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Dive into the research topics where Michael W. Panas is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael W. Panas.


PLOS Pathogens | 2011

Thy1+ Nk Cells from Vaccinia Virus-Primed Mice Confer Protection against Vaccinia Virus Challenge in the Absence of Adaptive Lymphocytes

Geoffrey O. Gillard; Maytal Bivas-Benita; Avi-Hai Hovav; Lauren E. Grandpre; Michael W. Panas; Michael S. Seaman; Barton F. Haynes; Norman L. Letvin

While immunological memory has long been considered the province of T- and B- lymphocytes, it has recently been reported that innate cell populations are capable of mediating memory responses. We now show that an innate memory immune response is generated in mice following infection with vaccinia virus, a poxvirus for which no cognate germline-encoded receptor has been identified. This immune response results in viral clearance in the absence of classical adaptive T and B lymphocyte populations, and is mediated by a Thy1+ subset of natural killer (NK) cells. We demonstrate that immune protection against infection from a lethal dose of virus can be adoptively transferred with memory hepatic Thy1+ NK cells that were primed with live virus. Our results also indicate that, like classical immunological memory, stronger innate memory responses form in response to priming with live virus than a highly attenuated vector. These results demonstrate that a defined innate memory cell population alone can provide host protection against a lethal systemic infection through viral clearance.


Journal of Neuroimmune Pharmacology | 2012

Trace Amine Associated Receptor 1 Signaling in Activated Lymphocytes

Michael W. Panas; Zhihua Xie; Helen N. Panas; Marius C. Hoener; Eric J. Vallender; Gregory M. Miller

Although most research to date on Trace Amine Associated Receptor 1 (TAAR1) has focused on its role in the brain, it has been recognized since its discovery in 2001 that TAAR1 mRNA is expressed in peripheral tissues as well, suggesting that this receptor may play a role in non-neurological pathways. This study reports TAAR1 expression, signaling and functionality in rhesus monkey lymphocytes. We detected a high level of TAAR1 protein in immortalized rhesus monkey B cell lines and a significant upregulation of TAAR1 protein expression in rhesus monkey lymphocytes following PHA treatment. Through screening a wide range of signaling pathways for their upregulation following TAAR1 activation by its potent agonist methamphetamine, we identified two transcription factors, CREB and NFAT, which are commonly associated with immune activation. Furthermore, we observed a TAAR1-dependent phosphorylation of PKA and PKC following treatment with methamphetamine in transfected HEK293 cells, immortalized rhesus monkey B cells and PHA-activated rhesus monkey lymphocytes. Accordingly, the high levels of TAAR1 that we observed on lymphocytes are inducible and fully functional, capable of transmitting a signal likely via PKA and PKC activation following ligand binding. More importantly, an increase in TAAR1 receptor expression is concomitant with lymphocyte immune activation, suggesting a possible role for TAAR1 in the generation or regulation of an immune response. TAAR1 is emerging as a potential therapeutic target, with regard to its ability to modulate brain monoamines. The current data raises the possibility that TAAR1-targeted drugs may also alter immune function.


European Journal of Immunology | 2010

Critical role for IL‐21 in both primary and memory anti‐viral CD8+ T‐cell responses

Brianne R. Barker; Michael N. Gladstone; Geoffrey O. Gillard; Michael W. Panas; Norman L. Letvin

While it is well established that CD8+ T cells generated in the absence of CD4+ T cells mediate defective recall responses, the mechanism by which CD4+ T cells confer help in the generation of CD8+ T‐cell responses remains poorly understood. To determine whether CD4+ T‐cell‐derived IL‐21 is an important regulator of CD8+ T‐cell responses in help‐dependent and ‐independent viral infections, we examined these responses in the IL‐21Rα−/− mouse model. We show that IL‐21 has a role in primary CD8+ T‐cell responses and in recall CD8+ T‐cell responses in help‐dependent viral infections. This effect is due to a direct action of IL‐21 in enhancing the proliferation of virus‐specific CD8+ T cells and reducing their TRAIL expression. These findings indicate that IL‐21 is an important mediator of CD4+ T‐cell help to CD8+ T cells.


