterozygous for c.460G>A (p.Gly154Arg) and the deletion of exons 3-9. Additionally, a homozygous exons 4-6 deletion was identified in a consanguineous Middle Eastern Arab family. No homozygotes have been reported for these changes in control databases. Fibroblasts derived from a subject with the recurrent c.460G>A (p.Gly154Arg) mutation showed evidence of increased endoplasmic reticulum stress and a reduction in Golgi volume density in comparison to control. Our results show that the c.460G>A (p.Gly154Arg) mutation and the exons 3-9 heterozygous deletion in TANGO2 are recurrent pathogenic alleles present in the Latino/Hispanic and European populations, respectively, causing considerable morbidity in the homozygotes in these populations.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2015

Vaccination and heterologous immunity: educating the immune system

Anna Gil; Laurie L. Kenney; Rabinarayan Mishra; Levi B. Watkin; Nuray Aslan; Liisa K. Selin

This review discusses three inter-related topics: (1) the immaturity of the neonatal and infant immune response; (2) heterologous immunity, where prior infection history with unrelated pathogens alters disease outcome resulting in either enhanced protective immunity or increased immunopathology to new infections, and (3) epidemiological human vaccine studies that demonstrate vaccines can have beneficial or detrimental effects on subsequent unrelated infections. The results from the epidemiological and heterologous immunity studies suggest that the immune system has tremendous plasticity and that each new infection or vaccine that an individual is exposed to during a lifetime will potentially alter the dynamics of their immune system. It also suggests that each new infection or vaccine that an infant receives is not only perturbing the immune system but is educating the immune system and laying down the foundation for all subsequent responses. This leads to the question, is there an optimum way to educate the immune system? Should this be taken into consideration in our vaccination protocols?


Journal of Clinical Immunology | 2016

Copa Syndrome: a Novel Autosomal Dominant Immune Dysregulatory Disease

Timothy J. Vece; Levi B. Watkin; Sarah K. Nicholas; Debra Canter; Michael C. Braun; Robert Paul Guillerman; Karen W. Eldin; Grant Bertolet; Scott D. McKinley; Marietta M. de Guzman; Lisa R. Forbes; Ivan K. Chinn; Jordan S. Orange

Inherently defective immunity typically results in either ineffective host defense, immune regulation, or both. As a category of primary immunodeficiency diseases, those that impair immune regulation can lead to autoimmunity and/or autoinflammation. In this review we focus on one of the most recently discovered primary immunodeficiencies that leads to immune dysregulation: “Copa syndrome”. Copa syndrome is named for the gene mutated in the disease, which encodes the alpha subunit of the coatomer complex-I that, in aggregate, is devoted to transiting molecular cargo from the Golgi complex to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Copa syndrome is autosomal dominant with variable expressivity and results from mutations affecting a narrow amino acid stretch in the COPA gene-encoding COPα protein. Patients with these mutations typically develop arthritis and interstitial lung disease with pulmonary hemorrhage representing a striking feature. Immunologically Copa syndrome is associated with autoantibody development, increased Th17 cells and pro-inflammatory cytokine expression including IL-1β and IL-6. Insights have also been gained into the underlying mechanism of Copa syndrome, which include excessive ER stress owing to the impaired return of proteins from the Golgi, and presumably resulting aberrant cellular autophagy. As such it represents a novel cellular disorder of intracellular trafficking associated with a specific clinical presentation and phenotype.

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Liisa K. Selin

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Nuray Aslan

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Katherine Luzuriaga

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Anna Gil

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Jordan S. Orange

Baylor College of Medicine

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Rabinarayan Mishra

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Shalyn Catherine Clute

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Emily M. Mace

Baylor College of Medicine

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Raymond M. Welsh

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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