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Dive into the research topics where Luke Barron is active.

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Featured researches published by Luke Barron.


Immunity | 2014

The Transcription Factor GATA3 Is Critical for the Development of All IL-7Rα-Expressing Innate Lymphoid Cells

Ryoji Yagi; Chao Zhong; Daniel Northrup; Fang Yu; Nicolas Bouladoux; Sean P. Spencer; Gangqing Hu; Luke Barron; Suveena Sharma; Toshinori Nakayama; Yasmine Belkaid; Keji Zhao

Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) are critical in innate immune responses to pathogens and lymphoid organ development. Similar to CD4(+) T helper (Th) cell subsets, ILC subsets positive for interleukin-7 receptor α (IL-7Rα) produce distinct sets of effector cytokines. However, the molecular control of IL-7Rα(+) ILC development and maintenance is unclear. Here, we report that GATA3 was indispensable for the development of all IL-7Rα(+) ILC subsets and T cells but was not required for the development of classical natural killer cells. Conditionally Gata3-deficient mice had no lymph nodes and were susceptible to Citrobactor rodentium infection. After the ILCs had fully developed, GATA3 remained important for the maintenance and functions of ILC2s. Genome-wide gene expression analyses indicated that GATA3 regulated a similar set of cytokines and receptors in Th2 cells and ILC2s, but not in ILC3s. Thus, GATA3 plays parallel roles in regulating the development and functions of CD4(+) T cells and IL-7Rα(+) ILCs.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2011

Muc5ac: a critical component mediating the rejection of enteric nematodes.

Sumaira Z. Hasnain; Christopher M. Evans; Michelle G. Roy; Amanda L. Gallagher; Kristen N. Kindrachuk; Luke Barron; Burton F. Dickey; Mark S. Wilson; Thomas A. Wynn; Richard K. Grencis; David J. Thornton

The mucin Muc5ac is essential for the expulsion of Trichuris muris and other gut-dwelling nematodes.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2011

Fibrosis is regulated by Th2 and Th17 responses and by dynamic interactions between fibroblasts and macrophages

Luke Barron; Thomas A. Wynn

Dysregulated wound healing leads to fibrosis, whereby fibroblasts synthesize excess extracellular matrix and scarring impairs proper organ function. Although fibrotic diseases arise from diverse causes and display heterogeneous features, fibrosis commonly associates with chronic inflammation. Recent discoveries reinforce the idea that communication between fibroblasts, macrophages, and CD4 T cells integrates the processes of wound healing and host defense. Signals between macrophages and fibroblasts can exacerbate, suppress, or reverse fibrosis. Fibroblasts and macrophages are activated by T cells, but their activation also engages negative feedback loops that reduce fibrosis by restraining the immune response, particularly when the Th2 cytokine IL-13 contributes to pathology. Thus the interactions among fibroblasts, macrophages, and CD4 T cells likely play general and critical roles in initiating, perpetuating, and resolving fibrosis in both experimental and clinical conditions.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2004

Cooperative Roles of CTLA-4 and Regulatory T Cells in Tolerance to an Islet Cell Antigen

Mark P. Eggena; Lucy S. K. Walker; Vijaya Nagabhushanam; Luke Barron; Anna Chodos; Abul K. Abbas

Adoptive transfer of ovalbumin (OVA)-specific T cells from the DO.11 TCR transgenic mouse on a Rag−/− background into mice expressing OVA in pancreatic islet cells induces acute insulitis and diabetes only if endogenous lymphocytes, including regulatory T cells, are removed. When wild-type OVA-specific/Rag−/− T cells, which are all CD25−, are transferred into islet antigen–expressing mice, peripheral immunization with OVA in adjuvant is needed to induce diabetes. In contrast, naive CTLA-4−/−/Rag−/− OVA-specific T cells (also CD25−) develop into Th1 effectors and induce disease upon recognition of the self-antigen alone. These results suggest that CTLA-4 functions to increase the activation threshold of autoreactive T cells, because in its absence self-antigen is sufficient to trigger autoimmunity without peripheral immunization. Further, CTLA-4 and regulatory T cells act cooperatively to maintain tolerance, indicating that the function of CTLA-4 is independent of regulatory cells, and deficiency of both is required to induce pathologic immune responses against the islet self-antigen.


