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Dive into the research topics where Martin Pearse is active.

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Featured researches published by Martin Pearse.


Immunological Reviews | 1988

Developmental status and reconstitution potential of subpopulations of murine thymocytes

Roland Scollay; Anne Wilson; Angela D'Amico; Katherine A. Kelly; Mark Egerton; Martin Pearse; Li Wu; Ken Shortman

In this chapter we have summarized our view of the subsets of murine CD4- CD8- thymocytes which can be identified with a range of monoclonal antibodies. We have shown the division rate and turnover time of the main subsets and have listed what we know of the TcR gene rearrangement, and expression at the RNA and protein levels. We have been unable to completely segregate gamma delta-TcR-expressing cells from alpha beta-TcR-expressing cells by any of the markers we have used, although the proportions of the two receptor forms vary widely in the different subsets. Experiments involving intrathymic transfer of the CD4- CD8- subsets are described, which indicate that all the TcR- subsets of the CD4- CD8- thymocytes display some precursor activity and which suggest a progression of at least five stages through the TcR- subpopulations of CD4- CD8- cells. The earliest precursor is a Thy 1 low, HSA low, Pgp-1 high cell which has unrearranged C beta and is non-dividing and which closely resembles the bone marrow prothymocyte. The later precursors are Thy 1 high, HSA high, Pgp-1 low, have rearranged C beta and are rapidly dividing. We tentatively conclude that none of the TcR+ CD4- CD8- cells are precursors of the major thymocyte subsets or of typical peripheral T cells, and we have found no evidence so far of separate precursors for the different mature subsets of thymocytes or peripheral T cells.


Immunology and Cell Biology | 2005

ISCOMTM-based vaccines: The second decade

Megan T. Sanders; Lorena E. Brown; Georgia Deliyannis; Martin Pearse

The immunostimulating complex or ‘iscom’ was first described 20 years ago as an antigen delivery system with powerful immunostimulating activity. Iscoms are cage‐like structures, typically 40 nm in diameter, that are comprised of antigen, cholesterol, phospholipid and saponin. ISCOMTM‐based vaccines have been shown to promote both antibody and cellular immune responses in a variety of experimental animal models. This review focuses on the evaluation of ISCOMTM‐based vaccines in animals over the past 10 years, as well as examining the progress that has been achieved in the development of human vaccines based on ISCOMTM adjuvant technology.


Vaccine | 2001

Immune responses to ISCOM® formulations in animal and primate models

Anders Sjölander; Debbie Drane; Eugene Maraskovsky; Jean-Pierre Y. Scheerlinck; Andreas Suhrbier; Jan M. Tennent; Martin Pearse

ISCOMs are typically 40 nm cage-like structures comprising antigen, saponin, cholesterol and phospholipid. ISCOMs have been shown to induce antibody responses and activate T helper cells and cytolytic T lymphocytes in a number of animal species, including non-human primates. Recent clinical studies have demonstrated that ISCOMs are also able to induce antibody and cellular immune responses in humans. This review describes the current understanding of the ability of ISCOMs to induce immune responses and the mechanisms underlying this property. Recent progress in the characterisation and manufacture of ISCOMs will also be discussed.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2004

NY-ESO-1 Protein Formulated in ISCOMATRIX Adjuvant Is a Potent Anticancer Vaccine Inducing Both Humoral and CD8+ T-Cell-Mediated Immunity and Protection against NY-ESO-1+ Tumors

Eugene Maraskovsky; Sigrid Sjölander; Debbie Drane; Max Schnurr; Thuy Le; Luis Mateo; Thomas Luft; Kelly-Anne Masterman; Tsin-Yee Tai; Qiyuan Chen; Simon Green; Anders Sjölander; Martin Pearse; François A. Lemonnier; Weisan Chen; Jonathan Cebon; Andreas Suhrbier

NY-ESO-1 is a 180 amino-acid human tumor antigen expressed by many different tumor types and belongs to the family of “cancer-testis” antigens. In humans, NY-ESO-1 is one of the most immunogenic tumor antigens and NY-ESO-1 peptides have been shown to induce NY-ESO-1-specific CD8+ CTLs capable of altering the natural course of NY-ESO-1-expressing tumors in cancer patients. Here we describe the preclinical immunogenicity and efficacy of NY-ESO-1 protein formulated with the ISCOMATRIX adjuvant (NY-ESO-1 vaccine). In vitro, the NY-ESO-1 vaccine was readily taken up by human monocyte-derived dendritic cells, and on maturation, these human monocyte-derived dendritic cells efficiently cross-presented HLA-A2-restricted epitopes to NY-ESO-1-specific CD8+ T cells. In addition, epitopes of NY-ESO-1 protein were also presented on MHC class II molecules to NY-ESO-1-specific CD4+ T cells. The NY-ESO-1 vaccine induced strong NY-ESO-1-specific IFN-γ and IgG2a responses in C57BL/6 mice. Furthermore, the NY-ESO-1 vaccine induced NY-ESO-1-specific CD8+ CTLs in HLA-A2 transgenic mice that were capable of lysing human HLA-A2+ NY-ESO-1+ tumor cells. Finally, C57BL/6 mice, immunized with the NY-ESO-1 vaccine, were protected against challenge with a B16 melanoma cell line expressing NY-ESO-1. These data illustrate that the NY-ESO-1 vaccine represents a potent therapeutic anticancer vaccine.


