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Dive into the research topics where Nana Haahr Overgaard is active.

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Featured researches published by Nana Haahr Overgaard.


Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2015

CD4+/CD8+ double-positive T cells: more than just a developmental stage?

Nana Haahr Overgaard; Ji-Won Jung; Raymond J. Steptoe; James W. Wells

CD4+/CD8+ DP thymocytes are a well‐described T cell developmental stage within the thymus. However, once differentiated, the CD4+ lineage or the CD8+ lineage is generally considered to be fixed. Nevertheless, mature CD4+/CD8+ DP T cells have been described in the blood and peripheral lymphoid tissues of numerous species, as well as in numerous disease settings, including cancer. The expression of CD4 and CD8 is regulated by a very strict transcriptional program involving the transcription factors Runx3 and ThPOK. Initially thought to be mutually exclusive within CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, CD4+/CD8+ T cell populations, outside of the thymus, have recently been described to express concurrently ThPOK and Runx3. Considerable heterogeneity exists within the CD4+/CD8+ DP T cell pool, and the function of CD4+/CD8+ T cell populations remains controversial, with conflicting reports describing cytotoxic or suppressive roles for these cells. In this review, we describe how transcriptional regulation, lineage of origin, heterogeneity of CD4 and CD8 expression, age, species, and specific disease settings influence the functionality of this rarely studied T cell population.


International Journal of Cancer | 2016

Does the nature of residual immune function explain the differential risk of non-melanoma skin cancer development in immunosuppressed organ transplant recipients?

Ji-Won Jung; Nana Haahr Overgaard; Michael T. Burke; Nicole M. Isbel; Fiona Simpson; James W. Wells

Patients receiving immunosuppression to prevent organ transplant rejection are at a greatly increased risk of developing nonmelanoma skin cancer. In recent years a correlation has been identified between the class of immunosuppressant that these patients receive and their subsequent cancer risk; in particular, patients switched from calcineurin inhibitors to mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitors not only displayed a dramatic reduction in new tumor formation but also in some cases a regression of their existing lesions. Studies of cancer models in mice and cell lines in the laboratory have attributed these discrepancies in cancer risk to the ability of immunosuppressants such as mTOR inhibitors to elicit direct anticancer effects, including suppressing angiogenesis and increasing autophagy‐mediated DNA repair. Recent evidence from the immunological literature however, suggests a significant alternative contribution of mTOR inhibitors; namely the promotion of memory T‐cell function. Recent advances in understanding memory T‐cell establishment and the demonstration of their critical role in long‐term immunity make it timely to review the available evidence as to whether the improved nonmelanoma skin cancer outcome shown by patients switched to mTOR inhibitor treatment regimens may be associated with the retainment of memory T‐cell function.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Comparative Immune Phenotypic Analysis of Cutaneous Squamous Cell Carcinoma and Intraepidermal Carcinoma in Immune-Competent Individuals: Proportional Representation of CD8+ T-Cells but Not FoxP3+ Regulatory T-Cells Is Associated with Disease Stage

Andrew Freeman; Jennifer A. Bridge; Pirashanthini Maruthayanar; Nana Haahr Overgaard; Ji-Won Jung; Fiona Simpson; Tarl W. Prow; H. Peter Soyer; Michael Freeman; James W. Wells

Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC) is a type of non-melanoma skin cancer prevalent in immune-suppressed transplant recipients and older individuals with a history of chronic sun-exposure. SCC itself is believed to be a late-stage manifestation that can develop from premalignant lesions including Intraepidermal Carcinoma (IEC). Notably, while SCC regression is rare, IEC typically regresses in response to immune modifying topical treatments, however the underlying immunological reasons for these differential responses remain unclear. This study aimed to define whether IEC and SCC are associated with distinct immune profiles. We investigated the immune cell infiltrate of photo-damaged skin, IEC, and SCC tissue using 10-colour flow cytometry following fresh lesion digest. We found that IEC lesions contain higher percentages of CD3+ T-cells than photo-damaged skin, however, the abundance of CD3−CD56+ Natural Killer (NK) cells, CD11c+HLA-DR+ conventional Dendritic Cells (cDC), BDCA-2+HLA-DR+ plasmacytoid DC (pDC), FoxP3+ Regulatory T-cells (T-reg), Vα24+Vβ11+ invariant NKT-cells, and γδ Tcells did not alter with disease stage. Within the total T-cell population, high percentages of CD4+ T-cells were associated with SCC, yet CD8+ T-cells were less abundant in SCC compared with IEC. Our study demonstrates that while IEC lesions contain a higher proportion of T-cells than SCC lesions in general, SCC lesions specifically display a lower abundance of CD8+ T-cells than IEC. We propose that differences in CD8+ T-cell abundance contribute critically to the different capacity of SCC and IEC to regress in response to immune modifying topical treatments. Our study also suggests that a high ratio of CD4+ T-cells to CD8+ T-cells may be a immunological diagnostic indicator of late-stage SCC development in immune-competent patients.


