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Dive into the research topics where Michael G. Constantinides is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael G. Constantinides.


Immunity | 2008

The Transcription Factor PLZF Directs the Effector Program of the NKT Cell Lineage

Adam K. Savage; Michael G. Constantinides; Jin Han; Damien Picard; Emmanuel Martin; Bofeng Li; Olivier Lantz; Albert Bendelac

The transcriptional control of CD1d-restricted NKT cell development has remained elusive. We report that PLZF (promyelocytic leukemia zinc finger, Zbtb16), a member of the BTB/POZ-ZF family of transcription factors that includes the CD4-lineage-specific c-Krox (Th-POK), is exquisitely specific to CD1d-restricted NKT cells and human MR1-specific MAIT cells. PLZF was induced immediately after positive selection of NKT cell precursors, and PLZF-deficient NKT cells failed to undergo the intrathymic expansion and effector differentiation that characterize their lineage. Instead, they preserved a naive phenotype and were directed to lymph nodes. Conversely, transgenic expression of PLZF induced CD4(+) thymocytes to acquire effector differentiation and migrate to nonlymphoid tissues. We suggest that PLZF is a transcriptional signature of NKT cells that directs their innate-like effector differentiation during thymic development.


Nature | 2014

A committed precursor to innate lymphoid cells

Michael G. Constantinides; Benjamin D. McDonald; Philip A. Verhoef; Albert Bendelac

Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) specialize in the rapid secretion of polarized sets of cytokines and chemokines to combat infection and promote tissue repair at mucosal barriers. Their diversity and similarities with previously characterized natural killer (NK) cells and lymphoid tissue inducers (LTi) have prompted a provisional classification of all innate lymphocytes into groups 1, 2 and 3 solely on the basis of cytokine properties, but their developmental pathways and lineage relationships remain elusive. Here we identify and characterize a novel subset of lymphoid precursors in mouse fetal liver and adult bone marrow that transiently express high amounts of PLZF, a transcription factor previously associated with NK T cell development, by using lineage tracing and transfer studies. PLZFhigh cells were committed ILC progenitors with multiple ILC1, ILC2 and ILC3 potential at the clonal level. They excluded classical LTi and NK cells, but included a peculiar subset of NK1.1+DX5− ‘NK-like’ cells residing in the liver. Deletion of PLZF markedly altered the development of several ILC subsets, but not LTi or NK cells. PLZFhigh precursors also expressed high amounts of ID2 and GATA3, as well as TOX, a known regulator of PLZF-independent NK and LTi lineages. These findings establish novel lineage relationships between ILC, NK and LTi cells, and identify the common precursor to ILCs, termed ILCP. They also reveal the broad, defining role of PLZF in the differentiation of innate lymphocytes.


Current Opinion in Immunology | 2013

Transcriptional regulation of the NKT cell lineage

Michael G. Constantinides; Albert Bendelac

How expression of canonical semi-invariant TCRs leads to innate-like effector differentiation is a central enigma of NKT cell development. NKT thymic precursors undergo elevated TCR signals leading to increased Egr2, which directly induces their signature transcription factor, PLZF. PLZF is necessary and sufficient to induce a multipotent, unbiased effector program that precedes terminal differentiation into T-bet(high) NK1.1(+) (NKT1) cells and recently identified NKT2 and NKT17 sublineages. Major variations in polarized NKT sublineages have been uncovered in different mouse strains and in several mutants, with direct impact on NKT cell function but also, unexpectedly, on the development and function of conventional T cells.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2011

PLZF induces an intravascular surveillance program mediated by long-lived LFA-1-ICAM-1 interactions.

Seddon Y. Thomas; Seth T. Scanlon; Klaus Griewank; Michael G. Constantinides; Adam K. Savage; Kenneth Barr; Fanyong Meng; Andrew D. Luster; Albert Bendelac

PLZF-expressing NKT cells establish residence at intravascular locations, failing to enter the circulation because of constitutive interactions with LFA-1 and ICAM-1.


