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Dive into the research topics where N.M. Keane is active.

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Featured researches published by N.M. Keane.


Hiv Medicine | 2002

Levels of IL‐6 and soluble IL‐6 receptor are increased in HIV patients with a history of immune restoration disease after HAART

Shelley F. Stone; Patricia Price; N.M. Keane; Ronan J. Murray; Martyn A. French

Objectives We have previously described immune restoration diseases (IRD) associated with asymptomatic opportunistic infections presenting in immunodeficient HIV patients responding to highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). Here we address the question of whether patients with a history of IRD exhibit persistent immune activation, shown by elevated levels of interleukin‐(IL)‐6 and soluble IL‐6 receptor (sIL‐6R).


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2002

Association of Increased Hepatitis C Virus (HCV)–Specific IgG and Soluble CD26 Dipeptidyl Peptidase IV Enzyme Activity with Hepatotoxicity after Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy in Human Immunodeficiency Virus–HCV-Coinfected Patients

Shelley F. Stone; Silvia Lee; N.M. Keane; Patricia Price; Martyn A. French

Hepatotoxicity was investigated, using plasma collected before and during treatment, in 16 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-hepatitis C virus (HCV)-coinfected patients who responded to highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), during a retrospective longitudinal study. Eleven patients experienced hepatotoxicity (i.e., a >3-fold increase in alanine aminotransferase level) while receiving HAART, including 4 patients with clinical hepatitis. Control subjects were 5 patients without hepatotoxicity. Markers of HCV-specific immune responses (HCV core-specific immunoglobulin G [IgG] antibody), T cell activation (soluble [s] CD26 dipeptidyl peptidase IV [DPP IV] enzyme activity), and inflammation (nitrate/nitrite and soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor I [sTNFRI] levels) were correlated with liver damage and immune reconstitution. All patients with hepatotoxicity had increased HCV core-specific IgG antibody and sCD26 (DPP IV) activity but did not have increased nitrate/nitrite or sTNFRI levels. Hepatotoxicity without clinical hepatitis was associated with increased CD8 T cell counts. Thus, hepatotoxicity in HIV-HCV-coinfected patients who respond to HAART is associated with increased HCV-specific immune responses and T cell activation.


Clinical and Experimental Immunology | 2001

An evaluation of serum soluble CD30 levels and serum CD26 (DPPIV) enzyme activity as markers of type 2 and type 1 cytokines in HIV patients receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy

N.M. Keane; Patricia Price; Silvia Lee; Shelley F. Stone; Martyn A. French

This study evaluates serum CD26 (dipeptidyl peptidase IV, DPPIV) enzyme activity and serum levels of soluble CD30 as markers of T1 and T2 cytokine environments in HIV patients who achieved immune reconstitution after highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). Patients who had experienced inflammatory disease associated with pre‐existent opportunistic infections after HAART (immune restoration diseases, IRD) were considered separately. Serum sCD30 levels and CD26 (DPPIV) enzyme activity were compared with IFN‐γ production by PBMC cultured with cytomegalovirus (CMV) antigen in controls and patient groups. High sCD30 levels were associated with low IFN‐γ production after antigenic stimulation in control subjects and, to a lesser extent, in immune reconstituted HIV patients. There was no association between serum CD26 (DPPIV) enzyme activity and IFN‐γ production or sCD30 levels. Serum sCD30 levels and CD26 (DPPIV) enzyme activity were significantly increased in immune reconstituted patients with high HIV viral loads. Patients who had experienced CMV retinitis as an IRD had significantly higher sCD30 levels than all other patient groups. Hence, high sCD30 levels may be a marker of a T2 cytokine environment in HIV patients with immune reconstitution and are associated with higher HIV viral loads and a history of CMV associated IRD.


Journal of Virology | 2006

Genetic and Functional Analysis of R5X4 Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoproteins Derived from Two Individuals Homozygous for the CCR5Δ32 Allele

Lachlan Robert Gray; Melissa Churchill; N.M. Keane; Jasminka Sterjovski; Anne Ellett; Damian F. J. Purcell; Pantelis Poumbourios; Chenda Kol; Bin Wang; Nitin K. Saksena; Steven L. Wesselingh; Patricia Price; Martyn A. French; Dana Gabuzda; Paul R. Gorry