Diabetes | 2016

Antigen-encoding bone marrow terminates islet-directed memory CD8+ T-cell responses to alleviate islet transplant rejection

Miranda A. Coleman; Claire F. Jessup; Jennifer A. Bridge; Nana Haahr Overgaard; Daniella Penko; Stacey N. Walters; Danielle J. Borg; Ryan Galea; Josephine M. Forbes; Ranjeny Thomas; P. T. Coates; Shane T. Grey; James W. Wells; Raymond J. Steptoe

Islet-specific memory T cells arise early in type 1 diabetes (T1D), persist for long periods, perpetuate disease, and are rapidly reactivated by islet transplantation. As memory T cells are poorly controlled by “conventional” therapies, memory T cell–mediated attack is a substantial challenge in islet transplantation, and this will extend to application of personalized approaches using stem cell–derived replacement β-cells. New approaches are required to limit memory autoimmune attack of transplanted islets or replacement β-cells. Here, we show that transfer of bone marrow encoding cognate antigen directed to dendritic cells, under mild, immune-preserving conditions, inactivates established memory CD8+ T-cell populations and generates a long-lived, antigen-specific tolerogenic environment. Consequently, CD8+ memory T cell–mediated targeting of islet-expressed antigens is prevented and islet graft rejection alleviated. The immunological mechanisms of protection are mediated through deletion and induction of unresponsiveness in targeted memory T-cell populations. The data demonstrate that hematopoietic stem cell–mediated gene therapy effectively terminates antigen-specific memory T-cell responses, and this can alleviate destruction of antigen-expressing islets. This addresses a key challenge facing islet transplantation and, importantly, the clinical application of personalized β-cell replacement therapies using patient-derived stem cells.


Frontiers in Oncology | 2017

The Oncopig Cancer Model: An Innovative Large Animal Translational Oncology Platform

Kyle M. Schachtschneider; Regina M. Schwind; Jordan Newson; Nickolas Kinachtchouk; Mark Rizko; Nasya Mendoza-Elias; Paul J. Grippo; Daniel R. Principe; Alex Park; Nana Haahr Overgaard; Gregers Jungersen; Kelly D. Garcia; Ajay V. Maker; Laurie A. Rund; Howard Ozer; Ron C. Gaba; Lawrence B. Schook

Despite an improved understanding of cancer molecular biology, immune landscapes, and advancements in cytotoxic, biologic, and immunologic anti-cancer therapeutics, cancer remains a leading cause of death worldwide. More than 8.2 million deaths were attributed to cancer in 2012, and it is anticipated that cancer incidence will continue to rise, with 19.3 million cases expected by 2025. The development and investigation of new diagnostic modalities and innovative therapeutic tools is critical for reducing the global cancer burden. Toward this end, transitional animal models serve a crucial role in bridging the gap between fundamental diagnostic and therapeutic discoveries and human clinical trials. Such animal models offer insights into all aspects of the basic science-clinical translational cancer research continuum (screening, detection, oncogenesis, tumor biology, immunogenicity, therapeutics, and outcomes). To date, however, cancer research progress has been markedly hampered by lack of a genotypically, anatomically, and physiologically relevant large animal model. Without progressive cancer models, discoveries are hindered and cures are improbable. Herein, we describe a transgenic porcine model—the Oncopig Cancer Model (OCM)—as a next-generation large animal platform for the study of hematologic and solid tumor oncology. With mutations in key tumor suppressor and oncogenes, TP53R167H and KRASG12D, the OCM recapitulates transcriptional hallmarks of human disease while also exhibiting clinically relevant histologic and genotypic tumor phenotypes. Moreover, as obesity rates increase across the global population, cancer patients commonly present clinically with multiple comorbid conditions. Due to the effects of these comorbidities on patient management, therapeutic strategies, and clinical outcomes, an ideal animal model should develop cancer on the background of representative comorbid conditions (tumor macro- and microenvironments). As observed in clinical practice, liver cirrhosis frequently precedes development of primary liver cancer or hepatocellular carcinoma. The OCM has the capacity to develop tumors in combination with such relevant comorbidities. Furthermore, studies on the tumor microenvironment demonstrate similarities between OCM and human cancer genomic landscapes. This review highlights the potential of this and other large animal platforms as transitional models to bridge the gap between basic research and clinical practice.