Vaccine | 2003

Intranasal vaccination with ISCOMATRIX adjuvanted influenza vaccine.

Alan Coulter; Rodney Harris; Roslyn Davis; Debbie Drane; John Cooper Cox; David Ryan; Phil Sutton; Steve Rockman; Martin Pearse

Mucosal delivery of inactivated vaccines that are able to elicit protective immune responses against respiratory diseases has been a long time goal of vaccinologists. Such vaccines would enable a more appropriate means of vaccination against respiratory diseases than those currently delivered by a parenteral route. The intranasal delivery of inactivated influenza vaccine plus the ISCOMATRIX (IMX) adjuvant, simply mixed together, was able to induce serum haemagglutination inhibition (HAI) titres in mice far superior to those obtained with unadjuvanted vaccine delivered subcutaneously. Furthermore, the IMX adjuvanted vaccine delivered intranasally induced mucosal IgA responses in the lung, nasal passages and large intestine, together with high levels of serum IgA. Intranasal delivery of IMX adjuvanted influenza vaccine in sheep gave antibody responses in both serum and nasal secretions that surpassed the levels obtained with unadjuvanted vaccine administered subcutaneously. These observations suggest that it may be possible to induce effective immunity to influenza in humans by intranasal vaccination with an IMX adjuvanted inactivated vaccine.


PLOS ONE | 2011

EphA4 blockers promote axonal regeneration and functional recovery following spinal cord injury in mice.

Yona Goldshmit; Mark D. Spanevello; Sophie Tajouri; Li Li; F. Rogers; Martin Pearse; Mary P. Galea; Perry F. Bartlett; Andrew W. Boyd; Ann M. Turnley

Upregulation and activation of developmental axon guidance molecules, such as semaphorins and members of the Eph receptor tyrosine kinase family and their ligands, the ephrins, play a role in the inhibition of axonal regeneration following injury to the central nervous system. Previously we have demonstrated in a knockout model that axonal regeneration following spinal cord injury is promoted in the absence of the axon guidance protein EphA4. Antagonism of EphA4 was therefore proposed as a potential therapy to promote recovery from spinal cord injury. To further assess this potential, two soluble recombinant blockers of EphA4, unclustered ephrin-A5-Fc and EphA4-Fc, were examined for their ability to promote axonal regeneration and to improve functional outcome following spinal cord hemisection in wildtype mice. A 2-week administration of either of these blockers following spinal cord injury was sufficient to promote substantial axonal regeneration and functional recovery by 5 weeks following injury. Both inhibitors produced a moderate reduction in astrocytic gliosis, indicating that much of the effect of the blockers may be due to promotion of axon growth. These studies provide definitive evidence that soluble inhibitors of EphA4 function offer considerable therapeutic potential for the treatment of spinal cord injury and may have broader potential for the treatment of other central nervous system injuries.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Secondary Acylation of Klebsiella pneumoniae Lipopolysaccharide Contributes to Sensitivity to Antibacterial Peptides

Abigail Clements; Dedreia Tull; Adam Jenney; Jacinta L. Farn; Sang-Hyun Kim; Russell E. Bishop; Joseph B. McPhee; Robert E. W. Hancock; Elizabeth L. Hartland; Martin Pearse; Odilia L. C. Wijburg; David C. Jackson; Malcolm J. McConville; Richard A. Strugnell

Klebsiella pneumoniae is an important cause of nosocomial Gram-negative sepsis. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is considered to be a major virulence determinant of this encapsulated bacterium and most mutations to the lipid A anchor of LPS are conditionally lethal to the bacterium. We studied the role of LPS acylation in K. pneumoniae disease pathogenesis by using a mutation of lpxM (msbB/waaN), which encodes the enzyme responsible for late secondary acylation of immature lipid A molecules. A K. pneumoniae B5055 (K2:O1) lpxM mutant was found to be attenuated for growth in the lungs in a mouse pneumonia model leading to reduced lethality of the bacterium. B5055ΔlpxM exhibited similar sensitivity to phagocytosis or complement-mediated lysis than B5055, unlike the non-encapsulated mutant B5055nm. In vitro, B5055ΔlpxM showed increased permeability of the outer membrane and an increased susceptibility to certain antibacterial peptides suggesting that in vivo attenuation may be due in part to sensitivity to antibacterial peptides present in the lungs of BALB/c mice. These data support the view that lipopolysaccharide acylation plays a important role in providing Gram-negative bacteria some resistance to structural and innate defenses and especially the antibacterial properties of detergents (e.g. bile) and cationic defensins.