ABSTRACT We characterized human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) envelope glycoproteins (Env) isolated from two HIV-1-infected CCR5Δ32 homozygotes. Envs from both subjects used CCR5 and CXCR4 for entry into transfected cells. Most R5X4 Envs were lymphocyte-tropic and used CXCR4 exclusively for entry into peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), but a subset was dually lymphocyte- and macrophage-tropic and used either CCR5 or CXCR4 for entry into PBMC and monocyte-derived macrophages. The persistence of CCR5-using HIV-1 in two CCR5Δ32 homozygotes suggests the conserved CCR5 binding domain of Env is highly stable and provides new mechanistic insights important for HIV-1 transmission and persistence.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Abacavir-Reactive Memory T Cells Are Present in Drug Naïve Individuals

Andrew Lucas; Michaela Lucas; Anette Strhyn; N.M. Keane; E. McKinnon; Rebecca Pavlos; Ellen M. Moran; Viola Meyer-Pannwitt; Silvana Gaudieri; Lloyd D’Orsogna; Spyros A. Kalams; David A. Ostrov; Søren Buus; Bjoern Peters; S. Mallal; E. Phillips

Background Fifty-five percent of individuals with HLA-B*57:01 exposed to the antiretroviral drug abacavir develop a hypersensitivity reaction (HSR) that has been attributed to naïve T-cell responses to neo-antigen generated by the drug. Immunologically confirmed abacavir HSR can manifest clinically in less than 48 hours following first exposure suggesting that, at least in some cases, abacavir HSR is due to re-stimulation of a pre-existing memory T-cell population rather than priming of a high frequency naïve T-cell population. Methods To determine whether a pre-existing abacavir reactive memory T-cell population contributes to early abacavir HSR symptoms, we studied the abacavir specific naïve or memory T-cell response using HLA-B*57:01 positive HSR patients or healthy controls using ELISpot assay, intra-cellular cytokine staining and tetramer labelling. Results Abacavir reactive CD8+ T-cell responses were detected in vitro in one hundred percent of abacavir unexposed HLA-B*57:01 positive healthy donors. Abacavir-specific CD8+ T cells from such donors can be expanded from sorted memory, and sorted naïve, CD8+ T cells without need for autologous CD4+ T cells. Conclusions We propose that these pre-existing abacavir-reactive memory CD8+ T-cell responses must have been primed by earlier exposure to another foreign antigen and that these T cells cross-react with an abacavir-HLA-B*57:01-endogenous peptide ligand complex, in keeping with the model of heterologous immunity proposed in transplant rejection.


AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses | 2000

Assessment of Immune Function by Lymphoproliferation Underestimates Lymphocyte Functional Capacity in HIV Patients Treated with Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy

N.M. Keane; Patricia Price; Shelley F. Stone; M. John; Ronan J. Murray; Martyn A. French

The objective of this study was to evaluate T cell responses in HIV-infected patients after highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), using four assays of immune function, and to determine which best reflects the presence of CD4(+) T cells able to respond to CMV antigen. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 41 HIVinfected patients and 31 healthy HIV-seronegative controls were cultured with mitogen (PMA/Ca(2+) ionophore) or antigen (CMV). Production of interferon gamma (IFN-gamma) determined by ELISpot assay was compared with lymphoproliferation, IFN-gamma production assessed by ELISA, and CD69 expression and intracellular IFN-gamma assessed by flow cytometry. Cells from patients whose CD4(+) T cells counts increased 4-fold or to >200 cells/microl after HAART responded as well as control cells when assessed by IFN-gamma production and CD69 expression after mitogenic stimulation, but lymphoproliferation responses were depressed by about 52%. Patients who did not meet these criteria for immune reconstitution had lymphoproliferative responses up to 30-fold lower than control subjects, while intracellular IFN-gamma and CD69 expression and ELISpot counts were less than 3-fold lower. Responses to CMV antigen could not be detected by flow cytometry, but were readily detected by ELISpot in CMV-seropositive patients whose CD4(+) T cell counts had increased after HAART. This included patients with low responses assessed by lymphoproliferation. Moreover, ELISpot responses measured with fresh and frozen cells were comparable, while lymphoproliferation assays required fresh cells. In conclusion, the ELISpot assay is a sensitive and efficient technique for detecting CMV-specific IFN-gamma responses in samples that display poor responses when assessed by lymphoproliferation assays.


Hiv Medicine | 2004

Restoration of CD4 T-cell responses to cytomegalovirus is short-lived in severely immunodeficient HIV-infected patients responding to highly active antiretroviral therapy.

N.M. Keane; Patricia Price; Silvia Lee; Coral-Ann M. Almeida; Shelley F. Stone; I. James; Martyn A. French

To define the level of pathogen‐specific immune reconstitution persisting over 3 to 5 years of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in HIV‐infected patients who began therapy with CD4 T‐cell counts below 50 cells/μL.