Frontiers in Genetics | 2015

Establishing the pig as a large animal model for vaccine development against human cancer

Nana Haahr Overgaard; Thomas Mørch Frøsig; Simon Welner; Michael Rasmussen; Mette Ilsøe; Maria Rathmann Sørensen; Mads Hald Andersen; Søren Buus; Gregers Jungersen

Immunotherapy has increased overall survival of metastatic cancer patients, and cancer antigens are promising vaccine targets. To fulfill the promise, appropriate tailoring of the vaccine formulations to mount in vivo cytotoxic T cell (CTL) responses toward co-delivered cancer antigens is essential. Previous development of therapeutic cancer vaccines has largely been based on studies in mice, and the majority of these candidate vaccines failed to induce therapeutic responses in the subsequent human clinical trials. Given that antigen dose and vaccine volume in pigs are translatable to humans and the porcine immunome is closer related to the human counterpart, we here introduce pigs as a supplementary large animal model for human cancer vaccine development. IDO and RhoC, both important in human cancer development and progression, were used as vaccine targets and 12 pigs were immunized with overlapping 20mer peptides spanning the entire porcine IDO and RhoC sequences formulated in CTL-inducing adjuvants: CAF09, CASAC, Montanide ISA 51 VG, or PBS. Taking advantage of recombinant swine MHC class I molecules (SLAs), the peptide-SLA complex stability was measured for 198 IDO- or RhoC-derived 9-11mer peptides predicted to bind to SLA-1*04:01, −1*07:02, −2*04:01, −2*05:02, and/or −3*04:01. This identified 89 stable (t½ ≥ 0.5 h) peptide-SLA complexes. By IFN-γ release in PBMC cultures we monitored the vaccine-induced peptide-specific CTL responses, and found responses to both IDO- and RhoC-derived peptides across all groups with no adjuvant being superior. These findings support the further use of pigs as a large animal model for vaccine development against human cancer.


Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2017

CD4+CD8β+ double-positive T cells in skin-draining lymph nodes respond to inflammatory signals from the skin

Nana Haahr Overgaard; Jazmina L. Cruz; Jennifer A. Bridge; Hendrik J. Nel; Nicole L. La Gruta; Antje Blumenthal; Raymond J. Steptoe; James W. Wells

CD4+CD8+ double‐positive (DP), mature, peripheral T cells are readily detectable in a variety of species and tissues. Despite a common association with autoimmune and malignant skin disorders, however, little is understood about their role or function. Herein, we show that DP T cells are readily detectable in the blood, spleen, and peripheral lymph nodes of naïve C57BL/6 mice. DP T cells were also present in Jα18−/− and CD1d−/− mice, indicating that these cells are not NK‐T cells. After skin administration of CASAC adjuvant, but not Quil A adjuvant, both total DP T cells and skin‐infiltrating DP T cells increased in number. We explored the possibility that DP T cells could represent aggregates between CD4+ and CD8+ single‐positive T cells and found strong evidence that a large proportion of apparent DP T cells were indeed aggregates. However, the existence of true CD4+CD8+ DP T cells was confirmed by Amnis ImageStream (Millipore Sigma, Billerica, MA, USA) imaging. Multiple rounds of FACS sorting separated true DP cells from aggregates and indicated that conventional analyses may lead to ∼10‐fold overestimation of DP T cell numbers. The high degree of aggregate contamination and overestimation of DP abundance using conventional analysis techniques may explain discrepancies reported in the literature for DP T cell origin, phenotype, and function.


OncoImmunology | 2018

Clinically-Relevant Rapamycin Treatment Regimens Enhance CD8+ Effector Memory T Cell Function In The Skin and Allow their Infiltration into Cutaneous Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Ji-Won Jung; Margaret Veitch; Jennifer A. Bridge; Nana Haahr Overgaard; Jazmina L. Cruz; Richard Linedale; Michael E. Franklin; Nicholas A. Saunders; Fiona Simpson; Raymond J. Steptoe; James W. Wells

ABSTRACT Patients receiving immunosuppressive drugs to prevent organ transplant rejection exhibit a greatly increased risk of developing cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). However, not all immunosuppressive drugs confer the same risk. Randomised, controlled trials demonstrate that switching renal transplant recipients receiving calcineurin inhibitor-based therapies to mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitors results in a reduced incidence of de novo SSC formation, and can even result in the regression of pre-existing premalignant lesions. However, the contribution played by residual immune function in this setting is unclear. We examined the hypotheses that mTOR inhibitors promote the enhanced differentiation and function of CD8+ memory T cells in the skin. Here, we demonstrate that the long-term oral administration of rapamycin to achieve clinically-relevant whole blood drug target thresholds, creates a “low rapamycin dose” environment in the skin. While both rapamycin and the calcineurin inhibitor tacrolimus elongated the survival of OVA-expressing skin grafts, and inhibited short-term antigen-specific CD8+ T cell responses, rapamycin but not tacrolimus permitted the statistically significant infiltration of CD8+ effector memory T cells into UV-induced SCC lesions. Furthermore, rapamycin uniquely enhanced the number and function of CD8+ effector and central memory T cells in a model of long-term contact hypersensitivity provided that rapamycin was present during the antigen sensitization phase. Thus, our findings suggest that patients switched to mTOR inhibitor regimens likely experience enhanced CD8+ memory T cell function to new antigen-challenges in their skin, which could contribute to their lower risk of de novo SSC formation and regression of pre-existing premalignant lesions.


