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Dive into the research topics where Niyati Bondale is active.

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Featured researches published by Niyati Bondale.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Cytotoxic immunological synapses do not restrict the action of interferon-γ to antigenic target cells

Nicholas R. Sanderson; Mariana Puntel; Kurt M. Kroeger; Niyati Bondale; Mark Swerdlow; Niloufar Iranmanesh; Hideo Yagita; Ahmed Ibrahim; Maria G. Castro; Pedro R. Lowenstein

Following antigen recognition on target cells, effector T cells establish immunological synapses and secrete cytokines. It is thought that T cells secrete cytokines in one of two modes: either synaptically (i.e., toward antigenic target cells) or multidirectionally, affecting a wider population of cells. This paradigm predicts that synaptically secreted cytokines such as IFN-γ will preferentially signal to antigenic target cells contacted by the T cell through an immunological synapse. Despite its physiological significance, this prediction has never been tested. We developed a live-cell imaging system to compare the responses of target cells and nonantigenic bystanders to IFN-γ secreted by CD8+, antigen-specific, cytotoxic T cells. Both target cells and surrounding nontarget cells respond robustly. This pattern of response was detected even at minimal antigenic T-cell stimulation using low doses of antigenic peptide, or altered peptide ligands. Although cytotoxic immunological synapses restrict killing to antigenic target cells, the effects of IFN-γ are more widespread.


Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2010

Study of the Efficacy, Biodistribution, and Safety Profile of Therapeutic Gutless Adenovirus Vectors as a Prelude to a Phase I Clinical Trial for Glioblastoma

Akm Ghulam Muhammad; Mariana Puntel; Marianela Candolfi; Alireza Salem; Kader Yagiz; Catherine Farrokhi; Kurt M. Kroeger; Weidong Xiong; James F. Curtin; Chunyan Liu; K Lawrence; Niyati Bondale; Jonathan Lerner; Gregory J. Baker; David Foulad; Robert N. Pechnick; Donna Palmer; Philip Ng; Pedro R. Lowenstein; Maria G. Castro

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most common and most aggressive primary brain tumor in humans. Systemic immunity against gene therapy vectors has been shown to hamper therapeutic efficacy; however, helper‐dependent high‐capacity adenovirus (HC‐Ad) vectors elicit sustained transgene expression, even in the presence of systemic anti‐adenoviral immunity. We engineered HC‐Ads encoding the conditional cytotoxic herpes simplex type 1 thymidine kinase (TK) and the immunostimulatory cytokine fms‐like tyrosine kinase ligand 3 (Flt3L). Flt3L expression is under the control of the regulatable Tet‐ON system. In anticipation of a phase I clinical trial for GBM, we assessed the therapeutic efficacy, biodistribution, and clinical and neurotoxicity with escalating doses of HC‐Ad‐TetOn‐Flt3L + HC‐Ad‐TK in rats. Intratumoral administration of these therapeutic HC‐Ads in rats bearing large intracranial GBMs led to long‐term survival in _70% of the animals and development of antiglioma immunological memory without signs of neuropathology or systemic toxicity. Systemic anti‐adenoviral immunity did not affect therapeutic efficacy. These data support the idea that it would be useful to develop HC‐Ad vectors further as a therapeutic gene‐delivery platform to implement GBM phase I clinical trials.


Journal of Virology | 2010

A Novel Bicistronic High-Capacity Gutless Adenovirus Vector That Drives Constitutive Expression of Herpes Simplex Virus Type 1 Thymidine Kinase and Tet-Inducible Expression of Flt3L for Glioma Therapeutics

Mariana Puntel; Akm Ghulam Muhammad; Marianela Candolfi; Alireza Salem; Kader Yagiz; Catherine Farrokhi; Kurt M. Kroeger; Weidong Xiong; James F. Curtin; Chunyan Liu; Niyati Bondale; Jonathan Lerner; Robert N. Pechnick; Donna Palmer; Philip Ng; Pedro R. Lowenstein; Maria G. Castro

