Lorraine Walls
University of California, San Diego
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Featured researches published by Lorraine Walls.
Genes and Immunity | 2008
M del Pilar Jiménez-A; Suganya Viriyakosol; Lorraine Walls; Sandip K. Datta; Theo N. Kirkland; S E M Heinsbroek; Gordon D. Brown; Joshua Fierer
Coccidioides posadasii spherules stimulate macrophages to make cytokines via TLR-2 and Dectin-1. We used formalin-killed spherules and 1,3-β-glucan purified from spherules to stimulate elicited peritoneal macrophages and myeloid dendritic cells (mDCs) from susceptible (C57BL/6) and resistant (DBA/2) mouse strains. DBA/2 macrophages produced more TNF-α and IL-6 than macrophages from C57BL/6 mice, and the amount of TNF-α made was dependent on both TLR2 and Dectin-1. DCs from C57BL/6 mice made more IL-10 and less IL-23p19 and IL-12p70 than did DBA/2 DC. These responses were inhibited by a monoclonal antibody to Dectin-1. DBA/2 mice expressed full-length Dectin-1, whereas C57BL/6 mice spliced out exon 3, which encodes most of the stalk. RAW cells transduced to express the full-length Dectin-1 responded better to FKS than cells expressing truncated Dectin-1. We compared the isoform of Dectin-1 expressed by 34 C57BL/6 X DBA/2 recombinant inbred (BXD RI) lines with their susceptibility to Coccidioides immitis. In 25 of 34 RI lines susceptibility or resistance corresponded to short or full-length isoforms, respectively. These results suggest that alternative splicing of the Dectin-1 gene contributes to susceptibility of C57BL/6 mice to coccidioidomycosis, and affects the cytokine responses of macrophages and mDCs to spherules.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2006
Joshua Fierer; Crystal Waters; Lorraine Walls
To determine which lymphocytes are required for vaccine-induced immunity to coccidioidomycosis, we used a temperature-sensitive mutant of Coccidioides immitis to immunize mice lacking subsets of lymphocytes or specific cytokines and infected the mice 4 weeks later with virulent C. immitis. After 2 weeks, we determined the number of fungi in their lungs and spleens. Vaccine-induced immunity required alpha beta T lymphocytes. beta -2 microglobulin knockout (KO) mice were protected by immunization, and we transferred protection using CD4+ T cells from immunized mice. However, vaccination also protected CD4+ KO mice, which suggests that CD8+ T cells played a role in vaccine-induced immunity, even though they were not required. We adaptively transferred protection using spleen cells from immunized CD4+ KO mice to nonimmune B6 mice, but CD8+ -depleted spleen cells did not protect against infection. Recipients of spleen cells from immunized CD4+ KO mice had 6 times more tumor necrosis factor (TNF)- alpha mRNA in their lungs than did mice that received nonimmune spleen cells, and TNF receptor-1 KO mice were not fully protected by immunization. These results show that both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells can protect against coccidioidomycosis and that TNF- alpha is a necessary component of the acquired immune response.
Infection and Immunity | 2006
Maria del Pilar Jimenez; Lorraine Walls; Joshua Fierer
ABSTRACT We have shown previously that there is a direct correlation between IL-10 levels and susceptibility to Coccidioides immitis peritonitis in C57BL/6 (B6), DBA/2, and BXD recombinant inbred mice. We now show that B6 mice are also more susceptible to C. immitis pneumonia and that interleukin-10 (IL-10)-deficient (IL-10−/−) B6 mice are more resistant to C. immitis pneumonia. In addition, we established that high levels of IL-10 are sufficient to make genetically resistant mice susceptible to both C. immitis peritonitis and pneumonia by infecting h.IL-10 transgenic mice. Infected h.IL-10 transgenic mice express lower levels of gamma interferon, IL-12 p40, and inducible nitric oxide synthetase 2 (NOS2) mRNA in their lungs, implicating inducible NOS as a defense mechanism in this disease. We treated DBA/2 mice with aminoguanidine, and they became more susceptible to C. immitis peritonitis and pneumonia. We conclude that high levels of IL-10 are both necessary and sufficient to make mice susceptible to C. immitis, regardless of the genetic background of the mice, and that IL-10 impairs resistance to C. immitis in part by suppressing NO synthesis.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2011
Joshua Fierer; Lorraine Walls; Pauline Chu
ABSTRACT We report a diabetic patient who had three episodes of cryptogenic liver abscess due to Klebsiella pneumoniae. He was a Caucasian who lived in California and had no epidemiological connection to East Asia. The isolate from his third episode was a hyperviscous K1 strain that carried the Klebsiella virulence plasmid.
