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Dive into the research topics where Nathaniel M. Green is active.

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Featured researches published by Nathaniel M. Green.


Seminars in Immunology | 2011

Toll-like receptor driven B cell activation in the induction of systemic autoimmunity

Nathaniel M. Green; Ann Marshak-Rothstein

Studies over the past decade have demonstrated a key role for pattern recognition receptors in the activation of autoreactive B cells. Self reactive B cells that manage to escape negative selection often express relatively low affinity receptors for self antigens (ignorant B cells), and can only be activated by integrating a relatively weak BCR signal with signals from additional receptors. Members of the toll-like receptor (TLR) gene family, and especially the nucleic acid binding receptors TLR 7, 8 and 9, appear to play a key role in this regard and promote the production of autoantibodies reactive with DNA- or RNA-associated autoantigens. These autoantibodies are able to form immune complexes with soluble or cell-bound ligands, and these immune complexes can in turn activate a second round of proinflammatory cells that further contribute to the autoimmune disease process. Recent data have emerged showing a pathogenic role for TLR7, with an opposing, protective role for TLR9. Targeting these disregulated pathways offers a therapeutic opportunity to treat autoimmune diseases without crippling the entire immune system. Further understanding of the role of specific receptors, cell subsets, and inhibitory signals that govern these TLR-associated pathways will enable future therapeutics to be tailored to specific categories of autoimmune disease.


Journal of Immunology | 2009

Murine B Cell Response to TLR7 Ligands Depends on an IFN-β Feedback Loop

Nathaniel M. Green; Amy Laws; Kerstin Kiefer; Liliana Busconi; You-Me Kim; Melanie M. Brinkmann; Erin Hodges Trail; Kei Yasuda; Sean R. Christensen; Mark J Shlomchik; Stefanie N. Vogel; John H. Connor; Hidde L. Ploegh; Dan Eilat; Ian R. Rifkin; Jean Maguire van Seventer; Ann Marshak-Rothstein

Type I IFNs play an important, yet poorly characterized, role in systemic lupus erythematosus. To better understand the interplay between type I IFNs and the activation of autoreactive B cells, we evaluated the effect of type I IFN receptor (IFNAR) deficiency in murine B cell responses to common TLR ligands. In comparison to wild-type B cells, TLR7-stimulated IFNAR−/− B cells proliferated significantly less well and did not up-regulate costimulatory molecules. By contrast, IFNAR1−/− B cells did not produce cytokines, but did proliferate and up-regulate activation markers in response to other TLR ligands. These defects were not due to a difference in the distribution of B cell populations or a failure to produce a soluble factor other than a type I IFN. Instead, the compromised response pattern reflected the disruption of an IFN-β feedback loop and constitutively low expression of TLR7 in the IFNAR1−/− B cells. These results highlight subtle differences in the IFN dependence of TLR7 responses compared with other TLR-mediated B cell responses.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

Autoreactive B Cells Discriminate CpG-Rich and CpG-Poor DNA and This Response Is Modulated by IFN-α

Melissa B. Uccellini; Liliana Busconi; Nathaniel M. Green; Patricia Busto; Sean R. Christensen; Mark J. Shlomchik; Ann Marshak-Rothstein; Gregory A. Viglianti

Autoreactive B cells are activated by DNA, chromatin, or chromatin-containing immune complexes (ICs) through a mechanism dependent on dual engagement of the BCR and TLR9. We examined the contribution of endogenous DNA sequence elements to this process. DNA sequence can determine both recognition by the BCR and by TLR9. DNA fragments containing CpG islands, a natural source of unmethylated CpG dinucleotides, promote the activation of DNA-reactive B cells derived from BCR transgenic mice as well as DNA-reactive B cells present in the normal repertoire. ICs containing these CpG island fragments are potent ligands for AM14 IgG2a-reactive B cells. In contrast, ICs containing total mammalian DNA, or DNA fragments lacking immunostimulatory motifs, fail to induce B cell proliferation, indicating that BCR crosslinking alone is insufficient to activate low-affinity autoreactive B cells. Importantly, priming B cells with IFN-α lowers the BCR activation threshold and relaxes the selectivity for CpG-containing DNA. Taken together, our findings underscore the importance of endogenous CpG-containing DNAs in the TLR9-dependent activation of autoreactive B cells and further identify an important mechanism through which IFN-α can contribute to the pathogenesis of systemic lupus erythematosus.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Activation of Autoreactive B Cells by Endogenous TLR7 and TLR3 RNA Ligands

Nathaniel M. Green; Krishna-Sulayman Moody; Michelle Debatis; Ann Marshak-Rothstein

Background: Low affinity autoreactive B cells are activated by co-engagement of the BCR and TLRs. Results: Endogenous RNAs that are associated with autoantigens are ligands for TLR7 and TLR3. Conclusion: Sequence and structure of RNA determines recognition by TLRs. Significance: B cells are activated by RNA delivered through the BCR, and the sequences of RNAs define their stimulatory capacity as TLR ligands. The key step in the activation of autoreactive B cells is the internalization of nucleic acid containing ligands and delivery of these ligands to the Toll-like Receptor (TLR) containing endolysosomal compartment. Ribonucleoproteins represent a large fraction of autoantigens in systemic autoimmune diseases. Here we demonstrate that many uridine-rich mammalian RNA sequences associated with common autoantigens effectively activate autoreactive B cells. Priming with type I IFN increased the magnitude of activation, and the range of which RNAs were stimulatory. A subset of RNAs that contain a high degree of self-complementarity also activated B cells through TLR3. For the RNA sequences that activated predominantly through TLR7, the activation is proportional to uridine-content, and more precisely defined by the frequency of specific uridine-containing motifs. These results identify parameters that define specific mammalian RNAs as ligands for TLRs.