ABSTRACT Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is a deadly primary brain tumor. Conditional cytotoxic/immune-stimulatory gene therapy (Ad-TK and Ad-Flt3L) elicits tumor regression and immunological memory in rodent GBM models. Since the majority of patients enrolled in clinical trials would exhibit adenovirus immunity, which could curtail transgene expression and therapeutic efficacy, we used high-capacity adenovirus vectors (HC-Ads) as a gene delivery platform. Herein, we describe for the first time a novel bicistronic HC-Ad driving constitutive expression of herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase (HSV1-TK) and inducible Tet-mediated expression of Flt3L within a single-vector platform. We achieved anti-GBM therapeutic efficacy with no overt toxicities using this bicistronic HC-Ad even in the presence of systemic Ad immunity. The bicistronic HC-Ad-TK/TetOn-Flt3L was delivered into intracranial gliomas in rats. Survival, vector biodistribution, neuropathology, systemic toxicity, and neurobehavioral deficits were assessed for up to 1 year posttreatment. Therapeutic efficacy was also assessed in animals preimmunized against Ads. We demonstrate therapeutic efficacy, with vector genomes being restricted to the brain injection site and an absence of overt toxicities. Importantly, antiadenoviral immunity did not inhibit therapeutic efficacy. These data represent the first report of a bicistronic vector platform driving the expression of two therapeutic transgenes, i.e., constitutive HSV1-TK and inducible Flt3L genes. Further, our data demonstrate no promoter interference and optimum gene delivery and expression from within this single-vector platform. Analysis of the efficacy, safety, and toxicity of this bicistronic HC-Ad vector in an animal model of GBM strongly supports further preclinical testing and downstream process development of HC-Ad-TK/TetOn-Flt3L for a future phase I clinical trial for GBM.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Exogenous fms-like tyrosine kinase 3 ligand overrides brain immune privilege and facilitates recognition of a neo-antigen without causing autoimmune neuropathology

Daniel Larocque; Nicholas Sanderson; Josee Bergeron; James F. Curtin; Joe Girton; Mia Wibowo; Niyati Bondale; Kurt M. Kroeger; Jieping Yang; Liliana M. Lacayo; Kevin C. Reyes; Catherine Farrokhi; Robert N. Pechnick; Maria G. Castro; Pedro R. Lowenstein

Soluble antigens diffuse out of the brain and can thus stimulate a systemic immune response, whereas particulate antigens (from infectious agents or tumor cells) remain within brain tissue, thus failing to stimulate a systemic immune response. Immune privilege describes how the immune system responds to particulate antigens localized selectively within the brain parenchyma. We believe this immune privilege is caused by the absence of antigen presenting dendritic cells from the brain. We tested the prediction that expression of fms-like tyrosine kinase ligand 3 (Flt3L) in the brain will recruit dendritic cells and induce a systemic immune response against exogenous influenza hemagglutinin in BALB/c mice. Coexpression of Flt3L with HA in the brain parenchyma induced a robust systemic anti-HA immune response, and a small response against myelin basic protein and proteolipid protein epitopes. Depletion of CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) enhanced both responses. To investigate the autoimmune impact of these immune responses, we characterized the neuropathological and behavioral consequences of intraparenchymal injections of Flt3L and HA in BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice. T cell infiltration in the forebrain was time and strain dependent, and increased in animals treated with Flt3L and depleted of Tregs; however, we failed to detect widespread defects in myelination throughout the forebrain or spinal cord. Results of behavioral tests were all normal. These results demonstrate that Flt3L overcomes the brains immune privilege, and supports the clinical development of Flt3L as an adjuvant to stimulate clinically effective immune responses against brain neo-antigens, for example, those associated with brain tumors.


Molecular Therapy | 2012

Immune-mediated Loss of Transgene Expression From Virally Transduced Brain Cells Is Irreversible, Mediated by IFNγ, Perforin, and TNFα, and due to the Elimination of Transduced Cells

Jeffrey M. Zirger; Mariana Puntel; Josee Bergeron; Mia Wibowo; Rameen Moridzadeh; Niyati Bondale; Carlos Barcia; Kurt M. Kroeger; Chunyan Liu; Maria G. Castro; Pedro R. Lowenstein

The adaptive immune response to viral vectors reduces vector-mediated transgene expression from the brain. It is unknown, however, whether this loss is caused by functional downregulation of transgene expression or death of transduced cells. Herein, we demonstrate that during the elimination of transgene expression, the brain becomes infiltrated with CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells and that these T cells are necessary for transgene elimination. Further, the loss of transgene-expressing brain cells fails to occur in the absence of IFNγ, perforin, and TNFα receptor. Two methods to induce severe immune suppression in immunized animals also fail to restitute transgene expression, demonstrating the irreversibility of this process. The need for cytotoxic molecules and the irreversibility of the reduction in transgene expression suggested to us that elimination of transduced cells is responsible for the loss of transgene expression. A new experimental paradigm that discriminates between downregulation of transgene expression and the elimination of transduced cells demonstrates that transduced cells are lost from the brain upon the induction of a specific antiviral immune response. We conclude that the anti-adenoviral immune response reduces transgene expression in the brain through loss of transduced cells.


