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Dive into the research topics where Niels A. W. Lemmermann is active.

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Featured researches published by Niels A. W. Lemmermann.


Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology | 2008

Murine Model of Cytomegalovirus Latency and Reactivation

Matthias J. Reddehase; Christian O. Simon; Christof K. Seckert; Niels A. W. Lemmermann; Natascha K. A. Grzimek

Efficient resolution of acute cytopathogenic cytomegalovirus infection through innate and adaptive host immune mechanisms is followed by lifelong maintenance of the viral genome in host tissues in a state of replicative latency, which is interrupted by episodes of virus reactivation for transmission. The establishment of latency is the result of aeons of co-evolution of cytomegaloviruses and their respective host species. Genetic adaptation of a particular cytomegalovirus to its specific host is reflected by private gene families not found in other members of the cytomegalovirus group, whereas basic functions of the viral replicative cycle are encoded by public gene families shared between different cytomegaloviruses or even with herpesviruses in general. Private genes include genes coding for immunoevasins, a group of glycoproteins specifically dedicated to dampen recognition by the hosts innate and adaptive immune surveillance to protect the virus against elimination. Recent data in the mouse model of cytomegalovirus latency have indicated that viral replicative latency established in the immunocompetent host is a dynamic state characterized by episodes of viral gene desilencing and immune sensing of reactivated presentation of antigenic peptides at immunological checkpoints by CD8 T cells. This sensing maintains viral replicative latency by triggering antiviral effector functions that terminate the viral gene expression program before infectious viral progeny are assembled. According to the immune sensing hypothesis of latency control, immunological checkpoints are unique for each infected individual in reflection of host MHC (HLA) polymorphism and the proteome(s) of the viral variant(s) harbored in latency.


Biotechnology Journal | 2011

Superresolution imaging of biological nanostructures by spectral precision distance microscopy

Christoph Cremer; Rainer Kaufmann; Manuel Gunkel; Sebastian Pres; Yanina Weiland; Patrick Müller; Thomas Ruckelshausen; Paul Lemmer; Fania Geiger; Sven Degenhard; Christina Wege; Niels A. W. Lemmermann; Rafaela Holtappels; Hilmar Strickfaden; Michael Hausmann

For the improved understanding of biological systems on the nanoscale, it is necessary to enhance the resolution of light microscopy in the visible wavelength range beyond the limits of conventional epifluorescence microscopy (optical resolution of about 200 nm laterally, 600 nm axially). Recently, various far‐field methods have been developed allowing a substantial increase of resolution (“superresolution microscopy”, or “lightoptical nanoscopy”). This opens an avenue to ‘nano‐image’ intact and even living cells, as well as other biostructures like viruses, down to the molecular detail. Thus, it is possible to combine light optical spatial nanoscale information with ultrastructure analyses and the molecular interaction information provided by molecular cell biology. In this review, we describe the principles of spectrally assigned localization microscopy (SALM) of biological nanostructures, focusing on a special SALM approach, spectral precision distance/position determination microscopy (SPDM) with physically modified fluorochromes (SPDMPhymod. Generally, this SPDM method is based on high‐precision localization of fluorescent molecules, which can be discriminated using reversibly bleached states of the fluorophores for their optical isolation. A variety of application examples is presented, ranging from superresolution microscopy of membrane and cytoplasmic protein distribution to dual‐color SPDM of nuclear proteins. At present, we can achieve an optical resolution of cellular structures down to the 20‐nm range, with best values around 5 nm (∼1/100 of the exciting wavelength).


Journal of Virology | 2008

The Immune Evasion Paradox: Immunoevasins of Murine Cytomegalovirus Enhance Priming of CD8 T Cells by Preventing Negative Feedback Regulation

Verena Böhm; Christian O. Simon; Jiirgen Podlech; Christof K. Seckert; Dorothea Gendig; Petra Deegen; Dorothea Gillert-Marien; Niels A. W. Lemmermann; Rafaela Holtappels; Matthias J. Reddehase