Transplantation | 1997

Changes In Cell Surface Glycosylation In α1,3-galactosyltransferase Knockout And α1,2-fucosyltransferase Transgenic Mice

Trixie A. Shinkel; Chao-Guang Chen; Evelyn Salvaris; Timothy R. Henion; Helen Barlow; Uri Galili; Martin Pearse; Anthony J. F. d'Apice

BACKGROUND Inactivation of the alpha1,3-galactosyltransferase (GalT) gene by homologous recombination (knockout [KO] mice) and competition for the enzymes N-acetyllactosamine substrate by transgenically expressed alpha1,2-fucosyltransferase (H-transferase) are two genetic approaches to elimination of the Gal alpha1,3Gal (alphaGal) epitope, which is the major xenoantigen in pigs against which humans have preformed antibodies. Such genetic manipulations often have unpredictable results. METHODS A panel of 19 selected lectins was used to characterize the changes in cell surface glycosylation in GalT KO and H-transferase transgenic mice, compared with nontransgenic littermate controls. RESULTS GalT KO mice showed complete elimination of the alphaGal epitope, as reported previously. Surprisingly, however, this was associated with only a modest increase in N-acetyllactosamine residues and had little other effect on the pattern of lectin binding. In contrast, the pattern of lectin binding to H-transferase transgenic mouse cells was more profoundly disturbed and indicated, in addition to the expected expression of H substance and suppression of the alphaGal epitope, that there was a marked reduction in alpha2,3-sialylation and exposure of the normally cryptic antigens, sialylated Tn and Forssman antigens. Similar changes in lectin reactivity with porcine aortic endothelial cells were induced by neuraminidase treatment. CONCLUSIONS Lectins were able to bind underlying carbohydrate structures (sialylated Tn and Forssman antigens) that are normally cryptic antigens on H-transferase transgenic mouse spleen and cardiac endothelial cells, probably as a consequence of the reduction in the electronegativity of the cell surface due to reduced sialylation. As humans have preformed anti-Tn and anti-Forssman antibodies, it is possible that these structures may become targets of the xenograft rejection process, including hyperacute rejection.


Journal of Virology | 2013

Neuraminidase-Inhibiting Antibody Is a Correlate of Cross-Protection against Lethal H5N1 Influenza Virus in Ferrets Immunized with Seasonal Influenza Vaccine

Steven Rockman; Lorena E. Brown; Ian G. Barr; Brad Gilbertson; Sue Lowther; Anatoly Kachurin; Olga Kachurina; Jessica Klippel; Jesse Bodle; Martin Pearse; Deborah Middleton

ABSTRACT In preparing for the threat of a pandemic of avian H5N1 influenza virus, we need to consider the significant delay (4 to 6 months) necessary to produce a strain-matched vaccine. As some degree of cross-reactivity between seasonal influenza vaccines and H5N1 virus has been reported, this was further explored in the ferret model to determine the targets of protective immunity. Ferrets were vaccinated with two intramuscular inoculations of trivalent inactivated split influenza vaccine or subcomponent vaccines, with and without adjuvant, and later challenged with a lethal dose of A/Vietnam/1203/2004 (H5N1) influenza virus. We confirmed that vaccination with seasonal influenza vaccine afforded partial protection against lethal H5N1 challenge and showed that use of either AlPO4 or Iscomatrix adjuvant with the vaccine resulted in complete protection against disease and death. The protection was due exclusively to the H1N1 vaccine component, and although the hemagglutinin contributed to protection, the dominant protective response was targeted toward the neuraminidase (NA) and correlated with sialic acid cleavage-inhibiting antibody titers. Purified heterologous NA formulated with Iscomatrix adjuvant was also protective. These results suggest that adjuvanted seasonal trivalent vaccine could be used as an interim measure to decrease morbidity and mortality from H5N1 prior to the availability of a specific vaccine. The data also highlight that an inducer of cross-protective immunity is the NA, a protein whose levels are not normally monitored in vaccines and whose capacity to induce immunity in recipients is not normally assessed.


Mucosal Immunology | 2008

Pulmonary delivery of ISCOMATRIX influenza vaccine induces both systemic and mucosal immunity with antigen dose sparing.

J L J Wee; J-P Y Scheerlinck; Kenneth J. Snibson; Stirling John Edwards; Martin Pearse; C Quinn; Philip Sutton

Using a large animal model, we evaluated whether delivery of influenza vaccine via its mucosal site of infection could improve vaccine effectiveness. Unexpectedly, pulmonary immunization with extremely low antigen doses (0.04 μg influenza) induced serum antibody levels equivalent to those resulting from a current human vaccine equivalent (15 μg unadjuvanted influenza, subcutaneously) and vastly superior lung mucosal antibodies. Induction of this potent response following lung vaccination was dependent on addition of ISCOMATRIX adjuvant and deep lung delivery. Functional antibody activity, marked by hemagglutination inhibition, was only present in the lungs of animals that received adjuvanted vaccine via the lungs, suggesting this approach could potentially translate to improved protection. The 375-fold reduction in antigen dose and improved mucosal antibody responses, compared to the current vaccine, suggests that mucosal delivery via the pulmonary route may be particularly relevant in the event of an influenza pandemic, when vaccine supplies are unlikely to meet demand.

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Ken Shortman

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

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