European Journal of Immunology | 2011

Macrophage activation governs schistosomiasis-induced inflammation and fibrosis

Luke Barron; Thomas A. Wynn

Macrophages regulate the initiation, maintenance, and resolution of chronic inflammatory responses and their function depends on their activation status. Studies in mice infected with the helminth parasite Schistosoma mansoni have been particularly helpful in defining the in vivo function of classically and alternatively activated macrophages (AAMϕs). These studies have shown that AAMϕs protect mice from acute and chronic S. mansoni infection through distinct mechanisms, which are discussed in this Viewpoint.


Mucosal Immunology | 2014

The TNF-family cytokine TL1A promotes allergic immunopathology through group 2 innate lymphoid cells

Françoise Meylan; Eric T. Hawley; Luke Barron; Jillian L. Barlow; Pallavi Penumetcha; Martin Pelletier; Giuseppe Sciumè; Arianne C. Richard; Erika T. Hayes; Julio Gomez-Rodriguez; Xi Chen; William E. Paul; Thomas A. Wynn; Andrew N. J. McKenzie; Richard M. Siegel

The tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-family cytokine TL1A (TNFSF15) costimulates T cells and promotes diverse T cell-dependent models of autoimmune disease through its receptor DR3. TL1A polymorphisms also confer susceptibility to inflammatory bowel disease. Here, we find that allergic pathology driven by constitutive TL1A expression depends on interleukin-13 (IL-13), but not on T, NKT, mast cells, or commensal intestinal flora. Group 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2) express surface DR3 and produce IL-13 and other type 2 cytokines in response to TL1A. DR3 is required for ILC2 expansion and function in the setting of T cell-dependent and -independent models of allergic disease. By contrast, DR3-deficient ILC2 can still differentiate, expand, and produce IL-13 when stimulated by IL-25 or IL-33, and mediate expulsion of intestinal helminths. These data identify costimulation of ILC2 as a novel function of TL1A important for allergic lung disease, and suggest that TL1A may be a therapeutic target in these settings.


Mucosal Immunology | 2014

IL-1α released from damaged epithelial cells is sufficient and essential to trigger inflammatory responses in human lung fibroblasts

Monika Suwara; Nicola J. Green; Lee A. Borthwick; Jelena Mann; K D Mayer-Barber; Luke Barron; Pa Corris; Sn Farrow; Thomas A. Wynn; Andrew J. Fisher; Derek A. Mann

Activation of the innate immune system plays a key role in exacerbations of chronic lung disease, yet the potential role of lung fibroblasts in innate immunity and the identity of epithelial danger signals (alarmins) that may contribute to this process are unclear. The objective of the study was to identify lung epithelial-derived alarmins released during endoplasmic reticulum stress (ER stress) and oxidative stress and evaluate their potential to induce innate immune responses in lung fibroblasts. We found that treatment of primary human lung fibroblasts (PHLFs) with conditioned media from damaged lung epithelial cells significantly upregulated interleukin IL-6, IL-8, monocyte chemotactic protein-1, and granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor expression (P<0.05). This effect was reduced with anti-IL-1α or IL-1Ra but not anti-IL-1β antibody. Costimulation with a Toll-like receptor 3 ligand, polyinosinic–polycytidylic acid (poly I:C), significantly accentuated the IL-1α-induced inflammatory phenotype in PHLFs, and this effect was blocked with inhibitor of nuclear factor kappa-B kinase subunit beta and TGFβ-activated kinase-1 inhibitors. Finally, Il1r1−/− and Il1a−/− mice exhibit reduced bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) neutrophilia and collagen deposition in response to bleomycin treatment. We conclude that IL-1α plays a pivotal role in triggering proinflammatory responses in fibroblasts and this process is accentuated in the presence of double-stranded RNA. This mechanism may be important in the repeated cycles of injury and exacerbation in chronic lung disease.


Nature Immunology | 2004

Distinct regions in the CD28 cytoplasmic domain are required for T helper type 2 differentiation.

