Nasim Motamedi
Yale University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Nasim Motamedi.
Science | 2015
Xaver Sewald; Mark S. Ladinsky; Pradeep D. Uchil; Ruoxi Pi; Christin Herrmann; Nasim Motamedi; Thomas T. Murooka; Michael A. Brehm; Dale L. Greiner; Leonard D. Shultz; Thorsten R. Mempel; Pamela J. Bjorkman; Priti Kumar; Walther Mothes
A close up view of retrovirus spreading Viral infections typically begin with a small number of viral particles gaining access to the host at a specific tissue site. But how do viruses that cause systemic infections, such as HIV, spread more widely? Sewald et al. visualized how the retroviruses murine leukemia virus (MLV) and HIV spread within lymph nodes in mice (see the Perspective by Hope). Specific macrophages that line the lymph-draining sinuses in lymph nodes first captured the virus using the carbohydrate-binding protein CD169. These macrophages subsequently transferred virus to the B1 subclass of B lymphocytes, which migrated further into the lymph node, disseminating the virus more widely. Science, this issue p. 563; see also p. 511 Local macrophages and a subclass of B cells promote retroviral spread in lymph nodes. [Also see Perspective by Hope] Dendritic cells can capture and transfer retroviruses in vitro across synaptic cell-cell contacts to uninfected cells, a process called trans-infection. Whether trans-infection contributes to retroviral spread in vivo remains unknown. Here, we visualize how retroviruses disseminate in secondary lymphoid tissues of living mice. We demonstrate that murine leukemia virus (MLV) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) are first captured by sinus-lining macrophages. CD169/Siglec-1, an I-type lectin that recognizes gangliosides, captures the virus. MLV-laden macrophages then form long-lived synaptic contacts to trans-infect B-1 cells. Infected B-1 cells subsequently migrate into the lymph node to spread the infection through virological synapses. Robust infection in lymph nodes and spleen requires CD169, suggesting that a combination of fluid-based movement followed by CD169-dependent trans-infection can contribute to viral spread.
Kidney International | 2012
Andrea Ribeiro; Markus Wörnle; Nasim Motamedi; Hans J. Anders; Elisabeth F. Gröne; Hans Nitschko; Peter Kurktschiev; Hanna Debiec; Matthias Kretzler; Clemens D. Cohen; Hermann Joseph Gröne; Detlef Schlöndorff; Holger Schmid
Polyomavirus-associated nephropathy (PVAN) is a significant complication after kidney transplantation, often leading to premature graft loss. In order to identify antiviral responses of the renal tubular epithelium, we studied activation of the viral DNA and the double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) sensors Toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3) and retinoic acid inducible gene-I (RIG-I) in allograft biopsy samples of patients with PVAN, and in human collecting duct cells in culture after stimulation by the dsRNA mimic polyriboinosinic:polyribocytidylic acid (poly(I:C)), cytokines, or infection with BK virus. Double staining using immunofluorescence for BK virus and TLR3 showed strong signals in epithelial cells of distal cortical tubules and the collecting duct. In biopsies microdissected to isolate tubulointerstitial lesions, TLR3 but not RIG-I mRNA expression was found to be increased in PVAN. Collecting duct cells in culture expressed TLR3 intracellularly, and activation of TLR3 and RIG-I by poly(I:C) enhanced expression of cytokine, chemokine, and IFN-β mRNA. This inflammatory response could be specifically blocked by siRNA to TLR3. Finally, infection of the collecting duct cells with BK virus enhanced the expression of cytokines and chemokines. This led to an efficient antiviral immune response with TLR3 and RIG-I upregulation without activation of IL-1β or components of the inflammasome pathway. Thus, PVAN activation of innate immune defense mechanisms through TLR3 is involved in the antiviral and anti-inflammatory response leading to the expression of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines.
