Marina Vaysburd
Laboratory of Molecular Biology
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Marina Vaysburd.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Marina Vaysburd; Ruth E. Watkinson; Cooper H; Reed M; O'Connell K; Smith J; Cruickshanks J; Leo C. James
Host species have evolved mechanisms that can inhibit pathogen replication even after a cell has been successfully invaded. Here we show that tripartite-motif protein 21 (TRIM21), a ubiquitously expressed E3 ubiquitin ligase that targets viruses inside the cytosol, protects mice against fatal viral infection. Upon infection with mouse adenovirus-1, naive mice lacking TRIM21 succumb to encephalomyelitis within 7 d. In contrast, wild-type mice rapidly up-regulate TRIM21 and control viremia. Trim21 heterozygous mice have a haploinsufficiency phenotype in which reduced TRIM21 expression leads to a viral load that is higher than wild types but lower than knockouts. TRIM21 is a high-affinity antibody receptor that allows antibodies to operate inside an infected cell. In passive transfer experiments at high viral dose, antisera that fully protects wild-type mice fails to protect most Trim21 knockout animals. These results demonstrate that TRIM21 provides potent antiviral protection and forms an important part of the humoral immune response.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017
William A. McEwan; Benjamin Falcon; Marina Vaysburd; Dean Clift; Adrian L. Oblak; Bernardino Ghetti; Michel Goedert; Leo C. James
Significance The mammalian cell cytoplasm contains numerous proteins with direct antimicrobial activity. Although these have been extensively studied in the context of viral and bacterial infection, it is unknown whether pathogenic self-propagating proteins, proposed to underlie common neurodegenerative diseases, can be targeted in a similar manner. We studied the ability of tripartite motif protein 21 (TRIM21), a newly identified intracellular antibody receptor, to intercept assemblies of misfolded tau, a cytoplasmic protein that aggregates in patients with Alzheimer’s disease. We developed tau “seeding” assays in human cells and found that TRIM21 could intercept and potently neutralize antibody-labeled tau assemblies. These findings demonstrate that the intracellular immune system can act against self-propagating misfolded proteins, with implications for ongoing attempts to develop antibody-based therapies for neurodegenerative disorders. Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and other neurodegenerative disorders are associated with the cytoplasmic aggregation of microtubule-associated protein tau. Recent evidence supports transcellular transfer of tau misfolding (seeding) as the mechanism of spread within an affected brain, a process reminiscent of viral infection. However, whereas microbial pathogens can be recognized as nonself by immune receptors, misfolded protein assemblies evade detection, as they are host-derived. Here, we show that when misfolded tau assemblies enter the cell, they can be detected and neutralized via a danger response mediated by tau-associated antibodies and the cytosolic Fc receptor tripartite motif protein 21 (TRIM21). We developed fluorescent, morphology-based seeding assays that allow the formation of pathological tau aggregates to be measured in situ within 24 h in the presence of picomolar concentrations of tau seeds. We found that anti-tau antibodies accompany tau seeds into the cell, where they recruit TRIM21 shortly after entry. After binding, TRIM21 neutralizes tau seeds through the activity of the proteasome and the AAA ATPase p97/VCP in a similar manner to infectious viruses. These results establish that intracellular antiviral immunity can be redirected against host-origin endopathogens involved in neurodegeneration.
PLOS Pathogens | 2015
Ruth E. Watkinson; William A. McEwan; Jerry C. H. Tam; Marina Vaysburd; Leo C. James
Encapsidation is a strategy almost universally employed by viruses to protect their genomes from degradation and from innate immune sensors. We show that TRIM21, which targets antibody-opsonized virions for proteasomal destruction, circumvents this protection, enabling the rapid detection and degradation of viral genomes before their replication. TRIM21 triggers an initial wave of cytokine transcription that is antibody, rather than pathogen, driven. This early response is augmented by a second transcriptional program, determined by the nature of the infecting virus. In this second response, TRIM21-induced exposure of the viral genome promotes sensing of DNA and RNA viruses by cGAS and RIG-I. This mechanism allows early detection of an infection event and drives an inflammatory response in mice within hours of viral challenge.
Journal of Virology | 2013
Ruth E. Watkinson; Jerry C. H. Tam; Marina Vaysburd; Leo C. James
ABSTRACT Tripartite motif-containing 21 (TRIM21) is a cytosolic immunoglobulin receptor that mediates antibody-dependent intracellular neutralization (ADIN). Here we show that TRIM21 potently inhibits the spreading infection of a replicating cytopathic virus and activates innate immunity. We used a quantitative PCR (qPCR)-based assay to measure in vitro replication of mouse adenovirus type 1 (MAV-1), a virus that causes dose-dependent hemorrhagic encephalitis in mice. Using this assay, we show that genetic ablation of TRIM21 or chemical inhibition of either the AAA ATPase p97/valosin-containing protein (VCP) or the proteasome results in a >1,000-fold increase in the relative level of infection in the presence of immune serum. Moreover, the TRIM21-mediated ability of antisera to block replication was a consistent feature of the humoral immune response in immunized mice. In the presence of immune sera and upon infection, TRIM21 also activates a proinflammatory response, resulting in secretion of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) and interleukin-6 (IL-6). These results demonstrate that TRIM21 provides a potent block to spreading infection and induces an antiviral state.