BMC Microbiology | 2012
Christopher H. Woelk; Jin X. Zhang; Lorraine Walls; Suganya Viriyakosol; Akul Singhania; Theodor N Kirkland; Joshua Fierer
BackgroundCoccidioidomycosis results from airborne infections caused by either Coccidioides immitis or C. posadasii. Both are pathogenic fungi that live in desert soil in the New World and can infect normal hosts, but most infections are self-limited. Disseminated infections occur in approximately 5% of cases and may prove fatal. Mouse models of the disease have identified strains that are resistant (e.g. DBA/2) or susceptible (e.g. C57BL/6) to these pathogens. However, the genetic and immunological basis for this difference has not been fully characterized.ResultsMicroarray technology was used to identify genes that were differentially expressed in lung tissue between resistant DBA/2 and sensitive C57BL/6 mice after infection with C. immitis. Differentially expressed genes were mapped onto biological pathways, gene ontologies, and protein interaction networks, which revealed that innate immune responses mediated by Type II interferon (i.e., IFNG) and the signal transducer and activator of transcription 1 (STAT1) contribute to the resistant phenotype. In addition, upregulation of hypoxia inducible factor 1A (HIF1A), possibly as part of a larger inflammatory response mediated by tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFA), may also contribute to resistance. Microarray gene expression was confirmed by real-time quantitative PCR for a subset of 12 genes, which revealed that IFNG HIF1A and TNFA, among others, were significantly differentially expressed between the two strains at day 14 post-infection.ConclusionThese results confirm the finding that DBA/2 mice express more Type II interferon and interferon stimulated genes than genetically susceptible strains and suggest that differential expression of HIF1A may also play a role in protection.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2000
Joshua Fierer; Lorraine Walls; Theo N. Kirkland
Loci on chromosome 4 near Lv and on chromosome 6 near Tnfr1 are associated with resistance to coccidioidomycosis in mice. To assess the importance of the Lv locus, we compared C57BL/6 (B6) with C57BL/10 (B10), strains that are nearly congenic for the Lv locus. Fourteen days after intraperitoneal infection, B6 mice had nearly 100-fold more Coccidioides immitis in their lungs than did B10 mice (log 6.2 vs. log 4.8). Furthermore, the time to 50% deaths was 15 days for B6 and 22 days for B10. Nevertheless, 90% of B10 mice had died by day 28. In other mouse strains, we found a direct correlation between lung colony-forming units and levels of interleukin (IL)-10 and IL-4 mRNA, but B10 mice had 100-fold higher lung levels of IL-10 and 10-fold higher levels of IL-4 mRNA than did B6 mice, despite having less C. immitis. In the absence of IL-10, B10 mice are resistant to lethal infection. These results suggest that a locus near Lv is responsible for early resistance to coccidioidomycosis but not for modulating the IL-10 and IL-4 responses. This locus is not sufficient to make C57BL mice resistant to coccidioidomycosis.
Infection and Immunity | 2018
Suganya Viriyakosol; Lorraine Walls; Sharon Okamoto; Eyal Raz; David L. Williams; Joshua Fierer
ABSTRACT Rodents are a natural host for the dimorphic pathogenic fungi Coccidioides immitis and Coccidioides posadasii, and mice are a good model for human infection. Humans and rodents both express Dectin-1 and Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2) on myeloid cells, and those receptors collaborate to maximize the cytokine/chemokine responses to spherules (the tissue form of the fungi) and to formalin-killed spherules (FKS). We showed that Dectin-1 is necessary for resistance to pulmonary coccidioidomycosis, but the importance of TLR2 in vivo is uncertain. Myeloid differentiation factor 88 (MyD88) is the adapter protein for TLR2 and -4, interleukin-1R1 (IL-1R1), and IL-18R1. MyD88/TRIF−/− and MyD88−/− mice were equally susceptible to C. immitis infection, in contrast to C57BL/6 (B6) controls. Of the four surface receptors, only IL-1R1 was required for resistance to C. immitis, partially explaining the susceptibility of MyD88−/− mice. We also found that FKS stimulated production of IL-1Ra by bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (BMDCs), independent of MyD88 and Dectin-1. There also was a very high concentration of IL-1Ra in the lungs of infected B6 mice, supporting the potential importance of this regulatory IL-1 family protein in the largely ineffective response of B6 mice to coccidioidomycosis. These results suggest that IL-1R1 signaling is important for defense against C. immitis infection.
Infection and Immunity | 1998
Joshua Fierer; Lorraine Walls; Lars Eckmann; Tomoko Yamamoto; Theo N. Kirkland
Infection and Immunity | 1999
Joshua Fierer; Lorraine Walls; Fred Wright; Theo N. Kirkland
Archive | 2013
Joshua Fierer; Lorraine Walls; Fred Wright; N Theo