Journal of Immunology | 2007

Duration of Antigen Expression In Vivo following DNA Immunization Modifies the Magnitude, Contraction, and Secondary Responses of CD8+ T Lymphocytes

Avi-Hai Hovav; Michael W. Panas; Shaila Rahman; Piya Sircar; Geoffrey O. Gillard; Mark J. Cayabyab; Norman L. Letvin

The duration of Ag expression in vivo has been reported to have a minimal impact on both the magnitude and kinetics of contraction of a pathogen-induced CD8+ T cell response. In this study, we controlled the duration of Ag expression by excising the ear pinnae following intradermal ear pinnae DNA immunization. This resulted in decreased magnitude, accelerated contraction and differentiation, and surprisingly greater secondary CD8+ T cell responses. Furthermore, we found delayed and prolonged Ag presentation in the immunized mice; however, this presentation was considerably decreased when the depot Ag was eliminated. These findings suggest that the magnitude and the contraction phase of the CD8+ T cell response following intradermal DNA immunization is regulated by the duration rather than the initial exposure to Ag.


Journal of Virology | 2007

The Impact of a Boosting Immunogen on the Differentiation of Secondary Memory CD8+ T Cells

Avi-Hai Hovav; Michael W. Panas; Christa E. Osuna; Mark J. Cayabyab; Patrick Autissier; Norman L. Letvin

ABSTRACT While recent studies have demonstrated that secondary CD8+ T cells develop into effector-memory cells, the impact of particular vaccine regimens on the elicitation of these cells remains poorly defined. In the present study we evaluated the effect of three different immunogens—recombinant vaccinia, recombinant adenovirus, and plasmid DNA—on the generation of memory cellular immune responses. We found that vectors that induce the rapid movement of CD8+ T cells into the memory compartment during a primary immune response also drive a rapid differentiation of these cells into effector-memory CD8+ T cells following a secondary immunization. In contrast, the functional profiles of both CD8+ and CD4+ T cells, assessed by measuring antigen-stimulated gamma interferon and interleukin-2 production, were not predominantly shaped by the boosting immunogen. We also demonstrated that the in vivo expression of antigen by recombinant vectors was brief following boosting immunization, suggesting that antigen persistence has a minimal impact on the differentiation of secondary CD8+ T cells. When used in heterologous or in homologous prime-boost combinations, these three vectors generated antigen-specific CD8+ T cells with different phenotypic profiles. Expression of the memory-associated molecule CD27 on effector CD8+ T cells decreased following heterologous but not homologous boosting, resulting in a phenotypic profile similar to that seen on primary CD8+ T cells. These data therefore suggest that the phenotype of secondary CD8+ T cells is determined predominantly by the boosting immunogen whereas the cytokine profile of these cells is shaped by both the priming and boosting immunogens.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Rapid Memory CD8+ T-Lymphocyte Induction through Priming with Recombinant Mycobacterium smegmatis

Avi-Hai Hovav; Mark J. Cayabyab; Michael W. Panas; Sampa Santra; John R. Greenland; Ralf Geiben; Barton F. Haynes; William R. Jacobs; Norman L. Letvin

ABSTRACT The most promising vaccine strategies for the induction of cytotoxic-T-lymphocyte responses have been heterologous prime/boost regimens employing a plasmid DNA prime and a live recombinant-vector boost. The priming immunogen in these regimens must elicit antigen-specific memory CD8+ T lymphocytes that will expand following the boosting immunization. Because plasmid DNA immunogens are expensive and their immunogenicity has proven disappointing in human clinical trials, we have been exploring novel priming immunogens that might be used in heterologous immunization regimens. Here we show that priming with a prototype recombinant Mycobacterium smegmatis strain expressing human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) gp120-elicited CD4+ T lymphocytes with a functional profile of helper cells as well as a CD8+ T-lymphocyte population. These CD8+ T lymphocytes rapidly differentiated to memory cells, defined on the basis of their cytokine profile and expression of CD62L and CD27. Moreover, these recombinant-mycobacterium-induced T lymphocytes rapidly expanded following boosting with a recombinant adenovirus expressing HIV-1 Env to gp120-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes. This work demonstrates a remarkable skewing of recombinant-mycobacterium-induced T lymphocytes to durable antigen-specific memory CD8+ T cells and suggests that such immunogens might be used as priming vectors in prime/boost vaccination regimens for the induction of cellular immune responses.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Improving Mycobacterium bovis bacillus Calmette-Guèrin as a vaccine delivery vector for viral antigens by incorporation of glycolipid activators of NKT cells.