Protein Engineering Design & Selection | 2015
Stefan Luzi; Yasushi Kondo; Elise Bernard; Lukas K. J. Stadler; Marina Vaysburd; Greg Winter; Philipp Holliger
Macrocyclic peptides are potentially a source of powerful drugs, but their de novo discovery remains challenging. Here we describe the discovery of a high-affinity (Kd = 10 nM) peptide macrocycle (M21) against human tumor necrosis factor-alpha (hTNFα), a key drug target in the treatment of inflammatory disorders, directly from diverse semi-synthetic phage peptide repertoires. The bicyclic peptide M21 (ACPPCLWQVLC) comprises two loops covalently anchored to a 2,4,6-trimethyl-mesitylene core and upon binding induces disassembly of the trimeric TNFα cytokine into dimers and monomers. A 2.9 Å crystal structure of the M21/hTNFα complex reveals the peptide bound to a hTNFα dimer at a normally buried epitope in the trimer interface overlapping the binding site of a previously discovered small molecule ligand (SPD304), which also induces TNF trimer dissociation and synergizes with M21 in the inhibition of TNFα cytotoxicity. The discovery of M21 underlines the potential of semi-synthetic bicyclic peptides as ligands for the discovery of cryptic epitopes, some of which are poorly accessible to antibodies.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018
Maria Bottermann; Stian Foss; Laurens M van Tienen; Marina Vaysburd; James Cruickshank; Kevin O’Connell; Jessica Clark; Keith Mayes; Katie Higginson; Jack C. Hirst; Martin B. McAdam; Greg Slodkowicz; Edward Hutchinson; Patrycja Kozik; Jan Terje Andersen; Leo C. James
Significance Viral-based delivery vectors have huge potential in the treatment of human disease. Adenoviral vectors specifically have proven highly efficacious in delivering corrected genes, as part of gene therapy, and vaccine epitopes for treating cancer and infectious disease. A principal obstacle to their widespread use is that antibodies potently neutralize them, limiting treatment to naïve patients. How antibodies block adenovirus-based transduction has long remained a mystery because, even though they prevent transgene expression, they do not prevent transgene delivery into target tissue. Here we show that the cytosolic antibody receptor TRIM21 is responsible for intercepting adenoviral gene therapy and vaccine vectors and neutralizing them. Gene KO of TRIM21 or a single-antibody mutation that prevents interaction is sufficient to restore transgene expression. Adenovirus has enormous potential as a gene-therapy vector, but preexisting immunity limits its widespread application. What is responsible for this immune block is unclear because antibodies potently inhibit transgene expression without impeding gene transfer into target cells. Here we show that antibody prevention of adenoviral gene delivery in vivo is mediated by the cytosolic antibody receptor TRIM21. Genetic KO of TRIM21 or a single-antibody point mutation is sufficient to restore transgene expression to near-naïve immune levels. TRIM21 is also responsible for blocking cytotoxic T cell induction by vaccine vectors, preventing a protective response against subsequent influenza infection and an engrafted tumor. Furthermore, adenoviral preexisting immunity can lead to an augmented immune response upon i.v. administration of the vector. Transcriptomic analysis of vector-transduced tissue reveals that TRIM21 is responsible for the specific up-regulation of hundreds of immune genes, the majority of which are components of the intrinsic or innate response. Together, these data define a major mechanism underlying the preimmune block to adenovirus gene therapy and demonstrate that TRIM21 efficiently blocks gene delivery in vivo while simultaneously inducing a rapid program of immune transcription.
eLife | 2018
Claire F. Dickson; Adam J. Fletcher; Marina Vaysburd; Ji-Chun Yang; Donna L. Mallery; Jingwei Zeng; Christopher M. Johnson; Stephen H. McLaughlin; Mark Skehel; Sarah L. Maslen; James Cruickshank; Nicolas Huguenin-Dezot; Jason W. Chin; David Neuhaus; Leo C. James
Archive | 2010
Gregory Paul Winter; Christian Heinis; Elise Bernard; David Loakes; Marina Vaysburd
Archive | 2010
Gregory Paul Winter; Christian Heinis; Elise Bernard; David Loakes; John Tite; Marina Vaysburd; Daniel Paul Teufel
Archive | 2010
Gregory Paul Winter; Christian Heinis; Elise Bernard; David Loakes; Marina Vaysburd