ABSTRACT Cytomegaloviruses express glycoproteins that interfere with antigen presentation to CD8 T cells. Although the molecular modes of action of these “immunoevasins” differ between cytomegalovirus species, the convergent biological outcome is an inhibition of the recognition of infected cells. In murine cytomegalovirus, m152/gp40 retains peptide-loaded major histocompatibility complex class I molecules in a cis-Golgi compartment, m06/gp48 mediates their vesicular sorting for lysosomal degradation, and m04/gp34, although not an immunoevasin in its own right, appears to assist in the concerted action of all three molecules. Using the Ld-restricted IE1 epitope YPHFMPTNL in the BALB/c mouse model as a paradigm, we provide here an explanation for the paradox that immunoevasins enhance CD8 T-cell priming although they inhibit peptide presentation in infected cells. Adaptive immune responses are initiated in the regional lymph node (RLN) draining the site of pathogen exposure. In particular for antigens that are not virion components, the magnitude of viral gene expression providing the antigens is likely a critical parameter in priming efficacy. We have therefore focused on the events in the RLN and have related priming to intranodal viral gene expression. We show that immunoevasins enhance priming by downmodulating an early CD8 T-cell-mediated “negative feedback” control of the infection in the cortical region of the RLN, thus supporting the model that immunoevasins improve antigen supply for indirect priming by uninfected antigen-presenting cells. As an important consequence, these findings predict that deletion of immunoevasin genes in a replicative vaccine virus is not a favorable option but may, rather, be counterproductive.


Medical Microbiology and Immunology | 2008

Epitope-specific in vivo protection against cytomegalovirus disease by CD8 T cells in the murine model of preemptive immunotherapy

Verena Böhm; Jürgen Podlech; Doris Thomas; Petra Deegen; Marcus-Folker Pahl-Seibert; Niels A. W. Lemmermann; Natascha K. A. Grzimek; Silke A. Oehrlein-Karpi; Matthias J. Reddehase; Rafaela Holtappels

Preclinical research in murine models as well as subsequent clinical trials have concordantly revealed a high protective potential of antiviral CD8 T cells, of donor-derived ex vivo memory CD8 T cells in particular, in the immunotherapy of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection in immunocompromised recipients. Although it is generally held view that the observed beneficial effect of the transferred cells is viral epitope-specific, involving the recognition of MHC class-I presented peptides by cognate T cell receptors, this assumption awaits formal proof, at least with regard to the in vivo function of the CD8 T cells. This question is particularly evident for CMV, since the function of viral immune evasion proteins interferes with the MHC class-I pathway of peptide presentation. Alternatively, therefore, one has to consider the possibility that the requirement for epitope recognition may be bypassed by other ligand–receptor interactions between CD8 T cells and infected cells, which may trigger the signaling for effector functions. Clearly, such a mechanism might explain why CD8 T cells are so efficient in controlling CMV infection despite the expression of viral immune evasion proteins. Here we provide direct evidence for epitope-specificity of antiviral protection by employing a recombinant murine CMV (mCMV), namely the mutant virus mCMV-IE1-L176A, in which an immunodominant viral epitope of the regulatory immediate-early protein IE1 is functionally deleted by a point mutation replacing leucine with alanine at the C-terminal MHC anchor position of the antigenic peptide.


PLOS Pathogens | 2014

Mast Cells Expedite Control of Pulmonary Murine Cytomegalovirus Infection by Enhancing the Recruitment of Protective CD8 T Cells to the Lungs

Stefan Ebert; Marc Becker; Niels A. W. Lemmermann; Julia K. Büttner; Anastasija Michel; Christian Taube; Jürgen Podlech; Verena Böhm; Kirsten Freitag; Doris Thomas; Rafaela Holtappels; Matthias J. Reddehase; Michael Stassen

The lungs are a noted predilection site of acute, latent, and reactivated cytomegalovirus (CMV) infections. Interstitial pneumonia is the most dreaded manifestation of CMV disease in the immunocompromised host, whereas in the immunocompetent host lung-infiltrating CD8 T cells confine the infection in nodular inflammatory foci and prevent viral pathology. By using murine CMV infection as a model, we provide evidence for a critical role of mast cells (MC) in the recruitment of protective CD8 T cells to the lungs. Systemic infection triggered degranulation selectively in infected MC. The viral activation of MC was associated with a wave of CC chemokine ligand 5 (CCL5) in the serum of C57BL/6 mice that was MC-derived as verified by infection of MC-deficient KitW-sh/W-sh “sash” mutants. In these mutants, CD8 T cells were recruited less efficiently to the lungs, correlating with enhanced viral replication and delayed virus clearance. A causative role for MC was verified by MC reconstitution of “sash” mice restoring both, efficient CD8 T-cell recruitment and infection control. These results reveal a novel crosstalk axis between innate and adaptive immune defense against CMV, and identify MC as a hitherto unconsidered player in the immune surveillance at a relevant site of CMV disease.