Manjunatha M. Venkataswamy; Tony W. Ng; Shalu Sharma Kharkwal; Leandro J. Carreño; Alison Johnson; Shajo Kunnath-Velayudhan; Zheng Liu; Robert Bittman; Peter J. Jervis; Liam R. Cox; Gurdyal S. Besra; Xiangshu Wen; Weiming Yuan; Moriya Tsuji; Xiangming Li; David D. Ho; John Chan; Sunhee Lee; Richard Frothingham; Barton F. Haynes; Michael W. Panas; Geoffrey O. Gillard; Jaimie D. Sixsmith; Birgit Korioth-Schmitz; Joern E. Schmitz; Michelle H. Larsen; William R. Jacobs; Steven A. Porcelli

Recombinant Mycobacterium bovis bacillus Calmette-Guèrin (rBCG) has been explored as a vector for vaccines against HIV because of its ability to induce long lasting humoral and cell mediated immune responses. To maximize the potential for rBCG vaccines to induce effective immunity against HIV, various strategies are being employed to improve its ability to prime CD8+ T cells, which play an important role in the control of HIV infections. In this study we adopted a previously described approach of incorporating glycolipids that activate CD1d-restricted natural killer T (NKT) cells to enhance priming of CD8+ T cells by rBCG strains expressing an SIV Gag antigen (rBCG-SIV gag). We found that the incorporation of the synthetic NKT activating glycolipid α-galactosylceramide (α-GC) into rBCG-SIV gag significantly enhanced CD8+ T cell responses against an immunodominant Gag epitope, compared to responses primed by unmodified rBCG-SIV gag. The abilities of structural analogues of α-GC to enhance CD8+ T cell responses to rBCG were compared in both wild type and partially humanized mice that express human CD1d molecules in place of mouse CD1d. These studies identified an α-GC analogue known as 7DW8-5, which has previously been used successfully as an adjuvant in non-human primates, as a promising compound for enhancing immunogenicity of antigens delivered by rBCG.vectors. Our findings support the incorporation of synthetic glycolipid activators of NKT cells as a novel approach to enhance the immunogenicity of rBCG-vectored antigens for induction of CD8+ T cell responses. The glycolipid adjuvant 7DW8-5 may be a promising candidate for advancing to non-human primate and human clinical studies for the development of HIV vaccines based on rBCG vectors.


Journal of Virology | 2009

X4 Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Down-Modulates Expression and Immunogenicity of Codelivered Antigens

Avi-Hai Hovav; Michael Santosuosso; Maytal Bivas-Benita; Andre Plair; Alexander C Cheng; Mazal Elnekave; Elda Righi; Tao Chen; Satoshi Kashiwagi; Michael W. Panas; Shi Hua Xiang; Karina Furmanov; Norman L. Letvin; Mark C. Poznansky

ABSTRACT In order to increase the immune breadth of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) vaccines, strategies such as immunization with several HIV antigens or centralized immunogens have been examined. HIV-1 gp120 protein is a major immunogen of HIV and has been routinely considered for inclusion in both present and future AIDS vaccines. However, recent studies proposed that gp120 interferes with the generation of immune response to codelivered antigens. Here, we investigate whether coimmunization with plasmid-encoded gp120 alters the immune response to other coadministered plasmid encoded antigens such as luciferase or ovalbumin in a mouse model. We found that the presence of gp120 leads to a significant reduction in the expression level of the codelivered antigen in vivo. Antigen presentation by antigen-presenting cells was also reduced and resulted in the induction of weak antigen-specific cellular and humoral immune responses. Importantly, gp120-mediated immune interference was observed after administration of the plasmids at the same or at distinct locations. To characterize the region in gp120 mediating these effects, we used plasmid constructs encoding gp120 that lacks the V1V2 loops (ΔV1V2) or the V3 loop (ΔV3). After immunization, the ΔV1V2, but not the ΔV3 construct, was able to reduce antigen expression, antigen presentation, and subsequently the immunogenicity of the codelivered antigen. The V3 loop dependence of this phenomenon seems to be limited to V3 loops known to interact with the CXCR4 molecule but not with CCR5. Our study presents a novel mechanism by which HIV-1 gp120 interferes with the immune response against coadministered antigen in a polyvalent vaccine preparation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Noncanonical SMC protein in Mycobacterium smegmatis restricts maintenance of Mycobacterium fortuitum plasmids