Journal of Virology | 2015
Luisa J. Ströh; Melissa S. Maginnis; Bärbel S. Blaum; Christian D. S. Nelson; Ursula Neu; Gretchen V. Gee; Bethany A. O'Hara; Nasim Motamedi; Daniel DiMaio; Walter J. Atwood; Thilo Stehle
ABSTRACT The human JC polyomavirus (JCPyV) establishes an asymptomatic, persistent infection in the kidneys of the majority of the population and is the causative agent of the fatal demyelinating disease progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) in immunosuppressed individuals. The Mad-1 strain of JCPyV, a brain isolate, was shown earlier to require α2,6-linked sialic acid on the lactoseries tetrasaccharide c (LSTc) glycan for attachment to host cells. In contrast, a JCPyV kidney isolate type 3 strain, WT3, has been reported to interact with sialic acid-containing gangliosides, but the role of these glycans in JCPyV infection has remained unclear. To help rationalize these findings and probe the effects of strain-specific differences on receptor binding, we performed a comprehensive analysis of the glycan receptor specificities of these two representative JCPyV strains using high-resolution X-ray crystallography and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, and correlated these data with the results of infectivity assays. We show here that capsid proteins of Mad-1 and WT3 JCPyV can both engage LSTc as well as multiple sialylated gangliosides. However, the binding affinities exhibit subtle differences, with the highest affinity observed for LSTc. Engagement of LSTc is a prerequisite for functional receptor engagement, while the more weakly binding gangliosides are not required for productive infection. Our findings highlight the complexity of virus-carbohydrate interactions and demonstrate that subtle differences in binding affinities, rather than the binding event alone, help determine tissue tropism and viral pathogenesis. IMPORTANCE Viral infection is initiated by attachment to receptors on host cells, and this event plays an important role in viral disease. We investigated the receptor-binding properties of human JC polyomavirus (JCPyV), a virus that resides in the kidneys of the majority of the population and can cause the fatal demyelinating disease progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) in the brains of immunosuppressed individuals. JCPyV has been reported to interact with multiple carbohydrate receptors, and we sought to clarify how the interactions between JCPyV and cellular carbohydrate receptors influenced infection. Here we demonstrate that JCPyV can engage numerous sialylated carbohydrate receptors. However, the virus displays preferential binding to LSTc, and only LSTc mediates a productive infection. Our findings demonstrate that subtle differences in binding affinity, rather than receptor engagement alone, are a key determinant of viral infection.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Edward C. Goodwin; Nasim Motamedi; Alex Lipovsky; Rubén Fernández-Busnadiego; Daniel DiMaio
DNAJB12 and DNAJB14 are transmembrane proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) that serve as co-chaperones for Hsc70/Hsp70 heat shock proteins. We demonstrate that over-expression of DNAJB12 or DNAJB14 causes the formation of elaborate membranous structures within cell nuclei, which we designate DJANGOS for DNAJ-associated nuclear globular structures. DJANGOS contain DNAJB12, DNAJB14, Hsc70 and markers of the ER lumen and ER and nuclear membranes. Strikingly, they are evenly distributed underneath the nuclear envelope and are of uniform size in any one nucleus. DJANGOS are composed primarily of single-walled membrane tubes and sheets that connect to the nuclear envelope via a unique configuration of membranes, in which the nuclear pore complex appears anchored exclusively to the outer nuclear membrane, allowing both the inner and outer nuclear membranes to flow past the circumference of the nuclear pore complex into the nucleus. DJANGOS break down rapidly during cell division and reform synchronously in the daughter cell nuclei, demonstrating that they are dynamic structures that undergo coordinate formation and dissolution. Genetic studies showed that the chaperone activity of DNAJ/Hsc70 is required for the formation of DJANGOS. Further analysis of these structures will provide insight into nuclear pore formation and function, activities of molecular chaperones, and mechanisms that maintain membrane identity.