Journal of Virology | 2010

Immune Evasion Proteins of Murine Cytomegalovirus Preferentially Affect Cell Surface Display of Recently Generated Peptide Presentation Complexes

Niels A. W. Lemmermann; Kerstin M. Gergely; Verena Böhm; Petra Deegen; Torsten Däubner; Matthias J. Reddehase

ABSTRACT For recognition of infected cells by CD8 T cells, antigenic peptides are presented at the cell surface, bound to major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) molecules. Downmodulation of cell surface MHC-I molecules is regarded as a hallmark function of cytomegalovirus-encoded immunoevasins. The molecular mechanisms by which immunoevasins interfere with the MHC-I pathway suggest, however, that this downmodulation may be secondary to an interruption of turnover replenishment and that hindrance of the vesicular transport of recently generated peptide-MHC (pMHC) complexes to the cell surface is the actual function of immunoevasins. Here we have used the model of murine cytomegalovirus (mCMV) infection to provide experimental evidence for this hypothesis. To quantitate pMHC complexes at the cell surface after infection in the presence and absence of immunoevasins, we generated the recombinant viruses mCMV-SIINFEKL and mCMV-Δm06m152-SIINFEKL, respectively, expressing the Kb-presented peptide SIINFEKL with early-phase kinetics in place of an immunodominant peptide of the viral carrier protein gp36.5/m164. The data revealed ∼10,000 Kb molecules presenting SIINFEKL in the absence of immunoevasins, which is an occupancy of ∼10% of all cell surface Kb molecules, whereas immunoevasins reduced this number to almost the detection limit. To selectively evaluate their effect on preexisting pMHC complexes, cells were exogenously loaded with SIINFEKL peptide shortly after infection with mCMV-SIINFEKA, in which endogenous presentation is prevented by an L174A mutation of the C-terminal MHC-I anchor residue. The data suggest that pMHC complexes present at the cell surface in advance of immunoevasin gene expression are downmodulated due to constitutive turnover in the absence of resupply.


Journal of General Virology | 2011

Single cell detection of latent cytomegalovirus reactivation in host tissue

Anja Marquardt; Stephan Halle; Christof K. Seckert; Niels A. W. Lemmermann; Tibor Z. Veres; Armin Braun; Ulrich A. Maus; Reinhold Förster; Matthias J. Reddehase; Martin Messerle; Andreas Busche

The molecular mechanisms leading to reactivation of latent cytomegalovirus are not well understood. To study reactivation, the few cells in an organ tissue that give rise to reactivated virus need to be identified, ideally at the earliest possible time point in the process. To this end, mouse cytomegalovirus (MCMV) reporter mutants were designed to simultaneously express the red fluorescent protein mCherry and the secreted Gaussia luciferase (Gluc). Whereas Gluc can serve to assess infection at the level of individual mice by measuring luminescence in blood samples or by in vivo imaging, mCherry fluorescence offers the advatage of detection of infection at the single cell level. To visualize cells in which MCMV was being reactivated, precision-cut lung slices (PCLS) that preserve tissue microanatomy were prepared from the lungs of latently infected mice. By day 3 of cultivation of the PCLS, reactivation was revealed by Gluc expression, preceding the detection of infectious virus by approximately 4 days. Reactivation events in PCLS could be identified when they were still confined to single cells. Notably, using fractalkine receptor-GFP reporter mice, we never observed reactivation originating from CX3CR1(+) monocytes or pulmonary dendritic cells derived therefrom. Furthermore, latent viral genome in the lungs was not enriched in sorted bone-marrow-derived cells expressing CD11b. Taken together, these complementary approaches suggest that CD11b(+) and CX3CR1(+) subsets of the myeloid differentiation lineage are not the main reservoirs and cellular sites of MCMV latency and reactivation in the lungs.