Journal of Immunology | 2015

Cell-Intrinsic Expression of TLR9 in Autoreactive B Cells Constrains BCR/TLR7-Dependent Responses

Kerstin Nundel; Nathaniel M. Green; Arthur L. Shaffer; Krishna-Sulayman Moody; Patricia Busto; Dan Eilat; Kensuke Miyake; Michael A. Oropallo; Michael P. Cancro; Ann Marshak-Rothstein

Endosomal TLRs play an important role in systemic autoimmune diseases, such as systemic erythematosus lupus, in which DNA- and RNA-associated autoantigens activate autoreactive B cells through TLR9- and TLR7-dependent pathways. Nevertheless, TLR9-deficient autoimmune-prone mice develop more severe clinical disease, whereas TLR7-deficient and TLR7/9–double deficient autoimmune-prone mice develop less severe disease. To determine whether the regulatory activity of TLR9 is B cell intrinsic, we directly compared the functional properties of autoantigen-activated wild-type, TLR9-deficient, and TLR7-deficient B cells in an experimental system in which proliferation depends on BCR/TLR coengagement. In vitro, TLR9-deficient cells are less dependent on survival factors for a sustained proliferative response than are either wild-type or TLR7-deficient cells. The TLR9-deficient cells also preferentially differentiate toward the plasma cell lineage, as indicated by expression of CD138, sustained expression of IRF4, and other molecular markers of plasma cells. In vivo, autoantigen-activated TLR9-deficient cells give rise to greater numbers of autoantibody-producing cells. Our results identify distinct roles for TLR7 and TLR9 in the differentiation of autoreactive B cells that explain the capacity of TLR9 to limit, as well as TLR7 to promote, the clinical features of systemic erythematosus lupus.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

A TLR9-dependent checkpoint governs B cell responses to DNA-containing antigens

Vishal J. Sindhava; Michael A. Oropallo; Krishna Moody; Martin S. Naradikian; Lauren E. Higdon; Lin Zhou; Arpita Myles; Nathaniel M. Green; Kerstin Nundel; William Stohl; Amanda M. Schmidt; Wei Cao; Stephanie Dorta-Estremera; Taku Kambayashi; Ann Marshak-Rothstein; Michael P. Cancro

Mature B cell pools retain a substantial proportion of polyreactive and self-reactive clonotypes, suggesting that activation checkpoints exist to reduce the initiation of autoreactive B cell responses. Here, we have described a relationship among the B cell receptor (BCR), TLR9, and cytokine signals that regulate B cell responses to DNA-containing antigens. In both mouse and human B cells, BCR ligands that deliver a TLR9 agonist induce an initial proliferative burst that is followed by apoptotic death. The latter mechanism involves p38-dependent G1 cell-cycle arrest and subsequent intrinsic mitochondrial apoptosis and is shared by all preimmune murine B cell subsets and CD27– human B cells. Survival or costimulatory signals rescue B cells from this fate, but the outcome varies depending on the signals involved. B lymphocyte stimulator (BLyS) engenders survival and antibody secretion, whereas CD40 costimulation with IL-21 or IFN-&ggr; promotes a T-bet+ B cell phenotype. Finally, in vivo immunization studies revealed that when protein antigens are conjugated with DNA, the humoral immune response is blunted and acquires features associated with T-bet+ B cell differentiation. We propose that this mechanism integrating BCR, TLR9, and cytokine signals provides a peripheral checkpoint for DNA-containing antigens that, if circumvented by survival and differentiative cues, yields B cells with the autoimmune-associated T-bet+ phenotype.


Archive | 2015

BCR/TLR7-Dependent Responses Autoreactive B Cells Constrains Cell-Intrinsic Expression of TLR9 in

Michael A. Oropallo; Michael P. Cancro; Krishna Moody; Patricia Busto; Dan Eilat; Nathaniel M. Green; Arthur L. Shaffer


Journal of Immunology | 2012

Complexed BCR-TLR9 stimulation induces an activation associated cell death in B cells which is rescued by BLyS

Michael A. Oropallo; Nathaniel M. Green; Kerstin Kiefer; Krishna Moody; Ann Marshak-Rothstein; Michael P. Cancro


Journal of Immunology | 2012

BCR/TLR7 coligation uniquely drives plasma cell differentiation of autoreactive B cells

Kerstin Kiefer; Nathaniel M. Green; Michael A. Oropallo; Michael P. Cancro; Ann Marshak-Rothstein


Journal of Immunology | 2011

Cross-regulation between TLR7, TLR8, and TLR9 in autoreactive B cells.

Nathaniel M. Green; Michelle Debatis; Ann Marshak-Rothstein

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Ann Marshak-Rothstein

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Michael P. Cancro

University of Pennsylvania

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Dan Eilat

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Patricia Busto

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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