Mbio | 2016
Yong Luo; Nasim Motamedi; Thomas G. Magaldi; Gretchen V. Gee; Walter J. Atwood; Daniel DiMaio
ABSTRACT Simian virus 40 (SV40), a polyomavirus that has served as an important model to understand many aspects of biology, induces dramatic cytoplasmic vacuolization late during productive infection of monkey host cells. Although this activity led to the discovery of the virus in 1960, the mechanism of vacuolization is still not known. Pentamers of the major SV40 capsid protein VP1 bind to the ganglioside GM1, which serves as the cellular receptor for the virus. In this report, we show that binding of VP1 to cell surface GM1 plays a key role in SV40 infection-induced vacuolization. We previously showed that SV40 VP1 mutants defective for GM1 binding fail to induce vacuolization, even though they replicate efficiently. Here, we show that interfering with GM1-VP1 binding by knockdown of GM1 after infection is established abrogates vacuolization by wild-type SV40. Vacuole formation during permissive infection requires efficient virus release, and conditioned medium harvested late during SV40 infection rapidly induces vacuoles in a VP1- and GM1-dependent fashion. Furthermore, vacuolization can also be induced by a nonreplicating SV40 pseudovirus in a GM1-dependent manner, and a mutation in BK pseudovirus VP1 that generates GM1 binding confers vacuole-inducing activity. Vacuolization can also be triggered by purified pentamers of wild-type SV40 VP1, but not by GM1 binding-defective pentamers or by intracellular expression of VP1. These results demonstrate that SV40 infection-induced vacuolization is caused by the binding of released progeny viruses to GM1, thereby identifying the molecular trigger for the activity that led to the discovery of SV40. IMPORTANCE The DNA tumor virus SV40 was discovered more than a half century ago as a contaminant of poliovirus vaccine stocks, because it caused dramatic cytoplasmic vacuolization of permissive host cells. Although SV40 played a historically important role in the development of molecular and cellular biology, restriction mapping, molecular cloning, and whole-genome sequencing, the basis of this vacuolization phenotype was unknown. Here, we show that SV40-induced vacuolization is triggered by the binding of the major viral capsid protein, VP1, to a cell surface ganglioside receptor, GM1. No other viral proteins or virus replication is required for vacuole formation. Other polyomaviruses utilize different ganglioside receptors, but they do not induce vacuolization. This work identifies the molecular trigger for the phenotype that led to the discovery of this important virus and provides the first molecular insight into an unusual and enigmatic cytopathic effect due to virus infection. The DNA tumor virus SV40 was discovered more than a half century ago as a contaminant of poliovirus vaccine stocks, because it caused dramatic cytoplasmic vacuolization of permissive host cells. Although SV40 played a historically important role in the development of molecular and cellular biology, restriction mapping, molecular cloning, and whole-genome sequencing, the basis of this vacuolization phenotype was unknown. Here, we show that SV40-induced vacuolization is triggered by the binding of the major viral capsid protein, VP1, to a cell surface ganglioside receptor, GM1. No other viral proteins or virus replication is required for vacuole formation. Other polyomaviruses utilize different ganglioside receptors, but they do not induce vacuolization. This work identifies the molecular trigger for the phenotype that led to the discovery of this important virus and provides the first molecular insight into an unusual and enigmatic cytopathic effect due to virus infection.
Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 2016
Xaver Sewald; Nasim Motamedi; Walther Mothes
Viruses are pathogens that strictly depend on their host for propagation. Over years of co-evolution viruses have become experts in exploiting the host cell biology and physiology to ensure efficient replication and spread. Here, we will first summarize the concepts that have emerged from in vitro cell culture studies to understand virus spread. We will then review the results from studies in living animals that reveal how viruses exploit the natural flow of body fluids, specific tissue architecture, and patterns of cell circulation and migration to spread within the host. Understanding tissue physiology will be critical for the design of antiviral strategies that prevent virus dissemination.
Virology Journal | 2012
Nasim Motamedi; Helga Mairhofer; Hans Nitschko; Gundula Jäger; Ulrich H. Koszinowski
BackgroundThe polyomaviruses WUPyV and KIPyV have been detected in various sample types including feces indicating pathogenicity in the gastrointestinal (GI) system. However, quantitative viral load data from other simultaneously collected sample types are missing. As a consequence, primary replication in the GI system cannot be differentiated from swallowed virus from the respiratory tract.Here we present a retrospective quantitative longitudinal analysis in simultaneously harvested specimens from different organ sites of patients undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). This allows the definition of sample types where deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) detection can be expected and, as a consequence, the identification of their primary replication site.FindingsViral DNA loads from 37 patients undergoing HSCT were quantified in respiratory tract secretions (RTS), stool and urine samples as well as in leukocytes (n = 449). Leukocyte-associated virus could not be found. WUPyV was found in feces, RTS and urine samples of an infant, while KIPyV was repeatedly detected in RTS and stool samples of 4 adult patients.RTS and stool samples were matched to determine the viral load difference showing a mean difference of 2.3 log copies/ml (p < 0.001).ConclusionsThe data collected in this study suggest that virus detection in the GI tract results from swallowed virus from the respiratory tract (RT). We conclude that shedding from the RT should be ruled out before viral DNA detection in the feces can be correlated to GI symptoms.
Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 2016
Andrea Ribeiro; Monika Merkle; Nasim Motamedi; Hans Nitschko; Simone Köppel; Markus Wörnle
Polyomavirus-associated nephropathy due to BK virus infection (BKVAN) is recognized as an important cause of significant kidney transplant dysfunction often leading to renal graft loss. The activation of innate immune defense mechanisms during BKVAN is still poorly understood and an altered regulation of inflammatory mediators by resident kidney cells upon viral infection can be expected to contribute to the onset and progression of disease. TNFα interacting with its receptors, TNF receptor 1 (TNFR1) and TNF receptor 2 (TNFR2), is largely accepted to be involved in viral responses, exhibiting both proinflammatory and immunosuppressive effects. Our aim was to examine the expressions of TNFα and TNFR1 and 2 in human collecting duct epithelial cells (HCDC) after infection with BKV as well as to study the effect of TNFα and poly(I:C), a synthetic analog of viral RNA, on the expressions of TNF receptors and proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines in HCDC. Quantitative RT-PCR analyses showed a downregulation of TNFα and an upregulation of both TNFR1 and 2 upon exposure of HCDC to the BK virus. TNFα stimulation induced the expressions of IL-6, IL-8, RANTES, and TNFR2. Poly(I:C) upregulated the expressions of both TNFR1 and TNFR2, a response that could be effectively blocked by siRNA to TLR3 and RIG-I, two double-stranded (ds) RNA receptors of the innate immune system. Poly(I:C)-dependent expression of TNFR2 but not TNFR1 was enhanced by TNFα. Taken together, our results suggest an involvement of TNF/TNFR system in virus-associated nephropathy.
bioRxiv | 2018
Nasim Motamedi; Xaver Sewald; Yong Luo; Walther Mothes; Daniel DiMaio
Polyomaviruses are a family of small, non-enveloped DNA viruses that can cause severe disease in immunosuppressed individuals. Studies with SV40, a well-studied model polyomavirus, have revealed the role of host proteins in polyomavirus entry and trafficking to the nucleus, viral transcription and DNA replication, and cell transformation. In contrast, little is known about host factors or cellular signaling pathways involved in the late steps of productive infection leading to polyomavirus release. We previously showed that cytoplasmic vacuolization, a characteristic late cytopathic effect of SV40, depends on the specific interaction between the major viral capsid protein VP1 and its cell surface ganglioside receptor GM1. Here we show that late during infection, SV40 activates a signaling cascade in permissive CV-1 monkey cells involving Ras, Rac1, MKK4 and JNK to induce SV40-specific cytoplasmic vacuolization and subsequent cell lysis and virus release. Inhibition of individual components of this signaling pathway inhibits vacuolization, lysis and virus release, even though high-level intracellular virus replication occurs. The identification of this pathway for SV40-induced vacuolization and virus release provides new insights into the late steps of non-enveloped virus infection and reveals potential drug targets for the treatment of diseases caused by these viruses. IMPORTANCE The polyomaviruses are small DNA viruses that include important model viruses and human pathogens that can cause fatal disease, including cancer, in immunosuppressed individuals. There are no vaccines or specific antiviral agents for any polyomavirus. Here, we show that late during infection, SV40 activates a signaling cascade involving Ras, Rac, and JNK that is required for cytoplasmic vacuolization and efficient virus release. This pathway may represent a new point of intervention to control infection by these viruses.
Journal of Clinical Virology | 2010
Andreas Osterman; Rudolf Haase; Nasim Motamedi; Hans Nitschko; Gundula Jaeger; Armin Baiker
The HCMV phosphoprotein 65 (pp65) antigen test represents fast, cheap and sensitive method for the routine diagnosis of an ctive HCMV infection.1 However, the lack of economic and easy ccessible (immuno-)staining control slides for the validation of his test has been considered as one problem for its standardization nd quality assurance. Approaches to manufacture suitable stainng control slides weremanifold, including their preparation out of p65 positive patient peripheral blood leukocyte (PBL) samples or heir in vitro-generationby co-cultivationof donorPBLswithHCMV nfected endothelial cells.2 Commercially available HCMV pp65 ntigen test providers supply staining control slides that are based n HCMV infected and uninfected fibroblasts (ARGENE, France), or ased on donor PBLs preparations mixed with defined ratios of ecombinant, pp65 expressing SF9 insect cells (CMV BriteTM Kit, Q Products, The Netherlands). The disadvantages of these existing ather sophisticated, labor intensive and thus expensive methods re the lack of unlimited amounts of biologicalmaterial, the depenency on infectious HCMV and differences in staining intensity of ecombinant pp65, respectively.3