AIDS | 2014

HLA class I restricted CD8+ and class II restricted CD4+ t cells are implicated in the pathogenesis of nevirapine hypersensitivity

N.M. Keane; Rebecca Pavlos; E. McKinnon; Andrew Lucas; C. Rive; Christopher C. Blyth; David S. Dunn; Michaela Lucas; S. Mallal; E. Phillips

Objectives:This study sought to examine nevirapine hypersensitivity (NVP HSR) phenotypes and their relationship with differing major histocompatibility complex (MHC) Class I and Class II alleles and the associated CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell NVP-specific responses and their durability over time. Methods:A retrospective cohort study compared HIV-positive patients with NVP HSR, defined by fever and hepatitis and/or rash, with those tolerant of NVP for more than 3 months. Covariates included class I (HLA-A, B, C) and class II (HLA-DR) alleles. Cellular studies examined NVP-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses by interferon-gamma (IFN&ggr;) ELISpot assay and intracellular cytokine staining (ICS). Results:NVP HSR occurred in 19 out of 451 (4%) NVP-exposed individuals between March 1993 and December 2011. HLA associations were phenotype dependent with HLA-DRB1*01 : 01 associated with hepatitis (P = 0.02); HLA-B*35 : 01 and HLA-Cw4 associated with cutaneous NVP HSR (P = 0.001, P = 0.01), and HLA-Cw*08 was associated with NVP HSR with eosinophilia (P = 0.04) and multisystemic NVP HSR (P = 0.02). NVP-specific INF&ggr; responses waned significantly more than 3 months from the original reaction and were diminished or completely abrogated when either CD4+ or CD8+ T cells were depleted from the peripheral blood mononuclear cells culture. Conclusion:The association of specific class I and II allele pairings with specific phenotypes of NVP HSR, and cellular studies showing both CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell NVP-specific responses suggest that specific combinations of NVP reactive class I restricted CD8+ and class II restricted CD4+ T cells contribute to the immunopathogenesis of NVP HSR.


Hiv Medicine | 2007

Susceptibility to opportunistic infections in HIV‐infected patients with increased CD4 T‐cell counts on antiretroviral therapy may be predicted by markers of dysfunctional effector memory CD4 T cells and B cells

Martyn A. French; N.M. Keane; E. McKinnon; S. Phung; Patricia Price

HIV‐infected patients responding to combination antiretroviral therapy (ART) after experiencing severe immunodeficiency may exhibit persistent immune defects and occasionally experience opportunistic infections (OIs) despite increased CD4 T‐cell counts. The investigation of immune defects in such patients was examined in this study.


Journal of Immunology | 2011

Translation of HLA–HIV Associations to the Cellular Level: HIV Adapts To Inflate CD8 T Cell Responses against Nef and HLA-Adapted Variant Epitopes

C. Almeida; C. Bronke; S. Roberts; E. McKinnon; N.M. Keane; A. Chopra; Carl M. Kadie; Jonathan M. Carlson; David W. Haas; Sharon A. Riddler; Richard Haubrich; David Heckerman; S. Mallal; M. John

Strong statistical associations between polymorphisms in HIV-1 population sequences and carriage of HLA class I alleles have been widely used to identify possible sites of CD8 T cell immune selection in vivo. However, there have been few attempts to prospectively and systematically test these genetic hypotheses arising from population-based studies at a cellular, functional level. We assayed CD8 T cell epitope-specific IFN-γ responses in 290 individuals from the same cohort, which gave rise to 874 HLA–HIV associations in genetic analyses, taking into account autologous viral sequences and individual HLA genotypes. We found immunological evidence for 58% of 374 associations tested as sites of primary immune selection and identified up to 50 novel HIV-1 epitopes using this reverse-genomics approach. Many HLA-adapted epitopes elicited equivalent or higher-magnitude IFN-γ responses than did the nonadapted epitopes, particularly in Nef. At a population level, inclusion of all of the immunoreactive variant CD8 T cell epitopes in Gag, Pol, Nef, and Env suggested that HIV adaptation leads to an inflation of Nef-directed immune responses relative to other proteins. We concluded that HLA–HIV associations mark viral epitopes subject to CD8 T cell selection. These results can be used to guide functional studies of specific epitopes and escape mutations, as well as to test, train, and evaluate analytical models of viral escape and fitness. The inflation of Nef and HLA-adapted variant responses may have negative effects on natural and vaccine immunity against HIV and, therefore, has implications for diversity coverage approaches in HIV vaccine design.

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Martyn A. French

University of Western Australia

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Shelley F. Stone

University of Western Australia

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