Journal of Immunology | 2012

Distinct APCs Explain the Cytokine Bias of α-Galactosylceramide Variants In Vivo

Li Bai; Michael G. Constantinides; Seddon Y. Thomas; Rachel Reboulet; Fanyong Meng; Frank Koentgen; Luc Teyton; Paul B. Savage; Albert Bendelac

α-Galactosylceramide represents a new class of vaccine adjuvants and immunomodulators that stimulate NKT cells to secrete Th1 and Th2 cytokines. Synthetic variants with short or unsaturated acyl chains exhibit a striking Th2 bias in vivo but no evidence of defect in TCR signaling or stimulation of NKT cells in vitro. Using cd1d1fl/fl mice, we demonstrated that distinct APC types explained the cytokine bias in vivo. Whereas NKT stimulation by α-Galactosylceramide required CD1d expression by dendritic cells (DCs), presentation of the Th2 variants was promiscuous and unaffected by DC-specific ablation of CD1d. This DC-independent stimulation failed to activate the feedback loop between DC IL-12 and NK cell IFN-γ, explaining the Th2 bias. Conversely, forced presentation of the Th2 variants by DC induced high IL-12. Thus, lipid structural variations that do not alter TCR recognition can activate distinct Th1 or Th2 cellular networks by changing APC targeting in vivo.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

PLZF expression maps the early stages of ILC1 lineage development

Michael G. Constantinides; Herman Gudjonson; Benjamin D. McDonald; Isabel E. Ishizuka; Philip A. Verhoef; Aaron R. Dinner; Albert Bendelac

Significance Diverse populations of group 1 innate lymphocytes, which exert critical early cytolytic functions against virally infected cells, have recently been discovered, raising issues of lineage relationships. We used expression of the transcription factor promyelocytic leukaemia zinc finger (PLZF) to identify the developmental intermediates of innate lymphoid cells type 1 (ILC1s), a subset of innate lymphoid cells that are particularly abundant in the liver, and demonstrated that this lineage arises from a distinct precursor, but that its development partially overlaps with established classical NK stages. Using microarray analysis, we defined a set of PLZF-dependent genes that may contribute to lineage divergence between ILC1s and classical NK cells. Among the variety of tissue-resident NK-like populations recently distinguished from recirculating classical NK (cNK) cells, liver innate lymphoid cells (ILC) type 1 (ILC1s) have been shown to represent a distinct lineage that originates from a novel promyelocytic leukaemia zinc finger (PLZF)-expressing ILC precursor (ILCP) strictly committed to the ILC1, ILC2, and ILC3 lineages. Here, using PLZF-reporter mice and cell transfer assays, we studied the developmental progression of ILC1s and demonstrated substantial overlap with stages previously ascribed to the cNK lineage, including pre–pro-NK, pre-NK precursor (pre-NKP), refined NKP (rNKP), and immature NK (iNK). Although they originated from different precursors, the ILC1 and cNK lineages followed a parallel progression at early stages and diverged later at the iNK stage, with a striking predominance of ILC1s over cNKs early in ontogeny. Although a limited set of ILC1 genes depended on PLZF for expression, characteristically including Il7r, most of these genes were also differentially expressed between ILC1s and cNKs, indicating that PLZF together with other, yet to be defined, factors contribute to the divergence between these lineages.


Nature | 2012

BTB-ZF factors recruit the E3 ligase cullin 3 to regulate lymphoid effector programs

Rebecca Mathew; Michael Seiler; Seth T. Scanlon; Ai-Ping Mao; Michael G. Constantinides; Clara Bertozzi-Villa; Jeffrey D. Singer; Albert Bendelac

The differentiation of several T- and B-cell effector programs in the immune system is directed by signature transcription factors that induce rapid epigenetic remodelling. Here we report that promyelocytic leukaemia zinc finger (PLZF), the BTB-zinc finger (BTB-ZF) transcription factor directing the innate-like effector program of natural killer T-cell thymocytes, is prominently associated with cullin 3 (CUL3), an E3 ubiquitin ligase previously shown to use BTB domain-containing proteins as adaptors for substrate binding. PLZF transports CUL3 to the nucleus, where the two proteins are associated within a chromatin-modifying complex. Furthermore, PLZF expression results in selective ubiquitination changes of several components of this complex. CUL3 was also found associated with the BTB-ZF transcription factor BCL6, which directs the germinal-centre B cell and follicular T-helper cell programs. Conditional CUL3 deletion in mice demonstrated an essential role for CUL3 in the development of PLZF- and BCL6-dependent lineages. We conclude that distinct lineage-specific BTB-ZF transcription factors recruit CUL3 to alter the ubiquitination pattern of their associated chromatin-modifying complex. We propose that this new function is essential to direct the differentiation of several T- and B-cell effector programs, and may also be involved in the oncogenic role of PLZF and BCL6 in leukaemias and lymphomas.