PLOS Pathogens | 2015

Non-redundant and Redundant Roles of Cytomegalovirus gH/gL Complexes in Host Organ Entry and Intra-tissue Spread

Niels A. W. Lemmermann; Astrid Krmpotić; Jürgen Podlech; Ilija Brizić; Adrian Prager; Heiko Adler; Astrid Karbach; Yiquan Wu; Stipan Jonjić; Matthias J. Reddehase; Barbara Adler

Herpesviruses form different gH/gL virion envelope glycoprotein complexes that serve as entry complexes for mediating viral cell-type tropism in vitro; their roles in vivo, however, remained speculative and can be addressed experimentally only in animal models. For murine cytomegalovirus two alternative gH/gL complexes, gH/gL/gO and gH/gL/MCK-2, have been identified. A limitation of studies on viral tropism in vivo has been the difficulty in distinguishing between infection initiation by viral entry into first-hit target cells and subsequent cell-to-cell spread within tissues. As a new strategy to dissect these two events, we used a gO-transcomplemented ΔgO mutant for providing the gH/gL/gO complex selectively for the initial entry step, while progeny virions lack gO in subsequent rounds of infection. Whereas gH/gL/gO proved to be critical for establishing infection by efficient entry into diverse cell types, including liver macrophages, endothelial cells, and hepatocytes, it was dispensable for intra-tissue spread. Notably, the salivary glands, the source of virus for host-to-host transmission, represent an exception in that entry into virus-producing cells did not strictly depend on either the gH/gL/gO or the gH/gL/MCK-2 complex. Only if both complexes were absent in gO and MCK-2 double-knockout virus, in vivo infection was abolished at all sites.


Methods in Microbiology | 2010

CD8 T-Cell Immunotherapy of Cytomegalovirus Disease in the Murine Model

Niels A. W. Lemmermann; Jürgen Podlech; Christof K. Seckert; Kai A. Kropp; Natascha K. A. Grzimek; Matthias J. Reddehase; Rafaela Holtappels

Publisher Summary Cytomegaloviruses (CMVs) are conditional pathogens that are strictly species specific and are usually well controlled in their respective mammalian hosts by the effector mechanisms of both innate and adaptive immunity. Human CMV (hCMV) is mostly acquired perinatally as well as in early childhood and is transmitted, for instance, through breast milk and saliva. Whilst the immune response in an immunocompetent host prevents an overt CMV disease and rapidly terminates the productive acute infection, viral genome is maintained in most tissues for the life span of the infected host in a state known as viral latency. Latency implies that infectious virions are no longer produced so that the host is no longer infectious. Furthermore, CMV diseases with multiple organ manifestations such as interstitial pneumonia, hepatitis, adrenalitis, gastrointestinal disease and bone marrow failure result from primary or recurrent infection of the immunocompromised or immunologically immature host. The chapter also describes murine CMV.


PLOS Pathogens | 2013

The viral chemokine MCK-2 of murine cytomegalovirus promotes infection as part of a gH/gL/MCK-2 complex

Felicia M. Wagner; Ilija Brizić; Adrian Prager; Tihana Trsan; Maja Arapović; Niels A. W. Lemmermann; Jürgen Podlech; Matthias J. Reddehase; Frederic Lemnitzer; Jens B. Bosse; Martina Gimpfl; Lisa Marcinowski; Margaret R. MacDonald; Heiko Adler; Ulrich H. Koszinowski; Barbara Adler

Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) forms two gH/gL glycoprotein complexes, gH/gL/gO and gH/gL/pUL(128,130,131A), which determine the tropism, the entry pathways and the mode of spread of the virus. For murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV), which serves as a model for HCMV, a gH/gL/gO complex functionally homologous to the HCMV gH/gL/gO complex has been described. Knock-out of MCMV gO does impair, but not abolish, virus spread indicating that also MCMV might form an alternative gH/gL complex. Here, we show that the MCMV CC chemokine MCK-2 forms a complex with the glycoprotein gH, a complex which is incorporated into the virion. We could additionally show that mutants lacking both, gO and MCK-2 are not able to produce infectious virus. Trans-complementation of these double mutants with either gO or MCK-2 showed that both proteins can promote infection of host cells, although through different entry pathways. MCK-2 has been extensively studied in vivo by others. It has been shown to be involved in attracting cells for virus dissemination and in regulating antiviral host responses. We now show that MCK-2, by forming a complex with gH, strongly promotes infection of macrophages in vitro and in vivo. Thus, MCK-2 may play a dual role in MCMV infection, as a chemokine regulating the host response and attracting specific target cells and as part of a glycoprotein complex promoting entry into cells crucial for virus dissemination.

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