Vaccine | 2017

Low antigen dose formulated in CAF09 adjuvant Favours a cytotoxic T-cell response following intraperitoneal immunization in Göttingen minipigs

Nana Haahr Overgaard; Thomas Mørch Frøsig; Jeanne Toft Jakobsen; Søren Buus; Mads Hald Andersen; Gregers Jungersen

The relationship between the antigen dose and the quality of an immune response generated upon immunization is poorly understood. However, findings show that the immune system is indeed influenced by the antigen dose; hence underlining the importance of correctly determining which dose to use in order to generate a certain type of immune response. To investigate this area further, we used Göttingen minipigs asan animal model especially due to the similar body size and high degree of immunome similarity between humans and pigs. In this study, we show that both a humoral and a cell-mediated immune (CMI) response can be generated following intraperitoneal immunization with tetanus toxoid (TT) formulated in the CAF09 liposomal adjuvant. Importantly, a low antigen dose induced more TT-specific polyfunctional T cells, whereas antigen-specific IgG production was observed upon high-dose immunization. Independent of antigen dose, intraperitoneal administration of antigen increased the amount of TT-specific cytotoxic CD8β+ T cells within the cytokine-producing T-cell pool when compared to the non-cytokine producing T-cell compartment. Taken together, these results demonstrate that a full protein formulated in the CAF09 adjuvant and administered to pigs via the intraperitoneal route effectively generates a cytotoxic T-cell response. Moreover, we confirm the inverse relationship between the antigen dose and the induction of polyfunctional T cells in a large animal model. These finding can have implications for the design of upcoming vaccine trials aiming at establishing a cytotoxic T-cell response.


Cancer Research | 2017

Abstract 805: KRASG12Dand TP53R167Hcooperate to induce pancreatic carcinoma in conditional transgenicSus scrofta

Daniel R. Principe; Nana Haahr Overgaard; Andrew M. Diaz; Carolina Torres; Ronald D. McKinney; David W. Dawson; Laurie A. Rund; Regina M. Schwind; Paul J. Grippo; Lawrence B. Schook

Although survival has improved in recent years, pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remains remarkably virulent with a median survival time of only four months. As there is no effective strategy for the management of PDAC, there is a need for the development of new preclinical strategies. The majority of this work is being done in genetically modified mice, which faithfully recapitulate a variety of pancreatic cancer histotypes. While mice have allowed for unprecedented insight into pancreatic cancer etiology, due to fundamental differences in anatomy and physiology, mouse models of PDAC often fail to accurately predict responsiveness to therapy. As the pig pancreas has more similar anatomical orientation and localization to humans than that of rodents, pigs may serve as a more relevant model for PDAC and other malignancies of the pancreas. As KRAS and TP53 mutations are observed in approximately 95% and 70% of PDAC patients, respectively, we generated Cre/lox transgenic Sus scrofta expressing a LSL-KRASG12D-TP53R167H cassette and administered an Adeno-Cre particle to the pancreas gland parenchyma. This resulted in a mixed histoype of metastatic leiomysarcoma and neoplastic disease of the pancreas. To produce a similar pancreas histoype while avoiding the leiomyosarcoma, we next restricted the Adeno-Cre administration to the main pancreatic duct, which resulted in both PDAC and neuroendocrine carcinoma with no abnormality of the smooth muscle. This serves as the first large animal model of pancreatic carcinogenesis, and given the anatomical/physiological similarity of pigs and humans, may allow for insight into new avenues of research not before possible in rodents. Citation Format: Daniel Principe, Nana Overgaard, Andrew Diaz, Carolina Torres, Ronald McKinney, David Dawson, Laurie Rund, Regina Schwind, Paul J. Grippo, Lawrence Schook. KRASG12D and TP53R167H cooperate to induce pancreatic carcinoma in conditional transgenic Sus scrofta [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2017; 2017 Apr 1-5; Washington, DC. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2017;77(13 Suppl):Abstract nr 805. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2017-805

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James W. Wells

University of Queensland

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Gregers Jungersen

Technical University of Denmark

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Thomas Mørch Frøsig

National Veterinary Institute

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Søren Buus

University of Copenhagen

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Simon Welner

National Veterinary Institute

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Ji-Won Jung

University of Queensland

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Mads Hald Andersen

Copenhagen University Hospital

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