Journal of Immunology | 2011

Promyelocytic Leukemia Zinc Finger Turns on the Effector T Cell Program without Requirement for Agonist TCR Signaling

Adam K. Savage; Michael G. Constantinides; Albert Bendelac

Thymocytes expressing the NKT cell semi-invariant αβ TCR are thought to undergo agonist interactions with CD1d ligands prior to expressing promyelocytic leukemia zinc finger (PLZF), a broad complex, tramtrack, bric-a-brac, poxvirus, and zinc finger transcription factor that directs acquisition of the effector program of these innate-like T cells. Whether PLZF can mediate this effector conversion independently of agonist signaling has not been investigated. We demonstrated that transgenic (Tg) expression of PLZF under the CD4 promoter induced the innate effector program in two different MHC class II-restricted TCR-Tg Rag1−/− models examined. In CD4 thymocytes expressing a fixed Tg TCR β-chain, the associated TCRα sequences in wild-type and PLZF-Tg mice overlapped extensively, further demonstrating that PLZF could induce the effector program in most CD4 T cells that would normally be selected as naive cells. In contrast, PLZF altered the negative selection of thymocytes expressing TCR β-chains reactive against several retroviral superantigens. Thus, PLZF is remarkable in that it is a transcription factor capable of inducing an effector program in the absence of T cell agonist interactions or cell division. Its expression may also enhance the survival of agonist-signaled thymocytes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Multiple layers of transcriptional regulation by PLZF in NKT-cell development.

Ai-Ping Mao; Michael G. Constantinides; Rebecca Mathew; Zhixiang Zuo; Xiaoting Chen; Matthew T. Weirauch; Albert Bendelac

Significance Natural killer T (NKT) cells are a specialized population of innate-like T cells that acquire their effector program during development under the control of the transcription factor PLZF (promyelocytic leukemia zinc finger, encoded by Zbtb16). To elucidate the mechanisms underlying this unique property of PLZF, we performed ChIP-seq and microarray analysis of NKT cells and PLZF-transgenic T cells, which revealed direct regulation of effector genes and of T-helper–specific transcription factors. Notably, PLZF also bound and repressed Bach2, a global repressor of effector differentiation. Thus, multiple layers of positive and negative regulation coordinate the induction of the innate effector program by PLZF. The transcription factor PLZF [promyelocytic leukemia zinc finger, encoded by zinc finger BTB domain containing 16 (Zbtb16)] is induced during the development of innate and innate-like lymphocytes to direct their acquisition of a T-helper effector program, but the molecular mechanisms involved are poorly understood. Using biotinylation-based ChIP-seq and microarray analysis of both natural killer T (NKT) cells and PLZF-transgenic thymocytes, we identified several layers of regulation of the innate-like NKT effector program. First, PLZF bound and regulated genes encoding cytokine receptors as well as homing and adhesion receptors; second, PLZF bound and activated T-helper–specific transcription factor genes that in turn control T-helper–specific programs; finally, PLZF bound and suppressed the transcription of Bach2, a potent general repressor of effector differentiation in naive T cells. These findings reveal the multilayered architecture of the transcriptional program recruited by PLZF and elucidate how a single transcription factor can drive the developmental acquisition of a broad effector program.


Journal of Immunology | 2011

A Naive-Like Population of Human CD1d-Restricted T Cells Expressing Intermediate Levels of Promyelocytic Leukemia Zinc Finger

Michael G. Constantinides; Damien Picard; Adam K. Savage; Albert Bendelac

Rare CD1d-α-galactosylceramide–specific T cells that do not express the invariant Vα24 chain of human NKT cells were recently identified after expansion in vitro with the lipid Ag, but their phenotype and frequency in vivo and lineage relationship with NKT cells could not be elucidated. By using a CD1d tetramer-based method to enrich these cells from fresh peripheral blood, we demonstrated their naive-like CD62LhighCD45RO−CD4+ phenotype and relatively high frequency of ∼10−5 in several healthy individuals. Notably, these cells expressed the NKT lineage-specific transcription promyelocytic leukemia zinc finger (PLZF), indicating a developmental relationship with NKT cells and ruling out the possibility that they were conventional MHC-restricted T cells cross-reacting against CD1d-α-galactosylceramide. Although PLZF is known to direct the effector program of NKT cells, we show in this study that the naive-like cells expressed it at a significantly lower amount than NKT cells. Further, we present mouse studies demonstrating a sharp PLZF expression threshold requirement for induction of the effector phenotype. These findings directly demonstrate in vivo the existence of naive-like CD1d-restricted human T cells marked by intermediate levels of PLZF.

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Seth T. Scanlon

University of Pennsylvania

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Adam K. Savage

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Clara Bertozzi-Villa

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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