Neurotherapeutics | 2014

Lentiviral-Induced High-Grade Gliomas in Rats: The Effects of PDGFB, HRAS-G12V, AKT, and IDH1-R132H

John Lynes; Mia Wibowo; Carl Koschmann; Gregory J. Baker; Vandana Saxena; A. K. M. G. Muhammad; Niyati Bondale; Julia Klein; Hikmat Assi; Andrew P. Lieberman; Maria G. Castro; Pedro R. Lowenstein

In human gliomas, the RTK/RAS/PI(3)K signaling pathway is nearly always altered. We present a model of experimental gliomagenesis that elucidates the contributions of genes involved in this pathway (PDGF-B ligand, HRAS-G12V, and AKT). We also examine the effect on gliomagenesis by the potential modifier gene, IDH1-R132H. Injections of lentiviral-encoded oncogenes induce de novo gliomas of varying penetrance, tumor progression, and histological grade depending on the specific oncogenes used. Our model mimics hallmark histological structures of high-grade glioma, such as pseudopalisades, glomeruloid microvascular proliferation, and diffuse tumor invasion. We use our model of gliomagenesis to test the efficacy of an experimental brain tumor gene therapy. Our model allowed us to test the contributions of oncogenes in the RTK/RAS/PI(3)K pathway, and their potential modification by over-expression of mutated IDH1, in glioma development and progression in rats. Our model constitutes a clinically relevant system to study gliomagenesis, the effects of modifier genes, and the efficacy of experimental therapeutics.


Journal of Virology | 2009

Herpes Simplex Virus Type 1 Thymidine Kinase Sequence Fused to the lacZ Gene Increases Levels of β-Galactosidase Activity per Genome of High-Capacity but Not First-Generation Adenoviral Vectors In Vitro and In Vivo

Mariana Puntel; R. J. Barrett; Sonali Mondkar; V. Saxena; Kurt M. Kroeger; A. K. M. Muhammad; Chunyan Liu; Niyati Bondale; Sandra Sciascia; Weidong Xiong; Yang Shi; A. Salem; A. Zadmehr; P. Huynh; Donna Palmer; Philip Ng; Maria G. Castro; Pedro R. Lowenstein

ABSTRACT Increased transgene expression per vector genome is an important goal in the optimization of viral vectors for gene therapy. Herein we demonstrate that herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV1) thymidine kinase (TK) gene sequences (1,131 bp) fused to the 3′ end of lacZ increase transgene expression from high-capacity adenoviral vectors (HCAd), but not from first-generation (Ad) vectors. The woodchuck hepatitis virus posttranscriptional regulatory element (WPRE), in contrast, increased transgene expression levels from Ad but not HCAd vectors. The differential activity of the HSV1 TK gene and WPRE sequences was detected both in vitro and in vivo and suggests potentially different mechanisms of action or the interaction of these elements with vector genomic sequences.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Identification and Visualization of CD8+ T Cell Mediated IFN-γ Signaling in Target Cells during an Antiviral Immune Response in the Brain

Mariana Puntel; Robert Barrett; Nicholas Sanderson; Kurt M. Kroeger; Niyati Bondale; Mia Wibowo; Sean F. Kennedy; Chunyan Liu; Maria G. Castro; Pedro R. Lowenstein

CD8+ T cells infiltrate the brain during an anti-viral immune response. Within the brain CD8+ T cells recognize cells expressing target antigens, become activated, and secrete IFNγ. However, there are no methods to recognize individual cells that respond to IFNγ. Using a model that studies the effects of the systemic anti-adenoviral immune response upon brain cells infected with an adenoviral vector in mice, we describe a method that identifies individual cells that respond to IFNγ. To identify individual mouse brain cells that respond to IFNγ we constructed a series of adenoviral vectors that contain a transcriptional response element that is selectively activated by IFNγ signaling, the gamma-activated site (GAS) promoter element; the GAS element drives expression of a transgene, Cre recombinase (Ad-GAS-Cre). Upon binding of IFNγ to its receptor, the intracellular signaling cascade activates the GAS promoter, which drives expression of the transgene Cre recombinase. We demonstrate that upon activation of a systemic immune response against adenovirus, CD8+ T cells infiltrate the brain, interact with target cells, and cause an increase in the number of cells expressing Cre recombinase. This method can be used to identify, study, and eventually determine the long term fate of infected brain cells that are specifically targeted by IFNγ. The significance of this method is that it will allow to characterize the networks in the brain that respond to the specific secretion of IFNγ by anti-viral CD8+ T cells that infiltrate the brain. This will allow novel insights into the cellular and molecular responses underlying brain immune responses.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2008

Regulated expression of adenoviral vectors-based gene therapies: Therapeutic expression of toxins and immune-modulators

James F. Curtin; Marianela Candolfi; Mariana Puntel; Weidong Xiong; A.K.M. Muhammad; Kurt M. Kroeger; Sonali Mondkar; Chunyan Liu; Niyati Bondale; Pedro R. Lowenstein; Maria G. Castro


Journal of Immunology | 2011

Immunological synapses do not restrict secretion of interferon {gamma} during antigen-specific lysis of target cells by CD-8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes

Nicholas Sanderson; Mariana Puntel; Kurt M. Kroeger; Niyati Bondale; Niloufar Iranmanesh; Mark Swerdlow; Ahmed Ibrahim; Maria G. Castro; Pedro R. Lowenstein

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Kurt M. Kroeger

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Mariana Puntel

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Chunyan Liu

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Mia Wibowo

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Weidong Xiong

University of California

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James F. Curtin

Dublin Institute of Technology

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Catherine Farrokhi

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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