Pietro G. Andres; Kimberly C. Howland; Ajay Nirula; Lawrence P. Kane; Luke Barron; Douglas Dresnek; Ali Sadra; John B. Imboden; Arthur Weiss; Abul K. Abbas

CD28 costimulation is essential for CD4+ T cell proliferation, survival, interleukin 2 (IL-2) production and T helper type 2 development. To define the nature of the signals that may drive different T cell responses, we have done a structure-function analysis of the CD28 cytoplasmic tail in primary T cells. CD28-mediated T cell proliferation and IL-2 production did not require a particular cytoplasmic domain. In contrast, IL-4 production was driven by the cooperative activity of specific motifs within the CD28 cytoplasmic tail. Using a gene-complementation approach, we provide evidence that one component of this T helper type 2 differentiation signal was mediated by 3-phosphoinositide-dependent protein kinase 1. Thus, different mechanisms underlie the induction of distinct T cell functional responses by CD28.


PLOS Pathogens | 2014

Incomplete Deletion of IL-4Rα by LysMCre Reveals Distinct Subsets of M2 Macrophages Controlling Inflammation and Fibrosis in Chronic Schistosomiasis

Kevin M. Vannella; Luke Barron; Lee A. Borthwick; Kristen N. Kindrachuk; Prakash Babu Narasimhan; Kevin M. Hart; Robert W. Thompson; Sandra White; Allen W. Cheever; Thirumalai R. Ramalingam; Thomas A. Wynn

Mice expressing a Cre recombinase from the lysozyme M-encoding locus (Lyz2) have been widely used to dissect gene function in macrophages and neutrophils. Here, we show that while naïve resident tissue macrophages from IL-4Rαflox/deltaLysMCre mice almost completely lose IL-4Rα function, a large fraction of macrophages elicited by sterile inflammatory stimuli, Schistosoma mansoni eggs, or S. mansoni infection, fail to excise Il4rα. These F4/80hiCD11bhi macrophages, in contrast to resident tissue macrophages, express lower levels of Lyz2 explaining why this population resists LysMCre-mediated deletion. We show that in response to IL-4 and IL-13, Lyz2loIL-4Rα+ macrophages differentiate into an arginase 1-expressing alternatively-activated macrophage (AAM) population, which slows the development of lethal fibrosis in schistosomiasis. In contrast, we identified Lyz2hiIL-4Rα+ macrophages as the key subset of AAMs mediating the downmodulation of granulomatous inflammation in chronic schistosomiasis. Our observations reveal a limitation on using a LysMCre mouse model to study gene function in inflammatory settings, but we utilize this limitation as a means to demonstrate that distinct populations of alternatively activated macrophages control inflammation and fibrosis in chronic schistosomiasis.


Mucosal Immunology | 2016

Macrophages are critical to the maintenance of IL-13-dependent lung inflammation and fibrosis.

Lee A. Borthwick; Luke Barron; Kevin M. Hart; Kevin M. Vannella; Robert W. Thompson; Sandra Oland; Allen W. Cheever; Joshua Sciurba; Thirumalai R. Ramalingam; Andrew J. Fisher; Thomas A. Wynn

The roles of macrophages in type 2-driven inflammation and fibrosis remain unclear. Here, using CD11b-Diphtheria Toxin Receptor (DTR) transgenic mice and three models of IL-13-dependent inflammation, fibrosis, and immunity, we show that CD11b+ F4/80+ Ly6C+ macrophages are required for the maintenance of type-2 immunity within affected tissues but not secondary lymphoid organs. Direct depletion of macrophages during the maintenance or resolution phases of secondary S. mansoni egg-induced granuloma formation caused a profound decrease in inflammation, fibrosis, and type-2 gene expression. Additional studies with CD11c-DTR and CD11b/CD11c-DTR double transgenic mice suggested that macrophages but not dendritic cells were critical. Mechanistically, macrophage depletion impaired effector CD4+ Th2 cell homing and activation within the inflamed lung. Depletion of CD11b+ F4/80+ Ly6C+ macrophages similarly reduced house dust mite-induced allergic lung inflammation and suppressed IL-13-dependent immunity to the nematode parasite Nippostrongylus brasiliensis. Consequently, therapeutic strategies targeting macrophages offer a novel approach to ameliorate established type-2 inflammatory diseases.

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Thomas A. Wynn

National Institutes of Health

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Robert W. Thompson

National Institutes of Health

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Kevin M. Hart

National Institutes of Health

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Kevin M. Vannella

National Institutes of Health

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Amber M. Smith

Washington University in St. Louis

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Joseph E. Qualls

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Kristen N. Kindrachuk

National Institutes of Health

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Peter J. Murray

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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