Michael W. Panas; Paras Jain; Hui Yang; Shimontini Mitra; Debasis Biswas; Alice R. Wattam; Norman L. Letvin; William R. Jacobs

Significance A mutant strain of Mycobacterium smegmatis mc2155 provided the first plasmid transformation platform for any mycobacteria. It has since been used extensively as a surrogate host to study mycobacterial gene functions in Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Mycobacterium leprae. In this report, we discovered that the efficient plasmid transformation (ept) phenotype of mc2155 is caused by a loss-of-function mutation in a gene, namely eptC, which encodes a protein that shares homology with the structural maintenance of chromosomes (SMC) family. While SMCs generally promote DNA segregation to daughter cells, we show that EptC selectively inhibits plasmid segregation and thereby establish a new plasmid restrictive role of this mycobacterial SMC homolog. Research on tuberculosis and leprosy was revolutionized by the development of a plasmid transformation system in the fast-growing surrogate, Mycobacterium smegmatis. This transformation system was made possible by the successful isolation of a M. smegmatis mutant strain mc2155, whose efficient plasmid transformation (ept) phenotype supported the replication of Mycobacterium fortuitum pAL5000 plasmids. In this report, we identified the EptC gene, the loss of which confers the ept phenotype. EptC shares significant amino acid sequence homology and domain structure with the MukB protein of Escherichia coli, a structural maintenance of chromosomes (SMC) protein. Surprisingly, M. smegmatis has three paralogs of SMC proteins: EptC and MSMEG_0370 both share homology with Gram-negative bacterial MukB; and MSMEG_2423 shares homology with Gram-positive bacterial SMCs, including the single SMC protein predicted for Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Mycobacterium leprae. Purified EptC was shown to bind ssDNA and stabilize negative supercoils in plasmid DNA. Moreover, an EptC–mCherry fusion protein was constructed and shown to bind to DNA in live mycobacteria, and to prevent segregation of plasmid DNA to daughter cells. To our knowledge, this is the first report of impaired plasmid maintenance caused by a SMC homolog, which has been canonically known to assist the segregation of genetic materials.


Infection and Immunity | 2014

Gene Deletions in Mycobacterium bovis BCG Stimulate Increased CD8+ T Cell Responses

Michael W. Panas; Jaimie D. Sixsmith; Keri Ann White; Birgit Korioth-Schmitz; Shana T. Shields; Brian T. Moy; Sunhee Lee; Joern E. Schmitz; William R. Jacobs; Steven A. Porcelli; Barton F. Haynes; Norman L. Letvin; Geoffrey O. Gillard

ABSTRACT Mycobacteria, the etiological agents of tuberculosis and leprosy, have coevolved with mammals for millions of years and have numerous ways of suppressing their hosts immune response. It has been suggested that mycobacteria may contain genes that reduce the hosts ability to elicit CD8+ T cell responses. We screened 3,290 mutant Mycobacterium bovis bacillus Calmette Guerin (BCG) strains to identify genes that decrease major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I presentation of mycobacterium-encoded epitope peptides. Through our analysis, we identified 16 mutant BCG strains that generated increased transgene product-specific CD8+ T cell responses. The genes disrupted in these mutant strains had disparate predicted functions. Reconstruction of strains via targeted deletion of genes identified in the screen recapitulated the enhanced immunogenicity phenotype of the original mutant strains. When we introduced the simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) gag gene into several of these novel BCG strains, we observed enhanced SIV Gag-specific CD8+ T cell responses in vivo. This study demonstrates that mycobacteria carry numerous genes that act to dampen CD8+ T cell responses and suggests that genetic modification of these genes may generate a novel group of recombinant BCG strains capable of serving as more effective and immunogenic vaccine vectors.

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Norman L. Letvin

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Geoffrey O. Gillard

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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William R. Jacobs

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Barton F. Haynes

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Avi-Hai Hovav

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Birgit Korioth-Schmitz

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Joern E. Schmitz

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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